The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1966-03-03, Page 6Buy Now And Beat
The Sales Tax Increase
ACT NOW
USED
CARS
AT LOWER PRICES
1964 OLDSMOBILE four door hardtop
Power steering and brakes. power windows,
positraction axle, custom radio, rear seat
speaker, whitewall tires and discs. One
owner. A96529
1964 CHEVROLET Impala 4-door sedan
Silver grey with red interior, low mileage,
one owner. A49916
1963 CORVAIR 700 Sedan
Automatic transmission, custom radio,
whitewall tires, wheel discs. A49927
1962 CHEVROLET Biscayne Sedan
Custom radio, two speed wiper and washers.
One owner. A48645
1961 CHEVROLET Biscayne Sedan
Automatic transmission, whitewall tires,
wheel discs, one owner. 34019E
1960 CHEVROLET Bel Air Coach
43,000 actual miles, one owner. A50484
1960 CHEVROLET Biscayne Sedan
Two speed wiper and washers. A52444
1959 PONTIAC Parisienne Sedan
8 cylinder engine, power brakes, custom radio,
discs, whitewall tires, new car condition.
One owner. A54087
SNELL BROS. LTD.
CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE
450 Main S. EXETER 235-0660
0", sAi'aiMingrae.' has
your
dog
tried
it?
BITE SIZE
SN~R
..................................................... ............................................................
N EW
SHUR•GAIN
DOG
FOOD
New SHUR • GAIN Dog Food is a
superior type of kibbled ration with a
high meat content-lots of real beef
Dogs love it. Feed it wet or dry.
Available from the man whose business
is feeding livestock better your local
SHUR-GAIN Feed Service Mill operator.
Ask about home deliveries.
the latest product of
SHUR.GAIN research dog food
235-1782 EX ETER
2294118 WHALEN CORNERS
Page 6 Times-Advocate, March 3, 1960
FOR ALL GOOD SPORTS
By Jinn Russell
Combines take lead
first of B playoffs
A title
maybe?
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111110iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinnieninneinienilli111111111111111111111111111111111111
The Lucan-Ilderton Combines
clobbered Petrone 13-3 in Lucan
on Friday night to take a 1-0 lead
in their best of five OHA Inter-
mediate B playoff. The winner of
the series will take on the first
place Seaforth Beavers for the
group championship.
Jack Campbell scored a pair of
goals in the first period as the
Combines overcame al-0 deficit.
Beg Mulholland scored at 59 sec-
onds to give the lasers a 1-0 lead
but Campbell's goals at 14:40 and
18:42 put the combines out in
front to stay.
The Combines outscored the
losers five to one in the second
frame to take a 7-2 lead and then
fired six more goals home in the
final session to take their first
-Please turn to page 7
The Exeter Junior Hawks belted Mount
Brydges 16-4 on home ice last Friday night and it
appears that the locals are shaping up for a run at
the Ontario Junior D title that eluded them last
year. For the first time in a couple of months Earl
Wagner and the Hawks are at full strength with
four defensemen and eight forwards. In recent
weeks the Exeter defense has been weak with only
three men protecting goalie Rick Stade, but with
the return of Larry Willert, the local defense is
solid, with Ron Broderick, Craig Davidson, Bill
Bourne and Willert available.
The Hawks looked very sharp in their lop-
sided win over Mount Brydges as everyone except
Stade picked up at least one point in the route.
The Hawks' line of John Cooper, Bob Livermore and
Bill Chipchase came up with 14 scoring points on
seven goals and seven assists to lead the club,
while the other aAaeking unit of Fred Lamb, Bob
Moir and Dennis Morrissey had 10 points.
Their win gave the Hawks a 1-0 lead in the
best-of-five series with the second game slated to
be played in Glencoe on Friday night. Third game
of the set is scheduled to be played here next Tues-
day. The winner of the series will take on the win-
ner of the Belmont-Strathroy playoff for the right
to represent the Shamrock loop in Ontario Junior
D competition.
