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Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Oct 1967, p. 11

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rise ry til just before the teams 1e ice for their warm ups. had been sidelined since art of training with a er injury. srals travel to London for ie Tuesday and meet Ot- 7s here Saturday. NA -- Wilson, Clayton, Stewart, r, McNamee, lard, Walton, Av, Siywehuk, O'Donnell, Boldire Nevin, Dionne, Quintilian, Rob- Seagrist, Sawyer, Dussiaume and LTON -- Gray, Rutherford, Gibbons, Carpenter, Mcinally, Monteith, Climie, Petit, Russell, Trevelyan, Coalter, , Adair, Speck, Lawson and Le FIRST PERIOD awa: Waltcn grist, O'Donnell) ies: Nevin 5:16; inne 15:51. SECOND PERIOD awa: Stewart * .- 16:03 ies: Clayton 3:51; Pettit 3:51 and THIRD PERIOD awa: O'Donnell ittaker, Tallon) nilton: Speck oum, Adair) .... : Nevin ... ies: NecNamee 18:56, Carpente: bons 19:50. it M\QUAR FOR "CAMPERS TRAILER STORAGE KAMPING UNLIMITED Townline Road North Mile North of King St. €.) PH, 728-9942 son CT bs) TIVE anter, our. an ww ers _ volved almost all members from 100 years, Leafs' Armstrong Hurt In Win Against Hawks By THE CANADIAN PRESS Phil Esposito has played in the shadow of Bobby Hull ever since he entered the National Hockey League, but the lanky 'centre cast a large shadow of his own Sunday night. Freed from Chicago Black Hawks in a mid-season deal that sent him to Boston Bruins, Es- posito erupted for four goals as the Bruins battered Montreal Canadiens 6-2. In contrast, the Hawks took a pair of beatings from Toronto Maple Leafs. They lost 5-3 at home Sunday night after they absorbed a 5-1 beating Saturday) in Toronto's homer opener. Toronto's major concern after the weekend was the condition of captain George Armstrong. The veteran winger retired early in the third period Saturday and was treated for a scratched eye- ball. Armstrong discounted fears the injury could mean the end of his career. "It's a little sore now, though. They put a couple of stitches above the eye and three below."' In other games Sunday, De- Flyers. 4-2, St. Louis Blues halted Pittsburgh Penguins 4-2 and Montreal beat Detroit 6-2. Toronto's marksmen Sunday were Dave Keon, Brian Conach- er, Jim Pappin, Wayne Carleton and Frank Mahovlich. Hull, Wayne Maki and Ken Wharram retaliated for the Hawks. In the Saturday game, Carle- ton, Cénacher, Ron Ellis, Keon and Murray Oliver handled To- ronto's scoring. Wharram ruined Johnny Bower's shutout bid. Howe's goal for Detroit cli- maxed a comeback from a 2-0 deficit. Other Detroit marksmen were Norm Ullman and Dean Prentice. Donnie Marshall and Jim Neilson connected for the Rangers. Ted Irvine halted a Minnesota rally with his second goal to lead the Kings Sunday night in Long Beach, Calif. Lowell |MacDonald, Gord Labossiere jand Howie Hughes added a goal 'each. | For the Stars, Dave Balon, |Bob Charlebois and Murray Hall pumped shots past substitute netminder Wayne Rutledge, Johnny McKenzie and Glen Sath-| er also scored for the Bruins.| Yvan Cournoyer and Jean Beli-| veau notched Montreal's goals. PINPOINTS SUCCESS | Esposito said his success was! due to the fact he was shooting moré. | Cournoyer picked up two goals| and as many assists to lead} Montreal Saturday. Beliveau,| Ralph Backstrom, Bobby Rous-) seau and Gilles Tremblay com- pleted scoring. Howe and Pren- tice counted for the Wings. Charlie Hodge, former Mont- real standout, turned in the first, shutout in the expanded NHL when he blocked 20 shots against Minnesota. Billy Harris led the way with two goals and Gerry Ehman, Larry Cahan, Kent Douglas and Joe sure also contributed. Larry Keenan produced his \third goal in as many games to \give St. Louis its win. Jim Rob- erts, Terry Crisp and Bill Mc- Creary scored one goal each and Art Stratton and Andy Bathgate scored for Pittsburgh. Brian Kilrea led | the Kings jpressed into service after Terry troit Red Wings