RO THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monsey, Feprucry 4, 1703 Re 'GUMP' WORSLE Fal Y BATS PUCK AWAY FROM GEORGE ARMSTRONG "ONE HULL OF A NIGHT Hawks Push Lead Spread =To 4 Points On Two Wins "By THE CANADIAN PRESS ~»ifbe league -leading Chicago Black Hawks finally are start- ing to put a little daylight be- tween themselves and the run- nersup for the National Hockey League leadership. Their 3-3 tie with Montreal Saturday night and 3-1 victory over Toronto Sunday gave them 62 points, a four-point edge over the two closest contenders, and a 64 triumph over New York to =<Glenn Hall was Chicago's standout Saturday stopping a breakaway by Henri Richard sepsereeee y } To Improve | Talbot of Montreal was sitting || Bobby Rousseau started the Ca-) - BOBBY HULL with 19 seconds to play to pre- serve the Hawks' tie. Canadiens outshot Ohicago 32-16, putting on tremendous pressure in the final period to overcome a 3-0 deficit. The Hawks went ahead on power-play goals by Bobby Hull and Stan Mikita, while both times defenceman Jean - Guy out a penalty. Ab McDonald scored a third goal for the Hawks before little nadiens' comeback. | Gilles Tremblay and Beliveau) counted in the final 20 minutes of the game, Tremblay on a close-in shot and Beliveau on Rousseau's rebound. Left winger Bobby Hull Boston took an early 3-0 lead before the Wings got rolling. Don McKenney scored in the first period and Murray Oliver, Jerry Toppazzini in the second. Detroit brought the count up to 3-2 by the end of the period on goals by Alex Faulkner and Macdonald. Tt was tied 3-3 at 14:20 of the third period when a_ puck glanced off Alex Delvecchio into the net. Boston regained the ad- vantage 43 seconds later when Bassen accidentally brushed Johnny Bucyk's shot into the net. BATTLE ALL THE WAY It was a battle all the way against New York Sunday. Top- pazzini snapped a 4-4 tie early in the third period and Oliver added the clincher on a power play with less than two minutes remaining, Rookie Leon Rochefort of the Rangers scored his first NHL goal to give New York a 1-0 lead. Forbes Kennedy tied it and Jim Neilson, a rookie de- fenceman, tallied the first of his two goals to put the Rangers ahead 2-1. McKenney tied it for the Bruins at the end. of the first period, Boston went ahead 4-2 on goals from Oliver and Tom Williams before New York's Dean Prentice cut the margin to 4-3 at the end of the period. By THE CANADIAN PRESS When Eddie Shore was an all- star defenceman with Boston Bruins in the 30s, he treated all forwards with supreme con. tempt. So it may have been Shore, now president of Springfield In- dians, who hit on the formula that jolted his American Hockey League defending champions out of an 11-game winless streak. The solution: Take three of your best defencemen and throw them together on a for- ward line. In two tries, the newly-aligned trio of Bob McCord, Bill White and Ted Harris accounted for four goals, Shore's chastened fulltime forwards provided a hatful more and the Indians skated off with a 9-4 victory over Buffalo Bisons Saturday night and a 9-3 triumph over Pittsburgh Hornets Sunday. The double victory boosted the Indians past Baltimore Clip- pers, 5-3 losers at Pittsburgh Saturday, into fourth place in the AHL's Eastern Division and left them within shouting dis- tance of a playoff spot, six points behind Providence Reds and Hershey Bears, co-holders of second place. BEARS SPLIT The Bears split a home-and- Hadley Wins Ski Event COLLINGWOOD, Ont. (CP)-- Danny Hadley, 15-year-old C class skier, won the Alpine com- bine title in the southern On- tario ski zone four-way cham- pionships Sunday. Skiing for Toronto's Austrian Ski Club, he raked down the slalom slope in 58.4 seconds to win his class easily as well as beating the winners in both and C classes for competitors more than 15. On Saturday Hadley came in thind on the Kandahar slope with a time of 56.0 seconds. Carl Campa of Oshawa won the event. Hadley, with a total of 196.9 points, edged Dave Dobbin, 17, of the