> 4 oar > “F Canadiens Brighten Hopes & y 4-2 Win Over Detroit. 1 y By BOB TRIMBEE opening. period came on hard as the year of the top trout fish- his tackle was too light to.c-n-| DETROJT (CP) — Montreal | drives by rookie Bert Marshall ing. It was a year with no frost | tain this huge monster of the Canadiens, humiliated by two} \from the point and by Andy. in the ground and the water'deep. I understand that Louis defeats at home, broke loose in Bathgate and Dean Prentice on from melting snows seeped into |Cantello, Seven Mile Road, tang- Detroit Thursday night for a 4-2 | close-in plays. Bathgate leads the ground instead of ‘foaming led with this big trout and came victory over Detroit Red Wings all scorers in the playoffs with torrents. of red, roiled water out the victor. I was told this in the third game of their best- .:, Six goals and Prentice has five. sweeping seaward. The trout | trout weighed one ounce short of !of-seven Stanley Cup final be-'! In the second period the ro- streams were crystal clear and ten pounds. I inquired from a lo- fore 15,154 fans. { tund Montreal netminder trout moved up well ahead of cal ‘character’ as to the type of MORE \stopped Alex Delvecchio on two the Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., April 29, 1968. ‘a HUNTER’S CORNER ‘Cardigan Causeway Called ‘Home Of Immense Trout | B The year 1965 went down in /offering a hard look and ‘reeled trout fisherman's record books in pronto. Apparently -he figured eo schedule. The big ‘tackle bus- ters’ moved into the Causeways early, weeks ahead of schedule and have afforded. some top trout fishing on opening morn- ing, and if reports from eyewit- nesses are true weeks before the opening date. In the North River Causeway an angler had a brief nodding acquaintance with a trout he claims was in the 10-pound class. He had battled a big trout to a knockout that weighed one ounce short of the five pound mark. The excitement of the battle rod Louis used and his reply; The Wings still lead the series really shook me: “A derrick’ 21 and the fourth game will be I'd say he’s needed one to handle plaved here Sunday at 2:30 p.m. that ‘big one’ if he tried to horse | Enr. him~but Louis is too smart for Gilles Tremblay scored a pair jthat and furthermore he was ta- of goals to pace the Montreal {king big trout years before some | aitack, but it was a first-period ‘of our present day experts were tally by Captain. Jean Beliveau kicking in their cradles. which really allowed the Can-- The future of our trout fishing dicns to get untracked after a is growing more dim with each wo bly start. assing year. A typical example; Dave Balon got the other s East Lake in Kings County. treal score while Norm Ull- | It’s not many ye 0 whotf{man and Gordie Howe shared |East Lake was/the mevca of the Wings output. iscores of trout fishermen from : Charlottetown. During my Game} INSPIRED CANADIENS } | J.C. TREMBLEY | ‘\tries from inside 20 feet with £ Oetroit players around the * crease looking for rebounds and ‘trying to deflect the puck into the net SUMMARY ,| First period—1. Detroit, “Ull- | man 34:20; 2. Montreal, Balon 1 (Harper, Richard) 15:40; 3. Montreal, Beliveau 3 19:12. Penalties—Backstrom 8:38. ; Second period — No sco * | Penalties Rochefort 46, ! Howe 5:20, Prentice 11:31, Wat- son 18:23, Balon misconduct 18: 23 GILLES TREMBLEY ' gz. Warden days it was a rarety to} But in this must game for the had left him sort of ‘pooped’ as the.old saying goes and in need of relaxation. So — he lighted up pass the lake without seeing a boat, or more,—on its waters) league champion Canadiens it was veteran netmiinder Gump ~a cigarette and-got back to-an even keel. He had reeled in all but a few feet of line when he| angling for trout and ..