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Oshawa Daily Times, 19 Nov 1927, p. 6

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PAGE SIX ' E CHAMPIONSHIP, '4 THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1927 / UP H mam -------- ea A ---------------------- Oshawa Has Had Banner Year in World of Sport Championship Honors Go to] wave it won the Ontario ehampion- . ship in 1926, it did not advance 0 Oshawa City Football Club | 'ar this year. After defeating Peter- --Other Teams Lost Out tcro and Richmnod Hill third | round play-downs, the tea: in Final Stage By Narrow | disaster at (he hands of Toromo 3 . | M2Cormicks, who went right Margins through and defeated Ottawa for One championship, several rur | of the provincial title. Ladies softball was also a fearuie i 3 H the past sport seasons The Pir- g successful nets:up alld 3a Ey Co net | ates won the Oshawa Ladies Sofi- i AY sha organi- | Pall League, by defeating the On. res 3 : hla he Ln zations during the past six months. rane Malleables in an exciting o less than ten real live out- |" : hg Ton in the city in praeti- The General Motors baseball team cally all field sports, Oshawa ex-| perienced what will no doubt Ye : ~cn the western section Hf the Lakeshore Senior DRaseball League outstanding feature of the muniex- pality"s history. senior Ama. Juvennes sue th as Softhall here this also sum UPHOLSTERING of all kinds, Workmanship Guaranteed G. A. CONSTABLE 74 Mechanic St. Phone 15953 to the | en. tieing which and then advanced to meet defeat {at the hands of Peterboro, winners nf astern section, For the first time in years. 14 the eastern section hi . ¥i ™ al M 3 : 1 ong, " Dikava ootha } Cob, bought hei *inals of the Ontario Baseball champicnship home pi teur Association. 'toronto and District Football Len- | . ra The Oshawa City team ae {and Guelph, the Chevrolets. winners Caaf > b Je "wTor {of the Toe industrial Softhall Len- feated @oodyears of New "wToron-|° ig ! ; yo cue, won the right to go into the was only due to stellar plaving on 4 3 y home grounds that the champion- of the Ontario Amateur Syftha)) As- € sociation a¢aihs 7 p ; ¢hip 'wa8 brought here for a year, | ociation against St. Catharines | Winning the first game at home, the Proyinefal League soccer proved i ,4 apier spending two d there to be jlist a little too strong for the | 4... incl da : : General Motors Football Club, an fue to inclement gNeather, wen § the local bush when its tions, with the result that the team. | yy from South kid did not make a very good show-l; =, first round. of he ing as far as league standing i ) : : " : ful juvenile year insofar proved cohdiderably, though, duriiie | ,.. Si ~ oY nat 2 the past few months, and with ine | 1.0 0sc0 slaved bv NE Ke addition' ¢f one or two more ex Cave NT ¥ a leam from sport that the Motor City excell formidable sauad next year. in during the past RA eXeelion Softball and paseball wecupied | winning the local group of Wood. considerable of the local fandom's locals suffered a loss to the Conr. Motors team in the Lakeshore Sen- tice Aeroplane team of Buffalo The for Zaveha)l pague 23 seve atter squad went through ard near € ha agues, re Was Junier Industrial cvening and Saturday afternoon. | made great strides week in and week out. down defeat, thus sued at Oakville, after receiving but a few hour's notice, Oshawa Chevs, went down to defeat. It | softhall season and next year's goal | is a provincial championship The St. Andrew's junior baseball | an |,' / x the way, went into honors of the first division of the | Sa Foreing defeat on Mount Denms 10 In two' exciting fixtures and il h ! J N senior finals for thé ghampianship ut least, / it | Chevrelets journeved to St. Kitt's ee Peterboro again it a thor § cther of the city's favorite organiza- Weg: A thorn in a 4 juvenile series. Ti was a fairly oncerned. The eleven have im % fair] i the General Motors, was ¢ y periénced players. should present : : anathe hridge and Toronto Danforths. tne time this summer With a General ly landed high honors, hall available practically every | series, In the play off was. however, the most successful | club alse enjoyed a good "season. ------ Quer a Million Wintertront Users PROTECT their motors against the destroying influence of cold with Au- tomatic motor protection, This is a vital warning to you. Equip your car with Pines Automatic Winterfront at 60° Fahrenheit. That's when cold strikes at the heart of your motor, FINES AUTOMATIC NTERFRONT , TRADE MARK