10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, March 15, 1962 GORDIE HOWE SCORES HIS 500TH NHL GOAL TO HELP WINGS UP GORDIE HOWE HAS SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS _ EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' OH WELL -- what you lose on the peanuts, you can always make up on the hog dogs -- that's what the '"carny" boys say and today it seems good enough for Canada's sporting public. There was great wailing and gnashing of teeth yesterday over Canada's defeat at the hands of Sweden, in the World Ice Hockey Tournament. Baz O'Meara, of Mont- real, dean of Canadian sports scribes, termed them the "Galt Terribles" while others did more barking and penned vicious verbal bites, the like of which would shame any self-respect- ing terrier..Last night, the Canucks took out their vengeance on Norway to the tune of 14-1 but even that didn't fully wipe out the stigma of Tueesday night's defeat and "'loss of face." However, today we find something to cheer about, the Jelineks, brother-and-sister figure skating team from Bronte, captured the world's "pairs'" championship, in their native Prague, yesterday and put Canada back on the front page of the sports news. Meanwhile, Oshawa's Don Jackson stayed wp a close second by performing with unusual skill in the "compulsory figures' -- a phase of the figure skating sport in which Jackson doesn't top the rest of the field, as he does in the "free-skating'" -- at which, currently, he has no equal. He is favored to win the world's title now, because he has made enough marks to stay a close second to Karol Nevin, the Czech, in the "compulsory figures."' THE RICHARDSONS, defending the Scotch Cup for Can- ada, will meet United States in their first curling match to- day. Sweden, a new entry in the competition, has been drawn against Scotland. Skip Ernie Richardson and his family, a brother and two cousins, will be making their third bid to win the Scotch Cup, won last year for Canada by Hec Gervais and his Alberta rink. The Richardsons won the cup the first year it was up for competition, in 1959 and again in 1960, They are favored to win it again this year and if they do, it is expected the Scotch. Distilleries--sponsors of this world championship curling event -- will likely give serious consideration to the invitation they have received, to hold the championship games in Edmonton, next year or in 1964. BRIGHT BITS -- Oshawa Hawks got a break when they got out of their series with Chalk River, Deep River, or what-have-you. Seems the club there lost a couple of key players and decided to pass up the playoffs. We think the Hawks would likely have beaten them but it was to have been an expensive trip. Now the Oshawa boys meet Toronto YMHA with the first game in Toronto this Saturday night. .«.+- OWEN SOUND Juveniles play Oshawa in the first game of a 2-out-of-3 Ontario Minor playoff round (quarter- finals) here at the Children's Arena on Saturday night and it should be a real attraction for local hockey fans... . SWEDEN'S hockey team may tour Canada, on their way home, and they're talking about an exhibition game at Maple Leaf Gardens. We wouldn't count on this one, too much! Osha-Hawks Advance Into Third Round "suns playground league at Moss! Park, that spelled finis to the) Oshawa hopes, last year. They} Oshawa Hawks will face much stiffer opposition than they had expected, in their next round of OBA playdowns, which scien HERE IT IS! The big one for Gordie Howe, ace right- winger of Detroit Red Wings, is caught by the cameraman here, as he pushes the puck past New York Ranger goalie LEAFS DUMP HABS Rangers Edge Wings On Penalty Shot, 3-2 By LAURENT CHIASSON Bernie (Boom Boom) Geof-|last man to handle the puck on Hockey League history to score 500 goals. Montreal's great Maurice (The Rocket) Richard scored 544 before he retired at the end of the 1959- 60 season. Lorne Worsley, in last night's game at New York, which the Rangers won 3-2. This was Howe's 500th NHL goal and at the time put the Red Wings in front 2-1, Howe is only the second player in National ~--AP Wirephoto Sports Scribes Use Acid-Type Ink For Barking At Terriers The cold, hard) was the