Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Oct 1965, p. 12

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

42. 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, October 6, 1965 SCHEDULE STARTS SATURDAY \} Generals Top Flyers, _ Last Pre-Season Tilt By FRANK RATCLIFFE Oshawa i --_ their pre-season ex! ion series on a winning note Tuesday night, registering an imp ve 5-2 victory over defending Memor- fal Cup champions, Niagara Falls Flyers. The game was played before a small turnout at Oshawa Civic Auditorium. Star defenceman Bobby Orr played a familiar role, sparking Generals to a 5-2 victory with a pair of goals and one assist. Tan Young also was a major factor, turning in a steady goal- tending performance. Other Oshawa scorers were Bill Heindl, Peter Nevin and Danny Sandford, while Jack Brewer collected a pair of as- sists. Single helpers went to Danny O'Shea, Bob Black, 'Peter Nevin, Brian Morenz and Barry Wilkins. Orr gave an indication of things to come early in the game. At 1:50 of the opening period he let a hard wrist shot go from the edge of the face-off circle to goaltender Bob Ring's left. Ring made a brilliant stick save, but the puck flipped onto the top of the net, coming dan- gerously close to bouncing in. Orr picked up the puck after it rebounded to the ice and pass- ed it across the goal-mouth, but no one was able to bat it home. Twenty seconds later Bud De- Brody was sent off for cross- checking and Generals' power play clicked at 2:55. Bill Heindl picked up the disc just inside Flyers' blue line and let a low shot go. The puck was travelling relatively slow but it rebounded off Ring's pads into the net to give Generals the lead. From then until the mid-way mark of the period, Generals enjoyed a wide territorial ad- IAN YOUNG vantage. Their play was high- lighted by their determination in the corners and by Orr's abil- ity to consistently get an attack underway. Around the 10-minute mark, Brian Morenz set up Chris Rob- erts right in front but the hard- hitting defenceman, starting his third season with the Generals, couldn't deflect the rubber in. QUICK COMEBACK Jean Pronovost changed the complexion of the game, with two quick goals for the visitors, at 11:40 and 13:52. The first came after Young had made a brilliant save on Don Marcotte. Pronovost picked up the re- bound and dribbled it between Young's pads, The second re- sulted from a pretty pass play,| with Rick Ley flipping the puck|strike early to DUCKS STAY! This flock of ducks is shown, at the In- giewood Bird Sanctuary, on the Bow River, near Cal- gary, in a scene from last year's bitter winter, when grain was set out for them. But this fall, there'll be no feed and "noise - makers" BOBBY ORR to Sal Spampinato in front' of the net. Spampinato left it for Pronovost who drilled it into the top left corner. Generals held a decisive mar- gin, but needed a goal by Bobby Orr at 15:38 to leave the period tied. Jack Brewer deflected a Peter Nevin pass onto the net from the right side of the crease. Ring made the stop but Orr slammed in the rebound from the other side. The only goal in the middle frame was scored by Danny Sandford, a Whitby product. Sandford flipped the puck in: at 15:03 over the outstretched body of goalie Phil Myre, who had replaced Ring four minutes earlier. The third period saw Orr away. With Oshawa playing two} men short and Niagara Falls one short, Of stole the puck and broké down the left wing, Myre blocked a bullet drive from just inside the line but the dise hit the ice and bounced in. The final marker came on @ power play goal at 1:26. A Bobby Orr shot deflected off Brewer's skate to Peter Nevin, who mede no mistake. GENERALLY SPEAKING -- The win was the second for the locals in six exhibition starts. They lost three and tied one, scoring 23 goals and allowing 26... DANNY O'SHEA, play- ing his first game after return- ing from Montreal Canadiens' camp, looked sluggish for most of the night, and coach Guidolin used him sparingly in the third ..