Edited Text
10 The Guardian, Cliarlotictown, Sat., April 17, 1968.)
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if
breathtaking
RF
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|
!
EE
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:
Es
t
i
of Wales trophy
on
se
Hs
a
fi
a
:
f
session
for
f
i
:
:
the Hawks
frame.
the
ot
Black Hawks with the âGolden Hawkâ setting
comeback in the seventh game
Hull scored his eighth goal of .
the half-way mark and this was
the Billy Reay coached aggregation to spring to
SPORTS FRONT /
Black Hawks
Down Detroit
by JIM CULLEN
series at the Detroit Olympia
Stanley Cup finals against
renchmenâ in the spring
winners jumped into a 2-0 lead
and Howe and appeared
in Stanley Cup finals when
stanza.
|
z
the series before the
ier before the close of the
on even footing with the home
Mikita,-who-hadnât- produced-very -well_for the-Hawks
winning goal for the Windy City
third period and Eric Nester-
the cake when he blasted one past Roger
into the Wingsâ zone and-
carried two defencemen out of position. This will mark the first
cerest sympathies te âDingerâ
chapter of the Detroit fan club
âWings showed signs of fatigue â~
night
*s all important contest.
players on a regular
take this opportunity to offer our sin-
Johnson, president of the local
as well as two of his executive
persons of Roy MacDonald and John Lane.
We are calling the Hawks to beat the Canadiens in the. finals.
Royals Meet Shearwater
their
championship St.
and âAlan âSmeltâ Gillis.
be
SANDY FRIZZELL
evening and two stars from
Dunstanâs Varsity squad were
outfit in Thursday _nightâs workout plus
the Royals team such as Angus
âFarmerâ Josey, Erwin Wood, Stu
The two youthful college stars
will be all-star defenceman
veteran with St. Dunstanâs. hoc-
factors in the Saints nail-
as
Maritime Intercollegiate Hockey Title and Gordie
or coach Kane on a line with
Monaghan.
Ange for his charges to get by
him to be able to issue a chal-
lenge to the New Brunswick provincial champions. Frizzell was
enraged when the Campbellton forces refused to meet the Royals
Ron Turcotte
Set For Derby © |
By KEN PRITCHARD
NEW YORK (CP)âThe stars
fn Ron Turcotteâs eyes are
glowing brighter than ever
these days.
The 23 - year - old Canadian
jockey, who five years ago was
a lumberjack in northefn New
âBrunswick, has been assigned
to. ride Tom Rolfe, rated among
the top three or four of the
three-year-olds which will start
in the Kentucky Derby May 1.
Turcotte, who has never seen
a derby except on television,
thinks he has a good chance to
wind up in the winner's circle
two weeks from Saturday.
Tom Rolfe is from the stable
owned by Raymond Guest, U.S
ambassador to Ireland. Heâs
rated a come-from-behind horse
and Turcotte has a reputation
as a âbelly riderââthe type of
jockey who refuses to admit his
TYhount is beaten until the race
is over. The combination may
be dynamic.
Last Saturday at Laurel, Tom |
Rolfe and Turcotte came from
behind to win the Chesapeake
Stakes, making it three victor-
ies for Tom Rolfe in four starts
this year. As the other Derby
starters, Guestâs three-year-old
will run 144 miles for. the first
time May 1.
HAS LONG STRIDE >
âTom Rolfe hasnât been far-
ther thar a mile and one-six-
teenth,â Turcotte said this
week. âBut he likes to come
from behind and has come from
last in his three winning races
this year. Heâs a small horse,
but he has a long stride.â
Turcotte seems destined to be
the main Canadian interest in
the Derby this year. Last year,
E. P. Taylor's Canadian-bred
Ă©
ness before being beaten in the | 8th..- at
Belmont stakes, the third of the | Sgts. Mess at Legion âAâ a Short (1-0), N.
famed .triple-crown. events for | Legion âââBâ at RCAF 32) American League
three-year-olds. | Brace âBYâ at. CLA 4-1| Baltimore, Roberts (00) at
Taylor has a couple of Derby | Sportsman at Brace âAâ 3-2| Boston, Monbouquette (1-0).
nominees this yearâNative Vic- | STAND) Washington, Ortega (0-1) at!
tor and Victory Myth. But) W L Pts: Chicago, Howard (0-0). |
neither is likely to start. | Sgts. Mess. 60 30 120; Cleveland, Donovan (040) at
Nor -is Flyalong, nominated | Sportsman | 56 34 112| Kansas City, Pena (00), tw |
by D. B, Weldon of London, | Legion âAâ 52 3% 104) light.
