The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-12-12, Page 16LOCAL. FIGURE EATERS, --These are four of the five skaters who_ rtici tedf
last
weekendthe in Ontario Sectionalre
.,Wes►tefrtdQn ori Competition in London. They are April Moore of
Wingham, Carol Wheeler of B,ru els, Braine Moore of Wingham and Catherine Cardiff of
Brussels, Missi . is
n DannyGortafn of Hanover.
9 (Staff Photo)
,
r
YOU ARE
CORDIALLY INVITED
TO VISIT "CHRIS"
at
"GOOSE 1"
(Main Branch)
or
0SE-2"
(Texaco Station)
To test drive these guaranteed
pre -owned cars
1972 Chevrolet Impala
4 door hardtop, airconOion-
ing, tilt steering wheel.
Lic. #CWM 393
ONLY 2995
14:2 Plymouth Gran Sedan
Divided front seat.
#FHK 501.
ONLY 2895
1913 Oldsmobile Delta 8$ Royale
4 door, power doorlocks,
cruise control. Lic.#FKC 592.
ONLY s3295
191',1 Ponkic
4 door hardtop. Lic. #BBH078
ONLY 2295
1969 Chevrolet Impala
j 4 door, 6 cylinder, power
'steering, only 20,000 original
miles: Lic. #FHK /3$.
ONLY 9895
1970 Dodge Polars
4 door, high mileage.
Lic. #DHM 141.
NLY $995
SENIOR LADIES
W, Lockwood seems to have the
Christi Das spirit as she defeated
everyone to have high Single of
214 and high double of 363. Other
good doubles were recorded by V.
Schneider 306; L. Newman 314;
M. Robertson 330 and R. Merkley
332.
The Canaries are still in first
place. with 36 points and the little
Wrens have moved into second
with 26. The Flamingoshave 24;
Nightingales 18; Bluebirds 17 and
Robins 14.
W.41. 11, Mara. 12, f ri.'t3, Sat. 14
•Ono coiiplete skew daily at7 30p•
mafiosos Set,;14 i Sun.1516 - •
st 1:30.p.m.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•••••••••••e •N••
S 15, tilos. I L Toss. i
Sim
DAILY AT 7:00 sad 9:00 R.M. .
/—/
1=--1:111111
I 177r;
(SE CONNEit
‚.INCOLOR
PARK
GODERICH
3' THE ;Oi'ARi
PHONE 574 '8
AIR CONDITIONED
WED.. TNUR.. FRL. SAT, DEC. 11, 12. 13. 14
ONI SNOW ONLY - S 00 P.N.
MATINEE-SATU*DAT, DEC. 10 - 130 P.M.
THE WORLD'S GREATEST ATHLETE
PLUS
SNOW ALL EXPRESS
SUN.. MON TUES.-DEC. IS. 14. 17
nusa.
FUGITIVE KILLER
WED.. NUL. ERI.. SAT. -DK. 11 H. 20. 21
they sayinlou
i
should set Ns yowl
taco WNW IL
, Anyone.
CHARLES
NBRONSON
.MR, MA,IESTYKM
MiMM A,�M
.PLUS- ADULT INTSNTAINM,NT
year's aet1 O► l poet
Arab#truck •rly and
Jumped** a two,goal lead* the
fiat with geode by Lorry Weeds
aod John BensOnly 2$ *ecocide into the second
period imd, Arthoes Cal M me '
*Id mode it 9 to 9. An imiloSistOd
Owl • nt "Prod I n , followed
by Cad; 'MacDonald's second Psi
andArthur,had a S t° plead, limn
it happened! Yeas, At 9
Arthur's "Mr. Aggravation",,
Dave Draper, and Ironmsn
Murray, Black ted and when
the ' Bate stopped flying Draper
was fingered for _10 minutes with
Murray Black picidng up . a
minutes. This was the *park that
suit the Id,nmen's rockets into
full steam. Before Dave Draper
returned to the ice the Ironmen
had picket up single" :gosh by
ws5g
Graham
In abort t armee of 4N
Se score reed Oar two favor
s
Ste 2 k Arthur's far
lithe freemen the
movel.
