TQ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Merch 14, 1964 * Habs And Hawks 'Battle For First In NHL Tonight By THE CANADIAN PRESS In one corner you have Mont- Cana . who haven't won a game in five tries. In the other, Chicago Black Hawks, who haven't won a National Hockey League title in 37 years. It adds up to a clutch game at the Montreal Forum tonight as the Hawks come to town with a slender two-point lead over the floundering Habitants. Chicago, with four games re- maining to Montreal's five, could come close to clinching the championship by defeating the Canadiens and going on to beat the Red Wings in Detroit Sunday. If Boston Bruins obliged by downing the Habs at Boston Sunday, the Hawks would be only a point away. By the same token, a double victory for Montreal would put Canadiens back in the driver's seat. The third-place Toronto Ma- 'ple Leafs, who open a home- and-home weekend series with New York Rangers at Maple Leaf Gardens tonight, also have their playoff status in mind. They're two points ahead of De- troit and can use all the points they' can get against the fifth- place Blueshirts, But the spotlight rests the Canadiens, who have been a welcome surprise to their fans all season, have suddenly lost their scoring touch. "We have to score more cals,' coach Toe Blake said 'riday. His club's last two out- ings were a 1-0 defeat at Tor- onto last Wednesday night and a scoreless tie in New York the previous Sunday. The presence of Glenn Hall in the opposition net offers scant hope for improvement - In the course of winning four to Chicago's six with tree ties over the season, the Montreal sharpshootérs have been out- scored 36-26, beating Hall for an average of two goals a game. The most he's ever allowed them on a single night is three. The Hawks themselves have lived through a slump of mag- nificent proportions, in the course of which they blew a 10-point léad, built up by late November, to gét into their present dogfight with the Cana- diens. Two weeks. ago the shoe was on the other foot, with the Mont- realers dead lével with Chizago and with three games in hand. That was when the Habs started their slide. Frank Selke, Montreal's man- squarely on Montreal, where aging director, traces it to the club's youth. Rookies such as Jacques Laperriere, Terry Har- per and John Ferguson made, the team the surprise of the season. But, says Selke, they) have become over-anxious in| the stretch drive, making er-| rant plays that have been costly, i For tonight's game, the} Hawks have had considerably| who blew their 1-0 squeaker to they edged Toronto 4-3, the The Bruins recalled young) Don Awrey from their Minne-/ apolis farm club in the Ceéntral Professional League Friday after learning team captain and veteran defenceman Leo) Boivin will be lost for the club's| three remaining games. Boivin suffered a fractured right ankle when chécked by Gordie Howe in the second pe- riod Thursday night at Detroit The Wings won it. 2-1. NHL Expansion Long Way Off | NEW YORK (CP) Clar-| more rest than the Canadiens) § 'Hawks have been idle. is the Leafs Wednesday night. 14 Since last Sunday night, when) Rival skips in the coming "Scotch Cup Series," Gerald Kellar (left) of Switzerland compare their brooms, which are really a type of curling . "brush'-- during the stop- SWISS AND SWEDISH SKIPS COMPARE THEIR 'BROOMS' other entries competing afe Canada, defending the trophy by- the British Columbia rink, United States and Scotland Calgary, for the International Scotch Cup curling champion- ships. The championship tour- nament opens on Monday and The annual Kitchener Waterloo Dominion Tire and Forbes Motors vs Oshawa Gen- eral Motors inter-club curling event was concluded here at The Oshawa Curling Coub yes- terday, when the K-W curlers scored a 66-45 victory over the Oshawa GM rinks, to capture The General Motors Trophy. | The visitors took the total- round, home-and-home event by a score of 131-96, having won at home 65-51, in the first half of the competition, in Kitchener! last Friday. ~ Following