PACE FIGHT THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1940 Today's Soorting Features GM Juniors Please Fans in Exhibition Game Oshawa Srs. Made Good Showing at N. Falls Maple Leafs Down Bruins 4 to 1 at Boston x SPORT NEWS x Today's Spo ' Canadiens Tie With London Club in First AAI ~ ~ ~ rting Features Black Hawks 4.4 Game Here Tonight Players in City League to Be Selected | | GM Seniors Need Win Tonight Here Against London "Streamliners" Newest Entry In Senior 0.H.A. Peppy Players Homesters in the Cellar, Visitors One Game Up; Real Scrap Anticipated Monday nights being Senior O.H.A nights at the Ospawa Arena, and tonight being Monday night, adds up to the fact that London "Streamliner," the O.H.A.'s newest entry will be the opposition to the luckless G.M. Men at the local ice palace. This game is needed badly by both teams and a real scrap should arise from the drop of the puck London has won only one game this season so far and that was their surprise defeat of the Toronto Marlboros right in Maple Leaf Gardens. Since that time the Sireamliners have been jn reverse and Jerry LaFlame, their popular coach, is worrying no end. The Oshawa G.M. Men are yet to win a game, but make no mis- take, the boys are geiting better and better every time out. Friday night in Niagara they fought the highly touted "Brights" to the final whistle and only were nosed out 3 to 1. Harry McQuestion gets hard- er to beat every time out and the defense has tightened up Immens- ley. London "Streamliners" will bring many new faces to the O.H.A. with their team and a few familiar ones who have been missed They have a formidable team on paper and showed plenty of fight and pepper in their first couple of games. An old Oshawa favourite "Red" Geddes is one of the pepper pots of the team and "Whitey" Kowalski the Kitchener boy is anotner. Dunc. Galbraith and Ilo Marzo are two more better known players, Hank D'Amore, who really burnt up the ice for Stratfords good Junior team of a few years ago is playing and along with the Stapleford brothers form a dangerous line. George Brown tends goal in able fashion and "Ripper" Radiff is a defense stalwart who is making the league forwards take notice. Show Improvement Oshawa's senfor O.H.A. entry showed much improved form on Friday despite the fact that they lost the game. The final score was 3-1 for St. Catharines but the lo- cal boys feel it could just as well have been 3-1 for them, if they had got the breaks. Two Oshawa goals that looked okay were disal- lowed by the arbitér. Don Hodges the new right-winger was going great guns in his first appearance for the locals, and promises to be a real asset to the club. The stage is set for' the Oshawa G-Men to turn in their first win of the current season tonight before the home crowd. Once they have tasted victory, it is believed the local puck-chasers will be hard to In the game Friday Covert was erroneously credited with the as- sist cn Thompson's counter. Har- ris actually made the assist on the play, but a change of sweaters ap- parently fooled the score-keeper. Saints Whitewash The "'Streamliners" 86. Catharines, Nov, 18--St. Cath- arines Saints snapped their three- games losing streak in the O.H.A. Senior "A" series by trimming Lon- don Streamliners, 6 to 0, here Friday night before 1,200 fans. The Saints turned in their best display of the season and led from start to finish. Rossini gave the homesters the lead with the only goal of the first period. Heximer and Hastie counted in the middle stanza to make it 3 to 0 and in the final frame, Backer scored twice and Mundrick once to complete the total. London battled hard throughout but couldn't cope with the faster locals. Penalties cost them two goals. London--Goal, Dunn; defense Taylor, Allen, centre, Kowalski; wings, Marzo, H. Stapleford; subs, Stoddard, Hales, C. Stapleford, Geddes, Butler, Galbraith, Legg, Damore, McLeod. Bt, Kitts--Goal, Forder; defense, Backor, West; centre, Reynolds; wings, Pilous, Mundrick; subs, Grant, Massey, Forgie, Hastie, Hex- imer, Rossini, Rombough, Mocha, Coupland. Referee--Duke McCaffrey, Toron- to. GUILTINAN'S CHAMPION SHOE SHOP Its Cheaper. Longitudinsl i a] . Ing Invisible ni le Ss) ~~ New military issue § made to measure, "11 BOND EAST ; PHONE 1216 - Collect; Deliver Sports Roundup By EDDIE BRIETZ Louisville, Ky., Nov. 18.