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Oshawa Daily Times, 16 Dec 1940, p. 6

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PAGE SIX ee ------------ Ken Today's Sporting Features O.C.V.L Sr. and Jr. Basketball Schedules Out St. Kitts Down Dukes: Overlin Successfully Defends His Title Brights Sink Tars THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1940 x SPORT NEWS § 1 Today's Spo Former Kenora Jr, in GM-Men Play League Game in Port Colborne Osh. "Generals" Start Campaign Here Friday rting Featares Midst of N.H.L. Action Toronto Leafs Take Double Win from Chicago In Week-End Games PORT SNAPSHOT Geo. H. CameseLL, Sports Editor _, Oshawa Generals will open . their 1940-41 campaign schedule ere on their home ice, this _. Friday night, when Native Sons ._ will supply the opposition. Marl- ""boros and Guelph will also play "their opening games this week, «with Young Rangers and Native 'Sons as their opposition. a's LE ~-With the GM-Men playing away from home tonight and again on Friday, it means that the Junior opening game" will be the only big JApcal hockey attraction of the week so the fans can get their shopping done early, in order to be free Fri- day night, on + Pp L7:Did any of our Oshawa hockey vfans read Andy Lytle's comments Saturday concerning what various players have cost the Toronto Leafs. He pointed out that Hank Goldup yenly cost them $500.00 for "school sexpenses." Wouldn't Northern Vo- i cational school be surprised to learn that they have a "tuition fee" for certain students or could it be that ur, Lytle made a little slip and iadmitted that Hank wasn't really an '{amateur when he was playing in {Toronto. : * + 3 CONCERNING FORMER | OSHAWA PLAYERS: Don Wili- son, who wore an Oshawa Sen- for uniform one year, scored the winning goal for the New Haven Eagles last night as they down- ed the ramblers 5-4 . . . Buddy Hellyer scored a goal Saturday night as the Hornets beat. Buf- falo and last night both Buddy and Nick Knott got assists as Hornets lost in overtime to Cleveland Barons ... Nakina Smith scored two goals as St. Louis whipped Minneapolis (his former team) Johnny Thompson scored four goals as Telegram upset Red Indians 5-2 « « «» Jud McAtee got an assist Saturday when the Caps routed »s= Hershey 5-2 . . JRoss Kninfel, Z who starred with the first Osh- % awa "Generals," against St. & Boniface Seals, suffered a pos- # sible broken leg yesterday after- " noon when the Washington % team played in New York ... # Elmer Kreller (you remember * Eimer?) scored the only goal for . the Rovers who lost 3-1. % * kB % N.HL. games over the week-end d the Toronto Leafs whipping "Chicago Black Hawks twise despite Humerous injuries . . . Canadiens "won the matinee game in Detroit #n Saturday afternoon ... Amerks fost to Rangers but even so, their Mew recruits, Thurier and Hunt furned in star performances, getting 3 points between them on only three «oq A TT a gy LR Oshawa GM-Men hit the highway again tonight, It's their first game in the second half of the Senior O.H.A. schedule. If the Motor City seniors can do as well in this section as they did in the first grouping, name- ly 7 victories in 12 games, they'll still be within the first three when February rolls in. fo BB ¢ In their first game this year, the M-Men took a bad beating up in i Colborne at the hands of the Sailors,-- both in the matter of goals and also in the usual meaning "given to "beating". It'll be different tonight. The Motor City boys have acquired some condition since then and also have polished up their y. Given a good brand of of- ling, the GM-Men might quite easily pull ont a victory right in Port Colborne, this evening. bp S| of referees--we note that "Army" Armstrong and Eddie Mepham (he used to play defense for Cities Service have been congratulated for their handling of the St. Catharines- Marlboros game last Friday night. It has been termed as "the best-handled senior game of the year." LR SR It was "Visitors Night" on Friday, with St. Kitts again nosing out To- ronto Marlboros on the Gardens' Lo ERE ERR F) RELL ote PIT i; ice. Paul Mundrick scored tie win- ning goal against his fo mates -- one of those flukey g of the kind with which Dukeg nosed out Hamilton recently. Ig the other senior game that t, Niagara Palls scored a 5-3 tory right in Port Colborne. Wj in Port Colborne is quite trick. * L 4 Both St. Ki and Brights seem to have. their . stride G s + CHAMPIO SHOE SHOP "SPECIAL" I soles, PHONE 