Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jan 1962, p. 18

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18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, January 24, 1962 208: OTTAWA ROUGH RIDERS NAME SECOND ASSISTANT COACH 'Smith's Three Goals Spark Whitby's Win Over Marlboro Jrs. By GERRY BLAIR aee -- os pe Captain Bill Smith, with three) W: set a precedent for the)night, eee goals, led Whitby Mohawks to a|newly formed Metro circuit:| MARLBOROS --gcal, Dryden; |4.g nti nana' irelinauished a thrilling 5-3 victory over the|Julie Kowaiski, on a solo rush|defence, Ridiey, Houston, Hoff- Sh sh Sa 3 0 ai M4 en the second-place Toronto Marlboros,|With Braden Houston hanging) man, Brown; forwards, Jarrett sitet it nnged th three suc: last night in the Whitby Com-|on, picked the far corner on al Elis, Conacher, Carleton, Me.\Ces*ve, 'allies to go in front 5-4, munity arena. It was one of|backhand drive, to give the|Donald, Mercier, Milroy, Moore, 'u! = Jones evened the count the better efforts of the Metro|Mohawks a comfortable 52) Harbaruk. ' rage beg ony of pt third eh Junior "A" season by the Mo- bulge. : | WHITBY -- goal, Perank: és: © send the game into overtime. awks, played before 700 fans.-| Brian Conacher rounded outifence, Tripp, Wright, Carnegie Bowmanville led 2-0 after one A first for the Metro League|the scoring in the final minute|MeCullough; forwards, Tren period of play On @, pale of was recorded when a penalty|from a scramble around the|Shearer, Smith, Kowalski |S0#S by Ted Fairey, Then Port shut ss awarded to Whitby,|Whitby goal Fletcher, Down, Weller, Col: after Wayne Weller was pulled) sHORT NOTES -- A pro-|lins, Butler. ' down from behind, by a Marh/found checking chore by the boro defenceman Frank Rid-/Mohawks in the second and ley, early in the third period. third period attributed to their Bill Smith took the shot andj victory, and held the offensive- fired a high riser over Dave|minded Marlboros to a single Dryden's shoulder. This goal|tally -- and as mentioned, it (Ellis) 1S . h b het p put the Mohawks in front 4-2;came when the Mohawks were! Penalties: Hoffman 6.16 oe ey t re ne Bowmanyllls ¢ and knocked most of the steam|relaxing in the last minute of Brown 12,29, : Bch Abe t markers. out of the classy Marlboros. | play. . . . Both Dryden and Second Period arises Vi tee 'a et Marlboros enjoyed a 2-1 mar-|Perani were cailed upon to) 4, Whitby: Weller (Dowe) 13 10/j, . thant ae score gin at the end of the first|make 33 saves, and the latter! 5, Whitby: Smith ' th Sh, sik thie hae. gave period on goals by Grant Moore|made severai key stops... .. (Tran, Carnegie) ..... 19.14 Th prigiaren Thong lal laggy = By GERRY BLAIR Port Perry Merchants, with innly eight players, held the Bowmanville Shamrocks to a 5-5 overtime deadlock last night, in an OHA Lakeshore Inter- tilt at mediate Port goal, hawks in Whitby next Tuesday Perry, league a in bye ng and another \pair early in the final frame. 1 uintee pune Ted Napiorkowski and Ken Ro- ! (McDonald Mile ) . berts counted for Port in the 2, Whitby: 'Smith (re ee -55/ second, and Garnet Warner and t Sugeitcres: Werk ran) 17.05/Bin Cornish gave them the lead, : s: Harbaruk 17.36 scoring within 13 seconds of each and Nick Harbaruk, with Smith Perry struck for four-in-a-row,| Port Perry Squad Ties Bowmanville Penalty -- Glaspell 12,30. SECOND PERIOD 3. Pt Perry: Napiorkowski (Cornish, Warner) ... 1.30 4. Pt Perry: Roberts ... 17.00 No penalties. THIRD PERIOD 5. Pt Perry; Warner (Cornish, Napiorkowski) 1.16 6, Pt Perry: Cornisk (Napiorkowski) ....+. 