£9 Af. ~ Lions Nip Whitby 'SPORTS report by Bill Fitsell : - A LION-HEARTED EFFORT-- Ang - Hockey's bid to monopelize the sports picture locally was turned ° aside this past week by a basketball squad which refused to lie down. - Minus a couple of theif stars, the Lions who are battling it out with Whitby in the: Oshawa District cage loop added many. games the Cawkermen headed ~ some up-and-coming cagers from the high school and proceeded to pull and play dead. 0 off.one of those whirl-wind finishes that Hollywood would have diffi- culty depicting, The locals were down four points (or-two baskets) - - with 60 setonds of play remaining amd managed to tie it up. A unique last minute double. penalty against both squads gave Port Perry their chance to prove coach Ivan Parkinson's reason for stressing the im¢ portance of -free throws and after the Panther's blew the chance the Lions in person of manager Jack Griffen, came through. Coming up off the feck like that and winning an important fixture when some gures the game was a sure loss, is an effort appreciated by all sports whether a basketball fan or not. to the Lions (who repeated the same trick in Whitby)!' May they continue to show that spark of spirit in the battle to represent Port -. Perry in Ontario Basketball Association Intermediate "C" class, i sources HUSKIES DRAW THE FANS-- Haliburton Huskies, that rugged band of blueshirts from the north, year at Memorial Gardens and the supporters who turned out weren't disappointed in the game despite Showing plenty of the old fighting spirit the Huskies checked furiously thrqughout and gave the customers a rousing brand of old-time game despite the chippy ice conditions . for that game incidentally weren't too good, but this was probably due to: the unseasonal week-end weather which didn't give icemaker Bev Kent a chance to put on a good flood let alone use the red and blue The Arena may be sporting a new scoreboard soon, so it is 'reported. Jack Starkey has contacted a tobacco firm that will supply a large hoard free of charge and one that shouldnt marr the well-kept appearance of the building. The rink definitely lacks a time: <. but Charlie Brignall's announcing the time of goals and penalties helps Mr, Phan get an idea of the minutes The arena board should make a definite step to obtain. a clock as the gardens is one of the few of its kind in the province drew the largest crowd of the the outcome. paint , . clock for the customers, too . left to play. without a. timepiece. JUVENILES JINXED-- Port.Perry's Juvenile "C" entry has béen running into tough luck in attempting to get into league action. First the Bolton game was called off last week and then on Monday night the scheduled contest with Bradford was forced to be Then over the week-end coach Ron Gohl's father passed away in Manitoba. We join with his many friends in-passing on condolences . « . 'Stouffville juveniles who come here Monday, showed they have a good club by beating Bolton. 6-3 led the 'young Clippers' with three gosls . the second hightest scoring team in the loop with 583 in nine games, However, the goals against mark is 494 . . . Aside to Bob (Oshawa Times) Rife--Nick Mroczek, a young Oshawa Grad forward does alright for his age but what about Port's Jack Owen--a league leader at 16. Jack incidentally has 126 points for ---- a 14.0°average. Mac Christie had 83 points for an 11.8 average until . + ."Woodville's young squad is here to-night and the Seniors must pick up some points or slip close to the cellar. On