REGC.US.PAT.OFF The Only Automatic Radiator Shutter on the Market MODEBS FOR ALL CHEVROLET SPECIAL FORD DODGE TOURING " | shoulder, . .BI5.9 Buy your Automatic Winterfront from your Auto Dealer or Garage or refer to District Distributos ' OSHAWA BATTERY SERVICE 37 King St. W. Oshawa Phone 1184 (Lo AER ER THENSTENE met | Peterboro, | juveniles | Ontario | | Dr bon. The Maple Leafs were the » winners after a handy battle with | the Eagles. It was a great series and did not a little towards foster- ing the game among the younger players of the city. In addition to the foregoing clubs, the Oshawa Cricket Club, the Oshawa Lawn Bowling Club and | the Oshawa Gelf Club, also enjoyed most prosperous. and interesting vears Oujpside honors were cap- ture in several instances and the players of the last two mentioned organizations tock part in tourna- ments spread all over the province. With the advent of winter, indi- cations are that a bumper hockey and curling season will be enjoyed. CLIFFORD STONE. OF ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., | WINS FIVE MILE RACE (By Associated Press) St. John's, Nfld., Nov. 19--Clit- ford Stone of St. John's, Newfound- land's champion runner, won the five-mile race here last night in the fasy time of 27 minutes, eight and three-fifths seconds. George Irwin, | maritime five-mile champion and | winner of the recent Halifax road race was second. ARMY--2 | | CHALLENGE FOR | WORLD GOLF TITLE London, Nov. I~ Avail Compston, Hagen, | vesterday Britain, challenger U.S. professional for a match 1 few weeks to decide the championship the world. "I am willing to holes," Walter champion, of play Hagen 72 said Compston, "for championship and a substantial bet, with a percentage of gate receipts, or England," oCmpston said he was planning to winter in the United Sta- tes. MAN IN HOSPITAL | (Continued from page 1) wan:on and furious ving, wilful negligence The force of the impact automobile threw Wilson wagon in such a way that pavement with his and while his | not badly injured, the \ 84, head will be taken this mine whether or not the skull fractured, An examination alen di closed that two of his ribs were 11 tured and that other were received. Wilson an uncons sate for an hour, and was in a s condition practically all night improving slightly this morning. RN. E. McMullen, who is the at | lending physician, states that while 1 fractured skull is possible, he does not congider it a probable condi- d or by with the from the he struck head and shoulder i injuries about, An x-va) to de ter | it his are (lite sevore alternoc ac- minor injurie remained i about hal mi-conscion ious tien rage, who iocal married 15 a ! man, appeared hefore Magistrate A . Hind this morning -'o answer him ind He nst marily, count, been drivi 'oad, on the street (hat he had not seen his wagon un- til within a very few fee!, His wind- shield was steamed un so he did not have very good vision of the road, and that there were no lights on the wagon. His brakes, he also admitted, were no' in first elass working or- der, Page wag drivinz an Oakland sedan, with license number 296-249, The crown attorney, J. A, McGibhon, nleaded guilty stated that in the the had the and to Wilson centre of tracks, car who condueted the prosecution, ask- ed for a remand for sentence to en- | able the court 'o see just what the extent of Wilson' injuries | Magistrate Hind and re- | maning ize for sentence until Mon- I day, December 5th. The wacon and team are 'he prop- {ert of James and Son, 53 Prince street, by whom Wilson is employed as a teamster. One horse was injured agreeing poe] ouite badly, sustaining a bad fracture | in the hip and being badly cut. It is not known as vet whether or not the animal will have to be destroyed. SEVERAL RUNNE recopmized as the match play champion | within the next | the workl's | side | match to be played either in America | BRIER IS HELD | overshadow He is | to | the charge that had heefll preferred | eleeted to he triegysum- | are, | 4 ~ Sport Briefs RAVINAS 4, WINDSOR 2 Toronto beating Windsor last night at Ravina Rink in the opening of the Canadian Professional Hockey League in this city, the Toronto Ravinas made dred fans who saw three: periods of fast hockey, with plenty of body- checking and ether thrills. © The score was 4 tof2, and Kavinas outlayed their opponents nearly all through the piece. The Border Cities team fathomed the blocking tactics of the Ravina defense, | and scored a couple of goals in the | carly stages of the