Ont....and Tom Hays of Oak-| Brace âA S35 Detroit, Regan (0-0) at-Los
ville, Ont., likely to start. Fly- Brace âBâ 38 52 Angeles, Newman (0-1), N.
along finished fourth in the Fla-| 7G, «pr 3753 74 ââ
Meme U.S. trainers think Tur- | RCAF 4% 8 SL LIAR
cotte ig th best Jockey t = fen schedule ends April) (DS
out of Canada in years. A tough |â; ,
aad an â man. te First af (6) teams will be m FOR
has ridden more than win- ext night of Thursday
than $2,500,000. Brace âBâ at Sgts. Mess. at
ee ase oe ry âAâ at RCAF nile
Born _a large French-Ca- at Legion ââAâ
five-foot-one, 110 - pound Tur-| League high single â 154 scor- 175 Gt. George Ph. 2-216
â eotte in 1964 earned about $170,- ed by Billy Fisher. \ ;
by
4
> tog 8 ~ .
i have had~a berth inthe?
+as-much-as-he-is.ââ"-âââ
As a. starter, Blake said he |
| Robert (Bert) MacCallum of
Charlottetown is_ the proud
owner of this most respectable
| catch which he landed yester-
day morning. The three trout
"A FINE CATCH
average 16 inches in length
and have an average weight of
2% pounds. MacCallum won
the Fish and Game Derby held
two years ago as he caught the
|
!
By AL McNEIL
MONTREAL (CP)--Montreal
coach Toe Blake sums up the
key to his Canadiensâ Stanley
Cup final series against Chicago
Black Hawks in three words:
Stop Bobby Hull. â
Blake said Friday as his
charges went through a final 50-
ries opener at the Forum:
. âStopping Hull is a tough job.
'|He had a good year against us
and itâs pretty hard to defend
against a guy who's on the ice
will assign rightwinger
whose overtime goal Tuesday
âeliminated the defending cup
|champion Toronto Maple Leafs,
ito shadow the Hawksâ blonde
| bomber. .
âWe'll use Provost against
|him at home. But (Billy) Reay
|may have
|when we get to Chicago.â
Blake, as .coach of the. home
team, will have the. final say in
aligning line-against-line at the
Forum. In Chicago, however,
the last move will be up to
Reay.
Hull, who set the regular Na-
tional Hockey League season on
fire for the first halfy only to
run into a succession of knee
troubles during the final 35
000 in jockey fees and purse
shares the jockey customarily |
gets 10 per cent of the purfse.
Tarcotteâs first job in the
field which has brought him fi-
nancial success was with Wind-
field Farm, owned by Taylor.
Farm manager Joe Thomas
hired him -to clean stalls and
walk horses at 18.
He rejected an apprentice
games, enters ,the best-of-seven
final _in the midst_of oneâof_his
patented goal-scoring sprees.
COUNTS EIGHT
In the seven-game semi-final
against Detroit, which the
Hawks clinched with a 42 vic-
tory Thursday, the muscular
to tie the playoff record for a
five assists to lead the playoff
contract. with Taylor, and
signed- with stable owner Gor-4
don Huntley. But he failed to
win on 14 months in 1961. |
At Fort Erie, April 9, 1962, he |
| broke his maiden aboard Phea-
{sant Ring. He had mounts
that year, of which 180 won,
148 placed second, and 128 were |
third: |
. In 1963 he, was up 1,135 times, |
with 263 first, 172 seconds and |
141 thirds. By arrangement with
Huntley he began free-lance
riding in the U.S. in the fall |
| of 1963. |
He was on his way. In 1964
he rode 1,462 mounts. He was!
first 250 times, second 219 and
third 215 and earned $1,292,264
for the owners of the horses he
rode. He had 50 winners last
October and November at
| Aqueduct track here.
| He. went on to Florida for the
winter and although given only
ordinary horses to ride, picked
up a number of winners. eon
Now that heâs nailed down a |
job riding Tom Rolfe, his for-|
tunes may be ready to soar to)
even greater heights.
Dart Results â
Are Released |
The following are the results)
of the Inter-Club Dart League
played on Thursday, April
i
*
BASEBALL
SCORES
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
San Francisco at Philadelphia,
ppd, rain. | the next game.
Los Angeles at _Pittsburgh,| 2core between Sydney and fre
ppd, rain. Falls in the first game Itâs rather coincidental that
National League round-robin for the Eastern Can- teams in Hockey |
Houston - 4\ ada Junior Championship on and Softball should play off with
New York 5|Monday. Tie news story men- Cape Breton teams in the last) |
Chicago | tioned that the visitors were two years. In softball, MacKen-
Milwaukee - 5| Weary after their long plane trip, zies and Enman Drug played
| and it may be that some lopsid- âor the Maritime title with Glace
American League ed scores will crop up yet. Alan Bay both years and won the ti-
Washington 3| Gaudet was presumably playing tle both times. Chicago i| with Sydney although his name merside juniors played off with
did not appear in the story. Paul Sydney, and split the series at} .
Detroit 6| MacWilliams expects to join ome apice.
Minnesota 4)
PROBABLE
PITCHERS
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Probable pitchers for todayâs
major league baseball games:,
(won-lost record in brackets)
National
San Francisco. Marichal (0-1)
at New York, Parsons (00),
Houston, Bruce (0-1) at Pitts-
burgh, Veale (1-0). â
Chicago, Koonce (0-0) at Mil-
waukee, Clininger (14).
