- sh \, "4 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1948 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE i i -- PAGE THIRTEEN BOWLING MOTOR CITY LADIES' MAJOR LEAGUE Victory Billiard are still hard at work on thelr int-collecting hobby, Monday night, taking all tha available from the Oshawa Bakery kids, Oshawa Furriers took two from Coca Cola's, and Hayden Macdonalds two from Kagn's, to put the Furriers and Macdonglds in & three-way 'second place tie with Karn's, Victor's Sports Cycle and Pearl's improved their 2 knocking off Lock's and transports by a 2 to 1 nt pot. Clements turned on the heat and rolled a nifty 851 triple (323) for top score of the night, Nora Sawyer was next best with hed 1738; Lene Gray H 730 (300); Janet Peel 721; Olive Frise 19; Vi, Mason 711; Zena Menzle 602 and Ann Reece 676, Bea. Ross sat out the first game, but got in there with 313 and for a lovely 600 double, Victory Billiards , o Oshawa Furriers , Karn's .... "ee Hayden Macdonald. .. Victor's Sports & Cycl McCallum Transports Bakery last ue rently refuse to f the count again this section, for they took Mitchell's ints last Monday, Alger's are now putth bid for top spot, and trimmed the Felt Bros. squad 3 to 0, White's Insurance were bitten by the same bug, and handed Oshawa Dalry a , S00se- ogg, Saywell's took two from Biddulph's, and Dixon's Coal 2, Henderson's 1. Only two bowlers were In average form last Monday, and Jean Walker's , and Helen Mazurk's 608, were the only 600's recorded. 4 Leag 0! in a sl Oshawa Dalry Mitchell's Dixon's Coal ... Saywell's ......... Henderson's ...... Felt Bros, «..... *... KING STREET HAPPY DOUBLES Monday night saw the Rockets soar to. within one point of the league leading Whiffers by taking all three points from Broncos. Switchers pulled a switch on the Whiffers team by taking all three points, : Tallenders managed to capture one point giving Werewoives two. High Singles: --Stan. Gomme 301, Harold Perry 277, 257, Ray Way 245, Bud Zeller 243, Leland Love 236, Ber- nice Perry 219, Norma Robinson 215, Ches. Robinson 218, 214, High Couples: --Bernice and Harold Perry 902, Ina and Ray Way 809, Nor- ma and Ches Robinson 777, Blanche and Bud Zeller 769, Marg. and Stan Gomme 739. Standing Switchers oo Werewolves .... Tallenders ,.... ALBERT ST. UNITED CHURCH i BOWLING LEAGUE Well last Monday saw some grand bowling mostly by the ladies, There were more ladies bowling better double games than the men. Though one man by the name of Jim Scott came up with a nice single of 311 without han- dicap, to take the previous score of 202 held by Jack Bent. Pearl Pike did some grand bowling too, She took ladles' high single with out handicap of 250, and also high double of 496 without handicap, This record was previously held by Gerry Chandler, Grand bowling folks! This last few weeks somebody is beating previous scores, Who 1s the next one to hold the grand title? The Skylarks took 3 points from Gutter Kids, Black ints from Flyers, Alley Oats % Cats 3 ) J from Live Wires, Rockets 2 from Por- 4ey's Pets, Bombers 2. from the Push of "Overs. The Live Wires are having a 8 he < bad time of it because they are short players every night. They had only four this week. It is not fair to any team to be away unless you, are sick. So get out next week and give your team some support. Ladies' high single:-- Blanche Norton 277, Pearl Pike 250, 246, Millie ' Gray 248, Elsle Morgan 244, 204, Ruth Bathe 227, Bea. Holland 227, Ruth Gibson 224, Beth Bint 223, Gladys Shemilt 216, 200, Leona Walker 206, Dorothy Cole- man 205, Ann Snudden 203. Ladies' high double:--Pearl Pike 406, --Jim Scott 311, , Clat Lee 263, Bd, mons 262, Bob Bent 240, Bey. Geo. Lord 215, R. Barrett 211, 208, 202, Lawson Parks 207. Men's high double: --Clat Lee 433, Jim Scott 424, Earl Follest 414, Elmer Pixley 