u . . . Adm; mm SEASON PASSES NOT VALID FOR THIS GAME midrm 25‘ 0P8" ThIII'Sday and Friday Evenlngs t0 9 pm. “We gave up two more intentional stooped them all. When you do that you safety touches in the third quarter.“ know you’re okay that way. said Searjeantson, “in an effort to move Markham went on to play the ball further up the field but it was no Newmarket in the York County g0. championship game Saturday. ‘-'__|lllllllIIl|lllllIlIIllllllilllllllllllllllllIlIllIlIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'g That margin lasted until the second quarter when King's Don Ham in- tercepted a screen pass on Markham‘s 20 by Peter Evans and raced across for a six pointer. King leads The two-point conversion on a pass from Brian Hamilton to Bryce Clark gave King an 8-2 lead which lasted until the end of the second half. King Seniors ousted by Markham The other safety touch came in the first quarter and opened the scoring as the Markham defence broke through on a King punt to down the kicker behind the goal line. (Continued from 3-1) better field position for an offensive drive that never materialized. Big march The big move came in the third when Markham marched 65 yards downfield and quarterback Mark Neale sneaked it over from the two yard line. The con- vert failed. Then it was Kirkland rounding out a fine twoâ€"way day in the fourth quarter (Continued from 8-!) Markham came right back on a punt single by Steve Kirkland from the Aurora 30 and added another one pointer in the second quarter from the 35 yard line. Clark Bullock and his rink of Colleen Alexson, Alex Alexson and Marianne O‘Connell, won Hill curling season is off and sweeping The opening spiel Oct. 17 was over-subscribed, but thanks to some of our veterans, room was made for the overflow. Like most curling clubs, we too suffered a loss in membership this year, but recovered by means of a very suc- cessful membership campaign headed by Paul Welsh. THE MINOR BAA/TAM GAME OF THE YEAR 8:30 I’.IVI. AT THE Inornlllll communnv Genlre BAVVIEW AND JOHN STREET. THORNHILL Markham Seniors in final By Ron Taylor Monday, Nov. 17th, 1975 1974-75 PEEWEE ALL-ONTARIO CHAMPIONS . I \ BOTH TEAMS ARE YET UNDEFEATED 1974-75 PEEWEE "AAA" ALL-ONTARIO CHAMPIONS VERSUS MABLBOBDS BAVVIEW AND JOHN STREET, THORNHILL the honor of becoming the first pot hunter of the year on the firstfldraw. V TORONTO The following day, the Sinners, Business Girls, Juniors and the Legion began their activities and by the end of the week all Schedules were in operation Guest Day On Nov. 1 a Guest Day was held and once again a full house was ac- Lloyd Schenoffer and his rink of Helen Schenoffer, John Besley and Cathy Cushing won the second draw. 8:30 P.M. AT THE Searjeantson thought his defensive team “played a tremendous game. They made three goal line stands and stopped them all. When you do that you know you’re okay that way. “I thought he was going to try for the interception" said Searjeantson, “but he attempted to knock it down instead and just missed." That was the game. The 8â€"6 lead lasted until five minutes before the end of the game when Markham struck for a dramatic touch- down on a long pass from the 35 yard line as Evans hit Steve Kirkman. Almost intercepted The touchdown aerial came within a whisker of being intercepted as King's Bob Heaslip managed to get a hand on the ball but it ticked by him and into Kirkman‘s waiting arms. A particular standout defensively was halfback Gui Kalbfleisch who made two interceptions and had six solo tackes to his credit throughout the day. “They didn't get on our side of mid- field throughout the entire second half,“ he enthused. when he tackled a Williams player behind the line for a safety touch. He‘s happy Markham coach George Krause was happy with his defensive unit especially in the second half. Markham travels to BaHrrie Saturdéy Len Lee and his com- mittee did a great job of planning this annual event and even though Len somehow lost the score cards, he was able to announce that Bill Oliver and his rink of his wife Brigitte and his guests of Lynn and Dave Hampton from Leaside were the overall winners commodated. Curlers on the late draw were of- fered a full breakfast for 99 cents and Chef Bill Baillie, after a few minor failures, turned out over 30 delicious servings. The long car ride to Windsor told its tale in the third period of last week's game between that team and the Richmond Hill- Vaughan Firefighters. The local firefighters faded and ended up on the Men's Open A local men’s clothing merchant and former curling club member, Bob