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Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Sep 1965, p. 7

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Gaels Top All-Stars 'in Minio Tune-Up , Eratic shooting plagued the OLA Junior 'A' All-Stars Satur- day night, sending them down to a 20-15 defeat at the hands of league-champion Oshawa Green Gaels, before the smallest crowd of the season at the Oshawa Civic Auditorium. The All-Stars had a total of 50 shots at Gael goaltender, Merv. Marshall, but an addi- tional 29 shots were wide of the mark. By comparison, Gaels shot 64 on goaltenders Don Crocker -and John Mc- Comb, with only 12 more going wide, The shortcoming .of the Ail- Stars was particularly notice- able in thé middle frame, even though they outscored the Osh- awans by a. 6-5 margin. Thir- teen shots missed the target during the 20 minutes. Ross Jones was top scorer) for the winners, firing four) goals, and Ken Thompson was| By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Three pass interceptions put| Calgary Stampeders at the top) of the Western Football Confer- ence a week ago. Saturday night two doses of their own medicine knocked them out of! it again. | The spoon was handled by British Columbia Lions at Van-| couver, who scored two second-} quarter touchdowns from inter-| ceptions in a 24-10 win before) a record Canadian Football League crowd of 36,704, | Saskatchewan vaulted into) first place in .the West with an| 11-9 victory over the Alouettes in an interlocking game at) ontreal Sunday. Calgary has 10 points, one behind the Rough- riders, and the Lions hold down! Mhird spot with nine points. At Edmonton, Eskimos came closer to leaving the WFC cellar with a 30-25 decision over Win- nipeg Blue Bombers, who) slumped to fourth spot from second. A holding penalty which nulli-| fied a winning interception set the stage for hard-rushing Ed- monton's third straight win after five consecutive losses. Edmonton moved to the Winni- peg 414 and 'a touchdown fol- lowed. GRABS A PASS In Vancouver, Norm Field- gate wrote the victory prescrip- tion by grabbing a Calgary pass and taking it for a touchdown Mack Burton signed it a few) minutes later by latching onto another interception and full- back Bill Munsey charged over FOOTBALL SCORES, eight plays later. Quarterback Joe Kapp. added a fourth-quarter touchdown, Pe- Abendschan New Leader | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Saskatchewan import guard) Jack Abendschan kicked a con: vert and a field goal Sunday to Two B.C. Interceptions Kill Calgary Stamps |Ottawa Hamilton |Montreal Toronto close behind with three. John "Shooter" Davis picked up 2 pair and assisted on five others, with Phil Clayton and Gaylore Powless collecting two goalr and two assists. Singletons went to Charlie Marlowe, Fred Greenwood, Don Stinson, Dwight Davies, Neil Armstrong, Jim Higgs and Brian Thompson. Higgs, who played a steady game both ways, added three assists as did Brian Thompson, Ron MacNeil of Etobicoke, and Al Smith of Mimico were top marksmen for the Stars with three counters each, Stan Cox picked up two, while single- tons went to Doug Favell, Bob Sicinski, Joe Hore, Dave Rudge, Mark Bergin, Kevin Ellis and Jim Henderson. The game conflicted with a banquet being held by the Hast- ings Legionnaires, and the ab- ter Kempf kicked a field goal,| two converts and flipped a pass for a convert after a fumbled snap. Jerry Keeling, called in when Calgary quarterback Eagle Day was injured, scored Stamped- ers' only touchdown. Larry Robinson made the convert and booted a 20-yard field goal. Edmonton fullback Butch Pressley gave Esks the lead when he charged over after Bomber quarterback Dick Thornton's interception was washed out. Thornton was re- placing injured Ken Ploen Eskimo quarterback Bill Re- dell