12 The Guardian. Charlottetown, Mon., Feb. 10, 1964.. . A SPORT ECHOES By Norman Macdonald Summerside Bureau of The Guardian The Top Ten The “top len" of the Prince County Hockey League scorer- ers: C1 > ‘U 3 Grady (C) ’ Deighan (C) Gaudet ( J ) Gaudet (C) Gallant (C) Bernard (0) Cameron (0) Leard (B) Gallant (C) Macwilliiams (J) wassecoreo Vw55:§E5§§§ assassssga .ssssssaaas .landers ccmpeting in the Mac- Donald Brief at Charlottetown on March 2 Saturday at Mono. fun. a rink composed entirely of Islanders won the New Brun- swick championship and will re- present our neighbouring pro- fince in the Brier. A Summer- side David Silliphanl. is male of the winning foursome. David was skip of the schoolboy Are Champions Again Harold Mabey. the skip of the New Bl‘Ul'l5\Vl('I\' champions. (and he has now won it three con- secutive times). throws stones. and his son. Hap. heaves lhc skip's rocks. Harold Keith is the other member of the foursome. Some years ago when we were teaching school in Cape 'l‘ra\'crs Harold tended goal for one of the South Shore teams. Tryon_ we think it was. In those days we didn't work for the paper, but used to send Toy-Toy ii to :1. Lloyd “Toy-Toy” Gallant has gone to Halifax in play ' Schoonens. and his absence has been felt in the ranks of the Junior Legion- nah-es.... Coach Grant. Grady and hj__ henchmen would rather see “Toy " come home than Bill Bailey. but not enough. per. haps. to “pay the rent“. No- body. and certaintly not the Junior heads. is blaming Lloyd for his departure. Alter there are few substitutes for that old folding stuff. The Jun- iors didn‘t look like the same team last Friday night when those old Texaco smoothies E curling rink which represented Summerside high school at. the Canadian finals in 1956. if heredity counts for any. thing. David should have been :1 hockey star. Hls llate Father. Ralph was one of the best hockey players on the 0 and his Island in his day. mother (at that time Irene Linkletter) was a member of that fabulous team. the Cry- stal Sisters. We saw them play the Preston Rivuletles from Ontario. but it was close, and it the only ladies‘ game we ever saw that had skating. stick. handling and shooting a bit similar to what you see In men's hockey. David's ‘tn- tcrests were in other sports. however. He took a fling at football and played for Dal- housie when no attended the university. but his first love seems to be curling. in the odd sports story forl kicks. Mabey had a reputation as a good goalie. and hi telling the merits of another net guard- " said: “he's the best in these parts. and we- go e . don't mean maybe." The atiroc-] ious pun fortunately didn't get» into rint. In those days wel don't know that you must “cditoria1ize" when writing sports story. Anyway that's the} not) a T085011 We relnelnber Mabel’ 50 » Black Hawks moved back into is first-place tie in the National wcll. Departs drubbed them 6.1. There is al W of outstanding “lent in those into a. deadlock with Montreal -- Canadlens, who Juniors. but w1'th and Don Campbell. been injured. missin urroy '1-Dy fence. LAST WEEK'S BOUQUE Attention. you curling fans. { do you want a w V Sports highlights of that little l town called Montague? 5 Well. there’s Ma.ry Nicholson. l queen of the curling rinks. And there's Evelyn Cudmore, Edith Clay. and Connie lngs. Those are the highlights. all “Diamond D" and true blue. .h ;Boston 5.‘? 35:3: after taking the league lead naturally a few leaks in the de- Sa_£,““lay " the pace in third place. 