'40 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, April 4, 1958 ~ LOCAL WOME mys i. urer, Eileen Coppin, past-presi- dent; Marion bell, pre- N Above are shown the officers Camp! sident; and executive members of the Oshawa Curling Club, Ladies' Section, who conducted the club's very active schedule for the 1954-55 season. Left-to-right, they are (seated), Belva Cain, treas- Helen Brock, vice-presi- dent, and Eileen Hopkins, secre- tary; (standing), Hilda Black, convener of games committee; Merle McConnell, membership Left-to-right, they are: M. Reed, E. Holland, E. Henry and C. Thompson. The Tip Top Trophy was won | by the lady curlers shown here. | McTavish, committee; £ committee; house committee; Helen Braithwaite, "Do" Robins, press; Merlee Lawrence, games committee; Effie Hezzelwood, ways and means committee; Dot ways and means Caye Bassett, cor- Winners of The Thomson Me- morial Trophy for this season, are shown above, left-to-right, responding secretary. Absent when photo taken were, Rita McCallum, bonspiel committee; Marj Armstrong, bonspiel com- | mittee; Evelyn White, social committee and Retta Higgs, house 'committee. F. Marsala, and M. Ridgley. was absent). E. Coppin (skip) (B. Calhoun SPORTS MENU "Everything from Soup to Nuts" by Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR the Oshawa Curling play in the A three-game competition, 96 | ners were as follows: M. Canning, | skip; Gert. Walker, Jean Bradley, Prizes for high two game win- Irene Jackson, with a plus of 16. Mamie Taylor, skip; Flo. Marsa. Winners of The McIntosh, Tro- phy are shown here, left-to- right, (front row) -- 1. Edmond- Final event of the season, The R. S. McLaughlin Trophy play, was won on Friday afternoon by McLaughlin Trophy Event Wes Santee Closes Out Ladies' Season The Oshawa lady curlers wound | with prizes, up their 1954-55 competitive season | Friday at Club with the final McLaughlin Trophy bonspiel. Runs Mile In 4.00.5 AUSTIN, Tex. (AP)--Cocky Wes Santee thinks he'll crack the four- minute mile within the next two N CURLERS CLOSE SEASON WITH PRESENTATION OF TROPHIES son, S. Sutton and F. Marsala; (standing) ] Armstrong (skip) and M. Donald --Times-Gazette Staff Photos. ) 3 i gl | he lady curlers shown here. They are, left-to-right, J. Reeve, E. Eillson, M, Gifford and J. Renwick (skip). Being forgotten isn't very impor- {tant if the ideals and the thoughts | that one was made of go on and keep alive --Caleb Milne. 4 the third period but 'Win First DETROIT (CP)--Three goals in the last seven minutes of play, the final one a lift into the net, carried the hard-driving Detroit Red Wings to a 4-2 victory over Montreal Canadiens Su nday night and launched the Detroiters along the ley Cup. The big payoff foal for Red Wing was scored by Marty Pavelich, a seven-year man with the Detroit club and one of its unsung heroes. The hard-working winger, a na- tive of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. broke it up with a breakaway at 17:07 of the third period, while HIS own team was shorthanded. Ted Lindsay's drive into the open net with 18 seconds left merely added a little icing to the Detroit cake. HARD-FOUGHT GAME The valiant Canadiens, under- dogs in this first game of the best- of-seven cup final, made it a bit- terly-fought struggle and surrend- ered the lead only after 47 minutes and seven seconds of play. Floyd Curry, the man known as a plugger and "the honest blocker" for Canadiens, scored both of Montreal's goals only to see them wiped out by Alex Delvecchio and Vic Stasiuk before the final Red Wing uprising got under way. The two clubs, which battled it out in seven games last year be- fore Red Wings won, fought a scoreless first period and each | counted in the second. Curry | again put his team in the lead in the lead | lasted little more than four min- utes. While the acclaim goes to Pave- lich, in the final analysis it was | the terrific power play that Red | Wings can come up with that {downed the Canadiens. It was a | play they couldn't match; if they | could have, it might have been a WERE SHORT-HANDED Each time Red Wings tied the score, Canadiens were playing short-handed. The Montrealers had as many chances as the Wings-- five in all-to do something when Detrcit Red Wings road to their seventh straight Stan- with they had the extra man but they failed. They didn't have the drive | and the ability to finish off the | play that belongs to Detroit, | They were trying it late in the | third period when it backfired on | them and away went the game. Gordie Howe was serving a De- | troit penalty when the big break | came | Canadiens were bustling about in | side the Detroit blue line trying to | set up the tie-breaker. Playing on | the points in the power drive, Doug | Harvey of Montreal whipped