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ADVERTISEMENT
Tired W alls Get
Smothered At CTC
Tired Walls throughout Exe-
ter got a good shellacking this
week when they were unexpect-
edly confronted with Don Jones.
The battle was unmatched for
its fury but Jones was way out
front as the obvious winner.
The clobbering didn't even
wind Don. He looked in good
shape. The walls looked even
better! Don made it clear that
it was he who was picking the
fight and said he was fit and
ready to take on any more Tired
Walls that begged for his at-
tention.
The Canadian Tire store own-
er laughed afterwards saying,
"I really don't think it was that
much of a fight! I had a winning
combination on my side," an
apparent reference to the tools
of his trade, reputable products
at discount prices.
Don said he was not stopping
where he was but wanted help
to renew the challenge to rout
out more Tired Walls and give
them the treatment they de-
serve.
He said he would offer anyone
dropping into his training quart-
ers one of his better lines of
paints, Blendit, at one remark-
ably low price, $5.40, to help
Exeter clear the boards of Tired
Walls.
Don said everyone was ex-
cited at Canadian Tire over the
fabulous array of 232 colors in
13 different finishes. This was
more than enough to banish
Tired Walls for many years to
come, he said.
He cited the odorless quali-
ties, matchless covering ability
and permanent wearing of the
paints.
Asked for specifics on the
$5.40 price, Don said that Ca-
nadian Tire was not only giv-
ing away latex paint at this
low price, but also primer seal-
er, alkyd flat, interior latex
satin, interior gloss, floor and
masonry paints and outside
whites.
No wonder Canadian Tire was
hopping with excited customers,
he said.
This was really only the be-
ginning, he pointed out. His
paints come in two different
lines, Blendit, and the match-
less SuperLastic. This way se-
lection was overwhelming.
All prices, Don said, were
well below any others on the
market, in line with his store's
policy on pricing everything.
He then began discussing his
three-brush painter's kit for
$1.39, quality and price he was
sure no one could equal, his
paint roller and tray set at 98Q
and his turpentine going for a
low 640 a quart.
He said he and Canadian Tire
stood behind everything he of-
fered as the best in the market
for the price.
As he hurried out the door
Mr. Jones was heard to say
that wall scrapers were low
at 540, paint and varnish re-
mover at 590 pint, sandpaper
at 120 and putty knives at 15g.
Don's been working hard ever
since at Canadian Tire, even
going so far as staying open
every Friday night till 9 for
popular convenience.
Is it any wonder nobody has
difficult keeping up with Jones
in Exeter?
1111.011•1111140111010111111MIMINIMPRIMMOWOMMINIMINIIIIIIINOMPIMPROMMIIIIMOINIIIIIimaggagiosagagagegoimiriggpir
THEM AWAY HAUL
1962 Ford GALAXIE
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Power steering and brakes, radio,
washers, wheel discs, whitewall tires,
one owner, low mileage.
1961 Chevrolet BEL AIR 1964 Chevrolet Custom radio, whitewall tires, wheel
discs, a one owner car.
COACH
1960 Chevrolet BISCAYNE
BISCAYNE SEDAN
Custom radio, washers, low mileage
Custom radio, low mileage. SEDAN
1959 Ford GALAXIE
1960 Corvair
HARDTOP
Power steering and brakes, custom
radio, sha.delite windshield, one owner.
1959 Chevrolet STATION WAGON 700 DELUXE SEDAN
Automatic transmission, washers, low
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CHEVROLET
450 Main S.
Page 6 the Hawks lead to one goal but
the locals settled down to give'
the local netminder god pro-
tection for the rest of the game
and the visitors were never able
to pull their goaltender for an
extra attacker.
took a goalinouth pass from
Dennis Morrissey for the even-
tual winning goal.
Dan Proha.ska deflected a shot
from the blueline that got be-
hind Glavin at the 8:55 mark
of the final period to again cut
Attract 1,000 here
Hawks need one win for loop title
2 Times-Advocate, March 18, 1965 Post pair of 3- wins
1:X11. ALL GOOD SPORTS
By Jim Russell
Night
for all
broke in to settle the contest.
