ee 12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, Jenuery 7, 1965 A BEAR AMONG RANG- ERS! Boston Bruins' Tom Williams (11) waves his stick above his head and skates ee kg away without a backward glance after: slamming puck into net over supine form of New York. Rangers goalie LEAFS DOWN HAWKS Jacques Plante in first period of NHL hockey game in New York's Madison Square Gar- den last night. Other Rangers fore- are Vic Hadfield, left ground, Larry Cahan (5) and Rod Gilbert (7). Jim Neilson (15) comes in at right. Wings Edge Canadiens On Ullman's Late Goal By THE CANADIAN PRESS An unfamiliar face is peering|assists to his record. over Bobby Hull's shoulder in the National Hockey League's goal - scoring race. It belongs to a shifty Detroit centre named Norm Ullman, who appears headed for his best NHL season ever in his 10th year of big league com- petition Uliman has never made the NHL All-Star team, and his 19 ord as runner-up goal-getter look pretty small when com- pared with Bobby's 33. He has 19 assists to go with his 19 goals and ranks third in over-all scoring points, 16 be- hind Hull but only two points away from runner-up Stan Mi- | ta. Ullman closed the gap on Mikita a little tighter Wednes- day night, when he netted the big goal with 18 seconds left to in Montreal. He also added two In the two other games played, Toronto Maple Leafs defeated the Black Hawks 3-1 in Chicago and New York Rangers hammered the visiting into the league cellar with a 5-2) victory. TIGHTEN STANDINGS The results tightened the standings of the four top teams to an eight-point gap from 10. Montreal still leads with 45 and Chicago still holds the run- The Montrealers had started quickly and grabbed a 3-1 lead before the first period was nine minutes old. Ralph Backstrom Richard the other. Alex Delvecchio had scored Boston Bruins a little farther for Detroit at 6:21. Detroit narrowed the gap to 4-3 in the second period, getting goals from Bruce MacGregor and Ron Murphy while Claude Provost scored for Canadiens. Murphy got his second goal of the night at 4:15 of the third period, and the tie lasted until ner-up spot three points behind, but Detroit improved its third-| place standing to 40 points and| Toronto moved up to 37 in| fourth spot. | the cellar-dwelling Bruins 20. game winning streak for the| play and earned the Wings a 5-4 victory over the Canadiens Canadiens. | HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League ' WLT FAPt Montreal 19 9 7107 8445 Chicago 19 13 4115 9142 Detroit 1712 6 97 8740 Toronto 1413 9104 9237 New York 11 18 8 85 108 30 Boston $23 4 7712320 Wednesday's Results Detroit 5 Montreal 4 Toronto 3 Chicago 1 Boston 2 New York 5 | Today's Game | International League Fort Wayne 4 Des Moines 6 Toledo 7 Dayton 1 Eastern League Long Island 2 New Haven 5 Charlotte 5 Jacksonville 5 Nashville 2 Knoxville 3 Western League Seattle 3 Los Angeles 1 Maritime Senior Windsor-Dartmouth 2 New Glas- gow 6 Quebee Senior Drummondville 3 Sherbrooke 6 Ottawa-St. Lawrence Senior Detroit at Boston |Lancaster 7 Kingston 5 American League Eastern Division WLT FAPt Quebec 2412 1138 105 49 Hershey 19 15 2127 105 40 Baltimore 13 18 3122 115 29 Springfield 1222 3105 140 27 Providence 12°22 1. 93.128 25 Western Division Rochester 2410 2128 9250 Buffalo 1912 3116 9841 Pittsburgh Cleveland 9 21 4 94 132 22 Wednesday's Results Providence 4 Cleveland 3 Buffalo 3 Hershey 4 Today's Game Providence at Quebec Central Professional WLT FAPt 3124 8941 Minneapolis 1912 Central New Brunswick Fredericton 3 St. Andrews 10 Southern New Brunswick Lancaster 2 Camp Gagetown 6 Exhibition Lacombe Rockets 8 Czechoslo- vakia Jr, 4 Ottawa Montagnards 11 Mann- heim, Germany 0 vi jwenes| OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS STORIE PARK LEAGUE High Triples -- A. Anderson 841, C. Wil- son 681, B. Amey 