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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1963-02-07, Page 11MID -WINTER SALE All winter footwear at sale prices. Wingham Advance -Times, Thursday, Feb. 7, 19 0,3 Page 11 CALLAN SHOES YOUR FAMILY SHOE STORE WINGHAM, ONTARIO PHONE 357-1840 FOUR PLACES OPEN in Wingham Scout Troop Contact Scoutmaster Bob McIntyre Clinton Drops Midget Game E. Anderson and J. Wild were the referees at the Wing - ham Arena on Friday evening when the Clinton Midgets visi- ted here and suffered a 9-5 defeat. Glazier of Clinton got the first score, unassisted. This was at the 10:10 mark and Bismayer and Strong retaliated seconds later with Wingham's first goal. The tie was held until Strong .assisted by Scott and Bismayer chalked up another for Wingham at 3:45 in the second period. Three more tallies were collected by the local boys during this frame, making the count 5-1. Credit went to Strong from Bismayer; Garniss unassisted and Scott from Bismayer. Clinton collected four in the final period, but Wingham also got four to leave the visi- tors well behind. Strong and Bismayer each had one goal and one assist, Scott a single and Gorrie had the final Wing - ham goal, assisted by Tom Deyell. There were only two penal- ties in the entire match. Fleury and Tom Deyell each had two minutes in the box. CLINTON: Crawford, Holl- and, Proctor, Glazier, Batkin, Dutat, Wittingham, Reiv, Schnubb, Daum and Finch. WINGHAM: Crothers, Ye - man, Fleury, Strong, Scott, Bismayer, Galbraith, Rintoul, Mitchell, Garniss, R. Deyell, jaikGorrie, T. *Deyell. Sportsmen -Good Start for '63 The January meeting of the Wingham and District Sports- men's Association, opened with the president, Mac Sewers in the chair. The minutes of the December meeting were read and adopted. The financial statement was read by H. Mc- Arthur and club finances were found to be in good standing. In the absence of Bill Gow, Lee Captures All Jet Scores In the local arena last Fri- day night the Wingham Jetsre- ceived yet another defeat. This time punishment came from the Mt. Forest Belmonts, 6-3. The first period remained scoreless but in the second the Belmonts broke loose, scoring four unanswered goals. Two of these went to McEarchern, while singles went to Noble and Parker. In the third frame the Jets came on a bit stronger scoring three times to Mt. Forests twice. Don Lee was the Jets hero, scoring all three goals. McEarchern did the honours for the Belmonts giving him a total of four goals for the night. WINGHAM: Riehl, Bain, Ritchie, J. Fryfrogle, B. Fry- fogle, B. Stainton, Kerr, Templeman, Lee, Mahood, Irwin, Jardin, Cerson, Skinn, Crawford. MT. FOREST: Schwindt, Mc- Meekin, Noble, Parker, Reeve$ McEarchern, Wieser, Mathews, Snape, Wilson, Campbell, Lawrence, Morley, Carbett. Bantams Lose To The Bantams were trimmed by the Goderich Bantams 8 - 2 Tuesday night of last week in the arena here, when Ban- tam, Midget and Juvenile matches were played in connec- tion with Minor Hockey Week. Douglas, with an assist from Armstrong, popped in a goal for the local boys at the minute and 45 second mark. However, Kelly of Goderich, and Craw- ford assisted by Whiter, soon came through to make the score 2-1 for Goderich. Shortly after half time in the first frame, D. Smith and Crawford chalked up another one for the visitors and Doug- las assisted by Kerr added a goal for Wingham. B. Smith Jets Defeated By Bulldogs Last Wednesday saw the Wingham Johnson Dominion Jets travel to Kincardine to re- ceive a nine to six defeat by the Kincardine Bulldogs. Connell led the Bulldog at- tack scoring three times, fol- lowed closely by Davidson, who picked up two counters. Singles for the Bulldogs were credited to Shewfelt, Bell, Pettaplace and Lee. Recoskie headed up the Jets scoring with two counters while singles went to Bain, Stainton, B. Fryfogle and Irwin. At the end of the first frame, the Jets held a comfortable five to three lead. Only two goals were scored in the second per- iod one by each team. In the t'u period the Bulldogs came on s rong scoring five goals while Wingham suffered