yee ee ee ee ee ee ve es SASKATOON @-- Members of ourselves against the Czechs.” | "We had to protect ourselves” Quaker coach Lynn declares Saskatoon Quakers who recently HIT WITH STICKS completed ai hockey tour Czechoslovakia have voiced crit- icism of Czech players and of- ficials. Speaking during a. television pancl show Weclnesdayv. Quaker neeman Sid Puddicombe der ° same reasons. “The Czech players vive VOU. Club president Bill Patrick everything — spears, butt-ends, Said politics “had a great deal cross-checks, elbows, the whole tO do with the way games were | business.” Puddicombe said rule inter- pretations by European referees were different in every game” “When the puck was back at the point in our zone, they would do anything to stay in front of our netminder: they were con- said, seemed in some localities to: Bonnice-Jean Jacsson this year. | stantly interfering and were never called for it.” Coach Vic Lynn said ‘in many cases we simply had to protect national hockey team. Stam ps drop Canucks | of Goaltender Don Campbell said he had sticks broken over his elbows by players trying to keep a position in front of him = to block his view and that he also “was speared and slashed for the >handled.” i He said that in some centres 1in Czechoslovakia it was plain ‘hockey officials and referees ‘felt they could not afford to Iet a Canadian team win. The atti- ‘tude toward Quakers, he ay vit be “give ‘em all we can.” However, all the Quakers praised the ability of the Czech. — Bucks win another By The Canadian Press Vancouver ccach Max McNab has said it before and will prob- ably say it again -- cellar-dwe!ll- ing Calgary Stampeders are the underrated club of the Western Hockey League. “They're better, much better than their record +10 wins, one tie. 25 losses) indicates.” he said Wednesday. “I don’t know what's holding them up.” Stampeders defeated Vancou- ver Canucks 3-1 before 2.467 fans Wednesday night. Gentile sends | back contract EASTON, Md. (4 — Baltimore Oriole Jim Gentile said Wednes- day night he was sending his 1963 contract back to the club— unsigned. The American League | first baseman, who batted .256 last year and came up with 33 home runs, said the contract contained | acut ‘of better than 25 per cent, and I have no intention of tak- Ing any cut in salary for the coming Season.” Basketball Schedule Prince Rupert Busketball As- sociation today issued the fol- lowing schedule: Jan. 10--Nelson Bros. vs Uni- ted Church: PRSSS vs Sunrise; Bo-Me-Hi vs CCC. Jan. 12 United Church ys UPAWU; Jay Days vs Chryslers. Jan. 17 Nelson Bros. vs UFAWU: PRSSS vs Bo-Me-Hi. Jan. 19 -- Be-Me-Hi vs United | Church: Sunrise vs Celgar. Jan. 24 — Bu-Me-Hi vs Nelson: Bros.: ‘Celpar vs PRSSS: Jay ‘record holder John Uclses Days vs Chicfs. , 164 —In that meet. ' Jan. 26 -- Bo-Mc-Hi vs UFA-' Now Wadsworth, 5) has WU; Sunrise vs Bo-Me-Hi; Chiefs vs Chryslers. Jan. 31—Nelson Bros. vs United Church; PRSSS vs Sunrise; Jay’ Days vs Chryslers, Feb. 7 United Church vs UFAWU: bo-Me-Hi vs PRSSS: Chiefs vs Chryslers. Feb. 9 Nelson Bros. vs*UFA- WU) Sunrise vs Ceigar; Jers vs Jay Daye, Feb. 14 Bo-Me-Hi vs United Church, Bo-Me-li vs Celeur: Chiets vs Juy Days, Feb. 16 Hho-Me-Hi vs Nelson Bros. Celwar vs PRSSS: Chrys- - lers vs Chiets HOCKEY SCOREBOARD By ‘Phe Canadian Pres, NTE SU NNDINGS € ledewtese TP fh det eg Toronte OOTP ae bea Montreal the YP? CES RE US De trott In lS ot tote New Vork (PMS Pha by oth, TSustau Hole ot toy bad ctype WH STANDINGS Northern Uisdsder Woke TN yet Vo eat ey to Tb oF 2 10B 40 Reniple vied boyy yey ‘ty Weanvetteors Poo YOR TAB 8A Cadpar: toh PPA a ad sauthert Division Teortlinse PP WP TR fi AG Te Arey Wa ob Gh TT RO RR eeare Pr ane rece WHO Te rag Re Spoken Meow Fao 1090 4G Noethonadd feawiae Chilentia 4 'Poranite | Snnerican Pewee Pirent telertigeee 1 OMe ada 4 Sprtiabpetea 1 Verte byeteeeda | ee Beecetetp FM yet 4 Cyber py Va rye cee ge | Porth ¢ 0 Ravage COUEy st N pave Seebhbe of byte berger a Worittstorek VP Ceale Paster Teer Cpe tty b €ph eer Peep Poeun Potand dG Mew bbayet) 2 Ptithisdedeetey ee ce OM 1 dev aide oth Neo Seatlir seapber Ntroverteyrty, GWM ea? VWaltfae he Cate ea Srsitte fe drew ae Sect beet de barf OG Norse Tia 7 CVUEN Ttenihen 4 Nhaeern belt ot Mfogitrend 6 Mionlbohi dobar Whaitpes Drive