| SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1951 Hl a THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE ELEVEN: SEEKS TITLE SHOT... I; De Marco Wrestles Split Decision From Saddler i bd ¥ / J i J | (AP) Billygoat New York | Paddy De Marco, who butts with tha mast angelic look on his face, was aiming for a title shot with lightweight champion Jimmy Car- ter today following his split deci- sion over featherweight king, Sandy. Saddler. y As for Sandy, he still was splut- tering with rage over the tug - of - war, Vigsting mated judo test he and the Brookly tering ram staged at Madison Square Garden last night Any re- semblance to the fine points of boxing was purely coincidental. Tears trickled from the infur- ated Saddler's eyes as he stormed into his dressing room and de- clared "I'm through---this is my last fight. "What do they want me to do?" said the tall negro "go in and beat s man down to win a decision. "I wasn't rough," said De Mar- co with a grin on his face. "sad- dler is rough. He can't fight any other way. My corner' told me to let him be the tough guy." Saddler, of course, soon changed his mind about retiring. Referee George Walsh voted for De Marco, a 3-to-2 underdog, by an 8-1-1 count. Judge Harold Barnes also had Paddy with winner, by 6- 4. The other judge, Frank Forbes, hscored for Saddler, 6-3-1. De Marco had a six-pound weight edge, 136 to 130. "De Marco sat down deliber- ately twice without being hit," Sandy's manager, Charley Johnston, "He should have been disqualified for that. He turned his back not only one but three times. He ducked out and grabbed the ropes. He did all the pushing and holding." . "Saddler pushed De Marco to the canyas twice," said the ref- eree, who had a very, very busy evening. He warned saddler in the first minute and admonished him at least seven times. He told off the Marco at least three times. The gladiators hit on the break, held and hit, heeled, butted and VOTE and RE-ELECT ALDERMAN CLIFFORD HARMAN Representative of all the people FOR ALDERMAN 1952 broke aimosi every rule ii ihe book. Robert Christenberry, the chair- naa of the state athlstia sommis. sion, who had warned both at the noon weigh-in "to make it a clean fight let's have no brawl," said he planned to take no action. "They fought in their customary style," sald Christenberry. 'They are two boys with a very rugged style of fighting." Appetizing Menu US Pro Football This Weekend New York (AP) -- The National Football League presents quite an appetizing menu tomorrow and the prospects are that both the Na- tional and American Conference races will be decided. The spotlight 1s on Los Angeles where the Rams entertain the De- troit Lions. The victor will take over the National Conference lead and just about assure itself of the crown. Los Angeles leads Detroit by one-half game. Both have a game apiece remaining. The Rams are gunning for their third straight conference title while the Lions are seeking their first diadem since 1935. The game probably will be a test between Los Angeles vaunted aerial attack and Detroit's strong defence plus the ground and air of- fence led by Doak Walker and Bobby Layne. Chief interest in the American Conference centres on Pittsburgh and Philadelphia. At Pittsburgh, the Steelers clash with Cleveland Browns while Philadelphia plays host to New York Giants. The Browns can Sew up tue American Conference pennant by licking the Steelers, a feat they figure to accomplish. The Giants trail the Browns by 1 }2 games. The. Giants lone hope is that the Steelers upset the mighty Browns while they defeat the Eagles. In other games, Chicago Bears take on the Yanks in New York, Green Bay tangles with the 49ers in San Francisco and Washington clashes with the Cardinals in Chi- cago. The Bears and 49ers still are in the running for the National Con- ference race but their chances are slim. The Bears stand at 6-4 and ' | the 49ers at 5-4. Los Angeles leads with a 7-3 record and Detroit is i | second at 6-3. AHL CHIPS Providence, R.I. (AP)--Indiana- polis Capitals, winners of only six of their American Hockey League starts, last night topped Provid- ence Reds for the fourth time by 5-2 before 2469 fans. Veteran Ed Bruneteau and Enio .| Sclisizai, scored Indianapolis tal- lies before and after Jack Stod- dard, the league's. top scorer, .notched the first Providence goal. During the third period Earl Reibel scored twice and Larry Wilson once before Jack McGiil provided the second Providence marker with less than three min- utes remaining. 