Daily Times-Gazette, 7 Jan 1950, p. 10

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PAGE TEN pe THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1950 N Hopes To Bring Back Boxing Crown Joey Maxim, Cleveland fighter and holder of the American light- heavyweight championship, is seen with manager, Jack Kearns, aboard ship in New York. The "champ" is bound for London, where he will meet Freddie Mills in a title bout, Jan, 25. --Central Press Canadian. Oshawa Grads Open Regular Season Against Port Hope At 0.C.V.l. Monday will be out permanently, but Al is likely to return in time to see action in the play-offs if the grads make You'll like this one. : The Oshawa Grads open their QUEBEC BRANCH RAISES ALLAN CUP DATE SQUABBLE AT C.A.H.A. MEETING Canadian Press Staff Writer Montreal, Jan. 7--(CP)--The Ca- nadian Amateur Hockey Assoclation went into final semi-final sessions today decidedly wearled but only slightly bruised from a series of lusty bodychecks handed out by the Quebec branch. A wrangle over Allan Cup playoff dates that erupted late in Friday's session wasn't settled until nearly midnight at a special meeting of the four Eastern Canada branches of the Association. Even then there was a" veiled post-meeting hint that the Quebec branch might forego the Allan Cup chase, > The whole argument revolved around the playoff dates for the Quebec and Maritime branch win- ners. By a 3-1 vote, the special four- branch meeting decided on a com- promise: : This Is Eompromise Instead of starting the Quebec- Maritime playoffs March 25, as sug- gested by the C.A-H.A, the date for the best of seven series will start April 1. The Quebec branch held out till the bitter end for a five-game series starting April 3, or some other com- promise. Voting against the Quebec branch in. the final showdown were the Ontario, Maritime and Ottawa and District branches. , The Maritime branch president, D. M. Love of New Glasgow, offered the motion for the final decision. It was secdnded by J. J. McFayden of Galt, president of. the Ontario Hockey Association, and supported by J. H. Flett, Ottawa and district branch president. Quebec Votes No The dissenting vote came from President Azarie Choquet of the Quebec branch. After the vote George Slater, president. of the Quebec Senior Hockey League, told thé Canadian Press his seven-club circuit would be called together and their deci- sion might be one of two things: 1. Cut down the 1eague's playoffs, already arranged, to conform with the April 1 dateor... 2. Continue its playoff schedule regardless of Allan Cup playoff dates, ' Could Still Enter If the clubs under the second al- ternative could finish playoffs be- fore April 1 through fast elimina- tions, the winner would still be ready to enter Allan Cup competi- tion, said Slater. Otherwise, so far as the QSHL. is concerned, it would be in the position of winding up the hockey season then and there, . Still Opposed The compromise, still bitterly op- posed by Quebec, was finally voted by the three other branches. Under the compromise, a fore- gone conclusion for ratification at today's plenary session, the final for the Allan Cup in the west may be delayed from April 1 until May 1 or 2. Playoffs between other branches are not expected to he affected. TEEPEES Oshawans Take SQUELC Another Loss As St. Kitt's Marksmen Blast Path Through Local's Defence Norm Corcoran Leads Garden City Crew With Three-Goal Dis- play -- Oshawa Team Trails All the Way St. Catharines, Jan. 7--(CP)--St. Catharines Teepees and Oshawa Generals staged a scoring -bee here last night in their fourth clash of the Ontario Hockey Association Junior "A" schedule 8s Teepees came