Playing coach Earl Wagner who
had played a lot of hockey in
both weekend games picked up
a clearing pass near the Exeter
blueline and relayed a pass to
Turvey who broke in over the
Strathroy line and fired a hard
shot that beat Brown cleanly.
The Hawks played with two
regular forwards sidelined with
knee injuries, Leftwinger Bill
C bip chase who usually per-
forms on a line with Earl Wag-
ner and Craig Chapman watched
the game from the sidelines
while Rick Boyle injured his
knee in the first minute of play
and was forced to retire for
the evening.
The Exeter Figure Skating Club will pre-
sent their annual extravaganza on Saturday,
March 27 with this year's theme "Around the
World". The local club's membership, which has
increased since last year from 40 to 70 members,
will begin the performance at 8 o'clock at the
Exeter Arena and will present several numbers
featuring colorful costumes representing many
different countries of the world.
The show, which is sanctioned by the
Canadian Figure Skating Association, is present-
ed by the club to show off all the area's fine
skaters and to raise funds to finance the sport
which develops grace and confidence.
Faye McDonald of Walton is the instruc-
tress of the local skaters who practice their fig-
ures every Monday night.
Mary Sills of Seaforth and John Hubbell
of Point Edward will be guest performers at the
local show.
Prepare for skating performance
Members of the Exeter Figure Skating Club are busily engaged in preparations for their annual
carnival slated for the arena on March 2'7, Theme will be "Around the World On Skates". Mrs.
Faye McDonald is shown above instructing some of the junior members. From the left are: Allison
Sturrock, Cathy Fuller, Ruth Anne Minderlein, Patti Arnold, Kathy Vriese, Wendy Webb and Gayle
Ecker, --T-A photo
Lace Combines twice
SINK TO NEW DEPTHS
Canada's National Hockey Team did little
to improve this country's image in. World hockey.
The National team was defeated 4-1 by the Rus-
sians on Sunday to complete their seven-game
schedule a the World Hockey Championships in
Tampere, Finland with an unimpressive record
of four wins and three losses.
The Canadian squad, coached by Gordon
Simpson of Winnipeg, lost to Sweden and Czecho-
slavakia as well as Russia to finish fourth be-
hind these three clubs with 8 points. This was
the first time in 45 years that a Canadian team
has lost three games in World and Olympic com-
petition and the 8.0 loss to the Czechs was the
worst defeat ever suffered by a team from this
country.
The Russians, who won the championship
with 14 points when they won all seven games,
defeated Canada for the third time in a row in
World Hockey competition and have now lost
only one game out of the last 21 that they have
played to prove once again that they are rapidly
catching up to this country which is the top
producer of hockey talent.
Because of Canada's poor showing in Fin-
land it seems that it is about time that this
country's hockey officials re - evaluated their
method of choosing a National team.
Most of Canada's best players are picked
up by professional clubs and are unable to com-
pete in amateur hockey and so the National
squad is usually made up of second best players
who are inexperienced or past their prime.
They are forced to compete against the
best players from these other countries who seem
to have different ideas about amateur standings.
And just to make it more confusing, the Canad-
ians, who have played hockey wide open with.
body checking all over the ice, are forced to
play International rules which allows body check-
ing in the defensive area only.
With the National Hockey League plan-
ning to expand to 12 teams in two years, the
number of amateur hockeyists will diminish even
more and the calibre of play is bound to suffer.
HUGE CROWD
The Hawks scored a goal in
each period to edge Strathroy
3-2 before 991 fans at the local
arena on Friday night.
After taking a 1-0 first per-
iod lead, the locals built up a
2-0 lead in the second period
before the Rockets'Jim Bender
cut their lead to 2-1 at 18:40
of the middle stanza. Each team
scored once in the last period
of the closely played contest
that featured some fine end to
end rushes and stellar goal-
keeping especially from Exe-
ter's Tom Glavin who thwarted
Strathroy attempts time and
again to keep the locals in the
game.
