Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 19 Mar 1953, p. 5

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\ 2 pts RT A an og TANIA n EA Ry Th, LH Qos) £3 RTA Fi po TY A a Sei Se me "SPORTS jy on FIRST BOWLING SERIES ENDS IN CLOSE RACE . and probably the year, A 2 1st Series 2nd Series To sum up the last week of action The Seven. aires also had a single game mark of ; 'by ail Fitsell ¥ : Silverwoods ............57 21 --it was a rare finish--with the so- |'1,245, some 36 more pins than], . . > sk res = Whiz-Bangs .. ..b3 21 called 'Stars baeking-into third money | Dodgers. : SAT ; : Stars 46 30 as Palmer's Sevenaires handed the| Gord Morrow of Whiz Bangs com-. TYING THE TAEALS ear becume: hore and. more 'Hockey Has Beens Ssiseges ani 19 Stars their first blanking of the sche- | bined games of 261, 202 and 208 (in- Nien Y rs ' a 2} ith the udve t televisi 'Dodgers ...... : 17 |dule and Dodgers all but came through | cluding a 48 handicap) for the top i ght in Canada' at ea n 2 ares, w ie advent. of television, Sevenaires . 27 to steal the show position. Beare's | triple of the week, 761.. Boh Jeffrey . is liable to revert. to Batl Night! That. is unless the faltering r-v Hilltops arrietad 16 just about did it too--taking the first | wasn't far behind with -787. . Team- |- ; heroes, the Mapleos: of Toronto, come "up with some spring magic. Lucky | trikes 1 two dn Thi from: Meteors before. log. te E. Hitehinaon.: came through An oat of the, fuss po aid Xon (for ai Aguine gould Smite) _- | Blow Kings .... 86 19 "+ ling the final one by 66 pts, That seém-14 with 728. A 305 game by drvingd pope idly Arh i] atin un Been Ph 4 hi i vias 4 hats . Peel's, HY 27 1 ingly clinched third place for Stars Boyd of Stars was highest single tally from 9.80 on alter this Saturday. These pork and fanettes, many Meteors .. 28 7 but Has Beens after whipping Knit. [ of last week's action, f .who ove 'lo Ked inside our : wn. Mer 1G d 1 t ol 'Knitters ............ooven. 12 9 ters 7-0 put in a ¢laim that looked le- High triples per team: I. Royd 650, vo ANG NEVER doused. duside SUF own Meuetial Gardens: on a 'co It's finall . It's Official That's it! 'gitimate.but the recount provided the'| A. Panabaker 626, H. Mark 671. J. _ winter night have become authorities on the game, the! refs and what 'y : ~_ fans drops, = the. Leafs board of strategy should do since Esso granted them the f rinkside ticket in warm, comio¥table surroundings, In fact the couple hundred fans who weekly enjoy the video show over an estimated 50 local sets ave just ws keen as the local 'I-V fight clan who gulp coffee every Wednesday night during "What'll you. have" intérmission. However, the boxing promoters with their seemingly endless string of scrappers, good and bad, have that advantage on hockey officials who come to the end of the line (and telecasts) when their teams are elimi- nated, However, T-V-ing of the OHA Junior "A" games may help the hungry puck:fans in case the Queen City Blues fail to pull an Ozark lke tinish-and fade out of the cathode tube and further pay-off games.