Ontario Community Newspapers

Times & Guide (1909), 11 Jan 1951, p. 5

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4 f *L WESTON ARENA â€" THREE GAMES EACH MONDAY EVENI!NG IN AFFILIATION WITH O.HM.A. SENIOR "B" T I a a 'l ‘ \~ |â€" . SENIOR CO&IM ERCIAL HOCKEQ* LEAGUE /4 : LUCKY NUMBER PROGRAMME 10c â€" GENERAL ADMISSION 50e _â€"â€" RESERVEN tEar Is. 6M y ® sArURDAY ~WESTON ARENAâ€" Saturday, Jan. 13th ADMISSION: 50c FN" y 33b it ts ts Bc es04 s cssc w-â€"‘l 'w- Recreation Office . seâ€" * Relkoeront en tien o ey Morth Torento LIONS vs. WESTON ARENA KODAK vs. A. V. ROE + C.C.M. ve. MOFFATS MOORES vs. R.C.A.F. GENERAL ADMISSION : Blue and Grayâ€"â€"50¢ _ Red (Reserved) â€"75¢ WESTON ARENA _ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17th FRIDAY, JANUARY 12th Industrial Hockey $ som\'mdy's birthday A Woeek of Monday, Jan, 15, to Saturday, Jan. 20 H. A. Dewolfe, Manager, Weston, Ont. A. Droppo, Manager, Maiton, Ont. 8.00 â€" 10.30 p.m. â€"â€" ADMISSION 30c CHECKING FREE ‘ open a savings account for your particviar somebody Children‘s Skating 2.30 â€" 4.30 p.m. â€"â€" ADMISSION 15c WESTON AND _ DiSTRICT Public Skating â€" LEAGUE GAME ther T Recreation Offi :idhrvm;\lin ?t::(if: a* tonâ€"RCCS "IMlustrious" IR. Undercoating MING UP ubâ€"Recreation Offic ing Street School ~_* 8.30 p.m. 7.30 p.m. Pays: 10 For :‘t?eif! 5;9,50 LEAGVUE 11, l Duto Body Repuirs P 0 A SIGN OF GOOD FRIENDsHIP “B!' at Lawrence Ave . WESTON â€" ZOliE 4422 BB vermecrris ho 2d T hflt Shootingâ€"RCCB "Illistrious" CHILDREN: 25¢ 1710 JANE ST. Weston DUKES PROGRAMME 10¢ â€" GENERAL ADMISSION 50¢ â€" RESERVED «_ ‘The line of Kelly, Boncardo, and Glark. stqod out for the Tigers, while defensemen Pat McDonald, and Ray Larman were strong for the Majors. ... <..In the recentlyâ€"organized Jeague, there are about 75 boys participatâ€" ing on the, four teams for Weston and . Mount Dennis. At the conâ€" clusion of the league schedule, an Allâ€"star team will be chosen from the four teams to enter the OMHA |‘ ‘Tuesday‘s game was a close one but Majors led all the way through by a a_f‘im margin until the tieing marker was scored by Pete Bonâ€" cardo for the Tigers. For the Tigers, Pete ‘Boncardo was the leading goal scorer with three goals and two assists; Bob Clarke followed with two goals; then Bob ‘T'h_ru‘sh with one goal, one assist; apd Kelly with thrée assists. The best for the Majors were Cribbar with 3 goals, Jim Reid with 2 goals, Will Bain with 1 goal and 1 assist, and Jack Smith, Ralph MeCormick, and. Pat McDonald with one assist apiece. In Friday‘s game, the winning goal wasn‘t scored . until five seconds before the close of the game. Orlando Martini set up Ray Hazel in front of the goal immediately after the faceâ€"off. Hazel, in the clear, made no misâ€" take, beating goalie Charlie Clark cleanly. The first goal was also scored by.. the Flyers. Martini assisted on this one too, with Don ‘B.oss tossing in the marker in the \fll‘st period. The Dukes tied it up early in the second period on a shot by Ron Thompson, unassisted, igp.d neither team was able to beat gxe goalies until the winning tally. ‘ oth. goal keepers did well with Len McDooling for the Dukes being outstanding, having to stop mbout fwice as many rubbers as Clark for the Flyers. i The leagueâ€"leading Flyers edged out the last placeé Dukes and the Tigers tied with the Majors in two actionâ€"packed games in the Weston Arena Juveniie Hockey. League last week. <Lions at that time . were illâ€"preâ€" pared, for. a stiff test with Coach Buck Houle‘s lads. They were a hurriiedlyâ€"assembled collection of hockey players and had only two workouts prior to the start of the season. It is. divulging no secret when your reporter passes along word that of. all the teams in the group Couch Houle fears the Lions the most. North ‘Torento dropped their first five starts and we‘e unforâ€" tunate that they caught Weston twice and the flashy, wellâ€"condiâ€" tioned St. MicKael‘s:twice in four of the first five games of the schedule. Since then they have won tore than their share of games and definitely present a playoff threat. Flyers Set Pace For Local Arena Juveniles _ The answer to that might easily Come this Friday eevning when the rapidlyâ€"improving‘ North Toronto Lions come to town for a scheduled Big Six