Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Jan 1964, p. 10

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4 i Pe eT vom tional Hockey League through the first half of the schedule, SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell oe bee 1 SPORTS EDITOR = 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' was beaten out by Chicago's Pierre Pilote in the mid-season balloting announced today for the league's top all-round de- fenceman. The. decisiveness of Pilote's selection over the man who led the NHL in winning goals with six made it even more a sur- 'Porterhouse' Delayed By Snowdrifts WPaikcens wen with Shei WESTBURY, N.Y. (AP)--Por-|canadiens meanwhile placed 1- OSHAWA GENERALS received a jolt on Sunday -- not os that it was entirely unexpected,,, rather let's say it was hoped _..that wouldn't happen. However, there was a recent history «ef Kitchener Greenshirts doing surprisingly well in recent "games against such top-tanking opposition as Marlboros, *\Montreal, Peterborough and Niagara Falls, eo for them to "f'win one on their home ice, was not really magic, However, gaithe Generals, who hadn't dropped a decision since New +» Year's Day, were hoping to grab off another valuable two <opoints with a win in Kitchener, But they didn't do it, Last night, the Peterborough Junions won a 6-5 decision over the "Red Wings, on Hamilton ice, and that prevented the Red "> Wings from getting any closer to the Generals, for at least 24 "hours. That time is up tonight -- when Generais host Kitch- gener, at Bowmanville Arena, Oshawa boys have to win this etme tonight in order to keep their total climbing. If they ** Jose -- it will mean that Hamilton has another one of those "games "'in hand' -- and when they finally get caught up with their schedule, a few victories in those extra games "would put them right back in contention for sixth place and that final playoff berth. 'Generals will be going all-out to win this one tonight, since they just can not afford to lose two wein succession to the tail-enders, » ee Ae ae BRIGHT BITS: -- NHL President Clarence Campbell is expected to issue his official decree today, concerning the «fetal discipline to be handed out to Howie Young, the culprit oswho "carried on' with certain comments and gestures, ep @lleged to have been 'vile language" and "'expectorating"-- ~ while he was confined to the sin-bin at Maple Leaf Gardens, in a recent NHL encounter. . . . CANADA'S Olympic hockey team had to score a goal in the dying seconds of the game to salvage a 4-4 tie in an exhibition game against of "unknowns" listed as 'former prefessional Cana- hockey players'. 'This one couldn't have meant too but just for the record-book, we're glad Father Bauer's managed to pull it out of the fire with at least a tie. . MID-SEASON voting for the verious NHL individual trophy awards, has produced a few surprises. Jean Beliveau for the Lady Byng Trophy award and Hart % Memorial and three of the Montreal Canadiens are listed % 1:23 in the voting for top rookie of the year -- a sure indi- * cation of why the Montreal club is far up in the standing and ® perhaps headed for another reign of supremacy. Pierre e leads Tim Horton in the bidding for the "best defence- an" and this one is a bit surprising since Horton's choice the all-star team, plus his obvious value to Toronto Leafs, put him in front, in this department, . . . BLACK have slipped a little in their scoring feats lately, ex- Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita and Kenny Wharram are much "up there' -- but besides leading the league » it's interesting to note that the Chihawks are also bF S523 ied S. SALARY FIGURES released yesterday reveal that the New Mork Yankees aren't being paid nearly as much as a lot of | people would believe. Mickey Mantle is still far and away : "their big money man, This year, Elston Howard, former > "Toronto Leafs' catcher, is expected @o draw about $60,000 -- and that's quite a salary for a catcher, even with Yankees, ; e John Thomas _Pete Stemkowski * ® ° * Improves Via . | "limbs To Fifth ; By THE CANADIAN PRESS ' Ballet Lesson | Six goals and four assists in : eg = last week pulled * NEW YORK (AP) -- John Pete. Stemkowski of Toronto S Thomas was a high jumping/M&rbores up to third from fitth } has-been at the age of 21. But : gt because of bal ocistion Junior A scoring race. + Ballet lessons? 