HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1967-09-28, Page 6Page 6 Times-Advocate, Setpember 28, 1967
FOR ALL GOOD SPORTS
By Ross Haugh
Pros back
to ama teur
Kinsmen close to Rec league title
hold three game lead over Tigers
ance for the Kinsmen and allowed
but three hits and recorded eight
strike-cuts.
A home learn error and Roy
Smith's single produced the only
Crediton run in the top of the
seventh, Doug Fink beine r's
double and a single by Slaght
completed the hit total for the
losers.
rally, A walk and two fielding
miscues preceded the big blow of
the inning, a bases clearing hom-
er from the bat of Jim Russell.
After the fateful second, Slaght
settled down and allowed only
one hit and retired the side in
order in five of the six remain-
ing innings.
Don Bell went the pitching dist-
The Exeter Kinsmen have
moved closer to the Exeter and
district Rec softball champion-
ship as the result of twp straight
Victories over the Crediton Ti-
gers during the past week.
The Kin nine were victorious
7-1 in Exeter Sunday and 10-0
under the lights in Crediton,
Tuesday, to take a 3-0 lead in
the best-of-seven series to de-
cide a winner in the play-for-
fun loop.
The fourth game will be played
to-night, Thursday in Crediton
at 8:00.
Latest horse show
dominated by locals
SCOTT BURTON BILL FARQUHAR
Lead Panthers to first win
PITCHERS DOMINATE
Tuesday's 10-0 Kinsmen win
in Crediton was highlighted by
the many strike-outs recorded
by the pitchers.
Don Bell and Doug Kennedy
combined on the Kin hill to send
19 Crediton batters down swing-
ing.
High school football clubs
open season with victories
Western Riding, McDougall,
Hick s, Janet Ecker; Junior
Equitation, Ponies, Wayne Pres-
zcator, Trudy Johns, Barbara
Parsons; Junior Flag Race, Bob
Parsons, Wayne Tweddle, Doug
Swan, Musical Chairs, Jr., Bob
Parsons, Terry Johns, Wayne
Twaddle; Trail Class, Wilmer
Preszcator, John Muir, Tom
Downham.
NOTICE
a similar play early in the first
quarter.
On the ground, Bud Desjardine
picked up 37 yards in seven tries
through the Mitchell line and Jim
Bell, who went the first seven
innings struck out the side four
times in gaining a total of 16
whiffings. Kennedy finished up the
pitching chores and tossed a third
strike past three opposition bat-
ters.
On the Crediton mound, Gord
Slaght picked up a total of nine
strike-outs, with seven coming
in the first five frames.
The game was scoreless until
the top of the sixth when the
Kinsmen scored three times to
go in front to stay.
A walk and two errors started
the Crediton downfall in the sixth
and Doug Kennedy added a double
to send three team-mates racing
home,
Four hits, three good for extra
bases produced five more tallies
for the winners in the seventh.
Doubles by Larry Stire and Jim
Hewitt along with a booming triple
from the bat of Don Bell and Doug
Kennedy's single were respon-
sible for the big inning.
Bell repeated in the eight with
another three-bagger and Bob
Callingham and Ken Jackson chip•
ped in with singles to send two
Kin runners across the plate to
complete the scoring.
Crediton's only scoring chanc-
es came onJim Finkbeiner's two-
out double in the third and in the
seventh when Larry Laye walked
and got as far as third on Doug
Finkbeiner's single.
Hayter gained 23 yards on eight
carries. The remainder of the
Panther ground gaining was ac-
counted for by Scott Burton and
Bill Fairbairn with respective
gains of 19 and 11 yards.
Traquair
Hardware
Goderich Jrs.
return to "B"
will be closed Oct. 2-3
—4 — for inventory. —
and will re-open for
business
Oct. 5
Thank you.
South Huron District High
School football clubs started the
official 1967 Huron-Perth confer-
ence season on the right foot with
double wins on the local school
field, Friday.
The senior Panthers, with an
exhibition triumph under their
belts a week earlier, outscored
Mitchell Red Devils 10-6 while
their junior counterparts shut-
out Central Huron of Clinton 6-0
in their first start of the season.
Both local clubs are again in
action tomorrow, Friday with the
juniors travelling to Goderich
and the seniors playing host to
Seaforth for a 2:30 contest.
Local entrants took the major
share of the prizes at the latest
open horse show sponsored by
the Exeter Saddle club at Exeter
Community Park.
Bob Parsons of Exeter and
George Beer of Hensall each
took first prize on two occasions
and single first awards went to
Janet Ecker, Bruce Hicks, Nancy
Swartz, Brad Mousseau and Wil-
mer and Wayne Preszcator.