fixture. Lions, fans will reâ€" member, gave Westen a terrific jolt when they met previously, leading the Dukes 3â€"1 going into the final period and finally bowing out in overtime . after Weston fought.to even the count in the third. â€" _ The question is: Is there a team in the group that can stop the flashy Dukes? _ Overpowéring Unionville Jets 7â€"3 in a game heavily sprinkled with penalties, Weston‘s leagueâ€"leading and undefeated Dukes rolled to their twelfth consecutive victory in Weston Arena last Friday night and the big question before the fans of the OHA Junior B "Big Six" group has still to be answered. Weston Dukes Roll On Unbeaten In 12 Starts; Face Lions Fri. Night WHO ~cWILkLâ€"SNAP â€"~WESTON â€" The game willâ€"be the thirteenth Annoynce’ CHANGE OF STORE HOURS HARRY CLARK, HARDW*RE Mon., Tues., Thurs., Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday 8 a.m. to 12 noon » Fridey 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 65 MAIN ST. NORTH Husky 181â€"pound centre. who is steadily improving in his p‘ay with Weston Dukes. Don played midget last season, is a student at Runnyâ€" mede Collegiate. _ Schedule for the next month is as follows: Tues., Jan. 9â€"(7â€"8 p.m.) Flyers vs. Majors; Fri., Jan. 12 (6â€"7 p.m.) Tigers vs. Dukes; Tues., Jan. 16 (6â€"7) Flyers vs. Tigers; Fri., Jan. 19 (6.30â€"7.30) Majors vs. Dukes; Tues. Jan. 23 (7â€"8 p.m.) Tigers vs. Majors; Fri., Jan. 26 (6.30â€"7.30) Flyers ovs. Dukes; Wed., Jan. 31 (6â€"7 p.m.) Tigers vs. Dukes; Fri., Feb. 2 (6.30â€"7.30) Flyers vs. Majors The league officials include the governor, Lloyd Milier; referees Ed Shade and Pete Rogers assisted by Joe Neil, Ab Crocker, and Lloyd. Miller. s Bill Beardall,. and ~â€"manager: Lox Summerville; Dukes, Vern‘ Plant, and manager Brice Hales; Flyers, Frank Stevenson; Majors, Moe Florian. . ADVERTISING PAYS â€" TRY IT Junior "A": series. This team will be coached by Jack Culverwell. Coaches of the teams are: Tigers, In the Junior game two teams from Humber Heights clashed, with the Beavers edging the Wolves 2â€"1 on goals by Weller and Kilpatrick. Stade was the goalâ€" getter for the losers. _ The school hockey season opened on Friday with the Eagles from Senior Public claiming a 1â€"0 win over the Falcons from Humber Heights. Jim Shropshire tallied the only goal of the game on an unassisted effort late in the game. Penalties were meted out by reâ€" feree Hampton to Shropshivre and Scott of the Eagles and Clarke of the Falcons. Public School ° Hockey League Has 12 Teams In the game against Unionville those veteran smoothies, Fred Bell and Paul Jago, were the "triggerâ€" men," both netting a pair of countâ€" ers. George Jami¢son, Don‘ Mcinâ€" tosh and Doug Timgren notched singletons. "Pickey" White, Bob Petch and â€"George Howell tailied for the Jets. league start for Weston Dukes and it could be that a combination of an improved Lions squad and the jinx number of an unlucky 13 will trip up our lads, Be that is it may it all adds up to a rattling good game for the fans to watch and good luck to both teams. Both play it clean and hard all the way. ON HIS WAY UP! TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON f MERCURYâ€"LINCOLNâ€"METEOR 122 Main St. North â€" Ju. 0865 W CRUICKSHANK GA Simpson Motors ... 'Moffns We Smvmmmirmumnoige BBELONE . smu~ nmnommmmmmne Weston Decorators ...... BUNNYIG® ... s â€"mmesswages I'Winderl won roll off. Final standing *Winders Taxi ... Wilf‘s Cycle ....... Winder‘s Taxi took a 4â€"3 division from Wilf‘s Cycle to tie the se ies at 34 poifits. Both tearhs rolled a sudden death gamé in the wee hours of morning before the Taxi men won out by 19 pins. Congratuâ€" lations, fellows. £ | W.B.T. Weston Major lndustrial 5 JOHN ST. Wilf‘s Cycle & Sports Sports Equipment Headquarters AT LOCAL.ALLEYs . _PINS and i POINTS See Us SKATING REQUIREMENTS FREE PICKâ€"UP AND DELIVERY Have Your Skates Sharpened Lengthwise Like the Professionals Good Supply of BADMINTON RACQUETS. BIRDS, ETC., at Reasonable Prices On All Repairs To Bicycles, Joycycles, Ete. ~ KEYSâ€"MADE WHILEâ€"Uâ€"WAIT â€" Visit Us At the Arena â€" SKATE SHARPENING â€"Continued on page 7 HOCKEY â€" Special Attention Given To Clubs â€" C.C.M. MATCHED HOCKEY SETS C.C.M. FIGURE SKATING OUTFITS (Expert Fittings) For All Your D. é‘;\ s 0CKEY Es . Mumcette