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Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 May 1963, p. 12

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12- | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Mey 13, 1963 best * ROGER BOURBONNAIS, of onton Oil Kings, was able io assume a kingly role, when e stepped up to accept The emorial Cup, because a happy Edmonton fan decked him out in a crown and regal robe, right after the game was over. Roger is shown here accepting the trophy from Art Potter, president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association, after Oil Kings had defeated Niagara Falls Flyers, 4-3, on Saturday night, to win the title series, 4-2, in games. --(CP Wirephoto) Edmonton Oil Kings Win Memorial Cup In Sixth Game, 4-3 ef Pe By BOB TRIMBEE 'sEDMONTON (CP)--This city nich had never won a junior am championship outside high @chool curling until last fall to- boasts three as Edmonton 1 Kings edged Niagara Fails Piyers 43 for the Memorial Sup junior hockey champion- ship Saturday night. Ou Kings' vi8tory gave best-of-seven series 4-2 be- ' another sell-out crowd of re than 6,700. *. It was Edmonton's first junior title in seven trips to national final. It followed les by Edmonton Huskies t fall in the Canadian junior all final and. Wayne Sa- 's triumph earlier this year p the Canadian high school championships. them|j i t 1930, when Regina that a club west of Manitoba has taken the crown. Paul and Gregg Pilling gave Edmonton a 4-0 mangin in the first 49 minutes of play but Fly- ers, crippled by the loss of two frontdine wingers through in- |by Bill Glashan, Ron Schock jand Terry Crisp to make it close. Russ Kirk was forced to make three sprawling saves on close-| hard drives whistled by un- guarded goal posts and missed tive in his first year as a junior, It was the first time since Pats won, Doug Fox, Glen Sather, Butch| uries,stormed back on goals In the final 90 seconds goalie m bouncing shots. Two other he net by inches. Kirk, 17, a Burnaby, B.C., na- "TITLES CHANGE HANDS Barney Hartman es 'Is Skeet Saher By RUSSELL PEDEN ST. JANVIER, Que. (CP)--A #6 - year - old RCAF squadron 'Jeader and a United States gnilor less than half his age ht it out right to the end| 'ore the Canadian officer won e Canadian Open all-around 'gkeet-shooting championship. "i Ottawa's Barney Hartman, Yhe RCAF officer, took the title a_ shoot-off peered -- ediecky of Baldwin, Mich. m4 i markenien finished the ree}- day championship with lentical scores of 496 out of a sible 500. | wi Sedlecky, a 22-year-old sea- fe who plans to retire from} a ie sport, won the Canadian pen 12-gauge title in another Phoot-off Sunday. He defeated Hartman, Eddy vo of Montreal, and Detroit- s Bob Thiefels and Chet tes. "Tuvo, as runner-up, won the| nadian and Quebec closed 12- uge {itles that Hartman has id for the last seven years. "i The 496 scores registered by artman and Sedlecky reflect ont mastery of all four shot- in gauges. een won the tough .410) ent with a near-perfect 99 of | Fridzy and Sedlecky won) e le and two other men finished e event with perfect 100 ores, {Tom Heffron of Groton, N.Y., Won the 28-gauge title with a perfect 100 while both Hartman 3nd Sediecky registered 98. Behind Hartman and Sed- ky in all-around competition ere Howard Confer of Detroit Mith 493 and John Dinning of uxton, Md,, with 490. ** Nort Francis and Harry Will- @ie, both of Montreal, scored nadian 12-gauge title, tained the closed championship| mood after the game and tossed in both the .410 and 20-gauge.;manager Leo LeClere and two His partner, C. H. (Cup) Mc-|sportswriters into the showers. Creery of Ottawa, won the Ca-| I nadian closed 28 - gauge title! Champ he re-| with a near-perfect 99. Quebec closed championships stopped Wayne Maxner, Flyers' top scorer in the regular season and playoffs, on a breakaway before the scoring started. In the third he again robbed Maxner from close in after