v 14 THZ OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, April 12, 1960 FORMER WORLD CHAMPION WATCHES CHESS MATCH looks on with interest. Mikhail | 24-game series 6% points to 4%. | The eighth game of the Mik- hail Botvinnik - Mikhail Tal chess champion title match in Moscow attracted a large audi- ence. The former world cham- pion, V. Smyslov (right), | Tal leads the defending cham- pion, Mikhail Botvinnik, in the IMLACH FRANTIC? Predictions By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP) -- Punch Im- lach is fast running out of pre- dictions--and Stanley Cup games. "I've got to win one game in Montreal," the Toronto Maple Leaf coach said before the Leafs- Canadiens best - of - seven final started in Montreal last week. Now, two games and two losses later, he says that if Canadiens don't smarten up, his heroes will square the series at home. Canadiens slipped into town al- most unnoticed Monday night and were quiet but confident they would wrap up the series in two more games. Bernard (Boom Boom) Geof- frion, Henri Richard and Jean Beliveau paused and smiled for a photographer and reporter who welcomed them. "We'll make up for it when we walk out again Thursday--with the Stanley Cup," Henri said. Leafs get their chance at Maple Leafs Gardens tonight when the third game of the nationally tele- vised playoffs start at 8 p.m. | & --CP Wirephoto SPORTS MENU | 'BASEBALL By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts JUST BEFORE THE BATTLE -- and Oh Brother! Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens are building a special sec- tion Of bleachers, to accommodate about 50 Montreal fans-=and the seats in the top four corners of the lofty Gardéns--behind the greys. They call 'em nosebleed seatsj*a common result of gaining too high an altitude but if somebody should catch somebody they think is responsible, all the nosebleeds will not be due to alti- tude. wAlthough it's denied--we find it hard to believe that this is anything other than reprisal spite against the Montreal folk, for the poor seats Toronto fans re- ceived in Montreal, All this isn't going to add to the sportsmanlike atmosphere at these games. As a gag-- the idea actually has some humor content--but in a serious vein it only shows that the Toronto Club people responsible are even worse than their Montreal con- | freres they criticized so harshly. Toronto isn't giving | Montreal the worst seats they had--they've gone to | trouble to build some even less suitabe. | * Opening Day By ED WILKS THREE-WAY FIGHT? Associated Press Staii Writer | Manager Bill Rigney, on the Can the Dodgers do it again? [spot in what shapes vp as an- Have the Giants found the pitch-|oiner three-way fight with the ling? "Can Chuck Dressen regain Dodgers and Braves, has Don the touch with the Braves and-or (Bjasingame at second, but the can the Braves regain the touch rest of the Giant lineup is about {with Chuck Dressen? {the same. Right fielder Leon | The answer to one of those | Wagner and shortstop Daryl questions may answer tiem all, Spencer, whom the Giants gave and the National League gets to [yp to get Blasingame as a lead- [work on the quiz today, opening off hitter, were in manager Solly [the 1960 baseball season a week Hemys' starting lineup for the fanead of jhe Aierican Deague: | Cards. i e world champion Dodgers, | : Nos : lets " : Milwaukee, missing a third still at home in spacious and straight pennant under Fred Haney by just one game last year, try this time with Dressen, a manager again after serving as |a coach with the Dodgers. Dres- 8 had just one rookie, left |fielder Al Spangler, behind south- {paw Warren Spahn (21-15). audacious Los Angeles Coliseum, open with a night game against| Chicago Cubs. Milwaukee's) Braves, who lost the 1959 pennant in a playoff with the Dodgers, and San Francisco Giants, pop- ular pre-season