10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 29, 1963 EASTERN CANADA FOOTBA WIN 'y RICK BLACK, Ottawa Rough R{ders' punter, has been named "the rookie of the yar" in the Eastern Profes- sional Football Conference, it was announced yesterday. The 210-pound fullback played his college football with Mount Allison: University, in Sack- ville, N.S, LL AWARDS Garnev uF ii enliev And 'Rick Black Picked } By Grid Officials GARNEY HENLEY, 26, Hamilton Tiger-Cat halfback, has been named the winner of The Jeff Russel Memorial Trophy, as the Eastern Foot- ball Conference player 'best combining ability and: sports- manship. --(CP Wirephotos) SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' | | | New Record TORONTO (CP)--While Dick Shatto was stealing the head- the record, day showed that Shatto, a half- back. with Toronto Argonauts, did not set an Eastern Football |Conference record Sunday when KITCHENER RANGERS invade the. Bowmanville Com- munity Arena this evening to do battle with the Oshawa Gen- erais at eight o'clock and it should be a peppy one. Kitchener has come back strongly after a very hesitant start and at the moment, appear to be ready to begin a climb for a higher rung in the OHA Junior "A" standing. Over the weekend, while Toronto Mariboros were handing our Generals a sound licking, Peterborough Jrs. were also chalking up an extremely valuable win -- one right on Montreal ice, over the Junior Canadiens. That's something that not many of the teams will do this season. Generals grabbed off a tie in their trip to Montreal and as the season progresses, no doubt the added value of points collected off the Canadiens on their own ice, will prove extra important. Meanwhile, getting back to to- |he caught seven passes for a career total of 383. Shatto did pass the previous mark of 377 set by Red O'Quinn, former end with Montreal Al- ouettes. And after some antici- |pation, it was announced that Shatto was the new record- | holder, However Gord Walker, the league's official statistician, ad- }mitted Monday that the record jwas actually broken earlier in the year by Patterson, another former Montreal Alouette now playing with Hamilton Tiger- Cats. HAMILTON (CP) -- Garney, Henley, named winner sf the Jeff Russel Memorial Trophy Monday, can't get away from his fans, Not even in a hosptal. The Hamilton '..ger-Cat half- back, picked as the Eastern Football Conference player who best combines ability with sportsmanship, was flat on his back when the announcement was made. And, to hear his nurses talk, he is the favorite patient in the Chedoke General and Children's Hospital-where he has been con- fined to bed since last Thurs- day. feet," said one nurse Monday night. "We're giving kim ten- der, loving care."' Henley was injured nine days ago in a game at Toronto "We'll get him back on his against the Argonauts and hos- pital officials M"nday night said it will be "several days at least before he is released." The outstanding defensive when used offensively, has a cracked rib and a kidney injury "something similar to a bruised kidney." 4 ANNOUNCES CHOICE His choice as winner of the annual award, won last season by George Dixon of the Mont- real Alouettes, was announced by EFC secretary Frank Gib- son of Hamilton. A second award went to punter Rick Black of Cttawa Rough Riders, picked as the EFC's outstanding rookie. Vot- ing in both categories was done by the league's officiating staff. The hospital official said Hen- half, who is equally effective) ley has been on bed rest since being admitted to hospital and that x-rays will be taken later this week to determine the ex- jtent of the injury. He is certain to miss the Ti- jeats' final game Sunday after- noon at Montreal against the Alouettes, but hospital officials --obviously football