Dr. and Mrs. Don Ecker were
in charge of the latest show. Club
trophies for highest points in the
four open shows of the year will
be presented at the annual ban-
quet of the Exeter Saddle Club
to be held in December.
Following are the top three
contestants in each event:
Western Pleasure, Larry Mc-
Dougall, Joyce Sims, Bruce
Hicks; Steady Hand Jr., Janet
Ecker, Bill Black, Allan Par-
sons; Pole Bending, Geroge Beer,
John Muir, Bill Sims; Working
Cow Horse, Hicks, Wilmer Pres-
zcator, Beer; Junior Equitaton,
Nancy Swartz, Tom Downham,
Janet Ecker; Senior Flag Race,
Brad Mousseau, Beer, Nelson
B ilyea.
Cloverleaf Barrel, Beer, Wil-
mer Preszcator, Jim Paisley;
ONE BIG INNING
In Sunday's '7-1 Kin win in
Exeter, the winners made the
most of a few base hits, a couple
of opposition errors, and a bit of
wildness by Tiger hurler Gord
Slaght in scoring all their runs
in the second inning.
Singles by Larry Stire and Don
Bell after Doug Kennedy was hit
by a pitched ball loaded the bases
with one out to start the Kin
After an absence of one year,
the Goderich Siftos are return-
ing to Junior "B" hockey action.
They will be competing in the
Central grouping with Owen
Sound, Stratford, St. Marys, Wat-
erloo and Kitchener. The Central
league clubs will also play an
interlocking schedule with the
Western league entrants from
Sarnia, St. Thomas, Strathroy,
Chatham and Leamington.
Jack Evans has been named
coach of the Siftos and their
training camp will open at the
Goderich Arena, Sunday, October
1 at 12 noon with work-outs to
continue each evening at 7 p.m.
thereafter.
In a letter to the T-A, Sifto
Publicity Director Richard
Madge extends an invitation to
any Exeter and area junior age
hockey players to attend the open-
ing practices.
NEVER IN TROUBLE
In the junior game that start-
ed the afternoon of football, Glenn
Mickle's South Huron charges
kept their Clinton opposition bot-
tled up in their own end through-
out to gain a 6-0 decision.
A 22 yard touchdown romp by
Murray Hodge midway through
the third quarter provided the
only game scoring.
The Clinton boys were unable
to get any sustained attack going
as the local defensive line never
allowed them to get to midfield.
"We had a few good opportuni-
ties to score, but the boys were a
bit nervous as this was the first
game of actual competition for
most of them," added coach
Mickle after the contest.
Curling club
selects slate
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EXETER
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CLOSE BATTLE
Friday's senior fray was a
close contest all the way as the
score would indicate and the stat-
istics also back up.
The SHDHS boys held a bit of
an edge in the overall offensive
department gaining a total of
201 yards by all methods as
compared to 169 racked up by the
visiting gridders.
On the ground, the Panthers
gained 90 yards to 85 for the
opposition and picked up an edge
of 96-64 in yardage gained by
way of passing.
The visiting Red Devils led in
only one department as they gain-
ed 20 yards by way of penalties
and the panthers picked up 15
yards.
A long forward pass from
quarterback Scott Burton to
fellow backfielder Bill Farquhar
proved to be the difference in
the opening Conference game.
Farquhar gathered in the Burt-
on toss and galloped 63 yards to
score the only Panther touchdown
late in the second quarter to go in
front 10-0.
Burton booted a single point
on the last play of the first quart-
er and Jim Hayter found the
range with a 28 yard field goal
early in the second period to ac-
count for the total Panther scor-
ing,
The only Mitchell scoring came
on an unconverted touchdown late
in the game.
In addition to the successful
Scott Burton to Bill Farquhar
pass play that enabled the Panth-
ers to gain the victory the same
pair combined to gain 29 yards on
One of the top amateur (?) hockey leagues in
North America will this season boast some of the top
puck stars in the country.
The International league with teams in Michi-
gan, Ohio, Indiana and Iowa has lined up a full 72-
game schedule for its seven participating clubs.
Officials of the Muskegon Mohawks probably
pulled off the biggest coup of the year by signing
Carl Brewer to a playing coach contract. Brewer, now
28, became one of the most controversial figures in
the world of hockey when he quit the Toronto Maple
Leafs at the height of his career at the close of the
1964-65 season.
Certainly one of the brightest stars on the pro
hockey scene, he gave up an apparent brilliant ca-
reer to finalize his university degree. Brewer played
last season with the Canadian National team which
lost the world championship to the Russians by a
whisker and was named the outstanding defence-
man in the tourney.
Brewer's salary as an amateur with Muskegon
is a closely guarded secret but no doubt his presence
will lure a lot of fans not only to the home games
of the Mohawks but to every rink in the league.
