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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Feb 1963, p. 13

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14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, February 22, 1963 IN SEARCH OF GLORY Quebec, Alberta Meet - For Schoolboy Honors GUELPH (CP)--Is Quebec on _@ hot streak, or is John Ham- mond a super skip? This is the question asked 'most often at the Cana- dian schoolboy curling cham- pionship. And the rink wanting the answer most is a classy foursome from Alberta, . It was boiled down to two . rinks Thursday--unbeaten Que- bec and Alberta--and they meet tonight. Alberta was expected to be , strong but the Quebec boys are ' trying to dispel a feeling that __luck has carried them this far, "Sure we're lucky," Ham- ' {mond said Thursday night, » "But we also play for lucky shots, If you make those it's the best way to demoralize your opposition," Some folks had said the Mont- real High School rink was un. defeated only because it hadn't met another rink of conse- quence, But the Montrealers have beaten them all except the 'Alberta foursome, a precision rink from Bonnie Doon Com. ' posite High School at Edmon- ton. BEATS ONTARIO In three rounds of action Thursday in the round - robin competition Quebec defeated Ontario 10-9, Manitoba 14-8 and toyed with mighty Saskatche- wan, winning 13-7. Alberta protected its record with three victories, 12-4 against British Columbia 12-4 over Nova Scotia and 8-7 against Prince Edward Island. Quebec was to face winless Newfoundland in this after. noon's 10th draw and Alberta was-scheduled to play Northern Ontario, The man who made up the draw did the promoters a fa- vor. In tonight's final game of the 11-round tournament will be dominated by the Quebec-Al- berta clash. CAN FORCE PLAYOFF No matter what happens in said one rival coach, "Alberta will win it, Quebec's front end can't make a takeout shot, But if the ice is warm and suitable to draw curlers, watch out for Quebec," Hammond seemed reluctant to comment on his chances, His rink has already eclipsed any- representatives, western teams," he said. MANITOBANS WIN Newfoundland Prince Edward Island. Prince Edward Island 10 New- foundland 4, New Brunswick 9 thing done by former Quebec "But we love to beat those In other seventh-round games, anitoba edged Northern On- ario 6-5, Nova Scotia downed 11-5 and Sas. katchewan took a 10-6 win over In the eighth round, it was their afternoon games, the two Ontario 8, and Northern Ontario teams will have to settle it to-|19 Saskatchewan 6 in an upset. night. If one of them loses, the) The big thing seems to be the|beat Newfoundland 8-6 The ninth-round matches saw rink can force a playoff by|Nova Scotia down British Co- beating the other one tonight./jumbia 10-8, Northern Ontario and ice, The championships are being played on comparatively new ice in Guelph Memorial Gar- dens and temperatures tonight are expected to play a big part in the game. "If the ice is hard and fast," {Manitoba defeat New Bruns. lwick 9-7. | Pee Wee Stars Advance To SPORTS MENU By Geo. H: Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' CHICAGO BLACK HAWKS tightened their grip on first place in the National Hockey League race last night when they scored a 5-3 victory over the Red Wings right in Detroit. Being the only NHL schedule fixture Jast night, this one just "might slip past the notice of a lot of so-called hockey enthu- siasts, without them realizing that this one last night was a key game. To begin with, it put Hawks five full points ahead of second-place Toronto Leafs but what is more important, the win right on Detroit ice, should serve as an indicator to all concerned, that the Chihawks are