the welcome ,ar- rival, the K-W curlers enjoyed a luncheon and then were en- tertained on a choice of sight- seeing tours. Bob Baun Puts Hockey Before His Politics TORONTO (CP) -- After see-| ing the two worlds of Leonard) Kitchener Curlers Defeat GM Rinks In Annual Match . After the curling action, the 128 curlers joined in a banquet with Ian McNab, of GM Public Relations Dept., acting as chair- man and extending a welcome to the visitors, which was in turn endorsed by Harry Gay, president of The Oshawa Cur- -- ling Club. Jack Forbes, representing the K-W visitors, made a suitable reply, Highlight of the banquet, the presentation of "The P-Pot,"' premier award to the rink los- ing by the largest margin and Norm Attersley, who claimed the trophy a week ago in Kitch- ener, made the official presen- tation to Jack Elliott, skip of the GM rink which bowed by the largest margin yesterday-- in this case, to Carl Assmuss- en's rink from Kitchener. Skip Jack Elliott, after intro- ducing his rink, fulfilled the sportsmanlike theme of this. an- nual competition, by proudly accepting the trophy and prom- ising that it would be passed along next season. Fred Popham, co-chairman of SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' TORONTO MARLIES knocked off Niagara Falls Flyers last night in the first game of their OHA Junior vA" Series, 5-2 in "The Falls" and. thus immediately stamped themselves as prime favorites to take this series, They play the second game at Maple Leaf Gar- dns tomorrow afternoon and then don't play again until Thursday night, Meanwhile, Generals play in St. Kitts tomorrow afternoon, back in Bowmanville on Tuesday and the fifth game is Thursday night in St. Kitts, In the Peterborough-Montreal series, third game is tomorrow in Montreal and the're back in the Liftlock 'City on Tuesday night. At the moment, it looks as if the Habs might take this one in four-straight games. SATURDAY'S SIFTINGS:-- Oshawa sports fans (baseball and curling types in particular) will regret to learn that Bob Elliott, current president of the King- ston Curling Club and former Limestone City baseball star, has been hospitalized with ruptured blood vessel in his throat from high blood pressure. One of Eastern Ontario's most popular as well as talented athletes, Bob has a lot of friends pulling for his complete re- covery .. . HARNESS RACING, for the 1964 season, opens at Greenwood Raceway in Toronto on Monday night and the current track conditions should produce some interesting results and perhaps some weird pay- offs... ONTARIO COUNTY Minor Lacrosse Associa- tion will meet on Wednesday evening of next week, 7:30 o'clock, at Simcoe Hall (Simcoe St. South), for the purpose of organizing minor lacrosse at various levels, throughout this district, for the coming summer and all communities, groups and individuals interest- ed, have a cordial invitation to be on hand. . . JACK DEMPSEY mokes the sport news today with a blast at both Sonny Liston and Cassius Clay. He decries Clay's association with the Black Muslims as un-American and states Liston "quit" -- which a champion never does .. , BOSTON BRUINS have lost Leo Bovin with a broken ankle, suffered while checking Gordie Howe on Thursday night in Detroit . . . SCARBORO is to have a new 3,200-seat stadium, to be built this year, near nogeon Road and Danforth Ave .. . OUT IN WINNIPEG, o girls' hockey team took their 1-0 de- feat in an exhibition game, real hard. They waited outside after the game and 'beat up" their opponents . .. FRANK HOWARD, Dodgers' top HR slugger, is reported as ready to reconsider 'his retirement plans, provided he is traded to a team nearer his own home-- which would be Milwaukee Braves ... . ROCKY COLA- VITO has signed his contract with the Kansas City A's for $50,000 -- with no "'string clauses" attached. . . DON FLEMING of Whitby - Dunbarton, who retired from stock-car racing in 1960, plans to return to the tight-turn sport this season, at the CNE track. Bantam Hockey League Round-Robin Playoffs B'Nai B'Rith edged Localsa with