Cincinnati, O'Toole (0-1)
St. Louis, Gibson (0-0) N.
Los Angeles, Drysdale (1-0)
at
some other ideas |
| scoring parade with 13° points ;Laurentian resort
|heading into the finals.
E
B
F
:
5
i
5
| town
-
$ â
Sis Ea 9-0 a a Fa AG APG Re SD
WwW
Each of their supporters, swears
By those Junior Legionnaires;
Of their two-year record they
can well be proud.
Coach Grant Grady kept them
If they loafed he hit the ceiling,
{And hustle won the plaudits of
| the crowd. °
| Those two Gaudets, Al and Da-
{When the chips were down, they
gave it
All they had, and that was
erally enough.
|Pau) MacWilliams, forward lin-
| er, .
tAnd there isnât any finer,
gen-
|Also played defence, but rarely
leftwinger counted eight goals; played if*Pough.
single series. He also picked up |The Arsenaults, Don, Keir, and
Terry,
|Ivan Baglole, Bobby Perry:
|All but Bobby were with Juven- Did
iles last year
Surprised With Score
Son of the worldâs champion
20 horses with records of 2:00
Sired dams of âKnight
DamâEleaner Hal by
|
!
:
}
ADULTSâ$1.00
|
Breed to the sire with the best bleed lines in the Province.
ELEANORâS DREAM BOY
âKnight
or better.
Hal Dale 2.62 sire of such horses as
Adios 1.57, Geod Time 1.57-3, Diamnd Hal 1.57-2.
Presently he has three colis racing in the Maritimes.
Standing at Rey Pippeyâs Mount Herbert 1965 season.
MARITIME PLAY-OFFS ! ! !
| FORUM
MONDAY, APRIL 19 â
SHEARWATER (N.S. Champs)
SANDY'S ROYALS (P.E.1.
; PLEASE NOTE: :
IF THIRD GAME NECESSARY, will be played at
THE FORUM :
TUESDAY, APRIL 20th at 7:00 P.M.
SAME PRICES: ;
Please Note Time of Game For Tuesday
Like
And they filled their proud sup-
porters hearts with cheer.
Other boys who played it smart:
Gerry Smith, Whitmore Muttart.
Wayne Trainot and Bill
Smith stopped lots of rubber) âą Hs
headed for the net.
And the best of all newcomers, | 2)
Freshman goalie, Gary Somers.
His fine work in goal we will not
soon forget.
So our boys have won renown
With last yearâs three-province
crown,
And two Island titles also to
their credit.
Our local Legion rates â âhip-
hipâ
For their two-year sponsorship.
the junior âa deserve
their help? You it
Dreamâ (3) 1.39. with
8.00 P.M.
Champs)
STUDENTSâSte
=
to cruise among the
You don't mad Montreal Trust âInvestment Servicesâ
ate i
Islands... (but it helps)
lio with this Officer as often as you
on receipt of your instructions; between
contact you should circumstances warrant
So, you control over your own securities but benefit
Agency
â
Âą /
iawKks VDeteat Re INgS
> Meet nadiensinrinalsS =;
wt } .
. 4 : 5.
-. ; a See coon - : â 2 *
§ | DETROIT (CP) â Bobby Hull mais sixth game in Chicago when Detroit, Howe 4 Delvecchio, .
combined with Chicago's scooter they lost 4-0. 2: Pronovost 16:35. Penalties â
line to lead the Black Hawks te | âThey stopped checking and Nesterenko 6:55; Langlois, Mi- /
a 42 win over Detroit Red skating and began -making de-/kita 7:51; Delvecchio 8:35; Howe «
Wings Thursday -night and give fensive mistakes the H a wk s/ 13:50. : Bee:
them a berth in the Stanley |were able to capitalize on by the| Second Period â 3.Chicago, B.
Cup finals for the first time in jend of the game._ - . Hull, 8 8:52; Chicago, Mohns .
four years. ; The loss. spoiled a brilliant |2_Mikita, 18:0. Pen-»
The seventh and final game ; perform ance by | altiesâMac 0:16; R. Hull *
of the best-of-seven set saw sma Crozier, who made 29|2:29; MacDonald 7:30;° Gadsby»
Hull register his eighth~goal of stops for the Wings. Crozier|7:49; Lindsay 10-minute mis»
-|the series, enabling him to tie was particularly spectacular in | conduct 7:49; MacNeil 10:42) «©
the record for- most goals in @ the final two periods when he| Third Period â 5. Chicafo,,.
semi-final, held jointly by him- was called on to make 12 Mikita 3 Maki, Mohns 9:42; 6, =
self, Jerry Toppazzini and 10 stops respectively. â~âââ Chicago, Nesterenko 2, B. Bullâ
Gordie Howe. ~ Veteran goalie Glenn Hall | 14:16. PenaltiesâB. Hull 3:12,
|Eric_Nesfereake ware the aiher') SocammetG wih the meceoeary Hall MS SeaÂź
iscorers for Chicago. ' a tineâ ng one with | Cromer ' 7120-9,
eee Se eee Se poe Pe RL q Ww 4
âą~
taking advantage ae lottetown * co]
: checking penalty to Nesterenko 2 pm. ae. a
| ERIC NESTERENKO _|at 6.55 of the first period, with! [ce 1 â R.C. De, 5
-|the: Hawks âhave been in the| end the season for the Wings,|Uine imeem Mie 9°6"| Jelks, H. Me Thea =
finals since the National Hockey | league. champions. F Soi Vs L. Wellner, A-E. Pierceys .
