hf AA fl Ar EE Town And Country League Reaches Final Series = # HY Bo # 1 Curling Race See ROD. IT WiLL SUPPLY Ol FOR AN EASY REMOVAL '| pointing for Ontario and North- Stars Rising QUEBEC (CP) -- Strong west- ern entries are favored to keep|three ends their unbeaten records in the third round of the Canadian curl- ing shamploships but some Bo atchewan against Alberta Manitoba against British Colum- bia. The three Prairie entries have 240 records. . Monday's matches were disap- ern Ontario with Northern On- tario badly beaten in the morn- ndland ing and edged in the afternoon.|less after a 13-5 first-round loss Ontario fought desperately but/to Alberta, which also defeated lost 13-12 in the afternoon after Prince Edward Island 13-5. defeating Quebec 11-6. wo) HOR BC a. tot 5 thi | Saskatchewan used .a strong a a game to defeat Northern|extra-end victory over Nova Sco- El 5 5 BIATHLON RACE Russia Wins FLASH FROM FLORIDA Pitcher Whitey Ford, centre, | training camp by Jim Turner, is congratulated on his new | left, and Ed Lopat, Yankee 1959 contract at the New York | pitching coaches. Contract calls Club's St. Petersburg, Fla. | for $35,000. Oshawa Girl Is Skating Champ A 17-year-old Oshawa girl, Dor- een Yeo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Yeo, Switzer drive, . Dar- tral Ontario Sectional champion- ships were Paul Huehnergard, 14, wildered the "Chevies" by scor-|W Belko's And Tony's Tied In UAW Series Finals Playing before 500 eager fans, Belko Redy-Mix and Tony's Re-| freshments again settled nothing, Sunday afternoon, in the Bow- manville Arena, as the two UAW Hockey League finalists battled to a 2-2 tie. Both clubs came out on even terms 5-5 last weekend. Although Tony's haven't yet registered a series victory they still find themselves in the driv- er's seat having won the first game on a protest on account of Belko's using an ineligible play- er in goalie Vince Vanstone. It wasn't settled until a '"'special committee" comprised of Cliff Pilkey, Ralph Cooke, and Bill Badgley settled the situation, and awarded the Refreshment team 1 the Belko end zone and flipped it back to Smith, who made no mistake. attendance, it set a high for the UAW Hockey League| eight-year history. Scoring cham- 'pion, Bill Berwick, missed the game because of a broken thumb and a badly swollen ankle. He is listed as a doubtful starter in the Jest, resumes Sunday at 1 p.m., key figure who helped Oshawa capture the all-Omtario Juvenile "A" laurels last: year and with typical Rocket: Richard style dipsy - doodling around no less than four Belko defenders with a stickhandling display that brought the fans to their feet, fired a hot drive behind theSmi amazed Gary Kunkel. Smith, Tony's veteran, proved to be the Refreshments' pay-off man, as rookie Bob Sutton got the draw in ICE CHIPS , . . With 500 fans in new time of the series. Tony's also Harmon, R. Reid. McMaster. son of Mr. and Mrs. Leight Hueh- nergard, Bader avenue, who was runner-up in the novice men's class, and three other girls from the Oshawa Skating Club. Two of these girls competed in the nov- ice class and one in the senior ladies'. Gloria Tatton placed third in the senior ladies' class. Gloria and Larry Webster placed second in the novice dance event and Paul Huehnergard and Yvonne [Asosiciuit placed third in this |class. ing from a corner face-off un- assisted. Gangemi finished the scoring on a pass from Ferguson final has captured the Central Ontario Sectional - Ladies' Novice Figure Skating Championship held in Orillia Saturday, Feb. 28. Miss Yeo was among 17 com- petitors in the event. She has been figure skating for six years and is a member of the Oshawa Skating Club. She held the nov- ice ladies' championship of inter- club for two years and was inter- mediate ch of the Osh Skating Club for two years. Other competitors at the Cen- Nordic Skiing weight as the Saskatchewan rink skipped by Ernie Richardson piled up points. LOSE LEAD In the second round, Northern Ontario scored three in the sixth to go ahead 7-6 but New Bruns- SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. (AP); Kolchin, a -116-pounder, beat North Americans, shut out of the|Finland's veteran Veikko. Hakuli- victory circle in the North Amer-nen in the 15 - kilometre (9.3 ican Nordic skiing champion-|/miles) special cross - country , had a chance for a title|race. Kolchin was timed in 54 today in the unique biathlon