` And „ thitY hit the lee the
tome traded goals with Jim
McGee, marksmen for the
ham, and Dave Densmore for
Arthur. Steve Ste. Marie's ulnas.
slated goal at 8:27 end the gap.
With 'less than 10 mi es to
the frogmen, in an all.out effett,
had the Arthur tong on the run
with three. quitic,quick goals. Quick
they were .within le than two
minutes — .ae sort of
tic-tac-toe
with marksmen'Grry Whee leer,
Carl Stanley and Gerry Wheeler.
The Ironmen had bounced back
from a 5 to 0 deficit to a 7 to 6
lead,
But the lead was short-lived as
Arthur's real opportunist, Waype
Rooney, evened the count at 15:17
with the final goal` of the game.
ool lea
IMP..i.iw For
bast lwalow jot iolt the
Man a1ONA Arthur. Akita* the
seers reed T le 7, anytime a team
can come *et of that.
arena whit a tie, it's as Brod as -a
win ... Doted Apolo and
back to earn a tie isJost whet
fronmen needed givett that
littler Well of con '
neededto improve their -road.
perfonnasee... Act McGee, uP
from 1t *dots, , .pb!yed with
poise endue up With a big poi
• . Once ami it. was Arthur's
little 'pepper , Dave Drawer,
who sabotaged Arthur's :sure win.
With a 10 minute penalty et the
wrong time » . - Gerry Wheeler
led' the Batt with two goals.
and one assist with Arthur's Cal
MacDonald fid in most of
his team's scoring, having two
goals and four assts . Dy the
way, these two teams tangle at
the local arenaon Boxing Day at
2:00, so keep that date in mind~for
there's bound to be action and .ex-
citement from, start to' finish.
Green Machine demolished
What was billed as a ,close
game turned out to be a one-sided, .
affair as the Ironmen, put forth
their best aril -out effort of the
year, downing the Fergus team 9
to 1 in Junior D action on Sunday
evening in the Wingham arena,
-The Ironmen started on the fly. y
and only some good goaltending
by Fergus goalie Tom Anderson
kept them off the score sheet until"
the seven -minute mark v Then
Murray McKague threaded
perfect shot rom the
point :irtttr`
the lower lecorner of the net.
Three minutes later the Tees-,
Tees -
water Connection combined with
Brian Yahbee getting the goal:
and Bob Johnston' drawing the
assist. In less than two minutes, it
was 3 to 0 on a goal\ by Carle
Stanley and it was a beauty. With
both teams playing a ran short,
Rick Foxton handed the puck to
Carl behind the Ironmen net and
with a burst of speed Carl zoomed
into the Fergus zone and one
stride over the blue line blasted
the puck like a rocket into the net.
Steve St. Marie made it to 0 on a
powerplay goal at .the 15 -minute
mark and 13 seconds:,,, later
hard-working Murray Black
rounded out the scoring for the
period.
t ams, skating; miles and getting
lots of ice time and Graham'
Hamilton was withouta doubt the
best defenceman on' the ice, play-
ing the blue line with finesse su-
preme and from .time to time
literally roaringinto the o i -
u tion end ... Moe than one .s�-
tator was, heard to groan and
shudder with fear at the sight of
the officials sent in for this game.
They certainly didn't .win the
hearts' of either coach. Their
missed calls, lack of uniformity
in penalty calls had everyone
thoroughly confused and on two
instances players who felt' they
had received penalties were
r, rather embarrassed when they
found the referee had fingered an
innocent member of the ,opposi-
tion ... Perhaps the best wale of.
the night came from' "a fan at
referee Frank Pierce had missed
an obvious offside and he heard
ringing through his ears the ex-
clamation: ``Why don't you take
the hair out of your eyes so you
can see the game!"
