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Daily Times-Gazette, 20 Mar 1947, p. 13

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THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1947 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE + PAGE THIRTEEN BOWLING NEWS MONDAY OFFICE LEAGUE Smith Trans aes out in full I ee Da] nolds Pen for n n them on the top and although there is one more game to be played, they are sure of ing rst place in section three. Smiths have come a long dis- tance during the schedule and have done it the hard way. They finished the first and second sections near the bottom, though not from the lack of trying, and now in this section they have come to life to capture first place nono and, a playoff position. One of th Best gies of the season was timed in by Mundy-Goodfellow which brought them a score of 1233, which is the highest for a Shgle game to date. This score hel them take 2 nts from the bi team in the eague, (Unemployment Insurance, that is). Another bright spot in M-G's afternoon of triumphs was that they tho two high bowlers for the day: Jean Noxon th 281 and Don Dean with 287. Results for thes afternoon Smith Transport Reynolds Pen i Times-Gazette 3, Se Press 0; Rob- son Leather 3, Pedlar People 0; Mundy- Goodfellow 2, Unemployment Insurance 1. Next week is the last week of the schedule and those who intend to go to the banquet are asked to bring their 60c with them, The Iolowing week we will have the playoffs and after the games the banquet will be held. By next week we wij have gathered oa the have them. in the column, Standin Smith Transport Unemployment Insurance Peop Bey -Gooatello LADIES' STORE LEAGUE We had a good collection of score sheets this week--looks like everybody | 614 is aiming for top place--but fast! Watch that Kresges No. 2 team this section--they're starting out with a vengeance, Does anyone know what has happened to Bassetts? They haven't been turring up at all lately? E. Russell captured the high single | Monday with 353 and G. Bourne came through with a nice triple of 764. Club 600: --D. Dobbie 685, E, Russell 663, N. Prizzell 630, H. Mitchell 639, and M. Dunn 617. Club 700:--Grace Bourne 764. Team Standing Royal Bank rds Wa Kresges No. 2 Pattenicks Bank of Sommerce Wholesalers Atkins Do.niuion Bank . Rrcsges No. 1 ... Oshawa Electric . Bassetts CNNUWHBAARAT TUS IT MONDAY AFTERNOON LADIES' LEAGUE There is quite a bit of good bowling lately, could be that practise makes perfect or that the ladies are thinking of the prizes at the end of the season, iin the reason, they are nice cores. The Optimists and the Play- fairs took four points from Slap Hap- pys and the Die Hards, The Green- horns, Boucks and Busy Bees took three, leaving one for the Ha, appy Gs Gang, Low Jinks, and Hi-Hats. Hub- bas and the Chui each [a two. Sa Bingle Yor e day: Did Hobbs High triple:--Dalisy Malcolm 736. Cen were: Belle Forbes 306, 655, Daisy Malcolmn 304, 281 Peggy Hefider- son 286, Vl Dot Sayers 288, Alice Darlin 281 , Bdith McKee 265, Marg O'Reilly 261, Pearl Peacock 246, Helen Plumb 245 Blanche Norton 242, 223, 200 a H 07, 215, 660, Toots Ferguson 147, 247, 235, 630, Rose Pearn 224, 154, 234, 612," Violet Pike 240, Win Brooks 235, Nelda 3 Thompson 225, The Optimists ... Low Jinks . -Hats .. Hubba Hubbas Greenhorns .. . MAIN OFFICE. LEAGUE od ints out of a ible nine B e claim od Sistine on made by Rospigk's 2° finants at the ony ion the th night of this action, There doesn't appear to be a team in the league that can bowl a good average of ine when up against these boys. course we are not inferring that the Deflants are not worth a "hoot in hades" but take last night for instance,--bow! against Ross Mc- Quay and his -Flyers, a team that has been getting some pretty fair scores of late, all they h to garner themselves was two low 1,000 ame. That's & touch nr any league. We est that the Havocs who meet the De ts next week troop down to Rendell's Sanctum after five . and roll off their three games and thus eliminate the mental hazard that seems to exist when bowling Lou's n the TaLilecSpitires tilt, Ding Gavas started suatted bust Ang the in the first game 1 P until he had ed up a scratch 924, for three to his mates take 2 points, His le of 374 won him the "Spe- r the second time in two. Soup" ' BE a cial." weeks the members of the were all keyed up for a big sess! across the road only to have their high spirits knocked for a loop as one of their members with 345 proved to Pes only the runner-up for the '"Spec- High Scores;--Don Gavas, 924 (374, 283), Bill ge 764 (303); Walter 8 dence 752 (280, 206); Herb Kearney 1 (333); Jerry Cooper. 