rt A A oe er - or Ne eT) pat rill oo hed hy. ow oo al CLR Ae hl ' ALL LATA EL ud A | < 3 Sat q Yaoi Zy Ph 3 or =] CER ~ CE ny tat AE Ra SEN TAL SW A a NS A Aaa Te RY 7 3 - hs Ne x RY ny oh, oy -s re Ee a RS NA NO TN a Te YT » '.. ad pad So " oN 4 tA eal Pt Ta <w A= ~ jv aa rie Dh SS 3 ad Low NR xb. V3 te wl 3 Cena WA a ~ y es a wa TS oN Sh a RCT : -" I yrs - oY RE Sant: A RTs (PIT EE STAN TE rad. - ne -T 14 -- PORT PERRY STAR -- Wed., December 19, 1979 MoJacks hit skids with three losses by Danny Millar The Port Perry MoJacks paid a visit to the Port Hope Panthers on Thursday Dec. 13 after having walloped them 12-4 the previous week- end. The rematch was quite a different story as league leading scorer Greg Bullen scored six goals and assisted twice to give the Panthers a 9-3 victory. The day before the MoJacks were beaten 9-7 in Stouffville by the Clippers. Bullen, the speedy center- man with a tremendous shot, scored the last six goals of the match. The final marker came with three seconds remaining in the contest when he blasted a slap shot into the lower corner on Merle Schewaga. The bullet drive came as Bullen cross- ed the blue line. Captain Bill Bridge did the most damage for Port Perry with a goal and two assists. His goal came on a first period play at 15:41 after he took three shots at goal- keeper Joe Pokusa. Defenceman Bill Owen drew the lone assist. Rob Garrow, who has made a successful change from defence to forward netted the other two MoJack markers. He slipped his own rebound past Pokusa at 17:48 of the middle period after getting aid from linemates Bridge and Tim Kane. Garrow beat Pokusa for the second time on a slap shot after less than two minutes had been played in the second period. He received passes from Bridge and Robert Cannon. Camon will be gone from the line up for the week preceeding the Christmas Holidays as he is vacationing in the Bahamas. He is joined in this junket by Tim Thompson, who played his first junior game against Stouffville the night before. ~~ Port Perry had their chances, despite being out- ayed. David Alexander had a shot bqunce off the cro r in thefSecond period after a clear opportunity from Clark Menzies and later in the frame Bridge and Owen were thwarted on close-in opportunities. Atom Stars Continued lingall and Steven Whalen who played steady in the net for Port. Bobby Goble, Warren Geer, Brian Dean, Scott Feasby and Robbie Jamieson who played strong defensively throughout the tournament, and the for- wards: John Lally, Dave Culbert, Dave Burnett, Blair Phillips, Robbie Baker, John Harmon, Steven Durham, Brad Menzies, Ray Daniels and Mark Barkey who did a good job of checking, passing and putting the puck in the net. Coach Dave Barkey, Assis- tant Coach Dave Ballingall and Manager Bob 'Punch' Jamieson deserve recogni- tion for the excellent coach- ing these boys are receiving. The boys are responding well for their coaches. Keep up the good work, and Congratulations. The last two. periods belonged to Bullen. He beat Schewaga three times in each session. His first came 15 seconds into the frame when he took the puck off the draw and wheeled down the ice for an unassisted point. Another one went in after 12:28 while Port Perry was 'two men short. Gord Lewis got his second of two assists. Lewis and Bullen combin- ed to give Port Hope a 6-2 advantage after two seg- ments with a goal at 3:05. Owen was issued a minor penalty on the same play. Bob Croll, Rick Evans, and captain Dale Sidey, who chipped in a pair were the other marksmen. All of these shots got by Schewaga in the initial session. TOUGH LOSS Defenceman Charles Tyson led the MoJacks with three goals against Stouff- ville. Bridge added a couple and Phil Cochrane combined a goal with four assists. Stouffville must feel fortunate to gain the two points because Port was leading as late as 7:43 of the third period. At that point Steve Spang completed his hat trick with a power play goal while blueliner