ave Road | up singles in a winning : Switzer and Lynn Middle- ored for the Mel-Rons who gamel but could not get ally when it counted most, k Hawks led 2-0 at the yf the first, maintained ead in the second as they ed goals with Mel-Rons, ppeared to find their skat- gs-in this period. Both scored once in the free- ng, hard - skating third game was fast and clean- yed with both teams giy- t with some fine passing The Whitby defence out several stiff body throughout but failed to ) the Hawks in the first r TALKING -- General er Dave Godfrey said he game, "We will have 't to pull our socks up z on Thursday night. We ad two soft ones at home s has hurt our team more ost people realize". .. . | MacDONALD, who al- as a fierce competitor'as r, hates to lose a game ported that he will start k the whip . . . THURS- NIGHT'S game could 0 be an interesting one e ways than one. Lorne ll, who is the number 'k-stopper of the Flamin- a brother of Matt Camp- 0 is one of the two goal- Mel-Rons, It could prove | brother act so far as ding is concerned... the fact that Lynn Mid- will be making his first Whitby against his 'old tes, whom he played t year, adds interest. rtice Wins. ISA Soccer STON -- Courtice High re the winnere of the cer championship of the Ontario Secondary Association. ourtice team completed OSSA competition un- , with seven wins and maxing the season with umph over Trinity Col- rt Hope, in the cham- playoffs, played at , on Saturday. 'e won a thrilling 1-0 in the semi-final round, enton, Bay of Quinte tatives while Trinity winners of the South a district nosed out |, North Kawartha rep- ves, also by a 1-0 score. consolation final, Tren- ited Lakefield 2-0. ° ' DOUBLEHEADER ANVILLE--In a Lake- nor Hockey Association der on the weekend, ille Juveniles defeated 1g Cobourg boys 7-3 bit Midgets fared better, ver their Bowmanville or Christmas VING MACHINES $49.50 Lessons -- Service WHITE ELNA WING CENTRE nd St. W. -- Oshawa hree final. "When s against FL's top FL and in algary has "Injuries General manager Rogers hew of Calgary Stampeders ays Reed's crushing power is he key to the offence of Saskat- hewan Roughriders. arris's performance Saturday fter Calgary took pame 15-11 at home, he said: he's ood; when he's great, they're reat... he was great today." Harris was in on seven tack- e Calgary defence held the ards on 21 carries. Reed paced ague during the regular sea- on with 1,471 yards on 302 car- ies for a 4.9-yard average in 16 james. In 1965 he was named e outstanding player in the adian selection. | 'HER PROBLEMS But stopping Reed ake the Grey Cup national) hampionship in Ottawa Dec. 2 gary r the first time since 1949. YS. he Stamps feel they can re-|W ace a halfback easier than the|the 20-degree range. The field| was reported in good condition ders can replace a defensive} d. Monday but snow was expected. a doubtful starter. know today Suderman will And, of the first!/horse. TALENTED RECE good, they're Reed Saturday as rusher to just 87/85 a receiver. the Canadian Reed's slot. Riders six years 1966 was an all-Ca-!in 1963. isn't all to do as it tries to Sunday. While Reed And Harris Keys In Western Grid Final CALGARY (CP) -- Fullback eorge Reed and middle line- backer Wayne Harris could well old the key to Wednesday's second game in the Western 'ootball Conference best -of- End Garner Ekstran, 27, of Saskatchewan is out for the year with a pulled hamstring and another defensive end, Don Gerhardt, suffered. a knee in- jury and was listed Monday as The Stampeders expected to if halfback Ben Woodson or defensive end Dick play. Woodson pulled a groin muscle and Su- derman aggravated a charley IVERS Bob Paremore could replace Woodson. The two have traded positions in the lineup before, with Woodson used