League's inauguration im 1927.| After 30 minutes of standup|, HÂź took 2 goalmouth pass | D. Rogers, E. Jay.
They last won the cup im 1961,| hockey, the Wings began to | fom Floyd Smith and batted it) Ice 2 â J. Cameron, A. Jones,
their third cup win. show the fatigue that hit them |'2!0 the. corner to Hall's left/B. MacLennan, Bill
Montreal made it to the finals late in the second period of the | Wille the Chicago goalie was|vs Dr. Hooper, W: Redden, J.S..
by defeating defending Stanley still down after stopping a shot.| Taylor, A. :
Cup champion Toronto Maple â With Detroit pressing in the| Ice 3 â E. Tanton, H.R. Car-
â Leafs in six games. RIFLE SHOOT Chicago end, Howe, gave the/ruthers, H. T.W.L.â
th heaviest fish in the twe FĂ© peony si of | Wings a 20 lead at 16.35. âHis | Prowse vs R. Spillett, F. Mace ~
day contest. When asked where | TRAILED 24 Phd rey Soy ated goal, which came less than a! Millan, S. Beaton, A. Bagnall.
proud-- owner stated: âturn | Thursday night at the end of | plonship. recent team | 00x, was knocked in from @\ (city) (runner-up)
north at Winsloe and follow (the opening fr and P| was the Summerside Cadets| *etamble around the net. Ice 5 â H. . George,
bag peared to have left all thelt | Squadron. To the winners went|âHull's goal, a blistering slap-|N. MacNelll. G. Rodd vs C. As- »
fight in Chicago. The Wings|the Prince Edward Island Rifle from the left point, came| prey, C. Flemming, Jim Mae- *
dominated the period for the | Association Cadet Challenge Tro-| While the Hawks enjoyed a two-| Lean, J. Anderson. o*
full 20 minutes and it looked as phy, âand Souvenirs to all mem-|man advantage. Bill Gadsby|7 p.m. mixed (tumblers) (Spares
|if they were headed for an easy ' bers of the winning team. and Parker MacDonald were/ needed):
: | The members of the sitting out minors when the| Ice 1 â (Open), a
However, Hull counted at the| ing team were: ~~ muscular Hull scored. unas-| Ice 2 â C. Flemming, D. Ste- »
|8.52 mark of the second period} Cpl. D.. Roddick * 190) sisted. wart, G. Duffy, B. Cousins vs *
and changed the complexion of } WO2 D. Dyment- 189): The =ââscootersâ â Mikita,|H. Petes, S. Flemming, E: Ra
\the game. His goal seemned to| WO2 R. Wand 187|Mohns and Wharramâcame, to|nahan, H. MacKinnon
|set fire to the Hawks and they| F-S. C. Thomas - 185) life midway through the period| Ice 3 â Harvey Douglas, M.â
continued to gain momentum | Sst. J. Straight 185) and Mohns tied the score on a|Dockendorff, E.-MaciInnes, G. â
â_ were all over the , See ee | Anal ve G. Galend, G. ee
stay until two hours before the | Mohns tied the score at 18.09) ,1°W Scores Counted Outâ side while Mikita carried esl" ee 4h Peete, Poa '
© Blake "said "Noel Pie ery ay t= ey 5 AC , aes i le ee eee . trees Anderson vs_ E.
Blake Noel. Picard, a a check. Smith, icholson, M. Jardine, J. Ander-
[burly defenceman whe joined |tired Detroit club. | tencores of the other competing! side and then fed Mohns a per-|son, C. Sentner. *
ithe Habs late in the season| Mikita, the NHL scoring | QCHS â Charlottetown âSgi9|fect-pass who scooted in front; Ice 5 â D. George, K. Doug-
from Omaha Knights of the Cen- |h2mp this season, BHS â Charlottetown g92|0f Crozier and flipped the puck las, L. Burke, E. Douglas vs M,
oa Wh will play |S third of the series at 9.42 and} Ch'town Air Cadet Squadron 8 into the right corner. Pursey, H. MacDonald, M, âą
k League, Nesterenko, with his second,| Ch'town Sea Cadets 690| First Period â 1. Detroit, Ull-| White, E. Jenkins.
againet Chicago if his groim is | scored the insurance marker to| Navy League, Charlottetown 641|man 6 Smith, Howe 7;04; ~2.|8.30 â All ices open.
oe
a. INVESTMENT SERVICES a
of your personal investment portfolio; ii
: â 4 with the least expenditure of time on your part. ADDRESS â
ins. Ch ship (CD please send me further information, Ae *
(0 would like an appointment with a Trust Officer. Bh
By NORMAN MacDONALD Complete and mail this coupon to: MONTREAL TRUST, *
° Charlottetown, P.E.I. ; - -
âAnd a stalwartâon defence â â 119 Richmond St. â Tel. 892-1215 * PHONE. mf
his name's John Beer.â a :
Âą
*Âź
&
if
breathtaking
RF
fe?
|
!
