Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Apr 1964, p. 15

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Six More In Soccer Scandal LONDON (AP) -- Six more soccer players were accused by a newspaper Sunday of having accepted bribes to throw matches for a gambling syndi- cate. The newspaper, The People, named three players last week whom it contended had thrown matches and won money on bets. One of the latest players named is a former Scottish in-| ternational goalkeeper. The group also includes a York City . player whom the paper said was a contact man in the rigging ring for years. The others, the paper said, now play for the Scottish club St. Mirren, Halifax Town, Wal- sall, Lincoin City and Bratford City. The People wrote that a goal- keeper in the ring confessed that on one occasion he had Pb DAHER ALT ME Accused OLD COUNTRY SOCCER The players in the ring who, the paper said, often did not know which other matches were being fixed, were linked through Jimmy Gauld, ex-Charlton and Everton player. Gauld was fined £60 last No- vember on charges of attempt- ing to bribe Oldham Athletic Club players to lose matches. Among the latest named were Bert Linnecore, Lincoln City,| and John Fountain, York City, both suspended by their clubs. Also named were Peter Wragg, Bradford City, who de- nied the allegation, and Ron Howells, Wallsall. Earlier, a Sheffield book- maker, James Thorpe, said at least two matches were fixed each week last season, "Without fail last season I was told they would go," he said. Thorpe added he had not re- ceived any information about age cing 4 in making sure team lost. fixes this season. OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS DOWNTOWN INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Team Standings -- Spruce Villa Hotel 55, George's TV Towers 36, Allen's BA 36, Southend BP 36, Spoilers 36, McLaughlin Fuel 35, Richmond Tire 34, Dunn's Tailors 27, Motor City 24, People's Clothing 24, White Stars 19 and Rosebowl 19. High Triples (700) -- A. Smart 756, A. Rich 740, B. Marshall 709 and M. Bell 747, High Singles (300) -- Well, Fellows, no visitors here this week. Everyone be saving themselves for the playoff April 2. Lemon League -- R. McCartney 93 and 8. Melch 85. Good Efforts -- J. Lucas 119, D. Smith 101, D, Snowden 127, P. Swartz 101, H, oe 122, J. Bouvie 123, L. Morgen- 116, G, Barrand 117, 129, and C. Write 129, 123. Section Winners -- 'st section winner: McLaughlin Fuel were the high pinfall winners. Our playoffs will be held on April 20 and 27. The banquet has Pos! until May 11 and will still be held af Walton's Restaurant. We will have a spe- cial "cigaret night' on May 4, compil- must| day, May 2, 1964, at Knights of Columbus griff 248, Ed Giles 217, 218, Wanda Zu-! liski 201, John Hroncich 236, John W. Car- dina! 255, 226, Barry Leach 205, John A. Cardinal 205, 257, 247, Fred Watts 230, 203, 208, Harry Dickison 209, Marg Baker 201, Lee Bloye :234, Adrian Brennan 233, 205 and Teresa Powers 219. Best game of the playoffs to date bowled by Mary Ekker 347. Nice going, Mary! Don't forget the bowling banquet, Satur- Hall at 6.30 o'clock. THIRTY-SIX LEAGUE Doubles -- Mabel Nicholson 400 (204). Over 200 -- Daisy Malcolm 217, Ann Lee 214 and Pearl Anderson 207. Points Taken -- Thistles took three ints from Rose Buds, Busy Bees took kg points from Try Hards and Rockets took two points from Maple Buds. Team standings -- Busy Bees 29, Rose Buds 26, Maple Buds 24, Rockets 23, Try Hards 22 and Thisties 11. The Busy Bees were the winners for total points in this section and Try Hards for total pins. Next week will be the playoffs. Don't LONDON (Reuters) -- Results of soccer games played in the United Kingdom Saturday: FA Amateur Cup Final Crook Town 2 Enfield 1 ENGLISH LEAGUE ' Division I Aston Villa 1 Leicester 3 Blackburn 3 Ipswich 1 Blackpool 2 Sheffield W 2 Chelsea 1 Everton 0 Liverpool 5 Arsenal 0 Notts F 1 Burnley 3 Sheffield U 2 West Brom 1 Stoke City 3 Man United 1 'Tottenham 1 Bolton 0 Wolverhampton 1! Fulham 0 Division II Bury 2 Preston 1 Cardiff 2 Southampton 4 Leeds 1 Plymouth 1 'Man City 2 Leyton Or 0 Northampton 1 Grimsby 2 Norwich. 