Rick Boyle opened the scor-
ing when he received passes
from Mike Cushman and Dennis
Morrissey to put the Hawks in
the lead. The same threesome
combined on the second Exeter
goal at 5:49 of the second period
with Cushman deflecting Boy-
le's pass behind Lanny Brown
Jim Bender intercepted an
Exeter clearing pass and skated
in alone to beat Glavin cleanly
and cut the Exeter lead to one
goal late in the second frame
but the Rockets' Randall and
Gerald Statham picked up minor
penalties at the 19:00 and 19:50
minute marks respectively and
the Hawks had a two man advan-
tage.
The locals were unable to
score in the remaining seconds
of the second period but it only
took 21 seconds of the third
frame before Craig Chapman
The Exeter Junior Hawks
jumped into a 3-1 lead in their
best-of-seven Shamrock loop
final against Strathroy Junior
Rockets when they posted back-
to-back 3-2 wins in weekend
games, and now need only a win
here Friday to wrap up the
series.
The locals posted their first
3-2 win before almost 1,000
fans at the Exeter arena, Fri-
day, and picked up a goal by
Dale Turvey at the 4:48 mark
of a 10-minute overtime session
in Strathroy Saturday for a dup-
licate victory.
It was the third time the
teams needed overtime to settle
the issue in the first four games
of the closely played series.
Besides Saturday's overtime
contest, the Hawks captured the
first game 5-2 in the extra
period while the Rockets won
the second game of the set by
a 6-5 margin when they out-
scored the locals by a two to
one margin in the extra session.
The Rockets opened the scor-
ing early in the first period in
Saturday's game when Bob Ran-
dall flipped in a long shot from
just over the centre red line.
The puck took a crazy bounce
and carommed in off Tom Glav-
in's pads to give the hosts a
1-0 lead.
Mike Cushman knotted the
score at one apiece when he
beat Strathroy goalie Lanny
Brown from close in after taking
a pass from linemate Dennis
Morrissey.
Morrissey flipped a goal over
the prostrate Brown to give the
Hawks a 2-1 second period lead
but Dave Robinson came right
back to tie the score before the
second stanza ended.
Although it was the second
game in as many nights for
these two evenly matched clubs,
neither showed any signs of
slowing down in the third period
as each team fought to break
the 2-2 deadlock. Goaltenders
Brown and Glavin stood their
ground, however, and the score
remained tied at the end of
regulation time.
Both squads had good scoring
opportunities in the overtime
stanza but it was Turvey, who
had worked on the forward line
as well as taking a regular
turn on defense, that finally
• Seaforth takes margin
game is scheduled for Seaforth
next Tuesday if it is necessary.
There was no doubt about
which was the better Club in
Tuesday's contest as the Town-
ers quickly built up a 4-1 as
the Irish couldn't seem to get
themselves untracked as their
passes weren't connecting and
The Seaforth Towners wal-
loped the Lucan-Ilderton Com-
bines by a 13-3 score in Sea-
forth Tuesday night to take a
3-2 lead in their best-of-seven
OHA Intermediate "B" series.
The sixth game of the series
will be played in Lucan this
Friday at 8:30 while the seventh
Bantams goal up
in OMHA playoff
Zurich juveniles
grab WOAA cup
duced only nine minor penalties.
Bob Hoffman and Ross Miller
paced the Zurich attack with
three goals apiece while single
goals were scored by Ken West-
lake, Bill Bloch and Bill Schade,
Don Culp scored four goals in
a losing cause for Drayton.
The Zurich club will now ad-
vance into Ontario Hockey As-
sociation playoffs but as yet
their opponent is unknown.
The Zurich Juveniles cap-
tured the WOAA Juvenile "D"
championship last week by out-
lasting Drayton 9-6 to take the
best of three final series, two
games to one.
The Zurich lads won the first
game of the series in Hensall
by a 5-4 score but came out on
the short end of a 11-'7 game in
Mount Forest to extend the
series to the deciding game in
Hensel'.
The home club took a 3-1
first period lead and were never
headed as they scored three
times in both the second and
third frames for the win in the
cleanly played contest that pro-
they were not skating.
The homesters fired six big
goals past Keith Scarborough
in the Combines net in the sec-
ond frame and then came back
with three more in the last
period to complete the rout.
