Daily Times-Gazette, 24 Jan 1951, p. 10

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PAGE TEN THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE os 'WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1951 -- SPORT SNAPSHOTS (3) == By Gro. H. CampseLL a ---- _, e,,o Well of course, after all, that's the way Junior hockey goes, doesn't it? Windsor Spitfires strive with might-and-main for about five weeks and finally succeed in climbing up into first place, tied with the To- ronto Marlies, who have been setting the pace in the Big Ten loop for the past two months--and then what happens--in one game they are back in second place, tied with Barrie Flyers again. Yep! That's what happened last night Marlies, Spitfires and the Flyers went into action last night 'all tied for first place with 44 points apiece but the Barrie Flyers ran into a red-hot Teepee squad at St. Catharines and when the ice chips had been cleared away and Rexie Stimers had finished spraying his throat with voice-preserving lotion, St. Kitts were found to have won a 6-0 whitewash triumph over "Hap" Emms' boys. That kept Barrie at 44 points and Marlies kept Windsor in the same position, by storing three goals in the third period, two of them aided by costly penalties to Eldor Thomas of the Spitfires. Those three tallies gave Marlies a 4-2 trumph over Windsor and put the Junior Dukes back in first place, alone, + * * ! : However, the fate that befell Windsor and Barrie was not a bit worse than that which overtook our Oshawa Generals. Sure they weren't in lrst place, never have been for the past three seasons but in recent weeks they have been putting up a splendid display to _ Keep pace with the other hurtling leaders and that overtime victory on Saturday night here put Oshawa up within one point of the 4th- .place Guelph Biltmores. In addition, Generals had two games "in hand" over the "Hatters" and it began to look very much as if the Ushawa boys could move into fourth place before the end of January rolled around. They still could--but their chances aren't nearly as good now. They have only one game in hand over Guelph now. Defeat last night at the hands of the much-improved St. Mike's Majors kept Oshawa in 5th place and the win by the striving students put them up within one point of tying Stratford for 8th 'place--~the final playoff bertn. Or course, if the "Irish" could lick Marlies on Sunday afternoon, they must be entitled to win on their own ice over the Generals but nevertheless there were high hopes "around this bailiwick that Oshawa would take St. Mike's last night 'and so move into 4th--which would have meant only 4 points behind the two teams tied for second place. But the Generals were de- feated! + * +* % Lou Jankowski and Alex Delvecchio are back tied again in the O.H.A. Junior "A" scoring race ag the result of last night's game. Louie popped all three of the Oshawa tallies for a brilliant hight's work and Alex came up with a couple of assists with Bill Berwick and Stan Mills ganling one assist point each! The game was as even as possible-- without resulting in a tie. Each team scored once in the first period, Oshawa first, St. Mike's took the lead in the second stanza, Generals tied it up and then while Herve DeJordy was serving an elbowing pen- alty late in the middle frame, Willie Marshall broke the 2-2 tie and set the stage for victory. Tommy Fyles made it 4-2 early in the third and it wasn't until there were only two seconds left to play that Jan- kowski got his third goal. Galt plays at Waterloo tonight and Stratford visits Windsor. The Generals are in action again on Friday night, when they. visit the up-and-coming Teepees. This one on St. Catharines' ice should be a sizzler, On Saturday night, Barrie Flyers play here in Osh- awa. It could be a disastrous week for the Generals but on the other hand, the way things are going, they could still cop four points this week and