'STEAMER' MAXWELL FOUR-FOR-FIVE PGi eo te oer wegen; I ee aS LN, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, December 31, 1962 15) Ly Reda a ed P OT AY TCG, PET Mar" he SPAN ag FOE Winnipeg Hockey Great Joins Hall Of Famers Acadian Cleaners SERVICE By GRAHAM COX WINNIPEG (CP) -- His clos-| est contact with sport now is watching from the grandstand but Fred G. (Steamer) Maxwell has some wonderful memories. Most important of these is his election last June to the Hockey Hall of Fame where his name joined those of some former teammates and onetime pupils. "I don't know why_ they picked me, but they did," says the silver-thatched 72-year-old Winnipeg businessman. | His modesty may arise from) the fact he never turned pro-| fessional but his career as an amateur player and later as coach impressed the selectors The highlight of his playing) career was the 1914-15 season) when Winnipeg Monarchs won) the Allan Cup as Canadian sen-| ior champions. He played rover on the club in the days when} hockey was a seven-man game .| He quit as a player in 1916 because his definition of an am- ateur differed from that of oth- ers, "When I played I bought my own skates and boots.. When found out some of the others were getting paid, I quit." COACHED WORLD CHAMPS He took up coaching and han- died Monarchs for two years, then took over Winnipeg Fal-} cons, Allan Cup winners in 1919 and Olympic champions in 1920.| Because he was involved in| getting his business on its feet,| however, he missed two of the . Graham Hill Clinches World| Driving Title EAST LONDON, South Africa) (Reuters)--Graham Hill, a 33- year-old Londoner who never drove a car before he was 23, clinched the 1962 world driver's| championship here Saturday while winning the South African Grand Prix in a BRM. His rival for the coveted title, | 26-year-old Scottish farmer Jim Clark, who had to win Satur- day's event to catch Hill, had! cruel luck. Clark led all the way until the 62nd lap in the 82-lap race but then pulled into the pits with smoke pouring from an oil leak) in his Lotus which forced him) out of the race. | This enabled Hill, in second place, to sweep into the lead and 'on to take the chequered! flag. ENDS A WINNER Hill's victory brought the Brit- ish BRM Company the manu- facturers' world title and t he ear which for nearly 12 years has been "jinxed" with mishaps ended 1962 as a world beater. Hill finished nearly 50 seconds | |HO | most important overseas' trips made by his teams. ' When Falcons went to Ant- werp for the 1920 Olympics and again when the Winnipegs won the world title at Davos, Swit- ezrland, in 1934, he had to stay home. "Those were tough times," he recalls. "You had to keep hust- ling all the time." But tough times now are be- hind him. Reputed to be a mil- lionaire, Maxwell owns a big plywood supply company that imports wood from many coun- tries. Among .the "youngsters" to beat Maxwell into the Hall of Fame was Dick Irvin, with whom he played on the 1915 Monarchs; described by Steamer as the finest team ever to win the Canadian senior championship. Irvin went on to become an even greater pro and before his death was general manager of Chicago Black Hawks. On Winnipeg Maroons, a pro- team Maxwell coached, were Johnny Gottselig, Lolo Couture and Charlie Gardner, all of whom went on to great careers with the NHL Hawks. PLAYED BASEBALL Maxwell also played baseball, starting as an infielder and end- ing his career in the outfield. For a time he owned a base- ball club, Winnipeg Arenas, which used to draw as many as 5,000 fans for exhibition semi- pro games against teams from Minneapolis and St. Paul. Today he is on the advisory board of Winnipeg Goldeyes of the class C Northern League. If he wasn't able to go abroad during his hockey days, he has certainly made up for it as a businessman. "Africa is my favorite place.| I've been there about threé| times, I've also been to India about six times as well as to South America, I don't know] how often. "I'm now planning a six or eight - week trip to 'South America." SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY No games scheduled. TUESDAY HOCKEY OHA Junior 'A' Metro Lea- gue: Oshawa Generals vs Whit- by Dunlops, at Whitby Com- munity Arena, 2.30 p.m. WEDNESDAY EY Oshawa Minor Assoc, Midget League: Lions vs Kiwanis, at 6.15 p.m.; Kinsmen vs Local 222, at 7.54 p.m. Canadian Legion vs Rotary, at 7.55 p.m.; and| Firefighters vs Navy Vets, at! 8.45 p.m. All games at Oshawa| Children's Arena. | ahead of New Zealander Bruc McLaren, with South African Tony Maggs third. Both Mc- Laren and Maggs drove Cooper- Climax cars. Ten of the 17 starters completed the course. A' crowd of about 80,000) watched the event over a 2.4-! mile circuit on the shores of the} Indian Ocean, It was the ninth! and final round of the cham- pionship series. ! Hill finished with 42 points in the championship table based on each driver's best five perfor-| mances in the nine races, | Clark, ended the season as runnerup with 30 points "\WEEKEND FIGHTS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS -Tunis--Angel Robinson Gar- cia, Cuba, -outpointed Ahmed Lamine, Tunisia, 10, (middle weights). SPUR SERVICE STATION TOWNLINE EAST SERVICE... THE GREATEST BROWN'S | LUMBER & SUPPLIES LTD. "DO-IT-YOURSELF HEADQUARTERS" |, NEW HOMES & HOME IMPROVEMENTS FULL LINE OF BUILDING MATERIALS 725-4704. 