Daily Times-Gazette, 20 Feb 1948, p. 11

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1 Kawzenuk, Hi { pa ) res hixnsarvcdacus anes seen mesancanvan . " FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1948 THE DAILY TI MES-GAZETTE PAGE ELEVEN "a ¥ ITY LEAGUE SEMI-F Sudden-Death Tilts Set iE Stage For Next Week's 0.M.HA. City Championships "Canada Bread and Osh- awa Dairy Score Only Shutouts City League Last night The first night of the sudden. ~-death play-off series, saw the City Leaue enjoying one of its big mom. ents this year. Rotary eliminated Kinsmen from further play, when they drubbed that squad by a 62 count. + Hughes snagged two of the Ro. tary club's early goals, and kept his + team on even terms with the Kins. men, who with the help of Copeland and Sutherland, potted two tallies. The second period saw McTavish swing into dction with is linemates Hughes and Chaszewski playing the supporting roles. He counted three goals in a row to really put himself in for all.star nomination on the * night's play. : Those goals made the score 5.2, and with Zeddic's last period coun. ter made the final 6.2 for the Ro- , tarians. MEN--Goal, Richards; defence, Guest; Boneham; wings, Sleeman, Burr. Alts.: Keetch, Copeland, Beaupre, Ripley, Tomlinson, Melch, Hurst and Sutherland, ROTARY--Goal, Girka; defence, Bea- | ton, Dykster; centre, McTavish; wings, Layton, Hughes. Alts.: Stone, . Zeddic, Barta, Marshall, Jones, Chaszewski, Ma- zurkiewich, and McGarry. Cokes Are Ousted In the other Bantam game, Cokes found the going rough, and lost out 4.2 to Kiwanis, who will now ad. , vance into the finals against Ro- tary. Duncan from Woodcock -and Woodcock on a solo were the tallies for the Cokes, who just didn't seem to have the staying power of the fast.moving Kiwanis squad. Scero scored from O'Connor for the first Kiwanis goal, followed by Lach on a lone effort, and then Scero from Gallas and O'Connor gave their team the winning edge. O'Connor finally got his goal, and that salted the game away for Ki. wanis and moved them on down the playoff trail. Cokes outserved the Kiwanians in the sinbin by a count of six min- utes to two. That could also have had some bearing on the final score. COCA-COLA--Goal, Stone; . defence, Cook, Cooper; centre, Woodcock; "wings, Brod , Duncan. Alts.: Kilpatrick, At- ' tersley, Dewwitt, Seymour, Spiers and | Red Rae. KIWANIS--Goal, Branch; defence, Lach, Wallis; centre, O'Connor; wings, Scero, Gallas. Alts.: Myles, Gummow, Halewood, Kostachuk, Stone, and Arm- strong. Baker's Register Shutout Canada Bread claimed the only . shutout in the Midget series of City League thus far in the play-off grind, They blanked Kinloch's 3-0 for a very nice win. Bell in the Bakers' nets didn't have a Jot to do, but when his turn came he was right in the thick of things, and in this game always came up with the rubber. Attersley got the first counter from Edwards at the. 13-minute mark of the first period. No furth. er' scoring took place till the middle canto, when Attersley slipped in by himself to draw Langfield out and notch the second goal. Barker scored from Gord Myles to make it 3.0, and to give Kinloch's a reason to do battle. Both teams were in on it, but only two guys served penalties, Bradley and Jeffs _got_majors for their part in the veorks. Myles got a minor later on for slashing, but Kinloch's could not capitalize, They failed to score in the third frame and the final was 3.0 for Canada Bread. KINLOCH'S--Goal, Langfield; defence, Soo De oiek. Alt. Bradley, McGar- , Tremble, Milne, Jurka, and Tonkin. VEANADA BREAD--Goal, Bell; defence, F. Sutton, G. Myles. Alts.: Jeffs, Lewis, Attersley, McRae, Edwards, G, Sutton, Little and R. Myles. Victor's Edge Out Win Victor's slipped in two quick goals n the third period before Hayden Macdonald