40 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, November 21, 1055 OSHAWA CENTRAL GRIDDERS MISS OUT IN BID FOR INTERSCHOLASTIC TITLE | So JANICE PATRICK (left) AND FRED CHASCZEWSKI, TOM CHASCZEWSKI AND JOHN NEWEY, A PEP TALK BEFORE THE BIG GAME SANDRA SHAW (right) GIVE THEIR CENTR | : Vancouver's Grey Cup Parad Will Be Greatest In Histor By GRAHAM McMULLIN Canadian Press Staff Writer VANCOUVER (CP) -- It's just going to be the best parade in Canadian history. That's the word of Frank Baker, Grey Cup parade committee chairman. He will have help from major football centres in other parts of Canada for the spectacle which will be seen by perhaps 250,000 persons in this city on Nov, 26, the day of the Canadian football classic, and by ons of others over television. Montreal is sending the colorful outfits that performed at every Al- ouettes game during the season-- a band of 50 pieces and 15 hand- some young majorettes well- trained in dazzling march rou tines. Toronto is providing eight floats which are surrounded in mystery, except for the promise they'll be humorous. The floats are being re- constructed here behind lockeq doors and hired guards. ROMANCE OF NATION Winnipeg, at last report, was considering a theme for its floats that will bring to life the romance of the oxen-pulled Red River carts. From Saskatchewan is the pro- OLD COUNTRY SOCCER LONDON (Reuters)--Results of soccer games played today in the United Kingdom: | Football Association Cup First round | Accrington 3 "Wrexham 1 | AL PLAYERS, TOM OLINYK, ED. KOLODZIE, Johnny Williams Snatch-Sprint Play Puts Alouettes Over Argos Great Bid By W. R, WHEATLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer hanging in the balance until the IMPORTANT GOAL [very end. | Bud Korchak booted what turned MONTREAL (CP)--Johnny Wil-! The long-looked for battle for air/out to be an all-important field Hams, last of the American im-| supremacy between Sam Etche- goal for Montreal fo start the led 38-30. ports to join Montreal Alouettes, verry of the Alouettes and Tom scoring in the first quarter and RAN OUT OF TIME took a hand in the dazzling aerial Dublinski of the Argos was a glit- he converted five of his team's circus Saturday and stalled a stun- tering show. No less spectacular | touchdowns. Bi ning football upset in the making.| was the performance on the ground) Five of Argos' six were con- The lanky Californian's pass in-|when the two field generals called| verted by Pfeifer. Gerry Doucette, weary Torontonians had finally run| passes, and Abbruzzi smashed over terception and 50. - yard romp on their fleet backfielders--Dick who handled the Toronto kicking pki out an insurance touch- Shatto and Corky Tharp of the chores, booted for a single when down the sorely-pressed Alouettes Argos and Pat Abbruzzi and/J. C. Caroline slipped behind the glee when Korchak's 23-yard field| verry, good for 80 yards on the| needed in their 38-36 wih over an|Jacques Belec of the Als--for the Montreal line for a rouge. : lesded § battling Toronto Argo- knife-like running plays through Alouettes took a 90 lead in the nauts team. |and around the struggling lines. first quarter, then fell back dis-| - In taking the Big Four playoff Three of Montreal's six touch- organized when the underdog Argos final and the eastern Canada title|downs came on Etcheverry"s|shot the works and piled up four fans, Alouettes now gird then- passes--iwo to Joey Pal and one touchdowns in the second quarter, selves for the Grey Cup game in/to Hal Patterson. Captain Herb spearheaded by drives of 71 and| Vancouver next Saturday--a sec-| Trawick recovered a loose ball for 62 yards. | swiftly in d crack at the Edmonton Eski-la touchdown, Abbruzzi rammed| Going into the second