familiar story of Cana- | By THE CANADIAN PRESS O'Meara: " '.. . If the Galt 'Terribles'|fact is that the Terriers couldn't! dian penalties. Some Canadian had rehearsed for a week how | adjust to the basic stratagems] 4bs have learned their lesson, they were going to lose to Swe-|of hockey They picked up} den, they couldn't have achieved foolish penalties You could|but the system of a new team their bjective more effec-\sense overconfidence all iiuough|#!ways seems to produce an- tively. " the team right from the start. other club to falter in this re- | Baz O'Meara, writing in the). . . The Scandinavians didn't|/SPect. . . . The old cry about Montreal Star, just about sum-|panic under pressure and they|European rules is out of date med up the feelings of Canadian|got gorgeous. goalkeeping to by now. sportswriters following Tuesday|help them out." Mike Rodden, Kingston. Whig- night's loss by Canada to Swe-| Ted Beare, Brantford Exposi-| Standard: "The Swedes . . . sur- den in the world hockey tourna-|tor: ' It makes you shud-|passed the Canadians in stick- ment in Colorado Springs, Colo./der to think how bad our side/handling, passing, breakaways The Swedish team rolled to a|might have looked if the Czechs|and observance of the rules. 4-0 lead over Galt Terriers, then|--supposedly superior to any-|They were the more resourcefu held on for a 5-3 victory. thing else on ice in Europe--|team and Terriers were more Canadian sportswriters were|had showed up." than slightly frustrated." almost unanimous in criticizing} Milt Dunnell, Toronto Star:| Len Taylor, Kitchener-Water- the calibre of the team repre-|". . . . The Canadians blew this|loo Record: 'It was obvious senting Canada and the way injoné with their hands and theirjearly in the tourney that which it played. They were just|heads. They couldn't shoot and|Swedes were a major threat. as unanimous in praising the|they didn't seem to think. .. .""|They need to continue their les- heady, improved play of the; Hal Walker , Toronto Tele-|sons and learn how to play 60 Swedes--especially the acrobatic|gram: "Galt's showing last/minutes without several exhibi- young goalie, Lennart Haggroth.|night was a sick thing. . . .Can- |tions of the 'Swedish swan," an If they faulted the Swedes at|ada's prestige as a nation of fun-|act which Hollywood may envy. all, it was for their "dying| loving people, who can laugh]. . . Two of the factors that de- swan" acts which they slipped|win or lose . . . was lowered|termined the outcome . . . were into every time they were belted| considerably." the atrocious Canadian marks- by a hefty Canadian body-check, Some of the comments: HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS Ontario Senior | Woodstock 4 Chatham 5. (Woodstock leads best-of-seven semi-final 2-0) Eastern Townships Senior Drummondville 1 Montreal 7 wins best-of-seven jpenalty shot awarded to Andy|802!s Maurice Richard retired Earl Ingarfield scored New of an exhibition game between It was Bathgate's second £0al| ond period. He got it the hard The Swedes defeated the Ter-/8ames to play to New York's!, .29-foot backhand shot past! riod. said he already has received in-/Canadiens. Montreal still has a' Powers allowed Bathgate Man. United 2 Preston 1 Aston Villa 1 West Brom 0 0 Division IV Canadian Press Staff Writer frion got one of Montreal's/the play -- retrieving it after Detroit right winger, Gordie|80als--the 325th of his 12-sea-/Bassen had knocked it away Howe finally bagged his 500th|/son NHL career. The goai broke/|from Prentice. "|goal in regular-season National|a tie for fourth place with the) Bathgate picked up the puck | Hockey League play Wednesday late Nels Stewart of Montreall/at the blue line, skated in night. Maroons' fame in the league's! slowly, faked Bassen off his feet we en ay But some of the lustre was/4ll-time scoring derby and tucked the puck in the open Pla Galt Bathgate of New York Rangers od ght iy Paso Mayenne other goal while the sec- lin the third period, The league's| ie Ore ne cag awe a 500 (ond Detroit tally was counted leading scorer beat Detroit ahd pi eed ike Minden 4 the|DY Claude Laforge. goalie Hank Bassen for a 80a ped Wings and Chicago