THE. DAILY. TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE ELEVEN | | £4 | Referee Frank Udvari, who according to the underground wire has made such an excellent impression in this season of Junior "A" offi- cialing, that next year he will be in the AHL. and probably up with the N.H.L. officials the following season, finally did last night in Weston ' what we've wanted to see for many a day. They had a wild free-for-ail scrap in last night's game at Weston and officials Udvari and Lewin gave out ten major penalties'and two minors. Every player on the ice who got into the fight--and some came from the bench to get into the scrap, no doubt--each received a major and minors were tagged on. This all happened in the 3rd period and after that the teams played the rest of the game with the players that were: left. The game itself was won by the Dukes, with Billy Harris and Ted Reid each scoring three goals while Fred Etcher was best for Oshawa Bees, with a pair of tallies. Oshawa held their own for the first two periods, 3-3 at the end of the first and 4-4 after two periods but the Weston team struck hard for three more goals in the third period, to take the lead in the series. * LJ * Andy Chircoski and George Brabin each scored a goal in last night's game at Weston. Tonight, the Bees will have their backs to the elimination wall, when the 4th game of this series is played here at the Oshawa Arena. Oshawa has to win this game here tonight in order to force a 5th and deciding gamw--which if necessary, will be played here in Oshawa, on Tuesday night. The Bees are putting up a gallant battle to survive in the O.H.A. Junior "B" playoffs and it would appear that if they could get past the Weston Dukes, they would have a great chance to cop the provincial title in this series. 'Tonight will find Weston Dukes aiming to elean up the series while Bees will be striving to prolong the affair to the 5th game. It should be a torrid tussle and those ten major penalties meted out last night didn't just come about over mothing. There'll be lots of action in this game here tonight too! * +* + Barrie Flyers chalked up a 4-2 win over the Marlies last night, due chiefly to their superiority in the third period. Once again their meet- | ing was studded with penalties but the Marlies didn't threaten nearly as much last night. They play the 4th game on Saturday afternoon at Maple Leaf Gardens. Leo Labine was in the bad man and hero roles both last night. He cross-checked Nesterenko for 5 stitches and then later in the game scored the winning goal. L 4 +* +* Big upset in the hockey whirl,(?) was Canadiens' victory on Detroit ice. Maybe the Habs should play all théir playoff games in Detroit. Red Wings took a 2-0 lead then Rocket Richard poked Ted Lindsay on the chops and dropped the Red Wing ace. Richard got a penalty of course a 5-minute job and still Red Wings failed to boost their lead. Then Canadiens came back to score three goals and added two more in the third period to win going away as the Wings collapsed. Now they go back to Montreal and if the Habs can please their home fans with a win--the N.H.L. League champions will be out of the Stanley Cup playoffs. Meanwhile, Pittsburgh, who get back into the A.H.L. playoffs after being kicked out over a protest, are now in the finals. They ousted Hershey Bears in the semi- finals last night, which means Hershey may send up some players to help Boston in their game against Toronto Leafs tomorrow night. Incidentally, don't quote us but the Boston-Leafs series will go seven games anyway! +* +* + BRIGHT BITS -- Nobleton's Junior "D"" team walloped Orono Or- phans 11-3 here last night on the local ice, in the first game of their O.H.A. semi-final series. The second game is back in Nobleton--and so is the 3rd game, if necessary, as Nobleton won the toss here last night. Dane Pound's Orono boys were outplayed badly in the last half of the game but they were also outweighed and outskated by the big, fast boys in Nobleton uniforms . .. Nanaimo Clippers ousted Edmonton Mercurys from Allan Cup playoffs last night with an 8-1 win to take the series 3-1... Port Hope Junior "C" team defeated Collingwood 2-1 to take the lead in their O.H.A. title final rounu, a -game afiair. This was the first game . . . Quebec Citadels thumped