final period, but this was Windsor's only threat. Ra- vinas possessed more speed and neater team play, and only fine work by Paddy Farrell, in the Windsor goal, kept the West End team from running up a larger total of goals, MILLIONAIRES WON AGAIN Kitchener, Nov. 19 -- Professional hockey opened here last night with the Kitchener team winning 2 to 1 in a game that went into overtime, the winning goal coming from the stick of Vic: Ripley. The victory was the s ond siraight, and the locals, one of the new teams in the league, are now lead- {ing the loop. PLAYER UECLARED "OUT" Pittsburg, Nov. 19--John Morrison, burg National League Baseball Club in mid-scason, has been placed on the ineligible list, it became known terday. ; | Morrison was at first suspended, and then declared ineligible' when he ig- nored three notices to report to Mana- ger Bush, President Barney i aid. To obtain reinstatement, it pointed out, Morrison must make ap- plication through President John A. Heydler of the National League, and the case would eventually be referred to Commissioner K. M, Landis. | Ves - ORDER OF MERIT IN EDCUATION WILL BE CREATED BY QUEBEC Montreal, Nov. 18---Quebec is about to ereate the order of the "Merite Scolaire," to be awarded to 'those in the province who distin- guishh tHemselves in the cause named by the Department of Public Instruction to arrange the This will be Quebec's second or- dey that of the "Merite Agricole" being in force for rewarding those of outstanding achievement in agri- | culture, : YALE VS. HARVARD New York, Nov. 19--The traditional hattle Yale and Harvard to- day imbridge, with the Elis con- ident that will keep them at the top ht Eastern ¢hampionship heap, the rest of the gridiron the Atlantic seaboard. en activity along PROMINENT BOXERS SUS- Yi PENDED New Yeggk, Nov. 19--Two prominent JOXCTS, Dundee of Baltimore, rld's welterweight champion, and Jack Sharkey, heavyweight, were put under suspensions vesterday by the New York State Athletic Com- mission, the sting extracted from Sharkey's ban by the approval of his excuse of an mjured finger for not mecting Tom Heenan at Madison Square Garden last night. Jo Joston but was HOLD MONSTER BONSPIEL Toronto, Nov. 19-- Representatives of Toronto curling clubs met last nizht at the Victoria Club to discuss the ibility of a tremendous honspiel such as the famous Winnipeg tourney, There is every indication that the pro- posed "Toronto Bonspiel" will hecome aT ality, that it will rivat the great Winnipeg gathering in the course of one or two years, and that eventually it may surpass the Western Canada classic in point of entries at least, The tentative date of the inaugural hon- spiel is Feb, 20, and s eding days. CANADA MAY WIN Ottawa.--If tests to be conducted hy officials of the Royal Canadian Air Force at a plant in Montreal next week are successful, Canada will have won an international aviation race to | built the first efficient photograph air- plane. URGES MiRGE OF CHURCHES New York. Consolidation of the evangelical group of Protestant Churches in America was urged hy | Frank "A. Horne, vice-president of 1'ie Board of Foreign | Methodist Episcopal Church, bl = a big impréssion on the fifteen hun-! Pirate hurled, who deserted the Pitts- | Dreyiuss | was | of education. A sub-committee has been | details. | Missions of the] CLOUDY AND €OLD- : FOR RUGBY CLASSIC : (By f'anadian Press) Kingston, Nov. 19--Cloudy and cold weather with flurries of snow vrevail for the Canadian semdfmal between Queen's and Tigers which was expected to provide a most dra- matic gridiron battle of the year in Canaua this afternoon. : With the ground hard and slippery the Tig- ers, who arrived last night, were slight favorites, particularly with | | Batstone's ability to kick today doubtful. NO JUNIOR O. H. A. TEAM IN PORT HOPE Port Hope, Nov. 19--Port Hope will joet be represented by an OHA, jun- RE IN PAST - 4 2 --_-- . - SPORT SNAPSHOTS & he s Boxers residing in Oshawa, Bowmanville or Whitby or ip t rounding vicinity desiring to enter the Ontario. Regimental | scheduled to take place at the Armories here Wednesday evening, December 7, are requested to send their names into. the "Sporting Editor," The Oshawa Daily Times, as soon «x possible, Several have already been received. Application forms will he available at this office the ewrly part of next week. Well, this is Saturday, and the day of the hig game in the Lime- stone City. Right off the bat, the writer calls Queen's to win the contest for nothing can beat a good strong college spirit and that is what Queen's possesses, Won't say anything about the Harvard-Yale game, Kitchener Juniors to beat Hamilton in O.R.