a pass |towards Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion. Pavelich reached out with his stick, turned the pass aside off the boards, then regained the puck and | went racing away in the clear. different story. | From about 15 feet out from goalie | Jacques Plante he let drive and No. 1 0. the puck caught the opening on Plante's left the. 2 TOOK OUT GOALIE With a minute left in the game Plante was taken out for an extra forward and Ted Lindsay sailed the puck into the open cage. Mi! Monts eat, Curry was ics e outstanding star and the best man on the ice. His line, Ken Mosdell at centre and Calum (Baldy) MacKay on left wing was the strongest for Cana- diens, both offensively and de- fensively. Jean Beliveau, high - scoring Montreal centre, played below form. The big fellow was suffer-|q ing from an infection inside and outside the mouth, causing his face to swell. It was believed caused by a sleeping pill he took during the train trip to Detroit from Montreal. Curry snapped in Mosdell's pass- out at 5:09 of the second period to put Montreal in front and Canadiens were hanging on to the precious goal until e Detroit ower play went into action. Butch uchard was serving a Montreal penalty when Delvecchio blasted an angle shot past Plante, finish- ing off a power play at 14:00 in which Howe and Lindsay supplied the passes. SECOND GOAL Mosdell's lob toss to Curry brought Montreal's second goal at 8:57 of the third period, Curry steering the lift from the corner past Terry Sawchuk in the Detroit nets. Then came the tying goal by Stasiuk, again on the killing power drive launched by Red Wings and again with Howe and Lindsay on the feeding end. Montreal -- Goal: Plante; de- fence: Harvey, St. Laurent, Bou- chard, Johnson, McAvoy; for- wards: Mosdell, Curry, MacKay, Beliveau, Geoffrion, Olmstead, Le- clair, Moore Marshall Ronty. Sub goalie: Hodge. Detroit -- Goal: Sawchuk; de- fence: Goldham, Pronovost, Kelly, Woit, Hay; forwards: Delvecchio, Stasiuk, Bonin, Reibel, Howe, Les- wick Lindsay, Skov, Pavelich, Wil- son, Dineen. Referee: Bill Chadwick; lines-| mes; Sammy Babcock, Doug Dav- | es. Summary First perlod: No scoring. Penal- ties: Leswick 1:54 and 10:10, John- son 4:11, Beliveau 10:10, Lindsay 15:09. Second period: 1. Montreal, Curry (MacKay, Mosdell) 5:09; | 2. Detroit, Delvecchio (Lindsay, | Howe) 14:00. Penalties: Pavelich | 2:52, Harvey 6:27, Bouchard 12:16. | Third lod: 3. Montreal, Curry | (MacKay, Mosdell) 8:57; 4. De-| troit, Stasiuk (Howe, Lindsay) | 13:05;..5, Detroit, Pavelich 17:07; 6. Detroit, Lindsay (Howe) 19:42. | Penalties: St. Laurent-11:04, Howe | 16:12. Stops: Plante 7 811-26 ... 10 3 7-20! Frontenacs Top Marlies In Opener TORONTO (CP)--Billy O'Ree, 18- year-old goal - sensation, turned playméker Saturday to lead Quebec Frontenacs to a 4-1 victory over Toronto Marlboros in the first game of the eastern Canada Mem- orial Cup Snals. pound leftwinger, a tive of Fredericton and a good bet to become the first Negro player in the National Hockey amazed 5,653 fans with his si and heady playing as he ass on three of the four Quebec mark- ter watching the much smaller and faster Quebecers baffle the Dukes with the near - perfect plays. Second game of -of - seven series will be played here Tuesday. The set then moves to Quebec. FIRST PERIOD LEAD The Frontenacs, who won the Quebec Junior Hoek ey ue chai:pionship before b Shiough the rest of the playoffs, forged into a 3-0 lead in the first period and increased it to 4-0 in the second before allowing Marl- boros their only goal. Sixteen - year - old rightwinger Miche! Lagace and centre Walt Bradley each fired two goals for the Frontenacs. A "gift" goal only two minutes and 29 seconds after the start of the game started Quebec on the way. Lagace sent a shot in front of the Toronto net and Marlboro cap- tain Mike Nykoluk, trying to clear the puck, batted it past Johnny Albani. Seven minutes later O"Ree made a dazzling play to set up Quebec's first "legitimate" goal. He stole the puck from a Marlboro player at the side of the Toronto net and passed behind the defence to La- gace, who drove a 15-foot back- hander into the goal. THIRD MARKER Another brilliant move by the Negro star started the Fronts on the way to their third marker. O'Ree carried the puck into the blue line for Bradley, who scored on a partially - screened 20-footer that hit the top left corner of the net at 13:55. James of the Dukes was sitting out a high stick- ing penaly at the time. Bradley's second goal, scored at 3:33 of the second period, was a return of O'Ree's hard shot, which rebounded directly in front of the Toronto goal. Cressman's 20-foot backhander in the period spoiled Jaques Marcotte's shutout. Each team suffered one casualty. Quebec defenceman Pat Presley suffered a