1 Toronto goalie Johnny Bow- er looks on as players rush past his net after the p u c it during Toronto Maple Leaf- Chlcago Black Hawk game in Toronto Saturday night. Chas- liorlrufiisuir The dnps. w start the Three Hawks, Summmsio and ROAF Eagles have ed with th Mari‘ time Anlalclnjhome Hockey Association in the inter-. media cided to stage a ‘double double‘ series to decide‘ 1‘, opwunhl. week working leveoishly; n$‘lD1'£p!';€I$dda1 his crown. D0!!! will b: ‘mm mthotoughtoimsestutho pi sevemlrinks feelllheyhav, annual men’: champI'on- D0118 C - - mmpeun , t appearance at The B1-loriAn Bu!‘ lthwgk-lm grind ulligtiigrcizhsicerned. will be 0”‘ l Playoff Arranged Forlnlermediaies teams. Johnny‘: Flying Eagles: M815 17 E39195 ‘S ‘e Combinesll-lawlcs reg;st.cr-‘ The island winner plays at to New Brun 20 or 21. The return game in the and ham : ome its at New ,or 24. , the cram as: Two year! I80 ' vet ke was alble to Cameron in a ran cliflhanger lcharlotitetown Curling Club. An is in there aflllll V001‘ after . great record in the Rendezvous (competition at the Glnrldtetown The Charlottetown Curling club ind, in the numbu of entries with nine. Summei-side is sending an even half dozen. Belvede;-e and RCAF five each and Mon. .13-guc rec. Interest is high in thee chain- plonships and large galleries will be watching the-matcbel through. out the entire week. A ch ' on Mar. over to Saturday. The week-long bwsplel is 1; double knockout affair and losers in today's opening round will be brink Of eIIfl'lllIall(1n e total goal series) Brunswick March 23 on the very as they play their second match. Chicago Edges Lea .To Tie For League Lead Centre Chico Makl shot the‘ period when Ron Stewart batted Horton 6227:,” McKenzie 11:23.‘ (AP) CHICAGO Chicago Hockey League with a hard- fought 2-1 victory over Toronto Maple Leafs here Sunday night. 1 The -triumph pulled the Hawks 4-4 Sunday will: Bruins night. ight. oronto fell 10 points behind STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN National League . _ w L T F A Pt , lMontreal 27 14 11 162 13065 [Chicago 27 1611 164 123 65 i jToront.o 2.319 9134 128 55 1 ;Detr0il 20 23 9132154 493:‘ 1 New York 18 27 81 9 Boston 14 . Canada Can Be Proud Of Olympic Hockey Team INNSBRUCK ICP) -~ Ari Pol- ter of Edmonton. president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Curlers Set 1 For Spiel SUMMIERSIDE tive meeting "Silver D" bonspiel last week with the president. Mrs. Harold §°"I‘:{ have roo Mclver. in the cnair. Plans were discussed for thclinemcimlt r°r‘”'e°i“g' but the provincial one-day bonspiel for‘ the "PatI‘l0‘t Tl‘0pI1_\‘". I0 be held at the Belevedcrc Golf and Win- ter club sometime in March. rhe““"“"°d pmud "I these exact date will be announced Ever-V Ear.“ the-V sporlsmanlike performance andiuon of the later An execu- of the P.E.I. Ladies Association declared Sunday that (the -Czechs during a Canadian 3‘p".°k mm an Open “robbed" of the tour in Sudbury. Ont.. early in Canada was bronze medal. “I may have told an IIHF=were idirector after Saturday night'slcze¢-115, ‘meeting that Canada woul (never play again in Europe." jfollowing Sun d a he said. "I was so mad I could have said anything. "ln my estimation we were beaten out of a medal. People (at home may think this is an ‘ ibi. It isn't. glory. Many times the players caused a donny- there with tcrribl their tempers. CANADIAN INLAGE ‘GOOD’ "1 think Canada should be boys. put 0 The date of the annual meetingpthey pmved lhc-" are H b"."