Black! Geoffrion scored his big goal, ar ens that gave Rangers an import-\i wis had 365. it also was his 21st of the sea- ant 3-2 win over the Red Wings At New York, Howe picked up,son--at 3:22 of the second pe- d 'riod and it tied the score 2-2. |the Swedish national hockey|% the game and the victory|way while his own team was\and won the rousing, hard-hit- team and Galt Terriers at|pushed the Blueshirts into a shorthanded. ting contest before 13,840 fans Maple Leaf Gardens here will|two-point lead, 59 to 57, over 'The 33-year-old veteran of 16,at Maple Leafs Gardens going be considered by the board of the Wings in the scramble for|pig-league seasons took a pass away. directors, President Stafford|the fourth and last Stanley Cup! at centre ice from Alex Delvec-| Bob Pulford of the Leafs also Smythe said Wednesday night playoff berth. : chio, charged down the middle, scored a milestone goal--the "It might be a natural," Detroit, however, still has a fought off New York player-|100th of his sixth big league sea- riers, Canada's representatives, four before the 70-game sched- goalie Lorne Worsley. cae = 5-3 in Colorado Springs Tuesday|wle ends March 25. Referee Eddie Powers called) pote rent seein, 'Bob night and became virtually as-| Elsewhere Wednesday night, the penalty shot when Bassen Nevin and Eddie Litzenberger sured of the world amateur| Toronto Maple Leafs dumped|threw his stick in stopping alNevin and Litzenberger also hockey championship. jthe league-leading Montreal Ca-|breakaway by New York's Dean| ad two assists each In Colorado Springs Jack Rox-|nadiens 5-2 at Toronto. Prentice. aR TaN f burgh, president of the Canadian|_ The win put the second-place Montreal's first goal was scored by Gilles Tremblay just lvitations to have the Swedish|game in hand. itake the shot since he was the/face-off. jteam play in Victoria and Port oe : Geass ; a ' Arthur. Roxburgh said he would ap- proach the Swedes but their travel arrangements might make games in Canada difficult LONDON (Reuters) Re- jsults of Wednesday night's Eng- lish and Scottish soccer games: F A CUP Sixth Round Quarter-Final Replays Blackburn 0 Fulham 1 (Man. United meets Totten- ham) SCOTTISH CUP Fourth Round Replay Third Lanark 0 Celtic 4 (Celtic meets St. Mirren) ENGLISH LEAGUE Cardiff 1 Burnley 1 Sheffield. U 1 Everton 1 Tottenham 1 Ipswich 3 Division II Sunderland 4 Charlton 1 Division HI Bradford 4 Southend 0 Bradford 2 Aldershot 1 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I Airdrieonians 3 Dunfermline 1 Dundee 0 Rangers 0 Hibernian 1 Motherwell 2 Raith 2 Kilmarnock 2 taken' off the milestone by Only three players have more!corner of the net. TORONTO (CP) -- Possibility at_ New York, his big goal at 17:10 of the sec- But the Leafs bounced back Smythe said. game in hand, having five more| coach Doug Harvey and flipped'son. It came in the: third pe- Amateur Hockey Association,|Ueafs just five points behind)/RETRIEVED PUCK \ to 32 seconds after the opening ' | OLD COUNTRY (Fulham meets Burnley) Division I Shrewsbury 0 Halifax Stirling 0 Dundee U 1 nal: ".,.. What was surprising'tending by . . . Haggroth." By THE CANADIAN PRESS Wednesday's Results National League Canada 14 Norway 1 WLT F APpt\United States 12 Britain 5 | 37 13 14 235 149 gg/ Finland 7 Switzerland 4 | 3719 9 222 164 83\Japan 7 Austria 3 2922 13 201 166 71 Thursday's Games By THE CANADIAN PRESS /Montreal Andy Bathgate, whose second | Toronto goal of the game--on a penalty|Chicago *|came on the floor, took a nine- ' Firefighters Take Lead In Series Opener The Ohawa Y's Men's Basketball League saw great action, when Firefighters and St. John's Cadets came in contact, at Simcoe Hall on Saturday. These two teams are fight- ing it out for the "B" Trophy, as well as gaining the rights to come in contact with the Bola- hood's Sportshaven team. In the first half of this game, it was a close match for both teams, as they scored foul-shot for foul-shot and field goal, for field goal, to close the score at 15 apiece, for the half. In the second half, it looked better for Firefighters as they point lead and held it for the rest of the half, while the St. John's Cadets could not catch them. This gave