While still on the subject of hockey playoffs
.,we notice that Exeter's three minor teams, the pee
wees, bantams and midgets, have started their Sham-
rock league playoffs with the midgets playing in
St. Marys Wednesday night in the first game of an
OMHA series.
The local midgets, who have lost only one
Shamrock tilt this season, will play their second
game of the best-of-three set in Exeter on Friday
night with the site of the third game on Saturday
still undecided.
Two-game goals-to-count series will be played
in the Shamrock playoffs with the pee wees meet-
ing Dorchester, the Legion bantams facing Lucan
and the midgets squaring off against Strathroy in
the first round.
The first games of the series were played
Monday night with the second games to be played
in Exeter next Wednesday night.
BASKETBALL CHAMPS
Congratulations are in order for Lauretta
Siegner and her South Huron senior girls who walk-
ed off with the Huron-Perth championship in a post
season playoff at Stratford North-Western last Thurs-
day. The locals climaxed a 6-0 regular season record
with a pair of wins over Seaforth and St. Marys to
finish the year undefeated in eight games.
The South= Huron squad, who went undefeat-
ed last season only to lose their first playoff game,
gained revenge by defeating Seaforth in the first
game 26-20 and then coming back to edge out St.
Marys 31-30 in the final for their first Huron-Perth
title.
Iris Marshall, Linda Hunter-Duvar and Lynn
Lesnick, who were South Huron's leading scorers
throughput the year, paced the champs at the tour-
nament with Marshall scoring 25 points, Duvar 20
and Lesnick 10 in the two contests. During the regu-
lar season Marshall led the Exeter scorers with a
total of 85 while Lesnick and Duvar were next with
50 and 37 respectively.
Other members of the championship squad
were Ann Mickle, Darlene Parsons, Mary Lou Ken-
nedy, Marg Bosch, Diane Stone, Karen Finkbeiner,
Enid Blackwell, Nancy Strang 'and Marg Salmon.
RUSTLINGS-Five Exeter area bowlers came
up with 300 games last week with Roy Ferguson
leading the way with 348. Other 300 bowlers in-
cluded Bill Brown 336, Nancy Dowson 345, Ted Mac-
Donald 301 and Ray Van Dorsselaer 305 . . . Exeter
Hawk defenseman Bill Bourne drew assists on six
of the 14 Exeter goals last Friday night . . . The
Exeter Figure Skating Carnival, which was held last
Saturday night, was the best ever with over 700
people on hand far the annual event . . . If the
National Hockey League's regular season was to end
this week we would be correct in our pre-season
predictions, but with 16 games remaining things
could change drastically . . . The Belmont Hatters
defeated Strathroy in their Shamrock semi-final
series and will now play Port Huron in a best-of-three
series for the Shamrock league championship . . .
Hensall's Jack Chipchase, formerly of the Tulsa Oil-
ers of the Central Professional Hockey League, is
now playing defense for the Victoria Maple Leafs.
The Western League entry is currently in second
place, seven points behind the Portland Buckaroos.
Basketball champions
The senior girls basketball team from South Huron District High
School won the Huron-Perth championship at Stratford Thursday
afternoon. Members of the team included Iris Marshall, Linda
Hunter-Duvar, Lynn Lesnick, Ann Mickle, Darlene Parsons, Mary
Lau Kennedy, Marg Bosch, Diane Stone, Karen Finkbeiner, Enid
Blackwell, Nancy Strang and Marg Salmon. (photo by Jack Doerr)
SHDHS girls P-H champs
The South Huron District High
School Senior Girls basketball
squad came up with back to back
wins in a four team tournament
at Stratford North-Western last
Thursday to win the Huron-Perth
Championship. In winning the ten
team conference crown the locals
defeated Seaforth 26-20 in their
first game and then came back to
edge St. Marys 31-30 in the
championship game. South Huron
defeated St. Marys by a 20-17
score when the two clubs met
during the regular schedule but
the winners were given a bit
of a scare in the title game as
the St. Marys club gave them a
real battle right to the final
whistle.
