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Page 4 Tires-Advocate, June 3, 1965 president of the club at a meet.-
ing following the outing and Jim
Russell was named secretary FOR ALL coop SPORTS
Liniment loop opens
Bowlers and Airmen
record easy victories
Russell scores win
in first outing
KO for
big deals
Ernie Chipchase 49, Harold
Hinton 43, Gar Johnston 45 and
Lloyd Greenacre 47,
The Exeter club is currently
on the lookout for members in
order to get the club better
organized for the coining sea-
son. This years fee is $2.50
and any golfer wishing to join
the club is asked to contact the
club secretary
Gar Johnston was elected
The Exeter Men's Golf Club
started their summer activities
last Thursday night with 14
golfers taking part in the initial
tournament.
Jim Russell led the field by
scoring birdies on the first,
fifth and ninth holes for a 36
to take the first competition,
while Dick Weber captured se-
cond place with a ae.
Stan Thorne took third place
in the night's action with a 40
while Wally Burton, Mel Soper
and Howard Bishop tied for
fourth with 42's.
Other awards in the tourney
went to Art Hillson, Burton
and Red Fairley for low scores
on holes 4, 6 and 8; Brian
Dobson and Lorry Cann for
high score on holes 3 and 5.
Woody Davidson received a golf
ball for his high score of 52
while Ernie Chipchase was the
winner of the door prize.
Other scores were: Ernie
Parks 54, Art Hillson47, Lorry
Cann 55, Red Fairley 45, Doug
Skinner 53, Brian Dobson 68,
sell's elbow in the mouth and
lost a tooth and cut his lip
but is expected to be back in
action next week against the
Kinsmen.
Bob Russell led the Lanes
at the plate lashing out two
doubles while Red Loader and
Jack Fuller with doubles and
Jim Russell with a triple round-
ed out the extra base hits. Gerry
Webb, Murray Bell and Beaver-
stock contributed single base
blows to the winners' attack.
Crediton lineup: Dave Wood,
Jim Pfaff, Dick Coulter, Al
Flynn, Bob liodgins,CarlIsanc,
Gord Slaght, Don Hudson, Smith
and Mathers,
Lanes: Red Loader, Gerry
Webb, Bill Gilfillan, Jim Rus-
sell, Murray Bell, Bob Ruseell,
Ron Heywood, Gil Burrows,
Jack Fuller and Don Beaver-
stock.
In the other game the Airmen
had little trouble with the local
Kinsmen as they picked up 20
runs on 20 hits while pitcher
Les Romain struck out 15 bat-
ters to post his first victory
of the year.
The Kinsmen, who have had
only one practice, managed only
three hits off Rom ain but bunch-
ed their safeties to score two
runs in the second inning on
singles by Dave McCutcheon
and Doug Sillery and Lester
Heywood's double.
Ross Mathers went the dis-
tance on the Mound for the
Kinsmen and struck out four
Airmen batters but his defence
gave him little support.
Red Swain led the Airmen
attack by banging out five
straight hits while Al Josey
and Al Falardeau had three
safeties each.
Kinsmen: Ron Anderson, Bill
Rowe, Jim Hewitt, Pete Flani-
gan, Dave McCutcheon, Doug
Sillery, Lester Heywood, Pete
McFalls, Russ Lee, Dave Cross
and Ross Mathers.
Airmen: Claude Audet, John
Wludyka, Neil Hatch, Al Josey,
Al Falardeau, Carl Reynolds,
Wayne Chuter, Roly Hache, Red
Swain and Les Remain.
Following is the Rec League
schedule for the month of June
and the remainder of the sche-
dule will be coming out in the
near future. All games under
the lights at Centralia will get
under way at eight o'clock while
games in Crediton and Exeter
will start at seven.
Location of the games will
appear in brackets after the
two teams with A denoting Air-
port; C, Crediton and E, Exeter.
7—Lanes vs Kinsmen (E)
Airmen vs Legion (A)
9—Lanes vs Oldtimers (E)
Kinsmen vs Crediton (C)
14—Crediton vs Legion (E)
Oldtimers vs Kinsmen (C)
16—Airmen vs Lanes (A)
Legion vs Kinsmen (E)
Crediton vs Oldtimers (C)
21—Legion vs Lanes (E)
Oldtimers vs Airmen (A)
23—Lanes vs Crediton (C)
Kinsmen vs Oldtimers (E)
28—Legion vs Airmen (A)
Lanes vs Kinsmen (E)
30—Crediton vs Airmen (A)
Legion vs Oldtimers (E)
CE golfer
among tops
The Exeter Rec Softball lea-
gue got off to a rousing start
on Monday night with the Exeter
Lanes and the RCAF Centralia
Airmen posting lopsided victor-
ies over C rediton and the Exeter
Kinsmen in league openers.
