Daily Times-Gazette, 17 Mar 1951, p. 14

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PAGE FOURTEEN THE DAILY TI MES-GAZETTE O.C.A. Victory For Peterboro Rink f {2 Members of the winning Peterboro rink flash victory smiles after winning Sims Trophy in Ontario Curling Association competition at the Toronto Granite Club. Left to right: Dick Whalon, Fred Allison, Burritt Harrison, skip, and Wib Westram, --Central Press Canadian. Rg Okay--now let's make it two-straight. After all, if the Generals -- GPORT SNAPSHOT By Geo. H. CampELL in the deciding game of the World Amateur Hockey Championship tournament. Lethbridge Maple Leafs, wide goal-average margin and a one-point lead, need only to tie with the sharp-shooting Swedes to retain the world crown for the Do- minion. with a Aren't Pushovers But before the night is over Dick Gray's Canadians will know they have been in a hockey game. The are nobody's pushovers. which is just about as pretty as any- thing on view in the world tourna- | ment here. | | (unrelatéd) of Rune, Gosta and accuracy that most opponents the net, Will Use Speed down Switzerland 5-1. | The loss cost the hurtling high- | The Andersson twins -- Stig and | landers from the Alps their chance | curys, drew a crowd of 14,000 des- | Hans -- and the Johansson trio |at the world title, but they remain | pite a transport strike that tied up and | in the running to retain their Eu- | buses and trams all over the city. Erik pass the puck with such speed | ropean crown. The latter appears | | likely to be decided between Swe- | tre Bill Gibson started the ball roll- | just stand and goggle until it's in |den and Switzerland on goal aver-|ing at nine minutes of the second. | age. | Stan Obodiak clicked from a faoce- | | Last night's tilt with Switzerland | They're tough on defence too, and | was the Leafs closest match. The | Gibson scored again to give Leafs Swedes -- favored to capture the |big Rune Johansson throws.a body | Swiss grabbed a 1-0 lead in the first |a 3-1 edge as the period ended. European title from Switzerland-- |check with the cheerful menace of | period with their frashy attack, but | a Red Horner cor a Ching Johnson." failed to stand up under the pres- | utes into the finale and Gibson! CANADA AND SWEDEN SQUARE OFF IN WORLD HOCKEY TOURNEY TODAY Paris, March 17--(CP) -- Cana-| They're big, fast and shifty and| Against this - powerhouse, Gray sure of the hard-skating Leafs. By completed the hat "trick with 50 da and Sweden square off tonight|can operate a checkerboard attack | plans to use speed and more speed | the third period they were slowed inside their opponent's blue line|in an effort to wear the Swedes almost to a walk. {down as the Leafs last night wore! Drew Large Crowd The Leafs, defending the title won last year by Edmonton Mer- After that first-period goal, cen- off at-the three-quarter mark, then Obodiak got his second four min- | seconds to go. | Other group "A" games yesterday | saw Britain and the United States battle to a 6-6 draw while Finland | overcame a battered Norwegian out- fit 3-0. | Italy clinched the group "B" con- | solation championship by whipping | Austria 7-2 for her fifth straight | win. In the other group "B" game, | the Netherlands edged Belgium 2-1. | { In other games today, the United | | States meets Switzerland and Brit- ain meets Finland in group "A" competition. In group "B," Yugo- | slavia meets' Austria, France meets | the Netherlands. b Defeat Windsor Spitfires 4-2 GENERALS TAKE FIRST GAME OF PLAYOFFS ON GOLF'S GOLD TRAIL - - By Alan Maver NHL Cinderella CARY M/DPDLECOFF | OHA JUNIOR 'A' Series "A" Best-of-five quarter-final. ' P W L 1 10 10 13 Friday's Result ( Gant Series CC" Best-of-five quarter-final. PW Barrie Galt Barrie Guelph EN | St. Catharines . 1 0 1, Friday's Result St. Catharines . 3 F A Pts 4:23 2.4 0 L Oshawa ... ..... 0 Windsor ........ 