Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 5 Sep 1961, p. 13

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 5, 1961 OLD COUNTRY SOCCER ! 13 Scotland's Internationals Sr ilwakee Saves | f ) as. vressen To Have Some New Faces our games played in the league schedule, they have won : lost one and drawn one. Lastt MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Mil season, they played 11 games Waukee Braves fired manager By M. McINTYRE HOOD | The team selected is made Defore even losing one point injChiatlie Diesen ang named ex. Special London, England up as follows: Connaghan (Dun- 2 draw. The three points theyjsculive vice . president Birdia Correspondent to fermline); Grant (Hibernian) have lost in their first four Tebbeits his successor Saturday The Times and Kennedy (Celtic); Beattie LONDON -- Scotland's inter- (Kilmarnock); McNeill (Celtic) ~ OLD COUNTRY SOCCER LONDON (Reuters) -- Results|Swindon 1 Bournemouth 1 {of soccer games in the United Torquay 3 Watford 4 Kingdom Saturday. Division IV ENGLISH LEAGUE Aldershot 1 Chesterfield 1 Division 1 Barrow 0 Wrexham 2 Birmingham 1 Leicester 5 Bradford C 1 Stockport 3 Blackburn 2 Wolverhampton 1 Carlisle 2 Oldham 0 |Blackpool 2 Man United 3 Division IV {Bolton 2 Arsenal 1 Aldershot 1 Chesterfield 1, Chelsea 0 Fulham 0 Barrow 0 Wrexham 2 Mickey Ion Was Man Of Iron In games have gone to their Lon-(for the remainder of the year don rivals, West Ham. T he|and the next two seasons. Hammers drew at the Spurs| Vice - president and general Role As Referee By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer Mickey lon casually stroked his jaw, looked at his questioner through cold blue eyes and de- clared: "I never sneaked out of a hockey rink in my life." He puffed vigorously on a cig- arette for a moment, reflected on his 30-odd years as a referee in the Pacific Coast and Na- tional Hockey Leagues and added: "I walked out the same way 1 went in--htrough the main door. But there was one small difference. On the way in I carried my skates in a bag. On the way out. I had a skate in {Everton 0 Sheffield W 4 [Man City 1 Burnley 3 Sheifield U 0 Aston Villa 2 Tottenham 3 Cardiff 2 Bradford C 1 Stockport 3 Carlisle 2 Oldham 0 Chester 2 Darlington 2 Colchester 3 Accrington 2 {West Brom Albion 1 Ipswich 3 Gillingham 1 York City 2 {West Ham 3 Notts F 2 Brighton 0 Bury 2 {Bristol R 2 Sunderland 3 Leeds 1 Rotterham 3 Luton 3 Huddersfield 4 Middlesbrough 1 Preston 0 Newcastle 0 Plymouth 2 Norwich 1 Liverpool 2 Southampton 5 Swansea 1 Stoke 1 Derby 1 Walsall 1 Leyton Or 5 Barnsley 2 Reading 3 Malifax 1 Crystal P 1 Lincoln 0 Hull City 3 Newport 6 Brentford 1 Division II Division HI Falkirk Mansfield 1 Doncaster 0 Millwall 5 Workington 0 Rochdale 3 Exeter 0 Southport 2 Crewe SCOTTISH LEAGUE CUP Aberdeen 2 Dundee U 2 Albion 3 Morton 1 Alloa 4 Berwick 4 Arbroath 4 Brechin 1 Celtic 2 Hibernian 1 Dumbarton 2 Cowdrnheath 1 Dundee 2 Thd Lanark 2 Dunfermline 2 Motherwell # ;East Fife 1 Queen of S 0 4 Ayr U 4 !Hamilton 3 Stenhousemuir 1 Hearts 3 St Alex 0 Mirren 1 national selectors are searching and Ure (Dundee); Hunter (Mo- for new blood to carry the coun- therwell), Gillespie (Dundee try's colors in this year's inter- United), Hughes (Celtic), Gil- national matches. In a team/zea (Dundee) and Mulhall (Ab- picked to represent the Scottish erdeen). , League in a game with the The six players capped for League of Ireland, there are six the first time are Connaghan, new players who have never |Beatlie, Ure, Gillespie, Kennedy before been picked for the high-'land Hughes. Mulhall comes est honors, back into the Scottish side after The selectors were in a dff- being dropped last season when cult position, because Rangers| he lost his form, and Grant is in land Hibernians are engaged in the same category. European Cup play in the same The Scottish league faces a week as this inter-league game, tough assignment at Hampden and apart from one Hibs' player, Park, when a team represent their stars were not felt to be ing the Italian League will play available against the Scottish League se- lect team on November 1. The Italian league team is likely to include such former British stars as Jimmy