19- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Jenuary 14, 1963 i. DON MARSHALL, Montreal Canadiens center, appears to receive a left to the jaw from Wayne Hillman (dark uni- form) of Chicago Black Hawks in first period action of last Red Wings Without Terry Like Song Without Tune By THE CANADIAN PRESS Detroit coach Sid Abel says Gordie Howe has had one flaw in his 17 seasons with the Red Wings -- he passes too much when he should be shooting. Charlie Burns pulled Bruins back into contention with a goal late in the second period, and Oliver deflected a shot by defenceman Eddie Westfall ' early in the third period for the "But Gordie is shooting much | more now,' said Abel Sunday night after Howe, on one of the hottest scoring streaks in his Brilliant National League career, led Wings to a 4-2 win over New York, FOLLOW 2-2 PATTERN The other two games Sunday night followed an identical pat- tern, First-place Chicago Black Hawks pulled into a 2-2 tie with Montreal Canadiens after Cana- diens had taken a 2-0 lead and Boston Bruins rallied from a two-goal deficit to tie Toronto Maple Leafs 2-2. The Wings dropped a 2-1 de- cision to the Leafs Saturday night, while Montreal was wal- loping Boston 7-2 and Chicago rushed New York 3-1, In Detroit Sunday night, Howe combined on a _ neat shuttle assing play with linemate Alex lvecchio to wipe out a 1-0 Ranger lead resulting from a © goal by Centre Jean Ratelle, Howe sent Detroit ahead . early in the second period on an unassisted effort, He drew » Ranger netminder Gump Wors- ley out of the net and back- handed the puck in, Val Foneyne scored what proved to be the winning goal for the Wings midway through » the second period, Dean. Pren- tice pulled the Rangers to within a goal in the third. period, but Norm Ullman gave Wings the 4-2 edge with 83 seconds left, *, Detroit is faced with playing without goalie Terry Sawchuk for just about the rest of the regular season, Sawchuk was in- jured--for the third time this night's hockey game between Montreal and Chicago, --(AP Wirephoto) | Kidd, Crothers Team Busts Boston Marks BOSTON (CP-AP) -- Uncon- Season -- in Toronto Saturday night. when two tendons in his glove hand were severed by Hockey © TERRY SAWCHUK Leafs forward Bob Pulford's skate, RIGGIN STANDS IN Abel said Sawchuk would be unable to move his fingers for about a month and will be side- lined for six to eight weeks. Dennis Riggin, who filled in for Sawchuk in the weekend games, will continue as Wings' net- minder, In Chicago Sunday night, Jean Beliveau and Gilles Tremblay gave Canadiens a 2-0 lead early jin the second period. Beliveau's |goal was the 299th of his NHL career, and marked the 11th consecutive game in which the big centre has scored at least a point. But Ab McDonald brought the |Black Hawks back into the. 2-2 tie with a goal late in the sec- ond period and another late in the third, It was McDonald's fifth two-goal night this season. In Boston, Leafs jumped to a 20 lead midway through the second period on goals by Eddie \Shack and Ed Litzenberger, But find a first-place spot was 15- year-old Abigail Hoffman, who Wills Picked As Athlete Of Year tie, KEON RECEIVES BYING Saturday night in Toronto, 22- year-old centre Dave Keon was presented with the Lady Byng trophy he won last year as the) br gp? best combining ability and gentlemanly conduct, Then he went out to score both Leafs' goals in their 2-1 win. He also picked up his first pen- alty of the season, matching his two minutes total in penalties last season, Howe scored the lone Detroit