and halfbacks Jim Fauver| and Jim Thomas scored touch- downs before a record 21,995 fans. End Tommy-Joe Coffey) clicked on three converts and a field goal. Winnipeg fullback Art ins and halfbacks Leo and Billy Cooper went over as| Bombers lost their fourth in a row after five straight wins. Perk- Jackie Simpson added a con-|Hastie bulged the mesh three) was vert and two field goals. Winnipeg now has eight) points, one behind B.C. climbing Eskimos, who with Bombers missed the WFC play- offs last year, brought their to- tal to six points. | Westminster Salmonbellies sence of such stars as Billy Armour, Jim Grady, Jim Pat- terson and Tim. O'Grady hurt the stars, who had been unable to practice together in prepara- tion for the game. Several of the players had not played in over a month. The layoff was noticeable, with Gaels putting six past goalie Don Crocker in the open- ing period to only four, goals by the Stars. Crocker was weak on several, of the tallies. McComb took over in the middlestanza as the Oshawans were out- scored 6-5, but. they held a 7-5 edge in the final frame, with Crocker and McComb sharing goaltending duties. The All-Star squad was pressing toward the' latter stages, hitting the post five times in the last 10 min- utes, but they were unable to pull the game out of the fire. Green Gaels open their Minto Cup defence tonight at thé Audi- torium at 8.00 p.m. against New their opposition in 1964 -- and general consensus is that the series will be one of the great- 'est Junior finals in modern la- | crosse history. Jr.-Juvenile Boxla Title To Scugog s Scugog Cleaners built up a 6-0 lead in the first 10 minutes Sunday afternoon and went on to edge Tom Cullen's 10-8, cap- turing the Junior - Juvenile La- lerosse finals three games tO}naq been John Johnston was the big gun for the winners, notching four goals, while Gary Davies and Wayne Bradley tallied twice each. Singletons went to Joe Krasnay and Rod Crawford, for a four-point total, and Rick Lack also collected two helpers. For the losing squad, Bill times, with single counters com- ing from Bob Johnstone, Bill Fisher and Charlie Brown. Scugog's was leading when Cullen's marked 6-0 the Brooklin Club Arrives West -- 'Minus ticks BROOKLIN, Ont. Mer- chants arrived here Sunday night to open the national sen- jor lacrosse final against New Westminster -- and found their lacrosse sticks missing. Officials of the eastern team were frantic. The best-of-seven series opens here tonight, and it takes a la- crosse player a long time to break in a new stick so he can shoot accurately, Through an oversight, said coach Bud Christie, the sticks were left on the bus which brought them to Toronto's al- ton airport for the flight west. Frantic calls were put through to the airline to locate the missing equipment and have it air-expressed here. But Christie said he was most concerned that the equipment would not arrive in time for the opener, Christie said the airline was making every effort to locate the equipment. The team's first concern will be a practice they had scheduled for this morning. Without their own equipment the practice won't be too effective, the coach said. 'Bill Armour With Gaels Billy' Armour of Hastings Legionnaires, 1965 OLA Junior 'A' scoring champion, will be wearing an Oshawa Green Gael uniform when the Minto Cup opens at the Oshawa Civic Auditorium at 8.30 tonight. The acquisition of Armour was a last-minute affair, forced by a rule change last night. It originally decided that the New Westminster Sal- |monbellies would be allowed | two pick-ups for the series, and Oshawa none, but the ruling |was revised to read three for the west and one for Gaels, Salmonbellies have picked up Lewis| Davies added a pair of assists/Ranjit Dillon from Victoria, a familiar figure to local boxla enthusiasts, who is