A 16 point first quarter pow-
ered the locals to their victory
over a tough Seaforth crew to
put them into the final. The
second half when South Huron
came up with 16 points to win
by one point.
Lauretta Siegner's senior
squad who went through the last
two seasons undefeated in reg-
ular season play have a 14-1
record for the last two years.
Iris Marshall again led the
losers outscored South Huron
4-0 in the second quarter but
were unable to recover from
their first quarter deficit.
Linda Hunter-Duvar and Iris
Marshall paced South Huron in
the point scoring department with
10 each on four field goals and
two free throws. Lynn Lesnick
and Ann Mickle took care of the
rest of the scoring with Lesnick
hitting on two shots from the
floor and Mickle adding two
points.
The South Huron club started
out slowly in the final game
against St. Marys with only four
points in the first quarter but
they warmed up to the occasion
in the second quarter with 11
points to take the lead. Iris
Marshall led the second quar-
ter surge with seven points and
was one of the big factors in
champs to their close win. Mar-
shall scored five field goals and
added five free throws for a 15
point performance while Linda
Hunter-Duvar picked up ten
points on four field goals and two
free tosses. Steady Lynn Les-
nick hooped six points to round
out the South Huron pointgetters.
Exeter Hawks trounce
Mount Brydges 16-4
Three goal performances by
Bill Chipchase, Scott Burton and
Fred Lamb netted the Exeter
New leader in
dart league
Playoffs started in
minor hockey action
There is a new leader in the
Exeter Legion Mixed Dart League
this week as the Sharpshooters
took over first place when they
edged the Itchy Four by a 3-2
score to move two points up on
the second place Plumbers. The
Sharpshooters now have 58 points
while the second place Plumbers
who have held the lead for most
of the season have 56 points
after their 4-1 loss to the Clean-
ers.
The third place Blue Birds
blanked the lowly Champs 5-0
to move to within three points
of the Plumbers while the Le-
gionnaires edged the Feather-
flights 3-2 in the other game of
the night.
The fourth place Itchy Four
have 49 points while the Clean-
ers, Legionnaires and Feather-
flights have 48, 47 and 46 re-
spectively with the Champs still
holding up the rest of the league.
Keith Brintnell won all five
games for the Blue Birds on
Friday night and now leads the
men with 33 games won for the
season while Marj Edwards and
Anne Romaniuk remained tied
for the ladies lead with13 games
each.
Hawks a 16-4 win over Mount
Brydges in the local rink Friday
night. The victory was their fifth
straight over Mount Brydges and
gave them a 1-0 lead in their best
of five OHA series, Second game
of the set will be played in Glen-
coe this Friday with the third
contest slated for here on Tues-
day.
The Exeter club who were at
full strength for the first time in
several weeks had little trouble
with the less experienced visitors
as they built up a '7-1 firstperiod
lead. The Hawks scored four
times in the middle frame as
Stade blanked the losers and then
the locals came back with five
more tallies in the third period
to complete the rout.
Bob Livermore, Dennis Mor-
rissey and John Cooper each
picked up a pair of markers for
the Hawks while Ron Broderick
added a single goal in the third
period. Bill Bourne was the top
playmaker 'for the evening as he
set up six Hawks scores.
A total of only six penalties
were called in the high scoring
contest with three minors going
to each club.
The Exeter Pee Wees rallied
from behind to record a 4-4 tie
with Dorchester in Ingersoll
Tuesday night while both the Le-
gion Bantams and Midgets came
up with wins on Monday for suc-
cessful starts in Shamro ck
League playoffs. The Legion Ban-
tams edged Lucan 5-4 in Lucan
Monday and now hold a one goal
lead in the two game total goals
series while the midgets defeat-
ed Strathroy 6-4 to take a 1-0 lead
in the best of three series. The
pee wee playoff is a two game
total goals series.
Larry Davies was the big man
in the pee wee encounter as the
locals rallied from a 3-0 deficit
with four goals in the final frame.