0, Ed. Simmons 407, Howard Flyers Gutter Kids Push Overs ,,. Live Wires , Bombers ... Porkeys Pets Skylarks .,. Black Cats ,,.. Sports Roundup By HUGH FULLERTON, JR. New York, Jan, 14--(AP)--Like a baseball manager or a football coach, a horse trainer's reputation and his job depend upon the kind of material he gets. . . . Therefore it Is remarkable to note that Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons is beginning his 25th year of training for Willam Woodward's Belair Stud and his 24th with Mrs. H. G. Phipps' Wheatley Stable... . This anni- versary will be observed with ape propriate ceremonies at the Hialeah opening Friday.... In those 24 seasons, Mr, Fitz has saddled two "triple Crown" winners, Gallant Fox and Omaha, and has won virs aly 'every important stake in the east, One-Minute Sports Page The National Baseball Congress already has mailed more than 1,- 000,000 letters, cards and circulars in an effort to stir up more sand- lot baseball teams for 1948 and ex- pects to mall 3,000,000 more before May 1. .... Syracuse's Lew An- dreas doesn't think it so remarkable that Holy Cross had to practise in a barn last season. Says Lew, whose gym burned last winter: "I'd be glad to have a cow shed if we could et in every day. We get a high school gym for one hour three times a week." Smokes To Burn According to an old Montreal Canadiens custom, a rookie hockey player who scores his first big lea~ gue goal passes out cigars just like & new pOppa. .... When rookie Tod Campeau joined the French- men last fall, he bought a box of cigars just to be prepared. . .. After four games he was farmed out to Buffalo and wasn't recalled for three months. . .. Tod Finally scored his first goal Dec. 28 and started to pass out the cigars. . . . 4 'o nobody's surprise, he found that is teammates had just formed -new year's resolutions to give up smoking. ALSO IN ARMY The adjutant is a stork-like bird found in various parts of One Of Them Is In Olympics Most husbands, so they say, have trouble enough trying to get in a word edgewise at home, but take the strange case of Mr, Warren Dow, of New York, who has been his wife's coach and tutor, and will shortly become her boss when he captains the U.S. Olympic fencing team of 1948, For the Dows, Warren and Helene, fencing is a family business. They both held crowns in 1943 when Warren won the U.S. folls championship for men and Helene won the U.S. foils title for women. Now they have another fencer coming up, He is little three-year-old Robert. While Bobby may still be a fe w years off championship form, they do things young practicing with his mother, He's really that good. lin the Dow family. Bedecked in fighting regalia, Robert handles himself with skill of polished duelist when Bobsled Team For Olympics Here is the first official picture of the U.S. Olymple bobsled team, taken at Lake Placid, N.Y, Jack Barry (white jacket), king of winter at the annual winter carnival at Lake Placid, poses with the squad. In- cluded in the photo are W. d'Amico, L, Martin, T. Latour, P, Martin, F. Fortune, Jr, C. Stevens, F. Tyler, 8. Carron, W. Dupree, D. Dupree, L. Miron and J. Bickford, US. teams usually win top-flight bobsled races, Sport Shorts From Britain London, Jan. 13--(CP)--Breathes there a man with soul so dead that he hasn't been intrigued by those pulp-magazine advertisements of- fering to clothe the 97-pound frame in bulging muscle? "Be a dynamic he.man, bend horseshoes, tear up telephone di- rectories," throttle your mother-in. law with your bare hands," chorus the bicep-peddlers. One bunch of tough guys who don't need any mail-order assistance are Britain's welght-lifters, currently tugging and groaning in preparation for the 1948 Olympics, Last year's champion and 'the big British hope for the: Games is Jamalca-born George Espeut, who