This Sunday night the Ironmen
play the Port Elgin Bears. The
last encounter between these two
teams in Port Elgin ended' in a 5,
all draw = so it should be a good
one.
The second period saw the Iron-
men
ron
men continue to dominate the
play and with the- Fergus Green
Machine weakened by numerous
penalties, the Ironmen got goals
from Steve Ste. Marie, Murray
Black, Steve Caslick and' Carl
Stanley to coast into a•9 to 0 lead.
The third period saw the Iron-
men continually forced to play
man short as there was a steady'
parade to , the penalty box.
However, superb effort and
strong skating by the Ironmen
penalty4dlling crew kept the
Fergus effort at bay. With 'less
than a minute left in the game
and the Ironrnen playing twb
short -- it happened. Yes, with
only 35 seconds• left in the game
Fergus' Steve Harper scored to
steal away the shut -out from
Ironmen goalie Benny Blackwell.
WHISTLE STOPS --- The Iron -
men werecertainly flying in this
-,one . Qnn the heels of a come -
from -behind tie"in Arthur Friday
;night it was quite evident that
_ Coach George Skinn had the
adrenalin flowing at full steam in
this one ... Carl Stanley, Murray
,,Black and Steve Ste. Marie each
_picked .up two goals in this win.
I Mw ray Blackplayed whale of a
-u11?• Y � •'PA f,4[10pull
Ironmen tromwvitPorttri
J
In , thee" only Tuesday game
scheduled the Ironmen came
back from Port with a 6 -all' tie.
Before the Ironmen got their
skating Teags they were down two
as Port Elgin got solo efforts by
Dave Carr at 1:30 and Rick Greig
at 2:14. Wingham .hit the score
sheet as.Phil Paquette dented the
twine at 5:57 with assists going to
Murray McKague and Carl Stan-
ley, Port Elgin's power play
clicked at 10:41 to take a 3 to 1
lead.
Four minutes later it was the
Ironmen's power play in action
and Gerry Wheeler took a lead
pass from John Henderson to put
the Ironmen back in contention.
The Ironmen power play evened
the count at 14:36 on Murray
Black's goal. Then in the dying
minutes another .power play goal
by Gerry Wheeler sent the Iron -
men into the second period with a
4 to 3 lid.
The second period was filled
with close checking and only one
goal, that coming, from the stick
of Ironmen Greg Hamilton at 8:59
Hoick
arena
schedule
Thursday, Dec. 12, 4:30-9 p.m.,
open; 9-11:30 p.m., Old Timers'
Game.
Friday, Dec. 13, 5-6 p.m., West
PeeWee practice; 6-7:30 p.m.,
West Howick Squirts vs Kurtz-
ville; 7:30-9 p.m., West senior
girls practice; 9-11:30 p.m., open.
Saturday, Dec. 14, 9 a.m.-12
p.m., figure skating; 12-1 p.m.,
East Bantam practice; 1-2:30
p.m., East Tykes vs West Tykes;
2:30-4 p.m., open; 4-5 p.m., Mid-
get practice; 5-6 p.m., Juvenile
practice; 6-7 p.m., Junior girls'
practice; 7-8 p.m., open; 8-10
p.m., public skating.
Sunday, Dec. 15, 2-4 p.m., pub-
lic -skating; 4-7 p.m., open; 7-8
p.m:, West Squirt practice; 8-10
p.m., open.
Monday, Dec. 16, curling.
Tuesday, Dec. i7, 5-6 p.m.,
East Squirt practice; 6-7:30 p.m.,
open; 7:30-9 p.m., West Bantam
vs Belgrave; 9.11:30 p.m., Mid-
gets vs Milverton.
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 1-3 p.m.,
skating, mothers and tots; 4:30-6
p.m., East and West Tyke prac-
tice; 6:30-7:30 p.m., West Ban-
tam practice; 7:30-9 p.m., West
PeeWee vs East PeeWee; 9-11:30
p.m., open.
