"CHUMS" CAPTURE MAYF CHAMPIONS of the Mayfair Ladies' Bowling League for the 1953 season, members of the "Chums" team are shown above, holding the trophies they receiv- ed at their closing banquet re- cently. Left-to-right, they are: front row--Mary Wright, Blanche Norton (holding Mayfair Trophy) and Gertie Jones. Back row-- Irene Smith, Barbara McFeeters and Pearl Cooper. Photo by Dutton--Times Studio. BOWLING NEWS OF OSHAWA LEAGUES ALBERT ST. UNITED CHURCH BOWLING LEAGUE In the playoffs on Monday night, the All-Stars won the top honours of the teams as they led by a total of 4085. The Night- hawks, however were only seven points behind with 4078 which made the game exciting. The Strikes ended up in third place with their total of 3577 and the Pin- heads had 3543. For the Norton trophy, the Whiz-bangs certainly deserve it for they had the high- est of all teams with their score of 4131. ~ In fact this the way the six teams for the Norton trophy finished. Whiz-bangs Go-getters 3844, and Royals tied fhe bowlers did very well such as Art with his high total of 984 with of 219, 308, 2% ands]. oars reel. ling, boy! Others who had over 'the 00 ni were Ross Clark with 871 (213, 272, 256, 130), P. Clark 849 (232, 207, 232), A. Harris 846 (208,, 205, 240, 193), J. Gordon 843 (224, 222, 200, 197), and Jack Beat 830 with a high single of 323. Singles of 200 for the men were R. Gif- ford with 277 and 209; M. Hill 267; G. Ford 261; F. Coleman 250; Harry At-| kinsoin 235 and 210; Albert Walker 227; R. | Best 225; B. Westlake 219; E. Taylor 218; | L 218; P. Bent 218; L. Parks 213; G. Shemiit 211; W. Down 209; C. Lee 207: A. Taylor 205; W. Pike 202 and D. Haines 200. W. Scott Jr. had a terrific game of 849 | with singles of 188, 216, 272, 240. A. Snud- | 210); M. Bent | den had 770 (210, 232, Betty Pike 768 | bowled 768 (236, 269); (226); Flo Boyle 754 (225); T. Parry 753 | (254); B. Norton 752 (200); B. Cooper 739 | (265); J. Gifford 739 (234); M. Harris 732 | (227, 225); E. Scott 728 (211, 215); Gladys | Shemilt 718 (204, 236) and N. Coakwell | 700 (233). | Ladies with single over 200 were P.| Cooper with a high of 275, W. Scott Sr. 232; D. Spiers 226; A. Pike 217; Marg Taylor 216; A. Sargeant 213"and 204; A. Gordon 206; M. Fleming 203 and N. Ricketts 201. Another season is finally over but don't forget the banquet will be held in the CONSERVATION CORNER Pickerel Season Opens May 15, ~ Still Attracts Many Fishermen TORONTO -- When the pickerel fishing season opens on May 15, record numbers of resident and non-resident fishermen will set out to lure from lakes and streams throughout Ontario, a fish which though no great fighter, and re- latively easy to catch, is regarded by gourmets as one of Canada's finest table varieties. A fish of many names, the pick- erel of Ontario also is known as dore in Quebec, wall-eye to most United States residents and, to some, pike perch. Actually, the pickerel does not belong to the pike spiny dorsal fins and the pectoral and ventral fins indicate that it is allied, rather, to the perch, But, by any name, it provides superlative food. There's no mistaking the identity of the fish, for being a nocturnal feeder, nature has endowed him with huge '"'wall eyes' with milky- white rims and enormous capacity for gathering light to enable him to see minnows or other food on the darkest night. Pickerel is distrubuted over wide areas of Ontario from the St. Law- rence River and the Great Lakes to some far northern streams and lakes, One of the best pickerel lakes in the Province, according to officials of the Ontario Lands and Forests Department, is Lake Nip- issing. Nowhere, perhaps, is the fishing church on May 23rd at 5:00 p.m. C - lations, folks! Galen Hanover Wins At Yonkers Raceway YONKERS, N.Y. (AP)--Galen Henover, taking the lead at the | half-mile pole, went on to score | an easy three-length victory Tues- day night in the Kensico Pace at Yonkers Raceway's Grand Circuit meeting. Warner Bull brought Galen Han- over into the lead without trouble. Selby's Pride closed well for sec- ond with Ginger Tass third. The | P.P.Y.C. C.B.F. Sanction * REGATTA * Mon., May 18 PORT PERRY Starting 10 A.M. 8-5 favorite, Margaret Abbedale, | wes