°h of the association was set for th last Saturday in April. It mu be :21“ held in Summerside. Ceniennials Arrive Home Pee Wees arrived home yes- terday afte-rnoon by air pucksters that gained so much prestige for Char-lottetown’9 Minor Hockeylsts by their re- cent display of hockey and sportsmanship at the Quebec International Hockey Tourna- ment. held in Quebec City last wee . The Charlottetown team was entered in the “B" competition in the tournament. The Cen- tennaials walloped Olsainville. Quebec 6-0 in their first outing. In their next contest the oppos. ltion was much stronger in the persons of a team from Gatineu. Quebec and this time the Ohm- {mm tlnrnials out in the semi-finals by virtue of a 3-0 verdict. Their only decisive loss was a 9-0 defeat at the hands of unit. St. Marie Pee Wee. who gentlemen. They ople ‘jected l-people over here. l Potter said he made a motion 1 lat the Saturday night III-IF Y.to retaliate. They didn‘t win be image on thefiryo first January. when 33 penalties} called. 21 against that At a players meeting e y afternoon. 1 ‘they said they were butt-ended] in the head. spcared and spat: on by the Czechs. Four pre-Olympic exhibition games were scheduled ml Czechoslovakia and the players! . We went down in a lot of'..[o1d pmher Bauer ‘9 that .e irough stuff probably would con- ‘tinue there and they would have want put in this position be- ‘cause the repercussions would involve the coach. This was one of the issues 3 ‘Toronto. Another was the ques- lbxlity Selling Ont. The _ . . Ceflalnllf ‘Swedes had said Selling was not urcdl the imagination of the .e1e:ib1e to may in the Olympics a one-game ut with Toronto Maple Leafs of the National League. players w a n t e d meeting called by UHF pres:-JEU ident John F. (Bunny) Ahearne Ilbetwccn the first and second eriods of the Czech - Swede (P game. w h e n IIHF ' officials lcalcuIated' on all eight teams if in triple tie existed among the be 0 1.... ltop u l "I protested immediately," ;Potter said. "and when I made in motion saying it (the goal. lspread) was calculated on lgames involving only the top .four teams. Czechoslovakia and .Russia supported me. Even the :Unlte States voted against (Canada. 1 "six voted against the motion ‘and Finland abstained. : "T U goes along with .what Ahearne says." Potter said he would give a full report on the situation at the CAHA annual meeting in Ottawa in May. The Canadian team had me! vialtalked about the goal spread,hom-5. Moncton. 'l‘his is the team of land "Ahearne mentioned it was’ rope. l That night Father Bauer. the. ICAHA executive and officials of. the Czech touring team met ml camera for more than tw ‘ The Czechs apologized ‘for the rough play at Sudbury land promised there would not » a recurrence while the (Canadians were in Czechoslo- vakia. 47.: ‘-.-x .~...‘¢.‘;3n-:7 ' ' A: Saints Down a YMCA Team Sf. Dunstan: Junior Varsity Basketball team trounced YMCA squad 85-87 in 11 Island intermediate Baa- ketball game at the YMCA Gym on Saturday night. Larry Farrel was the big gun for the Saints as he wished 23 points. Art Strong collected 26 for high man in the name but in a losing cause. SDU — Foley 13. Davis 10. R0- gers 8. Sootlen 0. Nantes 12. J9 ski l. Farrell 23. .Iobin 3. Buotte 14. Total —- 85. G Scantlebury 23, YMC . Oenten. R. MacDonald 0. K. Johnston 0, cmAtkinson 12. J. Ives 4. 