used a late goal|Sawchuk injured an elbow last|Saturday with two goals. Gord by Gordie Howe for a 3-2 victory over New York Rangers and Los Angeles Kings downed Minnesota North Stars 5-3. SEALS BLANK STARS California Seals whitewashed Minnesota 6-0 Saturday, Los An- geles downed Philadelphia Russia Wins Tournament From AP-Reuters GRENOBLE, France (CP)-- Moscow. Dynamo-won the four-| day, four-country invitational hockey tournament Sunday after beating Canada 3-0. The loss left the-Canadians in third place in the- standings. | The. victory gave the U.S.S.R.! six points on three wins and no; defeats. . The United States, which upset Canada with a 5-4 victory Saturday, finished in second place with two victories and one | | | "loss. Canada, with 'one victory and two losses, was third and winless Czechoslovakia was last. .Canada picked up its only vic- tory by winning 3-2 over the Czechs on the tournament's pening day Thursday. | \ The pre-Olympic tournament Inaugurated Grenoble's new ice palace where the Olympic tour- pament will be held next Febru- Bry. The- Canadians--actually. the Winnipeg section of the national team--played . bruising hockey and showed good. speed Sunday, but could not catch the Soviets. In both their losses, the Cana- dians were involved in donny- brooks with opposing players. PLAYERS BRAWL On Sunday, the Canadians and Soviets got involved in a wild stick-swinging fight which in- both teams. The fracas started when Soviet captain Vitaly Davi- dov tangled with forward Ted week. Esposito's first three goals all came in the first period and his |fourth came early in the second. Labossiere and Bob Wall shared \the others. Bill Sutherland and |Ed Hoekstra handed Philadelp- hia an early 2-0 lead. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League Eastern Division WLT F APts. Toronto 20010 44 Montreal + ee Wee Wes | Gem Bae | Boston y Ba ee Wee | Be ek Detroit Ti4 3° Ss New York yee Ae tae ieee Chicago 030 7% 0 Western Division California 2 0-6 2) 18 Los Angeles 200 9 5 4 St. Louis 2 Be Wat Vata es Ce Pittsburgh 2°60) St 9 Minnesota e215 ut Phila. o.2-9.. 3.958 Sunday's Results Montreal 2 Boston 6 Toronto 5 Chicago 3 Minnesota 3 Los Angeles 5 Detroit 3 New York 2 + Saturday's Results Chicago 2 Toronto 5 Detroit 2 Montreal 6 St. Louis 4 Pittsburgh 2 Philadelphia 2 Los Angeles 4 Minnesota 0 California 6 Wednesday's Games Detroit at Toronto Montreal at New York Boston at Chicago Philadelphia at St. Louis Minnesota at Pittsburgh Los Angeles at California OHA Junior A wtL N. Falls sess. -3..0..0. 29. .3 +60...7..14..2 -@..13..19..2 London aw --0...0..10..0 Montreal ... -0...2..10..0 Sunday's Results Toronto 2 St. Catharines 1 Hamilton 1 Oshawa 4 Ottawa «cose Oshawa ...0« Hamilton 4x Hargreaves, a Weyburn, Sask., native. : The scuffle, which lasted) several minutes, erupted when Hargreaves charged the Soviet goalie. Soviet Dynamos immedi- ately poured on to the ice and the fight broke out. The day before, during the U.S. upset, play was stopped for five minutes when Terry O'Mally, a University of Mani- toba student, tangled with U.S. goalie John Ferreira. The game was rough through- out, and members of both teams shared 30 minutes in the penalty box. The U.S. squad, which played a hard, fast game from the start, pulled out with a 4-2 lead in the first period. Canada evened the score in the final pe- riod, but a final goal by Bruce Riutta gave the U.S. the win. Jean Cusson of Lorette, Man., had two for Canada and Ray Cadieux and Morris Mott, both of Winnipeg each scored single goals. On Sunday, the Soviet squad scored once in the first period and added two more in the sec- ond to wrap up their win. London 0 Kitchener 8 Peterborough 4 Ottawa 4 Niagara Falls 6 Montreal 1 Tuesday's Game | Oshawa at London OHA Senior A HOCKEY SCOREBOARD Belleville sR Ts ee fee Collingwood 11060 4 4 lorillia S16 $4 | Woodstock S29: ¢:°% Sunday's Results {Galt 1 Barrie 2 \Toronto 1 Oakville 3 Saturday's*Results |Woodstock 2 Kingston 5 |Collingwood 1 Galt 2 | Tuesday's Games {Guelph at Orillia Barrie \Collingwood Galt at Woodstock at American League Eastern Division bad DETROIT RED WINGS' goalie George Gardner | dives under charging New | York Rangers' forward Vic Hadfield (11), as he came in on Detroit net for shot in this first period action in game at Detroit last night. 