Davies scored a pair of markers
including the tying goal that was
scored with Dorchester a man
short and Jim Brown out of the
Exeter net.
After a scoreless first period
Dorchester scored two un-
answered goals in the second and
added one more in the third be-
fore the locals hit the score-
board. Defenseman Rick Perry
scored the first Exeter goal on a
long shot from outside the blue-
line and Steve Riddell cut the
Dorchester lead to 3-2 just past
the eight minute mark in the final
stanza. The Dorchester club who
finished In first place over the
regular season scored on a power
play to take a two goal lead but
Davies took over to bring the
locals home with a tie.
Chris Riddell fired a pair of
goals in Lucan to lead the Exeter
Legion Bantams to a close 5-4
win over Lucan. Don Farrell also
picked up a pair of goals for the
locals while Ron Lindenfield
scored once. Larry Haugh picked
up three assists in the fast mov-
ing contest while goalie Mike Mc-
Laughlin played a steady game.
In Strathroy the Exeter Midgets
came up with another one of their
patented strong finishes to defeat
a tough Strathroy crew by a 6-4
score. Red Loader's club which
begins its OMHA playdowns this
week against St. Marys were down
2-0 at the end of the first period
and 4-2 at the end of the second
but came on to win with four goals
in the last stanza.
Rightwinger Jim Hayter led the
locals with a pair of tallies while
single goals came off the sticks
of Bill Fairbairn, Mike Hoy, Pete
Lawson and Grant Walker.
The three minor clubs will get
back into action next Wednesday
night when the Dorchester, Lucan
and Strathroy teams will be here
for a tripleheader. The midgets
will meet St. Marys in the second
game of their OMHA series in
Exeter Friday night.
Rec League completed
playoffs tonight
EXETER SQUAD CLOSING IN
The Exeter Legion Dart team
moved to within eight points of
the league leading Corporal A
squad on Wednesday night when
they played the third place Cor-
poral B club to a 5-5 tie. The
Corporal A who were defeated
6-4 in Wednesday's competition
still lead the Centralia Inter-
Mess loop with 121 points to the
Legion's 113.
In other league action the last
place Airmen B and fourth place
Sergeants tied five all. The third
place Corporal B team is ten
points behind the Exeter Legion
while the fourth place Sergeants
are just ahead of the two Airmen
clubs with 81 points. At present
the Airmen A have 78 points
while the Airmen B is close be-
hind with '77.
Joe Berthelet still leads the
league in games won for the sea-
son with 36, six more than the
Legion's Bill Smith.
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111H111111111111111111111111111111111111111
REC NEWS
By ALVIN WILLERT
H.
H.
E.
w.
H.
M.
D.
J,
M.
B.
H.
H.
Curling results
LADIES CURLING SCORES:
Mickle 6, H. Webber 4
Frayne 10, M. Ecker 3
Knight 8, M. Fisher 5
Wuerth 6, T. Payne 3
Jermyn 6, E. Busche 6
McCarter 13, N. Parsons 4
Marks 8, E. Boyle 6
Weber 8, L. Dobbs '7
Marshall 14, D. Pfaff 5
Bell 12, A. McDonald 4
Burton 10, J. McDowell 4
Mickle 8, D. Etherington 5
M.
G.
G.
B.
P.
A.
B.
A.
G.
G,
W.
L.
C,
E.
R.
C.
for the Old Timers while Bill
Gilfillan scored once.
Jim Russell scored twice for
the losers with Dale Turvey and
Frank Boyle added singletons.
G and G came up with their
fourth win of the season as de-
fenseman Jim MacDonald fired
four goals to lead the London
crew to a 9-4 win over Crediton
in the second game of the even-
ing.
Jack Stephen added a pair of
goals to the winner's total while
Bruce Denham, Ron Clark and
Don Graham each scored a single
goal.
Bob Galloway tallied twice for
the Crediton crew with Stan Lovie
and Jim Pfaff picking up single-
tons.
