6 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Jenuery, 29, 1965 HALL LEADS WAY Hawks Whip Bruins In Sloppy Contest B yTHE CANADIAN PRESS It was a rough, sloppy and high - scoring contest -- some- thing the National Hockey League fans must be coming to e when Chicago Black Hawks and Boston Bruins meet. Thursday night's game in Boston ended in a 6-2 victory for the Hawks, the third in a row between the two clubs in 'which eight goals were scored and team play was undistin- ed shed. Chicago goalie Glenn Hall made the difference Thursday = ack after a four-game lay- off, Hail made 27 saves and twice stopped shots while lying flat on his back. Boston defenceman Ted Green spoiled the shutout at- tempt at 9:18 of the third pe- ried and centre Murray Oliver scored on a 30-foot drive only seconds later. HAY SHINES That brief interval was the only bright spot for the Bruins, and it came after the Hawks had already built up a 6-0 lead. Captain George Armstrong and winger Andy Bathgate, will be back in the lineup Saturday. strained knee ligaments. be changed back to the sam combinations that won Toront its Cup last season. HORTON BACK lan Stanley and Carl Brewe will be reunited with Bob Baun. Clancy has been filling in fo coach Punch Imlach, who hai been on call at Toronto City Hall for jury duty for the last two weeks, Clancy made the changes Thursday, when the Leafs practised for the first GLENN HALL Bos- shot goal drove in all alone on the ton net, faked right and left to chalk up his 11th of the campaign. JOHNSON PRESSED Eddie Johnston in the Boston time in three days. York plays in Montreal Chicago Sunday, Montreal is at Chicag Bathgate was out with an 'in- jured hand and Armstrong with King Clancy, assistant mana- ger-coach, also announced that Leafs' defensive pairings will third consecutive Stanley Tim Horton, who has been playing as a forward to fill gaps left by injured players, will go back on defence with Al- In other weekend games, New and ip Detroit Saturday. OCA FINALS TODAY Black Knights Increase Lead Two games were played in the North Plant Hockey League at Port Perry this week. In the first contest, Suddard Qycle strengthened their hold on third place with a 6-2 triumph uver Modern Grill. League lead- ing Black Knights swamped Lord's Jewellers 9-0 in. the second match, John Ingraham, who had his shutout bid spoiled last week with just ten seconds remaining, made good in this one as he wesoe y everything that came his way. Next Sunday, Dyett's Sports take on B:ack Knights, at 1 p.m. and Modern Grill meets Lord's Jewellers in the other game, starting at 2.30. LEAGUE STANDING WLT Pts 74 Unionville's representatives in the Ontario Silver Tankard play, rinks skipped by Murray Rob- erts and Bob Lawrie, qualified to represent Divisions 1, 2, 3 and 4, in the elimination playoffs, held at the Oshawa Golf Club, here yesterday, with 'Jake"' Edwards and Andy McPhee of Kingston. skipping their rinks to further playdowns in The Bur- den Trophy play. Semi-Finald and Finals in the Ontario Curling Association's big double-rink event are being played today in Brantford, with the Silver Tankard playdowns at Brantford Curling Club and The Burden Trophy to be decided at the Brant Curling Club. In Governor-General's Cup inter-division playdowns, _ at Bowmanville's Southview Golf and Curling Club yesterday, Kingston rinks skipped by Ted Brown and Alex Scott survived and will move into the semi- finals, in the deciding playdowns today at Toronto Royal Cana- dians Club, The Globe and Mail Trophy semi's and finals are being played at Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club, with the Uxbridge rinks, headed by 's to an easy 103-60/Harvey Acton and Bill Geer, reset Ea winners of the Divisions 1-2-3-4 triumph over the new Hamilton Intermediate squad in an ex-|Playoff | e 0. Black Knights Dyett's. Sports Suddard Cycle Modern Grill 5 4 3 Lord's Jewellers 2 0 0 1 0 1 r McMurray's Win Easily Big Bob Grier led Oshawa r s '0 Unionville Rinks Win Tankard Set while Lawrie won 8-7 over Woodcox, for a total 19-15 win. Woodcox missed with his last