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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 24 Oct 1973, p. 7

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p"MmmMmm MmmMmm mmuMmm@% 623-3303! DOUBLE A DAYS - In 1922 Orme Gamsby coached a team out of Orono with John Cornish behind the plate, Bud Rolph at first, Cliff Winter and Shinny Moise at short stop, Dr. Cannon, third, and in field Dr. Rowden, Scotty Cameron, Nip Piper. The pitching staff included Fred Lycett, Andrew "Sandy" Somerville, Elgin Seymour and Lefty Wills. Roy Winter was bat boy for the team. It is recalled that seven of the players batted over .300 with Bud Rolph reputed to have an average of .512 for the year. When reliving history, the group chuckle when on one occasion they trailed Oshawa in the ninth but won having scored 12 runs in the frame. Also tucked away on memory lane is the fact that in one game, also against Oshawa Sandy Somervillç took 18 strike outs. Bud Rolph also lists a team managed by Wes Thornton which included Charlie Barrett, catcher, Albert Barrett, Ross Laing and Howard Mcombe, pitchers. Bud Rolph, first, Joe Cavana, second, Shiny Moise, shortstop, Perc. Long, third, and in the field George Armstrong, Kenny Kenefic, Joe Dobson and Kirk Mkeen. PENALTIES - The hockey season is once again underway, and reports coming in to this column show penalties are again taking valuable players to the "sin-bin" and costing the team, coach and management a great deal. It's also time for the referees to take a long look and "clean up the act." IT'S TIME TO START THINKING OF WINTER FUN! Make this winter a FUN winter with a Snowmobile from GARY'S SPORTS We carry new and used machines, clothing and ail accessories-. So don't delay, drop in today we're at ... 17 TEMPERANCE ST. - BOWMANVILLE PHONE 623-4203 BOWMANVILLE KIWANIS CLUB Winter Sports Equipment -Sale£ & S",wap BOWMANVI LLE PUBLIC LIBRARY Aturday, Nov. 3rd SALE TIME - 1 p.m. to 5p.m. Articles received from 10 a.m. to noon. Any articles not sold may be picked up between 5 and 6 p.m. SAL E CHA RGE 10% WE NEED ITEMS FOR THIS SALE Skis - Hockey Equipment - Snowmobile Clothing - Even Snowmobiles- CONTACT A KIWANIS MEMBER FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Knapps' Bantams Win Opener 4-2 Over Bay iidtges On Wed., Oct. 17th H. W. Knapp's Major Bantams open- ed their regular season with a 4-2 win over Bay Ridges at Memoriai Arena. Bay Ridges opened the scoring at 3:50 of the first period with a power play goal scored by AI Ribee. In the second, Knapps outscored the visitors 2-1 ýon goals by Captain John Conboy, assisted by Terry Sarginson and Sar- ginson from Chris Marchant. Gary Dunning scored for Bay Ridges. John Conboy scored the winning goal at 6:30 of the final period assisted by John Davis and Chris Marchant. Terry Sarginson then fired the clincher at 10:45 unassisted. Bowmanviille took 21 minut- es in penalties, Bay Ridges six. Rural Bowling Oct. 16, 1973. Team Standings Solina.................18 Mapie Grove............16 Hi C's . . . . .. . . .. 14 Tyrone................12 Enniskillen.............12 Rurals ....... ...... ....il1 Russeils Car Wash ......... 9 Salem ..................4 Top 10 Averages Don Taylor 233, Brian Martin 223, Wayne Coombes 217, John Coombes 216, Keith McGill 215,Cooney Goodman 212,John Luffman 211, Howard Bradley 208, Ken Flint 207, Cecil Mills 204. High Singles Ron Broome 338, Wayne Coombes 279, Don Taylor 277. High Triples Ron Broome 177-338-246-761, John Coombes 254-195-274 720, Wayne Coombes 231-279-180- 690. YOUNG ADULTS Team Standings G. Carter ................ .17 R. Etcher..............14 L. Richards.............. 14 R. Beaupric ............ 13 R. Selleck....... ...... 12 R. Davie 1 s.... . . .il -D.Antauf . . .. 8 K. Cobb.................7 Top Averages Roi Etcher 239, Bob Burley 235, Ron Selleck 226, Randy Beauprie 218, Ken Cobb 215, Dieter Analuf 212, Roger Davies 206, Larry Forsey 201, Lois Richards 216, Johanne, Lugtenburg 205, Sue Cobb 202. High Singles Ron Richards 301, Ken Rahm 301, Randy Beauprie 288, Johanne Lugtenburg 282, Sue Cobb 261,235. High Triples Randy Beauprie 743, Ron Sellcck 706, Dave Taylor 681, Johanne Lugtenburg 716, Sue Cobb 689, Lois Richards 639. period Lindsay had added two more goals. Again midway in the period, Forsey scored for the Eagles making the score 5-2 with an assist going to Bi Wagar. Bowmanville came on but just couldn't beat the Lindsay goalie. 