goal, drawing Wings into a 1-1 tie late in the second period. But Keon scored his second goal less than a minute later to give Leafs the edge. Henri Richard put on a spark- ling display of puck contro! and playmaking in Montreal's 7-2 win over Bruins Saturday night, The fiery, pint - sized centre gathered five assists,. three on goals by Claude Provost and two on Dickie Moore's pair, scored the other Montreal goals, while U.S, - born Tommy Wil- liams and Jean-Guy Gendron scored for Boston, In Chicago Saturday night, the Hawks extended their win- ning streak against New York to eight games with their 3-1 win, but they had to work to do it, Bathgate had given Rangers a 1-0 lead halfway through the first period, but Bob Turner and Reg Fleming provided Hawks with a 2-1 lead before the period ended. That's the way the score stayed until Chicago's Bobby Hull scored into an empty net Bob Rousseau and Billy Hicke| 6,335 ONLOOKERS By KEVIN BOLAND George Vail, the brush-cut, free-wheeling Oshawa General left-winger paced. his mates to a 41 upset vend over Knob Hill Farms as 6-335 fans, the largest gathering of the season, 100 on, In the second game of the regen scheduled Sunday twin bill Whitby's doting Dun- lops took an 8-0 blanking from Neil McNeil Maroons, Except for the sprawling an tics of the Dunlop netminder, Ray Reeson, the Les aga could well have doubled the mar in, . Generals outclassed the Farmers in every department in one of their best showings of the season, The win came at an oppor- tune time, The Oshawa entry had sunken to a low ebb as far as confidence was concerned, Jimmy Peters the hustle- bustle redhead on the Oshawa roster explained the 5-4 loss to Brampton 7-Ups in the Bramp- ton Arena took a lot of steam \from the Generals, The following night's 11-4 thumping Maroons handed Osh- awa made things that much worse, |FIERY YOUNG CLUB "It just goes to show you what a fiery young club like ours can do," said general manager, Wren A, Blair, "A lot of teams would have thrown the towel in well before this," he added, Blair also felt the victory was the best all-around performance his Generals had ever put out, Oshawa had little difficulty disposing of the Farmers who held to their third-place moor- ings, by a single point over idle Vail yer scoring when he pushed in a goal-mouth pass OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES early in the opening frame, Bob Ball, a Kingston Fron- tenac Jr, "B" import pushed the General's lead to two goals 40 |seconds after the opening bell LONDON (Reuters)--Results| of the final period. Both teams were held from Brampton 7-Ups in fourth spot.) Vail Leads Way To Generals 4-1 Win GEORGE VAIL | Jim Fuller brought the Farm- ers within 'striking distance when he beat Jim Couch, in the Oshawa net, on a 20-footer sec- jonds after the five-minute mark, Bobby Orr, 'the finest 14 ear-old pro prospect" Wren lair has ever seen, scored the insurance tally two min- utes later, | Vail netted his second goal of the afternoon to round out |scoring, |GOAL DISALLOWED ' , 7 tee came as close as he-ever will, White beat Knob Hill's mask- ed bandit, Dave Kelly, with a low shot into the right-hand core ni of the net in third per> Referee Ken Arthurs dise allowed the goal on a rare call, Tt seems an Oshawa player had his stick in the goal crease. Bae agg oy re 'aroons le difficulty in subduing the last-place Dunlops. The loss marked the 17th time Dunnies had dropped a de- cision, They have three wins and four ties for 10 points, seven less than the fifth-place Gen- | "sim Ch