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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1963-02-14, Page 31MainNIMMINIIMINIMMONE WINGHAM KINSMEN CLUB ALL WINTER FOOTWEAR AT REDUCED PRICES PACK A CUBS Ten boys took part in the Grand Howl at last week's meeting. After dues and at- Don't Miss the BIG 25th ANNIVERSARY OF THE FA SH FEB. 27 to MAR. OPEN DAILY 10:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. CLOSES SAT. 4:30 p.m. ADMISSION: 50$ Children with adults admitted FREE ®Afternoon and Evening Programs The latest in farm machinery and equipment Sponsored by Western FAIR ASSOCIATION -Vin co-operation with DDLESEX SOIL & CROP IMPROVEMENT Association Western Fair Grounds LONDON tendance were recorded Ken Acheson gave the Cubs drill routines. Games were played and an obstacle race was held. Brian Deyell passed his plant growing test in First Star work. PACK B CUBS Dues and health inspection followed the Grand Howl when Pack B met at the Scout House on Thursday. There were 32 present. British Bulldog and other games were played and then the boys worked on their dens. A story was read in regard to a Cub's duty, according to the Cub Promise. 1ST WINGHAM TROOP The flag break was made by Bryan Forsyth last Wednesday night, followed by the collec- tion of dues and inspection. The Cougars and Wolves won against the Buffalo and Stag patrols in a game of cap- ture the flag. Each Scout was personally interviewed by Scouter Bob Mc- Intyre. o-Intyre. In the meantime the other boys were given map reading and compass work by T.L. Dave Wenger. The in- struction included symbols, grid references, finding bear- ings and taking degree readings from topographical maps. Each patrol was then given a map for practice. The rooms were inspected. Out of a possible five points, Ron Hitching's Stags had 4, Steve Gorrie's Buffaloes 4, Bryan Forsyth's Wolves 4 and George Jardine's Cougars, 3. It is hoped that another troop will be guests at next week's meeting, and a week later the 1st Wingham Troop will hold an open meeting for parents, We still have room for afew more boys to fill out the troop. Boys who are interested, and 12 years of age or over, should contact Scoutmaster McIntyre. Bald eagles are so named be- cause of the effect of the white feathers on their heads. CALLAN SHOES TOUR FAMILY SHOE STORE WING;HAM, QNTARIO PHONE 357-1840 a 3 Bantam Victory Win Best of 3 series The Wingham Bantams carne through with a splendid victory on Monday night when they defeated Clinton 6-3 at the local arena, This makes them winners of the group, taking a best of three series. Ewing scored the only goal in the first period, on an assist from Armstrong. Wingham collected two more in the second and Clinton had one. Ewing and Douglas planted the goals and assists were by Renwick on one count- er and Armstrong helping with both. The third pe iod was filled with action. C :rter notched one alone and received help from Kerr and Douglas on a second. Douglas caught a pass from Kerr and flipped it into the net, Kerr took one on his own and Ewing assisted by Renwick scored the final count- er, Both Clinton goals were by Varga, with Fleet and Pickett on the assists, There were no penalties in the game, until 19:35 in the final frame, when Kerr of Wingham and Elliott of Clinton each got 2 minutes for high sticking. WINGHAM—Taylor, Carr, Boyd, Douglas, Kerr, Carter, Hotson, Fisher, Armst.. rg, Ewing, Renwick, Mille., Cor- xin, Irvine, Fleury. Spare goalie, Forsyth. Tied in Second At Series End GORRIE--Clifford defeated Gorrie 12-6 Friday night in the final game of the Inter -County Intermediate D hockey sched- ule. The game was played in Belmore. Art Gibson sparked the winners with five goals while Claude Fields scored four times. John Kruspe, with two and Ron Cook were the other Clifford marksmen. Alex. Strong collected three goals for Gorrie with Pete Doig scoring twice and Wayne King once. The loss left Gorrie