out on the big end of a 9-6 score. The win stepped Art. Jack- son's 'gold-black home crew into a tie for second place with Guelph regular season against Port Hope | Monday night, 8.00 p.m. at $e} OCV.1. gym. Who are they and what season are they opening? A Basketball season, my friendly, | and the Grads are the local rep- | resentatives in the Lakeshore | ague. of Hope, one of the three other teams in the league are the visitors and last year they gave the Grads | some of the speediest and best tests of their season. | Expect More i This year even more is expected | of the visitors. They haven't been | sounded out before the game and "in presenting a mystery lineup for the game, could come up with al- most any kind of club. The Grads on the other hand have many of last year's players back plus a few new faces. They have lost only two members of the team that finished second in regu- lar league play last year. : The two faces to disappear are Pat Sheehan and Al Reddoch. Pat said play-offs. Newcomers are Bud Perry, lanky centre or forward from Toronto, Bob Booth, a local player with hands the size of breadbaskets, Bob Hess, another local guy with plenty of experience, and Don Seeley, a port-sided guard. They should make up for the lost men and help mould a club that will go places this year. Have New Coach Coaching the 'club this season is Don Jones. Although he's noted hereabouts mainly for his rugby coaching skills during the past year, the Reverend knows which .end-of the basket gets the ball and how to work pivot-post plays. His drive and willingness to work should give the locals a leader, something which they lacked last year. y Among the members of last year's team who will be playing Monday are Wimp Crawford, Bob Patte, Bob Rife, Tony Mayer, Rick Sal- way, Gord Hanna, Jim Anderson, Fred Fairhart and Bill Grant, mores, who were idle. Bm rivals chalked up seven goals in the first period. Teepees scored the "first trio, then defense laxity a St. Catharines weakness, saw Gens come back with a brace. It was those three goals, coming in the first eight minutes .of play, that made the difference in the final tally. The Gens put on a drive in the remaining minutes of the period, but St. Kitt's added another siren went. They led the Oshawa squad T-5 at the end of the second, and then outscored them 2-1 in the final can- to when the Generals' defence suf- fered another lapse. Norm Corcoran was top man in the Teepee scoring parade, flashing the red light three times, while Jack White netted two, and Wayne Brown, Bill Altoft, Ike Boone, and witzer one apiece. Generals' scoring was split among six players, Sonny Hooper, Gerry Nicoli, Bob Holden, Marcel Cle- ments, and George Samolenko. to hold -a 4-3 margin when the | KROEHLERS CLIMB OUT JR. A CELLAR Stratford, Jan, 6--(CP)-- After a long uphill climb Stratford Kroeh- lers finally emerged from the O. HA. junior "A" cellar here last night by virture of an 8-2 victory over Galt Black Hawks. Stratford tops Galt by one point and the same two teams clash again at alt tonight. re win was largely due to re-vamped front line "Dinny Flanagan, Jimmie Pernfuss and Murray Dunnette, which accounted for four of their goals and all of them on fine combination plays. This trio, besides collecting four goals, three of them by Flanagan, also picked up five assists. i Doug French scored & pair for Stratford, while Ron Trussle and en Green nicked Galt's pair, one | of the game late in the third frame. | Kroehlers actuall |game in the second stanza when | they registered five times without a reply from Galt. Flanagan, as usual, started this splurge, with two counters, alded by his line- | mates, Dunnette