Inkerman Rockets 9-0 in their opener but Valleyfield Srs. lead Quebec Aces 3-2 in their 9-game series. . . . Oshawa Fittings Limited 5-pin team won the Steelworkers Tourna- ment, Eastern Ontario honors, first time the gvent was held, last week in Kingston. Fittings were representing the Oshawa Steelworkers having earned that right in a previous playoff here . .. Don't forget the motor- cycle races on ice at the Oshawa Arena tomorrow night! This is a thrilling sport to watch and made a big hit with the crowd who saw the riders in action here a few weeks ago. In addition to being good entertainment, the proceeds go to a good cause, to aid the local Kinsmen Club in their various charity projects, including the Memorial Stadium tioodlight fund. : * * * SCISSORED SPORT -- (By The Canadian Press) -- Al Pickard, President of the Western Canada Major Hockey League, said Thursday night the Alexander Cup semi-final series between Saskatoon Quakers and Toronto St. Michael's Monarchs opens April 10 at Saskatoon. Second game of the best-of-seven series will be played April 12 at Sas- katoon. If the first two games are split, the third will be played April 14, also at Saskatoon. Otherwise the teams will return to Toronto to finish the series. Winner of the Quakers-St. Mike's semi-final advances against the winner of the Quebec-Maritime major series playoff . .. There will be 70 days of horse racing at Vancouver this summer, 35 days at Lans- downe Park and 35 days at Exhibition Park. This is the same number of days as last year. Racing will probably open June 27 at Lansdowne. - «+ . At Columbus, O. Australia-born John Marshall, Thursday night, swam the fastest 1,500 metres in history when he negotiated the free- style marathon in 18:10.8. The time, far under the world record of 18:19 set by Hironeshin Furuhashi of Tokyo, cannot be recognized as a new mark since it was made over the short course of Ohio State's 25-yard pool. Marshall is a Yale sophomore . . Montreal middleweight, Thursday night, knocked out Claude Ritter in the second round of a scheduled 10-rounder at Paris to build Dauthuille as a worthy opponent for Champion Sugar Ray Robinson of New York. Dauthuille weighed 159% pounds and Ritter 160. * + * Plans to revive professional boxing at Kansas City with a. world's heavyweight championship match in 'late summer were announced Thursday. Jim Downey, Salt Lake City promoter, and Jimmy Nixon of Kansas City said they offered $75,000 or 40 per cent of the gate, to Ezzard Charles to meet Rex Layne of Salt Lake City in a 15-round title bout the first week in Avigust. Downey also said an offer of $50,000 or 35 per cent of the gate, had been made to Lee Savold, European Heavy- weight Champion, for a match with Layne in "June or July" . .. The Thoroughbred Racing Association, Thursday, expelled Sportsman's Park of Chicago from membership after directors first had voted mot to lift the track's suspension. The Chicago track, suspended Oct. 23, 1950, was not represented at the meeting. No specific reason was given, although the T.R.A. resolution said the action stemmed from "certain informa- tion brought to the attention of the Board of Directors with regard to questionable activities of officers and employees" of the track . . . JR. "B" PLAYOFKT ! Weston = Oshawa Jr. Bees TONIGHT 8.30 ADULTS 50c -- CHILDREN 25¢ SATURDAY NIGHT! 8 P.M. MOTORCYCLE RACING ON ICE -- Also -- BROOMBALL GAME -- Lions vs. Kinsmen ARENA . Laurent Dauthuille, | London, April 6--(AP) -- The Jjail-house door clanged shut yes- terday on "Little Arthur" Clinton, a race track tout who couldn't pick a loser. As related in the London Ses- sions Court, the troubles of Little Arthur began last Dec. 5. The tiny tout, a spruce and apple-cheeked 71, gave young Michael Green of Grimsby three straight winners at the Doncaster track. Green's mother, enthusiastic, on Dec. 7 wired £35 to Little Arthur, with instructions to bet on any beast of his choosing. He wired back that he was putting it all on a thing called Budore, which ac- cording to Little Arthur's best be- lief was strictly out for the air. Budore won at 9 to 4, Theoretically, Little Arthur now was holding £114 for Mrs, Green. Mildly annoyed, he composed another telegram, advising her that the roll was going back on a steed called Whispermg