--(AP)--' The Colonels down here are tab- bing whirlaway and Bivan Station as two good ones to take a flyer on in the Kentucky Derby winter book . . . the New York Boxing Commission probably will suspend Al Davis for repeatedly fouling Fritzie Zivic the other night, but Broadway is betting that Al will be reinstated in less than six months and permitted to fight Zivic again --for a $100,000 gate. Entertainment Dept. Ray Dumont, president of the National Semi-Pro Basebai! Con- gress, has presented a season pass to every guy who drew No. 158 in the selective service draft . . . Now all Ray has to do is to take his ball teams around to the vari- ous camps so the boys can see them. Ragtime News Review Toot that whistle! Ring that bell! Dartmouth almost stopped Cornell! Princeton barely beat the Yales by letting Peters tote the malls, And did John Harvard go to town in winning 14-0 from: Brown? . + « By holding Navy to a tie, Col- umbia showed the skeptics why a lot of folks still have the notion they're the gem of any ocean . . . Just hearken to that shout arising --"Three cheers for de-emphasiz- ing!" What a dizzy football day for addicts in the US.A, for take our word, it was no fluke wren Caro- ling upset Duke; nor when Iowa leaped to fame by Frealting the mighty Notre Dame. That Boston College-Georgetown bout was the hardest fought of all, nc doubt, but we think Stanford rates a cheer for staying in the upper 'ier. And don't forget that Ramblick Wreck that's better known as Goergia Tech . . . Hurry, Watson, fetch that shot. A lot of guys are on the spot. Odd To The Aggies And to the Texas Aggius We give a salutation. It looks as if none will stop them Unless it's graduation. The National League new motion picture, "Winning Baseball" will be previewed in New Vork tomor- row , . . Bobby Feller. who has been taking boxing lessons from Lee Savold, has wired for three ringsides to the Billy Conn-Savold fight . . . ~ What has become of Galento? Well, right now he's nursing an infected fi::gzer. Today's Guest Star Bob Phillips, Birmingham Age- Herald: "In turning professional, Miss Alice Marble will be suspected by many persons of merely making it official Juvenile League Names Officers Leon Osier was elected president of the Oshawa Juvenile Hockey League for the 1940-41 season at the annual meeting of the League held Wednesday evening last at the Genosha Hotel, In view of the en- thusiasm shown at the initial meet- ing, the league is looking forward to a most successful season. The complete slate of officers elected for the season include the following: Past Prestcent W. Branch; President, L. Osier; Vice- President, F. Black; Secretary, W. Campbell; Treasurer, 8. Ferguson: Property, Ray Trew; Referee-in- Chief, J. Childerhouse; Time Keep- er, C. Hubbell; Statistics and Pub- licity, G. Campbell; Executive, Con- sists of 1 Representative frem Each Sponsor. Harold Luke outlined some of the highlights of the Ontario Juvenile Association annual meeting held in Toronto, November 2. of which the Ochawa delegate was elected 2nd vice-president. : It was decided to call a meeting at Centre Street School on Novem- ber 19, for all boys interested in playing hockey. HOCKEY'S BIG 7 (By The Canadian Press) Three players--George Allen and Mush March of Chicago and Syd Howe of Detroit--shared first place today in the National Hockey League point scoring race with seven points apiece. Behind them, in an- other tie, were Syl Apps and Gordie Drillon of Toronto Maple Leafs, who each 'have six points. Another point away were Bill Carse of Chicago and Pete Langelle of Toronto, dead- locked at five points apiece. G. ' Allen Chicago ........5 March, Chicago . v3 Howe, Detroit ........1 Apps, Toronto ........2 Drillon, Toronto ......2 Langelle, Toronto ....2 Pts. W. Carse, Chicago ,...1 Football Union playdowns. Hamilton Trims | Sailors 5-2 to | Head Sr. | 0.HA. | Hamilton, Nov. 18--Hamilton Do. | fascos, sparked by the speedy Brady - Fritz - Shillington line, is rapidly establishing itself as the best | line in the ranks of the senior | O.H.A, leaped into undisputed lead- | ership of the league at the Barton | Street Arena Friday night by a 5-2 | victory over the Port Colborne club It was Hamilton's fourth straight triumph. Over 3,000 roaring fans witnessed the piece, which was the best home. | game of the two played here in the | still young season, and the tilt was marked by its speed, the brilliant stick-handling and playmaking of | Doug Fritz, the bespectacled centre ice player and the rugged defense | staged by 'Leo Lamoureux, star last | season of the Port Colborne Flyers. Hamilton started the game minus the services of Marshall and Godin, both defensémen, who are on the | injured. list, and Lamoureux and | Sherry were forced to play the en- | tire sixty minutes with but a few moments. rest for each, the relief coming from Bill Dinning, who was one of the few of last year's Dofas- cos to make the grade with the Redding-coached team this year However, Bill Allan, Port rear- guardsman, was dumped heavily by | Woodward in the first period and | left the ice for the balance of the game. This evened up the defense | a bit. Port Colborne opened the scoring, Thompson hammering the rubber | in past Jack Eley on a pass from McKelvie. This was the only score | in the first period, although Sar- gent, in goal for the losers, was forced to stop plenty of hard shots during the session. Swanson tripped Brunnell at the end of the first period and Port Col- borne started the second period a man short. Hamilton started to turn on the heat and scored two goals within 41 seconds of each other, Fritz getting the first and Shilling- ton the second. Sticks started to ride high and players were dumped with a fre- quency that pleased the crowd im- mensely., Lamoureux got his first rest after thirty straight minutes of hockey, but Sherry stuck on the job with Dinning as his assistant. At 18:50 of the second period Brady stole the puck of Swanson when the big Port defenseman was standing still and passed to Fritz who had nobody to beat but Sar- gent and he did it in a truly artis- tic fashion to put Dofascos up 3-1. In the last period Laroche banged a hard shot at Eley and the Hamil- ton Goalie's legs spread wide as he saved. He was still off balance when Fitzgerald scored on the rebound. The Brady-Fritz-Shillington line made the score read 4-2 five min- utes later, the actual scorer being Fritz again. Shillington scored the fifth Dofasco goal in the last thirty seconds of play on a pass from Brady. which SYRACUSE GIVES PORTER HIS OUTRIGHT RELEASE Syracuse, N.Y, Nov, 17.--C. M. Schneider. president of Syracuse Chiefs Club in the International Baseball League, announced in a telegram received here the outright release of Dick Porter as man- ager and Dan Taylor as playing coach of the team, Schnidler, said at Fort Lauder dale, Fla, where the team trains. that a new pilot will pe selected from among five unidentified candi- Balmy Beach Whips Sarnia in First of O-R.F.U. Toronto's Balmy Beach, only unbeaten rugby team in the | fense with the soldiers keeping the score down until late in the east, whipped the 2-26th Battery team from Sarnia 12-0 here |game. This piciure shows Don Crowe, triple threat Beach back- Saturday afternoon, in the first game of the Ontario Rugby | fielder, making yardage around the end of the Sarnia line. Beach carried most of the offen- | The teams meet again next Saturday in Sarnia. sive all afternoon, but ran into a surprisingly tough Sarnia de- | Hamilton | Niagara Falls good at hunting as he is on the pitching mound, judging from this dates under consideration, Playdowns Leafs, Canadiens were held in check until the last five minutes. With the Leafs leading 4-0 on goals by Sweeney Schriner, Wally Stan- owski, Lex Chisholm and Syl Apps, Canadiens broke into the scoring picture. Jack Adams scored at 15:14 and less than two minutes later, Elmer Lach picked up their only other tally. Canadiens Tie In Chicago 4-4 18.--(CP)--Many | nice things have been spoken | about what the roskie-studded 1 Montreal Canadiens were going to do in the National Hockey League this season under their new coach, | Dick Irvin. Those words taken back unless the Flying | Frenchmen start to show they | have something more than last sea- son when they failed 1» make the playoffs. In five games so far this Canadian Press Staff Writer Chicago, Nov, NATIONATJLEAGUE wWoLT 1 » 18 15 11 9 5 10 7 TORONTO Chicago ..... Detroit ...... Rangers ....s Americans ... Canadiens ... 