- JACK BREWER, younger brother of Leafs' Carl Brewer, was impressive. Jack showed little in the way of finesse but looks as though he may be the muscle Generals. have been looking for ... IAN YOUNG was a standout in the Oshawa net, and his pre-season, perform- ance appears to havé won him the job... . Coach BEP GUIDO- LIN and general mahager WREN BLAIR will be hard at work for the next few days de- ciding the starting line-ups. They are expected to be deter- mined Thursday in time for Sat- Four big guns -- ready to go Boom! Well, that's what the Minnesota fans are hop- ing. The American League champions held a_ brisk workout yesterday morn- ing, prepping for the open- ing game of The World Series, today, against Los Angeles. These four sturdy hitters will be gunning to give the Dodgers a "Twins" salute -- in base hits. Left- | FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Naples, Italy--Carmelo Bossi 145, Italy : Domenico Tiberia, 146%, Italy, 12. Hec- tor Homer Oliva, 126%, Argen- tina outpointed Jerzy Stokes, 12314, Los Angeles, 8, San, Jose, Calif. -- gor (Baby) Salazar, 12244, San Jose : stopped Pete Gonzales, iZ4, San 'Jose, 5. Houston, Tex.--Manuel Gon- zalez, Odessa, Tex., outpointed Cecil Mott, Houston, 12, welter- weights, 24 hours listening on your home station SPORTS TWINS HAVE FOUR-GUN SALUTE READY FOR DODGERS to-right, they are Harmon Killebrew, Rich Rollins, Tony Oliva and Jimmy Hall. --AP Wirephoto urday night's regular season HOME OPENER against Kitch- ener Rangers. Game time is 7:15 at Civic Auditorium .... WAYNE CASHMAN was still out of the line-up last night with a troublesome ankle injury but is expected to return Saturday . . Tulsa Oilers and Oklahoma the game/ City Blazers, both of the CPHL,| Thanksgiving weekend, against will play an exhibition game at| Sault Ste. Marie, the North On- Civie night, opening face-off at 8:00 p.m. Auditorium tomorrow Kingston Ousts Thorold 'In Story-Book Finish Kingston Prince George Hotel "Indians" will host the All-On- tario Senior "B" softball cham- pionship finals, This coming tario representatives. The Limestone City team won that right, here at Alexandra FOR AIR SAFETY Scare And Starve Ducks, Make The mFly South CALGARY (CP)--Ducks that} stop in Calgary on their south-|partridge stocks, members of} Thorold's bound winter flight are in forthe Alberta Fish and Game As-| got into "'a hot-box" and then a surprise this fall. ' | Park last night, when they stag- ed a story-book finish, scoring two runs in the 9th inning, after there were two out and the bases empty, to nose out Thor- old Star Cleaner "Bombers" 2-1. This was the third and decid- ing sudden-death game of the OASA 'Southern Ontario" Sen- ior "'B" finals. Previously, each Oshawa Owners Win And Lose At Garden City HOLD OHA DINNER TORONTO (CP) -- George Wardrope, Ontario minister of mines, will be guest speaker at the Ontario Hockey Associa- tion's 75th anniversary dinner here Saturday. Mr. Wardrope at one time was on the execu- ST. CATHARINES (CP) --|tive of the Thunder Bay branch Tapdean, owned by Ross Lati-|of the Canadian Amateur mer of Oshawa, easily won the sixth race at Garden City Race- way Tuesday night. The six-year-old bay trotter, plagued by leg ailments for most of his racing career, com- bined with runner - up Home- Hockey Association. 4 Times a Day With JIM. BISHOP 7:30 A.M, -- 12:15 Noon 5:30 P.M. -- 6:15 P.M, ART'S / team had won at home, via a shutout. Neither team scored an. earn- ed run last night and as far as the rival hurlers, Ken Rhohar for Thorold and Ron Brown for Kingston, are concerned -- they might still be playing. Thorold got their run in the bottom of the sixth, on an open- ing triple, then with two out, stock and deplete pheasant and| Brown walked the next batter. runner deliberately when the throw, across to 3rd sociation feared duck feed "was base was dropped by Ferguson, stead Dan for an $8.80 quinella. Ballerina Wick, owned by Frank Conlin of Oshawa, fin- ished first in the opening race but was placed second because of a break just before hitting the wire. Hillcrest Saint, who finished second, was placed first and combined with Pon- tiac Nancy, winner of the sec- ond race, for a daily double} worth $87.40. Ron Feagan, Canada's Jead-| ing harness driver, recorded) his 162nd win of the season in) the sixth race behind Starlite, GUN REPAIR 18 BOND ST. WEST, OSHAWA 728-9731 e BOUGHT © SOLD © TRADED © REPAIRED la ia (sounding to go South. --CP Wirephoto like gun explo- sions) will encourage them When they settle on the Bow River near the Cominco ferti- lizer plant or at the Inglewood bird sanctuary -- favorite stop- ping points--they'll be fright- ened and scattered by explosive noise-makers. As they waddle in search of grain that fish and game asso- ciation members have put out each year, they'll find the feed has been cut off. There won't be any feed at the federal government sanctu- ary and there'll be few, if any, handouts from private citizens. Worse yet, if the ducks plop) down in the