Peterborough Ski Club with 196.5 points, for the com- bined title. In the women's. events, Judy Sheppard, 18, of the Osler Bluffs Ski Club, won the Alpine com- bined honors with clubmate Katy Robertson in second place. Miss Sheppard was six seconds ahead of Shelley Rutter of Peterborough. REMEMBER WHEN .. .? By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Soviet Union won the Olympic hockey crown by defeating Canada 2-0 in the final at Cortina, Italy, seven years ago today. The Cana- dian team, Kitchener-Water- loo Flying Dutchmen, the Allan Cup holders, had pre- viously been upset 4-1 by the United States team in the final round-robin, Rus- sia won all five games in the finals» the United States had four wins and one loss Neilson's second goal evened the count 4-4, |}son's goal with 58 seconds of home series with Rochester Americans, winning 6-2 Satur- day and losing 10-1 Sunday. The Reds were beaten 5-2 at home Sunday by the resurgent Cleve- land Barons, who blanked Que- bec Aces 5-0 the previous night. Quebec and Buffalo played to a 1-1 tie Sunday in the remain- ing AHL game. McCord, White and Harris had a goal each in the Indians' conquest of Pittsburgh, Spring- field's other marksmen were Brian Kilrea with two, Jimmy Anderson, Wayne Larkin, Dave Amadio and Murray Davison. Larry Jeffrey fired two for the losers, whose third goal came from Howie Menard. Third-period goals by Hank Ciesla, Joe Szura and John Ferguson gave Cleveland the win over Providence after Fer- guson and Dick Van Impe had tallied earlier for the Barons. Zellio Toppazzini and Pierre Brillant counted for the Reds, Rochester, with a dismal rec- ord of three wins in 24 previous starts, exploded with a ven- geance Sunday as veteran Ger- ry Ehman scored three goals and Stan Smrke added two more. Dick Gamble, Johnny MacMillan, Lou Angotti, Jim Pappin and Gene Ubriaco ac- counted for the others. Mike Mahoney tallied for Hershey. SCORES NEAR END Buffalo needed Doug Robin- regulation time remaining to tie Quebec in the battle of divi- sional leaders. Terry Gray had put the Aces ahead in the sec- ond period. On Saturday, Springfield got two-goal performances from Anderson, Dennis Olson and Bruce Cline against the Bisons. McCord, Davison and Larkin were their other marksmen. John McKenzie with two, Art Stratton and Brian Smith scored for Buffalo. Jeffrey's three-goal perform- ance paced the Hornets to their victory over Baltimore with Howie Glover and Floyd Smith contributing the others. Dave Creighton fired two for the neve'g and Ralph Keller got the third. Makes Defence Offence To Prod Indians Into Winning Warpath Ways of Les Binkley's third shutout in five games as Cleveland blanked the Aces. Ferguson, Van Imp eand playing-coach Fred Glover also scored, Last period goals by Les Duff, Yves Locas and Willie Marshall, the latter on a penalty 'shot, gave the Bears their victory over Rochester, Dale Rolfe, Myron Stankiewicz and Howie Yanosik fired the earlier Her- shey goals while Ehman and Al -- replied for the Amer. cans, By KEVIN BOLIN mors sang outed § golden opportunity for a at a fourth and final playoff when they a 41 de- cision to Knob Hill Farms. Had they won the game, the opener of a two-game Metro Junior "A" feature in Maple Leaf Gardens, they would have moved to within two points of the fourth - place Brampton squad, who suffered a 5-1 set- back from Toronto Marlboros in the second game, As it stands, Generals are still four points. out of fourth place but have played NHL BIG SEVEN two games less than the Brampton club, Oshawa has 21 points on By THE CANADIAN PRESS It was either feast or famine for the National Hockey League's sharpshooters during the weekend, Among the scoring leaders with a bountiful harvest was Johnny Bucyk of Boston, who moved to the top of the indi- vidual points list by reaping one goal and four assists for a total of 55 points. | Others who netted five points were Chicago's Stan. Mikita, whose two goals and three as- sists moved him into third place with 52, Murray Oliver of