--Of course there are always those 'heroes' in those hoked up Ty rasslin films from Hollywood to turn to. ~----Ugh! LOCAL PUCKSTERS STILL ACTIVE-- Could be that the local ORHA Redshirts will be cutting up ice ~ longer than the Leafs but few Port Perry fans will see them in action unless CBC switches T-V cameras to Stouffville 'arena where Abe Cawker's men are engaged in a post-season cup series. Port made an auspices debut last Friday night by taking-the strong Brougham entry, the series favourites, 8-6. However, during thé game the round-robin tournament officials came up with rules that barred .two % local players who made good in Junior "B" with Lindsay. Bill Gibson and Don Cochrane won' 't be in the line-up when Port Perry puts their second game of the series this Saturday night against lin However, the locals were granted a 1-0 win in the rst? me hy the officials and-will-go-all out for their second victory. -- Bud Heard, Barry Howie, Ken Mark, Gibson and Meredith McKee were . among the goal scorers for the victors, '"Mert's" counter came in the dying moments when he pulled off one of his rare golf shots which landed in the undefended net for the dlincher . . . Greenbank galloper, will be back in uniform with the seniors after 'missing Friday's:tilt-due to a "little theatre" presentation by the YPU at his home villa . .. Sutton and Haliburton, tied after the Tri-County loop-round-robin, are in the midst of a special five- -game series with the winners going into the ORHA senior semi-finals, The Greenshirts forced the play-off. by whipping Cannington 11-7 in the final game . The C's were 'rained-out' here last Thursday in the ~ last game_on the schedule and due to lack of ice and interest it most likely will be forgotten. That's one of the bug-aboos of round-robins --once a team is out of the running. the enthusiasm of players and The Tri-County baseball lop have discovered that: best of three_play-off series are the best . . . Newmarket is the site of the above mentioned Huskies-Sutton saw-off and the York county lads are leading the northerners 2-0 with the third game scheduled - for to-night. : PE IT'S JUST FOR EDN FELLOWS! This corner just about lost his position: of unofficial scorekeeper of the men's bowling league last' week as the Stars were'in and out . of third place every hour on the hour. It started like this, The Stars with 46 points needed just two points to clinch third money in the loop; but they ran into a hot Sevenaires squad which rolled to a 7-0 lead. Dodgers with 39 points needed a clean sweep against Meteors to nose - out the Stars, Beare's almost did 'it as the Bryden boys managed a win in the last game, The boys in the back shop gave a sigh of relief. Then came Carnegie's bid and a recount showed them with . 46 points, The Stars fell!! However, an. other @ecount proved it wasn't so and the Starlets hung on to third just one point ahead of Dodgers, Sevenaires and the Has Beens ... Congrats to Jimmy Smith who teamed with Pete Jamieson of Uxbridge to go to the men's doubles finals in the Whitby district badminton tourney in Oshawa last week . Only other local winner was I. Boyd who paired with Jack Pearson of Uxbridge to take the men's consolation event , "Cannington bantams gained the OMHA "C" finals against Wingham by whipping Bracebridge 16-4 on the round. .. . Sonya brave, should be showing around those Pitts gain. He finished a good season with the OHA senior Brantford Redmen by scoring on a penalty shot. . . . THIRTY. Glen Till, the : Bill Shill, the * finn * PPHS SENIOR GIRLS LOOK GOOD BUT MIDLAND LASSIES TOO TALL There will be no more recounts. The first series is over--and Silverwoods (or Mudcats), Whiz- Bangs and Stars finished in that order in the money, according to the signed, sealed docu- ments delivered by secretary and of- ficial scorekeeper John D. Christie. Just one point out of third place were Has Beens, Dodgers and -Sevenaires tied for fourth spot. above offi¢ial standing. In uthey, action Lucky Strikes took Peels 6-2 and Hilltops garnered 7th place with a 6-2 victory against Blow Kings. Whiz Bangs came within one game of tying Silverwoods for the top position by copping the first two games before losing 1043 to 994 in the final game, ~~ Palmer's terrific team total of 3,494 was tops for the week Cook 691, L. Clarke 647; S. Beare 613, C. Popert 662, C. A. Glass 685, .G. 