eom-| minutes 10.7 seconds for a: vic- petition. tory margin of 3% seconds. Fin- In the event, the final one on(land's Kalevi Hamalainen placed the list of trials for this site of|third in 54:45.2. the 1960 Winter Olympic Games,| Kochkin, a stocky 25-year-old, skiers race 20 kilometres (12% (placed 10th in 'the 15-kilometre miles) shooting at four target/which with his first in the 60- ranges en route. metre jumping, gave him the The field of 20 for the biathlon |title in the competition combin- listed only two foreigners, Klas|ingt hose two events. Lestander of Sweden and LAC| Ted Farwell of Montague City, Norman Shutt of Falconbridge, a|Mass., a student at Denver Uni- member of the RCAF police versity, took second. In the European sweep, Fin- land's Kalevi Karkinen won the 80-metre jump with a best leap of 290 feet 4 inches. Duluth's Gene Kotlarek was second with 287 feet. Sweden's Sixten Jernberg took the 30 kilometre cross-country title in another event where North Americans made no show- in, : Solomon replied twice on rusties for is Dery, to leave score al Imperials bitter fought encounter, year, and despite losing part. of their team to an- other league, gave a commend- able performance beiore suc- cumbing. Goal tender Neate played tre- ey, despite the 1 hockey, oss. Brooks in the Petes' net had 1959 May Be Scotland's*: Year In Soccer Tests By M. MCINTYRE HOOD my "The Senator" Coyle's three- star selection were Neil Me- Matin, Sneddon and Joe Mel ck. TONY'S -- Goal, Melnick; de- fence, West, R. Reid, McCabe; [forwards, Sneddon, Davis, Locke, J. Reid, Harmon, Irvine, Sutton, th. BELKO -- Goal, Kunkel; de- fence, McMahon, Steffan, Cor- beil, Kap; forwards, Sawdon, Clarke, McQuaid, Lintner, Rich- force ards, Marshall, Shaw, Armstrong. : |PLACED 32nd No BE, P Mi Shutt was 82d fu the -- i | ometre special in 1:13:57.9. a aies R. Reid, Steffan, "vas not among the first 19 in| 2nd Period Nordic combined results. 1. Belko, Arnold Clarence Servold of Camrose, (Richards, Lintner) ... 10.05/Alta., finished sixth in the com- Penalties -- Steffan, Smith. bined event. He scored 172.50 3rd Period points in the jump and 237.81 in 2. Belko, Richards the cross-country for a total of (Arnold, Marshal 410.31. Shutt's speciality' is the biath- . 10.59 lon. 4. Tony's, Smith (Sutton) 18.44] A pair of Russians, Pavel Kol- Penalties -- Armstrong, Smith, |chin and Dmitri Kochkin, won their country's first victories and completed European domination of the Nordic. somewhat in doubt so far as the Fulham's Special To right back position is concerned The Oshawa Times {Alex Parker, formerly of Falki. | i LONDON -- This may be Scot-|and now of Everton. was form- side right will be Bobby Collins, land's vear in international foot-| erly the unani ous choice for|now Everton n.d formerly of] ball. A win over England in the that position. Everton, however, Celtic. a cert for selection. big international at Wembly on/have changed him ito a tor April 11, will give Scotland the ranking right half. The Scottish championship for the fir t time selectors, however, seem likel in quite a number of years. With|to bring him back to his former the talent available, there are|spot at right back. Failing that and 10,000-metre races. His team-| good hopes of a Scottish victory Duncan McKay of Celtic is fav- mate Alf Gjestvang took the 500|- if--and this is a :~'hexr big if--- |ore¢. There is only one chcice and Finland's Juhani Jarvinen|the top talent can stay clear of for left back, the reliable Eric broke the world record for 1,500|injuries and be available for the Caldow of Glasgow Rangers, with two minutes 6.3 seconds. |big game. who is practically a unanimous 1 have seen most of the pros-|choice. goal-scoring outside | | next Saturday at 2 p.m. at Port Perry to decide the league cham. pionship. g. Skating titles in the weekend of international competition also went to Europe. Norway's Knut Johannesen won both the 5,000- 8.07 DOW KINGSBEER'S "Little bar" ....... Officials -- Ivan Locke, Mickey the Bowmanville Arena. Jim- i] i A "fe Rh g gE g LH i i | | | : ; : & i 1 big g 4] t 4d REMEMBER WHEN? ... theavyweight world, died at age 77 at Burbank, Calif. won mons in 1899 wt Coney Island, N.Y., and 1905. On ought Reno rounds. By THE CANADIAN PRESS James J. Jeffries, one - time champion of the , six years ago today. He title from Bob Fitzsim- retired undefeated in a comeback try, he ack