ea m Cherry summed it wu when he said after the contan was over, "Nobody can touch them. They're one of the best all-around clubs I've ever seen, The loss out there today was no disgrace to us, When you get a team with super-stars like Corbett, Champagne and the goaltender Smith against you, to name a few, how can you help but get nailed," IVAN PROUD Ivan Davie, 'general manager of the club added, "I couldn't say anything bad of my_ kids today, I'm proud of them, They really tried hard, You couldn't blame them for the showing, All the way through they plugged their hearts out." Mike Corbett gave Maroons a 1-0 lead in the first period when he beat Reeson from close in on a hard shot, Paul Conlin added two more in the second period to spread the Maroon lead to three goals, len =" Neil MeNeill un- leas a five-goal onslaught Mike Corrigan, Gary Dinesa Bill MacMillan, Jim Keon an Wayne Mosdell were the marks: men, Dineen's' and MacMillan's markers were within seven sec- onds of each other, pre of soccer games played in the) scoring in the second frame due} Bill White, the flashy Oshawa) United Kingdom Saturday: jto the fine netminding at both/forward who has yet to SCOKO| VAN peare, Dubere Beat ened lends, "A" aC>/ald,' Ball, Scottish Football ----- -- KNOB HILL -- goal: Kelly; defence: Association Cup McClocklin, Phait, | Wallac, Ki First Round lery Paul, Regis, Kilger, Gollina Arbroath 2 Dumbarton 0 ir, Ba cerned about feuding between US.. Amateur Athletic bodies, Toronto runners Bruce Kidd and Bill Crothers gave standout performances at the Knights of bus track meet Saturday, + won the girl's 880, Miss Hoff-) NRW YORK (AP)--If all the)gag and dance act with five man, who once masqureaded &|phaseball awards received by|Dodger teammates and come- a boy to play peewee hockey,/ Maury Wills were lined up side|dian Milton Berle. turned in a time of 2:17.5 de-/py side, they probably would) The show is packing the cus | spite the fact she had to detour) match the 104 bases the fleet-|tomers in every night, just as | around a fallen competitor. [footed Los Angeles star stole/the Dodgers did last season this first goal in Metro Pen der, Baylies, Johnson, : setting meet records. The meet was boycotted by during the 1962 National League} when more than 2,700,000 spec- "The event was shy of collegi- ate. athletes because of the webbie between the U.S. Na- Collegiate Athletic Asso- ciation and the U.S, Amateur Atifetic Union, both of which are fighting for control of ama- teur sports in the United States. But that didn't make it any less of a show for the 7,233 who braved foul weather to see the meet, Kidd ran the two miles in eight minutes 43.2 seconds, third fastest time ever recorded indoors, cracking his own meet record by six seconds. Crothers turned in a record tithe of 2:086 for the 1,000 yards, emashing the time of 209.2 set by Yale's Tom Car- rolf in 1960. Crothers beat his|students at the University of|the indoor mile in 4:09 beating Force|Toronto but run for the East out Jim nearest opponent, Air all U.S. collegiate athletes, Pid bord f cept for the University of Mary-| The latest--and most impor- land, under orders of the U.S.