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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Feb 1963, p. 17

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Quebec's Schoolboys Are Still Unbeaten ELPH, Ont. (CP) -- For|back effort against New Bruns- nfo! sauaning supposed to be a'wick, which held a 6-1 lead atione game in five years of Na-|winner for the National League; Canadianione point, schoolboy curling champion: giigec RESPECTED western show, the ships have taken on an eastern flavor. Going into today's gruelling three - round schedule, Al- But sharing the Wednesday's round was a rink} from Montreal high schoo! which had originally hoped for a 5-5 won-lost record. Powerful teams from West such as Manitoba and British Columbia were down the list and out of! the picture. The third - ranking rink was) a foursome from Prince Ed- ward Island which had won) four games and lost one. Sha ing fourth place with British Columbia was Nova Scotia, both with 4-2 records game apiece Wednesday. have much to worry about in the fifth round. He blasted New-|Salmon Arm won two extra-end foundiand 19-4. Quebec's 9-7 win'games. yesterday and both los- in the sixth round was a come- ses hurt their opponents No Fear 0! Enlarged Strike Zone \Peter Munro, at 15 the young-| Brunswick against Manitoba, Optometrist TAKE ADVANTAGE OF jest skip in the event, pulled the| Newfoundland against North- 725-4704 NO jsame trick on poor old New-\jern Ontario and Nova Scotia HARE OPTICAL 436 RITSON N TRUCK RATES |foundiand, winning 10-8 in 11/against British Columbia, with }@ BOND ST EAST 723-4811 (Where Pavement Ends) jends Ontario sitting out wn Ge a a mond's Quebec rink short. Hammond. 'But we're also sur-| Prince Edward Island scored in, ' prised at the competition. We/the final end to edge Manitoba) "had expected it to be much 6-5 and Northern Ontario! tougher jjern rinks,"" the key to the Quebec rink. He/12 - 6, Prince Edward Island/implied that the Giants' pitch-| Fulham 1 West Ham 2 the can make the big shot underjedged Ontario 7-5 and Novaling pattern was being used as| Saskatchewan, (Pressure and his strategy has Scotia took an 11-9 decision! , weapon against a hefty raise.\Liverpool 2 Burnley 1 7 ;|been impressive up the pace in the 11-round, British Columbia going into to-\st, Louis 4-2 in the final week pp. : round - robin competition, they|day's actior. ; \Torquay 2 Oldham 0 could provide a big windup in|Wan |\the event. They don't meet un- (2-3), Manitoba K | y.|til_the final draw Friday night.{(1-5) Newfoundland (0-5) andthe end I also worked with a scheduled and Manitoba, and Quebec and Alberta won one against British Columbia, Nova Edward Island, Newfoundland Scotia and Prince Edward Is-|against Nova Scotia and North-! g 0 : eige Bd ae Alberta's Wayne Saboe didn'tiland | t one stretch as the Giants jthe title. Then Salmon Arm's|ing at 8 p.m., Srdered pattern, Piten ac hard] Harkness this ee bola chen Hust! F | Hustles For Ist Base Spot Sanford's asking price for the 1963 campaign is believed to be MONTREAL (AP) -- Things will. be crowded around 'first a Jack Pitches jerbal Barb Verbal Barbs in the neighborhood of $35,000 a boost of about $10,000. San- base at the spring camp of New Mets, but Tim Harkness At Giants ford says he and the Giants are eee hopes to win the job with the ; SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --|"far apart," which is taken to' Newfoundland, winner of only|purly Jack Sanford, 24-game|mean about $5,000. |help of a sledge hammer. Harkness, acquired by the OLD COUNTRY : tae n| , ; H j ts tional competition, h'as lost/champion San Francisco Gian s three games on last rock this rey gg fie ne any final ots ' ' : ; e aseball season Nobody is selling John Ham-week. In other sixth - round', two.inch cut in his heel from i. games, Saskatchewan beat/an operation to remove an ab- "We've had the breaks," said\Nova Scotia. 