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Daily Times-Gazette, 10 Apr 1953, p. 11

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' 40 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, April 10, 1953 aa | AE lock cb Montreal Canadiens drew first blood in the 1953 Stanley Cup finals, when they whipped Boston Bruins 4-2 last night at The Forum, on the . 'strength of a two-goal spurt in the second period that broke a 1-1 dead- "Jock established in the initial stanza. Kennie Mosdell and Floyd Curry -scorers in the middle canto and Rocket Richard potted the third period, 59 seconds after Plerson had put the Bruins running with a goal from a scramble. The second game is e Forum, on Saturday night and then they move to Boston Out in Western Canada, Frank Boucher, one of the well-known hookey family, lashes out at the CAHA and declares that the Cana- dian governing hockey body is running the game and is incompetent to handle the problems that are arising. Boucher is hollering--and his L bridge Native Sons are obliged mot without to enter the Western Canada finals mimus the services of three tly injured regular defensemen and his choice for a re- eiy once granted by the local'body, has been over-ruled by the CAHA, following protests from other 'clubs, who have yet to meet the Sons. Word comes out of Barrie that ftheir acé scoring winger, Orval Tessier may miss tonight's game against St. Mike's. If this shoud happen, it will mean that "Hap" Emms' club will take the ice tonight without "the best team that money can buy" since both Bill Harrington, goalie, and Tessier, the two players he purchased from Kitchener, will be missing from the Flyers' line-up. Tonight's game is an important one for hoth teams. "Irish" have to win again on Barrie ice if they are to win this series and Barrie Flyers realize too that if they lose at home tonight, then St. Mike's might quite easily clean up the series at Maple Leaf Gardens in the 8th game on' Saturday night. Word out of Cob 'g that their Galloping Ghosts are feady to haunt the ORFU ranks down this way again. They held an enthusiastic organization meeting on 'Wednesday night and had a banner turnout of interested citizens, Fred Dufton again heads the Cobourg club and a more energetic President would be hard to find in any sport. Expecting to be bolstered by players from Ottawa district, who are now in the Cobourg area, on duty, has raised their hopes of regaining the Intermediate title. Meanwhile, here in Oshawa, news from the Red Raiders' camp has slowed down to a walk and we have ever heard ene rumour that the Oshawa football .olub. may not operate a team this autumn. It's no secret that the Red Raiders, despite some génerofis support and hard work by a group of keen enthusiasts, are still using only red ink and qu out of the financial hole. estion arises whether the prospects are such to expect climb- BRIGHT BITS:--The Kelly Wildcats (who last year operated as OKLB Wildcats but are to be sponsored this year by Dean Kelly Enter- prises) are holding an outdoor workout at Radio Park at two-thirty on Saturday afternoon and all players are invited to attend . , . Weston Dukes won their third-straight over Belleville Hawks, this one 7-3 and mow need only one more win to clean up the series in straight games « + » St. Catharines Juveniles ousted Stratford 3-1 in the Southern final and will now take on Timmins in the All-Ontario Juvenile "A" finals, statring in St. Kitts on Saturday night . . . The famOus NHL "Kid Line" of Toronto hockey fame, will be re-united in the Old Timers charity game for East End Arena, on Sunday afternoon at the Gardens . . Kingston will have five teams in their senior city baseball league this . The suicide attempt by Ernie Lombardi, famous Big League baseball figure, comes #8 8 great shock to the many admirers of ne into hivspital for a serious operation (cancer is the cause hinted) and this my tean the end of the greatest female sports career of all time ,-.