'Carnegie- 842, T, Fden 045, J, -D. Christie 660, B. Graham 625, R. Gohl 689. High singles: B. Jeffrey 288, Art Panabaker 239, H. Mark 256, J. Cook 260, Archie McMaster 284, 8. Beare 256, G. Morrow 202, C. A. Glass 287, H. Hiltz 286, J. D. Christie 262, M. ~The Port. Perry Yacht Club held an- other successfil]social evening, Fri- day, 'when the eiftertainment commit- tee under the leadership of Mr. and Mrs, E; Gresik, Oshawa, aided the 'women' s committos in getting 'what was believed to be the findl payment on drapes for the Club 'House to be purchased. with the assistance of Mr. A. Brock, Drygoods Merchant, Port Perry. 5 Than During the evening a variety of novel dances were enjoyed among which was a balloon breaking dance, won by Vice-Commodore and. Mrs! Ted Griffen, Port Perry, while the broom partner. dance was won con- versially by either Marv, Tuck, of Oshawa, or Ernie Sulman, Port Perry, who were more noticeably seen dane-: ing while: looking through brushy broom bristles in search of a less be- whiskered partner, _ The men were persistently gather- Oshawa Members Show Form In Badminton Play "Iwo: Port Perry players combined with an Uxbridge pair to gain laurels in the Oshawa-dominated third an- nual Whitby and district badminton league invitational tournament at the motor city airport last week. Jim Smith of Port and Pete Jamie- son of Uxbridge came within a few points of beating B. White and Kern Smith of Oshawa and Irving Boyd of town and Jack Pearson of Uxbridge won the men's doubles consolation event, Veteran Péte Bernhardt of Uxbridge, lost the singles match to young Ken Smith, of Oshawa. The seventeen-year-old Smith won the triple crown by taking. the men's singles and pairing with Kay Hopkins and Bill White to win the mixed doubles, Stewart Lawson and Russ McAllister of Toronto came through a great change of pace after dropping the first game to win the special vet- rans doubles event for men over 49. The ladies' doubles finals was an all- Oshawa event with Vi. Heney .and. Aureen Jackson edging Kay Hopkins Winners of Bowmanville H.S. ina thrilling = series Port Perry High ~School senior girls duplicated 'the senior boys effort in the COSSA "B" semi-finals by losing by two baskets on Saturday. Coach Joan MecGregor's girls came up with a good effort against Midland but the Georgian Bay winners gar- nered a 20-16 victory. Big difference in the two teams was the height of the guards. Midland High's line-up included four girls over five-foot-nine and as a result the local gals had trouble sinking those important two- point baskets. PPHS were held to * three field goals by the lanky Midland > Lg A L) ---{ Ig I, eee i 4 - rp 7" | \ ® > guards but they potted ten out 'of 18 tosses, idland H.S.. just about wrapped up the game in. the first half when their star forward Mary , McMillan -- ran riot Ainking ten of her total of 12 points. Port trailed 16-6 in the first half but reversed the situation in the]. last 30 minutes, outscoring the win- ners 10-6 but that wasn't enough.