1.0 1 Friday's Result a . i Winusor ...... Playoff Future Games Today -- Stratford at ..arlboros (Maple Leaf Gardens, 3:30 p.m.); Barrie at Galt; Guelph at St. Cath- arines; Windsor at Oshawa. NATIONAL LEAGUE PW T F APs Oshaw '2 turn around and lose right on their home ice tonight, they'll not be al HAVING FINALLY WON First Game of Quarter-Finals 13 213 130 93 bit nearer than they were before they set out for Windsor. There | should be the biggest crowd of the season on hand tonight at the Oshawa | Arena. After all, the playoff fever has struck again and it takes only | just the smallest spark to set the Oshawa fans going at any time| That 4-2 victory last night right in Windsor is apt to start a conflagra- | tion. Remember how the local fans turned out for the biggest crowd | of the season right after the Generals had won a league game in | Windsor, by a 9-2 score, midway through the schedule? Well, last night's | win will probably stir up the enthusiasm again. After all winning a| playoff game away from home, iirst game of the series at that, is Just | about perfection. Larry Aurie had his chest stuck out so far when | he got back from Windsor, about ten o'clock -this morning, that he| counldn't get his coat buttoned up. At that--we'll bet it wasn't hard to take, beating Detroit's other sponsored Juniof "A" team right on their | own ice, to open a playoff series. Don't know whether Jack Adams was | on hand or not--he said here last Monday that he would try to take in this game. If he was--he probably took turns cheering for the Spits and Generals--and still ended up happy! * + * Louie Jankowski scored the first two goals in last night's victory at Windsor and at one time the Generals were leading 3-0. A major penalty to Alex Delvecchio (about His fifth penalty only, of the entire season) when he accidentally drew blood with a high stick, gave the Spitfires their big chance for a sustained pressure play in the third period, that finally shattered Dick Piatkowski's shutout bid. At that, Piatkowski earned star rating also with a superb display, actually outshining Windsor's great goalie, Glen Hall. Delvecchio got the third goal with Jankowski assisting, along with DeJordy, for the only goal of the second period. It was a splended win for the Gen- erals and gives them a great chance to advance to the semi-finals. However, as we pointed out before, it all depends on the game here tonight. Oshawa has to win this one here this evening to maintain any margin--on the other hand, a victory will put Windsor in the position of having te win all of the remaining three games. The third game is in Windsor on Monday night, 4 4 * The other games last night came out much as expected. Barrie Flyers handed Galt Black Hawks a 7-2 lacing while Guelph Biltmores whipped St. Catharines 7-3. The O.H.A. issued orders to their referees that they must referee strictly to the rule-book (finally) and a couple | of the Generals told us this morning that "you got a penalty for even Jodkingat a player." Windsor Spitfires started in to "scare" the Generals | with a: rugged checking display but the Generals didn't back up--the referee's clipped out a few penalties and that soon changed the entire picture--with Oshawa scoring while Spitfires were short-handed. +» + * Harold Reddick, who started the Oshawa A.C. here a few years ago and in partnership with "Coy" Wheeler, put on some fine boxing shows at the Oshawa Arena, is starting up another boxing club here. There has been an open meeting called for Sunday afternoon at two oclock--at "The Red Barn" in North Oshawa, and all would-be boxers and others interested are invited to attend. Reddick is turn- ing over "The Red Barn" as training quarters--during the week. There is ample floor space for skipping, running, etc.--as well as hi, for a ring. A lot of new training equipment has been installed this week and the Red Barn will be a popular place for the young men of the city who are interested in boxing. + * BRIGHT BITS -- Markham Millionaires now lead their 4-out-of-7 series with Stouffville Clippers by a 3-1 margin, thanks to their victory in a real good hockey game played here last night . . . The Port Hope Ontarios Baseball Club, has re-elected their entire 1950 executive to handle the team's affairs for this coming summer . . . The St. Lawrence Valley District badminton stars copped the Cup in the Central Distict's tournament at Bowmanville last week-end with Cliff Chambers being the only Oshawan to make much of a showing but H. A. Whiteley got into the limelight also--the local ball star winning