1.29 7, Bowmanville: Abbott (B Fairey, Richards) 8, B'ville: Marjerrison (Sheridan, Preston) .. | 9. B'ville: Marjerrison | (D. Masters, T. Fairey) 5.47 10, Pt Perry: Ron Jones (Napiorkowski, Roberts) Penalties -- Don Masters .45, |Napiorkowski 18,15, OVERTIME No Scoring. Penalties -- Glaspell 3.15, Cornish 5.35, Napiorkowski and Terry Masters 9.10. 3.56 4.25 | Eddie Shore Ends Coach Frank Clair of the Ottawa Rough Riders is shown ex-football star Tony Golab (left) chatting with Don Bran- Columbia Lions coach, who has been named as Clair's act as a scout and training camp coach for the Rough managing one for the Mohawks Whitby pulled seven points ahead of the fourth place Union-) Henalties: Butler 6.50, Ridley| penalties were called, more than| Vancouver Setup in the entire regulation time, (right) with RCAF officer and by (centre), former British second assistant. Branby will | Riders. aNeraihaiwcat : Third Period "SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' BOB FELLER and Jackie Robinson have been nam- ed to Baseball's Hall of Fame at Cooperstown and his- tory has been made. Both have been named in the minimum of time -- a player must be inactive for five full seasons before he is eligible for voting -- but Feller gets named at the same time that he has an article in a well-known magazine, in which he voices stern criticism of the Hall of Fame voting system. Jackie Robinson be- comes the first colored ball player to be named to the Cooperstown basebaN shrine -- which is fitting enough, since he was the first to play in major league ranks and was certainly an outstanding star in his own right. Feller mildly regrets that his stint in the Navy came at the peak of his career -- he might have set a new record for games won or at least matched the great Walter Johnston and Christy Mathewson. He says he gets a bigger kick today out of coaching youngsters on the sandlots than he did playing at Municipal Stadium. Jackie Robinson, thrilled and proud, sees his honor as a beacon of ambition for others. born in humble circum- stances. SPORTS CAPSULES:- Lloyd Crawford, of Belle- ville Inter. "A" hockey team is out on $200 bail, after being charged with common assault (of a fan) at the hockey game in Uxbridge the other night which Belle- ville won 2-1... GALT TERRIERS have announced they'll not turn down any money offered them by the Canadian Government from that new sports purse but they are through asking for it, to help their World Tournament fund . , .ROCKY MARCIANO was willing to wager that his protege Tony Hughes would beat British heavyweight champion Henry Cooper but last night in London, Hughes had to retire at the end of the fifth round with a badlv cvt eye... ARCHIE MOORE, at an awards dinner .. ~ va last night, verbally chrane, FIRST PERIOD 1, B'ville: T. Fairey (Abbott, D. Masters) 2. B'ville: T. Fairey (Sheridan, Wiseman) tion with the Canadian Army|forwards, Ron Jones, Warner. overseas, had been a defence-|\Cornish; Naplorkowski, er, | are of Shore's action, | VANCOUVER (CP) -- Eddie hore, owner of Springfield In- jans of the American Hockey League, has severed all connec- |tions with Vancouver Canucks of the Western League. | Shore ended a working agree- ment with Canucks Monday night when he removed goal- |tender Claude Evans, defence- jman Dale Anderson and for- ward Murray Wilkie to the |Springfield roster. They had been playing for Vancouver on jloan, | The Canucks, last-place team jin the WHL's Northern Division, are down to 10 players as a re- Shore, in a telephone inter- view from Springfield, said he recalled the players Monday 5.15|because of continued abuse \from the Vancouver manage- 8.30] ment. Tender EAT'N TRUE -TRIM