Brewer, who was reinstated as an amateur
last year to allow him to perform with Canada's Na-
tional team cannot turn professional again for two
years under present NHL rules. Any ex-pros are not
allowed to compete in World Olympic play and this
is the reason he left the National team to go to
Muskegon.
While Muskegon rocked the hockey world by
luring Brewer to their camp, another International
league entry has lined up a top notch performer to
handle the coaching duties and also fill a playing
role.
Jerry Toppazzini, a 12-year veteran of the
NHL, will take over the reins of the Port Huron
Flags. Toppazzini comes to Port Huron after two
years with the Los Angeles Blades of the Western
league where last year he was named the most valu-
able player.
Jerry played 10 years with Boston in the NHL,
one with Chicago and one with Detroit and compiled
a total of 163 goals and 244 assists for a total of 407
points.
TRUE PATRIOTISM
In the days of the importance of the almighty
dollar, the actions of one member of Canada's Na-
tional Hockey team are to say the least, commend-
able.
Gary Dineen, perhaps the most talented ama-
teur hockey player in the world turned down a good
salary offer from the Minnesota North Stars, one of
the new entrants in the NHL.
Here is what Wren Blair and the North Stars
were willing to do for Dineen if he would desert Can-
ada's National team and turn professional with them:
They would pay him a salary which in Dineen's
words, "far exceeds my wildest ambitions." They
would pick up the tab for post-graduate studies at
the University of Minnesota and they would arrange
a job in the investments field equivalent to the one
he currently has in Winnipeg. "I don't mind telling
you it was the most difficult decision I ever faced,"
Dineen said.
It was also a mighty important decision for
Canadian amateur hockey, too. Dineen's defection al-
most certainly would have brought on the breakup
of the existing national team, with the 1968 tourna-
ment less than five months away. And if he left, he
probably would have been followed by most of the
others, whose NHL rights belong to the Minnesota
organization.
At the time he swung the deal with the Leafs
last spring, Blair was well aware Dineen would be
the fellow he'd have to land. That's why his offer
was so extravagant.
"Here's the way I figured." Dineen explained.
"If this happened to be my last year of hockey,
would I have been more satisfied having won an
Olympic gold medal or having won a division title
with Minnesota in the NHL? There was just no con-
test. It had to be the Olympic."
"Wren Blair was very understanding. Having
taken Whitby to the world title in 1958, he has a bet-
ter idea than most about international hockey and
what it means. Our agreement is that the same of-
fer will be open after the Olympics. So maybe, just
maybe, I'll be able to have my cake and eat it, too."
The slate of directors of the
Exeter curling club for the year
1967-68 was elected at a general
meeting of shareholders held on
Monday evening.
Four of last year's directors,
Mac Hodgert, Clarence Mc-
Donald, Walter McBride and Mrs.
Jean Weber were re-elected and
will be joined by three new-
comers.
Allan Westcott, Jack Urquhart
and Gerald Prout will complete
the board of seven directors.
Clarence McDonald and Mrs.
Jean Weber will continue to
handle the respective duties of
treasurer and secretary as they
did for the 1966-67 season.
A new chairman, replacing re-
tiring director Clarence Down
will be selected from the new
slate at the next meeting.
Curling is expected to start
with the usual Halloween party on
October 31.
At Monday's meeting share-
holders heard of improvements
that were made during the sum-
mer to the rink and plant. An
aeration condenser cooling sys-
tem has been installed, renova-
tions to the rink itself have been
made and additional lockers in-
stalled.
Lawn bowlers
in close battle
The weatherman, repeating
some of his early season tac-
tics, confined the activities of the
Exeter Lawn Bowling club to
Tuesday night's regular jitney
as Saturday's scheduled bowling
was rained out.
Mrs. Andy Hamilton proved to
be the best in the only action of
the week, compiling two wins,
a plus of 20 and aggregate of
35.
Rev. E. Morrow's double win
and plus of 13 was good for sec-
ond spot and Ivan Hirtzel fin-
ished third with the same num-
ber of wins and a plus of two.
For the first time this year
in order to name the winner of
the fourth prize, officials had
to go to a one game winner. Mrs.
Bill Lamport' s single victory and
a plus of 10 was good enough for
fourth place.
A small number of competitors
and very close competition made
the unusual move necessary,
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Exeter native
excels in shoot
Roy Triebner of Ottawa broke
96 out of 100 targets in Trap and
90 out of 100 targets in Skeet in
12 gauge competition at the Ot-
tawa Valley Skeet Club to win a
matched set of Winchester Trap
and Skeet shotguns.