685; Cliff Ren- dell 681 (281); Edgar Mackie, 654; Jack Copeland, 654; Lou Roenigh, 648 and Bill Morath. Bid am Standing (Fourin Section) CWA BBULI® B'NAI B'RITH BOWLING LEAGUE With but three weeks left of the last series of the schedule, the teams that have as yet not made a play-off berth 1eally bore down, and when it was all over, the Lions had really administered a sound thrashing to the leaderless Carscls for all points. The Trap were much too Powerful for those fall- apart Wolves and took them for two out of three games, but the best bat~ tle of the evening was that between the Little Foxes and the mighty Bears; all three games were s0 close that the final outcome was not decided until the Very last man bad bowled, with the Little Foxes nosing out the Bears for two out of three games. Those within the charm circle this week were: Atkins 656, Evenstein 633, Sam Berns 628, Hyman 621 and Segal | High Singles were: Atkins 289, Even- stein 276, Sam Berns 260, Topp 247, Segal 241, Horwich 232, Lavine 228, Kalnitsky 226, E. Burns 223, Morris Swartz 215, Hyman 213. | | 3-Star Selection Atkins for the high triple of the | | week 656 (173, 194 and 289). { Ben Segal for his fighting spirit ana | good bowling in a lost. cause, Evenstein (but definitely) best effort and for mainly being res- | ponsible in his team winning the first game, cial Comments « Trying ug knock down pins for Mor- | ris Sarett was tougher than for n bald-headed man to grow hair, Sar- | ett seemed to be in a terrible op | and acted as if he had lost | bearings. Oyr sleuth informs us that bad boy Atkins whispered two terri- fying words into Sarett's left ear and Sarett was completely agog with ex- citement. Therefore if anyone should hear Sarett going around, muttering to himself trans-Canada, you will know the reason why for his strange behavior. It broke our heart to see Sarett wind up with a score of 109, as he is Juice a capable bowler. The rcores this week were really nothing to rave about, as only a few made the magic headlines. Manning Swartz was in distress most of the evening and wound up bowling a little under 600. Manning doesn't seem to be the mighty bowler he was of past years. Perhaps he too is permitting old age to creep up on him. Evcnsteln was as frisky as a colt, and with his wife looking on, bowled hls best three games of the season, Last week after the drubbing Sid Topp received from us, he really start- ed to bowl, af If to show us up, and in his first game bowled a lovely 247 score, but tapered off greatly in his last two games. Harry Marks bowled one of his poorest games when he came through with a score of 85, and even Lavine seemed to lose his bearings when he bowled one of his poorest scores of the year. On the bright side of the ledger Atkins kept pound- ing them: 8am Berns is showing im- provement and some of the others are also perking up. Please note that we only have another two weeks of our regular schedule as our play-off will start on April 7th. According to the results, it looks like the Lions are going to make the fourth playoff spot; with the Camels having an outside chance, Standing Trappers Wolves .... . Little FORD «savers evessrves Milt. Schmidt Awarded Trophy Best Showing Boston, March 20 (AP)--Milt Schmidt, Boston Bruins star cen- tre, today was voted the Elizabeth Dufresne Trophy by Boston hockey writers. It is awarded annually to the Bruin player whose performances have been the most outstanding during the club's National Hockey Here's Baseball The Hard Way | It's a topsy-turvy game at best, one minute you're up, the next down, | says bascball's favorite comedian, Jackie Price. for his | from his heels and banging away at a few pitches as part of his laugh- provoking act before the Giants and the Cleveland Indians met in a spring game at Tuscon, Arizona. He's down here, hanging RECORD BREAKER 'Bikt WouLe ale PASSED SYP S RECORD OF 512 Pointe Veterad cedter or Tiles Boston BRUS, LIFETIME SCORING KING OF The NATIONAL Hockey LeAGUss 5 ScolerR EXCEPT FOR A SHOULDER es THAT KEPT 2 HiM ONTHE SIDELINES FoR TWO WEBKS > Pick Yourself A Soft Spot To This picture won first prize in the anndal Swedish press photographers' competition in the oports class. Fall, Chum! It was made by Bertil Lindskog, staff photographer of a Stockholm newspaper, who shot the dramatic action a split second after a motorcycle rider had been spilled' from his machine. The man landed running, but did not stay vertical for long. Musical Skates Canadian champions in ice waltzes and ice ten-steps, Mrs. Margaret Wilson Roberts and Bruce Hyland will defend their title in Ottawa ice dancing contests on March 28-29. League home games. Five years ago Schmidt figured in the