playing in his fourth Minto Cup. Dillon picked up by Salmon- bellies for last year's series jagainst Oshawa, and also play-|~ but the|Robinson, Bob Goulding, Roy/ed against the local squad two years ago, when they tangled with Victoria in Whitby. The other additions are Den- |scoresheet with a pair of goals|/Mis Nagy from North Burnaby The Edmonton crowd in-|at 11.11 and 11.31, but the clubs|@"d Bob Salt from South Van- cluded a fan chosen as thelexchanged goals to make the|couver. Salt and Ron Pepper Clarke Stadium since Eskimos} | 2,000,000th paying spectator at|count 7-3 after 20 minutes. Chilen's played their best ball jform an obvious name combin- jation, and in addition are two rejoined ¢the Western Confer-\in the second frame, foiling of the fastest players on the ence in 1949. He collected $5,100 in prizes. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Eastern Conference wWwLT F Pt 5 1 0135 9010 5 2 0133 65 10| 1 5 0 55100 2 0 7 0 73 182 0) Saturday's Result on 13 Ottawa 22 Sunday's Result Saskatchewan 11 Montreal 9 | Western Conference | WLT F APt Hamilt opposition marksmen while scoring three goals, to narrow the gap to 7-6 going into the final stanza. club, According to coach, Keith |Jackson, that will be the key |}to the Minto Cup. "If we want Scugog's scored three goals in|to win the championship," says the last period, to two for Cul- len"s, to register the 10-8 triumph. OLA Drops Out Of Parent Group Oshawa Green Gaels Juniors fights for the Minto and Mann Cups tonight, and regardless of the outcome one thing is cer: Jed in | Monday's : j will go again on Wednesday, jand Brooklin Seniors begin their) Friday and Saturday, and, if | Jackson, "we have to keep up |with Oshawa," This year, he feels they have a fast enough . ~|club to do just that. | Both teams appear to be im-| proved over last year, and fans will be treated to the finest series of lacrosse to be present- many years. Following contest, the series jnecessary, the following Mon- day, Wednesday and Friday. | ee ences mel} ACK Port Perry Wins s ao Pon ballets ts). oes y PORT PERRY -- Evans, ef; S. Cochrane, 2b; Young, ss; Jef- fery, lb; Nightingale, 3b; Short, If; Heard, rf; C. Cochrane, ¢: THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Septomber 1, 1968 7 Port Perry won the Ontario Squirt Softball Cham- pionship on Saturday, at . the big annual round-robin tourna- ment at Woodstock, In the first game, of the semi- finals, Port Perry defeated Niagara-On-The-Lake 6-0. Williams was in great form and gave up only one hit in the entire game, a single by Sartor, in the fifth frame. Port Perry won the game with 'a lone run in the first frame and a five-run splurge in the 7th inning. Two walks in = All-two runs in thé first foning --o t OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS Zena ged 0 nae : competitiors turned in @ top scoring dis- play. J Smith end Carolyn Gilbert were iar gt end Mrs. Glider! $66 (262, 233, 161), Other bowlers coming vp with fop notch efforts were Joan walt Ro Mare Ferguson (247), Joyce Gates (238), Yvonne jatson (224), Dawn Carr (219), J. (215) and Millle Bawks (219). Team Sondiope after the first night of Rinbrtion tied: for top. spot with. ints. each, while Cracker-Jecks, Hum Bogs end Lollipops trail with one. aplece. when Evans walked and §. Cochrane was safe on an error and both scored on a hit by Jeffery, plus a choice play. Jeffery tripled to open the sixth and scored later on passed ball, to make the score 3-1 and in the 7th Port Perry clinched the verdict with a three-run rally, on singles by C. Cochrane and Williams, followed by sin- gles from Evans and §&. Coch- rane and then one by Jeffery, with one out, to complete the big rally, the first-frame and a five-run splurge in the. 7th inning. Two walks to Redmean and Heard, plus a choice play and then