10-10 were shots on goal in the second. Play opened fast in the third period and the Red Eagles controlled the play but the Muskies held and made it 6-2 at the five minute mark. The Red Eagles kept up the pressure and half way through the period had narrowed the score to 6-4 with Paul Forsey getting bis second of the evening from Ted Puk and Doug Tamblyn scoring from Rolly Simpson. Although Lind- say was short for the next seven minutes Bowmanville were unable to score on Larry Aldred. At the end of the game Lindsay scored again to make the final score 7-4 Lindsay had 12 shots on goal to Bowmanville's il in the third period. Lindsay coming up with 15 penalties and Bow- manville eight. Both teams scored three goals on power plays. Bruce Osborne, Jeff Legere and Paul Forsey turned in strong gam- es for the Red Eagles as did Doug Tamblyn and Larry Brunt both out for their first game, while the Eagles were short Rory Gibbs and Dennis Livingston, both out with school injuries. Nearly 1,000 fans saw the Muskies beat the Eagles so how about our fans turning out and helping our Eagles at home. One nember of the Red Eagles who as yet hasn't been mentioned - Jeff Donoghue__ stick boy and assistant to trainer Don Harveystglad to have you with us Jeff. Query - Why was Don Harvey so sure on his feet crossing the ice when Coach Cawker and Manager Smith were having difficulties. Maybe Don should reveal his secret. The Canadian Statesman, Bowmanville, Oct. 24, 1973 In a fast, well played game at Lindsay, Friday, October 19th the Red Eagles were beaten 7-4 by the Lindsay Muskies. Lindsay's sponsor this year is Trent Rubber and they have supplied the Juniors with the smartest set of uniforms in the League. To open the first game of the 1973 season, the ceremonies included "Ma Clayton", who Bowmanville and surrounding district fans will remember for many years, dropping the opening puck. Ma Clayton was pre- sented with a large colored photo of last year's Ontario finalists - the Lindsay Clean- ers - as a token of her continued encouragement to the hockey teams. The first period was very even with both teams having many scoring chances. Lind- say opened the scoring mid- way in the period with Bill Abercrombie getting credit for the goal and Bowmanville came back two minutes later with a goal by John Colwell from Ted Puk and Bruce Osborne. At the end of the period on a Lindsay power play, a Bowmanville man deflected the puck into his own net to make it 2-1 for Lindsay. Shots on goal at the end of the first period were Lindsay 10 - Bowmanville seven. With the second period just 17 seconds old Lindsay scored again - with the Bowmanville goalie having the misfortune to deflect a shot into the net off his skate. The last two goals deflated the Eagles and before fiye minutes of the second Wes+ern Electric Down Cobourg, Newcastle for Three Game Win Streak Bowmanville's Western Electric Minor Atoms won a pair of games last week to run their early season un- defeated string to three games in a row. Cobourg's Burnett Realtors went down to a 4 to 2 defeat in Cobourg on Tuesday, October 16th, while Newcastle was humbled 9 to 0 on Saturday night. For the Cobourg team, it was their first loss in three starts this year. Rick Erwin came up with two goals, including the win- ner, against Cobourg, while Billy Hogarth and Barry Cullen each added singles. Bowmanville led 2-1 after the first period, on goals by Hogarth and Cullen which came 41 seconds apart. John Hutchings scored both Cob- ourg markers, tying the game up early in the second period, before Erwin tallied the win- ning goal midway through the period. Erwin added the clincher in the last minute of the contest. In Bowmanville on Saturday afternoon, October 20th, the Western Electrics had things prettymuch their own way. The Bowmanville shooters scored two goals in the first period, added three