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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1954-05-06, Page 6
� �7!71''^k)i'L:t4.y 01 TJ=^C�Ml$"��� 5»e0efnit--}.�4h•.' W ?1:0' P•..,kY�.�rAL%Ll�r'1��::.li7f'_;1c:1!d't1h,��if a� !:,kl}•ly'::j.1:.,. Y 1n-'W'til1, p �Y 1 -• t fy i` y. ''Y��"•�'F-yr+bgNWxp�"fFp�p, +PA�g KA` a 0th, 19W STATE VACUUM STORES LTD., 758 Dundas Street East, LONDON, ONTARIO. Address Phone "Observer" Here it is creeping on into May, and the hockey season int over yet. This season has been only a fair one for intermediate Hockey as ,far as Goderich has been con. cerned. But what of next season? Are the powers -that -be in local hockey-,, dom going to decide now what the hockey program for next whiter will be or are they going to do like they did last season and wait until October to start scurrying around the countryside trying to gather up a few players for a team? Rumor has it that .a .number of people in Goderich would like to see .a good -junior hockey- -aggrega- tion formed. But that's where the rumor seems to end. No one seems to be doing any planning for next winter. Maybe there's some merit in having a junior team here. Seaforth seems to be doing fairly well. Wingham didn't fare too badly this year. And both these centres are smaller than Goderich. But for the sake of better games next winter, here's hoping' some- body in charge of the hockey set -tip gets on the ball pretty soon. The time to start building .a team: Is now, not when the snow starts, to fly next winter. Goderich . Sem,,is• Poutiaes captur- ors Hoffarth was waved" off iii the ed the first gaiine of the. WOAA Grand Champion hip series ,here Tuesday night, !mocking off the St. Clements Threshers 7-8 in over- time. Goderich was three goals behind with three-quarters ,of the third period gone when tWQ goals by Williams and one by Einnis .tied up the game at 4-4 forcing the Over- time sess,o'n. The Threshers, "D''' group. -win- ners in the WOAA this year, prov- Now the fastball season -Is ✓sold- , ed to be no easy mark for 'the ly approaching. We see- where th� Pontiacs. Port Elgin Lakesides. have signet St. Clements has been on a win- young Tommy„ Wilson, sharp in. Hing streak in the last feW games. fielder with Kincardine last year. The Threshers' 'won the Grand Tommy went up with' the Barrie Championship semifinal series by Flyers in the OHA Junior "A" knocking out Lucan Irish ,6-4 in the ranks toward the end of the hockey final game of a best-of-fve . series season and did quite well. The on Monday night at Waterloo. . Ports have also signed Hughie Hall, Lucan had a 2-0 stranglehold in the acrobatic colored 'boy from the series a couple of ,weeks ago. Detroit to do the pitching chores. But the final three games told the Hall wore the Port Elginuniform tale, with the Threshers fighting two years ago. Wilson is also a back hard for three straight wins: pitcher, by the way, so he'll be able The loss was a blow to the Lucan to give'Hughie some relief. Before squad. The Irish had won the signing Hall, the Lakesides appar- WOAA "C" Championship. and the ently tried to interest Keith OHA "C" championship (first ever Freeman 'and his kid r brother, awarded). Maurice, both with Meaford The Threshers took a 2-0 lead in Knights last year, - in Chang- the first period on goals .by Quehl ing uniforms. Keith, was to and T. Meyer. Goderich's first do the pitching and Maurice would goal was scored b? 