EXHIBITION GAME Stouffville Clippers Win On Home Ice dae Oshawa Truckmen In Peppy Tilt > iawa Truckmen cropped a facision to the S'ouffville Clin. in a penalty-studded exhibi- | game when Stouffville . notched their first tally. Two successive {pc+alties to the homesters were score ended at 3-2, although the Truckmen put on a spirited finish, especially while Scatalani and Thal- ame at Stouffville, on Satur successfully killed off by the Clip- er were serving a double roughing cv night. "= game was fast and peopy all t'» way. with flashes of old-time rivarly flaring at times, with the result that a doz~n nerslties vere m-ted out, the homesters: draw- ine seven. Charging, salshing, high- sticking and roughing were includ- ed in the. Hit of misdomeandurs. GOIN COAT KEFPING A highlight of the game was the fin: puck-siopping d:splays turned ia by, the rival net-minders. Blake Y'alough, in the nets for the Clip- Jers. was one of the game's big sfors with his fine saves. Ken Courtney and Jack Naylor shared the O*hawa goal - ke=ning chore, wies Les Colvin forced to miss ac- tien. dre to an in'ected ' - The homesters opened the scor- ing early in the game wien Nick Bangay scored on a play set up by Baker. Midway through the period, Jack Thaler evened the count on a thrée-way play with his mates, Dong Williams and Fred ! Etcher. This trio carried the mail for the Truckmen and was easily Oshawa's best line. The Truckmen got their goal a fen Seconds id Mills was thumb- ed to the penalty box for charging. Don McBeth had beep in rg a bin in the first few minutes of the 'pers, thanks to Eatough's fine work. : The second period saw the tight- est hockey of the night. Stevenson {and Harry Sinden were chased to- | gether, early in the period. Later, ; ill Berwick got a tripping penalty i but the I'ruckmen hela the Clippers | of and they did again, midway | through the period, when Jago got the gate for interference. | Later in the period George Stark, | who with Nick Bangay and Baker i shared tie limelight for Stouffville on Saturday night, drew a tripping penalty. Truckmen ganged the Clippers in a bid to break the dead- lock but the move backfived with | Gibson and Clark broke away to- to make the score 2-1. PACE SLOWS DOWN Play slackened off in the final canto but still both teams stuck dili- ently to sound defensive tactics and {the steady back-checking made goals just 'as scarce as ever. Shortly after Scatalani had drawn a penalty for charging and served his time, Frank Hooper tied the score on a nifty three-way play with Holden and Jago. Three minutes later Baker scor- ed a pretty solo goal to put the | Clippers in front again and the | gether, Gibson potting Clark's pass | | penalty. | OSHAWA TRUCKMEN: goal, Courtney; defense, Sinden and Me- | Beth; centre, Scott; wings, Samol- enko and Wilson; alts.; Williams, Etcher, Thaler, Hooper, Jago, Hold- en, Yourth, Berwick, Dickens and Peters. STOUFFVILLE CLIPPERS: goal, Eatough; defense, MacIntosh, Mills; centre, Scatalani; wings, Baker and Machin; alts., Clark, Minton, Stark, N. Bangay Pendle- berry, Small, Stephenson, Bell, Gib- son, Speers, Crust, Inatson, Tuns- tell and Lewis. FIRST PERIOD 1. Stouffville, N. Bangay (Baker) 2. Oshawa, Thaler (Williams, Etcher) . 13.28 | Peualties: McBeth (1.11), Mills (5.36), Stevenson (11.42), Mills 1 (13.06). SECOND PERIOD 3. Stouffville, Gibson (Clark) 19 Penalties: Stevenson (1.21), Sin- den (1.21), Berwick (2.10), Jago (8.56), Stark (18.15). THIRD PERIOD 4. Oshawa, Hooper (Holden, Jago) 2 5. Stouffville, Baker . 