a poor fourth. ! fd ar At KARN'S see the complete line-up of the new and exci Kodak cameras 28 King St. E. Never before has pictare-tak- taking been so easy . . . in full color 'as well as black-and- white, indoors as well as out. There's real Kodak value built into each camera. Make it a point to step in soon to see Phone 3-4621 keener than at North Bay. There a dock, only a few blocks from City Hall, is crowded on opening day and for weeks afterwards with fishermen of all ages and varie- ties. They all catch fish, too. Usually, there isn't much trick of it. A bamboo pole, short line, single hook and live minnows will take plenty. So will fly - fishing equipment or bait rods using plugs, spoons, spinners or live bait. Handline fishing is popular on rivers such as the St. Clair, where patient fishermen "chug" for the fish. By this method, a heavy sink- er is placed on the bottom of the line with the hook suspended sev- eral feet above it, Boats are allow- ed to drift while the fisherman simply "sounds" the bottom and waits. _ While the pickerel may be found in shallow, fast-running streams in some parts of the Province, it occasions little surprise when a lake trout fisherman, using copper line and a bait dragging 100 feet down, picks up a pickerel. The fish is easily filleted and skinned. Usually fried in d eep fat, after being dipped in flour or corn- meal, the white, flaky meat falls apart at the touch of a fork or the fingers. Size limit on pickerel is 13 inches, measured snout to the centre of A small atom bomb couldn't have been distinguished among the explosions present at the Lakeshore Baseball League meeting the other night. anager Ab Walker of the Transporters was attacked from both sides (east and west . . . Bowmanville and Whitby) on the question of pitcher Cec Hall. = Lindsay was quite happy with Oshawa's strength . . . they should be. They picked up seven Peterboro Senior players. Al Menzies, Bill Huntley, Joe Ste- wart, Al Garvey, Gunner White- hill, Bill Edger and Ed Lowery are the chaps . . . "A team in ~ themselves," as Ab put it. Sitting on the fence at the meeting were the reps from Colborne, Port Hope, Cobourg and Peterboro. They'll be about , the same strength and are happy. As far as we can make out, the arguments produced noth- ing less than the fact that Cec Hall may not be playing ball this year. Bowmanville want to go Intermediate B and if so, would not be able to use an import . . . Cec Hall (from Osh- awa). They own Hall's certificate and won't give up his release to Oshawa. Which puts Cec in a rather rough position. Ab tells us the Bowmanville outfit were all smiles at their banquet some months back, but the smiles were very thin the other night. It is strange that Whitby has lined up 'with the Roses on the Hall matter . . . actually they are in a glass house, having a couple of imports themselves. Mons. Walker gave both barrels before the meeting ended and was so unhappy when we talk- ed with him, that his leaving the Lakeshore League execu- the posterior, from the tip of the snout to the centre of the posterior ed to take six per day with not more than 12 being in his posses- sion at any time. This limit is regarded as gener- ous enough since the average pick- erel caught probably weighs any- where from a pound and a half to two pounds. One of the largest pick- erel ever caught in Ontario re- putedly weighed 193% pounds. It was taken by Miss Hazel Griffin, of Akron, Ohio, in Deep Bay near Parry Sound. A LOT OF LECTURES TORONTO -- Members of the staff of the Ontario Department of Lands and Forests lectured at 702 schools and 1,246 public meetings last year with an approximate at- tendance of 135,183, The lectures were intended to acquaint the pub- lic with the value of the Province's renewable naturat resources and the necessity of co-operation to e n- sure their protection and wise use. BAD SEASON TORONTO -- Forest Protection officials of the Ontario Lands and Forests Department warn that, with the seasonal forest fire hazard increasing daily across. the Prov- ince, utmost care should be exer- cised by everyone in the use of fire in any form in wooded areas. Care- less smokers and ch ildren playing with