• mot of llama
AtilitillillitiNILICLIALLALIA Ns !JILL_ .„111.1.1„, ,
and once again it was a power
play goal.
Port Elgin got a quick one in
the third as Brad Moffat scored
at the 32 second mark. The
Ironmen got that one back' on
Murray Black's goal at 3:03.
Then it was penalties which hurt
the Ironmen as the Port Elgin
boys came through with two
power play goals to even the
count and end the game in a
six -all tie.
WHISTLE STOPS—What a
game! No less than 7 of the '12
goals were power play goals.
Yes, the power plays were pro-
ducing at the expense of the
penalty -killing crews . . . Bob
McKinnon with a goal and two
assists looked good. for Port
Elgin, while Gerry Wheeler and
Murray Black with two goals
each led the Ironmen attack .. .
Coach George Skinn had some
shuffling to do on his lines with at
least one member of each regular
line missing. Midget Jim McGee
was paired with John Henderson
BRIDGE RESULTS
The Howell system was used.
First, Farish Moffat and Joe
Martin;' second, Mrs. F. A. Park-
er and Miss Yvonne McPherson;
third, Reg DuVal and Art Wilson;
Mrs. George Fisher and Mrs. D.
B. Porter.
Belmore sports
Monday, in hockey, the Bel -
more Squirts tied 3-3 with West
Howick. Scoring for Belmore
were Robbie Helfenstein, Jeff
Harper and Allan Kieffer.
Tuesday the PeeWees defeated
East Howick by a score of 9-3.
Scoring the Belmore goals were
Jeff Mulvey ' with three, Don
,Busby with two and Andy Ren-
wick, Larry O'Malley, David
Eadie and Greg Daily with one
each. •
Wednesday the Midgets lost to
Kurtzviile 5-4.
Friday the PeeWees had a 9-2
victory over West Howick. Greg
Dally, David Eadie and Don
Busby had two Belmore goals
each while Jeff Mulvey, Doug
Busby and Murray Mawhinney
each had one.
Saturday the Squirts won over
Brussels by a score of 5-0. Bel -
more goal scorers were Danny
Kennedy with three, and Keith
Rutherford and Allan Kieffer
with one each. Paul O'Malley was
in goal for the shutout.
and Gerry Wheeler; Murray
Black was inserted between Phil
Paquette and Carl Stanley and
Keith Raymond played the wing
with Brian Yahbee and Steve
Caslick. It gave the Ironmen a
balanced attack and proved the
depth of the Ironmen's strength
lies not in the ability of a few, but
rather in a well-balanced roster:
Howick teams
meet opponents
in hockey play.
FORDWICH — The Howick
Arena was bustling with activity
last week as the township teams
were there to fight for a place in
the sun. In Tyke action, Howick
East defeated Belgrave 4-1 and
Belmore shut out Howick West 5-
0.
In another shutout, this time in
Squirt play, Howick East lads put
Belgrave boys in their place to
the tune of 3-0. Howick West
Squirts defeated Brussels 5-1.
The Belmore PeeWees
trounced the Howick East boys 9-
3 and Belgrave won 5-1 over
Howick West. In an exciting 3-21
contest, Howick West Bantams -
defeated Howick East boys but in
turn, were trounced 7-1 by Kurtz-
ville.
Other action resulted in the
following scores: Midget, Ripley
7 and Howick 1; Juvenile, Dray-
ton 6, Howick 5; Intermediate,
Iowick 6, Belgrave 4.
In an exhibition game, the
team from Midwestern Hospital
defeated Fordwich 10-3.
Bluevale
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Thornton
entertained about 23 guests on
Saturday evening to honor
Robert Galley on his 88th birth-
day. Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Leeson and family of
Stittsville, Mr. an Mrs. Jim
Golley, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Golley and --f ly, Clarence
Golley and Sheila McPherson,
Mrs. Muriel MacLean, Mr. and
Mrs. Alvin Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Thronton and Jean Robert -
Miss Connie Mann and Bill
Taws spent the weekend with
Mrs. Ross Mann.
