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The Oshawa Times, 25 May 1961, p. 14

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14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, May 24, 1961 PHILS' COLEMAN TRIPS AFTER PUT OUT AT FIRST BASE BY CUBS' BOUCHEE Reds Hand Dodgers Their 1st. Shutout By ED WILKS hander high on the rookie of the|when they lost 10 of their first Oshawa O'Neill Collegiate and Vocational Institute's track and field team had their qualifying by bunching three of their seven | representatives on hand Satur- OCVI Track Team Second In COSSA = |were R. Guiltinan. Cane, Ding- {man and Woods. | John Baker, Grade 12, finish- |ed 3rd in the Senior '100-yard sh, Alan Tunnicliffe, Grade 9, won| the Junior half-mile race. ! Kenneth Black, also a Grade Associated Press Staff Writer |year list and a stubborn south- 15 games, the Reds have won 15 Cincinnati Reds are within 115 games of the National League of their last 20. Rookie Ken Hunt, and Billy Henry have been in on almost half of those paw who might well be the league's No. 1 relief ace. hits for two runs in the sixth off Don Drysdale (3-3) Gus Bell's sacrifice fly and a single by Gordie Coleman brought 9 pupil, came second in the | day, in Trenton, to compete in|rynning broad-jump. the COSSA (District Meet) and the OCVI team amassed a total of 39 points, to finish in runner- lead again because of a right| After sinking to the bottom ISPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts 'Beaton's Dairy | THE MILLINER 'WEARS A CROWN LOS ANGELES (AP)--Just because a young man named4 Emile Griffith is a milliner by trade, don't get the idea he's a sissy. Griffith, you see, happens to be the welterweight boxing champion of the world. Defeat Whitby 'Canadian Tire In an Oshawa Legion Minor Baseball Association Midget | League game, played last night] THE SOFTBALL SEASON got off to a flying start here last night, when the Oshawa City and District Soft- ball Association's OASA teams opened their schedule with the first of their bi-weekly doubleheaders. Despite the chilly weather, the turnout of fans was encouraging and they saw lots of lively action, not the mid-season, nip-and-tuck type but the wide-open variety, with plenty of lusty hitting against pitchers who weren't quite ready to go more than about five or six innings. And for the fans who like to see lots of hitting and plenty of runs this was made-to-order. Heffering's had an edge over Tony's "AA" squad in their curtain raiser, for a 10-5 margin while in the nightcap, Scugog Cleaners came from far behind to beat out MacLean's Esso 11-9. The Juniors scored six runs in the top of the sixth, to turn the tide. Tormorrow night's double- header finds MacLean's Esso meeting Tony's Vendors in the 6:30 o'clock tilt while the floodlight game brings together Scugog Cleaners and Hefferings. MEANWHILE, tonight at the Alexandra Park dia- mond, starting at eight o'clock, Oshawa Tony's open their 1961 Beaches Major Fastball League schedule against Randall Roy Heating of Toronto. Tony's ex- pected to open the season last Wednesday night but bad weather intervened. Since then, coach Ted O'Connor and manager Frank Foley have put their club through a couple of stiff workouts and they report that as a result, the team is in much better shape now, to open the season with a victory here tonight, The 1961 Tony's line-up will include most of the faces familiar to Osh- awa softball fans in recent years, chaps like Bob Booth and Nick Mroczek who can hit "the long ball" when they get the wood to a fast pitch and reliable infielders as Fred Etcher, Brent Oldfield and "Red" McDiarmid and old reliable standbys such as Jimmie Loreno, Cec. Hall, etc, Little is known of the Randall-Roy roster but you can bet they're not in the Beaches League without a contending club, so tonight's "opener" should be fast and lively. BRIGHT BITS:- Bobby Shantz started on the mound for Pirates yesterday, his first starting assign- ment since August of 1959. But there was no special glory in it for Bobby as he tangled with Lew Burdette on "a good day" and Milwaukee won the tidy tussle 1-0 . . , . ERNIE BANKS, Chicago Cubs' good-hitting shortstop, played in left field yesterday, to rest a knee injury and still keep his