1216 now and the brand of hockey they'll display in this next por tion of the schedule should en- able them to keep better check on both Marlboros and Hamil- ton: * bP "Red" Dutton has taken up Fred Thurier and Fred Hunt, ace goal- scorers of the Springfield Indians and "Peanuts" O'Flaherty, who made such a sensational debut in the N.HL., has been sent down to the Indians. Apparently O'Flaher- ty's injured knee was worse than at first figured and he has been sent to the Indians to enable him to get back into shape more quickly. * +b There was talk of the Senior O.H.A. clubs filling in the open dates in the Michigan-Ontario League, gaps having been caus- ed by the dropping out of the winless Muskegon team. Now it looks as if the London Stream- liners -- tail-enders in the local O.H.A. circuit, may be invited to fill in Muskegon's dates, * + That doesn't look very Surely the leading Windsor and De- troit teams would prefer sterner op- position such as the leading O.H.A. teams could provide -- so that their gate receipts would be boosted rather than deflated. * +P John M. Bannerman, a leading official of the Western Canada Rugby Union, has resigned as Presi- dent of the Canadian Rugby Union. The Western Interprovincial Foot- ball Union (to speak of them cor- rectly) have left the C.R.U. fold, in protest of the "deliberate scuttling" of the East-West Canadian grid final. * + % That's the best thing that could have happened. It was quickly developing into one of those "poker games" in which it looked as if both sides . were merely going to raise the yerbal ante and continue bluffing until dooms-day but now dthgt the Western Canada | men have "called", the nex is up to the C.R.U. It w| Interesting to see what "they make but at least it force the is- sue. The onlyfYtrouble is -- maybe the C.R.U men will stall and still dodge the issue by sus- pending East-West grid finals and C.R.U. intér-league compe- tition, "for the/duration." * +b OTHER WEEKEND SPORT NEWS, includes the stories of: --Bill Juzda, former Kenora Thistle de- fenseman, starting the, fire-works as Rangers lost in Detroit on Friday night , . . Ken Overlin having little trouble defending his title against Belloise . . . Pete Bessone, rugged Pittsburgh defense star, having to give up hockey because of a heart ailment . , . Guelph Biltmores win- ning an exhibition game up in Owen Sound against the team that whip- ped our "Generals" . , . an 80-year=- old-and-young Toronto grandma who still stars at 5-pin powling-. . an English boxing champion who has only one lung . . Junior Basketball Schedules for the O.C.V.I. teams which appear in to- day's issue . . . and that's about alll Ananias ! Thou Art A Woman logical. | . the Senior and' Harrisburg, Pa., Dec 16. (AP)-- Make way for the women deer- slayers. Its their turn at story tell- ing. Around the camp fires after the chase, milady no longer has to sit back and listen. She's been on the trail, teo, in the season just ended in Pennsylvania, and she's got plenty to tel. zua, a deer which Mrs. Walter ughter had felled "came to life" 'and attempted to gore her husband. She fired her last shot. The deer went down again, but quickly arose, chased Baughter from tree to tree and finally pinned him against the ground. While he yelled for help, Mrs. Baughter struck the animal with the butt of her gun, breaking its neck. Mrs. Thomas Bower, 40, of Hones- dale, never had hunted before but went along on a trip with her hus- band and son "to protect them." She got the only deer in the family. Looking up from her ironing Mrs. Charles Alsdrof saw a doe near the Alsdorf barn. She called to her hushand inside the house to some j shoot it, "You shoot: it, .he called back, jokingly. She did. Dogs chased a deer on to Philip Rowles farm near Clearfield. When he came in from work he found that his' wife and another woman had caught the deer and tied its [| legs with their aprons, - Over in Warren County near Kin- |' So FAR Tom HAS TURNED A DEAF « 4 EAR TO " PROFESS (OFFERS $ In > r HARMON, uaicus * ALL-AMERICA HALFBACK A B16 ATTRACTION AT Tom WITH A RECORD SURPASSING TAAT OF The GREAT RED GRANGE, WOULD 8e- THE PRO GAME ST. KITTS WIN OVER MARLIES IN TORONTO Toronto, Dec. 16 -- St, Catharines Saints punched Old Man supersti- tion squarely in the nose by juggl- ing a combination of 13's into a 2-1 victory over Toronto Marlboros in an O.H.A. senior game at the Gar- dens on Friday night. Defying the misfortunes tradi- tionally connected with Friday the 13th, the Saints, playing their 13th schedule game, used 13 players to forge victory.'And to round out the combination, Paul Mundrick, for- mer Goodyear player, scored the winning goal in the 13th minute of the final period. 