Dufresne award when it was voted to the Kitchener Line, which also included wingers Bobby Bauer and Woody Dumart, Since the trophy was put up for competition during the 1935-36 sea- son it as been won by such Bos- ton hockey greats as Tiny Thomp- son, 'Eddie Shore, Dit Clapper, Frank Brimsek, Bill Cowley and Jack Crawford. MUSTARD DEODORANT Dry mustard is known as a good antisceptic and sterilizing agent and is an excellent deodorizer. Let Us Fix It NO w!? WHEEL ALIGNMENT OUT-OF-LINE wheels grind rubber off tires . . « as if you purposely scuffed it away with a rasp! Let us ALIGN your car wheels. Then, we know you will enjoy multiplied mileage from your tires. Our charges are low. YOUR savings . . . great! DETROIT WINGS CINCH PLAYOFF SPOT WITH WIN The draw for the Stanley Cup playoffs was complete today with Detroit Red Wings entrenched in the final berth and that meant the National League's top four teams had about a week to form- ally wind up the schedule and map out strategy for the money round, The Red Wings cut themselves in for a chance at the $81,000 players' pot when they blanked New York Rangers 2-0, last night to wipe out the last chance the fifth-place Blue shirts had of catching them, That completed the circle, the other three having clinched their positions last week-end. The de- fending cup champion Montreal Canadiens already have first place wrapped up for the fourth straight time, with Toronto Ma- ple Leafs second and Boston Bru- ins third. So now the Red Wings will meet the Maple Leafs at Toronto Wednesday night in the opening game of a best-of-seven semi-fi- nal. The Bruins will start a simi- lar series in Montreal Tuesday night, In each series, as in the fi- nal between the ultimate winners, there will be a cash bonus of $1,- 000 for every player on the win- ning team, $500 for the losers, Just about all that remains to be settled in the concluding con- tests of the 180-game schedule this week-8nd is the individual scoring title, And that came no closer to being decided in last night's other two matches, The Maple Leafs took a 5-4 fall out of the Canadiens at Toronto in one while the Bruins ran up a 7-3 score at Boston against Chicago Black Hawks, long since counted out. At Toronto, Montreal's Maurice Richard notched two tallies, his 42nd and 43rd of the season. Chi- cago's Max Bentley managed one . the New York nets until Pat Lun- dy broke the ice at 7:06 of the first period. Sid Abel, lanky Detroit capt- ain, sank a five-footer in the final frame to asure the Wings of par- ticipation in their ninth succes- sive cup round. A crowd of 13,614 at Toronto watched their Leafs run up a 2-1 lead against Canadiens on first period goals by Syl Apps and Howie Meeker while Murph Chamberlain scored for Montreal, It was 4-2 at the end of the sec- and after Ted Kennedy tallied and Apps added his second to more than offset Richard's first counter. In the fiial frame, & pair of goals by Toe Blake and Richard tied the score but Harry Watson fired Toronto's winning tally at 10:09. Meeker's goal was his 25th of the season, the rookie right wing- er thus breaking Gaye Stewart's N.H.L. mark of 24 goals, previous record for a first-year man, There were 16 penalties in the game as referee Bill Chadwick called everything, Joe Carveth scored three and Woody Dumart two to pace the Bruins to victory over the Black Hawks before a Boston crowd of 13,900. The other Boston goals went to Bill Cowley and Schmidt with Adam Brown, Clint Smith and Frank Ashworth scoring for Chicago. ' Cowley added three assists to his goal to Increase his all-time rec- ord total set when he passed Syd Howe's mark, to. 582 points on 207 goals and 386 assists, UNITED TAXI OSHAWA'S FINEST CAB SERVICE PHONES 300 - 403 - 404 60 King St. East (NEXT GENOSHA HOTEL) Already They're 'Talking Shake-Up Western Hockey Edmonton, March 20 -- (CP) -- With the Western Canada Senior Hockey League title in the hands of the powerful Calgary Stampeders for another year, rumors have it that the two other Alberta entries in the League -- Edmonton Flyers and Lethbridge Maple Leafs -- are contemplating several changes. Tom (Calgary Albertan) Moore says he's heard of one rumor which wasted little time in cropping up. It concerns Dave (Sweeney) Schrin- er, Coach of the Lethbridge entry and former player with Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League. Moore says the word concerning Schriner is that there is consider- able doubt he'll be with Lethbridge next season. Schriner himself is mum. But the grapevine says it wouldn't be too surprising if he took over Edmon- ton Flyers, in whose camp there are signs of an impending shake-up, with demands for a housecleaning