broken nose in the first period but came back for the last two stanzas. He claimed he suf- fered the injury when he was hit by a Marlboro player's stick. | | ladies played their final game Fri-|la, Grace Mackie and Dorothy Day day, with one section playing in| with a plus of 13. E. Coppin, skip; Ermal Holland and months. is under way and the| The angular Kansan with OW THAT THE Stanley Cup series I x y 4 of-7 affair is known|the morning and the other section |May Price, the result of last night's opening game of the 4-out- to everybody, it's interesting to recall what the rival coaches had to say just before the battle. Dick Irvin was crepe - hanging when he| and his team left Montreal on Friday, said he had the weakest Mont- real team the Red Wings had ever met, said that one more injury would "kill" his Canadiens, insisted he had only nine forwards and| four defensemen ready to play while Detroit has 17 of the 18 play- ers they had when they wor the finals last year. Then he took a shot at Detroit's failure to help the weak sisters this season, pointing out that they sent only Metro Psystai to Chicago while Canadiens "Jost" Fddie Litzenberger, Bucky Hollingworth, Johnny McCormack and Lorne Davis. And to cap it off Richard (Irvin, that is) added that since Montreal Royals and Shawinigan Falls are both still in the midst of playoffs -- he couldn't look for any help there, Now if Coach Wrvin was going to lull the Wings into thinking his Canadiens were on crutches, last legs, etc., maybe he shouldn't have stuck in the prod about Wings having given only one player away this season. Meanwhile, Coach Jimmie Skin- ner was pointing out on Saturday that Red Wings have a 12- straight winning strezk and that maybe his team could he a little over-confident, or that they were simply ."about due" to Jose a game. However, Skinner also said that thanks to his team having watched the final Montreal - Boston game on tele- vision, he figured there was no longer the danger of Wings treating Canadiens too lightly, since the Habs looked very sharp, even "hungry" as they polished off the Bruins in the final game of that semi-final bracket. By the way, they play the second game of this classic, tomorrow night in Detroit, then move to Montreal for two games closed officially over the weekend machine this morning. A few local onspiels in the next week or 10 os finished all over warm least, dampening enthusiasm, held a grand closing session competition concluding was followed with presentation of On Saturday the men's section afternoon and evening, fol- f Night." This proved an out- standing 5s with over 200 members on hand. Professional talent ¢vided entertainment while local members in cos- fu added t Thes evening was topped off with a buffet nd 2 1 Then erday he final event of the sea- * held their closing day bonspiel and din- and the new 'Don McNaughton OSHAWA'S curling season and the ice-maker shut off his ks have kings for out-of-town but » season is ice or at » Oshawa Club McLaughlin. Trophy bo days wea The 1 on their } n PMzes and held a bar lowed 1 d trophies with curling in lumber's son, the 'we ner, Memorial plus rizes SPORT SHORTS -- Teny DeMarco's victory over Johnny Saxton has the fight fan itting up and taking notice. This one was a real scrap NCE CAMPBELL, NHL president, was very took time out between periods to make sentations to their top three stars. Campbell had ed Boston their request to make- a presentation to s, because it was a Stanley Cup game. However, ( a rmission, they just staged the event. . . JER, talented U.S. sport§ columnist, has picked N.Y. nal League and Cleveland Indians tc repeat pennat race IN BROOKLYN, a move is 1 lot of real interest entailed also, to cease calling the familiar title of 'Bums." Théy figure their team loafers and they want to drop the tag and stick to "Dodgers But recall the World Series a couple of years ago when a Brooklyn per carried front page headlines "LOVE DEM BUMS" after they had won a game, over Yankees. INT d SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS Western Canada Senior Final Edmonton 96 Port Alberni 85 (Best-of-five series tied 1-1) S. Ont. Intermediate A Windsor 64 Kingston Orphans 82 (Kingston le 2-game, total Taipt series) Canadian Women's Senior JOE REICHI Giants to wi ¢ in the Am mn underway, with the Dodgers by aren't bums or TO RATIFY AGREEMENT HAMILTON (CP) Ralph Cooper, president of the Big Four, said Sunday night the league ex- ecutive will meet Saturday, April 16, probably in Toronto, to ratify an agreement which allows 10 | Amer 1 imports to a club and eli. es the Canadian-American play B/ By T Milwaukee 5 Brooklyn 1 | Philadelphia 2 Boston 4 Quarter Finals | Chicago (A) 7 St. Louis 12 Winnipeg 44 Saskatoon 49 Pittsburgh 11 Baltimore 8 (Saskatoon