big bat in the line-up. How- ever, Ernie had only one hit and the Phillies won 2-1 in the 10th inning . . . . DODGERS and Giants both lost yesterday so they remain tied for top in the Na- tional League race with Pirates only one game back and Redlegs another half-game behind the Bucs . . . AMERICAN LEAGUE action saw Detroit win again to boost their lead a full game, when the lowly Angels blanked Cleveland Indians 9-0 . , . MEMPHIS OPEN golf committee will likely have to attract their gallery without the presence of Arnold Palmer, and Gary Player and maybe 'Canada's Stan Leonard. Seems these three have signed no agreement to play in Memphis, Player and Palmer are prepared to stick to their Canada Cup play dates and buck any opposition or threats from the PGA--having already sought legal advice as to their status. in Whitby, Beaton's Dairy nosed | out Whitby Canadian Tire 54. | McGarry started and earned | the win for Oshawa Beaton's round title defence June 3 Dairy but he required relief| against Mexico's Gaspar Or- from Johnson in the 7th inning, | tega. Sea : when after there were two out,| Do any of his ring rivals Botter and Campbell bath| needle him about his hat-mak- singled for Whitby. Johnson| ing? Le came in and walked Everett, to| 'No, they don't," said the load the bases and then struck muscular fighter, inferring out Armour, to end the game. | With a broad smile it might Prior to this, Whitby got two| not be a judicious idea. {runs in their first inning on hits| _ One of Griffith's managers, {by Henderson and Botter, fol-| Howard Albert, is in the mil- {lowed by a choice play. Vorvis| linery business and the fighter |was hit by the pitcher in the| took up the trade as a hobby. The 22-year-old New Yorker is here training for his 15- victories in the comeback spurt to fourth place. It was Hunt and Henry who combined for a five-hit, 2-0 vic- tory over second place Los An- geles Tuesday night -- dealing the Dodgers their first shutout of the season and ending their winning streak at five. San Francisco retained a per- centage point (.013) lead al- though the Giants were wal- loped 12-4 at St. Louis. Third place Pittsburgh remained within one game of the top despite a 1-0 defeat at Milwau- kee on the four-hit pitching of Lew Burdette. Last place Phila- delphia defeated Chicago Cubs 2-1 in 10 innings. Hunt, 22, has beaten the Giants, Pittsburgh and now the Dodgers in a 4-2 record and is 3-1 in the Reds' comeback. Henry, the old man of the staff at 33, now has four saves in the same spurt. HENRY WAS PERFECT The Dodgers got all five hits off Hunt. The youngster struck out six, but also walked six, bringing on Henry in the eighth for a perfect, 1 1-3 - inning mopup. It was Henry's 10th ap- pearance, for a total of 13 1-3 innings in which he has allowed just one earned run. The Reds beat Los Angeles them across after singles by Don Blasingame and Vada Pin- son and a walk had loaded the bases. Bill White was 4-5 and drove in five runs, two with a first- inning home run off loser Sam Jones (3-3), as the Cardinals banged 15 hits and ran up their biggest scoring total of the sea- son. Don Taussig also hit a two- hun homer in support of Ray Sadecki 3-3, who breezed in with a 12-hit job. Harvey Kuenn and Orlando Cepeda homered for San Francisco as the Giants suffered their fourth loss in five games. The Braves scored in the first) inning on a triple by Frank| Bolling and a single by Ed) up spot to the Moira District HS of the Belleville area, which topped all competing schools with a point total of 41. Individually, several members of the OCVI team performed with distinction, to qualify for the provincial-wide Ontario Fed- eration Schools Athletic Associa- tion track and field meet, in Guelph, this Saturday. O'Neill Collegiate will be represented at Guelph this next weekend by Alan Tunnicliffe, Brian Tunni- cliffe: Chris Chaytor, Grant Cry- derman, Dick Giroux and Bruce Woods. Oshawa O'Neill CVI point-win- ners in the COSSA meet at Trenton, on Saturday, are listed below: Grant Cryderman, Grade 11, won the Intermediate one-mile race. Brian Tunnicliffe, Grade 12, was second In the 200-yard sprint and 3rd in dash, the 100-yard Chris Chaytor, Grade 12, fin- ished 2nd in the 440-yard run. The OCVI Intermediate team