right now in full stride and they'll be tough to beat, for any club, You might even say -- Black Hawks are now well entrenched in first place in the NHL standing -- and that's where they will finish. The Red. Wings trail Montreal by five points but they are ..16 points ahead of N.Y. Rangers, so it can be pretty well assumed, that the Stanley Cup playoff berths for this sea- son, are all settled. The order of finish just might be slightly changed but not the personnel -- Rangers and Bruins are "gone", By the way -- Gordie Howe got his 30th goal of the season last night, so did Bobby Hull. x x x p 4 TORONTO MARLBOROS did the Oshawa Generals and Whitby Dunlops a real favor last night. They knocked off Brampton 7-Ups 8-6 in their league fixture and thus kept Brampton all tied up with Whitby and Oshawa, a three-way » scramble for fourth place and final playoff berth in the OHA ~ Junior "A" Metro League standing. Generals have one + edge -- they've played a couple less games and if they can . win one of these -- then that margin will really mean some- thing. Meanwhile -- there's a big "'if' tonight with Generals playing Nei] McNeil in the first game at Maple Leaf Gardens while Whitby takes in Knob Hill Farms in the nightcap. If the Dunnies pull out a win tonight -- the Generals are in trouble. But then, on Sunday afternoon, Oshawa meets Bramp- ton 7-Ups and this is their big chance! x x 4 x BRIGHT BITS: -- Senior and Junior competitions, run >this year at Oshawa Curling Club on a "pick-your-own-rink" basis, conclude tonight with final games in both main events and the two consolation sets. Games have been very close and the event has proven very popular. .. . TORONTO LEAFS *may have to go into action this weekend without the serv- ices of Frank Mahovlich, suffering from a_charley-horse injury, handed out by Montreal's Jean Gauthier, the other night, . . . OSHAWA Pee Wees, with their 5-1 win over Belle- ville, took that OMHA playoff round in handy fashion. . . . * QUEBEC, given almost no chance at all, at the start of the ---session, is currently tied for top spot in the Canadian School- --boys' curling championships, being undefeated after eight "rounds, along with Alberta, P.E.I. boys almost knocked off ~Alberta last night, losing out only in a crucial final-end «finish -- and now the event shapes up like a down-to-the-wire "final match in the draw, between Quebec and Alberta -- sche- duled for tonight -- with a busload of Oshawa schoolboy curlers making the trip up to Guelph, to sit in on the finish. ~ A PARTY of six Oshawa curling enthusiasts, leave next week for the Canadian championships at Brandon. . . . THE =PRIZE SHOOT, at Oshawa Skeet Club last weekend, saw Jim ~Carnwith, Jr., of Brooklin, capture top honors followed by Stan Starr and Dr. Holt Webster. Special event winners in- ==cluded Donald Smith, Gord Tomlinson and Stan Starr. Ex- cellent weather and a good' attendance made the event one of the season's best. jties handed out jthree to each club. 'Second Round By ALLAN BAILEY Oshawa Pee Wee All-Stars advance into the second round of the Ontario Minor Hockey Association playdowns, after scoring a 5-1 victory over Belle- ville last night in the Children's Arena. The local lads won the two- game home and home total goals series 9-2 . Larry Lupel fired two goals, Tony Flontek scored a goal and four assists, and Roger Morton and Leslie Minacs each had a single counter. Terry Meagher scored the lone Belleville goal. Oshawa led 1-0 at the end of the first period, added another in the second and added three more in the final stanza. The visitors' goal came in the third period. There were only six penal- in the game, OSHAWA Brian White, Larry Shrigley, Leslie Minacs, John Nicholls, Scott