HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1965-07-08, Page 6s•-•
NOW BY3CONKLIN'S
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No. One
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FLOOR TILES
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Value No. Two
"CAPRI" PANELLING
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Value No. Three
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$159 95
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this sunday, Wednesday afternoon
and during the evening throughout
the week,
Snell Bros.
Page 6 Times-Advocate, July 8, 1965 Airmen grab rec league lead,
Lanes lose pair by single tally
FOR ALL GOOD SPORTS
By Jim. Russell
Start pro
careers
Legion at the plate with a double
and two singles. Murray Brint-
nell banged out a pair of singles
for the winners while Chub
Edwards, Jim Pinder, Don
Mousseau and Jim Hennessey
each added a single.
Eagleson clubbed a homerun
for the Old Timers while Mike
and Lloyd Cushman collected
the other two hits, both singles.
Under the lights at Centralia
the Kinsmen won their first
game of the year when they
— Please turn to page '7
the Old Timers 8-2. Mousseau
allowed the oldsters single runs
in the second and fifth innings
while striking out eight.
The game was close up until
the fifth inning as the Legion
held a slim 2-1 margin but
losing pitcher Lloyd Cushman
tired in the late innings and the
winners tallied twice in the
fifth and four more times in
the sixth.
Secondsacker Bob Baynham
must have been eating the right
kind of potato chips as he led the
of the seventh for the Lanes
with a triple but Airmen hurler
Leo Romain, who gave up five
hits and fanned five, settled
down to retire the side without
a run being scored.
Don 13eaverstock on the hill
for the losers gave up only
six hits while striking out three
in the seven inning stint.
ONLY THREE HITS
On the Exeter diamond Wed—
nesday night, Legion pitcher
Don Mousseau spun a neat three
hitter as the Legion defeated
The RCAF Airmen registered
wins over the Exeter Lanes and
Crediton last week and took a
one point lead over the Legion
in the race for first place in the
Exeter Men's Recreation Soft-
ball league.
The Airmen scored two runs
in the first of the seventh inning
on Monday night to edge the
Lanes in a 4-3 thriller but had
little trouble with Crediton last
Wednesday as they posted a 13-2
victory.
In another Rec League game
Crediton walloped the Kinsmen
by a 16-7 score on Monday while
the Legion defeated the Old
Timers 8-2 and the Kinsmen
squeezed past the Lanes 6-5
on Wednesday night.
On Monday night at Crediton,
pitcher Gord Slaght pitched and
batted the homesters to a 16-7
win as he lashed out a homer,
two doubles and a single while
striking out 10 Kinsmen batters.
Shortstop Jim Sandford and
thirdsacker Doug Sillery were
the only Kinsmen players to
manage two hits off the big
righthander as Sandford picked
up a double and single and Sil-
lery added a pair of singles.
Jim Pfaff, Russ Beavers and
Lloyd blathers pounded out
home runs as the Crediton nine
picked up a total of 20 base hits
to coast to their second win of
the season.
In the game at Exeter the
Airmen scored a run in the
first inning on an infield error
and Al Josey's single but the
Lanes came back with three
runs in the third after two were
out to take a 3-1 lead.
Bill Gilfillan started the third
inning rally when he singled
and then scored when the Air-
men third baseman threw Jim
Russell's easy ground ball into
rightfield allowing Gilfillan to
score. After Joe Leiter had
walked, Gerry Webb drove in
two more runs with a long
blast to right centerfield.
The visitors picked up a sin-
gle run in the fifth frame and
the Lanes failed to score in the
next two innings to set the stage
for the disastrous seventh when
the Airmen scored two big runs
to move ahead 4-3.
With one out in the top of the
seventh. Carl Reynolds laced
a humerun into rightfield to tie
the game 4-4 and then a walk to
Art Epton and a single by Neil
Hatch plated the eventual win-
ning run.
Bill Gilfillan led off the last
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F...
Although we are in the midst of the sum-
mer season with golf and baseball receiving most
of the headlines, hockey has been in the lime-
light lately with the signing of two area lads to
pro contracts. Last week Jack Chipchase of Hen-
sail signed with the Toronto Maple Leafs while
last fall Terry Bourne of Exeter was signed to
a contract by the Springfield Indians of the
American Hockey League.
The 20-year-old Chipchase is well known
to district hockey followers who have watched
him develop through the Hensall minor system.
After playing pee wee, bantam and midget in
Hensall, Jack played one year of junior hockey
in Exeter before moving on to the Toronto Marl-
boros, with whom he has played for the last four
years.