Johnson in 1910 at was knocked out in 15 Tony's club that triumphed over the O'Connor Bowl opposition on Saturday at Bowlodrome, to still stay in the running in the To- pects for the Scottish team in| The half-back line has already action "this season, and am pre-|selected itself. Tommy Docherty, pared to go out on a limb injof Arsenal, will appear at right infin to Diodiet the Hreup the half, and may be the team cap- ectors 00se r e Wembly game against the Sas- tain. His performances since he senachs. The team will lean rather heavily on Anglo-Scots, on players now with English teams but born in Scotland. For goal, it should be a toss-up between Farm of Blackpool, and Younger of Liverpool, both form- er Scottish internationalists who are in top form at the moment. Tony's Stay In Running Toronto Major League as usual the breaks went the other way. Tony's compiled a neat first game score of 1325 which includ- ed Ozzie Keeler 316, Dick Adams 270, Bob Gallagher 277, Lloyd spark plug in the league. For centre half, the evergreen international veter- an Bobby Evans, of Celtic, is a certain choice, with Dave Mac- Kay, of Hearts of Midlothian, as the left half. Going into Saturday's bowling, it was a three way tie for top spot with Tony's, Playtime Bowl and Regent Press all having nine points each. It was a very determined , and ronto Major Five-Pin League. ANGLO-SCOT FORWARDS Should the choice fall on a home Scotland is very likely to field Playtime lost all of their three Sent, 'Slater of Falkirk would be Sabins 245 and Alex Donaldson Juveniles, Midgets, Btms. Vie For Provincial Honors For Oshawa people who dream when this city will re- games by 15-18 on the round. This is a big test for the local Juveniles who have been boning up for this home and home ser- fes with Lindsay. Realizing that Oshawa woul play the winner of Lindsay-Peter- borough, we journeyed to Lind- say on Friday evening to watch those highly touted Lindsayites and they did not disappoint us with their fast skating and heads- up hockey for 60-minutes. It is a well-balanced team of strong, hustling hockeyists who have worked out a fine passing game and each one is a power-house when it comes to shooting from all angles. Particularly impres- sive was their fine ganging at- tack when short-handed, as well as their ability to clear the puck out of their own end in short order. If the local Juveniles hope to vanquish this Lindsay crew, they will have to play hockey the way, and do it on the ice, not in the penalty box. Also, the second game with Lindsay will be play- ed either Friday night, March 6 or Saturday, March 7 in Lindsay. This should be the game of the season and Oshawans should be reminded that they must go into Lindsay with a several-goals- margin in order to come out on top and enter the second round or Belleville which will be played one week hence. On Saturday night, March 7, at playoffs against either Kingston handling games to the McGuinness club while Regent Press and Tony's both picked up two points each from their opponents. The shutout by McGuinness over Playtime, moved the Long Branch crowd into another three- way tie for top, Tony's, Regent Press and McGuinness, now having 11 points each. In their series with O'Connor Bowl, the Tony's trundlers really gave all they had and it should have been a shut-out victory, but 217, O'Connor Bowl was away be- hind the pace with a team total of 1157, The second game was a real thriller with both clubs racking up-team scores of 1300 or better. The O'Connor Bowl club had 1303 for their score, against 1300 for the Tony's club, and this three- pin margin favoring the O'Connor club was just enough to keep Tony's out of first place. The individual scores for the second game were for O'Connor, an entire forward line of Anglo-| Scots, if the players wanted are fit for the game. Graham Legget, my guess for the spot between the posts. The back division may be NO.1 STOVE OIL For Delivery by Metered Trucks 3 with concentrated coaching and over the past weeks. The Midgets do not boast a star- studded aggregation, but have th ives into a team the Children's Arena, the Oshawa 4-3 and have been correct- ing their errors and polishing up on their all-round hockey tactics for this return match. They rea- lize that being down one goal for this game means that they: will have to play real hard and fast hockey to eliminate Peterbor- ough to advance