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Page 6 Times-Advocate, Septembe 1, 1966
FOR ALL GOOD SPORTS -
By Ross. Haugh.
,Hensall. Golds out,
bow to Brucefield
Zurich Kings oust Doshwood;
drop first in OBA playdowns Let's go
to the rodeo
Zurich Lumber Kings advanced
into the Ontario Baseball As-
sociation ole" play-off series
With a hard-fought 7-3. win in
Dashwood Friday to overcome
the Tigers four games to three
in a full seven game set.
The Kings opened 013A play
losing to Wilkesport by an ae3
score. The second contest will
be in Zurich Sunday afternoon
at 2:30 with a third game, if
necessary, in Wilkesport, Labor
Day afternoon.
liensall Golds were eliminated
from further play in the southern
section of the Huron Ladies' soft-
ball league as they dropped the
second game of a best-of-three
series to Brucefield 5-3 on the
Hensel), diamond,_ Friday even-
ing,
Brucefield are now meeting
Brussels in the group final and
on Ken Rader's single and com-
pleted the cycle as Art Rader
slapped out a clean single in the
bottom of the opening inning.
ilayter again crossed the plate
in the third, reaching first on a
single, stealing second and com-
ing home as Ken Rader delivered
a one base safety.
Bob Hoffman was hit by a pitch-
ed ball with one out in the fifth and
raced home on Bayter's double.
Doug O'Brien and Rick Stade
were best in the Kings' hitting
department, each collecting three
hits. O'Brien combined a double
with a pair of singles, while
Stade's blows were all of the
single variety.
Jim Hayter, Art Rader and Ken
Rader belted two hits apiece to
lead the Dashwood hit total of
seven,
Local mare
best at Ex
DOUG O'BRIEN JIM PFAFF
. . . Lead assault on Dashwood
An Exeter entry took two top
awards in the horse br e e ding
shows held at the Canadian Na-
tional Exhibition in Toronto, last
Wednesday.
Dalton Finkbeiner's 4 year-
old mare, Kuni, was judged best
in the class for Arabian mares,
four years and over and also
took the nod from the judges
as reserve champion mare.
Win tenth of season
LOSE IN WILKESPORT
Some defensive lapses in the
fourth inning when Wilkesport
scored six times, spelled defeat
for the Lumber Kings in Sunday's
OBA opener,
The Kings rallied for three
big runs in the fourth and were
leading 3-1 until the roof fell
in, in the bottom of the same
frame.
Four successive singles gave
the Zurich club their complete
scoring total in the fourth, Bruce
Horton, Doug O'Brien, Bob Mc-
Naughton and Phil Overholt col-
lected the one base blows for the
Kings.
Horton was the top Zurich hit-
ter of the day, bashing a pair of
singles. Dick Bedard tossed the
full nine inning route on the Zur-
ich bill and was in complete
charge, except for the fateful
fourth.
Vets stay atop rec loop
This coming Saturday and Sunday afternoons,
it's rodeo time again, at the grounds 21/2 miles west
of Exeter on Huron Street.
The third annual rodeo is sponsored by the
Mid-Western Rodeo company with the co-operation
of the Exeter Saddle Club. Mid-Western is a joint
venture of Dalton Finkbeiner, Len Veri and Wilmer
Preszcator.
Finkbeiner, in charge of registering entries
this year, reports that a total of $1,922 was paid out
in prize money a year ago.
This local rodeo is only one of five held an-
nually in the province and is sanctioned by the On-
tario Rodeo Association. Last year one contestant at
the Exeter outing gained enough rodeo award points
during the year to qualify to go west, into hot rodeo
competition.
As in the previous two years, entries are ex-
pected from various points in the United States and
from many spats in Ontario including Toronto, Ham-
ilton, Hespeler, etc.
Other sanctioned rodeos in Ontario are held
at Leamington, Windsor, Oxbow and Hespeler. The
latter show will be held on Labour Day and will in-
clude many of the entries that will be held in Exe-
ter the previous two days.
Each day's performance, scheduled to start at
2:00 p.m., will be preceded by a parade into the show
enclosure by all entries. Participation in this pre-
show parade is a must as a contestant could forfeit
any prize money by failing to partake in the march-
past.
Good seating accommodation is available for
spectators and all forms of exciting rodeo action in-
cluding the favorites, bulldogging, steer riding, calf
roping, etc. will be on tap.
The local rodeo was first started three years
ago when the sponsoring trio purchased the defunct
franchise of the Old Blair Rodeo along with some of
its equipment.
are leading this Set 1-0 iagam.es
as the result of a come from
behind 10-9 win in Hensall, Mon-
day.