and Pernfuss. | Both Clark Sommerville in the Galt goal and Boat Hurley in the Stratford cage defended well, al- though the former had more shots to stop, Dotides paving a ahead of him. gr Kroehlers had made it 8-1 in the third period, Galt rallied K in the first period and the last. one | y sewed yp the | weak de- | OSHAWA: Gost, exch esos) | briefly to count at the 13:16 mark. a" very fast if they eat all of that cak |SCISSORED SPORT By The Canadian Press Another mové in the reorganiza- | | tion of the Toronto Argonauts H VISITING GENERALS 9-6 A Birthday Cake for Turf Prospects iit January 1st is the universal birthday of all racehorses. On that day, older horses advance one year in age. Celebrating the event at Hialeah, Fla, are two yearlings, Slave Bracelet (left) and In the Fly. Neither has raced yet, but will do so as two-year-olds. They won't race e. Canuck Curlers Land Friday In Scotland of 52 Canadian curlers arrived in Scotland Friday ready for a series yearlings become two-year-clds and --Central Press Canadian. LE EE IE PY THRILLS of the - ROARIN' - GAME Ld LB * J * LJ] » &é Dr. Doris Plewes Tells Meeting Of Swede Plan By H. DENT HODGSON Canadan Press Staff Writer Ottawa, Jan. 7--(CP)--The Scan- dinavian state of Sweden was held up today before sports chiefs as an example of how Canada might work out a new national sports program. Sweden, a country of smaller population ° than Canada which swept to first place in the winter Olympics and placed second in the summer Olympics in 1948, obvious- ly had something on the ball. Delegates ao the second confer- ence of national sports governing bodies were given an outline of how Sweden does it by Dr. Doris Plewes, secretary of the National Couneil on Physical Fitness which is spon- soring the two-day meeting of na- tional sports governing bodies. Dr, Plewes, who visited Sweden last summer to find out about ft, reported that the main reason for Swedish supremacy was their con- centration on participant sports. Sport in Sweden is organized not for the winners, but for the partiei- pants. Coaches are judged by the number of participants they pro- duce, not by the number of winning teams they evolve. It was a question of mass pro- duction, Dr. Plewes said. Pract cally everyone in Sweden belongs to the country's national sport or- ganization because practically everyone participates in some sport for 'which he must pay a modest fee --about the equivalent of 15 cents to the national body. Consequently, while sport is sub- sidized by the federal government to some extent, the main funds come from the thousands of people , --Yyoung and old--who participate and hence pay money into the cen~ tral body. The white ants of Australia build i bia that sometimes are 15 fees gh, "What | don't unnerstan' is how J J) Ee el LAMBERT TROPHY Friday, Jan. 6 | 4--Maynard 2; Pereyma 8. | Ken Green and George Ford com-|Football Club came Friday when | bining nicely with the former tal- | President Bob Moran announced ing. veterans Steve Levantis and Bob Flanagan's four Cosgrove will not be back as assist- | Chapman, Hall; } | wings, Clements, Jankowski; nates, McGillivary, Burwick, Zan- Ty atta, Caron, Holden, Nicoll, Taylor: | *Y ST. CATHARINES: Goal, Doug- | Senta can afford cll this on veur sal'ry, Pep?" * alter- of matches with the Royal Cale- donian Curling Club. ; | At stake will be the, Strathcona "Jolly Cholly HOCKEY scoring points 5 but French | ant coaches next season, Likes To Coach Leaves Chicubs 1." STANDING » IXZXXXXXXIXXXXXXXXEIXII, AS aa m-- O.H.A. SENIOR "A". PWLTF APts| .3024 4 2151 75 50 . 301514 1102 96 31 By CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN | Chicago, Jan, 7.