picks, opened at home in afternoon games--the/ . . Braves against Pittsburgh and| The Pirates started with the Giants in their new Candle-|slimmed-down righthander A Bob stick Park against St. Louis. Friend (8-19). Catcher Hal Smith, 8 | EST. The fourth game also is set |for " the Gardens Thursday and that's the night when many hockey observers figure Cana- diens will win the cup for the fifth consecutive season. But the Leafs, who started out |as 1-to-5 underdogs, anything but pushovers. They dropped the opener 4-2 and the second game 2-1--a contest that could have gone the other way. "We'll win the next two at home if that's the best Canadiens have been! Paradoxical mance for Richard who has burned up the league over an 18- year period. The Rocket has been in on Tor- onto goalkeeper Johnny Bower but the puck just wouldn't bounce for him. The series made news in an other department Monday when the Leaf management took steps to retaliate for the poor seats alloted to Toronto supporters in the Montreal Forum for last week's two games. Toronto officials said Leaf fans were sold tickets in the upper- tier section of the Forum--a spot they termed Nose-Bleed Alley. Workmen Monday finished a new 50-seat section high up in Maple Leaf Gardens, behind the grays and just under the roof girders. Gardens officials said the 50 seats would be reserved for Montreal- ers. College Boxer 'May Die From 'Head Injury | MADISON, Wis. (AP)--Charles {Mohr, 22-year-old University of |Wisconsin boxer who suffered a | cerebral hemorrhage in a college |tournament, remained uncon- scious, feverish and in very erit- ical condition today. Hospital authorities indicated late Monday night his chances for Subovely grew slimmer hour The Carling"s Men's 10-Pin team handicap championship, one of the biggest 10-pin com- petitions to be staged in many years around these parts, _ POPULAR ATHLETE GETS TOURNEY UNDER WAY swung into high gear with the opening of the playoffs, at Eastway Lanes here on Satur- | day afternoon. Above is shown star, Bob Attersl Dunlops and of Viti Olympic Games hockey team, throwing the first ball to offi- cially open the event. orth | the well - known local hockey --Photo by Robt. Teddy Morris, Argos 'Not Admitting Fumble SPORT SNAPSHOTS NOT CONVINCED its all-round male athlete of the ntury in a poll cond Coach Toe Blake of Canadiens, who shudders at the thought of making predictions, had only this commeht to make before the Na- tional Hockey League champions left for Toronto: given as many penalties as the Leafs or more; mark my word." Imlach had another forecast. "Pappy will showed us how." year NHL veteran and real castoff. Olmstead |goals and four assists. tests. year, "We will be "When we start killing the Cana- diens," he said in an interview, be the guy who Pappy is 33- year-old Bert Olmstead, an 11- Moat- to very critical from critical. Mohr, a senior at the univer- sity, was injured Saturday night in his 165-pound National Col- legiate Athletic Association cham- pionship bout with Stu Bartell of San Jose State. The fight was stopped in the second round when Mohr fell against the ropes, Yasied and unable to defend him- self. Dr. Manucher Javid, who per- formed an operation on Mohr an hour after the fight, said Mohr suffered "'acute subdural hemo- | Dr. Javid said chanees of sur- | Canadiens have an old-timer on |viving in such cases are 'very their roster who can show them minimal." all how to win games. He is the incomparable Maurice Richard, the department of psychiatry at the game's all-time high scorer Wisconsin's medical school, said and a fellow who has broken up| Mohr recently had been a psychi- many playoff and league con-|artic patient. physician Dr. John Flinn said The 38-year-old Rocket is over-|operating doctors suspected that| due. He has managed only one|a condition existed which made agsist in six playoff