|tant to Wills--is the award as United States Athlete of the National Collgeiate Athletic As-| ; sociation, Maryland coach Jim} Year for 1962, It was voted him ABBY HOFFMAN Kidd and Crothers both are Lieut. Ernie Cunliffe, by 2.1 sec-| York Track Club, onds. Another Toronto runner to FRANK BOUCHER Stirs CAHA To Act. By JACK SULLIVAN | Canadian Press Sports Editor |sociation will have the league) TORONTO (CP) Frank) Boucher may never see fulfil- ment of his plan for an East- West national junior hockey league comprising 12 high-pow- ered teams, but he has stirred the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association to do something about the junior situation on a) national scale. The commissioner of the Sas- And if they still play, the as- outlawed by every governing hockey body in the world, in- cluding. the International Ice Hockey Federation, COULD WRECK HOOK-UP If it gets that far it will wreck the IHL-Eastern Profes- sional Hockey League interlock- ing schedule which started this season, Kehoe said he would continue|by a wide margin Saturday in to defy the ban during the in-|the annual Associated Press door season, | poll, The meet was sponsored by! "I've received many awards," the Amateur Athletic Union, {said Wills, "but this is perhaps Canadian athletes are un-|the daddy of them all, I'm real affected by the U.S, squabble,|happy about the honor," Other competitors from the Uni-| The mercury - footed short- versity of Toronto included two-|stop's pleasure was expressed mile relay teams which took|from his dressing room in a first and second places in the| hotel at Los Vegas, Nev., where event. Maury 'is appearing in a song, Bill Dotson of Lawretice, Kan.|~ who has run the mile outdoors e in less than four minutes, won Olympics Reinstated MONTREAL (CP)--Montreal Olympics, finalists last year in Allan Cup competition, were re- instated Saturday in the. East- Trons of Brampton, Ont,, by only two-fifths of a sec. ond, |plan, which is tied in with a player draft scheme for the Na- tional, American and Western} leagues. lafter being suspended "indefi- nitely" Friday for using an in- eligible player.in two games. Fernand St. Germain, club | publicity director, said the team |CAHA would lose control of jun-| paid two $25 fines for ior hockey to the NHL, theithe rules and that the other Memorial Cup, emblematic of/teams in the league had agreed junior supremacy in Can&da/to allow the player in question, since 1919, would lose its iden-/defenceman Andre Martin, tity and it would hinder growth participate in league games. of the junior game, League president Len O'Don- Boucher stressed that his plan|nell said Friday Martin wag in- : | Main objections were that the} rovinci »k »| later, | l ern Provincial Hockey League He finally passed Cobb Sept. | LONDON (Reuters) -- Results} Bob Bishop and Rowland Mac. |), |tators set a National League at- jtendance record to seé the |30-year-old Wills perform his spectacular base-stealing act. "We have a real good show," said Wills. "'We dance and sing and have good lines." Wills, who does all these things and strums the banjo as well, has a major part in the show. Other Dodgers in the act jare Don Drysdale, Sandy Kou- fax, Duke Snider, Frank How- ard and Willie Davis. Wills captured 72 first-place votes and 338 points on a 3-2-1 /basis from a panel of sports |writers and sportscasters. Golfer Jack Nicklaus was sec- ond with 38 first-place votes and 208 points. Quarterback Y. A Tittle of New York Giants of be National Football League was third, He got 38 votes and 80 points, The runaway victory for Wills was fitting. He captured the na- jtional fancy as he passed Bob Bescher's National League rec- ord of 80 stolen bases in August }and closed in on Ty Cobb's.ma- |jor league mark of 96 a month East Fife 5 Edinburgh U 0 Forfar 1 Hearts 3 Inverness Cal 1 Dundee 5 Inverness This 0 Queen of S 2 Raith 2 Eyemouth 0 