Bos- ton and Jean Beliveau of Mont- real, who picked up three goals and two assists each for a fourth-place tie with Gordie Howe of Detroit. All have 51 points. Skimpy gains went to two former scoring leaders, Andy Bathgate of New York and Frank Mahovlich of Toronto, who registered one assist each on the weekend, Mahovlich holds second place with 54 and Bathgate is sev- enth with 49. Howe earned his 51-point total with one goal and one assist. Mahovlich retains the league leadership in goals scored with 27, and Beliveau leads in as-| sists with 39. The leaders: Bucyk, Boston Mahovlich, Toronto Mikita, Chicago Howe, Detroit Oliver, Boston Beliveau, Montreal Szura tallied twice in support Bathgate, New York 23 By THE CANADIAN PESS A last-minute sixeman power play produced the tying goal for the cellar-dwelling Galt Terriers Sunday night and pulled Chat- ham Maroons out of a_ first- place tie in the Ontario Hockey Association's Senior A Series. Maroons needed the win to keep pace with the Windsor Bulldogs, who posted a hard- fought 5-4 win over Woodstock Athletics in the afternoon. Rick Hay fired his second Galt goal of the night at 19:18 of the third period, and neither team could break the 4-4 tie in overtime. The tie brought Galt within one point of the last playoff spot, held by Kitchener-Water- and Canada was third with three wins and two losses. stock Saturday night. The win loo Tigers who lost 4-3 to Wood- bagged his 2lst and 22nd goals of the season in pacing the Hawks to victory over Toronto Sunday. The Leafs got off to a 1-0 lead Nevin scored mid- way in the first period. Hull tied the score at 1:14 of the HOCKEY SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | National League WLT F APt Chicago 25 14 12 145 118 62) Montreal Toronto Detroit 2518 8 162 137 58) 21:16 11 126 125 53 14.26 9 140 166-37 Edmonton 16 35 1 154 240 33) Calgary 13 34 1145 195 27 Southern Division Portland 3114 2186 123 64 21 13 16 157 121 58|San Francisco 29 16 1197 143 59| Dixie 25.16 2151 127 52 20 21. 1 136 142 41 Los Angeles Spokane METRO JUNIOR B WLTF A Pts.) 22 4 2196 9346 18 8 2166 106 46 1512 1142 107 31 Weston L .keshore 620 2 92 168 14) Schomberg 522 1 9521711) Bowmanville Last Minute Goal Costs Maroons A Tie For First Place spread the Athletics' lead to 12 points over Kitchener-Waterloo, but left them still six points back of the second-place Ma- roons. In Chatham, Keith Worrall also turned in a two-goal per- formance for Galt. Bob Pole, Ted Power, George Aitken and Geonge Usitalo were the Chat- ham scorers. In Windsor, the Bulldogs notched three quick goals in the first seven minutes of play, then just barely managed to stop Woodstock's third period rally with a marker from Joe Klu- kay. EACH SCORES TWICE | Klukay and Real Chevrefils} got two each for Windsor, and| Tom Walker also scored. Roy and, Gerry Theberge, Gerry Stringle and Andy Gauthior were the Woodstock marksmen. A solid display of defence and goaltending produced the vic- tory for Woodstock in Kitchener Saturday night. Ed Lockhead, | By eight wins and five _ ties. Brampton has 25 points on 11 wins and three draws, Knob Hill stretched their lead to five points over Brampton points and improve their stand- ing when they' meet the Gen- erals tomorrow night in Maple Leaf Gardens. Knob Hill took a _ one-goal jlead in the first period when Bob Collins slipped the puck Past two fallen Generals into _ right side of the Oshawa net, Farmers increased their lead to 2-0 early in the second period when Bill Johnston flipped his own rebound over a prostrate Jim Couch, Bob Dean set up the lone Osh- awa tally 10 minutes later when he outfoxed two Hillmen in the Oshawa end of the rink and EPHL ROUNDUP. THE CANADIAN PESS St. Louis Braves continue to go nowhere in the Eastern Pro- fessional Hockey League, but their scoring wonder, 24-year- old Alain Caron is collecting goals in bunches. Caron scored eight times in two weekend games, both. of which the last - place Braves lost. He scored all five goals in a 95 loss Saturday to