% the Yankees yesiéfday? "Bid you see what the Pirates did to Vie Mmm! . . . St. Thomas has signed 'asliuk, 26, former bull-pen catcher with Chicago White Sox, a , 190 26 Ibs., who caught Curt Simmons in the armed forces when and lost 5. He has played most of his ball in Hot Springs, + « « The Kawartha Golf Club's annual tournament on August 1-2°3 feature an increase in prizes, $2,500 being the value this year, on SPORTS FROM BRITAIN British Chess Authorities Agree to Speed Up the Game By ARCH MacKENZIE Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) The austere British Chess Federation is grant- ing tournament status next May to the six-moves-a-minute brand of . the classic game, The occasion is the annual Whit- sun chess at Ilford, Es- sex, where individuals and teams for the first time will participate in the Lightning Chess Champioh- e ped-up version calls for 10 seconds, compared with the usual world tournament pace of a minimum of 16 moves an ; SICK PLAYERS SHINE Eileen Tranmer, former British champion, seems to sum up the n of leading players. She called it '"'enormous fun and a re- laxation from slow chess." s Tranmer added that the e, described by a chess au- ty as being old as the hills, "is particularly interesting because a certain slickness can take a mediocre player a long way against an expert used to deep analysis. "The trick of lightning chess is to be, slick without making ob- vious blunders. This helps your ser- jous game, particularly when you tend to overshoot your 10-minute game limit." * The time element in chess came in about a century ago, says Brian Rellly, editor of the British Chess Magazine, Before that, big-time chess boiled down to a war of attrition with the winner the player hanging on the longest physically. Reilly says that some moves--not games--lasted 24 hours. Nowadays, aside from world tournaments, London league mat- ches have a time limit of 20 moves an hour and or league mat- ches 15 to 24 moves an hour, SAVES PHONE BILLS For the chess players competing by telephone--and they do to the extent that they were offered special rates last year of three- quarters the regular rate for the first two hours and even less after that--lightning chess saves money. The Whitsun congress, which will have the standard chess champion- ships as usual, of course, expec 100 players in the individual brac- ket of the lightning tournament. It can take 65 games. The con- gress, begun in 1950, runs May 22-25 inclusive. Winnipeg's Abe yauotehy won't be able to attend this year because of studies for his final examina- tions at Oxford, where he is a law student. He won the congress pre- mier section last year. FIRST BLOOD TO HABS Canadiens Down Boston Bruins 4-2 As Stanley Cup Finals Under Way By W. R. WHEATLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) -- Montreal Canadiens, bidding for the Stanley Cup hockey honors they last won in 1946, got away to a good stait Thursday Tight y defeating Bos- It wasn't a game that will go down in the records as a master- ful exhibition by either team. But it was an interesting playoff spec- tacle and the surprise element was as much Boston's lack of sharp- Hous as Canadiens' domination of play. Most fans-and Caniadiens Ag ured the Bruins were hot for one, particularly after they shunted the tough Detroit Red Wings out of the semi-finals in six games. How- ever, they ran cold on most scor- ing rushes and lacked the fire that carried them to the previous series. The victory gave Montreal a one- game lead in the best-of-seven ser- ies. The second game is scheduled for Montreal Saturday night. The teams then move to Boston for games Sunday and Tuesday. Canadiens spotted the Bruins an early goal, usually a disastrous s ation for the Montrealers against the defensive play the Bruins are wont to rely on with a goal in hand, plus offensive spurts that might produce another Foul. In the National Hockey League season, Canadiens learned from bitter experience--three wins in 14 game t the Bruins, given a goal, almost have to be ground into the ice before they will surrender it. But it was a different story Thurs- day. Goalle Jim Remy of Boston was peppered with 37 shots against 20 on rookie goalie Jacques Plante of Montreal, Dickie Moore, Ken Mosdell, Floyd Curry and Maurice (Rocket) ichard scored for Canadiens. Rookie Bob Armstrong scored the first goal of the game and winger Johnny Peirson scored the Bruins' second goal when his team was trailing 3-1. Boston's performance might be attributable to one of two things: No practice