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division II Hamilton 1 Alloa 2 Montrose 1 Brechin 2 | English League Division I West Brom 0 Sheffield W 3 Division II Barnsley 3 Notts 1 Brighton 1 Crystal P 2 | Swindon 5 Queen's Pk 0 Football League Cup | Semi-Final First Round Sunderland 1 Aston Villa 3 | Amateur International |Wales 0 Ireland 2 IRISH LEAGUE Ards 1 Glenavon 0 Coleraine 2 Clifton 2 Crusaders 4 Derry City 0 Distillery 6 Ballymena 1 Glentoran 1 Linfield 1 Portadown 1 Bangor 1 | RUGGER SCORES | | 'Pics Edge Dixie In Metro Bowmanville Pic-O-Mats stav-)key added singles for Bowman: 2:18 ed off a second-period rally by Dixie Beehives to salvage a close 7-6 victory in the Bow- 'manville Arena during Sunday); afternoon Metro Junior "B" hockey action, Pic-O-Mats led 3-1 at the end of the opening 20 minutes of play on goals by Gord Wilson, |Stan Dowe and Ron M oore. Don Parish picked up his first of three goals while Pic-O-Mat Stan Westfall was sitting out a two-minute hooking penalty. Dowe had turned the same trick on his goal. Jack Ireland was serving an interference pen- alty at the time, Beehives fell short with their five-goal comeback effort when Duane Rutley scored his second |goal of the period at 14,08, | Mickey Cherevaty scored two in the period to match Rutley's and Parish's second frame out. puts, Harry Orr scored once for Dixie. \17, reached *the 100 mark the|! Rugby Union games played|" last week of the regular season jand added four more in a three. |game playoff with San Fran- jstolen bases in 165 games, He was Caught trying to steal only 13 times compared with 35 for to|Cobb back in Ty's top year of) Pro! 5. | Stealing bases was not Wills' only contribution to the Dodgers in the United Kingdom today: England International Trial Final breaking| Cisco Giants to finish with 104) England 11 The Rest 6 (played | at 'Torquay) Welsh International Trial Final bables 0 Possibles 5 (played at Newport) | Ireland International Trial Final Top Five Teams In Old Country Soccer Leagues lz LONDON (AP)--Top teams in Action j ville, } Third period was scoreless, | | BOWMANVILLE goal: Wright: efence; Linton, Ashby, Tran, Kyle; lorwerds: Rutley, Bishop, Meore, Dowe, Wilson, Campbell) Watt, West- fall, Switzer, Mackey, DIXIE FIRST PERIOD 1, Oshawa, G, Vail (Earle) 6.58 Penalties -- McClocklin (oross.check> ing) 13.41, SECOND PERIOD Scoring None, Penalties -- Keloher (Cross-ehecking) THIRD PERIOD 3. Oshawa, Ball (Baton, ) 3. Knob Hill, Fuller (Paul, ) 4 Oshawa, Orr (Dean, Eaton) 5, Oshawa, G, Vail _, (White, Petans: oo) 6.03 n13 18.08 ehh BE goal: Titledtge: defence: |Lewis, MacGowan, y land jforwards: Freeman, Stan- |field, Nasato, Cherevaty, Watis, Gwil- liam, Parish, Huff, Orr, FIRST PERIOD 1, Bowmanville, Wilson (Tran, Moore) 2 Bowmanville, Dowe (Westfall, Watt) 3. Dixie, Parish Stenting, 5.05 11,01 ¢ ) wy 4 Bowmanville, Moore (CRatley) 16.90 Penalties -- McGowan (holding) 54, |Ireland (interference) 10.00, Penny \(oharging) 11.37, Westfall (hooking) 13,48, Watt (interference) 17,15, SECOND PERIOD 8, Dix' ie, Parish (Orr, MacGowan) Bowmanville, Bishop (Wesfall) 6 7, Bowmanville, (Campbell) 8 9. Bowmanville, Rutley (Moore) . Dixie, Cherevaty (Watts, Lewis) Dixie, Parish (Orr) a Mackey 8.05 9.40 10,49 11.07} 14.08 15,08 10, Bowmanville, Rutley (Moore, Linton) 1, 3, Dixie, Cherevaty Bt Penny) 12.19 'enalties -- Gwilliam (high-sticking) 10,08, Rutley (high-sticking) 10,08, Na- sato (roughing) 13.38, Ashby (rough ing) 13.98, Parish (roughing) 18.46 Tran (roughing) 18.46, Penny (inter. |ference) 20.00. i | : THIRD PERIOD