EE
f
:
Es
t
i
of Wales trophy
on
se
Hs
a
fi
a
:
f
session
for
f
i
:
:
the Hawks
frame.
the
ot
Black Hawks with the âGolden Hawkâ setting
comeback in the seventh game
Hull scored his eighth goal of .
the half-way mark and this was
the Billy Reay coached aggregation to spring to
SPORTS FRONT /
Black Hawks
Down Detroit
by JIM CULLEN
series at the Detroit Olympia
Stanley Cup finals against
renchmenâ in the spring
winners jumped into a 2-0 lead
and Howe and appeared
in Stanley Cup finals when
stanza.
|
z
the series before the
ier before the close of the
on even footing with the home
Mikita,-who-hadnât- produced-very -well_for the-Hawks
winning goal for the Windy City
third period and Eric Nester-
the cake when he blasted one past Roger
into the Wingsâ zone and-
carried two defencemen out of position. This will mark the first
cerest sympathies te âDingerâ
chapter of the Detroit fan club
âWings showed signs of fatigue â~
night
*s all important contest.
players on a regular
take this opportunity to offer our sin-
Johnson, president of the local
as well as two of his executive
persons of Roy MacDonald and John Lane.
We are calling the Hawks to beat the Canadiens in the. finals.
Royals Meet Shearwater
their
championship St.
and âAlan âSmeltâ Gillis.
be
SANDY FRIZZELL
evening and two stars from
Dunstanâs Varsity squad were
outfit in Thursday _nightâs workout plus
the Royals team such as Angus
âFarmerâ Josey, Erwin Wood, Stu
The two youthful college stars
will be all-star defenceman
veteran with St. Dunstanâs. hoc-
factors in the Saints nail-
as
Maritime Intercollegiate Hockey Title and Gordie
or coach Kane on a line with
Monaghan.
Ange for his charges to get by
him to be able to issue a chal-
lenge to the New Brunswick provincial champions. Frizzell was
enraged when the Campbellton forces refused to meet the Royals
Ron Turcotte
Set For Derby © |
By KEN PRITCHARD
NEW YORK (CP)âThe stars
fn Ron Turcotteâs eyes are
glowing brighter than ever
these days.
The 23 - year - old Canadian
jockey, who five years ago was
a lumberjack in northefn New
âBrunswick, has been assigned
to. ride Tom Rolfe, rated among
the top three or four of the
three-year-olds which will start
in the Kentucky Derby May 1.
Turcotte, who has never seen
a derby except on television,
thinks he has a good chance to
wind up in the winner's circle
two weeks from Saturday.
Tom Rolfe is from the stable
owned by Raymond Guest, U.S
ambassador to Ireland. Heâs
rated a come-from-behind horse
and Turcotte has a reputation
as a âbelly riderââthe type of
jockey who refuses to admit his
TYhount is beaten until the race
is over. The combination may
be dynamic.
Last Saturday at Laurel, Tom |
Rolfe and Turcotte came from
behind to win the Chesapeake
Stakes, making it three victor-
ies for Tom Rolfe in four starts
this year. As the other Derby
starters, Guestâs three-year-old
will run 144 miles for. the first
time May 1.
HAS LONG STRIDE >
âTom Rolfe hasnât been far-
ther thar a mile and one-six-
teenth,â Turcotte said this
week. âBut he likes to come
from behind and has come from
last in his three winning races
this year. Heâs a small horse,
but he has a long stride.â
Turcotte seems destined to be
the main Canadian interest in
the Derby this year. Last year,
E. P. Taylor's Canadian-bred
Ă©
ness before being beaten in the | 8th..- at
Belmont stakes, the third of the | Sgts. Mess at Legion âAâ a Short (1-0), N.
famed .triple-crown. events for | Legion âââBâ at RCAF 32) American League
three-year-olds. | Brace âBYâ at. CLA 4-1| Baltimore, Roberts (00) at
Taylor has a couple of Derby | Sportsman at Brace âAâ 3-2| Boston, Monbouquette (1-0).
nominees this yearâNative Vic- | STAND) Washington, Ortega (0-1) at!
tor and Victory Myth. But) W L Pts: Chicago, Howard (0-0). |
neither is likely to start. | Sgts. Mess. 60 30 120; Cleveland, Donovan (040) at
Nor -is Flyalong, nominated | Sportsman | 56 34 112| Kansas City, Pena (00), tw |
by D. B, Weldon of London, | Legion âAâ 52 3% 104) light.
