10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 16, 1959 TROPHY WINNERS HONORED Pictured above are the trophy winners in the Knights of Co- lumbus Little Big League base ball league, at the league ban- quet in St. Gregory's Auditor- jum, Saturday. Left front is Ed Hanowski, captain of the champion minor team, the Car- dinals; right front is Paul Mc- Allister, captain of the Reds, the Little League champs. Left rear is Bernard McGuire, win- | ner of the most valuable play- | er trophy in the minor league, | and right rear is Mike Mother- | sill, most valuable player in | the little league. --Oshawa Times Photo Bombers Crush . Eskimo Hopes WINNIPEG (CP) -- An icy 17- mile-an-hour wind swept across the football field as the broad- shouldered fullback, oblivious to| the cold and stomping his feet to make sure of footing, took the snap and kicked. The ball sailed into the chill air and soared far into the end zone, for &ll practicaly purposes) finishing Edmonton Eskimos for the Western Interprovincial Foot- ball Union's 1959 season. The punter was Charlie Shep-| ard and that single point with less than six minutes left in the game was almost as good as a dozen hdowns as innip Blue Bombers beat Eskimos 16-8 to capture the best - of - three WIFU final series in straight games. Bombers won the first game 19-11. Eskimos drove deep into Win-| vipeg territory and came close to| scoring a last-minute touchdown before losing the ball a fumble, but a converted TD would stili have left them losers. Bombers move info the Grey Cup classic at Toronto Nov. 28, to defend the crown they won last year. They will meet either Ot- tawa Rough Riders or Hamilton Tiger-Cats. ESKIMOS HAD LEAD Bombers overcame a 7-0 first- quarter deficit. But until Shep- ard's booming punt -- the ball scrimmage from Edmonton's 32- yard line--they couldn't be sure of avoiding a tie which would have sent the teams into a third game. | | A crowd of 15,872 was on hand Burkholder and the Bombers ran|of the one-sided contest, to see Bombers play alert, hard- OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES LONDON (Reuters)--Results of soccer matches played Saturday in the United Kingdom. Football Assn Cup First Round Accrington 1 Mansfield 2 Barnsley 3 Bradford C 3 Bath C 3 Millwall 1 Bedford T 0 Gillingham 4 Bradford 6 Scarborough 1 Burscough 1 Crewe Alex 3 Cheltenham T 0 Watford 0 Crook T 2 Matlock 'T 2 Darlington 4 Prescot Cables 0 Dorchester T 1 Port Vale 2 Southport T 1 Port Vale 2 South Shields 2 Chesterfield 1 Swindon 2 Walsall 3 Torquay 7 Northampton 1 Walthamstow 2 Bournemouth 3 West Auckland 2 Stockport 6 Wrexham 2 Blyth Spartans 1 Wycombe Wanderers 4 Wisbech 2, Enfield T 4 Headington U 3 Exeter C 4 Barnstaple T 0 Gateshead 3 Halifax T 4 Hastings United 1 Notts C 2 Kettering T 1 Margate 1 Kings Lynn 3 Aldershot 1 Peterborough U 4 Shrewsbury T 3 Rhyl 1 Grimsby T 2 | Rochdale 2 Carlisle U 2 Salisbury 1 Barnet 0 Shildon 1 Oldham 1 Brentford 5 Ashford T 0 Bury 5 Hartlepools 0 Colchester 2 Queens PR 3 Coventry 1 Southampton 1 Crystal P 5 Chelmsford 1 hitting football in weather that to Toronto, "We'll stay in Win- hit seven degrees above zero. Eskimos contributed to their own downfall by fumbling six times. Winnipeg grabbed five of the day vacation. Then daily. practice fumbles. ""Those fumbles killed us," said Edmonton coach Eagle Keys. "We were moving the ball okay, but just. couldn't get untracked except for a while there in the first quarter when we scored our touchdown. . . . I guess they were just a better ball club." Said Edmonton quarterback Jackie Parker: "We just couldn't move the ball. I don't care what the statistics show -- we couldn't move when we had to." |nipeg as long as we can