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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jan 1962, p. 17

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* 'ea wererrvrewrrvrrreeeeee ~ OTTAWA BOWLER HAS HIGH TRIPLE Mrs. Carole Gauthier of Ot- tawa, set a city bowling record on Monday night when she grossed a three-game total of Whitb 1,147 pins, made up of 387, | 391 and 369, during a session in which she threw 17-conse- | : y Mo cutive strikes. The previous Ottawa record was 1,071. --(CP Wirephoto) awks Defeat Brampton By. GERRY BLAIR Bill Collins and Pete Shearer, each with two goals, led the Whitby Mohawks to a convinc- ing 7-4 triumph over the tail- end Brampton Seven-Ups before 450 chilly fans last night in the Community Arena. The Mohawks compiled a 3-2 margin after twenty minutes of play and were never headed. Collins started the scoring early in the opening frame, but Paul Jago evened the count four min- utes later. Pete Shearer then took advantage of lax defensive play by the Brampton rear- guards to score his two counters, and newcomer Brian Bradley, recent acquisition from the Marlboros rounded out the scoring in the first period 13 seconds after Shearer's second tally. Whitby put the game well out of reach with a pair of un- answered goals in the middle frame. Bill Collins and Bob Wright were the marksmen. Wright who was a standout on defence for the Mohawks, rifled a shot just past the Brampton goal from outside the blueline. Julie Kowalski hopped in for the rebound off the backboards yand neatly put the . puck on Wright's stick as he cruised in unmolested to rifle the shot into the short side. The Seven-Ups and Whitby split four goals in the third and final period. Bill Smith and Julie Kowalski accounted for the Mo- hawks' tallies, while Steve Cor- lett scored both Brampton goals. The third period was the most impressive twenty minute period by the Seven-Ups, who were ineffective with their checking until that time. SHORT NOTES: Collins and Smith, with two points each, moved into a third place dead- lock in the Metro Junior "A" scoring race with St. Michael's Rod Seiling, with 27 points. They trail league-leader, Gary Dineen of St. Mike's by three points. Smith has scored the most goals in the league. His single tally last night gave him a total of 14... A surprise visitor to the Community arena was Toronto Maple Leaf standout, Dave Keon, who accompanied Bramp- ton coach Bob Savage. Both played together at St. Mike's for two seasons. Sandy Air, former Whitby Dunlop star, and now manager of the Brampton Seven-Ups, blames the inade- quacy of his defencemen for the last place standing. He was not too pleased with the poor check- Red Dutton Airs Football MONTREAL (CP) -- Mervyn| (Red) Dutton of Calgary, one of | Canada's most colorful sports executives, said Monday Cana- dian Football must allgw un- limited imports and stage a) two-game Grey Cup playoff if it is to survive. "Unlimited importation has to come," he said in an inter- view. "It's no secret that the most successful teams in Can- ada are the ones with the best|--one in Vancouver, one in Tog-|11, depth, the most homebred play- ers. But we're not developing them fast enough. The supply source is limited." He said football clubs like Winnipeg and Hamilton have the edge. "Other clubs try to|/Stampeders on this, but as a) devise ways and means of catching up. They hunt dual cit- izen players. They send Cana- dian boys to U.S. colleges for advanced training. But it's a slow process, Too slow." \ball executive since he retired Opinions trip, has been connected with Calgary Stampeders as a foot- as president of the Natio nal Hockey League to operate a contracting business. | He said the Grey Cup "'one-| shot show is ridiculous." | | 'Hockey has made us playoff; conscious. Without them it couldn't survive. And football ing of his forwards in the first two periods of last night's loss . .. The three stars were Bob Wright, Bill Collins and Don Fuller . . . Next action for the Whitby Mohawks is on Sunday afternoon at Maple Leaf Gar- dens against the Marlies, at 3.30 instead