won the 880-yard relay race in easy fashion. Team members were Chaytor, B. Tunnicliffe, Dick Giroux and Cryderman. Bruce Woods, Grade "12, praved that his year-long dili- gent training program was worthwhile, when he won the CONCRETE PRODUCTS No. 2 Between HAMBLY Oshawe and Wh PH. MO 8-4159 senior mile run and the open two-mile run, both in handy fashion. The OCVI senior mile relay | team finished second. Members Mathews, then managed just two more hits off loser Bobby Shantz 1-1, making his first start in two seasons, and re- liever Elroy Face. Bill Virdon| had two of the Bucs' hits off oski had doubled and moved to! third with two out. ILKS A single by Charlie Smith Apsoclonss Tress Staff Writer and a two-out triple by Bob "npotroit Tigers are a whop- Malkmus broke it up for the| ping 15 games over .500 and Phils against Glen Hobbie 25. have a 4%-game lead in the Frank Sullivan 2-4 and re-| American League race again-- liever Chris Short blanked the put it took a tough parlay to Cubs on five hits after a tirst-|turn the trick. for the first time in five tries inning homer by Billy Williams.| First, the Tigers hammered = three consecutive home runs, INTERNATIONAL A turn of the head or a blink, of the eye might be dangerous, when looking at the Inter- national League standings. Though the season is less than Something Has Got To Give ores Se" ar tying the major league record, while breaking a ninth-inning tie for a 5-2 victory over Min- |nesota Twins Tuesday night. | And then second place Cleve- land Indians, after winning six lin a row, were beaten 9-0 at Los Angeles by the last place league shutout, the first shutout first, scored the clincher in the|by the Angels' staff, the first last of the ninth on Fred Valen-| shutout for the Tribe--and the tine's bases-loaded single after| first shutout at cozy Wrigley Bobby Johnson's two-run homer| Field, the AL's homer heaven. tied the score. Charleston trails Tigers Climb wes Tribe Blanked [second stanza and scored later He now is a designer during {on hits by Hottot and Botter. |Campbell opened the third with ja double and scored on |Fletcher's single, after there |were two out. That accounted {for Whitby's four runs but they| |bogged down after that and| |didn't score again, in spite of| | off-ring hours. two months old, only five games separate the first seven teams today, and there are 3% be- tween league - leader Columbus and sixth-place Buffalo. Both third - place Rochester and fourth-place Richmond took a half stride closer to the top Tuesday night. Rochester "I find it relaxing," Griffith explained. Would he recognize one of his creations if he saw a lady wearing it down the street? "yes, I think I would," said Griffith. {their big threat in the 7th, {which Johnson squelched. rapped the second-place Char- by a half game. An unearned run in the sev- enth inning broke a 1-1 tie for Richmond and left the Virgin- ians 2% games out of first. Fe- lix Torres' homer tied the score for Buffalo in the sixth as Ted scattered eight hits for the victory. Dick Ricketts lost his first in four Wieand successfully decisions. SOX DEFEATED Baltimore replaced Minnesota in fourth place by defeating Chi- cago White Sox 3-1, and Wash- ington walloped Kansas City 7-8 in the only other games sched- uled in the AL. Norm Cash, Steve Boros and Dick Brown combined for the home run burst by the Tigers off a pair of relievers, loser Elliott started on the mound | for Whitby. Marchut, first Bea- ton's batter, walked and scored on a stolen base, a passed ball| and infield out. With the score 4-1, Beaton's| started to move in the fourth. | Jr. Lacrosse Ritchie singled and so did] Plews. McNamee flied out but a; TORONTO (CP) ~ Long stolen base and Lutton's single Branch Castrolites came scored Plews. {through for their home - town The Oshawa lads tied it up in|fans Tuesday night by defeat- the fifth on a walk to Bradley|ing St. Catharines Athletics and then with two out, Chees-|13-11 in the opening local game man doubled and Brady was Of the Ontario Junior Lacrosse safe on an error, that let Association. Cheeseman score. making it 4-4; Jim Webb, Butch Keegan and The winning run came in the Jack Stanfield scored two goals sixth. By this time, Roy had each, while singles went to Car- taken