{ | | | | % COACH ABEL CONGRATULATES HOWE ON HIS 1000TH NHL GAME Leafs Win Twice, Tie Habs At Top By LAURENT CHIASSON | bg " and Boston 11. -- a | Keon and Nevin, both 20-goal|Head's fine work kept the score Dave oe, Pe pes : gil scorers in their freshman year|down. rcths conkettina thes pomdin: are "smarter players than they) Marcel Bonin got two of the second - year malady known as|WeTe Jast season according to|Montreal goals, both in the sec- a couhaoute jinx y King Clancy, Toronto's assistant 'ond_ period. Canadiens got sin- ; ee manager-coach. gles from Bernie (Boom Boom) They're producing for Toronto "That sophomore jinx doesn't|Geoffrion, Henri Richard and 116 points while Detroit has 15)the play throughout and only er- Maple Leafs this season just aS\ean a thing anyway," adds|Billy Hicke in the third. Claude| they did in 1960-61 when they second drew : 'bay Clancy. "Keon and Nevin have|Provost, the league's ranked as the National Hockey! more confidence this year be-|highest point - getter, League eng a kas cause they know, what they can three assists. Both played prominent roles'do in this league." during the weekend as Maple ' |MAKES 20 SAVES _ | Toronto was in complete com-| Montreal goaltender Jacques Leafs won twice to grab a share) mand of its game against New of first place in the NHL stand-|yo.. but couldn't score until|r/2nte made 20 saves -- most 13:02 of the second period. Ed- of them easy -- for' his: firet St. Mike's Blank Whitby Mohawks By GERRY BLAIR In a dull, listless contest yes- terday afternoon at Maple Leaf Gardens, St. Michael's College Majors whitewashed Whitby Mo- hawks, 6-0 with comparative ease. The Irish regained . the OHA Metro Junior "'A" league lead, after relinquishing it to Marlborgs last Friday night, dropping a 4-0 four-pointer to Broda's' crew at St. Michael's College arena. After compiling a comfortable 3-0 margin in the first period, the Irish were content to play cat - and - mouse with the Mo- hawks, who could muster only 22 shots at netminder Gary Smith. St. Michael's took advantage of Whitby penalties, to score half their total while the Mo- hawks were shorthanded. The line of Rod Seiling, Mike Corbett, and Gary Dineen, up) from St. Michael's Buzzers, On-| tario Junior "B" winners last} vear, accounted for four goals--| Corbett fired a pair. Defence-} man Barry MacKenzie added two also. Dineen and Seiling were in on MacKenzie's first tally. In the opening frame, Dineen, Seiling and MacKenzie got the Irish off to a flying start. There was considerable controversy among by-standers and club of- ficials when MacKenzie fired) his first of two in the dying min-| utes of the initial period. Whitby were shorthanded at the time when the Irish started a four- man rush, Pete Shearer hooked one of the Majors coming out of his own end, and referee Joe Sadler raised his arm to indi- cate a delayed call. But, as we} mentioned, MacKenzie managed} to finish off the play before one} the puck to halt play. (It looked of the Whitby players touched|Smith; defence, ordered Shearer to the penalty|lin, Champagne, Dineen, Cor- bett, Watson, Therian, Walton. WHITBY -- goal, Perani; de-| fence, Stewart, Tripp, Bobbie, Watts, Carnegie; forwards, Tran, Luke, Shearer, Smith, Ko- walski, McCullough, Dowe, Col- lins. box. The smozzle was cleared later at the end of the period when those concerned were informed that rule 34B, installed just this season, states that if the de- fending team have a man in the box, and a delayed penalty is also forthcoming, regardless 'of whether or not a goal is scored on the ensuing play, the penal- ized player must serve his of- fence because the man already in the