1009 VIRGIN WOOL AUTOROBE Reg. $11.50 -- Special $6.95 In a Choice of Colors (Size 57" x 68") DON'T MISS THIS SENSATIONAL VALUE -- THE PERFECT GIFT FOR THE MOTORIST ON YOUR LIST. ONTARIO MOTOR SALES 86, KING E. DIAL 3-2256. A =U Hayward Re-elect ALDERMAN Murdoch -- 3 YEARS' Civic Experience --_---- An Honest Effort In The Interests Of The Citizens Of Oshawa Th omens Saddacia Fis ~ ~ Il was Saddier's first fight since he was suspended for two months by Christenberry. for his brawl with Willie Pep last September. Pep lad his license revoked. De Marco, who, won his 12th straight fight an d his second in three meetings with the then man from Harlem, swept fo a quick lead, forced the pace, and was far ahead when Saddler staged a be- lated rally in tne last two rounds. There was no knockdowns. Both were cut over tue left eye. There was a fairly successful weight-lifting competition put on by the Oshawa Strength and Health Club last night at their gym in the CRA Building. Between thirty and forty barbell enthusiasts turned up for the meet, and most of them got into active competition. There were a dozen or two interested spectat- ors, ' It was encouraging to see the large group of novice lifters in ace tion, and note their enthusiasm and fine lifting style. Ribbons for win- ners were supplied by CRA, and handed out by president Bill Sziks- zay at the close of the meet. Bill and Don Moffett changed weights and kept the meet going smoothly, and Brock Brace acted as MC and scorer, Following are the results: BEGINNER'S BENCH PRESS First, tie to Bob Shape and Larry Manning; Second, Jack Shear; Third, Bob Brownlee. Press for maximum weight: First, Manning; Second, Snape; Third, Brownlee. Bent-arm Pull-over: First, John Bint; Second, Shear; Third, Man- ning. Squats: Bint, Brownlee, Snape. LIGHTWEIGHT'S BENCH PRESS First, Don Wilcox; second, George Valentine; Third, Bob Renaud. Press for maximum weight: First, Renaud; Second, Valentine, and Third, Roy Royan. Bent-arm Pull-over: First, Don Wilcox, 200; Second, Bob Renaud, 190; Third, Roy Bryan, 181, Squats: First, Wilcox, 250; Sec- ond, Valentine, 225; Third, Renaud, 220. MIDDLEWEIGHT'S BENCH PRESS First, Don Moffett; Second, Roy Graham, Press for max. weight: Moffett, 185; Graham, 175. . Bent-arm Pull-overs: First, Gra- ham; Second, Moffett; Third, Bill Millington, Pull-overs, max. weight: First, Graham, 180; Second, Moffett, 175; Third, Millington, 130. Squats: First, Graham, 200; Mof- fett, 210; Millington, 160. Dead Lift: First, Moffett, 352; Second, Graham, 352; Third, Mil- lington, 320. HEAVYWEIGHT BENCH PRESS First, Harry Cook; Second, Bob Day; Third, Art Savoie. Press for max. weight: First, Day, 185; Second, Cook, 185; Third, Savole,. 160, There was evidéntly no time left for the heavyweights to compete in the deep knee bends or squats. But at half time, Ziggy gave a fairly re- markable demonstration of how the pull-over is done professionally, starting at 260 Ibs, with hal{-a- ddzen reps, and working it upto over 300 for several reps. He got a well-deserved burst of. applause. Credit goes to Glen Brouse, who in spite of a bout with the flu, at- some pull-overs. in the eight class. He also helped with the weights while Don was lifting, It was generally conceded that Art Savoie among the heavyweights and George Valentine for the light- weights had made the most pro- gress during the fall season, It cer- tainly showed in their lifting last night. The executive was highly gratified. N CHECKING GN SPAT Barry Lowes held the interest of the gathering of coaches, play- ers and fans at last night's bas- ketball clinic for a total of some three hours and 52 minutes. And then when he asked for questions . . . the group still had not had enough, : Sitting on hard benches and standing around in groups . . . it was a real tribute to the guy's ability to put his subsct across. It was a tribute, in a way, to the group too. They were really try- ing to get the most from the talks, vies and de strations. The film was concerned with Hank Iba's system of offence and defence. Iba, one of the top coaches in the south-west section of the U.8, presented systems of id attack. ter in the evening, Bar Lowes showed the i Mo pA ree Mine that - are so pre- valent in ay's ving gam basketball, ei From that point Barry went into. the defence situations that can befall a player and explained "away many faults... showed how a coach could correct them, and hoy a player could corre¢t him- self. A very interesting and instruc- CITY LEAGUE PUCK STANDINGS BANTAM SECTION RED LEAGUE Teams Ritson 8. Simcoe Westmount Centre rd St. Gregory's .... N. Simcoe BLUE LEAGUE Teams® O=N~OOM a] 13 Harmony & King 1 Cedardale & T.C.'s 0 FUTURE GAMES Wednesday, Dec. 12 -- S. Simcoe vs. Westmount, 4:00 p.m. Mary vs. Cedardale and T.C's, 4:40 pm. Harmony and King vs. Albert, 5:20 p.m. Thursday, Dee. 13 -- Centre vs. Ritson, 4:00 pm. N. Oshawa vs. Foly Cross, 4:40 