1 Middlesbrough 1 Portsmouth 2 Huddersfield 1 Rotherham 2 Derby 0 Scunthorpe 2 Newcastle 0 Sunderland 2 Charlton 1 Swindon 2 Swansea 1 Division II Barnsley 1 Mansfield 1 Bournemouth 2 Shrewsbury 0 Bristol R 4 Notts C 0 Waterloo Siskins Colchester 1 Luton 1 Hull City 0 Brentford 0 Millwall 0 Coventry 0 Oldham 3 Crewe Alex 2 Peterborough 1 Crystal P 1 Queens P R 3 Port Vale 0 Southend 1 Walsall 1 Watford 1 Reading 0 Wrexham 1 Bristol C 1 Division IV Aldershot 1 Rochdale 1 Bradford C 2 Oxford 1 Darlington 2 Doncaster 0 Exeter 2 Bradford 3 Gillingham 1 Newport 1 Halifax 1 Chester 0 Lincoln 0 Workington 2 Southport 2 Stockport 0 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division 1 'Aberdeen 0 Dundee U 0 Airdrieonians 2 St. Mirren 4 Celtic 1 Hearts 1 Dundee 5 Partick 2 Falkirk 3 Queen of S 2 Hibernian 5 E Stirling 2 Kilmarnock 4 St. Johnstone 1 Rangers 5 Motherwell 1 Thd Lanark 0 Dunfermline 1 Division I Alloa 2 Dumbarton 1 Arbroath 2 East Fife 3 Berwick Rangers 4 Queens Pk 2 Cowdenbeath 1 Morton 5 Hamilton 3 Brechin 3 Montrose 3 Albion 4 Raith 1 Forfar 4 Beat Dodgers 7-4 WATERLOO, Ont. (CP)--Wa- terloo Siskins rebounded from a 3-1 deficit in the second period and went on to whip Weston Dodgers 9-4 Saturday in the sec- ond game of the Ontario Hockey Association Junior B finals. .The best-of-seven series is tied 1-1 with the third game in Weston Monday. Rosaire Paiemont scored two goals for Waterloo while Jack Kline, Jim Lorentz, Bobby Bauer, Gary Phillips, Larry Dietrich, Ron Smith, and War- ren Ferguson scored one each, Jim Jago with two, Alex Os- forge' the banquet at Glenholme School on Friday, April 24, borne and Bob Collins were the Weston marksmen. Stirling 0 Stenhousemuir 2 CANADIAN BUSINESS By IAN MacKENZIE Canadian Press Staff Writer Stop the market, I want to get off--or is it on? This was the question on the lips of investors and brokers alike following the wildest week of trading in the history of Ca-! nadian stock markets. The long-rumored strike by Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. in Kidd Township near Timmifis was confirmed Thursday and Canadians went on the maddest speculative spree anyone had ever seen. The volume on the Toronto Stock Exchange Thursday reached a record 16,659,000 shares, only to be_ totally eclipsed Friday when 28,704,206 shares changed hands--a rec- ord not only for Canada, but for North America. The speculative boom had been in progress for two weeks before Texas Gulf disclosed it had made a "major discovery" on its zinc-copper-silver prop- erty 10 miles north of the Tim- mins airport. Stranae 3 Clyde 1 TRISH LEAGUE Ards 5 Cliftonville 0 Ballymena 0 Glentoran 3 Crusaders 2 Portadown 1 Derry City 1 Linfield 0 Glenavon 1 Coleraine 3 TORK SECOND LONDON (AP)--Pole vaulter Dave Tork was defeated Satur- day in indoor track events that highlighted the Great Britain- Finland 'duel. The British won the two-day international duel, 59-47, Tork cleared 15 feet, six inches in the vault. It would have given him second place in the meet behind Pentti Nikula's winning effort of 16 feet. Toronto Exchange Melee North American Record A word of caution came from Lt.-Gen. Howard D, Graham, president of the TSE. He said he could see "no rea- son for alarm" over the large volume of shares trading in Speculative issues -- but added that new and unsophisticated in- ivestors were '"'taking a very real risk in venturing into the speculative market." SOME WILL LOSE Mr. Graham said--~and many brokers emphasized the point-- that while some investors would make money, "a great many more must certainly be pre- paréd to lose their. money." On the Toronto Exchange, PCE Explorations Ltd. was the The issue reached $1.28 Friday before closing at $1.02, a gain of 55 cents. However, Central Porcupine Mines Ltd. was the eyecatcher Friday when it traded 5,522,400 shares, up 11 cents to 19 cents. Other heavy .traders in Tor- onto included Bunker Hill Ex- tension Mines Ltd., Paramaque THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 20,1964 15 for a loop was the fact that in- dustrials continued to advance strongly. The industrial and closed Friday at record levels and in Toronto they reached their peaks at 2 