the new badminton * racket in the draw that was held . . . Today being March, The Glorious 17th--it's just as well the Generals aren't playing St. Mike's in the play- offs. The older "Irish" team takes on Hamilton Tigers this afternoon "in a Major League final series opener . . right in Peterborough last night over Petes and now lead that Allan Cup playoff round by 3-0 in games . . (Continued on Page 15) HOCKEY PLAYOFFS Cs JUNIOR "A" WINDSOR SPITFIRES OSHAWA GENERALS TONIGHT -- 8:30 Tickets on Sale at the Arena MONDAY NIGHT - 8:30 JUNIOR "RB" PETERBORO .s. OSHAWA JR. BEES Adults 50¢ Children 25¢ <i RENA . Owen Sound Mercurys won | . Lethbridge Maple Leafs should | have the World's Hockey Tournament championship all sewn up for | Jankowski and Piatowski Star, Louie Scores Twice As Generals Win On Windsor Ice -- Piat- kowski Turns In Fine Net-Minding Chore -- Second Game of Series Here Tonight | | erals defeated the Spitfires, 4-2, | here last night in their O.H.A. | Junior "A" best-of-five quarter-fi- | nal series. Oshawa Generals, a high-scor- ling team with a porous defence | all season, sprang the only upset | as the Ontario Hockey Association Junior A playoffs began last | night. Generals regular-season standings, thanks largely to the marksmanship of Lou Jankowski and Alex Delvec- chio, who ran one-two in the scor- {ing race. But of the eight teams that made the playoffs, they had "| the worst goals-against record -- 231 in 54 games. That made them definite under- dogs when they squared off with Windsor Spitfires in the first game of a best-of-five, quarter- final round. Spitfire Goalie Glen Hall, with 167 goals against him, was the second-best netminder in | the league. But last night, Hall was the sec- ond-best netminder in the game as Oshawa beat Spitfires 4-2. Dick Piatkowski blocked 37 shots to Hall's 32. And, naturally Jankow- ski got two goals and Delvecchio | a third. of Oshawa George Samolenko Skov and j and Wwindsor's Elmer Bob Brown were the other goal- | scorers. The | strictly as other two games went advertised. The first- place Barrie Flyers disposed of the eighth-place Galt Black Hawks 7-2 while Guelph Biltmores downed St. | Catharines Teepees 7-3. : | ~All six teams swap playing sites | for their second games tonight | while Toronto Marlboros and | Stratford Krothlers open their | best-of-five series at Toronto in a | saturday-afternoon contest. | Se Be same Toronto bill, St. | Michael's Monarchs and Hamilton Tigers start their best-of-seven final series in the major group. BARRIE FLYERS 'TOPPLE HAWKS IN FIRST TILT Barrie, March 17--Barrie Flyers nished thé O on with a great burst of speed and opened their first-round playoff last | night in the same fashion when they trounced Galt 7-2. The second game O five quarter final series will take place in Galt "tonight, with the third back in Barrie Monday. The Flyers led throughout as Labine and Jerry Toppazzini led the sniping with two goals each. Real Chevrefils, Jack White and Don Emms tallied singles. Don Hogan and Jack Price pro- | duced Galt's tallies. It -- Goal, Sommerville; defense, Bughapan, Price; centre, Wharram; wings; Conacher, Hogan; alternates, Poeta, Cooke, Gardener, Sleaver, Gosselin, Boyce, Hill, Mateka. Barrie -- Goal, Howes; defense, Morrison, McKnight; centre, White; | wings, Chevyrefils, Labine; altern- | ates, D. Emms, Toppazzinl,., Pe. | Emms, Hagan, Towers, Wood, 0'. | Connor, Pearsall. 128 | First Period | Barrie, Labine (Chevrefils) . Penalties -- O'Connor (2), Mateka, Chevrefils. Leo Second Period 2--Barrie, Toppazzini | (Morrison, Chevrefils) ..... i 3--Barrie, Chevrefils | (White, Morrison) 4--Galt, Hogan (Conac Wharram) . 5--Barrie, Labine (White) .... 6---Galt, Price (Boyce) 1 Penalties--Price, McKnight. Third Perlod 7--Barrie, Toppazzini (Chevrefils) | 8--Barrie, D. Emms | (Toppazzini) . | 9--Barrie, White Penalties Mateka, | Gardener, O'Connor. her, 4:38 » ia easier iO (Labine) .... 10:02 McKnight, MUTUELS ARE WRONG San Mateo, Calif, March. 