before |going there." Grant gave his team a three- |sessions will resume. Habs Outclass By THE CANADIAN PRESS Until Saturday, Nov. 14, Boston Bruins operated on the theory that the best defence was a good offence, and it worked. Today, after getting 12 goals scored via them and scoring only two, they're beginning to wonder. Montreal Canadiens plastered them 8-1 Saturday and 4-1 Sun- day, thereby taking over Boston's title as the highest-scoring team in the National Hockey League and letting Boston take over New York's uhglorious title of the team most scored upon. The Rangers salvaged a 2-2 tie with Toronto Sunday after De- troit's Terry Sawchuk, playing one of the best games of his career, shut them out 4-0 Satur- day. | Sawchuk couldn't keep it up |Sunday. The last - place Chicago Black Hawks, fired by their re- juvenating oldsters--Tod Sloan, Eddie Litzenberger and Ted Lind- say--clobbered the Red Wings| 5-3 Sunday. | EIGHT-GOAL WEEKEND The Hawks thus enjoyed one of their best weekends of the season, picking up three points-- almost half their season total-- on the strength of the win and a| 3-3 tie with the Leafs Saturday. | In Montreal Saturday, the| Canadiens lost high-scoring right | wing Bernie (Boom Boom) Geof-| frion when he collided with Bos- | ton's Doug Mohns and suffered a six-stitch cut on the leg. Montreal returned the favor Sunday when Maurice (Rocket) | Richard checked left wing John| FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Manila--Teruo Kozaka, 131%,| Japan outpointed Tommy Ro-| {mulo, 130, Phillipines, 10. | Madrid--Fred Galiana, 135%, Spain knocked out Rebert Di- Martino, 134%, Tunisia, 8. Monterrey, Mexico--L. C. Mor- gan, 134%, Lan gsville, Ohio knocked out Damasco Collazo, 133, Cuba, 10. Seoul, Korea--Young Paulino, 161, Philippines and Kang Se- chul, 159, South Korea, drew, 10. Los Angeles--Ray Greco, 152, Los Angeles outpointed Karl Heinz Guder, 156%, Essen, Ger- {many, 10, Berlin -- Gustav Scholz, 159%, West Berlin knocked out Peter| Mueller, 155%, Cologne, 1 (Euro-| 'pean middleweight title). | | | | | COLLEGE FOOTBALL Mustangs Beat Thunderbirds | TORONTO (CP)--Coach Frank them by 50 or 60 points easily-- Winnipeg coach Bud Grant was Gnup of the University of British |if I had left my first string team asked where the turning point Columbig Thunderbirds says it on the field for the whole game." came. "I'm not sure it was a turning point, but I wasn't sure we had it won until we got the ball on an Edmonton fumble with less than a minute to play." NINE POINTS FOR JAMES Canadian fullback Gerry James, still rounding into shape! peg with nine points on a touch- down, two converts and a single. Union while Mustangs finished in|No 1 graft Halfback Leo Lewis scored the @ first-place tie with University teams, other touchdown. Normie Kwong charged 15 touchdown. Parker converted. Vic Chapman kicked a single. Eskimos marched from their own 40-yard line to the Winni- peg four in the dying minutes but {a fumble by quarterback Don who used several second Getty was recovered by Dave out the clock. Grant is not in a hurry to get! will take the West another five years to build up the football strength of the Eastern colleges. This post - game observation pretty well sums up Saturday's first Canadian college football championship, won 34-7 by the University of Western Ontario Mustangs. The Thunderbirds were un- {from a broken leg, paced Winni- defeated this year in the Western Canada Intercollegiate Athletic of Toronto Blues but represented the East because they outscored \vards for the only Edmonton Toronto in two league games. "If we are the best club in the West, then you can imagine what kind of league it must be," said Gnup after his