14 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, February 25, 1957 HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS KINGSTON FOURTH Dunlops Win Twice, Week-End Road Trip By THE CANADIAN PRESS Butch Martin, Jerry Theberge | There were no last - minute George Scholes, Jim Robertson shuffles during the weekend as|and Jack Taylor scored for the Ontario's top senior hockey Dutchies. , Mickey Roth, Tommy leagues 'ended their regular sched- Walker and Bud Kemp were the ules and looked toward playoffs. Stratford marksmen. Detroit NOHA Senior A Southern Group Final Standing WLT By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WLT F A Pls. 321511171126 75 2919 11 176 130 69 28 21 10 161 151, 22 27 10 153 187 18 28 13 136 159 14 33 11 139 183 Saturday's Results New York 1 Montreal 4 Boston 5 Toronto 2 Detroit 3 Chicago 4 Sunday's Results Montreal 3 New York 4 F A Pis. 33 25 2 234 202 Sault, Ont. 28 28 4 208 247 , Sudbury 27 30 3 209 164 Sault, Mich. 24 34 2 228 265 Saturday's Results {Sudbury 1 North Bay 2 Sault, Mich. 6 Sault, Ont. 10 Sunday's Result |Sault, Ont. 8 Sault, Mich, 8 | Tuesday's Game Sudbury at Sault, Ont North Bay Chicago Windsor Bulldogs won the west- REID SCORES TWICE ern division of the Ontario Hockey Association's senior A series, beat- ing last-place Owen Sound Mer- curies 7-2 Sunday for a three-point advantage over Kitchener-Water- loo Dutchmen. In games Saturday, Kitchener downed Stratford Indians, who fin- ished fourth, 5-3, and Owen Sound, taking only its ninth win of the season, downed the third - place Chatham Maroons 5-2. DUNLOPS WIN TWO Whitby Dunlops won two week- end games, 5-2 over Pembroke Lumber Kings and 2-1 over Corn- wall Chevvies to lead the eastern division by 14 points over Corn- wall. Kingston CKLC's whipped Belleville McFarlands 5-3. North Bay Trappers, with a 2-1 win over Sudbury Wolves, won the championship of the Northern On- tario Hockey Association Senior A At Owen Sound, Jerry Reid had two goals for Mercs, singles going to Buck Forslund, Jack Stoddard and Frank Bergeron. Jim Con- nelly and Copper Leyte scored the | Chatham goals. At Cornwall Sunday, Bob Atters- ley and Bus Gagnon scored for Whitby, Larry Kwong for Chev- vies. Ted O'Connor had two goals for Dunlops at Pembroke, singles coming from Jack Armstrong, Tom O'Connor and Gordie Myles. Nobby Clarke and Jack Giese brecht tallied for Kings. At Kingston, Mike Bukacheski scored two for the winners, singles going to Hub Macey, Ralph Bu- chanan and Roy Partridge. Minnie Menard, John Muretich and Keith McDonald tallied for Belleville. TWO SCORE THREE APIECE Bob Barlow and George Gosse-| lin were the North Bay marks- Toronto 2 Detroit 1 Boston 3 Chicago 4 Wednesday's Game Chicago at New York American League WLT F Providence Cleveland Rochester Hershey Buffalo 31 1 168 215 Springfield 14 32 4 149 222 Saturday's Results Jjershey 5 Cleveland 2 uffalo 1 Providence 5 Rochester 6 Springfield § Sunday's Results Hershey 2 Buffalo 8 Springfield 2 Providence ¢ Cleveland 1 Rochester 4 Wednesday's Game |Buffalo at Springfield OHA Senior A A Pis. 65 61 61 53 | Barrie (First game of round offs) OHA Junior A WLT F Guelph 3511 8227 138 Marlboros 33 13 2 173 122 St. Michael's 22 21 5 185 172 Hamilton 23 25 2 163 185 t. Cath 2225 2173 185 g | xOttawa 2 0 | Pete ( |x-plays for Laurier Cup only | Saturday's Results Peterborough 2 St. Catharines 5 Sunday's Results |St. Catharines 4 St. Michael's 1 to take the world and olympic Guelph 2 Marlboros 2 | Monday's Games |¢t. Michael's at Hamilton {Barrie at Peterborough SATURDAY Western League Calgary 0 Seattle 8 Brandon 4 New Westminster 1 'robin play- A Pts. 73 68 countries and Japan, who have en- Hl "3115 66 37|vakia, Finland, Austria, Poland 235 2135202 26 10 39 1 127228 21° men. Billy Watson tallied for the outhern group by eight points prs Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Grey-| Wolves. At Soo, Ont, Cleland hounds. | Mortson and Ron Rubic each fired | Hounds won both their weekend |three goals for Hounds. John Lum- | games over Sault Ste. Marie, |ley Mich., Indians, 10-6 and 8-3. {Burton each one. PORKIES FIGHT BACK Gordie Heale, I The semi-finals continued in the Eddie Joss, Ray Ceresino, Garry Porcupine Mines Senior League. | Sharp and Joe Malo scored for the South Porcupine Porkies dumped Indians. Abitibi Eskimos 4-1 to cut Abitibi's | Sunday in the U lead to 2-1 in the best-of set: and Kapuskasing Huskies Hounds, with Pete Horeck, Butch 1 their set at 2-2 by down-|Ratchford, Lyall Wiseman and | Sr en Flyers 7-6 y |Ron Rubic adding singles. Heale, At Windsor, Frank Bathgate,|Sharp and Gary Bird tallied for Bob Brown, Earl Keyes, Pete [the losers. . Pilote, Gord Haidy, Walt Pawly-| At South Porcupine, Frank But shyn and Lou Bendo counted for |ler, Lino Dimarchi, Doug Hunter | the champion Bulldogs. Ted Reidland Gordie McGinn scored for | and Jack Stoddart c: Owen Sound. 'the lone Abitibi marker. Whitby Cornwall had two, Don McLean and Bob [Belleville Kingston Laurie Peterson, |Pembroke ixOttawa [x-Not eligible for playoffs .S., Lumley and Whitby 5 Pembroke 2 _seven | John Bailey each scored twice for |Belleville 3 Kingston 5 ounted for | Porkies. Tatter McLellan counted | Windsor Kit-Wat Chatham | Stratford {Owen Sound F A Pis..Edmonton 3 Winnipeg 6 3216 2269 177 66| Saskatchewan Junior 24 21 4178 179 52 Humboldt 6 Melville 8 21 25 5420 201 47 Flin Flon 8 Saskatoon 3 19 26 5 195 238 42/Regina 2 Prince Albert 8 1529 4154214 34 International League 11 5 2 69 60 24 Cincinnati 3 Indianapolis 1 | Troy 1 Toledo 3 Fort Wayne 1 Huntington § Central Alberta {Red Deer 5 Ponoka 7 Western Intercollegiate Manitoba U. 4 Alberta U. 12 Eastern Intercollegitae Toronto 4 McGill 5 | Okanagan Senior OHA Senior A Kelowna 4 Kamloops 5 Western Division (Kamloops leads best - of - seven W LT F A Pts. semifinals 2-0) 32 17 3 214 152 67 Vernon 3 Penticton 2 30 15 4 246 194 64| (Best-of-seven semi-finals 28 22 2218 183 58/2-2) 2620 5219211 57) = Western International 943 1156 314 19 Trail 2 Nelson 6 Saturday's Results Eastern Division WLT Saturday's Results Sunday's Result Whitby 2 Cornwall 1 Tuesday's Game Pembroke at Whitby tied pl Russia, with V, Alexandrov scor- 57ing four goals, routed Japan 16-0 50 and Sweden 'defeated East Ger- (Trail leads best-of-seven semi- Woore, Montreal Russia And Sweden| Win Opening Games MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia and Sweden scored easy victories in the opening games of the world t hockey ch ionshi many 11-1 with Nils Nilsson con- tributing three of the goals in Sunday games. Playing in a late evening snow- storm in Dynamo stadium, Cze- choslovakia overwhelmed Austria 9-0 after getting off to a 4-0 lead lin the first Litzenberger And Nesterenko parking Black Hawks Spurt Life is stirring at the bottom of the National Hockey League, Chicago Black Hawks, in hiber- nation since early fall, show signs of awakening from their long sleep. Whether it's a genuine re- juvenation, a general slackening off by the rest of the league or just the law of averages working in their favor, the Hawks don't look like patsies from here on. A smouldesing revival burst into full flame during the weekend when they won their first back-to- back games of the season. They didn't do it the easy way either. Saturday they edged league-lead- ing Detroit Red Wings 4-3 and Sunday beat third-place Boston Bruins by the same score. Hawks were the only team fo get a full four points out of week- end action. Montreal Canadiens riod. The Uni States and Canada, second and third respectively in the 1956 world and olympic cham- | pionships, are not peting, leav- ling Russia to face six European tered for the first time, The other countries are Sweden, Czechoslo- {and East Germany. Russia first competed in the world championship in 1954 and won the title by beating Canada won 4-1 over New York Rangers in the deciding game, Saturday at home but lost 4-3 to Canada reversed the placings in|the Rangers in New York Sunday. 