Bourne on the other hand played most of
his minor hockey in Strathroy and was a stand-
out on the Strathroy Junior Rockets of the Sham-
rock League. The slender centreman also joined
the powerful Hensall - Zurich Combines for the
playoffs a couple of years back and helped that
club in the Ontario Junior "D" championships
before he joined the Ingersoll Marlands of the
OHA Central Junior "B" loop.
Terry and his family moved to Exeter
about two years ago and he and his father Mike
are employed by Canadian Canners.
Chipchase played nine games with the
Tulsa Oilers of the Central Professional League
last year and it is believed that the sturdy blue-
liner will begin his pro career with that club
this fall. The Central Pro loop is stocked mostly
with over age junior players and each team must
have so many players under the age of 24.
Bourne will report to the Springfield club
and while Tulsa is an affiliate of the Maple Leaf
organization, the Indians are an independent
club owned by former Boston Bruin defenseman
Eddie Shore.
Having played with Chipchase and against
Bourne in Junior competition we would like to
congratulate the two young hockeyists and wish
them the best of luck as they embark on the
tough career of professional hockey.
A HULLOVA LOT OF MONEY
While still on the subject of hockey,
Bobby Hull of the Chicago Black Hawks must
figure that he is to hockey what Mickey Mantle
and Willie Mays are to baseball by stating that
he should be worth $100,000 per season.
While this is Hull's opinion and not that
of James Norris and the Black Hawks' organiza-
tion, paying one player that much money could
throw NHL salaries way out of proportion since
a pennant contending club in pro baseball av-
erages between 25,000 and 30,000 fans for 81
home games while an NHL team can average
only around 15,000 for 35 home games and could
not afford to pay such a salary to one man.
Hull, whose only accomplishment this far
in the NHL is that he scored 50 goals in one
season to equal the mark that was set by two
other players, Maurice Richard and Bernie Geof-
frion of the Canadiens, also stated that he was
the Hawks' top drawing attraction and that he
thought he could convince the club that he de-
served much more money than he was getting.
If the muscular blond winger of the
Hawks thinks he is worth $100,000 it would be
interesting to note just how much team mate
Stan Mikita and Montreal winger Claude Provost
would be worth. While Hull gets most of the
newspaper ink, Mikita has led the Hawks in scor-
ing for the last three years and has been the
NHL scoring champion the last two seasons while
Provost, a lesser known performer, stopped Hull
cold in last year's Stanley Cup finals.
RUSTLINGS—Ross Burns, Al Piper, Tom
Reid, Brent Marsters, Howie Bishop and "Whip"
Watson will represent the RCAF Centralia Golf
Club in the Zone Three Golf Playdowns at Tren-
ton July 13-16. The six local shotmakers will
compete against eight other RCAF golf teams
and if they win the Zone Three playdowns they
will advance to the RCAF Golf Championship at
Summerside, P.E.I. on August 11-13.
Champions in Usborne track meet
Before school concluded last week, Usborne Township Central School students competed in a track
meet and team and individual champions were declared. Above are the individual champions, in the
back row, from the left: Bill Beiber, senior boys; Janice Morley, senior girls; Tom Prout, senior
runner-up; Mary Ellen Prance and Karen Rodd, tied for senior runner-up position. Front row:
Robert Case, intermediate boys; Leisa Ritchie, intermediate girls; Jim Ferguson, junior boys,
Joanne Paton, junior girls. --T-A photo
La. 12
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Greys extend streak;
Hensall nip Godench
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Although they were o u thi t
12-11 by Brucefield, the Exeter
Greys scored all of their runs
in the first two innings and
then coasted to a 7-3 victory
behind the clutch pitching of
Pat Down. Tuesday's win was
the Grey's second out of three
meetings with Brucefield.
The Greys plated five runs
in the first inning on seven
straight hits that came after
one was out and then they added
two more in the second to com-
plete their scoring. Brucefield
was blanked by Down until the
sixth inning when they scored
all their runs on four basehits.
In the big first inning up-
rising, Darlene Snell popped
up for the first out but seven
successive hits by Fern Dou-
gall, Anne C r ony n, Audrey
Pooley, Jean Weber, Connie
Kernick, Anne Baynham and
Anne Jorgensen netted the
Walkerton takes
commanding lead
Next week's games:
July 10 — Walkerton at Dash-
wood
July 11 — Staffa at Dashwood
2.30
Zurich at Walkerton
4.30
July 14 — Zurich at Staffa
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„=::-1 and Vacations I
FOR THE FOOT-WEARY
Shorthanded
midgets lose
Greys five runs.
Snell, Cronyn and Pooley rap-
ped out hits in the second frame
to add two more runs to the
Exeter total and that was the
end of the scoring for the local
club.
The visitors spoiled Down's
shutout when they scored their
three runs in the top of the
sixth on hits by Rathwell, Gra-
ham,Robinson and Aldwinkle
and hree Exeter errors.