primarily as a running back and Paremore Keys says guard Ken Reed likely will move to Ekstran's end slot and Don Bahnuik to Loss of Ekstran could hurt. He's been with the and was named to the all-Canadian team The game, scheduled to start !at.8 p.m. CST, will be shown on the CBC national TV network. The third game, if necessary, will be at 2 p.m. MST in Cal- In final and semi-final games from. Saturday's|between the clubs, the Rough-| ame are bothering the Calgary|tiders since 1936 have lost four! aching staff, although proba-|in Regina, won two and tied ly not as much as they bother|one. ; skatchewan mentor Eagle|they've lost six and won two. Temperature at Taylor Field ednesday night should be in visiting Calgary, e final 'ormance ut while sive ice is two e footing ebackers, wa. The short, passes. would poses. Ottawa last Sunday in the t of the two-game final. was standing pat for Sat- y's second game, Ottawa h Frank Clair said in a io interview he plans a few adjustments will enable his team to more points, e usually potent Rider of- was throttled on Lans- ne's. muddy field as Ticats tinually pressured quarter- ck Russ Jackson and hounded top icker and Margene Adkins. UGGED DEFENCE Even fullback Bo Scott found Ihnen he did manage to pene- ate Hamilton's front line. He hen was faced with the prob- m of outslogging waiting Ticat One of Clair's adjustments ay be utilizing his power-run- ing backs on screen passes be- ind a horde of Ottawa blockers one play that was conspicuous-| ly missing from Jackson's arse- al in Sunday's game at Ot- It would force the de- -- Coach Ottawa best short receivers ss and in Stewart - in Ticats 11-3 win}Canadian Football L GREY-CUP BOUND In the interview, the Hamilton de- : full credit to the H the series that leads tawa. Saturday's game ton's Civic Stadium, that he nationally by CTV. terview, that his enter the game § receivers--Whit though it was a sing those eight points. tough, especially} "The biggest coast on the lead we Saturday. The eight be considered only i of the series."' Ticats' Defensive Unit ill Remain Unchanged AMILTON (CP) Iph Sazio plans no changes in Tiger-Cat defensive unit for second game of the total- t Eastern Football Confer- against ugh Riders. Hamilton defence handled Riders easily with a solid fence to hesitate before commit- ting itself to either deep or short pass coverage or stopping a fullback or halfback draw. In Ron Etewart and Jay Rob- jerts, Jackson has two of the in the busi- one of the test broken-field runner in the eague, Clair gave amilton de- fence in the opening game of to the Dec. 2 Grey Cup final back in Ot- in Hamil- starting at 2 p.m. EST, will be televised Sazio Monday said, in an in- club would aturday as le game for the playoff championship. "We just have to disregard mistake we could make would be to think we're home free and try to 've built. "That isn't our intention at all. We're going to play to win points will f they have a bearing on the final outcome screen or delay classed serve several pur- cent were in 1960. FEW TENANTS Of the 430,522 farms counted in Canada last year only 4.6 per as tenant farms compared to 5.8 per cent NEW YORK Mets' Tom Seaver and wife Nancy hear of his selection yesterday as National League Rookie of the Year, at their Manhat- tan Beach, ~Calif., home. The 23-year-old righthander won 16 games for the New MONTREAL (CP) -- Bobby Hull, Chicago Black Hawks' tal- ented left winger, held a five- point lead Monday in the Nation- al Hockey League's individual iscoring derby. | However, statistics released by the NHL show a general tightening up in the positions di- lrectly behind the Hawks' scor- jing ace, Hull, who won the Art Ross Trophy as the league's top scor- er in 1960, 1962 and 1965, slipped behind