in view of the team's weak showing at the end of the League's schedule. : Other rumors regarding Schriner's future, says Moore, "range from the straight-from-the-feedbag, honest- to-gosh, you-mark-my-words infor- mation that he will return to the N.H.L. a member of Chicago Black Hawks to the equally found- ed assurance that he will become a whiskey salesman." Toronto's Pro Cage Sponsors 90 G's In Red Toronto, March 20 -- (CP) -- Canada's Eastern Professional Bas- ketball scene -- much discussed but only slightly-viewed -- by next sea- son may vanish, shift or be repeated in its present form, depending on the men who have dropped a small fortune endeavoring to popularize the game here. The initial season for Toronto Huskies, only Canadian entry in The Basketball Association of Am- erica, ends this month with the club out of the playoffs and its backers $90,000 in the red. Various stunts, ranging from prize nylons for the ladies and bargain- price "booster" tickets to high school curtain-raisers have failed to draw fans to Maple Leafs Gardens in sufficient numbers to pay for necessary fancy equipment, let alone fancy salaries for players im- ported from the United States. A crowd of 7,200 fans saw the League opener but there has been as few as 500 at some contests and there's no indication the game has sold itself to Gardens fans, accus- tomed to hockey and less interfer- ence,by way of official whistles, Just what will happen to the Huskies' franchise won't be known until after a. Directors' meeting fol- lowing. the B.A.A. playoffs. Sources close to the front office say the team will try again next season. Others figure, the promoters may throw "in the sponge or transfer their franchise across the border. Coach Robert (Red) Rolfe thinks it will take three years to establish the sport and asks the money-sat- chel boys: that lohg?" > Buu and Use CRIPPLED CHILDREN "Can you hold the fort Cornwall Falcons . Win First of Finals Ottawa, March 20 (CP) == Cornwall Falcons overpowered Ot tawa Army Headquarters 7-4 last night in the first game of best-of-three final series for the Ottawa and district intermediate hockey title and the right to ad- vance into the Allan Cup playdowns. The second game will be played on Cornwall ice' tonight. A crowd estimated by auditorium officials at 4,300 watched Henry Payette and Billy Marlin get two goals apiece for Cornwall while Buddy Fillion, Pete Payette and Jack Miron followed with three more in the second and third periods. Maynard Darch got two for Army in the first and second periods with Don Grant and Pete Moskaluk scor= ing the others. Early third period play saw Army tie the count at 3-3 but Falcons found the secret' of Red Charette in the Army ret to score four quick goals and cinch the victory. ANCIENT MESMERISM Hypnotism was practised by the ancient Egyptians. + +» The Favourite of Thousands! THRILL ask | forees . SHORTY Dry GINGER ALE -- Bottled By -- Shorty Beverages 1244 Woodbine Ave. Toronto ig nor i a Sn NOW! BASEBALL NEWS DIRECT FROM THE LEAFS FLORIDA TRAINING CAMP by STAFF SPORTSWRITER ALLAN NICKLESON Read the news of the ball team . . . the intimate items on train- ing . . . the facts on rookie prospects . . . all the dope from . the training camp that makes baseball so prominent in the spring sport news! Now, Allan Nickleson, Globe and Mail staff sportswriter, brings you on-the-spot réports from the Maple Leaf Ball team's training camp at Lake Worth, Florida. Nickleson knows baseball--knows what sports fans want to read. His fifteen years of sports reporting here, and overseas, give him the background of sports training that means "news worth reading" in every line he writes! Major Repairs and Accessories May He FOR CONVENIENCE TO TRUCK Financed Out of Income on G.M.A.C, ' OWNERS WE ARE OPEN Instalment Plan DAY AND NIGHT assist at Boston and that leaves Bentley with 68 points, one more than the Rocket's total, with two games each to play, Boston's Milt Schmidt picked up a goal and two assists against the Hawks to take over third place but with only 62 points and one more game tp play, the Bru- ing driving centre: has scant chance of catching the leaders, The Red Wings played it close to the vest to oust the Rangers before a crowd of 14,389 at De- troit, Giving goalie Harry Lum- NEWTON RICHARDS, Prop. ley plenty of protection for his : shutout, they hammered away at | The United Taxi Wish to Announce a 24 HOUR SERVICE Continuing Through Seven Days a Week For 'The Convenience Of Their New and Present Clientele. For STAR PERFORMANCE * x x SALES AND SERVICE... See ONTARIO MOTOR SALES LIMITED [eT Wa ICT Vo: TTA : TV] To! 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