--(AP)-- Charlie |. 0 ros ; Grimm, who has been virtud®y an pion wat, institution with Chicago Cubs, may Owen: Sound . 20 9 19 19 net as high as $50,000 early as the Hamilton 29 819 | new manager of the Dallas Base-| " Friday's Results ball Club of the Texas League. | Marlboros . chener . on. | Hamilton ,.. . 8 Owen Sound After a conference with Cub own- 8 Oyen er P. K. Wrigley, Grimm resigned | . 3 F : " ol Tonight--Marlboros ' at Kitchener- Friday as the Toe Jesters | Waterioo: Hamilton at Owen Sound. -& "brief case" job that threate ! SE to add s wrinkle of worry to Grimm's usually bright-and-smiling face. Grimm sald he belonged on the Held ou jn a iver Shay! Dallas st. Catharines 31 16 12 3 162 128 mill » n 1112 82 Burnett, is willing to grant his | Barrie. 2114 1 wish. The two will meet in Dallas |St. Michael's . 2 109 120 Jan. 13 to certify the deal. Oshawa 2 105 157 Burnett seems willing to top Station 3 » 14 2 Cholly's Cub salary 'reported to 00. 2 cio oie ©0 ° 4 an l, ? --St. 4 »8 and Marlboros 50 shout hic Te 1 Jiave plased one 4-point game against Meanwhile, a few names have] : , | been tossed into the hopper as|stratford | on 3 eam'®.. Grimm's successor as Cub vice-|St. Catharines .. 8 Oshawa president in charge of player per-| Future Games sonnel. Those mentioned included! Today -St. Michael's at Marlboros; | Bill Veeck, Bill Terry, Bill Me- St: Catharines at Oshawa; Stratford Kechnie, Steve O'Neill and Fresco | 2 salt; Barrie at Windsor. Thompson. | To Veeck, who recently sold his| TRAINS PERSON HORSES Cleveland Indians and appears to be on Je prow) 15 Dew baseeil Miami--G. P," (Maje) Odom will connections, hh oe Y | train the racers owned by Mrs. V . nter a eah, $ ' McKechnie and O'Neill, fresh out | stable is returning Si Slo nh of Cleveland coaching jobs, may cing after missing the last two find an offer well timed. . | seasons, O.H.A. JUNIOR "A" | PWULTTF APts| 2921 6 2130 65 | Guelph . 2016 10 3117 88 | Mariboros las; defense, Martin, Brown; cen- tre, Switzer; wings, Corcoran, O'- Brien; alternates, Byers, Buck, Mc- Intyre, Boone, White, Altoft, Mul- ling, Knowles. Referees: Bill Towne and Tes irkpatrick, Hamilton. Bare First Period 1--St. Catharines; Switzer (O'Brien) 2--St. Catharines, Brown (O'Brien) 3--8t. Catharines, Altoff (Mullins) 4 Oshawa, Hooper 5--Oshawa, Zanatta (Caron, Hall) ...... 6--5St. Catharines, Boone, (White) "sis 7--Oshawa, Samolenko .. Penalties: Taylor (2). Second Period 8--St. Catharines, White (Switzer) 9--Oshawa, Nicoll (Samolenko) 10--St. Catharines, Corcoran (Martin) ..eve... 9.24 11--Oshawa, Clements ........ 11.28 12--8t. Catharines, Corcoran (O'Brien, Brown) Penalties: Switzer Chapman, Third Period 13--St. Catharines, White (Byers) ....... 458 14--Oshawa, Holden (Zanatta) 7.35 15--8t. Catharines, Corcoran (Switzer) 8.57 Penalties: --- Samolenko, Chap- man, Taylor. Ape ir O'Brien London (CP)--General Bir Otto Lund is the new Chief Commission- er of the St. John Ambulance Bri- gade. 'TONIGHT ... 8:30 p.m. ST. OSHAWA CATHARINES ** GENERALS (Tickets Now On Sale at Mike's Place) Junior "B"" Hockey NARA Adults -- -- 50c¢ AAA IATA onday Night : Belleville - Oshawa Junior Bees Children - 25¢ $ 7 fense, ere tops for the night, Bg fuss were right behind | him with three each. GALT--Goal, Sommerville; defense, | Price, Buchanan; centre, wings, J. Green, Conacher; nates, Horvath, Ford, K. Oliver, Lumley, Trussell, holme, Hill STRATFORD--Goal, Nudds, Armstrong; aire " n: swings, Pernfuss, - Be ri Robitaille, Helin- buck, Clements, French, Leckie, wil- | liams, Shaw, Draper. {| Referees Al Woods, | Honey Kuntz, Waterloo, i First Period Stratford, Flanagan (Pernfuss) Galt, Trussell (Lumle) Oliyer) Penalties Trussell. alter- Wolsten- Hurley; de- centre, Toronto; 1:29 5:04 Horvath, Pernfuss, | Second Period 3--Stratford, Flanagan (Dunnette, Pernfuss) SO 4. Stratford, Flanagan (Pernfuss) . | 5--Stratford, Per | Dunnette) . . 