70 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 2, 1959 SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' IT'S NICE! We refer to the quiet, soothing Iull that in in mid-week, following the Cup. Sure, we know it will not last, in Oshawa we've got several leagues and organizations ready to move right into the publicity limelight, on behalf of their own particular activities, but just the same, it's nice to have a little peace-and- quiet, even if it doesn't last for very long. Among other events that are "building up" this week, is the world fightweight fight tonight in Houston, Texas, when cham- pion Joe Brown meets Dave Charnley, the British Em pire southpaw champ, who may prove quite a problem For Brown, although Brown is heavily favored at the mo- ment. Then on Friday night, down in Utah, a place nam ed Logan, "Spider" Webb will take on Gene Fullmer 'gain in a middleweight title clash, that may or may-not give rise to some interesting results. What never fails to amaze most fight fans, as well as those of us in the sports-writing game, is, how can these "World Champ- Jonship" bouts sneak up on one, with so little ballyhoo. It seems obvious if you haven't got a Patterson or Jo- hansson for the heavy title, Archie Moore or "Sugar Ray"--you actually haven't got too much to appeal to the average Joe. Down in Adelaide, Australia, police removed eight boisterous hecklers from the ranks of the spectators last night when Lew Hoad was being given a "roasting" while playing fellow-Australian Frank Sedgman. On the heels of yesterday's news that Aussie Neale Fraser would not turn pro with Kramer's tennis troupe, comes word HOUSTON, Tex. (CP) -- Joe Brown, boxing's busiest cham- pion, defends his world light- weight title for the eighth time tonight when he meets Dave Charnley of Britain, The 34-year-old champion, who already has gathered about $200, 000 in three years of defending Patterson To Spar In Canada TORONTO (CP)--Floyd Patter-| son, former world heavyweight champion, will cpen a Canadian boxing tour in Windsor Saturday. Loren Cassina of Toronto, spon-| sor of the tour designed to keep| Patterson tuned up. for his re- oey Brown Defends Title the title, hopes to tie Benny, Brown is favored at 12 to 5 Leonard's record for warding off odds to retain his championship, challengers. Leonard «did it eight and become the oldes{ man to times and retired undefeated in hold it. He is three months 1925. younger than Joe Gans was in Charnley would like to become (1908 when the latter lost to the first Briton to hold the title Battling Nelson. - since Freddie Welsh of 42 vears| There is a 90-day return clause ago, and also the first southpaw in the contract in the event to be lightweight champion. Brown loses. If he wins there are Brown almost lost to lefthander| offers of $75,000 and $100,000 for Kenny Lane here last year. fights on the west coast and HEAVYWEIGHT NECK Florida. Shavsiey is Joi He a heavy. SEVEN DEFENCES weight from the waist up, S| Brown won the title Aug. 24, iid Jock sas Big a3 Jack 1956, from Wallace (Bud) Smith, Fraoire. title by knocking out|It seven defences he has five Re for! YY une the knockouts and two decisions. No. 8 contender for Brown's| At the close of business Tues- throne. |day night $19,281 was in.the till. Brown, from Baton Rouge, La.,|The promoters forecast a total has had almost three times as Of $40,000 by night time. Brown many fights as the 24-year-old Sets 40 per cent and Charnley Charnley. But Charnley has one 20 of the total proceeds. distinction Joe can't claim, He| The 15-round scrap will be never has been knocked off his televised by the ABC starting at feet in 40 battles. 