'Stamps Move Into First, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, October 16, 1967 7] can't brag about it. ern Conference, Canadian Football League game| at Hamilton. The game ended when veteran} | | } off Young's fingers and the Ti- | | |Rough Riders. i} In off spot. Jim Dillard, cast off by both Calgary Stampeders and Ottawa jin his CFL career, erupted for 162 yards in 11 tries to bury the | ger-Cats fits. Bernie Faloney fired a pass at|tempts for 277 yards and that in- Hamilton native Jim Young on|cluded long bombs to Leroy|back into a tie for first place j \the goal-line. The ball trickled| Sledge and Jim Sidle. cats escaped with a two-point)yard pass-and-run play at 1:29, : |margin over the idle Ottawa\on the second play from scrim- half ground attack for a 20-9) half. |triumph over Montreal Alouettes| CONVERTS TOUCHDOWNS land virtually clinched third) Teq Gerela converted both! place and the last eastern play-| touchdowns and added a 38-yard| field goal. Ticats Down Lions 22-17, Argos Defeat Als 20-9 By THE CANADIAN PRESS other after the Argos led only 3-) Hamilton Tiger-Cats have re-|1 at halftime. Dave Mann con-| dled exclusively by Ted Watkins gained first place in the Eastern|tributed two field goals and a\and Tommy-Joe Coffey. Watkins'. Football Conference--but they) pair of converts. Hamilton's scoring was han- |caught scoring passes of 25 and For Montreal, Dave Lewis led|16 yards from Joe Zuger and They held off a late drive by|the way with a touchdown and|Coffey produced 10 points with f \British Columbia Lions, cellar-|two singles. His touchdown|his toe. dwelling members of the West-|came late in the game after he! for a 22-17|replaced Carroll Williams. Jim} '|triumph Sunday in a thrilling} Long converted Lewis' score. He kicked field goals of 20 and 23 yards, converted both touch- Faloney's passing gave the Ti-| downs and settled for singles on field-goal attempts of 28 and 47 He completed 14 'of 25 at- yards. Ottawa has a chance to move 4 Wednesday when the Rough Rid- Sledge went across on an 81-\ers meet Vancouver at Lanse |downe Park in Ottawa in a nas 1 \tionally - televised contest. mage, as two Hamilton backs) the only other eastern|collided. Faloney hit Sidle on a} game, Toronto Argonauts strung|55-yarder in the second ee A. E. JOHNSON, 0.3; together an awesome second-|and Hamilton trailed 14-5 at the ° PTOMETRIST 14/2 King St. East 723-2721 RE-ELECT & Detroit's Gary Bergman guards the goal mouth be- hind the sliding goalie. (AP. Wirephoto) wit 'Trouncing Bombers 51-29 | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Calgary Stampeders got | large assist from Edmonton Es-} kimos Sunday and used it to} move into a first-place tie with| |Saskatchewan Roughriders in} the Western Football Confer-| ence. LT F Apt The Stampeders, using an Springfid 210 15 8 4 awesome air attack, shellacked| | Hershey 1-0 0 8 1 2\Winnipeg Blue Bombers 51-29 in Providence 12 0: it 1719 Calgary,-while in Edmonton, the Baltimore 0 2.0 1 7 0 Eskimos upset the Roughriders} 21-17. | Western Division The results left both Calgary| Rochester 2 0. 10 § 4 and Saskatchewan with 10-3 'Cleveland 2 0 0 6 3 4j\won-lost- records -and a seven- |Buffalo bie Vike. ae} Jig ae 4 sacle - | Quebec ©. 3/9: 39 '0 Sunday's Results Providence 7 Springfield 4 Cleveland 4 Quebec 3 Rochester 5 Baltimore 1 Saturday's Results Rochester 5 Buffalo 4 Cleveland 2 Baltimore 0 Hershey 8 Providence 1 Springfield 5 Quebecd Tuesday's Games Rochester at Baltimore Cleveland at Quebec SUNDAY Toronto «+«. 