Friday night the locals travel to Cambray for a battle with the for an average of 57. the puck season started, Taniblyns and come back here next Tuesday with the sfime Cardinals . Reg Foster, the Greenbank sports enthusiast, is reported to have made. the best rink-long 'dash of the night during the Uxbridge Community league games in. Sunderland Mopday. Reg made hig appbarance when - | stand of the season. . ms led back the last-second winning goal f which would have 'hroken the 2-2 deadlock with Sunderland. the timekeepe other game Uxbridge shoved home over Utica . , . END, senior entry doubled the score on the defending -champion Sutton Green- conk -Knickerbockers. vious games away the club claimed a PERT A] SSE AN 1 rnd) Sera dni a - PORT PERRY HAVING TROUBLES Port Perry Redmen are having 'road troubles'. ; In familiar surrounding the ORHA second. three goals. shirts and trounced the luckless Cobo- "Port 2-0. In three pre-| ° kies. With a total of five points in as The teams battled on even terms until Couch fired the second of Davie added his second two minutes later and in the rough NL opti eion third period which saw eight penalties [12--Port Perry, D. Mark (Me handed out the home team outscored [13--Port Perry, K. Mark . : (Christie). »athnssinaqhiaiais 1.18.20, 14--Sutton, J. Taylor (Holborn)..19.07 Penalties--Christie, Howey, Dunn. - Port Perry -- goal, Sweetman; de- fence, Christie, Howey, Carnegie, Van- Camp; forwards, -D. Mark, Wallace, McKee, Till, Hunter, K. Mark, Healey, poifit on a split with. Haliburton Hus- and blitzed 7-3 by Keswick Comets. - locals were expected to take both games as they appeared superior to the 'shirts' here and were regarded better than the eighth-place Comets. .| However, the Lake Simcoe' villagers forgot to read the Port press clippings and proceeded to lower the boom. Against Ellis Pringles' men Port Per- t ry built up a good lead and then withered in the last minutes--blowing a four goal lead. In Keswick the So this week it's hats off 8s they went back to their-old habit of.a bad first period, recovering in the second, and faded in the rugged last . + Ice markings J a ES, period. had a big night while the Don Mark- Wallace-McKee trio had little success || going either way. Glen Till, the hard- working centreman from Greenbank, turned the hat-trick and Jerry Hunter also fired three besides assisting on others, Ken Marks' two markers com- pleted the scoring for that combina- tion which-accounted for eight of the ten goals, Don Mark and Meredeth | MéKee were the other marksmen, For the winners Jim "Skip" Taylor was poison, with five goals, three coming in the last ten minute outbreak which turned the locals 10-6 lead into a deficit. Till, Ken Mark and Glen 'VanCamp were the goal-getters in- Keswick but that was far from enough as the homesters fired four goals in the last 34 minutes with not a reply from Port Perry. The Comets took a 3-1 lead in "| the first but Abe Cawker's lads tied it up in-the first 80 seconds of the postponed due to ice conditions. in the. league opener, Bill White . ., Lion hoopsters are the hinterlands of North to York County over the week-end "and came {home clean--scalped 12-10 by Sutton Barring unforseen circumstances the locals didn't seem to have it all night | The Redmen's alleged . second. line. Clark, Davie Rye; forwards, Burrows, Peters, " Henry, G. Clarke," Huntley, Couch, McLaughlin, -Allter, Smith, First Period-- : TT, AD 1. Keswick, Davie (Rye) 2. Port Perry, Till (Howey) ...... 1.45 3. Keswick, Burrows (McLaughlin-Couch) ......... 