Second sacker Anne Cronyn
led the Greys in the hitting
department by banging out a
single and a double while Aud-
rey Pooley and Connie Kernick
each picked up a pair of singles.
Jean Weber and Darlene Snell
hit doubles for the winners
while singles came off the bats
of Fern Dougall, Anne Bayn-
ham and Anne Jorgensen.
Rathwell, Robinson and Dal-
rymple with two hits each were
the top hitters for the visitors.
The Greys will pay a return
visit to Brucefield this Friday
night and their next home en-
counter will be Tuesday night
when Winthrop will supply the
opposition.
64 Pontiac 63 Chev
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BISCAYNE SEDAN
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FOR THE BUSHMAN
63 Corvair 62 Chev I
MONZA SEDAN BISCAYNE COACH
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custom radio, washers, one owner.
Back up lights, whitewall
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FOR THOSE WHO THINK YOUNG
61 Pontiac 60 Chev
STRATOCHIEF SEDAN
Custom radio, washers,
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• BEL AIR SEDAN
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FOR THE FISHERMAN
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CONCRETE
In Huron-Perth baseball ac-
tion last week the red-hot Walk-
erton club picked up three vic-
tories and ran their winning
streak to five games to take a
four point lead in the four team
loop. The northern squad clob-
bered the Dashwood Tigers13-6
at Walkerton on Sunday and
last Thursday they took a
doubleheader from the Zurich
Lumberkings.
Walkerton, who has defeated
Zurich three times this season,
took the opener on Thursday
11-3 and then came back in the
second game to register a 3-2
win for the sweep.
Don O'Brien started the first
game on the mound for Zurich
but had to be relieved by Dick
Bedard while Al Steinhoff went
the full seven innings for the
winners. Doug Cassidy of Walk-
erton and Jim Pfaff of the Kings
hooked up in a pitching duel
in the nightcap with the visitors
coming out on top by a 3-2 score.
Errors contributed to Dash-
wood's downfall in Walkerton
on Sunday as the homesters
came up with five runs in the
first two innings on only one
hit. The winners picked up nine
hits off Dashwood pitchers Eu-
gene Guenther and Bob Hoffman
and got most of them in the
seventh frame when they scored
five runs on four hits.
Dashwood starter Eugene
Guenther could not be faulted
for the loss as he struck out 11
Walkerton batters including five
in a row at one point in the six
innings that he worked but he
didn't receive much support
behind him.
Cassidy blanked them for five
innings on five hits when the
Tigers exploded for six runs on
six hits in the top of the sixth
frame.
Bill Schade led the losers at
the plate by banging out three
singles while pitcher Eugene
Guenther added a pair of safe-
ties. Whitey Denomme had a
double for Dashwood while sing-
les came off the bats of Art
Rader, Dave Ratz, Ken Guen-
ther, Bob Hoffman and Mike
Denomme.
There have been a couple of
reports out of Dashwood that
there could be a grudge game
between the present Dashwood
team and the old time Tigers
who performed with some of the
powerful Dashwood clubs sev-
eral years ago but the date of
the game has not yet been
The Exeter Midgets, who are
suffering from a lack of players
because of summer jobs and
vacations, dropped two games
last week to bring their record
to one win, three losses and a
tie. The locals bowed 9-2 to
the powerful Clinton Juveniles
on Monday night and were de-
feated 11-3 by the Clinton Mid-
gets in Clinton Saturday.
The Exeter club which plays
in a midget-juvenile league,
has split its two games with
Clinton and has lost to the
Clinton and Lucan Juveniles.
On Monday night the Clinton
juveniles, most of whom were
members of the Clinton midget
club that gained the Ontario
finals last year, had little trou-
ble with the shorthanded Exeter
nine as they plated four runs
in the first, one in the second
and four more in the third to
record an easy victory. Rick
McDonald and Bob Beaver s
were the only Exeter players
to score as the Clinton hurler
was in complete control all the
way.
Robert Wolf& who was pitch-
ing his first game of the season
went all the way to take the loss.
The Clinton Midgets scored
four runs in the third and fifth
innings on Saturday and went
on to defeat the locals 11-3.
Scott Burton and Larry Wil-
lert shared the pitching duties
for Exeter but received little
support as the losers committed
eight a r r o r s. Willert's long
homerun in the third inning was
the only bright spot in the game
for the Exeter squad while Bill
Fairbairn Rick McDonald, Bill
Bourne andi Barry Baynham col-
lected singles.
BEL AIR
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Automatic transmission,
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W L P
Walkerton 5 10
Stela 3 3 6
Zurich 2 5 4
Dashwood 1 3 2 ••• WATER PROOF TOO
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