10 The Guardian, Charlottetown. Wed., Jun. 30. 1963. SPORTS FRONT By CARMAN SMITH Pius On Hockey Jaunt AFTER only a short absence we've been aSRed once again to fill in for regular columnist Pius Callaghan so that he could attend a couple of hockey meetings. Being president of the Maritime Amateur Hockey Associa- tion may entail many extra hours of work but it also has its good points. Right now I don't think I would mind much if I was sitting in the club car of the Ocean Limited heading for Toronto on a week-long trip. Before he left we asked Pius if he would be seeing any MIL games while he was away. and e said he hoped to see Canadicns at home to Toronto Maple Leafs Thursday night and Leafs and Rangers Saturday night at Maple Leaf Gardens. We're not trying to spoil your trip Pius but we hope that the Blake- men are winners Thursday night. Pius is first attending the annual meeting of the Maritime body in Momton and from there travels to Toronto for a CAHA mcct. The second annual Morell Sports Dinner is being held to- night and the committee that arranged this annual affair made a good choice when they asked Gus MacFarlane. football and basketball coach of Mount Allison University. to be guest speaker. Although we‘ve never heard Gus in an after dinner speaking role we’ve chatted with him several times and we’re poitive he would be an articulate and witty fellow on the mashed potato circuit. A Chat With Gus WE HAD 3 chance to speak to the Mount A coach last Sat- urday between halves of the SDU-Mount A basketball game at St. Dunstan's. which incidentally the Saints won by a 72-63 score. At the time the Mounties were trailing by a 36-31 score and al- though his lads were behind Glls appeared quite happy. ‘I was amazed with the improvement of this team since HA5 eveé‘ei’ii‘itii‘é All! Bronco. We that one i. won To Do is RESTORE YOUR CONFIDENCE... I. . ' I 'I “luv u" Pro Golf By JIM PEACOCK NEW YORK (CP) — Andy Bathgate. New York Rangers winger who r e c e n t 1 y made headlines by scoring in 10 con- secctive N at i o n a 1 Hockey League games. is seeking sum- onto as a golf professional. He said Tuesday he hopes to talk with officers of three golf clubs in Toronto when Rangers visit there to play the Maple Leafs this weekend. ‘His objec- tive is summer-season work as assistant pro at Oakdale. North- woo or Bayview. Eventually. he said. he hopes to make golf his full-time pro- fession — an ambition toward which he has been working for five years. Bathgate. a native of Winni- peg who has made Vancouver his home in summer during his 10 seasons with New York. will be 31 next Aug. 28. THINK OF SECURITY That‘s an age at which many athletes. and especially those in the rugged, body-contact sports such as pro hockey. begin to think about security. than there is in hockey." Bath- gate said in an interview at Madison Square Garden. Bathgate's prowess in hockey has been well established. He's scored or more in mertime employment in Tor- )1 “There‘s more security in golf ' Andy Bathgate Seeking Job In Toronto other competitions in Br't . Columbia for three years. “Sh V “I don't really get playing well un- uyorAw ."hesaid. That's why he‘s looking area so I could handle both hockey and golf for a couple of years anyway," he said. Eventually. when his hockey career is finished. Bathgato said. he hopes to return to Van- couver as a golf pro. "I've got no ambitions to join - the pro tour." he said. “After this racket here. that's enough touring for me." Borden Nationals Nip W- ROYGIIY Borden Nationals edged West ber 7-6 ANDY BATHGATE is perhaps less known. but in Royalty 30m 11 an ex- t'tve years as an amateur he