17 -- | (AP)--Because of an error made in mutuels calculating at, Bay Meadows March 14, the California State treasury was richer by $5,- 150.85 today. Bettors who wagered place money on the first and sec- ond horses in the eighth were out $1.50 per $2.00 ticket each. State Racing Board Secretary Al- fred B. Fiske sald "There was an underpayment of $1.50 per $2.00 ticket for place on 'the winning horse, Sugar Sample and the place horse, 'Pat's Own.". He said; the personnel involved in the error « had been disciplined. be, Windsor, March 17--Oshawa Gen- | finished fifth in the | A { i, a WITH NS { LESS THAN Sa A MONTH po OF /95/ GONE HE WAS TOPs Ww MONEY WON W/TH VER $#3,000/, ig SUMMARY | OSHAWA --Goal, Piatkowski; de- fence, Sinden, O'Connor; centre, Delvecchio; wings, Jankowski, De- Jordy; alternates, Delich, Holden, | Caron, Mills, Boniface, Samolenko, Attersley, McBeth. WINDSOR--Goal, Hall; defence, | Danilovich, Skov; centre, Grosse; | wings, Anderson, Thomas; alter- nates, Turner, Offidani, Johnson, Zorica, 'Joss, Hass, Koneczny, Brown, OPEN First Period WIDER 7 1--Oshawa, Jankowski (DeJoray) 2--Oshawa, Jankowski i VEEeRIO) iin ccna. 18:30 Penalties--DeJordy, Thomas, Le- | {lich (2), Joss, Skov, Zorica, Hass, Second Period 3--Oshawa, Delvecchio (Jan- kowski, Dedordy) Penalties -- Jankowski, Joss. OE Pog; Turner, Third Period { 4--Windsor, Skov (Grosse, Hass) 'h ; .5--Oshawa, Samolenko (Boniface, Attersley) 6--Windsor, Brown (Offidani) Penalties -- Delvecchio Thomas, DeJdordy. GUELPH BILTS | "oem. WHIP TEEPEES J HE GAVE UP DENTISTRY FOR GOLF BUT oT/LL KEEPS BUSY IN THE G0 WLAY DEPT. -- WAS 2/Np IN MONEY WON FOR /949 W/TH 24,604.57 AND ETH IN 50 » wTH $18,205. 3:10 | 10:12 18:03 (major), | | | | A CALIFORNIA TOURNEY, MAY BF oFF 70 ONE OF HE BEST YEARS / ~ N.Y. Rangers In Play-0ffs By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer | It appears that the Cinderellas of { the 1950 Stanley Cup playoffs will | have to do it all over again. | New York Rangers, who barely | made a post-season berth last year | but went on to scare the daylights | ! Detroit | T 13 14 17 21 66 1: 10 Future Games Tonight--New oronto ... Montreal .. Boston .... New York . Chicago ... 65 65 65 65 66 York at 198 135 165 172 168 182 161 188 159 270 85 60 59 59 36 Toronto; Boston at Montreal; Chicago at De- troit, Sunday --- Toronto at New York; Montreal at Boston; Detroit at Chi cago. Inkerman Rockets Beat S. Porcupine out of Detroit Red Wings in the! finals, once again find themselves gh the outside of the playoff scram- | e. With a tough nomesanisonie series scheduled with the second- | | place Toronto Maple Leafs this | | week-end, Rangers need an even | | break or better to keep their] chances bright. | At the moment they're tied for | fourth place with Boston Bruins and | a mere point behind the third-place | Montreal Canadiens. But -- and it's | a big but -- Boston and Montreal | have a game in hand. | The Bruins and Canadiens tangle | in another double bill, which could | make one or the other club a lead- | | pipe cinch for one of the playoff | spots. The top-ranking Detroit Red | | Wings and last-place Chicago Black | Hawks also have two meetings sche- | duled. | Rangers, with only a tie to show | for their last three games, and un- | able to beat anyone but the lowly | Hawks in more than a month, have only two games to play after the | Toronto series -- one against the | Hawks, but the other against the | | high-flying Wings. Of course the other clubs have, their troubles too. Canadiens may | be unbeaten in their last five games | SERIES OPENER oiTy LEAGUE fo iors BANTAM GAMES Biltmores last night went one game SOUTH SIMCOE BANTAMS up in their OHA Junior A best-of- five series with St. Chatharines Tee- | 'NOSE OUT NORTH SIMCOE pees with a 7-3 victory before a | but they'll have two games with De- | troit and one with Toronto after | their Boston games -- and the op- position couldn't come much tough- | er. If the Bruins survive the week- ---------- end, they'll meet Toronto twice and | Six more games to the play-offs, | Chicago once. and a few words about the play-offs. Veteran Milt Schmidt, injured | The team finishing in first place | knee and all, will return to the Bos- | ton lineup .after missing Bruins' | ZONE F1 DART "LEAGUE sell-out crowd of 4,200 fans. Second game will be played in. St. Cath- In a City League Bantam game, played Thursday, South Simcoe de- | will receive the Carlings Trop the runner up the