° what is|Worsley ‘who proved the -inspir- [aout (GAINED POISE + | But after Canadiens took the final' period the game was. in, Harper and, Henri. Richard. ‘Tt jwas Richard's first ~ playoff point in five games this year Third period—4. Montreal, G: \Tremblay 3 (Beliveau) 1:45; 5. Montreal, G. Tremblay 4 (J.C. ‘Tremblay,’ Rousseau) 3:21: 6. and the Montreal centre re- |Detroit, Howe 4 (Marshall, Del- ‘more to the point catching trqut. | On favourable evenings I have seen as many as seven or eight | t ation for the victory. The ro- tund goalie made at least six, great stops in the early- going ; 4-1 margin tey again gained | the poise the club displayed in ; winning the league title and run- sponded with his best game~ so far. He played throughout with Balon and Leon Rochefort and |vecchio) 19: 59.Penalties—Mar- )Shall 3:03, Balon, Ullman. 10:14, iticllheles. He dante, ites Natit dl CK & sat down fc’ a smoke and, as a | starter, just flipped the lint into | “the water a féw feet from the |checked as many as 16 trout {each~ Of the last-two- periods -to~ adiens with Gordie Howe (9) {Talbot 13:24. Detroit penalty MONTREAL Canadiens—Git——after taking a shot in the ear- boats on this trout walér. I have |and then added another pair in| |. | Ming._through._Toronto_.Maple.| the unit turned ina solid effort. | 0 by_MacDonaid—16-50. ‘ ; : Leafs in four games in the semi- | REPLACED LAROSE les Tremblay catches himself ly part of first period of third ‘ _A big bruiser must have or a . les laced-Claude—fa-——n by es ee . PE Boivin (24) cal _hank. A_bi rulser must have ‘fishermen on this lake and it hold C nadiens shead hots on final “Rochefort-rep' 4d i is on goal | — before £ Anan ee : “ going af — 3 been just cruising by and !t' was seldom that any of them, Each club had- shots of | The loss sn. the Wings’ in the Montreal lin Montreal ......... 9 9 13—31 falling to ice as he game und of ter the loses suck seemed as if it dropped into his didn’t have a good catch and on | goal : apped the Wings’ /rose_ lled al lineups inetrot -.... 9 15. 71 TUBS into Detroit Red Wings Cup play in Detroit last night. _ : mouth. The angler-_claims he hake as. many -as--ten of |. Montrea!-held a 2-1 margin at Heo : ee playoff winning | after he eae fal up when his Attendees 1814: goalie Roger Crozier’s skate No. 4 is Jean Beliveau of Can- (AP Wirephoto) was at least three feet long and twelve would have caught their|the end of the first period and ee renee ee their third iene Aces - ee | 1 : re = : a : mat six.inches wide just back of his| limit of 20 and the others justjafter a scoreless second period | 6) 2 he Until a eal in the cae Gee aah in the | Finals e e land went all the way to third|ans gave him in the first in- neck. He gave him the butt pron-|short by a few trout. With the |outscored the Wings by a simi- |) y lyeb 3 th een won 3 te ‘ ane iz we ie ns us ? WLFA lacions Tie - jon Dick Howser's infield. hit, ning when Jim Landis raced to.and the leader snapped like advent of potato growing on a|lar margin in the final 20 min-| sfi° to det ‘te wr n't been ing Wt u ia the 4 v : | Detroit _-9.110°8 ~~. taking off when Jim Fregosi|home from first base on Rocky : a cabweb He feured: he toni d large scale and deadly poisonous |utes. Detroit's last goal didn't |ble to « pene ings in al- oe -— ae ccd Wie he Montreal 1,2 8 10; L M k ithrew late to first base. Then Colavito’s bloop double. ie ; : : | = A . | 4 . { .nt. , g t ’ i replace the leader a lot cheaper |top killer and ordinary spraying come until 19:59 of the closing | “iniman shot the Wings ahead checked Delvecchio. near cen- Hane leads best-of-seven eague , r ae eel Ane, Soe em Reichardt's homer broke # | ‘string