got settled down, to re. gister a 2.1 win in the other Midget game at the Arena last night. «Playing through scoreless first and second periods, the teams re. mained even on penalties at least witli Lawrence serving a minor in the first for Victor's and Marshall sitting it out in the second. Layton from Husband put in the first counter for Victor's to give them the lead. Burnside added an+ other from Kent, two minutes later. T'was then that goalie Bill Howie saw his shutout burst when Marshall took passes from Barta and De. Gray to shove the puck into the net. "That was the way things ended ands it moves Victor's against Cana- da Bread in the finals. HAYDEN MACDONALD--Goal, Stone; defence, Carrie, Hubble; centre, Olesuk; DeGray, Barta. Alts.: Dysart, Haxton, Shearer, and Middleton. Howie; defence, centre, puto} ings, Lawrence, England. Alts.: Kellar, Ldiarney, Burnside, Tippett, Cooper, Lay- ton, Rogers and Kent. Milkmen Blank Milkmen "! 'Oshawa Dairy Juveniles, roared to a 5-0 shutout win over the Bea. 1's Dairy squad in a wide-open brawl type of game at the "Arena last night. "he Oshawa Dairy team showed » fight inf gaining their win, if a of 14 minutes in the sin bin theans anything, as compared with ton's eight minutes of servitude. { They outscored their rival dairy ih every way possible with Hurst ing up with a fine effort in the swine to stave off all Beaton marks. men... Farrow ande Lean tallied in the first period, with Williams and Far. row again adding two more in the second. . Williams clipped the twine in the guid for hig second goal, to make it Lorne line of Farrow, Lean and Jozkoski, who by-the way set up the goals, was the best on the night's smassianvan BOWLING OSHAWA YACHT CLUB LEAGUE Well! Well; Roll out, the red carpet and turn out to greet the two champs George Wall and Phil Phillips. Both had an extra high single with George roll- ing 378 and Phil 376, Congrats to both. Rod Hendrle's 302 and 256 are also worthy of honourable mention, Red Shobbrook did very well with a score of 276 in the second game. High triple men were P. Phillips 746, R. Hendrie 741 and L. Shobbrook 709. Ron Poulter 61 and W. Chesebrough 71 were lone partners in the lemon bracket although there were many who were close to joining them, The Corvettes were again successful this week gaining three points over the luckless Dinghies. This puts the Corvettes in the lead in hte, third sec- tion with 10 points. The Sloops came up with 3 ints over their op- ponents the Yawls with 0. Schooners made 2 over the Cutter's 1, and Vikings also made 2 over the Ketches 1. MAYFAIR LADIES' LEAGUE The girls really were slapping those old pins down this week, e top score of the day went to Elsie Smith with a nice single of 336. Nice going Elsie, We are glad to see Mae Sloan back again after her spell in the hospital, and are sorry to hear that Elda Pigden is in the hospital, High triples for the day: Violet Pike 704 (202, 199, 303), Freda McGlashan Barker, Clarke; centre, Etcher; wings, | 675 (247, 179, 249), Nelda Thompson 649 (271, 265), Peggy Mosser 649 (252, 214, 183), Elsie Smith 629 ( | Borrow 618 (226, 219). Win Brooks 594 | (305). High Singles: Agnes Hartford 268, Toots Lang 243, Rene Jones 241, Mae Sloan 238, Edythe Reading 234, Jean O'Donnell 233, Louise Spratt 220, Hazel Weddup 227, Ann Forman 227, Bernice McMahon 226, Lou Borrow 226, Dolly Swanger 225, Sadie James 224, Madeline Gates 224. The Greenhorns, Playfalrs, Rappy , took 4 points from the Hubba High Jinks, and Has Beens, Busy Bees, Low Jinks, Blitzers, Roamers, took 3 points from the Jonahs Die Hards, Dreamers, Hopefuls. The Jesters tied for 2 points with Lucky Strikes. Hopefuls .... Low Jinks Jesters .. Roamers Die Hards . Greenhorns Happy Gang Playfairs .. Has Beens ... TIMES-MUNDY-G BOWLING LEAGUE Don't look