games this|Mohr's blood vessels "more than a most uausual perfor-'normally susceptible to injury." Wisconsin ; toma with marked brain damage is tin a fifth-place and with irreversible damage to scoring tie in the series with two the mid-brain." Dr. Robert Roessler, head of team Canadian Press riter | Teddy Morris, the homespun farmer with a voice right out of a gravel pit and a Toronto Ar- |gonaut since 1931, doesn't allow |sentiment to sway his feelings when he scouts a youngster for the Big Four football club. Not even Lionel Conacher Jr., an ath. lete whose name is synonymous with Canadian sport. Sentimental fans--and, in the final analysis, what other kind |are there?--say Teddy, and Ar- gos, pulled a rock when they passed up the son of Canada's all-time great athlete in this year's college draft. It was only natural, fans argue, that Lionel Jr. should wear Argos' Double blue, as his father did 39 years a we pulled a boner, OITIS Sal in an interview. "The boy could prove me wrong, but I'm not con- vinced yet." But critics are willing to argue the issue. They point out that the Cona- cher name is traditional with Tor- onto sport and is known to every sports-page reader in the coun- try. They point out also that Montreal Canadians groomed Howie Morenz Jr: until the youngster was convinced he couldn't make the National Hockey League and follow his famous father, a million-dollar box-office attraction with Cana- diens of another era. Why wouldn't Argonauts sign Lionel Jr? a proven college star and a natural drawing card? Morris knows all the back- ground of Lionel Sr. The Big Train was almost a one-man £0. They had first choice in the draft but picked up Bill Mitchell, a team-mate of Conacher's with the University of Western Ontario Mustangs. Mon t real Alouettes, who had second choice, grabbed Conacher and signed him to a |contract last week. | Was this another mistake by first East-West Grey Cup final. Argonauts, who haven't been able y = show in football--a hard-rumning halfback who had the stamp of | greatness put on him in 1921 when he captained Argonauts to a 23-0 victory over Edmonton in the Lionel scored 15 points that after- U years BU. "We_had a choice," explains Morris. "Would we take a name or would we take a player whom we thought would be best for the Argonaut football club? Mitchell is one of the best placement kick- ers I've seen. He's a good kick- off man, He's a big, rough bey and he has the talent for other jobs besides kicking, "I don't want to knock young Conacher. I sincerely hope he makes the Montreal team and body can say, except for sen- timental reasons, that we did wrong in passing him wp. IX picked Mitehell and I hope I'm right. "Lionel Jr. is an offensive half. back. He's still a youngster--22-- and do you think he could take over from such established Arge stars as Cookie Gilchrist and Dick Shatto? "That's the question we had te decide. What would you do when you're picking players in an ef- fort to strengthen a last-place club?" That's a good question. But ¥# Lionel Jr. comes back to haunt DV to get out of the Big Four cellar since 1956? Morris, who runs a noon. GREATEST ATHLETE Argonauts this season in Big Four play, fans won't let Morris farm in suburban Toronto and acts as chief of Argos' Canadian talent scouting, says no. OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES LONDON (Reuters)--Results of soccer matches played in the United Kingdom Monday: ENGLISH LEAGUE | First Division | Wolverhampton 5 West Ham 0 | Third Division | Halifax Town 2 Reading 2 Fourth Division Northampton 6 Barrow 0 The Cincinnati Reds, as usual, [previously with Kansas City, was also opened at home in the after- [the only newcomer. noon against Philadelphia. The pew faces club is Phila-| delphia. Eddie Sawyer, | DRYSDALE STARTING hose It's righthander Don Drysdale, hs Brillies ate alts a V0 Sudbury