shot, by only about an inch, when perfection would have given him a_ four-count and Peterboro the victory. In the Burden Trophy round, Edwards beat J. Bland 10-5 and McPhee won 12-9 over H. Mc- Quire's rink for Peterborough's total 22-14 win over Ottawa Glebe. AT BOWMANVILLE In the first round of Governor- General's play, Ted. Brown's Kingston rink won 11-7 over Ux- bridge's Bill Geer to offset Har- vey Acton's 9-7 win over Alex ey giving Kingston the round "16. In the other bracket, Peter- Beaupre's Head Senior League Following are the standings in the Oshawa Senior Hockey League (four-point games in- cluded) and leading scorers, as of games played January 25: LEAGUE STANDING L 13 10 5 Beaupre's Spur Bad Boys Juvenile All-Stars Foley's Plumbing 6 Discount House 7 McGrath's Plumbing 5 Durno's Garage 412 TOP TEN SCORERS GA G. Rowbotham Bishop Wilson Hogg - Weidmark Georgeoff Westfall Rennick Sneddon . Wright 18 ll ll J. B, G, J, M. A S. A, J. TORONTO (CP)--Four Tor- onto area high school track stars turned in outstanding per- formances on the indoor oval at Maple Leaf Gardens Thurs- day night, earning themselves a trip to the United States in- ter - scholastic championships in New York later this year. Ken How, Brian Richards and Ed Hearn of Toronto, along with George Neeland of nearby Thornhill were standouts at the second annual Ontario high school indoor track meet which kicked off two days of track events, The highlight will be a star- studded international track meet tonight, featuring an ar- ray of Olympic medalists in- cluding Bill Crothers of Mark- ham, Ont., who won the 880- yard event in the Millrose oa at New York Thursday night. borough defeated Ottawa Glebe 17-15, another tight finish, de- cided on the final stone, as S. Harper of Ottawa defeated John Walsh of the Liftlock City 10-7 but Don Dummitt put Peterbor- ough in with a 10-5 triumph over Ian McDonald. in their final, Ted Brown and John Walsh fought nip-and-tuck to an 8-8 decision and Kingston won the right to go to Brantford when Alex Scott beat Don Dum- mitt 129, for 20-17 total. In the Globe and Mail Trophy GETS SECOND HOLE-IN-ONE WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- Lena Alberta, whose golf oe has im- proved steadily since she started five years ago at the age of 70, scored her second hole-in-one on the Belvedere Golf Club course Thursday. She did it with a No. 3 Among the other outstanding performers here Thursday night, although he failed to gain a berth on the Ontario team to the U.S., was Glen McWilliams, running for Ottawa's Woodroffe High School. MeWilliams scored an easy win in the intermediate boys' 1,000-yard run, and showed a tremendous burst of speed to pull away from Tom Musgrove and Dave Patterson of Toronto on the final leg, How, running for T. L. Ken- Toronto Track Stars Dominate School Mee: nedy Secondary School, won going away as he clocked the senior boys' mile in 4:25.8. A distant second was Jim Wilson of Richview Collegiate, onto, while Peer Jensen of R. King Secondary School, Tor- onto, was third. Hearne turned in two out- standing performances, sprint- ing to an easy win in the 50- yard dash in 5.5 seconds, then anchoring the Neil McNeil 640- yard team to a sen- sational win as he came from 10 yards off the pace on the final leg to nip Parkside Col- legiate of Dundas. Neeland was equally sensa- tional in the hurdles, covering the 50-yard event in 6.2 seconds and finishing well ahead of Paul Rombeek of Sarnia North- ern Collegiate and David Fisher of London South Secondary --* both timed in 6.7 sec- onds. : Aldershot 'High School won the lone girls' event at Thurs- day night's meet, a 320-yard relay that was run off in four heats with the fastest time wins ing the event. COOLER BELOW CHEAM, England (CP)--A large underground vault ex- cavated by this Surrey town council's work force is believed to have. been an 18th-century cold storage for food and wine and once served an inn. and Detrot at New York. wood on the 125-yard fifth : ove hole, the same one on which she hit her first ace a year ago. Oshawa Lad Ends Third Tom Dittmar, a student