a two-bagger by Evaniss and an- other by Cochrane, put Port Perry in the clear. Niagara-On-The-Lake scored just. one hit, a single by Sar- tor, in the fifth inning as young Williams pitched his way to the first shutout on a one-hitter, Port Perry picked a run in the first inning when Evans opened with a single and scored after two out, on a couple of in- field errors, Cochrane's double in the third and bases-loaded in the fourth, on a single and two walks, all came close for Port Perry but it wasn't until the sixth inning, when they staged a five-run up- rising, that they clinched the verdict, Bourgois and Heard each drew walks to start it off and then with one out, Williams was safe on a choice play that miss. ed and then Evang and Coch. rane followed with back-to-bac doubles and Jeffery's single, to complete the five-run rally that gave Port Perry their 6-0 win. BEAT GALT IN FINAL game, Port Perry whipped Galt Squirts 6-1, to administer the first loss Galt has suffered in five successive years of OASA Squirt tournament play. Williams struck out nine bat- ters in the championship final and gave up only five hits, scat- tered over the route. Galt's only run came in the third on an opening single by Watson and one by Pike, with two out. Port Perry got to Watson for In the championship final} JUNIOR BOWLERS ATTENTION Motor City Bowling 78 Richmond St, West Phone 723-3212 JUNIOR LEAGUES Will be starting Sept. 25th et 10:00 a.m, REGISTRATION Will be held on Sot., Sept. 11th end Sat., Sept. 18th et 10:00 a.m, te 12 Noon ALL CHILDREN Ur TO 18 YEARS OF AGE WELCOME break a first-place Western|Sask. 5 '3 1 164 158 1iltain. Neither club will be batt-| 5 3 42 44 35 Larry} points | ENJOY BOWLING TONIGH YOUR SATISFACTION Abendschan boosted his total)/Edmonton 0 138 197 6)Lacrosse Association Lacrosse} for 4aepoinis. -- -|ciation has asserted it will not| Kelly Disney Coleman's temmate 1, drawal are the increasing com-; Whitby 668-5891 to 40. (CP) -- A Canadian lacrosse|@a8" Playoffs sufficiently in ad- on the weekend to move three|0Pening of the national Mann against Montreal Alouettes. Harry McKnight of New} + grab a share of fifth place with/lectors will be chosen in Jan- |} Football Conference scoring tie/Calgary 0 162 108 J0/ling for the trophies next sea- with Lovell Coleman of the Cal-|B.C. 1149 76 9)son gary Stampeders. Winnipeg 0 120 153 8! In telegrams to the Canadian} is OUR_AIM to 46 points, but has played one) Saturday's Results |Association and to associations All Core Carry more game than Coleman, who) Winnipeg 25 Edmonton 30 in British Columbia and Corn- Our GUARANTEE has scored seven touchdowns!Calgary--10-B-C. 24 }wall, the Ontario Lacrosse Asso- Coleman's teammate 1 enter national playoffs next sea- Robinson scored four son Used Cars for 42 points. Reasons given for the with-| Led. arry Robinson scored four points jplexity of OLA operations, the} 1200 Dundas E. against the B.C. Lions Saturday) r: | ame increase in the number of series) night to bring his season total jand teams and the apparent sii a a ; 'jimpossibility of arranging Cana- Peter Kemet of BC. and NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. Tommy Joe Coffey of Edmonton . % vance for the OLA to efficiently) vaulted into a fourth-place tie i Re May melt Conk ole: supply entries and officials. with 33 points each, They scored! i " a ese five and six points respectively; A meeting prior to today 4) points ahead of Hugh Campbell) CUP senior final set up machin- and George Reed of Saskatche-|¢Ty to bring the project into be-| wan, who did not score Sunday | '"8 | Edmonton's Jim Thomas) Westminster will be chairman) scored a touchdown" against/of the governing body. Three Winnipeg Saturday night tojeastern and three western se 30 points. uary at the annual meeting of The leaders: the Canadian Lacrosse