‘Saint Dunstan's Varsity Bombs Moncton U 10-2 — The Saint Dunstan’s Varsity Saints bounced back from their 5-4 defeat at the hands of the Mount Allison Mounties last weekend and routed the Univer- sity of Moncton, 10-2, at Saint Dunstan's Saturday afternoon. This was the Saints second win in three starts this season. They defeated the Dalhousie Univer- sity Tigers, 7-0, in their league opener, The Saints were led to their overshelming victory by Gordie Whitlock, who scored three]; goals, Maurice Roy, Dave _0’- Brien, who each scored two goals Toy also picked up an assist. Vince Mulligan, Art Le- Clair, and Rick O'Donnell the other Saints goals. Theriault and LaForge got the U of M’s only points. LaForge also collected an assist. The first few minutes of the first period gave the spectators _impression that the Saints were going to spend all their time in the penalty box. At the 2.40 mark the Saints had two men sitting out rule infractions. How- ever, Moncton failed to capital- ize on this opportunity but when it came the Saints turn to have the odd man: advantage they were determined to make use of the situation. At 9.31; seconds after Moncton gained one of their two penalized players Mau- ., tice Roy scored his fifth goal of TEXACO FUEL CHIEF Home Heating Oil Warmth without worry all winter jong® Deliveries right on schedule so you can never run short. Fuel Chief is the finest of its kind—economical, cleaner burning, and protective to your heat- ing equipment. Call us for Texace Fuel Chief today! Ch'town Petroleum - Products Ltd. 203 Gt. George &t. Ch’town Bot | VINCE MULLIGAN ahead 1-0. Gordie scoring in the first period at 11.50 when he shot the puck, which had rebounded off the Moncton. goal post, over the sprawled Moncton goalie. AGAIN AND AGAIN It appeared as if the second period was going to be a‘ car- bon-copy of the first, when in the first eight minutes there was five penalties given out. On two occasions players from both |sides went off together. Again things settled down and at 8.55, when both teams were short-handed O'Donnell took the puck directly from the faceoff and backhanded a hard shot past Basque, who was playing bril- liant. hockey. The Saints came alive after O'Donnell’s goal and completely dominated the last part of this period. Shot after shot was steered away by Basque, but he couldn't take on the whole Saints forward line, who at this point seemed to have Moncton a bit disorganiz- ed, .and at 15.36 O’Brien banged the puck into the net on a pass from Kelly. Whitlock scored his ° second goal and put the Saints five points ahead when he finished a play that had started deep in the Saints none. The third | \Clair flipped a high shot from ' loutside the season and put the Saints— Whitlock finished the |i / SECOND SECTION ' spectacular goal tending by Bas | que kept SDU in check until) 9.20 when Mulligan backhanded | a shot over the top of him, into | the net Basque received a minor in- jury on this goal and after a few minutes breather he was ready to continue. From the faceoff at centre ice the puck went into the Moncton end but LaForge, who had been a powerhouse for Moncton all afternoon, stole the puck from a Saints defenceman and skated down the ice all alone and fired a shot past MacQuaid. | The Saints retaliated with three goals in four minutes. Le NEW YORK (AP) — Scoring champ Stan Mikita fired three goals and assisted on a fourth as red-hot Chicago Black Hawks whipped slumping New York 6 - 2: in a National the Moncton blueline which took a bad sideways hop and trickled into the net. Again the Saints applied the pressure and again it paid off. O’Brien scored at 14.15 and then ‘at 16.00 the Saints came speed- i shot a rebound into the Moncton net. This game marked the end SDU’s schedule -until after a St. > - g8 2 A = HE ; : r i Fg is Fi jnew year. Their next game Jan. 10, '66 