Ont....and Tom Hays of Oak-| Brace âA S35 Detroit, Regan (0-0) at-Los
ville, Ont., likely to start. Fly- Brace âBâ 38 52 Angeles, Newman (0-1), N.
along finished fourth in the Fla-| 7G, «pr 3753 74 ââ
Meme U.S. trainers think Tur- | RCAF 4% 8 SL LIAR
cotte ig th best Jockey t = fen schedule ends April) (DS
out of Canada in years. A tough |â; ,
aad an â man. te First af (6) teams will be m FOR
has ridden more than win- ext night of Thursday
than $2,500,000. Brace âBâ at Sgts. Mess. at
ee ase oe ry âAâ at RCAF nile
Born _a large French-Ca- at Legion ââAâ
five-foot-one, 110 - pound Tur-| League high single â 154 scor- 175 Gt. George Ph. 2-216
â eotte in 1964 earned about $170,- ed by Billy Fisher. \ ;
by
4
> tog 8 ~ .
i have had~a berth inthe?
+as-much-as-he-is.ââ"-âââ
As a. starter, Blake said he |
| Robert (Bert) MacCallum of
Charlottetown is_ the proud
owner of this most respectable
| catch which he landed yester-
day morning. The three trout
"A FINE CATCH
average 16 inches in length
and have an average weight of
2% pounds. MacCallum won
the Fish and Game Derby held
two years ago as he caught the
|
!
By AL McNEIL
MONTREAL (CP)--Montreal
coach Toe Blake sums up the
key to his Canadiensâ Stanley
Cup final series against Chicago
Black Hawks in three words:
Stop Bobby Hull. â
Blake said Friday as his
charges went through a final 50-
ries opener at the Forum:
. âStopping Hull is a tough job.
'|He had a good year against us
and itâs pretty hard to defend
against a guy who's on the ice
will assign rightwinger
whose overtime goal Tuesday
âeliminated the defending cup
|champion Toronto Maple Leafs,
ito shadow the Hawksâ blonde
| bomber. .
âWe'll use Provost against
|him at home. But (Billy) Reay
|may have
|when we get to Chicago.â
Blake, as .coach of the. home
team, will have the. final say in
aligning line-against-line at the
Forum. In Chicago, however,
the last move will be up to
Reay.
Hull, who set the regular Na-
tional Hockey League season on
fire for the first halfy only to
run into a succession of knee
troubles during the final 35
000 in jockey fees and purse
shares the jockey customarily |
gets 10 per cent of the purfse.
Tarcotteâs first job in the
field which has brought him fi-
nancial success was with Wind-
field Farm, owned by Taylor.
Farm manager Joe Thomas
hired him -to clean stalls and
walk horses at 18.
He rejected an apprentice
games, enters ,the best-of-seven
final _in the midst_of oneâof_his
patented goal-scoring sprees.
COUNTS EIGHT
In the seven-game semi-final
against Detroit, which the
Hawks clinched with a 42 vic-
tory Thursday, the muscular
to tie the playoff record for a
five assists to lead the playoff
contract. with Taylor, and
signed- with stable owner Gor-4
don Huntley. But he failed to
win on 14 months in 1961. |
At Fort Erie, April 9, 1962, he |
| broke his maiden aboard Phea-
{sant Ring. He had mounts
that year, of which 180 won,
148 placed second, and 128 were |
third: |
. In 1963 he, was up 1,135 times, |
with 263 first, 172 seconds and |
141 thirds. By arrangement with
Huntley he began free-lance
riding in the U.S. in the fall |
| of 1963. |
He was on his way. In 1964
he rode 1,462 mounts. He was!
first 250 times, second 219 and
third 215 and earned $1,292,264
for the owners of the horses he
rode. He had 50 winners last
October and November at
| Aqueduct track here.
| He. went on to Florida for the
winter and although given only
ordinary horses to ride, picked
up a number of winners. eon
Now that heâs nailed down a |
job riding Tom Rolfe, his for-|
tunes may be ready to soar to)
even greater heights.
Dart Results â
Are Released |
The following are the results)
of the Inter-Club Dart League
played on Thursday, April
i
*
BASEBALL
SCORES
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
San Francisco at Philadelphia,
ppd, rain. | the next game.
Los Angeles at _Pittsburgh,| 2core between Sydney and fre
ppd, rain. Falls in the first game Itâs rather coincidental that
National League round-robin for the Eastern Can- teams in Hockey |
Houston - 4\ ada Junior Championship on and Softball should play off with
New York 5|Monday. Tie news story men- Cape Breton teams in the last) |
Chicago | tioned that the visitors were two years. In softball, MacKen-
Milwaukee - 5| Weary after their long plane trip, zies and Enman Drug played
| and it may be that some lopsid- âor the Maritime title with Glace
American League ed scores will crop up yet. Alan Bay both years and won the ti-
Washington 3| Gaudet was presumably playing tle both times. Chicago i| with Sydney although his name merside juniors played off with
did not appear in the story. Paul Sydney, and split the series at} .
Detroit 6| MacWilliams expects to join ome apice.