Tom Dick led the Seaforth
club in the scoring department
with three goals while Bill Mc-
Laughlin, Jack McIlwain, Larry
Dale and Jim Dick notched t wo
goals each. Bob Beutenmiller
and Bob Whitelaw added• a goal
apiece for the winners.
Doug Galloway with two goals
and Barry Hearn with one made
up the Lucan-Ilderton scoring.
EVEN SET
The Towners evened the ser-
ies at two games apiece on Fri-
day night when they walloped
the Combines 9-3 before the
Lucan fans.
The Combines' Stu O'Neil
opened the scoring at the 2:39
mark of the initial frame but
the Towners scored three times
in the period to take a 3-1
lead into the second frame.
The visitors then went on to
tally three more times in both
— Please turn to page '7
period and it looked like they
would be able to coast to an
easy victory but the locals
started to press after the five
minute mark and broke out for
eight goals with St. Marys
replying five times in the last
fifteen minutes for a total of
12 goals in a wild third frame.
John Loader led the locals
in their third period splurge
with four goals while Jim Hay-
ter picked up apair of markers.
Single tallies went to Bill Fair-
bairn and Barry Baynham.
The Exeter bantams erupted
for eight third period goals
Saturday to defeat St. Marys
8-'7 and take a one-goal lead
in their two-game goals-to-
count series in OMHA play-
downs. The second game of
the two-game set is slated for
Saturday at 8:30 at the Exeter
Arena.
St. Marys jumped into a 1-0
first period lead and increased
their lead to two goals in the
second frame. The St. Marys
opened the scoring in the last
HOW CLOSE IS IT TO NHL?
Since none of the European National clubs
will play against an NHL team, a contest be-
tween the Canadian National team and an NHL
team might give Canadian fans an idea of just
how close International hockey is to the NHL.
The only problem in a game like this would be
what rules to use.
Before the National team left for Finland
a group of NHL Oldtimers played the National
team in an exhibition contest at Maple Leaf Gar-
dens and the National team had to extend them-
selves to gain a 2-2 tie. Several Oldtimers such
as Sid Smith, John Henderson and Bob Goldham
expressed the opinion that the National team
would not fare so well in the upcoming World
Championships and that any NHL team would
have no trouble defeating them.
Thus it would seem that this country
should send no team at all to compete in Inter-
national play because it is no good sending sec-
ond best to represent the country which boasts
the finest hockey players in the world.
Peewees to meet
St. Marys squad
The local pee wee club got a
sample of what to expect in
their upcoming OMHA playoff
with St. Marys when they were
blanked 4-0 by the powerful
St. Marys squad at Lucan's an-
nual Shamrock Tournament on
Saturday.
The two teams will meet in
a two-game goals-to-count ser-
les this weekend with the first
game to be played Friday night
in St. Marys and the second
game set for the next night in
Exeter.
The St. Marys club is rated
as one of the best pee wee
teams in Western Ontario and
captured their division of the
Watford Silver Stick Tourna-
ment that was held a month ago.
The Exeter club also bowed
out in the consolation round
when they dropped a elose2-1
decision to Port Credit.
Larry Haugh scored the only
Exeter goal in the losing cause
with Chris Riddell and John
Guenther drawing assists on
the play.
Exeter goaltender John Hay-
ter 'was voted the Most 'out-
standing goalie in the Lucite.
Tourney.
The Exeter squirts took a
1-0 lead in their best of three
Shamrock League playoff series
with Kensall Park when they
defeated the southern club 6-3
in EXeter Friday. The next
game of the Set will be played
in Lucan this Saturday.
The locals jumped off to a
3-1 first period lead and then
Increased their lead to 4-1
in the second frame as goalie
Doug Fairbairn blanked the
visitors in the middle stanza,
Bill GlIfillan's crew then went
on to score twice more in the
last period to put the game away.
Peter Stover and Peter Klein-
stiller led the Exeter attack
with two goals apiece while Don
Thompson and Ken Creech add-
ed one goal each. LDSMOIILE
235-0660 SNELL EROS. Vf3