436 RITSON N. (Where Pavement Ends) SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, relioble Gas ler in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 Now If You Don't Buy Open Nightly (Except YOU PAY TOO MUCH !! BAD BOY KING ST. E. Al TOWNLINE on at... BAD BOY'S Refrigerators, Ranges, T.V., Dryers, , Vacuums, Bed, Mattresses, Chesterfields, Bunk Beds, Kitchen Suites, Bed Chester- fields, Lemps, Continentel is, Hassocks, Dividers, Pole Lemps, Tepe Recor- ders, Record Players !! It At Bad Boy's FURNITURE APPLIANCES Seturdoy) 'Til 9:30 728-4658 Acadian Cleaners _ five-pin jbowling club opened the second series of the schedule at Bay- view Bow! with Willow Bowl as the opposition, and the Oshawa trundlers won four of the five-| game set. In the two previous meetings of these clubs, the Willow kids had given Acadian consider- able trouble and it appeared that they would repeat at Bay- view. | Acadians led all the way) until the final frame of the first game, but faltered just; enough to give Willow the de- cision by a_ narrow margin, | 1104 to 1101. | Smarting under this reverse, the Oshawa squad came back strong in the second game to completely smother the opposi- tion, 1472 to 1134. Ozzie Keeler was the spark plug in this }game with a smashing 375, Bob /Gallagher 319 and Dick Adams 288, Spill Willow Bowl 286, Dick Adams 265 and Ozzie|Lugtenburg absent due to ill-| Keeler 261, ness and Hank Sarnovsky also! Leading three to one, Aca-|missing, the Acadians were for-; dians were al! out for the fina' iunate to have Lloyd Sabins game and Willow Bowl were back in the line-up. equally determined to stop the) The team totals were: Aca- Oshawa boys. It was a tight/dian Cleaners 6365, Willow battle all the way before Aca-| Bowl 5729, dians came through, 1169 to) parrigos italian Foods 'lead| ' with 5 points, Acadian Cleaners! Dick Adams was the top|4; York Bowl 3, Seagrams 3, shooter in the fifth game with|Carway Imperials 2, Bowlo- 275 and Lloyd Sabins 252, with drome 2, Willow Bowl 1, Atlas a strong finish. Bowl 0. : Bob Gallagher was the num-| Saturday's action will be at. ber one guy for Acadians with) Aprile Lanes when Acadians a whopping 1395 five-game total,'tackle their Oshawa rivals, Car- 245, 319, 302, 286 and 243. Dick} way Chrysler. Adams was close behind Bob Congratulations are i 'der with 227, 288, 293, 265 and 275/for Taek" Bartetiiy. ve for 1348, was busy handing out the All eyes were on Ozzie Keel-\cigars the other night. It's an- er who is leading the league other boy for Mr, and Mrs. with the highest average, 272. Hank. The 'Mighty Mite' shook off a bad start to roll 237, 375, 247. 261 and 214 for a 1334 total, to still hold first spot in the high O.H.A. Metro Junior "A" STORES First chec features... then compare prices! QUIET RUNNING--The exclusive tread design makes Suburbonites whisper-quiet, even on dry paver ment and at high speeds. Acadians continued the torrid average race pace in the third game to Lloyd Sabins made a_ wel- again wir with another nice come return to the club wiih total of 1342 against 19'7 "some steady and timely bowl- |Willow, Bob Bob Gallag'er ing, 203, 244, 257, 230 and 252 again came through nice :\for a total of 1186, Young Den- 302, Dick Adams was close be-/ny Brown gained an assist in hind with 293 and Lloyd Sabins! the victory with nice relief 257. work and racked up 726 for 32 The Oshawa squad opened frames. Denny Linton despite the fourth game with some considerable rough breaks, powerful trundling and appear- came through when needed, ed to be well ahead of their 376 for 16 frames. With Dutch jopponents until the eighth = ---- - frame when they ran into a bit of trouble. Denny Linton was in- jected into the line-up with two ever assembled in Winnipeg, |frames remaining and "'Leity" including the 1915 senior Ca- |came through with 88 pins out of a possible 90 to give Aca- dians the necessary edge, 1281 HOCKEY Se OSHAWA WHITBY DUNLOPS Tuesday, Jan, Ist 2:30 P.M. Whitby Community Arena Adults $1.00 Children 25e Students with cards 50c JOINS SELECT CIRCLE -- Fred G. (Steamer) Maxwell, long a sports personality in Winnipeg, has joined. some of his.teammates in the hockey Hall of Fame. Maxwel:, now 72, played with and coached some of the greatest teams nadian champion Monarchs. Among his players and (eam- |to 1153 mates were the late Dick Bob Gallagher again was Irvin, Johnny Gottselig and |pbrilliant in anchor spot with Lolo Couture. ie = IN OSHAWA Sales & Service 353 KING w. CP Photo nament. Vicente Zaraua and 'Joaquin Mayo, Mexico City, 7-5 Satur-|zwon the doubles title by defeat- MITH PORT OPEN EVENINGS PH. WINS TENNIS CROW N_ |frey Pollard 6-1, 6-3, 723- MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--/day for the 18-and-under title ing Mike Belkin of .Miami 9311 Anthony Roche of Australia de-;in the climax of the annual' Beach and Charles Pasarell of feated fellow countryman Geof-iOrange Bow! junior tennis tour-!Puerto Rico, 6-3, 6-4 This New Year's Eve... when it's "One for the road"... Fine whisky, in moderation, plays an important part in the art of gracious living. Knowing when to make a "gracious refusal" plays an equally great part in the art of sensible living. This is especially true when the New Year's party is breaking up... when you're about to drive home and someone suggests, "How about one for the road?" 'This New Year's Eve, if you are doing the driving, say: "Yes, I'll have one for the road. But, please make it coffee}" THE HOUSE OF SEAGRAM LtTp. MEN WHO THINE OF TOMORROW...PRACTICE MODERATION TODAY life. Goodyear You're smart to shop aro tires! 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