p.m. at the height of the speculative trad- ing--in fact the penny market might have been a red herring the way the stocks of psi, major companies were rising. On the industrial board new highs were made by Massey- Ferguson on announcement of a dividend increase, Ford of Can- ada, Aluminium, Page - Hersey Tubes, General Steel Wares, composite indexes in Montreal]; Bridge, Consolidated Paper, Sa- lada Foods and several others. ' =F Eg 22s 8 E Canada Cement, Dominion Mines Ltd, and Belleterre Que- bec Mines Ltd. On the Canadian Exchange White Star Copper held the spotlight, closing Friday at 83 cents, Fano Mining and Explo- ration Inc, closed at 40 cents on the spectacular volume for one session of 2,389,000 shares. Montreal recorded record turn- heavy trader on the week with a turnover of 7,042,320 shares. over both Thursday and Friday. | One facet that threw brokers CS A Stantle for YOu & PENNY MINES ROCKET Penny mines with property within 15 miles of the strike shot skywards on the stock market unt! floor traders just stared at each other and mut- tered "unbelievable." "The whole thing is com- pletely illogical,' said one bro- ker, who pointed to the phe- nominal] rise of one issue on the Canadian Exchange in Mont- real following an anouncement that the company was trying to buy property near Texas Gulf. But this didn't deter investors BOB EAKINS --a Toronto brokerage house said housewives and one-time investors they hadn't heard from for years were trying to get into the act. "Play hard to get,' the young married said to her single friend. : "That way he'll only want you "That's whet 1! was doing," come the reply, "'when he met o girl who believed in love at first sight." We think it will be a case of 'love at first sight' too, when you first see evidence of the ex- pert dry cleaning work we do. Your garments will be returned in like-new condition for longer and prouder wear. Call soon. It could be the start of a beoutiful friend- 9 4 EVERY MONDAY AT 7:30 P.M. IN COLOR "Monday Night At The Movies" EVERY WED. AT 7:30 P.M. IN COLOR EVERY FRIDAY AT 8:30 P.M. IN COLOR OY Open Nightly (Except Saturday) 'Til 9:30 KING ST. E. at TOWNLINE.. .. NOW ) NOW YOU CAN AFFORD { AFFO. Tem We ae | forT YOU PAY ONLY FREE DEMONSTRATION Come in and see these Color TV pown 50 weexty Shows at No Obligation. "The Virginien" IN "The Bob Hope Show" FURNITURE APPLIANCES .. 728-4658 ments of Hap Appleton and Matt Kotelco. ; This will be open to all bowlers. GLENHOLME SCHOOL LEAGUE Wesley yer -- Pool Re sida 355, Jon Lee 215, Westtell a0 Philip "Sipton 170, and Randy McArthur 190, Gail Sobczak 160, Linde Nichols 220, Linda Harding 185, Sharyn 260 and Keren O'Boyle 100. 110, | Doreen Carson 155, Christine Straszewski Rickey Peyton 135, Stanley Weich 185, | Carlo a 125, Billy Nichols 180, Jim- | 110, John Wilson 185, Bobby | 125, Mery | my Brown Henning 195, Robert Peat Polocok son 121, Christine LaRush 140, Brian | Bernier 160, Debbie Bartlett 135, David O'Boyle and Wanda Mather 115. BUSH LEAGUE Points Taken -- City Yard 3, owt 1; Len and Lou's 3, Acme Haulage 1 CNR 4, George's " 0; Doyle Construc- tion 3 and Tonys 1. Triples -- B. Hollyhead 686 7s, | Easte- High 251); J. oat bod (256), J brooks 673, S. 658 (272), J. Huband 726 (200). A. A. Bruce 718 (301), A. Hatfield 609 and &. Richard 614, ate bee go -- D. Crawford 257 and " aaa team ae tie 3 and J. Burk 56. ae Construction won the fourth seo- ion. HARMAN PARK LEAGUE Ledies' high triple was Eleanor Ruker. uk with 594 (223, 169, 183). Be high | single wes Betty Godfrey wi Men's triple was Bill Meinichuk icfwk with 74 (218, 237, 169) and Men's high-single wes Brian Reid with 623 (135, 308, 180). 