when they ‘host FX. , f H e . | i SUMMARY First Period: 1. SDU — Roy (Kelly, Hughes) 9.31; 2. SDU — |Whitlock, 11.50. Perialties Whitlock, 50; Roy, 2.40; O’- Brien, 5.41; Theriault, 7.29; Al lain, 8.35; Theriault, 16.00. Second Period: 3. SDU — O*- |in Donnell, 8.55; 4. SDU — O'% Donnell, Hughes, Roy) 16.17. Penalties LeClair, Savoie, |that 4.21; Desjardin, 7.35; Roy, La- violette, 8.03; O'Donnell, 16.44. Third Period: 6. SDU —Whit- lock, .56; 7. U of M — A. Ther- liault (LaForge, Solomon) 3.23; 8. SDU — Mulligan (O'Donnell, Hughes) 9.20; 9. U of M — La Forge, 10.21- 10. SDU — SDU, LeClair, 12.45; 11. SDU — O’- Brien (Mulligan, Kelly) 14.15; 12, SDU — Koy, 16.09. Penalties — Hughes, 5.43; Solomon, 8.02; F i E f itt sf iJ i i r eee i 4) i fi and then completed his goal night with just more three minutes to play. scored three goals in Hawks’ 10-1 romp over Bruins Saturday night. Lou Angotti scored * second goal with - handed midwa fest : BE Hockey Practice Coach Angus Carroll has call- ed a practice for Sandy's Royals for tonight at the Charlottetown Forum. The practice session is scheduled for 9.30 p.m. and all team members are urged to be on time for the workout. . There will be a hockey prac- tice tonight for Rogers Rangers at Charlottetown Forum be- 10.30. All players are to attend. <p = ae Z & a Ashley consulted with goal judge Lee Stark and the no-goal decision stood. Pilote rapped at if the finest in the. world. ‘You can’t beat — the taste of _ -Player’s__ The best tobaccos make the best-tasting cigarettes. In Canada, the makers of Player’s consistently buy most a * “of the best. Virginia tobaccos —.« | TUESDAY:° Che Guardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” , Charlottetown, Mon. Dec. 6. 1965. Maple Leafs, de- fenseman Marcel Pronovost (3) throws a check into De- troit Red Wings’ Floyd Smith (17) as he charged around net 13:53, Giacomin 15:25. Second period: 3. Chicago, R. Hull 17 (Ravlich) 7:23; 4. i cago, Esposito 9 (Mohns, Maki) 10:14; 5. Chicago, (Mohns) 3:31, Esposito .6:01, |McMahon (fighting majors) 10:56. Third period — 6. Chicago, Mikita 13 (Mohris) 0:58; 7. New York, Amgotti 2 (Hillman) 11:58; 8.Chicago, Mikita 14 FORUM . SCHEDULE MONDAY: 11:00 - 12:00—Parkdale Jr. High 3:50- 4:50—Prince St. School 5:00- 7:00—Minor Hockey 7:10- 8:10—Birchwood High 3:30- 4:30—Spring Pk. School 5:00- 6:30—Figure Skating - Club 6:30 - 7:30—Minor Hockey. 8:30 P.M.—Junior Hockey: P.W.C. vs. S.D.U. High Students: 35¢; Adults: 60c WEDNESDAY: 2:00- 3:30 p.m.—Pre-School Children Skate 25c per Family 4:00 - 5:30 p.m.—Skating: Children 15c Adults 25c 6:00 - 7:00—Minor Hockey _ 7:30 p.m.—Parkdale Elemen- tary & Sherwood -» Tee Saprts THURSDAY: 11:00 - 12:00—Parkdale Elementary 4:00- 6:30 p.m.—Figure ~Skating Club 6:30 - 7:30 nee , Hockey 8:30 p.m.—Junior Hockey: ‘ P. V.I. vs. Rogers Rangers Students: 35¢ Adults: 0c FRIDAY: 1:45- 3:45—Ch”town Rural’ ; High 3:45- 4:45 p.m.—St-/Jeans ~ School 5:00 - 7:00—Minor Hockey 8:30 p.m.—Skating Senior Teens (15 yrs. & older) 35¢ Adults: Se SATURDAY: the glass protecting Stark with Chi- Mikita 12 13:22. Penalties—Neil- ison (misconduct) 3:01, D. Hull Esposito, Chicago, Detroit Triumph; Habs, Boston Deadlock Ela Le to make shot in this.first per- fod action of game at Detroit Aast night. Toronto goalie Ter- ry Sawchuk sprawis_ bebind the two guarding the net on (Wharram) 16:50. Penalty—jhave scored 2% goals jsurge. . =~, the play. Despite the defense effort shown here Detroit won game $1. (AP Wirephote) ia the his stick. Howell 11:00. Shots on goals by: . | Detroit and Toronto traded SUMMARY , |Chicago 13 11 &~32 goals in the first period with First period: 1. New York, |New York 18 7 5—30 Norm Ullman on a Brown 1 (Gilbert, Robinson) | Attendance—15,925. jpower play and “Eddie Shack 3:57; 2. Chicago, Mohns 9 (Hull, itying the score for the Leafs Mikita) 15:51 