110 p.m. EST. match with | Johansson, said Tuesday that other confirmed dates are Kitth-| ener Dec. 8, Peterborough Dec. 9 and North Bay Dec. 10. Patter-| son will be in either Toronto or Montreal Dec. 11. Cassina sald he is frying to HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WLTF Interprovincial Senior [smiths Falls 5 Hull 4 A Pts, [Cornwall 7 Buckingham 4 33] Springfield 16 6 Interprovincial Junior SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Hockey Assoc. Midget League -- Local 222 vs Rotary Club, at 6.80 p.m.; Ki. wanis Club vs Lions Club, at 7.30 p.m. and Canadiar ' Legion vs Kinsmen Club, at 8.30 p.m. All games at Children's Arena. THURSDAY'S GAMES BASKETBALL Oshawa Grads vs Coca Colas, at Simcoe Hall, 8.00 p.m. Willie Morrissey Says He'll Still Run 'Name' Horses owner William Morrissey says he will not change the names of six racehorses despite a ruling Monday by the Su- preme Court of Canada which turned down his appeal against an Ontario Racing Commission order. The commission said the horses were named to ridicule and embarrass track owner Fred Orpen or members of his family. It has ordered Mr, Morrissey to find new' names for Stole the Ring, Hot Ice, Red Nose Clown, Irene's Or- phan, Rabbit Mouth and Into the Grape. "I'm out of racing but I'll | never change the names," Mr, | Morrissey said. "Our program | TORONTO (CP)--Racehorse jo, By CLIFF GORDON Belleville McFarlands, playing doe of fhelr best games of the Oshawa Industrisl League -- team well earmed assists in last night's game, He also eerned the third star of the night behind Maniago and Boucher of Belleville. The next home game for the Whitby Dumlops willbe this eom- ing Saturday night when the {third-place Chatham Maroons will be the visitors, The Maroons are really playing some good hockey of late and are making a desperate bid to overtake the second place K-W Dutchies, so you can beg they will be hard to ston here on Saturday night. g E : ; i ] : E* a i Bp rsd ESSERE ¥ g 2F%8 i § Hi 8 g hot and, they increased their lead to 5-2| before Whi a pass from McBeth as he top- ped in a goal mouth pass that fooled Maniago all the way. Then, with just 12 seconds to go, Pogue backhanded in a soft one that fell just one short of tying the score, ICE CHIPS: The Macs were really fired up for this game and ther were deserving of their win. 7.10. Belleville 'Macs' Nose Out Dunnies Penalties: Pogue, 3rd Period 6. Belleville:. Boucher 9. Whitby: Pogue (Attersley, Etcher) .... 3% that Alex Olmedo, U.S, Davis Cup star, has taken Kra- The Dummies built up a fast mer's offer of $35,000 to turn professional. If this con- tinues, Kramer's professional shows are going to attract most of the world's tennis fans and only the lowly- ranking amateurs are even going to remember what the Davis Cup means. Since there just aren't that many good tennis players either--we're not so sure that this situation would be bad either, but it does seem a shame that country club members should suddenly find them- selves so far removed from what is actually the top bracket of their favorite sport. BRIGHT BITS: -- "Toe" Blake, coach of Montreal Canadiens, who has been basking in the reflected glory created by the outstanding 18-game unbeaten record of his Habs, has finally come out and given some long- overdue credit to the play of defenseman Doug Harvey. Jacques Plante stole the limelight with his plastic mask and with Richard and Geoffrion on the injured list, one was almost apt to quit figuring out how Canadiens still manage to stay up there on top, with such authority. Mr. Doug. Harvey is certainly one of the main reasons. ...MUZZ PATRICK has decreed all Junior and Juven- ile goalies in the N.Y. Ranger "farm system" are to wear plastic face masks. It may look weird for a while