defeat. Western coach John Metras, - string ast half said he could easily have won by more, "I think we would have beaten players for most of the 1 SS -- MORRISON GOLF-No. 2079 Better posture and the ease by standing with your toes POSTURE does it! Bad pos- ture will handicap your swing for any shot, long or short. It places your body, arms and hands in the wrong, alignment, causes tension and faulty movements, Worse yet, the trend in golf al- ways is toward the wrong pos- ture and you can fall into it gradually without being aware of doing so. But good posture means a green light for the most Doncaster 3 Gainsborough 3 Newport 4 Hereford United 2 Norwich 1 Reading 1 Southend 6 Oswestry T 0 Tranmere 0 Chester 1 York City 3 Barrow 1 and hands, The best posture for the golf © by King Featu efficient use of your body, arms | with ALEX MORRISON it affords can be felt simply elevated by a strip of weed. swing finds your weight evenly divided between the balls and heels of youd feet. The tendency is to have too much weight on the ball of the foot, particularly in your starting position. Periodically you should prac. tice swinging back and forth without striking the ground with your clubhead and with the toes of both feet resting on a strip of wood about an inch thick. This helps to properly balance the weight between heels and | toes, res Syndicate Inc, |yard kickoff single. |in the iast minute of the game |when halfback Jim Olafson [ Rain and some snow resulted | in a disappointing crowd of 2,000 --less than the number of tickets sold. The Mustangs, especially their| powerful fullback Lionel Cona-| cher, Jr., revelled in the mud at| Varsity Stadium and rolled] through the Thunderbirds with ease. | Conacher, climaxing a season that has made him the unofficial | choice of professional | scored four touchdowns and barged his way through the UBC line for 188 yards. All but| 26 of them were gained in the| first half as Metras sent in the subs in the second. | Meco Poliziani, Conacher's run-| ning mate, scored the other Mus. | tang touchdown. Bill Mitchell booted three converts and a 90- The lone UBC touchdown came cracked over from a yard out to finish off a scoring march of 66 yards. Dave Barker kieked the convert. BIG STATISTICAL EDGE The Mustangs had 26 first downs compared with UBC's 16, outrushed UBC 347 yards to 202 and outpassed them 107 yards to 39. Western clicked on two out of four and UBC on five out of seven as mud prevented passing. Conacher, 23-year-old son of the late athletic great, caught one of the Mustangs' short screen passes and galloped 64 yards for| the teams final touchdown in the| third quarter. | Bucyk into the boards and put him out of action with a dis- located shoulder and leg injuries. Bucyk plays left wing on Bos- ton's famed Uke line and helps make centre Bronco Horvath the league's leading goal and point. getter. Horvath scored Boston's only goal Saturday and Don McKenney* scored their only one Sunday. POCKET IMPRESSIVE Henri (Pocket Rocket) Richard Jed Montreal's attack Saturday with two goals and two assists. Contributing to the total collapse of Boston's defence were Don Marshall Andre Pronovost, the | Rocket, Billy Hicke, Ralph Back- Boston Bruins Norm Ullman, Warren Godfrey, Gary Aldcorn and Gordie Howe clicked for Detroit. He couldn't keep it up Sunday. John Mackenzie, Fobres Kennedy and Howe had given Detroit a 3-1 lead before the Hawks roared back, Litzenberger and Sloan strom and Jean Beliveau--Bell- veau's being a present from Bos- ton defenceman Fern Flaman who slapped the puck into his own net by accident. Sunday, the first-place Cana- diens were paced by Claude Pro vost, who scored while his own team was short-handed to break a 