conscious and Tiger-Cat fans--say he will be in good shape for the play- offs. Henley, 26, has been a key man in the Tiger-Cat drive to first place and leads the league in pass interceptions with six. He has the deception of a basketball player and the speed of a sprinter. He came to the Tabbies four seasons ago from Green Bay Packers who felt he was too small to make it in the National Football League. Argos Hoping Voters | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | | Who would tiave thought Tor-| onto Argonauts would turn out] to be the saviors of the Eastern) |Football Conference? {Saskatchewan Roughriders 44-) A check of the records Mon-|28 Sunday at Toronto and gavelor the record held EFC teams an even split this jseason in interlocking games. | Eastern and western teams| won 10 interlocking games} apiece this season, forcing a| deadlock which can be broken only in the Grey Cup game. | 13 starts for the last-place Ar- }gos. The margin of the victory) also gave the EFC clubs an edge in points, 439-427. | Dick Shatto when they get jaround to picking the Four's most valuable player. Shatto is the leading scorer, leading pass receiver and : third in rushing with a team) than runner-up George Dixon of Montreal Alouettes. |NEARS WAGNER MARK The all-time leading scorer in the EFC, Shatto now has scored lines, Hal Patterson was setting) The hapless Argos thumpedi7g toychdowns since joining Ar- gos in 1954. He's only one shy by former Montreal great Virgil Wagner. Wagner, however, played most of his career in the five-point touchdown era and hasn't as many points. Dixon is a country mile ahead of Ottawa's Dave Thelen, his It was only the third win in|nearest rival, in the rushing de-/Stewart, O partment. Dixon has churned 1,261 yards on 184 carries, The- len 873 on 144, Ottawa's Russ Jackson leads Argos are hoping people 4ake|the passers. He has completed|Hoppmann, M a long. look at a fellow named|139 of 241 attempts for 2,734/Sutherin, H yards. Big) Garney Henley, the versatile|Tucker, O /Ticat handyman, has picked off|Jackson, O six passes this season to lead in this department. \Caleb, H 'King Hal' js Lake Long Look At Real Owner Dick Shattos Feats Ted Page of the Als, busiest by far of the league's punt re- jturn men, has run 325 yards jwhile returning punts 51 times. Gino Berretta of the Als, a re- formed soccer player, enjoys a slim punting lead over Toronto's read Mann with an average of 41.7. | Scoring leaders: TDC FGS Pts 13 0 78 ll 0 |Shatto, T Dixon, M Racine, O Thelen, O = ~J r~4 {Berretta, M |White, O |Clark, M |Grant, H |Viti, H -- --_d owsooocooroso 5 32 0 30 /Kuntz, H 30 24 Ernie White of the Rough|Henley, H : Toronto Leafs 4 AFL Crowds, Gate Receipts Both Bigger NEW YORK (AP)--Commis- sioner Joe Foss reported in- creased attendance and dollar volume in the American Foot- ball League Monday and esti- mated that four, and possibly six, of the eight teams, will share a profit in 1963. Foss, speaking at the weekly meeting of the New York Foot- ball Writers, said attendance had passed the 600,0°0 mark at the halfway point in the season, an increase of 80,009 over a similar period last year. "Dollar volume is up 29 per CANADA CUP FINAi. By JOHN FARROW VERSAILLES, France (AP)-- Jack Nicklaus played the last round of the Canada Cup golf tournament in a swirling fog Monday as if he had radar-- and he did. The 23-year-old husky hitter from Columbus, Ohio, disclosed after he had won the individual title with a 63-hole total of 237 end the team title for the United States with Arnold Palmer at radar." 482, that he carried @ "kind of c cent,"' said Foss. 