tied in second place with Kurtzville. The playoffs will be next. Win in Fergus A rink from the Wingham Curling Club went to the Fer- gus bonspiel on Friday and captured first prize. Skip was Mrs. Peter Cutter, vice, Mrs. Jack Gorrie, second, Mrs. H. H. Hotson and lead, Mrs. Jack Goodall. SOUTHERN RHODESIA A white Scout from this Central Africon country is quickly spotted of a World Jamboree by his distinctive light and dark striped hatband made from the skin of the Zebra. The rest of his uniform is the same as that of an English Scout but made in light khaki drill with the shorts cut wider and shorter. SOUTHERN RHODESIA HAS 11,641 SCOUTS UNIFORMS OF THE WORLD The illustrations and information are from the British Scouts' Patrol .Book No. 18, "Uniforms and Badges of the World", compiled by Edward G. W. Wood and illustrated by Kenneth Brooks. They are reproduced by permission of The Boy Scouts Association of the United Kingdom. /r,'�,�tllllllllllll 11IIIIR SiJPEM RADEl NSAL DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS OPPORTUNITY LIMITED TIME ONLY XXA ANY OLD POTS, PANS OR BAKEWARE IS WORTH MONEY TO YOU DURING THIS SPECTACULAR A COMPLETE VARIETY OF QUALITY SUPREME UTENSILS TO CHOOSE FROM, INCLUDING POPULAR COOK AND BAKEWARE UTENSILS PRICES FROM 49$ TO $5.73 AVAILABLE AT YOUR SUPREME COOKWARE CENTRE ALEXANDER'S HARDWARE Full Entry in Gorrie Bonspiel Sixteen rinks were entered in the Gorrie bonspiel which was run off last Wednesday at the Wingham club, with en- tries from Belgrave, Wroxeter, Gorrie, Wingham, Fordwich, Palmerston, Listowel and Bel - more competing for the prizes. Top honours for the day, went to the winners of the 11:00 o'clock draw, with a count of three wins plus eleven, The rink was skipped by Jack Turvitt with Jack Shiell vicing Murray Shiell, playing second and Elmer Bruce lead. Placing second in the late draw was Ron Adams with two and 10. Third was won by Jim Coulter with two and 5. Earl King won the consolation. Four brothers, curling to- gether for the first time, won the top spot in the first draw with three wins plus 8. The Belgrave rink was skipped by Mason Robinson, assisted by his brothers Ross, vice, Charles, second and Roy, who curled for the first time in his life, as lead , Second place went to 011y Johnston of Listowel with two and 12 and third to Jack Reid of Palmerston with two and eight. Consolation prizes were taken home by the Ben Johnston rink of Gorrie. Wingham Advance -Times, Thursday, Feb, 21, 1993 -- Page 15 PLAY BINGO AT HOME! Get your Home Bingo cord from any Kinsman or your favorite store and try for $1O0 prize. London Rink Wins Hiram Walker Cup A London rink, skipped by Mel Deacon, won the first draw in the annual Hiram Walker bonspiel held at the Wingham Curling Club last Saturday, and with a score of three plus of 13 and also took the trophy. Barry Parsons had the vice - skip's chores with Lorne Wilson in second spot and John Craig playing lead. Rinks were on deck from Fergus, Listowel, Teeswater, Ingersol, Toronto, Wroxeter, Goderich, Paisley and Wing- ham as well as three entries from London. Jack Bowman of Wingham was in second place in the early draw with two and 14. Third spot went to Harley Crates ford's Wingham crew with two and 8. Carl Schaefer of Tees - water won the consolation. In the late draw Gordon MacKay's foursome won top honours with a score of three and 12. In second place was an Ingersol rink skipped by Fred Kimberly with two and '7 and an aggregate of 24. He was tailed right to the wire by Don Gurney of Wingham, who also had a two and 7 count but lost out with an aggregate of 23. Walter Coates of Paisley and his rink took home con- solation prizes. �el�e�ap 's Teamwork Outsmarts the Jets The Wingham Jets met with tough opposition on Wednesday of last week when they were fleeced by the Kincardine Bull- dogs 9-2. Miller passed to Pollock at centre, with Clarke taking the play into the Wingham end. Bell was uncovered