To Witter Monerels 4 Cr e ' sareh ted TAK Kar Vite dederty fe Peeps ttaan dows Mowe da oe Sntooy Vetesvag 2 Wevhorn 6 Po bibeetienn THY All-star GO NMuobepa DH 2. —_o Chrys- Wow roo A yt The win left Vancouver with 40 points in the Northern Divi- sion, five better than second- | place Seattle Totems who de-' feated Edmonton Flyers 7-4 with ; ‘three goals within 70 seconds of ‘the third period. Edmonton has / 30 points and Calgary 21. | In the Southern Division. ,Portland Buckaroes broke a 2-2 ‘second-period deadlock to de- ‘feat Los Angeles 3-2 and take ‘an 11-point lead over the sec- 'ond-place Blades in the stand- ‘ings. | Norm Johnson, Gordon Re- ‘dahl and Ron Leopold scored for (Calgary. Phil Maloney got) Van- jcouver's tally, ; | At Edmonton, where 1,247 fans ° ibraved 15-below-zero tempera- ; itures and strong winds to sce’ ithe game, Jim Powers scored! ‘twice for Seattle. Bill MacFar- ' ‘land. Jim Hay. Ray Sabourin.: Wayne Hall and Don Chiupka , added the others. Ray Kinise- ; iwich scored twice for Edmonton | ‘and Sid Finney and Mac MeIn- ‘tyre scored singles, 1 | Pole vaulter © to use glass | TORONTO ‘Henry worth, who set a United Amateur Athletic Union pole vault record with © steel last March, will bring a glass fibre pole to the Telegram-Maple Leaf indoor games Jan. 25. Now at West Point and com- peting for the U.S. Army team. Wadsworth vaulted 15 feet, four inches to win the U.S. indoor championship in New York last year. He defeated former world Wads- switched to vlass and has in- formed meet dircetor Ken Twirer : ‘he has cleared 16 fect five times | ‘ins practice. The Miami, Florida, | Native is also a capable high: Jumper and around the | hovers ron CONG . Meh Moors. pets ) ests ty etd Ble, Miie, Out, into the Ciuridiaun States: 'SIX-foet eight-inch mark, | et HAN arcu Wet aI op ST Mk regal il sone MLA so tw anareyed BUFR Beth vane ma ety. AMS Instructions during oa The Quakers, in the Saskat- schewan Senior Leazue, won. six of 10 wames on the tour, whieh included two tosses to Swedish ‘teanis, | Vancouver girl given bye in skate action | VANCOUVER °-— The — girls ‘competing to become top female Ifieere skater in British Colum- about : [ [hin won't have to worry ; But Bonnie-Jean will cateh up ! ‘with them later. The 16-vear-old technical stu- Tdent bas boo awarded a bye charapion- ships at Edmonton Fob, 7-9. Ord- ‘inarily size would have had to place in the first three in’ the B.C. senior women’s singles event this weekend et Prince CGeorre, IC. tu qualify for the chiamp- louship. But oa pulled hip muscle suf- fered last Dee, 16 sidelined her from B.C. competition. The emxcciutive of the Cana- dian Fivure Skating Associa- tion, B.C. section, gave her the bye on the streneth of her show- Ry ing in the B.C. coast champton-| © ships in which she won the sen- | ior division by 58 points. | RON MURPHY . seores clincher the alleys Men's Vive Pin Bowling League snared women's high, three with A. Division ‘a total of 494 pins. Dave Lockhart rolled 249 to Team high single and team grab individual high single in high three Monday nieht's action, City Transfer, whose team rack- Individwd high three went to ¢d up 868 and 2363. Al Sheppard of Paramounts with - 719 pins. ! Edwards Towing captured Balding tops team high single scoring 1087. Team high three was won by. Shmoos who hac a totajy of 2926 { pins. DYO-aMa eur Results | Shoioos 3, Paremeunis 1; Lal SAN DIEGO, Calif. @ — Tor- (Gondola 8, Lonyshoremen 1: Ed-;onto’s Al Balding, who tied for lwards Towing 3, Stromduhl’s 1:'second place behind = Arnold /Palrner Monday in the $50,000 B Division iLos Angeles Open, is shooting Din Moran established new for another golf pay cheque this season's highs in both individual. Week. men's high single and men’s high! Balding carded a three-under- three ringing up totals of 328 par 68 Wednesday in a pro-ama- and 719 pins. _teur warmup for the $25,000 San Columbus grabbed off both Diego Open which opens today. team high single end team high Bob Rosburg fired a record- three scoring 1030 and 2873. tving 63 in the warmup event to Results win $500. Dow Finsterwald tour- Columbus 3, Rebels 1: Speros ed the 6,800-yard, par 35-36-—71 3, CeHar Dwellers 1; UFAWU 3, course in 64, Don January in 65 Babeock 1; Electricians 4, Bud’s and Billy Casper Jr., Julius Boros Safe 0: City Transfer 3, Legion 1, and Mason Rudolph in 66. Mixed Most name golfers, with the Pronk Comadina grabbed off: exeeption of Jack Nicklaus and beth omens high single and Palmer, are in the San Diego men’s hirh three rolling 216 and: field. Palmer and Nicklaus were ABP respectively. in New York Wednesday night Womens hish single went to where they were honored as the Finitvy Bitt oof Jakes with Poo. ollstanding golfers of 1962 at the Betty Duhb of Radio Cabs National Golf Awards dinner. Grotto 2, Cook's 2, 10-Pin League ne vets bg aha Sl co toy we BG, es UWeeseareo mors eahedeserd afd To Wiveeyeur-old Facutor Walson, dwarfed by the legs of couch recenh peewee heekey dimboree at Memorial Gir Giculuu playa died Lowe Vb deapgua, By The Canadian Press Chicago Black Hawks may have found the formula for beat. Hawks fly to top NHL spo with 3-1 win over Leaf ing Toronto Maple Leafs. Before Wednesday night's 3-1 victory, the Hawks had won only one of their eight National Hoc- key League games against the Leafs. Goalie Glenn Hall was credit- Harv Raymond Sports the Hawks had built up in the first period on goals by Ken -Wharram and Ab McDonald. Hall made at least a_ half dozen spine-tingling saves, in- cluding stops on George Arm- strong, Dave Keon and Bobby Pulford, all of whom had only the goaltender to beat fron: close range. ed with keeping the lead that Sports Writer o {Ocuice Rupee Oaily Mews Led. Thursday, January 10, 1963 The vitcory put the Hawks back into sole possession of first place with 47 points, two up on DETROIT BOSS SAYS the Leafs. WHARRAM STARTS IT | Wharran opened the scoring NHL mus By JACK STEVENSON SAN FRANCISCO wh — Jack Adum-s, who spent 45 years in. big time hockey as player, man- ager and executive, is convinced | the National Hockey League will! have to expand to Los Angeles and San Francisco, Adams, 67, who retired last spring after 35 years with De- troit Red Wings, was a visitor in San Francisco where a West- ern Hockey League franchise be- gan operations last year. “A franchise would have to do an $800,000 annual business lto make it in the big leagues.” | | Adams explained today. “It looks; jlike Los Angeles, with a minor | ‘league team, will do $600,000 this year, and I know San Francisco ‘could do it. | “With the major league, each were captured by should draw over $1 million and there are the television possibil- ‘ities with a national hookup. The entire league would be bet- | ter off television-wise. | “You know, we did those Sat- | KER RRR RRR SR . If some skips could see them- Selves as others see them—or better still if they could view themselves inf a% y homemade movies’ “: complete with? sound track surrep-£. . titiously taken by the second man's 7}. vife in candid cam- ¥% cra style — they would repent their sins in haste. a The following contribution by Steve Swabuk of Portarze la ‘Prairie, Man., illuminates the isufferings of thousands of curl- ‘ers who labor under men cursed jWith low boiling points. Some ipoetic justice may be served if certain skips read these lines and make 1963 a year of new vows. | A SKIP'S NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS “In this New Year, 1 do resolve. | To throw away my whip: And be a leapin' sweepin' boss, Not just a howlin’ Skip. "T vow to be tess headstrone © When we are on the ice: Ul give my rink their due respeet ; And heed their sage adviee. | “And when my Stalwarts do | come up i With thelr usual rotten game; | promise on my solemn oath This year, TH take (he blame. “And if John Lead can't pet his weleht, I won't berate the louse: (Someone may love that forlorn soul If only his poor sparse.) “And should Sian Seeond miss the broom Twill not raise a fuss: And if the dope should raise thelr rock TU hardly even cuss. “And should my Third Joe nit a shot That surely spells our doom: TH take it cool and cont to ten Before T heave wy broom, nen savant cane oe LAST NIGHT'S FIGHTS Rochester, Minn. a --- Duane Horsman, 160, Chattleld, Minn. knocked out bee Thullard, 1607, St. Paul, Minn, 3; Mloyd Joyner, 100, Rochester, Minh, oulpobited Jody Jones, 196, Detrott, 4. HOUSTON ( VWouston Ol- ers announced the alpning af linebueker Jerry Hopkins on ‘Yexns A wud M, to California “This year I vow, should we get “i And to my Rink I vow to speak, on a pass from linemate Stan Mikita. McDonald backhanded a weak shot between the legs of goalie Johnny Bower just a little more than five minutes later with NHL big 7 By The Canadian Press | Toronto's Frank Mahovlich | was held pointless Wednesday t expand urday afternoon games for a couple of years. The network said one of the reasons for dis- continuing was not enough cov- erage in the south and west. night in Chicago Black Hawks’ Now there are some rinks in! 3-4 victory and remains one the south with amateur hockey point behind New York's Andy to create interest. And what a Bathgate in the National Hockey potential market for television League's individual scoring race. out here with the millions of Bathgate has 42 points to top people? the big seven. RINKS NOW AVAILABLE | John Bucyk of Beston The former executive said that ,third place with 38 points. — until last year acceptable rinks: Stan Mikita of Chicago picked weren't available in Los Angeles UP ‘wo assists to jump into a and San Francisco but both have ;fourth place tle with Murray good ones now — at the Sports | Oliver of Boston. Both have 36 Arena in the former and Cow | Points on 13 goals and 23 as- Palace in the latter, j Sists. is in _ _ G A Pt ~ ‘Bathgate, New York 20 22 42 PRO BASKETBALL ‘Mahovlich, Toronto 23 18 41 By The Associated Press 'Bucyk, Boston 17 21 38 National Association Oliver, Boston 13 23 36 St. Louis 110, N York Mikita, Chicago 13 23 36 gs Aneles 193. D es | Prentice, New York 11 24 35 208 Angeles teo, Detrol i Howe. Detroit 15 19 34 Cincinnati 116, Syracuse 112 ‘mMeDonald, Chicago 14 20 34 Chicago 131, Boston 123 !Richard. Montreal 14 20 34 BERR RRR RRR EERE RE RE RRR e Just something to think about “If in my Strategy I should goof, “If wifey asks how we made ou Or muff an easy shot; | And if our game we'd won; This year, I vow, I will admit ‘T'll sweetly smile at her and say; My way was not too hot. ‘Gosh no, we didn't, Hon!’ IB REERERREREE ct | And if a Spiel we should take in V'll keep the boys in line; i There'll be ong Girly Show a week And into bed at nine. beat, Their Skipper’s hand to shake; And not to bellyache. “There'll be no gay carousin,' My boys won't be so frisky, We're out to bring the jewellery home Or T'll “And when we lose a two T won't complain or grouse; And kick the dog halfway down- stairs Or beat up my poor spouse, game or cut off their whisky. | This date, I vow as eurling Skip Of Sound and Sober mind; ‘To keep these Resolutions, (Unless we get behind),” “Right after games, I'll go straight home, And not remain to wateh Readers are invited to mail In case my boys, for post- their question to Ken Wat- mortem'’s sake, son's Curling in care of this Just order one more Scotch, newspaper, ETER SELLERS § Without A Paddle... a ! gen © Oe y __P ‘ - 9 war TIME! TODAY to SATURDAY — 7 p.m. THE GREATEST THRILL GLASSIC OF ALL r. pm. am ATARMING HERBERT LOM HEATHER SEARS THORLEY WALTERS MICHAEL GOUGH A Faun rity a WoATA / sy», G4. M PRODUCTION +A UHIVERSALINTURNATIONAL RELOASE MATINEE SATURDAY, 2 p.m. s rs . { Wharram and Mikita assisting. * Leafs put the pressure on in the second period and Ron Stew» art scored their only goal, firing a low, hard shot to the corner on a passing play with Billy Har- ris and Bob Pulford. ‘ With the pressure on, Hall showed his brilliance, breaking the hearts of the Leaf players with saves that left the 14,409 fans open-mouthed. : The Leafs tried desperately to tie the score in the third period but were unable to find the mark. Ron Murphy put the Hawks out of reach at 18:25 of the third period on a shot that deflected off Leafs’ Red Kelly into the Ta- ronto net. j Len Lunde, assigned the task of checking Toronto’s Frank Ma- hovlich, drew an assist on Mur- phy’s goal. ; 7 / I : | { { | |Deluxey RYE : . WHISKY | | From the Rocky Mountain foothills, where the air is rare, glacial waters flow and the best. rye grains grow, comes Alberta DeLuxe Rye —- so unique in taste and flavour, | it stands head and shoulders high as your own kind of rye. Try Alberta DeLuxe for size. You'll 4 like the way it shapes up. “ 2 wal ¢ This acdvertixnamont Is not published der chaptiayed by the Liquar Control Bouwrd a¢ by Ihe Gavertiment of Dritivh Columns. ‘ é : a 1 v ‘ ' aaa