3. Mc- Dougall 2. A. strung 20. R. scantlehury 0, Total - 67. ALEX FAULKNER Faulkner Fires Important Goal 30 TO N (AP)—Detrolt cen- tre Alex Faulkner scored with just over six minutes remaining for a 3-2 National Hockey League victory over Boston sat- urday. ‘ Faulkner knocked In a high! pass from the I as ho‘ skated by the left corner of the Bruins’ net. The triumph tight- ened the Red Wings hold on» fourth place as New York lostl to Montral 8-2. “E55"RecI Wings Trip ;' 17644 §New York Rangers in their bat- ';0]0129]_5933JlI:' for fourth place with a 4-2 ‘cleaned up before leaving f0l“li1’B2E: Q‘ r- H winning goal for Chicago at 7:48 of the final period when be swept in to convert o nht ere swept in to convert on the re- bound of a shot by Eric Nes- terenko. The goal was only Maki's fourth of the year. Chicago broke a tense some less tie midway in the second period when Ken Wharram put a back-hander behind Leafs goalie Johnny Bower after tak- ing a pass from Ab McDona'd. Toronto pulled into a 1-1 tie in the second minute of the final rince Edward 11 in ooxn- net on March 28 and at Nova . petition with New Brunswick and Scotia on March :11. This series mgrgglds §1l§V{?]l3{)e9-3°. ‘1““_f)g°§‘n£ N°"“‘ S°°“"' . . - - " "”‘° ’- "°’“° ‘"0 "°‘"° ml through until mldulgh 1 tonight _ If two teams finish in a tie for goal affair. 0 . .8] “mg cerenwnie mg Ab McDonald (14) are Ken Wharx-am of the_ Hawks ms‘ place’ they win pm 3 ,L.,.,,.,. _ Clh m°g;_l-_ this In 5 Tim Horton (7) and Allan (17). The game was tied 3-3. and home Wm goal series to 59. ‘ "“°""- Stanley. In background is (P Wlrephotol dde upon a wmmn If ahallglu-:2 - way tie results. a draw s , . ef . the bye. The teams not drawing the ye shall a sud- , d death semi-final andtliesemlo The following in the curlinfl AT THE S — final winner then will play the draw at Montague for today. team drawing the bye for the Is- 7 P.M. ‘ . and intermediate ‘A’ crown. In Tip Top Tailor — Substitutes the case of a three-way tie. the pmvj ‘ RCAF rink lill not be used for‘ Ice 1 ——- J.S. DesRoches.. L. MONDAY_ .playoff. Combines and Hawks sh,-,w_ 1), some, s. Macxinnon ' the puck past Chicago minder Glenn Hall. who had justl saved on a long shot by Carl Brewer. 1:06 shall decide rink by toss of coin. Here is the schedule 3. Chicago, Maki 4 (Mur- - l Hawks at Eagles: Mar. 3 Com.‘ vs. J. Cudmore. W. Maclntyfe. IL. Stewart. G. ChamP|0fl- iél-"'1 — Dr. P. Maclnlyre. M- 7:30-ll::l0 a.m.—Queen Cllarlotti 12:45-1:45 p.m.—P. W. C. 2:30.3::t0 p.m.—Parl1dnle net |MacNe“ 17 Felgelal I1:a\‘E‘:;"‘aI:h‘C‘-;'int‘:itn Clair. G. Warmlalr. lgulglhy VIS’ Elemcntarycmld d ' 1 , _ - _ ’ 1 A. Jones. A. Su ivan. - Wan . ‘ 4:00-5:30 pm. ren an “M 'i:em("1i3r— :2’ ;Ilii:»nrtcI')' 2° Baal“. aéogfififfs-. 2‘; G. oicldlngs. * Adults Skating Stewart ewe . Eagles 1-: . - .50_5:5o p,m___.,h. cad,“ 5. 7:00-8:00 p.m.- Toronto pulled Bower in the phy, Nesterenko) 7:48. Penalty blues at ‘Eagles; hlar. 6 H]-:wk': wiggimon. E. Duvan B_ Sharpe; 8:l5_9:l5 p_m._ ::::;‘.. '".i:"‘:..‘*::...::: .:::.:':: -§:.::‘:.y iihimiies‘ 30:. :-m--°°mm=~=-- - 1 . _« _ . crrin , . - attack. although Hall had to»Bower lg iIl;Ii&Il‘v\éI:€_s. Ilvvllgllr. 111l5Ea1Cg‘i$»b§ante§JoI':1It:3 Ice 2 _ Ladies. TUESDAY: make a brilliant save on B_oblHall ~- ' 7_m_8_00 pm._Mmm_ Hock” Pulford who! broke in alone with. . . ‘é_fi_i_45 "H" _P W C 30 seconds eft. ‘ O _' ' _' ' ' " ' ' First period —— No scoring. D I d 4.00-7.30 p.m.