SILVER MEDALISTS—Carol Wheeler and Blaine ore
finished second In .pre -novice Pairs skating at the recent
Western Ontario Sectional Competition in .pair
i� � �
was invited to travel. -to the Ontario' Winter GaMits Nater thili
month,in Thunder Bay.
In Junior Bantam, Joanne high double,.
Henry rolled 'the high single and Other boys over 175 were ,JaY
high double for girls with a 154 MacLaurin 177; Ja mieSmlh 134;'
and 274 • respectively. Kevin and Ricky MacLennan 240..
Smith duplicated the event for Nancy King bowled; a 177,
the boys with a 165 single and a Leadingthe`i 'the.
� !.
283 double. �
Outs with 37 'points..' heytold 1t
In games over 125, adalne five 'point bulge over second
Adams was the only other girt to place, the ,'Whops. The, 'Bata are 14
attain it, For the boys, Michael . one 'behind than tollOWed bythe
Pletch 136; Greg Laidlaw 132; Untouchables with27, the Brutes
Randy Bain 132; Stephen Gaunt ' with 24 and the Strikers::with , d5..
132;Terry Hoy 136; . Rance Wink •
132; and Tim Stainton 154,
The Peanuts . continue to lead '
with 38 points. The Chips have 31, +Q C'
Cheezies 30, Popsicles 25, Pop-
corns 23, and the Toffees have 18.1A�L onor
points. Several ,local ' figure , skaters
Steven Anger had the high participated: 'in :the, four-day
single and high double for the Western Ontario Skating
Bantam boys. He :bawled ra 245 Al Competition in London': last
iwgl o da a 3 : e J a'; week sail, °tyro skated try,
Henderson' had the high' sil` er•: �Te �'' ',7 -'
girls' v ,medat`. .
single,'; a 178. Kerry Thompson Carol Wheeler and' Blaine »:
bowled the high double, a 327. Moore earned , second place
Included in her total was a 164 honors in.. rle pr oyicce, • ` irs
single. _ competition; Carol and Blaine
Other boys over 150 were Brad were selected to participate
Gerrie, 209; Greg,Storey 169; and the. Ontario Winter Games in
Wayne Thompson 175. Thunder Bay Dec. 27 to Dec. 30.
The Sabres lead the league with The top three competitors is the
36 points followed closely behind Thunder Bay games travel .:toy
by the Braves with 33 points. Lethbridge, Alberta for the'
They are trailed by the Blues Canadian Winter iGames 1n
with 30, the Flyers with 28, the February.
Islanders with 24 and the Seals Other local skaters participat-
with 17 points. ing were April, Moore aid Danny
In the Junior . league, Steven Gordon, who finished ninth in
Burke rolled the high single and pre -novice dance,, and Catherine ' .
high double for the boys with a Cardiff, who finished first in coin-
291 and 457 respectively. Rhonda pulsory figures and eleventh
Lee bowled a 208 for the girls high overall after the free skating seg=
single. Shari Smith bowled the ment in her' division.
vginsmastamialersicosistskastsissistosassintitoziraifilidionassissitox
GIFTS TG STRUM—GIFTS Ta DRUM...
1
1
STUDENT GUITAR OUTFIT
INCLUDES
Guitar, Leatherette Case, instruction' Book,
and Picks
Complete Unit 37.7j
UKULELES
instruction Book, and Felt Picks
Complete Unit $8.95
ORCANA CHORD ORGANS
(Any Model)
Price includes Bench, Plus Four Beginner's
Music Books
$79.95-1329.95
Prices Range From
stii%t„‹.•-./e.
MUSIC CENTR
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, SUPPLIES AND REPAIR
For the Professional and Amateur
sieutsvisratiowswatitsemat