p.m. N. Simcoe vs. St. Gregory's, 5:20 pm. Wem wm ~oo™ COMO OM . |the league's service bureau man- » tive night . . . we could stand more of 'em, vr ni hot Central Senior team did it again last night. This time Hey clipped the wings of the 68-44. Last time it was the Grads. At half time the.club from the south school led 52-14, but a de- termined bid by the Irish salvag- ed some of their reputation, Coach Don Mcliveen has his club breaking beautifully on the big floor and they make it pretty rough on any visitors not used to the vast reaches of space that are CC 1. i Notice that Willie Casanova, the hot-shot with Ajax Cleaners is still leading the ODBA Big Five. At his present rate, he should cop the scoring title with ease. He has now taken over the job of coaching his team. ' Pat Sheehan, the ex-coach, is still in basketball locally, running the minor league set-up that is thriving at Simcoe Hall on Sat- urday mornings. The upcoming games in the Oshawa and District Basketball Association pit Port Perry Lions against Oshawa Grads at the OC- VI gym on Monday night, 8:00 o'clock; Oshawa Rovers in Ajax Tuesday (dance after the game, men) and on Wednesday night, the Flying Irish return home for h c CHECKLETS--Well, that red- |1952 with the action Oshawa Rockets Motorcycle Club The meeting was called to order by vice president Vic Williamson in the absence of the president. There were 19 members present. Joe Bobak and Jack Vaillancourt are to represent the Club at the monthly meeting of the CMA in Hamilton, Next Sunday, Dec. 9th, is the ominations for the officers for The attendance pool winner Was Clare Miller. However being absent the money reverts to the treasury. BOWLING NEWS High scores: Cliff Cassleman, 646 points; Ken Cowle, 556 points; Boris Kapchinski, 513 points. Neil Tonkin's team, Intermediate Punks are in the lead. Lemon League: Jack Vaillancourt. There was great deal of discus- sion on the point system as all members are eligible for the Pellers Trophy. --Joe Peacock. MINORS END TALK BAN Baseball's minor leagues wound up their annual convention - day at Columbus by Jester the ban on chatting school players and ors for half their radio-television revenue. eliminating with high asking the maj- Unless the big leagues 80 along of the minors, the igh school rule will revert to the urrent one which prevents base- ball men approaching scholastic tars in any way. Under a compromise worked out of three separate proposals, the minors, agreed that 'during 1952 the professionals might talk with high school players, but not sign |astie players to sign contracts, but, them to a contract until their class | would ban them from playing a had graduated. In 1953 the riile | game until their eligibility had ex] would change, allowing the schol-'pired. GENERAL MOTORS VETERANS' SOCIAL GLUB ROUND AND SQUARE DANCING ; TO Bryce Brown and his Sevenairs TO BE HELD AT OSHAWA AIRPORT, FRI, DEC. 14 ? 8:30 P.M. : * REFRESHMENTS x ADMISSION Tickets on Sale -- Crystel Grill, $1.50 PER COUPLE Sle bin-Stss, SnE WANs anofher short stay to play host to the Whitby Intermediates. That game begins at 8:00 p.m. in Sim- coe Hall. . . . By Bob Rife. National League Attendance Falls New York (AP) -- National League baseball attendance fell 13 per cent in 1951 according to the official figures released today by ager. The league drew 7,244,002 com- pared to 8,320,616 in 1950. Brooklyn was the top draw with 1,282,628 at home and 1,538,762 on the road. The Boston Braves slumped from 944,391 to 484,475 as five clubs fell 944,391 to 484,475 as five clubs fell behind. The only teams to improve on their 1951 attendance were Brooklyn, New York and Cincin- nati. Want to buy, sell or trade? A Classified Ad, the deal is made. Compaign. VOTE AND ELECT Group chairman, 7th Oshawa Scouts . . . vice-president of Oshawa's - Kinsmen Club . . . chairman, Kinsmen Elmer the Sefety Elephent MARK YOUR BALLOT GORDON B. ATTERSLEY - - X GORDON B. ATTERSLEY FOR ALDERMAN 1352 A year round worker on com- munity projects -- successfully represented groups of citizens, re public improvements, parks, traffic lights and guides for schools, ete, \ VOTE as You Like Council JOHN M. BLACK CEPHUS GAY CLIFF HARMAN JACK NAYLOR WESLEY POWERS W. RUTHERFORD NORVILLE SWEET ote as you like BUT VOTE! BUT VOTE! Local 222 respectfully draws the attention of its members to the fact that the following candidates for Civic election are members of Local 222, UAW-CIO: Public Utilities ROY FLEMING Bd. of Education - W. DUFFIELD CLARENCE SADLER Oshawa) fail to make some namely Total Assessment: ~--Buildings * --Business Total assessment as returned for 1951 n Your debenture debt has increased from a low in 1947 of: to a high of: Local improvements Present