Firefighters a fine victory of 41-to-32, and also a nine-point lead for the second game, as they come in action again this Saturday morning, at 9.45 o'clock. FIGHTERS --T. Kocho, 6; |E. Arych, J. Campbell, 12; B. |Fedorczenko, 17; S. Bradica, 2; W. Haas, 4. ST. JOHN'S CADETS --} coach, Elder Bingham; P. Kili-| sitoff, 16; B. Willis, B. Shody, 2, J. Marchut, 4; C. Williams, 10; E. Burke, J. Aksuizye. Y's Men's Open | 'Semi-Finals Sat. Morning Oshawa' Y'S Men's Major| Basketball League semi-final jround will get under way this jSaturday morning at Central Collegiate. In the quarter-final round, On- tario Steel '"'B" team elimi- |nated the Modern Dry Cleaners jand Ontario Steel "A" squad ousted the favored Walt's Bar- ber Shop team. In the semi-finals, Ontario, Steel B's, led by Roy Clarke,| {Benny King and Stan Seneco, jwill meet second-place Kin- |Loch's Men's Wear in a two-| jgame, total-point series and |Kinloch's will be led by Bob Winters, with Al Etchells and Don Calder backing him up, in the bid to overthrow last year's champions. In the other semi-final brack- et, Greg Milosh and Stan Dali- dewkz will lead the surprising|(CP-AP) They announced their retiye$ ment from amateur competi- tion, right after they had been: declared the world's 1962 | champions. Prague. | THE JELINEKS, Mario and | brother Otto, of Bronte, On- tario, last night captured the world's figure skating 'Paris Championsship" in --(CP Wirephoto) - t Over 18,000 See Canada's Jelineks Win World Title PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Today's competition includes -- Canadian skaters|the final two figures for men, Ontario Steel "A" team against) were aiming for more honors to-| 'Me first two figures for ladies, the league leading Jaycee |Rockets, who will be spear-| headed by Jim Rowden, Bil]! Jepma and their mates. day in the wake of the brilliant) te. but close victory by Maria and|ing. The ice dance title will be |Otto Jelinek in the pairs compe-|decided Friday night and the the two compulsory dance pat- rns and the men's free' skat- | tition of the world figure skating|ladies' singles Saturday night. SATURDAY'S GAMES 9.00 a.m. -- Ontario Steel "B" vs Kinloch's Men's Wear; 10.15 a.m. -- Ontario Steel "A") jvs Jaycee Rockets; Ist games lof two-game, total-point semi- final rounds. Return games on Saturday, March 24. "NHL LEADERS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Standings: Montreal, won 3 lost 13, tied 14, points 88. Points: Goals: Hull, Chicago, 44. | Assists: Bathgate, 54. Shutouts: Hall, Chicago, 8. Penalties: Fontinato, Mont- real, 165 mirutes | Eight Teams In Ontario's HS 'Championships | WELLAND (CP) Eight teams, representing the cream ballers, square away here Fri-| iday as the annual Golden Ball {tournament opens. | The Ontario ch the|featuring teams representing the | the \various high school area winners| Wendy G ladies' Thompson and Miss Griner ar' lot eliminations from Friday|16-year-olds. through Saturday night. The last} bs from across the province, will) be played in a 10-game_ block! jtwo games of the tournament jwill be the consolation and |championship finals. Four area teams will be in Bill Westwick,--Ottawa Jour-|manship and unbelievable goal-|the event. Notre Dame High) School will enter as representa-| tives of the host city while Wel-| land High and Vocational School! and Niagara District High) School of Virgil will gain berths} as Southern Ontario Secondary Association representatives. Niagara Falls Collegiate and Vocational School has s gained a berth as champions of a playoff between. SOSSA and/as the Libin sor Other teams finding berths in broke. COSSA. the provincial playoffs are: Riv- championships. {team from Bronte, Ont., bfeore a capacity crowd of 18,-|ping Ludmilla Belousova and 500 in the city where they were|Oleg Protopopov in the pairs. born, beat out Russian and West| West Germany's Margret Goebl German skaters for the pairs;and Franz Ningel were third, | title Wednesday night. json of Oshawa, Ont., was still jin the running for the men's sin- |gles though he »\vakia's Karol Divin ieee | BRMESe, NEW Yorks school figures, Divin led son by 45.8 points. An un tabulation gave Divin . land