from several penalties. WINGHAM: Riehl, Bain, Recoskie, Irwin, Stainton, Ma - ho Fryfogle, Jardin, Lee, Skinn, Skinn, Moffat, Ritchie, INCARDINE: O'Brien, Bell, Connell, Finlayson, Lee, David- son, Miller, Shewfelt, Pollock, Turcott, Bulzgis, Zold, Ben- nett, Pettaplace, Courtney. Goderich and Gilbert closed off the per- iod, with the scoreboard read- ing 4-2 for Goderich. Prest, unassisted, placed the only goal in the second. Again in the third period the local boys were unable to score against last year's champ- ions in the "A" grouping, who are playing in the "B" category this season. Sowrby, Kelly and Crawford were each credit- ed with one goal, two of the assists coming from Crawford and one from Graham. PENALTIES SECOND PERIOD--Smith(G), Crawford (G). THIRD PERIOD—Jones (G), Kerr (W), Crawford (G), Kerr (W), Smith (G). WINGHAM: Goal, Taylor, Fisher, Kerr, Douglas, Arm- strong, Carter, Fleury, Ewing, Irvin, MacLean, Corrin, Carr, Hotson, Boyd, Conron,• Elliott, Forsyth.• GODERICH: Goal, Keen, P. Smith, Whiter, Jones, Jerry, Graham, Sowrby, Farrish, D. Smith, Kelly, Craige, B. Smith, Rush, Prest, Gilbert, Crawford, Creeden. Curlorama Won By J. R. Coultes The Massey - Ferguson Cur- lorama was held at the Wing - ham Curling Rink last Wednes- day. Winners of the nine o'clock draw were J. R. Coultes, 3 wins plus 24, first; Lorne Ed- wards, 2 wins plus 13, second; Ken McKague, 2 wins plus 7, third. Iiarold Thomas' rink was in first place in the eleven o'clock draw with 3 wins plus 14. Se- cond was Jim Adams, 2 wins plus 12 and third, Jack Shields, 2 wins plus 11. The fourth game to decide a winner for Wingham district was won by Jim Coultes and his rink, with a 7 to 6 victory over Harold Thomas, This rink will now advance to Hanover for the next round of play on Feb- ruary 6. chairman of the streams com- mittee, Frank Caskanette read the report on the stocking of streams in the area. The re- port was favorable, both in re- gards to stocking as well as the fish caught and entered in the various competitions. Ross Wormworth was appoint- ed chairman of the committee in charge of the bird sanctuary in Lower Wingham. The other members are Frank Caskanette, Don Hopper, Perrie Holmes, Harry McArthur, Hugh Hand, Brian Metcalfe and J. C. Mc- Intyre. Meeting nights for 1963 are to be the third Thursday of each month. The time to be 8:30 in the winter months and 9:00 in the summer, the time change to be governed by the schedule of trap shooting. A motion was made by Frank Caskanette, seconded by H. McArthur that a vote of thanks be accorded to. Mac Sewers for his idea in designing and issu- ing new meeting notices. Richard Wehmeyer and Terry Nethery moved that the names of mortgage holders be put in a hat and three names he drawn for part payment of outstanding loans. The names drawn were Frank Caskanette, Joe Clark and Bill Gow, each to be paid $50.00. The 1963 slate of officers is as follows: President, Mac Sewers; vice president, Richard Wehrneyer; secretary, Clarence Borho; treasurer, Harry Mc- Arthur; membership convener, Richard Wehmeyer; trustee for 3 years, Harvey Carrick; streams convener, Bill Gow; in charge of Junior Club, Albert Rintoul; in charge of trap shooting, J. C. McIntyre. Late Start, No Carnival On Tuesday evening, the following members of the Wing - ham Figure Skating Club execu- tive met at the home of Mrs. Burrell: President, John Strong, Roy Bennett, Mrs. Wild, Mrs. M. Willie, Mrs. John Stephens and Mrs. M. Rae. It was confirmed that only half fees should be accepted for this season. Parents of un- registered skaters should con- tact Mrs. Wild or Mrs. Burrell, at once, at their home, and sign the membership form. Miss Faye Love, of Walton, is the professional in charge on Thursdays and Harold Brooks on Saturdays. John Strong was asked to contact Mr. Brooks and express appreciation for his great help in the club. The executive approved the division of skaters into five groups: Groups 5,4 and 3, those who have never passed a test and should be on the ice from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. on Thurs- days. Each will