debentures the council to proceed with: like the word bankruptey. and in the near future, if you the of the council board . . . | mean the mayor ond aldermen of 1951 . . . in the fore- coming election on Monday next, between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. First | would like to point out, that your corporation is one of considerable substance, --Lands assessment - $ 7,354,365.00 32,080,280.00 5,814,530.00 45,249,175.00 Approximately 50 million dollars $ 569,415.00 3,318,618.89 In addition to your annual mill rate and debenture increases from 1946 to 1951 inclusive your councils have from 1946 to 1950 inclusive spent $299,480.10 received from the sale of city-owned property taken over at tox sales. Proposed future financing on which and for which debentures will have to Sewage disposal plant Purchase of Hydro distribution system in annexed ares. . .. Waterworks improvement; balance of present program. . .. Total present commitments Probable debenture debt by end of 1953 Since we are now taking a discount of between 6% avd 7% on our deb have to be increased, in my opinion, In 1947, your council was able to honour money on 15 years debentures at roves ing from 2% to 2% % while for your most recent issue of 4% ani 414% you have had to take Bi ho of 2D 6% and 7%, emounting to $83,748.41 on your capital, we sold eur bonds toe cheap, if it were mot so, they would mot have been gobbled up so quickly. | opyosed accepting the offer, and suggested a recall for tenders at a later date. The following is a list of projects, that interested citizens are continually pressing Louisa St. Bridge and new street Connecting Louisa with Alice St. New bridge and super road Bloor St. W. New lateral sanitary sewers could easily run into an expendituré of New and needed storm sewers could easily run into an expenditure of New roads and pavements, King and Simcoe etc... . Repairs to old sidewalks and new sidewalks These are my own, estimates and may be épen ts some criticism, but regardless of eny criticism the cost of these projects is bound to Se of eonsiderab'e proportions. + Then there is new street lighting, moving the crsék for Board of Education, a bridge ot John St. creek valley development scheme, etc. far inte the nijht, end if you the men who cannot say no to any request, for fear of of 'ending someone ond théreby not going to be teo long before you have a debentu-e debt approaching 10 - 12 million, and if you take a serious look ot the overall pleture you will realize t:at we are "galloping teward something" if you don't It cen be truly said that some of the occupant owner it makes no difference whether he pays the cost to city's tex collector, or through the P.U.C. wicket in increased water ond electric retes. Parsonally, | don't think the great majority of taxpayers ere prepared, end in many cases mot able to pay their share of the cost of such an ambitious program os has been in: my best to warn the councils of the past two or three yeers, of whet unsuccessful in getting sufficient of them to heed m; warnings, eithough et times | resorted to rather L it use of words. > In conclusion the foregoing facts and figures are in the mein incontrovertible, and | have as chair. man of finance fulfilled my duty to you the electors, as | see it, giving you the foregoing report. Finley MM. Dafoe | F. M. DAFOE MAYOR 1952 I would like to ask the public to redlize that the City of Oshawa is much the same as an established business corporation. The retepoyers are the shareholders and the council members are the directors, with the mayor acting in the same capacity as the president of a corpora- tion. It is therefore my intention to try and present @ clear picture to the electors of Oshawa, of what has been happening in the past few years to Your Corporation's financial position and to portray what is likely to happen voters (shareholders) of - this corporation (the City of resent representdtives changes in the personnel of your Your tax mill rate has increased as per schedule: 1946 -- 26 mills 1947 -- 312 1948 --33 1949 --36 1950 -- 39 1951 -- 47 It is my opinion that your 1952 mill rate will be above 30 mills, regardless of who you elect, as a result of past commit- ments, ofc. " " some money's have already been expended, be issued os a result of existing commitments. $1,000,000.00 300,000.00 .....$3,425,000.00 ..$3,318,618.89 $6,743,618.89 ! the foregoing estimates will. sees ese en ....approx. $ 250,000.00 .. 1,000,000.00 .. 250,000.00 ,000,000.00 250,000. thi ---------- $5,750,000.00 keep electing to council, losing a vote, then it's 6 dah are P.U.C. debentures, but to the toned tuted of late years. | have done / ey wére heading into, but was RESPECTFULLY YOURS, A