Jackson 1,210.1. The Czech|i" ordinals was 15 to 16.5. |had six first-place votes to Jack-| prps |son's three from the-nine-judge NDS LONG CAMPAIGN | panel mat of France was third after the six figures with 1,184.7, just | jahead of Donald McPherson of Stratford, Ont., with 1,156.3. |CAN OUTPOINT |pinned on Virginia Thompson of} |St. Catharines, Ont., and Wil-| ampionships, |liam McLachlan have won their second-succes-|shot -- brought New York/New York 24 31 11 185 199 59 Group A (Montreal _ The Jelineks turned back Rus- The graceful brother - sister|sia's bid for its first interna- skating) tional figure skating title by nip- |while Marika Kilius and Hans Juergen Baeumler withdrew jafter a fall which injured Baeumler and damaged their al-| Skates. The Jelineks who said they will retire after this competition, At the close of compulsory|dtew a bare majority of five Jack-|first place votes. Their points official| Margin was 102.2 to 102.1 for 1,255.9 the Russians and thelr margin Canadian champion Don Jack- championship today, | trailed Czechoslo- The triumph of the youthful _, Canadians climaxed a 10-year European champion Alain Cal- campaign for the title. "It's terrific," 21 - year ~ old Otto exclaimed. '"'We had plan- ned to retire a year ago. But when the 1961 championships ;were cancelled because of the Jackson, considered to he one|American team's tragic plane of the world's finest free skat-|Crash, we decided to give it one lers, was expected to outpoint/more shot. |Divin in this final phase of the} | competition, which counts for 40/ Jelineks' career from hteir first Bruce Hyland, who shaped the r cent in the judging. \pairs lesson at the Oakville, io's hi .|pe , 1jof Ontario's high school basket fas Hallas tae were|Ont., Figure Skating Club, said: "They skated the most difficult program ever done in a world of Toronto in|meet." : dance competition and on| Otto now plans to enter his riner of Toronto in the/father's cork business while singles. Both Miss|Maria will enrol at Sorbonne ne e| University in Paris to continue her language studies. She wants ----|to become a United Nations in- |terpreter. The Jelinek family fled their jnative Czechoslovakia in 1948 and came to Canada a year later from Switzerland. The victory by Maria and Otto gave Canada the pairs crown for the seventh time in eight world championships. In 1960 they were second to Lon- Barbara Wagner and Robert London Team Will Drop Out It They Win LONDON, Ont. (CP) - don senior basketball team has|Paul, Canada's four-time world a problem--it doesn't intend to and Olympic champions. Last \lose, but it can't afford to win.| year's championships were can- celled after the entire U.S. team was wiped out in a plane crash in Belgium. NHL BIG SEVEN The locals were once known gstons, but the spon- withdrew. Now they are The team faces Windsor Em- erdale Collegiate, Toronto; St.|bassy here Saturday in the sec- \Charles, Sudbury; Fisher Park,jond game of the best-of-three Ottawa; and a winner, not yet/final for the Ontario senior bas- \ketball title London won the first 90-70. | If they win Saturday, it final 4-2) Saskatchewan Junior Saskatoon 2 Melville 8 A RRUnGceAbEN were} |decided, of a WOSSA-CWOSSA Flin Flon 3 Regina 5 playoff to be held this week. 'Eastern Division Oa ae hae "THIS PAPERBOY' IS RETIRED NOW WILT F A Pt port Arthur 6 Fort William 2 40 21 2266 176 82 (port Arthur wins best - of- habe a : ioe ae by seven final" 3-2, two games rovidence 3132 2226 25. tied) >ONTEF y 3 8 Western Division Victoriaville 5 Montreal-Nord 3} a pews. vendor in Ponte- 8| Cleveland 35 24 321817873) (Victoriaville leads best - of-) fract Tuesday night. 