At Centralia, the Airmen
clobbered the local Kinsmen
by a 20-2 score while the Lanes
defeated Crediton by a 10-1
count at Exeter.
After Lanes pitcher Don
Beaverstook had set the visitors
down in order in the first inn-
ing, the Lanes wasted little
time in building a lead as they
scored two rims on two walks
and an error in the bottom of
the first.
The bowlers then went on to
add two more runs in the second,
three in the fourth and three
more in the sixth for their
first win of the season.
Lanes' hurler Don Beaver-
stock pitched a fine game for
the winners and held Crediton
hitless until Al Flynn's one out
single between short and third
in the top of the seventh inning
spoiled his no hitter bid. Beav-
erstock fanned seven Crediton
hitters while Gord Slaght, his
counterpart on the mound for
Crediton struck out eight but
had five errors committed be-
hind him.
Lanes catcher Gil Burrows
was forced to leave the game in
the first of the fifth inning after
colliding with thirdbaseman Jim
Russell. The pair came together
while chasing Bob Hodgin's pop-
up and Burrows caught Rus-
:::',WWW.MINNIMOZIMMEMO
F/L Ross Burns of RCAF
Centralia, who was match play
champion of the Exeter Men's
Golf Club last year, is off to
another fine start this year.
The local golfer tied for the
lead in a Centralia tourney
that was held two weeks ago
with a 73 at the Grand Bend
layout and on Friday he shot
an 80 at the Ontario Champion
of Champions Tournament that
was staged at the London High-
land Golf Club to finish in an
eight-way tie for tenth place.
Burns, who was competing
against some of the best ama-
teur golfers in the province,
played both nines in 40 and.
finished 13 strokes off the win-
ning score of 67 that was posted
by veteran Bill Morland of North
Bay.
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EXETER DISTRICT
tia0ZINataea •
Miss Margaret Kernick Is a
patient in South HuronHospital,
Exeter having had an appendect-
omy Saturday.
Misses Sandra and Shari de
Mooy of London are visiting
with their grandparents, Mr.
& Mrs. Alvin Passmore.
About100 friends
honour bride-elect
Mrs. Major Baker, who has
spent the last three weeks in
South Huron Hospital, is at
present visiting with her daugh-
ter and son-in-law, Mr. & Mrs.
Roland Neil of Ailsa Craig.
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Baker,
Sandra, Donna and Nancy visited
with Mr. & Mrs. Roland Neil
and Mrs. Baker Sunday.
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Caught elbow
The rec softball loop opened
this week, but got off to a bad
start for Exeter Lanes catcher
Gil Burrows. He collided with
thirdbaseman Jim Russell as
they raced for a pop flybetween
their respective positions and
Burrows ',caught" an elbow in
the teeth. His lip was cut and
a couple of dentures were dam-
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this Sunday, Wednesday afternoon
and during the evening throughout
the week.
Last Tuesday's World's Heavyweight box-
ing match between Champion Cassius Clay and
Challenger Sonny Liston did very little to im-
prove the fight game which was in a sorry con-
dition before the fight, and also failed to make
either one of the two combatants any more pop-
ular.
Clay, who prefers to be called Mohammad
Ali because of his association with the Negro
Black Muslim Sect, has been labelled a loud-
mouth and a braggart by most newspapermen
in the U.S. while Liston has been arrested sev-
eral times for his drinking and poor conduct.
Clay's two-minute knockout at Lewiston, Maine
might have been the mortal blow to the sport
of boxing which has been under heavy fire be-
cause of its deaths and shady management.
Many expert observers, including former
heavyweight champions Gene Tunney and Jack
Dempsey, condemned the fight calling it a farce
and a fiasco and they are now worried that box-
ing will go the same way as professional wrest-
ling and become an entertainment
In previous years when boxing was one
of North America's major sports, title fights were
staged in well known arenas and stadiums like
the Cow Palace in San Francisco, Madison Square
Gardens and Yankee Stadium in New York be-
fore overflow crowds, but now boxing is more in-
terested in television revenues than paying cus-
tomers and thus important bouts are put on in
Email unknown places like Lewiston. By doing
this boxing has discouraged the ordinary fan
who was responsible for making the fight game
so popular in the past
Although some fight fans paid exorbitant
prices to see the Clay-Liston fight, it would ap-
pear that the real losers were the promoters and
the fighters themselves. The last four heavy-
weight title matches combined did not total ten
rounds and boxing could be forcing itself into a
tight corner where the ardent boxing enthusiast
will not pay $100 for a ringside seat or $10 to
see the fight on a theatre screen.