'We really are moving along, All the clubs are up," Foss said the league had be- come so well balanced that "the word upset has become obsol- ete." IT'S THE FANS WHO DO DAMAGE! VANCOUVER (CP) -- Take it from promoter Cliff Parker --his wrestlers are safer in the ring than they are with the fans. Parker, commenting on a) charge that brutality was | used in a Monday night match | here, said Thursday the wrest- lers "never get hurt bad, ex- cept when they tangle with a fan." He said the walk to the showers through the crowd following a match has felled more wrestlers than battles on the mat. He cited these examples: Gene Khinski required 13 stitches after being knifed in the back last year, the Outlaw was stabbed in the side with a nailfile three years ago, and Hardboiled Haggerty was side- lined for eight months when he broke an arm defending himself against a chair-wield- ing Chilliwack, B.C., fan. Ald. Aeneas Bell-Irving has called for an investigation into the brutality charge. Twenty- seven fans signed a petition after Whipper Billy Watson was knocked out in a match with the Great Zim. Call Up Help | TORONTO' (CP) -- Toronto THIS SHOT WAS REAL SHOCKER PARIS (AP) -- The shot that helped Jack Nicklaus win the Canada Cup indivi- dual golf crown Monday also unseated an ex-king. The Duke of Windsor, a former King of England, was sitting on a shootng stick in the fairway just be- hind the trap on the sixth hole when Nicklaus blasted from the sand into the cup, 70 feet away. The duke became so. ex- cited he fell off his seat, TRYING FOR OLYMPICS WALLINGFORD, Conn. (AP) Kurt Steiner wants to run in next year's Olympics in Tokyo, and he's getting ready. The 42- year-old native of Austria did some tuning up Saturday -- a 52% mile run from Wallingford to Deep River and back in seven hours, 34 minutes, 49 seconds. U.S. SKI COACH HAS NEW TURN BOULDER, Colo. (AP)-- Just like the automobile busi- ness, skiing is intnoducing for the 1963-64 model year a new style of racing, dyna-turn, de- signed by United States Olym- pic coach Bob Beattie. Beattie unveiled the dyna- turn last weekend at the first coaches clinic conducted by the United States Ski Associa- tion. Candidates for the U.S. Olympic downhill and slalom racing teams demonstrated the dyna-turn on the icy sur- face of St. Mary's Glacier, a place where novices shouldn't make any kind of a turn. Beattie said it's simple: "Basically it's keeping the "It's in my hip pocket in shape of a card," he said. pace every course -I/play. | know the distances, not by looking, but knowing, I play by visual guessing of dis- tances." Nicklaus, who had played wek. in the fog once before in the 1959 U.S. amateur at Colorado Cprings, Colo., did the final nine ond straight day. eke Nicklaus' total was five strokes better than Miguel of Spain and South Afri-- can Gary Player, who finished ina tie forse ~* ie FAR UNDER PAR Nicklaus and Amold Palmer carded a 63-hole team total of 482--22 under par for the Saint- Nom-la-Breteche course in the suburbs of Paris. They were three strokes better than sec- ond - placed Spaniards Miguel and Ramon Sota, and 10 better than Player and Retief Walt- man of South Africa. The Canadian team of Tor- onto's Al Balding and Stan Leon- ard of Vancouver was fourth with 495. and Balding tied Palmer and Australia's Bruce Crampton for fifth place in the individual competition. Balding matched Palmer's 34 Monday in the nine-hole windup to give him 67-73-34 -- 245, Leonard was. 69-71-71-39---250. But the Canadians were bitter about the decision to cut the final round to nine holes "even before a shot was played." Organizers said weather con- ditions made it impossible to play the full 72 holes as sched- uled, ANOTHER WAY? ° ' "That's okay," retorted Bald- ing. "But there was another way out. Everybody should have been told that an effort was go- ing to be made to play 18 with the proviso that the tournament would revert to 63 the weather clamped down." Leonard, too, was