| Outside of the starry Miss McMillan the winners didn't' show much of a margin 'a "maraged to hoop only half of § 18 foul shots. ; Jean 8 led the losers With six po one basket and four singles, ~ . oa] uby . Leask. scored five points while Doris DeNure notched three out of four foul shots and Mary Jean Dobson clicked on two throws to complete the scoring. E.:Gerrow counted five for Midland and D, Flynn added one. Although the local gitls. didn't gain the finals it proved a good season on the basketball courts for them. In taking the Lakeshore title and in ex- hibitions they held wins over Lindsay Cl, Oshawa C.V.I.,, Uxbridge H.S. and Bowmanville, The junior girls also had a good record until meeting the strong Port Hope team. SENIOR GIRLS -- Freida McCul- Jough, Bev, Michell, Kay Aldred, Ruby Leask, Jean Williams, Mary Jean Dob- son, Doris DeNure, Vera -Howsam, Barbara Love, Joan Chapin, Mary Wilson, Marina 'Lee, Muriel monds and Caroline Naples, JUNIOR GIRLS -- Helen' Honey, Ruby Leask, Jean Samells, Helen Wil- liams, Joanne Mosienko, Dorothy Wil- bur, Ann Chapman, Mary Phoenix, Isobel Faux, Marilyn Walker," Nancy Kight, Kent Gerrow, Lois Sanderson, Tum- a] _-- NESTLETON PUPIL TAKES PART 'Glenn Larmer of Nestleton and Dave Craig of Bowmanville, took part in designing a farm economies exhibit that won top honours at the 24th an- nual Keniptville Agricultural School 'Royal' on March 11. The éxhibit showed that the granary door type of book-keeping must give way to the modern" farm account book. The colourful display 'of animal showman- ship, handicraft and educational ex- hibits was staged by students before 600 relatives, graduates and friends. 15-10, Mixed Doubles -- K. Hopkins - K. Smith, Oshawa; J, IR Walker, Oshawa, 15.8; 3-15; 4-16. Men's Doubles--B. White-K. Smith, Oshawa; P. Jamieson, Uxbridge-J Smith, Port Perry, 16-12; 9-16; 16-8, Ladies' Doubles --- K; Hopkins-D, Dobbie, Oshawa; V, Heney-A. Jack- son, Oshawa. 15-9; 16-18; 16-9. UXBRIDGE LEGION TO REBUILD. Plans are under. way to re-build the $25,000 Canadian sLegion Hall which was completely destroyed by fire on Saturday 'night. s4Legion president, Arthur Staley, said the three-year-old building was covered by insurance and plans to organize a working be to re-build the structure. Provincial' Constable D. C. Wilton, who had locked up the cement block building after checking following a teen-age dance, indicated defective wiring was a possible cause of the fire. The blaze which first reduced the roof to a blazing "inferno was fought by Uxbridge brigade under Chief Ross Rodman for two hours, Winds fromthe west fortunately kept the flames from menacing a nearby soft drink plant. Hazeldine "Hall, advice while coloring Mr, Easter bunny are on hand to put in the of the brush, lively children's program. Lou Snider, Bernie Johnson, Bill Need reading range by introducing them to ee A Ap en + Prince Albert Mr. and Mrs, Austin Franklin, of Oshawa, visited' their aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Collins, on Satur- day. 0 Master Bobbie Snelgrove celelnnted his ninth birthday anniversary, Mon- day. Many happy returns, Bobbie! Mrs. --McKerihan, Mrs. Luke and Murray were guests of Mr. and Mrs, L. Stanton, Brooklin, Saturday night. On St. Patrick's night, Mis. Fletch- er's C.G.LT. Group put on another fine entertainment in the Sunday Schoool room. Three films were shown after which Rev. Mig Wylie was chairman for the program. « To make Bordelnise sauce; chop up a small onion and a clove of garlic, mix these with brown, sauce to which has been added a tumbler of Canadian claret. Simmer. it down, cool and serye. ' "Cuckoo Clock House's" Easter, | TST frolic and fine music are mixed in to make with young listeners to the CBC's Dominion network, climming hostess," gets good - Matilda the Cuckoo ind a perky eir two cents worth with every stroke Miss Hall and the saucy little bird are heard' regularly on the Other participants include host Keuny Graham » les and, of course, Basil the Bullfrog. The Broadcasts encourage listeners, aged eight to "twelve, to widen their good books. Equal portions of fun, "Cuckoo Clock House' a favorite BOWLING IS FUN FOR EVERYONE " Come with your friends and enjoy an afternoon of fun and sport. Special prizes and: prices in afternoons out- side of sport club and league bowling. "I No bowling Monday afternoons, Open how ling Friday and Saturday nights. 