Willson, Mike Dawson, Donald Hudgin, Roger Norton, Larry Lupel, Bob Hall, Pete McNamee, Lee Para- dise, Rick Harding, Tony Flontek, Joe Rockbrune. BELLEVILLE -- Ron Jury, Bernard Howe, Greg Burkette, David Casa, Terry Meagher, Darryl Demera, Mark AcquaFreddo, Mulvihill, Alan Jones, Brian Jones, Ted: Waite, Ron Mitchell, Garry Sero, Dennis MacCormack, Don Lowen, Andy Slapkauskas. SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY BASKETBALL COSSA Lakeshore District "B" schedule -- Pickering at Courtice, 5.30 p.m.; Ajax Whitby Anderson, 5.30 p.m.; Whitby Henry at Bowmanville, 5.30 p.m.; Olarke at Dunbarton, 5.30 p.m. HOCKEY OHA Junior "A" Metro League -- Oshawa Generals vs Neil McNeil Maroons, 'at 7.30 p.m, and Whitby Dunlops vs {Knob Hill Farms, at 9.00 p.m.' |both games at Maple Leaf Gar- jdens. SATURDAY HOCKEY Oshawa Neighborhood Assoc. Pee Wee Boys League -- Fern- hill vs Harman Park, 7.00 a.m.; Nipigon Park vs Lake Vista, 7.45 a.m,; Connaught vs Stor- je Park, 8.30 a.m.; Eastview "A" vs Eastview "B", at 9.20 a.m.; Radio Park vs Sunny- side, at 10.05 a.m.; Valleyview vs Southmead, at 10,50 a.m.; Brookside vs Kingside, at 11.40 a.m.; Woodview vs North Osh- awa, at 12.25 p.m. and Rundle Park vs Bathe Park, at 1.10 p.m.; All games at Oshawa Children's Arena. OHA Junior "A" Metro League -- Toronto Marlboros Sox infielder, acquired dur- Oe et en eerReN TE EE! HOPES TO HANDLE HOT CORNER Pete Ward, Chicago White ing winter in trade with drills in Sarasota, Fla., yes- Baltimore, works out at third base at club's first spring Se terday. Infield coach Tony Cussinello works with Ward ee eae ate, * |cago coach Rudy Pilous calls) 4 \the dynamo |Hawks churning, scored three! goals and assisted on another. OR WHITE SOX who will get chance to be regular third baseman. this year. --AP Wirephoto LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-- Underdog Gene Fullmer is plot- ting strategy for regaining the world middleweight boxing title Saturday night on a movie he can't stand. Filmed in San Francisco on an October night last year, the movie shows the 31-year-old Fullmer, of West Jordan, Utah, losing his crown to Nigeria's Dick Tiger in 15 bruising rounds, "We studied those pictures for six weeks," Fullmer said Thursday after he and Tiger wound up their heavy drills for the scheduled 15-rounder, to be televised by ABC starting at 10 p.m, EST. | Although Fullmer's strategy | wasn't disclosed, observers who watched him in sparring ses- sions figure he won't rush into Tiger as he did in their first bout. Although Gene got in the first blows, Tiger beat him with speedy counter-punches to the body and head. | The 33-year-old Tiger has no }movies, but it doesn't worry him, He nodded agreement with trainer Jimmy August, who de- clared: "Dick will do the same as he did in San Francisco. He'll wait land see, Fullmer is supposed to have new strategy. Whatever it is, we'll meet it. Fullmer has been around too long to do much changing at this point." Tiger added: "I think this will be a tougher fight than San} Francisco. Fullmer is going to |come all out. He's already said he'll retire if he doesnt' win this one. That kind of a fighter lis especially dangerous." | The champion is a 3-to-1 fa- |vorite to successfully defend the 160-pound title which is recog- nized everywhere but in Massa- |chusetts, where Paul Pender is jlisted as middleweight cham- | pion, | Tape Tale LAS VEGAS, Nev. (CP)--Tale jof the tape for .15-round title fight Saturday night between World Boxing Association mid- dleweight champion. Dick Tiger and Gene Fullmer: Fullmer 31 160 \5"8" 169 38 41% 314%4 17 }23 116 15 15% 9% Tiger Age xWeight Height Reach Chest normal Chest expanded Waist Neck Thigh Calf Biceps Forearm Ankle 12 Fist ™% Wrist | x-Exact weights to be an-! nounced at weigh-in morning of the fight. | Fight Facts LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -- Facts and figures of the world middleweight title fight between champion Dick Tiger of Nigeria and Gene Fullmer of West Jor- dan, Utah: Date: Saturday, Feb. 23. Place: .Las Vegas, Convention Centre, capacity 8,100. Distance: 15 rounds. Television: American Broad- casting Company, with Las Vegas area 100 - mile radius blacked out. Radio: None. Time: 10 p.m., EST. Anticipated at'endance: 8,100. Anticipated Gate Receipts: $121,000, Television Revenue: $100,000. Fighters' purse: Each fighter $30,000 from television money and 30 per cent of gate receipts. Scoring: Five points for the winner of a round, four or less to the loser, five each for an even round. Officials: Referee and two judges, to be named at ring- side. _ Promoters: Silver State Box- ing Club, promoters Mel Greb and Jack Doyle. Return Match: No rematch clause in contract as recognized by the Nevada Boxing Commis- sion. Four-Up Cleared Up LETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP)-- Coach Bob Hamilton of Leth- bridge Nationals says happy that the problem of se- lecting Canada's basketball rep- resentative in the Pan-Amer- ican Games is settled. M. W. Leeson of St. Cathar- ines, president of the Canadian Amateur Basketball Associa- tion, said the team will be picked at a tournament here March 14-16, Canada's representative will be the nucleus of the winning team, filled out with the best players of other teams. Earlier it had been claimed that it had been decided to have Leth- bridge represent Canada. Hamilton said Thursday: "Now it's up to our ball club 4\to go ahead and win the thing Alin s ball) i f Pesan enh dl os ant |took a 1-0 lead in the first pe- players will be on this team. "I'm sure the winning. coach) will have a say in the matter) because it should be done that way." vs Knob Hill Farms, at Maple| Basketball | he is} Strategy Cloaked Smokies In Secrecy By Fullmer Entourage Swamp Czechs PRAGUE (Reuters) -- Trail |\Smoke Eaters, Canada's rep- resentatives in the world hockey championships swamped Czechoslovakia's B team 9-3 Thursday. The official Czech news agency, CTK, said the Cana- dians played "with gusto and enthusiasm" in this third match of their current Czech tour. The Smoke Eaters had beaten the B team 3-1 in their first start and lost 3-2 to the top Czech team in their second. The Smoke Eaters led 2-0 after the first period and 8-2 after the second in a game in which CTK said they made use of all their assets, especially in plotting offensives, They showed "clean, quick work in the defence and uncomplicated attacks on the goal," the agency said. Forward Walt Peacosh Trail with four goals. Howie Hornby scored twice and Gerry Penner, Harold Jones and Ad Tambellini scored sin- gles. Czech scorers were identi- fied as Barta, Hrbaty and Sko- pal, The game was marred by one incident CTK described as an "'unsportsmanlike scene."' Trail defenceman Harry Smith and Czech player Cristofoli were sent off the ice with penalties after a skirmish and the ref- eree then assessed Cristofoli a 10-minute misconduct for abus- ing the official from the penalty bench. Smith was thrown out of the game with a match mis- conduct. led Centre| Ice-Fishermen | May Have To Remove Huts TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario government has legislation un- der consideration which would require ice-fishermen to remove their huts at the end of the sea son, Lands and Forests Minis- ter Roberts says., Mr, Roberts said Wednesday during debate of his depart- ment's spending estimates that the act had been passed, but would not be officially pro- claimed until