2 Boston .. wid 2 1 Sunday Results Toronto ... +4 Boson ... : Detroit v.uae 2 Americans ..... Riders, Beaches 'Leading in Prov. Football Union By SYDNEY GRUSON 0 2 2 2 1 may have to be 4 2 2 1 1 0 Shamrock Club Dance Tonight At Avalon The Shamrock Athletic Club's third Annual Dance and Frolic is scheduled for the Avalon Pavil- ion tonight. The members of the Shamrock Club have remained in training since the closing of the running season just for this one event and most of them will be on hand (minus spikes) As in other years the general public will be admitted to this evening's fun. Leafs Win 4-1 Against Bruins Taylor and Goldup Score 2 of 4 Nets Boston, Nov. 18. (CP)--The men | and horses of Conny Smythe have | made him a mighty pleased individ- ual these days As thoroughbreds are supposed to do, they're winning hockey games and races with great regularity. Smythe's Toronto Maple Leafs es- | tablished themselves as early pace- makérs in the National League with | a well-earned 4-1 victory over the winless Boston Bruins here last night. It was the fourth successive | victory for the Leafs and once again the team youngsters scintillated. | Saturday night in Toronto, the | Leafs beat Moatreal Canadiens 4-2. | While all this was going on,' Smythe's Sir Marlboro romped to | victory Saturday in the feature race | at the opening day of the Bowie | race meet. Friday, the Toronto | sportsman's Second Helping won the | $10,000 added Bowie Handicap at | Pimlico. Both horses raced to surprise vic- | tories but the Leaf's feats weren't | exactly that. They've been flying of | late and were so good last night that | the Bruising Bruins, who usually give the Leafs a rough time of it, | vear they have failed to come out The conclusion was general in {on top once, tying two and losing | eastern football circles today that | three Toronto Last night they divided pointe |tNe leads bullt up by 2 for the second time, coming from |Balmy Beach and Ottawa Roug behind in the third period to gain [Riders in the first stage of the play- a 4-4 tie with Chicago Black Hawks. [offs would be more than sufficient to carry them through to the sec That showing was better than the one they made the previous night tion final. That final was predict- ed as egrly as two months ago. when Toronto Maple Leafs defeat- The best in their unions on paper oChicago Saturday Results Toronto «+ 4 Canadiens .... 2 oRangers ..... 3 Detroit ........ 3 Future Games Tuesday--Americans at Rangers; Detroit at Boston. Thursday--Toronto at Americans; Canadiens at Detroit; Boston at Chicago. Saturday -- Chicago .at Toronto: | 0d them 4-2 never could get going. | It was the first stand of the sea- | | son for the Leafs on American ice | | and from the time young Wally Stanowski wound up on one of his rink-length rushes and deposited | the puck behind Frankie Brimsek, the visitors were in full command. | That goal came midway through | the. first period and Sweeney | Schriner added another midway The tie left Canadien: a point In front of the last-nlace Boston Bruins who have lost two games and tied one. Chicago shares second place with Detroit Red Wings, the | deadlock leaving the Hawks unde- 8 | feated in their last four games. 6 | Canadiens were trailing 2-0 early 6 | in the second frame bu! came roar- 6 ing back to knot the count in the 2 | third and then hold off powerful 2 | 0 Americans at Canadiens; Boston at Rangers. ers and Beaches justified the con- fidence by leading the Interprovin- cial and Ontario circuits, respective- ly, in the regular schedules. They |swep® aside any remaining doubts lin the first playoff games Satur- | day. The potent combination of Andy Tommy and Tony Golab led Riders [to a 12-1 victory over Toronto Argo- nauts at Ottawa while Balmy Beach crushed Sarnia Battery 12-0 at To- 1onto. Both series are on a total- points basis. For two quarters Argos had the best of play and a one-point lead over the eastern champions. Annis Stukus kicked them a point early in the game on a play that started out as an attempted placement field goal and became a straight punt when the bell was fumbled on the snap-out. Then Ross Trimble sent his