have, atleast, half an hour of group lessons, in that order; Group 2, those who have passed at least one preliminary test; Group 1, those working on bronze and upwards. These will be "on patch" from 6:30 to 7:30 and then begin dancing lessons. Preliminary dances finish about 8:30. Group 1 will finish about 10:00 p.m. Parents should see that children are home shortly after classes finish. Ice super- visers cannot escort fifty home- ward. Parents are asked to co-op- erate with Mrs. Willie if asked to give supervision. On Saturdays, groups 5, 4 and 3, practice from noon to 2:00 p.m. and groups 2 and 1 from 5:00 to '7:00 p.m. Under the above timetable, no lunch- es should be needed. This will help keep the skaters on the ice and eliminate the muss in the dressing -rooms. Older groups will be able to study before going to the arena at 6:30, on Thursdays. Miss Love plans to present skaters with coloured ribbons as they acquire skating skills. The white ribbon signifies the skater can do a "bunny hop, balance on one foot, and walk on his toes." The order of the The Last Great Calvaryman Viscount Allenby, British army officer, is credited as be- ing the last of the great caval- ry -leaders in history. Allenby fought in Bechuanaland, Zulu- land, South Africa, France and Palestine, in the course of his long career. He rose to the rank of field marshal. The campaign in Palestine, which he liberated from the Turks in the first world war, climaxed his career. ribbons is white, green, red, blue, purple and gold. A pink ribbon shows skill in ten free skating routines. Because of the late start in skating, it was felt that it would not be in the best inter- ests of the skaters to begin on carnival numbers instead of learning basic figure skating, so there will be no carnival this March. If progress warrants it, there will be tests at the end of the season. Mr. Bennett was asked to investigate the music facilities at the arena. Mrs, Stephens will accept subscriptions to the skating magazine, The Inside Edge, published by West- ern Ontario Clubs and the Cen- tral Ontario official magazine. It was moved that Miss Agnes and Miss Mae William- son be asked to audit the trea- surer's books. Mrs. Burrell asked the club to secure an assistant to work out the balance of the season and assume full duties in June. Mrs. Wild and she were named as a committee to carry out this assignment. To date, there are 45 club members, and more have sig- nified their intention of joining. Rules to Prevent Hunting Madness This is a disease that over- comes outdoorsmen this time of the year. Believe it or not, the foolish acts are the ones that really cause accidents every hunting season. All these acci- dents can be prevented, states the National Safety League of Canada, if hunters will only follow these 10 s!mple rules: 1. Treat every gun as if it is loaded. 2. Never point a gun at any- thing you do not i'ttend to shoot. 3. Be sure of your target be- fore you shoot. 4. Before firing be sure bar- rel and action are c!ear and un- obstructed and that you are us- ing proper size ammunition. 5. Keep the safety on until you are ready to shoot and carry the gun so it will not point at anyone should you stumble. 6. Unload your gun before climbing a fence or tree or travelling in an auto or boat. 7. Never shoot a bullet at a flat surface or at water. 8. Don't mix gunpowder and alcohol. 9. Before carrying a gun in- to camp, unload it and leave action open. 10. Be sure guns kept at home are empty and that ammunition and weapons are stored in sep- arate places, away from child- ren. 'r. THE "SENATE" of the 21st Field Regi- ment lost out in the annual bonspiel at Listowel on Saturday, sponsored by the regiment, to a team of youngsters from the RCAF Station Clinton. The "Sen- ate" team, comprised of Bob Hether- ington and George Howson of Wingham, with E. D. Bell of Exeter and Maurice R. Oliver of List owel had three wins plus 15 but the Clinton boys tallied three wins and a plus of 20 to capture the trophy.