12 THE OSHAWA TWHES, Momfoy, HAMILTON TIGER-CATS AND THEIR FANS HAD MANY HAPPY MOMENTS ON SATURDAY November 27, 1961 CRA Dart League Headed By Storie Results of games played No-)3, B. France 1, W. Dowe 1, G. vember 23: North Oshawa 5,|\Fahy 1, J. Craighead 2, Jean Southmead No. 3, 0; Rundle No.| Craighead 1, R. Hopson 1, Ruth +5; Woodview No. 2, 0; East-| Hopson 1, O. Clark 1, M. Pullen view 4, Rundle No, £3: Storie 2, G. Waite 1, D. Clark 1, E, 3, Woodview No.3, 2; Fernhill Lovelock 1, F. Densham 4, F. 3, Woodview No. 1, 2; South-| Parsons 1, J. Carlson 1, June |mead No, 2, 3, Southmead No. 1,/Wyatt 1, F. Clifford 2, V. |2. Graves 1, M. Muir 1, T. Héle 1, | Doubling in and out B.|J. Hele 1, Doug Pelow 3, F. Crawford 3, Mel Wilson 2, J.|Jenkins 1, B. Shortt 1. Houston 2, G. Houston 1, K,) Baseball One Inning -- J. Snodden 1, J. n 1, L./Houston 9, B. Clark 7, J. Crai Cornish 1, B. Cole 1, O. Twine | head 7, J. Snodden 6, L. Cole 2, T. Twine 2, A. Bryant 1, D.|B. Crawford 5, 0. Twine 5, T. Crawford 2, F. Williamson 2,|Twine 5, J, Crawford 5, J. "wile J. Williamson 1, R. Adair 1, liamson's, G. Waite 5, R. Hop- E, Adair 1, B. Kitchen son 5, O. Clark 5. nt, ee ere ea Fred Waghorne 108, R. Hopson 100, J, Houston Was Former OLA President 100 Team Standing -- Storie 28, TORONTO (CP) -- Frederick Albert Waghorne, 73, former | Eastview 27, North Oshawa 25, Rundle No. 1, 24, Woodview No. 1, 25, Rundle No. 2, 22, Fern- hill 21, Southmead No. 1, 19, Woodview No 3, 17, Southmead president of the Ontario La- crosse Association and the Tor- onto Hockey League, died in |hospital Sunday. | Mr. Waghorne suffered. a No. 2, 15, Woodview No. 2, 13, 5, 6. heart attack three weeks ago Southmead N The illness prevented his at- tending the golden anniversary of the THL, of which he was {president from 1934 to 1936. im SACP Wisezucte) | Mr. Waghorne guided the \Irish Canadiens to the Ontario! junior lacrosse championship for three suc¢ gessive years, 1926 to 1928, amd headed the. On- tario Lacrosse Association from 1933 to 1935. He was a former president of the Purchasing Agents Associa- tion and an official of the Ca- nadian Industrial Traffic Asso- ciation. He leaves his wife and a son, |Frederick E. Waghorne. Metropolitan i OHA Junior "A" HOCKEY | his back by Ti-Cat Paul Dek- | Walt ker (75) is Argos' Dick Shat- Martinello to (22). Racing in on Faloney | right, are Argos Art Jackson (26), | BERNIE FALONEY, Tiger- | naut defence as he zips | Cat quarterback, seems to be | downfield, during Saturday's | almost tip-toeing through a | Big Four Eastern Conference | big hole in the Toronto Argo- | final game. Knocked flat on Argos Muff Big Chance Then Tiger-Cats Romp For Four Overtime TD's HAMILTON (CP) -- Shortly;tainly send the Argonauts intojhad penetrated Ticat territory, The before the clock ticked to aj ithe cup classic. This was the/only six times in that period-- gamely, merciful end after 80 minutes/time for a quick kick with Ha-|the deepest to the 27-yard line of bristling, heart - thumping/milton's defensive halves/in the dying seconds--and Rote football Saturday afternoon,|pinched up close to the line. was hounded unmercifully by Toronto Argonaut quarterback} But Argo strategy was to run the Tiger-Cat front wall and Tobin Rote walked slowly to thelout time with line plays andjlinebackers Zeno Karez and bench and said: 'They are com-|kick on third down. Coach Jim| Grant. McKee ing straight up the