river outside the city limits, a hunter may start blazing away at them--because a reguistion prohibiting shoot- ing near rivérs is scheduled to be lifted Nov. 1. | Ducks are the object of Oper-) ation Move On, a scheme de-| vised by the.Canadian Wildlife Service and the Alberta gov- ernment's fish and wildlife div- ision. getting a little short" and spent nearly $4,000 in grain for the ducks. | The grain was spread near the fertilizer plant, at the In- glewood sanctuary and on asso- ciation land. Industrial effluent pumped in to the Bow River melted ice and created open spaces of water for the ducks to float in. Under these conditions, be- tween 10,000 and 15,000 mal- lards loitered in the city and some stayed all winter. "Normally, mallards will fly south, but they're hardy birds and will try to winter as long as there is food and open water,' Mr. Webb: said. The fear, he said, is that the number of loitering ducks could grow to 30,000 or 50,000 within a few years. FLY OVER AIRFIELD The biggest danger was for the safety of air traffic at Me- Call Field where motion picture films produced through radar the Thorold runner scored. Rhohar didn't strike out any- body in the first inning but he fanned 16 in the next eight frames. Kingston sent two pinch-hitters in, Minette and Beatty, to start the last of the 9th, with the score still 1-0 and Rhohar fanned them both. Then with two out, Charlie Pester, who had fanned three times before, drew a-walk on four-straight balls and that was Rhohar's big mistake. Then White slashed a. gr to sec- owned by J. M. Maguire of} London, Ont. | LONDON, Ont. (CP)--A 10th race exacta of $790,90 was set up at the Western Fair Race- way Tuesday night when Battle Haw Lea finished first at $62.60 and Patchen Bars second at $12.50. ; The seventh race paid an ex- acta of $230,80 with Merrie Byrd coming in first at $63.50 and Miss Goldie Frisco second at $4.40. ond base, where the fielder wait- ed for the second bounce -- and muffed it. With runners on Neighborhood Dart League Results The following are the results of games played on the open- ing night, September 30: South- mead 5, Bathe 0; Rundle No. 2, second and third, Bob Gilmour checked his swing on a doubt- ful "strike" -- his bat connect- ed, popped the ball out over the third baseman's head, scoring both runs. Mike McMahon pitched the last inning for Kingston and re- tired Thorold in. order. "Buying A New Gun This Season?" Come in and talk GUNS with Art. We have the best prices on ell. popular makes, and have the lorgest inventory of Used'. . . New. . . Guns im South Central Ontario, ALL GUNS GUARANTEED FOR 1 YEAR WHY NOT BUY IT ON TIME ? Available for es little os $5.00 per month Shotguns... Rifles... Pistols... ete. have shown rge and small|4, Rundle No. 1, 1; North Osh- DUCK HUNTERS WARNED Shooting Prohibited | 'Second Marsh Area The Newcastle Sportsmen's Club wishes to take this oppor- fore they can buy a licence to hunt in Ontario. | Anyone wishing to apply fgf this course may do so by"calling McCall Field and that feeding PRESENT HAZARD The--project. was-. prompted, says provincial biologist Bob Webb, when it was realized that duck flocks were presenting an increasing hazard to aircraft at costs could skyrocket. | Last winter, when below-zero temperatures, snow and strong winds mbined to kill live- flights of ducks ¢rossing the airport in aii "directions, Flying around the stubble fields near the runways the ducks could be sucked into an aircraft's engine and the result could be tragic. "When the normal migration period comes along with a cold snap we'll really give them a blitzing with the exploders and Win To Hungaria keep them stirred up," Mr, Webb said. But the best incentive to en- awa No. 2, 4, North Oshawa No. I, 1; Woodview No. i, 3, Wood- view No, 2, 2. Doubles -- E. Stewart, M. Rae, D. Rae, 0. Twine 5, V. Emm, M. Smith, A. Parks, E. Adair, E. Major 2, G. Waite 2, D. Donald, J. France 2, A. Cole 3, C. Cole, L. Shobbrook 3, G. Bry- ant, B. Ross 3, J. Houston 3, G. Houston, M. Wilson, A. Muir, V. Graves, D. Taylor 2, R. Harman 2, M. Muir 2, P. Andrews, K. Clark, G. Woodall and A. Wood- all. | PHILIPS | -- DIRECT VIEW OF WORLD SERIES |courage the ducks southward In Soccer Action [wil be that their feed "'will be Hungaria shaded Hogenboom|cut off completely." Much has been printed in the| Edward Powell, 376 Colborne is|street east. Telephone 723-3552 of|for further particulars or to en- tunity to advise Oshawa and dis-| trict hunters that shooting of|past about this course and it Baseball 1 Inning: G. Bryant 5 and F. Donald 5. take advantage AUTOMATIC PRE- the|wise to migratory waterfowl, in area known as '"'the Second/courses, whose duration is morejroll, for a course in gun safety.