Craigie, has agreed to sponsor a Men‘s Open Spiel Nov. 15. Thanks to the hard work of Bill Oliver and his committee, this spiel is filled and promises to provide some keen competition. for the day Firefighters fade, lose by 9-1 N z/ _ / - ‘2'. - ' :2: x o = 227 i | ,, l; Club members could Firestone ll 5 an all pomuon head wllh an open shouldu' 1m une mic and closed shoulder on me when Ln [up naumn and comm; for VW's ‘ 560-15 installed whitewall Town & Country MINI-SPORT A truly unique Snow Bite: for small car owners with Town & Country winter tread retreads Here's the big name in biasvply trachon' Hungry Snow Sher tread makes n a wumer wmnev Luke every Firestone Snow Bnen i1 IS guaranteed to go 650-13 Blackwall Installed with our new tire guarantee TEAMS A Red 1 Dark Blue 2WhiOe 3 Black 6Ligh' Blue SGreen A Shaw 6. Griffen D, Pedder D Luneau W. Berseth C Bridges D. Cassie R, Cummings B. Giles T. Iveney J Kiddell w, Levine A. Lusk Richmond Hill Town Hockey League We make it easy at five stone GOALIES TEAM GP LEADING SCORERS TEAM 6 A P wrong end of a 9-1 hockey score. And it was a close, entertaining game until the 10 minute mark of the final period with Windsor only leading by two goals. Then the roof fell in. say thanks to Bob by dropping into his store on the west side of Yonge Street. just north of Centre Street. Mmm.Good Tab MacDonald and his richmond hill curling club L P’s II’QSTOHQ Stores RICHMOND HEIGHTS CENTRE Windsor pumped six unanswered goals past Blair Robson in the last nine minutes of the game. The Richmond Hill- Vaughan Firefighters gave it a great effort and with a little bit of luck could have made the score a lot closer. Richmond Hill hit the goal posts six times Not to be outdone, your Board of Directors are offering a steak dinner to If you have other plans for later that evening. why not plan to eat at the club. Tickets are available from Tab. Mixed Curling committee are cooking and serving a spaghetti dinner Nov. 22 for the low price of $1.49. Serving _begins at 7:30 10:30 pm 8 pm. atTHORNHILL COMMUNITY CENTRE _ \ IHUNDERBIRDS ;’ vs. Barrie Monday, Nov. 24th aid c6ntinues until Dynes Thursday, Nov. 27th 0.H.A. Jr. "B" Hockey All cooking and sewing will be done by the directors. Interested members are asked to sign their names on the poster at the club. Roaring Start Compared to previous years. this season is off to 'HORNHILL the first 48 curlers who sign up for a six end game at 4:30 Nov. 30. Dinner will be served at 7 pm. after “Happy Hour“ for a cost of $5 per person. Maybe it was an inâ€" dication of things to come when the drivers of the Richmond Hill-Vaughan cars each got a ticket for speeding on the way to the game. during the game but the only counter came off the stick of Terry Haviland with assists to Don Peers and Rob Nixon. Firestone DELUXE CHAMPION POLYESTER C & 078-14 878-13 578-14 USE OUR Firestone (‘HARGE CREDIT PlAN SIZE Firestone ‘~' I- TRACTION ALL- EASON '/\_ /‘_ ; ,v WHITEWALLS $3 MORE The best of Ihe belts to match up With original equipment belts up from. Two body plies plus stabilizer belts for good conlrol. comfon and mileage, The Snow Biler tread has so much traction - ALL-POSITION by keeping your payload moving 98(1 Haï¬ QL) HHJCH “(ILHOH 9 quaranwed m [)0 Schedule standings and individual games will be reported next week, but in the meantime. three questions remain unanswered. a roaring beginning and by strong committees and continued support by the membership this tempo should continue throughout the season. THE LIBERAL. Wednesday. Nov. 12. 1975 â€" 3-3 25. RADIAL K 5.: Y ti ‘Flrestone Town & Country BLACKWALL 2 Door Haldtop. V-8, automatic power steering power brakes. radio. Lsc. No. HW 951 . ‘ . . . . 1974 Barracuda 1974 Dodge Monaco Custom 4 Dow Sedan, V-8 automatic. powet steenng. power btakes. radio, defogger. 3,000 miles LIc. No, JWY 729 . . . . . . . . . . . ‘ . . . . . . . . . dDoor Sedan. automatic, powet steering, radio. vinyl roof, electric dehoster. LIC‘ No‘ JUN 295 . 1975 Pontiac Catalina 1975 Dart Custom 2 Door Hardtop. V»8 automatic. power steenng, power brakes, radro. Factory arr condrtronrng, s on electrrcdefroster. etc ch. No.JL1505 . . . 1975 Cordoba $24 $26 $23 G78 F78 H78 SIZE xdy .ï¬r 884-4401 Whose vice skip pulled him out of trouble in the Mixed League and then took all the credit for himself? It's the principal of the thing! How did a man’s car- digan end up in the Ladies Lounge? Who was the grey haired gentleman seen sneaking out early during the Guest Day? BLACKWALL $27 25 $28.30 30.40 s11195on $439500 $4195m F78-14/15 Blackwall Installed