0.04 4. Keswick, Couch (Davie) ........ 16.10 Penalties, none | - Second Period-- 5. Part Perry, K. Mark ('l'll) .... .50 6. Port Perry, VanCamp ............ 1.20 1. Keswick, Couch ...ccoooovvvivnnni, 6.36 8. Keswick, Davie ...................... 8.36 Penalties, Davie, Hunter, Me- Laughlin Third Period-- . 9. Keswick, McLaughlin ............ 3.25 10. Keswick, Couch ..............co...... 10.36 Penalties, McLaughlin, Rye, R. Clark, McKee 3, Healey, G. Clarke. Port Perry -- Goal, Sweetman; dé- fence, Howey; Christie, VanCamp, Heard; forwards, I). Mark, McKee, Wallace, Tilly K.. Mark, Hunter. Sutton -- Goal, Holder; defence, Dunn, Lonergan, Beattie, Cole, C. Brady; forwards, Anderson, Learoyd, J. Taylor; Brett, Lockie, Griffith, Hol- born, : 5 Firdt' Period. 1--Port Perry, Till (K. Mark-Hunter) ...... 3.65 2--Port Perry, McKee - (Till-VanCamp) ........ . 418 3-- Sutton, Learoyd : 4--Port Perry, Hunter (Heard-Till) .............. 10.10 6--Port Perry, K. Mark .............. 19.16 Penalties--none. Second Period-- 6---Sutton, J. Taylor (Holboin).. 7.--Sutton, Brett ........................ 3.12 4.45 8--Port Perry, Hunter' Haliburton's: -hard - rock "Huskies swept in from the north Tues. night and left with two points as the ORHA "-]'Senior Redmen lost their first home It was a tough loss for Abe Cawk- er's lads as the largest gallery of the year was on hand but the fierce check- ing northerners were full value for their 7-4 win. Port hammered home Greenbank _ In the © two last minute goals to win 5-3 In: Last Seconds - Port Perry Lions came through with --a-triple victory here Friday night as they- nipped Whitby Panthers 57-66 win in a thrilled-pack last minute finish, r= Forced to postpone a game earlier in the week due to the shortage of play- ers, coach Ivan Parkinson joined five high school cagers with two veterans and went to take the game by the nar- rawest of margins and undisputed pos- sion of third place over the Panthers, It. was a big win for the regulars and the other basketball enthusiasts as it assured them of at least a tie for third in their battle with Whitby who are the only Intermediate "C" class team in the Oshawa district loop. Down four points with 60 seconds to go the Lions roared from behind to tie. on Bud 'Warriner's basket and in the dying seconds a double roughing penalty was called, Whitby took their two tries and missed and Jack Griffen stepped forward and sank the winner but Warriner had to come through in "the last second -of -play to -stop--a- Whitby thrust at the basket. In the slow first quarter the Pan-. thers elawed out a 7-6 lead and held the same two point margin (19-17) at the half. The Ports began to fly in the _ third, outscoring the visitors 21-17 and #6ved the winners in-the hectic final hh despite--a 22-18 edge by. Whitby. ; Jack Owen pushed his season's mark to 108 and the top of the scoring race with a fine 17-point effort newcomer Johnny Waldinspérger sank 18, 'while Warriner clicked for a dozen .and Norm Haugen hooped 11. Griffen added five. Doug Hayes and Gary "* Lawrence 'made up the shorthanded, =but determined local side. Milt Jordan led the losers with 17 points and An- 88. : High single marks per team (in- derson added 18 and Procunier 10, - - .