The first place Bankers fini-
shed the season with 19 pOints,
four more than the second place
Old Timers while Crediton place
third with 13 and Graham and Gra-
ham fourth with nine points on
four wins and a tie.
_-
In the first nine months of
1965 the value of goods import=
ed into Canada totalled $6,198,-
000,000, an increase of 12.2 per-
cent over the cbtrespondingper-
led of the preceding year, while
expOrt8 increased by 1.2 percent
to a value of $6,232,000,000.
MEN'S CURLING SCORES:
Gaiser 12, D. Parsons 5
Gregus 12, L. Webber 5
McCarter 11, A. Passmore 6
Alexander 9, J. Galloway 9
Hera 13, G. McTavish 4
Pyrn 8, B. Morgan 8
Tuckey 10, R. Hodgert 8
Westcott 9, J. Corbett 8
Mickle (default) P. Raymond
Busche 0, II. Cowen 8
Middleton 9, L. Learn 8
Kraft 10, R. Jeffrey '7
Powe 9, C. Sinai: 5
Pollen 9, W. MacLean 4
McDonald 6, A. Clarke 5
Fink 14, H. Snell 9
Marshall 8, Ross Hodgert 2
Down 13, L. Passmore 9
The Old Timers and Graham
and Graham registered victories
in Rec Hockey action last Thurs-
day as the four teams tuned up
for the playoffs which will start
tonight (Thursday). Tonight's
playoff action sees the second
place Old Timers tangling with
fourth place Graham and Graham
at 7:30 and the first place Bank
Boys facing third place Crediton
at 9:30. The semi-final series
will be the best two out of three
affairs.
Last Thursday night Terry
Bourne came up with five goals to
lead the Old Timers to an easy
8-4 win over the Bankers in the
first game. The Bankers'loas still
left them in first place but the
oldsters moved into second place,
two points up on Crediton who
Suffered a 0-4 loss to Graham and
Graham,
Besides Bourne's five mark-
ers, Bill Shaddick scored twice
and Mites will play as usual.
I remind the captains of the Pee
Wee teams to contact their play-
ers and have them on hand at
game time. Last week the black
Hawks defeated the Maple Leafs
5 to 2 and the Wings defeated
the Canadiens 4 to 2.
tioUSeleague night will be held
On Saturday March 10.
St. Marys in a 2 out of 3 series
with the first game at St. Marys
this Wednesday and the second
game here at Exeter Friday night
at 8 o'clock. The winner of this
series advances to further OMHA
play. The Pee Wees and Bantam
teams have been eliminated from
further OMHA play but still have
the Shamrock play-offs to com-
plete. The Pee Wees meet Dor-
chester in a home and home
series while the Bantams meet
Lucan in a similar series. The
Midgets as well as the OMHA
play-offs have to play Strathroy
for the Shamrock championships
So we will be playing hockey for
a few weeks yet. The home games
in these series is at Exeter,
Wednesday March 0, 7 pm.
The Pee Wee hOuseleague
starts into play-offs this Satur-
day with the Canadiens meeting
the Wings at 8 o'clock and the
Maple LeafS and Black Hawks
tee off at 0 o'clock. The Novice
The Figure Skating Carnival
is over and I think it can be
safely said that this was the
largest and best Carnival ever.
A large and enthusiastic audi-
ence over 800 showed their ap-
preciation of the efforts put forth
by the youngsters. A lot of time
and effort goes into the planning
of a carnival, the executive and
the skating instructor are to be
commended for the show we had
this year,
The Teen Town sleigh ride
party planned for the Pinery
Park last Friday was cancelled
due to lack of snow but the
dance at the Imperial Hotel was
held as scheduled, This Friday
a bus load of Teen Tbwners will
travel to Kitchener to appear on
Canadian Band Stand. This pro-
gram is taped and will be shown
On TV Channel 13 at a later date.
The Friday night dance here,
will be' held as usual. The Kin8-
uteri's Midget hockey team play