0.C.V.1. CARDS CAGE Ski School Will Be Held At Local Club' The Ontario Ski Zone has ane C.0.8.8.A. Senior and Junior Basketball Schedules for 19d Season January 25 -- Cobourg at Bow- manville; Lindsay at Peterborough. January 31--Oshawa at Cobourg; Port Hope at Lindsay. February 7--Oshawa at Bowman- ville; Peterborough at Port Hope. February 14 -- Bowmanville at Cobourg; Port Hope at Peterbor- ough. February 21 -- Bowmanville at Oshawa; Peterborough at Lindsay. Even an element of luck was at- shot from the right Marlboro cage after taking a pass from Captain Red Reynolds during a melee. The puck ticked Defense- man Bobby Copp's stick and was deflected into the far corner of the net away from Goalie Baz Bastien's Deserved Victory The fates stuck determinedly with the Saints througout a | scrambly sort of due, but the Gar- den city buckos still played the type of hockey that earned them victory. Ken. Gverlin | Retains Title + ~ Via Verdict New York, Dec. 16--Ken Overlin's | ring wisdom was even too much for | a "double-13" jinx Friday night, | and the ex-sailor retained his world's middleweight championship with an easy 15-round victory over somewhat-bewildered Steve Belloise in Madison Squar Garden. Overlin weighed 159; Belloise 154. With the largest crowd of the local indoor fistic season on hand, Ken went through this defense of his crown on Friday the thirteenth in his thirteenth year of fighting and won going away. He knew too many of the answers for the rangy New Yorker and gave him a lesson all the way. On The Associated Press score card, the one-time tar, from Deca- tur, Ill, by way of Norfolk, Va., won 10 of the 15 rounds. Both judges, John Potter and Bill Healey, voted for Ken. Referee Arthur Donovan came up with the verdict for Steve, For a fellow who was supposed to be ill, with a heavy cold, Overlin showed a remarkable amount of en. durance. Always Dangerous Belloise gave the impression all the way that he was able to walk in and take Ken any time. But he didn't, simply because the veteran titleholder outsmarted him. Ken was in trouble only once--in the second round, when Belloise con- nected with a right and left on the whiskers. Ken's legs buckled and he fell into a clinch until his head cleared. After that, he waltzed home, al- though Belloise rallied in the sev- enth, eighth and ninth rounds. Ken's left eye was cut by Bel- loise's long straight left in the eighth round, but he evened this score by splitting the bridge of Bel- loise's nose in the eleventh, The Big Seven (By The Canadiana Press) Bryan Hextall of New York Rangers scored three goals during the week-end to take second-place among the National Hockey Lea- gue's individual paint-getters, one point behind the idle Bill Cowley of Boston. 8yl Apps, Toronto Maple Leafs bagged a goal and two as- sists to move into third position, while Gord Drillon of the Leafs also got a goal and two assists, moving into fourth-place tie witn Phil Watson, who helped. in two Rangers' goals, and Syd Howe of Detroit Red Wings, who dropped from second position when he was held pointless. Roy Conacher of Boston helds the last Big Sever birth, The leaders: G. A. Pts. Cowley (Boston) ....., 5 12 17 Hextall (Rangers) , 9 17 18 Apps (Toronto) .., 7.8.15 Drillon (Toronto) ...., 8 6 14 Howe (Detroit) ........ 6 8 14. Watson (Rangers) ..,, 3 11 14 R, Conacher (Boston) , 8 5 13 { can see Alice Marble Sports Round Up | By EDDIE BRIETZ, | Associated Press Sports Writer | New York, Dec. 16. (AP)--Broad- | way melody: Brooklyn and the | Yankees are the favorites in Jack | Doyle's big league winter book . . . If you get up early enough, you (in shorts) alternately jogging and walking around . the reservoir in Central Park . . . Max Baer left the cast of "H'ya, Gentlemen" in Boston | | Saturday night and they're saying the show will never see Broadway. | Max may sign for a Billy Conn fight any hour now. Louis vs. McCoy | As for the fight in Beantown, | Your agent has a hunch That Joe can pick the winning round And also name the punch. 