since they disposed of the Red Wings last Sunday or the loss of centre Milt Schmidt for the game. Schmidt was injured Sunday. There is no doubt that the play- making of the 35-year-old veteran was missed. Coach Lynn Patrick started Real Chevrefils at Schmidt's position, then, later in the game, scrambled his lines several times. Chevrefils was on left wing with Woody St. Kitts Meet Timmins Lions Juvenile Final Minor Hockey's nearest approach to a Stanley Cup series will get under way in the St. Catharines arena Saturday night, as a result of the St. Catharines Bisons victory over Stratford Kroehlers in the de- ciding game of the Ontario Minor Hockey Association Juvenile A championship series here last night, Timmins Lions, Northern Ontario champions, will be the opposition. The All-Ontaro Juvenile cham- p series, an annual affair which alternates betweéen the north and south each year, features the OMHA champions against the Ju- venile champions of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association for the "Vietory Trophy", a fine piece of silverware donated to the OMHA as a memorial to all Juvenile hock- ey players who served their King and country in the Second Great ar. It is currently held by Sault Ste. Marie, who defeated St. Catharines in a thrilling series at the Soo last year. This series set all-time at- tendance records for minor hockey, the final game even surpassing the final Memorial cup game for at- tendance, Joey Follis Wins Free-For-All Tilt LONDON, Ont. (CP)--The main bout between Joey Follis of Tor- onto and Al Langfeldt of Hamilton, in an amateur boxing card at the arena here Thursday night was nothng short of a ring war before Folia was awarded a split decis- on. They were su ed to weigh in at 135 pounds, give or take a pound, but Follis actually had about a five-pound edge. In one of the five-round co-fea- ts tures, Eddie Beattie of Hamilton scored a surprise decision over Don Churm of Brantford. Churm is re garded as one of the best bantam- weights in the province. It was a 130-pound scrap. In other bouts, Ernie Biere, St. Thomas, ie a draw with Harold Swazie, Hamilton, at 140 pounds, and Joe Cassidy, London, decis- ioned Clarence McLelland, Paris, Ont., in a rousing 126-pound bout. {left him in a four-way tie for 4the CAHA returned the (Porky) Dumart, another veteran centre. Coach Dick Irvin of Canadiens also did some line juggling when centre Billy Reay aggravated an ankle injury in the first period and did not return. Plante and Henry turned in cred- itable games. Each time Plante was beaten, his team was short- handed. He was injured in the first period when struck in the groin by a puck fired by defenceman Hal Laycoe, but came back after a rest. Canadiens outshot the Bruins in every period. In the second period the Bruins had only two soft shots on Plante. Armstrong's goal came on a Bos- ton power play. Armstrong caught the corner of the net from 40 feet out on a rush with Fleming Mac- kell and Laycoe. Moore's goal, tieing the score before the first period ended, was unassisted. He shot toward the goal crease from "the end boards and the puck caromed into the net off Henry's skate. Mosdell and Curry, with the only goals of the second period, put Canadiens ahead to stay. Mosdell scored from close range on the rebound of a shot by Eddie Mazur, and Curry's goal came from al- most the same spot when Calum Mackay passed out after taking Dollard St. Laurent's long forward. Peirson gave the Bruins hope halfway through the third period when he tipped in Mackell'$ angle shot from the side of the net. How- ever, Richard added the clincher a minute later. Chick Harbert Tops As Masters Opens AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)--Husky Line-up Boston--Goal: Henry; defence: Godfrey, Quackenbush, Armstrong, Laycoe, Martin; forwards: Chevre- fils, Dumart, Klukay, Mackell, Sandford, Peirson, Creighton, Me- Intyre, "roppazzini, Lbine, Sulli- van. Montreal--Goal: Plante; defence Bouchard, Johnson, Harvey, St. Laurent; forwards: Lach, Richard, Mazur, Reay, n, Moore, Modell, Davis, Curry, McCormack, Olmstead, Mackay. . Referee: Bill Chadwick; lines- men: Doug Davie and Sam Bab- cock. Summary First period: Boston, Armstrong (Mackell, Laycoe) 2:08; Montreal, Moore 13:42. Penalties: Mosdell 1:52, Bouchard 8:57. ! Second period: Montreal, Mos- dell (Mazur) 2:37; Montreal, Curry (Mackay, St. Laurent) 16:05. Pen- alties: Olmstead :32, Chevrefils :32, Martin 2:48, Labine 8:02. Third period: Boston, Peirson (Mackell, Sandford) 10:11; Mont- real, Richard (Mosdell) 11:12. Pen- alties: Mackell 2:00, Mazur 2:00, Harvey 8:56, Stops Henry .. Plante Argo Grid Ducats Up 30 Per Cent TORONTO (CP)--The high cost «rr 10 12 11-15 6 210-18 |of living has hit supporters of the Argonaut Football Club. Ticket pri- ces for the 1953 season are up 30 per cent. In a letter to season subscribers, the Big Four club announced its new price scale for seven home games, The increase amounts from 30 to 80 cents a ticket, CENTRAL COMETS STAY IN TOURNEY KINGSTON--In a game that meant elimination for the losers, Kingston's Re- giopolis College met Osha- wa Central Collegiate bere last night in "B" section action of the Queens bas- ketball tournament. The rough contest saw plenty of fouling and a 41-36 win for Oshawa. This kept them in the running for the title in the double elimination se- ries : ! Starting slowly the Osh- awa Collegians led 12-9 at the quarter and widened it to 22-15 at the half. A third period splurge closed the gap but Regi was still down 27-24. The last ten minutes was wide open as Oshawa forced the ball from the ball from the home club to take their narrow margin. High scorer of the tilt was Oshawa's Varga with 15. DeLisle topped Kingston with 11. In the fouls three Regi men fouled out to one for Oshawa, DeLisle, ran- cis and Guit'errez for Regi, and Fisher for Oshawa. OSHAWA -- Varga 15, Starr 5, Yeo 8, Olynik 10, Ruskay, Rahme, Kellar 3, Fisher 3, Matthews 2, Yule, REGIOPOLIS --DelLisle, 11, Francis 9, Martin 4, Ga- zeley, Cervenko, Gutierrez 5, Stone, Morrison, Tetro 4, Remfeldt 1--36. Dutchies to Fly in Ace Winger Don Rope for Senior Contest OTTAWA (CP) -- Kitchener- Waterloo Dutchmen are bringing a forward by plane from Toronto in time for tonight's second meeting with Smiths Falls Rideaus in an effort to even their best-of-seven Eastern Canada senior hockey fi- nals. Coach Bobby Rafferty said that Don Rope, former Toronto Marl- boro star who missed the opener studying for law exams at the Uni- versity of Toronto, will be here in time for the second game. That is the only change Rafferty plans to make in the team which a 6-2 decision to Rideaus Wednesday night. Coach Hal Dewey plans to go along with the same lineup, though Alf Webster may see action. Dewey doesn't regard his team as the underdogs in the series to decide |" the East's entry in the Allan Cup firals, "I think we'll get better as we go along," he said. "I've seen individuals play bet- ter during the season, but I thought our club played better as a whole than they did at any time during the season." Rafferty showed the same confi- dence in his Dutchmen, and credi- ted their poor showing in the first game 'to "the tough playoff grind we have been through." "We've put that first game be- hind us," he said, "and are look- ing forward to the second meet- ing." FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Calgary -- Ernie Kemick. 135, Calgary, outpointed Harold Dade, 133, Los Angeles, 10. Detroit -- Chuck Speiser, 174, Detroit, stopped Billy Fifield, 170% Toronto, 8. New York -- Jimmy McCoy, 145, Portland, Ore., outpointed Mike Colucel, 14712, New York, 8. (ow tot of voi dice wu never too | CAHA AT WAR, AGAIN Lethbridge Player Switch a big one, provided the one sure thing in a day of confusion as the 17th Masters tournament began Thursday. Harbert fired a four-under<par round of 68 over the spacious Augusta national course and watched it stand up all day. Defending champion Sam Snead teetered on the edge of disquaii- cation for a moment before some confusion about his score card was cleared up. Snead settled for a one-under-par round of 71, which sixth place. Actually, Sam scored a 70, matching the totals of 1951 winner Ben Hogan and Milon Marus'e of Herkimer, N.Y. But his play.ng partner, Byron Nelson, put down a four op Snead's card for the 18th hole instead of the birdie three Sam shot. Snead signed the ecard | without noticing, and when the error was discovered it was ruled | that his score had to go in' the | books the way the card showed. | Harbert posted his round of 33- 35-68 early in the day. At'the| windup it was just enough for:a | one-stroke lead over Ed 'Porky' | Oliver and big Al Besselink, two other long-hitters in the pro Tapiis. SCISSORED | SPORTS TESSIER MAY MISS GAME BARRIE (CP)--Barrie Fyers' wing-man, O#v Tessier, will pos- sibly not be in uniform for the seventh game of the Ontario Hoe- key Association Junior A finals here tonight. Tessier suiiered a severe charley-horse to the right leg when he plunged into the goal- post during Wednesday night's game in Toronto. 