now--but guess who has made the first bid to take the third zeries. It's none other than Alex Makay and his Pin Pickers, The only team to take four points on Tuesday night, they now stand alone as section leaders, Four teams are tied for second with three points each--Perry's Pets, Cats, Bulletins and Pi Boxes. The Pets produced some sensational bowling with three players top ing the three hundred mark--Esme 1lllams 1, Phil Perry 313, and Merv. yagnt 309. This team also bowled the high total pins for the night with 3213 and really deserved four points. The luckless Headliners were the only team to go pointless and so occupy the cellar all alone, Mery. Wright had go really roll to se- cure the high triple for the evening. On several occasions he chopped out the 2 or 3 pin only to follow up with rfect shots for very useful spares, is howling on Tuesday was a treat to watch, Southpaw Geo, Wilson had a giend game of 365 for high single while e William hit them hard to cop both high single and triple in the ladies' section. Her scores were 301 and 720. The fact that total pins for the sea= son will mean a play-off berth should not be forgotten. Quite a battle is de- veloping in this department, Omittin teams that have won a series we find Hot Sparks with 56560, Pin Pickers Jebas, ulletins 56318, and Perry's Pets Here is how the games went on Tues- day. Pin Pickers took four from Head- liners; Bulletins 3, Dem Bums 1; Pi xes 3, Scoops 1; Red Cats 3, Johnnies 1; Derry's Pets 3, Hot Sparks 1. single and 4 1llams 301 and 720. Men's high single--George Wilson 365. Men's high triple--Merv. Wright 783. Over 210 (without handicaps)--Ladies --Jean Southworth 241, Verda Jac 230, Marie Bension 218, Phyl. Baxter 235, Elsie Brown 244, Esme Williams 301, 262, Marion Wilson 215, Gents--A. Mackay 250, P. Price 233, N. Perry 224, H. Quick 289, T Mackay 228, Geo, Wilson 339, R. Johnson 232, R. Noble 210, N, Arthurs 283, T. Drury 229, C. Thornington 275, G. Campbell 291, M. Potter 223, . Jeyes 264, 236, H. | Wager 232, A. vw. PP. 302, M. Wright 249, 201, F, Harris 233 | R. McPhee 212, es 0 00) Large advértisement on page 11 of eel 's Times-Gazette headed "Giving Away Soup" has no Jetersnce to 'our George". The ad, cerns le Soup--for further information consult "Butch as. Poor Exec.--We have kept them pret- ty busy lately, so--for this week-- nothin' cookin'. play with the duo of Williams and Gord Myles did a load of addition in their own right. OSHAWA DAIRY--Goal, Hurst; de- fence, Peters, Maisowich; centre, Joz- koskl; wings, Lean, Farrow. Alts.: Myles, Doads, Williams, Jefferys, Tamblyn and BEATON'S DAIRY--Goal, Maddock; defence, Lawrence, Harper; centre, Locke; wings, Brabin, Comerford. Alts,: McLaughlin, Fry, Robinson, Durno, England, J. Lawrence, Husband and Powless. Eveleigh's Move On Eveleigh's Cleaners ' managed through stint of one goal to oust McLaughlin Coal from further Ju. venile action when they edged the collier boys out by a 2.1 score. Both teams played scoreless hock. ey in the first period, and looked as though they could keep it up all night. That wasn't to be though for Ford broke the ice when he bounced the puck in past Sagar for the first of the Cleaner's counters. Hambly finally got that one back for McLaughlin on Kellar"s pass near the end of the period. In the third frame, Tom Krawse became the hero of the night, when he broke the deadlock, with his game-winning goal from team mates Town's pass. Eveleigh's will now go against Oshawa Dairy in the Juvenile fi. nal, EVELEIGH'S CLEANERS--Goal, Dur- no; defence, Lack, Miller; centre, Towns wings, Krawec, Gibbons; alternates, Locke, Ford, DeGray, Barta, Olesuk and Irvine. G = MokaUGhbLiN COAL -- Goal, Dagar; defence, Depratto, Fer n; centre, Hill; wings, Ehearcr, Kellar; alternates, Sutton, Fowler. v Spicy Bits From Other Sports Cols. 