startled the natives in 1947 by rais- ing 733 pounds over his curly head. Other big names are stevedore Ju- lian Creus and miner F, Purser -- whose jobs, one would imagine, would be exhausting enough with- out a before-breakfast workout with the barbells, Dark horses in the competitions-- if they enter the Games--will be the Russian welght-lifters, one of whom, Gergori Novak, is. reported to have treated a 931-pound weight with considerable contempt last year, Arsenal, league-leaders since the season opened, are being quoted as 10-1 favorites for the Football As. sociation Cup--buf# the Gunners' stock slumped when they suffered their first home defeat of the sea- son, Dec. 27, 2-1 to Liverpool, Many bookies quickly shortened their odds against the Merseyside club from 20-1 to 16-1, and one leading soccer expert, John Gray- don of the Sporting Chronicle, said that on the day's play "Liverpool struck me as being a more likely Cup®proposition than Arsenal." Meantime, Blackpool, Burnley and Preston North End held firm as je.nt second favorites at 12.1. Wol- verhampton are at 14-1 and you can get 1,000-1 against Tommy Lawton and his Notts County Club. An eye injury has forced N. M, Hall, England's best stand-off half for the last several seasons, out of international rugby----and he: may never play again, In a game at Catterick two months ago Hall was struck in the left eye by the ball and a few weeks later began complaining of a per- sistent pain in the eye. Doctors di. agnosed a detached retina and pre- scribed complete rest for several months, Dr, A. H, Macklin of the Univer. Lindsay, Peterboro Rinks Entered In N. Ontario 'Spiel Timmins, Ont., Jan, 14-- (CP) -- Scheduled for the "swank" McIn- tyre Curling Club in Schumacher Feb. 9 to 15 inclusive, the 18th an- nual bonspiel of the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Curling Asso- ciation promises to be outstanding curling event of the season. Entries are expected to top the 128 mark and will include many outstanding rinks from Southern Ontario and Quebec clubs. The 'spiel has taken on an International flavor with at least four rinks from American clubs participating, Among the clubs from outside the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Curling Association which have sent entries to date are: Kingston Curling Club, Lindsay Curling Club, Sault Ste, Marie Curl ing Club, Sudbury Curling Club, Orillia Curling Club, Peterborough Curling Club, sity of Aberdeen Mas completed a survey, the results of which may surprise Athletic Director Warren Stevens of the University of Toron- to and his counterparts at other Canadian brain factories. Four out of five students at Brit- ish universities take no part in games or exercise of any kind, re- ports Macklin, We forget just what percentage of undergraduates Steve used to boast took part in intra-mu- ral athletics, but 'we recall /it was considerably higher than /20 per Nipawin Bonspiel Moves Into Auto Finals Play Today Nipawin, Sask, Jan. 14--(CP)-- The 12 rinks to compete in the $23,« 000 Nipawin Bonspiel's round-robin play-off for the major prize of four new automobiles had been deter- mined and two groups winners de- clared before curlers took time out early today for a new hours sleep. Shortly after midnight Jimmy Welsh of Winnipeg, 1947 Dominion champion, .won the No. 2 group championship with a 7-6 decision over Rene Lavoy of Choiceland, Sask, Earlier in the 'spiel Howard Wood of Winnipeg--whose rink is the only undefeated foursome among 121 entries in the world's richest monspiel--took the No, 1 event crown. Grant Watson of Winnipeg enter- ed the fours of the No. 3 event on the 11 p.m, draw to become the fin- al rink to qualify for the round- robin competition. He won his quarter-final match 11-9 at the ex- pense of O Hanson of Rouleau, Sask. The three other