'MacDon- patrol the infield. Markdale, how- ald early in the second frame, but ever, had the inside track. Keith St Clements scored again a few will pitch for Markdale in the minutes later to make the score Owen Sound City League and read 3-1. Maurice will either catch, play in- field or be an outfielder -probably all three 'before the season ends. Lucknow Legionnaires definitely will not be in the WOAA fastball league this year, according to re- ports. Charlie Cotton, the colored pitcher who did the mound chores for them last year, is slated to come to Goderich. The Lucknow Sentinel says backers of the Leg- iohnaires lost $1,000 last year. PRICED FOR SPECIAL SELLING SAVE $9.85 an these glamour -styled Sure Visors. This handsome accessory adds driving comfort and vision safety to oil -weather driving : . with complete freedom from sun and road glare --plus extra visibility in sleet or heavy rain. These Exterior Car Visors are finished in pearly grey hommeroid baked enamel, also available with "prime coat" -ready for paint to color match any car. Polished stainless 'steel trim., Easily installed on. most 1940-53 cars with divided windshields (for cars with 1 -piece , windshield, add $1.75 for special adapter bracket). Special value • Worth $19.50 Y • I ARMOR'PtAtE. ► j r Sruro•,c CLEANER FURSl1 Oil Tanned Chamois Moto -Master Brake,Fluid 20 -oz. .89 Exactly same formeita as used in your car originally. Mixes with all standard brands. Sig size -20" x 15". Mode of smaller pieces carefidly sewn together. Stand up and pump -use - your weight instead of your muscles. Compact and effi- cient. Armor -Coat Cleaner -Polish 10 -oz. .54 Worth 98c. No washing - no rubbing- Contains Sili- cone (with Forsil) - pro- tect up to 6 months. WHITESIDE TIRE CLEANER spray he dirt,away' WINO ry Whitewall 50,000 Mile Fuel Pumps Tire Cleaner Brand new, fairy tesf'd-_'. save up to ,,50%- For ,Ford and Chevrolet. Exchange Price - - . • 2.65 to 2.98 dlioSt others 3.25 - Auto Door Visors Pair 4.39 Spray on - wipe off, no Allows you to keep win - hard rubbing. Leaves tire dews open in bad weath- sparkling white. Cleans 50 er. Fit most popular cors: tiros, Gleaming stainless steel. Baby Bottle Warmer 4;98 -- Insulated - Keeps cold, Plug into cigar lighter - heats bottle in 10 min- utes. Hard Lustre Spray Wax Moto -Master Wonder Wash �0-oz..89 *lye up to ensures tial rhgcl .. baarbtfw. aeti fie, ist *'�fer; A testo- `•w"r�rdir Product. ' ' Was 1.75 Pore cornauba wpls,,,i pquld form in 12 -oz. creosol spray c'on. Just spray cer-wipe off. Cuts car wash titre, 'in half; self -drying - no :hornets needed. Dries without ° stregks. Hanger chain extends tight across car; install without --tools--to rain gutters. "How silly can an athletic or- ganization get when it goes out after money as represented in gate `cuts'?" This is the question posed last week in the Meaford Express. The Meaford paper is kicking' again., about the intermediate hockey set- up this year., The WOAA grand championship series, it claims, ' is as "phoney as an $11 bill." The main beef is about the fact that the grand championship series was ar- ranged by the WOAA to be played - between Goderich • and Hanover. M f d h ea or Knig ts, of -course, won the Intermediate "B" group' honors, the "B" round robin and one of the "A" round robins without los ing a game, but won't be in the runningfor the grand champion- ship of "the organization they dom- inated all winter," the paper says. "In the - screwy WOAA" season Charlie Macdonald and his Knights managed to win 34 games and tie two ... as well as provide the WOAA treasury with more -money than any other club, without. -;win= ning anything.'