Kingston Frontenacs and three more Sun. day when his team lost 9-5 io Hull-Ottawa Canadiens. Caron has 29 goals in 28 games and shares the goal- scoring lead with Sudbury Wolves' Mare Dufour who has scored his 29 goals in 46 games. Caron, a right winger from Dol- beau, Que., started the season with Greensboro, N.C., in the U.S. Eastern League. Caron started out in profes- sional hockey two years ago, scoring 12 goals and 15 assists in 15 games with Quebec Aces of the American League, The Aces farmed him out to Sault Ste. Marie of the EPH, where he got seven goals in sine games, He boasts one of the hardest shots in the circuit, Saturday, three of his five goals came on blistering slap shots past Kings- ton goalie Bruce Gamble. -- Jeannot Gilbert, the top point- getter in the league, had four goals for Kingston, giving him 27 for the season, John Paul Parise, Billy Knibbs, Red Ouel- lette, Dick Cherry and Ron Willy scored other Kingston goals. : Sunday at Hull, the Canadiens Best Year Yet For New York Racing replacing injured Athletic goal- tender Ron Salter for his Sec) ond game in the Senior A, stopped 30 of the Tigers' 31) shots. Land led the Woodstock at- NEW YORK (AP)--The state harness racing commission re- ports the greatest year in the history of trotting in New York state, with records in revenue, with their win but Seven-Ups 7) could close the spread to three § Sunday's Result ltack with two goals, and Toby attendance, wagering and 5 fs when he crashed Oshawa Blows Chance For Crack At Fourth In the closing minutes of the final period when Ted Baylis scored from his own rebound. Ray Winterstein closed out scor- ing with a 20-footer that caught the top left corner. Ron Buchanan, , the sleek centre on the Oshawa roster, suffered a slight concussion into the fink, inte 'the "thing pertoe, » la y Informed sources say Buchana- nan -will be able to play Tues- ) day when Generals face Bramp- BILL LITTLE skated the length of the ice to fire a shot at Dave Kelly, the masked Marvel in the Knob Hill net. Kelly got his pad in the way of the shot but the rebound went to Bill Little standing in front of the net. Little banged at it twice before he put it in. en Phan ( Clspoking) 10:16; Late Coombes aeeee Farmers put the game away ton in the second -- at Maple Pee ns, ha Leaf Gar- F 10D 1. Knob Hill, Collins (Paul) a2 -- Stroud | »' 11.07, ty ) 15.01, SECOND PERIOD ¢ Regis (high - sticking) 8.36, Baylis (interference) 13.56, Kilger (roughing) 19.53. Top Five Teams In Old Country 'Soccer Leagues Caron Lonely Warrior On Brave Reservation scored almost at will, Chuck Hamilton and Keith McCreary getting two each and Billy Car- ter, Norm Beaudin, Bob Courcy, Doug Senior and Bill Inglis get- ting the others. Besides Caron's three, St, Louis got goals from Duke Har- ris and' Murray Hall. The other weekend game saw Kingston drop Sudbury 5-2, ruin- ing a fine performance by Sud; bury substitute goalie Kurt Demmier. He took over from regular Gerry OCheevers at the end of the first period with Kingston leading 1-0 and stopped 17 shots in the second period and 19 in the third. Demmiler plays in the Eastern Ontario Junior eague. Don Blackburn and Cherry scored two each for Kingston and Pete Panagabko got the other. Dave McComb and Jim Johnson were the Sudbury scor- ers. St. Kitts Takes Blind Pin Loop Tourney Honors WATERLOO, Ont. (CP) Bowlers from St. Catharines walked off with team honors in the annual fivepin Ontario blind bowling championships Satur- __| Distillery LONDON (AP)--Standings of top teams in Old Country soc- cer: (including Saturday's games): ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I _ Tottenham 6 Everton 62 Burnley Leicester City Aston Villa Division II WwW 3 13 1 SESRaSs saxyagal oaunweah SVeeRrer> Chelsea Sunderland Bury Plymouth Stoke City Divisi Peterboro 1 Swindon Town 12 Watford 14 B'rnemouth 10 Coventry City 1010 J 224 8Beex? Or rs 5 35 18 91 5 =g BRSSe Basse Hserne sesse seers Bae Srao &E Reve _ aaceass Brentford Mansfield Gillingham Crewe Alex SCOTTISH LEAG