15.32 Penalties: Scatalani (8.50), Sca- talani (17.07) and Thaler (17.07). CLOSE 1953 SEASON Present Trophies, Elect '54 Officers Oshawa Tennis Clubs Annual Banquet The first Honorary Life Mem- berships in the history of the Osh- awa Tennis Club were presented at the closing banquet on Friday night. The deserving receipients were Bruce Annand and Earnie Gomme. These two tennis enthusi- asts were intrumental in the build- ing of the spacious clubhouse and the fine courts which are unsur- passed in Canada. With the final banquet which closed another tennis season came the presentation of trophies. Among the guests were many for- mer tennis greats of Oshawa, some of whom : resented trophies to the winners of 1953 tournaments. TROPHIES PRESENTED Mrs. Gordon Conant, after tell- ing of the attributes of the game au fe o the Jme when 8 50 was a keen player, - sented her trophy to the Ladies Singles champion of Oshawa, Mrs. Betty Welsh. hy, emblem. the Men's Single: championship, presented it to Lloyd Gardner, the 1953 winner. John Harris, a well-known Osh- awa sports figure and a former tennis player himself, made the presentation to Reg. McArthur and Clint Hall of the Men's Doubles Trophies. The ladies doubles champions, Miss Kay Hopkins and Mrs. Betty Welsh, who between them collect- ed three championships, were awarded the Sinclair Trophy, pre- sented by Mrs. A. Armstrong. The mixed doubles champions were Miss Kay Hopkins and Bob Brown. "Sam' Barker presented them with the Dr. R. McMullen Trophy. In the junior division, Miss June MacGregor was the ladies' singles champion and Ray Petrie the Jr. men's singles champion. "Army" , | Armstrong made the presentation of these trophies. The men's consolation title was won by B. Mooney and he was resented with his trophy by Dr. oug. Langmaid. The Lakeshore League Trophy, which this year was won by the Oshawa Tennis Club, was present- ed to team captain, Bryce Brown by D. Brown. . NEW OFFICERS NAMED "Chick" Hewitt, president of the club for the year 1953, after giv- |ing a synopsis of the activities for the season, then called for the election of officers for the coming year, and the following members were chosen to carry on the activi- ties for the 1954 season. President, Harvey Moyer; 1st vice-president, Bob Brown; 2nd vice ident, Al. Dunk; treasur- er, s K. Hopkins; secretary, Miss B. Tennier; membership chairman, B. McDonald; membership chairman, . Gilbert; grounds committee chair- man, Chas. Eder; instruction con- vener, Reg. McArthur; tournament convener, Bryce Brown; social committee, Miss J. Curran, Miss M. Clarke and Miss G. McLaren; entertainment convener, Jack Ly- ons; publicity chairman, Clint Hail. The banquet was held with the same enthusiastic feeling which 'Was put forth on the courts all season and was a great success with many laughs being brought out by the entertainers, after which dancing was enjoyed until closing. P.S.--Until snow covers the courts, you will still find some of the die-hards staying in shape. (Maybe for next season?) 'TI-CATS DOWN OTTAWA Edmonton Eskimos and Mont. Alouettes Are Still Unbeaten On Home Fields By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer Avpatently Montreal Alouettes and Edmonton Eskimos forgot to read the experts' 'scripts before Canada's professional football sea- son opened last August. Both were written off as potential Grey Cup contenders. They may make the experts look good in the long haul before the ast-West final at Toronto Nov. 28, but right now they're the hottest big-league clubs in he business. Tis proved it during the week-- end. The Als did it wth a de~isve 39-11 victory over Toronto Argo- nauts, defending Grey Cup cuw..