half trail- es who upset the favored Mont- through the line for another and ing 24-9, Alouettes struck with al- realers last year. | Williams put the reverse twist to most unbelievable reversal of jemergency in his role as defensive |the line from 14 yards out. | left halfback, pulled off his pass| WITH GROUND PLAYS linterception and run and the Als| The Alouette comeback in the | third quarter started with a suc- | cession of 10 ground plays. The Argos struck once more, on march stalled on the Toronto one- Dublinski's passing, and were only yard line but finally got rolling two points away from a tie but the| again, with help from Etcheverry's out of stamina and time. Alouette supporters were in high from a yard out. A tremendous pass by Etche- goal was followed by Trawick's|one pass-and-run shot, sent Pat- first-quarter touchdown. In a wild/terson over. Another heave by scramble over the goal line thé|Etchevevrry, from the Toronto 52, Alouette captain pounced on alsettled in Pal's arms for a touch- lose ball that ad got wway from | down. { Tex Coulter's punt, Argos struck first in the last But the Argo avalanche came quarter, a touchdown pass from the second quarter. Dublinski to Ford from the Mont-| | Dublinski shot a touchdown pass real 38, to give Argos a lead for| {to Tharp from the Montreal 15. A{the last time, 30-26. fumble by Montreal's J. C, Caro-! From the Argo 17 Etcheverry hit lone of Dublinski's passes. form. This time the reeling Argos line gave Argos their next opening! Pal on the goal line and Williams Barrow 0 Crewe Alex 0 Bedford' T 3 Leyton 0 Bishop A 3 Durham C 1 Boston U 3 Northwich Vie 2 Bradford C 3 Oldham A 1 Brentford 4 March T 0 Brighton 8 Newport C 1 Chesterfield 1 Chester 0 | Coventry C 0 Exeter C 1 | Crook Town 2 Derby C 2 Crystal P 0 Southampton 0 | Darlington 0 Carlisle U 0 | Easington ,0 Tranmere R 2 Gillingham 1 Shrewsbury T 1 Goole T 1 Halifax T 2 Halesowen T 2 Hendon 4 Hartlepools U 3 Gateshead 0 Hastings U 6 Southall 1 Leyton O 7 Lovells A 1 Mansfield T 2 Stockport C 0 | Margate 2 Walsall 2 | Netherfield 1 Grimsby T 5 Northampton T 4 Millwall 1 Norwich C 4 Dorchester T 0 Peterborough U 3 Ipswich T 1 Reading 1 Bournemouth 0 Rhyl 0 Bradford 3 Rochxale 0 York C 1 Scunthorpe U 3 Shildon 0 Skegness 0 Worksop 4 Southend U 2 Queens P R 0 Southport 6 Ashton U 1 Swindon T 4 Hereford U 0 Torquay U 2 Colchester U 0 Watford 5 Ramsgate A 3 Weymouth 3 Salisbury 2 Workington 4 Scarborough 2 Wycombe 1 Burton 3 Yeovil T 1 Aldershot 1. ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Birmingham 5 Huddersfield T 0 mise of a float commemoratin| that province's golden jubilee, ai another honoring Miss Saskatche- wan Roughrider. Out of Calgary, thé city that first injected high-powered western en- thusiasm into Grey Cup parades, comes woid of buckboards and broncos, flapjacks and chuckwag- ons. ° The Herron family and their rid- ers, 'mounted on saddles and trap- pings inlaid with hig e § e city. PROUD RUSTODIANS The pecple of Edmonton, proud | custodians of the Grey Cup, expect to be here 4,000 Strong. One float will represent their city and an- other the Province of Alberta. A luxury convertible, deep in golden chrysanthemums, symbol of the Eskimos," will carry the cherished Grey Cup. A mink-coated model will ride with it. Thirty cheer leaders in conver- tibles will flank the Grey Cup ve- hicle and 20,000 Eskimo pies will be tossed to the crowd as the par- ade moves along. A stagecoach that once bumped | its way through the heart of the! Cariboo during the gold rush willl representing ,000 worth of | bef roll again Grey Cup day. Flankingand non-commercial floats have the stagecoach and its four-horse been restricted to five hitch will be eight outriders from |them Williams lake, B.C. clad in turn- of-the-century costumes, A in the parade is reserved for Marilyn Bell and Mayor Na- than Phillips of Toronto. Place in the parade, too, has been marked for a young Cana- dian wi eyes may still sten from her triumph -- Miss rey Cup--to be chosen the t ore from beauties repre J Canadian cities with senior foot- eams, A custom-built limousing that is used by the United States presi- dent for parade purposes has been loaned by an American automo- bile corporation to carry Vancou- ver's mayor Fred Hume and John Dunsmuir, Grey Cup festival com- mittee chairman. MEET HIGH STANDARD The driving force behind the par- ade arrangements is the ad and sales bureau of the Vancouver board of trade, the group that won plaudits for its promotion of the British Empire Games here last year. They have done a lot of organiz- ing. Seventeen bands have been arranged for. The 35 commercial es. : Those themes are Canada ai the Grey Cup -- eastern and the Prairies and all the atmosphere of oil nches, bustling i oikies and, ! all, beauty. Some prospective. entries were turned down because, their plans and standards failed to. pass the scrutiny of the selection commtteie. The parade will roll regardless: of weather. So water - repellant materials and solid construction, to avoid breakdowns, are required for floats. The parade will swiss out i residential West Georgia at 9: a.m. PST. Two hours and less than two miles later, the last float will reach the dispersal area at Jacke son St., a similar distance short of Empire Stadium in plenty of time for the pre-game 'entertainment and kickoff at 1:30 p.m. The route snakes past a block- long covered reviewing stand in front of the court house, down through Granville street district, and east on Hi through the fringe of Chinatown. The entire show should Ss a given point in one hour, which, a nation displays its charm. Oshawa And District Badminton Assoc. Makes Plans For Their Coming Season Innovations featured the annual; wart Lane, Port P&ry Badminton decide the issue for each match. | meeting of the Oshawa and district Club. The Secretary is to be app-| It was unanimously agreed that Badminton Association recently ointed by the President of the As-ino one player may play in more held at the club rooms of the Osh- sociation and will be announced than one match in any one event. awa Flying Club. Hater, the Port P Cla or Wag 3is0 agreed snauigusly : . is year the Port Perry Club, that in the case o e Oshawa 1 the Suggestion of John Gill, replaces the Oshawa "Y" Club Flying Club, no teams which had president of the Uxbridge : Badminton Club, two directors in the Qshava 2ud District League. won the club championship the | ' ; e league will consist of home- past season may be paired to- | along with the usual Executive and-home games between the four! gether in District League play. will govern the Association. clubs, Ajax, Oshawa, Port Perry This was definitely agreed upon. Directors appointed were Paul| and Uxbridge. The home team is due to the fact that there was og former President, of ine responsible for supplying birds and some misunderstanding re this Harl f Presi Ph refreshments. | matter last year when this policy, Har owe, ome : Seiden of the| The matches will consist of three| alhough agreed upon, was not ob- Peliawa and District Badminton men's doubles teams, three ladies' served. This year matches will es | doubles teams and six mixed be defaulted if this rule or the the BASOIYS Jk oe CBT | a ny ht Ml be given fot previous one named. ls Croke, ) -| eac! ch won. The matches will| was al ec! at Ump- son were: President, Bud Moore be the best-of-three, ,5 point|ires are to be used for matches. of the Oshawa Flying