Division I 143) 14 ll i BSSeFk Sesser Ss RESSS SRE _ Rangers Partick Kilmarnock Aberdeen Hearts 9 Division Hamilton 14 St. Johnstone 12 1 1 SBxess ESSR VSVse 2 5 4 6 Stranraer 1 Morton 1 East Stirling 10 IRISH 7 4 5 2 3 LEA 2 5 4 1 5 1 5 7 4 GU) 2 1 3 1 2 Linfield Glentoran Portadown Ballymena oe han Quan REESE day. St. Catharines posted: a three-game total of 3,003. were Bill Burrows, Clell Mclin- tyre: Charlie Biggar, Frank Lot- teridge, Tom Nichols and coach Harold Court. Sarnia placed second with 2,969 followed by Toronto with 2,890, Guelph 2,761 and Peter- borough 2,751. Other teams in the event were Brantford, 2,744; Hamil- ton, 2,663; London, 2,651; Galt, 2,605; Barrie, 2,599; Kitchener- Waterloo, 2,534; and Owe Sound, 2-192. Court was the top coach in Members of the winning team} BEFORE THE WHITES It is estimated there were 220,000 Indians in Canada before the white man came. Indian population now is about 185,000, 1963 JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS NOW ON DISPLAY Saturday's Results the tournament with a 378 sin- gle. Homer Leblond of Brant- ford was the only double win- ner, He won the totally blind high single with a 264 and the high triple with 667. second period while Toronto's| New York |Eddie Shack was serving a pen-|Boston alty, and put Chicago in front) three minutes later. jChicago 3 Montreal 3 | Centre Stan Mikita clincheda|New York 2 Toronto 2 the win midway through the| Detroit 4 Boston 4 third period. Sunday's Results Lakeshore ,...11 Bowmanville 6)Black added the other. Don SATURDAY Ontario Senior A Woodstock 3 Renate Waterton, 1 | : |purses to horsemen. |Duke was the lone Tiger scorer | The commission's annual re- The Windsor-Woodstock game|port, released Sunday, shows was the fifth in seven days for|that rev nue to the state the Athletics, who filled in forjreached $45,963,709, compared Kiitchener-Waterloo. After losing| with $40,763,357 in 1961. in Woodstock Saturday night,| Attendance in 1962 totalled 10 29 12 151 214 32| Portiand i Seattle 0 Los Angeles 1 Spokane 0 San Francisco 4 Calgary 3 Sunday's Result Seattle 7 Portland 1 353 MITH PH. SrortS ant Saturday's Results aad OPEN EVENINGS Ww. Standards NEW YORK (CP) --British athletic coach Geoffrey Dyson, | | Ontario Junior B Ontario Senior A Welland 2 Hamilton 5 Montreal 6 Detroit 2 en route to Ottawa, arrived here Sunday firmly resolved to' do his utmost to raise the stand- ards of track and field coaching in Canada during the next five years. "Tf after five years the only thing I leave behind in Canada 'is an ed corps of coaches and teachers," he said, "I shail be happy." Dyson, for more than 14 years senior professional coach a Britain's National Amateur ic Association and a man be variously as a "'con- troversial personality" and "the test coach" in the United lon, has been hired by the Canadian Legion to di- erect its athletic training pro- "gtam for Canadian youngsters. He arrived here with his wife and ll-year-old daughter, Ju- Dyson, who expects he may become something of a coach- ing co-ordinator or full-time link . between coaches in various parts of Canada, said he likely will conduct clinics for coaches and athletes across Canada. *A clinic for coaches will be staged in Guelph Aug. 12-20 un- der 44 the Legion auspices and will be key figure there. It follows the pattern set last|Sunda year when the Legion training plan brought Dyson to Canada to conduct a clinic that at- -dracted more than 170. coaches from Canada and the U.S. COME FROM BEHIND from its two weekend outings, coming from behind a two-goal deficit to tie New York 2-2 Sat- urday. Earl Ingarfield scored the opener, a 15-footer from a diffi- cut angle. Left winger Camille Henry made it 2-0 at 4:57 of the second period, while Shack was off for boarding. Toronto defenceman Allan Stanley scored at 18:01 and the equalizer came at 6:11 of the third period from Dick Duff. Montreal earned its second- place tie by trouncing Detroit 6-2 Sunday. Beliveau was the only Canadien to score twice. The other markers