10-6, surprising! coc. SOCCER SCORES LONDON (Reuters)--Results,in a winter trade between the of the only soccer matchesjtwo National League | clubs, played in Britain Wednesday|faces competition for the first night: base job from veteran Gil Hodges, Marv Throneberry and $100,000 bonus rookie Ed Krane- | pool; "Frankly, I hope that I'll be Currently involved in a con- tract cold war with the Giants, Sanford put a couple of hot A : coals into the dispute Tuesday In the fifth. round, Northern when he told the San Francisco Hammond, 18, has been called Ontario beat New Brunswick)Chronicle of his operation and --especially the west-\stopped Ontario 11-9. F, A, CUP Third Round Replay Fourth Round Replay playing every day," Harkness / THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, February 21, 1963 WA said Tuesday at his home in a Montreal suburb. He's been)' working hard all winter to get into shape. The 25-year-old rangy in- fielder took a job lugging cases on a brewery. delivery truck, and worked out regularly in the! basement of his home with a 12-pound sledgehammer. "The hammer js kind of a training invention of mine," he} said. 'You swing it around and it builds up the muscles in your| hands, wrists, forearms and shoulders." He's always been known as a glove man and hit only .259 in 91 games for the Dodgers last season, Harkness signed a contract for "something more than $10,- 000," he said, and will report to camp in St. Petersburg, Fla., Sunday. vet re ef fF fF fy from Manitoba "Few people know this," said , ; ' ENGLISH LEAG Following Nova Scotia and\ sanford, "but just before I beat a If Quebec. anc Alberta keep Division IV were Saskatche-\t had an operation on my heel (3-2), Northern Ontario|t9 z:omove an abscess, a two- (2-4), Ontariolinchlong cut. It hurt. Toward CRAVED MEAT PIE . : : 4 William Pitt, the 18th-century Both clubs had three games|New Brunswick (0-6). y today -- Quebec) Other seventh Alberta/Saskatchewan against Prince) The fastballing righthander, | his death bed, whe won 16 consecutive games| -- inne BROWN'S LUMBER & SUPPLIES 14 ALBERT STREET 3.50 PER DA : ern Ontario against. Manitoba.!made their rur at the league- British Columbia's rink from/New Brunswick had the bye. leading Los Angeles Deters, Other eighth-round matches|then fired his verbal broad- included New BUILDING MATERIALS HOME IMPROVEMENTS | 4 DAILY-WEEKLY-MONTHLY i Pay Less With i jcold that drained me. Yet I\prime minister of Britain, is : : y c - round sched-|worked something like three|reputed to have wished for a = s | against Ontario, Saskatchewan uled to start at 9:30 a.m. sent)games in six days." meat pie in his last words on 1 : SERVICE -- rent ieee. 8:00 A.M. -- 6:00 P.M, &| set for 2:30 p.m., matched side: et 6:00 P.M.-- 8:00 A.M. | Northern Ontario and Sas-| "Chub (Giant vice-president " | CHAMPIONS FADE katehewan, Ontario and New|Chub Feeney) mentioned I did} "DO-IT-YOURSELF 5.00 FOR 24- HOUR DAY B.C. edged Saskatchewan 9-7 Brunswick and Newfoundland not complete many games last} HEADQUARTERS" PLUS 7c PER MILE | lin an L-ender in the fifth round, 40d Prince Edward Island. The) ess ; virtually dashing all hopes the DYe Went to British Columbia. NEW HOMES & Includes Gas and Necessary Insurance 1 defending champions had for Ninth - round matches, start-| JOHN A, OVENS FULL LINE OF Deluxe model cars, power equipped, slightly higher rete. | THESE WINTER RATES : Ww H ON REQUEST J PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) The new, enlarged strike zone which thas brought howls of anguish from some of the American League's biggest hit- ters holds no fears for Albie Pearson, base balt's littlest player. "I believe the new strike zone) will help me," said the spark-| ling centre fielder of Los An-} geles Angels, who at five-feet- five and 140 pounds looks like! a jockey who has slightly out- grown his trade "It may cut down. my base- on-balis production, but it's bound to make me a better hit-| ter, if only by making me swing} the bat more. I've always been| a high-ball hitter, so raising the) strike zone from the armpits to the top of the shoulders should not bother me. I hope to add about 20 points to my batting average in 1963." Albie, the most popular An- gels player with the fans, isn't completely satisfied _with bis) feason's work in 1962, espe- cially with his batting average, | which slipped from .288 in 1961) to .261, "Defensively, I had the great-| est year of my life," he said.) "But I should have hit at least! 