Halts cee routes In 715 sto ded" ly ree" elon." Montreal Team ; starting righthander Robin Rob-| SUDBURY (CP) -- Montreal |felt der Bon. Ader s ou [CTS (1D. making his 1th con- Ro Jou + BFaight mATalag [toro hacher Dad Spt wi De ager Wak Alston nag Secutive opening day appearance; |spree came to a halt Monday penalty checker all The named virtually the same lineup left fielder Harry Anderson, and [night as they lost 3-0 to Sudbury [first two goals against' Royals that won it all last season--Gil|fist baseman Ed Bouchee. Man-| Wolves in the Eastern Profes-|were scored on Sudbury power Hodges at first, Charlie Neal at|28er Freddie Hutchinson picked|sional League's final series. plays. Burchell may be fit Wed- Ee ® Jim Brosnan (9-6) to start for the| The result tied the best-of-seven nesday, Montreal officials said. second, Maury Wills at short, JU-| peg, set 1-1, Montreal won the opener | w Trail Advances Meanwhile the battle resumes tonight on Toronto ice and a lot of the fans who viewed the first two Mon~ treal victories, figure the Habs will have to skate faster, harder and longer, if they are to beat the Mapleos in the Gardens. And not that any more "spur" or incentive is needed--but one has been added today in the release from Montreal of the Hockey News' annual all-star gelections. The first team finds Bobby Hull leading and others on the team are goalie Glen Hall, Jean Bel- iveau, Doug Harvey, Gordie Howe and Marcel Prono- vost with Toe Blake as coach-of-the-year. The second team finds four more Canadiens on it, Jacques Plante, Tom Johnson, Dickie Moore and Bernie Geoffrion. Bronco Horvath also made it and only two Toronto operators, defenseman Al Stanley and coach of the sec- ond team, "Punch" Imlach. There'll be some screaming over these choices, no doubt. He was voted the country'sfor managing director Lew Hay- outstanding football player and man forget the college draft. Dart League Race In Home Stretch Fernhill were the big Neighbor- mead this week, as they fight % hood Association Dart League|out to see who takes over the winners this past week, as they [final position in Series "A" .,. downed Rundle No. 2 by a score |It Is interesting to note that with of 5 to 0. Rundle No. 1, Storie |only one night to go before play and Southmead all won 3-to-2|offs, that Storie Park holds a one games over Eastview, Woodview [point edge over Fernhill in the No 2 and Woodview No. 1 re-|total points for both sections . . . nior Gilliam at third, Wally, . Moon, Don Demeter and Duke 4) Sunday. Tle nest feme is at| Snider in the outfield and John M Ou t Of real din Bel, Rosebud bend He Pe aroons S the ov - finals to oust Trois- The Cubs, with Charlie Grimm | ie ¢ replacing Bob Scheffing for his Rivieres Lions. BRIGHT BITS: On Friday morning, at 3:00 am. to be exact, a group of Oshawa and district bowlers will fly from Malton Airport, headed for Calgary and the All-Canadian five-pin championships. Local bowling experts feel that Oshawa is well represented in the bid for Canada honors. The group includes Isabell King, third stand as manager, bave four new faces among the start ers. Richie Ashburn, late of the Phillies, is in centre; Frank Thomas, last with Cincinnati, at third; Don Zimmer, long Dodger, at short, and rookie Lou Johnson in right. The Giants, who blew a two- Rouyn-Noranda CHATHAM (CP)--A convincing 50 win over Rouyn - Noranda Alouettes Monday night sent Chatham Maroons into the next round of Allan Cup playdowns. The Maroons won their eastern Brilliant goaltending by Gerry McNamara played a big part in Monday's Sudbury victory. He stopped 30 shots compared with 22 saves by Royals' Gerry Me- Neil. McNamara was particul- arly active in the scoreless sec- ond period when he kicked out 15 shots as Wolves held on to a 1-0 Canada semi-final 3-2 in games, lead. "To Allen Cup TRAIL, B.C. (CP) Trail Smoke Eaters advanced