Club; Vice-| games, except where matches arejSchedule will be released later President, Garnet Gray, Uxbsidge| played in Port Perry or Uxbridge, by Ralph Harlowe. League starts Badminton Club; Treasurer, Ste-' where a single 21 point game will! week of Nov. 28th. hall of Mayor Nathan Phillips who| was held up in Saturday nighti WATH - ON DEARNE, England traffic. . (CP)--A fathei objecting to his Toronto Grid Fans * NO OVERTIME On Good Will Train TORONTO (CP) Toronto's delegation to the 1955 Grey Cup game in Vancouver left town Sat- urday night in a noisy whirl of laughter and cheers climaxed by a "fan" dance on the city hall steps by Metro Chairman Fred S. Gard- iner. Mr. Gardiner performed the dance with another football fan-- cheerleader Zena Chavers of Tor- onto--to the delight of a crowd assembled in 32-degree weather. The crowd and officials waited in vain for the apparance at city, |and Edmonton Eskimos. The mayor, however, met the|son having to do homework in this cheering delegation when it drew| Yorkshire town complained to the up before union station aboard a boy's headmaster, Dr. C. Saffel. multi-colored wagon pulled by six| "If I do overtime I get timeand matched horses. | ahalf," he said. "My son gets | The group of 250 Toronto foot-|nowt." {ball rooters are aboard a special Canadian National Railways train] which will make a six-day trip across the country, picking up, delegations in Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary and Edmonton. It is due to arrive in Vancouver on Friday, the day before the game between Montreal Alouettes EEE EE STOPS RUST ON CAR CHROME Hiram McCallum, general man- ager of the Canadian National Ex-' E : a ibi : I Ar it Satur-| The Argo quarterback, taking to give up three touchdowns, and and Shatto finished it off with two|supplied the insurance touchdown|Burnley 3 Portsmouth Falkirk 3 Raith R 1 {hibition said: day in McGill University's stadium the air more often than Etche- Alouettes carried a 26-24 lead into end runs from thé Montreal 29. will become a thrilling chapter in Canadian football history. It is the i r unleashed Ford. Shatto and Tharp rounded way. Argos shot ahead 30-26. Alou-'by air and ground. Tharp went Hory % gn hy behind out Argos' six touchdowns in run- ettes struck back to lead 32.30. over from six yards out on a pitch-| took on the Montreal 15 and car- | and forge ahead, the outcome left verry, shot two touchdown passes the final quarter. to Al Pfeifer and two to Henry| It was a dog fight the rest of the ning. plays. Then Williams, meeting the big | less than a minute later. It proved | | Two more touchdowns followed badly needed because Dublinski | | pass interceptions and long gains | fell back from his own 49 and| whipped a long pass that Ford! out and Dublinski hit Pfeifer over|ried on over. Burlington Hig h School St. Mike's New Netminder Wins Junior COSSA BURLINGTON . -- Burlington High School juniors captured the Central Ontario Secondary Schools Association football title for the third successive year on Saturday and for the third time they defeat- ed a team from Oshawa Central Collegiate. The score was 17-0. major, converted by Andy Long. Th locals took the lead in the In the second quarter. David {opening minutes when Bill Clack Barker collected the third major plunged over for a touchdown. on a 25-yard pass and run play. A few plays later, Ron Headon|He also accounted for the lone lintercepted a forward pass and|point scored in the last half, with galloped 45 yards for the secondia long kick. | Making His Presence Felt By THE CANADIAN PRESS was Hamilton's Bill Binnie last| The deal that sent goaltender Thursday. Bob Savage to Toronto St. Mich-| Savage was brilliant at Toronto. ael's Majors looks better