sin-bin returns to the ice at the time the goal is scored. (Clear as mud?). SHORT NOTES -- Toronto Marlboros blew a 2-1 second period lead, and dropped a 3-2 verdict to the Guelph Biltmores in the "nothing" game as part of the weekly twin-bill at the Gardens ... Whitby remained in third place, three points back| of the Marlies The Mo-) hawks host the vastly improved) Brampton Seven-Ups on Tues- day night (tomorrow) in the Whitby Community. arena. Un- doubtedly the Whitby club would) like to settle the score with the Seven-Ups after absorbing that humiliating 11-3 loss 10 days ago in Brampton ... St. Mikes, in chalking up their fifth win in six games in Metro league play, | did so without two top defence-| men, Tom Polonic and Ray Du- Pont ... The smallest turnout of the season, 2,200 witnessed vesterday's lifeless doublehead- er. Guelph, with an unimpress- ive record to date, probably ac- counted for most of the decline in attendance -- and of course when the games mean. nothing ; |in Metro league standings, there isn't too much*to get excited about for the Toronto followers. ST. MICHAEL'S goal, Clancy, Mos- McKendry; dell, MacKenzie, 1. St. Mike's: Dineen 2. St. Mike's: Seiling 3, St. Mike's: MacKenzie Penalties: MacKenzie .36, Col- lins 4.40, Therien 10.36, McCul-| lough 15.44, Shearer 16.57, St. Michael's bench penalty (served by Walton) 18.12, Kowalski 19.16. 4. St. Mike's: Corbett Penalties -- MacKenzie 5.45, Smith 8.11, Champagne (2) 17.60, MacKen- zie 18.00, Luke 18.33. 5. St. Mike's: Corbett 6. St. Mik Penalties -- Corbett 3.37,) Champagne (minor and migcon-} duct) 7.29, Collins 8.50, Shearer! 12.50, MacKenzie 17.04, Shearer 18.43. I POACHING PROTESTED ves LONDON (Reuters) -- The) English Football League Sun-) season play. day protested alleged poaching attempts by a Canadian soccer' team. League Secretary Alan Hard- aker said a protest has been made to the Canadian Soccer Association because Hamilton, Steelers soccer team of Canada made direct approaches to Eng- lish players, apparently for off- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 27, 1961 ]3 the new Moscow school for run- International soccer rules say) ners. such approaches must be made to the owning club. FAVORITE LOSES ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Arthir . KITS RETURNS Ashe Jr. held off a late rally MOSCOW (AP) -- Vladimir)by first - seeded Cliff Buchholz Kuts, Russia's- great distance|Sunday and successfully de- runner who has been out of the|fended his U.S. national junior sports picture for several years| indoor tennis championship with has been appointed director ofian 8-6, 6-4, 9-11, 11-9 victory. ist Period (Corbett) (McKendry) (Dineen, Sciling) ..... 16.57) + Beautify your home the modern, func- tional way; clean, durable ASPHALT DRIVEWAYS last a housetime. Inquire now. , 2nd Period | (Dineen, MacKenzie) 10.42 Kowalski ~ 12.25, 3rd Period (Dineen, Seiling) 8: Mac (MacMillan) ... vooe 11.39 onzie «++ 16.10 \\ to us that a Mohawk rearguard|ards, Seiling, MacMillan, Con- had touched the puck amidst a|~ scramble in front of Perani.) In- Yeu. maon..any ily stead of the goal nullifying the delayed penalty as has been the ratic shooting, at times, andicase in past games, Sadler still) | SPORTS CALENDAR | TODAY'S GAMES HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- City League Bantam -- Local 2784 vs Scugog Cleaners, at p.m.; Police Assoc. | 205, 6.00 p.m.; Houdaille Indus-! tries vs Civitan, 7.00 p.m.; Coca- Cola vs Westmount Kiwanis, Keon and his linemates--idie Shack got the first goal. shutout this season. It also was George Armstrong and Dick Then Keon, Armstrong and Duff Flante 8 50th shutout in 