but we think it's a move in a sensible direction: . . . GLEN TURNBULL of Hamilton Thistles, a veteran skip, scored a perfect eight-end yesterday in the annual Hamilton Thistle Club bonspiel, beating Ossie Stewart of Hamil- ton Vies 17-8. . . . BOSTON RED SOX acquired Bobby Thomson yesterday in a deal with Chicago Cubs, and it begins to look as if the Fenway Park fans are going to have to get ready to say "adieu" to Ted Williams. War- ren Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves, it is rumored, may also be traded to the American League and if it has to be, where better than to finish up his career, than back 15 11 12 8 1011 912 812 717 Tuesdqy's Result Providence 5 Quebec 2 | Thursday's Game Providence at Quebec Eastern Professional League d WL T {London 1 147 11 10 10 10 98 8 51 87 6 80 5 102 work out appearances in - Providence bury, Sault Ste. Marie, Quebec Rochester City and the 'Maritimes but the Buffalo schedule will. have to conform Hershey with railway timetables since| Cleveland Patterson refusés to fly. Quebec The ex-champ will box with sparring partners Julio Mederos, Clarence Boyd and Dusty Rhodes on alternate dates. | Championship Tale Of Tape HOUSTON (AP)--Tale of the tape on the Joe Brown - Dave Charnley world's 1ig ht weight championship boxing match to- night: Brown M4 135 5-T% 7% 35 38 29% 14% 18% 13 11% 10% 11 10 6% 30 Bueki; Penalties: Babando, 18.25. A a ---- ---- For Your Convenience STOVE OIL is available in any quentity of the following . . . VIGOR OIL SERVICE STATIONS ® OSHAWA eo. 78 BOND ST. WEST SIMCOE ST. SOUTH ot Lakeview Park KING ST. EAST ot the Townline ® WHITBY eo 500 BROCK ST. NORTH ® AJAX © HARWOOD AVE. N. © BROOKLIN eo JCT. 7 &12 HWYS. 2 ngham 4 Pembroke 3 22 Thunder Bay Junior 21/Fort William Hurricanes 8 Fort 19 william C 1 15 - Metropolitan League |St. Jerome 11 Lakeshoe 2 | Brockville 4 Snowdon 2 Sorel 17 Pointe aux Trembles 3 * OHA Junior B | Woodstock 8 2 op ar o| Waterloo 7 Owen Sound 8 3 79 71 2| Niagara District Junior B 4 81 91 24/8t. Catharines 1 Welland-Crow- 5 74 60 23 land 4 S.8. Marie 910 3 2 71 2|-- ais WDA hel ms Yankees Want Warren Spahn |Hull-Ottawa, 3 Montreal 3 Trois-Rivieres 2 8.5. Marie 7 Tonight's Game Trois-Rivieres at Sudbury x ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) Ontarley Resior A A pts. |--New York Yankees Tuesday 56 93 Were reported to have offered 66 22/second baseman Gi! MeDougald 70 21/and right fielder Hank Bauer to 44 19/Milwatkee Braves for Warren 80 6/Srahn, 20-game winner for 10 years in the Nationa! League. i i The offer came at a secret con- ony Slee ace mung counter for Oshawa Diary. {ference during the minor leagues|times, He earned $537,004, more] OSHAWA DAIRY -- goal, Brai- Connorowski, Westfall .. 11.48 | winter meeting here, sources told |than any other horse in 1959. |den; defence, Linton, Branton,| Penalties -- Westfall Young 2 |The Associated Press. Milwaukee | Balson, Kolesnikg forwards, Cov-|Bobbie, > | officials said they would "think . " er, Matthews, Liston, Armstrong,| Referees -- Bob Simcoe and it over." | Indians Setting J. Peters, T. Peters, Solomon, Paul Kawazenuls; Official scorer Spahn, 38, who had a 21-15 win-| . Macdonald, Nelson and Furey. -- Jim Shaw. A Pts. |loss record last season, is be- BHL Point Pace BEATON'S DAIRY -- goal, NEW YORK (AP) is to race them until we are | ordered to stop." two-goal lead in the first period The Morrissey horses are |by the 5.10 mark. Hassard start- raced under lease by Miss | Christina Blanche Armstrong JUVENILE HOCKEY League-Leaders Tie; Beaton's Leave Cellar barred from the tracks. Lloyd Mapes, flashy rearguard |FIRST PERIOD of Beaton's Dairy Juveniles, fired| 1. Tony's: Garrow a goal with less than two