Steel. This was a mortal cinch to be something like dead last. Whispering Steel trailed in the early running, moved up boldly at the turn for home and won at 10 to 1. Artie Did The Sweating The horse wasn't even sweating at the finish, which was more than could be said, by now, for little Arthur. On paper, Mrs. Green's original stake had mushroomed into £1,254. Little Arthur feverishly scanned the entries on Hislet. "The only way this one could do it," he mut- tered, "is if they disqualify all the other horses." He sent off another telegram to Mrs. Green telling her the whole wad was on Hislet. Hislet, bet down to 5 to 2 at post time, took the lead at the break and scored in a commén canter. * Horrified, Little Arthur now was STRANGE STORY OF RACETRACK TOUT WHO COULDN'T PICK A LOSER the non-possessor of a supposed £4,389 belonging to Mrs. Green. When he failed to come up with the money during the next three days, Mrs. Green complained to the | police. Wednesday Little Arthur pleaded guilty to a charge of "fraudulently converting" to his own use his client's £35. The judge gave the little tout six months to study his form charts in peace. BEES LOSE WIL Bill Harris Leads Wes- ton To Win In 3rd] Game Of Series--Wild Free - For - All Punctu- ates Final Period Of Play By BOB RIFE The Oshawa Junior Bees have | their backs to the wall tonight when they meet the Weston Dukes at the Arena in the fourth game of their best-of-five play-off series. Losing by a 7-4 count in Weston last night left the local club on the wrong end of a 2-1 count in the O.H.A. Junior "B" inter-zone ser- ies. ) There was only one period of hockey in last night's brawl in Weston Arena, and that was the first. During the second and third frames, the teams tossed the hock- ey rules over the boards and went at each other as if they were the featured attractions in one.of Pat Milosh's wrestling shows. Had It Tied They were even at 3-3 after the first period and were tied again | 4-4 after the second frame. Penal- ties played a very big role in the | third period and aided the Dukes in their last minute sprint to a 7-4 | | final count. ) Fred Etcher opened the scoring | for the Bees on a very pretty goal | while Oshawa were short-handed. | Brabin was in the penalty bench | serving a high-sticking offence when Fred poked the puck away | from an opponent at the Oshawa | blue-line and moved into the centre ice area. od With two checks tagging him closely, he went in on Head, pulled him to the right, and flicked the puck into the left corner. Chircoski made a great break a few seconds later, but his shot screamed off the post. These successes while short-hand- ed made the locals slow up some- what when they got back to full strength, which was when Ted Reid teamed with Bell and Jamieson for a three-way effort to beat Pallister making the score 1-1. The Babe Does It penalties separated Two that | tally from the next good Oshawa play that came when Jack Marsh- all carried the puck the length of the ice and passed over to Etcher. He shot, the rebound came to Lawr- ence. He stick-handled in front, but lost possession. The check had moved the goaler to one side, and |a de Chircoski picked the puck off a defenceman's stick "and danced on Head, the netminder had little chance. Three minutes elapsed from that 2-1 tally till Weston slipped the puck behind the "Oshawa de- fence which was playing too far forward. A two-man break resulted. Bill Harris had control of the puck and used Jago as a fake. He deked Pallister and shoved home the rub- ber to tie the game again, 2-2. Oshawa weathered a pair of penalties and came up With an- otner goal when Brabin was given a "pass" by an enemy forward from a face-off in the Duke's end. George centred the puck on his blade . . . looked up to spot an open corner and fired in the same motion. Oshawa led 3-2. There was less than two minutes left in the first period and that looked like the end of the scoring. However a bad pass , . . rink-wide, allowed Fred Bell to burst in on Pallister, pull him aside, and hand the puck to Reid to score and give the Weston club a 4-4 tie as the period ended. Heavier Going The second period began in much different fashion from the first, as the teams decided that roughness was the sure method of winning. The heavier play