1955, but the Russians came back| Bruins trounced Toronto Maple Leafs 5-2 in Toronto Saturday, then lost in Chicago Sunday, and Leafs pulled an upset Sunday by Wings in Detroit. TWO BIG REASONS Two players are probably the big reason behind Chicago's spurt, which has given them three wins in their last four games. titles at Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy, [during last year's winter Olym- | pics, * HOCKEY'S BIG 7 By THE CANADIAN RRESS Gordie Howe of Detroit scored a goal and two assists during the weekend to cling to his two-point lead in the N ation al Hockey Leagué scoring race over line-| mate Ted Lirdsay. Howe boosted his points total to| 77 .but Lindsay, who also had a goal and two assists stayed right {on his heels with 5 points. The |twe Detroit stars pulled one point {further ahead of third-place Jean Beliveau of Montreal, who had a goal and an assist to increase his | total to 69. The leaders: Howe, Detroit Lindsay, Detroit Beliveau, Montreal | Bathgate, New York Litzenberger, Chicugo G. A Pts 38 39 77 | 28 47 78 28 41 69 21 36 57 27 2% 28 22 Ed Litzenberger and Eric Nes- terenko have been the most prom- inent names wins. Litzenberger has been going well all season, but his conversion to centre from right wing--when right-winger Nesterenko came out of retirement to play weekend in most Chicago games with the Hawks--has done wonders for the 24.year-old. And for Hawks. Since Nesterenko began mixing week-day schooling at the Univer- sity of Toronto with holiday hockey they've won five and tied four of 14 weekend games. Big Ed, the Calder rookie tro- phy winner in 1955, scored three goals in the two Chicago wins--his 25th, 26th and 27th--and seems assured of hitting 30 in the .12 games left. Nesterenko collected assists on two of those goals. Saturday the tall centre scored the winner over Detroit with 50 scoreless first period. it at 6:50 of second 28th goal this year. Armstrong carom goal 11:48 of Toronto win. It was win in 10 days. ed post and past the third pe! scorers were Glen Skov, Hec La- lande, and Forbes Kennedy. Gordie Howe scored in the third to tie the game after Hawks went ahead 3-2, but that was all for Detroit. Red Kelly hit for his 10th of the year in the first period and Alex Delvecchio, centring Howe and Ted Lindsay, got his 11th in the second. Sunday the Hawks slammed in three first period goals past Bos- ton's Don Simmons and added one in the second period to wrap up their scoring. Bruins scored. one in each period. ' jot his first of the Litzenberger night after Nick Mickoski opened day and then 13,128 fans saw them score two in less than a inute of the middl ion and add another pair in the third. Half the fans left midway through the third, the rest stayed to boo. Leo Labine, Johnny Peirson, Vic Stasiuk, Louis Mohns and Chevrefils were the Boston marks- men, taking advantage of some sloppy Leaf work. Bob Pulford and Rudy Migay scored for Leafs. Sunday Leafs' Ed. Chadwick played some of his best hockey this season blocking 39 of 40 De- t troit shots, while the Leaf defence, the scoring at 1:03. Eddie Machur (a much-maligned lot, kept Howe took the other. For Boston it was|in fairly close check. Cal Gardner, Real Chevrefils and| The game was tight all the way Don McKenney. as Wings, who usually play fast Big Jean Beliveau was assured and loose with Toronto, d ad What Makes by his doctors Saturday that he|tired and suffered the hoots and doesn't have any mysterious dis-| whistles of 13,878 Detroit fans. ease, but the news didn't really | Old Ted Kennedy got the third sink in until Sunday. {goal of his comeback after a Saturday, before 14,327 fans in Montreal, he didn't get a point. Dave Creighton gave New York a brief 1-0 lead in the first period then Montreal poured on the coal as Dickie Moore tied it just before the period ended and gave the Habitants a 2-1 lead in the second. He has 28 goals this season. Maur- ice Richard with his 26th and Phil Goyette, just up from Montreal