after it had been studied by the standing com- mittee on fish and game. Leo Troy (L--Nipissing) had asked the minister whether there was any legislation which would require that ice fishing huts be removed from resort area lakes in the spring Mr. Troy said a Timagami area tourist resort operator had complained that garbage left by ice fishermen wae polluting the lake and huts left standing -- Hawks Nip Wings On Mikita, Hull Power Display By RON ANDREWS Canadian Press Staff Writer Chicago Black Hawks' Na- tional Hockey League opposition is finding out it can stop Stan Mikita or Bobby Hull some of the time but it can't stop both of them all of the .ime. Mikita and Hull, with some strong support from goaltender frey was serving a penalty on Hull's goal. GETS TWO MORE Mikita made it 3-1 early in the secon' period and, after Pronovost's goal 78 seconds later, completed his second three-goal performance of Season. Howe narrowed the lmargin to 4-3 a minute later. Glenn Hall, ganged up on the Red Wings at Detroit last night and led the first-place Hawks to a 5-3 victory in the lone game played, The win gave Chicago 70 points. five more than the second-place Toronto Maple Leafs,' who lead Mont- real Canadiens by a point. De- troit is fourth with 59. Mikita, the centre whom Chi- that keeps the| The Red Wings benched goalie Hank Bassen in the last min- ute of play for an extra forward but the strategy backfired when Hull drilled a puck into the empty goal at 19:19, While Detroit is 11 points be- hind the Hawks, it has two games in hand over each of the first three teams, The Wings get a chance to move up on Mont- real and Toronto this weekend when they play twice at Chi- cago and New York while Ca- nadiens and Leafs have only one game each, Both Montreal and Toronto have doubtful starters for their Saturday night games. Defenceman Jean-Guy Talbot |of Canadiens has a charleyhorse r _twoland bruised right knee, which Hawks twisted the NHL's indi-/he suffered Wednesday night at vidual race into a tiger knot/Toronto when Leafs defeated with only two points separating) Montreal 2-1. Club doctors have the top seven players, Gordie|listed 'Talbot es a doubtful Howe scored one of Detroit's|starter for the game Saturday Hull scored twice--his 18th and 19th in the last 17 games--and also had an assist. And Hall kicked out 42 shots, the most Saves he's made in a game this} | Season, | The scoring output by the goals--Val Fonteyne and Andre Pronovost added the others-- and picked up an assist to take the lead with 60 points, including 29 goals. | | CLOSELY PURSUED | But six players are snapping at Howe's heels, Hull, who moved into a tie with Frank Mahovlich of Toronto Maple Leafs for the goal-scoring lead with 30 goals, Mikita and Bos- ton Bruins' Murray Oliver and Johnny Bucyk each have 59 points, Mahovlich and Jean Beliveau are tied with 58. Until last night's game, De- troit had held Mikita to only One goal in 10 games, And in the four wins and three ties the Wings have against Chicago this season, neither Hull nor Mikita had scored a goal. Conversely, Hull has scored at least once in each of the four victories Chicago has against the Wings. Detroit grabbed the lead at were an eyesore for summer residents. Ridan Declared Out Of Rich Widener Handicap MIAMI, Fila. (AP) -- Ridan has been declared out of the cap and the probable starting) field for Saturday's 1%-mile) feature now is 10. | With Riden out, Kelso became the heavy early favorite at 3 to' 5. The entry of Beau Purple and Kilmoray is 3 to 1, Others expected to go include) Sunrise Flight, Jay Fox, Bronze Babu, Prego, Tin God, Herosho- gala and Try Cash. 14:49 of the first period, just 10 seconds after Chicago's Bill Hay had been sent to the pen- jalty