produc- ed fewer shots-on-goal , . . a total of 14 for the second period as com- pared with 26 for the first . . . and much poorer play. This was the only period in which Oshawa out- shot Weston, claiming a 9-5 mar- gin. Weston led 16-10 at the end of the first and completely dominated things in the third with a 16-3 37-22. Only Pallister"s great work in the net's saved the Bees from a worse trouncing. The first goal of the second per- iod was scored by Bill Harris . . . he got three over the night with one assist. The shot was from a very difficult angle and between Pallister and the post on the short side to give the Dukes a short-lived 4-3 lead. Oshawa came back with a goal which came out of a scramble. He the post on the short side for a 4-4 tie, Very Costly Penalties The game was won in the third period as penalties to Ted DeGray by 11 seconds in the first three min- utes of the frame. The Bees thus played two men short and held off the enemy till all but seven sec- onds of the penalties were gone. That was when the Dukes final- ly broke down the stout defence thrown up Ly the locals and made ee | DeGray; Weston Dukes Lead Oshawa By 2-1 Count In Play-Off; Fourth Game Here Tonight > SUMMARY WESTON DUKES: Goal, Head; defence, White, Tolton; centre, Harris; wings, Bell, Jamieson; Alts, Moore, Livingston, Stoyan, Reid, Timgren, McIntosh, Jago and Ingram. OSHAWA BEES: Goal, Pallister; defence, Hillman, Marshall; centre, wings, Brabin, Wilson; Johnson, Edwards, Chircoski, Et- cher, Lawrence, Kellar, ""Haxton and O'Connor. Referees: Frank Udvari Kitchen- er and Larry Lewin, Galt, First Period Oshawa, Etcher Weston, Reid (Bell, Jamie- SON) Lu: Oshawa, rence) Weston, Harris (Jago) .. Oshawa, Brabin Weston, Reid (Bell) Penalties -- Brabin, Bell, Stoyan (2), Hillman, Law- rence. Second Period 7 Weston, 'Harris (Jago) .... Oshawa, Etcher Penalties -- Johnson, Chir- coski, Reid, Jamieson, Tim- gren and Brabin. Third Period Weston, Bell (Harris) Weston, Harris (White) Weston, Reid Penalties -- DeGray, Wil- son, McIntosh, Pallister, Johnson (major), Etcher (major), Marshall (major), Chircoski (major), Stoyan (major), Livingston (ma- jor), Harris (major), Jago (major), Ingram (major and minor) and Moore, Chircoski (Law- 10.59 . 13.32 18.37 19.21 FRAY TO WESTON 7-4 Canucks Upset Red Wings 5-2 On Detroit Ice Detroit, April 6--(AP)--The turn- ing point in last night's Detroit-| Montreal's National Hockey League semi-final playoff game was the first-period fight between the Wings' Ted Lindsay and Canadiens' Maurice Richard. That was the opinion of jubilant Coach Dick Ir-| vin of Montreal. | Canadiens had just staged a spec- | tacular comeback with a 5-2 victory ! over Detroit and move within one game of taking the best-of-seven | series. i Fiery Richard drew a major for! punching Lindsay and received an extra two minutes for charging. The Wings were leading 2-0 and appear- ed to be a cinch to take the game. "But Detroit couldn't capitalize on our shortage of one man," said | Irvin. "And when our Billy Reay | scored at the start of the second | period with Richards still off the | ice, that took all the fight out of | the Red Wings." | Midway in the second period, | Montreal's Bert Olmstead tied it up | and then Bernie (Boom Boom) | Geoffrion 'whipped in a 55-foot | shot that put Montreal ahead. "Give a lot of credit to our third line of Geoffrion, Paul Meger and Billy Reay," said Irvin. "It was their | spark in the second period that put us over the top." In the Detroit dressing room, Lindsay was nursin black eye' and a deep cut under the left eve. | He said he didn't see Richard's | punch coming. The two had tangled | along the boards and were joined | by several other team-mates. Detroit Manager Jack Adams and | Coach Tommy Ivan, whose club won | the third and fourth games after losing the first two, said little. They offered no excuses. { Thus the two teams move to Barrie Rally In 3rd Period Sends Marlies to 2nd Defeat As Flyers Take Series Lea ! Leo Labine In Limelight, (Morrison, White) Cuts Nesterenko For 5! Stitches Also Scores! Winning Goal--Penal- ty Timekeeper Never Lonely Barrie, April 6--(CP)--A three- goal spurt in the third period last! night gave Barrie Flyers a 4-2 vic- | tory over Toronto Marlboros and a | 2-1 lead in their best-of-seven games