1 i | Against Ken Overlin Friday night, | Steve Bellolse came out with his | right cocked for action . . . when the right ended, the right was still cocked for action . , . what was he | saving it for--the junior prom? | On The Cuff M.GM.s scouts have decided | Billy Conn has plenty of oomph | and will sign him up this week . . ol Benny Leonard takes another flyer | in the restaurant business when he opens a spot on Seventh Avenue tomorrow night . . . Tony Canzoneri, ex-lightweight king and idol of N.Y. fans, has gone into the refereeing | biz . . . Mike Jacobs will spend the holidays in Florida, but the folks needn't get all agog. Mike has abandoned plans for staging a show down there this winter . . . Ken | Overlin will decorate the family Xmas tree at Decatur, Ill, with $100 bills--one for each member of the family . . . Mrs. Lew Jenkins (beautiful K-K-Katie) is in from Texas for the Zivic fight Friday night, Today's Guest Star Don McDowell, Rapid City (S.D.) Journal: "Fred (Ripper) Ray, form- er South Dakota U. gridder, has won his wings with the Canadian air force , . . now, what'll they dub him -- "Death' Ray, or the 'Grim Ripper'?" OWEN SOUND BOWS TO GUELPH JUNIORS Owen Sound, Dec. 16 -- Guelph Biltmores, junior "A" O.H.A. Big Six team, defeated Dominion Wreckers in an exhibition game here Friday night giving Jack Markle's team their first defeat of the season, The score was 6 to 5. It was the fastest?) and best played game of the year, The fast Guelph junior team well deserved their win. POLISH ATHLETES London -- (CP) -- M. Kusocin- ski, Olympic Games marathon run. ners, serves coffee to German of- ficers in Warsaw, many of whom likely cheered him When he pay, at Berlin in 1936. At the same cafe, the cigarette girl is Mille, Jadwigy Jedrzejowska, Polish tennis cham- pion who has played at Wimbledon lin 'the American Hockey Buddy Hellyer and Nick Knott Each Get Points (By The Canadian Press) Cleveland Barons and Springfield Indians, who both threatened early season to stage runaway races League's twin sections, were forced today tec share their respective divisiona: | leads with Hershey Bears and New Haven Fagles. New Haven culminated a win- ning spurt with two straight vic- tories during the week-end to move into a first-place tie in the eastern | section with the slumping Indians, who meanwhile lost two matches, | In the western. division, Hershey | won one and lost one to move in with the Broncs, who lost their only start. The Eagles gained their eastern- section tie with a 4-2 victory over Philadelphia Ramblers at Haven last night. Eddie Shore's Indians meanwhile. dropped a 6-2 | decision to Providence Reds, while lin the other two games, Indiana- polis beat Hershey, 5-2 and Pitts- burgh won 2-0 over the Buffalo Bisons. At New Haven, the Eagles came from behind for the victory after Philadelphia had opened the scor- ing in the first period on a goal by Stan Smith. New Haven bag- ged the next four goals, however, with Jack Cain, Marcel Tremblay, Earl Roche and Louis Trudel scor- | ing, while Mitchell Pechet notchea the only cther Philadelphia count- er. Playing at home, Providence Reds ran up six goals before Springfield broke into the scoring. The Providence counters came on a first-period goal by Art Giroux, three second-period goals by Ab De- marco, Bill Mosienko and Giroux, and last-period counters by Jack Shill and Crossley Sherwood. Glenn Brydson got both Springfield tal- lies. Goalie McAtee turned in a shut- | out perfcrmance at Buffalo to pace | Pittsburgh Hornets to a victory over the Bisons. Buddy Hellyer| opened the scoring with a 35-foot shot late in the second period and Johnny Sherf got the Hornets other goal at 12:04 of the final frame, At Indianapolis meanwhile, the Capifals beat Hershey on three goals in the final period, The teams -had played to a 2-2 dead- Jock when Connie Brown tallled twice and Bill Jennings bagged an- other to put the Capitals well in front. Jennings and McDonald got the first two Indianapolis goals, with .Pat McCreavy and Herry Frost scoring. for Hershey, In Saturday night games, Her- shey defeated the Hornets, 4-3, a» Pittsburgh on an overtime goal oy Vince Germann; Cleveland Barons were defeated 3-2 ty Indianapolis at Cleveland; Buffalo shutout the Indians, 2-0, at Springfield, and centre Don Willson scored in over- time to give New Haven a 5-4 vic- tory over the Ramblers at Phila- and Forest Hills. in | New | They checked the Dukes dizzy and | applied most of the serious offen- sive pressure stirred up during the fray. As Coach Ivan Corrigan word- ed it after the tussle: "We got the | breaks tonight, but it's just about | time. T think that's the first time | we've been lucky this season. NIAGARA FALLS 'DOWN SAILORS tached to the payoff goal. Mundrick ! side of the | reach. | | February 28--Cobourg at Oshawa; Lindsay at Port Hope. As may be noted the league is divided into two sections, (a) Osh- awa, Cobourg and Bowmanville and th) Peterborough, Lindsay and Port Hope. The winners of the sections will playoff for the C.OSSA. championship. 