two goals each. 2784 2-1 in a Bantam ence Campbell, president of the} National Hockey League, says) the league is no closer to ex-| or three years ago. cheon: of the New York Hockey| it worth while for the NHL. He said expansion would dil- ute the calibre of talent now) seen in the league and would) mean that the two Canadian Toronto. Maple Leafs, would play fewer games -- in York. These two teams, he said, If two teams: were added would probably mean the play in New York five times) each. panding to include West Coast) pittsburgh hockey teams than it was tw0|Cleveland Rochester Campbell, speaking at a lun-| Buffalo Writens Association, said that|pittsburgh 4 Cleveland 1 any expansion would havé to)Rochester 1 Providenc 2 be economically sound to make/Hershey 1 Springfield 10 Pittsburgh at Hershey Rochester at Springfield ; Baltimore at Buffalo teams, Montreal Canadiens and) ¢ yringfield at Cleveland Hershey at Providence NeW / pittsburgh at Rochester each play in' New York to sell-Qmaha out crowds seven times a year. st. Paul it/Minneapolis Ca- st. Louis nadiens and Maple Leafs would cincinnati and Kurt Johnson of Sweden, over in Toronto, en route to HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League | 2 | Marlies Take --____. First Game Of Fort Willam «Red Rock S| Sent Final Set (Fort William leads best-of-| pally Pict ab a |_ NIAGARA FALLS, Ont, (CP) nawaee ty Oanek a | Toronto MarWates, league ; key . {champions of the Ontario (First game best-of-seven fi-) Hockey Association Junior A se- nal) ries, Friday dumped Niagara 2237 4213 245 48 St. Louis at Omaha Ontario Junior A y Pi 8 | |Falls Flyers 5-2 to take a 10 | Western League |Toronto 5 Niagara Fails 2 | lead in A bi best-of-seven semi- Vancouver 1 Los Angeles 3 | (First game best - of - seven) ginal series. San Francisco 6 Seattle 4 | semi-final) | Marlboros weathered a total International League | Northern Ontario Junior | of 17 minutes in penalties and Fort Wayne 6 Des Moines 5 ey 1 Sault Ste. Marie.) were outshot 15-7 in the first Int, i jperiod but came on strong to (Sault Ste. Marie leads best-| Poll up their winning rei of-seven semi-final 2-1) |. Bud Debrody gave the Flyets Thunder Bay Junior --_--j a 1-0 lead midway through the Port Arthur 5 Fort William) first with Toronto holding a Canadians 4 {man advantage. But Gary Din- | (Fort William best-of-|een scored less than two min- P.E.I. Cape Breton Senior | seven final 3-2) jutes later to knot the count. Charlottetown 4 Sydney 13 | Saskatchewan Junior | Dineen, with his second of the | (Best-of-three series tied 1-1))Moose Jaw 1 Estevan 5 |night, and Nick Harbaruk fired Ottawa-St. Lawrence Senior (First game best - of - seven/goals just 34 seconds apart to Morrisburg 5 Kingston 1 semi-final) account for all the scoring in (Best of-five series tied 2-2) Weyburn 4 Regina 6 /the second period. Ontario. Senior (Weyburn leads best-of-seven) The Marlboros built their (Galt wins best-of-seven semi-| semi-final 2-1) margin to 5-1 in the third on 4215 8 282 181 92| final 4-1) Canadian Intercollegiate --_ goals by Andre Champagne and 3429 4 241 221 72 Northern Ontario Senior University of Alberta 5 Univer-|Grant Moore before Gilles Mar- 32 27 7 258 249 71| Abitibi 1 Rouyn-Noranda 3 sity of New Brunswick 3 cotte scored for the Flyers. 30 29 7 290 25267| (Rouyn - Noranda wins best-|Sir-George Williams 5 Univer-| The opening playoff loss of 10 48 6175 34326) of-nine semi-final 5-2) sity of Montreal 1. the series was the ninth straight | Friday's Results {Cincinnati 1 Omaha 6 Eastern Division |St. Paul 5 St. Louis 3 WLT F Apt Tonight's. Games 3826 1235 19777\St. Paul at St. Louis 32 29° 4 212 299 6g/Cincinnati at Minneapolis 3031 4229213 64) | Gar 27 34 4178 204 58| Minneapolis at Cincinnati Quebec Hershey Providence Baltimore Springfield Western Division 36 26 3 209 178 75 3427 4216 182 72) 33.29 2 219 206 68 | 42 95.8 177, 204 52 port Huron 6 Chatham 5 Friday's Results |Windsor 5 Muskegon 7 | | Eastern League |New Haven 2 Johnstown 4 \Clinton 2 Long Island 5 |Greensboro 6 Charlotte 