Penalties—Howell MONTREADL 4 BOSTON 4 = with less than three minutes re BOSTON (CP)—Montreal Ca- nadiens bounced back with three goals in the third period Sun- day night to wipe out a two- goal deficit and tie 44 with Boston Bruins in a National Hockey League game. The tie, which snapped a Montreal four - game winning streak and ended a four-game maining. Alex Delvecchio put the Red Wings ahead for good at 6:42 of the second period. Barkley, Ullman and Howe. Canadiens into second place in jof the third period. the NHL stahditigs, one point | behind Chicago Black Hawks. Montreal, trailing 3-1 after the [formances of the season, make lsecond period, had gone ahead | ing 33 saves to 24 for Toronto’s with three goals scored in a goalie Terry Sawchuk. two-minute span of the third pe- SHACK SCORES riod. But Tom Williams set up| Shack, in the penalty box Ron Stewart.for an easy Boston |when Ullman scored his goal, goal at 7:55 that gave the took Orland Kurtenbach’s pass |Bruins the tie. ifrom the right boards while | The game also marked ° the skating full speed up the middle ifirst two NHL goals for Boston and beat Crozier with an ice- lrookie Bob Dillabough, both in skimming shot from about 30 ithe second period. |feet out. ; Montreal pulled ahead of the! Uliman’s tally, his 1th of the listless Bruins at 7:11 of the season, came just 13 seconds lfinale when Jacques Laperriere |after Shack was penalized for. dashed in from the blue line to slashing pounce’ on a long rebound and} ~“Dowg “Bakley “shot the puck blast it past Boston goalie Gerry into & maze of players in front Cheevers. The puck hit Cheev- of the Toronto net and Ullman ers’ pads and hopped over his beat teammate Floyd Smith to |the puck and backhanded it past. Terry--Sawchuk. . SUMMARY First—_period:—1-—Detroit,—Ul- leg. LAROSE STARTS RALLY Claude Larose started the rally for-Montreal-_at-5:22-of the— period, picking up a loose puck |Mman 11 (Barkley, Howe) 9:20; | ‘in front of the Boston cage and |2. Toronto, Shack 7 (Kurten- faking Cheevers away from the bach) 17:17. Penalties—W atson post before tucking it in. 6:18; Shack 9:07; Barkley 9:50; Just eight seconds later, | Douglas 11:30. : Bobby Rousseau got his 12th; Second period—3. Detroit, Del- goal of the season when he | vecchio 5 (Ulman, Howe) 6:42. broke in alone on Cheevers and aoe eT 7:15. put the puck between the split | o legs of the Boston netminder. |(Delvecchio) :56; 5. Detroit, SUMMARY | (Barkley, Ullman) 1:14; 6. De- First Period—1. Boston, Bu- troit, McDonald (Smith Bath- cyk 7 (Prentice, Oliver) 1:52, |gate) 3:55. Penalty—Pronovost Penalties—Provost 7:44, Fer- | 14:55. guson 12:07, Beliveau 18:08. Shots on goal by: , Second period: 2. Boston, Dil- Toronto labougzh 1 (Westfall, Fleming) Detroit > :22; 3. Boston, 4Dillabough 2, Attendance—13,384. one Provoet > Ras) NIKE STANDINGS ;Montreal, “Provost 5 (Richard) By THE CANADIAN PRESS 15:23. Penalties — Boivin 1:26, | Ashbee 6:24, Talbot 10:36, Harris 11:43. Third period—5. Montreal, La- ee ae me -? ee jrose 4 (Lapeiriere, Backstrom) phe 1144 7 48% 5:22: 6. Montreal, Rousseau 12 Montrea 7346 S618 |(Beliveau) 5:30; 7. Montreal, Detroit 710 3°44 6117! |Laperriere 3 7:11; 8. Boston, Tre | fe ee iS Stewart 5 (Williams, Langlois) 2°" sil 4 8 8013 |.7:55...Penalties—Fleming... 