box. But less than two |Minutes later the Hawks were ahead 2-1 on goals by Mikita \and Hull, Detroit's Larry Jef- at Montreal against the fifth- place New York Rangers. Canadians, however, hope to have centre Henri Richard back in action. Richard missed the ast three games because of pulled groin muscles. Mahovlich is the injured Leaf, He also picked up a charley- horse in Wednesday's game and club doctors are doubtful that he'll be able to play against Boston Saturday at Toronto. e $100,000-added Widener Handi-| NHL LEADERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Standings: Chicago, won 28, lost 15, tied 14, points 70, Points: Gordie Howe, Detroit 60, Goals: Frank Mahovlich, Tor- onto, and Bobby Hull, Chi- cago, 30, ' Assists: Jean Beliveau, Mont- rea Shutout + Jacques Plante, Mont- HAWKS, FLYERS WIN By THE CANADIAN PRESS Third-place Peterborough Petes lost a chance to gain ground on Hamilton Red Wings when they blew a 4-2 decision to St. Catharines Black Hawks in Ontario Hockey Association Junior A play Thursday night. The Petes, with 49 points, re- main one point ahead of Hamil- ton, which lost to front-running Niagara Falls Flyers 5-2. Peter- borough has five games left and the Red Wings three. At Montreal, the junior Cana- diens stayed five points behind the Flyers by whipping last- place Guelph Royals 9-5, The Canadiens need one victory to sew up second place. At Peterborough, the Petes riod, but wilted as the Black Hawks cathe back for a pair Petes Fail To Secure Third-Place Moorings Bob Wall and Tony counted for the Wings. | The Canadiens spread their scoring among eight players as they sent the Royals down to their 32nd defeat in 46 games. Bob Charlebois netted t wo goals, both in the first period, Other marksmen for the Ca- nadiens were Andre Lagueux, Norm Dennis, Bill Inglis, Yvan Cournoyer, Bob Lemieux, An- dre Boudrias and Terry Clancy, Doug Davidson led Guelph with two goals and Trevor Fahey, Oscar Allen and Len Bazey tal- lied once each, Bob Plager, Guelph's scrappy) defenceman, was ejected from the game in the second period for protesting a Montreal goal too loudly. Plager grabbed ref- eree Bill Roberts by the arm and spun him around. Goegan in the seccnd and third for the win, | Paul Popeil led St. Catharines) In a Metro Junior A game. Toronto Marlboros outscored Brampton 3-1 in the last period to take an 8-6 win. | - and Glenn Hall, Chicago, Penalties: Howie Young, De- troit, 210 minutes. 1p or FILTER TIP CIGARETTES 50 of the month of February. FREE With the purchase of .00 worth of merchandise during the remainder A RAINBOW STAPLING KIT VALUED AT 2.49 lwith two goals and Dennis Hull Leaf Gardens, 2.00 p.m, | and Ken Hodge scored one) Ontario Minor Playoffs es MOTORS KNOCKED -- ~* HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS HAVE MANY TRIBES By THE CANADIAN PRESS | National League WLT F APt 28 15 14 165 134 70! Fort 28 20 9 179 151 65 23 16 18 180 142 64 23.19 13 143 150 59 16 29 11 163 190 43 12 31 15 172 235 39) \),, Thursday's Result | Chicago 5 Detroit 3 Saturday's Games New York at Montreal | Boston at Toronto Detroit at Chicago Sunday's "ames Detroit at New York Boston at Chicago Ontario Junior A : la ee oF A Pt Port Arth Niagara Falls 2811 6 185 130 62) Montreal 2413 9 186 137 57 Peterboro 19 15 11 134 114 49) Hamilton 2019 8 183 166 48/114 St. Catharines 13 22 10 145 104 36 Guelph 832 6 144 236 22 Thursday's Results ~Guelph 5 Montreal 9 "St. Catharines 4 Peterborough 2 Niagara Falls 5 Hamilton 2 Ontario Junior B Tonight's Game Kitchener 5 Owen Sound 3 St, Catharines at Nia~ora Falls|Burlington 3 Stamford 3 Western League (Semi-final series tied 1-1) Los Angeles 3 Vancouver 2 Exhibition Spokane 4 Seattle 3 Trail 9 Czech B team 3 Metro Toronto Junior A Marlboros 8 Brampton 6 International League Wayne 5 Muskegon 3 Eastern League |New Haven 1 Long Island 7 Philadelphia 5 Greensboro 9 Nova Scotia Senior w Glasgow 2 Moncton 4 Chicago Toront> Montreal Detroit New York Boston series: 2-1) Windsor 7° Halifax 3 (Halifax leads | series 2-1) | _ Manitoba Junior Winnipeg B, 3 Brandon 5 | Saskatchewan Senior |Yorkton 5 Saskatoon 8 kehead Senior (Fort William seven final 3-0) Ottawa-Hull Junior A Il 6 Ottawa Primroses. 