28 39 6\Buffalo 35 27 223219972' seven semi-final 2-0) News vendor Joseph Nixon 17 22 2/Rochester 30 28 6 219 212 66 Ontario Junior B 33, learned Tuesday he won 18 37 2'Pittsburgh 952 2152319 20/Kitchener 6 Hamilton 3 $367,326 on a one-farthing bet 19 2 Wednesday's Results (Kitchener wins best-of-three) in a soccer pool. He 17 44 2 Cleveland 4 Hershey 0 semi-final, 2-1) promptly retired. Buffalo 5. Providence 7 Eastern League "Every morning my wife- 13 6 Friday's Game Clinton 3 Greensboro 4 and I get up at 5::30 a.m. to 8 4\/Hershey at Springfield (Greensboro leads best-of-nine) fetch the morning papers and mark them for deliv- ery,"' he said. "Now I, shall just lie in bed instead.' |Sweden vs Britain West Germany vs Finland Group B France vs The Netherlands Denmark vs Australia only this|Rangers a 3-2 win over Detroit) Detroit 22 30 13 176 204 57 Boston 12 46 8 159 296 32 Wednesday's Results Detroit 2 New York 3 Montreal 2 Toronto 5 Thursday's Games Chicago at Montreal Boston at Detroit World Hockey WL.T GROUP | sive Toronto title, ' year they moved to the other|/Red Wings. Toronto League, the Metro| Gordie Howe of Detroit, who group and have been sponsored|scored his 500th goal in regular- by YMHA. Their personnel is|season play in the Wings' loss almost the same. . . Bert|to New York. Raphael, Willie Silverman and| Bob Nevin and Ed Litzen Dave Bernstein, who all helped! berger, who. each scored a goal] \demolish the Hawks last year, and assisted on two others to are still with the club. lead Toronto Maple Leafs to a So this series will be a real|5-2 victory over Montreal Cana- battle. The Oshawans have the |diens. Sweden lacking at the hands of the Osh-|advantage of home floor for the} "|\Canada awans, they have defaulted) second game of the series and\against Windsor or Kitchener,|United States their series. Therefore the|will also have Garney Gunn in}who also open their set Satur-) Norway Hawks will advance to third/the lineup, for at least the first/day night. Kitchener stopped|West Germany round play, meeting Toronto/game of the series. The rookie|Welland by 10 points in their| Finland : YMHA Intermediates at the|centre will be home from Filint,/last round while Windsor oust-! Switzerland YMHA gym, Bloor and Spadina,|Michigan, for the opener Satur-jed St. Thomas. The . Hawks Britain Saturday night at 8.30 p.m. The|day night. He'll join Carliwould dearly like to finish the return game will be at Done-'Cheski in working the centre/Toronto crew, to gain that van gym, next Saturday. spot, leaving Tom Olinyk and|Southern final berth. They will Several of the Hawks have a\Brent Oldfield, free to checklalso be out to prove that they | France big scere to settle with the|the YMHA bigyscorers. jcan take this YMHA club ang | Netherlands Toronto crew. It was this same) The winner of the series will|that last year's series was a Denmark team, playing in the Torontoladvance to the Southern finals|big mistake. Australia get under way Saturday night. They were originally sched- uled to play Deep River Neu- rons, opening away from home. But an industrial accident has sidelined three of the Neutron players, who work there at the Atomic energy plant at Chalk River. This leaves the understaffed club with only six players and) sooner than taste a bitter shell- By THE CANADIAN PRESS Andy Bathgate of New York Rangers scored two goals Wed- nesday night and opened up a | ; four-point lead over runner-up lmeans they have the right tol Bobb rs ; | y Hull of Chicago Black host Montreal in the Eastern) ee Canada finals--at a minimum ee ies ~ ei for ens leost of $300 The winner of the| aaytear barat Obie phere he a eastern finals has the right tol re uate a <eannl tr noes oe ne penalty shot--came in Rangers' $1. 500 : 3-2 win over Detroit Red Wings $1,500. re ; and brought Bathgate's point . =e close : prsllgeeel |. for the season ie 81. ane sal e seniors, e) total is made up of 27 goals an |Saturday, will settle for the On-la jeague-leading 34 assists tario title and withdraw from| 'The Jeaders: ' the eastern final. They'll G A Pts. change their minds if they can) Bathgate, New York 27 54 dig up financial aid. Hull, Chicago 44 33 The team will have an added|Howe, Detroit 31 42 spur in its attempts to win Sat-| Mikita, Chicago 22 47 urgay. A loss means travelling Mahovlich, Toronto 32 36 money will have to be obtained|Delvecchio, Detroit 24 41 for the third game at Windsor.|Ullman, Detroit 24 38 Springfield . F .A Pt Hershey 36 40 41 8 9 16 GRO - 30 32 28 16 6 7 Japan Austria 13 4 Western League semi-final 3-1) 20 4,Calgary 2 Portland 6 International League 0 Spokane 1 Edmonton 5 Toledo 3 Indianapolis 6 0|Vancouver 2 San Francisco 3° iSt. Paul 3 Minneapolis 2 ee o> 49