'FINE, SUSPEND PLAYER HALIFAX (CP)--Steve Brklacich, fiery Charlottetown Islanders' de- fenceman, Thursday night was fined $60 and suspended for two games for wrestling a referee to the ice in a game against Halifax Atlantics Wednesday. As a result, Brklacich will not play in tonight's and Saturday night's games of the best-of-nine Maritime Major Hockey League fi- nals, which Halifax leads 2-0. MONTREAL CAGERS WIN MONTREAL (CP) -- Montreal YMHA defeated Marcus Miners from Saint John, N.B., 54-46 Thurs- day night in the first game of a two-game total-point Eastern Can- ada juvenile basketball final series. The second game will be played here Saturday. The victory was the 15th straigh$ for the Montreal cagers. PACER BREAKS ECORD PERTH, Australia (AP)--A New Zealand pacer, Blue Mist, bettered the world record Wednesday night for the 1'2-mile distance over the Banbury half-mile track, 120 miles from here. The mare covered the route in three minutes, 34 seconds. The listed world record is 3:06, set by the United States pacer Scot- tish Pence at Roosevelt Raceway in Westbury, N.Y., in 1951. LETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP)~Thethat annoyed me more," he said. Canadian Amateur Hockey Associ- ation was on the receiving end of verbal blasts today over amateur hockey"s latest flare-up, Jowever. ire. The cross-country broadside was let loose Thursday over the CAHA's refusal to allow Lethbridge Native Sons to use all-star defenceman Mid Houghton as a medical re- placement during the Western Can- ada Memorial Cup playoffs. Frank Boucher, general manager of New York Rangers of the Na- tional Hockey League, parent club of the Native Sons, the Lethbridge Chamber of Commerce, Mayor A. W. Shackleford and Senator W. A. Buchanan (L-Alberta) all voiced their protest to the second vote ruling. CAHA President W. B. (Baldy) George of Kemptville, Ont., gave the rebuttal, Native Sons, who lost three reg- 'ular defencemen through injuries for the remainder of the season while winning the Western Junior Hockey League title, were granted Houghton after a CAHA vote. But, after he played only one game as a replacement, the CAHA conduc ted a second vote among its bran- ches. Houghton was ruled ineli- gible, Native Sons opened the Western final Thursday night against St. Boniface Canadiens, who were op- posed to Lethbridge using Hough- ton. Canadiens won the first game of a best-of-seven series 7-5. At one point, St. Boniface officials threatened to pull the club out of the playoffs if Lethbridge were al- lowed to continue using Houghton. Boucher charged Thursday that the CAHA was "incompetent'" and was '"'ruining" hockey. ¥ "TI 'have been connected with hockey for more than 30 years but I have never heard of a deeision STANLEY CUP STATISTICS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Final WL Montreal 10 Boston 01 (Montreal leads best-of-seven nals 1-0) Thursday night's result Boston 2 Montreal 4 Individual scoring: Sandford, Boston Geoffrion, Mtl Peirson, Boston Lindsay, Detroit Prystai, Detroit Mackell, Boston Creighton, Boston Howe, Detroit Wilson, Detroit Mosienko, Chgo A 2 4 fi- > ~ o > NAAR jy con oneD BNO wona® TEI bt --_oNn ' Hocliey Fans! IS THIS A GOAL? A defending player tries to shoot the puck out of his zone. It hits the referee and deflects to an attacking player who shoots and scores. Would you allow this goal? Yes, the goa! counts. Only when the puch is deflected into the net directly | Jrom an official is the goal not allowed, - O'KEEFE'S BREWING COMPANY LIMITED "It was a sickening decision, one which could only have been made by a body as lacking in integrity and common sense as the CAHA." In Kemptville, George told