675, R. Parson 649, R. | Wood 646, F. Stubbert 642, B. Woodman 642, D. Pearson 636, O. Whitmee 634, J. McLean 620, V Craddock 618, B. Short Jr. 616, L. Locke 616, H. Williams 614, L. Short 613, A. Williams 608 and M, WII liams 600. Omaha 1712 4112106 38) over 200 -- B Short Sr 247, D, Wood Tulsa 1814 2 115 111 38 246, A. Sargent 243, Kane 41, | Knipe 229, 209, G. Powlenchuk 230, A St. Paul 18 12-0113 92 36) Redknapp 225, J. Teravain 224, M. Brooks i ' 90/224, V. Brooks 213, 207, A, Short 211, 200, Memphis ee 2 107 ° j. Whitmee 208, G. Killingbeck 208, 208 St. Louis 721 3 9214117 «. wittsher 207, J. Porter 204, A, Porter urs te 203, C. Nash 203, 220, D. Redknapp 202, Wednesday's Results | 08° and A. Morris 200. Omaha 1 St. Paul 6 |" Standing. -- Cromwells 18, Johnstons |i8, Mills 17, Cuberts 16, Hibberts 13, Minneapolis 4 Tulsa 3 Friday's Games Tulsa at Omaha Minneapolis at Memphis |Montraves 12, Hillsides 10, Burtons 9% |Colleges 9, Simcoes 9 Tresanes 8 and |Oxfords 5. | Jay Cameron and Gar Killingbeck won 'the hidden scores this week. Faster 24-Hour DELIVERY McLaughlin Coal & Supplies -- With our Fleet of -- RADIO-CONTROLLED Delivery Service TRUCKS !! ; Budget Plan - Automatic Weather-Controlled Delivery j 110 KING ST. WEST "Turn To Modern Living With Oil Heat" TELEPHONE 723-3481 | Mckaughlin Coal & Supplies Lid. OSHAWA | goal. | HULL SCORED 33RD | Bobby Hull got his 33rd goal| in the game against Toronto, | Frank Mahovlich. Selby, called up from junior Toronto Marlboros club the second NHI, goal in three got two of the goals and Henri In New York, rookie Lou An- gotti sparked a Rangers rally in the third period that broke a lustre hockey. | Rod Gilbert gave New York ja two-goal margin at the mid- way point and Donnie Marshall wrapped it up with his second goal of the night at 19:36. ton, the first and second periods and 2-2. Phil Goyette scored on a 25- footer for New York in the Ullman bagged the deciding |opening frame and Tom Wil- iams tied it for the Bruins. Then Boston went ahead on Johnny. Bucyk's goal and held the lead until Marshall got his seventh of the season at 19:55. Rangers have 30 points and|but the crippled Leafs handed| The Bruins are at home: to jthe Hawks their second consec-|Detroit in the only. scheduled Ullman's last - minute goaljutive defeat with goals by Bob| game tonight. : in Montreal snapped a four-|Pulford, rookie Brit Selby and|---- NHL LEADERS itor a five-game trial, netted his) By THE CANADIAN PRESS Standings: Montreal, won 19, games during the third period.|jost nine, tied 7, points 45. Hulls' goal came while Kent} Douglas was: serving the third lof four penalties he drew in the jgame, Hull carried the puck the length of the ice, split the Leafs _|defence and put the puck behind Johnny Bower. Points: R, Hull, Chicago 54. Goals: R. Hull, 33. 'Assists; Mikita, Chicago, 28. Shutouts: Crozier, Detroit, 3. Penalties: Mikita, 106 min- utes, 2-2 tie after 40 minutes of lack-| Although dominated by Bos-! ended with the score tied 1-1) wens i ecihigh og age: ' Fe gan a ee . csv sscmenemansene sscnget eres ee a a | By IAN MacLAINE TORONTO (CP)--Prince Ed- ward Island was the only un- beaten rink today after four rounds in the second annual ournament of Cham pions round-robin bonspiel. The Cameron-skipped Ontario high school rink 15-6 in Wednesday's morning round, edged Saskatchewan 5-3 in the afternoon and squeaked out an lextra-end 7-6 win over Ontario in the -- round, Cameron's last two games were decided on the final stone and set the stage for this morn- ing's match with Hee Gervais' Alberta rink. A victory could just about clinch first place for the P.E.I, foursome in the tour- nament which concludes sched- 'luled play tonight. The top four teams after seven rounds of action enter Friday afternoon's semi-finals and compete for $5,000 in mer- chandise which goes