every ge turned aside 30 Teepee drives day. In two games he's had two while Marv Edwards, in the St. shutouts in the Ontario Hockey Catharines' mets, was handling 31 Association Junior A League. | shots. The Majors, mainly on the fine| Frank Mahovlich, Frank How- work by Savage, took over first arth, Gino Ubriaco and Dick Mat- | Li Charlton A 3 Aston Villa 1 Everton 1 Manchestér C 1 uton T 8 Sunderland 2 Manchester U 3 Chelsea 0 Newcastle U 4 Cardiff C 0 Preston N E 0 Arsenal 1 Sheffield U 1 Bolton W 3 Tottenham 2 Wolverhampton 1 W Bromwich 1 Blackpool 2 Division II Barnsley 4 Bristol R 3 Bristol C 3 Sheffield W 2 Bury 1 Stoke C 0 Fulham 2 Plymouth A 1 Leeds U 4 Liverpool 2 Middlesbrough 4 Doncaster R 1 Notts C 1 Leicester C 1 Port Vale 0 Hull C 1 Rotherham U 3 Blackburn R 2 Swansea T 0 Lincoln 2 West Ham U 1 Nottingham F 2 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division A * Aberdeen 1 Motherwell 1 Airdrieonians 4 Stirling A 0 | place in the league stasdings Sun- day when they shut out St. Cath-| | tiussi scored the Majors' goals. Celtic 3 St. Mirren 0 Hearts 5 Clyde 1 ! Kilmarnock 1 Rangers 2 Partick T 1 Dundee 2 Queen of § 1 Hibernian 3 Division B Alloa 1 Berwick R 1 Brechin C 1 Albion R 0 Cowdenbeath 4 Stenhousemuir 3 Dumbarton 5 Stranraer 2 Dundee U 3 Ayr U 3 Forfar A 3 Third Lanark 1 Hamilton A 8 Montrose 1 Morton 2 St. Johnstone 2 Queen's P 2 Arbroath 0 IRISH LEAGUE Ards 0 Ballymena U 3 Cliftonville 2 Linfield 4 Coleraine 3 Glenavon 3 Distillery 6 Crusaders,0 Glentoran 1 Bangor 1 Portadown 5 Derry City 1 7oodwill trip." . "We're heading west on another 900A INIIIIRENIIBRYT W000008 PP isn annensnsnsiene ERNIE CRY Ly INSULATION DIAMOND PAINT 3-0122 3 AT YOUR SERVICE STATION arines Teepeés 4-0. Last Friday h | Savage and his teammates white | washed the Toronto Marlboros by | the same score. Some 3,000 fans swarmed around regular Flyers' coach did not ac- Art Jones, whose main game is| the home-town victors at game's company the team to Maple Leaf! eader, Jim Crockett played a; . steady game in goal in the Marl- 4 ps riuns boro nets and was robbed of a Over Orfuns Hel Pete. 0 Cop Title In the first game of the regular : Oieefes " per 4 i e remaining in the game. Bob Cherry PETERBOROUGH (CP)---A S00} Wort William leat 1 te 22 3 Sunday doubleheader at Toronto, spoiled En rE shutout al Ah d at Bowmanville CF star was the hero in Peter-/t1e end. e i gl 2 P| Marlboros downed Barrie "Flyers tempt. WB uge crow 3 4 a ae borough Orfuns' 10-7 football win 15 first downs, and the no eruers 3-1. It was the first time a Barrie A GOAL A PERIOD -- 3 S8w an 'action PACKEd hore Saturday over Fort William 12. Fumbles and penalties bo (team has appeared in a Sunday "gin wen Rent Bove onal phans on Sunday. Siding oF ame at Toronto. Hap Emms, the gob Pulford 3 \ 'With fast skating on both teams media'e ire: marksmen, They scored in that 3 : br order, one goal in each period. the game was scoreless for 14 soccer, goes along with the grid end as fire sirens wailed and Gardens. A Dew re a ton Roccy Esposito scored the first f p ind 4 y : vert kicker only. His toe paid off| Officials were on hand to pre- Teepees laced Marlboros, defend- and Don Carter, converted fr goal o he game assigted by ote handsomely. He kicked the tying sent the Percy Robinson Memorial| ing Canadian junior champions, 6-3 5 defen i most of ik Pcie [Be IVINE, assisted ;oint in the third quarter Saturday| Trophy to the winners--unfortun- for their third win of the Season. scoring at St. Catharines Satur- ' | ' = : Tony's Win S cer Star S Accurate Toe In the first game of the double-| East Fife 3 Dunfermline 1 shutout with less than two minutes game between Tony's and Or-pojeying for the Canadian inter- Were scarce. were