1 Knoxville 4 Nashville 3 Sunday's Games Tonight's Games leads Sunday's Games Central Professional | WLT F Apt Braves Lose, | But Al Caron Scores Twice By THE CANADIAN PRESS | St. Louis Braves are stuck in) fourth place in the Central Pro-| |fessional Hockey League but it's |through no fault of Al Caron. | Caron, the league's leading} scorer, fired his 68th and 69th) goals of the season Friday in \the Braves' 5-3 defeat by. St.) | Paul Rangers. The win enabled) the Rangers 'to take over sole | possession of second place, one point up on the idle Minneapolis | Bruins. | In the only other game the jleague - leading Omaha Knights | but will bounce, predicts John NAGS MAY SOON BOUNCE Ottawa Beaten ON RUBBER RACE TRACKS --_ 5 Suébury OLD COUNTRY | (Red) Kelly, Bobby Baun says| the event, presented The Gen- he will wait until he is finishedjeral Motors Trophy, to Don playing hockey before he seeks|Ferguson, head of the a political career. | Kitchener - Waterloo contingent Rumors began circulating in| and warned that next year, the Ottawa Thursday when Baun, a|GM curlers would be "packed bruising defenceman with Na-|with power" to regain the tional, Hockey League Toronto) honors. Maple Leafs, accompanied his} Following 'are comp teammate, Kelly, who is also aj results of Yetattay'e play: iste Liberal member of Parliament, : to the capital, : KITCHENER OSHAWA GM Wilson Martin, "Ed. Alker, Baun was asked by the Lib- eral party to run in the last provincial election in the Tor- onto - Beaches riding; but he turned it down. However, he said Friday he would seriously consider a po- litical career after his hockey visit was strictly social, he said. |€¢ Baun, a confessed Liberal, also met with Keith Davey, na-|Jock Playford, tional Liberal organizer, he said|Ser'y Hormer, in an interview Friday. | The defenceman's family lives in : Saskatchewan. Coincidentally, at-the moment there is a vacancy in the Sas- katchewan riding of Saskatoon following the death of Progrés- sive Conservative Harry Jones last week. However, it turned out that Baun and Davey were old friends, having worked together at radio station, CKFH, and his Bill McHugh, Bert Gronik, skip, Bill Burns, Norm Briggs, Ruddy Andrews, Jack Copeland, Frank Kellar, Jack Elliott, 0; ki Lorne Hewson, tan McNab, Roy Morris, Harry Gay, ' Norm Attersley, Allan Shirk, skip, 5; H. Vogt, Hal Burgess, Hovner Yack, Pete Potipcoe, Carl Assmussen, skip, Ed. Hymmen, Jack Forbes, Don Fraser, Geo. Ti Pson, skip, C. Kieswetter, Shelley Uppelman, |. Heller, Jim Timmins, Bev. Smith, 7; _ skip, Bryce Brown, Roy Mercer, Reg. Fair, Murray Hainer, i 'Casey' Luke, Ev. Hewitt, skip, 7. Alex. Barclay). Carl Shoemaker, Phil Schappert, Geo. Vogt, Alex Hammer, skip, Bill Roberts, 4 Geo. Howstrauser, 'Hec.' Campbell, John Innes, 'Preem' Whiteley, 7 |days are over. | BASKETBALL Detroit 133 Philadelphia 122 Second game is scheduled for | | TORONTO (CP) -- Horses men--would be able to stand | Golden Ball Play | we "sa 112. San Francisco SCORES seg or | By THE CANADIAN PRESS NBA Jack Symons, Frank Black, | skip, 1; _ skip, jLes Smith, Bill Johnston, |Al MacDonald, Bill Broadbent, |Bill. Uffelman, John Morrison, jLorne Kuntz, Fred Popham, ' Don Crothers, Bill McLeese, © Howard. powell. Al Beard, Geo. Campbell, skip, 5. 45. |Ralph Forbes, \Joe Schnarr, | skip, ITOTALS:-- 12; 66; |Toronto Sunday. won't trot or pace down the UP better to the long racing) BARRIE (CP) Teams| SOCCER SCORES é season, he said. et i .