In Friday's contest, both clubs,
scored in the first inning with
the visitors holding a 3-0 edge.
The Ileneall gals fought back with
a single nun in the fourth to tie
the count and they battled on even
terms until Brucefield sent their
first two batters in the sixth
across to clinch the victory.
Singles by Gail Marcell and
Sandra Graham and a two-bagger
from the bat of winning pitcher
Betty Graham produced the open-
ing Brucefield tallies.
The Golds retaliated as if they
really meant business with Mary
Lou Hyde and Linda Regan bang-
ing out singles and Eleanor Shiele
tripling to come within one run
of tying the mint in the bottom
of the first.
The faithful hometown fans
were rewarded in the bottom of
the fifth when Shiels slammed a
bases empty homer with one out
to knot the count at 3-3,
A single by Sandra Graham,
her second of the night, a walk
to Kirlew and Sharon Burdge's
single in the sixth put away the
Brucefield win.
The Hensall gals threatened
in the bottom of the seventh but
were unable to score, Marion
McNutt singled to open proceed-
ings and moved around to third
on a couple of infield outs, but
was left stranded.
Betty Graham of the winners
and June Chuter of Hensall en-
gaged in a tight pitcher's duel,
member of the Kin club to col-
lect more than one safe hit.
EVEN SERIES
Dashwood Tigers evened the
H-P final series at three games
apiece with an 11-3 win on their
home diamond, Wednesday.
Five runs in the second and
four more in the fourth were
mainly responsible for the Dash-
wood one-sided victory,
Zurich scored all their runs
in the first inning as Dashwood
starter Bill Schade ran into a bit
of control trouble walking two
and hitting one, Singles by Bob
Johnston and George H aggitt
helped send the three runs home.
Eugene Guenther took over the
Tiger mound chores midway
through the first and after giv-
ing up the hit to Banat, settled
down and held the Kings hitless
the rest of the way.
Four Zurich fielding mistakes
and singles by Bill Schade, Whit-
ey Denomme and Guenther pro-
duced the Dashwood runs in the
second, Gord Vincent's double
and singles delivered by Bob
Hoffman, Bill Schade and Ken
Rader sent a quartet of Dash-
wood markers across in the
fourth,
Exeter Legion continue to head
the parade in the local Rec soft-
ball loop as the schedule moves
into its final weeks. The Vets
with only one loss throughout the
season hold a six point edge in
first spot.
A real battle is shaping up for
second plane, between the Lanes
and Kinsmen. At the moment they
each have eight victories to their
credit, but the Lanes have a slight
edge with one game in hand.
The Legion boys won their
tenth game of the season Tuesday
night with a 6-1 win over Cen-
tralia. The "bowlers" who had
slipped to third place for a few
days regained their higher spot
with a 6-1 decision over the Kins-
men, Wednesday and a 11-6 ver-
dict over the Teen Towners, Mon-
day. The Kin club stayed in the
battle for second, downing Cen-
tralia 13-3, also on Monday.
VETS COP TENTH
Exeter Legion won their tenth
game of the season, Tuesday,
with a 6-1 win that was manu-
factured on only three safe hits.
The vets scored twice in the first
and added runs in single fashion
in the second, third and fifth
innings.
The lone Centralia marker was
scored in the third when Bob
Lammie was hit by a pitched
ball, moved to second on a walk
to Harvey Railings and raced
across on a single by Paul
C ronyn.
Three free tickets to first
along with a hit batsman and a
single from the bat of Charlie
Atthill sent the first two Legion
runs home. Jerry Finnen singled
in the second to send Ted Mc-
Donald home with run number
three and Jim Hennessey's single
brought in another marker in the
third.
Dune Mousseau went the dist-
ance on the Legion hill to gain
the victory while Harvey Rollings
threw in the losing Centralia
cause.
STANDINGS
W L
Legion 10 2
Lanes 8 4
Kinsmen . 8 5
Teen Town . . . 5 8
Centralia 1 11
Pts
20
16
16
10
2
PIN BOYS
Anyone wishing to set up pins for the coming
season, please meet at the Bowling Lanes,
• WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7
at 4:00 p. m.
to draw up a schedule.
with a single, moved to second as
Lyle Little walked and home on
a double from the bat of Bill
Gilfillan. Jim Russell followed
With a free ticket to load the
sacks and third sacker Hal Fiero
drove in all three with a solid
double to left. Bob Russell gain-
ed first with the same keen eye
as his brother Jim a few min-
utes earlier and sped home all
the way from first on a double
by Bogart. The speeding Russell
failed to heed the hectic waves
of his coach and dashed on to
beat the throw.