Royals, got two third-period goals to finish the Rangers off. BELIVEAU SCORES Sunday, for 15,925 New York fans, Beliveau scored his 28th goal and assisted on another but the Rangers, allowing Montreal to tie it twice and go ahead briefly in the third, had no intention of {dropping both games. Bernie Geof- frion, another Habitant just off the sick list, got his 13th of the year and Bert Olmstead got the other. Andy Bathgate, who has been in something of a slump, got the win- ner for Rangers at 10:24 of the third period. Dean Prentice scored in the first, Creighton added his 14th in the second and little Ron Murphy got his fourth of the year to tie the game and set the stage The racking cough that often follows a cold can be 'hard to shake off' at this time of the year. So don't wait for it to get deeply established. As soon as any member of the family shows signs of developing a cough . . . reach for the Pinex bottle. There's no quicker relief. The very first spoonful of Pinex Cough Syrup goes soothingly to work. It lessens the distressing tickle and eases the soreness of inflamed for the win. Bruins were down 2-1 in the NEVER NEGLECT A CONCENTRATED or READY- BRUAR! COUGH membranes. In no time have the cough under co Buy Pinex in the concent' form for home mi economy or as conve ready-to-take Prepared F Your druggist has both. seconds left. Earlier Chicago second period at Toronto Satur- OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDA REMODEL IN TIME FOR SPRING WEARING! COMPLETE SERVICE... Remodelling, Cleaning, Storage. finals 3-1) " {Rossland 2 Spokane 3 M. Richard, Montreal (Spokane leads best - of - seven semi-finals 2-1) ™ |chatham 2 Owen Sound 5 Stratford 3 Kitchener 5 Sunday's Result Owen Sound 2 Windsor 7 26 24 Cornwall And Belleville Agree On Playoff Dates CORNWALL (CP)--Playoff ar- The Cornwall-Beileville series rangements were discussed by|cpens in Cornwall Wednesday, | representatives of teams of the March 6. Other games are Belle- Ontario Hockey Association senior ville, March: 8; Cornwall, Sunday, A eastern division at a league March 10; Belleville, Tuesday, meeting here Sunday. March 12; Cornwall, Thursday, The league voted to send part of March 14; Belleville, Frida y.| Pembroke's share in the league March 15; and ornwall, Sunday, | pool to the Lumber Kings March |March 17. 4 provided the Pembroke team| Cornwall's Sunday games will| fulfills its duties to the league.|start at 2:30 p.m.. while Friday | To qualify for the sum, Kings night contests in Belleville open| must gress a ful team of Pid at 3 p= All other games are players for each of their four re-|<lated to start at 8 p.m. | maining games two of which are| Semi-finals and Ho will be Loans up to $2500--up te 30 months to repay on loans over $500 on the road. hest-of-seven series. final | 1% SIMCOE ST., N., 2nd Fl. (Over Bank of Nova Scotia), SHAWA Playoff dates for the semi-final 11%$ COE ST. N, (Over Bank of Nova Scotia), series between second-place Corn-| wall Chevvies and third . place| NHL LEADERS OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT -- PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS Belleville McFarlands were com-| pleted, but Whitby Dunlops and] Kingston CKLC's were unable to| Standing: Detroit, won 32, lost agree. 15, tied 11; points, 75. : Kingston wil be hampered b|pojniy Howe. Detrolt, 77 the Canadian curling champion-| . . H ships to be held in the Kingston| Goals: Howe, 38. ! arena the week of March 4. when| Assists: Lindsay, Detroit, 47. the playoffs are due to start.| Shutouts: Plante, Montreal, 7. Managers of both teams expect to! Penalties Fontinato, New York, | settle the matter today. 122 minutes. GET AHEAD WITH A || I= | ) N | BILL CLEAN-UP LOAN! » Pay leftover seasonal bills and reduce high monthly pay- ments with a prompt loan here. We like to say "Yes!" when you ask for a loan. Phone for your loan in one visit, or come in. hd NEW NAME! Personal Finance Co. 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