minutes Bobbie ti remaining in. the weekly *"City| 2. H-M: Connorows League" twinebill played at the Siblock, Stevens Children's Arenta last night as his club nipped the Oshawa Dairy boys 3-2. The triumph enabled Beaton's Dairy fo vacate the loops cellar, a spot which they've held all season and move into a tie for" third place, along with Oshawa Dairy. Centre Butch Dowe ahd Ronnie Hooper were tise other Beaton's snipers. Jimmie Peters and Roddy Macdonald triggered singletons They got great goal tending by Maniago who was lucky on a Sword Dancer Is American Champ NEW ORLEANS (AP)--Sword Dancer, three - year . old horse owned bv the Brookmeade Stable, Monday was named American champion by the selec- tion board of the Thoroughbred Racing Associations, Inc. The 25-member board made up of racing secretaries at the TRA tracks around the country also unanimously selected the flashy chesnut as three-year-old cham- pion. The Kerr Stable's Round Table, retired as the world's| money-leading winner with $1,-! 749,869, received one vote for American champion. Sword Dancer was unplaced Sudbury T.-Rivieres Hull-Ott Montreal sesenes 10D .eeese 12,19 Lo 17.44 , McKnight, Charnley 24 135 Age Weight Height 56% Reach 66 Whitby Chest nor 38 K-W Chest exp 40 |Chatham Waist 28 |Windser 981 Neck 16% | Belleville 3150 Thigh 2 | Tuesday's Results Calf 13% [Chatham 3 Windsor 7 Biceps 13 |Belleville 5 Whitby 4 Forearm 11% Tonight's Games Fist 11 |Kitchener. at Chatham Ankle 8'% | Whitby at Belleville Wrist 6% Ontario Junior A WLTTPF 5 SECOND PERIOD 4.-Tony's: Garrow (Yahn) 8.18 5. Tony's: Young 4 Garrow, Kirk .... .. 1224 Penalties -- Bobble, Garrow, Yahn, Westfall, Butler and Con- norowski 2. THIRD PERIOD 6. H-M: Butler 1270 10 7 2 X71 Marlboros 10 46 2} even to get about $70,000 a Godridge; defence, Mapes, | yes Pr in Boston ? Neighborhood Assoc. Pee Wee Hockey 61, in the fifth game of the The 18 Pee Wee hockey teams were out in full force Saturday, Nov. 28. Play got underway at 7:00 am. with Rundle against Bathe. Rundle boys seemed wide awake even at such an early hour as they downed Bathe with a score of 4-1. Goals for Rundle: Graham 2, Morrison 1, Stewart 1. Goals for Bathe: H. Marlow 1. Second game, Storie met and defeated Woodview. 6-1. Goals for Storie: Solomon § and Hercia 1. Goals for Woodview: Morrison 2 The third match was a close one as North Oshawa's goalie, Moore, came up wi'h a shut-out. The only goal of the game was scored by Strand of North Osh- awa, early in the first period The final score North Oshawa 1, Kingside 0. The fourth game saw Fernhill shutout Storie 5-0. morning. Goals for Sunnyside: Curry 4, Chapman 1 and Peyton 1. Eastview blanked Harman out with a score of 6-0. Goals by Eastview: Waite 2, Bowen i, Hewer 1, Vann 1 and Brockman 1. Connaught trounced Valleyview 16-0. Goals for Connaught: Lloyd 4, Glenda be 2, g, Far Moritt 1 and Miljour 1. In the last game of the morn- ing, Nipigon led Lake Vista to the tune of 9-1. Goals for Nipigon: Dionne 5, Wilson 1, Salter 1 Anderson 1 and Stead 1. Lake Vista's only goal was scored by Pat Smith. Next Saturday morning, an- other eight games are scheduled. Spectators are welcome at the Oshawa Children's Arena. For good entertainment and an op- Goals for Fernhili: Al, Griffin 2, J. Dionne 2 and Hanowski 1. Sunnyside downed Southmead, portunity to help our children's sports program, drop in any Sat- urday morning. AT WEMBLEY Valdes, DeJohn Win UK. Fights LONDON (AP) -- Lanky Mike DeJohn of Svracuse, N.Y., and strapping Nino Valdes of Cuba Stat beat pair of disappointing fights at Wembley's indoor stadium Tues. day night. A sellout crowd of 11,000 saw British heavyweights in a Facts And Figures In Title Fight HOUSTON (AP) -- Facts and