into the championship round for the Allan Cup Monday night with a 7-1 victory over Port Arthur Bear- cats. Trail took the best-of-seven |western final series 4-0. |_ Cal Hockley and Pinoke Me- spectively. Fernhill's win puts them into a tie with Woodview No. 1 for second place, with Woodview No. 1 for second place, with Storie taking over first place. With one more night's play left in the schedule, both South- mead and Rundle No. 1 have a SPORTS CALENDAR Storie Park, piaying with one player short, scored 16- runs in the ninth inning and nearly beat the team high which is 19 runs in one inning . . . Thursday night will decide all the individual TODAY'S GAMES chance to take over fourth place, trophy winners and the play-off with Rundle No. 1 now holding positions, and all players will be Janet Peel, Bernice Milton; "Hank" Sarnovsky, Bob Gallagher and Larry Piper, of Bowmanville LOU ~JANKOWSKI, former Oshawa Generals' left- wing star was second highest to Guyle Fielder of Seattle, in the Western Hockey League's annual All- tar voting EARLY WYNN lost a game yesterday when Washington whipped White Sox 7-3 WOLVERHAMPTON, making a great bid for that almost Intyre, a recruit for the playoffs, HOCKEY cach. Norm Lenardon, Hal Jogos or GL, STvice League -- (fourth and defenceman Har 2 Smith ang deciding BING) mes Rd ermal Ty 1th pirefighters at 7.30 p.m. at The John Irving scored the Port Bowmanville Arena. Arthur goal late in the final pe- BoC ES)AY'S GAMES riod. The Bearcats tallied only OHA Intermediate C Finals four goals in the four games. (Fourth and Deciding game) -- geme lead in the last 10 days last season, picked 21-game win- ner Sam Jones for their debut in ithe new $15,000,000 park against |the Cards and righthander Larry {Jackson (14-13). FIGHTS LAST after dropping the first two con-| Sudbury scorers were captain tests to the Als |Sam Bettio, Tom McCarthy and The Eastern Canada final with Wally Boyer. Hull Legionnaires opens next| Playing on home ice, though Monday in Chatham. The winner|with a disappointing crowd of 4,- of the best-of-five series will[477, also helped the Wolves. They meet Trail Smoke Eaters in the/ied the EPHL standings but suf- Canadian final. Itered some decisive setbacks in away - from - home games dur- this spot by two points. wi i i Team Standing: Storie 40, trying their best in an effort. te Fernhill 38, Woodview No, 1 38,|¥in some of the silverware, Rundle No. 1, 33, Southmead 31, Woodview No. 2, 28, Rundle No. 2, 26 and Eastview 26. Doubles In and Out: B. Clark , 0. Andrews 1, J. Williamson 2, F. Williamson 1, R. Cornish 3, SEE THE ALL NEW EVINRUDE It is the first western cham- impossible "double" of English Soccer, defeated West Ham United 5-0 last night to take over first place in NIGHT the English League's first division standing. They are already headed for the F.A. Cup Final, against Black- burn Rovers, on May 7 . . . . . NATIONAL LEAGUE baseball schedule opens today on four fronts and so, we find once again summer has overtaken winter, since a lot of our hockey titles up this way are still far from decided. Oshawa 'Wilkies' By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Sydney -- Ralph Dupas, 145%, |New Orleans, outpointed British |Empire welterweight champion George Barnes, 146%, Australia, {12. non-title. | Paris --Alphonse Halimi, 120%, | France, outpointed Louis Poncy, 125%, France, 10. | New York--Isaac Logart 146%, {Cuba, outpointed Marvin (Candy) {McFarland, 145%, Philadelphia, 10. GIVEN HEWITT TROPHY Maroons now are All-Ontario Senior A champions. After Mon- day's game OHA convener Lloyd | Pollock presented Maroon cap-| tain Ted Power with the W. A.| Hewitt Trophy. i [ The teams fought through a| scoreless first period. But early] in the second the Maroons broke the visitors' spirit by firing three goals in two minutes. Two more goals in the third period clinched | the vietory. | The scorers were Gary Sharp, | ing the season. The absence of Montreal's Skippy Burchell, injured by a Dave Amadio check Sunday, was SPORTS BRIEFS GOOD NEWS NANAIMO, B.C. (CP)--Alfred (Red) Carr regained conscious- ness Friday, heard that his Na- naimo Labatts hockey team won the Western Canadian intermedi- ate hockey semi - final, smiled, Fred Pletsch, Frank Bathgate, and went to sleep. The coach, 43, pionship for Trail since 1937-38 when they went on to capture th Allan Cup and the world hockey championship. The final series opens here April 25 against either Chatham Maroons or Hull Legion. Statement By Dudley Port Dover Sailors vs Orono Orphans at 9.00 p.m. in the Bow- C. Usher 2, E. Major 1, B. Craw- ford 1, J. Houston 5, M. Muir 1, STARFLITE Montreal S manville Arena. D. Pelow 2, A. Pelow 1, A. Cum-| HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Eastern Professional League (Best-of-seven final) LTTF APis. udbury 1 20:4°¢ 3 110 44 2 mer 2, M. Parker 2, J. Goulding | & 3, F. Densham 2, J. Densham 1, |} Ralph Hopson 2, Jack Craighead 3, Jean Craighead 1, J. Craw- ford 2, D, Crawford 2, N. Johnson 2, A. Bryant 1, R. Shobbrook 2 and W. Ross 1. | Baseball One Inning: Jean] Craighead 6, W. Ross 5, D. Craw- | ford 5 and B. Clark 5. | High Three Darts: Jock Hous- ton 148, J. Goulding 100, D. Pelow 100 and A. Cummer 100. Monday's Result Montreal 0 Sudbury 3 LEAGUE LEADERS Providence, RJ. -- Mickey Doubles In: B. Clark 33 and F. Jim Connelly and George Aitken. i idi Tob Riiagemudnl ao, y 8 collapsed during the deciding Bobby Smith, 21 -year - old|game of the best-of-five final Back In Leaside Oshawa, a long time power- house in the Leaside Junior Base- ball League, re-entered the league today. It was officially announced by general manager Alex C. Fer- ries Jr. The club will be making their fourth-straight appearance in the five-team loop. In their first year of operation, back in 1957, they captured the championship with a Juvenile en- try in a Junior League and went on to win the Ontario Juvenile brilliant career as an infielder in the same Leaside loop. |son Brown, 149, Boston, 7. Holyoke, Mass.--Andre Tessier, Noranda goaler, again played | well, stopping 31 shots compared |168, Springfield, Mass., stopped|to 17 by Chatham's Cesare Man- The club plans initial work-out/Jack Harrison, 165, New York, 1.|iago. with Lacombe, Alta, Rockets Thursday night. Nanaimo won 5-2. He was resting comfortably in hospital Friday. sessions this Saturday afternoon at Alexandra Park, with the Lea-| side opener tentatively set only] three weeks away, on May 7. All interested baseball players should contact either Jim Shaw § at RA 57040 or Ted Roberts at; 5-6010, for further information about playing baseball this sum- mer. 4 title. The following '58 they repeated as the Leaside| winners and advanced to the On- tario Baseball Association Junior "A"™ finals. Last year however they finished third. They describe last year as a re-building season for this year. | The Oshawa club will once again be sponsored by the J. J. Wilkinson Construction Company and shave their eye's sighted to- wardg 'another Leaside tarig, ftle. Fesries also announced that he hassinked Jim Shaw as manager, for the up-coming season along with. Ted Roberts as coach. | Shaw is no stranger as he has| managed the "Wilkies" for the past three seasons and has a cou- ple of Ontario titles in the Mid- get and Juvenile ranks under his belt. Roberts will be making his|Cardinals and Clint, Couttney initial debut at eoaching, after a huave picked up {wo other catch- SAYS WILL QUIT MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Catcher | Joe Ginsberg of Baltimore Ori-| oles popped up on the American | League waiver list Sunday, and the veteran said he will retire un- less claimed by a major league club. Ginsberg, 33, joined the Orioles in 1956 and