Scoring None Penalties -- ing) 10,98, k Wetfall. (oross-check-| Westfall (high-sticking) | \1,98, Watts (interference) 14.49, Watts! | Groughing) 16,59, » NN 6.22|° -- Orr ) 3.20, White 57, White (boarding) 6, Ceneeing) 9.47, dis SECOND GAME NBIL MoNEIL -- goal, Smith; de fence: MoKenny, Mi » Mosdell, Dupont; HY A Seiiog: MacMillan, Dineen, Doran, Keon, W: ton, Conlin, 5 , WHITBY -- : Reeson, LaRue, Hoffman, Brockie, Tremblay: forwards: Weller, Smith, Davenport. Abbott, Wilson, Gay, Fletcher, Mar- shall, Everett, FIRST PERIOD (holding) 3 MeClocktia > SECOND PERIOD 1, Neil MeNiel, Conlin 418 (Keon, Corbett) 2, Neil McNeil, Contin (Walton, Cham- pagn) m3 3. Penalties -- Abbott (charging) 2.48 Smith ( )» $.23, Hoffman (hold. ing) 8.33, (charging ' THIRD PERIOD 4. Neil, MeNeil, Corrigan (Dupont) 5. ven haa Dineen MacMillan, Ch; ene) 6. Neil MoNedl, MacMilinn (Dineen) %. Neil MoNeil, Keon (Champagne, 8. Nell. MoNeil, (Corbett, oe) Penalties -- endry (elbow) Champagne (boarding) --$,00, oie Welker (eoordins : 10, 5 (slashing, roughing son (interference) 16.36, A] 1.98 10.06 19.00 233, » > 20. Ree | Main topic of the sessions) ry soccer stand- around the Boucher the Old Country soce Probables versus Possibles post- ings (including Saturday's! katchewan Junior League _lis- nse ance pened becuune A enow games): | Vail tened Sunday as CAHA officials Centred applauded him for trying to NHL BIG SEVEN "didn't intend junior hockey to/eligible under a league ruling/!as* season. Playing in all his be taken out of CAHA control."'|making it mandatory for all) team 4 games, he finished = He said it would eliminate|teams to approve a player join-/a batting average of .299, high-| _ negotiation lists which funk ing the EPHL club from a team/est among all shortstops, did a} parents of some juniors, do Considered of a "higher calibre"}superb job in the field and eee ENGLISH LEAGUE Returns To cure ills that have plagued the : Division T sap, General's Roster juniors since the early 1950s-- TOP BEER DRINKERS my meaning flagging attendances then voiced objections to! his scheme. 'In effect, they turned it down. »-Now, CAHA committees east and west have been instructed to take a close look at the situa- tion and report to the associa-| tién's annual meeting at Bran- ,.Man., May 19-23. | 'Delegates to the Saturday- day semi-annual gathering pped through a pile of busi- mess, much of it relating to in- teypational affairs. INTERNATIONAL DOINGS "In this category was a possi- e four-country, round - robin! tegrnament in Canada next De- r and January between Canadian and United States Olympic teams and the Cecho- jevakian and Swedish national Ss, If this doesn't pan out, er® is a 10-game schedule laid an for the Czechs starting Dec. ¥. *R@ports also were given on the junket to Europe by Saska- topn Quakers last month, the ame tour of Canada by a ssian team and plans to send *Canadian club to the Soviet ion next December. j +The CAHA also set in motion) gteps to take a swipe at the six- team amateur International Beague in the U.S. for allegediy wing its teams to sign Cana- in players who haven't both- to get proper transfer «The CAHA said there are it 25 players in the IHL who re breaking hockey's regula-| tions. If the. CAHA finds out} y didn't get their releases| m their Canadian clubs * By THE CANADIAN PRESS The first three slots in the National Hockey League's indi- vidual scoring race didn't change as a result of weekend games. New York's Andy Bathgate, Toronto's Frank Maieviich and Boston's John Bucyk each added two points to their