figures on the Joe Brown-Dave Charnley world's lightweight box- ing championship fight tonight: | Title at stake: World's light-| weight championship at 135 pounds; 15 rounds. Principals: Champion Joe Brown, Baton Rouge - Houston; challenger Dave Charnley, Dart- ford, Kent, England. Place: Sam Houston Coliseum. Promoter: Texas Boxing En- terprises Inc., Houston. Time: 10 p.m. Television: National TV by| ABC with the Houston area| blacked out. No radio broadcast. TV-proceeds: $40,000. Gate: About $50.000, Attendance: About 10,000. Purses: Brown 40 per cent; Charnley 20 per cent. Prices of seats: $15, $10, $1.50, $5, $2.50. Potential worth of house: About $80,000. Seating capacity: 11,200. | Scoring: Referee and two| judges, 10-point maximum per| round. Return . bout: Within 90 days should Charnley defeat Brown. Promoter Approaches | | time top-ranking Cuban had lost two straight fights in the United | es. As London announced he was | through for the evening and| walked across to Valdes at the end of the seventh, the erowd booed, clapped and stamped on the floor. There were no knock- DeJohn gain a narrow, well Booed decision in 10 A Dick Richardson, a Welsh milk- man, and Valdes stop Brian Lon- don, jut - jawed former British champion, on cuts in seven rounds. The 35-year-old Cuban opened a cut over London's left eye, forcing the 25-year-old Briton to retire at the end of the seventh round of the 10-round co-feature. It was London's first fight since he was knocked out in the 11th round by Floyd Patterson, then world heavyweight cham- pion, at Indianapolis May. 1. DIDN'T SHOW MUCH Neither Valdes nor London dis- played any power or skill. They t most of the time in clinches. At times it looked more like .a wrestling match. Valdes, who weighed 218 to London's 211, was a major dis-|in appointment to the fans. In three previous bouts in England, he scored devastating knockouts. Before coming here, the one- over |d and few solid punches. NARROW WIN DeJohn, who had scored two straight knockouts in the U.S. barelv squeaked through over the lightly-regarded Richardson. At the finish, the tall, 28-year- old American was bleeding from cuts over each eye and on his forehead. The crowd jeered loud and long after referee Bill Williams raised DeJohn's hand in triumph. Many fans thought Richardson deserved the verdict for his ag- gressive tactics. Richardson weighed 204%, De- John 201% There were no knockdowns and the referee frequently warned both fighters for using their heads in the infighting. DeJohn was cut slightly over the left eye the fifth and his nose bled freely from the eighth on after the Welshman connected with four hard rights that made the favored New Yorker hold on. Johansson NEW YORK (AP) -- Would-be boxing promoter Joe Tepper dis- closed his three main backers Tuesday and said he was hope- ful of promoting the return fight between heavyweight 'champion Ingemar Johansson and Floyd Patterson in New York next June, "Johansson and Edwin Ahl- quist, Johansson's adviser, will meet with us after Ingemar finishes his South American ex- hibition tour in about three weeks or so," said Tepper. Tepper, former secretary of the New York State Athletic Commission, returned last Thurs- day from his second visit within a month to Sweden where he talked with Johansson and Ahl- quist. i "They told me they were hope- ful I could put the fight on in New York," said Tepper. "Jo- hansson said he would fight only in New York." Tepper's supporters are Steve Masters. head of a chain of dis-| count stores, Angier Duke, for- mer ambassador to El Salvador, end Tom Murray, Jr., a former college boxer and New York| management executive. * 'Will Meet 17\" The Braves were said to have 14 6 "BLUE BOMBER