—Minor Hockey PenaItles—McKenzie 8:54. Flem- E a n a I a WEDNESDAY: ing 10.04. _ Second period — 1. Chicago. Wharram 2R (McDonald. Hill New York 4-2 DETROIT (AP)——Detroit Red Wings went five point.s ahead of National Hockey League victory orm Ullman score two goals. after Gordie Howe opened . the scoring midway through the p o to spearhead the Detroit attack. Ullman's second goal late in the ' lng shorthan e . ' Bruce MacGregor fired the ( net in the last minute ay as New York tried in vain to notch the equal- izer. I New York, which now has lost . -four straight games after mov-~ ing into fourth place for thetwere B. Smith 3, B. MacDou-libel’ ‘”°‘°ry °V" Canada‘ first time last Sunday. twice- movcd to within a goal of a lie. I‘ Phil Goyette scored the Ran-« gcrs’ first goal early in the sec- ond period while Andy Batligate; -got New York's final marker at j 17 of the final period. The victory was the third in ‘row for Detroit and marked lh ifirst time this season that the (Red Wings have been able to string together that many wins.) The Red Wings now have 49 .pninls to 44 for New York. 3 First perIod——l. Dctroil. Howe ll6 (MacDonald. Ingram) 10:31) .2. Dtroil. Ulelman 11 (Smith. ;Jeffrey) 12:21. Penalties — Jef- {fry 0:43. M. Pronovost 7:18. I Second period—3. New York.l iGoyette 17 (Gilbert. Henry) 1:47: [4, Detroit. Ullman 12 (Macgre-‘ lgor. M. Pronovost) 17:25 Pen-» . . . a . 9 [m,}alties—Henderson 6:59. Cahan‘ L a n gl 0 I s. misconduct, . , .37. Gilbert and -Ingram 13:41. { lGadstby 16:11. _: Third period—$. New York. Bathgate 15 (Johns) 9:17. 6. De- oit. MacGregor 9 (Gadsby) 1 14. : Saves. I Plante 10 7 11-28 I Sawchuk 1o 16 6-32] Montreal, Boston l Battle To 4-4 Tie BOSTON (CP)—-Boston rookie Gary Dornhoefer knocked in the puck from a scramble two min- utes from the finish and pulled Boston into a 4-4 tie with Mont- real Sunday night in a furious National Hockey League game which included a penalty-box I = to FOWHBI R0.)’8l5 90590 Nlnelglory failed Saturday night ‘by. _ I St over the Rangers Sunday night. : Mile Creek 8-7 In their lIllI‘dil.\)V0 goals as the Soviet Union l0Iym_P|C 09 3 game of a best of seven semi fi- igffifgted R"- l Olympic hockey gold nals for the W.R. Shaw trophy. Pownal now leads the series 3-0.! The name “'85 li8_d at Six 30 lgivn Canada a victory over the _ middie penod, ‘ at the end of regulation time and I Russians ' came with the Red Wings play-, it “'35 14- Kelly W110 fired the then would have won the gold ‘ d d ‘ itmedal in the final outcome. winner for Pownal in the sudden death overtime. T. Smallwnod led the Pow1_1a.:-‘ARGUMENT FL-‘RES attack with 4 goals while L. Ixcl-‘, ly contributed a brace and Duffy and F. Dow garnered. singletons. l Nine ‘Mile Creek marksman‘. gall 2. B. Crockett Dougall 1. l Viinal standings. four more than Races Held ;S.“.'.:S‘§i:. i twice i On Saturday 1 Here are the results of the ice; races held it the causeway onl aturday afternoon. I No 1 CLASS D PACE ? Far Stride Spirits Freedom Cra-ig's Abbe E.G. ' ‘ My Lady Lynn Way C Times 33.2. 33. Winner Far Stride owned by D. and T. MacNell G-hulhib-1-‘ t~UIb‘l€It\)r- N0. 2 CLASS B TROT & PACE Freedom ance 1 1 dr Roger Stone dns 2 1 Millics Express 23 2 Times 34. 32. 