get up there ahead of the Biltmores. * * * SPORT SHORTS -- Tomorrow night is Mercantile Hockey Night at the Oshawa Arena, with the usual weekly doubleheader scheduled which has its regular crowd of customers and deserves more . . . Gordie Howe netted three goals again last night as Detroit whipped Chicago 8-2 and if anyone wants to hint that the 70-game schedule in the N.H.L. has just about run its course, we'd be prepared to agree. Right Bow, the season probably couldn't end too soon for both Chicago and New York Rangers ,.. In the O.H.A. Major series, St. Mike's Monarchs won a 6-4 decision in Waterloo last night and this puts them far in front of Marlboros, who aren't defending The Allan Cup anyways, so there! . . . That 28-0 hockey game at Blind River on Monday night must have given the goal-judge a cramp in his elbow (and that's a very seri- ous malady in Blind River) . . . Toronto civic officials, board of educa- tion men, rea] estate men and sport officials are once again trying to decide whether Oakwood Stadium will continue as such--or become a residential area . . . "Rocket" Richard is definitely on the shelf for a game or two, his thigh injury having failed to respond to treatment. - +» » Wonder what the Oshawa Ski Club members are doing these days-- ® there's been less snbw around these parts this winter than in any] season for the past ten or twelve. . * * * SCISSORED SPORT -- (By The Canadian Press) -- Buster Mills, coach with Chicago White Sox for the last four years, Tuesday signed t0 manage the Superior, Wis., Blues of the northern league. The White Sox have a working agreement with Superior, Mills, 42, an outfielder, played with six major league clubs . . . St. Louis Browns announced Tuesday the ight rel of pitcher Bob Raney to Toronto of the international League. The righthander, 27, won seven and lost 11 last year for Baltimore of the International League . . . Joe Louis, Jr, 3%, will be a ringside spectator when his . famous father fights Omelio Agramonte in Miami Feb. 7. The former champion's son will come from Detroit Tuesday. It will be his first ringside view of his dad in action , . . Frank C d Memp g , was indicted Tues- day on a charge of bribery in the alleged fixing of November. The Shelby County grand jury, sitting in extraordinary session, also indicted James A. Manley, referee and promoter of the "faked" fights, for the second time. He previously wag indicted on four counts of bribery. It was a Joint indictment saying the two bribed Dallas heavyweight Russel (Buddy) Scott . . , Sandy Saddler of New York City, the world's featherweight champion, took a unanimous 10-round de- cision Tuesday night from Sunny Dave Shade of Detroit before about hi hi prizefights here last | 4,000 fight fans, but he had a fight on his hands most of the way, In a preliminary six-rounder Dave Leblanc, 134%, Montreal. Mitchell, 131, Toronto, outpointed Terry Tommy Reece, Niagara Falls, Ont., out- pointed Dick Strano, 158, Utica, N.Y., in a four-rounder , , Talks About Guelph's Sports Writer Our Generals (Editor's Note:-- Rex MacLeod, Sports Editor of The Guelph Mer- cury, who was on hand here Satur- day night to see Biltmores lose out in their overtime tussle with the Generals, had some interesting com- ments to make in his column on Monday, Regardless of whether local fans think the Guelph scribe's remarks are competent, observations or merely "sour grapes", we thought we'd repeat them, so that local hockey fans' could 'get somebody's ideas on the Oshawa Generals. Here are three paragraphs of MacLeod's findings) : -- "BILTMORES WEREN'T too diskteartened by their overtime loss to Oshawa although the game act- ually meant four points to both clubs in the battle for fourth place. 