—Listowel Banner photo. ```','''''°'' 1 Bantams Take Lucknow 11-0 o r, VV ONG N E W S BANTAMS Yanks 13; Angels 10; Twins 9; Mets 9; Giants 8; Cubs 5. High singles: Susan Foxton, 165; Billie Brown, 144. JUNIORS Jags 11; Chevies 11; T -Birds 10; M. G's. 8; Stingrays 7; Caddies 7. High singles: Brenda Wal- lace, 167; Donald Collar, 230. INTERMEDIATES Spades 21; Diamonds 19; Clubs 17; Hearts 12; Aces 7. High singles: Barbara Hall, 197; Robert Campbell, 265.. COMMERCIAL LEAGUE, It seems everyone is aware that we are entering our fourth quarter, and excitement is run- ning high. We have reached the stage in the game when every point counts. Welcome back Grace and Eric. Hope your trip out West was enjoy- able, even though you didn't encounter as much snow as we have had. Thanks go to two spares to- night, namely Helen Casemore and Elaine Colvin. Dorothy Templeman took the high single with 247 as well as the high triple with 579. Frank Burke has come into his own with a high single of 310 and high triple of 771. Keep up the good scoring, Frank. Team standings as follows: Wings, 84; Bruins, 83; Leafs, 80; Rangers, 75; Canadiens,66; Hawks, 63. LADIES' LEAGUE Team standings: Gay Lords, 41; Matinees, 39; Players, 37; Belvederes, 34; du Mauriers, 33; Sweet Caps, 32. Gwen MacLaurin had high single of 279. Hilda Parkinson had high triple of 652. LLOYD'S LEAGUE Ken Saxton took both men's high single and high triple with scores of 200 and 807. Carol Lambertus also took both the ladies' high single and high triple with 244 and 635. The highest team score was the Kings with 2647, Jokers 2608, Spades 2532, Diamonds 2505, Aces 2501, Queens2487, MEN'S TOWN LEAGUE League standing: Lees 87, CKNX 86, Burkes 59, Hydro47, Rockets 30, Mustangs 27. Lynn Finnigan took both high single with 293 and high triple with 782. Monday night was a disap- pointment for the Lucknow Ban- tams when they met the local boys at the Wingham arena. The score was 11-0. In the first period Ewing and Renwick each made the Luck - now net, unassisted. Douglas had two goals, with assists from Kerr and Boyd. Fisher on an assist from Cor- rin and Douglas from Kerr brought the score to 6-0 at the end of the second. Third frame counters were one for Douglas from Kerr, and two by Kerr from Douglas, Cor- rin assisted by Armstrong, and Miller got one single-handed. Fisher and Douglas of Wing - ham each had one penalty and R. Button had the only penalty for Lucknow. LUCKNOW: Taylor, Alton, R. Button, E. Taylor, Camp- bell, Nicholson, Ritchie, John- stone, McKinnon, Mullin, D. Button, O'Donnell, McKenzie, McDonagh. Full Entry for Hanna Trophy There was a full entry at the annual mixed bonspiel on Saturday for the Hanna Trophy. The winning rink was skipped by Alan MacKay, with a score of 3 wins plus 12. Bill Tiffin's rink won the nine o'clock draw with 3 wins plus 10. Dr. Granby of Preston was in second place and Lloyd Casemore of Wingham was third. The consolation prize went to Roy Ross and his rink from Walkerton. The MacKay entry in the eleven o'clock draw was fol- lowed by Jack Bowman's rink in second place; Harley Craw- ford, third and Murray Rae taking the consolation. WINGHAM: Taylor, Carr, Boyd, Douglas, Kerr, Carter, Ewing, Armstrong, Renwick, Fleury, MacLean, Corrin, Mil- ler, Irvin, Henderson, Jardine, Hotson, Fisher, Willie. CROWN THEATRE HARRISTON WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. Feb. 6, 7, 8 and 9 THE KING of KINGS' In Technicolor With Jeffery Hunter reverently portraying the King of Kings. Siobhan McKenna as the Virgin Mary. One Show each evening at 8.15 WED.-THURS. FEB. 13-14 TWO DAYS ONLY "THE HORIZONTAL LIEUTENANT" In Color Starring Jim Hutton and Paula Prentis. Another comedy hit from MGM Shows at '7.15 and 9.15 p.ni. FRI.-SAT. FEB. 15-16 TWO DAYS ONLY THE ALL -MAN "TARZEN GOES TO INDIA" In Technicolor "IT HAPPENED IN ATHENS" In Color Stars: Jayne Mansfield. A mad- cap marathon of Fun, Laughs Tarzan at 7.15, 10.15. Athens at 8.40 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 C=01:201=01=0==:=01:20===i0=01 Ellnteimediate Hockell p Wingham Arenao 11 I Wiarton vs. p Winghamo 11 °Kincardine vs. Wingham oo =JOIO- •OL1OIJJ Pe10=10/=0=0S=01:71 0 ==:=01=0 J FRIDAY FEB. 8TH MONDAY, FEB. llth