5:31 6--Stratéord, Williams ....,... 18:36 7--Stratford, French (Leckie) 19:12 Pénalties--K. Green, Nudds, Hein- | buch, Oliver, J. Green, Draper, Wil- | Hams . iri . 5:11 nfuss (Flanagan 'Third Period & Stratford, Shaw | 9--Stratford French (Draper) 1 {10~Galt, K, Green (Ford) ..... 13:16 | Penalties Trussell, Draper, K | Green, Lumley. EATEDR RESULTS By The Canadian Press Cape Breton Senior Glace Bay, 6; Sydney, 5. Maritime Senior Halifax, 6; Amherst, 2. Quebec Senior Montreal Royals, 2; Valleyfield, 2. Manitoba Junior Winnipeg Monarchs, 5; Winni- peg Canadiens, 4 (overtime). Winnipeg Black Hawks, 2; Bran- don, 10. : Great Lakes Senior : Port Arthur, 7; Sault Ste. Marie, 112. O.H.A. Senior "B" ; Toronto Meteors, 8; Lindsay, 1. Grimsby, 5; Crowland, 2. : St. Catharines, 2;- Woodstock, L 8 Brantford, 8; Port Colborne, 4. Kingston, 7; Peterborough, 3. O.H.A. Intermediate "A" Simcoe, 11; Tillsonburg, 4. Wainfleet, 17; Hamilton, 3. «Chippawa, 7; Burling Beach, 2. Milton, 5; Weston, 3. O.H.A. Intermediate "B" Sundridge, 6; Huntsville, 4. Gravenhurst, 15; Parry Sound, 5. Cayuga, 8; Delhi, 1. O.H.A. Junior "B" Welland, 7; Hamilton, 7 O.H.A. Junior 4 Hespeler, 11; Inger 3. International League ° Chatham, 4; Windsor, 5. | «Detroit Auto Club, 4; | Hettche, 1. | Eastern League Boston, 1; Atlantic City, 8. Western Canada Junior Medicine Hat, 2; Moose Jaw; 3 Western Canada Senior Saskatoon, 4; Calgary, 3 Eastern Canada Senior Hull, 6; Cornwall, 1. Detroit Sarkisian; | Greed snot, where he succeeded Earl Sel- 2:46 3:16 | This means a completely new | coaching staff for Toronto's entry in the Big Four Union. Earlier this week Teddy Morris moved from the coaching job into the manager's kirk who resigned. Moran sald it was hoped to keep both Levantis | and Cosgrove in the Argos organiza- | tion, possibly as scouts. | LE BR | Willard Cleveland of Fairlight, | | Sask., runner 'up for the cars in last year's auto bonspiel at Nipewin, | Sask., Friday was knocked out of | the No. 1 event in the fourth an- {nual Nipawin contest. The grand- daddy of the car honspiels, the | fourth annual Nipawin automobile 'spiel has an entry of 96 rinks. | dH | - At Colorado Springs, Colo., young " Jimmy Grogan's right ankle was fractured Friday when a horse fell {on him and the skating star will riot be able to compete in the world figure skating championships 'next March. Irrlast year's North Ameri- can championships Grogan was runner-up' to Dick Button of Englewood, N.J. | La BR Cleveland Indians Friday an- nounced the signing of Oscar Melillo to a one-year coadhing contract. The 47-year-old Melillo formerly coached for the American League baseball club in 1939, 1940, 1942 and | from 1945 to 1947. | LO BR | [ Wake Forest College of North! rCarolina lost six football players! Friday after the sextet had heen | | accused of cheating on pre-Christ- | mas tests. Three were expelled and three were placed on probation, but none will be eligible to play again, the Wake Forest student council | announced. , Included was All- Southern guard Ray Cicia, BR 3 The Harmsworth Trophy, fnter- | national classic of speedboat racing, may be held'during Seaftle's Sea- fair next August. Jerry Bryant, | orated, said Friday he was advised | that J. Lee Barrett of Detroit would | inspect Lake Washington next week as & possible site for the 1950 | Harmsworth. Barrett is secretary- ciation of America. LIE BR Twenty-two riding horses