into the second round against either Kingston or Belleville. Peterborough teams are the explosive type and can come up with a splurge of goals and never give up despite the score. Great things are expected of the bantams this season. If they go out there and play hard, but clean hockey every minute, there is every reason to believe that they will come out on top and vie for the second round laur- els the following week. To round out the hockey night, Saturday, March 7, the surprise team of the 'City League', the Oshawa 'All-Star' Midgets will play the second game against Pe- terborough Midgets and go into this game with an 8-4 margin. The Oshawa Minor Hockey As- sociation is more than proud of this crew of Midgets who were not expected to go past the first round against Peterborough be- cause of their size, player short- age and no desire to win. How- ever, they have come along way It's on NOW! YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER'S FEB. 27 fo Come and see MAR. 7 oll that's new In boating .. occessories. ALL-FAMILY « boats, outboards, mily. Lots of fun for the whole fa 20 RAY ST. Glen McLean 349, Tom Pritchard 263, Bob Green 233, Bill Garrard 221 and Cliff Goodman 228. For the Tony's club it was Bob Gal- lagher 281, Dick Adams 275, Alex Donaldson 260, Lloyd Sabins 243 and Ozzie Keeler 241. : The game was also close- ly fought and it was only after a bitter struggle that Tony's took the decision with 1192 against 1181 for O'Connor Bowl, and the credit for this one went to Ozzie |Keeler and Bob Gallagher with 310 and 283 respectively. The three game totals, Tony's 3817, O'Connor 3649. When the chips are down the | Tony's club is hard to shake and with only one more week to go, it should be a terrific finish at Bayview Bowl on Saturday. We Finally Have 9t In Oshawa! ANY HOUSEHOLD SERVICE WITH ONE PHONE CALL! AVAILABLE TO ALL HOUSEHOLDERS! (Example: you need a) Plumber, T.V. Repair, Heating Service, Exterminator, etc. effort which is paying off. They play hard, clean hockey on the ice and make it their business to keep out of the penalty box; keep the other team in check all the time and 'drive-drive-drive' and as a result they have a four- goal lead for this game. However, this Peterborough team is a big, fast skating crew and can break up a game at any time. From reports of the game in Peterborough, the Oshawa Midgets played heads-up hockey all night and swarmed all over the opposition with a fine dis- play of team-play and clean hock- ey, which is hard to beat. They have a desire to win and want Soxing mire than to prove to the shawa fans at they were " mistaken when they were labelled| on 30. gh en : over 20 teams that ed in as push-overs. This lead is fine ' Q but the Peterborough lads willl cal hiner rue, his winter. So be out there playing their hearts focal, fans, if you ave. su in some high-class entertainment out vive that the first game|yis the hockey picture and 'Minor Hockey-wise', make a date to be Wi folks, Shure ie is! OMEA at the Children's Arena on both n Osh s ay nights, Thursday and Satu y week on Thursday night, March of this week. ny FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL SERVICE | World Wide ] Travel | Arrangements: Sea - Air - Rail - Hotels Tours - Documents (ALL FREE OF CHARGE) PHONE . . . VIGOR OIL CO. LIMITED OSHAWA WHITBY RA 5-1109 { MO 8-3644 BROOKLIN AJAX "282 550 5, game time 8.156 p.m., when Lindsay invades Oshawa for the first game of their home-and- home series, total goals on the mound. Then, on Saturday night, first game at 8.00 p.m., Peterborough Bantam and Midget teams will tangle with our 'All-Star Bantams and Mid- gets in the second game of their first round, home-and'home ser- ies. These are three big games and fans are in for a thrill-packed hockey series in the Children's Arena on both nights. The Oshawa Minor Hockey As- sociation needs fan support in their bid for provincial honors) and an incentive for the more DOW KINGSBEER BREWERY LIMITED Fast Guaranteed Service! On call 24 hours a day, everyday !! Qualified Competent Service Men! Guaranteed Fair Trade Prices!! Honest % Dependable % Efficient For information fill in the coupon and Mail Now fo: ener y > | Associated Household Services Reg'd. 539 Albert St. Oshawa, Ont. » Please send more inform ition, on r services, without obligation. my i : BI I I EE I ay Address 57 King: Street East, Oshawa PHONE RA 8-6201 RA 83-8853