BEEF Penalties -- Name Bob Feller |the count at 2-2 midway | meetings with Marlboros, who| 7. Whitby: Kowalski ; 4 | 9 | through the second period. |were minus coach Turk Broda, (Fletcher) 9.48, Manville, Shamrocks host Ux- |fect pass from Elmer Tran,jand moved him three in front of|Shearer 13,29. | BOWMANVILLE:-- goal, Van- rison, Sheridan, Wiseman. ) : with Montreal Royals, leading| major leagues, is the first of |infielder was enshrined Tuesday} @uiet, hard working and al- thet aetant rele Leann lyears with Cleveland Indians, |in 1949 to lead the National/+> and dropped Simcoe intojtrick, Dan McKee with a pair| ORR was the first time the Baseballs, @ major league record, marksmen for St, Paul's. Hall, the Harmony goal-keep- |Walter Johnson, Honus Wagner|base runner around from the|Nichols, D. Mackie for St.) WESTMOUNT--goal, J. Hall; | --(CP Wirephoto) |in between. ville Seaforths, whu were edged|"" * 2 -------- | Wayne Weller, displaying his|by Brampton Seven-Ups, 5-4/ a but. neither club managed to|< |best game since rejoining the/last night... . It was the| 6. Whitby: Smith take advantage of the extra|4 |club after missing 15 tilts, tied/third Whitby victory in four (penalty shot) ...... vee .24; Manpower. : Thursday night in Bow- | With only 46 seconds remain-|hospitalized for an eye opera-| 8. Marlboros: Conacher : jbridge Black Hawks. In their ° e ing in the second period, Bill|tion. He is expected to be re- (Jarrett) 19,25)!ast_ appearance, Shamrocks ac 1e O inson |Smith put the Mohawks in/leased today ... Smith's goals) Penalties: McCullough 3.53,\°Ked, out an 8-6 victory over [front for good. He took a per-|were his 19th, 20th, and 2ist,|Houston 10.06, Hoffman 10.52,|'M¢ Black Hawks. |stickhandled his way neatly| hie closest rival, Gary Jarrett, ae ee HB iggy Bo |around Arnie Brown and de-|for the league - leadership, .. . peil, terry Masters, tt; To Hall Of Fame posited the puck behind Dryden| Unionville Seaforths are | ihe/ REMEMBER WHEN. . .? forwards, Bob Fairey, Ted Fair. on a backhander. 'next opposition for the Mo-| By THE CANADIAN press |°Y: Richards, Burgess, Marjer- BOSTON (AP) -- Jackie Rob-|He spent one year of seasoning) ge aia en aL . " inson, first Negro to play in the . | Cpl. Jack Fox, reported 20) PORT PERRY:-- goal, Leach; ( years ago today as killed in ac-/defence, Murray Jones, Roberts: his race elected to baseball's the International League in bat-| urc eague highest honor -- its Hall of|ting and fielding, and then i inni Fame at Cooperstuwn, N.Y, joined Brooklyn as a second . a OMe Capen See Wee | The former Brooklyn Dodger baseman. Bantam H kx he deh Warional can Ane along with pitcher Bob Feller, a| Ways a offensive and defen- OC ey pee Sad hecses raseute arte i » fr rg sive threat, Robinson flirted . 1 . x Tare i tantal teres 'he with the .300 mark his first we st. PAUL'S 4, SIMCOE 3 | WESTMOUNT 6, HARMONY rp Torenpe Maney Lats, [American Taaae tor say 90|Seasons and batted a lusty .342 St. Paul's downed Simcoe St.| Harry Morrison, with the hat : fourth place. and a single to Mike Planke Both won election to the hall) "°@8¥e. i ike! yi i : the dirs : nia | His Halding aod bas : Peter Hollingsworth, Mike|provided the scoring punch as [the first time they were ge wes iia to behold m one see| Beamish, Paul Hollingsworth| Westmount blanked Harmony 6) 12 KING a } men. tom) | ; Ane and Bill Morrison were the|to 0 baseball being mandatory. It} 50M he committed only seven er- Writers Association of America| Participated in 137 double plays} ©. McCrea, Don Cockerton/er, was cul for five stitches ST. EAST had named anyone on their first|{hat same season, 