10.C.V.1. CAGERS SPLIT TWIN-BILL WITH RUNNYMEDE basket- Runnymede Collegiate's | ball teams visited the O.C.V.I. last Friday and, although losing the ju- seniors, 31-19. The first half of the senior game started the locals off well with Krantz, McLaughlin and Buchanan compiling ten points against Run- nymede's nine. However, in the sec- ond half the visitors ran up 22 points by long shots by Hill and Doughty and breakaways by Strat- hearn. The visitors had a close co- ordinating style of play that was INPT.COLBORNE | | Port Colborne, Dec. 16'-- Niagara | Falls and Port Colborne Sailors set | | a new high in hockey entertain- | ment for the season here Friday | night with the Cataracts being su- | perior behind the blue line to take the best hockey of a chequered sea- son, had enough chances to win several games, but Carey in goal | and other visitors played a remark- able defensive game and kept the | puck out of the Falls net for the victoy margin. In the first period the play was inside Niagara Falls blue line for fifteen minutes and -while shots caromed off goal posts, shoes and skates of various players, they could not score. Feather Champ Is ""On2 Lunger" London, Dec. 16 -- (CP.) -- Nel Tarleton, British feather-weight | boxing champion, has only one lung, | was given grade two rating by the | Army medical board, and told by boxing experts that his legs would let him down. Yet at 34 he has fought 500 con- tests and in a recent title fight went 15 rounds against 'an opponent 13 vears his junior, Sergeant Tom Smith of Sunderland. His superb ring generalship and clever foot- work and stamina figured promin- ently in the victory. He easily out- pointed Smith. Tarleton, who intends to join the Royal Air Force next month, re- tired twice from boxing and came back both times apparently as good as ever. He won the title for the first time in 1931. Married and the father of twins, he follows a rigid diet and schedule, He eats only two meals a day, re- fuses to touch potatoes and takes a halibut liver oil tablet after each meal. The capsule, he says, is good for his chest, weakened by past at- tacks of pleurisy and pneumonia. He rises between 8:00 am. and 8:30; combining late breakfast with early lunch, and has dinner at 6:30 p.m. He smokes lightly and drinks an occasional glass of beer. HEART AILMENT | CAUSES RETIREMENT OF BESSONE Pittsburgh, Dec. 16--Pete Bessone, rugged defenseman for: Pittsburgh Hornets of the American Hockey League, probably reached the end of his sports trail Friday. A physician found the 28-year-old player from Springfield, Mass. is suffering from a heart ailment, and ordered him to quit' the game for at least 'the rest of the season. Bessone, one of the few American- born players in professional hockey, had complained for some time about what he thought was an injured left side. An X-ray examination dis- closed the real trouble today. He plans to remain here for a while, hard to break up but the Oshawans | deserved a better fate because of | several, stellar individual perform- ances. Juniors Triumph In the junior game the Red, Green and Gold led from the open- | ing whistle with good teamwork by Salmers, Sledziewski and Skinner. a 5 to 3 decision. The Tars, playing | However, in the second half Run- | nymede's Hyrtzay and McDowell staged a comeback that was only This proved to be a fast, yet close- checking game that showed great possibilities in the local squad. Runnymede , Collegiate Seniors-- Howard 2, Doughty 5, Hill 4, Heinbuch 4, Strathearn 14. O.C.V.I. Seniors -- Chute, Mc- Laughlin 3, Krantz 8, Daniels 1, Buchanan 7, Scott, Trew, O'Brien. Runnymede Collegiate Juniors-- Ward, Hyrtzay 4, McDowell 2, Wal- ker, Rogers 1 0O.C.V.1. Juniors--Sajmers 2, Sled- ziewski 2, Skinner 6. son, Landon, Poloz, 80-Years-Young Grandma Enjoys Her 5-Pin Games Toronto, Dec, 16-- (CP) -- Mrs, Charlotte Faragher of Toronto, white-haired, slight, 80 years young is an enthusiastic exponent of bowling. And shé's no mean trundler herself, either. Disproving that old bromide about youth being full of sport