The Lanes scoring ended in
the seventh when Jim Russell
hammered out a bases empty
homer.
Larry Willert was the top hit-
ter for the youngsters collecting
a single and a long home run.
Dave Wood and Larry Inglis com-
bined on the Teen hill in a losing
cause while Jim Warren and Gard
Slaght tossed for the winners.
SLAGHT SLOWS KIN
A solid hurling performance
by Gord Slaght enabled the Lanes
to down the Kinsmen 6-1 in Rec
league play, Wednesday. The big
right-hander from Crediton al-
though touched for seven hits was
tough in the clutches, allowing the
only run in the seventh.
In contrast the Lanes used a
14 hit attack to produce six runs
from the combined offerings of
Virgil McNab and Don Bell.
A four run rally in the sec-
ond pretty well sewed up the
"bowler" victory. Joe Wooden
and Ron Bogart led off with
singles and romped home as
Gary Middleton picked up a
double. One base safeties by Gord
Strang and Lyle Little along with
a two base blow from Al Flynn
produced the next two scores.
The final Lanes runs came
over the pan in the fourth as
Strang, Gilfillan and Little pro-
duced their second safeties of
the game.
Bell coming in late in the game
to relieve McNab opened the sev-
enth with a triple and came home
on a long sacrifice fly from the
bat of Dick Roelofson to avert a
shut-out. Pratt was the only
PFAFF WINS SEVENTH
Perennial pitching rivals Jim
Pfaff of Zurich and Eugene Guen-
ther of the Tigers, hooked up in
the seventh and final game of the
Huron-Perth series with the
former gaining a 7-3 win. It was
Pfaff's third win of the series
and sent Zurich into the OBA
playdowns.
Guenther, an equally hard
throwing right hander saw most
of the Tiger pitching action dur-
ing the series and picked up all
three wins for his club.
Fielding errors and the hot bat
of Doug O'Brien helped the Tigers
into the discard. Three Dashwood
miscues helped Zurich to a big
five rally in the second.
Doug O'Brien opened the sec-
ond frame rally with a single,
moved to second on a wild throw
and finished the trip home on
Rick Stade's single, Stade moved
up a base on a walk to Phil
Overholt and came the rest of
the way home as the result of a
wild pitch and a passed ball.
A walk to Bob Johnston and two
more Dashwood bobbles produced
three additional Zurich markers.
Bruce Horton singled and O'-
Brien doubled to open the third
and both were plated on Stade's
second hit of the night to end
the King scoring.
The Dashwood runs were scor-
ed in single fashion in the first,
third and fifth stanzas.
Jim Hayter reached first on a
Zurich error, advanced to second
Lucan birds
race home
A bird from the loft of Willy
Vanneste of Clandeboye was home
first in the latest test of the Lucan
Homing Club, nipping an entry
from the Hardyholme loft by a
scant seven seconds.
A total of 184 pigeons from 10
Lucan and area lofts made the
difficult 175 mile trip from
Peterborough, Saturday morning,
in the young bird series of the
Lucan organization.
The winning Vanneste flight
was completed in five hours and
25 1/2 minutes, with an average
speed of 943 1/2 yards per min-
ute.
Winners of earlier races in
the same series were Mert Cul-
bert and sons and Gordon Hardy
of Lucan and Chuck Barrett of
EXeter.
KIN WIN MONDAY
Two base hits were the decid-
ing factors in the Kin 13-3 win
over Centralia, Monday. Con-
secutive two-baggers from the
bats of George Pratt, Jim Newby
and Ron Anderson were the big
blows in the second inning to put
the winners out in front early.
In the third stanza, Anderson
duplicated his feat of the pre-
vious inning sending Chuck Mc-
Kenzie and Newby across the
plate. Again in the fourth another
double was responsible for a
pair of Kin markers. This time
Dick Roelofson wielded the big
bat.
Continuing the early pattern,
relief pitcher Don Bell doubled
in two more tallies for his Kins-
men club in the seventh. Three
additional markers came across
in the same inning as the result
of a couple of walks and a Cen-
tralia error.
Bob Laramie and Fred Lamb
crossed the plate in the sixth
to avert a shut-out for their
Centralia mates and Paul cronyn
added another run in the seventh.
Virgil McNab and Don Bell
shared the pitching duties for
the Kin in gaining their club's
eighth win of the season.