4 leads ter-final series 4-2) |Hawkesbury 3 Smith Falls 5 (Smith Falls wins (Moncton leads best-of-seven best-of-seven) have ur 3 Fort William 5) best-of-| (Hull wins best-of-seven quar- best - of- seven quarter-final series 4-2)|ney, 160, Lowell, Mass., out-/one apiece. |Belleville, in Belleville, 10.30 ja.m, (2nd game of home-and-| jhome, total-goal series). | BASKETBALL Ontario Senior "B" Playoffs Oshawa Hawks vs Toronto, jat Toronto, 8.00 p.m. | Oshawa Y's Men's Minor, Oshawa Times performed an| League -- CKLB vs Provincial astonishing feat Tuesday night! Tile, at Oshawa Central Col-jagainst Gord Dodd Motors by legiate, 9.00 a.m.; St. John's)scoring three goals in the last Cadets vs Bolahood's Sports-|minute of play to defeat the n, at 10.00 a.m., at Simcoe! Motors 6-5. : | Hall and' Firefighters vs Medi-| he Times trailed 5-3 going cal Pharmacy, 10.45 a.m., | Simcoe Hall. oe" Dull OH 6-5 Baker scored at 23.50 of the 25 minute period to come within a goal of tying the game. With six attackers, pulling their ¢al- tender, they capitalized when | FIGHTS | LAST NIGHT Wilson scored to make it 5-5. Then Baker who played a mar- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS vellous game for the. winners. Los Angeles--Jose Lopez, 118,| scored his fourth goal at 24.43 |Mexico, knocked out Manuel! Ta-!|to give the Times the win. Other razone, 120, Mexico, 8 goal scorers for the Times Worcester, Mass.--Larry Car-|were Brown and Wilson with On Last-Minute Goals Victory Footes Towing played to a 2-2) draw but Footes lost out in this second game of 2, best goal average. Envoy defeated Foutes last week 4-3, therefore winning the series by one goal. Envoy now faces the Teach- ers in the best 2 out of 3 semi- each. Dale Watson and John| Vanderburg tallied for the Petes PENALTIES LOPSIDED The Hawks drew eight of the Barely three quarters of the people of Burma are Burmese There are 125 other racial and tribal groups in the 21,500,000 population. | ¢ 7a, BULL ST NORTH +O we plete, Ling. of ONG MATERIALS HAWA, ONT = 11 penalties but goalie Jim) Horton helped keep the Petes from taking advantage. | In Hamilton, the Flyers scored four wianswered goals in the first period and then coasted to the win with the help of outstanding netminding by George Gardner. Ted Snell, Dave Armstrong, Ron Hergott, Wayne Maxner and Don Awrey scored for Ni- agara Falls and defenceman finals beginning Tuesday aight at 7.00 p.m. sharp, February 26 Thompson and Miller scored for Footes while Greene and! Brown were the marksmen for Envoy. YESTERDAY'S STARS |pointed Tom Tucker, 165, Val- jlevy Stream, N.Y., 8 Miami --. Jack Gilbert | Knoxville, Tenn., die Febba, 155, dale, Fla., 6. Gord Dodd Motors goals were tallied by Myles with three and Hubble-and Hoop: ;one apiece -|FOOTES ELIMINATED | Envoy Food Service 158, outpointed E Fort Lauder | andl By THE CANADIAN PRESS Stan Mikita, Chicago's shifty centre whq scored three goals and an assist in the' Hawks' 5-3 1963 JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS NOW ON DISPLAY 353 5 MITH PH. KING 723. Ww. PORT 9311 OPEN EVENINGS win over Detroit Red Wings. | I At sea and ashore! RU NAVY MS (Dark) PALM BREEZE (Very Light) WHITE CAP (White)

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