1951, setting #nd W. Peyton scored for Sim-|when struck by a deflected shot. | eligible shot since the original @ National League mark. coe Street. eer ee we, ee 723-3633 five -- Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth,| Jackie was the most feared DS Aivith, Bi, nee of ie same. | late 1940s to the late 1950s. Once|Paul's; C. McCrea and W, Pey-|defence, M. Planke, Ken Wot-| he stole home in a world se-|ton for Simcoe Street. jten, B, Zufelt, M. Walls; for- PAUL'S --. goal, Brian| wards, B. Kirkpatrick, J. How: |Drew; defence, P. Andrews, R,| ard, K. Vernon, H. Morrison, S. jand Christy Mathewson -- were |tapped in the first election in | 1936, ries game. Candidates needed 75 per cent |of the 160 votes cast by associ- jation members. Feller, now a |43 - year - old insurance execu- jtive in Cleveland, received 150 votes. Robinson, 42, vice - pres- USES BULLSEYE Nicholls, D. Whiting, B. Smith;| Clark, J. Badgley, J. Welsh, D. Feller was a 17 - year - old|forwards, B. Morrison, : worth, B. Durno, R. Spicer, B./fence, phe ap a barn bag Bolton, R. Bolton, M. Beamish,|Danniels; forwards, McDonald, ; y n the. majors in .|M. Rose, D. Mackie. |Begg, Crowe, McGill, Orton, ident of a restaurant and:coffee/He was what the game needed| SIMCOE STREET -- goal,|Simpson, Gunn, Griffith, Bone, Jj ; sewn ST. | g Paul| Slater. | g youngster who had sharpened|Hollingsworth, Peter Hollings-) HARMONY -- goal, Hall; de-| ' his eye by throwing at a bulls-| O'Neil, McNaughton, ; FOR QUALNY, FLAVOR, SAVINGS! BUEHLERS: ~~ d/>. ee a | company, t 124 votes, 7 sean A voles, four) hurler pitcher who packed Craig Burch; defence, Don| Edwards, Mackie, Hanna. | |more than the minimum); ' | in the crowds, Cockert D Cockert needed. Sockerton, ennis Cockerton, ' c Twenty years later--with four|W. Peyton, C, McCrea, D.| N'MINSTER 3, KING ST. 2 | | ROBINSON THRILLED forwards, R,| Northminster kept their sec-| Todd, M. Burch, J,|/ond place position when they) 1 SPECIALS THURS., FRI., SAT. years out for navy service dur.| Weatherbee:; "It's a once - in - the - life-,ing the Second World War in|Brown, J. | c time thrill," said Robinson, at\his pitching prime--Feller had|Manning, B. Warne, S. Warne,| edged King Street 3 to 2. his home in Stamford, Conn.|)compiled 266 victories. He suf-|T. Murdock, G. Peyton, B.| G. Gulliver, T, McQuade and} "It's hard to describe my feel-|fered 162 defeats. Tod C. Griffin were the marksmen) ings fully at this time. I am} for Northminster. C. Glenden-} id. Among the wins were three) KNOX 2, ST. MATTHEW'S 1 blasted Montreal promoter Eddie Quinn for "running on the Moore - Cleroux bout. that Archie got a guarantee slice, before the bout ou" : pleased and honored, my fam-!no-hitt - hi Word than it no-hitters and 12 one - hitters. to eat." : tory have spun as many as Feller, typically, was less|three no-hit games. None ever Knox took over seventh place/ning and Cuthbert scored for This was a well-played game with no penalties and the goal- ily is so excited no one wants Only two other pitchers in his.| Dy downing St. Matthew's 2 to 1.| King Street. Only two penalties in the game and they were to L, Lloyd BEEF STEAKS & ROASTS SIRLOIN and was cancelled, so he shouldn't kick too loudly -- not if he wants to fight in Canada any more. ... BOB BE- DARD, Canadas top tennis player for the past seven years, at the same dinner last night, announced his re- tirement from Canada's Davis Cup team and all major tournament play. Mundingers Boost Margin In Biddy Loop Trainer Is Ailing, Will Sell Horses NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- I jtroit automobile dealer T. Simcoe Hall Settlement