•' But the part that - had us confused was the paper's claim that the Knights had "elimin-• ated" Goderich. Here's what_ _the, story says: "It is true Tory Gregg tried to add to his -association's treasury by, ordering . Medford ;- to, play Hanover, a team it had Whip- ped four times, for the "B" champ- ionship, and then oppose Goderich, another club it hadre p viously eliminated, for the grand champ- ionship." Yes, Meaford defeated Goderich 7-6 and 8-7 in the two" round robin -gimes', but then Mea - ford dropped out to go into OHA Intermediate "B" playdowns. Nevertheless, we can certainly see Meaford's reason for claiming that the WOAA title race is "phoney" and that it's been a "screwy WOAA season." ,Recently we read • an article in a national magazine in which the writer attempted'to find a reason why hockey seemed to be on the down_ grade. It was claimed 'that youngsters just didn't get ,any- where in the hockey world unless they were on an NHL "string" by the time they reached•midget or juvenile ranks.,And the theory was advanced thathere's too much concentration on speed, ganging attacks and bumping. What the writer suggested was that it might be a good idea to get back to a good, old-fashioned game of "shin- ny," aril aud.get away from concentrat- ✓rig only on the six men on the • ice. - An item from the Chatham Daily News also came to our attention. Recently in that city the Chatham Minor Hockey Association execu- tive decided that all juvenile and midget hockey 'players who wish •to play hockey in the association next year must pay for the privilege: We quote from • the account in the paper: "It was felt that Chatha.iu.• boys are handed too much and that -they do too little toward earning their playing time and privileges. - . Only in Chatham' are `the boys 'so" lucky." In centres •such as Sarnia, the story points out, all- boys playing minor hockey pay 19 cents a da and supply“heir their own sticks an tape as well \as shin pads, should - pads and tape. In Chatham,- the plan is to assess juveniles $2 at the start of the season and.the midgets $L It Was felt that the .bantanls and pee wees, since they were not of ,,age to get out and work for the money, should be let go without being assessed and . given a book of five season deices to sell instead., We Wonder whether Goderic�,h youngsters rea4'lite bow meth is "handed" to them by the Lio S Club in the minor hockey progra And are they appreciative? Then the visitgrs added another midway through the final frame with Schnarr blinking the light. It was five minutes after that goal that the Goderich team finally started to show the power that won them the Intermediate "A" WOAA title .and enabled them to' defeat Hanover in the Grand Champion- ship semifinals. Goderich took air early two -goal lead in the overtime stanza, but St. Clements roared back to tie up the score once again. Then Don Emms blasted in the final goal at the 7.57 mark to break up the tie. That's when the fun began. Hoffarth of the Threshers became involved in a bit ,-of fisticuffs with Emms and both were sent to the sin bin with major penalties. Less than half a minute before that incident Voll of St. Clements was sent to the penalty box and Beacom and Dietrich were banished for roughing. Referees called a total of 18 penalties, 12 of them to the visit- second ` period on a misconduct -count:_ __ . Emms was the big gun for the Pontiacs, collecting three goals, William$ gc$t two and Meriam .'and MacDonald got one each. T. Meyer led the Threshers with two. ST. CLEMENTS••:,-+Goal, A. Diet- rich; defence, N. Meyer, D. Crejss- man;. forwards,- X. Forwell, Koch;• Quehl,; alternates, L. Forwell, T. Hergott, A. Forwell, B. Hoffarth, Voll, Sehnert, • E. Forwell;-C,, Diet- rich, T. Meyer, Voisin. " GODERIM - Goal, Hesse; de fence; Beacom, Westlake; forwards, Williams, Meriam, ' MacDonald; al- ternates, Emms, Reis, Cruickshank, Rivers, Miller, Walters. First Period 1. St. Clements-Quehl 5,40 2, St. Clements - T. Meyer (C. rForweij) 13.25 Penalties -•L. Forwell, MacDon- ald. - • Second Period 3. Goderich - MacDonald (Wil- liaums)'' 0.49 '`" • St, C'lements�C. Forwell •,-(T^- Meyer) 4.07 - Penalties -- T. Meyer, Cress - man, Schnarr, MacDonald. Third Period 5. St. Clements-Schnarr (Voll) 10:01 6. Goderich- Williams (MacDon- ald) 15.14 7. Goderich '- Williams (Emms). 