outspoken: "The tournament was cut to a battle between six or seven teams. There was a chance those teams would complete the 18--even if the other teams did not. "The point is, we could have reached the first green and wind could have blown. away the fog. The sun might have come out. But it was all cut and dried beforehand. It was nine holes and that was that." Nicklaus Plays 4-Under | In Spite Of Heavy Fog | ¥ i } s that has not distinguished itself/Riders is the best at returning|Oliver, M offensively. The veteran half-|kickoffs, covering 665 yards|/Luster, M back has scored 13 touchdowns|while running back 19--an aver-/Parker, T 1g| Maple Leafs announced Monday 1g|that right winger Gerry Ehman 18)and defenceman Al Arbour from Patterson began the season| with 356 career receptions, He} has 4 so far--19 less than) night's action, Coach Doug Williams will go with Dennis Gib- son in goal tonight. Sunday afternoon's defeat was by no means laid entirely at the door of goalie Ian Young--the pressure driving through the front of the skis. It's an ag- gressive approach." Www COhAUINAMHSABDAIHK SS eocoowooooorsooooussowecoso eoocowoocoooorwoocoewcooacso eaeooooece BROWN'S age of 35 yards-a try. \Pace, H Generals as a team, were nearly all individually guilty of defensive lapses -- but Gibson is older and has had more experience. A couple of Oshawa imports, defenceman Art Hampson from Trenton, and rightwinger Bill Lastick, from Toronto, saw action with the Whitby Dunlops last right in their opener and made respectable showings. They have signed "B" cards, in order to get extra action and under this status, they can also play with the Generals, in fact, they will be in the Oshawa lineup tonight at Bowmanville, "HAMILTON'S talented two-way performer Garney Henley has-been named by the officiating staff of the Eastera Profes- sional Football Conference (these are the gents who do the voting in this case) as the 1963 winner of The Jeff Russel Meiiorial Award, an honor last year that went to George Dixpn of the Alouettes. Rick Black, 20-year-old newcomer to the Conference, who has been brilliant as a vunter for Ottawa Rough Riders since leaving the Maritimes to play pro® football, was voted "rookie-of-the-year."" With such an array of stars available -- and various clubs tendered such nathes as Jim Andreotti, Dixon, Bernie Faloney, Dick Shatto, Doq Fuell, Russ Jackson, Gene Gaines, it's conceivable that thestwo chosen by the men in the black-and-white Striped jer- seys will not-be unanimously endorsed by all football fans, but}few of these rate the two-way value of Henley. In Black's choice ~~ there aren't too many other rookies around either. {SPORT BITS: -- Enthused over Dick Shatto's brilliant play and scoring success this season, some of the scribes claymed a pass-receiving record for him over the weekend but{official statistics have revealed that "Prince Hal" Pat- tergon of the Ti-Cats, holds that mark with 396 catches. Shalto has gathered: in 383. . , HORSE RACING dates at various meets at the three Ontario tracks for next summer, have been approved and if you want to mark your calendar-- they open at Fort Erie on April 4 and close at Greenwood on Nov. 28. GREENWOOD RACE RESULTS Archambault FIRST RACE -- 7 Furlongs, 2-year- FIFTH RACE -- 7 Furs, for three- old maidens, Canadian foaled, claiming! year-olds. Claiming all $3500. Purse $190 % $3500. Qa /My Valentine, Smith 7.60 4.30 3.20'8-Admirals March, 3Midway Bive, Walsh 5.90 4.20 bToudh. Keneetiek: SLimbo Lad, Terry 7.30/1-Janhill, Harrison Winner, bf 2, Blue Man -- Modest Mary. Start good, won easily Trainer, A. Rennie. Start good, won easily. ec ig Bay cw pool 45,781. Ran r: Choppy River, Trainer W. Woods. Miss Peanuts, Saromar, Pool 63,268 Speedy G., Border Chief and Dominant. Gordon 9.10 5.90 3.40 Hale + 7.0 3.70 29) OTTAWA Also Ran in Order: Willhooks, Miss\ Rough Riders announced Mon- Winner br ¢ 3 Whirling Home -- On Draft. King's Line, Pantoismine, Scholar Trust, Chief Whitefoot, Grand Fleet. SECOND RACE -- 1. Mile for 2-year- SIXTH RACE -- 1 mile for three-year. olds and up. Allowance Purse $2900 (6) Walsh d 1-Bradbury, olds. Claiming all $5000. Purse $2200. i i 7-Fleet_ Hawk, Fitzs, 31.70 11.80 9.00 lea gt aa lel " AbFalls Way, A-en., A'strong 4.60 5.30/Start good, won driving 1A-Brief Wind, A en., Potts 4. 