rinks in the fours of the No. 3 event are those of L. H. Campbell of Avonlea, W. Dun- bar of Kinley and Norm Taylor of Lang, all Saskatchewan foursomes. These fcur, together with Wood, Welsh and Crawford Hicks of Win- nipeg; Lavoy; Lowrence Borreson of Antler, Sask.; Dr, H. E, McKel- ler of Carlye, Sask., Bill Rose of Sedgewick, Alta.; and Bert Robert- son of Edmonton start play today in the automobile series. Surprise of the 11 pm. draw in the consolation event last night was defeat of Leo Johnson of Winnipeg, former Dominion curling champion, who lost to Art Johnsson of Love, Sask., 10-8. Jimmy Welsh's triumph in the No. 2 event final came in one of the best-curled games of the spiel, now in the seventh of its 10-day, occasional ation, On the 12th end Welsh nicked the only Choiceland rock in the house and rolled out of the rings to hold one-point lead. Toronto Granite"s Win Guelph 'Spiel Guelph, Jan, 14--(CP) -- Colin Campbell's Toronto Granite rink, skipped by Gordon Campbell and composed entirely of Campbells, won the Imico Trophy in a two-day bemsplel which concluded at the Guelph Curling early today. The Campbell four defeated Nor- mie Himes strong Galt entry 13-8 in a closely-fought final match to take the trophy won last year by Mel Dunn, of Fergus, Dr. John Scqit's Guelph rink car- ried off top spot in the second event by nosing out J. Patrick, of Galt 10-9 in the deciding match. Consolation honors went to Herb Jamieson's Guelph entry, SOUTHAMPTON WINS Wingham, -- Southampton Fish. edmen edged Wingham Rockets 5-3 in a WCAA Senior A fixture at Southampton, This was Wingham's first loss of the season. Goal-getters for Southampton were: N. Bates 2, D, Bates 1, Masterson 1, T. Bates 1, Wingham snipers were Foster, Brent and English, ---------- Fast...But Good! BARONS' RADIO & ELECTRIC Broken round-the-clock dur- | only -- so be early. Pre- Inventory ...and HUNDREDS | are SAVING many 'DOLLARS in This GIGANTIC .. SALE! PATTENICK'S BLOUSES Regular to 4.98 Including crepes, cottons and silks. Sizes 12.to 20, 38 to 44 in SALE PRICE | LADIES' SWEATERS and JUMPERS Reg. Priced' to 6.95 size ranges SALE PRICE 1.98 All This Week o THURS. o FRI o SAT. the lot. CHILDREN'S 3-PC. SETS ® Coat, Hat and Leggings REG. PRICE 10.95 WHILE THEY LAST BOY'S PULLOVERS Long Sleeve, Crew Neck. Two Pockets. WINTER COATS Reg. Priced to 16.95 Sizes 7 to 14 yrs. Out they go at 8.00 and 10.00 Fancy pattern in wool. Red, turquoise, black and white, HEAD SQUARES low, powder, royal, green, pink, Sale Price Gi Each yel- Slight! PART LINEN TOWELLING Reg. 49¢ yd. Sale Price 29- Yard Size 26 to 34. GIRLS' Reg. to 4.98 Spuns, crepes and cottons. Smart styles to choose from. Sizes 7 to 14 years, SALE PRICE 1.98 BOYS' LEATHER JACKETS Full length zipper -- 2 pockets, warmly interlined. 'Reg. price 10.95. Sizes 6 to-14 yrs. SAEE PRICE 6.00 TEA damaged in tiansit. REG. PRICED TO 16.95 Included are sizes and styles for Misses and Women, Be early for first choice, SALE PRICE LADIES' BETTER DRESSES Windproof, zipper, 2 pockets. Higher priced lines condensed at one low price. Sizes 36 to 40. SALE PRICE Will have your radio back THIS WEEK-END working like new. Skil- led technicians do the work quickly and efficiently. There's no delay wait- ing for parts because we carry large stocks at all times. City-wide pick-up and delivery. For Guaranteed Radio Service 'BARONS' RADIO & ELECTRIC 426 SIMCOE ST. S. EE ---- Waterproof, THRIFTY WISE BUDGET BUYS Kasha-lining,. full 3.98 length NYLON STOCKINGS oxo these, so be early as the sup- ply is limited. SALE PRICE BUNTING BAGS Reg. 5.49. Keep baby warm all winter in one of these. opening. They're well lined for extra protection. Pink, white or You'll want several pairs of PAIR - - - 3 3 Full length zipper for easy GR blue. SALE PRICE 2. 22 KING STREET WEST ° LIVING COSTS NOW! mf GU