John Robertson was off. Port Perry led 3-2 after 20 'minutes of play after being. outskated by a slight margin. Tyson picked up a loose puck near a corner and slapped it past goalie Randy Defoy at 4:25. It was unassisted. Bridge's goals came 4:18 apart. He netted one at 8:11 on a man-power advantage after Cochrane and Todd Wilbur assisted. Wilbur worked the point on the power plays and collected three assists. Earlier in the evening he had participated in a Midget A practice. The Clippers followed the Bridge goal with one of their own when Tyson committed himself at the blue line on the other end of the rink and Bruce Rugelis finished off a two on one break with a shot that eluded netminder Raymond Gibson. Bridge regained Port's two goal margin when he banged in a Garrow rebound on a power play near the middle of the period. Later Garrow was victimized by Steve Price, who slipped around him for a goal, with only 1:39 left. = ourinsurance a love you Port Perry was given a golden opportunity to pad their lead at the start of the second session when they enjoyed a two man advant- age for over two minutes. They were not successful and immediately after the infractions had elapsed the Clips applied pressure and bottled Port Perry in its own end. Due to a shortage of able- bodied workers, MoJack coach Doug Scott called up three juvenile skaters. Tim Thompson and Dave Dickson who were linemates on the younger team combined with Tim Kane and played well. Rearguard Mike Tobin teamed with Robertson. Late in the second period Robertson was called upon to make a sliding stop on a Stouffville rush after a Tobin miscue. Spang scored at 6:08 of the second on a nifty play when he shovelled the puck under Garrow's legs and then flipped it into a corner to tie the score. The Clippers went ahead for the first time a minute and a half later on Glen Gibson's goal from Kelly Burrows. Cochrane, Cannon and Tyson countered with MoJacks markers in the same frame. Cannon's was a superb passing play in which he passed off to Cochrane, who traded passes with Mike Healey and then fed Cannon over the blue line. Cannon cut in front of Defoy and popped it in. The Stouffville contest came in the midst of a disastrous road trip in which Port Perry lost three games and dropped another to loop leading Bowmanville team emerged victorious. Middleton, 2nd. "ATTENTION: Wood Burners A CHIMNEY LINED WITH SOOT AND CREOSOTE CAN CAUSE DANGEROUS CHIMNEY FIRES WHICH COULD DESTROY YOUR HOME! Take This Worry Out Of Your Life By Professional, Dustless Chimney Cleaning KLEAN SWEEP CHIMNEY SERVICE Your Local Chimney Sweep 985-3111 VIERSON INSURANCE AGENCY LIMITED 193 QUEEN STREET - PORT PERRY 985-7306 VI ple E_IE Ne Dr ii I> gb "gs Junior Curling Champs Eight teams competed in the Junior Men's Open Bonspiel sponsored by Peterborough Lumber last Saturday at the Port Perry Curling Club and a local The winning team consisted of [back left] Scott Howey, vice; Paul Griffen, skip; [front left] Beaver Howsam, lead and Stephen NOTICE TOWNSHIP OF SCUGOG APPOINTMENT LIBRARY BOARD Applications will be received from interested citizens of the Township of Scugog who are interested in serving on the Library Board commencing January, 1980. LIBRARY BOARD - 1 appointment (Secretary) if you are interested and willing to serve on the Library Board for a 3 year term, please submit your application to the undersigned no later than December 31, 1979, at Earl S. Cuddie, AM.C.T.,C.M.C,, Clerk-Administrator, Township of Scugog, 181 Perry Street, P.O. Box 209, Port Perry, Ontario. LOB 1NO is don't just leave you. | ALL LINES OF GENERAL INSURANCE 5 YEAR ¥, Sp 4 FAs We 3 5 33: os Ae family wh Trust 1%/a Annual Interest 11v2% Semi-Annually STANDARD Annuall Interest 11%% Semi-Annually the my idpal savings 8 oa 20raton 5S YEAR 12 Annual Interest 11%2% Semi-Annually LIAL macdonald-cartier 5 YEAR Annual Interest 1/4 11%2% Semi-Annually trust company Annual Interest 12% Semi-Annually