- pions, at Montreal on Sunday and Eskimos, already assured of a Western Conference final playoff berth, de-fused Winnipeg Blue Bombers 32-9 at Edmonton Satur- day night. The in-and-out Hamilton Tiger-Cats were "in" with a 33-21 victory over Ottawa Rough Riders Fhurday to keep in step with the s. The Edmonton - Montreal tri umphs probably won't cause home- town supporters to put immediate they proved a couple of points: They are the most consistept win- ners in the play-for-pay game and both dote on home grounds UNDEFEATED AT HOME Neither has dropped a game this before h town fans--the only big leaguers tol hold such a record--and both are on a victory rampage. The Eskimos, who meet Saskatchewan Roughriders at Ed- monton tonight, have taken four straight and the Als claim a three- game victory skein. The Big Four, with the possibility of a four-way first-place tie, now has the Als and TigerCats tied at the top with 12 points each, four up on both Ottawa and Toronto. Four games remain before the schedule closes out and Montreal fans might take heart that the Als play two of theirs at home, against Ottawa next Sunday and against Tiger-Cats Nov. 8. Calgary Stampeders, headed for a sideline spot in the Western Con- ference playoffs after a double- header loss to Eskimos last week, chance go when they lost 24-18 to Roughriders at Calgary Saturday. Now the western two-game total point semifinals will be between the Bombers and Roughriders. ORFU RACE TIGHTENS The Ontario Rugby Football Union race tightened with only two points separating three teams. The 40 | Grads showed signs of finis ass't. | the EX. BASKETBALL Saturday night at Simcoe Hall, the Simcoe Hall Grads opened their 1953 basketball season at home with an exhibition game against the Toronto Mustangs and it was not a happy opening as far as the local crew were concerned as they were edged 66-60. The game itself was well played, as both teams stuck strictyq to bas ketball. The Mustangs showed a wellrounded attack and at times the Grads had trouble breaking through the oppositions defence. At the end of the first stanza the Grads trailed the Toronto crew 28- 13 but surged back in the second quarter with a fast breaking attack to lead the Mustangs at the half 32-28. The Grads lost the lead in wthe third quarter and trailed 48-42. The last stanza saw both clubs match basket for basket and up until the last three minutes the Grads held the lead. However some careless passing and loose balls around the basket enabled the visi- tors to turn defeat into victory. She al they had last season and judging by their play, it will not be long before they round into mid-season form. Bob Booth paced the Oshawa at- tack with 21, while Varga and Rise- brough each hooped seven. Pat Sheehan was again a star in the Grads defensive system as time and time again he grabbed off the rebounds from the backboard. For the Mustangs, Buguski with Toronto Mustang Nip Simcoe Grads THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, October 19, 1953 11 | [MINOR LADS LEARNING FAST Jaycee Blues, Fire Fighters and Bolahood's Chalk Up Wins in Simcoe Hall Hoop Loop 8 22 points. and Wowchick with nine were stapdouts. The Grads led in the fouls depart- | ment with 26 being called while the Mustangs were called for seven in. fractions. THos on hand were treated to some top notch basketball action and the Grads will certainly be heard from this year in the Toronto league. SU yY GRADS Name Pos. Mroczek, for. Seedhouse, For. Melnally, For. Risebrough, For. Varga, For. Booth, Cen. Gedge, Cen. Sheehan, Guard Corse, Guard Hill, Guard Fleck, Guard F oNpNO wwe owl = COHNON mmooon -- ha 3 SUG apNNSoeTR --- : Total --] MUSTANGS Name Pos. Buguski, For. Miyasaki, For. Hirand, For. Makimoto, C. Wowchick, Guard Miyasaki, Guard Edamura, Guard Iwanicki, Guard Total 21 66 Fouls: Grds, 26 Mustangs, 7. FG FS Pits. 9. 