went to Bobby Rousseau, Ralph Back- strom, Henri Richard and Claude Provost. Parker Macdonald gave De- troit a 1-0 lead Jate in the first period. Andre Pronovost counted in the second for the | Wings. GAINS GROUND Boston gained ground with its tie against Detroit Saturday and its 6-4 upset of the Rangers y. The Bruins were well on their way to winning the first contest when old reliable Gordie Howe scored for the Red Wings with 61 seconds left to play. < Toronto salvaged one point|Boston 6 New York 4 Toronto 1 Chicago 3 | American League WELT F APE Eastern Division 23 19 10 146 148 56 25 20 4161 140 54 2417 6174 138 54 Springfield 2022 8 187 165 48 |Baltimore 2024 7 145 183 47 Western Division 2717 5 154 138 59 2 21 6 161 165 46 Pittsburgh 19 26 3 142 167 41 Rochester 15 27 7 162 188 37 Saturday's Results Quebec 0 Cleveland 5 Rochester 2 Hershey 6 Baltimore 3 Pittsburgh 5 Buffalo 4 Springfield 9 Sunday's Results Quebec 1 Buffalo 1 Cleveland 5 Providence 2 Hershey 1 Rochester 10 Pittsburgh 3 Springfield 9 Eastern Professional WLT F APt 2911 6 105 132 64 2613 7 190 148 59 Sudbury 17 19 10 192 197 44 St. Louis 11 27 8 152 206 30 Saturday's Result St. Louis 5 Kingston 9 Sunday's Result St. Louis 5 Hull-Ottawa 9 Sudbury 2 Kingston 5 Western League Northern Division WLT F APt 2422 1 165 164 49 2019 3138 138 @ | Quebec | Providence Hershey Buffalo Cleveland Hull-Ottawa Kingston | Seattle Vancouver | Windsor the Tigers said they could not ice a team in Windsor, but held a team meeting and decided not ito drop out of the league. The Tigers agreed to fill | Woodstock's date in Windsor jnext Wednesday. WLF F APt Nova Scotia Senior 2111 1 234 139 43) Windsor 3 New Glasgow 9 20 11 2 188 113 42) Halifax 1 Moncton 7 1818 0 188 166 36 Cape Breton Senior 1121 2188 167 24|North Sydney 6 Glace Bay 5 11.20 1114 156 23) Ottawa-Hull Junior A Saturday's Resuli Pembroke 5 Ottawa 4 Chatham Woodstock K-W Galt 7,523-273, up from 7,491,638 in 1961 and parimutuel turnover increased from $516,790,071 in 1961 to $530,109,244 last season. Purses last year totalled $14,- |021,471, a boost from 1961's | $13,362,989. tock 3 Kitchener-Waterloo International League |Minneapolis 5 Muskegon 7 St. Paul 2 Omaha 3 Port Huron 3 Fort Wayne 6 Woodstock 4 Windsor 5 Eastern League Ontario Junior A Charlotte 4 Clinton 8 WL FA Ppt|lng Island 2 Johnstown 5 ; a. Exhibition Niagara Falls 22 1b 3 100 ie az|Trail 2 Vancouver (WHL) 7 Intercollegiate a 7 " in B,J ¢ U. of Toronto 9 U of Montreal 4/ Sherbrooke 6 Carleton 1 Northern Ontario Senior South Porcupine 2 Kapuskasing | 13 (Kapuskasing leads best - of - Peterborough 2 Hamilton 4 | 'even semifinal 10) METRO JUNIOR A | Eastern League W LT F A Pts.\Chariotte 6 New Haven 4 25 2 2186 6852/Clinton 2 Long Island 2 18 7 5160 107 41/Greensboro 4 Knoxville 3 1214 6 95108 30|/Nashville 2 Johnstown 5 1118 3127 166 25 International League 817 5110 162 21/Omaha 1 St. Paul 1 520 5111178 15/Minneapolis 3 Port Huron 2 Sunday's Results Nova Scotia Senior Knob Hill.... 4 Oshawa 1/Halifax 3 Moncton 6 Marlboros.... 5 Brampton .. 2) Cape Breton Senior Future Games Sydney 4 Glace Bay 3 Tuesday--Neil McNeil at Whit-} Ontario Junior B by; Knob Hill at Marlboros;/Tillsonburg 8 Sarnia 2 |Brampton at Oshawa. Kitchener 1 Waterloo 13 | Thursday--Whitby at Bramp- Intercollegiate iton. |Sherbrooke 1 Ottawa 4 Woods 1 Sunday's Results Galt 4 Chatham 4 FRONT-END Montreal | Peterboro Hamilton St. Catharines 1219 8 126 170 32 Guelph » 728 5119 1098 19) Saturday's Result on 2 St. Catharines 3 Sunday's Result ALL CARS JOHN BEAN "Visualiner"' SPECIAL ! Hamilt | Neil McNeil Mariboros Knob Hill Brampton | Oshawa Whitby 534 RITSON RD. S. ALIGNMENT 95 PHONE 728-6221 for appointment Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service sania GENERAL TIRE OF OSHAWA 728-6221 PRICES! If You Don't Buy YOU PAY TOO MUCH !! BAD BOY Open Nightly (Except Saturday) 'Til 9:30 KING ST. E. A? TOWNLINE LOW No Matter Whether It's Furniture, Appliances, HI-FI, TV, Radios, etc. lt At Bad Boy's FURNITURE APPLIANCES 728-4658 |