Ni- agara Falls had counted twice to cut Edmonton's margin to 4-2. Owner-coach Hap Emms of Flyers said, "if we had scored that first goal the entire pattern of the game would have changed." He said it was the turning point of the game. ACCEPTS MEMORIAL CUP Captain Roger Bourbonnais, dmonton's top player in the |series, accepted the Memorial Cup from Art Potter, president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association. Oil Kings took advantage of every loose buck they found and two of their goals came after Gardner had made an ini- tial stop but let the puck get away from him . Another was scored when a defender left the puck lying 10 feet in front of his goal while he took out an Oil King for- ward. This was picked up by Pilling and his goal proved to be the winner. Oil Kings were in a delirious FLYERS DRESS QUIETLY Just down the hall, dressed quietly, Emms Flyers said/the one pitch I wanted to make! BOBBY KERR HAMILTON (CP) -- Bobby Kerr, track star, Olympic Games competitor and a mem- ber of the Canadian Hall of Fame, died at his home here Sunday at the age of 81. Known as the world's fastest human at one point in his 21- year track career, Kerr ran the 100-yard dash in 9.4 seconds and the 220-yard dash in 21.4 sec- onds in a day when starting blocks were unknown. He competed in two Olym- pics, was captain of the Cana- dian team at a third and mana- ger of the track and field team aa fourth. During his lifetime, he won more than 400 awards and tro- phies and held six separate Ca- nadian records simultaneously. Born in Enniskillen, Ireland, Kerr came to Canada at an early age, lived in Kemptville, Ont., for a year and a half, then moved to Hamilton where he lived for the rest of his life. Schoolboy successes were soon followed by triumphs in tougher competition and in 1902. he won the 100, 400 and 880- yard events at the Hamilton Coronation Games. GOES TO OLYMPICS In 1904 he was crowned Cana- dian sprint champion and se- lected to represent Canada. at the Olympic Games in St. Louis, Mo. The blonde-haired youth had to save $75 to make the trip and was eliminated in the 100-yard semi-final. After several years of barn- storming competition, he wound up in 1905 at the Montreal Cale- Hamilton Sprinter Once World's Fastest donia Games and the Canadian) YMCA Championships, where he captured all the sprinting events. ! He led the Canadian track team into the 1908 ores in England, ran third in the 100 metres, won a gold medal in the 200 metres, and went on to sweep all the sprints in the Bri- ish championships, He returned from the Games to travel across Canada, giving exhibitions. In 1909 he set an Irish record in Dublin. In 1910, he swept the card at the Canadian championships in Winnipeg, running the century in 9.4 seconds, creating a world's record of 14.3 for the 150 yards and running the 220 in. 21,4 seconds, He continued in competition) | League -- Los Dave Morehead Wins Third For Red Sox By JIM HACKLEMAN Associated Press Sports Writer Something over two decades ago, Boston Red Sox had a good-looking young rookie out of San Diego's Herbtrt Hoover High School named Ted Wil- liams. He became quite a hit- ter. Today, Red Sox have a hand. some young rookie out of Her bert Hoover High who shapes up as quite a pitcher--Dave Morehead, The hard-throwing 19-year-old right-hander kept his perfect record intact Sunday, winning his third straight with a 4-1 de. cision over Washington Sena- tors. He allowed just one hit-- a home run with two out in the first inning to Chuck Hinton. The victory gave Boston a split of the Fenway Park dou- bleheader. Washington took the opener 3-2 on Don Lock's 14th homer. Elsewhere in the American Angeles Angelis ended the first-place Chicago White Sox' winning string at seven, winning 7-6 in 12 innings after being bombed by Sox 14-2 in the first game of their dou- bleheader; Jim Bouton fired a two-hitter as New York Yan. kees beat Baltimore Orioles 2-0 with two unearned