matches already have been responsible for a number of out- breaks. In the past ten years about 81 per cent of all such fires were due to human agency. didn't look unlikely. ell, it makes for a red-hot rivalry between Oshawa and Bowmanville, and Oshawa and Whitby. . Just remember that things - will be plenty warm come open- ing day without the fun that regularly goes on on the ball field. Bowmanville' aren't too happy about playing at home against Oshawa Monday after- noon and back here in the eve- ning of the same day. Looks like an event worth seeing, eh? Spikes high, etc! Vv CHECKLETS We hear that a young fellow, a virtual unknown in sports around Osh- awa, has come up with an all- time record performance. We're speaking of Tim Kovac of OCVI. .The guy hasn't taken a really active part in sports until this past year and has suddenly blossomed out as the finest 220 track man around. He worked hard at it, and now has broken the record set by Bill Williams in that particular event . . . a mark which was thpught to stand for some time. Tim's new mark is said to be around 23 seconds . . . veddy neat! In fact it sounds almost too good. Jesse Owens world mark set in 1935 was 20.3 seconds. The banquet league continues hot and heavy. This Thursday, the Central CI Athletic Associa- tion hold their annual feast and trophy presentations at King Street Church, We have just received a let- ter from the Oshawa Minor - Hockey Association inviting us to their feast. It's to be held May 20th at the Legion Hall around 8.00 p.m. The award winners will be on hand and it should be anoth- er big battle of the waist-line. We have always been rather frank with our readers on the matter of what we think of team performances, and our opinion of the showing of the Oshawa. Merchants last Sun- day will be thusly. The boys will have to go a long way in the matter of im- proving co-ordination if they are going to live up to expecta- tions in the Inter-county Lea- gue The amount of beet on display right now is worthy of Pat Milosh's retinue . . . not of the newest and best representative of Canada's toughest amateur baseball league. We have a feeling that if the waist-lines don't diminish that quite a few players will be shocked by the suddeness of their departure southward. d now a note to those basketball teams who have left their scorebooks at the Times- Gazette office. Please pick them up as soon as possible or they'll be tossed out. Baseball and softball scorebooks are starting to come in and the mix- jure resulting is most confus- 2. Two outfits we note who have had theirs here the longest are the Simcoe Hall Minor League and the Industrial Leagues "2nd game' book. We'll give the boys until May 20th . 80 hustle around you types, otherwise out they eo! by Bob Rife. tive Wi STRICTER TACTICS CAHA . R. atley Canadian Press Staff Writer NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)-- The Canadian Amateur Hockey Association wants something done when short handed and to silence players who protest with lurid pro- fanity when they are tossed into the penalty box. At its opening general meeting Tuesday, the association accepted proposals on these points for rule changes, but turned thumbs down on several others. It threw out a proposal by the Saskatchewan branch that the slap shot be banned as a dangerous part of hockey and thereby allowed the embryo Boom Boom Geoffrions to continue blasting away to their hearts' content. A footnote was appended to the rules jenmg referees to deal stric- tly with players for kneeing and to hand out major penalties '"when warranted." A proposal that time keepers call attention to referees of swear- ing by outraged penalty servers was rejected. It was felt the time keeper should not become an act- ive official in the game itself. All suggestions for rule changes will go before the rules committee of the National Hockey League in ment between the two bodies. Each knows what the other plans and can act accordingly so that both wind up with essentially the same rules. Soon after opening its first plen- ary session at the 36th annual con- vention, the association welcomed back the reistated Quebec Ama- teur Hockey Association--one of the