over from Elliott, and he [son Bromberry, Ed Hutzel, was charged with the loss. Mc. (Larry Goring, Peter Tory, Namee opened the sixth with a|Wally Hutzel, Rick Okihiro and single, stole second and scored|Terry Weir on a timely hit by Fair, to make| Pat Cheevers led the St. {it 5-4. {Catharines squad with four BEATON'S DAIRY -- Mar-|g0als and his brother Jerry chut, ¢; Ritchie, If; Plews, 1b; |added three. Tom Teather got McNamee, 2b: Lutton, 2b; Fair, !W0 goals and Brian Thompson Castrolites Win Opener In | leston Marlins 3-2 and the Vir- ginians stopped Buffalo 2-1. Jer- sey City, in fifth, was beaten by last-place Syracuse 7-2. Co- lumbus and Toronto were not scheduled. Rochester, only a game out of Ray Moore and Paul Giel. It was the third time Detroit has smashed three consecutive homers for a share of the much equaled record. Al Kaline also hit his first home run of the season, in the sixth inning, for Syracuse surprised the Jer- seys with a display of power as Frank Leja hit a solo homer and Joe Altobelli and Woody Smith each clouted one with a man aboard. GRENADA, Miss. (AP) -- Jake Gibbs was expected to sign a professional baseball contract today for a bonus of about $100,000. He wouldn't say which team he planned to join. It was speculated that the 22-year-old baseball and foot- ball star from the University of Mississippi would pick New York Yankees of the Amer- ican League or Milwaukee JAKE GIBBS -- $100,000 IS A LOT OF BASEBALL the Tigers, who collected nine hits. Hank Aguirre was the win- (ner in relief. : | The Twins had seven hits, one a fourth inning single that gave Lennie Green a 20-game hitting streak, longest in the majors this year. McBride, a 25-year-old right. hander who had only an 0-2 record to show for two brief trials with the White Sox, gave up two singles and a double, walked five and struck out five against the Indians. The Angels backed him with 11 hits, three of them homers-- a pair of three-run shots by Ken Hunt and Earl Averill, and a solo by Leon Wagner in the first inning off loser Jim Perry. | Wrigley Field now has given] up 63 home runs in 21 games, | with the Angels socking 36. The Orioles also did it with] home runs, one by Dick Wil-| liams in the first inping and a| two-run homer by Jerry Adair in the second. Southpaw Billy Pierce was the loser, although striking out 12 in six innings. THIRD STRAIGHT LOSS Billy Hoeft won with three inning of three-hit, shutout re- lief by Hoyt Wilhelm, who low- ered his earned run average to 1.32 for 41 innings. It was the third straight loss for the White Sox. { A two-run triple by Willie Tasby wrapped it up for the Senators as they scored four in the eighth at Kansas City and beat Ray Herbert. Ed Hobaugh was the winner, with relief help from Marty Kutyna when the As came back with two runs in their eighth. Pitcher Don Larsen, con- verted into an outfielder by As manager Joe Gordon after hit- ting a pinch homer Monday, was 0-for-4 and struck out with two on in the rally. expected to sign a baseball | pact earlier. However, base- ball commissioner Ford Frick | ruled in March that teams must wait until final examin- ations, or, if it came later, the collegiate season's end, before signing college players. Gibbs attracted attention with his passing and running as the signaller who sparked | PORT ARTHUR (CP)--Dele- Mississippi to No. 2 ranking in | gates to the Canadian Amateur the United States in the unde- {Hockey Association's annual Rule Changes Impose The association considered the spearing penalty grave enough to give it a section of its own in the rule book. A cf and 3b; McFeeters, 3b and| If; Bradley, rf; McGarry, p;| Johnson, p in 7th; Cheeseman, cf; Everett, ss; Braves of the National League. Gibbs, who played third and Jim McGrath got one each. Wensen, rf; feated season. Gibbs, a six - foot, 185- pounder, was named to the | meeting decided Tuesday in fa- |vor of the one referee4wo lines- {men system of officiating in ¢ in 5th; Brady, cf in 5th; Mort, | Fletcher, 3b; Vorvis, 2b; Hottot, rf in 6th. |e; Elliott, p; Ray, p in 5th; | CANADIAN TIRE -- Hender-|Clark, batted in 7th; Armour, rf| son, If; Botter, 1b; Campbell|in 5th, | base for the Mississippi base- ball team and quarterbacked the football team, had been all-America