at McLaughlin Collegiate and Vo- cational Institute, finished third in the 1,000-yard run for Senior Boys in the second annual On- tario high school indoor track meet at Toronto last night. David Peddie of Toronto cap- tured the event in 2:19.6 sec- onds with James Simms of Galt coming in second. Athletes from O'Neill Colleg- iate and Vocational Institute citing basketball contest at Don- CLOSE FINISHES | evan Collegiate last night. In the first draw of Tankardiround, Acton's rink beat Ian Mc- ' mitra Ropes a first start/play here yesterday, al Donald of Ottawa Glebe 14-7, to 'or McMurray's S season,|Bdwards of Kingston nosed ovt!.. ' notched 2ljpoints and put on an|Murray Roberts 8-7 but pob|=v° Uxbridge the rights, in the outstanding effort for the local|Lawrie's 10-4 win over Andy|ther half of this match, § fans. McPhee gave Unionville their/Harper and Bill Geer waged a Oshawa hada 46-30 lead atjmargin. In the other bracket.) brilliant knockout tussle that half-time and outscored their|both Peterborough's scored 1\sroduced four dead ends and a opponents 57-30 in the second|for a combined 20-16 win overliing scare of only 4-4. Total half as they completely out-|Ottawa Glebe Howard Woodeox wee 4 . , played the Hamilton boys. won 109 over H, McQuire andjscore was 18-11 : Jack Lynes also had a fine|Bill Hendry defeated J. Bland) night with 16 points while|!0-7. Bob Mann In net had a tough night but kicked out 28 shots. The Bruins now are slated for back - to - back weekend games against Toronto Maple Leafs, whose crippling injuries are. beginning to heal, Two injured Toronto regulars, STARS LAST NIGHT By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bill (Red) Hay, who scored two goals and helped set up two Bill (Red) Hay spearheaded the attack with two goals and two assists. Ken Wharram opened the scoring at 12:26 of the first pe- riod, taking a pass from Stan Mikita, ana Hay netted his first goal unassisted at 17:09. Defenceman Pierre Pilote, the Chicago captain, scored at 8:57 of the second period and Hay came through with his second goal less than three minutes) NHL BIG SEVEN By THE CANADIAN PRESS With the help of a 6-2 victory over Boston Bruins Thursday night, Chicago Black Hawks have placed (our players among the National Hockey League's top seven scorers. Latest to join the list is the team captain, defenceman Pierre Pilote, who scored one goal and helped set up two oth- ers in the Boston game. That gave Pilote 38 points and a tie for sixth spot with Phil Goyette of New York Ran- | gers, WRESTLING WITH AN ADULT GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET FRIDAY, JAN. 29th-8:30 P.M. 2-MAIN BOUTS -2 MAIN EVENT TEX McKENZIE BULLDOG BROWER 2ND MAIN TAG TEAM BOUT Chris and John TOLOS vs. HILLBILLY Andy ROBIN and Chuck CONLEY Johnny Powers vs. Alexonder The Greet i BILLY STACK vs PAUL DIMARCO Ri Tickets only sold et the Cosino Restaurant, All others et Auditorium Box Office ot 7 p.m. Friday Nite -- Pet Milesh, Promoter | Bus Service Direct To and From Auditorium EXHIBITION FREE PARKING FOR 750 CARS later. In the third period, Dennis Hull made it 5-0 with his eighth goal of the season. Assisting on the play were Hay and Fred : Stanfield, who also set up Pi-|cthers as Chicago Black Hawks Tote's goal. ( rolled to a 6-2 victory over the Then at 8:35, Chico Makillast-place Bruins in Boston. SPORTS MENU 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR chipped in with 12 each for the|dry's Liftlock City foursome 11-8 winners. George Fabbri and)" ; Bill Ferroni paced Hamilton OWEN SOUND (CP) -- Bob| {Mann's Hanover rink and Len cago players are Bobby Hull, been set up by the Ontario Am-| Win In Tankard Schmidt's team from Walkerton who leads the scoring parade by|ateur Basketball Association to TORONTO (CP) -- Defending a wide margin, runner-up Stan) determine the playoff categor-|champions Alf Phillips Sr. and and McLaughlin competed in the meet. himself and Hull to nine points./8 ford today by registering a on jand Tara im previous rounds, - Esposito also picked up one as- . FE ocirgel 23-12 victory over WO) son's rink