in front of the net and on a quick pass from Clarke placed the first goal at 10:40. Bain tied the game shortly after, but the tie was soon Fordwich Teams Play Hockey FORDWICH—The Bluevale and Fordwich Pee Wees played this week in Wroxeter with the Fordwich team winning 6-3. The Midgets met Kurtzville and this group lost by a 7-5 score. The Kurtzville Interme- diates lost to the Fordwich team by a narrow margin, the final count being 7-6. BRIDGE CLUB North and South: First, W. Laidlaw, W. French; second, H. Crawford, Mrs, G. Godkin; third, Mrs. H. Campbell, Mrs. A. Wilson. East and West: First Mrs. C. Hodgins, Mrs. H. Crawford; second, J. Martin, Mrs. D. Nasmith; third, Mr. D. Arcott, Mr. E. Carter. S.S. 9 Euchre WHITECHURCH--Miss Bar- bara Brinley, teacher at S.S. No. 9 East Wawanosh and her pupils sponsored the euchre on Friday night in the school and sixteen tables were in play. Mrs. Lawrence Taylor and Lloyd Montgomery held high points, and Mrs. Phillip Daw- son and Henry Pattison held low points. Little Jane Shiell received the special Valentine prize. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Robert- son and Mr, and Mrs. Henry Pattison will sponsor the next euchre in two weeks, broken by Pollock, who.shot the puck through Riehl's legs. Then Bell scored a third goal for the Bulldogs at 13:30. Riehl made several nice saves during the period when Kin- cardine players sent in shots that looked like positive goals. Miller, on a pass from Pol- lock, notched another at 4:50 in the second. Connell scored the Bulldog's fourth counter and Miller made it 5-1. Then, on the final goal of the period, the Kincardine boys displayed excellent teamwork in passing. The puck was car- ried by Zold, Connell, Court- ney and Davidson. Barry Fryfogle opened scor- ing in the third frame. Zold made a spectacular play, tak- ing the puck from centre and right through the defence. The final score by Bell was the result of Connell, Davidson and Bell confusing their op ponents with well -times pass- ing inside the blueline. Games Are Tied In Play-offs, 1 ,1 Last Wednesday night the Clinton Midgets visited Wing- ham for the second game in the play-off series with the Local boys. Wingham won 8-4 which ties the series 1-1. Collecting goals for Wing - ham were Stan Bismayer 2, Fraser Strong 2, Jon Bateson 1, Martin Garniss 1, Keith Scott 1, and Bill Yemen 1, George Schuff knocked in three for Clinton and Barry Glazier got the fourth goal. 1 LIFETL'MIE SECURITY A Canada Life special con- tract providing Life Insur- ance and Pension Option all in one policy available from age 0 to age 55 Consult — Frank C. Hopper •— REPRESENTATIVE — Canada Life WINGHAM, ONT. PHONE 357-2452 rEER:•:G 'OUND j'L" _' . ROAD WANDER? Tr TIRED OF S( 'FIRED AKI %'Q'1 RIDES? 2h YOUR CAR "Wears Out" ALINEMENT 3 Times FASTER than a Muffler! Every bump you hit knocks.out wheel alinementahttle more!That'swhyaline- ment "wears out" 3 times faster than mufflers. Prevent costly wear. don't gamble with unsafe steering ... have wheels accurately checked every 5,000 miles by the shop with `•,EUS E Fd V 8 CE at the `Happy Bent" Signe t,UUR EXPERT Wheel Safety Chek SPOTS :TROUBLE ON THE .00IJBLE, KEN'S Alignment Service Dial 357.1230 - Diagonal Rd. WINGHAM WSIIINIMISSIMMINVONNIW B 3 4 6 7 9 10 14 HOME BINGO $100 Prize To=L CHECK YOUR CARD WITH THE NUMBERS BELOW: I N 18 21 22 27 28 29 30 32 33 34 36 37 39 40 41 42 45 48 49 50 54 60 O CARDS AVAILABLE FOR, $1.00 EACH front any member of the Kinsmen Club or from the following places of busi- ness: Burke Electric, Walk- er's Honte Furnishings, Stain - ton's Hardware, R. A. Currie & Sons Furniture, Reming- toat's IGA, Red Front Gro- cery, Hanna's Store. Belgrave, Willis Store, Whiteehurch, Moffat's Store, Bluevale, Ed- gar's Stora, Wroxeter. 61 63 64 65 73 74 75 Numbers called this week were: B9, G54, N39, N33, 129, 063, N42, 049, 061, N41, 065, G60. 12 Numbers drawn this week by Mayor R. S. Hetherington