20 points higher." Pearson led the league in runs scored with 115, was sev- enth in walks with 96, eighth) in stolen bases with 15, 12th in times at bat with 614 and 20th|f in hits with 160. Hedr ove in| 42 runs, not bad for a leadoff! hitter, Schoolboys' Fifth, Sixth GUELPH (CP)--Wednesday's results in the Canadian school-' boy curling championships: FIFTH ROUND | 001 102 021 0-- 7) P.E.I. Ontario 110 010 100 1-- 5 Alberta 020 151 204 4--19 Nfld. 102 000 010 0-- 4 Sask 002 000 200 30--7 B.C, 210 111 001 02--9 Manitoba 020 020 103 1-- 9 Nova Scotia 301 103 030 0--11 New Brunswick 100-010 020 2-- 6 Northern Ont. 041 101 302 0--12 IXTH ROUND Sask 004 020 020 2--10 Nova Scotia 110 102 100 0-- 6 New Brunswick 102 300 000 1~-- 7 Quebec 010 011 222 0-- 9 'Northern Ont. 301 003 210 1--11 Ontario 040 130-001 0-- 9 PEI. 020 101 010 1-- 6 Manitoba 100 020 101 0-- 5 B.C. 002 201 030 02--10 'Nfld. 110 020 201 10-- 8 _ NHL BIG SEVEN By THE CANADIAN PRESS Murray Oliver of Boston man- 'aged only one assist in the Bruins' 3-3 tie with New York 'Wednesday night, but it was 'enough to vault him into a first-| place tie for the National] 'Hockey League scoring cham- pionship. He now has 21 goals and 38 assists for 59 points, the same as his team-mate John Bucyk who ranks ahead of him be. cause of his goal production--24. Bucyk was scoreless Wednes- day. . Andy Bathgate of New York got one goal and one assist and Moved akead of :Chicago's Bobby Hull into sixth place There were no other changes in the list. The leaders: G A Pts. Bucyk, Boston 24 35 59 Oliver, Boston 1 38 59 Mahovlich, Toronto 30 23 58 Howe, Detroit 28 30 58 Beliveau, Montreal 14 44 58 Bathgate, New York 25 32 57 Hull, Chicago 28 8 56 Do Mons Fashions ( 1940 Big and bold! A 'drape" shape with heavily pad- ded shoulders, big wide 1920 A completely unpadded effect. The shoulder line was norrow, small and sloping... the waist line was very high, Tight-fitting 'Edwardian' clothing, such as this four-button model" shown here. Little shirt front or crovet wos exposed, lapels . . . a "He-man" concept of styling. 1963 The Kennedy Look This two-button style makes bigger men look slimmer. Notch lapel, neat jetted pockets without flaps, plain back, narrow Save up to 24.50... TAILORED TO-MEASURE SUIT SALE pants. now only 29 sui 69.50 Wool costs are up 10% to 15% ... YET we offer our traditional $55 sale price! Over 300 cloths & patterns ---- These all wool worsted cloths are magnificent! Fashion- able fabrics for Spring include: Muted Glen Checks Fine Herringbones Blended Marl Patterns Neat Sharkskins Self-Colour Overchecks Neat Stripes and Plains faction. Choose your own suit-style . , look" of the trim 'Natural Shoulder"? Ma styles -- Let our experienced staff adv they're specialists! Over 46" chest, slight extra cha Wear an individually-fitted suit . . . carefully HAND-CUT and tailored to: your figure und measurements by two of. Toronto's leading tailoring houses. 3 Easy Ways to Buy 1. Pay cash. 2. No service charge if paid within 30 days. 3. NEW Easier Credit Plan. = PA Open 'Til 9 Every Friday The Natural Shoulder The slim and trim look for younger men. Three buttons, vent at back, pleatless an expertly fitted suit, carefully hand-cut to your figure ALL year these Special Price for TEN DAYS only 36 years tailoring experience guarantee your satis- . why not consider wearing the new two-button "Kennedy- extra pants $18... vests $8. feck Peas OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE ? They Do -- Drastically! | 1963 lapels, hooked centre ts cost & 79.50 ny more ise you, rge. ree 4 TURN PLEASE IT'S WELL WORTH THE EFFORT! . -4q | \

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