Bou- cher--in effect--to stay on his own side of the fence. '"The CAHA are governing their own organization," he said. "And it would not be wise for me to come along and refer to the de- cisions of the NHL in the same manner." Boucher said the CAHA deserves all the criticism it gets. He noted that it did not make public the names of those who changed their minds on Houghton's eligibility. In reply, George said the second vote was held at the request of two branches--Manitoba and Thun- der 'Bay--who said the earlier de- cision had been made with insuffi- cient evidence of the circumstan- ces, He said a telegraph vote among CAHA members on the Houghton issue was "just a confirmation of the CAHA gegulations." These al- low each club to sign 18 players and dress 15 for each game. No replacements are allowed except for an injured goalkeeper. To Boucher's charge that the CAHA had been 'coerced' into taking the second vote, George re- plied: "We do not condone tactics of that nature." Senator Buchanan, a former sec- retary of the Ontario Hockey Asso- ciation, said in a telegram to George that he felt the welfare of the game 'is suffering from pres- ent differences of opinion. . . ."" id not. . . appoint a strictly unbiased investigator whose decis- ICE CHIPS FROM AHL PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Bob Sa bourin scored two goals Thursday night as Pittsburgh Hornets de- feated Cleveland Barons 5-2 for their first victory in three starts in the playoff for the American Hockey League's Calder Cup. Andy Barbe, playing in a plastic helmet to protect a fractured jaw, scored what proved to be the win. ning goal for the Hornets. It came at 19:44 of the second: period. The Hornets, beaten twice at Cleveland, took the lead on a first- . | period goal by Danny Lewicki but Bob Bailey squared it for Cleveland at 7:15 of the second stanza. Frank Mathers sent the Hornets ahead again at 18:25 and then came Barbe's clinching goal. ¢ Draws Fire From High Places fon would be final?" Mayor Shackleford, in a telegram to James Dunn, CAHA vice-presi- dent in Winnipeg, and George Dud- ley of Midland, Ont., secretary- manager, said: *, . . Your responsibility to the paying public demands impartial treatment." Neither team picked uo any in. juries in Wednesday pg 's game other than the usual bumps a bruises. Clare Martin, rugged Kitchener defenceman formerly with Chicago, Boston and New York in the Na- tional Hockey League, is playing with a broken thumb. Smiths Falls' Gordie Scott, who scored two goals in the opening game, broke one of his skates Wednesday night and must break | in a new pair in time for tonight's game. HOCKEY RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Stanley Cup Boston 2 Montreal 4 (First game of best-of-seven finals) Calder Cup Cleveland 2 Pittsburgh 5 (Cleveland leads best-of-seven fi- nals 2-1) Eastern League Springfield 2 Johnstown 0 (Johnstown leads best-of-seven fi. nals 3-1) Western League New Westminster 0 Saskatoon 7 (Saskatoon wins best-of-seven semi-finals 4-3) Maritime Intermediate Halifax 2 Campbellton 6 (Campbellton leads best-of-five fi- nals 240) Quebec Senior Chicoutimi 4 Quebec 6 (Best-of-nine finals tied 1-1) Ontario Senior B Toronto 2 Kingston 8 (Kingston leads best-of-seven semi. finals 3-1) Ontario Int. A Elmira 1 Simcoe 6 (First game of best-of-seven semis finals) Ontario Int, B Durham 7 Centralia 3 (Best-of-seven semi-tinals tied 1-1) Ontario Junior C Collingwood 8 Ingersoll 2 (Collingwood wins best-of-seven fi- nals 4-1) Ontario Junior D Beeton 3 Fergus 10 IFelgus wins best-of-seven finals -1) Wesiern Can, Memorial Cup St. Boniface 7 Lethbridge 5 (First game of best-of-seven finals SUPERATEST EXTRA MILEAGE TELEVISION with the exclusive new Magic Monitor" An RCA Victor-engineered electrons ic marvel, the "Magic Monitor" acts like an engineer inside your set to bring you crystal-clear pictures, true- to-life sound, free of distortion. Here, truly, is television at its best! ULTRA-SENSITIVE TUNING © Hill ony $389.50 OTHER OUTSTANDING Highland: FEATURES MODERN CABINET STYLING NEW CIRCUIT DESIGN * BUILT-IN ANTENNA Your old radio can be accepted as down Immediate antenna and T easy terms. ayment. Long AY installation B.F. 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