1-1 tie. Other goals were by Rocket Richard, Backstrom and Beliveau. Saturday in New York, De- troit's Sawchuk was the whole show as Rangers outplayed the Wings but couldn't beat them. Sawchuk stopped 50 shots--New York's Gump Worsley had 34-- to hold the Rangers scoreless as Lindsay got one goal and Ron Murphy and Murray Balfour the others. SECOND WIN The five-goal output matched the Hawks highest this season-- they beat New York 52 in the only other game they've won this year. HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS Saturday, Sloan slipped In a late third-period marker for a 3-3 tie with the Leafs. Litzenberger By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League w T FP APs. 65 28} 21 19] 17 10 Montreal 1 Detroit Toronto Boston New York 1 | Chicago 21 33 Saturday's Results Boston 1 Montreal 8 Chicago 3 Toronto 3 Detroit 4 New York 0 Sunday's Results Toronto 2 New York 2 Montreal 4 Boston 1 Detroit 3 Chicago § Tonight's Game Chicago at Detroit American League WLTTPF APts| 12 3 7% 4 25 18 69 56 22| 10 5 61 41 20 79 41 45 16 710 55 73 14] 6 10 61 72 14) 614 49 81 13 Saturday's Results Quebec 0 Hershey 3 Rochester 3 Cleveland 2 Providence 2 Springfield 4 Sunday's Results Quebec 3 Providence 5 Springfield 3 Rochester 1 Cleveland 6 Buffalo 1 Wednesday's Games Providence at Buffalo Springfield at Hershey Eastern Professional League WL T A Pits. 10 7:1 7% 21 44 5 19 51 57 80 2 8 7 8 3 Springfield | Providence | Rochester Hershey Buffalo Cleveland Quebec Sudbury Montreal Hull-Ottawa T. Rivieres S.8. Marie 51 Kingston 410 2 57 Saturday's Result Sudbury 6 Kingston § Sunday's Results Montreal 1 Hull-Ottawa 1 Sudbury 1 Trois-Rivieres 8 Tuesday's Games Hull-Ottawa at Trois-Rivieres Kingston at Sault Ste. Marie OHA Senior A WL T F APts, 50 17 16 F 80 8 60 8 61 7 55 16 5 13 10 K-wW Whitby Chatham Windsor Belleville Saturday's Results Windsor 3 Kitchener-Waterl Chatham 3 Whitby 4 Sunday's Results Kitchener 4 Windsor 2 Tuesday's Game Whitby at Belleville NOHA Senior A 14 9 4 35 45 27 4" 00 A Pts. 14 14 28 17 29 Rouyn-Nor Timmins Kapus Abitibi North Bay Saturday's Results North Bay 4 Kapuskasing 6 Sunday's Results North Bay 2 Timmins 11 Rouyn-Noranda 5 Abitibi 5 Wednesday's Games Kapuskasing at Rouyn-Noranda Abitibi at Timmins OHA Junior A WL TPF APts. e 530 Michael's 5 10 Guelph arrie Marlboros Hamilton St. Cath 2 Saturday's Results Guelph 5 St. Catharines 5 Sunday's Results Marlboros 4 Barrie 3 St. Michael's 3 Hamilton 0 Tuesday's Games Peterborough at Marlboros Hamilton at Guelph SATURDAY Western League Victoria 2 Calgary 3 Pet: St. BRse8S 1 3 5 3 6 4 | Melville 1 Flin Flon 6 and Bobby Hull got the other goals, Again they were down 3-1 after goals by Billy Harris, Dick. Duff and Johnny Wilson before re- viving. Sunday in New York, Andy Hebenton did his best for the lackadaisical Rangers but the team managed only a tie. He- benton whipped in two goals within one minute, 39 seconds of the second period to overcome a 140 lead Toronto took on Bert Olmstead's goal. But Toronlo captain George Armstrong came through with the tying goal--the only one in the game scored with both teams at full strength. Olmstead's goal Louisville 7 Toledo 4 St. Paul 4 Milwaukee 5 Western International 'Rossland 3 Nelson 5 Saskatchewan Senior Saskatoon 5 Moose Jaw 4 Cape Breton Senior Sydney 3 Glace Bay 4 Saskatchewan Junior Moose Jaw 3 Saskatoon 8 OHA Jr. B Border Cites Riverside 3 Windsor 5 Central Alberta Red Deer 9 Edmonton 4 Lacombe 3 Ponoka 5 Montreal Metro Jr. Brockville 8 Verdun 2 OSHAWA MAJOR HOCKEY Coach Gar Peters and his Macko's A's took over undisputed first place in the Oshawa Major Hockey League Sunday evening, owning Durno's Garagemen 11-8. It was the third victory in a row for the A's without a de- were expected to pro- 's with their stiffest op- te but an atrocious hammered in eight goals, left lit- tle doubt as to who was the stronger team of the night's play. Durno's did come to life in the final stanza, scoring six times when Macko's, sensing victory, tended to ease up. The opening frame provided Macko's A's Win Over Dumno's Garagemen 11-8 THIRD PERIOD 12. Durno's, Westfall (Burgess) .. ... 