5.30 Also Ran in Order: Ph aes elt oy tas |Roman and Twice Shy. Talk, Trusty Man, Miss Sheppe rior trainee hg fits Bae ee Sarges Nob, French Twist, Lady Domain Poo! 27,932. Guinelia Pool 35,584 and. Barleycorn. QUINELLA 1 AND 6 PAID $36.90 DD NOS. 2 AND NOS. 2 7 PAID | See 3 Winner, ch ¢ 2% Be Fleet wth Patel Trainer, J. J. Stewart, ool 44,860. : $260.50 }$2600. (9 laSt » THIRD "RACE -- 7 Furlongs, For 2\\semenart year-old maidens, Canadian foaled.Start good, won easily Claiming aii $3500. Purse $1800, (12), Also Ran in Order: Mangea 2-Jet Impala, Dittfach 10.10 5.20 3.50\ter Matt H, Guest Speaker, 12-Minnie Haw Haw, Clemes ... 8.30 5.80/Full Honors and Turkey 'J Page ae 5.50 A-Coupled 900d, won driving |Win ~ Also. Ran in Order: Pauie's Flight,| Tretmer Hi oer wont Flaming Wind. Rushton's Heir, Centores, Fire Mate,| Start good, won. easily Tarapaca, Sag Snow Beau, Selectim,| Pool 62,437. and Winner, b g, 2, Ferd -- Gold Belty., EIGHTH RACE ~ 1 and léth Mil Trainer, J C Meyer. for three-year-olds and up. Claimin "all Pool $52,926 Wee Purse $1900. (12) Bee \12-Copper Cliff, Fitzs's FOURTH RACE -- 7 Furs. for three| 3.m, i year-olds. and up. Cdn. foaled. Claiming| apome, ae seis "0 aii $2500. Purse $1800. (12) ' |Start good, won easily 2Mrs, Cesstord, McComb 41.00 16.00 7.30) Alse Ran in Order: Swampscot, Auntie 45un end Wind, Dittfach 400 3.10|\Nora, Prince Beau Gi, Bitters, Nirisso, W®-Hash_ Boy, Lanoway 3.50|Destrer's Prince, Yola 2nd, South 'Shore Also Ran in Order: Eternal Lock, Mr.iand Book -Master. § Yo Te, New Flight, Hy Elector, Phantom) Pool y Boy, I'll Swear, McGilllcuddy, House| Attendance 8,083 Boy and Grey Duke. |Winner, ch 9, 4, by Coastal Light Winner b m 5 Beau Dandy -- Gold Belty.| Baffin Bay. Trainer, F. 4 Merrill, Jr, Trainer ©. Mann. Pool $66,808. Total pool $478,371, 83,472, Attendance 4,083, Fitzs's Leblanc Cake, Mas- Shere Khan, oe. 10.60 6.10 5.40 Total Pool $478,371. 1 Mile for two-| -- Wasse. year-olds. Cdn. foaled. Allowance. Purse! U Shatto, who leads the league. So the EFC record now is 396, held by Hal Patterson, | Walker said the error oc- curred when he neglected pre- viously to include Patterson's pass-catching figures made with Montreal before he was traded to Hamilton in 1960. The spectacular Ticat end also holds the league record for yards gained on pass recep- tions, 8,231, including 832 so far \this season, OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES LONDON (Reuters)--Results jof soccer games played Monday |night: | FA CUP | Second-Round Second Replay |Huddersfield 2 Plymouth 1 ENGLISH LEAGUE Division .1 Man United 2 Blackburn 2 | Division II Colchester 4 Peterborough 1 Millwall 2.Oldham 1 Port Vale 0 Reading 0 | Division IV Halifax 4 Southport 1 Tranmere 2 Exeter 1 York City 3 Doncaster 1 Riders Coax Back To Play (CP) -- Ottawa day that Canadian tackle Gil Archambault has come out of jretirement to rejoin the club) land may see action in the com-| ing- Eastern Football Conference) 4,80 3.40 2.40) playoffs. | +. 