8:04, , Rousseau 12:56;"Roberts, Woyo- Shh tsa ty: SDHS Pucksters Bodom > 9s Topple Rogers Attendance—-12,319 , j TORONTO 1 DETROIT 5 |. Saint Dunstans High School DETROIT (CP) — Two goals pucksters downed Rogers Rang- by Gordie Howe in 18 seconds jers 8-4 in a.regular league game lof the third period highlighted |at the Charlottetown Forum yes, Page 9 A Tonight is fans [ td f & E | & 9 = cfst 4 5 5 F Fatty Hi age é R Borden Nationals were five out of six: ‘ e i Donnie MacWilliams, centre; with Jim MacLeod and Armand Taylor on the wings, but no doubt the completed squad will SPORT ECHOES ~ Fan Support ids Family By NORMAN MacDONALD Smith and put the game out of reach of the Aces. Ev White, last year’s scoring champ, re- turned after a lay-off North Sydney player scoring honors when North Syd- . ney played the Strait Pirates recently. Alan had three goal and four assists, and Andrea, three goals and three assists, Two of Gaudet’s goals were 26 ; seconds apart. The Andrea play- er who is leading scorer in the Central Professional League at present hails from Cape Bre ton. We wonder if the Andrea Howe got his first goal with 56 seconds gone in the third pe- riod and his second completed a three-way play between Doug Ab MeDonald - added te” the losing string for Boston, dropped |Detroit lead with's goal at 3:55 Detroit goalie Roger Crozier turned in one of his best per- Third period: 4. Detroit, Howe | Johnny Unitas suffered toon have a good representation f playing with North Sydney Jun- all the teams. It’s an ideal com- iors might be his kid brother. bination when people can assist “The RCAF will play their first ‘game in the PCHL, on Sunday afternoon, Dec. 12, at the port. Jim Dwyer will re- place Tony Licari as coach. The other teams will have played about eight games each before Eagies start, so it will be up to the mathematicians with the Pope Motor Aces Fri- to figure out how ma ints day evening, and yet had {to give them for a arr or enough hustle to fire two un- it could be decided on by per- pect a die tererdete TSE wer ve * Leaders : ‘he Aces callected six, miner . eS Ae one major. Two goals were Jim MacLeod (B) 1 7 7 fired into their net when they Don MacWilliams (B) 7°9 16 were short on manpower. The George Dalton (\A) 9 6 5 MacWilliams brothers provid- Lynn Foley (J) 67 8 ed the big third period goals, Gave Keough (B) 5 8 8 Dale shooting the winner, and Dave MacLeod (A) 39 12 — doing a dipsy-doodle at Donnie Arsenault (J) 6 § it crease to mislead goaler Greg Deighan (A) 460 Rampaging Bears Tighten Up Race By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chicago hospital for an operation that will sideline himi for the season and tightened the National Foot- ball League’s Western Confer. ence race into a three - way struggle Gale Sayers raced 61 yards for a touchdown and his rookie teammate, Dick Butkus, led a fierce Chicago defence that trimmed the Colts' lead to one- half game over Green Bay |. aia with the Bears 1% be- Each team has two games re- The Colts at Baltimore next Sunday, closed in with a 24-19 win over Minnesota Vikings. In other games, Eastern- champion Cleveland Browns de- feated Washington Redskins 24-16, New York Giants took over second place in the East. with a 35-10 victory, over Pitts- burgh Steelers, jos Angeles }P! against the Bears a Rams crushed St.’ Louis. Card- ago, was dumped after inals 27-3, Dallas 's edged letting go of a pass near the Philadelphia Eagles 21:19 and |°Dd of the first half and sutf- San Francisco ‘49ers edged De- |fered torn ligaments in his right troit Lions 17-14. knee. He was scheduled for WHIPPED OILERS surgery. « In the American League,| Sayers, held to 17 yards rush- Eastern champion Buffalo Bills.|i08_in_ his. first. try.against-the whipped Houston Oilers 29-18 | Colts, surpassed that with his and Oakland Raiders kept its |touchdown run in the first pe Western title hopes alive by |tiod and wound up with 118 for downing Denver Broncos 24-13. |the game. Roger Leclerc booted San Diego Chargers moved field goals for the other points. within one victory~of the West-| Trailing 19-14, the Packers ern crown Saturday by th |moved ahead on Zeke Bratkow- ‘ing New York Jets 38-7. Boston.