to the win- * \ner of Friday night's final. | |TAKES FIRST LOSS In other fourth - round play, Alberta fell from the unbeaten ranks in a 7-6 cliff-hanger to Hersh Lerner's Manitoba rink from Winnipeg; Ernie Richard- son's Saskatchewan rink drubbed the 1964 world and Cameron's P.E.I. Rink eads Curling Classic quartet trounced the Northern|™ jagainst Northern Ontario, Sas- katchewan playing the U.S. and Manitoba facing P.E.I. The round-robin matches con- clude thig evening with North- ern ¢ Saskatche- w lanitoba f. Ontario, laying P.E.1, and the U.S. eeting Alberta, 4 Although it was the last to finish, the P.E.1.-Ontario game kept most of the 2,690 fans glued to their seats until the final rock Wednesday night. DRAW SHOT GOOD Cameron drew a_ standing ovation when he drew his final stone to the inside of the four- foot circle to offset Ontario's shot rock, which was frozen against another Island at the Pag edge of the eight-foot cir- cle. The Alberta - Manitoba match also went to the last stone when Gervais, in a position where a double take-out was. necessary to tie the score, managed to re- move just one stone and suf- fered his first loss of the tour- nament. ' The Richardson rink had only token opposition from Dagg's quartet, whose only win going into today's play was over the high school entry from North- ern Ontario, Alberta and Manitoba were Canadian champ hip rink from Vancouver, skipped by Lyall Dagg, 11-6, and the 1964 Canadian high school cham- pions from Kirkland Lake, skipped by Bob Ash, won their first game as Northern Ontario took a 9-6 decision over Bob Magie's United States cham- pionships from Duluty, Minn. In addition to the .Alberta- P.E.I. meeting other fifth round play pits Northern Ontario against Manitoba, Saskatche- wan with Ontario, and B.C, against the U.S. The sixth round has B.C. meeting Ontario, Alberta | NHL BIG SEVEN | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Phil Goyette of New York moved right up among the Na- tional Hockey League's scoring leaders Wednesday night when he clicked for a goal and two assists in the Rangers' 5-2 vic- ltory over the visiting Boston Bruins. Goyette, who had been in a |four-way tie for 10th spot in the scoring race, jumped into an- other four-way deadlock for sixth place. In other Wednesday night |games, scoring leader Bobby \Hull of Chicago got his 33rd goal for a total of 54 points, \third - ranked Norm Ullman of Detroit netted a goal and two lassists for a 38 total and Claude Provost of Montreal picked up a goal but remained in fourth spot- with 34. THE LEADERS: ......:...- G A Pts. R. Hull, Chicago 33 21 54 |Mikita, Chicago 12 28 40 )Ullman, Detroit 19 19 38 |Provost, Montreal 13 21 34 Esposito, Chicago 14 18 32 Gilbert, New York 17 12 20 Howe, Detroit 9 20 29 Goyette, New York 7 22 29 Pilote, Chicago 227 2 OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE TONI semi-annual STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE GHT till TOMORROW till 9 p.m. SATURDAY till 6 p.m. FOR 3 DAYS ONLY DOVER'S ENTIRE STOCK OF TOP QUALITY MEN'S WEAR AT REDUCTIONS OF | 10% ° 40% Come in now and choose from Dover's | large stock of better men's wear. | AND REMEMBER "YOU'RE WELCOME TO CHARGE IT" Bvev}) OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 9 p.m. Remember When? ... By THE CANADIAN PRESS The New York State Ath- letic Commission with- drew recognition of heavy- weight champion Max Schmeling 34 years ago to- day--in 1931--when the Ger- man refused to sign for a return bout with Jack Sharkey. Sharkey, who had lost to Schmeling on a foul the previous summer, fi- nally met the champion in 8-1 entering the final day. of| play with and MONTAGNARDS WIN 11-6 Saskatchewan them were Northern Mannheim Cityjat Augsburg. 11-0 7 -- hockey MANNHEIM, West Germany|34me. 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