6.60 i The 29-year-old Archambault! suffered a knee 'njury in last Mark Left, Balai year's semi-final between Mont-| |real Alouettes and Ottawa an- jnounced his retirement during ithe winter. | The 270-pound tackle, a first stringer in six seasons with Ot- jtawa, received a cheque and |la-French Wind, Armstrong 4.20 3.70 3.00\gifts from the. football club and 4.20 3.70 3.00 ba phys A] fans here @ few weeks ago. Riders also announced that import defensive half Don Der- inick has been sent home for the balance of the season. Ed Ul- imer, who joined the club early jlast week from Syracuse Storm- jers of the U.S. United Football Leaguel played in Derrick's iplace Saturday against Hamil- 'ton Tiger-Cats and apparently |won a job for at least the bal- ance of this season on the strength of his showing then. | Coach Frank Clair said Arch- ambault will play in Ottawa Sat- urday against Toronto Argo- nauts in order to be eligible to|By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS| Morton continue in the playoffs, Riders) ee dropping lineman Chuck Woods to make room for him. for 78 points, 12 points more Boom Boom Geoffrion Sets Surprise Pace In NHL Scoring Race headed for another 50-goal sea-| json. in the National Hockey) current scoring pace. | real right winger won the NHL scoing championship with 50 goals and 45 assists in 1960-61,| jbut has come up with only 23 }goals in each of the last two seasons, This year, he has collected] six goals and six assists in his |first seven games and is. only| one goal behind the blistering) pace he set in 1960-61. | Official NHL statistics re- leased today show two other) players currently tied with Geoffrion for the scoring lead- ership. | Stan Mikita of Chicago and} |Jean Beliveau of Montreal aiso| |have 12 points, but it took Mi-) kita eight games to collect six goals and six assists. As for Beliveau, only three of his 12 points represent goals. HULL FOURTH Bobby Hull, Chicago super- star who also has enjoyed 2 50- goal season, moved into fourth place in the scoring race by netting two goals and two as-| Willie Marshall Leads Way Again | | NEW YORK (AP)--There's a) familiar fame on top of the American Hockey League scor- ing list today--Willie Marshall.| The veteran 32-year-old centre] of Providence Reds, who played| for: Hershey Bears last season, went on a scoring rampage on the weekend to take the scoring| \lead with 17 points on nine goals) | land eight assists. Len Lunde of| |Buffalo Bisons is second with 12.| Pittsburgh Hornets' Roger) Crozier tops the netminders with an average of 2.17 on 13 goals in six games. Don Cherry| of Rochester Americans leads in penalty minutes with 32, | | LAST NIGHT'S | STARS Tokyo--Buyong . Kango, 138, \South Korea, stopped Takeo! |Sugimori, 138, Japan, 6. "Leeds {Arbroath 10 points, five of them goals. Montreal rookie John Fer- with Geoffrion and Beliveau, of Chicago. Ferguson has four goals and Wharram two. A victory and a tie during the |weekend maintained the Hawks at the top of the league stand- ings, now with a comfortable four-point margin. Toronto and Montreal are tied Leading Teams Soccer Leagues LONDON (AP)--Old country soccer standings, including Sat- urday's games: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I : WLT F APt 5.2 31 19 21 33 30 1419 1 4 30 1719 833 45 2 19 9 1 4 28 3019 Sheffield U Man United Liverpoo! Tottenham Everton 8 8 9 Division I 951 10 3 2 10 3 3 942 924 Division 11 30 31 27 31 12 23 14 23 15 23 23 22 23 20 Swindon Sunderland Preston Charlton Coventry Oldham Crystal P Bournemouth Shrewsbury 18 25 22 23 19 22 16 21 29 21 Gillingham Workington Carlisle Exeter [Brighton SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I ~ Rangers Kilmarnock Dundee Dunfermline Hearts 26 3 5) 9 15) 10 14 9 13 13 12) nm i 17 21) 13 20) 12 18) 13 18| 1517! esto seems Divisi Clyde erases wauwn~ Montrose Queens Pk mre Se enue oe 3\Faulkner, Det 9| MacGregor, Dt MONTREAL (CP) -- Bernie)sists in the Black Hawks' threejfor the runner-up spot with\an arm in the last game of the (Boom Boom) Geoffrion