14, Macko's, Garrard (Ch ) 1 1 17, Durno's, 18. Durno's, Westl; 14.38; Garrard (tripping and mis- condijs) 18.47. 5. Macko's, Copeland 6. Durno's, Sneddon Westfall (Mills, Nicholishen) ... 15.40 (Mill seine 19.27 ¢ Penalties -- Hubble (charging) the only two-way hockey of the night with the A's grabbing a 10 lead via a tally by Tub Garrard on a ganging attack. SCORE AT WILL In the second stanza, Macko's scoring almost at will, took a commanding lead on two goals each, by Bob Cherry and Chuck Durno, and singletons by Ed- wards, McGarry, Baker and Copeland. Doug Cole and Dave Nicholishen replied for Durno's, The final period saw big George Westfall go on the biggest scor- ing binge of the young season, | as he rifled home four big goals | to make Durno's at least look re-| spectable on the score sheet. Jack Sneddon and Ernie Mills| also counted for the garage men. For Macko's, in the third, Gar- rard and Gary Copeland each notched his second of the night. | Next week Durno's tackle the Juveniles in an attempt to get back on the win side of the led-| SUMMARY ! | MACKO'S A's -- goal: Wil shire, Cherry, Edwards, Hubble, ! came while the R Ss were two men short. Western League Vancouver 2 Spokane 4 D th, Welsh, Baker, Durno Walker, McGarry, Garrard, Copeland | Seattle 4 Winnipeg 2 International League Denver 4 Indianapolis 2 Milwaukee 4 Toledo 3 Eastern League Johnston 2 New Haven 1 New York 4 Clinton 2 Manitoba Junior Wpg Braves 6 Wpg Monarchs 4 Saskatchewan Junior Melville 4 Flin Flon § Montreal Metro Jr. Brockville 1 Sorel 1 Western League L F APs. 68 29 21 19 16! 15| 13 1 Young Jockey Gets 3 Winners NEW YORK (CP) -- Gordon Lanoway, 18-year-old apprentice {Jockey from Vancouver, rode three winners at Bay Meadows Race Track in California Satur- day for the best record of the meeting. In 12 days of racing at the San Mateo course he has had 20 win- ners--10 in the last three days. Lanoway rode The Searcher to a second-place finish in the day's feature race, the $11,125 Burlin- game Handicap which was won by Battle Dance ($12.80). At other U.S. tracks Saturday: Snow and cold weather in Chi- cago Ned "i Toei program at Sportsmin's Park. The Irish ($10.20) captured the Idlewild Handicap at Aqueduct in 1:48.4, the best time yet for a mile and a furlong at New York's new plant. Vancouver Seattle Victoria Calgary Edmonton Winnipeg Spokane 49 Saturday's Results Victoria 2 Calgary 8 Vancouver 5 Spokane 4 Sunday's Results Vancouver 2 Spokane 4 Seattle 4 Winnipeg 2 Tuesday's Games Seattle at Calgary Victoria at Winnipeg 51 DURNO'S -- Goal, Melnick, | Shetler, Olesuk, Nicholishen, Tu- reski, Myles, Brown, Cole, Mor- den, Kilpatrick, Burgess, 'West- fall, Sneddon, Mills, FIRST PERIOD 1. Macko's, Garrard (Cherry, Copeland) .. Penalties -- McGarry (high- | {sticking and misconduct) 11.30. SECOND PERIOD 2. Durno's, Cole 3. Macko's, McGarry (Durno) 4. Macko's, Baker (Cherry, Garrard) 8. Macko's, Durno fwelsh) ............ . 6. Macko's, Durno (Welsh, McGarry) 7. Macko's, Edwards 8. Macko's, Cherry (Baker, Garrard) ...... 14.02| 9. Macko's, Copeland . |10. Durno's, Nicholishen | (Mills) 11. Macko's, Cherry (Garrard, Baker) ...... No penalties. 