House,|see) Wright, who has saddl Bolahood's Sportshaven defeat-|the most winners in four of t ed Firefighters 12-8 in the first|last six years. game. | Gary Morrison (2), } Smith (6) and Bill Rajkovic (4) another trainer. were the point-scorers for Bola- Grissom said Tuesday he will/he criticizes isell his string of racing thor-|dure. In Biddy Basketball League| oughbreds because of the illness| against the modern-day player,| action on Saturday 'morning atjof his trainer, V. R. (Tennes-|especially pitchers Grissom said he would rather Paul|get rid of his stable than to get Wright, 40, underwent surgery keeping was outstanding. of King Street for cross-check- | J, Clark and G. McDougallling and K. Waldie of Northmin-| jscored for Knox while T. Buck-/ ster for charging. | jley scored St. Matthew's lone | most as if I had nothing to look} 4949 when he notched 27 tri. mie | NORTHMINSTER 7 goal, B. NN |Cranfield; defence, K. Waldie, |\forward to -- except going to um py " phs. He set the modern x ' x . | _|thougtt T might have to. wait| @&z of 18 strikeouts in a nine-|getence: J Clark, J Nesbitt, HB: Leaming, T. McQuade, 7. longer. Joe DiMaggio had to go inning game against Detroit/neshitt, R McLeod: forwards,| Goodchild; forwards, C. Griffin, around Ps eon ren times, | 28ers Oct. 2, 1938, thoughl; McDougall R Carmichael,|T: Alexander, A. Gillette, W.| Maybe the eorapetition g| Sandy Koufax of Los Angeles|' 'parker, &. Knocker, R.|McGahey, J. Alexander, E. | ae hee then." : ner pag since has tied the rec-| Avies. 8. Racz , "!Nichols, C. ae, ie. Mc- or' ei | ord, om ae) W's -- |Vety, T. Griffin, G. Gulliver. Feller's entry is timed almost} 1946 ST. a deen rs con KING ST.--goal, D. Hare; de- cet me but just as thrilled.| tossed 12 one-hitters. "Naturally, I'm happy about Six ti » re dee rats | Six times Feller won 20 or It," he said. "But now it's al-| nore games. His high came in was De-| exactly with his story in the Sa- : . ayward; | E A.|turday Evening Post in which G. Carroll, B. Carey,.B. Barker; |fence, P. Graper, C. Glenden-| selection proce} forwards, R. Brabin, W. Bell,/ning, H, Silvers, G. Perkins, J.| He claims it works} /B. MacIntyre, T. Buckley, V.|Magill, G, Osborne; forwards, |Walters, W. Coppin, A. Annis,|L. Lloyd, T, Keys, Cuthbert, At Mi hi S IP. Smith, D. Shettler, R. Davey,|Lean, Perry, McConkey, Hard-| Ic igan tate |K. Allard, D. Rosnick. ing, Ogden, Pearse. he| ing belief that modern ball play- 3 : oe oe | EAST LANSING, Mich, (AP)\~ jers should be judged by more|/Ralph H. Young, 72, who built P ] Ni Off | ed) "There seems to be a grow- severe standards than the old-|Michigan State University from timers in order not to Cheapen'/an obscure college to a nation- jthe Hall of Fame," Feller says\ally-known sports power during jin his story. his 31 years as athletic direc. WING STEAK Boneless RUMP ROAST SIRLOIN TIP Boneless Round Steak Roast ROAST m3 89: SAUSAGE MEAT Buy 4 lbs. . GET 4 LBS. FREE! Beef Cut and Wrapped FREE! .. Freezer Special! Hindquarters sees ty OOP ox ae hood's while Firefighters hadjshortly before the opening of Paul Sargeant (2), Bill Swindell|the current Fair Grounds meet- (2) and Brad Barnoski: (4). Mundingers defeated CKLB jing and said he needs a rest. | --------------| BREAKS COLOR LINE hall, including former players and officials, There now are 88 men in théitor, died at his home Tuesday M4 following a heart attack. | Ster Ing uttons Young, who retired as MSU} athletic director in 1954, was| Sterling Button and Pleatingjred hot Fraser Hambly again| 17-11 in the second game of the schedule, with Nick Corneal (6),| Ron MclInroy (4), Jerry