pre- vious totals Bathgate remains on top with 44 points on 21 goals and 23 assists. Mahovlich is one point back with 43 points on_ his league-leading 23 goals and his s 20 assists. Bucyk is three points off the pace with 41 points on 17 goals and 24 assists. Gordie Howe's three weekend goals left him in fourth place with 40 points on 20 goals and 20 assists. : Henri Richard bounced back into contention with five assist all_in Saturday's game. Montreal player and Chicago's Stan Mikita, who picked up two assists, are tied for fifth place }with 39 points on 14 goals and 24 assists. Murray Oliver slipped from sixth to seventh place although he scored a goal and counted an assist in weekend games, The leaders: G 21 23 17 20 14 14 4 A Pts. 23 44 20 4 20 23 25 a Bathgate, New York Mahovlich, Toronto Bucyk, Boston Howe, Detroit Richard, Montreal Mikita, Chicago Oliver, Boston 40 39 The! 43 | morial Cup would go the same 41 | way under Boucher's plan. 33 | away with pro sponsorship of| than the EPHL, junior teams and ensure a fair, Martin came from distribution of players, The plan suggested each NHL Greens- Hockey League. jcracked out 208 hits, the best | total of New York Giants in 1922. Belgium is the top beer- by a National League drinking nation of Europe on a| Everton boro, N.C., of the United States! shortstop since Dave Bancroft|per capita basis, Belgians drink) Tottenham jan average 30.4 gallons a year. team deposit $50,000 a year into a draft fund and each American) and Western League club $5,000.| This would provide $385,000 an-! nually, HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS Of this, $210,000 would finance operation of the junior league and the rest of the money would go to the other 50 Junior A clubs in Canada recogniezd Chicago by the pros, In return, the NHL/ Toronto would have first draft choice) Montreat of players on the 62 clubs and! petroit ver-age players passed up by|New York the league would be placed in/poston 7 24 10 114 167 24 a draft for WHL and AHL! Saturday's Results teams. {Boston 2 Montreal 7 FOR SPECIAL TROPHY Detroit 1 Toronto 2 The national junior league, New York 1 Chicago 3 = rele sy viy commis- Sunday's Results sioners Operating it under Chicago 2 CAHA regulations, would play | mentee eet - a _-- ria te would! New York 2 Detroit 4 eave "year-old Memorial Cup the prize for the other jun- Eastern eK APt ior teams. The CAHA isn't like! 23.10 3147 109 49 'we years | Kingston 2211 4151 115 48 ago when it agreed to a plan Sudbury It learned its less Ph seen g 17 18 6 163 145 40 whereby handpicked semi-pro|St. Louis 721 6 105 151 20 senior leagues in the East and Saturday's Result -- a for the Alex-/St. Louis 1 Kingston 5 ander Trophy. That left the! lt Allan 'Cup, symbol of senior gy RP ey 8 me supremacy in the country since|;-... dbury 1909, to Senior B clubs and it Kingston 3 Se 7° lost its identity, | Aneta anae? | CAH ici i Me-| castern sion A officials figure the Me WLT F APt 2114 1717 2017 18 15 82 By THE CANADIAN PRESS National. League WLT F APt 20 12 10 109 98 50 2114 6 129 106 48 17 1013124 9147 1813 8100 97 44 12 22: 7117 134 31 | | y to buy, | Hull-Ottawa Hershey The Alexander Trophy lasted/ Quebec only four years, Player salaries| Providence were high, gate receipts were| Springfield low and it went out of business.'Baltimore 22 126 43 34 120 43 50 124 41 120 146 39 91 31 51 3 Buffalo Western Division 23.13 3131111 49 |Cleveland 15.19 6 130 150 36 Pittsburgh 14.22 2 102 125 30 IRochester 12.21. 