1.22 a0 vs 800] oo 11451 ve. 12.52] 16.08 19.15 COMING THROUGH! QPUARTERBAGK RALPHGUGL 1EL M/, or me . . WASHINGTON g REDSKINS, /AS SHowy s/6/5 oF COMING N70 HIS OWN AS A PRO, 7H/5 5 YEAR. gn = A Be Ae n THE NOTRE DAME ALL-AMERICAN SAW LINITED SERVICE 45 4 ROOKIE REDSKIN MW 1955, SPENT NEXT 2 YEARS W SERVICE AND Wis BOTHERED Vancouver 5 Spokane 4 Okanagan Senior Penticton 3 Kamloops 8 Vernon 4 Kelowna 5 Eastern League Gr boro 1 Washington 2 Philadelphia 0 Clinton 4 New Haven 2 Johnstown 3 International League Omaha 8 Fort Wayne 3 Premium Quality Courteous, Pro OSHAWA RA 5-1109 NEW REDUCED PRICE STOVE OIL VIGOR OIL CO. For Delivery by Metered Trucks Phone mpt Delivery WHITBY MO 8-3644 BROOKLIN OL. 5-3221 AJAX 550 EERE VOR - This coin is worth *150.00 QUEEN VICTORIA 5c COIN PROVINCE OF CANADA 1858 "LARGE DATE" A COLLECTOR'S ITEM CANADA'S LEADING C10AR REMEMBER WHEN...? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Tiger Flowers, former world middleweight boxing champion, tion for removal of a growth over | ision over ch i go [Burton scored 8 sticking) 11.30; Westfall (high-| Beaten 8-1 By 3 Rivers By THE CANADIAN PRESS Trois-Rivieres Lions may be ia fourth place in the Eastern Pro- fessional Hockey League and Sudbury Wolves in first place, but | you would never have known it | watching the two teams play against each other Sunday. The Lions grabbed a 40 lead in the first period and then coasted to an 8-1 victory over the Wolves, who the night before had edged Kingston Frontenacs 6-5 at | Kingston. 3 The victory moved Trois Rivieres within two points of Hull-Ottawa Canadiens and Monts real Royals, who are tied for sec- ond place a couple of points bes hind the Wolves. The Canadiens and Royals battled to a 1-1 stands off in Hull, an TWO SCORE TWICE "n Mel Pearson and Rollie Leclere each scored two goals in the Lions' victory. Frank Roggeveen; Dave ALON, Jean Paul Deal and Wayne Hull got singles. : udbury's only tested | ; goal at 3:43 of the Gerry McNamara 2 times in the Sud while. Wolves managed fhe Wolves outscored Frontenacs 3-2 in the third period to clinéh | victory. Chevrefils scored his second and third of the night and Cummy Burton his second of | the night, Stan Maxwell and § playing coach Cal Gardner re» | plied for Kingston. It also was Gardner's s o; | The other Sudbury scorer wap Cleland Mortson, while Gerzy | Ouellette notched Kingston's other marker. > BIG CROWD AT HULL i The largest crowd of the, sek son in Hull, 4,561 fans, the Canadiens and Montreal Roy- als divide two goals in the first period Sunday and then checks mate each other the rest of the A way. pe: Bill Carter counted for Cana diens and Ken Mosdell for the | Royals. Royals defenceman Moe Mantha was in the penalty box when Carter scored, and Canas diens' Jean Gauthier cooler when Mosd died in a New York hospital 32 | years ago today after an opera- | his right eye. Flowers had reached the top in 1926 with 15-round di Harry Greb, and lost the title later that year to Mickey Walker. | SALMON STUDIES PORT ALBERNI, B.C. (CP)-- A large artificial salmon-spawn- ing ground is being flooded here by the fisheries department to help biologists in their study of the fish. TONIGHT ! LIVE JAZZ At C.RA 8:00 ThSR YOUR DANCING: & LISTENING PLEASURE DRY.CHARGED~-- FRESH WHEN YOU BUY Ee A LH ES BERBEIRRRD ANNAN ORER REN 1381 £2 ie PREBERaRtnstR nan nERRERERS New Prest-O-Lite Vibration Proof HI-LEVEL eliminates twooutof three power failures in heavy duty service! Built to take the roughest treats ment and still deliver full starting power. The Prest-O- Lite Vibration-Proof is made possible by a great new bate teryengineeringadvancement that ends plate failure from vibration--a major cause of battery failures. GUARANTEED FOR 50 MONTHS®* *in normal possenger car use 'om net; " % a ------------------ Te, : jor an 1H 94 J