'Had Biltmores won, it would have given them a five-point. bulge over Generals and wiped out the two- game advantage that the Generals hold. But they didn't and Oshawa is only one point behind and two games in hand. Unless St. Michael's Majors have reformed (see yester- day's score) the Generals will thrash them Tuesday night and take over 'fourth place. Pike was a little sad about the loss. We shguld have won," he sald; "I hope we meet them in the playoffs. We can beat that club." We seem to recall Pike expressed similar sentiments after the first game with Mont- real Canadiens in the eastern Can- ada final last spring. Hope he has 'the Oshawa, eam pegged better. + * ; GENERALS IN SOME respects, are like the Toronto Marlboros of last year. If their big line of Del- veechlo, Jankowski and Mills isn't functioning their efficiency is re- duced by about 75 per cent. But unlike last year's Dukes the Osha- Wans are weak on defence and 'only fair in goal. We don't wish to take anything away from Eddie Crouch, who played amazingly well for the first two periods Saturday night, but if Biltmores had been shooting at the net half the time instead of three feet on either side of it they might have filled the cage with rubber. Crouch has a peculiar style, one that won't give him a profile like the late Barrymore. He dives hecd first at approaching players, risking 2 puck in the mush to make a save, He has already sto two pucks in the face this pred but apparently this, hasn't convinced him to change his style. Biltmores made the mistake Saturday night of trying to pull him out only to be submerged by.one of his football tackles. Next time the, 'll remember to shoot and it soi d be interest- ing to observe how Crouch behaves under fire. * + $ "IT ISN'T DIFFICULT to spot why Delvecchio and Jankowski are leading the league in scoring. Del- vecchio, in our estimation, is ready for pro ranks now but he still has another year to go in junior, It is hardly likely that Detroit will leave him in junior for another season Jack Adams believes in rhoving his better prospects along when they're ready. Delvecchio is a more finished performer now than many profes- sional hockey players. Some obsery- ers think Jankowski is the better player of the two but well go for Delvecchio. Jankowski is fore ag- gressive, a dependable guy to lug the puck out of his own zone but he doesn't finish off his plays with the precision of Delvecchio. Jan- kowski packs a hard shot but he seems to be too proud of it. Satur- day night he was triggering shots almost as soon as he passed centre ice. You don't score 'many that way inowadays." 2 . BIG FOUR WANTS TWO-GAME SERIES FOR GREY CUP FINAL Toronto, Jan. 24--(CP) -- The Big Four football unioh wants a two-game total-points East-West final for the Grey Cup next fall, with one game in Toronto and an- other in Montreal. A Big Four source said Tuesday the proposal was discussed Satur- day at its annual meeting. Support will be sought from western Cana- da with a view to putting the plan before the annual meeting of the Canadian Rugby Union. For years the Grey Cup and the Canadian championship have been settled in a sudden-death game be- tween representatives of the East and West. The C.R.U. constitution in Toronto's Varsity Stadium on the last Saturday of November. The two-game plan was linked with an announcement that two Big Four representatives -- President C. C. Lawson of Hamilton and Past President Eric Cradock of Mon- treal Alouettes -- will go West to discuss "mutual problems" with officials of the western interpro- vincial football union. They will provides that the game be played |- also talk overs possibility of joint action for greater control over their affairs jn the C.R.U. Lawson and Cradock will make their, trip early in February. They may lay the grédundwork in earlier telephone talks with western offi- cials. : The 'Big Four official who con- firmed talk of the two-game plan said that one aim was to provide bigger gates for the competing teams. He saw it as a boon to the western clubs who depend on saie of programs and other money-rais- {ing