This win ensures him a posi-
tion on the Ottawa 5-man team
competing for the Canadian Team
Championship in the Winchester
Claybird Tournament. Roy is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Doug Trieb-
ner of Exeter,
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0
Prout 530)
Pincombe 647)
Skinner 685)
Brintnell 619)
Russell 617)
Mathers 583)
Coleman 648)
Essery 525)
Moore 498)
Jorgensen 590)
Rader 586)
6
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11
15
9
17
12
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0
16
0
MEN'S "A" LEAGUE RO (A.
Hearn 590) 3 3 MM (L.
King 537) 1 1 PP (E.
Rollings 645) 4 4 BB (W.
Blommaert 631) 0 0
Brintnell 593) 2 2
Finnen 624) 2 2
Finlayson 711) 4 4
Brintnell 639) 0 0
Miller 656) 3 3
Beattie 726) 1 1
Collingwood 857) 3 3
KI (E.
CO (R.
RO (H,
O&E(C.
TR (D.
2x4s(J.
C4th(A.
UN (M.
SP (A.
CA (W.
RI (R.
RB (R, Heywood 681) 1 1
Exeter Bowling Lanes
are now
Fully A utomatic
for your bowling
pleasure
OB (V.
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TR (0,
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Burning Rectal Itch
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GETTING EXPENSIVE
With a general increase in operating costs,
officials of most National hockey league teams are
increasing the price of tickets for the 1967-68 season.
Although the same teams are seen in action
there is quite a difference in admission prices at
some of the big league arenas. Boston Bruins' fans
can watch their favorites play from the best seats in
the Boston Gardens for $5 while spectators in New
York, Chicago and Los Angeles will pay a top price
of $7.
The balance of the clubs have their admission
prices set between the ones being used by the afore-
mentioned clubs. The new clubs at Philadelphia and
California will charge $5.50 for their most advan-
tageous seats, Minnesota will get $5.75, while fans
in Detroit, Toronto and St. Louis will shell out up
to $6 to watch their favorites in action.
FISH BY COMPUTERS
By the aid of computer-fed information from
numerous lake surveys, Ontario anglers will eventu-
ally be able to obtain contour maps from every sur-
veyed lake, together with pertinent facts about it,
the fish it holds and angling tips.
Ontario, it is believed, will lead all provinces
and states with its newly instituted lake survey anal-
ysis program. However, Lands and Forests officials
point out, it will be more than a year from now be-
fore the first results will be made available in a form
useful to sportsmen,
Size and complexity of the program has neces-
sitated the establishment of a fisheries inventory
unit. This unit will increase and co-ordinate lake
surveys across Ontario and develop modern data
processing techniques so the vast amount of collect-
ed information can be fed to computers.
Three thousand lakes have already been sur-
veyed in detail, while information is being gathered
on many others as a basis for future surveys,
4
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MEN'S "B" LEAGUE
MI (G. Stire 731) 4
PE (T, McDonald 618) 0
NO (D. Brunzlow 634) 4
BE (J. Schroeder 548) 0
TR (R. Anderson
G. Wilson 647) 3
LA (V. Smith 566) 1
TE (G. Dobson 710) 4
WI (S. Brand 536) 0
CJB (T, Ellerington 547) 3
CA (N. Mclsaac 653)
Funeral services were held
from Rata and Bechtel Funeral
Home, Kitchener, on September
20 for Mr. Louis Guenther, who
passed away in Kitchener Water-
loo Hospital September 17.
He is survived by wife Esther,
daughter, Mrs. Bruce Gillatly,
(Audrey) of Waterloo, three
granddaughters; sister s, Mrs.
Arnold Halliman (Mildred) of
Listowel, Mrs. Clem Trogan,
(011ie) of Detroit, Mich,, and
one brother, Karl Guenther of
Shipka.
PERSONALS
Mr. and WS'. Milford Dietrich,
Mr. add Mrs. Ted Dietrich and
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Breen, Wind-
sor, spent the weekend in this
vicinity and attended the Booge-
rna.ns-Dietrich wedding Saturday
at Mt. Carmel.
Mr. and Mrs, Ross Pickering,
Mr. and Mrs. Cec Smithers,
Mrs. Ada Dietrich visited with
their relativeS in Brantford on
Monday,
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WE WELCOME YOU FOR OPEN BOWLING SATURDAY
AFTERNOON AND EVENING AND SUNDAY AFTERNOON.
FOR THE LAST EIGHT YEARS WE HAVE HAD THE
PLEASURE OF WORKING WITH A WONDERFUL GROUP
OF BOYS WHO WERE INDUSTRIOUS AND INDISPENSABLE
WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK THEM FOR THEIR HELP
AND THE CO-OPERATION OF THEIR PARENTS.
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