in the Ontario Hockey Asso- | ciation final. | Next game of the series is slated | for Toronto Saturday. | It was bad man Leo Labine who scored the winning Flyers goal. | Before that he spent a good deal of time in the penalty box, on a major | for cross-checking Eric Nesterenko | in the first period and two minors in | So the second. Hurst Ties It Up Real Chevrefils lead off for Bar- |! rie less than four minutes after the | game got going, but Ron Hurst tied | score before the first period ended. | Neither team got a shot home dur-! ing the second. | The middle period was not dull, however Labine's rough attack on| Nesterenko caused five stitches and st instigated a repeat perform- | ance of the knock-down and drag- | out affair in Toronto a month ago. | Marlboro coach, Bob Davidson, | got himself chased off the bench | for rushing onto the ice to keep his | players out of trouble during the | melee. | Bill Hagan and Jack McKnight | scored close on Labine's heels once Flyers broke ahead in the third period. By the time Danny Poland n Montreal for the sixth game Satur- | 80t to scoring the second Marlboro day night. So far the home team |80al, there was less than two min- has not won in the series. utes to go in the game. Montreal -- Goal, McNeil; defence, The first Marlies goal came out | Bouchard, Johnson; centre, Lach: ! of a rather weird pile up in front of | | wings, Richard, Olmstead; subs, |the Barrie goal. Hurst and Earl it a 5-4 tussle. Bill Harris passed | Harvey, Geoffrion, Curry, MacKay, | | PITCHING EDGE ! Detroit -- Hal Newhouser has won | | 185, lost 133. | 4--Barrie, Hagan So (Emms; Toppazzini) 5--Barrie, McKnight (Wood, Barber) ........... Marlbhoros, Poland (Nesterenko, Macdonald) 18:42 Penalties -- Peart, Poland, Peart, Lumley. 8:40 . 10:43 N.B.C. SERIES Wichita, Kans.,, April 6 (CP) -- | The National announced today that North American series between amateur clubs repre- senting the United States and Canada will start Sept. 10. tails will be announced later, Fort Wayne, Ind, won the 1950 series for the United States at Fort Wayne last year, Oshawa Merchants won the Canadian Con- gress title. The Canadian representatives will be decided in an East-West series, following regional playoffs be 'held in Saskatchewan and Ontario. The United States will be represented by the winners of fhe National Tournament at Wich- a. Baseball Congress the 1951 Championship | De- | Stanley Cup Statistics By The Canadian Press Semi-Finals, Best-of-Seven Series A PW IL a T 0 0 A A 10 10 10 10 { Montreal Detroit 1 shusicysid. 1g OF SCORING LEADERS A Toronto .. Boston bet] ® 3 NOOKNBMNNOANSONN®T Richard, Montreal Bentley, Toronto Reise, Detroit Howe, Detroit .. Abel, Detroit rss Olmstead, Montreal .. Barilko, Toronto Dumart, Boston .. Couture, Detroit Peirson, Boston Gardiner, Toronto Flaman, Toronto Reay, Montreal Lach, Montreal | Stewart, Detroit p | Harvey. Montreal ..... 0 2 2 28 | x--Includes one 10-minute miscon- [ duct. Quebec Citadels Appear Shoo-In 1 ° Eastern Finals | Sle | 'Quebec, April 8 -- (CP) -- Que- bec Citadels today appeared to be 'a shoo-in for The Memorial Cup, | Eastern Canada final. : Cits last night went on a scoring spree and won 9-0 over Inkerman | Rockets in the first game of their | best-of-five, semi-final series. Big Jean Beliveau, Cits' major | scoring threat, blasted two goals | past Rockets' goalie Ronnie Diguer, {and assisted on four others. Camille Henri and Bernie Guay {also scored twice. Bruce Cline, | Rainor Makila and Gord Haworth | counted the other markers. | Quebec's wide edge in territorial | play showed in the number of shots {on goal: 40 on Diguer, compared | with 18 on Paille. | Second game of the series will be played in Ottawa on Saturday. ] ll oF SEE CRO Cre BRB NONR Asoo aa'D T'S BIKE- FIXING GET READY TIME edge, thus out-shooting the Bees | LUBRICATION ~lipped | along exactly the same lines. Fred | Etcher got credit for the effort | shot, and the rubber deflected off a | Weston player between Head and | and Jedd Wilson lapped each other | Balfour brought the puck down the | to Fred Etcher for the tally. McNabney, Lowe, Ei but it was the io Flyer | Weston gained strepgth after goalie, Lorne Howes, after two vain ing a charging penalty, they actual- ly kept the Bees bottled in their own end of the