'By EDGAR SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer Toronto Feb. 20--(CP)-- : Keep Junior away from the rink, Maw, : Protect him from bourgeois strife. The Soviet Columnists think, Maw, The puck game is not a good life. They aren't dishing out many laughs in the Moscow papers these days, but Pravda provided a few western chuckles last week when its intrepid sports columnist undertook to tell the faithful of the superior- ity of the local brand of ice hockey over the Canadian product, which apparently is' making insidious in- also | roads into the Russian sport pic- ture. . The Russian game, known as Hockey-Bendi, is played on a larger ice surface, and resembles a type of glacial football, Canada's hockey, says Pravda, is "unusually rough, typical of the bourgeois west," and the smaller rink "does not come from a good life." (Presumably "another difference between the two games is that all tthe Russian forwards are left- wingers.) The Moscow - blast caused little excitement--far less, for example, than arose when Russian musical experts imposed match penalties on a couple of guys called Shostako- vich and Prokofieff for turning out subversive symphonies and capital- istic concertos. Bill (Owen Sound Sun-Times) Dane saw the hockey yarn as an improvement in east- |Lac west relations. Bill finds it gratifying that the |} Russians find so little fault * with the western bloc that they have time to pick holes in Canada's na- tional sport. . "If the Russians don't want ice hockey, Canadian style, it will be their loss and not ours," he adds, noting that there haven't been any demands for introduction of Hoe key-Bendi over here. Sour Note From Kingston When Conn Smythe hailed his boy Jimmy Thomson as Toronto Maple Leafs' greatest defenceman in history, the Leaf manager drew scant enthusiasm from at least one expert. Mike (Kingston Whig-Standard) Rodden, who has seen quite a lot of defencemen come and go, dis- missed the Winnipeg youngster as just another clutch-artist. Mike shudders to think what would have happened if James had tried his tactics on such Olympians Hockey's Big Seven HOCKEY'S BIG SEVEN Elmer Lach, Montreal Canadiens' crack centreman, wsa the only player to move along in the individual scor- ing race last night as Canadiens down- ed the Toronto Leafs in the lone Na- tional League contest. The Leaders 4 G. O'Connor, New York .... 21 M. Bentley, Toronto .... 25 45 al oe 42 41 41 FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By The Associated Press Pittsburgh -- Mimmie Ad: Pittsburgh, and Lee Bohles, 1: land, drew (10). Newark, N.J.--Henry (Snow) Flake, 19213, Buffalo, knocked out Pat Com- iskey, 214, Paterson, N.J. (5). Fall River, Mass.--Roy Andrews, 13715, Lowell, outpointed Johnny Larusso, 1368, New York (10). . . Worchester, Mass.--Don Williams, 141, Worchester, outpointed Pat Demers, 137, Brockton, Mass, (8), na, 127, , Cleve- as Sprague Cleghorn or Billy Coutu. Mike recalls that a Toronto de- fenceman "tried to clutch Cleghorn one night and had arstick bent over his skull, Cleghorn explained that he didn't approve of the manoeuvre and wanted to be sure it didn't happen again. As far as Mike re- members, it didn't. Beau Jack Starts On Upward Trail To Lightweight Title New York, Feb. 20--(AP)--Beau Jack, twice holder of the light- weight boxing crown (New York version) goes after his fourth title bout tonight in Madison Square Garden. « ; The little Augusta, Ga., Negro meets Terry Young, a Brooklyn veteran, in the toughest test of his latest comeback. It's been a year, minus a day, since Jack last fought in New York. And those who saw him knocked out that night by Tony Janiro thought he would never be back. He was carried from the ring with a broken left kneecap. An operation and a nine-month rest