| the visitors shook. off the affects of the two-houi trip but after that they set up as close a checking game as seen here in some winters. The spiri- Bowling Banter The leadership of the men's bowling league continued in a deadlock last week as the pace-setting Whiz-Bangs | four goals was scored by a forward. and Silverwoods had to be content| A Lingssy Jinind PL "B" Herb Baker, led the Huskies from With two points each, behind the 2.0 deficit with a dash in the first 27 seconds of the second. Ken Carnochan combined with "Hust. ling-Herbie" for the equalizer and that was it. Mark Sehefee sank an- other and Carnochan also soloed after Glen Van Camp blazed home a long low one for the home side for his second goal. : Mac Christie, who played n strong bottled up the locals the rest of the Stars upset the W-B's to tighten their 'grip on third place: with 33 pts., eight back of the leaders while Blow Kings were' anything but that in tak- ing the "Mud Cats". Has Beens clip- ped Dodgers 6-2 to move into fourth place tie with Hilltops who were ed- ged 4-3 by the improving Meteors. Knitters took two points from Lucky Strikes and Peels were whitewashed by Sevenaires who jumped into sixth spot. with the Dairy hoys, one mark up on Blow Kings and Dodgers. Frank Hastings spilled the pins for the high triple honours with 791 and his high single of 822 was four better than, Maurice Jeffery's 318. 'Top-triplers' for each team were: Bruce Beare 716, Art Panabaker 694, Stan Bruton 769, E. Hutchinson 738, Harry Mark 671, Roy Cornish 842, C. A. Glass 668, Gord" Robertson 710, Gord Heaver 681, Ron Middleton 677, Art Eden 706, Bill Beare 744 and Storey Beare Howie, tied it up 4-4 early in the 3rd but Haliburton hustled back with Bud Dart clicking from Carnochan and Mark Schell adding another. Centre- man Carnochan completed his hat trick at 15,04 for the second Huskies' gonl with the Ports serving time. It was a rough night again for the 'D. Mark-Wallace-McKee trio as they 'were held scoreless' although Ron did assist on Van Camp's first period goal, Glen Till who opened the scoring in the first earned an assist on Van two in the first 120 seconds before ted blueshirts, despite the chipped ice, way--so much so that only one of the. game on the rearguard with Barry |- Huskies Hammer Porls at Home Keith Sweetman. came through with a good effort- between the pipes and almost drew one of the penalties in the rugged third canto.' Leon Smith of -Sutton handed out five of the cight penalties to the locals. Rugged Joo Iles who played a strong game on the blueline drew one of the visitor's sentences. Officials--Leon Smith and Bill Harrison. - First Period - 1--Port Perry, Till 1.27 2--Port Perry, Van Camp (Wallace) 2.00 Penalties, Hunter Austin, "Second Perlod 3--Haliburton, I. Baker (Carnochan) 27 4--Haliburton, Carnochan (Baker) |. 6.42 - 5--Haliburton, Scheffee 17.58 6--Port Perry, Van Camp (Till- Healey) 16.40 7--Haliburton, Carnochan 16.40 Penalties, McKee, Iles. Third Period 8--PFort Perry, Christie 3.66 9--Haliburton, Dart (Carnochan) 8.21 1 10--Haliburton, Schell (Robertson) S12.24 11--Haliburton, Carnochan 16.04 Penalties, Howey," Van Camp, Ti, Brohm. ; BROOKLIN KIDS HERE FRIDAY Port Perry bantams and midgets will meet two of the hest minor teams in the district Friday night when they tangle with Brooklin. The locals, coached by Joe Fowler and Jack Brit- nell are prepping for. competition. in O.M.H.A. next month and the games shold be keenly contested, The ac- | tion starts at seven bells, Camp's second as -did Bob Healey. cluding handicaps) read like this: Bill Beare 2756, A. Eden 308, Lew Burnett 230, Ron Gohl 267, Gord Mark 270, M. Jeffery 318, H..Mark 249, Merv. f DeNure-229, A, Panabaker 261, Bruce Beare 316, S. Bruton 200 and Bruce Hull 274. : "BRONCHIAL COUGH Are you