Daily Times-Gazette, 17 Nov 1951, p. 11

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1951 ! "THE wAILY TIMES -CAZETTE PAGE ELEVEN WHA HOPPEN?... Waterloo Wh ews ww == Guelph (CP)--Guelph Biltmores moved to within one point of the league-leading Toronto Mariboros by trouncing the eighth-place Wa- terloo Hurricanes 12-1 in an On- tario Hockey Association junior "A" tilt last night. MarlboTos, however, have two games in hand. Although minus two of their leading goal-scorers, Andy Bath- . gate and Chuck Henderson, Bilt- mores, packed too much speed for the faltering Hurcs. Waterloo held a brief 1-0 lead but Biltmores made it 2-1 before the first period ended. They scor- ed four more in the second and finished up with six in the third stanza. Ken Laufman, the league's lead- ing point-getter, fattened his aver- age with a pair of goals and four assists. Aldo Guidolin scored three goals, Billy McCreary drill- ed a pair with single tallies going to Ray Ross, Ron Murphy, Chick Chalmers, Dean Prentice and Frank Bettiol. Lou Dietrich scor- ed Waterloo's lone tally. WATERLOO -- Goal, Defelice; defence, "Caron, Appleby, Roth, Treen: forwards, Brooker, Mader, Dietrich, Oliver, Woods, Arm- Herewith some times of general interest gathered by Bill Szikszay, president of the Oshawa Strength and Health Club. The Self-Improvement Contest is now under way, and the boys are training hard to cash in on the prize. Measurements have been taken, and it's hoped that next week individual or group pictures of the contestants will be snapped. We have some talented lens hounds in our midst. Good luck and good training! Bill Millington, George Valen- tine and Johnnie Bint are three of our more eager aspirants. Haven't missed a work-out Since the season started. Nice going, boys. - Did you know--yass, that means you--that the 'average' body- builder lifts close to 15 tons of weights during a work-out seesion? As someone once remarked: Blood, sweat and tears. Don Hall, Glen Brouse and Al Major are teamed up as training partners, under Glen's experienced supervision. On Friday, December 7, the club plans a competitive lifting meet, to be held in the CRA auditorium. It's free, so why not drop down that way and see some of Osha- wa"s strongest athletes at work. Competition will be scheduled for three classes: Lightweigh t, Middleweight and Heavyweight. Could anything be simpler? Any Oshawa business man who is interested in losing weight, con- ditioning exercises, or packing on some healthy flesh, should get down and see the club rooms at the CRA Building at 100 Gibbs Street. There's at least one of the executive on duty every night in the week, and most afternoons, and he will be glad to start you off with some easy exercises ad- adapted to your particular needs. You will meet some fine lads and top-notch athletes, who exemplify the club motto of "Body-building and Sportsmanship." Art Savoie, "our strong-man cop", keeps busy, running between the wood-working shop just down the hall and the weights room. Law-breakers beware. Art is squatting with 130 1bs., and does a bench press with 160 lbs. Bob Renaud and Don Wilcox joined up as training partners last week, and these well-developed athletes push up tons of cold steel each work- out. Bob is no mean gymnast either. Why body build? Body-building is a sure method of increasing physical strength and muscle tone, and at the same time maintaining efficiency of the internal organs. You can't go wreng if you stick by the rules in this game. It works wonders. Laugh of the week: Al Major giving a seat-splitting performance while doing the squats. Meeting of the club membership at 2 p.m. today in the CRA Audit- orium, where you'll hear news of the Big Strength-and-Health Show scheduled for Friday, March, 14, (Why, that's Next Year!) Inter- ested visitors invited to sit in. And watch this column for further details. This is only the beginning, | 12--Guelph, Chalmers (Lauf- [od i id strong, McNeil, Connelly, Maison- euve. GUELPH -- Goal, Hagen; .de- fence, Blair, Fontinato, Powell, Uniac, Brady; forwards, Ross, Guidolin, Murphy, Laufman, Chal- mers, Bettiol, Prentice, McCreary. Referees--Jack Shropshire, To- ronto; Hugh Bolton, Hamilton. FIRST PERIOD 1--Waterloo, Dietrich (Brook- er, Mader) 7:35 2--Guelph, McCreary (Lauf-, mers, Fontinato) Penalties--Howell (3:50); Treen (3:59); Maissoneuve (10:29); Blair (15:08). SECOND PERIOD 4--Guelph, McCreary (Lauf- Li phy) 6--Guelph, Ross (Guidolin, , Howell) 7--Guelph, Murphy Penalties--McNeil phy (7:37); Fontinato (11:56); Ross 14:29); Unlac (18:22). THIRD PERIOD 8--Guelph, Prentice 97 9--Guelph, Guidolin (Mur- | 48 | | . 