Minnesota 4)
PROBABLE
PITCHERS
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Probable pitchers for todayâs
major league baseball games:,
(won-lost record in brackets)
National
San Francisco. Marichal (0-1)
at New York, Parsons (00),
Houston, Bruce (0-1) at Pitts-
burgh, Veale (1-0). â
Chicago, Koonce (0-0) at Mil-
waukee, Clininger (14).
Cincinnati, O'Toole (0-1)
St. Louis, Gibson (0-0) N.
Los Angeles, Drysdale (1-0)
at
some other ideas |
| scoring parade with 13° points ;Laurentian resort
|heading into the finals.
E
B
F
:
5
i
5
| town
-
$ â
Sis Ea 9-0 a a Fa AG APG Re SD
WwW
Each of their supporters, swears
By those Junior Legionnaires;
Of their two-year record they
can well be proud.
Coach Grant Grady kept them
If they loafed he hit the ceiling,
{And hustle won the plaudits of
| the crowd. °
| Those two Gaudets, Al and Da-
{When the chips were down, they
gave it
All they had, and that was
erally enough.
|Pau) MacWilliams, forward lin-
| er, .
tAnd there isnât any finer,
gen-
|Also played defence, but rarely
leftwinger counted eight goals; played if*Pough.
single series. He also picked up |The Arsenaults, Don, Keir, and
Terry,
|Ivan Baglole, Bobby Perry:
|All but Bobby were with Juven- Did
iles last year
Surprised With Score
Son of the worldâs champion
20 horses with records of 2:00
Sired dams of âKnight
DamâEleaner Hal by
|
!
:
}
ADULTSâ$1.00
|
Breed to the sire with the best bleed lines in the Province.
ELEANORâS DREAM BOY
âKnight
or better.
Hal Dale 2.62 sire of such horses as
Adios 1.57, Geod Time 1.57-3, Diamnd Hal 1.57-2.
Presently he has three colis racing in the Maritimes.
Standing at Rey Pippeyâs Mount Herbert 1965 season.
MARITIME PLAY-OFFS ! ! !
| FORUM
MONDAY, APRIL 19 â
SHEARWATER (N.S. Champs)
SANDY'S ROYALS (P.E.1.
; PLEASE NOTE: :
IF THIRD GAME NECESSARY, will be played at
THE FORUM :
TUESDAY, APRIL 20th at 7:00 P.M.
SAME PRICES: ;
Please Note Time of Game For Tuesday
Like
And they filled their proud sup-
porters hearts with cheer.
Other boys who played it smart:
Gerry Smith, Whitmore Muttart.
Wayne Trainot and Bill
Smith stopped lots of rubber) âą Hs
headed for the net.
And the best of all newcomers, | 2)
Freshman goalie, Gary Somers.
His fine work in goal we will not
soon forget.
So our boys have won renown
With last yearâs three-province
crown,
And two Island titles also to
their credit.
Our local Legion rates â âhip-
hipâ
For their two-year sponsorship.
the junior âa deserve
their help? You it
Dreamâ (3) 1.39. with
8.00 P.M.
Champs)
STUDENTSâSte
=
to cruise among the
You don't mad Montreal Trust âInvestment Servicesâ
ate i
Islands... (but it helps)
lio with this Officer as often as you
on receipt of your instructions; between
contact you should circumstances warrant
So, you control over your own securities but benefit
Agency
â
Âą /
iawKks VDeteat Re INgS
> Meet nadiensinrinalsS =;
wt } .
. 4 : 5.
-. ; a See coon - : â 2 *
§ | DETROIT (CP) â Bobby Hull mais sixth game in Chicago when Detroit, Howe 4 Delvecchio, .
combined with Chicago's scooter they lost 4-0. 2: Pronovost 16:35. Penalties â
line to lead the Black Hawks te | âThey stopped checking and Nesterenko 6:55; Langlois, Mi- /
a 42 win over Detroit Red skating and began -making de-/kita 7:51; Delvecchio 8:35; Howe «
Wings Thursday -night and give fensive mistakes the H a wk s/ 13:50. : Bee:
them a berth in the Stanley |were able to capitalize on by the| Second Period â 3.Chicago, B.
Cup finals for the first time in jend of the game._ - . Hull, 8 8:52; Chicago, Mohns .
four years. ; The loss. spoiled a brilliant |2_Mikita, 18:0. Pen-»
The seventh and final game ; perform ance by | altiesâMac 0:16; R. Hull *
of the best-of-seven set saw sma Crozier, who made 29|2:29; MacDonald 7:30;° Gadsby»
Hull register his eighth~goal of stops for the Wings. Crozier|7:49; Lindsay 10-minute mis»
-|the series, enabling him to tie was particularly spectacular in | conduct 7:49; MacNeil 10:42) «©
the record for- most goals in @ the final two periods when he| Third Period â 5. Chicafo,,.
semi-final, held jointly by him- was called on to make 12 Mikita 3 Maki, Mohns 9:42; 6, =
self, Jerry Toppazzini and 10 stops respectively. â~âââ Chicago, Nesterenko 2, B. Bullâ
Gordie Howe. ~ Veteran goalie Glenn Hall | 14:16. PenaltiesâB. Hull 3:12,
|Eric_Nesfereake ware the aiher') SocammetG wih the meceoeary Hall MS SeaÂź
iscorers for Chicago. ' a tineâ ng one with | Cromer ' 7120-9,
eee Se eee Se poe Pe RL q Ww 4
âą~
taking advantage ae lottetown * co]
: checking penalty to Nesterenko 2 pm. ae. a
| ERIC NESTERENKO _|at 6.55 of the first period, with! [ce 1 â R.C. De, 5
-|the: Hawks âhave been in the| end the season for the Wings,|Uine imeem Mie 9°6"| Jelks, H. Me Thea =
finals since the National Hockey | league. champions. F Soi Vs L. Wellner, A-E. Pierceys .