kept awake by a nerve-racking bronchial cough? Is im #0 tightly packed in your bronchial tubes, no amount of coughing seems able to dislodge {t? Templeton's RAZ-MAH capsules are especially made to loosen phlegm, so it p comes away easily and you are rtileved of PORT PERRY coughing and wheezing. -Max for Quick Telief, 65¢, $1.38 at druggists, B44. - - Summer Fresh All Year Round i "York Frosted Foods ' : FANCY QUALITY FROZEN FOODS OFISH ® MEATS e POULTRY e : CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING CAWKER BROS. "THE FAMILY BUTCHER" ON THE ROAD (K. Mark) .......ccoooevnnnns 6.1 Third Period. 2 Keswick--goal, Winch; defence, R. 22--Sutton, J. Taylor, = Penalties--none, TTY . bo ARIMA LS EF BEL 9---Sutton, Bret (Learoyd) ...... 8.23 10--Port Perry, Hunter we 9014 11--Sutton, Dunn .......: ...11.68 Port e€)15,20 15--Port Perry, Till :( Hunter) vor 1.36 20---Sutton, Griffith, (F. Taylor) 18.46 21 Sutton, Learoyd (., Taylor) 17.26 Sa 4 8 16--Port Perry, Till... 2.10 | 17--8utton, J. Taylor (Holborn) 3.80, 18--Sutton, Brett (Learoyd) 010407] w 19-=Sutton, J. Taylor 4 (Holborn-Griffith) ....13.00 PORT PERRY Memorial Gardens WEEKLY PROGRAM TONIGHT, (Thursday, Jan. 22) ORHA SENIOR HOCKEY, 8.30 Waoadville vs. Port Perry. FRIDAY, Jan, 23-- : -OMHA EXHIBITION, 7 p.m. Bantam and Midget Brooklin vs, Port Perry SATURDAY, Jan, 24-- 10 am. to 2 p.m--Minor Hockey 2-4 pm.--Public Skating 8-10 p.m.--Public Skating MONDAY, Jan. 26-- ~OMHA JUVENILE "C", 8.40 pn. Stouffville vs Port Perry TUESDAY, Jan. 26-- ORHA SENIOR--8.30 p.u. CambFay vs. Port Perry WEDNESDAY, Jan. 28-- 8-10 p.m.--Public Skating THURSDAY, Jan. 29-- 3-4 p.m. Pre-School Skating 4-b p,m.-- Public School Skating "PORT PER AT THE HIGH SCHOOL | * DANCING ~ *BINGO ip © *ENTERTAINMENT PERRY LIONS = "GALA NIGHT ~ Friday, February 20 3 SPECIAL DRAW for Thoroughbred COCKER SPANIEL on Firedome 8 DeSoto Get Yours Now! ~ CAR DRAW at Midnight LIMITED NUMBER OF TICKETS I PROCEEDS T0 COMMUNITY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL STOKELY'S CREAM STYL _ 20 oz, tin 20 oz. tin--2 for 27c. . 28 oz 1 BRIGH'I'S CHERRIES - 15 oz. GLENWOOD FRUIT COCK | COLLEEN CHOICE CORN, Cream Style : : 20 oz. tin--2 for 27c¢. CLARKE'S PORK & BEANS : 20 oz, tin--2 for lec. "CHERRY -VALLEY-PUMPKIN--- IX CORN : 15 0z. tin--2 for 29c¢. KING'S CHOICE TOMATOES go 2 for.37c. STOKELY'S TOMATO JUICE ; 10 for $1.82 10 for $1.29 in--2 for lle. in--2 for 33¢. TAIL 15 oz. tin--2 for 39¢. HEINZ PORK & BEANS ......... BIRDSEYE FROZEN ORANGE JUICE ~ PINK GRAPEFRUIT ........ a HOMATOES ......iuiivivestiar sie FLORIDA ORANGES, large size, doz. 43c. FRESH LETTUCE, CELERY, | CABBAGE, SPINACH, at market prices WESTON'S 1 Ih. CORONATION Pkg. of Cookies, with coupon inside for color- ful Booklet, "Our Queen is Crowned" GOLD SEAL SALMON; Y Ib. tin ........ 43c. SEA LORD COHOE SALMON = Va-lhe tin 27e. ...2 tins 35¢.. 2 tin 46¢c. ... 3 for 23c¢, carton 23c. 57c. House Furnishings PLASTIC, embossed... G9¢. yd. PLASTIC DRAPES $2.00 pr. VENETIAN BLINDS, Airlume, $1.95 Steel--white or eggshell WALLPAPER---New 1953 Patterns 28c¢. a roll and up CONGOWALL, 69¢, ft, 51 in wide. MARBOLEUM TILE, 15¢. and 20¢. ea. "WINDOW SHADES © 20e., 95c., $1.50 and $1.89 JASPE LINOLEUM TILE, 26¢, each i . PHONE 29 1 -- CURTAIN TRACK Feestverrenie J9¢. ft. } Phone 43 | GOLD SEAL CONGOLEUM, 90c. square Yard REXOLEUM ......... Hhe. square yard LINOLEUM FLOORS Prices quoted complete or free instruction BROCK & SON a L pea . + . sr Port Perry - oy 1 No SH ie EERE ER . "Aa VR a A Ne ag Lr N= WT Kap