burned to .death and a stableboy was in- | jured Friday in a fire which de- | stroyed the Greentree Stables in | Chicago's suburban Norwood Park, | a Jake Mintz, co-manager of heavy- | weight champion Ezzird Charles, said Friday night at Pittsburgh that | there's a possibility his boxer may | defend his title next month at San | Francisco. z | "I have received a request from | {| William Kyne of San Francisco to | hold Feb. 22 open for two weeks and I have agreed to the request," Mintz | said. "Kyne wants Charles to fight | an 'unnamed opponent on that | | date." | ' LS ER A high school girl basketball player scored 65 points in a game at Hemingway, S.C. Friday. Nan | Eaddy of Hemingway tossed in 32 field goals and a foul shot to lead the Hemingway girls to a "3-63 | victory over the somteh. | president of: Seattle Salts, Incorp-] treasurer of the Yachtmen's Asso- | | Cup brought to Scotland last year by the Cadedonian Club which beat the Canadians on their home ice. The Canadian team represents all provinces except Newfoundland. | Seven of the team brought their wives along. J The party arrived on the liner | Empress of Canada which made a special call at Greenock to land them. Pipers in full Highland dress pro- vided a musical welcome while Sir James Dengy Roberts greeted the visitors 'on behalf of the Caledon- ian Club. The Canadians will play a series of 10 matches in eight Scottish Cities. At a meeting 'held aboard the vessel Jar. 3, senior and junior cap- tains for the tour were elected with two assistant secretaries. Hon, Er- rick P. Willis, of Winnipeg, was elected senior captain and Norman C. Ralston of Saint John, N.B,, ju- nior captain. Willis will captain the "A" team and Ralston "B" squad. The "A" team commit- tee also elected by the curlers {aboard ship, includes A. F. McDow- | ell, Timmins, Ont. team committee num- | The "BY bers among Cruthers, terborough. Team "A" breaks down into six teams of four or five members re- presenting Manitoba, Ontario, Nor- thern Ontarlo, Saskatchewan, Al- berta and Nova Scotia with Prince Edward (Island. "B" team has six teams representing New, Brunswick, Manitoba, Alberta, Canadian R.C. C., Saskatchewan and Quebec. its members W. M. the | assistant secretary, Pe- | 5--Butler 10; Brock 5. 1--Brownlee 12; Kerr 12. 2--Staples 11; J, Morrisen 12. 3--Burton 10; A, Morrison 12 6--Thompson 7; Wyman 8. 7--WHMght 14; Muir 10. 8--Germond --; Dixon ---, 4--Cochrane 2; Ross 10. 5--E. Michael 5; Peacock 7. UNITED TAXI "Oshawa's Finest Taxi Service" PHONES 300 - 403 - 404 80 KING STREET E. By RINKER'S CLEANERS, OSHAWA APPEARANCE ~ WHAT LITTLE KE SPE HIS SUITS CLEANED HAS PAID BIG DIVIDENDS. | HENRY HAS BEEN DOING BETTER SELLING SINCE HE 5) DISCOVERED THE VALUE OF A GOOD PERSONAL + 5 ET NDS TO HAVE Ass -ierem "THE BEST 15 King E. CLEANERS. Phone 576 IN (eX NE ALL You won't Dealers for Chevrolet, Oldsmobile. "adillac Automobiles; - Chevrolet and Mople Leaf Trucks; G.M. Parts and Accessories; Peterboro Canoes, Boots and Accessories; Johnston Motor Sales 'and Service. KING & MARY STS. OSHAWA get away with it! There are still a few truck owners who think that because their trucks are running smoothly in this mild weather, they'll keep on the job all Winter. = TRUCKS MUST BE WINTERIZED! The hard-driving wear and tear of truck operation can be costly when the truck is not tuned, lubricated and set for the season. Your best bet for safe, unbroken service is to arrange for GM -Winterizing Service! ONTARIO MOTOR SALE Headquarters for GM-Winterizing--Genuire GM Factory-Approved Methods Genuine GM Factory-Approved Parts and Accessories PHONE 900

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