¥.U. Stratford beats St Thomas in same series. While V. T. S. have a nice team and even though they won the championship of the eastern secon this year, Hamilton Delta will win today's interscholastic fixture. Sarnia wins from Kitchener and Kitchener wins from Windsor in the other inter- scholastic games. How are these? Waich and see' ior team this season, according to a | decision reach®d at a well-attended ! i meeting of junior enthusiasts held here | last night. It was decidgl that a town ! | Junior league, composed of four teams, | | be formed, the league to be governen | I by the O.H.A. ryles. ! Since the organization of the O HA. | i Port Hope has been represented by a! unior team, but this season it was | { felt that there was not sufficient ma- | | terial to warrant an entry. Last year! | the youngsters were carried by the | | | |] intermediate team, in regard to finan- i cial issues, etc. The local intermediate club will not | { be connected with the junior aggrega- | The officers of the town junior | tonight, George { | | | | tion, league, which were elected are follows : President, | Gould; Vice-President, A. B. McDon- ald; second Vice-President, Roy Hunt; | Secretary-Treasurer, Harold Tosher; Executive Committee, Mose Hewson, Jurnham and J. Mathewson, C.F. MASTERAAN DIES INONRON Former Liberal Minister was | Widely Known Jour- nalist | London, Nov. 19.--Rt. Hon. Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman, former Libe minister, afd widely known journalist, died at a nursing home in! London this week, Charles F. G. Masterman, who was] born in 1873, played a prominent part | | | as R. in the political life of England early in the present century. He tered parliamentary elections member of constituencies first 'eu- in 1903, parliament in the fol- and served for various lowing years He became Under-Secretary of State | in the Home Department in 1909, and | | Financial Secretary to the Treasury ia | 11912, serving until 1914, when he be- | came Chancellor of the Duchy of Lan- caster | He served as director of Wellington House (propaganda department), dur-| ing the war and only recently, answer- ing certain charges, declared that Brit- ish war propaganda was truthiyl. Of late vears his political power peen waning and he was defeated | the parliamentary elections of 1924. | He the author of many i on conditions the British Empire, | [and on Great Britain's part mn the | Great War. y had | in | | Wits books | ol | of Everybody that craves excitement is goirg 15 Toronto Arena Gar- dens next Wednesday night to. see the Oshawa Shamrocks and Park- dale hook up in a Sportsman's Pat ioti¢ Association fixture. Oshawa is in the best of condition and while a keen contest is assurred, there seems Lo be no reason under the sun why our boys can't come across with a win, Harry Watson will he able to put the finishing touches on the game for he is coaching the locals, Harry ought to know the weak- nesses of the Parkdalers. Forgetting condition and half a hundred other things though, a large following will help the team not a little. There is nothing like a good crowd to cheer a team on to victory. Let's get down to the Queen City some way or another and do our' part. Wouldn't there be a lot of fun between Oshawa and Bowmanville fans should these two teams make the grade and enter into the S.P.A. finals ?. It hardly seems possibly, yet hockey is a game of surprises. Considerable interest is being evinced in this city and Bowmanville over the team's entry in the series, It will sure help tha 'little town over the bridge" as far as conditioning is concerned. There is nothing like a good game for getting the kinks out of the muscles. Bowmanville is in pretty fair shape, having taken indoor training eut at the Indus- tral Boys' Hoine and also at the Toronto rink. Among the several winter sports that provides amusement and recreation to hundreds of citizens of this community each week, is alley howling. This city is fortunate in having two academiés for in some cities, much larger than Oshawa, there is but one alley. Keen competition is being staged in the local leagues. One interesting feature about the ladi s" leagues is the fact that many who do not participate in any other sport set aside several evenings a week to howl, Quite true, the game is not outdoors, but there is usually a good brisk