runs; Cleve- land Indians whipped Detroit Tigers 9-3; and Kansas. City Twins 2-1 before the second game of their doubleheader was rained out. ONE SPOT TOUGH Morehead, who shut out Sen. ators 3-0 in his big league debut this season, now has an earned run average of 1.13. After yield- ing Hinton's homer, the young- ster had one tough jam--walk- ing the bases loaded with one out in the fourth,. But that threat ended when Chuck Cot- tier lined into a double play. Red Sox got two unearned runs without a hit off loser Claude Osteen in the first, and Frank Malzone homered in the third. Hinton also homered in the opener, tying the game at 2-2 in the eighth, and Lock settled it with his homer off Dick Ra- datz in the 14th. Leon Wagner's leadoff triple followed by Lee Thomas' double gave Angels their overtime vic- tory against the streaking White Sox. Los Angeles drew even at 64 in the seventh with three unearned runs, helped by losing reliever Hoyt Wilhelm's error. Floyd Robinson's three hits and three runs batted in paced Chicago in the opener, won by right-hander John Buzhardt, SINGLES IN SEVENTH Bouton, making his first start Athletics nipped Minnesota of the year, retired the first 19 until 1919. Orioles in order before Jerry Adair singled in the seventh. Brooks Robinson got the other Baltimore hit, in the eighth. Or. iole lefty Steve Barber, seeking his seventh victory, turned back three Yankee threats but was don in in the ninth, The two unearned runs crossed on Luis Aparacio's error, Elston How. ard's double, a wild pitch and a sacrifice fly. Indians clinched things against Detroit with a five-run fourth inning. Woody Held hit a double and triple good for three RBIs and Ellis Burton added a homer for Cleveland. Sam McDowell, 20-year-old In- dian southpaw, went the dis- tance. He gave up six hits, in. cluding a homer by Gus Tri- andos, six walks and wild pitched a run home but was aided by three double plays. The second-place As pushed to within 1% games of Chicago by beating out Minnesota with an unearned run in the eighth. Jose Tartabull carried it across on Norm Siebern's fly after hit- ting a bunt single, then moving to third base on Vic Power's error. John Wyatt saved the pitching victory for Dave Wick- ersham, coming on in the last of the ninth following Bob Alli- son's one-out triple and nailing down the final two outs. IN 9TH INNING Ted Bowstfield Just Misses A No-Hitter By LEW FERGUSON MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Ca- nadian-born Ted Bowsfield, who came within three outs of pitch- ing a no-hitter Saturday, was in a jovial mood afterward and meant no disrespect of Power in saying he hated to give up the first hit to Vic. "But I'm just saying I hated it because of the type of hitter he is." just happy that he had hurled| Bowsfield said he had no a victory. Bowsfield's biggest regret was the fact that Minnesota first baseman Vie Power was jthe first Twins player to get:a hit off him as he pitched Kansas City to a 5-1 victory. "If it had been anybody else wouldn't have minded so much,"' said. Bowsfield, a na- tive of Penticton, B.C. "It was went to three Montreal sharp-|"with a couple of breaks (we)|but I guess it was wrong. shooters. Nort Francis won the 410, Harry Willsie the 28-gauge and Art Guthrie the 20-gauge. at the Montreal ranges in St. Janvier, 21 miles|lost after they suffered broken north of the city, jcould have won the game." Bowsfield stressed that he | Both he and Buster Bray-! ishaw, Oil ilegs. |By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|\and gave rookie Atlanta seldom steals a base,|Harvey Branch his second 4 rarely hits a home run and al- Crackers In Fron Even If 'Ordinary' Sabbath victory. Branch is King's coach, had | Some 265 shooters from Can-jhigh praise for Crist, Flyers' ada and the United States en-|husky captain. Crisp did double tered the weekend tournament|duty after wingers Gary Dorn-| : : é Skeet Club|hoefer and Gary Harmer were| By