| F ee from Thornhill, Sudbury, Co-| [ONDON (Reuters e- stretch five years from now, There is already one rub- |phourg and Bradford won their| sults of English cpl pias ber track in operation just | came as the Ontario high school] matches played Friday: outside Pittsburgh. It is owned |haskethall (Golden Ball) tourn-| Birmingham 2 Blackburn 2 by Delvin G. Miller, a mil- | ament opened here Friday. | West Brom. 2 Blackpool 1 lionaire harness owner, driver | Thornhill defeated Smith Falls| Division TIT soa | Falls 59-46, St. Charles College/Coventry 2 Southend 5 _He said the club has inves- | 4¢ Sudbury defeated Oshawa Division IV tigated the possibility of Pav- Central 64-51, Cobourg collegi-/ Chester 3 Lincoln 1 ing its new track in St. Cath- | 216 downed Barrie Central 56-46 arines with the new product | ang st. John's College of Brad-| or oa Pye Ap would | ford defeated Ridgemont high! Carthage. one of the great| He said this would push the | Ottawa 55-36. | cities of the ancient world, had| over-all cost to just under |, Dale Crouter scored 28 points)a peak population of 1,000,000 $4,000,000 for the new plant, |for Thornhill while Smiths Falls) more than three. centuries - J, Mooney, general 'manager of The Jockey Club. By that time, race tracks will be rubber, . he said. He said the club is already looking into this for Toronto. Mooney said it would be the greatest boost to the racing industry since John Dunlop of Belfast invented bicycle tires in 1888. "Tracks would have more bounce to the ounce,"' he. said. Horses feet and legs--al- VASTLY POPULATED | STOVE | FUEL Automatic Delivery Phone 668-3341 Ok Quality oak by Metered Trucks "which at this time would be | Wa8 led by F. G. Allard with 14| fore Christ. points. ways a tender spot with horse- a little too high.' G. Polano led Sudbury with) | stretched their margin atop the |Standings to 20 points by trounc- ing the hapless Cincinnati Wings 6-1. It was the Wings' 48th loss. Caron's two goals midway through the second period gave} the Braves a 2-0 lead but it was) short lived as the Rangers came) back with three by Ted Taylor, Bob Cunningham and Moe Ofte- | bro. | Billy Taylor and Paul Andrea made it 5-2 after two minutes | of the final period before Lioyd| | Haddon of the Braves closed out} the scoring. | Norm Dennis fired two goals} jto lead the Rangers to victory. |.The others were divided among Gary Peters, Tom Carty, Bob Courcy and Len Ronson. Howie Menard accounted for Cincin- nati's lone goal. Hornets Win 6-4, Advance To Finals GALT Don "B" Suppelsa and Michael Clouthier (CP)--Carl Hatt and round-robin playoff game this added singles. D. Brittin and/!¥an Tennant scored in the last week. John Nestic and Bob Todd | Doug Heard scored Westmount's|'W° Minutes to give Galt Hor- were the B'Rith marksmen. goals. Roger Norton scored the lone : : goal for Local 2784. MIDGET PLAY In other Bantam Hockey League "B' games, Scugog|off games. With two of Cleaners defeated Police Asso-/8ames ending iii ties. ciation 5-3 and Local 1817 edged| Houdaille 2-1. | There were four midget play-ciation Senior the S Kinsmen and Local 222 play- ed to a 2-2 draw. Ray Grahamscreened backhand shot at the nets a 6-4 victory over Guelph) Regals and push the Hornets' into the Ontario Hockey Asso-, A series finals, The Hornets took the best-of- seven semi-final set 4-1, Hatt broke the tie with a Paul McGill, Dave Beaches,|and Carl McRae scored for the|18:00 mark and Tennant. with Lee Paradise, John Alexander|Kinsmen while David Mosier|his second of the night, clinched| 30 pointsa nd D. Calder and Al Horn scored 14 each for Osh- awa. _ Jim Carroll scored 22 points jin the Bradford victory while | P. Scobie had nine for Ottawa. | Six games will be played to- |day as the winners advance into Flat-Racing Opens In Britain Monday | 2 LONDON (CP) Britain's, Racing writers are wary)the losers go into a consolation 1964 flat-racing season opens|@bout English prospects. There| round. ' ive|Have been too many "talking| Monday, whetting speculative! orses'? -- pefisations in. the appetites for the big "spring training gallops bu: flops in the! double." racecourse test. | This combines the Lincoln-| Irish - trained Santa Claus| shire, a one-mile handicap run|heads the Epsom Derby hopes) Wednesday in the cathedraljand French invader Paolina city of Lincoln, with the Grand|seems to have the fillies' Wendy Griner Has Decided To Retire TORONTO (CP) -- Wendy National, a steeplechase held at!sics at her mercy. The only Griner, ie, Hens ster who clas-| Aintree, a Liverpool suburb, {English hope advanced with pee have lost a championship Both events draw big