of the original starting time of 2.00. The game was switched so that CFTO could televise the Metro tilt, beginning at 4.00 .. . All five clubs in the Metro circuit are meeting to- night in Toronto to discuss the possibility of increasing the player limit allowed to be dress- ed to 15, instead of the present 14. This is the ruling in the OHA Junior "A" league, and when the two leagues meet in the play-offs, the 15 player rul- ing will prevail. BRAMPTON -- goal, Brod- erick; defence, Watson, Mitch- ell, Sinclair, Reid; forwards, Noakes, Corlett, Jago, Fuller, Seager, Abbott, Westbrooke, Ferris and Bradley. WHITBY -- goal, Perani; de- fence, Ashby, Tripp, Wright, McCullough; forwards, Tran, Shearer, Smith, Kowalski, Fletcher, Dowe, Weller, Collins, Butler. Ist Period Whitby: Collins (Tran) 5.19 Brampton: Jago (Fuller, Corlett) ..... Whitby: Shearer (Kowalski) Whitby: Shearer (Wright, Tripp) .... 5. Brampton: Bradley (Westbrooke, Seager) 18.43 Penalty -- Reid 10.48. 2nd Period 6. Whitby: Collins (Smith, Wright) ...... 7. Whitby: Wright (Kowalski) Penalties Kowalski 3.27, Shearer and Bradley 8.53, Fer- ris 12.33, Kowalski 18.55. 3rd Period . Whitby: Smith (Tran) . Brampton: Corlett (Fuller) ... . Whitby: Kowalski iL 2. 9.10 3. 4. ++ 18.30 1.31 AT 3.40 should go for at least two games successive Saturdays--| lonto on ; | Grey Cup before it's too \for the late. Dutton said Canadian football rules should not be altered. | "I'm not speaking for the ifootball fan,'" he said. "Our |coach, Bobby Dobbs, is for 11- |man teams. Not me. Perhaps we could do with better protec- |tion or blocking for the punt receivers. PRES event to be held at the . U.A.W. 3. DEMONSTRATIONS. DOMINION TIRE STORES ENTS SPORTSMAN'S NIGHT Make it a date to attend our annual Sportsman's HALL Bond St. East - Oshawa Tues., Jan. 23rd...8:30 p.m. ENTERTAINMENT INCLUDES: 1. MOVIES ON HUNTING & FISHING. 2. GUEST SPEAKERS, 4. DISPLAYS. REFRESHMENTS will be served FREE ADMITTANCE Everyone Welcome (Shearer) Brampton: Corlett (Fuller, Jago) ..... 7.58 18.10 P. er 8.15, Westbrooke 11.20, Col- lins 19.13. The R. S. McLaughlin Trophy, coveted award of the annual Oshawa Curling Club's three- day bonspiel, will leave the city again this year with Murray Roberts and his Unionville rink, 1961 title winners, favored to retain the honors and Charlie Baillie's Orillia entry rated as most likely to provide an upset. GIANT KILLERS Harve Acton and his Fire Department rink from Ux- bridge, continued in their role of giant-killers yesterday. They knocked off Bill Wyse's rink on Monday and yesterday they came up with a brilliant comeback to beat out Ed. Rhodes and his Royal Cana- dians. Rhodes, with the West- ern Canada ace Walt Derrett as his mate, was picked by many to take the honors this time but in his game with the Uxbridge 'rookies' yesterday, Rhodes himself faltered twice on sure-count shots. Acton and 'Two Tied For Top Place In Minor League The Oshawa Y's Men's Minor League had three very exciting games down at Simcoe Hall Settlement House on Saturday morning. In the first game of the morning, the Firefighters out- fought and outplayed the Medi- cal Pharmacy boys by a score of 22 to 13. In the first half, the Fire- fighters led by Bill Fedorczen- ko outshot the opposing team by a score of nine to five. In the second half the Medi- cal Pharmacy team tried to make a comeback at first but the Firefighters still outplayed them and the fina] score being 22 to 13. High scorer for Firefighters, Bill Fedorcezenko 15; high scorer for Medical Pharmacy, Joel Palter, six. BOLAHOOD'S CLICK In the second game of the morning, action was much closer than the last one, as the Bolahood's. team outscored the St. John Cadets by five points, as the full game ended up by a score of 33 to 28. In the first part, the St. John Cadets team played a very close and exciting half as the score was 12 to 11 in favor of} Bolahood's. | In the second half, the St. | John Cadet team tried to make) a comeback but just couldn't! sink the ball on the foul shots, so they ended up as the under- dogs of the game. High scorer for Bolahood's, Gerry Gaatch 