BOWLING NEWS 3 KING STRING HAPPY DOUBLES LEAGUE Team standings: 1 10 e Le cars sseesssens Betty's Blowers arneh. SOXUp 'Slomoshun Kibitzers 6 * - Over 200: Betty Pearse 291, Greta Burrows 264, Jim Souch 268 and 200, Audrey Metcalfe 237 .and 200, Stan Gomme 230, Stan Pilkey 229, Jackie Marshall 256, Earl Moore + 217, Chester Robi.:son 216 and 216, Marg. Gomme 209, Raloh Gulliver 1, Ray, Way 216 and 210, Ed. app 212. Lemon League Vi Milne 96, Dory Cole 98, Marg. Gomme 88, Howard Cook 91. Don't forget next week is the Christmas roll so let's see every- tecssssshens TEAM STANDING Fashion Village shawa Furriers Dobbies Jewellers al Mae Beauty Salon Victor's Sports Stroud's Foods Coca Cola Gillard Cleaners { Franklin Simons | Hayden MacDonald LADIES MAJOR "B" LEAGUE There were only five girls over the 600 mark Monday night. Rose Marie Wiley had 766, Fran- Pollitt 699, Diana Brown 626, Doris Bowen 613, Ann Mcinally 612. Two teams took all four npoits, Burn's, Henderson's Val-Mae, Mea- gher's, Mitchell's each took three points, Saywells, Biddulph's one each, Dixons, White's 0. STANDING 35 36 31 24 21 28 21 17 1 1 9 8 8 7 7 5 2 onz out to try for a en'een. Moxt | TEAM Monday is also the end of the sec- B ond section and it's still anybody's victory except for the, Kibitzers. ST. GEORGE'S CATHOLIC LEAGUE The second section started with kean competition. The-Beavers and Double Ding:rs were the only teams to lrse all tie woints but with most of their bowlers missing th:y didn't have a chance. Mary Karas rolled a 533 double. Nice bowling. : a~y! * eo DPrtars was a close second with 491 double. Mia. Palteps it ol, cers Ic owski 479, John Hrico 475, Ann Bes: 33, Bill Yasmaniciki 408, Dint O'Brien 408, Bill Wacko 405. TEAM STANDING Eversharps Hotshots appy Gang Doth Ringers Aces Spades Beavers Double: Dingers MAYFAIR INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE This week brings on our annual Christmas chicken-roll as well as the end of the first section. Owing to the fact our bowling night falls on both Christmas and New Year's Eve, we will suspend operations until January 7. Belmont Motors have now won the first section but a three-way fight is on for second place and a ot in the main play-offs. Four shut-outs resulted from last week's bowling. ' Points: Belmont Motors 4, Tony's Refreshments 0; Westmount 4, Kent's United Service 0; Genosha Hotel 4, Independents 0; C.P.I. 4 Bradings 0; Koolvents 3, United * Taxi 1; Pigott Construction 8, ' Dunnes Tailors 1; Ontario Steel 3, Gillards Cleaners 1; Nash Alu- minum 2, Canadian Tire 2. Soop LKR Over 650: B. Galbraith 789 zn. 20 268, 251); Howard 758 (284, 228); Van 763 (280, 268 215); Hen- ning 724 (282 229, 213); Pidwer- becki 705 (273, 39); Q71, , 204); Ka (278, 230); McLean 673 (261, 254); El- dridge 667 (238, 227, 202); McKin- ley 265, 213); Claus 663 (255, 231); Nesbitt 653 (273). Over 250: Barrett 309, Wickenden 283; Chiplick 271, O'Reilly 259, May 258, Wotton 256, Mackness 255, Tay- lor 250, Galey 250. Lemon League: Moore 99, Brent 95 and 86, Anderson 93, R. Buz- minski 93. STANDINGS Belmont Motors Tony's Refreshments Oneario Steel Genosha Hotel Westmount C.Pl1 . Independents = Pigott Construction Koolvent Awnings Dunnes Tailors Nash Aluminum Kent's United United Taxi Bradings : Gillards Cleaners LADIES MAJOR "A' LEAGUE The Christmas season seems to have affected the spirit of the "bowlers and last Monday saw more getting into the 650 and over score. Janet Peel was top bowler with 749, Sis Rockect 720, Jean Keeler 695, Isabel Hubbel 691, Helen Rey- nols 673, B. Ross 669, Peggy Ban- ton 666, June Grice 665. Ray Brooks 657, Alice Lanning 654, Sa- die James 651. The points were all one sided, Oshawa Furriers 3, Victors 1; Dobbies 3, Val Mae 1; Fashion Village 3. Franklin Simon 1; Strouds 3, Gillard Cleaners 1: 20% 19 1 Soca Colas 4, Hayden MacDonald | Meaghers Mitchells Hendersons Biddulphs Saywells Val-Mae Whites Nesbitts Dixons 16 CANADIAN ORDER OF FORESTERS Every team managed to salvage at least one point gn Friday night. {Exports 3, Troopers 1; Hustlers 3, White