33.2. hflthe tie-breaking system. but i . . . . dldnt involve the strong Soviet Unio 1, J. Mac lo while allowing only goals and given up 19 for By JACK SULLIVAN }ruled that‘ all seven {games nadian Press Sports Editor ,would count in the flgur neg. INNSBRUCK, Austria (CP)—. The Canadian hockey cam. dressed in the brilliantly col- ored Canadian Olympic team uniforms. showed ul) Bl . dium to partici- ‘ ' u t th medals presentations 3.?av'd Bauetli: ‘Erie dilly Then did Father Bauer recover Olympic h o c k e 1/ squad to w medal. "1 b e . e ronz. TV”) more goals would have "Come on fellas." he shouted to his players. "Let's get out of here. We‘re not gettinfl anil- thing so let's get out." The final result had an ironic .»twist. The Canadians. after los- A dispute boiled up later 0V€1"ing to Czechoslovakia 3-1 Fri- " day night. had one slim chance for the gold medal. It required a Canadian victory over the Soviets and a lie or a victory by the Swedes in their game with the Czechs. In that circumstance. even though tied in first place with and Canadians F3 team. _ The Soviets saw to that Willi: Russia a 7-0 won-lost rec- in the Winter Olympics “ ' and 14 points in the gave rd Sweden and Czecho- d medal b w h i c h each lost in the seven gflmel '—a regulation set out by The Swedes, scoring 47 goalslm-n~'_ ' 16 in their! But the Canadians fell have won the gel goal spread—a total of 31-811! and the Swedish victory then under the IIHF regulations took { knocked Canada out of the med the silver medal. .315, The Czechs had scored 331 Some complaints were voiced ajaf-ter the game about the ref- goal spread of lit-four better‘ than Canada's 32-17 record. lvmatci. but none came from Canadian team officials saidiFather Bauer. the Roman Cath- they had believed the second-lolic priest who came up with place tie would be broken on the idea to form international the basis of the goals records and truly amateur team to re- in games involving only the top resent Canada here. four teams —- a system under He said he would make no which Canada would have fin-;comment on the officiating. ishcd ahead of the Czechs. ‘then added: But the ILHF, making its final am proud of my ruling in a hastily called dirac- thought they played a tremen- tors meeting while the Swedes dous game and 81's I that and Czechs were still playing. matters. The Russians played I learn that the Czechs had won man 9:24. Penalties-Nevin azsiliwfifh I e Pownal Trips c The Creek 8-7 l 8 iCanada's bold and. inspired bid i good game. ,‘ the gol the age teur team cl medal and no talk can ‘take it away from them" team young players — their average was 23-hand-picked across the country. Despite the outcome, he said; he hopes his type of truly ama- . resent Canada in the future. hope we as a nation will, co-operate from now on in thisl 7:00-8:00 n.m.—Minor Hockey 10:30-11:30 a.m.—Pa1-kdale Elementary 12:45-1:45 p.m.—P. W. C. 1:45.:l:l5 p.m.—Pro.School Children Skate -1:00-6:00 p.m.—Flgure Skating 7:30 p.m.—Qucen| County too. Now they have I It was Father Bguer Xho tprtr Ice Sports ‘ sed to the Cana in ma euri e llloockey Association that a na-THURSDAY: lional team I39 5°I°°l°d- ?§5°m" 7:30-8:30 a.m.—Queen bled and prepared specifically Charlotte for international competition. "_00_12_00 a_nL_shfl.wwd And it wasFathe 1- Bauer who. Elememary ut ‘°5°“‘°’ “"09 12:-15-1:45 p.m.—P W. c. 4:00-6:00 p.m.-1-‘igure Skatini, 6:00-7:30 p.m.—Minor Hockey 8:15 p.m.—Junior Hockey S. D. U. vs. P. W. C. Students .351‘: Adults FRIDAY: 7:00.8:00 a.m.—Minor Hockey 8:00.l0:00 a.m.—Parkdale am: will continue to rep- 00° nt re of playing true ama-3 Ifurll." he said. "We (the team; , 5h9|'W00d RCEIWII HI!“ wanted to make a contribution‘. 