10; high scorer for St. John Cadets, Peter Kili- sitoff 13. In the third and final game, the CKLB boys downed the Provincia] Tile team by a score of 38 to 21. | In the first half of the game, the CKLB team outscored the Provincial Tile by a score of 25 to 11. In the second half, CKLB boys still outplayed and outshot) the Provincial Tile boys to end) the final score by 38 to 21, High scorer for CKLB, Larry Horne, 11 points; Bob Crothers, 11 points. High scorer for Provincial Tile, Larry Planche, 9 points. |LEAGUE STANDINGS: | Ww Firefighters Bolahood's enalties: Shearer 1.28, Shear-|CKLB St. John Cadets his rink fought back grimly after dropping a four-end mifd- way through the contest. Charlie Baillie's Orillia rink, using the knockout style with deadly effect, eliminated a stub- born foursome from Belleville, skipped by Les Edwards. Time- and-again Edwards kept his boys in the running and on. the final end was within reach of at least a tie and a possible win but an unlucky "rub" on a tricky draw shot spoiled his final rock and clinched the win for Baillie and his men. Baillie meets Acton in one semi-final round today and Rob- erts and Mac White of Belle- ville tangle in the other bracket, a game which many insist will be the key game of this year's bonspiel. FITTINGS TROPHY The Fittings Trophy will also go out-of-town. Dr. Earl Rach- er, of Sarnia, eliminated Ernie Swan's Weston rink and Hal Brown came from behind to put out Barrie's Vern Adams. Manse Robinson and his Perth rink defeated Herb Crabb's Orillia rink in another quarter- final set. The fourth game of the quarter-finals was the big thriller. Len McMullen's rink from Unionville, with 'Hi'? Lawrie as skip, scored a 7-end on Al Kotelko's Toronto Boulevards, in the first end. They were up 11-2 at one stage and 13-7 with only two ends to go. They were about ready to shake hands but Kotelko elected to continue. He scored a four on the 9th and two in the 10th, actually should have won it right there as Lawrie's off-the-mark final roc ended up as a third shot, with a fortunate roll. In the extra end, Kotelko himself, was wide and a little heavy with a guard rock and then drifted through the house with his final rock, to let the Unionville rink emerge 14-13, Lew Mackey's Lindsay rink continued their strong play in the J. B. Highfield Memorial Trophy event and Joe Gurowka and his Dixie band eliminated Jack Kennedy's Barrie rink in their quarter-final round. Don Anderson of St. Thomas, vet- eran Lou Ross of Tam O'Shan- ter, Dave Gerolamy of Peter- borough are others also still in the running. OSHAWA RINKS Dr. John Brock's rink ousted George Kennedy of Barrie in the Oshawa Times Trophy play and along with Al Steer of Mid- land, Don Holden's Oshawa rink, Jake Bryant of Whitby, Bob Robb of Sarnia and Bill Hood of Unionville, qualified for continued action in this fourth jevent. | In the Duplate Canada Tro- phy play, two Oshawa rinks. skipped by "Bob' Mercer and Herb Robinson, clashed this morning for the right to con- tinue. Vern Adams of Barrie and Oscar Parker's Oshawa rink also were to meet this morning along with veterans Bill Wyse of Weston and Andy Grant of Unionville Trophy finals in all of the five major events, will all start early this evening, in the grand finale wind-up. R. $. MeLAUGHLIN TROPHY Round Wm. Wyse, 7, Bob Lowrie, ae 5; Andy Grant, 4. 12; G, Goodfellow, 10. | H. Acton, C. Baillie, L. Edwards, Five Trophy Finals In 3-Day Bonspiel Scheduled Tonight Round G. Metcalfe, O. Parker, E. Rhodes, Baillie, L. Edwards, FITTINGS LTD, TROPHY Second Round C. Knight, W. Mercer, G. Fitzpatrick, H, Robinson, Round Vv. Adams, Ernie Swan, H, Crabb, M, H, c H. Crabb, M. tL. McMullen, 12; Third H, Brown, 8; €. Racher, 13; . Robinson, 8; E, McMullen, 14(x); J. B. HIGHFIELD MEMORIAL First Round Don Holden, |W. Chowen, ' 11; C. Dawson, D. Gerolamy, B. Kennedy, 1D. Anderson, A. Robillard, Lou Ross, A, Wilkinson, H. McAllen, Second D. Gerolamy, D. Anderson, Lou Ross, L. Wilkinson, R. Manning, L. Mackey, jj. jJ. Bert Kennedy, A, Robillard, H. McAllen, Geo. Kennedy, John Brock, A. Parkhill, Jake Bryant, Round