more in the second frame and then poured it on with four goals in the last 15 minutes, en route to their 9 to 0 victory. Top marksmen for the Western Electrics on Satur- day were Rod Plain with three goals and two assists, Joe Nihill with a pair of goals and an assist, Steve Cary with three assists, and John Klompmaker with two goals. Other Bowmanville tallies went to Barry Cullen and Brad Clemens. County Chrysler Stuns McNulty's Whle Locke's TV Ease Past Kramps by Jim Clarke County Chrysler stunned McNulty's Sports 8-1 in last Thursday night's late match to remain undefeated, while Locke TV eased past Kramp's Furniture 6-5 in the opener. The four clubs enter the third week of their 18-game sched- ule this Thursday with McNul- tys and Lockes tangling at 8:00 p.m. In the 9:30 match Kramps meet County. "Bucky" Hughes' goal at 17:28 of the third proved to be the winner in Lockes' tri- umph. It gave them a 6-4 edge which was shaved to a single goal when Kramps' Dean Cox fired home his second of the night with just five seconds remaining. Officials Bob Hellam and Jamie MacDonald waved off only three offenders, all for minor infractions, with Kramps getting two. Lockes only penalty to Brian Evans resulted in a goal by Dave Colwell, as Kramps tied things at 4-4 at 7:29 of the third frame. It was quite a debut by Colwell, as he bagged a pair of goals and two assists for the losers.- Kramps led 1-0 after 20 minutes, but trailed 4-3 after two as Lockes got moving in the middle stanza, with four goals. Hughes, who finished third in the 1972-73 scoring race, had two of the TV crowd's goals, with Larry Perris, Dave Green, Evans and Grant Flintoff collecting the others. Rick Woolner picked up his first goal of the year for Kramps to go along with the pair by Cox and Coiweli. Mike Johnson turned in a steady netminding chore for the Locke bunch in his first outing this season. Larry Memisz also between the pipes for the first time this year, performed well for Kramps. In the late encounter, McNulty's fell behind 4-0 after the opening period and never recovered as County Chrysler administered an' 8-1 licking. The winners have pumped home a dozen goals in their first two matches of the 73-74 campaign. Ray Pickell, Brian Bradley, Lanny Burns-and Barry Oliver got the winners off on the right foot. The only goal of the second period came after 10:52 with County's Woody Lee picking up his first of two. The Chrysler crowd added three more in the final 20 minutes, as McNulty's man- aged their only score. Joe Balson finally beat "Smokey" Hayes at 17:40. Both teams drew three penalties. Nine of County'se s players had a hand in the scoring. Red Eagles RaIIy for Tie With Port Hope Panthers by David Passant A combination of hard work and excellent goaltending al- lowed the Bowmanville Red Eagles to register their first point of the 1973-74 hockey season. The local Junior "C" entry did it the hard way Sunday night. Trailing 3-1 late in the third period, they surged from behind to salvage a 3-all tie against the visiting Port Hope Panthers. The Eagles, who dropped their first two encounters to the Lindsay Muskies last week, got goals from Steve Davies and Glenn Rice not two minutes apart, to save the contest for the homesters. Rice's marker came with just 53 seconds remaining, a power play goal with the Panthers' Roy Burns off for tripping. Port Hope opened the scor- ing early on a power play effort. Jim Lingard clicked from Brad Davis and Neil Pemberton at 2:32 with Dav- ies serving a two minute interference infraction. AI- though the Panthers held the edge in play, with four power play opportunities, no further scoring resulted in the period. At 5:22 of the middle frame the score was evened as Captain Bruce Osbourne found netminder Peter Gulles out of position. Ron Strike and Ted Puk drew the assists. But two and one half minutes later, Bob Eardley connected on a slap shot from 30 feet, with Dean Morgan assisting. The second period saw many good scoring chances at both ends, with a wide open, end to end brand of hockey, as Port Hope led 2-1. For the first haif of the final period penalties kept the Eagles in trouble. Wayne Griffeth