12:32 man 11--Guelph, Laufman (Chal- mers, Bettiol) man, Bettiol) 13:59 13--Guelph, Guidolin (Ross) 18:58 Penalties--Oliver (6:24); Apple- by (10:44). 10 6 12-33 11-23 FLYERS IN SIXTH Barrie (CP) -- Barrie Flyers moved into -a sixth-place tie with St. Catharines tonight by defeat- ing Kitchener Greenshirts 5-2 and breaking their losing streak of the past two weeks in the OHA jun- for ""A" circuit. Flyers were sparked by Thi- beault all the way and outplayed the Kitchener team. KITCHENER -- Goal, Harring- ton; deefrce, Simon, Candido, No- vak, Farelli, Jarvis; forwards, Toyota, Hicks, Tessier, Holowaty, Ingoldsby, Lahaye, Austin, Joyce. BARRIE--Goal, Howes; defence, Willis, Thibeault, O'Connor, Men- ard; forwards, Wood, McKenney, Emms, Whalen, Mohns, Teal, Mar- tan, White, Macdonald. FIRST PERIOD : 1--Barrie, McKenney Rudy Cruz Scores 4th Round TKO Hollywood. (AP) -- Rudy Cruz, formidable Los Angeles light weight, scored a fourth round technical knockout over Manuel Rivera of Mexico City here last night. Cruz scaled 139, Rivera 136%. Rivera was unable to toss a solid punch during the brief, one sided affair and went down under a bar- rage of head and body blows be- fore referee Frankie Van stopped it with 2 minutes, 2 seconds gone in the fourth. Cruz, always a stylish boxer but a notoriously weak puncher, blood- ied Rivera's nose in the second and carried the fight all the way. SPORTSMANS DIGEST sharp FISH GROW LARGER PENETRATING SUNLIGHT 7 | ard Bilts! -- Flyers Win (Whalen) 2--Kitchener, Joyce (Candido, Ingoldsby) ... 15:10 3--Barrie, Teal (Thibeault) 17:22 Penalties-- Novak (4:14); Mar- tan (9:10); Thibeault (14:55); Men- ard (17:55); Simon (18:23); Thi- beault (19:33). SECOND PERIOD 4--Barrie, Macdonald (Teal) 7:30 5--Barrie, Menard 19:40 Penalties--Farelli (2:44); O'Con- nor (4:50); Menard (7:40); Men- (10:19); Teal (11:10); Wood (12:09); Simon (19:07). THIRD PERIOD 6--Barrie, Martan (Mohns). 8:45 7--Kitchener, Teassier . (Hicks) Penalties--O'Connor (2:28); Hol- owaty (2:45); Novak (3:30); Far- elli (misconduct), (8:45); White (delaying game), (8:37); Thibeault (9:40); Lahaye (14:00); Novak (16:55); Martan (17:25). Stops: Howes Harrington & Bruins Plan Puck avhem | WEY EINE y Elwes At Leafs Home BY THE CANADIAN PRESS | A delinquent rightwinger, a once- | shunned leftwinger afid a goalzesn- er who really gets around, come | to Toronto today. They plan a little | hockey mayhem. As members of Lynn Patrick's Boston Bruins, they have aspira- | tions of handing the secend - place | Toronto Maple Leafs their (fifth Saturday night less in the Nation- al Hockey League. o Leafs haven' won a Saturday night game at home this season. | The best they could do was a 3-3 | tie with Detroit Red Wings last | Saturday. x For the delinquent, Bill Ezinicki, it will be his first appearance at the Gardens this year. A former Leaf, Ezinicki abandoned the Bruins at the beginning of the season, preferring golf to hoc'ey. For a player who at one time 14 10 6--30 wasn't wanted by other NHL | teams, Adam Brown is doing re- merkedly weil in a Bruin uniform. He's sixth in the scoring derby and tors for the Eosion teow. Sugar Jenry daspile Eivins' fourth - rlace status, has fanned on only 24 shets and sup- rlied the keantowners wita 'a stronger defence against sone of these high - sédrinz forwards. He has left in two goals fewer tazn 21 Rollins ef the Lea's sid Detroit Red Wings' Terry Sawchuk But they've both keen in 15 games to 13 for Henry. Jim Montreal Canadiens will attempt | to secure their third - place stand- ing when they meet New York Rangers in Montreal, the eonly other game scheduled tonight. Bruins have played two fewer games than the Tcronto team, and are only four points in arrears. That makes tonight's affair an im- portant one for the Leafs. The Boston club will have Johnny Peirson back in the lineup, to re- unite a dangerous which includes Brown and veteran Milt Schmidt. Canadiens three points behind Torento, wil lhave to take their game with Boston Sunday if they wish to retain third place. Neil Colville's Rangers are two points SCISSORED TARP TOPS TURF It finally happened: The Can- adian Rugby Union's $12,000 tar- paulin was spread completely over Varsity stadium's field in Toronto late yesterday. It will remain on the field until the Nov. 