450 NHL Duff -- were standouts Satur-ltook over and kept New York/®*™°S- : | day night when Maple Leafs!goalie Lorne (Gump) Worsley; At New York, Canadiens got) routed New York Rangers 6-0)hopping the rest of the way. their two goals in less than two} at Toronto. Keon and Arm- , 5 ? minutes during the second pe-| strong each scored twice and I Veteran Johnny Bower of the riod. Ralph Backstrom and) Duff once. Keon and Duff nl lhe i Dickie. Moore were the scorers. | Defenceman Al Langlois, in| picked up two assists and ATM-| nyally to the goalie who plays ' ; | strong one. the most games for the team |the first, and left winger Dean} > 7 z tice, in the second, were JCORES FIRST GOAL jthat allows the fewest goals--|*rentice, in 3 ' Sunday night at Boston, Nevin had to make 23 stops for his New York's marksmen. | scored the first goal and set up|!6th NHL shutout and first of another shortly after for Frank the season. Bower also is lead-|beaten streak to five games--| Mahovlich and Leafs never ing in this season's Vezina race.|two wins and three draws. Ran- looked back as they downed the cellar - dwelling Bruins 4-1. Montreal Canadiens, tied with Leafs for top spot, also went! undefeated during the weekend. Saturday night on home ice, the Habs had too much all - round Fant nit finesse for the Bruins as they ee hovlich's skated to a 5-0 triumph. Cana-|_ Le a ae diens, however, had to settle for 24™e - Winner this season, tops/Bronco Horvath a 2-2 draw at New York Sun-|" the league. Big M has 10)Norm Ullman got Detroit's lone day night ae nae tally in the first. ne ae efenceman Bobby Baun and} Detroit's Gordie Howe was In the. weekend's only other|rorward Ron Stewart got the|playing in a record - breaking game, Chicago Black Hawks yooes oth aikecs got spectacular goaltending nied. J er markers in the/1,000th NHL game. He put on a from Glenn Hall in whipping De-| ofrorts 4 as tole Had Wines 41 Sundayl* forts. Baun stole the puck in|but Hall held him scoreless. r jthe Boston end.and scored at} The record Howe snapped was night. : _. |6:16. Stewart poked one into an|set two years ago by retired The Leafs get preferential bill-|empty Boston net after goalie/Ted Lindsay, a former linemate 3:37 of the first period. About|beaten string snapped at Tor- nine minutes later he stole the|onto Saturday. puck from Boston deSnceman| The Hawks, winning only their Pat Stapleton and passed to Ma-/fifth game in 19 starts, got a hovlich who scored what proved'goal from defenceman Pierre to be the winning goal from 10) Pilote in the first, another from sixth singles from Ron Murphy and ing for first place because they|Don Head had been removed for|who wound up a 16 + year car-| § have two more wins than Cana-ja sixth attacker in the game's|eer with the Hawks. diens. Toronto has 27 points on'final minute. | Hall turned in one of his best 13 victories, six losses and one| Bower was deprived of a séc-|performances of the season for| tie while Montreal's 27 points'ond shutout in as many nights|the Hawks. At one point during are made up of 11 victories,;when Don McKenney, Bruins|the second period, Wings kept! § five defeats and five ties. |top scorer, got a power - play|the puck in the Chicago zone New York, in first place be-|goal at 15:41 of the middle pe-|for almost two minutes with Ull- fore weekend games, droppediriod. {man getting three good shots at to third but is only one point} Boston was lucky it didn't get)the Chicago net, two of them in behind Canadiens and Leafs.