THE CANADIAN PRESS |San Francisco 0 Los Angeles 8 eo en eee |Kansas City \Los Angeles | Washington | Detroit left - hander most never plays an errorless for the fledgling season with baseball game, but the Crack-|two triumphs over Indianapolis, best winning percentage in the International League in spite of these handicaps. ers hit the road today with the HOMERS IN VAIN Columbus hit two home runs in each game but came up with|New York 2 Baltimore 0 two defeats to chance to field Power's hot grounder that skipped past the mound and into centrefield in the ninth inning. Bowsfield, purchased from Los Angeles Angels last winter, had permitted only four batters to reach base, all on walks, and needed only three more outs in the ninth to become the first pitcher to hurl a no-hitter in the majors this season. Zoilo Versalles, the first bat- \ter to face him in the ninth, walked, Power followed with a BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS | | single to crash Bowsfield's dream. Versalles took third on the hit, a ground single through the middle, He scored as Bill SANDY KOUFAX, Los An- geles Dodgers pitcher, is shown after pitching his no- hitter, tired but happy, as the storybooks usually say. San- dy just barely missed a per- By JOE REICHLER Associated Press Sports Writer It may have been the vote of confidence club president Wal- ter O'Malley gave manager Walter Alston last week. Or it may have been the mere sight of the hated Giants who heaped so much _ humiliation upon them last October. Whatever it was, it worked ers. From a dispirited, bungling crew of second divisioners, Dodgers became an aroused eam over the weekend, capped. Sunday by their third straight triumph over Giants. Sunday's 6-5. victory was an even sweeter triumph than Fri- day tight's 2-1 squeaker or even Saturday night's 8-0 shutout in which Sandy Koufax pitched his majestic no-hitter. Sets Record In Tuttle hit into a double play. Bob Allison followed with a single but was forced by Earl Battey to end the game. Until the ninth, Bowsfield had walked four and struck out four in the chilly, 48-degree weather and hadn't allowed a runner past first base. HAS WON TWO Bowsfield, a six-foot-one, 185- pounder, now has won two and lost four. "Mediocre pitchers aren't meant to pitch no-hitters--only the great pitchers," he said aft- erwards. 'I've never felt I was good enough to. pitch a no-hit- jter,"- Bowsfield, Kansas City's only lefthanded pitcher, credited his American League Pct.GBL 621 -- 567 144 560 2 538 533 500 484 419 L 18 11 17 13 14 11 14 12 16 14 12 12 16 17 13 18 1217 414 Minnesota 11 18 .379 Results Saturday New York 13 Baltimore 1 /Kansas City 5 Minnesota 1 |Cleveland 6 Detroit 5 Los Angeles 2 Chicago 4 Washington at Boston ppd, rain Results Sunday Boston New York Baltimore Cleveland 2% 3%4 Jacksonville.|Kansas City 2 Minnesota 1 Rochester 20-gauge in a shoot-off after) They padded their southern) Larry Elliott homered twice for| (second ppd, rain) division lead to two games Sun-|Jets im the opener, and Julio|Cleveland 9 Detroit 3 day by winning a doubleheader) Gotay and Rex Johnston hit one from Indianapolis Indians 4-2)each in the second game, but/Washington 3-1 Boston 2-4 and 1-0. Jacksonville Suns swept|sharp relief pitching by Ted Columbus Jets 6-5 in 11 innings) Abernathy and Dave Tyriver divided their Sunday games. Buffalo Bisons downed Ar- |and 6-4, and the other teams! assured Suns' sweep. _A bases-loaded homer b: |Powers and Joe: Hicks' kansas Travelers 9-6 in the first} home run of the season led Buf- game but bowed 5-1 in the nightcap. Syracuse Chiefs edged } : falo to its jover Arkansas, first-game victory Travelers -re-| Richmond Virginians 5-4 after|taliated with two home runs by the Vees took the opener 3-1. |Cal Emery and one by Dan Rochester Red Wings trounced|Cater as decisive blows in the Toronto Maple Leafs 8-2 in the nightcap. [Los Angeles 2-7 Chicago 14-6 Probable Pitchers Today Washington (Rudolph 