team by The As- inter . branch playoff games sociated Press last season. He |ntes CAHA President Jack batted .389 in three years of [Roxburgh challenged them to college baseball. show "guts enough" to decide the thorny issue. CITY AND DISTRICT Heffering's And Scugogs Win Their Opening Games It was a decision on Rule 35 player will draw an automatic five-minute major for spearing, where in the past the referee could use his discretion. For a second spearing infraction, the player receives a game miscon- duct and his team will play SALES & SERVICE shorthanded for five minutes. with famous handcrafted 10 overeat diag. preture mansure 172 00 in of raetenguis: peturs World's finest performing portable TV SBERVICE SEAVER TV CHASSIS The VILLA Model G2105 Slim styling in attractive West Point Gray color or Brown Mist color. 269.00 ZENITH QUALITY FEATURES All chassis connec: tions carefully hand- wired hand soldered for greater operating dependability. Full Power Trans: former. "Fringe Lock Circuit Sunshine® Picture Tube. Cinelens® Picture Glass Spotlite Dial Monopole Antenna COME IN! SEE WHY ZENITH QUALITY IS YOUR BEST TV BUY! WILLIAMS Electronics 1218 SIMCOE N. RA 5-2905 (A) which gave the CAHA pres- ident or his representative the option of appointing either a referee and two linesmen or two referees to handle a play- off series. Some teams found themselves playing first under one system, then under the other, in this year's junior and senior play- {offs. Delegates from the Thunder {Bay and Maritimes branches The Oshawa City and Dis. own half of the sixth inning, mound for the Juniors but it | trict Softball Association opened with a three run rally. Frank |its 1961 Major League schedule| Varga walked, Mackness sin- {last night at Alexandra Park|gled but was forced by Solomon {with a sparkling doubleheader, then Melynik singled. That was BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS jin which Heffering's Imperials all for Jones and Ron Phillips {defeated Tony's Venders 10-5 in|took over but Smith greeted {the curtain - raiser and Scugog him with a solid hit to keep By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS W L Pct. GBL 2611 .703 2115 | 1815 . 1918 | 1818 | 1820 . Tuesday's Results Philadelphia 2 Chicago 1 Pittsburgh 0 Milwaukee 1 Los Angeles 0 Cincinnati 2 Detroit Cleveland New York . Baltimore Minnesota Washington Boston Kansas City Probable Pitchers Today Los Angeles (Craig 3-2) at St. Louis (Jackson 0-3) (N) San Francisco (McCormick 4-2) at Cincinnati (Hunt 3-2) (N) Philadelphia (Mahaffey 4-3) at Milwaukee (Nottebart 2-2) (N) Pittsburgh (Mizell 3-1) at Chi- {cago (Ellsworth 1-2). International League W L Pet. GBL 1711 607 1813 .581 1612 571 1615 .516 1313 500 1415 .483 Toronto 1317 433 Syracuse 1021 .323 Tuesday's Results Richmond 2 Buffalo 1 Charleston 2 Rochester 3 Jersey City 3 Syracuse 7 (Only games scheduled) Games Today Columbus at Toronto (N) J. City at Syracuse (N) Charleston at Rochester (N) Richmond at Buffalo (N) American Association Tuesday's Results Omaha 1 Houston 4 Louisville 4 Indianapolis 3 Dallas-Fort Worth 0 Denver 6 DS] Chicago 1 Detroit 5 Minnesota 2 | Washington 7 Kansas City 3/ Cleveland 0 Los Angeles 9 (Only games scheduled) le Pitchers Today Detroit (Mossi 4-0) at Minne- sota (Pascual 43) (N) Cleveland (Bell 14) at Los Angeles (Casale 1-3) (N) Boston (Conley 2-3) at New York (Terry 1-0) Washington (Sturdivant 2-3) at Kansas City (Nuxhall 1-1) (N) Chicago (Shaw 3-2 and Kem- merer 0-2) at Baltimore (Brown 3.1 and Hall 1-1) (2) (N) National League W L Pct. GBL 2113 618 2315 .605 1913 594 1 571 1% 500 4 Columbus Charleston Rochester Richmond Jersey City Buffalo % 1 2% 3 3% 5 8% San Francisco 20 15 1616 . 1418 438 6 1222 353 9 1023 303 10% San Francisco 4 St. Louis 12|season, Heffering's and Tony's| {Cleaners Juniors rallied to beat|the rally going, to make the {out McLean's Esso 11-9. | score 7-5. "a Phillips was in control in the rN yor HEFFERING'S | ast three frames, allowing only opening game of the two scattered singles and no |runs, His mates clinched the wasn't his night. A walk and waged a ding-dong tussle for| five innings, with the score 2-1 for Tony's at the end of the half-way mark. Ted Jones start- ed for Heffering's and yielded two runs in the second inning on his own error when Solo- a sacrifice by Taylor, and in- field out and Bill Berwick's single, with two out. Thanks to Ronnie Taylor's good work in the early frames, ony's made this lead stand up until the fifth when Hickey was safe on an extra-base outfield error and scored later on a wild pitch, to make it 2-1. That was the end of the good pitching and close competition. In the sixth inning Heffering's |suddenly got to Taylor. With {one out, Buzminski singled then {two walks followed, plus al |strikeout, then a walk to R.