4 v.06 17] SWmONe 1 2 3 1 1 4 -- Referees: Bill Dell and . Bill Smith. Dutchmen split a doubleheader | with Toronto Balmy Beach, win- ning 20-13 at home Saturday and losing 31-9 at Toronto Sunday. Sarnia Imperials, tied with Beaches two points behind the Dutchmen, didn't surprise anyone with a 34-6 decision over Brantford Redskins at Sarnia Saturday. It was the Redskins' ninth loss in as many starts. Conference game, the losers came up with desperate fourth-quarter victory bids that at least kept the fans from leaving the parks. The most courageous was put up by Ottawa who started to roll late in third quarter after Tiger-Cas piled up all heir points. Tiger-Cats, whipped 30-12 by Ar- gonauts Thanksgiving Day, made four first-half pass interceptions that set them up for 24 points. One of these accounted directly for a Hamilton touchdown and the other three put the Cats within easy striking distance. LATE OTTAWA RALLY Riders, defeated twice by Mont- real in their Thanksgiving week- end doubleheader, hit the scote- board for a major late in the third quarter and added three converted majors and a single in the last 15 minutes The Als piled up a third-quarter 28-0 lead and then eased up as in the final quarter. It was the first Montreal home game not tele- vised and a crowd of 19,603, largest of the season, turned out. The split-T formation Eskimos led 19-3 going into the fourth quar- STAFFORD BROS. MONUMENTAL WORKS 318 DUNDAS ST. E.,, WHITBY PHONE WHITBY 552 Memorials @ Markers YOU CAN BORROW AT HFC FOR THESE REASONS b A oi 25th year in C Need M 0 hy EY ive Fuel bills, medical bills, emergencies, clothing for the children, repairs for car or home, holiday expenses -- and many more! $50 TO $1000 » YOUR OWN SIGNATURE ¢ NO BANKABLE SECURITY REQUIRED © UP TO 24 MONTHS TO REPAY ON THE PLAN YOU SELECT HOUSEHOLD FINANCE / A 11% Simeoe $1. South, second C. H. Brook, Monager floor, phone Oshawa 5-1139 OSHAWA, ONT. : bids in for Grey Cup tickets but 3 The name John Player ¢c Sons" the package is your guarantee that every cigarette is smooth and fresh, (Canada's Mildest, Cigarette league-leading Kitchener-Waterloo | In each Big Four and Western | Argonauts scored all their points. f ter, allowed Bombers a converted touchdown, and added two con- verted majors and a single to make vicwry complete. Calgary Stampeders, behind 24-6 with 15 minutes left, rallied for two converted touchdowns. Another full day of Minor basket- ball was run off at Simcoe Hall on Saturday morning, which mark- ed the second week the league has been in operation. The Jaycee Blues won their first game of the season in their first start as they downed the Jaycee Whites 41-24. The game was much closer than the score would indi- cate, and the losers would have made it closer if they had not missed so many shots. Eddie Kolodzie was the big gun for the winners as he scored 22 points to lead his club while his team mate Ron Simcoe scored 10. Danny Gray, Bob Sutton also figur- ed in the points for the winners. For the Jaycee Whites, Jerry Jackman, George Fuller, and Dan- ny Kornylo all scored baskets in a losing cause. i FIRE FIGHTERS WIN In the second game of the morn. ing, a much improved Fire Fight- 1 ers crew edged out a close decision |over CKLB 2522. It marked the second-straight week that the Ra- dio men have dropped a close game and coach Ralph Risebrouch vows that next week will be dif- ferent. The Fire Fighters under coach Nick Morozek looked much game against Bolahood's, and some sharp shooting by the winners spel- led the difference. The scoring for the winners was about evenly divided, with Kozey, Kolodzie, and Olynk all doing hon- ours. For CKLB Horton, Boxstrom and Williams led the attack scoring 20 of the 22 points. Jack Lyons play- ed a good defensive game for the losers as did Logeman for the Fire Fighters. BOLAHOODS ROLLING The last game of the morning saw the Bolahood's sports club 1 better this week than in their last, swamp the St. John Cadets team 63-18 as coach Bill Willmore's club unleashed terrific power. The Ca- dets might have won the contest but they missed chances time and time again. The big gun for the winners was Vogue