schemes to bolster their attend- ance receipts. : Bomber President Silent Ralph Misener, President of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, Tuesday right declined comment on the Big Four proposal for a two-game, to- tal-point, East-West final for the Grey Cup next fall. The Bomber president said it would take a great deal of study. Quipped Misener: "Wonder how they'd like to play one game in the West?" '| ton Eskimos of the Western Inter- Al Anderson, manager of Edmon- provincial Football Union, said he doubts a two-game Gery Cup series would have the attraction of the present sudden-death final. Mr. Anderson said he could not speak for the Edmonton club, but he personally thought the final would lose a lot of its glamor By extending it. "Suppose tue score in the first game is 20-0," he said. "How much interest will there be in the second game?" ST. MIKE'S EDG 1-Goal Edge In Second Stanza Is Only Margin "As "Irish" C E GENERALS IN THRILLER Between Teams limb Close to 8th Louie Jankowski Fires All Three Goals For Generals, Delvecchio Counts Two Assists-- Winners Break® Tie Late In Second Period While Oshawa Short- Handed Toronto, Jan. 24 -- St. Michael's Majors continued their drive to- ward eighth place in the OHA Junior A race by shading Oshawa Generals; 4-3, at the Gardens last night. It was the second game of a doubleheader. Despite fine efforts by the high- scoring duo Alex Delvecchio and Lou Jankowski, the Irish carried most of the play throughout the second and third periods. The teams deadlocked, 1-1, in the. first period, but St. Mike's took. a 3-2 lead in the second. They made it 4-2 early in the third, and kept it that way until two seconds before the end. Jankowski was the high scorer with three goals, putting him in a tie with Delvecchio in the in- dividual scoring competition. Del- vecchio had two assists to make it 75 each for the two Oshawa for- wards. St. Michael's scoring was spread among four players. Bob Sabourin, Murray Costello, Willie Marshall and Tommy Fyles were the marks- men. Fyles: was a standout with a good <+wo-way show, while Sa- bourin's shooting was better than it has been in some time. Oshawa--Goal, , Crouch; defense, Sinden, O'Connor; centre, Delvec- chio; wings, Jankowski, Mills; al- ternates, Delich, Holden, DeJordy, Caron, Boniface, Samolenko, Atters- ley, Berwick, Leroux, McBeth. St. Michael's -- Goal, Chadwick; defense, Buchanan, McCann; cen- tre, Marshall; wings, Weldrake, Fyles; alternates, McNamara, Clune, Schiller, Dineen, Sandford, Mac- Donald, Sabourin, Costello, Lee, Ratchford. Officials--J. Liscombe, Galt; Kirkpatrick, Hamilton. First Period 1--Oshawa, Jankowski' (Delvecchio) : 2--St. Michael's, Sabourin 18.28 Penalties -- Sabourin (hooking), 4.28 Caron (tripping), 12.22, Second Period 3--8St. Michael's, Costello (Buchanan, Costello) .... 4---Oshawa, Jankowski (Berwick) 5--8St. Michael's, Marshall (Fyles, Weldrake) 18.40 Penalties -- Delvegchio (holding), 1.55; O'Connor (tripping), 9.02; Mc-~ Cann (holding), 11.31; DeJordy (el- bowing), 18.00. Third Period 6--St. Michael's, Fyles (Weldrake) 7--Oshawg, Jankowski (Mills, Delvecchio) Penalties -- McBeth (tripping), 12.13; MacDonald (hooking) 13.03. TEEPS SHUTOUT BARRIE FLYERS BY 6-0 SCORE St. Catharines, Jan. 24--(CP)-- St. Catharines Teepees knocked Barrie Flyers out of first place in the O.H.A. Junior "A"" series last night by trouncing the Flyers 6-0. The victory ended St. Catharines' five-game losing streak. In first place all alone today are Toronto Marlboros, who defeated Windsor Spitfires 4-2. Previously Barrie, Marlboros and Windsor were deadlocked for the leader- ship. v Seventy-four minutes in penal- ties were handed out here with Barrie drawing 39, including a mis- conduct and three majors. St. Catharines scorers were, Mc- Comb, Teal, Pilotte, Martin, Toy- ota and Brown. Lineups