counted from Eard- ley with Rolly Simpson in the smn-bmn for high-sticking at 5:24. Red Eagles goalie Randy Thiele, was called upon for some remarkable saves dur- ing the Panthers advantage in man power. Bownianville never stopped trying, and began appiying pressure in the late stages. Ted Puk did all the.twork for the Eagles' second tally. He dumped the puck off the boards past a Panther defend- er, swooped behind the net and hit Davies with a perfect pass, who fircd it home to make the score 3-2. Then, with the crowd cheering the Eagles on, Rice notched his tying goal, from Osbourne and Rory Gibbs. But at 19:36, Ted Puk went off for roughing, and the Red Eagle defence had to hang on once more, for the tie. Penalty killing played a majorhrole as the Eagles were short-handed for almost half the game. One fight broke out, a hugging match between Mike Cornell of the home team and Pemberton of the Panth- crs. Great goaitending by Eagles' Thiele and Panthers' Gulles kept the scoring to a minimum. Though the calibre of play wasn't up to mid-sea- son form, mistakes made the match exciting, with many goal mouth scrambles. The Eagles are improving and showed they can come from, behind. Frank's Pee Wees Drop Close Game To Lindsay 2 to 1 W. Frank Real Estate Major Pee Wees dropped a close 2-1 decision to Lindsay on Sat., Oct. 20th in the league opener at Bowmanville. The first period was score- less with both teams playing end to end hockey. At 5:12 in the second period, Lindsay scored while Bowmanville was short handed. Bowman- ville then came back to tie the game up at 12:15 in the same period on a good wrist shot by David Hutton, assisted by Tom Guster, our imports from Orono. The game remained tied until the 8:00 minute mark in the third period when Lindsay again scored while Bowman- ville was short handed. Goal tending was shared by Kevin Gibson and Eddy Sal- lows, both doing an excellent job. There were a total of 14 penalties handed out with Bowmanville taking eight of them, which proves it is hard to win games in the penalty box. NIGHTHAWKS Oct.17,1973. High Single A. Burgess .............265 High Triple M. Trimble............718 Team Standing K. Ralston.......18632 17 B. Smith........18628 17 L. Burgess......17989 15 D. Ogden ........ 18407 13 M. Trimbie ..18022 12 L. Piper.........18074 10 Men's Major Osborne & Shank Insurance team has taken over top spot from Frank's Variety store. Osborne & Shank has 16 pts. to Franks 15. Ron Etcher leads in the averages with 259 for 21 games. This is nice bowling in any league-Larry Piper trails at 247. Three bowlers were over, 800. Larry Piper 817 (241-285- 291), Howard Bromell 808 (316-270-222) and AI Osborne 803(273-262-268). Gord Wilcox had the high single 320. The lander Hardware team won all top team honors with a single 1277 and a triple 3499. PHIL VOWLES IEATING SPECIALIST i Queen Street' Bowmanville PHONE 623-7591 24 HOUR SERVICE Oui, Gas & Electric Furnace & Air Condition Installa- tions - Central & Windnw Units - Clare Hecla & Findley Equipment Free Estimates Budget Terms Available CAT CAT CAT CAT (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT COME SE. WHATALL STHE BEST SDRESSED IC EWURINGO 4 The best dressed snawo bilers on the trail gat that % way by getting into ArcticWear. 4 Frorn head to toe, Arctic's 4 got you covered V in warmth, «4 b- durability and style. Rugged one Sor twopiece l snowmobile suits, U (insulated & reflectorized), insulated and -i steel shanked e boots, hats, U helmets, gloves and all kinds of j other Cat accessories. The e 4 one andonlyway to dress for winter fun. ArcticWear, KENDAL HILLS Sa 'SALES & SERVICE R1n V Authorized Arctic Cat Deale R. R. 1, Kendal, Ont. j- 983-5671 4 4 Mi. East of Kirby off Hwy. 115 (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT (AT 3rd Anmual MOTOROLA m uar El-- FREE OFFICIAL CFL POSTER WITH DEMONST RATION OF Quàsar GREY CUP SPECIAL. (UMITED OFI-E) MYLES RADIO & TV SEVICE 'WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL 3 SILVER STREET PHONE 623-348Z BOWMANVILLE Lindsay Beats Eagles 7 to 4 In 2nd Encounter This Season

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