fields|°OMidence is Showdown, favor-|2>@C@use she wouldn't wear and usually result in box-car|ite for the Two Thousand Guin-/2!48ses on the ice, has decided navel aacevite a acer ae be i her glasses and doff her son for the few who link the; The Queen has a large but we as Sinner: |mainly untried stringl It in- lass tide ag skater, four sbi : vn otad racing cludes two - year - old Kitimat,|times Canadian champion and Frigg tied ge a mbery Meat presumably named for the big|"unner-up in the 1962 world ame story this year Ireland's\¢¢'e!oPment in British Colum-/championships, announced Fri- ei ake this year ara S| bia day that she has retired from eerste tes ane : y wel active competition and hopes to Peerieneai. i it 1 tavoulte Mi rgd havent e ts tl as, is 10-to-1 rite in at the University. of Toronto. pel a ae yo oe Her coach, Sheldon Galbraith, ae i; te chiles. St Alat who coached Barbara Ann Scott ane ca iliord ihe itd of Ottawa to the Olympic title oF ie natty it 14. in 1948, blamed Miss Griner's y J recent losing performances on her refusal to wear glasses while skating. Legalized betting shops and levision broadcasts are caus- g a slump in racecdurse at- tendances, giving rise to fears re-'that Britain may become a sec- Te€/ond-class racing power. Purses man'are much higher in France, |where bookmakers are illegal, and doping scandals are caus- }ing worry in Britain. Regina Captures | BANTAM "A" ACTION and Dan Clark all had singles|Picked up both Locai 222's for Scugog Cleaners. For the|80als. Police Association, Don Hudgin,| In the other tie game, Fire Pat.Flonter and' Mark Blan-|Fighters and Navy Vets. played chard scored jto a 1-1 standoff. Rogeer Wid- dal netted F' Fighters goal and Dary! Hudgin scored for In Bantam "A" games, Cocaithe Vets. Cola defeated Duplate 3-2, Local! Rotary whipped Canadian Le- 1500 and Canadian Corps tied gion 4-2 with four players shar- ~ 3-3 and Canadian Tire whipped|ing in the winners goals. They Westmount Kiwanis 6-2. McCullough had two goals to lead Coca Cola to victory. Hard- ing fired one, Christenson scor- ed twice for Duplate. Bill Holmes fired two goals | were Erwin Berger, Brian Car- ey, John Brooke and Jack Me- |Garry. Mike~Conway and Bill Morrison replied for Canadian Legion. Lions downed Kiwanis 5-1 in the win with a goal into the fempty net after Regals had pulled goalie Boat Hurley. Ron Hergott pumped in three goals to pace the winners. Keith Worrall led the Regals with two goals while George Usitalo and Bert Brown added one apiece. Remember When? ... By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Grant Warwick, fright- winger with the New York | Rangers, was named Rookie | . the Canadian Farmers' Curling Farmers' Curling Title At Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- A Regina foursome, representing southern Saskatchewan defeated the Que- bec-Maritimes' entry 11-3 to win BEAMED "LIVE" ON OUR GIANT Ne SCREEN LEAFS»: NEW YORK Championship Friday, Skip Bob Pickering and his rink finished with an unblem- ished record of six wins and no losses in the seven-win) round- robin series QUALITY TRUCKS ALWAYS COST LESS! | 1964 RUCK REPRESENTATIVE STOCK AVAILABLE "Serving Oshawa and Area Over 40 Years" ~ ONTARIO. of the Year in the National Hockey League 22 years ago today' in the annual poll for COMMENTARY BY BILL HEWITT REGENT 723-3021 OR 728-6673 | Ontario gained a 3-3 record | In other final round play, Mel) |Watchhorn of Northern Alberta jdefeated Dale Fagen of Alberta 6-4 and Ray Grant of Markham, |Ont., clipped Stan Autman of| Hanley, Sask., 5-4, | for Local 1500 while Rick Gil-|the last game. Walter. Grabko| more addéd the other. Dennis|led Lions with two goals. Allen Hercia tallied twice and Jerry) Mathews, Larry Lloyd and Chris} the Calder Trophy. He Welsh once for the Corps. |Stead fired singles. Jerry Wal-| coached the: Penticton Vs to Canadian Tire were led by|lace scored the lone goal for) the world hockey champien- David Orton and Doug Suppel-/ Kiwanis. | ship in 1955 MOTOR SALES LTD. 140 BOND STREET WEST PHONE 725-6501¢