beat Port Elgin 8-4 Esposito also picked up one | OSHAWA--Grier (21), Lynes|Galt rinks here Thursday. |Mavn's O00 DOe | ort Elgin 4) NHL LEADERS real Canadiens. ; and Kepma. Galt foursome. DOUBLE-RINK competition, as presented in the Ontario | Norm Ullman of agin ies However, Alf Jr. came! Mann and Schmidt will clash| Goals: R. Hull, 37. Curling Association's major inter-club competition, holds the |troit Red Wings ranks third wi HAMILTON--F abbri (15),/through with a 15-3 victory over | Assists: Mikita, Chicago, 38. spotlight across the province today, although actually there (15), Ferroni (15), were a lot more clubs interested yesterday perhaps, than now. In all other major OCA competitions of provincial level, it's a single rink affair, which means the emphasis is on the players, the man, usually the skip, but in double-rink play, it's the name of the club that catches the glory ink. These venerable double-rink playdowns are for the Ontario Silver Tankard and its consolation companion, the Burden Trophy and the Gover- nor-General's Trophy with its companion, the Globe and Mail Trophy. The Ontario Tankard and Burden Trophy semi-finals and finals are being played today, at two different Brantford clubs while the Governor-General's honors will be decided at Toronto Royal Canadians and the G and M Trophy at Toronto CSCC. with 15 points apiece. emerged as District 13 playoff Mikita and Phil Esposito. lies Oshawa and Hamilton will|his son, Alf Jr., gained a berth A -.|(16), Ehlert (8), Dejong (6),| Phillips Sr. lost his first Tank- } moved into a fourth-place tle Walkerton downed Chesley 11-| Standings: Montreal, won 24, | Henderson} at a later date to decide who! Shutouts: Crozier, Detroit, 4. Brent Oldfield and Gary Newitt] In the final, Roberts beat Hen- , 'District Final Skips Alf Phillips | a This was the first game of a | The other high-scoring Chi- round-robin series which has finalists in an Ontario Curling Association playoff here Wed- pap 5 ici i : finals of the Ontario Sil-/nesday. Mikita got one assist for 54|participate in. The return match)!" the fina / | : points, Satie the gap between| will be played in Hamilton Feb. ver Tankard Trophy in Brant-| After defeating Thornbury A : "|Boivin (3), Oldfield (12), Booth|ard match in 10, dropping a 9-8 |with Claude Provost of Mont-/()" pichelis (6), Newitt (12)/decision to Jim Broomfield's|7 in the third round after de-|lost 12, tiec 7, points 55. lfeating Keady and Whitehall. | Points: R. Hull, Chicago, 63. the other Galt rink, skipped by 4 ' \(3), Ewoniak (3), Violin (12),/Syd Smithers, to provide the|advances to Ontario champion-|. Penalties: Mikita, 130 min- To Mt | 43. The Leaders: : s "A Pay' |Gravino (12), Ellis and Elliott.|winning margin. Iship play. lutes. 16 38 54 21 22 43 17 23 40 16 24 40 9 2 38 7 31 38 R. Hull, Chicago Mikita, Chicago Uliman, Detroit Provost, Montreal Esposito, Chicago Goyette, New York Pilote, Chicago City League Hockey Play Oshawa Pee Wee All-Stars fought to a 4-4 tie with George Bell Pee Wees in an exhibition contest at the Children's Arena last night. Les Kiraly, Gary Squires, Eric Howard and Chris Bone were the marksmen for Oshawa. Simich, Campbell, Besco and Moxey tallied for the Toronto | squad. In the second attraction, Osh- awa Midget All-Stars nipped! Cobourg 3-2. Mosier, Grabko and Morrison fired the goals for | the- winners while Bambridge| land Herald clicked for Cobourg. | MIDGET LEAGUE Navy Vets whipped Rose Bow! 7-2 in Oshawa Minor Hockey Association League midget play. Roger Waddell and Bill Shwar- chuk fired two goals each for the winners. Singles went to Robert Hogan, Roy Fisher and) Fred Greenwood. | Bill Carey and Grant Clark) tallied for Rose Bowl. | Now you can get the pizzaz of a Mustang ina falcon! x x x x YESTERDAY saw the survivors whittled down to just four clubs, across the province as representatives, who two weeks ago had won their own Division honors, met at an area location for further elimination. In the Silver Tankard play, winners of Divisions 1, 2, 3 and 4, played here at the Oshawa Golf Club. Unionville won the right to go