R. Manning, J. Kennedy, Kennedy, Gurowka, L. Mackey, \J. Gurowka, 9; OSHAWA TIMES TROPHY First Round 11; A. Parkhill, 10; G, Kennedy, 10; D. Spence, 11; Wm. Ward, Second Round 10; Bob Metcalf, 9; skip Cc. Dawson, DUPLATE CANADA TROPHY First Round 12; V. Adams, 10; G. Metcalfe, W. Mercer, 9; C. Knight, H. Robinson, 9; G. Fitzpatrick, | Second Round 'Wm. Wyse, 10; R. Lowrie, 'Andy Grant, 10; G. Goodfellow, J. Bryant, John Brock, R, Robb, Wm. Hood, Al Steer, |D. Holden, E. Swan, O. Parker, 10. A. Kotelko, : RY ig THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Janvery 10, 1962 17 OTTAWA (CP)--Milan Mar- cetta of Sault Ste. Marie Thun- derbirds has suddenly emerged as a contender for the scoring leadership. in the Eastern Pro- fessional Hockey League. Marcetta collected three goals and five assists last week .|to run his points total to 41 and .|jump from 12th to fourth place -|in the individual scoring totals. League statistics issued Mon- day show Marcetta with 19 goals and 22 assists in his 37 games. He trails Dave Balon of Kitchener-Waterloo Beavers by one point. Orval Tessier and Tom Mc- Carthy of Kingston Frontenacs' '} still are running one - two in -|scoring. Tessier has 48 points, 3 made up of 24 goals and 24 as- '|sists while McCarthy has 44 on 23 goals and 21 assists. Ed Hoekstra of Kitchener- .| Waterloo is fifth with 40 points and clubmate Mel Pearson is jnext at 38. .| Goalie Cesare Maniago of '|Hull-Ottawa Canadiens allowed '| nine goals in two games last jweek but still is the league's g,|leading goaltender with an av- 5.;erage of 2.66 goals per game. a Dino Robazza of Sault Ste. 9{|Marie picked up another eight 5.;minutes in penalties to run his 7. league-leading total to 124 min- 5.! utes. Sudbury Wolves are the most. penalized team at 570 min- 5-/ utes. 8. 6. 6. 5 7. 9 5. 5. 8 7 Soo Thunderbird Challenges Lead The top 10 scorers: Tessier, 'Kingston McCarthy, Kingston Balon, Kitchener Marcetta, Sault Hoekstra, Kitchener Pearson, Kitchener Attersley, ------_ saESaoS SSRRRO Titel? £2 fo 8 to seasussecte? SEE PAGE 9 BIGGEST. 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It; is adapted to the individual after a personal examination and progress is checked at re- gular, intervals by a Roberts Specialist. Who Can be Helped? Will the new Roberts treat- ment cure baldness? "No!" For we cannot help men and wo- men who are slick-bald after years of gradual hair loss. But if you still have fuzz and your scalp is still creating hair, you can at least save and thicken what 'you have. Some condi- tions, such as "spot baldness" usually have complete cover- age if caught in time! Other conditions that usually THEY RE-GREW HAIR! IN 3 MONTHS HERE THURSDAY WOMEN HOW TO SAVE HAIR AND PREVENT BALDNESS or dryness, follicle clogged with sebum or seborrhea -- can be corrected by the Roberts home treatment if caught in time. "DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT'S TOO LATE." Baldness won't wait for doub- ters to be convinced, you're going to keep right on losing hair 'til you're bald--unless you get your scalp in healthy, hair srowing condition again. Examine You Free We want to make it clear that you incur absolutely no charge or obligation by coming in for an examination. Your only obligation is to yourself. We do not accept cases that will not respond. Guarantee Satisfaction The Roberts Specialists will giye you a written guarantee that you must be satisfied within 30 days or it will cost you nothing. For a free examination and discussion of your hair prob- Jems ask the desk clerk for Mr. Thomson's room number. He does not make appoint- ments, so come in at your con- venience. bring on excessive hair-loss--| dandruff, itching, over-oiliness Examinations are given in private. | Suits Sport Coats Car Coats Shirts Sweaters Shoes Lok MEN'S WEAR LTD. Annual January Clearance Commences Thurs., Jan. llth, 9 a.m. We invite you to select season-end items from our quality "Brand Nome" merchandise at reduced prices. The House Of Style . 74 For Men and Boys" SALE SIMCOE ST. NORTH 723-3611

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