has hibltlof‘ hOCkel’ game It Borden established himself as above- 135‘ l" B. MacInnis and Leard paced the winners with a brace of goals each. G. Sexton. MacDonald and G. Keough each scored once. Kelly was tops for the visitor. with two goals. singletons going to Burge. Mclsaac. Simms and Blanchard. average there, too. He shoots consistently in the 705 and by mid-July last year, after he’d had a couple of months play. he had a scratch handicap. Two years ago he won the Vnacouver City ama- teur and he‘s showed well in seven of the last eight seasons. reaching a high of 40 in 1958-59. and he’s got 23 so far this sea- Irene the start of the season." sai us. “Eight of the players are fiist year nicn. two are second ear. and only one third year." “You take this boy Harrison“ (tallest player on the team at 6 foot 7i he continued. “he comes from Bermuda and is a soccer playcr. He had never played basketball before he came to the university—4n high school or anywhere." “WE PLAYED four games at the start of the season and it must have been a shocker to the boys" he said. “We platv home and home games with four US. colleges. The first game of the season against an American college we lost by a score of 112-58. then two other colleges from across the border and UNB and we lost all of them by lopsided scores." He added. “then we played St. EX. and lost by only 17 paints and in the first meeting with Saint Dunstan's we lost by only four points. So you see. we arc improving" . Cmcli MacFarlanc thinks his players gain much experi- ence by competing against those US college teams. We asked Gus if he had many US; players on his team and his answer was: “None. As a matter of fact I’ve never had an American player on any of my basketball teams.” This is sur- prising when you stop and take a look at other universities in the Maritimes. Practically all the basketball teams have a sprinkling of players from the States. “ Gus then switched his talk to his 1962 football team. Would ' , 't'?“ he said. "On offence I had seven Maritimers and three on de‘ence. This. of course. includes Ricky Black of Halifax. the most valuable player in the ‘A' section of the Atlantic Conference this year.” Sport Notes IF SOME stories are true. Johnny Bower enjoys making a mystery of his age. In Toronto he has been hospitalized after three hockey injuries. The first time he told the nurse that he was born on Nov. 8 1924: the second time he claimed 1925 and son. including 11 he scored dur- unior Penguins Trounce Combines 10-4 At Ar” 17.21; Old Spain Junior Penguins,i Vance Harris accounted for headed by the high producingithree of tiie visitors' markers line of Stan Peardon, Dave Law ’with brother Garth hiring the lor and Gord Whitlock. colobber- fourth. ed visiting Prince County Com- The Penguins. playing like bznes 10-4 in a regular league they own the rink. scored tussle at the Sports Arena last their first goal with the game n1ght. |less than two minutes old and This line accounted for eight incver looked back. After of the ten Penguin goals. Stan twenty minutes of play they Peardon the small but heady were sporting a 52 edge. They ' trio‘s ‘helned on three others. The oth- .er two Penguin ls Montague puckster. topped the outscored their opponents 3-1 output with four goals in the sandwich session an and as many assists. Dave Law- triggered two goals to one by lrr was only one point back with the Combines in the final per- two goals and five assists and 10 . Whitlock triggered two and At 1.54 of the initial period Stan were mg when be flipped a goal- scored by Willie Gallant and mouth pass into the mesh. Wil- Daie Gaudet. lie 9 the third time be shifted it to 1926, Dr. James Murray. Maple Leaf physician. says: “I'd say he is at least 41. maybo more. but he has the body of a man 25 or 30". Confronted with the facts, Bower smiled innocently. “I’ve lied so much." he sa "that I've forgotten how old I really am. . A coast-to-coast CTV television network on the question. “Who do you think will win the Stanley Cup?" recently produced the following results: Toronto, 41.9: Chicago. 