BARRIE--Goal, nowes; defence, Morrison, Pearsall; centre, Hagan; wings, Hogg, Woods; subs. O'Con- nor, McKnight, Labine, Chevrefils, Toppazini, D. Emms, P. Emms, White. ST. CATHARINES--Goal, Sim- mons, defence, Pilotte, Gould; cen- tre Boone; wings, Brown, O'Hearn; subs., Taylor, Martin, Teal, Robert- son, Power, Toyota, Lomer, Mc- Comb. Referees -- Pearcey Allen, and Andy Bellemer, Toronto. ) First Period 1--8t. Catharines, McComb (Power) 10:20 Penalties -- Pearsall, Labine, Pi- lotte, McComb, . P. Emms, Boone (misconduct). . Second Period & St Catharines, Teal (Robertson) 14:20 Penalties--Labine, Teal, Pilotte, Chevrefils (two minors and miscon- duct), Pearsall, Boone, Toppazzini (major), | Third Period 3--8t. Catharines, Pilotte A. (Brown, Boone) ........... 4--8t. Catharines, Martin MARLIES RALLY TO WHIP SPITS BACK IN FIRST Toronto, Jan. 24 -- Toronto Marl- boros came from behind to defeat Windsor Spitfires, 4-2, in an OHA Junior "A" game at Maple Leaf Gardens last night. Victory gave the Dukes a two-point edge ovex Windsor and Barrie in the race for first place. Toronto Marlboros are back in sole possession of the Ontario Hockey Association's Junior A Di- vision No. 1 spot today because Eldor Thomas wasn't there where he should have been last night. Thomas, high-scoring winger for Windsor Spitfires, sat out a couple of minor penalties during the third period. Before his penalties Wind- sor led the Dukes 2-1. After the former western player finished serv- ing them Toronto was in front 3-2 and Marlies added another one later for good measure. Prior to last night's three junior contests, Marlboros, - Windsor and Barrie were tied atop the 10-team loop with 44 points apiece. Dukes went a game in front when Barrie Flyers were upset 6-0 in St. Cath- arines by the Teepees. John Lumley -deadlocked the score at 2-2 early in the period the score at 2-2 early in the period and Eric Nesterenko won the game at 14:54. Danny Poland's goal whi¢h came less than a minute later, clinched the victory, Parker MacDonald was high point getter of the game. He scored the first goal and was credited with an assist on the last two. Will Hass and Al Arbour counted for Windsor. Windsor --- Goal, Thibeault, Zorica; centre, Grosse; wings, Anderson, Thomas; altern- ates, Offadini, Johnson, Joss, Skov, Hass, Danilovich. Marlboros -- Goal, Lockhart; fense, Lumsden, Cooper; Maxwell; . wings, Lumley, alternates, Windley, Poland, Mac- Donald, Hurst, Peart, Nesterenko, MacFarland, Balfour. Referees--Frank Udvari, Kitchen- er; Ken Holmeshaw, Toronto. First Period 1--Marlboros, MacDonald (Poland, Lumsden) .... 2--Windsor, Hass (Danilovich, Skov) 14:38 Penalties--Grosse, Lumsden, Joss, Nesterenko. Second Period 3--Windsor, Arbour (Hass) ... 6:35 Penalties--Danilovich, Hurst, Kon- Hall; defense, de- centre, Stewart; 7:15 > : Bavarian Curve Claims A Life eczny, Grosse, Thomas. ' Third * Period 4--Marlboros, Lumley (Cooper) 5--Marlboros, Nesterenko | (MacDonald) . 14:54 | 6--Marlboros, Poland | (MacDonald) ® Penalties Windley, Hurst. Thomas, Internat. Bonspiel Begins In Quebec Quebec, Jan. 24 -- (CP) -- Que- bec's 38th inetrnational bonspiel, mammoth multi-prize curling event, gets under way today with 10 Que- bec province district champions competing for the provincial title, The provincial championships, lead-off competition in the bon- spiel, will be followed all next week by the international title-hunt. A total of 120 rinks from Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan, New Bruns- wick, Nova Scotia and the United States will compete in international play. The provincial championship, won last year by a Quebec Victoria rink skipped by Herb Simons, will give the winning foursome the right to represent Quebec in the Dominion champoinships at Halifax next March, Pembroke Downs " .Hull Volants 7-4 Pembroke, Ont., Jan. .24--(CP) -- Pembroke Lumber Kings took a 7-4 decision from Hull Volants in an Eastern Canada Hockey League game here Tuesday night. Pembroke held a 1-0 first-period lead but surged ahead 5-1 at the end of the second. Fred Giesebrecht and Ken Robertson' were the big guns for Lumber Kings, scoring two goals each. .Jim Maxwell, Lorne Freemark and John Inglis comple- ted Pembroke's scoring. Hull marksmen were Hec Legris, Bilodeau, Carman Marshall and Zanata, POSTS USED Boston--Football goal posts were used for the first time in 1847 and that year also was the first for admission fées. (Taylor) . 