16.14• 8. Goderich-Emms 19.18 Penalties-Hoffarth (minor and misconduct), Westlake, Quehl, Dietrich, Williams, Koch. Overtime 9. Goderich - Emms (Westlake, 'MacDonald) 0.18 10. Goderich-Meriam 1.13 ' 11. St. Clements -T. Meyer (Diet- rich) 1.49 12. St. Clements-Hoffarth 423 13. Goderich - Emms . (Westlake) '7.57 Penalties - Beacom, Dietrich, Voll, Emms (major)', Hoffarth (major). STRATFORD MAN LIONS NEW DD. GOVERNOR James V. Douglas of Stratford was elected district deputy gover- nor of the region • to which the Goderich Lions Club is a part at a rally held at St. Marys on Tuesday night. He succeeds on June 30 Ward Bolton ,of East Nissouri. At- tending the meeting were repre- sentatives from Lions Clubs at Stratford, Thorndale, Mitchell, Milverton, Goderich, Brussels and St. Marys. -. For the Goderich Township TMtulicipalw 'el6p140,e._ System. - Duties to commence as soon atter June 1st as hooks "can be audited by the Municipal Auditors. • Apply' stating salary expected'. and address appli- cations ns tw W. R. LOBB, Chairman of the Board of Com- missioners,,, R.R. 2, Clinton. ,; 18 Pontiacs Eliminate Hanover Metros In Two Straight; Win Second 13-3 Hanover Metros, the team which was given a big -ovation by home- towners when it won the WOAA Intermediate "B" title by defeating Elmira Merchants, •must have felt awfully let down after two dis- astrous losses to - Goderich Samis Pontiacs last week. - Last Thursday night at the Gode- -r_ieh Arena the-Pan-tiaes- skated -the - Metropolitans into the ice to the tune of a 13-3 score to knock the Hanoverians out of the WOAA grand championship race. Earlier in the week, the Pontiacs had de- feated the Metros 15-11. The win gave Goderich the right to meet the winner of the Lucan- St. Clements series. Doug Cruickshank and Jack Meriam 'led the locals with three goals apiece. Don Emms picked up two, and-' Reis, MacDonald, Miller and Westlake got singles. The Pontiacs had no trouble eliminating the Metros. They took a 6-0 lead and piled on five more in the second frame to lead 11-0 going into the final period. The locals played slow hockey in the final frame, allowing the Metros to pick up three tallies. Goderich got two in the final 20 minutes. Referees called a ,total of 11 penalties, eight of them against the Pontiacs. HANOVER-Goal, King; defence, G, Weidner, Yost; forwards, Mercy, Allen, Kraft; alternates, J. Scar- borough, Crowe, K. Scarborough, L. Weidner, Horan. GODERI.OH - Goal, Hesse; de- fence, Beacom, Westlake; forwards, Williams, Meriam, MacDonald; al- ternates, Emms, Cruickshank, Reis, Miller, Walters, Rivers. 1. Goderich-Reis (Emms, Miller) 4.14 2. Goderich-Meriam "(Williams) 5.13 3. Goderich-Cruickshank (Emms) 10:00 4. Goderich - MacDonald (West- lake) if.12 5. Goderich-- er)14.3Cruickshank4 (Errins 6. Goderich-Cruickshank (Emms, Rivers) 18.15 Penalties - Cruickshank, J. Scarborough. Second Period 7. Goderich-Miller 2.17 8. Goderich -• Williams (Meriam) 5.17 9.God13erich.15 - Meriam • (Will iams) 10. Goderich-Emms (Cru•ick: hank) 13.18 11. Goderieh--Meriam (MacDonald, Williams) 19.40 Penalties -MacDonald 3, Allen. Third Period 12. Goderich-Westlake (MacDon- ald) 3.11 13: Hanover --J. Scarborough 7.58 14: Hanover -Mercy 8.06 15. Hanover -Weidner (Yost) 11.40 16. Goderich-Emms (MacDonald) 15.39 - Penalties - Westlake, Crowe, MacDonald 2, Beacom. $,WEA NEAT/NG costs For actual records that Oar Wood, expertly installed, will sake you healing dollurpr., CALL IN -,WRITE -OR TELEPHONE (Sparkling Entertainment) • AT Nile United .Church. list Match your dollar bills with. the Its of • Canadtan one dollar• bill serial numbers published daily in The Tely : w . - Anyone can 'win $10, $25, $50, $100, $200 or• $500. ' •• Ten new numbers published every day in The -rely. Sixty new numbers published every week in The Tely.. See today's Tely for details•• - Your Dollar may • be r�ort0 ` $10, $25, $50, $100, $200 or $500.' Britannia Road Phone 235 For Gar Wood Dealers In Districts ^r not listed above . . write to - ENGINEERING . INDUSTRIES CO. LIMITED G14 Supper served 6 to 8 'p.m. ADMISSION: Adults, 1.00 Children, 50e 18-19 $600i.