22.4: Montreal Hill; Detroit 1.7 and New York. .3. No opinion 15.0. . . . . Deli-cits Howie Young is on the cover of Sports illustrated and_('oach Sid Abel is reported as describing him as “the most exciting player in hockey today." Montreal columnist Dink Carroll comments “Henri Richard and Toe Blake have other ways of describing h m." E. Minor Hockey Night goes At Spgrtshtgha is evening at Sports Arena Charlottetown and sur- :.mg a r e a Minor Hockey ‘ Abbies Midgets. and Juvenile Albbies: they stage a Minor 11 Juveniles — Tom " onsisting of four I higtiatgd hockey tilts climaxed gntgéi eI'I‘y Nam . b’Aftiiiif‘et: fggtaufindemay at Barnes, Billy Pouitcn, Ron Gig- . sharp boys will be gcy. Lloyd Dutfy. Frank Robin- admitted free if accompanied son. Grant Crockett, Kevm by adults. Admission for the Smith. Dave Burgoyne. Ron adults is 50 cc . lMoncton Boy Wins Contest .Fourteen-year-old Gary Steeveslf)d . iof Moncton. 3" twinner Tuesday of a competi- .. -9.l5 ' it‘ —‘H0(‘ke.v Association. Midget: Abbies vs. Juvenile 9.154015 — Skating for all.;Smoke Eaters as they try t Following are the lineups of‘win the world amateur title. the . . Monaghan. winners were selecte ab- Howard Murchisogh PW F10",‘flfrom hundreds of entries. An _ *7 Herble independent Mike MacKrnnon. Les fmm tih- at the 11.35 mark and twenty seconds later the Combines got on the scoresheet when Vance Hands scored on footer. The Birds added p "- ‘Iabwll d suffered a minor cut to his face opened the scor- Don 1 two more in the next four min- utes before Gar ' scor- guin goals in the final period. his second one coming while the Combines were Shorthanded. ankle high shot that caught the short corner. Roy Biggar and Allison ‘Hook' Walsh collided head—on Late in the game and Bigtgar had to be taken out for repairs after suf- fering a cut to the top of his head. Walsh was stunned and but watched the remaining min- utes of the game from his bench Officials for the game were Whelan and Joe Coyle. They assessed a total Of nine penalties. six of them going to the Combines. First Period: 1. Penguins— S. Peardon (Lawlor. Whitlock) 1.54: 2. Penguins — W. Gallant G. Harris (V. Harris) 18.57; 7. ance’s third goal came on an Penguins MacLeod) 19.04. Penalties Smith 2.14; Bursey, A. Cutcliffe Lawlor (Peardon. Whitlock) .24; 9 Combines — V Harris Peardon kg his record-setting Ill-game reak His prowess on the golf course "" FAMOUS non ". BRANDED INSPECTED STEAK ‘Flyers Travel To Murray Hor. Parkdale Irving Flycrs travel I CURLING DRAW The following is the curling draw for Wednesday at the Charlottetown Club. (S p a r e s ceded). 6.50 RM. Ice 1 —- E. Taylor. Dr. Drys- dale. H. Smith. P. Borys vs. G. Bennett. Dr. Cox H. Gaudie. C. Downe. Ice 2 —- Ed Wood. A. Wilson. J. S. Taylor. I. Webster. vs.‘ G. Anderson. I“. Miles. G. Newman. 14-10- .B. Crockett. Second Period: —— 8. Penguins Ice 3 — R. Manning, W. Far- na enguins — Lawlor (Peardon) 17.22; 6. Combines- (A. — D. Gaudet l to Murray Harbor tonight to do battle with Murray Harbor , Bruins. All Parkdale players are A aliskcd to be at the Parkdale mng station at 6-30 Teach Your Child to love the Storm sharp for the trip. What is the true art of being a parent these days? Do you give your child everything except a sense of values? In February Reader’s Digest read why teaching your child to like lightning and to love storms will help ' to cope with human nature all his life. U5" ............ E DISCUSS SWAZILAND LONDON (Reutersl—Duncan Sandys. Commonwealth and col- onial secretary. formally opened constitutional talks here Mon- ay which will decide the future political advance of the British territory of Swaziland. an area of 7.000 square miles almost surrounded by the territory of South Africa. Irell. B. 'Boyles. Geo. McLaren assisted) 1.04; 10.. Penguins — VJEII‘S- N- MBCNPIII. Whitlock lPeardrm. Lawlorl 1 Ice 4 ~— L. Turner. 8. Lynch. 11.55: 11. Penguins — Peardon S. Bryenton. H. Edwards vs. M. (L. Gallant, wmuock) 14.34. :Jenkins. D. Estabrooks. C. Mc- Pcnaltjes _ , Grady 6.10; tInnis. J. Wilson. Claw and Gaudot 3.53; G. Grady t Ice 5 — D. Matheson. J. Whal- 11.48:; Walsh 19,49, yen. B. Parke. G. Lidstone vs. R. Jones. D. Ward. A. Garrett, J. Third Period: —- 12. Penguins e don é . and r1,a . ' $2! I}; .0“ bi‘mWEP-VBgfg; 3.30 PM. RENDEZVOUS Sec 13 ' .' r ' . ‘ Ice 1 —- (G. Stewart vs. L (G. Deighanl 10.32; 14. Bengums ' (Lawlorl 15.45. penaL ‘Wellner. “ES — Claw _ 15.30. ed for the visitors. Vance pick- tCP)— . . up an aSSist on this goal. 1 e Gaudet ended the scoring Ifc-r the paniod at the 19.04 mark when he barrelled into Combine KITCHENER. Ont. N.B.. was named tion that will send him and his ,‘father to the 1963 world hockey “3mm? Sham“ 8““ falling o the ice. championships in Stockholm.t Sweden. Gary. the son a a: a grade 9 student. is gone by When Law’m‘ batted in Mr. and Mrs. Earl a loose puck during a scramble Steeves. He and eight other in from at the combine 119'" representatives from all Cana- The Combines 30001111 8031. diau province 9 . credited to Vance Harris. Ifoundland competed in the final father 3 “'6le 0116- Vance bad lstage of a competition held by Come in 810m 011 @061 aft-er Hockey Canada, official publi- eluding defenceman Bursev and cation of the Canadian Amateur deked goalie Ffizzell but miss» ed the net with his shot. Bur- sey shot the puck from behind his net and it deflected off teammate Toy Toy Gallant into cage. Goalie Thane Mann was unable to get a good grip on Whitlock's shot at the 11.5 mark and it tniclded past the crease. Less than three minutes 0 n. was Gary and his father will be flown to Sweden to see Trail 0 i The original nine provincial by draw panel of our judged essays on Why Hockey .is a Good Game for Canadian gBoys in considering the final lwinner. later Peardmi batted in his own rebound to make il-3. Peardon counted both Pen- the scone read mm. ‘vs. N. Nicholson. D. George. D. 1 Ice 2 — H. Peters Vs B. Le- I . 1 High Quality l ? BOWLING SHOES For Men and Ladies ‘ mm 13.79 CANADIAN TIRE . Stewart 8: Makes Ltd. l . ASSOCIATE STORE it 96 Queen St. Dial 4-8509 E 1 wakm l IClair. (A. MacLeod) 11.35; 3. Cam- STANDINGS 1 Ice 3 —- H. Maclnnes vs J.s. bines —— v. Harris — (G. Dei w L r r A Pis.‘MacD0n81d- hanl 11.55: 4. Penguins —? oyals 15 4 1134 9031 ; Ice 4 —- Geo. Kay: vs Lou Whitlock tLawlor. Peandonl ICombines 9 9 2102 98 20 lJOhnslon. -E05Eca 6 11 3 85 121 15 _ Ice 5 — D. Saunders vs. Ed Penguins 6 12 2 98 115 14 'Tanton. Volleyball Meet Slated Tonight SUMMERSIDE -— All repre- rch 7.17, only WWW-four seconds had 1sentatives of teams in the Sum- lmerside Volleyball League a r e asked to be present at a meet- ing to be held at Civic Auditor- :ium tonight at 7 o’clock. At 8 pm. after the regular meeting. Gord Montford. referee~in-chief of the P.E.I. Volleyball Associa- tion. will hold an officials' clin- ic. Each