Peller Shield, {and the top eight teams will play- 4-0 beating at Detroit 'Thursday night. The big centre, always an in- HA Junior A sched- | Black Hawks, f the best-in=-| arines today. ra 5- Teepees battled Biltmores on even | ne ne Torin two goals, | terms for the first 20 minutes but | pMalachowski, Vaughan and Under- fell rapidly behind after that. Bilt- | wood were the goal-scorers for the | mores led 1-0 at the end of the first | winners with Shildra getting an period, 4-1 at the end of the second | assist on the first goal. Bill Kel- and then outscored Teepees 3-2 in| lington scored on Don Scott's pass the last. |from North Simcoe then Scott | Andy Bathgate scored three goals | helped David Mark to two goals |to pace the Guelph attack. Ronin succession with Taylor getting | Murphy, Ed Kulik, Danny Blair an assist on the third goal. Finally |and Dean Prentice got the others.| Don Scott, the standout for North {Skip Teal, Buddy Boone and Frank | Simcoe, scored the fourth tally | Martin scored for St. Catharines. | with help from David Marks. : | The game wasn't as one-sided as| SOUTH SIMCOE -- Goal, Mel- | the score indicated but Guelph nick; defense, Sholdra and | proved beter around th. goal. Pen- | Vaughan; centre, Tureski; wings, |altjes hurt the Teepees, too, as Hood and Malachowski. Alts; | Guelph scored three goals while | Hercia, McKoney, Henderson, | they had an advantage in man- | Hercia, Yarmola and Underwood. power. | First Period | mer; 1--Guelph, Murphy | centre, Scott; wings, Taylor (Laufman, Henderson) va :28 S | Penalties--Gould, Brown (2), Laut: | Maths. Alls, Read, Drown, | man, Teal, Prentice yk. ea rentice, Lucy | Whittington. | defense, Salter and Kerr; Jobb, | Second Period 2--Guelph, Bathgate (Murphy, Laufman) ; 3--Guelph} Kulik (Prentice, { Guidolin) ..... aaa | 4-8t. Catharines, Teal | (Robertson) ererenaiey 9300 | 5--Guelph, Blair (Dickenson) 15:31 | Penalties--Marshall,. Pilote, How- | eth Murphy. i Thipd Period 6--Guelph, Prentice (Kulik) . WESTMOUNT AND HARMONY IN BANTAM HOCKEY TIE Westmount and Harmony-Thorn- ton's Corners clashed in a Bantam City League hockey game this week, which ended in a 3-3 tie. Vandewater got the first goal for | Westmount, assist Germond on the second and Haynes combined { 5:41 | 7:06 | B. | D. | NORTH SIMCOE -- Goal, Bul- | and | ton, Woods, Hutchison and | | off for the Zone F1 Dart League | spiration to his mates, should give | Trophy. The piayers on this Win- | them a lift even if he isn't skating | ning team will also receive each a |at top speed. { smaller trophy. | Canadiens lost little Norm Dus- The team. finishing in first place | sault for three weeks when the fleet plays the eighth place, second plays | winger broke a small 'bone in his seventh, third plays the sixth, fourth | back in a collision with a goal-post | plays the fifth, the winner of the | during skating pracgice Thursday. {first and eighth plays winner of | | fourth and fifth, winner of second | Mr "OHA" Panter { * {and seventh plays winner of the | third and sixth. This will I i 1 eave | Sings An Old Tune Toronto, March 17 -- (CP) -- | two teams who will play best two- | out-three sets of game., home-and -home games and if a third is nec- | essary, it is to be played on neutral | Rough and illegal play is not going | grounds. to be tolerated in Ontario Hockey Pts. | Association Junior playoffs. ¢7 | George Panter, O.H.A. Business 60 | Manager, served this warning yes- 58 | terday after a meeting last night 52 | with team officials a referees. 52 | "We are not trying slow up the 51 | game," he said, "But if players in- 50 | sist on breaking the rules, they are Ww. . 67 . 33 . 