| Simcoe, to force in a run. Sam Smith replaced Taylor at this point and Reg Hickey greet- ed him with a solid single, O'Reilly then doubled to score | Hickey, for a king-size, six-run| {rally, that broke the game wide open. | Tony's didn't quit however. | IThey came right back in their| ad mon bunted, w alk to Melynik, 3 win with a three-run splurge off Smith in the 9th, on a hit, sacri- fice, bunt hit, a walk to fill the bases and then a timely double by John Carnwith, that cleared the bases but saw Carn- itt trapped between 2nd and T Piontek and O'Reilly each had two hits for the winners while Mackness had a pair for Tony's Vendors. HEFFERINGS -- Simcoe, 3b; Hickey, c¢ and rf; O'Reilly, 2b; Piontek, ss and c; Buzminski, If; Jordan, rf and ss; Carn- with, 1b; Sarnovsky, cf; Jones, p; Phillips, p in 6th, TONY'S -- Berwick, cf; Hor- ton, If; Rennick, 1b; Varga, ss; Mackness, 3b; Solomon, 2b; Melynik, c; Taylor, p; Snow, rf; Smith, p in 6th, SCUGOGS RALLY TO WIN The nightcap of the twin-bill was played at different tempo, with McLean's Esso breaking out for an early 6-0 lead, only to lose an 11-9 decision in a 7-in- ning tussle, when the Junior Scugog Cleaners staged a six- run rally in the top of the 6th frame, Reg White started en the Gary Copeland's double, an error and then D. Weldon's single produced three runs for McLean's in the first inning and they added three more on hits by B. Elliott, L. Weldon, Copeland, plus two errors, in the next inning, for a 6-0 lead. In the top of the 3rd, Scugogs struck for four runs. Dan Peters, who had replaced White, click- ed with a hit, after Fegan had opened the inning with a single. Suddard also connected and Mapes belted a homer, to make it 6-4. | L. Weldon's homer made it 7-4 and in the fourth, O'Connor walked and scored later on an infield out and an outfield error, { In the fifth Suddard homered, but Bob Boyce, the McLean's pitcher, wiped this out with his own four-ply blow, to make the score 9-5. But in the top of the sixth, Scugogs suddenly struck for a six-run splurge that turned de- feat into victory. Wilson got on via an error to start then Fegan singled, Peters grounded and Wilson was tagged at the plate. Another choice play, an error and a long double by Mapes followed by Bob Young's homer, completed the big rally, to make it 11-9 and that's how it ended, as Peters tightened up, along with his mates, in the final two frames. L. Weldon, Copeland and B. Elliott each had two hits for McLean's while Suddard, Mapes and Young, each with a homer and a double, were tops for Scu- gogs, with Jim Fegan, who had two singles. SCUGOG CLEANERS -- Sud- dard, If; March, 3b; Mapes, rf; Young, cf; Wright, 1b; Burke, s8; Wilson, 2b; Solomon, c; White, p; Fegan, c¢ in 3rd; Peters, p in 3rd. McLEAN'S ESSO -- L. Wel don, 3b; Copeland, 1b; O'Con- nor, ss; D. Weldon, c; R. Elliott, If; Ulrich, cf; Courtney, rf; B. Eiiioit, 2b; Boyce, p; Duke, p in 6th and Wills, 2b in 7th. opposed the new rule but were THURSDAY NIGHT FROM 6 P.M. TO 9 P.M. ONLY Hockey Federation was turned down without discussion. outvoted 17 to 4. Ontario, Que- - |bec, the Ottawa district, British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatche- wan and Manitoba approved the change. "Our junior hockey is just too fast for the two-man system," said Art Potter of Edmonton, a CAHA vice-president. "The ref- erees just can't keep up." A proposal by the Manitoba branch that the CAHA adopt the rules of the International Ice O'KEEFE EXTRA OIL.1) STOCK AN. 1S BACK 10 LB. BAG Regularly 89: LOLES SPORTING GOODS - SPECIAL AT COLES SPORTING GOODS CHARCOAL 49° ONLY 2 PER CUSTOMER OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M,

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