walk home and the exercise in the game plus the walk outdoors does inestimable good to the body. The Qtratford Beacon-Herald says the officials of the Stratford A.A.A. will leave it to the O.H.A. to decide whether that city will have intermediate games in the big league this season. They. have asked that Stratford City League be considered as an O.H.A. group, the win- ner to go into the play-offs. "There are other centres in the same boat where pro hockey has made inroads on the hockey interest; and the O.H.A. will have to do something to keep its organization intact," savs the Stra'ford paper, which opines that "otherwise there will he a dropping-off in O.H.A. activities. It all sounds like blue ruin, but nevertheless it is visible," concludes our contemporary. There's some- thing wrong somewhere, The Classic City turned out its f 'antic thou- sands when the Red and White were winning O.H.A. championships but somebody held the bag $6,000 worth there last season. y I1 ARMY OF WELSH MINERS CONTINUE | TREK TO LONDON the British Govern- ards | Cecil's attack on ment's attitude to disarmament was-in the amouncement-of Rt. Hon. W. C. Bridgeman, First Lord of the Admiralty, in the House of Commons at aimos: the same hour that only cone oi the three cruisers of the 1927 program will be started at the present time. (Cable Service to The Times By Canadian Press) Slough, England, Nov. 19--The little army of Welsh miners march- | -- rm ing on London to present the casc | TORNADO CAUSES DEATH AND nuemployed miners started to- | DESTROYS PROPERTY day on the next to the last tramp, | EI NE with London only 18 miles away. | The marchers sleep tonight in the | fashionable London suburb of Chis- | | | | } | | Washington. -- A tornado, followed by two heavy reainstorms that drench- the city, struck two sections of Wash- ington and neighborhood this week, leavir;z in its wake at least one death, more than a score of injured and sev- eral million dollars' damage to nrop- erty. "ean, wick. Tomerrow they join a mass meeting and later met labor M.P's. | ANSWER FOR CECIL London.--Best answer for Viscount "ne NB. SLAYER STILL AVOID ARREST | & | Nehemiah Hudlin Defies | Police and Remains ! at Liberty | gow | Fredericton, N.B., Nov. 19.--Nehem- i jah Hudlin, one of the three brothers b wanted 1m connection with the shooting ! of Policeman Russell Hayward on a railway track near Ripples, Sunbury | County, on Wednesday morning wa: | still at large at a late hour on Wed- nesday night and no murder charge has been laid against Hudlin, held in custody here after being apprehended near the scene of the ambush from which Hayward was killed. { William H, Hudlin, the third brother, was still in custody on a technical charge of having aided and abetted the i escape of his brother Nehemiah, | Police officers in all the towns sur- | rounding the Sunbury county woods {into which Nehemiah Hudlin disap- | peared on Tuesday morning, are on the watch for the fugitive and if the in- | structions of the sheriff are carried out . he will be shot down i* he again offers { any resistance to arrest. | | The book jacket gets a dig from | Mr. Chesterton; he rips it up the | back, so to speak, as thus: | Our fathers to creed and tradition were tied, | They opened a book to see what was | insile; | And for various methods, they deem ! ed not the worst | Was to find the first chapter and look at it first; ! And so from thgefirst to the second i they passed Till in servile routine they arrived at the last. | But a literate age, unbenighted by creed, Can find on two boards all it wishes to read; the front of the somebody shot. | And the back of the cover will tell you the plot, For cover shows i. P.'s Meet Knights of Pythias held a very : enjoyable and profitable meeting lust evening at its regular session. ver) DOMINION GOVERNMENT INCOME TAX RETURNS Income Tax Act now requires that a proper system of books be kept by all business firms, The Oshawa Collection and Idemnity Co. Room 4, Bradley .Block, 20 Simeoe Street South, Oshawa Representing WILLIAM A. DAWE Income and Sales Tax Expert, 59 Victoria St., Toronto ; employed by Dominion Income Tax Department JRVICE-.COLLECTIQNS, BUSINESS CONSULTANTS, AUDITS CONDUCTED SIMPLEX ACCOUNTING SYSTEM (Copyrighted) KENNETH E. DEVITT, Manager Service Department Telephone 23 Forn PROMPT N o1. Watined In handy packs --or-------------- oF id * bia one is invited 6 the meeting and all visitors are cordiully welcome, »

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