rink for the whole two minutes. Harris' fore-checking jay a big hand in this great show- ng. White passed to this same Bill Harris not five minutes later to give the Dukes a 6-4 lead on a drill-shot from the blue line. Pal- lister got his eye on it at the last moment and tried to take the puck high on his stick. It glanced off the wood and caught the corner of the net, Oshawa * were growing tired by this time and Reid's ted the seventh goal for his club was just an anti-climax. The Big Battle A 'minute after that tally, a boards in front of the Oshawa bench produced a free-for-all that embroiled every player on the ice except the Weston goaler. All the players paired off and swung away. Leg holds, flips, scissors and all manner of fighting was demon- strated. Pallister forgot himself and tried to act as peace-maker. He got a minor pénalty for leaving his net. Ten majors, five apiece, were listed and the players concerned were sent to the dressing-rooms since less than five minutes re- mained in the game. Ingram picked up a minor as instigator of the plot. The result was a four-man game of hockey for the remaining four minutes and eight seconds. Not too interesting, so a lot of the fans left. To our way of think- faults . . . a lot of blame could be laid at the feet of the officials, who let things ride during the first and part of the second periods. No, matter what happened at the Arena in the fourth game with the fifth, if necessary, back in Oshawa on Tuesday night. that and while McIntosh was serv- | unassisted | rush up the right boards that net- | check . . . rather rugged, along the | ing it wasn't altogether the players' | though, the teams go at it tonight | Reay, Mosdell, | Meger, MacPherson, | Kaiser, Mas- nick. Detroit -- Goal, Sawchuk; defence, Reise, Kelly; centre, Abel; wings, | Howe, Lindsay; subs, Goldham, Gee, | Peters, Stewart, Skov, Pavelich, Mec- | | Fadden, Prystai, Couture, Pronovost, | | Woit, Glover. Referee--George Gravel; linesmen | --Jim Primeau, Eddie Mepham. | First Period | 1--Detroit, Abel ... a | 2--Detroit, Howe (Lindsay, | i Kelly) 14:27 | | Penalties--Woit, Lindsay, Richard | | (major and minor). | | Second Period | | 3--~Montreal, Reay (Meger) 4:04 | 4--Montreal, Olmstead | (Richard, Harvey) 11:48 | | 5--Montreal. Geoffrion | (Masnick) . or 17:51 | Penalties--MacPherson, Howe. | Third Period | | 6--Montreal, Richard { | (Olmstead) 7--Montreal, MacKay (Curry, Mosdell) | Penalties--None. | 14:45 | | 18:07 | IRISH RECORD | -- | South Bend -- Jim Mutscheller, | | Notre Dame football captain for | | 1951, led the 1950 team in scoring | with 42 points. He caught 35 pass- | es for a' total of 426 yards to set a | new Irish aerial mark. | | stabs, who finally poked the puck in. Lots of Penalties It was a rough, sometimes wild game. The penalty box never got lonely. Barrie had a slight edge in territorial play, but both teams looked a shade weary. Toronto Marlboros - hart; defense, Lumsden, Cooper; centre, Maxwell; wings, Lumley, | Stewart; alternatives, MacDonald, Nesterenko, Poland, Peart, Windley, | MacFarland, Balfour, Hurst. Barrie Flyers -- Goal, Howes; de- | fense, Morrison, Stanutz; centre, | White; wings, Chevrefils, Labine; alternates, McKnight, O'Connor, | Towers, Hagan, Wood, D. Emms, | Toppazzini, Barber. { Officials--Jack Hogan, Galt; Jack | Mehlenbacher, Hagersville, Goal, Lock- First Period 1--Barrie, Chevrefils (Morrison, Labine) . er. 3:34 2--Marlboros, Hurst (Balfour) . 10:23 | Penalties--Peart (Minor and mis- conduct), Lumsden, Nesterenko, | Hagan, Windley, Labine (major), Windley ' (major), Toppazzini (maj- or). Second Perlod Scoring----None Penalties--Lumley, bine, Labine, Hurst. Third Period 3--Barrie, Labine Stewart, La- p) 4 0] Mn Canada's Smartest Xaces more people wear STETSON HATS than any other brand ask forthe Stetson Playboy $1028 Other Stetson Mats from $8.95 | [I 266 KING ST. WEST | I Regular lubrication and oil change is essential for the mechanical well-being of your car or truck. Drive in every 1,000 miles and our lubrication department will give your car expert attention. CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR PONTIAC--BUICK--G.M.C. TRUCKS PH. 4750 BICYCLE TIRES Worth 2-29 Heavy duty, thick ete type treads. 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