has been the club's | On-|No. 2 catcher behind Gus Tri- andos. He played for Kansas City and Cleveland after being brought up to the American League by Detroit in 1958 and catching three years for the Ti- gers. Since last season the Orioles ers, Gene Green from St. Louis from Washington Senators. lew I PORT PERRY RINK WINS BEARE MOTORS TROPHY When the Port Perry Curling Club held their first annual men's open bonspiel this sea. son, their own members came up with a popular win to cap- ture the premier award of the | bunspiel, The Beare Motors Trophy. Left-to-right are shown Bill and Storey Beare, of Beare Motors Litd., donors of the tro- phy rink members Oscar Beare, Bob Kenny (skip), | [the officials as Archie MacMaster and Neil McQuarrie and at the extreme right, Dr. C. A, Bathie, presi- dent of Port Perry Curling | ling CAHA officials that Rouyn- Is Disputed SUDBURY (CP) Sudbury Combines hockey club has taken {exception to statement by George Dudley, secretary of the Cana- dian Amateur Hockey Associa- tion, that" a Sudbury protest de- layed the Eastern Canada Allan Cup playoffs. Combines official Max Silver man said Monday that Mr, Dud- ley's statement carried a strong insinuation that Sudbury's protest against the use of six disputed players by Rouyn-Noranda Alou- ettes in the Northern Ontario final was unnecessary, "We were told by three rank- Noranda could not pick up addi- tional players for that series," said Mr, Siiverpnag, He named lan Duncan, Sudbury district convener for the NOHA; Red Maltby, NOHA presi- dent, and Dudley himself. | Mr. Dudley said earlier that (the dates for the Allan Cup finals were changed because Sudbury's protest might make ia replay ne- cessary in the East. He said Monday it will be about two days before he receives the result of a telegraph vote of the CAHA ex- ccutive on Sudbury's protest. | Sudbury, eliminated by Rouyn- Noranda, claims it was prevented Club. =Photo by Port Perry Star from: strengthening its team with imports. Wednesday's Game Sudbury at Montreal Allan Cup (Best-of-five semi-final) WL TF Chatham 3201905 Rouyn-Nor Monday's Result Rouyn-Noranda. 0 Chatham § (Chatham wins eastern semi-final 3-2) Monday's Game Hull at Chatham Allan Cup Port Arthur 1 Trail 7 (Trail wins Western Canada final Memorial Cup Brandon 2 Edmonton § (Brandon leads best - of - seven Western Canada semi-final 2-1) Ontario Senior B Strathroy 2 Welland-Crowland 1 (First game best-of-seven final) Ontario Intermediate A Collingwood 1 Georgetown 5 (Georgetown. leads best-of-seven semi-final 3-1) Ontario Junior € Picton 5 Whitby 10 (Whitby wins best-of-five semi. final 3-0) Stratford 9 Wallaceburg 3 (Stratford wins best - of - seven semi-final 4-0, one game tied) A Pus. 6 230151 4 Williamson 25. Doubles Out: B. Clark 21 and M. Muir 11 | High 3 Darts: J. Houston 148 and J. Craighead 140. Baseball 1 Inning: G. Parker 9 and N. Pullen, F. Williamson G. Houston, O. Clark, J. Craig-|Teke a look at the Starflite 75% head, M. Muir, all tied with 6. | magnificent new styling, new Jet Baseball 9 Innings: J. Houston 'stream Drive lower unit. Take com 2 and F. Williamson, O. Clark mand of a Starflite powered un about or cruiser and feel the instant response to the Starflite"s vast, smooth V-power thrust and speeds | Jock Houston beyond compare. See this senss- [tional new Starflite and all 7 new Evinrudes today! Team Baseball 9 - Innings: Storie 93. ODD DARTS: scored a double 14 and two triple 20's for a nice 148 score on his first turn and this puts him in the lead for the High Three Darts Trophy .... It was nice to see Southmead finally win a series, as they have dropped all their points in their last three or four nights . . . All the teams will be watching Rundle No. 1 and South- me yon EVINRUDE DEALER for experienced: service and boating advice, terms. 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