League's inauguration im 1927.| After 30 minutes of standup|, HÂź took 2 goalmouth pass | D. Rogers, E. Jay.
They last won the cup im 1961,| hockey, the Wings began to | fom Floyd Smith and batted it) Ice 2 â J. Cameron, A. Jones,
their third cup win. show the fatigue that hit them |'2!0 the. corner to Hall's left/B. MacLennan, Bill
Montreal made it to the finals late in the second period of the | Wille the Chicago goalie was|vs Dr. Hooper, W: Redden, J.S..
by defeating defending Stanley still down after stopping a shot.| Taylor, A. :
Cup champion Toronto Maple â With Detroit pressing in the| Ice 3 â E. Tanton, H.R. Car-
â Leafs in six games. RIFLE SHOOT Chicago end, Howe, gave the/ruthers, H. T.W.L.â
th heaviest fish in the twe FĂ© peony si of | Wings a 20 lead at 16.35. âHis | Prowse vs R. Spillett, F. Mace ~
day contest. When asked where | TRAILED 24 Phd rey Soy ated goal, which came less than a! Millan, S. Beaton, A. Bagnall.
proud-- owner stated: âturn | Thursday night at the end of | plonship. recent team | 00x, was knocked in from @\ (city) (runner-up)
north at Winsloe and follow (the opening fr and P| was the Summerside Cadets| *etamble around the net. Ice 5 â H. . George,
bag peared to have left all thelt | Squadron. To the winners went|âHull's goal, a blistering slap-|N. MacNelll. G. Rodd vs C. As- »
fight in Chicago. The Wings|the Prince Edward Island Rifle from the left point, came| prey, C. Flemming, Jim Mae- *
dominated the period for the | Association Cadet Challenge Tro-| While the Hawks enjoyed a two-| Lean, J. Anderson. o*
full 20 minutes and it looked as phy, âand Souvenirs to all mem-|man advantage. Bill Gadsby|7 p.m. mixed (tumblers) (Spares
|if they were headed for an easy ' bers of the winning team. and Parker MacDonald were/ needed):
: | The members of the sitting out minors when the| Ice 1 â (Open), a
However, Hull counted at the| ing team were: ~~ muscular Hull scored. unas-| Ice 2 â C. Flemming, D. Ste- »
|8.52 mark of the second period} Cpl. D.. Roddick * 190) sisted. wart, G. Duffy, B. Cousins vs *
and changed the complexion of } WO2 D. Dyment- 189): The =ââscootersâ â Mikita,|H. Petes, S. Flemming, E: Ra
\the game. His goal seemned to| WO2 R. Wand 187|Mohns and Wharramâcame, to|nahan, H. MacKinnon
|set fire to the Hawks and they| F-S. C. Thomas - 185) life midway through the period| Ice 3 â Harvey Douglas, M.â
continued to gain momentum | Sst. J. Straight 185) and Mohns tied the score on a|Dockendorff, E.-MaciInnes, G. â
â_ were all over the , See ee | Anal ve G. Galend, G. ee
stay until two hours before the | Mohns tied the score at 18.09) ,1°W Scores Counted Outâ side while Mikita carried esl" ee 4h Peete, Poa '
© Blake "said "Noel Pie ery ay t= ey 5 AC , aes i le ee eee . trees Anderson vs_ E.
Blake Noel. Picard, a a check. Smith, icholson, M. Jardine, J. Ander-
[burly defenceman whe joined |tired Detroit club. | tencores of the other competing! side and then fed Mohns a per-|son, C. Sentner. *
ithe Habs late in the season| Mikita, the NHL scoring | QCHS â Charlottetown âSgi9|fect-pass who scooted in front; Ice 5 â D. George, K. Doug-
from Omaha Knights of the Cen- |h2mp this season, BHS â Charlottetown g92|0f Crozier and flipped the puck las, L. Burke, E. Douglas vs M,
oa Wh will play |S third of the series at 9.42 and} Ch'town Air Cadet Squadron 8 into the right corner. Pursey, H. MacDonald, M, âą
k League, Nesterenko, with his second,| Ch'town Sea Cadets 690| First Period â 1. Detroit, Ull-| White, E. Jenkins.
againet Chicago if his groim is | scored the insurance marker to| Navy League, Charlottetown 641|man 6 Smith, Howe 7;04; ~2.|8.30 â All ices open.
oe
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