5.124 150 20 Saturday's Results Quebec 1 Springfield 5 Buffalo 4 Pittsburgh 0 Baitimore 0. Hershey' 5 |Rochester 1 Cleveland: 6 Sunday's Results Providence 5 Quebec 3 Hershey 4 Buffalo 2 Pittsburgh 4 Baltimore 3 Springfield 2 Rochester 3 OHA Senior A WLT F APt 23 7 119511247 23 9 1161 98 47 2013 0 185 131 40 1217 © 9513224 iK.-W, 1118 2118131 24 |Sarnia 328 0104224 6 | Sunday's Results Kitchener-Waterioo 1 Chatham 6 Galt 9 Sarnia 5 : |Woodstock 3 Windsor 4 | OHA Junior A | WLT F APt Montreal 1510 7124 9737 |Peterboro 15 7 5103 7536 Niagara Falls 156 8 5113 8835 Hamilton 1211 6118 105 30 Windsor Qhatham | Woodstock |Galt 619 5 9214417 Sunday's Results Guelph 3 St. Catharines 3 Hamilton 2. Montreal 2 Guelph 4 SATURDAY | Western League Seattle 4 Calgary 8 Vancouver 3. Spokane 5 |Portland 2 San Francisco 3 | International League |Minneapolis 4 Omaha 7 |Port Huron 4 Muskegon 5 St. Paul 2. Fort Wayne 8 Eastera League Clinton 6 Philadelphia 2 Johnstown 8 New Haven 2 ;Greensboro 3 Nashville 1 |Knoxville 4 Charlotte 1 SUNDAY Western League Portland 5 San Francisco 2 Northern Ontario Senior S. Porcupine 0 Kapuskasing 21 Abitibi 3 Timmins 6 International League Muskegon 1 Port Huron 6 Minneapolis 3 Omaha 6 Eastern League Clinton 2 New Haven 6 Philateiphia 0 Long Island 11 Knoxville 2. Nashville 4 Charlotte 3 Greensboro 2 Metro Toronte Jr. A |Knob Hill 1 Oshawa 4 Whitby © Neil McNeil 8 OHA Junior B 2 145 106 44)St. Catharines 816 7101 142 23/Stamford 5 Hamilton 5 St. Marys 12 Sarnia 9 Stratford 3 Kitchener 2 St. Thomas 8 Dresden 8 Goderich 6 Waterloo 12 | 146 3 52 2634 145 5 73 3433 13 5 5 48 3331 I 11 7 5 47.3129 | Liverpool 1l 4 8 40 30 26 Aston Villa 10 6 6 42 3326 | Division II | Chelsea 17 3 | Bury | Sunderland | Plymouth | Stoke Burnley | Leicester 4 56 1937 32:19:31 Sl 3431 46 32 30 40 25 13.5 6 1357 1 8 3 911 3 Division Hl 14467 11 8 6 14 210 1010 5 1010 5 1226 8 Division IV 473 18 38 13 8 5 65 ou 59 34 49 7 434 31 30 4430 26 30 40 30 40 30 Peterboro Swindon Watford B'rnemouth Coventry |Notts C Sl 27:35 47 2933 54 26 31 4 Oldham Brentford | Mansfield | Gillingham 13 3 8 3429 | Crewe Alex 10 8 6 40 3528 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I 143 43 M4 39 58 45 4 38 16 31 1730 28 27 23 26 1924 2224 Rangers artick | Kilmarnock Aberdeen | Hearts Celtic 31:33 20 28 39 27 29.23 27 23 Hamilton 13 St. Johnstone 12 Stranraer ll E, Stirling 10 {Cowdenbeath 10 IRISH LEAG Distillery 5 3 Linfield 4 Porsadown Coleraine | Glenavon Ballymena 51 49 43 38 UE 1 3 12138 $11 12 10 1610 10 9 29; 23 9) oF Wren A, Blair, general man-| ager of the Oshawa Generals'| hockey team, announced today! that Terry Vail whom he sus-| pended a week ago for refusing} }to take part in an axnibition| game, has returned to the Gen- jerals' roster, | | "Terry phoned me last night,") jsaid Blair in a telephone inter-| view this morning, | } "I'm glad he came back,"| added Blair, "It has been tough! | without him," | Blair said all differences had} jbeen reconciled, | WEEKEND FIGHTS 'By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bangkok -- Pone Kingpetch, 111% Thailand, outpointed Mas- ahiko Fighting Harade, 111, Ja- pan, 15, (Kingpetch regained! world's flyweight title.) | NEW YORK--Billy Daniels, | 186, New York, stopped Tony! aaa. 19544, Hollywood, Fla., TOKYO--Negboru Saito, 160,/ Japan, stopped Moses: Cooper, | to pay all your t LOAN the down paymen LOANS LOANS te to complet t buy the your family w need NOW wit ~ things waiting LOANS tor any purpe $50 to $5000 without endorsers or benkable security j161,.Los Angeles, 2. 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