3..1..0..26..17..6| | Western Canada Junior Kitchener .» 3..1..0..23...9..6;Edmonton 3 Winnipeg 1 Peterboro yx 3|Saskatoon 2 Flin Flon 7 Thunder Bay Junior Port Arthur 3 Fort Frances 4 SUNDAY Central Professional Kansas City 2 Oklahoma 7 Omaha 1 Tulsa 3 Western Junior \Calgary 4 Estevan 8 Invitational Tournament |Russia 3 Canada 0 Central Professional Dallas 0 Fort Worth 4 Omaha 1 Houston 8 Western Junior \Calgary 5 Weyburn 6 \McLaren Wins _At Monterey | MONTEREY, Calif. (CP)-- |Bruce McLaren of New Zealand won Sunday's 201.7-mile Monter- ey Granl Prix for sports cars, driving a McLaren M-C-A 'with a Chevrolet engine. ral, who was one lap behind. was third. John Cannon of Mont- real was seventh. The race was the fourth in a series of six to decide the win- ner of the $210,000 Canadian- American Cup. New Zealand's Dennis Hulme |won the first three races, held at Elkhart Lake, Wis., Bridge- hampton, N.Y., and Mosport, Ont. Prizes will be awarded to drivers for their performance in jeach race, and at the end of the series the top 10 drivers on points will divide a champion- \ship award of $90,000. The final two races in the se- jries will be Oct. 29, in Los An- Second was Jim Hall of the { United States, driving Chapar-|349 yards on passes to bring his |point pull over Elmonton, which, ajhas won six, lost six and tied/more passes to set another WFC one for 13 points. Winnipeg is 4-9 for eigh points. British Columbia Lions, who lost 22-17 Sunday to Hamil- ton Tiger-Cats, have two wins and a tie in 12 games. The Lions now are out of the playoffs. If they win their four); 499 yards gained passing for|Sask. remaining games they could tie the Eskimos, but would still be monton won its series with the Lions this season. Edmonton ----_------|needs just oné more win or aiall |Winnipeg loss to clinch the final for his WFC mark. | playoff position. |4 RECORDS SET | Four WFC records \tablished in Calgary's conques' were @s- t {of the Bombers--two by Peter \Liske and one each by Terry} Evanshen and Bill Goods. | season total to 237, and gain mark this year to 3,602 yards. then of Calgary, in 1963. Liske's yards-gained total put 3,279 set by Joe Kapp of B.C. Lions in 1962. REMEMBER WHEN? . . By THE CANADIAN PRESS Track star Bill Crothers of Markham, Ont., captured a silver medal three years ago today--in 1964--in the 800 metres event at the Tokyo Olympic Games, Gil Boa broke the Olympic rec- ord on the -small-bore rifle range that day but finished lgeles and Nov. 12 in Las Vegas. fourth only. Liske, who threw six touch- down passes in the game, com- pleted 20 throws to bring his him ahead of the old mark of Liske needs to try just 20 record and complete three of nt them for touchdowns to set a|Hamilton fourth. Another 47 pass atte mpts/ Toronto would give him one CFL reco: and another seven touchdown| passes a second. He needs anoth-| er 40 completions and a total of| other CFL marks. Evanshen brought his pass re-| lout of the playoff because Ed-|ception yardage to 1,384 this)""~ year. The old mark was 1,329) jset by Hugh Campbell of Saskat-| chewan in 1965, Goods converted seven Calgary touchdowns), | CAUGHT 2 TD PASSES down passes Sunday, Two more went to Herm Harrison and one each to Lovell Coleman and Gerry Shaw. Shaw scored anoth- er touchdown on a fumble recovery in the first quarter. safety touch. For the Bombers, jm kicked a single for the Bombers' other point. In Edmonton, the Eskimos re-/the season, ran up,a string of mble|nine consecutive victories to and|take first place by a_ single ----l|drove in from there for the|point. The Hurricanes had eight jcovered a fourth-quarter fu jon the Saskatchewan 31, |game-winning touchdown. Frank Cosentino and Randy |Kerbow scored Edmonton touch- |downs. Peter Kempf converted both, kicked two field goals and a single on a field goal attempt. Hugh Campbell and Gord Bar- well had touchdowns for the Roughriders. Jack Abendschan converted one and kicked a field \goal. The other