| ski's 27-yard touchdown pass to Bill Anderson, then clinched it John Unitas on a 25-yard field goal by Don Out For Year Chandler that brushed the up- right before falling over the crossbar. The Browns also trailed Wash- ane ington 16-10 in the fourth quar- BALTIM : : __ | ter. But Cleveland pulled it out ORE, Ma. (AP) on Frank Ryan’s 14-yard pass Sunday’s game against Chicago | Brown's four - yard touchdown Bears and is lost to Baltimore |SCamper after a fumble recov- Colts for the remainder of the |@'Y, by Jim Houston. National Football Le _| Tucker Frederickson had the son: e ne ee biggest day of his rookie season \for the Giants, scoring three | Unitas’ loss was a cri blow to: Beltimore’s sous tee |touchdowns against the Steelers | Western Conference title. The | runs of 13 and three yards Colts lead Green Bay Packers | and a_ 19-yard pass from Earl by only one-half game with two | Morrall. |} games remaining. |. Roman Gabriel passed for two | The Colts can nail down their touchdowns, hitting Billy Truax second straight conference title} @ 59-yard play and Dick Bass by beating the Packers next| 0 4 l6-yarder, as the Rams | Sunday. |walloped the Cardinals. a eu pen a Son hae | down pass to Frank Clark ‘tory, is ended depended on the proved decisive for the cow- | outcome of an operation sched..|P°YS: who got possession of the , “ball.-when Jethro Pugh broke uled Sunday night. j : ; ' through and blocked Sam Bak- Unitas was injured with 4:42 | ors field-goal attempt. Moncton Don Meredith’s 21-yard touch- Chicago Bears, the second time this season they have laid- him ;low. He also had to leave the game in the first half at Chi- ;cago Nov. 7 with a sprained back and missed the next tilt with Minnesota. CAN DO JOB 7:00 - 1:15—Minor Hockey 2:00- 3:36 p.m.—Skating: AN UNUSUAL CHRISTMAS GIFT SKATING PASS PRICE $4,00 For Boys’ and Girls’ Detroit's 5-1 victory over Tor- | onto Maple Leafs Sunday night | under 15 years of age terday afternoon but not before they had gotten a little more op- | was the second—high -scorer- for the Saints with a brace of mark- ers. Rogers dominated the play throughout the opening stanza and_it _was—only the brilliant play of Mike Brown in the SDHS icage that kept them from put- Both coach Don Schula and +else-on the team.” Unitas still was in the dress- jing room at halftime and the seriousness of his injury be- came known to the rest of the squad. Bears said he did not learn of Coach George Halas of the’ ting the game away right there. the extent of Unitas’ injury un-, However as the game wore on til the last few minutes of the) Drops % Children 15¢ and moved the Red Wings inty posiion than expected. ;Gary Cuozzo, understudy to Un- ’ Adults 25¢ third place in the Notional Alan Flood broke an early sea- itas, expressed confidence the = i 4:30- 9:20 p.m.— - Hockey League ; son slump by scoring a hat trick | substitute could fill in ade- i Minor Hockey The triumph was the fou for.his first three tallys of the | quately. ; ; —- in a row for the Red Wings who seasen while Billy MacKinnon,| ‘‘He’s not a rookie,” said OVd S 'Billy Weatherbie, Bill LeClair | Shula. ‘‘I definitely think he can_ potted singles. Gary Cudmore/do the job and so does everyone MONCTON: ‘CP! — Moncton | Hawks outscored Charlottetown Royals in every. period here Sat- urday to take an 83 exhibition | hockey win over the Islanders. | Phtl Doiron and Charles Poir- ier scored two goals apiece for Moncton,- who led the Visitors 42 after ‘the first period and 6-3 after 3 minute’: the Saints showed more strong- game. t ly “nd they held the majority of “I'm sorry to hear it. He's the play in the final stanza. 2 great, great quarterback.’ For Additional Sport See Page 10 = 4 > Dave Barley, David Bourque, Norm Mullins and Roger Chee vrier scored singles for Monce ton. Charlottetown goals were by _ Angie Carroll, David Lewlor.and— | Arnold MacLeod. CHARLOTTETOWN FORUM A Real Nice Gift Any Time _ More So.At Christmas ___ Available at Forum Office Plaver’s.,. the best-tasting cigarettes. ’ = te “f akg 4 : ; 5 A AOS mee ONE eae ty SAB AEM ON. 0. S *