Greaves, Joe Baker, Denis Law, John IRISH LEAGUE Ulster Cup {Coleraine 3 Ballymena 1 ground, and then defeated them manager John MéHale said on the West Ham pitch. This| Dressen was told of the firing makes the West Ham team look now 'to ensure him sufficient a lot better than it was last sea-|/time in the event other major son, when it lost both of its|league managing jobs becomes games with the Spurs. This available." early pair of reverses for the Tebbetts left a job as Cincin- Spurs is the sensation of the nati manager to become exec season so far. utive vice-president at Milwau- Another sensation is the success kee three years ago. of Peterborough United in the -- ar ros third division. Admitted a year ago to the fourth division for Swims Lake Ontario the first time, Peterborough won the championship and pro- For Second Time motion to the third. Now they, TORONTO (CP) -- Jimmy are again carrying all before Woods of Orlando, Fla., Satur. them, and have a sparkling un- day beat his own record by defeated record so far in their swimming Lake Ontario in 17 third division schedule. hours, 10 minutes. His previous time for the 33- mile swim, set in 1957, was 18 CHEESE VALUE each hand, just in case some crazy guys wanted to play games and rough me up "And you know, nobody did." There wasn't a trace of bra vado in the 74-year-old legless Kilmarnock 4 Raith 1 Montrose 4 Clyde 0 Queens Pk 7 E Sterling 2 Northampton 1 Port Vale 1 Notts C 2 Grimsby 0 Peterborough 3 Bristol C 4 Queens Pk 0 Portsmonth 1 angers 4 Airdrieonians 1 Shrewsbury 4 Bradford 1 St. Johnstone 4 Partick 3 Southend 2 Coventry 0 IStranraer 3 Stirling 0 Two ounces of cheese--a con- hours and 35 minutes. cenirated form of milk--has the Tor landed Sgetry Sast hi itis : ; re, missing his targe L] (same pro'ein value as two large Canadian National Exhibition Tottenhamleggs. waterfront. Crusaders 2 Glentoran 1 Derry City 2 Cliftonville 1 Charles, and Gerry Hitchens All of them are givng a good Glenavon 1 Bangor 1 account of themselves in Ital- Linfield 2 Ards 1 ian foothall Portadown 2 Distillery 1 I As 1 intimated, man's voice. He was simply stating a fact. No one pushed Frederick James (Mickey) lon around, and that included some of the roughest, toughest play ers the game has known when Mickey was ice boss in the pro leagues from 1912 to 1943 SAME OLD SPIRIT Mickey now gets round in a wheelchair, his legs amputated almost to the hip. "Bad cir culation," he explains In a cheerful, carefree sort of way The only clues to his age are the deep lines creasing his face like a stock market graph There are onlv a few traces of grey in his thinning brown hair Mickev has been confined to a Seattle nursing home for vears, His wife died there six years ago, victim of a stroke He lost his legs four years ago But he can let go with a hearyt belly laugh and his eyes were mischievous as he swapped yarns with old-timers " Mickey was in Toronto a week ago for the official opening of the International Hall of Fame He was one of 43 living mem bers of the Hall invited to the ceremonies by the National Hockey League and rooms of a downtown hotel were thick with nostalgia as fellow mem bers fondly renewed old friend- ships JRON-FISTED RULER Thye all beat a path to lon's room. Here was a great ia crosse defenceman who never played pro hockey exchanging affectionate handshakes and bear hugs with players who were notoriously bad characters in their day. the Mickey had ruled them all/team with no questions asked. When Frank FORMER LACROSSE ST Mickey, 'was the time some guy in the stands zinged me a couple of times on the neck with a pea-shooter. But he wasn't yeas; he was blowing out marbles "1 turned around fast the second time and spied the guy. There was nothing to do but go up in the ands and biff him Which I did." His visitors included Eddie Shor .ethe rambunctious Boston Bruins defenceman who found that Mickey was just as tough as he was. Another was Gordon (Iron Duke) Keats, a bruising defenceman with Edmonton Es kimos of the old Western Can ada League 'CREASED ME GOOD' There were Frank Foyston of the Toronto Blueshirts, a pro in the distant past, and Fredrickson now a said using smal he dropped