'but the two leaders remained "Why not?" said coach Tom Wchanged. . + Dufty. "They tend to loosen up) Andre Boudrias of Montreal * the thigh muscles, give greater Canadiens held his 15-point lead L.apring and they relax an ath- With 86 points from 23 fot : . And when a man is re- 83 assists in 34 games, ate he's confident, When he's Yvan Cournoyer is second with confident, he's ready." 71 points from 39 goals -- the And Thomas, once again, is highest in the league--and ready. He demonstrated it be-/@ssists in 32 games, yond doubt last weekend with a) Stemkowski, who had 57 points of seven feet, two inches/the previous week, now has 67 ' ton's Knights of Colum-/from 27 goals ang 40 assists in © bus games, the opener of the 30 games. : -- Dy ebay ee t le u times at seven f feet, 4% inches, a quarter of an SEES POTENTIAL + inch better than the indoor rec-| MONTnEAL (CP)--¢weden's + ord held by Russian Valery /Per-Olof Brogren, rounsing out $ Brumel, the old foe who gave & 2l-day tour of Canada to pro- ' Thomas the leaping doldrums. mote speed-skating, said Mon- Thomas went on the decline|day Canada's potential in the ct eee place in the Ontario Hockey As./the LTAA relaxes its position, sociation Junior A scoring race | | Andy Bathgate terhouse, one of the three Amer-|9. roti r the rooki ican trotters slated to race in wd Hab septs sane the rich Prix de Amerique)" Im the other trophy competi: States Jan.26 in Paris, has been tions, Montreal's Jean Beliveau eo was a walkaway leader as the ss or a few hours Monday,/most valuable player and the oosevelt Raceway officials|yoting for the performer best wondered whether the horse had combining sportsmanship and -- Pe in FR gc ggra gy oe ability was so tight a mere 15 Roosevelt after taking 12 hours|Pu"ts sparated the four play: to cover the last 2 Smiles: [| As in last season, the indivi. ' ee HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS _ Tull's Ankle Brused : ' ° : But It's Not Broken i By THE CANADIAN PRESS \Hamilton at Peterborough CHICAGO (AP) -- X-ray ex- V Ontario Junior A Montreal at St, Catharines amination of the ankle of Bobby WLT F Apt Ontario Junior B Hull, Chicago Black Hawk scor- toronto 98 4 5207117 57/Petenborough 7 Georgetown 1 Jing ace, disclosed only a painful f ' Montreal 2210 2177 119 4¢/5U«lington 4 Stamford 7 bruise, club doctors said Mon- Peterboro 16.12 6 105 115 98 Thunder Bay Senior day. all ® e Niagara Falls 1612 4121 9536 Port Arthur 1 Fort William 5 Hull was hit on the ankle by hs St. Catharines 15.15 3148 143 33 Nova Scotia Senior a puck during a 2-1 loss to Mont- ' e ° ; Oshawa 1019 6 127 149 96; Windsor 8 New Glasgow 4 real Canadiens here Sunday, j Hamilton 622 5 11016317 North Shore League There was fear at first that a Y | ] '@ | 'oa: ec Kitchener 522 5 78171 15\Chatham 6 Newcastle 3 bone had been broken, 3 : Exhibition Hull, who leads all National . 