'King Pin Lanes PORT Penny ing in_small groups in -different cor-|and Doreen Dobbie in one of the best ANA rm eT : ------ . ners of the Club House discussing | exhibitions -of the night. a: racing strategy, new motor expecta ' Men's Singles--K. Smith, Oshawa;| os nfm Ba -tions--and the coming summer Ss gen- | Pete Bernhardt, Uxbridge. 18-16; eral activity, only to be just as per-|.17-18; 16-9. sistently broken up by the more fri- "Veteran's Doubles --- 8. Lawson-R; volous and socially conscious women | McAllister, Toronto; R. Charlton-W, folk: Fmsley, Peterborough. 13-16; 16-5; Of the two lucky draws, the lucky | = er number draw won by Dorothy Cro- ; : E ¥ 1S ount well, Oshawa, and the lucky cup prize| FEEUIAURRIILEYYTAVYT ST" was won by Mr. E. 'Warwood, Toronto, FRONT OF YOUR GARAGE DOOR? while daughter Thelma' Warwood Tri -- LA winner in the scrambled pie ; content Lay Slips, $3.85 : The ever active women workers lost | WITH LACE SHOULD 5 no time in capitalizing on the over sub-| 4 ACH) LDER STRAPS. scribed luncheon by electing Don : RE hd pe Smith, Oshawa, auctioneer, to dispose : ~ of several excess pies ahd other edible i: Lamisoles;- $1. 98 articles to willing bidders. High- '| light of this event was when Mr. Wm, : SILK CREPE WITH LAC 1 ERE ML eee ett Ge Hackney of Hackney Motor Sales, of | it's fine... if : - TTT % Oshawa, successfully bid for two pies| gy¢ AM RRISON- i -- Ha f EE ~ "and presented them back to the club 17's o : d Slips, $2. [' for "re-bidding. Later Mir. 'Hackney /| rr) = i rl Tt ay Ro {4 J)oor SMALL, MEDIUM, LARGE, parcel and upon inspection, revealed 00 «8 Mi SON Roly- TTI two pies. Sle Hh phe SE Srl : RE B : (C Everyone joined in wishing Gladys soceh fora chad. == rassieres, 1.85 Otto a happy birthday when unknown | jomsessionsl . oveshend - VIL IT J tL Ta " \ to her and as a complete surprise, EYELIY EMBROIDERED, LOV FABLE Commodore Vinee Otto, ®shawa, pro- i duced a suitably inscribed cake that|- C proved to he more than 'sufficient in oronation Nylon Panties, $1. 00 size for all present to enjoy. TR WI' ; or All agreed that another such even- RL ES D and BL aki I'RIM. ing will be held in two weeks, March 27, when square-dancing will he R Oc. iy ayon Panties, 50c. Teomrihuted, SMALL, MED: and LARGE, PINK and BLUE. . H To Aes } MM MMMMMMMM MM MMMMMM Chi 1dr C t B ildren s otton Briefs, 23c. You Will Reap - What You Sow 216 6 years SEED is the foundation of your crop. Take no chances, yo GAINS DOG FOOD. i rit Reires 04 1 oe Liv order ently. GROCERIES {AINS i , 6 tins and a buy "GREEN GOLD" and he sure, Place you order early, : : dog brush... 8hH¢ | ' We carry a complete line of : EASTER: EGGS ......000e .10¢, and fe MIXED COOKIES ooo... 39¢. Ih, ; GARDEN and FIELD SEEDS "CANADA BREAD and C CAKES FAB, 1 large FREE with Giant ........... The. : A . N Y) BLACK TEA, Ib, See us for your FRESH TOMATOES .................. pkg. 23¢ BUDGE T TEA, Ih. : CELERY .....c....c.oiiiimnmmrinen 2 for 19¢ : * HOG he MAXWEL lL HOUSE COF I' is Ki ; * DAIRY CAULIFLOWER, firm and white, ....35¢. with coupon ..........000 99¢. . eo laR POULTRY --- - "fete | F. W. BROCK & SON Phone 1 rere || Phone 43 Port Perry | MMMMMMMMM MMMMMM Mb e---- ---- ----_ -------- . I a a

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