with 25 ponts while Brady hooped 18. For the losers Muba, Teresi, and Holawaty shared the scoring. > 5 The next action in the Simcoe- Hall Minor Basketball League will be Wednesday night at the gym, when the Police Association, take on the Jaycee whites in the first meeting this season. A Next Saturday morning there will be three games, when at 9 am. Fire Fighters meet St, John Cadets while CKLB take on the Jaycee Blues in the second contest, at 11 am. Jaycee Whites meet Bala- hood's Sports. JAYCEE BLUES -- Gray, E. Kolodzie, R. Simcoe, Sutton, J. Bishop, Bradley, McGee, Total: 41. JAYCEE WHITES: Clough, Ful- ler, Griffin, Kornylo, Newell, Arm- strong, Topp, Jackman, Total: 24, FIRE FIGHTERS: Logeman, Tuson, D. Rooke, T. Rooke, Stacey, Boivin, J. Kolodzie, Piatte, Olynk, Kozey. Total: 25. CKLB: Williams, Horton, R. Sim coe, Boxstrom, Mainds, Weeks, Clarke, Lyons. Total: 22, ST. JOHN CADET's: Tereski, Desroachew, Newell, -Holawaty, Muna, Nagy, McKay, Kelly. Total: BALAHOOD'S SPORTS: Waduck, Norris, Gorycki, Marchutt, Kalnit- sky. Vogue Brady. Total: 63. eferees: Nick Morzek, Ralph Risebrough, B. Starr, G. Vaughn, F. Williams, D. Andrey. JAYCEE BLUES WIN AGAIN On Saturday night at Simcoe Hall the Jaycee Blues downed the Sim- coe Hall Jr. Grads 43-26 in a Sim- coe Hall Minor Basketball game. The win for the Blues was the second in as many starts and it was the first loss for the Grads. The Blues had too much power for the opposition, and Bob Simcoe iled up 21 points to lead his club 0 victory. Other standouts for the Blues were Eddie Kolodzie with 8, and Bob Hercia with 4. Garry Vaughn was a standout for the Jr. Grads as he hooped 18, while Lowry and Ryser also figured in the scoring. SIMCOE HALL JR. GRADS: K. Clarke, Reid, Ypughn, Edmunson, Lowry, Tunnicliff, Mastin, Jackson, Total: 26. | JAYCEE BLUES: Gray, Bishop, | E. Kolodzie, Eg-cia, B. Simcoe, Sutton, Bradly, Yahn, Total: 43. STANDING MINOR BASKETBALL w Bolahood's Jaycee blues Simcoe Hall Jr. Grads St. John Cadets Fire Fighters Police Association Jaycee Whites KLB = a) a COON ASS SOFTBALLERS TIE HAMILTON (CP) -- Ryckmans | Corners, Ontario Intermediate A softball champions, and Hamilton Pellers, provincial Senior. A titlists, layed to a 3-3 tie Saturday. Their nefit game brought more than $500 to Matt Blair, Corners' pitcher !who suffered a broken back in a game last June. YUGOSLAVIA WINNER ZAGREB, Yugoslavia (AP)---The Yugoslav soccer team defeated France 3-1 in Matsimir Stadium today. Air Force go places i equivalent or better. your country. freedom! MAKE YOUR You gain valuable aviation training ~win your wings--see the world -- serve Enrol today: make your target --- Enrol today! TARGET FREEDOM n their offices! Adventurous and satisfying jobs are now -open in the expanding RCAF to young men 17 to 24 who have Junior Matriculation, the i \. RADIO see, write or phone _ coupon today. Hake this Cockpit For Off .Highly qualified professional men... working as an efficient team . . . in a mobile office 20,000 feet up...over the Pacific... Atlantic... Europe «+. Japan. The Air Crew Officers of the Royal Canadian 'ENROL TODAY TO TRAIN'AS PILOT OFFICER NAVIGATION OFFICER For all the information about Air Crew; training, rates of pay and other benefits, the Career Counsellor at the address in the coupon -- or mail the "ur \ V > r I 1 R.C.A.F. RECRUITING UNIT, _Phane PR. 6659 or 6650 Please mail to me, without obligation, full particulars regarding enrolment requirements and openings wow available in the R.C.A.F. NAME (Please Pring 1207 Bay St.,, TORONTO, Ontario, (Surname) STREET ADDRESS (Christian Name) CITY PROVINCE.......unwumimucion EDUCATION (by grade and province)... AGE...... When applying, bring 1) Birth Certificate 2) Proof of Education. CAF.53-10 RoYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE