Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Feb 1963, p. 9

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10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, Februery 9, 1963 Generals Make Dukes Bow Towards Oshawa On Vails Display By KEVIN BOLAND Oshawa Generals pulled to within two points of fourth place and the final Metro Junior "A layoff spot when they nipped 'oronto Marlboros 3-2 in Maple Gardens last night. It was the first time this feason the Generals had been able to stop the Dukes. In a half-dozen other regular fixtures Marlboros stopped Oshawa five times and tied them once. i "All the way in I felt we were to win," said Billy White, s he walked from the dressing- rooms. 'You could feel it as we rent on the ice," he added. "We felt good and had the con- fidence we needed." ? "They were busting for a win ever Marlies," said coach Doug Williams. "Every time we play- ¢d them we got just that much floser to them. This time I figured we were due." . In the second game of the two-game feature Neil McNeil Maroons stretched their un- beaten streak to 12 games with a decisive 7-1 victory over Knob Hill Farms, Neil MeNeil's win coupled with Martboros' defeat left the leaders with a more than ampie 13 point bulge over the second place Dukes. WATSON SCORES Barry Watson gave Marlies a 1-0 lead when he blazed a shot by Jim Couch, the Generals' netminder, near the halfway mark of the opening period. Brothers George and Terry Vail took the scoring honors for the Generals, George Vail scored the lone second period goal when he steered a backhand shot into the left-hand side of the Marlboros' net from 15 feet away. Terry Vail netted his first of two third period markers in the Generals ahead 2-1 at that point. His second goal came seven minutes later when he banged in White's pass as he stood at the side of the Marlboro net. Nick Harbaruk put the Dukes : -- within a goal when he beat ) Couch from a scramble, After the goal had been scored a pile up of players rousted goaltender Couch from his cage. There was some dispute as to whethe there were some of the meiee in the goaltender's crease or not when the goal was scored. "I know the Vail boys won it for us and I don't want to take F credit from them,' said coach Williams, "but I thought Jimmy (Couch' saved our neck for us in the second period." Couch was exceptional on several occasions when Mar]- boro. attackers 'fired shots at point-blank range. MARLBOROS -- Goal; Des- jardins: defence; Ridley, Chip- chase, McCloskey, Foley: for- wards; Stemkowski, MacDon- ald, Ellis, Carleton, Harbaruk, Moore, Watson, Milroy, Selby, us McKay, Davidson. GENERALS -- Goal; Couch: defense; Orr, Batte, Eaton, Domm: forwards; Dean, T. opening minute of play to put Vail, White, Buchanan, Dubeau, Little, G. Vail, Peters, Mac- Donald, Gibbens. First Period 1. Marlboros, Watson CUI) cogencncececes 140 By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' , . « Ga 8 + " * . * % 4 H b Z ' . * WEEK-END SURVEY -- 'Mac' Hood writes rom Great Britain that "they've never had it so bad" -- meaning the winter weather of the past six weeks, which has completely disrupted both their cottish and English "major" soccer-league schedules, hs well as shattering the important "English F.A. Cup" playoffs -- a knockout affair, that suffers tly every time they miss a week-end's action ¢-: FLOODS are the latest hazard to their soccer dates The big thaw finally arrived to ease the Rrip of winter but they've had so much snow, pevere floods, which will still keep their soccer fields unfit for play ... DEER HUNTERS, who prefer to ke at least part of their holidays at that time of he year, get a big break this season. They've already @nnounced the deer-hunting dates, so that the nim- dods can make their plans and preparations real early. We'll run the detailed list of dates, sometime later but in the meantime, the major area (Parry Sound, we a Haliburton, etc.) will start its season on onday, November 4... TONIGHT the TV hockey fans get their big treat, a Saturday night showing pf Canadiens playing in Toronto and word from Mon- treal is that goalie Jacques Plante will be in the hhets at Maple Leaf Gardens tonight, as the Habs Rane an all-out bid to move into second place in the L standings ... JOHN ROSS of Toronto Park- Way and Murray Roberts of Unionville, are the co- favorites to qualify as Ontario's British Consols single-rink champs and representatives in the Cana- lian Brier, at Brandon, next month. Final playoffs Pi in Hamilton, starting on Wednesday ... SONNY ISTON predicts that he'll take care of Floyd Pat- ferson, via another KO, but a lot earlier this time, han the last. We'll, unless he starts to fight before he refree says "Go" -- he'll have to hurry to make it any earlier. { _ MORE OF THE SAME -- A TELEPOLL SUR- WEY, coast-to-coast, taken recently, reveals that 41.9 recent of hockey fans pick Toronto Leafs to repeat is season as Stanley Cup winners ... BUT GUESS AT? No less than 15 percent of those interview- ed, offered no opinions -- obviously, they weren't ey fans, or were the very cautious type... RONTO ITALIA soccer club has organized a ¥Hunting and Fishing Branch" within its club mem- rship ... CANADA'S Schoolboy Curling champion- hips are being held in Guelph this year, Feb. 18-22 Oshawa collegiate curlers will be on hand, via a usload of interested youngsters, to watch the final ight's action ... ONTARIO'S Hunter Safety Train- ing Program, launched in 1957, has already gradu- ted more than 45,000 young hunting enthusiasts, avho successfully passed the course and examination its. Many of this number were teen-age girls .. . URSDAY NIGHT, this next week, sees a big ketball doubleheader being presented at Donevan liegiate, with all proceeds to go to the Simcoe Hall ys' Club Building Fund. Oshawa's Collegiate All- tars take on Toronto YMHA Juniors, at 7:30 o'- lock and at 9:00 p.m., it's Oshawa's good Senior 'B" team, the Hawks, vs a team of Toronto All- s, including Lynn Bottoms, Norm Stoneburgh, ick Shatto, Dave Mann, Jim Andreotti, Jerry Philp, ill Mitchell, all of Toronto Argos, along with Steve idzik, Leafs' baseball pitcher, Jim Watt, of Ham- his big doubleheader later, but in the meantime, ton Ti-Cats and others of sports. fame. More about keep the date free. Penalties -- Harbaruk (elbow- ing - 5 minutes) 11.15, Dean (slashing) 13.04, McCloskey (in- terference) 19.01. Second Period 2. Generals, G, Vail (Dubeau, Little) Penalties--Stemkowski (char- ging) 10,02, Orr (holding) 10.53, Stemkowski (tripping) 16.49. Third Period 3. Generals, T. Vail woo 4. Generals, T, Vail (White, Domm) ..... 7.d1 5. Marlboros, Harbaruk (Ellis, Chipchase) ,.- 15.27 Penalties -- None, 58 MONA COUCH JIM | | HOCKEY SCORES soos 18.00)8 LISTON DISPLAYS HAM FOR PATTERSON Sonny Liston, heavyweight boxing champion says the huge hunk of ham on the left side of the picture will as- phyxiate Floyd Patterson in the first round of their sched- ee SF Rg SPORT FROM BRITAIN Pe A SOP IE TST SOLOS ERS SPORTS CALENDAR BUYER uled heavyweight champion- ship rematch this April. --AP Wirephoto Ice Fishing Attracts 100,000 Over Weekend TORONTO (CP) -- Blistering]warm running from one to the|throughout the province this heat and greedy blackflies don't| other." necessarily accompany Ontario sport. fishing, Department of lands and for-jalong the line are allowed. ests officials estimate there are) more fishermen on Lake Simcoe now than at any time during the summer. This is the peak of the ice when anglers throughout Ontario brave freez-!yey can't use nets, so profits ing weather to drop their lines) ould be small and fishing for fishing season, through holes in ice more than) STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | American League Eastern Division | a foot thick. They sit'in wooden huts rang-/ RENT HUTS ing from the crude to the pal- Four hooks or four gangs, or clusters, of hooks spread out All ice fishing technically is sport fishing. There are no com- mercial licences, but persons fishing for whitefish--not con- sidered game fish--may catch and sell as many as they like. profit is rare. Huts rent on. Lake Simcoe atial and toast themselves be-|from between $3 to $8 a day, side tiny stoves. jcomplete with lines, bait and The ice fishing season--deter-| mined by how long the ice is safe--runs from about the mid- die of January to the middle of March. No licence is required by Ontario residents. Others pay $6.50 a. season. LTF APt 2720 4167 141 58 23 21 10 147 154 56 2418. 6 i76 145 54 Baltimore 22 24 7 155 186 51 Springfield 2122 8 194 167 50 Western Division Minnows--salted or live--are Buffalo 2817 5157140 61\the uual bait. Cleveland 2122 6 166 169 48 | Pittsburgh 19 28. 3.145.178 41; ATTRACTS 100,000 Rochester 15.28 7 164 191 37|,, Surveys, th ars angle , , it's hard to s. s é ilibiccn ee 7 ice fishermen haunt: the solid Necmney's Springfield 7 surfaces of Ontario's lakes, but " sgh < an official of the department of Buffalo ig cnr wage lands -_ forest s said - leve 10,000 Rochester at Pittsburgh lace' kale tamone, Lake' St. Providence at Springfield \Clair and the shores of Lake esd ae GAMES |Erie are the main ni gyre o Springfield at Buffalo | An aerial survey e Sim- Baltimore at Providence jcoe this week showed 3,147 huts. Hershey at Quebec | New legislation this year al- Pittsburgh at Rochester \lowing fishermen to have two Eastern Professional lines in the water at one time L TF A Ptiis proving popular. As one offi- 2912 6199138 64/Cial put it: "They can keep | Providence Quebec Hershey Hull-Ottawa stove. By far the largest number of ice fishermen angle from these huts. A few put out "'set lines" with a tip-up signal device and then watch from cars, but a man holding a line im the open air is going to be uncomfort- able. "It's bitterly cold in the first place," a seasoned fisherman said, "and if you. ever get caught in a blow out there, well, you've had it." There has been some discus- sion about making fishermen register their huts but no legis- lation has been introduced. "We'd like to see them reg- istered,"' said an official of the fish and wildlife branch of the department of lands and forests, "because sometimes people leave their huts on the ice to sink in the summer, causing hazards to navigation." Ice conditions have been fair Kingston 2613 8 194 148 60 Sudbury 18 19 10 197 199 46 St. Louis 13 28 8172 222 34 Friday's Result |St. Louis 2 Sudbury 5 Tonight's Games |Fort Wayne at Hull-Ottawa Kingston at Omaha Sunday's Games |Kingston at Minneapolis |Fort Wayne at Sudbury St. Louis at Hull-Ottawa Ontario Junior A Pewee y 1. TF A Ptitainside known Niagara Falls 2511 5 166 121 55| Run. Montreal 2012 815111548) The Sunday event will be a Hamilton 19 15 8172 143 46\slalom race for $5,000 in prize Peterboro 17 13 10 125 104 44] money. First prize is $2,000, sec- St. Catharines 1219 8 126 170 32|ond $1,000 and third $500, with Guelph 730 5 125 212 19) lesser amount paid a rs the Friday's ' placings get lower. Top Cana- latiucaut Towa t dian is assured of at leat $300, Peterborough 1 Niagara Falls 3 Most of the pros were to take Sunday's: Gaians their first look at Waterfall Run | Mottreal at St. Catharines today, t_some blanch, 80 one F ill be surprised. | Peterborough at Hamilton ae "ay | | e run suits its name. Start- |S50 lydwydeze . feb9d) : | |UNDTD add hky Stgs, scores! Western League | s | |San Francisco 5 Vancouver 3 | Odds With Maple Leafs COLLINGWOOD, Ont. (CP)-- \Twenty-two of the world's top | professional skiers are ready to tackle a wicked chunk of moun- as Waterfall Eastern League Nashville 0 Philadelphia 3 | Johnstown 1 Greensboro 5 |Charlotte 2 Knoxville 4 International League |Minneapolis 2 Port Huron 2 | Metro Toronto Junior A | Marlboros 2 Oshawa 3 \Knob Hill 1 Neil --e,? | Ottawa-Hull Junior Smiths Falls 3 Hawkesbury By THE CANADIAN PRESS |(Smiths Falls leads best - of -| The home ice advantage of seven quarter-final 1-0) |Maple Leaf Gardens will be Ottawa Primrose 4 Hull Hawks| working for Toronto in tonight's a) * e | battle with their rivals for sec- |(Ottawa leads best - of - seveniond place in the National | quarter-final 1-0) | Hockey League. | Northern Ontario Senior | Both Montreal and Toronto} |Abitibi 2 Timmins 11 have 58 points, five behind the) |(Timmins leads best - of - nine|league - leading Chicago Black! semi-final 2-1) Hawks. South Porcupine 2 Kapuskasing! 'Toronto has won three of its| 15 four home-ice games against! {Montreal this season, while | | seven semi-final 3-0). | breaking even, 2-2, at the Mont- | Saskatchewan Junior lreal Forum. | |Weyburn 3 Regina 4 | Coach Toe Blake of Montreal| Melville 3 Estevan 2 jmay put regular metminder ; Ontario Junior B Jacques Plante and injured de- Pde mag 8 oar 2 fenceman Tom Johnson into ac: Sarnia ngers e let Gailerich 7 Owen Sound 7 jtion in a bid to beat the odds. Tillsonburg 5 St. Marys 7 |MAY STILL USE HIM Kitchener 3 Stratford 9 | Blake said Plante looked okay Intercollegiate jin a workout with the team Fri- | | (Kapuskasing leads best - of - 22 Skiers Tackle Waterfall Course On Home Ice"? ing gate for the 33-gate course faces a dropoff of 42 degrees and the course does not level out much after that. About 1,000 feet long and with a vertical drop of 450 feet, the gradient Stays at about one-in-two, just about maintaining the 42-degree incline. The first man in the race, Swiss stylist Andreas Rubi, is to shoot through the starting gate at 1 p.m. EST. Second run of the combined-time event will start at 3 p.m. FAVOR PREVIOUS VICTORS The two previous winners are favored--but the two previous pro slalom events held near this town 72 miles north of Toronto were not held on Waterfall Run. Stein Eriksen, born in Oslo and operator of a ski school in Aspen Highlands, Colo., won the 1961 race Heli Schaller, a native Aus- year so far. Smaller lakes are often slushy in the centres be- cause of heavy snowfalls, The larger iakes -- Ontario, Huron, Erie and Superior--are not frozen over, but there is ice fishing in bays and along the shores. Whitefish are most popular in Lake Simcoe because there is no limit on them. Lake trout are scarce but Some are landed, The limit is two a day. Perch are plentiful in Lake Erie's Long Point Bay and in Lake Ontario's Bay of Quinte. Smelt are being caught in the Welland Canal and in small lakes in the Pembroke area. The Timagami Chamber of Commerce has an annual carni- val to attract ice fishermen and laké trout catches there have been reported good. Fishermen on Lake St. Clair and Lake Nipissing have been getting perch, pickerel and pike. Hamess Bets Skyrocket To Record Levels OTTAWA (CP)--Betting on harness races took an impres- sive leap to record levels during the 1962 racing season, the fed- eral agriculture department re- ports. Ontario accounted for practically all of it. In the eight provinces where federal authorities supervise the pari - mutuel betting, total wagering reached $36,892,708-- | up by $10,404,041 from the previ- ous year. Quebec and New- foundland are not included. During the season 76 racing associations ran 6,836 races on 813 days of harness racing. In 1961 there were 70 associations, 5,524 races and a 668-day total. Figures for flat racing were issued separately two months ago. They showed an all-Canada betting total of $143,529,942, an increase of $6,760,520 from the year before and a record. On a percentage basis, how- ever, the rise in harness betting was far more impressive. It rose by about 40 per cent com- pared with about five per cent in flat racing. In Ontario alone the 1962 bet- ting on harness horses almost reached the eight-province fig- ure of 1961. The province re- ported $26,230,828 collected at the betting windows, up §$10,- 220,176 in a year. TODAY BA Ontario Senior League -- Lon. don vs Oshawa Hawks, at Done- van Collegiate, 7,30 p.m, SUNDAY OCKEY : OHA Junior "A" Metro League -- Whitby Dunlops vs Toronto Marlboros, at 2,00 p.m, and Brampton 7-Ups vs Neil MeNeil Maroons, at 3.00 p.m.; Both games at Maple Leaf Gar. dens, OHA Junior "B" Metro League -- Dixie vs Bowman- ville Pic-O-Mats, at Bowman. ville Arena, 3.00 p.m. North Plant League -- Kin- loch's vs Plaza Food, at 1.00 p.m.; P and K Welding vs Cor- vairs, at 2.380 p.m. and Subway Lunch vs Acadians, at 4:00 p.m.; All games at Port Perry Arena. : UAW League -- (Semi-Final Playoffs) -- Bad Boys vs Ven- domatics at 11.00 am. and Tony's vs Merchants 12.30 p.m.; 2nd games of series; both games at Bowmanville Com. munity Arena. MONDAY HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Assoc, (Ban- tam League) -- All games at Oshawa Children's Arena: 5.00. 5.40 -- Scugog Cleaners vs Lo. cal 2784; 5.50-6.30 -- Local 1500 vs Police Assoc.; 6.40-7.20 -- Canadian Corps vs Houdaille Ind.; 7,30-8.10 --Coca-Cola vs Westmount Kiwanis; 8.20-9.00 -- Canadian Tire vs Local 1817; 9.10-9.50 -- Duplate vs B'Nai B'Rith. Ajax Shellettes Blank Keswick Ajax Shellettes trounced Kes- wick girls 14-0, in their hockey game this week at Keswick, when Fieming's Shellettes show- ed just a little too much ex- perience and polish for the homesters. It was a_ well-played, game and the Keswick girls showed a lot of spirit, even though they. couldn't match the Shellettes' skill. Gladys Williams, with four jgoals. and three assists, along with Linda McCord, who had one goal and three assists, were the stars for the Ajax team. FIRST PERIOD 1. Ajax, G. Williams (L, McCord) Ajax, Hercia Ajax, B. Duff Ajax, J. Godfrey (G, Williams) Ajax, G, Williams (N, Stark, N. Beamer) 10.20 Ajax, L, McCord (G. (Williams, J. McDonald 12.40 Ajax; N. Lawson (L. McCord) Ajax, G. Williams (L. McCord) No penalties. SECOND PERIOD 9. Ajax, M. Gibson (D, Gibson) 10, Ajax, J, Ernnick 11, Ajax, S. Fertile (B. Duff) No penalties. THIRD PERIOD 12. G, Williams (W. Stark) 8.15 13, N. Lawson (J. Rennick, G, Williams 11.30 14, J, Hercia (N, Lawson) 14.50 No penalties. 1.05 2.40) 3.45 9.10 2. 3. 4. 5, 6. 7. 14.15 8. 14.50 2.30 7.40 13.15 PREPARE FOR RACE DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) There will be an international field of men and machines Sun- day when the starting flag falls on the third Grand Prix of the United States motorcycle race. Americans and Canadians predominate in the field of largest machines but Fumio Itoh of Japan will be one of the favorites to take the title for 250- cubic - centimetre motor- cycles. The Grand Prix is a 200- kilometre competition, or 124 miles. Other riders given strong chances to win the big event include David Lloyd of Toronto, who will handle a BSA. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Largest amount wagered last season for a single track was Old Woodbine in Toronto where a 14-day race meet took in a daily average of $277,682. Smallest was at a one-day meet trian living in Kimberley, B.C., won last year. Eriksen's record is impres- He won the giant slalom in the 1952 Olympes and took} second place in the slalom. He} has held the Norwegian cham.) pionships three times. | Schaller, 25, also can prove his abilities. When he was 14} he. won the Austrian junior] championship and later the} Swiss Alpine and downhill championships and the Norwe- gian giant slalom title. He was} a member of the Austrian na- tional team 'in 1961. lowly Boston Bruins, who have won only 10 of their 52 games this season, and Toronto tangles with Detroit Red Wings. The only other weekend ac- tion is a pair of home-and-home games between Chicago and New York, offering the Hawks a chance to put first place al-| most out of reach. McGill 2 Toronto 8 jday and he would assign him to) Laval 4 Montreal 1 jthe Toronto game, despite |Bishop's 5 Loyola 3 Plante's earlier statement in| |Acadia 6 St, Dunstan's 6 New York that his hip:and rs British Columbia 2 Alberta 2 |injuries would keep him on the Manitoba 2 Saskatchewan 7 sidelines for at least another Exhibition week. \Trail 2 Chatham 4 On Sunday Montreal visits the WHO IS Mr. Nobody ? | in Newington, Ont., where bets totalled $226. "a By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tokyo -- Osamu Watanabel, 136, Japan, outpointed Isorasek Puntainorasing, 13544, Thailand, 10, Chicago--Jimmy, Jones, 205, Gary, Ind., knocked out Jim clean| LONDON (CP)--Frozen spray zipping past numbed ears, frost- coated oars and floating ice are just a few of the hazards ex- perienced by 32 young men pre- paring for the annual inter-vac- sity boat race. Not even one of Britain's worst-ever winters has deterred candidates for the Oxford and Cambridge crews from getting in 11 weeks' practice prior to the March 23 race. It will be the 108th in the series rowed on the Thames between Putney and Mortlake. Cambridge in particular is bearing up to the elements with an almost ray gehen A air With the river Cam fit only for skaters, the Light Blues have been wandering afar in search of ice-free courses. Recently they packed their gear into a furniture truck and moved to Peterborough, 30 miles away, where the river Nene is kept flowing because a bankside factory discharges hot water. : 'CHEWTON"S CIRCUS' "We are getting incredibly ef- ficient at moving off with two great shells, a couple of launches and the crew," says Cambridge President Lord Chewton. "I suppose you could call us Chewton's Circus. We make 2 gay sight bowling across the fens--bus, truck and cars all in a convoy and stopping at every stretch of water to see if it is frozen." The Oxford crews prefer to take their chances with the Thames and make do with a mile-long course near Henley " Oxtord-Cambridge Crews Have Training Troubles Between dodging miniature bergs and de-icing swivels, the D Blues talk furtively of their "secret weapon." _ q Oxford can always be relied spon to add a touch of the ridic- ulous to the boat race, In re- cent years the Dark Blues have come up with shovel oars, training tights, Italian 'wi er'. shells--and now it's ocket Boat. The only detail of the secret 'shell that has filtered thi is the astonishing news that it has a wide bow and a thin stern, The £400 craft is being built by veteran designer George Harris who describes it 2 a, Rolls-Royce of racing shells."" CAMBRIDGE FAVORED Cambridge treats the Oxford Rocket with a mixture of amusement and disdain, "They always seem to be changing, don't they? Shovel oars, long boats, bent boats, Italian boats--and now a jolly old rocket, How very interest- ing." Cambridge---who cut the gim- micks and row it straight--can afford to treat Oxford's brain- waves lightly, The Light Blues have won 12 of the last 16 races and are favored to win again this year, Absent from the Cambridge possibles this year is John Lecky of Vancouver, who with American Boyce Budd became known 'as the "engine room" of the victorious 1962 crew. Lecky, a silver medallist in the 1960 Olympics, is concen- trating on law studies but has stayed on as secretary of the boat club. By THE CANADIAN PRESS It has been a good week for Niagara Falls Flyers, leaders in the Ontario Hockey Associa- tion provincial Junior A group. The Flyers finished off a per- fect three-win week at Niagara Falls Friday night by defeating Peterborough Petes 3-1 to main- tain their seven-point spread over the second-place Montreai junior Canadiens. The Canadiens meanwhile, prevented the Flyers from in- creasing their margin by edging the last-place Guelph Royals 4-3 at Guelph. Niagara Falls has 55 points and Montreal 48. Hamilton Red Wings are third with 46 and Pe- terborough next with 44. St. Catharines has 32 and cellar- dwelling Guelph 19. Niagara Falls started its big Land Man Gets Manager Post With Machen SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A real estate developer has taken over as manager of heavy- weight Eddie Machen with the avowed intention of bui'ding the troubled. boxer into heavyweight champion. Under terms of the five-year pact with Walter Minskoff, the fighter will receive a signing bonus of $5,000 and a euaran- teed income of $1,000 a month if he regains his boxing licence. Medical reports for the licence are expected within 10 days. Machen was rated the top heavyweight contender by the World Boxing Association at the time he was originally admitted to hosiptal after threatening sui- cide last Dec, 12, On Jan. 18, he was released from the hos- pital after psychiatric treat- ment. His aims were to break all ties with Sid Flaherty, his for- mer manager, and to fight champion Sonny Liston who beat him in 1960 when Floyd Patterson still was champion. Machen, now 30, admitted that financially he was starting from the bottom again and fi- ial worries were blamed Olive, 204, Cleveland, 8. for part of his mental problems Three Flyer Wins Rests Them Easy In Loop Top Spot week with a 10-3 romp over Guelph Tuesday night and a 4-0 whitewash job on Peterborough Thursday night. SPOT A LEAD In Friday night's game, the Flyers spotted the Petes a 1-0 first-period lead on a 20-foot sizzler by Ron Naud that beat {goalie George Gardner cleanly. League-leading scorer Wayne Maxner fired the deadlockin goal in the second period an the Flyers took control of the game. In the final 40 minutes, the Petes managed only seven shots on goal. Maxner has 76 points, two more than Pit Martin of Hamil- ton Red Wings. Ren Schock made it 21 for the Flyers before the period ended and Gary Harmer, third member of the Maxner-Schock- Harmer line, scored the insu- rance tally in the final period on a rebound from def Ron Hergott, BREAK A TIE Montreal's win gave the Habs undisputed possessicn of second place, breaking a short-lived tie with Hamilton, The Red Wings had forced the tie by beating Montreal 3-1 Thursday. The game was the last of the season between Guelph and Montreal. It was the fourth win in five meetings for Canadiens, all of them by one-goal mar- gns. Montreal opened up a 4-1 lead in the third period and held on while the Royals connected for two goals, Montreal scorers were Norm Dennis with two, Don Fedun and Bill Inglis. Sandy Fitzpat- rick, Doug Davidson and Trevor Fahey counted for Guelph. 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) _-- SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. 22 BOND 278 PARK R 74 SIMCOE 1271 SIMCOE STATHAM B. COR. KING ST. £. a CROWELL'S SHELL STATION ST. BAST RUSS BOSWELL'S SUPERTEST STATION CORNER WILSON AND OLIVE SARGANT'S TEXACO STATION OAD SOUTH MEADE'S SUNOCO STATION ST. SOUTH BRAMLEY MOTOR SALES ST. NORTH A. STATION AND RITSON RD. v FRONT-END ALIGNMENT SPECIAL ALL CARS JOHN BEAN "Visualiner"' 95 PHONE 728-6221 for appointment Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service GENERAL GEN TIR' 534 RITSON RD. S. ERAL TIRE: OF OSHAWA 728-6221

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