middle; /Trimble of the Tiger-Cats count- npn Ive got to spin out most of the ered by sending three men into oe we hele corcenetd in time to keep alive." the end zone--better-than-aver- |i, opening game of the series "They" were the Hamilton age reagent cone 8 rs Don with variations of the short Tiger - Cats, who sharpened|Sutherin and speedster Ron Ho-|.5t formation. Then, he had Radzick (68), Marty (54). and on the BRAMPTON 7 UP's vs. WHITBY MOHAWKS TUES., NOV. 28 8:30 P.M, Whitby Community Arena Adults $1.00 Children 50¢ TIGER-CATS' head coach | lighted grins, even after the ; following Saturday's specta- : ; victorious Hamilton team | cular Big Four overtime play- Jim Trimble (right) and line carried the two mentors into | off victory. coach Ralph Sazio have de- | the showers--clothes and all--| 'Kings Sit High On Major Loop Throne 3, A's: J. Gibbons (Garrard, Towns) 4, A's: Copeland (Hughes) Penalties -- Garrard 14.25, McLellan 18.26, and Peters 19.25. 14. --(CP Wirephoto) SPITTER STAYS OUT TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Base- ball rules makers turned down a return of the spitball Sunday putting the controversy to rest for another year. The offical playing rules committee of pro- | fessional baseball, meeting here lat baseball's winter convention, |voted 8 to 1 against bringing | back the spitter. CHRISTMA Argonauts battled but their defence started to show cracks in the | second half. Then Hamilton| scored two touchdowns and a 12-yard field goal by Sutherin. Sutherin's placement, at 4:19! Who's going to stop the Osh- of the fourth quarter, put Ham-!awa Kings in the Oshawa Major ilton ahead 27-25 on the round|Hockey League: Last night at but Mann kicked two singles. to Bowmanville Arena, the King's put the game into overtime. chalked up victory number six Faloney tossed two touch-|and ran their unbeaten streak to down passes to Garney Henley|seven games, running rough- 2. King's: G. Westfall (Gray, Nicholson) .... 3. King's: S. Westfall (Tureski, Middleton) 10.35 Penalties -- Lawson 11.11, Second Period King's: Lawson - ll nol 9.15 GIFT -- IDEAS their teeth on Argonaut hides well. |PUNTS EXCHANGED all over Civic Stadium to de- molish the Argos 48-2 and ad- vance into the East-West Grey) Cup final against Winnipeg Blue Bombers at Toronto this Satur- day. kick the ball right back. It went |the blitz was on to Sutherin about five yards be-|ONly 21 of 44 passes for hind the goal line and-he got it,yards and much of the after- away, back to Mann on the Ha-j"00n was on his back gazing time to spot any one of six eligible receivers and hit them regularity but Saturday He completed 114 Trimble's instructions were to With It took the Ticats 20 minutes) milton 40. Mann gave it another UP at Ticat tacklers. of overtime to do it in this sec-| hoot, this time to Faloney on His ball carriers netted only ond game of the total - point!/{ne three and he did some raz- 61 yards for a total air- ground Eastern Conference final Andizie - dazzle running 107 yards|gain of 175 against an even 700 those two 10 - minute hal ves|down the sidelines for what ap- for Hamilton. marked the final crushing of the Argos, who finished the reg- ular season in third place A week earlier in Toronto, the ilton 46-yard line. Argonauts had twisted the Ti- cat tail by thumping the league's first - place finishers 25-7 . Thelthat the infraction was block- Tiger-Cats wiped that out with ing. which is