and age's breath being short, writes Bobby Rosenfeld in the Globe and Mail, Mrs. Faragher didn't take a bead on the headpin until she was 65. Since, there has been no more devoted player on the alleys. Every Tuesday she can be found at a local bowling club trying for strikes and spares with fellow members of the North Toronto Business Ladies' Club. Since taking to the pastime, she has missed but one meeting and that because ot an injured ankle, Turned 80 Dec. 4 this year, she laughed when ésked if her years did not warn her away from' ex- ercise. "Some of the other girls com- plain that they can hardly walk upstairs after the season's first day bowling, but I don't find it any trouble at all." What's more she's not a "stiffy" old lady, but delights in being in the midst of the tumult and shout- ing that surrounds her Tuesday afternoon club. Right now, Mrs. Faragher Is busily engaged knitting socks for the Canadian Red Cross, KNIGHTS WALLOP AMERKS Omaha, Neb, Dec. 16.--~Omaha's fast-travelling Knights walloped Kansas City Americans, 6 to 1, in an American Hockey Associatic 1 game Saturday night, Maloney got Amcricans' only goal, with Ron Hudson, Raney, Brown, Verity, delphia, then return to his home. Brenneman and Hap Emms scor: for Knights. i nior game, 7-10, won over the lceal | Tropea 2,' mons, Andi- Miners, Pierce, Rundle, Mason, Wilson, \ nounced that the Ski School for In- structors will be held at the Oshawa Ski Club the week-end of Dec. 28, At this event representatives from ski clubs in Southern Ontario will feceive expert truition which will enable them to impart their skiing skill to members of their respective clubs and also, if the participators qualify, will beccme Zone Instruce tors. Last year the school was held at the Blue Mountain Ski Club, near Collingwood, when President Dean Patte of Oshawa passed the tests, receiving the only award made in Ontario last year. The year previous the school was held at the Chicopee Club, Kitchener. Events already planned for the week-end include a dry ski school period Saturday morning, final in- struction Saturday afternoon. exame= ination ef skill Sunday morning and examination of oral instruction on Sunday afternoon. Social entertain. ment is being planned for Friday and Saturday rights. Floodlights Next Week Four thousand watts will push back dark night when the = new flocdlights are turned on at the Oshawa Ski Club next week. Erect ed this fall, mostly by labor of club members, the lights are arranged in two "floods" or reflectors, two 1,000= watt bulbs in each. Ron Luke, elec trician by trade, has had complete charge of the construction and has also done more werk than any one, The spur line from the Hydro on the highway was erected, as well as the standards for the "floods." The clubhouse has been completely wired as well and ceiling drop lights will illuminate the interior. Members of the Hydro maintenance crew were of much assistance in the pro- ject. The lights are to be turned on Wednesday and Friday evenings from 8 to 10 o'clcck. A tentative date for the official opening of the floodlights has been set for Deceme ber 27, At the get-together of representa« tives of ski clubs in Southern One i tario held at Hart House, Toronto, Saturday night, those pre:zent from | the Oshawa club were President | Dean Patte, Treasurer Ralph Scho- | nipped by two baskets by Skinner. | field and Chairman of Instruction Iv. Richards. The latter informed us that nine of the 13 clubs were represented at the meeting and that each of the nine clubs wera sending at least three representatives to the Ski School for Instructors which is to be held here. ST. LOUIS. BROWNS | SEEKING HAYWORTH St. Louis, Dec, 16--The Browns, determined there must be an un wanted experiencoed catcher some where, Friday beckoned Ray Haye worth, 35-year-old veteran who spent eleven years in the American League before going to Brooklyn Decdgers in 1938. William O. de Witt, vice-presi= dent of the St. Louis American | negotiating for Hayworth, who re- cently 'was released by New York Giants, A FLYERS BLANK Minneapolis, Minn, Louis Flyers snavp lesing streak Sat blank Minneapolis Nakina Smith and § goals. a four-game ay night to illers, 2 to 0. Kashner got the RANTEE dua Ti to ashi na filler of the same quality used in cigars soldi at much higher pric . « .. 8 ° Herd th ! Actual Si ro Fao for the ri 've been pay. in, or one good Hiv a Cigar!

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