'tied boscunens peace : Odphaies Olympics ' Canadian nekey Lae eee Ayn a Ray Lr field 1 fe ton $35,000. neq accepted a cut but Houk Kitchen eens, Games * w gaskatchewan Gonier pel io plsy. in Montreal 2 *4100.000. ; "Phe left side -- Kubek and) 'You don't penalize a man be- ve ln Hata patrcetealen cas Thursday. Phe recession began the day|Boyer--stands about the same/cause of injuries sustained in stepped up from managerjas last year, The gains were/the line of duty, He means a bed i manager of New/made on right side. Pepijgreat deal to this club and I m T1ses n q : tone gets a hefty raise fromjexpect him to bounce back and market hit bottom/$8,000 after hitting 271 with 27/have a great year." day when Houk and homers and 89 runs batted in--/ Houk already has signed two ses decided to mail out/high for the club, Richardson, rs--outfielder Roger Maris cts to the Americania ,265 hitter and a team leader, pitcher Whitey Ford, Maris baseball champions, The|gets about a $5,000 increase toltook a cut of about $5,000 to '@ | os a '@} e '@) to come to/$30,000, $65,000 while Ford signed for a estima ,000, GETS ONE-EIGHTH $12,000 raise to the $60,000 neigh- As for the four men Houk val- big hunk of ¢ 000/borhood for his 24 victories and ® e e at $5,000,000 in a word bat-/payroll, one-eighth of it to bejadded stature as a pitching with Baltimore managerjexact, goes to Mickey Mantle,| Also in for a hefty raise is 1Vl1 u ily Hitchcock last year, here's|who played in only 65 gamesicatcher Elston Howard, the way the salaries go, from|last season because of a broken/American League's most valu- : to third: left foot and a damaged left knee/able player, e ted to get a By MARVEN MOSS -- jdual awards carry a total of| A full 50 points behind him 1B--Joe Pepitone, $15,000. cartilage that had to be oper-jontract calling for close to $06,-| MONTREAL (CP) -- Muscu-/$2,000 in prize money for eachjin the balloting for the Hart Me- 98--Bobby Richardson, $30,-|ated on this winter. 000. Most of other increases|lar Tim Horton of Toronto, the|co: tion, | morial Trophy was Chicago's 28- 000. Mantle had said he wouldigo to the young players. No. 1 payoff man in the Na-/LEAD WORTH $250 Pe yo "> ae _ oes goalie enn Hall 0 e ac! This year the mid-season lead in each competition is worth $250, Another similar sum will go to the second-half leader, The over stl winner at the end of the season gets $1,000 and $500 goes to the runnerup. Points were awarded on a 5-3-1 basis by those covering the hockey beat in the league's six member cities, as in past sea- sons, The attack-minded Pilote pol- led 72 points against a surpris- ingly-low 43 for Horton, whose eight goals gave him twice as many as Pilote in the first 35 ames, apart from the timeli- ness of six of them, Beliveau, covering more ice than anyone else around the league and perhaps the princi- pal reason for Montreal's strong showing, came closest to the maximum 90-point potential by attracting 82. Hawks with 19. TOPS ROOKIES Jacques Laperriere led the Montreal rookie contingent in the Calder Trophy competition, with 53 points, The defenceman was followed by_ his left-wing teammate John rorqees with 43 and another mate, Terry Har- per, with 28, oe Chicago's. hustle - guy Ken first half, topped the Lady Byng Trophy voting with 40 points. His penalty total: 10 minutes. A two - minute man, New York's Camille Henry, was eight points back, One more be- hind was Dave Keon, Toronto's two-time winner of the trophy. At 25 points in fourth spot was Hull of Chicago. Keon had four minutes in penalties and Hull 15. Duke Rodney, one of the three| who will race in France, hasn't left Washington, Pa. Weather permitting, he is due here in time to leave with Porterhouse Wednesday, The third member of the trio, Elaine Rodney, al- ready is in Paris. Handlers of Porterhouse said they didn't notify the track be-! cause they were so near and kept thinking they would be able to roll along at faster speed. Instead, they were detoured and then stalled by snowdrifts, The horse left Pinehurst, N.C,,| yet senel nce Blan ancl | MONTREAL (CP)--All those jteam records for scoring punch in the National Hockey League oy merson seem to have slipped well be- yond the reach of Chicago's s . shump-racked Black Hawks, Ret H Apart: from Bobby Hull, Ken alns 1S Wharram and Stan Mikita, none of the Black Hawks are doing ® e much with the puck these days. ussie it 6 But as a whole the clud is still running well ahead of the pace for one NHL record, It has to napomete rt (| wh Sherr, out +i scoring, nay yt 9 ata Pale mi or a eyed over his Austra-'4) games, official NHL statistics IStolle eo rind oe Fred/showed today, and at that rate | 'The tell, stylish Stolle, ran-lop sef'ms Ineal' caocld fal god spd ger last yearjeasy |to Chuc Kinley i Ss : |States, bed be suenic fer Se far the Chicago team av. erson's whirlwind attack. jerage is slightly more than 18 | Emerson, individual standout/™Mutes & game. That would lin the recent Davis Cup chal. |Produce a total of 1,260 minuies lenge round won by the Unitea|#t the end of the 70-game sched- |States, thus took the early lead |W! The record is 1,072. in the battle for No. 1 world) MONTREAL SECOND amateur honors, although a! In fact, the six clubs collec- cloud shrouded his future plans.'tively have drawn far more As winner of the Australian ti-/minutes in penalties this season Ue, he is the only player with aland Montreal Canadiens are that Is, capture the Australian,/ing clip, though considerably French, Wimbledon and U.S. 'pehind Chicago. jcrows In a single year. The league total for 119 games | However, he is involved in & so far is 3,176 minutes, That's bitter dispute with the Lawn/something around 700 minutes Tennis Association of Australia more: than in the comparable jover restrictions on overseasisnan of 1962-63. |play and is threatening to turn! 'Js play getting rougher? Are professional, there more blowups? Or is it The LTAA has ruled that Aus- ading the NHL in the matter of penalties per game, . ... ane to gain a grand slam--|also punning at a record break- Black Hawks Could Set New NHL Mark In Penalty Parade that the officials are calling The leaders: | them tighter? GA Pts, PiM Probably a combination of all/Mikita, Chi 23°33 «56 = (101 three, |Beliveau, Mtl 18 35 53 28 Mikita and that two-man Chi-/Hull, Chi 28 24 52 cago gang, Reg Fleming and) wharram, Chi 24 19 43 Howie Young, account for more/Bathgate, NY 12 29 41 jthan 300 minutes in Chicago/Howe, Det 425 3040 penalties between them, Flem- Goyette, NY 13 25 38 8 ing tops the league with L0ivighovlich, Tor 17 20 37 42 minutes, Mikita has 101 and the) Hay Chi | 14 22 36 suspended Young, 97. Gili t NY 14 3 Only one other player around) eon, Tor 12 of " al the league has reached the 100-) "> |minute plateau and that's New/Oliver, Bos 13 19 32 /York's Vic Hadfield with 102, |Rousseau, Mtl 11 21 32 | Canadiens have averaged 15.8/Henry, NY 18 12 30 jminutes a -- for . total ef |Pilote, Chi 4 26 30 619 and at that pace the mar tor the carne tan pune OM BE ithe end of the season, Toronto Maple Leafs have a/Pulford, Tor 10.18 28 total of 571 minutes, Detroit Red|Kelly, Tor 523 8 4 |Wings 427, New York 417 anjRichard; Mtl 10 16 26 49 |Boston Bruins 403, MIKITA LEADING Mikita collected a goal and an jassist during the week to boost jhis production to 23 goals and /35 assists for 56 points, increas- ing his a ge Laan -- | Montreal's Jean veau in the ® individual point-gathering com- In Hamilton petition, Beliveau was contained to a pair of assists in the week's} HAMILTON (CP)--Jim Pater. play and heads the NHL in that/son's second goal of the night department with 35, jgave Peterborough Petes a 6-5 | A five-goal spurt by Huilivictory over Hamilton Red imeanwhile pushed his league-|Wings in Ontario Hockey Asso- leading total to 28, leaving him ciation Junior A action Monday. vl goals ahead of his 1061-62) The victory put Petes in sole pace when he tied the NHL rec-|possession of third place, two ord of 50 goals in one season.}points ahead of Niagara Falls |Flyers. Hamilton was left in Junior Petes Score 6-5 Win itrallan players cannot engage in overseas competition before |March 31. Many of the players, jincluding Emerson, have strenu- lously objected to this edict be- jcause it rules out the lucrative! Caribbean tour, | Emerson has said that unless MONTREAT, (CP) -- They - told Terry Harper that Chi- he may either turn professional , jor move to Great Britain, Bither| pred Debby Hull was oll jaction would make him ineti-/ ee Mesias jgible for Davis Cup competition nan bellese i and would virtually wreck Aus- : : jtralian hopes of recapturing the The pair tangled in Sunday night's National Hockey jtrophy in the tT . | = manda och | League game at Chicago, "Did you get in any good punches?" Harper was asked. "Yes, but he did too," said Harper. S A R A draw then? . | tays anger "No. I guess he had the | edge. His first punch knocked | me back about three feet." For 'bd Season But Harper, an awkward TORONTO (CP)--New York! Sk#ter who deals out some of Rangers will not trade star) @e_ stiffest checks in the jright winger Andy Bathgate this| }®8¥e, was credited by coach lyear, coach Red Sullivan said) Toe Blake of the Canadiens |Monday. as a big factor in Montreal's | "Any and all deals we had 2! Win. rookie TERRY HARPER FINDS OUT BOBBY HULL HAS MUSCLE sixth place, nin i Oshawa tan =e Davey Sharpe also collected two goals for the winners and single goals were notched by George Godson and Bob Jamie- son as the Petes boomed back schedule I can only count one from a 3-1 deficit at the end of! bad game for Harper and : : that Was when the whole de- (-°>. 'Mie. Period to take the) ence had a letdown," Blake |S&™e. j said Monday, | Bryan Campbell, Jim Mair,) 'The sixfoot-one 195-pound |Nick Libett, Real Lemieux and! Harper gave Hull a rough Jim Peters got the Hamilton) time Sunday night, containing |S0als. | Hull's patented sweeps. The | Sharpe's two goals in 20 sec-| Chcage eh BF ca mae onds early in the third: period! is e season but |, ' that a wae Harper was tied the score and bounced Pe-| serving a penalty jterborough right back into con-| They came to blows in the |tention, Hamilton took the lead) page Boag Ae both drew jon two later occasions but eac five-minute majors, Harper, 4, is a native of time the visitors knotted the Regina who made the NHL although his legs were. se- verely burned in a childhood | accident, j He has, unofficially, taken over Lou Fontinato's job as the club's policeman. "Looking back Over the | son's winner, ipending have fallen through," ; after three straight losses to the Sport appears to be "unlimited." i } Russian and, for almost a year,|"The talent is here but some. cians on igs Borg i -- ; Greenest the ranks of neg Ash | sineuirete dens for Wednesday's game | There Are Special Benefits For All © track's elite. 2 is $0 they /against Toronto. » 'Then, last year, Phomas/can measure Up against the = said Bathgate, in addition BUSINESS EXECUTIVES * called Duffy and asked for help, world's best," he said in an in-'to scoring the first goal, "played AND SALESMEN {For weeks Dufty kept Thomas/terview. jone of his best games of the > @ former Boston University ath- | " night when New} For personel uve or for @ ACADIAN Other * lete, at six feet. Then, after a SIGN TEXAS |York lost $2 to the Red Wings Company ure there ee PONTIAC Models S month or so he let the tall QB lin Detroit. definite edventeges when On. s youngster go at seven | tay BAY, Wis. (AP)--| Published reports last week | Yeu leeve © new... @ BUICK Request : 3 Signing of quarterbdack|said Bathgate was heading for Me tnvorence come... Ne melntenence corte . . . One rete covers {At the same time, Dutty set/Duke Carlisle. who led Texas/the' Maple Leafs tor two Na- | SM ]{Rp on ene or two veer Wess tems. ." Phone or come to up a whole new program for|to the U.S. collegiate champion-|tional Hockey League players 1 : bis athiete, a niger that ~ -- = & Cotton Bow! victory/and one from Rochester of the MILLS isa + cluded some new exercises a t Navy, was announced Mon-/American 'League. The 