Saskatchewan {point was a single on a quick kick by Allan Ford at the end of the first half. WLtT A Pt|Edmonton 5 Brandon 1 Toronto 3.1 0 17 7 6/Saskatoon 4 Flin Flon 8 Guelph 220 8.8 4 Invitational Tournament Galt 2 2-0 12 7 4)United States 5 Canada 4 Oakville 2160 8 10 4 racer eae Kingston 23 0 13 20 4 Barrie EE Be Rape Zacks est | BOWLING NEWS WEDNESDAY NIGHT LADIES High Trip (660), Sandra Wilson 257, June Murphy 213, 203, 227 (643), Jo Cob- 175, 170, 286 (631), Gerry May 192, 194 (630), Verna Dewell (626), Joan Beaton 169, 247, 207 (623) Pritchard 248, 159, 196 (603). High Singes: Betty Cepecaver 201; Doris Bowen 226; 225; 206; Lorraine Warden 206; 205; Molly McGraw 203; 202, Carole Rockbrune 201. Team Standing: Bell-Botioms 13, G Getters 12, The Betters 12, Acrobats 1 232, U7 Minis ¥ and Bells 4, 224, 254 (715), jes: June Bird 235, 219, 206 215, 181 (653), bledick 197, 208, 228 (633), Carole Misztak 244)) 191, 241, 194 Nancy Fice 216, 166, 238 (620) and Jo Bonnie Simcoe Helen Hoogsteen 212, Sally Bryans Flo Bracey Betty Pearce i Hits and Misses 10, The Busybodies 9, Congratulations to Mary Piccini 237, SALES - SERVICE 39 PRINCE ST. OSHAWA SHAVER SER & SUPPLIES OSHAWA - PARTS - AGCES, RVICE 728-4284 POSTES Be a master city-area-letter-addresser the name of the | | Evanshen caught two touch-|Vancouver at Ottawa The Stampeders rounded out the scoring with a fourth-quarter Dave Rai-\Uphill struggle Saturday with a ey scored twice. Ken Nielsen|16-11 victory over Hamilton Hur- and Ed Ulmer scored the other|Ticanes to win the Ontario Juni- George Follmer of the United] The former WFC completion|/touchdowns. Ernie Kuzyk con-/0F Football Conference champ- States, driving a Lola Chevrolet,|mark was 228 set by Eagle Day,|verted all four and Ulmer|ionstip. Alouettes in the last half. The Argos need either a win or a Montreal loss to clinch their first playoff appearance since 1961. SCORES ON SCREEN PASS Dillard took a screen pass from the Montreal 44 for one touchdown and Bill Symons scampered seven yards for the Football CONSERVATIVE Standings Eastern Conference WLT F A Pt 7 4 0 184 182 14) Ottawa 6 4 0 247 144 12| 5 6 6 201 201 10 rd| Montreal 2 8 0117197 4 | Western Conference WLT F APt Calgary 10 3 0 317 158 20) 10 3 0 287 235 20 \Edmonton 6 6 1 192 203 13| Winnipeg 4 9 0176 335 8 2 9 1149221 5) Saturday's Results Toronto 20 Montreal 9 Hamilton 22 Vancouver 17 Surday's Results Winnipeg 29 Calgary 51 Saskat- chewan 17 Edmonton 21 Wednesday's Game | Burlington Wins Crown BURLINGTON, Ont. (CP)-- {Burlington Braves capped an The Braves, who lost 8-7 to Hamilton in the first game of wins and a tie going into the closing game Saturday. | Both teams now advance to a sudden-death semi-final series Wednesday. The Braves will meet Scarborough Rams while Hamilton plays Weston Invictus. An investment that won't let you down. CANADA SAVINGS BONDS a Go-ahead people buy their. bonds at TORONTO-DOMINION The Bank where people make the difference, When did Niagara come into the picture? person, the apartment number, the street number, the city, the postal zone and the province.. of course aletter with the correct address F 'is delivered promptly FOR POSTAL INFORMATION SEE THE YELLOW PAGES OF YOUR TELEPHONE BOOK A medical bill. A clothing bill. A car repalr bill. They all seemed to'come at once, Jack needed money In a hurry. Answer: A Niagara Loan. Jack talked It over with the manager of the nearest Niagara ° Office. Besides getting the money, he got a lot of good advice on budgeting. With a Niagara Loan, Jack was able to pay all his bills at one time. And repay the loan on easy terms to suit his budget. When you need extra money for any good reason, you can expect the same courteous, quick service at any one of 300 Niagara offices. NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED Member of the (ac) Group of Companies 286 KING STREET W, 723-3487

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