3-2) or (Bronstad 1-2) at Boston (Con- hi- y John g eighth | "Ye Los Angeles (Lee 2-1) at C cago (Fisher 2-4) N (Only games scheduled) National League W L Pct. GBL 19 18 594 -- 19 14.576 % 16 13 552 1% San Francisco St. Louis Results Sunday |St. Louis 2-3 Pittsburgh 1-4 |Milwaukee 3-5 Philadelphia 4-6 \Cineinnati 3-12 New York 0-13 |Chicago 1 Houston 2 Probable Pitchers Today | *" | New York (Craig 2-3) at Hous- ton (Bruce 1-3), N ; (Only game scheduled) International League Southern Division WL Pet, Gah | Atlanta Little Rock | Indianapolis | Jacksonville 14 14 500 3% Columbus 11 17 393 6% Northern Division Buffalo 14 9 609 -- 12 12 500 214 11 13 458 3% 10 13 435 4 10 15 400 5 Results Saturday Rochester 2 Toronto 1 |Indianapolis 9 Atlanta 4 17 10 | 1411. 15 14 517 3 630 -- 560 2 | Syracuse Richmond | Toronto Little Rock at Buffalo ppd, cold! Richmond at Syracuse ppd, cold Results Sunday |Indianapolis 2-0 Atlanta 4-1 Little Rock 6-5 Buffalo 9-1 Jacksonville 6-6 Columbus 5-4 Richmond 3-4 Syracuse. 1-5 Rochester 8-3 Toronto 2-4 Monday's Games ger, Eddie Lopat, for res- urrecting him from the pitchers serapyard, | "I wouldn't even be pitching for any other ball club," he aid. "If it weren't for Lopat, 5. I wouldn't be pitching. He takes Half-Mile Race WINDSOR (CP)--John Rey- nolds of Galt Southwood, clock- ing the fastest 880 ever run by an Ontario high school interme- diate, was voted most outstand- ing athlete of the 15th annual Kennedy Relays here Saturday. wonders on Los Angeles Dodg- Gi féct game when he walked Ed. Bailey, on a 3-2 pitch, with one out in the 8th inning. Later he walked Willie Mc- Covey on four pitches, with two out in the 9th. It was the Dodgers didn't trail in the first two games, but found themselves on the short end oi a 5-2 score when they came to bat in the eighth inning Sunday. Jack Fisher, seeking his fourth straight victory, hadn't let a runner beyond first base since the second inning. But Fisher didn't last the inning as Dodgers erupted for four runs to sweep the three-game series and edge into fourth place, only two games behind the leading jams, CARDINALS SPLIT St. Louis Cardinals advanced to within a half game of the top, despite a doubleheader] split with Pittsburgh Pirates. Cardinals won the opener 2-1 in 11 innings and Pirates took the second 4-3. i Houston Colts nipped Chicago Cubs 2-1 in 10 innings for a sweep of the four-game series. Philadelphia Phillies swept both ends of adoubleheader from Milwaukee Braves 4-3 in 11 inn- ings and 6-5 in 12, New York Mets gained a split with Cincin- ati Reds, winning the second game 13-12 after Reds 'had taken the opener 3-0. Saturday, in addition to Kou- fax' 8-0 no-hitter over Giants, Pittsburgh defeated St. Louis 3-2, Philadelphia defeated Mil- waukee 8-5, Cincinnati defeated New York 4-2 and Houston took two from Chicago, the first. 5-3 and he second 1-0. first no-hitter in major leas gue baseball this year. Dodg- ers beat the San Francisco Giants, 8-0. --(AP Wirephoto) Los Angeles Dodgers Sweep Week-End Set Off Favorite Victims Walls opened the gates for Dodgers Sunday. Hits by Maury Wills, Jim Gillian, Ron Fairly and Wally Moon followed and Dodgers had three runs to tie the score. The winning run crossed on John Roseboro's sac- rifice fly, Dick Calmus, a 19- year-old rookie, pitched three linings in relief and picked up his ifrst major league triumph. DELIVER KEY HITS Ken Boyer and Ted Savage delivered the key hits in the Cards - Pirates split. Boyer's single in the 11th drove in the winning run for St. Louis in the opener. Savage's home run snapped a 3-3 tie in the eight of the nightcap for Pirates. Frank Torre's two-out single scored Johnny Callison with the winning run in the 11th inning of Phils' opener, A double error by Brave pitcher Lew Burdette led to Philadelphia's winning run in the 12th inning of the nightcap, which took a record seven hours and 56 minutes te play, "Choo Choo Coleman's rune scoring single snapped