Roses 1; Pellers "53" 3, Deuces 1; Hi-Lowes 3; Red Caps 1; Rough Riders 3; Kingfishes 1; Toughies 3, ABC's 1; Admirals 2 and Lucky Strikes 2. A very fine line up of scores were bowled this week and Jim Hurvid was top man with 730, Don Chapman 716 (301) and that's a new high single with handicap for the men, Arn Greene 683, Norm O'Reilly 680, Jim Shaw 678, (320), Fred Glover 662, Ray George 661, Jim Morrison 653, Bob Allen 646, George Scott 651, Len Martin 645, Sam Grant 642, Bill Miles 627, Doug Trivett 612, George Lintlop In the 200 and over bracket were Ross Twining 305, Al Spring 263, Walt. Tippett 239, Ernie Kehoe 1239, 212, Cliff Sark 230, Art Peel- {ing 220, Len Wall 217, Art Smith {216, 203, Ralph O'Reilly 213, Jack {Randall 211, 201, Mike Peters Sr. {208, Steve Mandryk 208, Mel Mc- Cabe 206, Alex Nathan 205, 204, Wilf Manning 208. For the ladies Jo Coulter 658 (must have been that practise you had on Thursday, Jo.), Ethel Shaw 632, Janet Stark 625, Madeline Morrison 263, 203, Marg. Smith 223, Molly Hartshorn 220, Rose Kehoe 218, Mary Zakarown 206, 201, Bille Trivett 203, Toots Ferguson, Next week is the chicken roll so 30 30 24 3 25 19 16 21 28 (one more little reminder. If you 704 would please add up your individ- ual sheets, it would help your sec- retary very much. SURVIVES KNOCKDOWNS MANCHESTER, England (AP)-- Robert Cohen of France, No. 1 world bantamweight challenger, survived two knockdowns Monday night to win a bloody 10-round decision over Jake Tuli of South Africa. It was Tuli's first defeat. Cohen floored Tuli, top-ranking flyweight hopeful, four times but was bleeding from both eyes when the fight ended. Cohen weighed 117%; Tuli 115. CLEARS WHITFIELD LOS ANGELES (AP)--A regional |secretary of the Amateur Athletic Union said Tuesday that as far as he is concerned, Olympic star Mal Whitfield is completely cleared {of any charges which might jeopar- dize his amateur standing. AAU official Larry Houston made the statement after interviewing the world's top half-miler. Monday night in New York city, AAU secretary Dean Ferris said the brilliant track careers of Whit- field and Wes Santee, America's fastest miler, are threatened by an AAU investigation. He said the in- | quiry concerned alleged violations of amateur rules. £6,000 SOUGHT EDINBURGH (Reuters) -- Scot- land Tuesday was asked to sub- scribe nearly £6,000 to send at least 20 athletes to the 1954 British, Empire Games at Vancouver. Lord Airlie, opening the appeal, said the country has attended every one of the games since the first at Hamilton, Ont., in 1930 {manager of Toronto Marlboros of {the Ontario Hockey Association {Bruins last season, he has never everyone try to be on hand and |1 NO MORE SHOESTR INGS Stafford Smythe Gives Figures On Operation of By WALTER GRAY Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP)--The days of operating an amateur hockey team on a shoe string are over. The teams technically can't even afford to buy the shoe string. "Nobody makes money in ama- teur hockey," Stafford Smythe, Junior A League, said in an in- terview Tuesday night. He estimated it cost between $40,000 and $50,000 a year to oper- ate a team in the OHA. "And we consider it a good season if we lose between $20,000 and $30,000," he said. The question of finances was never more evident than in the OHA, both junior and senior series, this year. Sarnia Sailors were forced to drop out of the senior circuit last Friday. Kitchener-Waterloo Green- shirts were the centre of a bitter dispute recently involving Mont- real Canadiens of the National Hockey League. The NHL club owned 18 Kitchener players and attempted to transfer them to the uebec Junior Hockey League, but the move was blocked. Greenshirt backers claimed financial losses nwere the reaso for the move. LOSING $1,000 WEEKLY Qubec Citadelles dropped out of the OHA Junior A loop Monday and the team's holdings were sold to Quebec Frontenacs, rival club in the QJHL. Amateur Hockey Walter Weber, Greenshirt presi- dent, said at the time the player transfer would realize enough money to