|Rangers 2-1 Tuesday night, in Marsh" is prohibited by law. Not only is this area within the corporate limits of Oshawa but, for the past ten years or than two hours, as some hunter Oshawa and district sharp-| first division Oshawa Soccer safety intructors have a habit of|shooters will be pleased to learn| League action at Kinsmen Civic giving first time applicants. | It is foolhardy to think that a) that the Newcastle Sportsmen's Club will be holding their an-| Memoria! Stadium. John * Dunai and J. Kiss more, it has been a federal duck|boy, who has never handled ajnual turkey shoot, this coming)shared the scoring for the vic- banding station. This means that it is "a baited|and igun in his life can obtain a full! comprehensive instruction} area" and the shooting of ducks|in two hours. When one consid- and other waterfow! is not. al- ers all the aspects of the use -of their shooting! road west, Saturday, at range on Shirley south of Port Perry. The shoot will begin at 1.30)/Thistles have captured the 1965! lowed within a quarter-mile of}a gun, courses lasting from six|p.m. and will continue as long crown for their second cham: | tors. Jonn Van Hoof was the only Ranger able to mark the scoresheet. In 'B' division, any baited area. Several per-|to eight hours, with a field test!as contestants wish to shoot. |pionship in succession. sons have been apprehended in/following, are the surest method|Birds may be won by shooting the marsh this past week or so,|of assuring that youngsters arejat shotgun splatter boards andjat Kinsmen Stadium, Italia and | all claiming ignorance of the| prepared to carry and shoot a/22 rifle targets. There is am-|Rangers tangle in the . semi-| |ple parking in the area and/finals of Lancaster Cup elimina-| w. As a public service, the New- castle club is issuing tis in- formation, for the benefit of all hunters. The club also wishes to ap- peal to parents, who have boys becoming of legal age for carry- ing fire-arms for the purpose of hunting, that these boys must pags a hunter safety course, be- OLD COUNTRY SOCCER LONDON (Reuters) -- Soccer results: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Everton 2 Blackburn 2 Division Ill Brighton 1 Grimsby 2 Swindon 4 Bristol R 3 Division Ii Halifax 3 Bradford 2 Rochdale 3 Southport 6 lethal weapon. Instructors of the Newcastle! Sportsmen's Club are extremely everyone ies invited to atend. -- {tion play. - At 8.00 p.m. tomorrow night BAD BOY perinitety SELLS FOR LESS! FREEZERS - 21 CU. FT. . R.C.A, VICTOR 5 Yeor Guarantee made by Beatty. Free food plan, Free delivery, PRICED FROM |capable men, who have been ap-| proved by the Department of | Lands and Forests, to give prop- er instruction in gun safety YOUR SATISFACTION IS_OUR_AIM All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE Kelly Disney Used Cars Led. 1200 Dundes E. Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS® . DROP IN Applications for Registration tion will be taken at the OSH follows: ea heave registered, and there will be « OSHAWA MINOR HOCKEY REGISTRATION WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6th -- 6:00 P.M to. 8:00 P.M. Midget League Age Limit -- Bor after May 31, 1949. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9th -- 9:00 A.M, to 12 noon. Bantam League. Age Limit -- Born after May 31, 1951. Note; There will be @ period of skating ond skating drill efter you Oshewe Minor Hockey Associe- AWA CIVIC AUDITORIUM es charge of 25¢ for the ice-time. 3-WAY HOME THEATRE FM/AM Radio, 4 Speed Automatic 88 Changer, 23" TV all in one Walnut e Cabinet. Free Home Service. $479.00 VALUE 23" BIG SCREEN TV Hand wired circuit, full power trans- ty former: Up-front tuning, AGC circuit. . Swin-out . chassis, Convectaire Cooling, Fidelity tone audio system, With trade WE ARE OPEN EVERY NIGHT rovess "TIL 9:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Everybody Knows the Place--Bad Boy--King St. E 728-4658-4659 SET FINE TUNING 2-YEAR PICTURE GUARANTEE Phillips Monitron TV with. Direct Vision Picture Tube is the ideal way to.watch the World Series. Nothing comes between you and 4 crisp, sharp picture, Trade-in now Get set for excitement. First game Wednes- day, October 6th! €"herney's WITH A TRADE-IN FUORNITORE WORLD \

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy