Toni Chibi will defend his Canadian Ten-pin Bowling Championship at Montreal Friday and Saturday. Chibi, who won the title for the third * TEN-PIN CHAMPION successive year early this month, will play off against three other regional finalists in the All-American Master's Tournament next month. Twins Hope For Big Win By JOE REICHLER Associated Press Staff Writer What do you suppose would be the odds against all 10 Amer- ican League clubs losing their home op this ? Prob- for his second victory. Rocky Colavito's three run homer in the first, and Norm Cash's two- run double in the third, were the key blows that spelled the ably 10,000-to-1. If you had plunked down $10 a couple of weeks ago at those odds you'd have $100,000 riding on the outcome of the Minne- sota Twins-Angels game at Los Angeles next Thursday. Los Angeles is the only Amer- ican League club which has not yet played before its home fans. Minnesota and Kansas City played at home for the first time Friday--and suffered the same fate of the previous seven home opening teams. They lost. The Twins were beaten 5-3 by Washington in the first champ- ionship major league game ever played in Minnesota, and Cleve- land dampened Kansas City's season inaugural with a 5-3 tri- umph. Detroit and New York soared into a first place tie, the Tigers clipping the Angels 9-1 and the Yankees downing Baltimore 4-2 for the Orioles' fifth defeat in six games. Chicago's White Sox nipped Boston's Red Sox 3-2. HIT FOURTH HOMER Mickey Mantle walloped his fourth home run in four games and Whitey Ford pitched his second victory this week as the Yankees won their fifth straight after a losing debut in Yankee Stadium. Mantle's homer came with a runner on base in the third in- ning off southpaw Steve Barber. Bobby Richardson began the inning with a single, took sec- ond on an error and scored on a hit by Hector Lopez. Ford lost his chance for a d defeat of the year for Jerry Casale. Washington rallied for two runs in the ninth to knock the Twins out of first place. Rookie Joe McClain was the winner although he needed ninth inning help from Dave Sisler. There were two out and two on when Sisler took over and he promptly walked pinch hitter Elmer Valo to fill the bases. But another pinch hitter, Pete Whisenant, struck out to end the game. The Senators pounced on re- lief pitcher Ray Moore for their winning runs in the top of the ninth. Billy Klaus and Coot Veal singled and Klaus scored on Pete Daley's single. McClain then laid down a sacrifice bunt to score veal. Cleveland, with Vic Power providing the punch and Bob Allen the pitching, came from behind to defeat Kansas City. The Indians trailed 3-2 in the eighth when Power tripled to score Tito Francona. Power then scored the winning run when Woody Held grounded out. Allen replaced starter Jim Grant in the seventh and held the A's scoreless thereafter to record his second triumph. Minnie Minoso's sacrifice fly in the eighth sent Luis Aparicio home with the winning run as Cal McLish registered his first victory for the White Sox. Nel- lie Fox drove in the first two Chicago runs with a two-run single in the third. Pete Run- nels and Gary Geiger drove in the Boston runs, second straight shutout in the fifth when pinch hitter Dave Philley doubled home two runs after Earl Robinson walked and Marv Breeding hit a two-bag- ger. The Yankee southpaw per- mitted seven hits, walked one and fanned four, Five appeared to be the magic figure Friday. The Ti- gers won their fifth straight and the Angels lost their fifth in a row. Tiger southpaw Don Mossi spaced eight Los Angeles hits Still Another EPHL Trophy To Pennington OTTAWA (CP)--Hull-Ottawa Canadiens completed a sweep of individual awards in the East- ern Professional Hockey League with this week's an- nouncement that centre Cliff Pennington had been named outstanding rookie of the 1960- 61 season. Pennington was earlier chosen to the all - star team, the most valuable player to his team and the most gentlemanly player. The other individual award -- outstanding defence- man -- went to Al MacNeil of Canadiens. Pennington, considered an outstanding National League prospect won the EPHL scor- ing title in his first professional season. He scored 33 goals and established a record for assists with 69. The unanimous choice of sportwriters for the award, Pennington was trailed in the rookie balloting by teammate] Bobby Rousseau and Pat Stapl-| eton of Sault Ste. Marie Thun- derbirds. ho MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL American League AB R H Pct. 27 412 44 18 2 7 .389 32 612.35 Temple, Cle. Brandt, Balt. Versalles, Minn. Wood, Detroit 24 7 9.3% Phillips, Cle. 27 610 .370 Runs--Green, Minnesota, 8. Runs batted in -- Allison, Minnesota, 11. ie -- Temple and Versalles Doubles--Kaline, Detroit, 4. Triples -- Piersall, Cleveland, Home runs -- Mantle, New York, 4. Stolen bases--Versalles, 4. Pitching -- Allen, Cleveland, Mossi and Lary, Detroit, Ra- mos, Minnesota, Turley, New York, and McClain, Washing- ton, 2-0, 1.000. Strikeouts -- Pascual, Minne- sota, and Turley 16. National League AB R H Pct. Moon, Los Ang. 385 10 19 .543 Cunningham, Stl. 32 9 15 .469 Gonzalez, Phila. 22 510 455 Post, Cinci 27 511 407 Kasko, Cinci. 37.415 405 Runs--Moon and Boyer, St. Louis, 10. Runs batted in--Moon, 12. Hits--Moon, 19. Doubles -- Kasko, Moon and Groat, Pittsburgh, 4. Triples -- Post and Stuart, Pittsburgh, 2. Home rums--Moon, 7. Stolen bases -- Pinson and Robinson, Cincinnati, 4. Pitching -- Elston, Chicago, Purkey, Cincinnati and Friend, Pittsburgh, 2-0, 1.000. Strikeouts -- Drysdale, Los Angeles, 18. © |the same inspired hockey he : (showed 4,000 fans at the Hull | |Hull rink Tuesday. [Tonkin 318; presented by Edith HULL, Que. (CP) -- Hull-Ot- tawa Canadiens go into Sun- day's sixth game of the East- ern Professional Hockey League final needing only one more victory to' clinch the title following their 3-2 sudden-death overtime win here Friday night oyet Sault Ste. Marie Thunder- i And if Bobby Rousseau plays Arena Friday night, there will be no need for a seventh game --tentatively scheduled for the The Canadiens lead the best- of-seven series three games to two, with the Sunday game set for the Soo. Hockey League p..spect in the EPHL, fired two goals in Fri- day night's victory. Both were big ones. His first, coming with less than four minutes to go in re- gulatic- time, sent the game into sudden - death overtime-- w the first time in the series the team couldn't come to a deci- sion. His second goal at 14:34 of the first overtime period brought an abrupt end to the tight duel waged by the two teams, both near exhaustion af- ter the hard - fought game, It was easily the best game of the series to date. HAS SET ECOL D Rousseau now has scored 10 goals for Canadiens in semi-fi- nal and final series competition and has established a scoring record in the two - year his- tory of playoffs. Playing - coach Glenn Skov opened the scoring for Czna- diens early in the second per- "| The 21 - year - old Rousseau, |iod considered the best Natioaal Merv Kuryluk tied the score for Thunderbirds six minutes and eight seconds later and Fred Hilts put them into a 2-1 lead at 7:56 of the third. Rousseau's tying goal was a * one. It was set up by a wild scramble around the Thunder- bird net. Terry Gray's =I... shot hit the goal post and bounced 20 feet to the left side of the net. Goalie Roy Edwards, believ-| ing that the puck had entered the net, was kneeling at the crease and Thunderbird yers made no mc e toward Ros ~ar as he skated into close range and banged the puck into the unprotected net. It was a rough moment for Edwards. who played a brilliant game. He stopped 44 shots, many of them labelled Ed Johnston, at the other end of the rink, picked off 26. STOPPED 19 SHOTS Edwards rose to the heights in the second period when his teammates were overwhelmed by the Canadiens. He stopped 19 shots in that period alone and had blocked 11 shots in the overtime before Rousseau's screened shot went behind him. The Canadiens may be with- out Skov for Sunday's game. The Habs coach injured his right shoulder early in the ov- Hull Habs Take Lead In EPHL Series Playoffs ertime and made only one other brief appearance on the ice be- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, April 22, 1961 1] Himsl Steps Down Usual Cub Mix-Up By JOE REICHLER nati out of undisputed posses-homer to hang a defeat upon Not since 1952 has a Chicago|sion of first place, defeating the|young Jay Hook of y Cub team finished a season with|Reds 5-3. Sandy Koufax pitched] Second baseman a .500 won and lost percentage.la six-hitter and struck out 14. But the fellow who has them at] Rain forced the postponement that level today will step down|of the other scheduled games, as head man Sunday. St. Louis at San Francisco and He is Vedie Himsl, the first| Milwaukee at Pittsburgh. of an undetermined series off Wally Moon, the hottest hit- leaders the Cubs will have this{ter in the National League, season under club owner Phillonce again sparked the Wrigley's mass managerial|Dodgers. The left handed hitting makeup. outfielder hit his seventh homer! According to plan, each fellow|of the season, all over the Coli- who assumes the role of Cub|seum's left field screen in Los leader must step down after two|Angeles, and added a single. He weeks, Himsl will have served|scored two runs. Johnny Rose- two weeks after Sunday's/boro also chipped in with a doubleheader in Philadelphia. Who will be next? Mr. Wrig- fore returning to the bench for the night. However, he was able to make the trip to the Sault with the players. Referee Eddie Powers hed] tight control of the game but issued only three minor penal ties -- two of them to Thunder- birds. SUMMARY First Period: No scoring. Penalties: McCreary 9:23, Ro- baxxo 14:26. Second Period: 1. Hull - Ot- tawa, Skov (Annable, Bouch- ard) 0:15; 2. Soo, Kuryluk (Ro- bazzo, Schmautz) 6:23. Penalty: Offidani 16:10. Third Period: 1. Soo, Hilts (Kachur, Officani) 7:56; 4. Hull- Ottawa, Rousseau (Gray, Gau- thier) 16:03. Penalties: none. Overtime Period: 5. Hull-Ot- tawa, Rousseau (Bouchard, Pennington) 14:34. Penalties: None. successor most likely will be one of three -- Elvin Tappe, Harry Craft or Bobby Adams. And what happens to Vedie himself? He starts all over again, at.the bottom of the nine- man list--just in time to finish the 20-week season and maybe become a last place manager. 511-44 PS 19 59 6-26 Edwards 9 Johnston 6 By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London, England Correspondent To The Oshawa Times LONDON -- Now the record-| breaking champions of the Eng- lish League, Tottenham Hot- spurs are only one game away from being hailed as the team of the century. Not since 1897 has any team won the league championship and the English Cup in one season. In that year, Aston Villa did the trick. The only game which now stands be- tween Tottenham and the covet- ed double being won for the first time this century is the Cup Final game with Leicester City at Wembley Stadium on May 6. Their 2-1 win over Sheffield Wednesday, in a hard-fought game, was all that Spurs need- ed to give them the league championship. Wednesday have to be content with second place. Tottenham still have three games to play, but already they have quite a collection of rec- ords to their credit. Here are some of them: LIST OF RECORDS The most wins in one season in first division history -- 30. The most away wins in first division history -- 16. The most league goals in a season in the club's history -- 111 so far. The most wins to start a sea- son -- 11 in a row. The smallest number of play- ers used in winning a champion- ship -- 17. 1 Spurs need only three points in their last three games to beat the Arsenal record of 66 points in season 1930-1931. To crown, Spurs this season so far have been watched by 2,334,- 489 spectators in all games play- ed, with three league games and the cup final, which will have a sell-out crowd of 100,000 still to come. PLAYERS' RECORDS In league and cup, Spurs have played in 39 games this season. Four players, Blanchflower, Henry, White and Allen have played in all of them. Appear ances of the other players are: Baker, Brown and Norman, 38; Dyson, 37; Mackay, 34; Smith, 33; Jones, 28; Medwin, 12; Saul, 6; Marchi, 6; Barton, Hollowbread and J. Smith, one each. The goal-scoring records in eague games are: R. Smith, 26; Allen, 23; Jones, 15; White, 13; Dyson, Mackay, 4; Medwin, 4; Norman, 4 and Saul 3. SQUAD FOR TOUR 12; Blanchflower, 6; England has selected a squad of 19 players for a close sea- son tour of Portugal, Italy and Austria. With Jimmy Greaves slated to go to Milan, he may not be available for world cup finals in Chile. It looks as if Johnny Byrne of fourth division Crystal Palace is being groom- ed as his successor in the Eng- lish team. He is not only in- Tottenham Hotspur 'Team Of Century' Need Only FA Cup cluded in the tour party, but is in the Young England team to the eve of the Cup final. follows-- Goalkeepers: Springett (Sheffield Wednesday) an Hodgkinson (Sheffield United); Full backs: Armsfield (Black- pool), McNeil (Middlesbury) and Angus (Burnley); Half- backs: Robson (West Brom- wich), Swan (Sheffield Wednes- day), Miller (Burnley), Flowers (Wolves) and Anderson (Sunder- land). Forwards: Douglas (Blackburn), ley), Greaves (Chelsea), East- ham (Arsenal), Smith (Totten- ham), R.|Haynes (Fulham), Byrne (Crys-| tal Palace), and Charlton (Man-| chester United). Connelly (Burn- Hitchins (Aston Villa), YOUNG ENGLAND TEAM Only one change will be made in the England team to meet Young England. Hitchens of Aston Villa will be at centre in place of Smith of Spurs, who will be playing in the cup final on the next day. Otherwise, the team is the one which swamped Scotland by 9-3 in their inter- national. The Young England team has been selected as fol- lows: Macedo (Fulham); Angus (Burnley) and Ashurst (Sunder- land); Shawcross (Manchester City), McGrath (Newcastle) and Moore (West Ham); Paine (Southampton), Hill (Bolton), Byrne (Crystal Palace), Robson (Burnley) and Harris (Burnley). ANNUAL BANQUET The Motor City Ladies 5-Pin League held its annual bowling banquet Saturday at the Gen- osha Hotel, with President Blanche Norton presiding. After dinner, the awards were given to the winners of the year. They are as follows: Motor City Ladies (Champs) Trophy: Lucky Six -- Donalda Williams, Flo Williams, Vera Horner, Irene Huxtable, Peggy Brudek, Gussie Mitton; present: ed by Matt Kotelko. Vera Bint (Total Pins) Tro- phy: Busy Bees -- Ethel Tonkin, Lois Burden, Hazel Bannon, Edna Anderson, Joan Maddock, Babe Lang; presented by Mad- eline Morrison. High Average -- Isabelle King 229; presented by Blanche Nor- ton. High Single (scratch) -- Ethel McKee. High Triple (scratch) -- Ev. Stata 810; presented by Marj. Vaughan. High Single (with handicap) -- Ellen Anderson 319; presented by Isabelle Creamer. High Triple (with handicap)-- Helen 'Fetchison 746; presented by Hazel Weddup. Over 300 Trophy -- Isabelle il Motor City Ladies Loop Closes Its 5-Pin Season Rosettes, Lemons, Honey Bees, Cokes; pins presented by Pru Whittick. SPORT BRIEFS The Cubs defeated Philadel phia Phillies 3-2 Friday night for their fourth triumph in eight games. The victory still left them in sixth place in the Na tional League but only half a : 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. Calgary Signs Four Canucks CALGARY (CP) -- Calgary Stampeders announced Friday MITCHELL'S DRUGS LTD. 9 SIMCOE ST. NORTH RA 3-3431 game from the top. Four teams ~Cincinnati, St. Louis, San Francisco and Pittsburgh that four Canadians from col- leges in Eastern Canada have signed 1961 contracts with the Western Football Conference club. They are Glenn Harding and John McMurtry. of the Univer- sity of Toronto, Don Robb of | | |an meet the full England team Onltre and ¢ : |was England's touring squad is as|choice. McMurtry is a corner |linebacker and offensive back, Queen's and Peter Hoisak of McGill. --shared first place. The fifth place Los Angeles Dodgers are only eleven percentage points behind. The Dodgers knocked Cincin- YESTERDAY'S STARS MEDICAL PHARMACY 95 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH RA 8-6277 TAMBLYN DRUG STORE OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE RA 5-854) Harding, 23, an offensive cen- defensive linebacker, Stampeders' first draft and was 1960 all-star fullback in the Senior Intercollegiate League. Robb, 22, is an offensive end d defensive halfback and Hoi- sak a guard and defensive end. geles Dodgers -- slammed his seventh home run, all in Los Angeles, to help defeat Cincin-| nati Redlegs 5-3. | York Yankees--Hurled a seven- hitter for his second victory of the week, a 4-2 decision over Baltimore Orioles. * Batting: Wally Moon, Los An- SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY Pitching: Whitey Ford, New 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Pender Choice In Ontario Bowlers Council also presented a pin to Melva Dal- ton, who had an average of 109 in September and was the most improved bowler by March, with an average of 145. Norton (consolation) Trophy: Rockets -- Ethel Freeman, Shir- ley Sargent, Muriel King, Ev. Stinson, Betty McDonald, Cecille Branton; presented by Blanche Norton. SECTION WINNERS Teams -- Busy Bees, Echoes, Lucky Six, Chippers and A special award was pre- sented to Jean Schoenau, by president Blanche Norton, for Jean being the most improved bowler last year. Matt Kotelko gave each girl of the league a gift of a cup and saucer. Secretary's report was given n regards to the tournament to be held in Toronto in the near future. LINEBACKER SIGNED HAMILTON (CP) -- Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Big Four Foot- ball League Friday announced the signing of Lloyd Hodge, a five-foot-eleven, 200-pound line- backer who last year was co- captain of the University of Kentucky Wildcats. ARGOS SIGN MORROW TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto Argonauts of the Big Four Foot- ball League announced Friday they have signed Tommy Mor- row, a 195-pound halfback who was top pass-catcher for Missis- sippi Southern last year. RANKED WELTER WINS ROME (AP) -- Welterweight contender Teddy Wright of De- troit stopped Germany's Helmut Mistol in the eighth round of a scheduled 10-round fight Friday night. Wright, ranked fourth by the U.S. National Boxing Asso- ciation, weighed 149% and Mis- tol 152. TOP JOCKEY KILLED BUDAPEST (AP)--Hungary's leading jockey, Lajos Burgel, was killed Friday when a horse which had thrown its rider at a stable crashed into his mount. The treasurer's report was also given and the girls re- ceived their point morey. At nine o'clock the dance started and the husbands joined their wives for a pleasant evening. CORRECTION Galvanized King 321, Ethel Tonkin 318, Eve- lyn Redpath 316, Mary Mother- sill 315, Ellen Anderson 307, Mary King 306, Nancy Brisebois 304, and Vera Szikszay 300. Ontario Bowlers Council HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS STEEL ROOFING award for bowling over 300 with an average of only 148, in regu- lar league play, was won by Ellen Anderson. t ALBERTA HORSE WINS LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -- Four-and-Twenty raced to vic- tory Friday in Keeneland's Forerunner Purse, a race for a small pot but one that has pro- duced more than its share of Kentucky Derby winners. Four- and-Twenty, owned by Alberta Ranches, finished two lengths ahead of J. Graham Brown's He's A Pistol with Ronnie's Ace another 13% lengths back in the $7,500 race. The winner paid $7, $4.40 and $7.40. He's A. Pistol t returned $560 and $9.60 and Ronnie's Ace paid $10.20. Moncton 2 Toronto St. ael's 6 seven semi-final 2-0) I Napanee 2 Barrie § Port Colborne 3 Ingersoll 6 semi - final 3-1) By THE CANADIAN PRESS Eastern Professional Sault Ste. Marie 2 Hull - Ot- awa 3 (Hull - Ottawa leads best-of- seven final 3-2) Allan Cup Galt 4 Winnipeg 3 (Galt leads best - of - seven final 2-0) Memorial Cup Mich-| (St. Michael's leads best - of-| Ontario Intermediate A (Best - of - seven semi - final ied 2-2) | (Ingersoll leads best-of-seven] l 8%... ® First' Quality ® 28 British Gauge ® New Crib Design 50 SQUARE OR MORE CASH AND CARRY Attractive Prices on Smaller Quantities Ask Today BEAVER LUMBER {f COR. DUNDAS & HICKORY MO 38-5818 l Welterweight Go GANGEMI'S SERVICE STATION 809 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH PRESTON'S SERVICE STATION 925 SIMCOE STREET NORTH BOSTON (AP)--Paul Pender's slashing left hand and elusive style make him a 2-to-1 favorite to retain his limited version of the world middleweight boxing title against the challenge of dangerous Carmen Basilio to- night, The event is scheduled for 15 Basilio's crowding, weaving at- tack. HOUSTON'S SERVICE STATION 67 KING STREET WEST ROBINSON'S ESSO STATION 89 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH FOOTE'S SHELL STATION contrast in styles--Pedner's su-| perb, stand-up boxing against Basilio, 34, a former middle weight and welterweight champ from Conestego, N.Y., has won two easy 10-round decisions in a Ci rounds and both fighters are cautious about predicting it will end in less than that, "If the opportunity raises, I'll try for the knockout, but no pre- dictions," Basilio said. "I ex- pect to have to chase him. His style is not aggressive." Pender was even more reluct- ant to talk of a knockout. "Sure, I'd like to get a knock- out," he said. "I don't want to go 15 rounds with that guy." MAKES THIRD DEFENCE Pender, 30, from Brookline, Mass., has boxed more than 100 rounds getting ready for his third defence of the 160-pound title recognized in Europe, Mas- sachusetts and New York. The bout figures to offer a weight king by the Nationa Boxing Association. $80,000 of the anticipated $100,- 000 gate and $75,000 television money. Basilio, going into his 11th title fight, expects to pocket about $50,000. onto. 4-0 home win over Ballymena in Friday. back after a pair of brutal maulings at the hands of Gene Fullmer, recognized as middle- 97 KING STREET EAST WHITFIELD'S SUNOCO STATION 531 RITSON ROAD SOUTH CRANFIELD'S B.A. STATION 331 PARK ROAD SOUTH CLARKE'S SUPERTEST STATION 272 KING STREET WEST VIVIAN'S B.A. STATION NONQUON ROAD PLEASURE VALLEY WHITE ROSE STN. 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