5--~8t. Catharines, Toyota .... 6--8t. Catharines, Brown (Boone, O'Hearn) Penalties--Boone, McComb, Labine (2), Martin, Simmons (served by Me- Comb), Taylor (major), Hagan 1:09 | The! Grim Reaper was an extra passenger on this ride down the Garmisch Parténkirken Olympic bobsled course in. Germany. Top picture shows the Swedish sled, "Sweden 1," entering .the dangerous "Bavarian Curve" and going to the eedge of the banked runway. Centre shot was taken just before it overturned, killing the front man, Rold Odenrick. At bottom, two Germans pull the sled off a survivor. Odenrick lies.in Snow on' runway. \ --Canada Wide Picture. HARNESS KING - - - -iy Alan Maver OELVIN MILLER. OF MEADOW LAND, P4. SET A NEW RECORD FOR HARNESS RACING DRIVERS BY WINNING £3//809 Ww PURSES 74/8 YEAR -- HE FINISHED Zsr WN 106 RACING HEATS, COPPING 4 OF THE . SPORTS 70P EVENTS INCLUDING THE HAMBLETONIAN ./ THIS B7-YR OLD DRIVER SCORED His FIRST TRIUMPH AT /6 AND HAS BEEN COMPETING ON THE GRAND XR CIRCUT FOR 12 YEARS." arg Tonight! | (major), Labine (major), ICE SKATING Mercantile Hockey Thursday Night (DOUBLEHEADER) Detroit Wings Blast Hawks By 8-2 Score By MEL SUFRIN | Canadian Press Staff Writer | Of all the teams in the National Hockey League, you'd think Detroit Red Wings might be the one to show a little consideration for Harry Lumley. After all, the beleaguered Chicago Black Hawks goaltender played half a dozen brilliant seasons with Detroit and helped the team to its Stanley Cup victory last season be- | fore being traded. However, the Red Wings appear to have forgotten. Last night, for the second: time in a week, they turned back the cellar-dwelling Hawks--this time by a lopsided 8-2] score. { The pasting left Lumley with 147 | goals scored against him so far this | season. That's in 44 games and Is | only one less than the number sent | past him in the 63 games he played | for Detroit last season. | If Lumley, a veteran in experi- | ence although still young in years | --he's 24--has any bitterness for his old mates, he has good reason for | directing much of it at Gordie | Howe. Howe Scores Three The star Detroit "right winger shoved three goals past Lumley in| Chicago last night, duplicating a | feat of the previous Wednesday | when the Red Wings beat Chicago | 4-2. Howe's line mate, Ted Lindsay, | picked up four points, a goal and | three assists. | A meagre crowd of 7,488 was on | hand to watch the Black Hawks go through their 18th consecutive | game without a win. The last time Chicago won a game was in Toronto Dec. 16, more than a month ago. Since then the best they have been able to do is three tie games. Goals by Howe, George Gee and | Jim Peters gave Detroit a 3-0 first- period lead before Gus Bodnar got Chicago's first goal on a passing play with Lee Fogolin. | From Bad To Worse i Things got steadily worse for Lumley and the Hawks as Howe got his second goal at 15:19 of the second period, followed slightly, more than a minute later by Lindsay. Lindsay helped Sid Abel and Howe on their third-period goals after which Rookie Ed Leier got Chicago's second goal with Doug Bentley and Ernie Dickens assisting. The game demonstrated the dif- ference a defence makes to a goal- tender. Terry Sawchuk, with pro- tection from such rearguard stal- warts as Red Kelly, Leo Reise, Boh Goldham and Eugene Martin, has had only 90 goals scored on him this season, second only to To- ronto's Al Rollins-Turk Broda team. Lumley, on the other hand, had good protection this season