a 12-12 tie in the eighth for Mets' night- cap victory. Vada Pinson drove in five Cincinnati runs with a homer, double and two singles. Le Cardenas' three-run homer backed Bob Purkey's seven-hit pitching in the opener, Bob Aspromonte's homer in. ¢ the bottom of the 10th snap; a 1-1 tie for Houston aga A single by pinch hitter Lee! Cubs. Reynolds clipped nearly two full seconds from the time of 1:57 set last year by Dave Bai- ley of Toronto Northview Heights. Earlier Saturday he won the open 440 in 40.5 seconds, short of the 49.6-second record but the third fastest ever recorded by an intermediate in the prov- ince. The open mile event saw Keith Coates of Sarnia Northern a lwin in %4:25.9. The old mark was 4;30.4. Brian Kelly of Galt and Joe da la Franier of North Essex also were under the old mark 2% |San Francisco 5 Los Angeles 6/€ aside and works with me| | respectively. and helps me all the time." with times of 4:26.8 and 4:28.5 DEATH NOTICE CONNAUGHT PARK Due to the lack of response from the letter your executive sent out in regard to building a munity Centre, the executive feels it can not carry on without the support of the people in this crea. The only course left is, for the executive to resign, in which case, all monies, property and equipment will be turned over to the City of Oshawa Recrea- tion Committee. There will be a Special Meeting on Monday, May 13th, at 7:30 p.m. at Con Jarvis Street. naught Park Club House, 45%. A Some antique cars still run, but a new car runs better. Some ioned service metheds still but modern methods, such as ours, are better for your car! NOW ...» Two Locations To SERVICE YOUR CAR John KENT'S WESTERN B-A 136 King St. West PHONE 728- 1911 @ LUBRICATION @ B-A GAS & OIL Dated too! e @ CAR WASH old-fash- work too, BETTER Opposite Western Tire GREASE JOBS ...... apiece as runners-up to If at that time, the necessary support is not obtain- e in both| Pittsburgh e nece ed, the above action will be taken. Homers were decisiv. games at Syracuse. Don Bud-|L05 Angeles din's homer won 'the opener for| Chicago Richmond, and two by Bill Ro-|Cincinnati man insured the Syracuse vic-| Philadephia tory in the second game. New York Herman Starrette hurled 6 1-3| Milwaukee innings of hitless relief for Ro-|Houston 13 19 .406 6 chester in Red Wings' victory) Results Saturday over Toronto in the first game.|St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 3 Rico Carty's home run in the|Milwaukee 5 Philadelphia 8 seventh inning gave Toronto a|Cincinnati 4 New York 2 Chicago 3-0 Houston 5-1 - 17. 15 .581 Atlanta at Buffalo, N y, |Little Rock at Columbus, N 16 15 510 2% | ,N 14 15 483 3° |Jacksonville at Indianapolis, N) 14 16 .467 4 | Syracuse at Rochester, 'N ; |Toronto at Richm | 14.17 .452 4% | 0 at Ric . ond, N 14 19 424 51% | havo i uebec event. | first game, but Maple Leafs ral- alle agd no went to Mrs.|lied for a 4-3 victory in the sec- inning of Ruxton in|ond. ioue on 20 - gauge| In Saturday games, Atlanta events. |lost a 9-4 decision to Indian-| s i apolis and Rochester defeated WIN WOMEN'S EVENTS Toronto 2-1,. The other three te Mrs. Clarine Menzel of Osh-| games were postponed because fosh, Wis., took the women's of rain. "310 with 93 and Mrs. Barbara JOHN KENT'S Western TIRE & AUTO SUPPLY--ASSOCIATE STORE COMPLETE MINOR & MAJOR AUTO REPAIRS 145 KING ST. W. : ' Phone 728-1607 PARK BOUNDARIES: NORTH--Rossland Road EAST--Ritson Road SOUTH---King Street WEST--Simcoe St. to Buckingham Ave. and west to Osh- awe Creek. FRED SCHULTZ, President ITALY WINS | MILAN, Italy (Reuters)--Italy | jbeat Brazil, the world champi-| ons, 3-0 in an international soc- cer match here Sunday. At half time, Italy led 2-0. | A double by Jack Kubiszyn Buffalo, N.Y., scored, and two infield grounders in the fi to win the women's 28-gauge.| second inning produced the only although Hartman lost his Ca-|run of the nightcap in Atlanta| spit. * we

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