the puck to start a Vancouver alderman, and tough game he was the boss and every player knew it. "The only time I was hit," in the old PCL guy together Walking: in were Newsy Lalonde, an old lacrosse Co i AR, HOCKEY REFEREE and hockey cut-up who played with lon on a Vancouver la crosse team away back in the early 1900s; King Clancy, wiry little defenceman with the old Ottawa Senators and Toronto Maple Leafs who refereed a few vears with Ion, and Frank Nighbor, the Pembroke peach and famed poke-check artist wit the Senators The talk got around to Newsy "1 remember facing off with this guy and somebody ve at me: 'Watch the scratch," recalled Clancy "Seratch? 1 thought that re ferred to money. So the next think I know, I'm getting New- sy's stick all the way up from my knees to my hairline. He creased me good." "I know all about it," said Nighbor. "Look at me; 1 hardly have any eyebrows left." "Yeah," said Lalonde. "But I didn't do it when Mickey was on the ice. He was too smart for me." Ion sat back and smiled Prefers Field Game Over Box Lacrosse VICTORIA (CP)--The world's largest manufacturer of lacrosse sticks prefers the way Canada's national game is played in the United States to the style most Canadian teams play Colin Chisholm of Cornwall, Ont., recently watched games in * the Inter - City Box Lacrosse League here and concluded that Canadian teams "don't quite play by the rules." Chisholm prefers the field la crosse game spreading rapidly in eastern U.S. colleges However, he can't deny that box lacrosse as played in this area and Ontario is supplying a great deal of his business THE TYEE CLUB Rules Strict [ast year, the Chisholm Lacrosse Manufacturing Com- pany's sales were about $90,000. The company tuined out 22,800 sticks which sold for between $5 and $12. STARTED BY CHANCE This is a lucrative business for a man who got into it by accident Chisholm was teaching school on an Indian reserve in Ontario in 1932 when a group approached him and asked him to form a manufacturing business The Indians, Members of the Mohawk branch of the Iroquois Confederacy (Six Nations), had - Costs High But Many Want To Join CAMPBELL RIVER, BJ (CP)--The badge of distinction for west coast salmon sport fishermen doesn't come cheap Membership in the Tyee Club one of the world's most exclu- sive fishermen's cliques, costs time, patience, energy and money. But at this Vancouver Island east coast fishing resort where the big ones lurk, mem- bership in the club that was formed in 1924 is a much-sought possession. To be eligible for membership the fisherman must have a light rod and' tackle. It musi be registered with the club at a cost of $3. The salmon must be caught from a rowboat, and the tish must weigh 30 pounds or ore For a 30-40 pound tyee the properly accredited fisherman gets club membership and a bronze button---at a cost of $5 For a 40-50 pounder he gels a| silver button costing $7.50, for a 50-60 pounder a gold buiton at $15, for a 60-70 pounder a diamond button at $22.50 and for 2 fish over 70 pounds there's a ruby button, also costing $22 Ruby button-holders are rare but there are quite a few with diamond and gold butions, most of them from the United States ONLY ONE HOOK This year Mrs. Walter I. Mikas of Los Angeles, equipped with a rowboat, a light rod, 25 pound test line and a spoon lure] --rules stipulate lures with only one hook--boated a 5-pounder to become the first gold button winner of the season. She fought the fish for 40 minutes before boating it with the aid of her husband and a guide. Last year on his first day of fishing an American reeled in a 66-pounder, But his rod and gear weren't registered so he didn't get a button previously worked for Joe Lally maker of Lally who was the sole lacrosse sticks until 1932 later sold his interests to Chis- holm: In 1932, total company were $12 B.C. and Ontario are the big- gest buyers of the sticks but the eastern U.S. colleges also make a heavy demand As vet, he can still meet the demand for sticks, "but 1 hope it won't be much stronger." The stocks are made prim arilv by hand, with an electric drill and sander the only ma «<hinery used in production MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS American League AB R H 456 101 166 Howard, NYork 367 51131 Piersall, Cleve. 