team in the league should have two representatives there to qualify for refereeing during the volleyball season. Nine teams have already en- tered the league: Those co in last year's league are SHS. Fire- men. Y's Men. YCW. Sharp- shooters. and Jets. New teams are Legion. RCAF. and Misfits. There are 0 teams, the X-Men and K of C. w 0 may join the league. but haven‘t made a decision as yet. "oasg-doog-fl" MOLASSES GIN nits. The schedule for this even- ing is as follows: ' — Paper-weights —— St. Jean Setters. ee ees ~ PSS Hornets vs. Sp. Park- Foxes. '-8.30 —— Bantams — Sher- wood Battlers vs. Pkdle. Bombers. . - .D WKS Colts vs. .50—8.10 — Sonny Liston Dismisses Clay As Big Mouth PHILADELPHIA (AP )— Beavyweight champion Sonny Elston dismissed Cassius Clay 8 a big mouth and says he can Ikk him anytime-literally. Says the champion of the loquacious Clay. who has prom- Iled to kayo Liston in six: r“! be comes to me. I'll kill Ilia. And if he runs. I’ll catch Id! and kill him. If Clay lasts m. d with me I'll be a Mace to boxing." "‘Clay is naming the round Mi knock me out in. Well. I'll the time. I'll have a man at ringside. shouting time. '15 seconds. 30. 45.’ “"1en boom. it will be , w we‘d sin angl- of I” It s cc: spo s ' Monday night ‘ flavofhumor. W's "neon would ringside if and _ month" t! I u no rm it also. MI “he . those din. mm W Patter- Boy es. Midgets — John Reid. Wayne ‘M’acDowgall. Kenny Scott. Dale él’lurphy. Angus Houston. Gary Cudmore, Jack WIacEachern.' ‘Junior MacDougall. Alan Flood. {Joey Brown, Bill Weatherbie.‘ ‘Gary Clow. Doug Mumag‘hanw ‘Jamie Kennedy. Cecil MacDon- ald. Cyril MacDonald. Referees for the games are: t . . Dennis Flanagan. Mike Fitzgerald. 830-915 Bill Boyles. Mer- .8m _ rill. MacLean. MINOR London Defeats E Tom McNeeley ‘ LONDON (AP)——Brian Lon- don. former British heavy-1 weight champion. knocked Tom McNeeley of Arlington. Mass. down for a count of six in the fourth round Tuesday night and.l .then coasted to an easy 10-; round decision. , 1 London weighed 209 pounds; rand McNeeley 203 for the bruis-l ing bout that matched I couple, of fighters who were knocked ‘out by Floyd Patterson when Patterson held the heavyweight :crown. A crowd of abou 7.000 saw the brawl in tho Olympia IStadium. ‘ The fight was the highlight in to bill that took over from the icircus for one night and left the wild animals caged in their pens until the reopening Wed- nesday. : London. 21!. now has won as Might: and lost nine. The 25- year-old McNeeley bu won 20 and lost six. To-Night Wednesday Ian. 30th Everyone agrees that sport is the best training for our children and hockey is Can ’s own sport. So this Wednesday evening get out and support these young people. Don't send your son to the rink, TAKE HIM. TO-NIGHT'S SCHEDULE . 1:30 to 7:50 8:10 to 8:30 PAPEBWEIGH’I‘S BANTAMS W.K.S. Colts Sherwood Battlers VI. VI. Parkdale-Southport St. Jean Setters Bomb"! we to 9:10 '.__—'.- PEE WEES gm” “rag; P.S.S. Hornets " Juvenile Abbies ' VI. Spring Pk.-Q.C.II.S. Foxes Midget Abbies 9:15 SKATE FOR ALL "Remember if you wont to loop Him out of Hot water PUT HIM ON ICE." London'- St. Paul's Cathedral between 1675 and 1710. after the chuck wu SPORTS ARENA Don‘t worry it they disappear like magic. This is an ice-box recipe. Malta 0 big, big batch of dough, roll it in wax paper and loop ii in your refrigerat- or. Then halt. ’m as you 'om. Yes, Easy-Dou-It with than now molasses ginger 0‘. ‘Mtnrfir’f FOR EXC rated in the Great Fire of 1666. DESI IOI IAIlE USO GER COOKIES I‘vl-DOII'Z‘I. I“ °°° ell “Mal-co: "5‘ 0" ELLENT SUGAR CONTENT IE8! FOR COOKING . AAAAAAAAA-‘A-AII ‘_._._._...._a.a_..‘__..._._.‘