parent body's biggest branches --which had been suspended for defying the national organization's edict over a player's status. SPORTSMANS D [GEST 2 sharp WARMER WEATHER WADING ......c0c00e AREAS; THE WATER MAY BE WARM ENOUGH TO be => OR WADERS. IN HOT WEATHER, WADERS CAN BECOME UNCOMFORTABLE AND DAMP IN- SIDE FROM PERSPIRATION AND WATER CONDENSATION. AT SUCH TIMES IT MAY BE MORE COMFORT- ABLE TO WEAR OLD TROUSERS AND A PAIR OF RUBBER-SOLED CANVAS SHOES IF IT'S A LEVEL. BOTTOM. HEAVIER WADING SHOES SHOULD BE WORN WHERE IT IS ROUGH OR BOULDER STREWN. CHANGE OR DRY CLOTHING AS SOON AS POSSIBLE AFTERWARD/ to hobble teams that ice the puck po accordance with a mutual agree- |, THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, May 18, 1953 14 Scarcely were the five Quebec delegates seated when president Martin Conway of the QAHA arose and Jrovoeed that future disputes between CAHA branches be settled by arbitration, the arbitrator to ve no connection whatever with the CAHA or its branches. The vote was a surprising 11-to- 9 count by hand in favor of the Quebec resolution, but it was lost because a two-thirds majority was necessary. The resolutions committee con- tinued its deliberations on many subjects today as a prelude to an- other general meeting tonight. The arbitration suggestion was the only resolution proposed by the Quebec delegates which did not get prompt passage on to the com- mittee. One of the most important pro-|C. vides that a committee consider future relations between the major- series leagues and the CAHA. It was the only official recognition the convention has taken so far of the decision by the Quebec Senior League to turn professional. The Maritime Major League is the only other circuit concerned. The Quebec delegates also put across for consideration a proposal that officers of branches involved in a dispute shall have no vote themselves when questions are put a vote by branches. The rules committee left it up| to the general meeting to deal with | the proposal of the Ontario Hockey Association about putting a check | rein on teams for icing the puck. It was agreed that the present rule forbidding icing be rewritten to | make provision against this prac- tice by short handed teams. Another proposed rule change, accepted, was aimed at stricter penalties for boarding. It incor- porated the words "in contact with the boards" to deal with players who are cross-checked, body- checked, charged or tripped. Players who deliberately shoot at goal keepers after play has been Billy Agar Decisions Toronto's Bob Streeter TORONTO (CP)--Billy Agar of Toronto decisioned Bobby Streeter of Toronto over five rounds Tues- day night in the main bout of a seven-bout card at the East York Arena. The bout was in the 160- pound class. emi-final pounds: Denn Williams, Oshawa, decisioned red Mancuso, Toronto. Preliminaries--126 pounds: Bob Burrows, Oshawa, decisioned Dale Torangeau, Toronto; 150 pounds: Tommy Whalen, Brantford, de- cisioned Don McLeod, Toronto. ONTARIO FLOOR SANDERS OLD FLOORS REFINISHED RRR WALL AND FLOOR TILE SUPPLIED AND LAID DIAL 3-7251 Swearing in Sin-Bin To Stop; Starts "Get-Tough Policy stopped were given a slap. Under a Suggestion by the British Colum- bia branch, the offending player would be given a misconduct pen- ally. One of the man given approval was that of secre- tary-manager George Dudley. It provides, in effect, that. the CAHA executive must 'follow the book' in dealing with squawks over player replacements and other playoff questions. Executive decis- ions cannot be made arbitrarily between annual meetings. The OHA was host to the dele- gates Tuesday night at dinner at which Louis Blake Duff of Welland, Ont., was the guest speaker. The OHA's miniature gold hockey sticks, awarded for outstanding work in amateur hockey, were pre- gejusd to past presidents of the resolutions New Low Price 75.00 Also -- We now have in stock: Brownie Movie Projectors Brownie Projection Screens Protective Covers for Brownie Projectors All Kodak 65th Anniversary Featured Cameras and Ac- cessories Are Available At Evy model 3. Lomo... @ black-and-white camena..x. Color, Camera... 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