followed. Jack started again slowly, whip- ping four so-so opponents. Then he kayoed Johnny Bratton in Chi- cago Jan. 28 with a blow that broke Bratton's jaw, and Bratton is considered a pretty good fight- er. The Beau is a 5 to 11 favorite to win his sixth straight. | Sports Roundup New York, Feb. 20--(AP)--Brook- lyn Dodgers announced a "rookie hunt" the other day and immediat- ely afterward the reporters staged a rickey hunt . . , The latter almost completely obscured the former . . . But a chronic viewer-with-alarm could find good reason for looking askance at the rookie unt and simi- lar hookups between sports and non-sporting promotion stunts. . . . The "hunt" is merely a combined effort by the Dodgers and a na- tional magazine to find some out- standing kid ball players and re- ward them (and the coach who "bird dogs" them) with a trip with the Dodgers and maybe a contract . +++ The team may get a few good prospects and the magazine a lot of inexpensive advertising. Before this stunt, it was Bob Fel- ler and the maker of 'an ice cream confection joining to award college scholarships to outstanding boys and girls. . . . Babe Ruth is front man of a youth program sponsored by an automobile manufacturer. . . .. For years newspapers ave used amateur boxing, football, and other sports to attract circulation and re- sorts ave used various sports to at- tract patrons, ... There's no ques- tion but that many of these promo- tions have been good for sports and ave helped to arouse Interest. . . , But the list seems endless--and still growing--and no one knows where it will lead. . . . could be that some day a pitcher will have to consult his sponsor before deciding whether to trow a fast ball or a curve--or that a kid will play ball, or any other game, not because he likes the sport but because he hopes to win half a department store, like the winner on an audience participation pro- gram, The Stamford (Conn.) Boys Club basketball team as won 17 games and lost seven this season--all by one point ... . About the most read- able baseball record book to reach this department is the Eastern Shore League booklet, compiled by Ed. Nichols of Salisbury, M.D. LAST NIGHT'S STARS By The Canadian Press Kenny Reardon, bruising Canadien rearguard who slammed home the win- ning goal that gave Montreal a 3-1 vice tory over Toronto. Bill Durnan, Montreal netmidder {whose sensational goalkeeping in the last two periods kept the Maple Leafs from going ahead. N.H.L. LEADERS By The Canadian Press Standing--Detroit, won 26, lost 18, tiled nine, points 61. Points--O'Connor, New York 50, Goals--Lindsay, Detroit 27. Assists--O'Connor, New York 29, Penalties--Barilko, Toronto, 127 mine utes. Shutouts--Lumley, Detroit, six, MEN! WOMEN! ....here's Value! and EASTER SUIT NOW!! at annon, Hambly, Baker and ORDER THAT NEW SPRING Two-button, single-breasted sports model for comfortable ease. All wool Bonfirth Tweed. 335.75 BOND challenges the rising cost of clothing' with a [2° policy to give you better value at less cost in 48 Fixed Scale of Lowered Prices! Better Cloth, Finer Linings, Sturdi er Paddings to Hold the Style Lines of Your Bond Suit! More Skilled Tailoring! oo Bond dealers across Canada are co-operating too, in this organized effort to challenge rising cloth~ ing costs. Drop in to S. B. Collis' Store today. See the wide selection of Spring colours and pat- terns in hard-wearing Bonsted Worsted, sturdy Bonfirth Tweed. Have your measurements care- fully taken for a Bond Suit, tailored-to-measure in fashionable style and cut. Bonsted Worsted. Well-dressed styling in a two-button double- breasted suit with long roll lapel. Fine $39.75 It's Canada's Greatest Clothing Value! SIMCOE ST. N. BOND ST. NAL PLAY-OFFS PROVIDE THRILLS APLENTY §

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