his goal-a-game pace last week, but his three points gave him a total of 15 goals and nine assists in 17 games. One week ago he held I three-point lead over Detroit! Red Wings Gordie Howe, Howe was held to one goal last week and now shares the second spot with centre Jean Ratelle of New York Rangers. Both have 19 points with Howe having scored 11 goals and Ratelle counting five goals and assisting in 14 others. Behind Howe and Ratelle are three players with 18-point to- tals. They are Andy Bathgate of Pittsburgh Penguins, Montreal Canadiens' Yvan Cournoyer and Fred Stanfield of Boston Bruins. Bathgate is the only member of an expansion club to figure in the top 10. He formerly played for New York Rangers, Toronto Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings. his previous NHL career. sists, played 46 games with De-| troit over a four-year period.| sists for 11 points, Philadelphia Flyers goaltend- ing combination of Doug Favell and Bernie Parent continued its domination of netminders' sta- tistics with a goals-against aver-| age of 2.25. Veteran Hank Bas-| THREE OTHERS TIED Tied behind the Bathgate, Cournoyer and Stanfield three- some are another trio with 17 points each. New York's Vic Hadfield, Boston's John Mc- Kenzie and _ Alex- Delvecchio, Detroit Red Wings veteran cap- tain and centre, make up this group. Delvecchio's 15 assists to go with his two goals, is tops for the league in that department. Lowell MacDonald, a_ native of Thorburn, N.S. and right winger for Los Angeles Kings of the expanded division, picked) up four goals and one assist last -- ou y're both famous, becoming more so he time. Schenley Wedding Dry Gin cool and wonder- | Schenley Golden ccessful marriage hiskies. Invite this fo your next party. 'Santa Says... Christmas Comes Early At Trent Auto Sales S \! Watch For Our Sensational... Further Deta eB 1v USED CAR SALE THURS., FRI. and SAT. See Wednesday's Oshawa Times for TO SALES LIMITED eo KING ST. E., BOWMANVILLE Rambler--American--Rebel--Ambassador--Javelin "NOBODY UNDERSELLS TRENT" jweek-including three against,Goyette, NY Canadiens Sunday--to surpass!Prentice, Det his goal and point total for all/Rochefort, Phil /Pulford, Tor MacDonald, who now has 16 Keon, Tor points on six goals and 10 as-|Oliver, Tor Nesterenko, Chi Ellis, Tor During that time he could man-| Walton, Tor age only five goals and six as-|Stratton, Pitts Hampson, Det § Yorkers to become the first Met ever to capture an offi- cial post-season award. Hull's Lead Increases, | 'Tight Battle In Second VnBow A Rand 8 HOCKEY STANDINGS East Division jsen of Pittsburgh recorded the WLT F only shutout of the week. Detroit 9 5 3 58 Defenceman Noel Picard of|Boston 9 42 55 but|St. Louis Blues took over as in-|Toronto 9 7 2 62 dividual penalty leader with a|New York 8 5 3 53 55-minute total. Montreal 6. 74:38 Chicago 5 7 5 44 -- GA Pts Pim West Division B. Hull, Chi 15 9 24 / g\Los Angeles 8 6 3 51 Howe, Det 11 8 19 / 35\Philadelphia 7 5 4 33 Ratelle, NY (5 J4~19/ o| Pittsburgh 78 2 44 Bathgate, Pitts\°8710 18 9|Minnesota = 5 6 4 34 Cournoyer, Mtl "& 10 _18~~~-2{Oakland 411 4 41 Stanfield, Bos 5°37 18 0 |St- Louis 410 2 36 Hadfield, NY 8 9 17 4 Wednesday's Games McKenzie, Bos 3 14 17 16|Montreal at St. Louis Delvecchio, Det 2 15 17 = 2/Minnesota at Toronto Bucyk, Bos 9-7 16 0|Chicago at New York MacD'ld, LA 6 10 16 2|Boston at Pittsburgh Irvine, LA 6 10 16 2|Detroit at Philadelphia Gilbert, NY 412 16 0| Oakland at Los Angeles Esposito, Boss 8 7 15 ~ 2I Thursday's Games Hicke, Oak 8: 7.35 17 Montreal at Chicago McD'ld, Pitts Gas ye 2iNew. York at Boston TH URSDAY, NOV. 23rd is the GRAND OPENING of y ock's Carpet Mart : 282 KING ST. WEST FACTORY PRICES! 