'ts UT LEA } the ballet lessons. lo by Green Bay Packers of] were denied by the Rangers' ex- a ° J ok ! (It paid eff. the National Football League. ecutive. : PHONE 723-4636 utp. 266 KING ST. WET Wharram, a 20-goal man in the) -o riod as Drinkwate twine, and took a 2-1 lead on Eno's goal into the final period. : Dyett's, with better bench strength, applied pressure at the outset of the final period and gained the. tieing marker, From that point on each team opened up in search of the lead goal and finally late in the period Bruce fired what proved to be the winning goal, which the Suddard defence made stand up, in face of desperate bids by the Dyett squad, J SUDDARD CYCLE: Russell, Brown, Glaspell, Eno, Niles, Hughes, Thrasher, pred Maingay, Raymond, Clement, Cruise, jackson. 1ST PERIOD Nicholas, Fogel, Porteous, McMillan, DYETT. SPORTS: Henry, McLinton,|CeWRRE, MeRonald, Hall, Flistott, Pap: Watson, Alsop, Drinkwater, Foster, Lane)| MERCHANTS: Braden, Delves, Mc- wingay, Raymond, Clement, Cruise/ciimond, Bulmer, Morden, Humphries, Be eg eee Dodsworth, Georgett, Cockerton, Butler, 1 rfnatlel iew Clarke, Nell, (Cruise, Raymond) ..........55 15.32 if "st PERIOD 8. Plaza: Y: 2 Suddard: Holliday (Brown)... 17.4 : Gar eR 3, Suddard: Eno (Thrasher) ...,,. 22.34 ; Peewtelg enti Pen ee oe ¢ Pes8 in Br hicenee) | RINAL PERIOD : 'aeney 912 xf a 4, Dyett's: Ray: 2. Knights: Flintoff (Drinkwater, Cruise) + 409 ian, "| Bee 24.28 5. Suddard: B FINAL PERIOD (Hughes, Thresher) 19.10 "Keefe Player Award to Bruce (Suddard). Shots-on-Goal: by Suddard's 19 and by Dyett's 12, MERCHANTS TIE LEADERS Merchants pulled the classic upset of the NPHL season thus far by holding the hitherto un- beaten and untied Black Knights to a 2-all tie, in a contest that saw repeated offensive thrusts parried by stalwart net mind- Merchants Tie But | Suddards Cling To Third-Place Berth Suddard's Cycle finally sna and alert defensive play by; Pl oot ther ak dha beh eae = ging by the slimmest of margins, as} Me: seeking to unsea' they edged by Dyett's Sports|the ts, j 3-2, thereby moving into a half-|ly on al share of spot on the NPHL|rewa: as Delves (UAW) standings. them wit Dyett's moved in front at thejthe period, on ; midway. mark of the initialjthat eluded Vanstone 's was able to beat <= -- holy ry pore md ai ercha Anal puted "wine ie' aot da Knights, white short- |, took advantage uttering Merchant: power jay to gain the tieing marker. m then till the spine ting- ling finish, booming drives by Nichols and mates rained upon Braden, who held firm while at the opposing end Vanstone turn- ed back dangerous Merchant! * Ss. BLACK KNIGHTS: Vanstone, Fitchett, 4 = 4. Knights: Porteous (Flintoff) ...,. 7.10 O'Keefe Award to: Braden (Mer chants). I: By Merchants: 20. and by Knights: 28. PLAZA FOOD WINNERS Plaza Food continued their| Med late season drive by disposing! Merchants of Modern Grille 7-4 and taking a 3-point grip on 2nd spot in the NPHL, as the schedule season moves to its climax with but four games remaining. Butler (Mer. Kansas KANSAS CITY (AP)--Owner Charles Finley of Kansas City Athletics said Monday he was "tired of being crucified" and had "taken it on the chin from the Aemrican League long enough," Finley told Ernest Mehl, sport editor of the Kansas City Star, he thought "'it is time I told my side of the story," and then re- 97 lated how in prior years he had jmade trips to Dallas and to Oakland, Calif., with league ap- proval seeking a new site for jhis Athletics, | "If the league pulls the rug jout from beneath me the league 2/is going out with me," Finley | said, Ready To Buck A.L. City Owner Finley's latest effort to shift the baseball club, this time to Louisville, will come before league directors and owners in New York Thursday. - Finley signed a contract to move the club to the Kentucky city, sub- ject to approval of league own- ers, after he had failed to nego- tiate a new contract for use of Municipal Stadium here. WON'T TAKE FRANCHISE Finley said Monday there is not the slightest chance of the league "taking my franchise away from me." tei Finley said he had been "backed into a corner" ahd had been "receiving" much of the threatened by place and I thi blame for what has happened, jtell my.side of : Canada Olympics "Score Late Draw CP from AP-Reuters | GENEVA--A last-minute rally igave the youthful Canadian |Olympic hockey team a 4-4 tie |Monday night with a team made jup of Canadian professionals performing with European clubs. More than 9,000 spectators saw the spirited match at Ver- net Ice Stadium in this Swiss city. Defeat seemed certain for the Olympic squad, down 43 with a minute left in the game, Then Roger Bourbonnais, a forward from Riviere qui Barre, Alta., broke free and went in alone to score the tying marker. The Olympic squad gained a 2:1 lead in the first period and was ahead 3-2 after two. Brian Whittal, who once Billy Reynolds Ran In Olympics GALT, Ont, (CP) -- William {Olympic runner and one-time count to set the stage fo rPater-jagara Falls, Ont., before com- Thomas Reynolds, 58, former holder of the Canadian record for the 10,000 metres, died in hospital here Sunday. Reynolds competed in the marathon run at the 1928 Olym- pic Games in Amsterdam and) in the 1930 British Empire; Games. He retired from track compe- tition 20 years ago and organ- ized the Galt Legion Track Club where he was coach until a few months ago. He was born in England and lived in Brandon, Man., and Ni- ing here 42 years ago. BEAMED "LIVE" put them ahead with just two set the stage for the last-ditch Bourbonnais came through. tour of Europe, the Olympians, coached by Rev. David Bauer, had defeated three European teams rather easily. games against E. V. Fuessen in Germany, the Canadians won 9-5 and 4-1, and they defeated ERC Mannheim 13-0 Saturday in Mannheim, West Germany, Pres. Campbell Will Announce Decision Today MONTREAL (CP)--Clarence Campbell, National-Hockey League president, plans to an- nounce a decision today in the played in Regina, had three goals for the an squad, opened the scoring after eight minutes of the first period, Ray an te _ a ae ey Adele, e., tied it up a few Ni seconds later, Gary 'Dineen, ath Oye Coe Re from Montreal, gave thd Olym- babes. =a pians a 2-1 lead in the 12th min- 2 ute, Young was placed under indef- inite suspension by Campbell | WERE AHEAD 3-1 last Tuesday pending investiga- tion of his conduct during a Jan 4 game in Toronto between Hawks and Maple Leafs. The Toronto club claims Young used intemperate -- spat while in the alty i In the same game, -- hole ara PE doo penalty w automatically reviewed by the NHL president, Campbell returned to Mont-? real Monday after a weekend of gathering evidence in Toronto and Chicago, "I talked to all the witnesses concerned, including Young and Fleming," he said Monday. "T hope to be able to announce decision on Tuesday." Campbell said last week Young, perennial bad man the NHL who was traded by troit Red Wings to Chi season, could be the game for life. The mpians went ahead 3-1 after two minutes of the sec- ond period, Dave Merriefield of Port Arthur getting the marker.| Whittal got his second for the European squad 15 minutes la- ter, The European Canadians tied up the match in the third min- ute of the third period, Martini being the scorer, and Whittal minutes left in the game, That drive by the Olympians in which Earlier in their pre-Olympics In two ON SAVINGS Interest from date of deposit Free Chequing Privileges Deposits by Mail postage paid envelopes provided free Hours--9 to 5 Fridays--9 to9 -- Saturdaye--9 to 1 4 COMMENTARY BY BILL HEWITT ee GUARANTY TRUST CANADA'S LARGEST INDEPENDENT TRUST COMPANY. 32 KING STREET EAST 728-1653

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