|a worse beating at Montreal/rapid succession. In all, Chicago now ranks fourth with'Saturday. Canadiens controllediturned back 33 Detroit shots. HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS 7 6 5 67 6519 79 2 51 5416 45 27S. S. Marie 213 4 56 88 8 56 27) Saturday's Results 62 26/Sault Ste. Marie 1 Kingston 3 50 16) Sudbury 5 Kitchener 3 2 = Sunday's Results » **/Kingston 4 Hull-Ottawa 6 .../Sault Ste. Marie 3 North Bay 5 OHA Senior WLT 10 Sudbury ; Western League A Pt|North Bay Northern Division WaLitF 13 5 1 77 910 1 80 Calgary 710 2 66 Vancouver 411 2 43 Southern Division | WLT F Portland 15 5 0 78 | Spokane 11 6 1 60 t/San Francisco 712 0 49 37 21\Los Angeles 512 1 51 45 19) Saturday's Results 39 18/Calgary 3 San Francisco 4 39 12) Seattle 2 Portland 4 47 10| Edmonton 2 Spokane 3 Yb a 4 Sunday's Results 50 6)Calgary 1 Portland 4 63 5)San Francisco 4 Los Angeles 5 66 0) SATURDAY : | Eastern League Johnstown 3 Greenboro 8 Knoxville 2 Charlotte 4 National League Wit 70 79 69 45 13 6 1 1155 10 6 6 5 8 6 Toronto Montreal New York Chicago Detroit 611 3 51 Boston 413 3 53 Saturday's Results Boston 0 Montreal 5 New York 0 Toronto 6 Sunday's Results Montreal 2 New York 2 Toronto 4 Boston 1 Detroit 1 Chicago 4 American League é Eastern Division Waterloo WLT F APt Stratford 13.5 1 83 46 27|Chatham 12 6 0 68 4424) 5armni Providence 1011 0 74 7120 St- Thomas id Quebec 615 0 49 7312) Saturday's Results Western Division |Waterloo 3 Sarnia 2 LT F APtiChatham 2 Strathroy 5 . sc a 1210 0 67 7824| Woodstock 6 Galt 5 Bog ty bbc a 10 6 0 50 5120 Sunday's Results | sslotcn § Taconite itasedoniens & Buffalo 910 0 56 58 18|Stratford 3 Waterloo 9 Wester theradtenal Pittsburgh 413 1 41 67 9/Strathroy 2 Windsor 5 |Kimherley 9 Rossland $ Saturday's Results OHA Junior A \Trail 5 Nelson 3 Providence 3 Cleveland 1 | WLT F APt) SUNDAY Buffalo 2 Hershey 9 |Hamilton 12 74 38 26) Thunder Bay Senior Rochester 1 Springfield 13 |Montreal 8 56 36 16] port Arthur 5 Fort William 2 Sunday's Results St. Catharines 4 45 5310) Moose Jaw 0 Medicine Hat 2 Rochester 4 Providence 3 Niagara Falls 3 41 44 8} Ontario Junior B Pittsburgh 3 Quebec 5 Peterboro 4 30 52 8| Owen Sound 6 HaYnilton 8 Eastern Professional Guelph 3 47 70 8 Eastern League WLT F Saturday's 27\ Niagara 22 | Edmonton Seattle rT Ar 83 73 80 44 | Strathroy 1 1 0 0 0 44 1 0 1 | Windsor Galt Woodstock 48 37 Springfield 36 Hershey NAN NURUwD Rochester Cleveland A Pt Result Charlotte 2 Knoxville 4 12 4 3 74 50 Falls 1 St. Catharines,4| Philadelphia 3 New Haven 4 54 Sunday's Result Johnstown 2 Greensboro 4 Kitchener Kingston 10 6 2 63 Bobby Hull in the second and|§ in the third.|§ riod, both on unassisted|usual fine effort for the Wings! @ Hall] } 8.00 p.m.; and Local 1817 ys Canadian Tire, 9.00 p.m. \W OHA Intermediate Lakeshore) League -- Napanee at Uxbridge,| 8.30 p.m, | | GAMES FOR TUESDAY HOCKEY OHA Metro Junior "A" Brampton Seven-Ups vs Whitby Mohawks, at Whitby Community Arena, 8.30 p.m. | Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- City The tie ran Montreal's un-| League Bantam -- B'Nai B'Rith Kinsmen \vs Duplate, at 8.30 p.m.; City) jLeague Midget -- Kinsmen vs} At Boston, Nevin scored at\gers had a seven - game un- Rotary, at 9.30 p.m. Both games Osh. Dairy at Oshawa Children's Arena. | OHA Junior "C'" -- Uxbridge jat Stouffville, 8.30 p,m. 5.00, Scugog's vs Local}Local 2784 'Oshawa Minor Hockey Assoc. -- Records BANTAM LEAGUE WLTF A PTS. |\Local 1817 Ira | Civitan Can, Tire Police Assoc. Coca Cola Houdaille Local 205 Duplate /. Kiwanis B'Nai B'Rith 0 MIDGET LEA SSOCH HR UND NYE Eee HR OOOO © Ocrrproocorooo BO 69 69 en OT G9 oR OT ey OT STOO SAOAAQWIFP SH Ed PS COSHH NNSA _ S >] > a] | SOM WORD Navy Vets Local 222 Can. Legion Lions Rotary Firefighters Kiwanis Ww 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 prone ence Fl nn