dyna- mite twins into action and the tide turned. Pirst 'Tommy raced 50 yards to set up play on the Argo 20. Orville Burke shot a 10-yard pass to Tommy Daley, and Golab sent around the end for the touch- down converted by Tiny Herman. Long-distance kicking by Sam Sward brought three more points and Sward's superior punting even- tually carried them into position for Herman's field goal from placement. Argos, unable to cash in during the first half, didn't have the power to do much about it in the second. Even an inspired fight such as they put up in' defeating Ottawa 11-9 once this season could hardly make up the difference for Argos next Saturday. Ottawa has the better first stringers and, just as important, the better reserves, The Beach-Battery game was a hard-fought ground duel, featured by the air-tight defence of the To- ronto club. Sarnia had the ball in Beach territory only in the game's dying moments and it required two successive 15-yard penalties to carry gem to the Beach 33. A newly-developed quarterback sneak, in which Beaches fake a plunge of their ace, Frank Seymour. led. to the touchdown that sealed the verdict early in the first quarter. Johnny Manson, the quarterback, executed it perfectly and went 34 yards to the Sarnia two. from where he went over on second down on the same play. Bob Porter kicked a single in the second quarter and, after a lohg kicking duel, the Beaches broke O.H.A. SENIOR SERIES LT FP APls 0 0 24.9 10 6 15. 11 16 14 6 19 12 10 9 23 w + 4 2 Port Colborne 3 Marlboros 2 London... 1 St. Catharines 1 Oshawa ..... 0 4 0 Future Games Jack Quilty fired the tying goal Monday---Marlboros at Port Col- | for Montreal shortly after Ken borne; London at Oshawa. | Reardon beat Paul Go dman on a a a olo rush. A goal by Mush March and two by George Allen were rung Club To Select | up for the Hawks before Joe Benoit City League Players | retaliated for Montreal at 14:25 0 2 1 3 3 | Chicago attacks in the overtime | period. of the second period The Hawks took a three-goal | lead again less than five minutes | later when Doug Bently beat Bert Gardiner Canudiens c:me back and with 44 seconds left to play in the period, Tony Demers cut the lead to two goals. Reardon and Quilty did the only scoring for the remainder of the game In Saturday's game against the The manager of the City League Hockey Club requests that all boys intending to take a berth in the city league this season, appear at the arena on Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. This in- cludes all last season's players as well as new-comers to the great winter sport. Lefty Goes A Hunting before the season started, the Rid- | through the second pefore Centre Bill Cowley snared a quick one that | saved the floundering Bruins from a shutout. Four minutes later, elongated | Hank Goldup sent the Leafs two up again on a play with Gus Mark- er and Pete Langelle. Milt Schmidt was serving a minor penalty when Little Billy Taylor completed a five- man Toronto power attack by driv- ing the puck into the Boston cage. Taylor also earned an assist on Schriner's tally. Nick Metz and Bingo Kampman drew assists on Taylor's goal. Both Brimsek and Turk Broda were kept hopping in the scoreless third period. Gordie Drillon and Syl Apps made things especially hot for the young Boston netman. Only three minor penalties were issued during the game, two of them to Boston, Reggie Hamilton drew the lone Toronto penalty in the final frame. Agalnst the Canadiens at Toronto, the Leafs scored all their goals be-' fore the Montrealers came back with two in the closing minutes of the tilt. Jack Adams and Elmer Lach were the Montreal marksmen, with Lach showing as one of the best players on the ice. Stanowski, Taylor, Schriner and Jack Church were the Toronto scor- ers. For the latter three, it marked their initial scoring this seascn. BOSTON TORONTO Brimsek Broda Shewchux Hamilton Clapper Church Cowley Langelle Conacher Goldup Hill Wing Marker Boston subs--Schmidt, Bauer, Hollett, Crawford, Smith, Jackson, Wiseman, Cain. Toronto subs--Apps, Drillon, N. Metz, Schriner, Taylor, C:isholm. Officials--King Clancy and A. Smith. Goal Defense Defense Centre Wing First Period 1--Toronto, Stanowski assisted) No penalties. Second Period 2--Toronto, Schriner (Tay- lor, Hamilton) 3--Boston, Cowley 4--Toronto, Goldup gelle, Marker) 5--Toronto, Taylor (N. Kampman) ves Penalties--Hollett, Schmidt, Third Period No scoring. Penalty--Hamilton. (un- (Lan- i through to block a punt by Freddy Daws. in the fourth quarter. Reg. Turnball fell over the line after picking up the ball two yards out. This was the easiest of the three victories Beaches have secured over Sarnia this season. They should be able to add to their margin next Saturday. ws Vernon "Lefty" Gomez, Yankee pitching ace, seems to be just as picture; "Lefty" totes a nice size deer, which he feiled at 100 yards in the woods near Rangeley, Maine. "El Goofy's" hunting companion is Mrs. Gomes, the former june O'Day. She carries both guns and is beaming up at her famous spouse as they trudge toward home and a nice roast of venison, ; SAINTS WIN THIRD Minneapolis, Nov. 18 (CP)----St. Paul Saints won their third game in as many American Hockey Associa- tion starts this season by beating Minneapolis Millers 3-2 last night Ted Saunders scored all Saints' goals and Tustin both Millers, OSHAWA LOST 3-1 AT N. FALLS Niagara Falls, Ont, Nov. 18.-- Niagara Falls clicked in all departe ments here Friday night to record a 3-1 win over Oshawa in an O.H.A. senior "A" fixture. A crowd of 1,300 braved the stormy weather to be present. The Massecar-coached team force ed the play throughout and their back-checking was so effective that most of the G-Men thrusts were frustrated before the danger zone was reacned. The Falls' front line of Walton, Cooper and Bellinger - was the most impressive, McQuesten in the Oshawa cage, made many fine saves and in the second and third periods, was a big factor in blanking the home attackers. Sy Allan, Niagara centre, suffer- ed a sprained ankle early in the second period, and was out for the remainder of the game, The Fallsers did all their dame- age in the opening frame. Cooper took Walton's pass for the first. Bellinger scored next with Walton again providing the pass. Walton netted the third on Cooper's pass. Oshawa got in one close call in the middle frame, and Carey moved fast to save from Thompson. The lone counter for Tracy Shaw's team came in the last minute of the third iod, Thompson caging the disc on Covert's pass. OSHAWA--Goalg McQuesten; dee fense, Barnes, Daniels; centre, Ede mison; wings, Thompson, Carre Harris; subs, J. Cooper, Tisdale, Covert, Gamble, Peters, Hodges, Ritchie, Maundrell. Niagara Falls--Goal, Carey: de= fense, McAndrew, Astle; centre, Allan; wings, Morrison, Stuart; subs., Walton, Bellinger, H. Cooper, 'Stirling, Catlin, E. McCracken, Boston Macphail. Referee--F. W. Moore, Port Col- borne, First Perjod 1--Niagara Falls, Cooper (Walton) 2--Niagara Falls, Bellinger (Walton) eat Ta 3--Niagara Falls, Walton (Cooper) No penalties. Second Peried No scoring, Penalties--Stuart, Tisdale Third Period 4--Oshawa, Thompson (Covert) Penalties--McAndrew 2. Record Opening For Oshawa S'-i Club we The skiicz sciscn was unoffice ially opened yesterday when fifteen optimistic skiers took advantage of the three-inch fall of snow that cove ered the "Ridges", where the prope erty of the Oshawa Ski Club is sit= uated. Early in the morning the show was dry and skiing was as good as could be expected consider=- ing the depth of snow. Later in the forenoon the mild wind and occase ional bursts of warm sunshine softe ened the snow .and by one o'clock it began to rapidly disappear. However, a record was set. Nearly every year some skiing is done in November, but the date has been at the latter end of the month, Not for several years, and certainly not in the history of the club has skiing been enjoyed as early in the season as November 17. Here's the Smoke Treat You've Been Waiting Forl Here they are -- actual size! Ten cent value in each at 2 for 5 cents , 4 & Canada's newest cigar that has sold by the millions since its introduction. Try a Trump for its mellow mildness . . . for its delicate aro- ma . .. for its real Havana cigar flavour and satisfaction . , « and for its price. 7277 IN) Guarantee We guare antee that these ci gars today at two for y five cents contain Havana filler of the same quality as in higher priced cigars blended with fine ime ported tobaccos . + «+ «