10100-13500 3-In--9099" to this ‘e . Now we have‘ Charlotte .made it_" . 12:45-1:45 p.m.-(P. W. C. 1 The Canadians pm 2:00-3:30 p.m.—Ml &€WIl'. Russia. the Canadians wouldigame “gm against me power. I ’ Y ful Soviet squad and twice led Virtue Of h3V")E 09500" 3055“ the Russians in the first and- ihe lsecond periods. t But when Veniamin Alexand- , “'0 lrovc put the Russians ahead 3-2 St‘\'t'-‘I1 games. had the Superior [goals short against the Soviets Iearly in the gm,-d period saw,-.1 lday night. "not penetrate the Soviet de- ‘fence for the victory. l The Russians earned their. ’ triumph ereeing in the Canada-Soviet margin of any of their victories (hex-e—as th outshot the one of the matches of lion Fire Department School 5:00-6:00 p.m.—Blrchwood School 0:00-7:30 p.m.—Minor Hockey 8:30.l0:30 p.m.—-Teens Skills the Canadians could‘ Teens .35c: Adults Soc (SATURDAY: 7:00.l:00 p.m.—Minor Hockey 1:30-3:30 p.m.—ChlliI-en’: and . Adults Skating 151: 1: 30 4:00-6:00 p.m.—P. W. C. vs. Kings College 6:15.ll:00 p.m.—Minor Hockey by the narrowest ey skated hard and Canadians 42-19 in. best and roughest,‘ the 11-day competi-, guys. I 0 Winner Freedom Ohance owned by J. Fraser. N0. 3 CLASS A TROT dc PACE Millics Lee 1 3 1 Freddy's Dream 2 1 2 Adlopolo Yates 3 4 4 My Hero 4 4 3 Times 32. 31.4. 32. winner Millie’: L29 owned by A. Pineau. N0. 4 CLASS C PACE Jester Jane 1 1 2 Billy G. Command 2 2 1 Grey Eagle 3 3 dr David Watchlm 5 4 3 Island Prince 4 0 4 Drills 1-1131 6 5 dr Times 32 . . . winner Jester Jane owned by Cyril Smith. -braw. The last-place Bruins. forced’ to storm back from a 2-0 deficit with three breakaway goals in the second period, had to rally again when C l a u d e Provost listed a rebound at 1:30 of the: final period and restored 1 leéigue-leading Canadians First pcrlod—l. Montreal. Bel- lveau 19 (Lapel-rtere. Provost) 0:52 2. Montreal, Hicke 8 ard. Ferguson) 16:45. P - Mohns 7:05. Balon. Green a lead 12. . Second perlod—-3. Boston. Bu- cyk 12 (Johnson) 2:27 4, Ron- ton. Kennedy 6 (Letter) 3:03 5. Boston. Oliver 19. 12:41 6. Mont- re . J. C. Tremblay 5 (Lapel'- riere. Richard) 18:22. Penalties —Hicke minor and 10-minute‘ misconduct, Boivln minor and 10-minute misconduct 14:1). Ba- Grecn 17: Third period —— 7. Montreal. Provost 0 (Beliveau, Balon) 1:30 1!. Boston, Dornhoefer 9 (Oliver. Mohns) 17:50. Penaltleo—none. Save: l l-lodge 3 I4 5-22 I [Johnston 9 12 13-—35l Bobby Hull Speaks Out TORONTO (CP) Hull of the Hawks, who had almost as much ice time as? the officials. admitted after the} game that the Canadiem are go. 1 In: to be hard to catch. 5 NOT GETTING GOAL! 4 "We're only one point behind them. but someone‘: got to stop them soon. They're really fly- ing. if some guys on this c b. goals. we'll be okay. I think we're in a slump. just not getting ma on we need them." Stan Mikita, was happy to score his 30th goal of the sen- oonutbntmdisappointed his club do w . "We should have beat them by least two goals. We'll break out with some goals one night." Bobby E Hockey Tomorrow Nightt BORDEN RINK AT 8.30 P.M. JOlHNNY’S FLYING HAWKS VS. BORDEN NATIONALS LIONS HOCKEY NIGHT KENSINGTON RINK TUESDAY, FEB. II - 8:00 PM. Summorsldo RCAF Eagles Konslngton All-Stars I St. Eleanor: Lions Ilonsingvtson Lions Referee - Gordie Drillon Former Star of Toronto Maple Leafs Advance Sale of Tickets Student: 25¢: Adults 60: Proceeds for Minor Hockey_ Skate After Welcome and Good Curling MACDONALD TOIACCO INC; AK our-ax.-K: T Z 1 IA-- -din-:fl.:ln 5-In/nu