1] HAVE YOU SEEN THE MACLEOD OF MACLEOD? NEW Hughes (Astros) Angeles 4 Louis Cardinals drew six votes and Gary Nolan of Cincinnati Reds collected three. Hughes posted a 16-6 record| while Nolan had a 14-8 mark. | CREDITS OTHERS "T am thrilled to win the Mahovlich returned to Maple award because there were other|L¢af Gardens Monday for the our/| first time since he was admitted league besides Hughes and Nor-|t0 hospital Nov. 2 and Dr. Hugh lan; like Don Wilson of Houston|Smythe said the right winger may be skating again with To- ronto Maple Leafs next week. The National Hockey League fine young pitchers jer in Manhattan Beach, Calif.| |""I felt that Hughes would win it|star was in hospit because he won 16 games for a pennant winner." Seaver was obtained by Atlan- ; ta Braves in the college draft|Week or so has been skating in and signed to reported $40,000 Secret at a private club. His noon-hour session Monday | |was barred from reporters or| iphotographers as he worked| with defenceman Allan Stanley,| 6, .1wo months later, the Mets recovering from an eye injury) | obtained the rights to the young|Suffered Nov. 11 in Minnesota} 4|Pitcher in a special drawing in!against the North Stars. contract However, baseball commission- er William D. Eckert nullified |the contract because the signing violated the college rule. Seaver Chosen. Rookie Of Year YORK (AP) They can thank, too, the 11) win the rookie award in the Na- members of the Baseball Writ-| tional League. ers Association of America, who} voted for Seaver, the cool, confi-|) dent 23-year-old winner of 16); games last season. Two other right-handed pitch- ers were mentioned in the vot- ing announced Monday. Dick 1949. of the champion St.) TORONTO in and Bill Singer of Los| (Dodgers)," said Seav- and tension, in February, 1966.) -- The|which Cleveland Indians and last-place New York Mets have|Philadelphia Phillies also were a first today in. pitcher Tom|involved. Seaver, the National League's ™ Rookie of the Year for 1967, and/e ) they have the luck of the draw , to thank for it. Seaver is the first Mets' play- r ever to capture an official |post-season award and the first {member of a last-place team to Outfielders Albie Pearson and Bob Allison were named the leading American League rook- es while with last-place. Wash- ington Senators, jand Allison in 1959. The award in each league was originated in | Mahovlich : At Gardens (CP) |doctors termed acute depression but for the last THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, November 21, 1967 7 Pearson in 1958 Frank al with what CANADIAN RYE WHISKY DISTILLED BY HIRAM WALKER & SONS LIMITED, WALKERVILLE, CANADA hat sth Special HIRAM WALKER & SONS, LIMITED, WALKERVILLE, CANADA, 14\¢ A Pt 48 21 39 20 44 20 42 19 41 16 56 15| 52 19 36 18 44 16 4414 56 12 46 10 ---- Ce weer oS If your purchase of snow tires does not include: e FFIREE STORAGE OF SUMMER TIRES e FIREE INSTALLATION OF SNOW TIRES e FIREE STORAGE OF SNOW TIRES e FIREE INSTALLATION OF SUMMER TIRES A 12 MONTH INSTALLATION AND STORAGE PLAN Here's why we recommend General Tire Winter Cleat snow tires for any winter driving hazard: INTER CLEAT SILENT SAFE FEATURES @ Deep, wide tread @ Thousands of gripping edges e 600 Full depth sipes e Paddle wheel shoulders e Duragen Tread Rubber @ Polybutadiene Tread Compound @ Four plies of Nygencord --General's patented process nylon cord BENEFITS @ Peak traction, long wear @ Dig in, grip, hold for gear- like traction e Increased tread flexibility @ Moves you through hub- deep drifts @ Long trouble-free mileage e Keeps tread flexible for complete traction even at sub-zero temperatures e Combats bruise breaks, resists moisture damage For positive glare-ice traction have your Winter Cleats equipped with Seco studs. 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