Associa: | tion = 1S Pts 46 42) ~ 40 'Fe = "> wn eSeesoooo2u+isowv, . Abendschan, S$ Coleman, C Robinson, C Kempf, B.C. Coffey, E Thomas, E Campbell, § Reed, S Fleming, B.C. Swift, B.C. Lewis, W Cooper, W PRODUCE POTASH 33, +R. V. Porritt, president of | 33, Noranda Mines Ltd., Friday an- 30/nounced in Toronto production 30\of a new potash property near 30)Saskatoon, Sask. Noranda will 24\develop and operate the potash 24)property and Central Farmers 24/Fertilizer Co., Chicago, will Mlpurchase the potash produced. WRESTLING LAST SHOW OF THE SEASON! CIVIC AUDITORIUM TUESDAY, Sept. 14, 8.30 p.m. TAG TEAM MATCH is Tony Marino & Andy Robin -- Johnny Powers & The BEAST JOHNNY FOTI vs. BOB LIEPLER THE DESTROYER vs. on ear PAT FLANAGAN service te end from Auditorium -- Leeves at 7:30 P.M. Corner Bus Bond end Simcoe Sts. Return following Bouts. --- Tickets fer these Exhibitions et the Casino Resteurent ~- 1.50-1.25-.75 -- Pet Milesh are f STYLED FOR THE Perfect form! Perfect comfort! On every score Sunbeam Bowlmaster shoes lead the league. So smart and stylish ---- 90 right for the game. Put them on and have fun -- in ahh FS ---S eocscoosoeuuasoeosn coco co soo s+ woe | Style. Available in men's and women's styles. SUNBEAM Treated > 4 BOWLMASTE Makers of the exclusively new Master Bowler's Shoe. Designed, endorsed, end worn by Canada's leading bowlers, EASTWAY 10-PIN LANES King St. East at Town Line, Oshawa DOMINION TIRE STORES TO TEMPORAR - ot -- 145 KING ST. WEST formerly Western Tire and Auto Supply City expansion! Present building to be demolished to make room for better downtown parking facilities. Your Dominion Tire Store is in the process of building a new shopping centre at the corner of Park Rd. and King Street. Until their new building is completed they will be located at their temporary quarters. Their usual good service will be maintained. atch For Opening Sale! DOMINION TIRE STORES TEMPORARY QUARTERS 145 KING STREET WEST Downtown Oshawa 725-6511 See Also, Armstron Homes in Beautifu SOUTHWOOD PARK Harwood Ave. S. -- Ajax Homes Heated " By Clean DEPENDABLE Consumers' Gas "Your Design for Modern Living at Its Very Best' IN CONVENIENTLY LOCATED Rolling Hills Estates OLF &: FREE! With Your Purchase of A Lovely Armstrong Home in ROLLING HILLS ESTATES - OSHAWA 1- YEAR FAMILY MEMBERSHIP to Grandview Golf & Country Club Membersh'p includes Fether, Mother, end All Children 18 Years and Under. ALL ARMSTRONG HOMES INCLUDE THESE FEATURES AT NO EXTRA COST 16, with the + Copper tone hooded exhaust fen in kitchen, . Stainless steel kitchen sink, . Colored eeramic, well tile for bath- room and eolered fixtures, |. Velance bexes in living rem, . Kitehen eupbeords end deors not. urel stained imported mahogany (eustem bullt), Double leundry tubs ' . Forced air gas heating--or forced air oll heating -- extre. . All electric light fixtures, SOME PLANS PROVIDE FOR WALKOUT BASEMENTS MANY OPTIONAL EXTRAS AVAILABLE TO YOUR TASTE 9, 100 Amp. heavy-duty electric wir- 'ing Instelled. 10, Divided basement with recreation nM. Metal iron railing Installed en frent porch where there ere three steps or more, Copper toned built-in triple paper towel rack, Clay brick, Built-in kleenex dispenser. Poured congrete basement (with lifetime guerentee). Mehogany trim. Bullt-In range and even, Electric heating Instalied es en extra. facilities. All services included, paved reed, sanitery, and storm sewers, in- dividual' water connections, curbs, |: 12, Front and side yards edded, 19, 20, 7, . Sidewelks installed from front te driveway end side door to drive- wey, 21, 22, 23. . Fancy ceiling in tiving reom end dining room. 18, Oak floors throughout where As; bestos virlyl tile is not installed, Phone Pickering 942-3310 or Oshawa 723-6461 for Appointment

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