meses cone 0 JUVENILE a c > ac} Le} an onw eS Tony's H. Macdonald Beaton's NHK ORM wwe HoOSOS ad sya is2] Seoooss osoHeHHoss Ww 2 1 1 0 soon n _ Let's face it. There are thousands of men who are worth more money than they make--and their employers would readily admit it! But their hands are tied, because they can only pay what the job is worth, And some jobs are only worth so much money ---no matter who fills them. Still want more money? If you do, then you should consider this life-time career onnortunity with the State Farm Insurance Companies. The man we want should be willing to accept responsibility. He should also be able to meet and get along with people. He will become a career insurance agent, serving clients by providing protection for their families, their homes, their businesses and their automobiles. He will be given complete on-the- job training in a program which is considered one of the best in the ' insurance industry. It includes field work, study courses. as well as formal George A. Cull | 1185 Algonquin Blvd., Peterborough, Ont, Tel. RI 5-1034 available in my area. | dia ae FILL-IN, CLIP AND MAIL TO: = "= = Please send me more information about the Career opportunity which is "schooling. Through this program, men without any prior experience have be- come some of State Farm's most suc- cessful agents. In fact, this is one of the very few career gpportunities where the right man at be almost certain of success. His income will depend entirely on his own efforts. After five or more years, average earnings of State Farm agents is nearly $11,000. However, there is absolutely no salary ceiling. Many of our top agents are in the high five figure income bracket. He would be 'representing one of America's largest insurance organiza- tions . . . specially tailored to serve the automobile, life and fire insurance needs of the vast family insurance market. Hf you are looking for a career op- portunity, in a growing industry, where your services are in constant demand, then write or use the coupon below to obtain complete details, STATE FARM INSURANCE e im under no Name. Address. City and State. moons thot provincial and municipal governments... it works for Canadians in every walk of life. When you save money at the B of M, you not only keep it safe and earning interest for you, but you make a sound investment for yourself in Canada's growth now and in the years ahead, Whether you want to save money or bor- row tt for some useful purpose, you'll like doing business at the BofM. So, if it's about money, see Canada's first bank first! Bank OF MONTREAL Canadas Fist Sank @ v Yes, Miss Jennifer Johnson, we do. Your deposit of $50... and the deposits of three million other Canadians add up to well over three billion dollars at the Bank of Montreal. And here's why it's important: This "three-billion-odd" doesn't stay locked up in a bank vault. This money, including your fifty dollars, works steadily--day in, day out--in the form of loans, which help Canadians get what they want in the way of material things. This money fills a thousand-and-one business and personal purposes. It goes to farmers, fisher- men, oilmen, miners, lumbermen ... it goes to businesses large and small... it goes to every- day citizens. This money builds houses... buys cars, trucks, tractors ... finances school and university educa- tions, and all 'sorts of family needs . . . it goes to community organizations of many kinds, and to TO 3 MILLION CANADIANS Resources $3,949,615,542 WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN EVERY WALK OF LIFE SINCE 1817 Hull-Ottawa 8 8 4 57 57 20\Hamilton 3 Montreal 7 Clinton 6 Long Island 1 oe .