Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-10-03, Page 6PRESENTING SRI BRE 1 1114 THE NEVER-BEFORE Now it's easier than ever to own an Oldsl This new 88 series fea- tures a brand-new Jetfire Rocket V8 engine, a new optional Jetaway* transmis- sion—and the same bumper-to-bumper reli- ability as every Olds, What's more, it's priced to put you in an Oldsmobile sooner than you think! fp,IM:,f,==f • . *Optional at extra cost JETSTAR 88 CELEBRITY SEDAN THE PRICE SURPRISE OF'64 NEW LOW PRICE! MORE ROOM-MORE POWERS More room—sleek 10 incheS longer outside. More comfort—F-85's wheelbase is three inches longer. New V6 economy and V8 Vigor. In fact, more of every- thing—except the money it takes to buy one! F-85 DELUXE SPORTS COURE owe 1111181111111111111 SNELL EROS. LIMITED Chev OidA Cbrvair * Envoy chov Trutks PHONE 1354660 EXETER, ONT. Foqo ¢ Tirno#409 at#, -October 3, 1903. • - fOR ALL ,0001? 0PPRTS By .RoeS,,'Haugh , 'squea ker. puts em back in runnin fluren-perth aenior Net- * final five of the A Connie of 00 breaks In ball conference game sent tba I$DHS Panthers, down to a 15-0 defeat at the- hands of CHDHS, Clinton, here Wed., Sept, 2 5t The Panthers battled on even terms with their onP9nents Most of the way until a short kick from close to their goal line was picked pp by Clinton, Don Colquhopn grabbed the ball and raced across for .the final major score. Trying to get back in the g4Trie with time running out, the local club fumbled at their own 25- yard line and two plays later a Clinton pass play was good for another six paints, Both converts were good and a single point was added when John Wade was nrpught down be- hind the line, .P.t.effa Merchants improved their .chances of copping. the oBA fntermecliate. "g" title with o .7,5, win over Little Cainat the home field of the: Perth county team .4t4roy. gtPrpoon, The Staffs win tied the hest.- ofafiVe PreVineial final at .game .apiece.. The third opntost, a 'Very important one, will pe played in Little nritain Siinday, BIG THIRD FRAME Five consecutive hits to lead off the third produced four SW, fa runs and the big difference in the 7-6 vietery which knotted the series, George Coveney went the dis, tance for the Merchants and was in little trouble until the ninth when the visitors came back with a trio of runs to close the gap. Of the nine hits giVen up by Centralia dart-throwers win doubles championship Aland John Link, centre above, won the doubles trophy at the third annual Forest City dart tournament Crone held in the Army, Navy and Air Force Club, London, over the weekend. They were members of the four-man Centralia team which included Norman Ferguson, left, and Frank Con- kum, right. They competed against teams from Oshawa, Toronto, Hamilton, Welland, Sarnia, Windsor and other area. centres. The Centralia team' a next competition is a tournament.--T-A photo Behind 1 8-ball'again! contest of the Huron Ladies softball final in the northern town Wednesday to advance to the WOAA semi-finals against Mitchell, The game was a see-saw battle most of the way, with the Greys picking up three runs in the last two frames to ensure victory. Buy a beautiful OrCal Diamond Insured free for one year Pleasing you.pleases us. Ann Cronyn's single and dou- bles by Audrey Pooley and Dar- lene Snell produced two runs in the first inning to put their club out in front. Brussels came back with a singleton in the third and a pair in the fifth to take a 3-2 lead. Ann Jorgenson, leading off in the sixth, reached first on a fielding error and appeared to be stalled as the next two girls grounded out, Leftfielder Mary Gravett stepped to the plate and lined out a long home run to account for the tying and what proved to be the winning markers. the Staffs :rigit-haecier f six of them were, shared equallyby-the first. two men in tbp. 'Attie Britain line-up, their second. base nombinatien of Neil. Wannarnaker and Doug McMil- lan. In addition to getting the majority of their niubaa nine bite, the lead-off men also aeon,- PO five of the six runs. Wanna-.714icer- and McMillan singled to start the game and came .around on third sacker Ren Jewel's single. The McKellar boys started the Staffa club on its way with back-to-back extra base drives in the second, Bob doubled, perg tripled to the far corners of the park and came around on playing manager Bill Murphy's one base smash to tie the spore. The big rally in inning three put the home club into what appeared to 'be a safe lead, Coach Hugh McGillivray started the frame with a long double. pitcher Coveney kept the rally alive with a single, Porky Wan, lace repeated with another bin, gle