the Marlboro minutes of the first period, When oun aca placement and a con-| bands blared. In the lone Saturday game, the at centre, flanked by Ab McDonald CALEN DAR by J. Masiewich and J. Lack scor-| 0" 4p op midway through the! ately someone forgot to bring the gaAvE 15 POINTS day. -.1 mal 83a» ed to give Tony's a two - nothing lead. Both teams starting with fast hockey in the second period and B. Harman unassisted, scored the third goal. The Orphans scored their first goal with Sammy Stark unassisted, doing the job. Again Tony's came back with Lack assisted by A. Jackson. The Or- phans' goal, unassisted by A. M. Myles, left Tony's with a 4-2 lead at the end of the second period. Tony's scoring their fifth goal in the third period, assisted by B. Harman fourth bodted a 25-yard field goal cup to the contest. for the winning points. The Redskins got the only point . of the first quarter when wurray Montreal Majorettes YieRengie kicked a single. the Off F V Orfuns went ahead briefly in the second when Boyd Hendry took al 3 or ancouver touchdown pass from Reg Fowler! MONTREAL (CP) -- The 16 over the line, Jones converting it. pretty band majorettes of the | Before the quarter was over, Vic| Montreal Alouettes football team | Marks finished off a Fort William left by train Sunday for Vancouver drive - by knifing five yards for where they will take part in next | give Forts a 7-6 lead at the half. as, this city's goodwill ambassa- In the third quarter, Jones 90TS kicked the only point on an at-| Several hundred Alouettes sup- Pete Siblock came through for|® major. Ed Kruppa converted {o|Saturday's Grey Cup celebrations Then Hanna scored the third| tempted placement. He missed the| porters were on hand as the girls and final score for the Orphans uprights but the ball went to dead-| boarded the CPR train. unassisted. |line, The Orfuns drove hard in the, Thes troupe will make six stops Tony's with good offensive hock- fourth to march from their own 10- before reaching Vancouver Wed- ey whipped three more goals yard line to Redskiss' 25. They | nesday. the net by P. Siblock, assisted by| Were held on two plays and special-| Miss Alouette--majorette Nancy B. Harman; B. Harman, assisted|ist Jones trotted in for the place- Roland -- will present gifts and by R. Esposito and P. Siblock; the last goal of the game being scored by D. Hill and J. Lack. Both goalies were in good form and made a lot of good stops. Tony's goalie was Andy Czera- Wety and the Orphans' netminder was T. Campbell. "TONY'S: 'A. Czerawaty; H. Sar- npvsky; J. Masiewich, M. Mueller, R McDermaid, P. Siblock, Rocco Esposito, B. Harman, B. Irvine, D. Tureski, D. Hill, A. Jackson, Sam Esposito, J. Lack. ORPHANS: T. Campbell, Han- na, Olesuk, Myles, Stark, G. Sut- ton, Depratto, Piontek, F. Sutton, R. Myles, Gibbens, Dineen, Ban- non, Smith RADIO BOOMING LONDON (CP)--Radio set in Britian increased by 26 per cen. in the first six months this vear, compared with a year ago | ment which won the title. messages from Mayor Jean Dra- The two well-matched squads peau of Montreal to the mayors of relied mostly on ground plays, al-' Ottawa, Sudbury, Fort William, though the Orfuns tried a few Winnipeg, Medicine Hat, Calgary passes early in the game, and| and Vancouver. BUY YOUR FUEL OIL WHERE YOU RECEIVE RELIABLE BURNER SERVICE CALL RAndolph 5-3589 43 KING ST. W. LANDER - STARK OIL LTD. | St. Michael's, with seven wins| Stratton fired three goals and {and a tie in 11 games, have 15 had a pair of assists, McDonald] points, two better than second-|scored a pair of goals and set up| place Kitchener-Waterloo Canucks. | two others, while Carter had three| A crowd of 5,718 saw Savage assists. 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