FAN WAS NOT TOO BLUE TORONTO (CP)»--A Winni- peg football fan was fined $10 Monday on a drunk charge and complimented the Tor- onto - police force on being "kind, courteous and toler- ant." He was cone of 110 persons brought before Magistrate James Butler on drunk charges. Abqut 60 usually ap- pear in cour ater a normal weekend. Billy Carter Still Leads OTTAWA (CP)--Billy Carter of Hull-Ottawa Canadiens was held to one assist in Eastern Profes- sional Hockey League action last k but maintains an 11-point in the scoring race with 45 points, league statistics. show. Cleland Mortson of Sudbury Wolves, co - holder of the mosi- penalized player lead, was on his best behavior and took second place by scoring- his 11th goal und three assists. He has 34 points. Carter, 22-vear-old centre, ags 21 goals -- best in the six- club league--and 24 assists, one more thap Mortson. Orval Tessier of Kingston and Sam Bettio of Sudbury, in a four- way tie for second last week, are bracketed a third with 30 points, Claude Evans of Trois-Rivieres Lions still leads netminders with a 2.4 against gverage, having al- lowed 36 goals in 15 games. Charlie Hodge of Montreal added another shutout, his fourth, to lead that department. League-leading Sudbury is the most-penalized team, adding 36 rainutes for a total of 336. Mort- son and Dino Mascotto of Trois- Rivieres each have 53 minutes in penalties. FIGHTS LAST ' NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles -- Carmie Price, 138, "Ambridge, Pa., outpointed 58 43 Hamilton 2 2 7 Tuesday's Results Barrie 5 St. Catharines 2 Hamilton 5 St. Michael's 5 Guelph 6 Marlboros 3 Tonight's Game Guelph at Barrie {Fritz Brickell, a shortstop. 3 5 7.8 9 9 Western League Winnipeg 3 Edmonton 4 International Leay St. Paul 7 Toledo 2 Milwaukee 5 Omaha 2 Eastern League Philadelphia 5 New York 3 Manitoba Junior St. Boniface 2 Winnipeg B 0 Brandon 10 Winnipeg M 1 Saskatchewan Junior Flin Flon 4 Moose Jaw 1 Regina 5 Saskatoon 2 Alabama Penn State By WILL GRIMSLEY NEW YORK (CP) -- Alabama, which has one of the flossiest of | bowl records, accepted a bid| Tuesday to plav Penn State Dec. 19 in Philadelphia's new Liberty Bowl. This completed the lineup for the big post-season football games. The top 11 teams in The As- sociated Press's latest poll--Ala- bama is No. 11--all have bowl commitments and the crimson tide becomes the fifth so honored from the bowl-minded Southeast- ern Conference. In the seven major games more than half the talent is provided by the deep south and southwest. The Southwestern Conference challenges the Southeastern's whopping list with three teams. Two of the southeast's giants, Mississippi and Louisiana State, clash in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans Jan. 1 where ole Miss hopes to avenge its 7-3 regular season setback. They rank No. 2 and No. 3 respectively in the na- tional poll Georgia, southeastern cham. pion, meets Missouri in the Or- ange Bowl Jan. 1 at Miami and Georgia Tech tackles Arkansas in the Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Fla., Jan. 2. Besides Arkansas, the south- west sends Texas against the un- beaten united national leader, Syracuse, in the Cotton Bowl at Dallas Jan. 1 and Texas Chris- tian against Clemson in the Blue- bonnet Bowl at Houston Dec. 19. The grandpappy of the bowls, the Rose at Pasadena Jan. 1, of- fers the traditional Big Ten-Paci- fic Coast lineup of Wisconsin and 145%, Passaic, stopped Jesse Washington, Watson, 140, Brooklyn, 6. The top 10 teams in the latest| London, England---Nino Valdes, poll were, in order: Syracuse, 218, Cuba, stopped Brian London, Mississippi, Louisiana State, |[211, England, 7. Mike DeJohn, Texas, Georgia, Wisconsin, Texas 