of 29 consecutive score- than 300 feet of top nylon line. 1| material the lake stinks like a period. hear by the gravcvine that he is|cess-pool... Sprayers are filled! Each side took turns at throw- keeping this particular ‘spot and washed in the stream that/|ing its weight around. In par- ‘top secret’ and will give it an-|flows into the lake from the|ticular, Leo Boivin of Detroit other try when he is not so con-| west. In a few-years more top handed out several crunching cerned about his new nylon line. | fishing spots will be written off checks. HOME OF BIG ONES fct? keeps. On one occasion af-| Bryan Watson. the Wings’ The Cardigan Causeway |s the |ter a sprayer was washed in this | spunky at 4:20 of the opening period, Stealing the puck from defence- |man Ted Harris. and beating Until Reichardt’s shot tied the | score, Sonny Siebert had pro-|less innings by the. Indians tected a 1-0 lead that the Indi-|pitching staff. SKILLED MUSICIANS Immediate openings for musicians qualified on the following ing instruments: tre and broke in alone to-score. MORE | CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleve- land Indians tied the major, | league. record for consecutive | |\victories at the start of the sea- utility player, again home of some immense trout:stream dead trout by the hun-|took his share of the spotlight They are not the ordinary speck-|dreds as well as cranes — King |and was_ involved “Leon Wagner's eighth Inning, sacrifice fly brought Pedro Gon- zalez home with the winning run | out ° Crandall 1 | Worsley from the edge of the jinto the wide-open goal. | crease. After a scoreless second pe- ins Stak | Wins TAKES Shaded the California Angels 2- in. several Until 15:30 did the sparkling lit-|ing games of the series, Cana- (1 sea. I was told a few days ago|the stream banks. The greatest/pair of goals in the first three nay S ’ 4 * : b |on- even terms at 15:40, tipping 4 jday in the $29,500 Blue Grass|after California's Rick Reich- a 1 FIRES HARD SHOT | Gay ’ : that one of the Clements boys destroyer of our natural resour-|minutes and BL eee tO a double relay from Terry| On the first he took Beliveau's Stakes at Keeneland. ardt had tied the game 1-1 with goal. On the: second, during a the pace-setting Graustark in Clarinet Coronet Montreal power play, he took a the stretch drive and took the en, a ~~ Peaneon He pulled Crozier to the right ———--— | Not until 9:26 of the opening |riod, one in which Worsley con- | son, winning their 10th straight |period did Montreal manage a |tinued to shine after a spotty ; ,fle Detroit “goalie have a diffi-|diens wrapped up fhe game with + LEXINGTO N, Ky. (AP) | led trout but are Steel Heads ...| Fishers, gulls and mink were skirmishes in the game. leult shot: to handle. (Tremblay's outburst in the |Abe’s Hope upset Graustark by | — a big bruiser giving his'ces and ~— is man himself; oe ete i pass just to the left of the De- | The colt’ from the-Grand Prix his press ene | : 14 | le. with Willie Shoe- * e 5k Celtics Win troit net and fired a wicked shot |stable. with jockey Willi Bectiss: | oug! } Out 00 “ldouble relay from Bobby Rons- | victory-in~the—final—stride.__ seperti s a a side before turning the puck ' Abe’s Hope | game_Thursday night when they | shot on Roger Crozier and not performance in: the two open- Rainbow trout that have gone to|found dead in the water and on| Until Tremblay scored his | Balon finally put - Canadiens |third the sarcovber of masiiia huee to the right-hand side of the |maker in the saddle, collared | Eighth Title — Eighth Title It was the ‘first loss in eight Faces Car Rally - By WALTER HAYES VANCOUVER (CP)—A hodge- podge of slush, ice, snow and mud threatens to make this year’s 4,000 - mile