meet the payroll and current debt. ] "We are losing between $900 and $1000 a week with no visible means of support," he said.' In withdrawing its team last week, the Sarnia Arena Commis- sion said the Sailors were $8,000 in the red. R. N. Taglietti, commis- sion member, placed the blame "100 per cent on the shoulders of the public." The Sailors, tied for last place with Niagara Falls Cataracts, drew an average of 1,412 fans when 2,000 were needed to keep the team in the black. SPONSORS PAY DEBTS Smythe said most teams continue to operate solely because league sponsors pay. their debts. "The sponsor doesn't mind pay- ing the shot as long as he gets one or two future stars out of the team," he added. Smythe, whose Marlboros draw an average crowd of 5,000, referred to two current $3 emples of public support in the OHA Junior A loop. - Guelph Biltmores, 1952 Memorial Cup champions, drew huge crowds that season. This year they are in the league cellar and the fans are staying away in droves. On the other hand, St. Catharines TeePes a last-place club last season, are currently one of the better clubs and the fans are behind them, re- sulting in fairly solvent financing. Third Toppazzini Highly Regarded by Coach Lynn Patrick By JIM BASTABLE Canadian Press Staff Writer Jerry Toppazzini, the youngest and most versatile of three hockey- playing brothers has given coach Lynn Patrick playoff ideas for his NHL Boston Bruins since being re- called from the minors last month. Patrick will be banking on an- other good game from the 22-year- | old utility man when the fourth- | lace Bruins meet fifth-place New | ork Rangers in New York to- night in the ohly game scheduled. Although Toppazzini, a six-foot, 180-pound native of Copper Cliff, | Ont., played in 69 games with the looked better since being recalled from the American League Hershey Bears to fill in for leftwinger Real Chevrefils, who broke a leg Nov. the first four games with Boston this year, but in the fifth he tallied three times to lead Bruins to a 5-2 victory over the Rangers. That was Nov. 26 and Toppazzini is still showing the drive that probably will keep him in the big time for a while. "I picked him because he never stops hustling when he's on the ice," Patrick said. 'He isn't the most graceful player in the world but he's dangerous around the nets." Toppazzini didn't have much ex- perience at any position a year ago. But he played all of them since then and does a good job, Patrick says. Lynn figures the Bruins will make the playoffs if they break even in games against Rangers during the rest of the 70-game schedule. They played four times this year and each won twice. The Bruins now have a total of 29 points, nine ahead of Rangers. In twp games Thursday night, third-place Toronto Maple Leafs travel to Boston and last-place Chi- cago Black Hawks meet the sec- ond-place Red Wings in Detroit. 4, Toppazzini didn't score a goal in Here's a Gift that's sure to please your Boy or Girl... oe HAWKEYE FLASH OUTFIT * Everything ded for hooti "You'll also want outdoors or indoors is included i Hawkeye Camera, Flash Model, there are two rolls of film, eight fla lamps, Flasholder with guard and batteries, plus'a picture-taking information booklet. Only Wa%1320 <a 8 KING ST. E PHONE 3-2245 0) gift outfit. In addition to the Brownie a] n this to see the new KODAK DUAFLEX FLASH OUTFITS sh PHOTOGRAPHIC" SIC{eT1 Y [elo] SRR PHONE 5-3546 ok Make Sure Your Next Car Is An QI One - from -- CHEVROLET COACH ....... 52 i "eserves $1495 C05 G.M.C. : ¥2-TON PANEL ! 5 PONTIAC COACH ....... 49 $995 EE EE RR CHEVROLET DELUXE SEDAN . 4 CHEVROLET DELUXE SEDAN . 