24 Grey Cup final, for which it was purchased. Yesterday was the first time the huge canvas has been used. Some stadium officials said that if the weather after the week-end turns out clear and mild, the tarp should bé taken up to let the field dry out. ANOTHER HAMILTON WINNER Hamilton Panthers trounced Osh- awa's Red Raiders 19-0 last night to win the Ontario Rugby Football Union Intermediate championship. The victory gave Panthers a 31-1 edge in the two-game, totalpoints final. They whipped Raiders 12-1 last week. Panthers now will travel to Mon- treal where they will meet either Montreal Regiment or Montreal Lakeshore for the Eastern Canada championship Nov. 24. The east-west final will beplay- ed at Toronto's Varsity Stadium. Dec. 1. RIDES 4603 WINNERS Gordon Richards, with 226 win- ners, will end Britain's flat-racing season today as the leading jockey for the 24th time since he began riding in 1920. His closest rival is Doug Smith with 117. Richards has ridden a lorecord total of 4603 winners. ARGOS RE-SIGN COACHES Frank Clair and John Kerns have been signed to three - year contracts as head and line coach, respectively, of the Toronto Argon- auts of the Big Four football union, it was announced yesterday by president Bob Moran. Terms of the contract were not disclosed. ADVANCE TO 'SPIEL FINAL At Galt C. Renwick's Belmor Rink beat A. O. Hutchinson's Fer- gus four 10-7 and Galt's S. H. Smithers rink downed J. Heffer- nan's Guelph quartet 11-7 yester- day in semi-finals of the Little trophy, main event on the Galt curling club's Early Bird bonspiel. ACCEPT SUGAR BOWE BID At New Orleans Charles C. Zata- rain, president of the New Orleans Mid-Winter Sports Association, an- nounced last night the University Maryland have accepted invita- of Tennessee and the University of tions to play in the 18th annual Sugar Bowl football game there Jan. 1. The game will pit the country's second and fifth ranking 5 | teams. oe RECENT EXPERIMENTS PROVE THAT SPREADING LIME UPON LAKES WITH THE USE OF BOATS; CLEARS THE WATER SO THAT MORE SUNLIGHT PENETRATES THE DEPTHS. THE ADDED SUN- LIGHT WITH NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS FERTILIZER PRO=- MOTED PLANT GROWTH AND ALL FISH GREW FASTER AND LARGER AS THE RESULT. FARR LOSES THIRD At Manchester, England, Al Hoosman, Los Angeles Negro who has been doing most of his fight- ing in Europe for the last two years, outpointed 37-year-old Tom- my Farr of Wales last night in a 10-round bout. It was Farr's third loss in eight comeback fights fol- lowing a 10-year layoff. VANCOUVER BOXER BEST Len Walters, young feather- weight boxer from Vancouver, last night was named winner of the Norton H. Crowe Memorial Trophy, giving him recognition by the BE SURE we + RE-ELECT Tommy THOMAS Ir is Not expensve ErmHER/ OF WHAT WAS . .. FELT'S JEWELLERS To J. NASH ® Bulova Watches ®- Community & 1847 Bros. Silverplate ® Blue Star Diamonds ALL FULL GUARANTEE, ALL REPAIRS DONE NEW WATCHES UNDER AGAINST BREAKAGES! SWISS WATCH EXPERT THE CHANGE OF OWNERSHIP JEWELLERS! Rogers the past. Come in and EVEN BY A Although the name is changed you will still receive the same courteous personal service that you have in BUY ON OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN OR ON CREDIT J. NASH sweuers 14 KING ST. E. --- PHONE 3-9433 "A Good Place to do Your Christmas Shopping" see us soon. SPORT Amateur Athletic Union of Can-| ada as the outstanding Canadian athlete of the year. The announce- | ment was made at the annual! meeting of the AAU in Vancouver. | The 20-year-old Walters, a British Empire Games athlete, won the North American featherweight box- ing championship this year Boston. TWO RANGERS GO DOWN New York Rangers of the Na- tional Hockey League yesterday | in| By Canadian Press farmed out rookie pazzini to Cincinnati of the Ameri- can Hockey League. BODY BLOWS BEST Roughouse Paddy Demarco of Brooklyn bullied young Eddie Chavez of San Jose, Calif., and wore him down with body blows last night to win a unanimous 10- | round decision at New York's Ma- dison Square Garden. Demarco weighed 138'%, Chavez 1394. the ! scoring line | A defenceman | Jim Ross and forward Zellio Top- | | behind the Bruins, and three back |of Montreal. | One thing is definite. The leading | V s can hang onto first place at vntil temorrow "night. They lead Toronto by four points. | £4 sit teams will see action | Sunday. Montreal will visit Boston, I"i'orento will go to Chicago and New | York will entertain the Wings. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT New York, -- Paddy Demarco, 158Y2, Brooklyn, outpointed Fadis | Chavez, 1392, San Jose, Calif.(10) | Hollywood, Calif, -- Rudy Cruz, 139, Los Angeles, stopped Manuel Rivera, 136%, Mexico City (4-TKO) Roanoke, Va.-- Irish Ritchie | Reed, 149%, White Plains, N. Y., | stopped Manny Gomez, 142, Phoe- nix (5) Manchester, England -- Al Hoos- man, 209%, Los Angeles, outpointed Tommy Farr, 204, wales (10) Tigers Trounce Sounders 7-4 in Sr. Fixture All six OHA Seinior A league teams went into action last night. Hamilton Tigers maintained their hold on first by trouncing Owen Sound Mercurys 7-4, Brantford va- cated the basement with a 3-2 triumph over Sarnia Sailors and Stratford blanked Kitchener-Wat- erloo Dutchmen 8-0. Murray Comfort was the big gun at Hamilton, bagging four goals for the Tigers. Bill Ham- mona added a pair while Ab Co- nick scored the other tiger tally. Andy Grant, Roy Leckie, Tommy Burlington and Buck Forslund were Owen Sound snipers. Over 2800 fans saw Bruce Dale rack up his first whitewashing of the season for Indians. Dinny Fla- nagan led the way offensively, 3 scoring three times, and defence- man Don Heinbuck added a pair, ° Jack Thaler, Al Ritchie and Bill Walsh accounted for the rest. Brauiford Wok 'a 20 lead in ine first on goals by Wally Hnatiuk and Holota, but Chuck Glabb cut nounced that Windsor Spitfires, counter of the middle canto. Bob: Wrightshell added another goal for Redmen in the third to make it 3-1 before Ted Garvin rounded out the scoring. i All six senior teams will play to- night with games slated: Stratford at Sarnia, Hamilton at Owen Sound and Brantford at Kitchener. Tomorrow's Specicl *™ BARGAIN STORE GOOD WORKING PANTS All Colors end Sizes. Reg. $3.95. Special .. $3.45 21 BOND W. OSHAWA 313 ALBERT ST. "DIXON COAL COAL ALL KINDS AND SIZES OIL furnace - FueL OIL LARGE STOCK AND GUARANTEED QUALITY! ALT I 1.9.5] "IMPERIAL" OSHAWA, ONT. he Hospita A Pledge to Ontario THINK! VOTE LIBERAL -- HERE IS YOUR CANDIDATE WALTER C. THOMSON ONTARIO RIDING > them. ICKNESS KNOWS NO BARRIERS, accident and disease strike without discrimination. And, for many, they spell tragedy far above the ravages of illness itself. For many they spell stark financial ruin, the savings of a lifetime wiped out, the provision for old age gone in a few short weeks. : The reason for this is very evident. At every hospital door there is a barrier -- an invisible dollar sign -- that keeps these desperately needed services out of reach of many who do need The rich are well able to pay for their hospital care, the poor are cared for by the state. But the middle class families, the back- bone of our population, are expected to pay their own way. And" the sad truth today, when the cost of hospital care bears no relation to the ability to pay, is the fact that many of these simply cannot afford the hospital care they need. Because this is drastically wrong by all human standards, because there is so crying a need for adequate measures to protect our people in sickness as well as in health, the Liberal govern- ment, when elected on November 22nd, solemnly pledges the immediate institution of a province-wide hospital plan to make certain hospital care is available to the people of Ontario at rates they can afford. This is no idle promise. Nor is it a "fraudulent" scheme. It is a definite actuarial plan, based upon sound business practices and upon the experience of other provinces where such plans have proved successful. It will be a contributory plan, the costs shared by the province, without increased taxation, and by your annual premium. The provincial share will be financed by levying increased dues upon private companies who have been making profits from certain of Ontario's Crown resources without adequate payment. The contribution of the individual will be well within the means of all to pay. Because we believe that the greatest prosperity this province can have lies in the contentment of its people, it is our intention to bring to the people of Ontario a government worthy of their trust, a government interested in them and in their well-being at all times, in sickness and in health. $ These are the facts. The decision is yours to make on November 22nd. | Plan > INSERTED BY LIBERAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE FOR ONTARIO. Leader, Ontario Liberal Party 'Y ad

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