60 Ottawa, March 17 (CP)--Inker- man Rocket juniors last night scored a 4-3 overtime victory be- fore 7,200 fans over 'South Porcu- . pine Combines in the third:game of their opening-round series of the Memorial Cup hockey playoff. The Rockets will carry a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five test in the fourtla game here today. Inkerman took the opening game 3-2 and the Combines the second 9-1. Brian McFarlane, Cliff Baldwin, Jacques Limoges and Denzil Crowd- er counted for the winners while Jack Higgins, Darrel McLaughlin and Jerry - Labelle sniped for the Combines. The services of Rick Albert was lost to South Porcupine when he suffered a dislocated right should- er in a third period crash into the boards. Penalties proved to be the downe fall of the Northern Ontario cham- pions. Crowder scored the pay-off goal at 7:14 of the overtime session on a close-in drive while the Com=- . bines Bub McCord and Bill Need- ham were sitting out tripping pen- alties. Montreal Hoopsters Best Hamilton 52-47 Montreal, March 17 -- (CP) Point St. Charles Olympics of Mon=- treal last night downed Hamilton Lady Ramblers, 52-47, in the first game of a two-game, total-point series for the Eastern Canadian women's basketball championship. Hamilton lead 26-21 at half time. Top scorers for Montreal were Sylvia Ferris, 20; Shirley Griffin, 14, and Betty Bockus, 6. For Ham- ilton, Fern Kemp, 19; Dolores Ross, 17, and Joyce Brennan, 5. The second game takes place here tonight. iw. ¥Shoe 49 | going to be penalized." 46 | He added that too many players 46 recently had suffered severe in- 45 | juries. In the playoff, particular 3 i 40 attention would be given to charg- { it. "B 36 ling, boarding and high-sticking. DAVIDSON'S SHOE STORE 31 SIMCOE N. PHONE 227 |O. R. M. "B" Sqd. ... 28 | | MURPHY BEATS BUCCERONI | New York, March 17 -- (AP) -- | | Stout-hearted Bob Murphy took "CASCADE" CANADIAN ANTHRACITE 7--Guelph, Bathgate { (Theberge, Laufman) . | 8-8t. Catharines, Boone ,... | 9--Guelph, Bathgate | (Laufman, Dickenson) ...., 17:48 | 10--S8t. Catharines, Martin .... 18:02 | Penalties--Robertson, Taylor, How- 'ell, Boone, Young. | Soo And Sudbury Teams Favored In NOSSA Tourney Se Sudbury, Ont., March 17 (CP) -- Sault Ste. Marie Collegiate and Sudbury High School cagers looked like the "teams to beat" aftér the smoke had cleared on the first round of the annual Northern On- tario Secondary Schools Associa- tion basketball tournament here Friday night. The Soo Wildcats impressed a capacity crowd by humbling Cop- per Cliff High 69-17, while Sudbury High came out on the long end of a 46-38 score against St. Jerome's College after a hard-fought battle. But there are two other teams to reckon with. Kirkland Lake Col- legiate topped Sault Ste. Marie Tech 66-34, and Sudbury Tech toppled North Bay Collegiate 60-25 in other first-round matches. est inglividual performer of the f6ur games was speedy Ted Roman of the Kirkland Lake Entry, who played the rebounds with success for a total of 31 points, almost half of his team's total. Sault Collegiate and Sudbury High meet in the opener of to- day's semi-finals, while Kirkland Lake and Sudbury Tech clash in the other bracket, Finals in both the championship and consolation | | | with Knox for their third tally. | everything young Dan Bucceroni | Wallace was the big hero for Har- | could throw last night and then mony -- heé scored all three of their | Wore down the Philadelphia but- IDEAL FOR FURNACE, STOVE OR HEATER NUGGETS ... Per Ton $21.00 tallies, unassisted. Weldon, Layton then Weldon again, along with Fleming of Har- mony, drew down t@e penalties is- | sued in the game. WESTMOUNT -- Goal, Lawson; | defense, Weldon and Haynes; cen- tre, Germond: wings, Sutton and Knox; alts, Vanderwater, Layton, Scott and Morrison, COMBINES -- Goal, Sheather; defense, Wallace and Fleming; cen- tre, Boyce; wings, Hoskin and Shepherdson; alts, Greentree, M. Myers, Giesberger, R. Myers and Sanders. Deer Hunters Can Shoot Either Buck or A Doe Toronto, March 17 --(CP)-- On- tario hunters will be permitted to shoot one deer -- a buck or a doe -- next fall under an amendment to the game and fisheries act intro- duced in the legislature yesterday. Lands Minister Scott said the bill, inn effect, abolishes the so-call- ed "buck-law," which has existed for several years. Elk in Ontario's north country also may be hunted the same as deer. SLAVS EKE WIN Paris, March 17 -- (Reuters) -- Yugoslavia today edged Austria 4-3 | in a group B Consolation game in the World Amateur Hockey Tourna- ment, Want to buy sell or trade? -- A rounds will be played tonight. classified ad and the deal is made, |cher boy to win on a technical | | knockout at 51 seconds on the Madison Square Garden. 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