51 CHEVROLET SEDANETTE AIR-CONDITION HEATER .. $1395 All Our Cars Are Mechanically Perfect! ONTARIO MOTOR SALES Lid. 190 KING ST. EAST USED CAR DEPT. DIAL 3-225% HOCKEY RESULTS AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Buffalo Cleveland Hershey Pittsburgh Syracuse Providence Tuesday Pittsburgh 2 Cleveland 7 Future Games Dec. 16--Providence at Buffalo; Pittsburgh at Hershey; Cleveland at Syracuse. OHA "Sr. A WL Kitchener Windsor Qwen Sod €0 tt fot pt pt bi pt 00 ht --- feRnzREeER~ Pr SEB2RR8K> . Future Games Dec. 16--Stratford at Kitchener. ona Jr. A L St. Michael's 13 6 St. Catharines 18 7 Marlboros 12 8 Kitchener 11 6 Hamilton 810 Galt 1 Barrie Guelph T 2 0 1 2 2 Barrie 4 Kitchener 7 Guelph 6 St. Catharines 7 Future Games Dec. 16--Galt at Hamilton; Bar- rie at Guelph. Western League Victoria 1 Vancouver 3 Calgary 0 Saskatoon § Maritime Major Charlottetown 4 Sydney 5 Glace Bay 4 Halifax 7 New Brunswick Senior Moncton 2 Saint John 14 Northern Ontarlo Senior A Sault, Ont. 8 Pembroke 6 International League Johnstown 6 Marion 3 Troy 5 Milwaukee 3 Louisville 2 Grand Rapids 8 Saskatchewan Senior Moose Jaw 1 Melville 5 Western International Nelson 3 Trail 9 Spokane 4 Kimberley 9 Okanagan Senior Kelowna 3 Penticton 6 Vernon 3 Kamloops 8 uebec Junior Jonquiere 3 Montreal Royals § Provincial League Cornwall 2 St. Jerome 6 Lakehead Junior Ft. W. Hurricanes 4 Ft. W. Cdns. 3 v Ed Barrow N.Y. Yankees Died Tuesday PORT CHESTER, N.Y. (AP)-- Ed Barrow, 85, the man who dis- covered Honus Wagner, changed Babe Ruth into an outfielder and developed New York Yankees into the most feared team in baseball, died of cancer Tuesday night. He entered hospital last July and his close friends knew his death was only a question of time, Early in November he lapsed into a coma for 36 hours. Then rallied, began eating again and 33 | seemed improved until a relapse Sunday. Barrow retired in 1947, selling his stock in the Yankees for $300,000. He was with the club for 26 years. Born in Springfield, Ill., May 10, 1868, he was city editor of Moines Leader when he first got into baseball as a semi-pro man- ager. He was president of the Interna- tional League for seven years be- fore moving to Boston as mana- er of the Red Sox. IGGEST GAMBLE Here he met Ruth, a left-handed pitcher, and changed him into an outfielder. "It was" the biggest gamble I ever took in my life," Barrow ad- mitted later, "but I never had rea- son to regret it." Ruth was sold to the Yankees in 1920 and Barrow soon followed as business manager and secre- tary. Barrow took over as presi- dent when Col. Jake Ruppert died. In 1946 he became chairman of the board of directors when a syn- dicate headed by Larry McPhail bought the team. Wagner, a bow-legged Dutchman, was Barrow's pride and joy. He found him in Carnegie, Pa., throw- ing rocks and later sold him to Louisville as a shortstop. He main- tained Wagner was the greatest. Barrow was well known in Tor- onto early in his baseball manag- ing career when he brought the Eastern I t--it's now he | 187, To] THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, December 16, 1008 17 FIGHTS LAST . NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Miami Beach, Fla.--Willie Pep, 129, Hartford, ' Conn., outpointed Tony Longo, 130, Baltimore, 10. Chicago -- Bob Satterfield, 184, 0, knocked out Ray Augus- , Topeka, Kans. 8. Los Angeles--Cisco Andrade, 135, Angeles, outpointed Bobby Woods, 134,% Spokane, Wash. 10. Toledo,0. Pedro Gonzales, 164 tts] , outpointed King Solo- 164, Chicago, 10. utte,--Mont. -- Bobby Bickle, ka, and Santiago Esteben, 187%, Angeles, drew, 10. Sacramento, Calif--Art Aragon, 147, Los eles, knocked out Art Soto, 147, Oakland, Calif. 10. Canada's Earl Walls To Fight Satterfield CHICAGO (AP)--Bob Satterfield, Chicago heavyweight, has earned a Jan. 18 Chicago Stadium match against Earl Walls of Edmonton and Toronto, the Canadian heavy- weight champion, off his perfor- mance Tuesday night. Satterfield, 184, knocked out Ray Augustus, Topeka, Kans. 176, in the last round of their scheduled eight-round feature bout. Heavy right-hand smashes floored the Kansan twice in the final round and he was unable to rise after the second knockdown. ; Satterfield is making a comeback after an in-and-out eight-year car- eer, mostly as a ht heavy- weight. the International League--to the Canadian city in 1902. Barrow re- turned to Toronto in 1908 and man- aged the Windsor Hotel for a time. 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