on. They beat Kingston in the first round, Murray: Rob- erts losing to 'Jake' Ed- wards but Bob Lawrie beat Andy McPhee by enough. Peterboro ousted Ottawa Glebe and Unionville put out the Liftlock City rinks in the final, a real thriller. In the Burden Trophy round, King- ston ousted Ottawa. In the Governor-General's Trophy playoffs, which were held at. Bowmanville's Southview wolf and Curling Club, Kingston rinks were more successful. Their skips, Ted Brown and Alex Scott won over Uxbridge 18-16 in a real close battle and then beat out Peterborough in 'the final round. The Liftlock City curlers ousted Ottawa Glebe in the first bracket. In the G and M round, Harvey Acton and Bill Geer of Uxbridge combined for an 18-11 win over Ottawa Glebe. The big games of the day at Bowman- ville were in the G-G final, when Ted Brown and John Walsh tied 8-8 and in the G and M final, when S. Harper and Wm. Face Rough Chore Geer tied 4-4. This last game was a knockout dandy -- each . i ~ rink won four ends, scored only one at:any time -- and they | MONTREAL (CP) -- Cana Pe s @ i diz lers intain their had four "dead ends". Score details of the games are given pect sar eg 'cad over oitetd elsewhere on this page. | lin competition for the Strath- x X x x |cona Cup Thursday, losing four CASSIUS CLAY practically stole the show, at the Ontario ie six seeet but gaiios 9 Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association's annual "Sports |{aW in the agerega e score. Celebrities Dinner', last night in Toronto, when 1,206 boosters a re -- pas Prin: cob pe hea paid $25.00 per plate for their dinner, as a donation to the lreal. Fri pecid left Canada Ontario Society. for Crippled Children. The head table was /ahead 1,266 - 1,023 after 18 of "loaded" with sports greats, some of current fame, many of |the 20 scheduled cross-country former years, but with the interest in the Chuvalo-Patterson prog eh plas d sega fight (this Monday night) mounting steadily, many wanted to giant task of making up hear what Cassius had to say -- and as usual, there's no prob- eee ola né in lem hearing from Cassius. He predicted George Chuvalo to | : : ete : : | The Strathcona Cup has been win by a knockout -- so Clay's stock is a little higher, in Tor- |in competition since 1909 with onto, right now. jeach country winning it five |times over the irregular sched- Germans Rally To Attain Draw , : : _- lule. Canada won the cup in |2-1 lead in the first period.|1957 but the Scots reclaimed it SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)--A second - period goal by Gorg) Fane was no scoring in thelin 1960, when the matches were| Scholz gained the West German) last played. national hockey team a 2-2 tie} with Lancaster Mooseheads of| the Southern New Brunswick) Hockey League in an exhibition) game before nearly 3,000 fans) here Thursday night. Scholz deflected a shot from) the point to beat goalie Charlie) MacTavish at 7:41 of the sec-) ond period after Lancaster, an intermediate A team, took a) Scottish Curlers The beautiful, low cost Falcon now comes with all the 'whoosh' of a hot performing GT racer! Nothing like it since Cinderella went to the ball. The sizzling Mustang engines are now available in Falcon. Pick your brand of sizzle from any one of these three 289 cu. in. V-8's: the 200-hp, the 225-hp or the High Performance 271-hp V-8. Choose from three transmissions: 3-speed auto- matic, 3-speed or 4-speed manual, both fully syn- chronized with V-8 engines. If you've admired Falcon for its economy--this year's news is even better! The standard 170 Six is more economical than last year's... the optional 200 Six will give you that extra power with amazing economy. And don't forget Falcon's Extended Maintenance: 6,000 mile oil changes and 36,000 mile major lubrications. Your Dealer will tell you all about it! Get behind the wheel of a new Falcon--sample the pizzaz of a Mustang! See your Ford Dealer soon. Whoosh! WITH A MUSTANG UNDER THE HOOD, THE FALCON HAS ALL THE PIZZAZ OF 'A GALLOPING HUNT WITH THE FOX 1N FULL FLIGHT. 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