and veteran Line Rohfritsch chased all the base runners home with a sharp double. Bob McKellar notched his second safety of the afternoon, this time a single to plate Rohfritach and put the Merchants out in front 6-2. Wannamaker and McMillan again teamed up to count the third run for Little Britain in the fourth, the former tallying the marker on the strength of his mate's single. The home CIO got this Single back in the sixth. Roger Pauli opened the inning with .a single and completed the circuit on an ontfielding error ,and a fielder's choice. Keith Brown led off the Little Britain ninth by working cove- neY for a free ticket to the initial sack, Wannamaker chip- ped in with a single and stole second to put two men in scoring position with only one out, Doug McMillan sent a high bounder out in front of the plate and both runners scampered across when Covenpy's threw bounced off the runner going into first. playing manager DonJenkins grounded to third for the second out before Ron Jewel put his team close with alooping single to right to score Doug McMiilan, With the tying run perched on second, Coveney blazed the third strike past Wayne Mc- Millan to end the contest. Bob McKellar was the top Staffa swatter with three hits and turned in a solid game at first base, scooping several low throws out of the dirt. Aging Hugh McGillivray showed he hasn't lost his eye at the plate, meeting the ball solidly four times. Jim Cornish, toeing the visiting rubber to start the game, was hit hard and left in favor of 16-year-old lefty Ted Ballet in the third. The young- ster was quite effective in a relief role, giving up three hits the balance of the way. More than ever in 1964. Olds has the model to match your particular brand of luxury! -ataaxaaa•aaatalaVWaaa — ' • • SUPER 88 HOLIDAY SEDAN Dolly Matson. bashed a triple and dashed home when Pooley's grounder eluded the Mitchell The final Grey spurt in the eighth upped their total to seven as Rose Carey and Ann Cronyn were successul in crossing the plate on the strength of singles by Farquhar and Matson. Exeter's chances grew dim in the fifth when regular Ann Jor- genson was injured and forced to leave the game. Audrey Pooley was the Grey shining light at the plate, notch- ing a pair of singles and a triple in four tries, J. Gettke's four singles led the Mitchell attack. DROP FIRST Exeter Greys failed to cash in on their scoring opportunities when they dropped the opening game of the WOAA ladies inter- mediate best-of-five semi- finals to the Mitchell girls 3-2 at Hensel). Saturday night, The locals left 13 runners stranded on the bases compared to a half dozen left by the visiting crew. The first two Mitchell hitters in the game, Edna Hotson and Jane Rolph, singled and came on to score to put their club out in front early 2-0. A walk to lead-off batter Ann Cronyn and a single by Mary Gravett put the Greys in scoring position in their first turn at the plate but a fast double play killed their chances, Darlene Snell and Rose Carey worked pitcher June Chessell for free passes to first in the second and the former com- pleted the circuit on a couple of infield outs. A walk to Gravett and singles by Audrey Pooley and Helen Ebel loaded the bases in the third with one out but Chessell forced the next two batters to pop out and ground right back to the mound. In the fifth Pooley doubled, again with one away, but was thrown out at the plate. Inning number six produced the run to knot the count at 2-2, Ann Jorgenson reaching first on a fielder's choice scampered home on first base guardian Dorothy Wilson's triple. The Mitchell girls p I at e d their third run and the winner in the seventh when Roiph was safe on an Exeter miscue and rode home on E. Uniac's single. As in most every inning of the game, the Greys threatened in the seventh and eighth but failed to produce a clutch hit. Again in the ninth, Mary Gra- vett opened by getting to the initial sack by way of an error and moved along on a single by Audrey Pooley, her third safe blow of the night. The next batter popped out and Darlene Snell followed with another walk to load the bases With only one away. Again Chessell and her Mitchell defensive crew went to work to subdue the Exeter for- ces. Chessell, in going the nine inning distance, struck out only but three were in crucial situations to close out the in- ning. Her mound opponent, Rose Carey also turned in a good performance, fanning fiVe while showing perfect control in not issuing a single lama. GREYS .ADVANCE Exeter Greys continued their uncanny ability of winning the big ones by doWning Bnilasela 74 in the fifth and deciding ,ienaileitionneeleierniainatetiatilieemeea Russell gains tourney final PRESTIGE! POWER! COMFORT! Talk about Action with a capital "A"—and you're talking about the 1964 Oldsmobiles, From the elegant Ninety-Eights, through the adventurous Starfires, the superb Super 88's, the dashing Dynamic 88's to the never-before Jetstars and the all-new F-85's, Oldsmobile for '64 has the looks, the performance and just the right touches of luxury to make this another winning year! Exeter Greys find themselves in a familiar position, with their backs to the wall, in WOAA ladies semi-final play. The local gals have dropped the first two games of a best- of-five series to Mitchell and must come up with three con- secutive victories to survive and advance to the loop finals. Mitchell took a convincing 14-7 win inSebringville Monday after squeaking out a 3-2 deci- sion in Hensall Saturday night. The third game in the set was played at Hen sail last night, Wednesday. DROP SECOND The Mitchell girls touched the Exeter hurlers for 19 hits, most of them of the blooping variety, only two going for more than a single. The Greys moved into a short-lived lead with two runs in the top of the second. Darlene Snell and Dorothy Wilson con- nected for solid base hits and crossed the plate with the help of an error and a ground-out. Four singles and a triple by Irene Uniac produced three Mit- chell tallies in the bottom of the same frame to reverse the edge, Starting Exeter hurler Helen Ebel worked out of a tough sit- uation in the second when the bases were loaded with only one out and three runs had scored, She fanned the next hitter for the second out and got the important retirement on a force play. In a repeat of the second inning, back to back singles by Snell and Wilson accounted for a single Grey tally to tie the contest. Mitchell came to life again in their turn at the dish in the fourth, scoring three times after the first two batters were retired to go in front to stay, Another trip of markers in the fifth upped the score to 9-3 before the locals could dent the plate again. In inning six, Audrey Pooley in a lead-off capacity, slammed a long triple to left and came home on Ebel's one base smash. The winners chalked up three more in the sixth and two in the seventh to wind up their run production. With one away in the seventh, Two weeks ago, we checked the spring baseball predictions Of the area guessperts and as it has now turned (ant no one picked both 'clubs that are this week competing in the World Series. Delving a little deeper into individual player selections we find that five persons were able to come up with one right out of six tries in batting and pitching winners. Wait a .minute, There were two fellows. who had a better record than this. They managed by some sort of luck to be right in one department and their selection in another ended in a tie. Exeter's Ree Director "Boom" Gravett and yours truly have the enviable distinction of be- ing right occasionally, "Boom" picked Harmon Killebrew and Hank Aaron to win the home run 'honors. Kille- brew emerged as the best slugger in the Ameri- can but Aaron, the Brave, is forced to share the title with Willie MoCovey of the Giants, We, with a blind stab, selected Aaron to be tops in round-trippers and Sandy Koufax to lead the senior circuit in pitching victories. Boom may have just shaded us in over-all percentages since we predicted that Koufax and Bob Friend of the Pirates would share the pitch- ing crown with 23 wins each. What a friend he turned out to be. The annual fall classic getting going this week will decide which of us has the best crystal ball. The genial rec director picks the Yanks in a full seven-game set and we go with the Dodgers in the same number of encounters. If the quantity of teams can be used as a measuring stick, this coming season's Sham- rock minor hockey league should be a booming success. At the re-organizational meeting in Lucan a week ago, about 37 teams signified their inten- tions of competing in the different classifica- tions, Exeter will be represented by youngsters in five different age groups. Squirts and juve- niles will join last year's entries of pee wee, ban- tam and midget. RIGGIN TO BOOST HOCKEY HERE The retirement of Dennis Riggin, a 14- year veteran of the Detroit Red Wing nockey or- ganization may be of some benefit to area hock- ey, especially in minor ranks. Riggin is now an area brewery representa- tive, taking over the local territory from George Noseworthy, well known for his photographic abilities while stationed at RCAF Centralia sev- eral years ago. Riggin, now 27, a native of Kincardine, has been hooked up with the Wings since he was 13 and is only topped. ,by Gordie Howe and Mar- cel Pronovost in length of service. Although he has played only sparingly dur- ing the years with the parent team, he has long. 