Ogden} (2), Mike Zimmy (1) and Don| Sugden (4), being the point-get-| ters for the winners, For CKLB it was Pete Plob (4), Walt} Hubar (2) and Tom Edwards} (5). | Parts and Service defeated) Jaycee Blues 15-11 in the third] game of the morning with three big scores doing the job, Andy} Kit (5), Kevin Sawyer (6) and/ Gary Manser (4). Jaycee Blues got points from Bill Wayling (6), Laird Black (1), Earle Conlin (2) and Bill McKean (2). | Officials for the morning were| R. Goddard, J. Matthews and B. Derry. WL Pts. Mundingers 10 120 Jaycee Blues 7 414 Firefighters 5 6 10 Parts and Service 4 CKLB 4 Sportshaven 3 NEXT GAMES are as follows: Mundinger vs/ Jaycee Blues at 8.30 a.m.; Parts! jy fighters, at 9.20 a.m. mane inane --| CONDITION UNCHANGED NEW YORK (AP) -- Frankie ei | color line in 1947, Branch Ric-|in 1956 and was re-elected on| St. Kitts Oust key, then general manager of|the Republican ticket in 1958| . the Dodgers, had startled the 2nd 1960. a ville From baseball world the year before| He was head coach and ath-| when he signed Jackie to ajletic director at Depau Univer-| L di » Brooklyn farm contract. jsity and Kalamazoo (Mich. )| a 1es an ar rags pe alae Pat Daeg ey before he moved to! g sity Monarchs of the Negro/MSU in 1923 as athletic director BS sighe ind Sotan yp eo American League at the time.'and coach of all sports. inal bon in daniernk com. HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS final berth in double-rink com: petition for the' Ontario Ladies' Tankard. ia tw Peet : By THE CANADIAN PRESS |St. Catharines 1315 6 136 139 32 10th-end ieeabure Ey love Gan ee Guelph . 1217 5 185 166 29 a Guartén Of an inch aid Hantl zas' "~ a <a mtg 817 8118 133 24 27 12 2 166 116 56 Tuesday's Results 2115 4134118 46|Guelph 7 St. Catharines 4 on to defeat Mrs. R. C. Mona- ghan 11-6 in the extra end. The| Hershey 2021 1144151 41 Other Tuesday Scores 19 25 1128 128 39 Western League victory made up the deficit for) e Mrs. William Jukes, who lost| Gusher Western Division Calgary 3 San Francisco 4 WLT F A PtiSeattle 2 Spokane 8 Springfield 10-9 to Mrs, H. S, Wilson of Oak- ville. 2216 2133 120 46|Edmonton 8 Vancouver 6 2119 3146 146 45) Nova Scotia Senior Earlier, the St. Catharines|Cjeveland rinks edged Mrs. D. Horne and| Rochester 21 21. 1133 138 43) Amherst 10 New Glasgow 8 830 210517218/Moncton 2 Halifax 5 | Mrs. R. Smillie of Dixie 19-18, | Buffalo Pittsburgh Robinson broke the game's/Clected a state representative|bowlers missed a golden oppor- tunity of spot when they lost to Peoples|Sterlings Credit Jewellers by a 3-2 score. finishing in second Sterlings as well as Peoples had trouble with the pins and although Peoples gave every Sterlings were unable to take advantage and had to settle for bowling. |with 289 and McQuaker 225. opportunity of winning|Peoples it was | into the fifth game| just could not get) going the first five frames, re-| sulting in Peoples winning the last game by a score of 1274 Going them|against Sterlings 1090 and for Rock 289, Con- nelly 280 and Gunn 254, Ster-| |lings had Ballam with 269, Orval third spot in the final day's|Brown and Herb Donaldson 239. Totals on the day: Peoples The first game was taken by|5752, Sterlings 5565. | For the winning team, it was Peoples with a score of 1094 winning by 84 pins over Ster- lings 1010. For Peoples it was Fraser Hambly with 261 and Fraser Hambly with a 1295 score | for five games (261, 234, 300, 289, | 211), followed by Phil Gunn 1172) 819 5 75 121 21) Rock 222 and for Sterlings Orval|for five games; Phil Rock 1146) Brown came through with 257|(289). Sterlings' Harold Ballam| and Paulo 236. Sterlings fought back