®111•r6s•••Ni.iet•N S N E Ca1vttt SPORT $�C-A1-lI.M-N • f.a:.:.• ©pa 9 LY ?�° WEEKEND T©ronlo 1 Order The Tcly 1IOW hoar your newsdealer; the carrier on your street, or phone EMpire 84011. hy jury ;,F., • VET INSPECTOR -DIES The death occurred at Alexandra Hospital on Tuesday of W. R. Ate-,� Lerman, 49, a istrict inspector for Veterans' landholdings. The -bac y. wasforwarded from the Cranston, funeral home on Tuesday to Corn,. •oixvir f <.:,;>: •�•:• •. _ . S-9484,161/2" OJ.IBWAY FARM FENCE Fencing time is here and 1 respectfully' suggest you drop in and see me for• your requirements of Cattle Fence,, Hog Fence, Poultry .Fence; Gates;, Posts, Barb Wire, etc. A long lasting fence most have a' superior coating of zinc and I know that. the OJIBWAY • Fence which 1 carry in stock wilt serve you for many years to come. WO% CAMDIAN convert Every Kentucky Derby -like every other great horse race -has Jits episodes of glory, but every renewal of this great 'race has its,-.. bitter• disappointments, and its upsets, too. For instance, there was the 1940 Ken- tucky Derby, and - there never has been a satisfactory answer tothe question of just. what • happened to the great Bimelech in the Run For The Roses that year. Colonel E. R. Bradley has an amazing number of thorough- breds, including four whiners of previous Derbies, and also the mighty Black .servant, Baggenbaggage; Blue Larkspur, arid so inany others, and he had furnished the sire which produced the immortal Black Gold. Going up to the 1944 Derby, Colonel Bradley said: • ' • I think 'Bimelech •is the greatest horse I ever had." Bimelech won 6 races straight as a 2 -year-old. Making, his debut as a 3 -year-old, he won both races in which be had been entered, and ,came up to the Kentucky Derby of 1940 With the record of being unbeaten in 8 start"s, apparently at the peak of his form, and with the turf authorities insisting he ,had the Derby at his mercy. The punters made him a favorite at 40' cents to the ''dollar. The field he was pitted against : was regarded as ,one of the most mediocre of many years. It represented the best of the crop,' but the crop, at its best, was not presumed to be • in a class with Bimelech. "Bimelech should win by a quarter of a mile" the experts insisted. ''No other horse in the race can run the 'mile anid a quarter faster than 2.05." A Yet Gallahadion, who never knew greatness before, nor , showed 'any greatnessafterward, was too ' fast for Bimelech that afternoon G.allah�adion- won by a length and a half. Gallaliadion'S time: 2.051. Not until the defeatof the grey ghost, 'Native Dancer, 'last year, at 7,10, hha, here been a similar catastrophe of form, and even so, the ot(cli On Bimelech Weed, much shorter, so that the re'at mystery of ally fhe► Kentucky Derbies is: "What was wrong, With Birnelech • On . Derby •Day of 1940?"' 'Stour comments and Suggestions for this column will be wel- coined l y EiIn r '1'e gason; % Mr. Ell i,ebold, Calvert Repre- sentatives, uoderich -District. 56 College Street, Kitchener, Ont. "i.T•hankfult What have t to be thankful for? i aril pay y '``hen, man alive"c ,lie • tea kt il1 '4 yeii aren't one of your ere i r 16 D,-i'ST-1.LL.ERS LIMITED} ry •AMHER".irsURa, ONTARIO