illegal peared to be a touchdown. Faloney, who pitched five But the dazzling play was nul-,touchdown passes, clicked on 22 lified by a penalty at the Ham- of 37 attempts for 328 yards and It was sig- Gerry McDougall roared for 151 referee Of Hamilton's 372 yards along ter explained the ground, The Tiger-Cats made 30 first and one each to Ralph Gold- ston, gall peg castoff, Paul Dekker and McDou- Carver Shannon, a Winni- scored the other on a 14-yard running play, nal points of the game the fi- Sutherin, a tremendous power on defence, made the convert good on all six touchdowns. FOOTBALL SCORES °." By THE SATURDAY Eastern Conference Toronto 2 (Hamilton v Hamilton 48 ns twe tal-points final 55-27 Atlantic Bowl CANADIAN PRESS -game, to shod over City-Wide Answering Service 10-3 In the opening weekly double Third Period A's: Garrard (Romanuk) g : A's: Keenan (England) 6.35 . Juves: Supryka (Watt, Matthews) . Juves: Macdonald (Furey Juves (Bradley) Penalties -- } game of the - header, Oshawa A's withstood a - period to defeat City- League" Juvenile Stars 5-4. A's remain a_ distant second behind the front run- <ing's by five points. Juve- and City-Wide s. If King's pace they could league pennant 5 n ont ly still KING'S 10, C.-WIDE 3 High - flying Oshawa King's, paced by the brilliant four-goal fG Westfall, crown- keep wrap tefreshment D is A's, who 1 battled t A'S 5, em t Other marksmen for the win- JUVENILES 4 ners' were John Wills and Gary (S. Westfall) King's: G. Westfall (Wills, Tureski) . King's: Price (Lawson, Gray) 3: 7. King's: Lawson (Gray) 14.44 8. King's: Wills (Middleton, G 9. C-Wide: Burke (Roberts) Penalties -- None Third Period - King's: :G. Westfall (Wills, Tureski) b . King's: Wills (Cole). :.. 3 2. C-Wide: Burke (Butler, Rennick) .... . C-Wide: Napiorowski (Wright, Rennick) ... 11.18 Penalties -- Napiorowski 0.40, West'll) 16.03 10.35 PICNIC COOLERS -- TENTS -- TOYS --GUNS--RADIOS--RECORD PLAYERS --TOASTERS---STEAM IRONS--BOATS -- OUTBOARD MOTORS -- BICYCLES --GUN CASES--BATTERIES--FLASH- LIGHTS -- LANTERNS -- PICNIC STOVES -- WATER SKIS -- LIFE PRESERVERS--PEDDLE CARS--TIRES -- LAWN CHAIRS -- BOAT TRAILERS --MARINE HARDWARE--TRICYCLES -- SLEEPING BAGS -- COFFEE PERCS -- LAWN MOWERS -- ROTO TILLERS Myles 7.57 and Myles 10.08. Officials Charles March and Lionel Baker. on punt downs against 13 for the Argo- nauts ¥ ARGO DEFENCE HOLDS The Tiger-Cats started ham- mering early but could score only three points ey were fortunate to hold half--a tale by sia ringer dogs A in a two-point safety touch i tes hey Argo Ron Morris intercepted a WEEK-END STARS Faloney pass just outside the goal line and was pushed into 2,7 By rd-period rally Oshawa bowed Lawson with two each while Stan Westfall and Dan Price garnered ] a 20-2 margin at the end of reg-/ runbacks ulation play, piled up another 28 points in overtime and took the series by a resounding 55-27 -- lapsed, BOTH BLUNDERED They Much of the drama and sus- the pense was packed into the final th 103 seconds of regulation play during which the Tiger - Cats, then the Argonauts, made what hind-sight experts term weird calls. Many of the small 23,000 crowd--4,000 below capacity - were fitting Tiger-Cat quart back Bernie Faloney for goat's horns when his first-down pass from the Hamilton 25-yard lin was intercepted by defens at the Hamilton 44. At that pc the round was knotted up 27-2 27. Wallace rambled to the Ticat 27, a perfect spot