gamely |games (193, 296, 226, 243, 269), | in the second game and came/folowled by Orval Brown 1080 led the way with 1227 for five through with a beautiful 1217|for 48 frames, Mike Paulo 1038 | score over Peoples 1163 and for|for 45 frames and Ron Swartz Sterlings it was Ballam's 296,|865 for 40 frames. |Paulo's 262 and Ron Swartz' 248 that made possible the win. For Peoples, the leading league | Washington Signs Games this Saturday, Jan. 27,| Penn State Star WASHINGTON (AP) -- Galen) alt nes § |Hall, star quarterback at Penn| Windsor and Service vs Sportshaven, at! state who was overlooked by the| Woodstock 8.55 a.m. and CKLB vs Fire-| professional football clubs in the| Waterloo draft, was signed Tuesday by| Strathroy Washington Redskins of the Na-/|Chatham jtional League. The five-foot-nine signal cal-|Sarnia Ryff, one-time lightweight title|ler quickly went on the want list Tuesday's Result |Hershey 4 Quebec 5 OHA Senior WLT F APt 2010 0151 9240 19 7 1140 86 39 1413 0 98 129 28 13.14 1117 127 27 1112 0120 89 22 818 1103 15417 421 1 80157 9 Tuesday's Results | Stratford contender who was injured in ajof the pro teams, including Ha-|Strathroy 6 Sarnia 3 seven-floor fall Friday, Saggy bem Tiger-Cats of the East-| Woodstock 2 Galt 3 in critical condition.' The 28. arm st accident. i ern Conference, after he pitched year «'d boxer suffered head and|the West to-a 33-19 victory over Ww Juries in a building con-|the East in he U.S. Bowl game/| Hamilton here Jan, 7, OHA Junior A LT F 22 7 515511149 2210 3 158 107 47 A Pt 'Montreal Metro Toronto Junior A Marlboros 3 Whitby 5 Brampton 5 Unionville 4 Manitoba Junior Brandon 3 St. Boniface 8 Thunder Bay Junior / 1610 0124 100 32|/Fort William Canadiens 5 Fort '55 William Hurricanes 4 Ontario Junior B |Tillsonburg 5 Woodstock 8 | Niagara Intermediate A Welland 1 Port Colborne 3 Eastern League Knoxville 1 Charlotte 4 Greensboro 5 Philadelphia 6 International League Muskegon 5 Toledo 3 |Minneapolis 2 Omaha 5 \Fort Wayne 3 St Paul § bowlers were Phil Gunn. with 265 and Hambly with 234. Sterlings had the opportunity, jof finishing in second spot but | ithe last two weeks saw them) go to pieces, when they lost a! !4-1 decision two weeks ago and Although Sterlings had every |this week a 3-2 decision, losing) opportunity of winning the third|second spot by one point. Just} game, they lost it by a score|when it looks as if the team is) of 1078 against 1130, losing by|really going, disaster appears to} Mike Paulo 227, Ballam 226, Ron Swartz 220. Peoples' Fraser |Hambly had 300 that sank the Sterling ship, followed by Gunn/completed, Sterlings are looking | 234 and Rock 231. pins and for Sterlings it wasjovertake them and their incon- jsistency has been the result of a lot of poor: games. With the second series now forward to coming through in Again the Sterling team rallied|the last series but in order to jand came through to win the/do this must be at their best, fourth game by a score of 1173/if they intend to grab a play-off against Peoples 1091 and Sterlings it was for/berth. The final series opens at again M-.e/Ace Bowling on, Saturday when Paulo 256, Ballam 243 and Ron|/Sterlings take on the Bowl- (Swartz 230. For Peoples it was!odrome team. i SPECIAL! THURS. ONLY !! LAMB-IN-A-BASKET @ ROASTS @ CHOPS e@ STEW |b. al SPECIAL! FRI. ONLY !! © C Fresh Shankless 3 5 PORK SHOULDERS). CHICKEN WINGS Buy 4 lbs. . . 1.00 Get 4 lbs; FREE! SEE WHAT 1.00 WILL Pf: 20"" tras 3-LBS. FRESH MADE VEAL PATTIES hual aids ind ond of 3-LBS. SKINLESS WIENERS pPeration © i 4-LBS. BOLOGNA BY-THE-PIECE ner ieae, Mii 4-LBS. 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