Vancouver- Quebee City car toughest in its six-year history. Veteran competitors who ar- rived here by car. Wednesday and Thursday told of adverse weather- and road conditions from Quebec province through into British Columbia. —Rally—route—officia ed the Vancouver rally office with reports of foot-deep mud on some roads in Northern Ontario, ice in Quebec and deep snow through the Prairies. Dick Pepper of Shearwater, N.S. near Halifax, arrived Wed- ~nesday~moyning after- an over- -nicht=-drive—trom-—Galgary—and- said he occasionally ventured of* main highways through the Prairies ‘ind found side roads inches deep in mud ° Pepper, a competitor in the rally in 1962 and a_ veteran rallyist in the Maritimes also encountered deep snow in parts of Alberta and eastern B.C. “We drove through the Da- kotas and the weather condi- tions were terrible, so I can imagine what they were like BASEBALL National League Cincinnati “000 000 000— 0 40 San Fran. 010.101 00x— 3 70 Ellis (1-2) Arrigo (6), Mec- Cool (8) and Pavletich; Mari- chal (4-0) and Haller. HRs: SF—Davenport (2). Pitts 000 011 111 4— 9140 Chicago 002 000 210 1— 6 80 Sisk, McBean (7), Face (2-0).. (8), Mikkelsen (10) and Paglia- roni, May (10); Hands, Jenkins (6), Aberfiathy (8) Koonce (0-1) 10), Hoeft (10) and Hundley. HRs: Pitts Mazeroski (1). Chi—Phillips (1), Santo 2 (3), Browne (3). : AMERICAN LEAGUE California 000-000 010— 1-50 Cleveland 100 000 Oix— 2120 Lopez, Lee (7) and Rodgers; Siebert, Allen (9) and Azcue, Sims (9). HRs: Calif—Reich- ardt (4). Kansas City 101020 00i— 3 80 Detroit 004 072 00x—13 110 Hunter (1-2) Lindblad (5), Dickson (5), Aker (7), Wyatt (8) and Suarez, Bryan (7); Loe | fich (2-1) Pena (6) and Free- han HRs: KC—Stah! (1). Det—| Kaline (8), Lumpe (1), Wert! @), Northrup (1). PROBABLE PITCHERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Probable pitchers in today’s. major league baseball games with won-lost records in paren- thesis: ; | 4. American League rally the) “)Tommy Aaron and Dan Collett farther north,’’ Gene Hender- son, a 40-year-old police ser. geant from Dearborn, Mich., said of his arrival here Thurs-| day morning. LEFT THE ROAD ‘ “It was so bad we put the car joff the road at one point,”’ said Florent Guibeault of Cornwall, Ont., who travelled here with Henderson but who will com- pete against him in the rally ‘which starts Saturday night. Some of the drivers who ar- rived here by plane were not! ‘Basketball Association ‘of 13,909, the—Celtics gave re- ee ee H ope H | gh For Indians most_fabulous_team— in major | Teague sports history, captured | their eighth straight National | cham- pionship Thursday in defeating Los Angeles Lakers 95-93 at the CLEVELAND . (AP) Vet- eran catcher Del Crandall speaks with the enthusiasm of a rookie about Cleve!end In- dians’ chances of winning the American League pennant this Garden. Responding to pressure and year and the role he hopes to play in their campaign. the cheers of a sellout. crowd | ~ Crandall, who was 36 Marc 5, was signed by the Indians as 1 | tiring coach Red Auerbach a title salute with another clutch performance in winning the de- ciding game of the best-of-seven championship eries. RCAF Planes ‘eontent to take the word of thelr | fellow competitors on the |weather conditions and travel- iled into the B.C. interior for a first-hand look. Among them ,was = Diana Carter, _a__27-year-old__veteran-: race and rally driver from Tor- onto, who left Wednesday night for an overnight drive into the | Trail-Nelson area. Diana has |won the Coupe des Dames tifle in the rally every year since 11963. ca : | Rosemary Smith, also 27, of \Dublin, Ireland, went into the same area by plane. Miss Smith is one of the top women rally drivers in Europe