0 Bowlers -- Sonny Lewrence 611 (241, 7%, pedis Frenk Clements 691 (278, 205, 208) Lioyd Patterson 623 (197, 185, | ae | | | \ 4 Of The | 16 SALESMEN 200 Bowiers -- Al Reid fn cog d Was: sell 222, Martin Muller 200, Bob 250, Molly Bosley 216, Tim omic ve John Gow .Jr., 232, Ruth Hunt 21% G Element 'weil 202, Ross Godfrey 2% Sallle Plume 255 and Bob Weroski Lemon League -- dm Shibley 83, 75, 75, Louise Cook 96, Tom Lodge 91, Bill Wassell 92, Pam Bosley 75 and Vi Cle ments 97, 92. NOR'WESTERS LEAGUE High Tripies -- Phyl Clarke 782 (311, rig bed Bet) Ba 701 (312, 204) over #0 -- Mary Wie M13 ond Ton -- 2. League -- Hazel Ormindton * Uncen | | * S: lag oid | | at YOUR SERVICE that's a LOT of cars .. , means you've really got a choice on the BIG LOT .. . and can make the DEAL of YOUR LIFE. . . Right Now! Why not drive better this Spring and Summer . . « NOW IS THE TIME to select just the car you've been wanting from our tremendous range of best buy OK used cars. Over 160 cars... step up to a better used car TODAY. We have terms to suit your budget to aT", 1962 Chevro STATION WAGON, The ideal vacation car. With custom radio. Smart Honduras Maroon finish. 1 let DELUXE SERAN CORVAIR mission end radio. 962 with automatic trans- 1961 Chevrolet IMPALA SEDAN. Automatic tronsmission and redio. | | F end Eileen Grondin | Team standings -- Jinxes 26, Toppers | 3 14 Blowers 12 and Hit and Misses 11. 7 " tildnecnae Gok te tT ect HOWARD GRASS and aiong with ee Lemons, Slow Pokes and Untouchab! playoff best total points. Pinel playoff night | ls Wednesday, April 22. The four teams in fhe Consolation Event are Teachers Pests, Blow Strik- | ers, Shamrocks and Debonairs, who will | aiso have a winner on April 22. Over 200 games: John W. Cardinal 248, | 254, Barry Leach 236, Doris Woodward | 251, Helen Burrows 200, John A. Soares | $1675 FORD COMET . . . 4-door deluxe sedan with automotic transmission and radio. $1695 1960 Studebaker LARK V-8 engine, automatic, radio, sygied steering and power brokes. Try you'll buy it! $1195 1959 PONTIAC "STARCHIEF" . . . 2-door with powerful V8 engine, automatic, radio, power steer- ing and brakes. duced from: $1495 . . priced to SELL FAST $495 | $1095 | $1195 | $1275 "Serving Oshawa and Area Over 40 Years" ONTARIOMOTOR SALES 140 BOND STREET WEST LIMITED PHONE 725-6507 $1795 1961 CORVAIR MONZA SEDAN. Bucket a. Ly transmission and radio. A real $1595 1960 Chevrolet BISCAYNE with automatic transmission and radio, $1395 195% BUICK HARDTOP, 2-door model. Automatic transmission, re power brakes, Re- CARS AND TRUCKS PONTIAC 2-DOOR SEDAN at an excellent price! $695 1959 Oldsmobile SUPER SEDAN . . . complete with eutomatic transmission, radio, etc. $1095 1957 CADILLAC SEDAN de VILLE. In showroom con- 1961 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, Automatic, radio, power steering, power brakes . . . @ real "dream" of a cor. $1995 1960 PLYMOUTH "SENECA" STATION WAGON, A big 9-passenger wagon with V-8 engine, automatic transmission, radio, power $1575 1959 Chevrolet BEL AIR SEDAN . al by 1% 222, Bill Burke 264, Ron Moran 215, Dede ibe 203, Adrian Brennan 220, | Bill Hickey 200, Dan Rukaruk 215, 232, | Harry Dickison 241, 241, Mary Ekker 256, | Dave Wetmore 215, John Hroncich 220, | 241, 325, Joe O'Malley 210, Lee Bloye 253, | John Rerecich 206, 215, Father Darby | 216, 202, Ted Powers 244, Tony Coulas 224, 254, Father Darby 214, Ted Powers 214, 215, Dave Wetmore 229, 246, Audrey Brennan 202, Mary Ekker 347, Betty Sa- | 1957 Chevrolet 2-door model in excellent condition 5699 MITCH KOWAL SUPER SPECIAL 1963 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE A beautiful 2-door model with 6 cylinder engine, automatic trans- mission and radio, Lovely Cordova Brown metallic finish. An excellent buy! *2095 Winnipeg Takes | 2-0 Lead Over -- Sock, Qoakers. | WINNIPEG (CP) -- Winnipeg | Maroons withstood a third- pe | riod assault by Saskatoon Quak- | ers Sunday for a 7-5 victory and a 2-0 lead in their best-of-seven Western Canada Allan Cup fi- nal. Elliott Chorley's goal wth 73} seconds remaining snapped a 5- | tie forged: by Saskatoon when | the visitors rebounded from a! . §&3 second-period deficit. | * The series shifts to Saskatoon | -for games Wednesday, Friday and Monday ifnecessary. Any | 'remaining games will be played back in Winnipeg. Defenceman Bill Johnson and centre Aggie Kukulowicz paced 'the Maroons with two goals tach. Ross Parke, Chorley and «1 Johnson each counted once. Johnson scored on an empty net with 14 seconds remaining. | Don Smith, Herb Jeffrey, | Stank Kuzma, George Hunchuk and Bob Kortje scored for Sas- DOUG AMEY KEITH SMITH

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