453 75149 .329 Mantle, NYork 464 117 150 .323 Gentile, Balti. 420 89135 .321 Runs--Mantle, 116 Runs batted In--Gentile, 127 Hits--B. Robinson, Baltimore, Cash, 166 Doubles--Kaline, Detroit Kubek, New York, 35 Triples--Wood, Detroit, 11 Home runs--Maris, New York, sales by the Pct 364 357 Cash, Detroit and Over the years several myths 53 have grown up about the club One is that the fisherman has to have a guide. Officials say he doesn't, though guides who know where the fish are, available at $16 to $20 a day Another myth had it that the fisherman was supposed to give the fish to his guide, then buy it back. Not so, say club officials The button-winning fish belongs to the man who catches it WEEKEND FIGHTS ASSOCIATED PRESS 134 Teruo By THE Manila -- Flash Elorde Philippines, outpointed Kosaka, 134, Japan, 12 Cardiff -- John Caldwell, Ire land Juan Cardenas 1, 8. Bantam weights hts not announced Miami--Al Taylor, 153 sau, outpointed Eddie 150, Fort Lauderdale, 8 Miami Beach -- Carlos Ortiz 139. New York. outpointed Doug la F it, 138, Cuba, 10 stopped Nas Fobbs are 2 Stolen bases -- Aparicio, Chi- cago, 45 Pitching -- Ford, New York 22-3, 880. Strikeouts -- Pascual, Minne sota, 182 National League AB RH 503 92 182 542 94 186 514 106 169 480 107 158 381 60123 San Francisco Pet Clemente, Pitis 362 Pinson, Cincin, Aaron, Mil Robinson, Cin Moon, Los Ang Runs--Mays 109 Runs batted Francisco, 120 Hits--Pinson, 186 Doubles--Aaron, 35 Triples--Altman, Chicago, 12 Home runs--Cepeda, 37. Stolen hases--Wills, Los Ange les, 30 : Pitching--Potires, Los Angeles 18-4, 818 Strikeouts--koufax, Los An geles, 214, In--Cepeda, San PUBLIC NOTICE: SHEATHER HARDWARE 1200 WECKER DR. AT LAKE VISTA PLAZA OSHAWA PP PV FPP YY € ¢ QUITS BUSINESS EVERYTHING GOES! AT PRICES THAT WILL MAKE YOUR EYES POP! THIS IS YOUR HOUR OF ACTION, GET YOUR SHARE -- YOU JUST WOULDN'T DARE MISS IT! Absbssssssssssaas Over $20,000 worth of Garden Tools & Supplies ® Paint ®* Housewares ® Tools ® Gifts ® Electric Appliances ® Toys *Fishing Tackle ® Mowers ® General Hardware ® Fencing, etc. etc. A Wall-To-Wall Forced Sellout T LIQUIDATION PRICES REG. 4.50 HVY. ALUMINUM DOUBLE BOILERS 2.99 2.25 6 PT. ALUMINUM SAUCEPANS 1.69. REG. 4.95 9 Cup Supreme Aluminum COFFEE PERC. 3.74 REG. 3.25 ALUMINUM TEA KETTLES 2.44 REG. 15.95 STEAM-DRY G.E. IRON 11.99 REG. 28.95 LARGE SIZE TRICYCLE 20.99 REG. 3.85 40-LB. BAG FERTILIZER 2.89 Fixtures For Sale Merchandise Islands Registers Shelving Displays, etc. REG. 10.95 / Bathroom SCALES | ~ REG. 39.95 G.E. Electric FLOOR POLISHER 29.99 ---_ REG. 14.95 "COLEMAN" GASOLINE OUTDOOR | GRILL 11.24 ' REG. 1.19 Heavy Duty 12-qt. PAILS 78¢ This store is now one Big Colossal Bargain Counter -- Closeout Bargains On Every Dollars Worth We Own! SHEATHER HARDWARE 1200 WECKER DR. AT LAKE VISTA PLAZA OSHAWA ENTIRE STOCK Generel Herdware Plumbing Supplies Cabinet Herdwore Locks ENTIRE STOCK "INTERLUX" Paints Enamels Varnish Nails, ote. Kemtone Turps, ete. 25% OFF 25% OFF ENTIRE STOCK HAND TOOLS ® Saws ® Levels ® Bits ® Hammers @ Squares ® Pliers ® Snips ® Wrenches, ete GOING AT BIG DISCOUNTS SELLING STARTS TOMORROW AT 10 A.M. ENTIRE STOCK GARDEN TOOLS ® Pyrex ® Spading Forks ® Glashake Cultivators #® Dinnerware Rakes * Glassware Trimmers, ete. 25% OFF 25% OFF Reg. 23.95 GARDEN 12-Gauge "Cooey" INSECTICIDES Shotgun "Raid" 17.99 Rose and Flower Dusts Reg. 22.95 D.D.T. 50 22 Calibre ""Cooey™ Tree and Fruit Repeating Rifle Spra 17.24 259% OFF REG. 3.45 35-LBS. PINK VIGORO 2.63 AMMUNITION ""CANUCK" & "IMPERIAL" 25% OFF REG. 16.75 "SUFFOLIC"" LAWN MOWERS 12.49 REG. 4.35 5-LBS. "STEEL BRIGGS" GRASS SEED 3.09 REG. 1.69 PAINT ROLLER & PAN SET 1.28 REG. 11.29 ELECTRIC TEA KETTLE 8.49 REG. 22.00 G.E, ELECTRIC TOASTER 16.49 THIS STORE IS REG. 28.00 100-FT. ROLL 42-INCH WIRE FENCING 20.99 REG. 12.95 "Melnor Swinging LAWN SPRINKLER 8.88 REG, 9.95 MELNOR 6.68 CLOSEOUT PRICES REG. 81.95 "BLACK & DECKER HEAVY DUTY SKILL SAW 61.49 Reg. 46.95 ""B & D" 'ELECTRIC SANDER' 34.99 A AROURLE I" V7 BUSINESS LOCK, STOCK & BARREL INQUIRIES INVITED

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