and the big- gest threat to Miss Carter. Chicago (Ellsworth 0-1), Houston (Latman 1-1) at At- lanta (Lemaster 1-1), (N). Cincitinati (O’Toole 0-0) at Los Angeles (Osteen 3-1), (N), | St Louis (Sadecki-1-0) at San \Francisco (Shaw 1-2), cy). STANDINGS | j | plane,carrying two unidentified : a free agent last December End earch after Pittsburgh Pirates re- leased him. - | “I feel that I can be of some HALIFAX (CP)—The RCAF ended its search for a missing United States Air -Force B-57 ‘plane—Thursday—after—an—an= successful effort t6 track down faint radio signals south — of Nova Scotia. : The air-sea rescue centre here said an Argus aircraft from the RCAF’s Greenwood, N.S.) sta- tion was sent to an area about 200 miles east of Cape Cod, Mass., after the faint signals were heard on an emergency frequency. A spokesman said the Argus has found no trace of the missing |Belp to the Indians and ap- jparently the club ~ officials | thought. so, too, or they -wouldn’t eran. of 15. seasons in- the: Na» tional League. _ He doesn’t know how often manager Birdie Tebbetts plans to use him but.-says he is in condition to catch as many as 100 games if called on. Although Tebbetts has said that none of his pitchers will be given a personal catcher, Crandall has caught in the only four starts of* Sam McDowell, the Indians’ star left-hander. McDowell, only seven years old when Crandall started’ his major league career with the old Boston Braves, gives the veteran catcher much of the credit for his 300 record. WORK TOGETHER. “We havea rhythm working,” McDowell. said after hurling a one-hitter against the Kansas U.S. Amen. ."The signals could have been caused by anything, even ano- ther airplane,’ the spokesman | said. ‘Tt was just a tiny clue| | that had to be investigated.” B-TU--was reported mis- sing Wednesday after it failed to return to the Stewart, N-Y., air force base from a training mission. The spokesman said the USAF had-advised that Cana- dian planes were not needed in “We go over the hitfers to- \gether before a game. He doesn't ‘forget a thing. He has | American League Littler, Mowry Tie First Round SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)--| Gene ‘Littler, a veteran of the fairways, and Larry Mowry, tied for the first round lead in the $80,000 Texas Open golf tournament Thursday with 66s. Littler took the lead early and held it most of the day, but Mowry joined him late in the day at five under ‘par. ers—Al Three play Funseth, —were a stroke off the pace with 66s. Fight players skot 67 on the | 6,71%yard Oak Hills Country Club.-course. They were Bob Goetz, Al Geiberger, Jay He- bert, Chris Blocker, Dale Doug- las, Joe Gondstrand, Bill Grif.-. Baltimore (Bunker 1-1) at De- troit (Monboquette 2-1) (N). Chicago (Lamabe 0 - 0) at) Cleveland (Bell 1-0) (N) Minnesota (Kaat 1 Lav t Washington (Richert 0-3) (N). | Only games ‘scheduled : National League New York (Gardner 0-0) at Pittsburgh (Blass 1-0), (N). | Philadelphia (Bunning 1-1) at) fiths and Wright Garrett. ~ SOFTBALL MEETING y j WL. Pet. GBL Cleveland 10 01000 — | Baltimore 9 1 900 % Chicago 9 -3 .750.-2 Detroit, AO. @ 17-2 California & 6 500 5 Minnesota 4 6 400 6 ; Boston 3. 9 250-8 | Washington 38. 9 .250 8 Kansas City 2 9 182 84) New York 2 11 154 9%) ja photographie mind.” ' Crandall caught three no-hit | games while with Milwaukee— ‘by Jim Wilson, Lew Burdette jand Warren Spahn. When Crandall was signed by jthe Indians, Tebbetts com- jmented: q |_'There is only one thing that ‘determines a player’s value at ;Del’s age, and that’s his de- |sire.”’ | No one doubted Crandall’s de- isire--in-spring training at Tue- son, Ariz. ‘ In his daily routine, he caught FACES TWO CHARGES batting practice, ran with the ‘young players, took an extra ORILLIA, Ont. (CP) — Two-\turn around the track on his charges of attempted murder own and then went. to the bench further search efforts. REMEMBER WHEN . . . Kid Chocolate, feather. weight Negro boxer, won his 166th. fight 36 years ago tonight—in 1930—in Toronto, defeating —Johnny—Crickson of New York over 10 slow rounds. The Kid was warned several times to fight, but preferred to carry Crickson along until time ran out. - thave “signed me,” said the vet-_ City Athletics Monday night. - | seau and J. C. Tremblay before | |turning. the puck into the goal | {behind Crozier. | |For ‘Tremblay, who-was Mont: | jtal’s top scorer against the | |Wings in the regular - season | iwith 10 goals, it brought his out- | put in the playoffs to four. Worsley’s best saves in the Yankee Slum Seen Brief } NEW YORK YAP)—The man who had a role in New York | Yankees’ greatest years — 19 | | ‘ | | | races for Graustark, current fa- vorite to win the Kentucky Derby: ss Abe's Hope was timed in 1:49 1-5, over a track made sloppy by a hard rain. Abe's Hope paid $7.60 with win betting only. : ee | (OOD SERIIGE Volkswagens Are Our Specialty BIKES As low as $30 down. anid 3 years to pay. Ae 1 Sold and Serviced in Charlottetown & Area By Tuba Contact your CANADIAN FORCES RECRUITING CENTRE QUEEN CHARLOTTE ARMOURIES _. 3 —tefused to gloat Thurs over the sudden collapse of the iteam that fired him six years — ago. ; | “T am too- familiar with the |10th-place experience myself to | | start taking potshots at anyone | jelse in__that- position,’’. said, | (Gearge Welles ecades Thursday | ae Complete” Vine of genuine _ Volkswagen parts. — RUDISCH'S GARAGE Alberry Plains Ltd. 25 Brackley P. Rd. DIAL .4-6423 Sherwoed | “There- are too many fellows; ‘on the team that I was. closely lconnected with for years. They are close. friends. They still | seem like my children. They | are in another league, ‘|wish them well.”. now 71, Joined the! 4 Yankees as director of farm op- |’ Weiss, erations in 1932 and in 1947 Yankees’ youth movement. He then moved over to the | rival New York Mets, bringing | Casey Stengel with him. have left .themselves is dead. I think there present slump is just temporary.” : Only at Taylors... VATU AT 25% SAVINGS DURING OUR BIG APRIL DIAMOND SALE! | | y ) pon eet 1: gv 121 Grafton St. Dial 4-4253 Randall Golden, 41, of Graven- | hurst, Ont., in connection with | the weekend beating of his wife | and another man. also faces two charges of wounding with intent and one of assault. Mrs. have been laid against Leo /for five minutes of push-ups. AM! persons’ wishing to play | with the National Park All-Stars this year are asked to attend a meeting in the Corran Ban Hall at 1:30 on Sunday. reentry renner D cB Meche” a6 wate Senter rt proweseive trailer near here. : Provincial Campaign P.E.I. : ‘ hE "~~, Headquarters Building | Anew Charlottetown Objective: $35,000 Office Hours: “HELP THE -ARMY | __: 168 Gt. George Street ATTAIN THEIR GOAL | Phone 4-6295—45633—1-6816 —ADD YOUR NAME | TO THE CONTRIBU- | ‘ TOR ROLL.” Conservative _ 3 and 1 | & moved up to general manager, 4 a job he held until 1960 when he resigned — victim of the id | 3 Weiss refuses to join those 'who contend that the Yankees @e with a} beat-up batch of oldtimers and ; cripples and that their dynasty | __“The Yankees have had_a_lot of bad luck and many injuries. | i # «~~ §tore Mon. - Th 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Friday . Saturday — 9-12:30 Keith Carmichael ~> CHARLOTTETOWN 892-2611 - Shoprfor BIG SAVINGS in- - - ‘MEN'S WEAR © LADIES’ WEAR — CHILDREN’S WEAR ACCESSORIES HOUSEWARES. _ & Hours ur. — 9-5 — 9-9 rere Tieton) | “YOUR FAVORITE SHOPPING CENTRE’ | FAVORITE SHOPPING CENTRE’ |