wins 2-game, total-| Cincinnati 4 Washington & point series 105-96) INew York (N) 7 Cleveland § BALL RESULTS | | | CANADIAN PRESS in the afternoon. After ing game Caye Bassett, Fran. Pollitt with a 14 plus. | In the afternoon section, Jean | following rinks finishing with best enwick's team with Marg. Gif-| plus for one game: Merle McCon- ford, E. Willson and Jean Reeve|nell skip, Betty Lofthouse, Grace emerged as champions with a plus| McCullough and A. Jackson; Sel- McLaughlin | ma Aker skip, Hilda Dyas, L. Dick- George Campbell, |son and L. Peacock. R | of 20 take the Trophy. Mrs. club president, to presented the | trophy and prizes, with congratula-| Ladies' Club will be held at the Renwick and her | clubhouse on Thursday, April 14 at | team. The runners-up wulso receiv-|8 p.m. and it is hopéd all memtery their fine | will | three wins and were presented meeting. tions to Mrs, | ed congratulations on skip Mable Gilchrist, | Marion Campbell and | Jean Gordon and Ede Reading Marg. Storie won three fine games | with a plus of 11. skip; L. Rose, | Prizes were awarded to the two The spring meeting of the turn out for this importan K-W Dutchmen 'Win 7th Game | | KITCHENER (CP' -- Kitchener- | | Waterloo Dutchmen, who were be- { hind all the way in the all-Ontario senior A hockey finals, came | through in the must game | Their 6-1 victory over Sault Ste. | | Marie Greyhounds before 7,338 fans here Saturday gave them the| championship and the right t6 meet | Moncton Hawks in the Eastern Canada Allan Cup Final. The best- of-seven series starts here Tues-| day. Kitchener's victory Saturday, gave them the best-of-seven all | | Ontario title 4-3 and they had to come from behind all the way through the series to force a sev-| enth game. The Greyhounds took | the opener 1-0 but Kitchener soruared it with a 2-0 victory in| the second game. Sault Ste. Marie again went ahead, squeezing out a 2-1 win in the third game but the| Dutchmen hnunced back with a 4-1] decision in the fourth, | | TO THE LIMIT The Greyhounds appeared to be in the clear when they won the fifth victory in the next game forced the series the limit. Saturday's victory, by far the most decisive of the series, was never in doubt. Kitchener went ahead 1-0 in the first period and] increased it to 3-0 in the second] | before the Greyhounds scored their the | only goal. Dutchmen Three goals in the final by period | sewed it up. Defenceman Joe Schertzl led the victory, scoring the winning goal and a pai: of assists. George Scholes, Gerry Theberge Buddy Horne, Clare Martin and Jack Mc- Kenzie also notched single count- ers. Matt Mesich scored his first| goal of the series and the last for Sault Ste. Marie. Defensive lapses by the Grey-| hounds aided Kitchener greatly | Two of the Dutchmen goals were scored by Sault Ste. Marie players, | another while a Greyhound was in the penalty box. | OPENED SCORING i Martin opened the scoring for Kitchener at 7:38 of the first per- iod, picking up a loose puck in the corner and passing across the front of the Sault Ste. Marie goal | Greyhound defenceman Joe Bum- bacco, turning to cover, deflected the puck past Ed Chadwick, net- minder of the Northern Ontario game 5-3 but a 2-1 Kitchener ' Hockey Association champions INSIST on this | NEW | SOCK COMFORT for your feet | | i the morn-| Marion Graham, with a plus of 12.| chop stride came closer than ever before Saturday with an American- record 4:00.5 at the Texas relays, Santee complained that he was tired and that a brisk north wind might hamper his bid for the glory that has gone to Roger Bannister and John Landy. But he showed no signs of weariness as he breezed around Memorial Stadium to fin- ish a half-lap ahead of Henri Geller of Oklahoma A and M. Santee said he will rest three weeks efore competing in the Kansas relays and hopes to be in top shape for May and June meets in California, where he believes his chances are best to crack the bar- rier on a clay track Santee was magnificent despite a tiring three-months running and travel schedule that had seen him in meets all over the U.S. and in Mexico A crowd of 14,000 cheered him on every step of the last lap. It was the fifth fastest mile in history Team mate Art Dalell paced Santee, who had 59.0 flat for the first quarter, 1:59.0 at the half, and 3:01.0 at the three-quarter VUARE:] ene sity pTIP FINE ERE \ POINT | | MOW a new motor oil that adds thousands of miles to the life of your carl new Marvelube does more than 5 lubricate vital parts. 7. it protects with a coating TOUGHER THAN NEW MARVELUBE in contact with the engine metal produces an invisibly thin chemical coating that + covers vital parts where wear takes 'place. This coating substantially reduces the amount of wear. 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