for pun Dave Mann to boot one ir end- zone seats and almost Gay Brewer's Birdie Putt Pree nerve Se create ait i agro mrs nase lla a had to 49 1." Gay Beever AAVEEF Blanks == Carway Keglers dr. getnned Sainetny Whar con McMaster . ; Atlantic Bowl Edge Pasquales ing a 15-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to win the Mobile open golf tournament by one stroke TALIFAX (CP)--St Jniversity > Bowl 0 St. Francis Xavier McMaster -- etc., etc., etc: There wasn't time for anothe play. The same went into over- time and the Argonauts col- Western Canada Juvenile Fort Garry 32 Victoria 9 (Fort Garry wins western fi- nal) HAVE PROFIT REGINA (CP) -- Saskatch- ewan Roughriders may have - had a losing season in the West- ern Football Conference but: ; ended up ahead in the treasury n m financial report at the club's annual meeting Sat- urday showed it ended the 16- game regular schedule with a $62,023 profit. Riders finished the season in fourth place with five victories, 10 defeats and a e OPEN A CHRISTMAS BUDGET ACCOUN? TODAY No Outside Financing lead on ¢ /~ DOMINION TIRE STORES opening WORL D TONGUES 48 BOND W. (Corner ef Church) 725-6511 1, G. West stfall, and Middleton. WIDE SERVICE def ence, Delves, ] Rennick: for- Napiorow ight, Mac- was Wil Tureski CITY goal, Marden Roberts ch Ai cade wards B € "* People's Nose =e iat GR, Acadian oe Sa ee ere job for * get bowlers @a st nig ge by 1947 the the _end zone sie tempt and Eugene a single. Bobby Watt, CANADIAN PRESS THE ge Armstr ron g and -- 'oro Glaspel Smit h, hop, Wr ler and Myles. "First Period G. Westfall Keon score lead the rout of New Ye . el Leafs to a 6-0 rk Rangers. of Montreal riod goals rked the Ca- n over Bos- King's NHL LEADERS THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto, won 13 at a 5-0 w the boys io mow more Armstrong acdonald OSHAWA A'S -- Tdefen Towns; Nevin Bob rong SiR ROBERT BURNETIS CELEBRATED : on New York niret ser The f a d period 'roi ight Provost, tie with Mo Batt Goals: Montreal, 16 Assists: 39 game was a First Period a as Lagi r. with bo was : : P. Gibbons, Ma 15 93 en going into the Lou at r or Peoples By raat | tuck r tiie f about n-stey Hall Peopies Cl ond game in manner as Ron ook Jay led mates with a 280 game and Roy Nesbit t again came through with just a neat relief chore. The scores game were, Peoples Cloth- 1264 and Acadian 1077. OSLO LOL eel al gl in a tension-packed finish The steady - nerved Brewer said he had been keeping "knew what the score was.' He referred to the fact that th Johnny Pott finished ahead of y. him with a fine six-under-par j, 66 after starting the round a stroke back. Brewer was five under par going into the par four, 420-yard 18th and needed a birdie to take the ma The 29-year-old Crystal R. Fia., pro dropped his approach shot on the downhill side of t green 15 feet from the addressed the bail then rolled it into t closing 66 This gave him a c 66-74-66--275 for 72 holes ov the course where par is 36-36 72. Pott had a 70-69-7 take second place a also came in se George Knu took fifth piz with rounds of Bob Panasiuk of W picked up $165 for a tie for 72 place. A! Johnston of Montr finished eut ef the money. y for Acadian up Francis X-Men won for the th more Canadians drink BURNETT'S than any other Gin Acadian boy $ rar snag er Peoples this win went to Ed Brown pin a 1-66--276 ¢ ana coach af Ponies Cicthing and and Pleaung the third frame and were never Knob Hill