may be|games last week. He now hasjeight points each, but the Leafs|ctaniey Cup finals. Yi. to Cana-| are ranked ahead because the jhave four victories League--if he can maintain his|guson, left winger on the line|diens' three. Detroit has seven points, New he burly 32-year-old Mont-|has nine points and is tied for/york six and Boston Bruins, le yd ss \fifth place with Ken Wharram| w ith one victory and one tie in eight starts, have: three. HALL TOP GOALIE | Glenn Hall of Chicago. took jover the goaltending leadetship from Detroit's Terry Sawchuk, allowing only four goals in three games last week while Saw- jchuk was scored on vight times jin two contests. Hall now has 17 goals against him in eight games for an av- erage of 2.13. | In second spot is Toronto's |\Johnny Bower, who has 17 In Old Country }goals charged against him after |seven games, Sawchuk is third with 18 goals-against in seven appearances, Both Hall and Bower have one goal charged against them that was scored into an empty net in the dying moments of a game. The empty-net goals are included in goals-against totals for purposes of awarding the Vezina Trophy. Bruins are the league's most penalized team so far, with a total of 124 minutes. The indi- vidual penalty leader is Larry Jeffrey of the Red Wings with 34 minutes--more than one- third of his team's total. The leaders: Geoffrion, Mtl Mikita, Chi Beliveau, Mtl Hull, Chi Ferguson, Mtl Wharram, Chi McDonald, Chi Goyette, NY con sto -- Mahovlich, Tor Hay, Chi Pulford, Tor Howe, Det Horton, Tor Oliver, Bos Keon, Tor Nevin, Tor Jeffrey, Det Pilote, Chi Bathgate, NY Hadfield, NY Rousseau, Mtl Williams, Bos Gilbret, NY Gilbert, NY Duff, Tor AAMKAnFtannnanannnraernrtiss.S © ts SCL Ae BVMAMSVWNODBANNHWONON | That's his way of saying you Rochester Americans will be called up for a National Hockey |League game here Wednesday |night against Montreal Cana- \diens. Punch Imlach, Leafs' gen- eral-manager and coach, said the American Leaguers are needed to fill vacancies created by injuries to regulars Bob Ne- | Vin and Carl Brewer. swing into the turn without putting on the brakes. "This new approach stresses the dynamics involved in a racing turn," Beattie said. It's not unlike the auto rac- ing driver who steps on the gas to push on through a curve rather than trying to slide or skid around it. Beattie doesn't recommend it for novices. Nevin suffered a severe bone| jbruise on the ankle last week LUMBER & SUPPLIES 7 UTD. "DO-IT-YOURSELF HEADQUARTERS' y NEW HOMES & HOME IMPROVEMENTS FULL LINE OF BUILDING MATERIALS 04 436 RITSON N. (Where Pavement Ends) jand Brewer has been absent since last spring when he broke Willie Lambert Boosts Lead In | Intercollegiate By THE CANADIAN PRESS | McGill halfback Willie Lam-| bert lengthened his lead in the) [Intercollegiate senior football| jscoring race Saturday, scoring) all the Redmen's points in a 17-| loss to Queen's University| Golden Gaels. The touchdown and convert) jgave Lambert 45 points, 15 bet-| ter than University of Toronto) |halfback Gerry Sternberg, held! scoreless as the Blues edged! |University of Western Ontario! Mustangs 12-8. | Bill Edwards of Queen's con-) verted one towehdown for the! Gaels to tie Mustang end Pat! McConnell for third place with 29 points. McConnell was also scoreless, | | Bayne Norrie scored a touch- down for Queen's, giving him 18 points and a one-point margin in fifth place over Western's Jim Weber. Toronto's Bryce Taylor follows with 15. | MORE INTEREST 1% 8 SAVINGS DEPOSIT RECEIPTS Redeemable ANY time Interest on daily balance MINIMUM DEPOSIT $5,000.00 GUARANTY TRUST Company of Canada 32 KING ST. E. 728- 1653 PROUDLY EXPOR DISTILLED, MATURED AND TED TO MORE THAN BOTTLED IN CANADA BY CANADIAN ( HC of G anuda g ay ( 104 Whisk 50 COUNTRIES SCHENLEY LTD