gkpk MA Te and W \. '”y & T . ATING ( / C /3 ® IREMENTS & N WILEF REEVES, Prop. beoviv ons a come in... 1951 MERCURY TRUCKSâ€"â€" OVER 80 MODELS â€"â€"% To s tons 34 34 30 21 15 11 MERCURY TRUCKS for less! to move it with A serious operation. The Junior| hockey game started at 4.20 lnd‘ the Senior game at 5 p.m. Reports of the games were necessarily too‘ late for this week‘s edition but willl be published next week. ‘ Yesterday, Wednesday, January ‘10th, the T.D.L.A.A, hockey season was scheduled to begin with Wesâ€" ton playing a double â€" header against Runnymede, (Proceeds of the games on ‘Jan. 10 will benefit a young rugby player for the Colâ€" legiate who suffered an injury dur» ing the season and had__to undergo. Runnymede And. Weston In Opener J. H. JORDAN WATCHMAKER Expert Watch Repair Prompt Service 5% MAIN ST. N. \g i @m ZONE 4â€"463 . Yen‘ll_ reduce Innllqeuundhu-'t ‘operiting efficiency with a truck that has been selected with the right tonnage, wheels base, body, etc. to do your job. The new Mercury Truck Catlog#e Man: ual makes it easy to select exactly the right Mercury Track to give you .the best trucking service. Comeinnndllcdicl,’lu“’rm and get your FREE copy of the Mercury Eddie Shore did nothing "for fun", he asked for and got his price. That he was always worth the money he commanded no employer ever quesâ€" tioned, for Shore played hockey like a frantic machineâ€"at top speed and In his first year with Boston, the dynamic Shore pulled the Bruins up by their bootstraps, from a cellar position in the N.H.L. of the two previous yearsâ€"to second place in the American section of the league in 1926. He is the only player to ever win the Hart Trophey four times, and is now, of course, elected to hockey‘s Kingston Hall of Fame. Boston Bruins, where he literally ‘sold‘ the game to the casual Bosâ€" tonians. And incidentaily the Boston management seem to need someone to do the job over again in 1951, but that is another story. As & player, Eddie Shore built his hockey career the ‘hard way‘, followâ€" ing the ice game through the Melvilie Millionaires in 1923, through Regina and Edmonton and finally to the man in the game, Eddie Shore can very well be considered as the greatest hockey playerâ€"period! Never a gentleâ€" man to the point of losing the puck or a goal, Shore nevertheless brought a tremendous amount of colour and talent to the game. s Lo ol HERE‘S been a lot of ink spilled on sports ently Twhoduewuthcdded“fitufidlh ’ sports. You may recall that this came about at the Press, whoinvitdtfll::i:flhl‘m& > performer in lacrosse, hockey, etc. etc. # Despite any official verdictâ€"and the fact that a fatâ€"footed cmcausea\otoflmgenttâ€"thiowhul‘nfi.lr.'l ate three of its favourites for the mythical awards. The Rugby Crown The Hockey Award _ Admittediy, other For the greatest football playerâ€"we nominate Dave Sprague of the Tigers and Ottawaâ€"for‘ his longâ€"playing excellence and powerful contribuâ€" Saskatchewan, who was born just two years after the turn of the present century. Generally accepted as For the greatest hockey player we sugâ€" gest Edward ‘Eddie‘ e States championshipe; he was the first Canadian to wih a heat in the famous Diamond Sculls and the first Canadian to win the coveted Bedford Cup. Although the Diamond Sculls eluded the big man throughout his own career, he coached‘ his son Joe, Junior to many championshipe and on July 7th 1928, he réalized his last ambition in rowingâ€"when the name So iteâ€"Shore and Sprague and Wright. Yeerâ€" nominations please! ‘Joe During his 23 years in a rowing craft, Joe Wright, Senior won 130 championship races hete, there and The Rowing Laurels As for the ‘grestest Wright. Senior. ate Jor . Following in the great tradition. of Ned Hanlan, ‘Big Jo¢‘ earâ€" / ried Canada‘s colours v proudly pkimiing along the waters of the world and increased the Dominion‘s Dave Spragie was first, last and fis trivie, ho hi Pn mm his d A could be cousited on for â€" of mnuu*y@ quarter, he was offered none his in 1940 ot shirey years of linemen and backfclders, runners and kickers and smashereâ€"and we etill. wmeupvlthlunun*?'fi hhdxteut«u“e'u-:h years oluentbdhcm Hamilton â€"to his Inst Eastern Canadian Championship with the Rough Riders

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