until Jack Stewart and Bil] Gadsby, two keystones of the defence, were put out of action with injuries.' Since then things have been going from ad to worse and there's no sign of | any improvement. Last night's victory increased the | first-place lead of the Red Wings to 10 points over Toronto. The Leafs will get a chance to get the two points back tonight, however, when they play host to Montreal, a third-place team that has been badly weakened by the loss of high- scoring Maurice Richard, out of ac- tion for about a month with an aggravated charley horse. Standing-Detroit, tied 8--64 points. Points--Howe, Detroit, 53. Goals--Richard, Montreal, Assists-- Howe, Detroit, 31. Shutouts--Sawchuk, Detroit, 7 Penalties -- Mortson, Toronto, won 28 lost 9, 28 2% | Toronto Montreal .. New York . Chicago - = a ~~] SREB Home bt B8Cop ohooBul Boston .. RBEEE»> E31 3-4 4 3-3 --- oo 24 Tuesday's Result 8 Chicago ....... 8 Future Games Tonight--Montreal at Toronto. Thursday--New York at Chicago; Boston at Detroit. - - - Detroit OHA MAJOR PW LTTE APs xSt. Mike's 24 15 7 2106 73 39 xMarlhoros 22 13 8 1 97 80 28 ° Hamilton .. 28 10 16 2 96 120 22 Kit.-Wat. . 30 10 17 3103 120 23 xMarlboros and St. Michael's have each played four four.point games, | Tu ay's Results St. Michael's ... 6 Kitchener-Wat. 4 Future Games 3 Tonight--Marlboros at Hamilton. Friday--Kitchener - Waterloo at Marlboros. Saturday--Hamilton at St. Miche ael's. OHA JUNIOR A P L F APts 131 100 164 113 141 108 146 129 159 122 119 121 125 114 124 149 131 157 97 224 Marlboros . Barrie : Windsor ... Guelph .... Oshawa ... Galt St. Cathar, Stratford St. Mike's . Waterloo Tuesday's Marlboros 4 St. Catharines . 6 Barrie . St. Mike's . 4 Oshawa ... Future Games . Tonight--Galt at Waterloo; Strat. ford at Windsor. Friday--Waterloo at Barrie; St. Michael's at Guelph; Marlboros at Stratford; Galt at Windsor; Oshawa at St. Catharines. Pee Wee Hockey Play-Off Dates Are Announced The following is the standing of the Neighbourhood Association Pee Wee Hockey League with games included that were played on Sat- urday, January 20th. °* eam w Rundle Valleyview Brooklin Connaught Victory Bathe Storie N. Oshawa .. 17 Woodview 0 4 PEE WEE HOCKEY SCHEDULE Saturday, January 27 * AM moeonowNe ed Results Windsor ... wow ~BEEEEEZRS L T Pts 10 ovoo~oPoo 8:00 to 8:40--Bathe vs. N. Oshawa 8:40 to 9:20--Valleyview vs. Rundel 9:20 to 10:00--Storie vs. Victory Referee--Bill Smith. Saturday, February 3 A.M. 8:00 to 8:40--Connaught vs. Run- dle. 8:40 to 9:20--Brooklin vs. North Oshawa, 9:20 to 10:00--Bathe vs. Victory. Referees--Bill Smith, Lloyd Mas- ters. Saturday, February 10 A.M. 8:00 to 8:40--Woodview vs. Cone naught 8:40 to 9:20--Storie vs. Brooklin 9:20 to 10:00--Valleyview vs. Vice tory Referee--Bill Smith. Saturday. February 17 8:00 to 8:40--Lathe vs. Storie 8:40 to 9:20--North Oshawa vs. Valleyview 9:00 to 10:00--Woodview vs. Brook- lin Referee--Bill Smith. Saturday, February 24 AM 8:00 to 8:40--Woodview vs. Vics tory | 8:40 to 9:20--Bathe. vs. Connaught 9:20 to 10:00--Storie vs. Brooklin. Saturday, March 3 The first four teams in the League standing will take part in play-offs this day. In event of a Ee em BER tie, or sudden death, game will be ] played. Referees for play offs will be la- ter announced by Referee in chief of Neighbourhood Association Hoce key League, Bill Smith. OPERATE ON PANTER George Panter," secretary of the Ontario Hockey Association, under went a stcenach operation at To- ronto. General Hospital. His cone | dition said to be satisfactory, he is resting 'in the Private Patients' Pavilion, minutes. If you are interested in S 353 KING ST. W., Re Delivery of 1951 MERCURY OUTBOARD MOTORS Mercury Motor we would advise immediate placing of your order. Quantities available are very limited. Some 1951 models now on display. MITH' PORT « the purchase of a 1951 iio ~~ ki) § Ba a 1 k

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