'been regarded as NHL calibre and was in action for 14 games last season when Terry Sawchuk was out with 'a broken hand. Now making his home in Stratford with his wife and four children, Dennis has offered his services in 'a coaching or refereeing capacity for minor hockeyists or for 'any feature attrac- tion,. We would tike to make a correction in last week's explanation at the conclusion of -this col- umn concerning the identification of the bowling teams in the weekly reports. Due to an error, the abbreviation for a team. with a double name, for example, Larry's Supertest should have appeared as LS, using the first 'letter of each word. Statistics ling EXETER LANES A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE JJ JS HE BB HA WC MM SP LO AC BL DR 12 0 5 0 MEN'S "A" LEAGUE SP J. Fairbairn (628) 4 HE H. Mitchell (517) 0 UN R. Stagg (765) 4 PI H. Gosar (655) 0 CA W. Beattie (123) 3 RO L. Haugh (704) 1 Rt B. Wright (706) 2 A&1111. Holtzman (587) 2 1/13 P. McFalls (727) 4 PE J. Coughlin (658) 0 KT E, Matzold (706) 3 LS B. Osgood (649) 1 14 6 7 5 14 7 19 4 17 14 17 2 LADIES "B" LEAGUE J. Isaac (533) A. Cann (477) L. Bell (548) '7 G. Webster (503) 0 S. Wright (659) 5 S. Appleton (600) 2 J, Mason (647) 5 A. Ruggaber (512) 2 B. Attfield (587) 5 M. Prewer (553) 2 D, Prance (620) 5 A, Schroeder (544) 2 10 9 6 2 7 4 11 6 MIXED LEAGUE R. Ferguson (568) '7 '7 J. Hoy (424) 0 0 V. PreWer (799) 5 12 I. Campbell (503) 2 4 A. Fairbairn (700) 7 12 L. Brock (657) 0 P. Brintnell (568) 5 5 B. Gilfillan (653) 2 9 B. Mercer (647) 5 12 D. Gravett (740) 2 9 B. Caldwell (731) '7 '7 S. Zadhar (430) 0 0 MEN'S "B" LEAGUE WI 0, 11-Duvar (697) 4 10 MI F. Bowden (569) 0 4 CT F. Tilley (606) 2 6 13D IL Lee (558) 2 4 IDS R. Dobson (663) 3 8 WI J. Brand (5'70) 1 2 PA P, Coburn (666) 4 10 NM A. Mende (505) 0 0 SF L. Sherman (724) 3 10 BA D. McKnight (675) 1 6 LA M. Bell (584) 4 9 OF V. Smith (578) 0 3 GH AM GU LW CE 118 BL CC WR SH CR SE LADIES tiA" LEAGUE WII J. Weber (738) 5 )3B W. 13rintnell (56'7) 2 PP M. Gravett (568) '7 LS M. Riliripel (481) 0 NH 8, songster (631) MM H. Beaver (491) 0 P1 IL Prout (659) 4 RO Burke (644) 3 IG I), Mattson (623) 5 11G A. Stock (619) 2 TR N. Melkie (649) 5 BD 1. Campbell (563) 2 To Help Prevent The RUST That Attacks Your Car 14 14 14 10 8 7 LUCAN LANES LUCAN LADIES 10 RA M. Lewis (253) SH E. Burt (198) 21 DA 3. Ankara (235) CC L. Blake (026) 12 SP B. Wraith (236) 10 DI B. Newman (207) 11 AC L. Harrison (205) 7 CL R. Blank (194) 19 HO S. Weller (lea) FS B. Johnson (016) 12 LE b. Miner (164) HE M. 'Young (213) 4 2 0 Jim Russell has earned one of the spots in the final of the "A" division of the Exeter Golf Club's match play now under way at the local course. B u ssell reached the final round by eliminating Claude Farrow in a semi-final set 2-1. Either Jim Mason or Dick Weber will be the other contes- tant for the "A" title. The two ended their first semi-final round in a tie and will try again to decide who will battle Russell for the match play honors. Mason reached the semi- round with a one-up victory over John Keep. Action in "B" section has also reached the same stage as the competitors in "A". Tony Mansell will meet Jack Doerr in a set-11141nel match with the whiner Meeting Bill Colbert. Mansell knocked Off Bill Bracken 3 and 1, while Doerr sidelined Al Parka. Colbert reached the final bracket with a 7 and 6 win over Derry Boyle after' the Exeter councillor edged John McCar- ron 3 and 2, The first half of a 36-hole toUrnanlent to decide The Exeter men's g 01 f club IOW gross championship will be played at 5 the Ego* cotirseSunday after- noon at 12:30. The tourney 18 Open to any Male golfer that holds an annual trieMberehip, Handicaps will not be need in an attempt to find the beat golfer In the club. RC tkiv 111 P1 41 AC Have Pro-Tectyl Applied !Po Connbat The Road Salts add Moisture of Winter DO it now Before the Wet Weather IS here Only $9400 LADIES` Pittbkif NI1 R. 110 D. bobson. (500) 5 16 • Howell OM A A BL1 J. bougherty.,(4SS) 7 14 It NI, tridges. Pa) 0 0 11H A, RotnartlUk (580) -":1 td Pilistrault (50) .6 6, SNELL BROS. LID. COLLEENS FI E. Bodgins (530 4 4 Tit, L. Blake (607) 1 1 Harrison (442) 4 4 HI) Y Bowman (444) 1 LUCAN J8141088 ,t„, twin:nen (116) 5 14f. Hearn (154)' 0 3 L. _Arnold (191) 5 I N. navis (143) .ti Iteady (206) 5 10 s. kennedy (156) 6 a Phone 235-0660 Eifetor ineamenniaineneeenetteeeneeennneno