AN OSHAWA TRIO, shown above, captured The Fred Hobbs Memorial Trophy, at the Oshawa Lawn Bowling's Oshawa Trio Wins Fred Hobbs Trophy An Oshawa team made up of| Gordon MacMillan, skip; Mrs. M. Price, vice skip and Sam MacMillan, lead, amassed a score of 63 plus 12 to win The Fred Hobbs Memorial Trophy in the mixed trebles tournament, at the Oshawa Lawn Bowling Club on Saturday. Fire Chief R. Hobbs, a son of the bowler inj whose memory the trophy was given, presented the trophy. A capacity entry of 32 teams from Peterborough, Lindsay, Cobourg, Bowmanville and Osh- awa. competed. Ideal weather contributed to the success of the annual Mixed Trebles Tourna- ment, on Saturday. Fire Chief Ray Hobbs, left, is shown pre- senting the trophy to the Osh- served by the ladies of the club between the second and third games. Second place prizes went to Jack Piatti, Mrs, Piatti and Jack Coleman, of Oshawa, who had a score of 53, Third were Vic Highfield, Mrs. Highfield and Miss Margaret Highfield, of Port Hope, with a score of 52 plus 7. George Read, Mrs. W. Joyce and Mrs, J. Biddulph, of Oshawa, were fourth with 48! points. Prizes for two wins went to two. Peterborough teams. N.| Parsons and his team had a/ Named Harry Sinden, all-star defence- man and Assistant-Coach with the Kingston Frontenacs last season, was today appointed /|playing-coach of the Minneapo- lis Bruins of the newly formed |Central Professional Hockey 7 | League. "| The announcement was made 'by Wren Blair, General Mana- '| ger of the Minneapolis club, and _|starts the tenth season that Sin- 4 den and Blair have been assoc- '|iated. *| Sinden, a native of Toronto, played his minor hockey with the Toronto Marlboro's organiz- _|ation, and came to Oshawa at 17 / | years of age to play Junior nar i hockey with the Oshawa Gen- 'lerals. After 3% seasons with the Oshawa club, he signed with Blair in 1953, to play Senior hockey with the Oshawa Truck- men, This Glub won the All-On- uf tario Senior "B"' title. In later seasons, Sinden played on another Senior "'B" champ- ionship team in Whitby in 1956. In 1957 he was a member of the Whitby Dunlops Allan Cup championship Club, and was captain of the "'Dunnies" when they captured the World Champ- jonship in Oslo Norway in 1958. awa trio that won top honors: Gord MacMillan, skip, Mrs. Norman Price and Sam Mac- Millan. Harry Sinden Coach Minneapolis "Dunnies" when they won their second Allan Cup in 1959. In 1960 he was a member of the Canadian Olympic Hockey Club which finished second to the American team at Squaw! Valley California. Shortly after Blair signed with the Boston Bruins organi- zation in the spring of 1960, he turned Sinden pro, and made him captain of his Eastern Prof- essional League team at Kings- ton, Two seasons later, Sinden was elevated into the coaching department, and last year this combination paid off with an EPHL title, and the Tom Foley Memorial Trophy for the Lime- stone city. "Harry has a great insight in- to the game of hockey" said Blair, "and I believe he has a brilliant future as a coach". "As a player, he is probably one of the finest minor pros around today, if not a major leaguer." Last season he copped every laurel in sight in the EPHL, He was voted the most valuable player in the league. Made the the first all-star team, and was voted the most outstanding de- fenceman in the league. He holds the league record for the most points scored by a defence- Again he was captain of the man in the history of the East- ° ese "gold rusn." in this finan- cial year alone,--the Japanese! are~-expected to spend. shout 700,000,000 yen-training their best Olympic prospects. In the next financial year, starting next April, until the October g es, Japan will spend an imated 384,000,000 yen on athletic training. A total of 170 coaches are working on 1,000 of the brightest prospects for the Olympics. Some of the coaches have been brought from outside Japan. The latest scientific training equipment is being used and individual events, hundreds of Japanese athletes Time, money and effort are|will be competing overseas to not being spared in the Japan-/prepare them for the Olympic competition. Japan Making All-Out Spend For '64 Games TOKYO (Reuters)--Japan is spending a sizable fortune on training athletes for the Olym- pic Games to be held here in October, 1964, Japan hopes to pick up at least 15 gold medals, which are awarded to the winners of the ern Professional Hockey League. He"' ll certainly be a popular fig- ure in our Minneapolis op- eration" Blair concluded. Sinden is 31 years of age, and married to the former Eleanor Brodie of Oshawa, They have three children. Nancy 10, Have Your Suit Styled and Tailored by SAM ROTISH 7 KING ST. EAST From A Large Selection of Fine British Woollens RE a hata a NAME IN FINE CLOTHING Carol, 9 and Donna 8. They cur- rently make _ their home| in Kingston, but will-move to} Minneapolis in early October.) SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, relichle Gas Dealer in your areca. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 and H. Campbell, of Oshawa, were high for one win with a) score of 45, E. Jackson, Mrs. Jackson and E. Yourth, of Osh- awa, were in second place with a score of 43. Minneapolis Will Train At Bowmanville MINNEAPOLIS (AP)--Minne- lube job There's a big You'll favor our kind of if A Complete ""bumper-to- difference in lube * Upholstering Cleaning Your Complete CAR CARE CENTRE Ask About 0 CLEANUP" SPecial SERVICE jumper" Clean-up including The Place Men Like to Shop . « . because the selection is wide, the prices reasonable, the service efficient! score of 49 plus 7. apolis Bruins of the new Cen- P. Canning, Mrs. R. B. Reed) tral Professional Hockey League een erioes have announced. a 32-man train- ®@ Auto De-Tarring ® Minor Rust Removal © Motor Steam Cleaning © Trunk Clean-up He ESTIMATES e tracts." $ysgenh Com © Books of "We kets Avie Wath Te. tournament, which was en- hanced by _ the refreshments Brantford Girls Put Out Scugogs Brantford Westdale Angelsjthe mound and gave hee to whipped Oshawa Scugog Clean-|Marilyn Schultz in the third. In ers m3 14 in a wide-open slug-|the 9th, Paradise came back in, |Dornhoeffer and Gary Harmer. fest, yesterday afternoon in but the damage had been done, | Garin, Dome: a Brampton, to sweep their) Oshawa was tied 13-13 going sp played in Niag- OASA Junior "A" playoff round! into the bottom of the 8th and rt He hagge Pasian Hoos a in two-straight games. Brantford broke the deadlock|~°rs ith Kineston, Ont. Con This one was a_ wild one/ with a wide-open rally, 10 runs 4 ' : | from start to finish. Oshawa/on 11 hits, plus a walk and two nelly was with Boston Bruins jacket of laminated nylon homer. They added three more) ogsHAWA SCUGOG CLEAN-| led the attack while Carol Ger-/gth, MOTORISTS! day at the plate. If; McCreary, rf; Hill, p and 'Have Your Car Checked NOW at fh ave TOur Lar LNeCKE @iime... the second and third inning and|Wings Thursday announced that scored three runs in the sec-lerrors, Norma Wood homered| Part of Seno jersey that reverses to in the third, one in the fifth, twolmRS -- Pelow, c; Boddy, ss; mond had three hits, Cheryl BRAMPTON ANGELS --| With 14 hits for 14 runs, rf; Suzie Belantz, p in 3rd. they went wild, in the fourth,/he has cut mine players from his/| with an 8-run rally that practi-|training camp roster. All were} cally clinched the game right/ordered to report to Johnstown) there. Jets of the Eastern Amateur) Sandra Paradise started on|League. | jobs . . .and the difference is in od. a 32 YOUR favor when we do the work. ing roster which will open ice ee drills Sept. 24 at Bowmanville, | Our expert precision pays off to you 'in smoother, quieter riding. We use the finest in lubricants... by Shell. SHELL - HANDY ANDY open 8:30 A.M. TILL 6 P.M. ONE-STOP AUTO SERVICE CENTRE LTD. 520 KING WEST (At Stevenson Rd) 5 Nat mete eint MANNY BM ao Ont. * Eight of the men named are at the parent Boston Bruins' training camp in Boston, They are goalie George Gardner, de- fencemen Wayne Schultz and Ken Stephanson, centres Terry Crisp and Jeannot Gilbert and wings Wayne Connelly, Gary PHONE 728-9421 A handsome looking | Stine SSE ond on a walk to Carol Ger-|while the rest of the team alll] ' : * mond, Sadra Paradise was safe|hit hard, in this inning, to earn| | ; Sor atte Bidcker ore in the 7th and four runs in thelschuitz, 2b d' 2b; Germond ATTENTION Sth and added one more in the|1p: Paradise, p and 2b; Clough | Pelow and Mary Clough each Wood. 3b: R ' | , 3b; Ronson, cf; Belantz, had a pair. Germond homered c: Waggoner. 1b; Sharon Bel! Scugogs deserved a better. fate,| except they ran into the Brant- DETROI TCUTS NINE on an error and May Clotight's|the decision. fib see 17.95 Connie Lucas, with four hitser, I 1" Vendewsinen at Oshawa & District and singled in the Sih, for a fine 802, 20; Waddington, ss; Firth STARTS WITH A STOP HERE! ford girls on a hot day. The) DETROIT (CP) -- Manager-| homesters scored singletons in|coach Sid Abel of Detroit Red! foxiest way to get the best car deal... Finance your car in advance with. a low-cost termDlan loan Put yourself in a strong bargaining position! Before you shop, arrange with the Royal for the cash you need. A Royal Bank termpPlan loan offers low rates, fast service, 36 months to repay. No extras or hidden charges. Life-insuréd too. So--see any Royal branch first about a termPlan loan for a car, appliance, any other reasonable need. & 44) ROYAL BANK Oshewe Bronch: Donnelly, Meneger Oshewe, King & Wilson Brench: : JM. Waddell, Menoger QUEEN (Entrance Off CHECK LANE Starting Monday, Sept. 16th Through Sept. 27th at POLICE PARKING LOT STREET Bagot Street) HOURS: 10 6 P.M. DAILY--MONDAY 10 FRIDAY | : : ~Sponsored by- OSHAWA SAFETY LEAGUE-OSHAWA POLICE DEPT. & THE ONTARIO DEPT. OF TRANSPORT wearin grey in sizes 36 to 46. 2-way button cuff. Sizes 14% to 16%. Botany wool cardigan, of hard- , Paterlock Knit Blue, charcoal, taupe, loden 'af B! 95 Walker's own make of dress shirt. Well cut of "Sanforized" broadcloth. Fused collar and 3.98 Long sleeved sports shirt of "'San- forized"cotton in authentic tartan or check. patterns. Small, medium, large sizes, : Fri. till 9 P.M. $5 Just a few selections from our well-equipped men's department. WALKER'S OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE--Mon. to Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. -