201%, Syracuse, N.Y., outpointed Christian and Clemson. Angeles, 10. Sacramento, Calif. -- Auburn Copeland, 132%, Los Angeles, out- pointed Ray Riojas, 135%, Fort Worth, 10. San Antonio, Tex. -- Frankie |Valdez, 126, San Antonio, outs pointed Ruben Munoz, 125, Odessa, 12. Trenton, N.J. -- Stefan Red], Timmy Jefferson, 139%, Los! , Washington, Arkansas Dick Richardson, 204%, Weies,! {10 place Springfield Indians hold 171 asked that the Yankees throw in|the first three spots in the in-|Bell, Dowe, Hoar, Reld |dividual scoring race of the {American Hockey League, Floyd Smith leads, followed by Art |Stratton and Bill Sweeney. | Their teammate, Harry Pid- hirny, is tied with Hershey's Wil- lie Marshall for fourth place. Smith has fired in 16 goals and assisted on 26 for 42 points. Stratton, who also has 26 assists, has scored eight times for 34 points. Sweeney has amassed 28 points and Pidhirny and Marsh- all each have 26. Smith is top goal-scorer and tied with Stratton for the assists leadership. Rochester's Ed Chadwick leads goalies with an average of 2.45 goals a game. | ASKS WINNERS SHARE THE LOOT WINNIPEG (CP) -- The Winnipeg Community Chest Monday congratulated Win. nipeg Blue Bombers on win- ning the Grey Cup and made a bid for some of that east- ern money. A fund official said: "The Community: Chest congratulates the Blue Bomb- ers and invites those astute Winnipegers who have made a very recent successful busi- ness - speculation to share their wealth with the Chest." Bombers won 21- 7 over Hamilton Tiger-Cats. MOOSE KILL AT PEAK QUEBEC (CP)--Hunters killed 2,043 moose during the 1959 sea- son in Quebec, largest number since compulsory registration of |kills went into effect five years |ago. The kill last year was 1. 1879. Final figures released Tues- day by the game and fisheries department show more permits issued--11,258 to - residents and non-residents compared with 10, 701 in 1958 -- First- Wright, Fegan; forwards, Smith, H { Dudley, 'Gray, ooper, and Mac- |master. FIRST PERIOD | 1, Osh. Dairy: J. Peters Armstrong, T. Peters Osh. Dairy: Mncd Furey . 3. Beaton's: Dowe Sadowski Penalties Smith, Bell, Fegan, SECOND PERIOD 4. Beaton's: Hooper Hoar 14.32 Peters, Bell, £ | Penalties--Nelson, | Dudley, 2, Smith. THIRD PERIOD 5. Beaton's: Mapes Dowe cavsssnee 39.30 Penalties -- Kolesnik, Balson, | Fegan. H. MACDONALD -- TONY'S In the second half of the double- header, Tony's Refreshments and Hayden Macdonald, op-holders of top spot in the league standings, battled to 3-3 stand-off. Pivot "Bo" Garrow, the loop' | OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS Suggests This As A Must Before Starting Your Don't Just Paint 11) ¢ Rox is an inorganic, cement all compounded to pe other Your Masonry -- IT! purpose out. Rox will by inde, P it aul st by independent labo: Satiag | sborisaries for masonry acceptable stan leading sniper led Tony's it with a brace of tallies with Bobby Young being the other Refresh- ment sharpshooter. Roman Connorowski, Bob Bi. shoo and Gary Butler, who even- tually tied up the encourter, click- ed for one eagh in the "Mac" line-up. HAYDEN MACDONALD Goal, Hinkson; defence, Bishop, Stevens, Colvin; forwards, West- fall, Wilkins, Aasen, WPallister, Eyeman, Rowden, Conmorowski, Butler and Siblock. TONY'S REFRESHMENTS -- goal, Nicholison; defence, Say- ers, Kirk, Young; forwands, Ste. {John McKnight, Goodchild, Gar- row, Bais, Bobbie, Cockerton, ngs Accept no substitute--there isn't amy. EXTERIOR CEMENT BLOCK WALLS: Insulates, beautifies and protects, FLOORS (Before laying tile): Keeps moisture from loosening tile, DRIVEWAYS AND WALKS: Beautifies and individualizes. SWIMMING POOLS: Long protection of bottom. 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