It appears that boxing will have to change
its ways and give the sport back to the ordinary
fan by staging bouts with regular television cov-
erage and no lush TV contracts.
KEGLERS TOSS TOP GAMES
Although all the local bawling leagues
have concluded their schedules, local keglers are
still competing at tournaments and are making
their presence felt at the post season affairs.
On Saturday, 18 Exeter bowlers took part
in the Waterloo Bowling Tournament. Seven men
and 11 ladies from the local league bowled in the
two-week tourney and while the teams failed to
place in the money, two individuals did very well.
Jack Fuller, who was bowling in the doubles with
a former Exeter Mohawk star, Bill Oberle, and
Dot Monroe who lives in Kippen but bowls in the
the Exeter Ladies' League during the winter
came up with fine games to place high among
the leaders in the tough competition for the first
week.
Fuller was rolling the fourth game of the
day when he tossed ten straight strikes but left
a corner pin on his next ball and had to settle
for a spare and a sparkling game of 433. The
fine game was the third highest of the tourna-
ment with the other high games being 448 and
440.
Dot Monroe, while bowling in the ladies'
'B' division of the tourney tossed a fine three-
game total of 913 and at the end of Saturday's
play there wasn't another lady close to her as
the second highest triple was 895. She has a very
good chance of taking the honours in this section
because the winning triple last year was 801.
Other local keglers who competed in
Waterloo were: Phyllis Haugh, Grace Farquhar,
Lila Smith, Georgina Webster, Peg Hunter-Du-
var, Betty Wilson, Betty Datars, Doris Dobson,
Ruth Durand, Anne Jorgensen, Aub Farquhar,
Bob Osgood, Don Beaverstock, Peter McFalls,
Lorne Haugh and Bob Nicol.
RUSTLINGS — The Exeter Greys, who
will open their regular softball schedule June
19, are interested in starting a junior girls' soft-
ball league to produce players for the regular
team, The juniors will hold a practise this Sat-
urday at 2:00 o'clock and all young girls who
are interested in playing are invited to the work-
out Well known horseman Charles Godbolt
is walking on air these days after receiving a
new colt out of Dustabout. Dustys Folly arrived
three weeks ago and his owner claims that he
is just as handsome as his mother.
' : '' • '''' ''' ' ' '''''''''''''''''''''
By MRS. WILLIAM ROHDE
THAMES ROAD
Around a hundred friends,
neighbors and relatives gather-
ed in the church basement Fri-
day evening to honor Miss Ann
Marie Rowe, bride-elect of this
month. The basement was taste-
fully decorated with tulips, li-
lacs and lily of the valley.
To the strains of the Bridal
Chorus played by Mrs. Lloyd
Knight, Ann Marie was escort-
ed to a decorated chair by Miss
Barbara Webber.
A program in charge of Mrs.
Ross Hodgert included an ac-
cordion selection by Mrs. Ross
Ballantyne, a humorous read-
ing by Mrs. William Rohde and
a vocal solo ',Because" byMrs.
Ray Cann.
Miss Joyce Mayer read an
address and Diane Hodgert and
Laurel Hodgert pulled in a de-
corated wagon laden with many
gifts. After opening her gifts
Ann Marie thanked all those
present and invited them to see
her trousseau Saturday, June 5.
PERSONALS
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Jeffery
accompanied by Mr. & Mrs.
Raymond Heard of Kirkton spent
Saturday evening with Mr. &
Mrs. Ronald Clarke of London
celebrating Mr. & Mrs. Heard's
and Mr. & Mrs. Jeffery's tenth
wedding anniversary.
Mr. & Mrs. Victor Jeffery and
Barry and Mrs.Harry Coates of
Exeter visited with Mr. Harry
Coates who is a patient in a
London Hospital.
Mr. & Mrs. Milton Sleamon
of Exeter visited Sunday with
Mr. & Mrs. Albert Etherington.
The Happy Doubles picnic will
be held Saturday evening at 6pm
at Riverview Park, Exeter.
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