Serum albumin is a product
made from blood plasma. It is
used in the treatment of shock,
certain liver and kidney diseas-
es and for extensive burns.
WALPER'S
THEY HAVE A PROBLEM
Owners of the present six clubs in the Na-
tional Hockey league have quite a problem on their
hands, deciding how to staff the new teams that will
be joining the loop's expansion program for the 1967-
68 season.
Meetings of the past week were expected to
come up with a formula to protect some of the play-
ers on the present rosters of each of the old stand-
bys, but complications have delayed official action.
The big question at the moment is the num-
ber of players each team will be able to freeze. The
new clubs will each get 20 players for their invest-
ment of $2,000,000 to ready them for their first try
in the major league of hockey.
Our opinion is that if each of the established
clubs were only able to protect six players, the dis-
tribution would be fairly even and make for good
competition right from the opening whistle.
Several of the present owners have suggested
that each of the present six be allowed two goalies
on their protected list. This seems a little unreason-
able in that 12 of the best net minders would be
tied up and certainly not all seeing steady action.
Each club should be satisfied to go with one expe-
rienced net custodian and rely on a youngster for
fill-in duty.
One idea put forth would have each club pro-
tecting one goalie, two defencemen and a complete
forward line. It is quite doubtful if the Old Guard
would go for this; in fact, the newcomers will prob-
ably be fortunate if the protection figure is between
six and 12.
We agree that it will be tough for the well
founded clubs to give up experienced talent. Man-
agers, coaches and scouts will be giving up some
players that have taken many years and some finan-
cial contributions to develop.
Owners retain managers and coaches on their
successes and they won't be anxious to give away
any products that are adding to their bread and but-
ter.
On the other hand, the present owners will
want the new clubs to produce crowd pleasing hock-
ey to keep the fans coming through the turnstiles.
Although the Forum in. Montreal and the Gardens
in Toronto have been virtually sold out for years,
we doubt if their fans will continue to flock out if
their favorites are able to win by lop-sided scores.
The man responsible for drawing up the suc-
cessful formula to stock the new additions is Sam
Pollock, general manager of the Montreal Canadiens.
He has spent months on the job, probably profes-
sional sport's most thankless job. Formula after for-
mula has been discussed and then thrown into the
trash can.
The latest delay is not serious as the plan
will not be needed until the NHL draft meetings in
June, This extra time will give the new clubs an
opportunity to do a more thorough job of scouting
prospective players. A protection formula is not
necessary to do scouting.
In addition to the question of the number
of protected players to be allowed, the treatment of
veteran performers hasn't been decided either. There
is a feeling throughout the league that no club, old
or new, should attempt to stock up on veteran play-
ers, but should pick a mixture of young and old,
While officials of the six established NHL
teams are trying to settle some of their problems,
the newcomers are equally busy with mutual woes.
They are engaged in discussing area construction,
admission prices, advertising, etc.
NGS
Frank Glanville of Crediton
proudly holds a 24 pound spring
salmon, he caught last week in
British Columbia. The fishing
party including Charles and Har-
old Glanville of Crediton and Les
Glanville of London captured
more than 100 pounds of salmon
in a day's outing.
LANES LACE LADS
A six run uprising in inning
number five provided the Lanes
with the difference in downing the
Teen Towners 11-5, Monday
under the lights.
The Lanes scored a pair of runs
in each of the second and third
frames to get in front early.
Jim Russell led off the second
with a double and after the next
two batters were retired, rode
home on Ron Bogart's long blast
to deep right field that went for
a homer. Al Flynn's three-bag-
ger was responsible for plating
the Lanes markers in the third.
Larry Stire started the big fifth
WALPERS vfeena'rs
SWEATERS, SWEATERS & SWEATERS
SPECIAL BACK TO SCHOOL
HALF PRICE
Values to 19,95
Thursday, Friday and Saturday only
WILL PLAY IN BIG IGLOO
Only the Pittsburgh entry in the new six-
team division of the National ice circuit have yet to
come up with a nickname. The other teams named
are the St. Louis Blues, Philadelphia Flyers, Min-
neapolis - St. Paul North Stars, San. Francisco Seals
and Los Angeles Kings.
The Civic Arena in Pittsburgh has been nick-
named the i3ig Igloo, which would lend support to a
suggestion the teartt may be called the Eskimos. The
monicker is already in use in gcnonton, so will prob-
ably be discarded. Another guess would he the Pen-
guins. This would also be in line with the Igloo bit
and would certainly blend in with Pittsburgh.
1-4