8 ‘Hie Gunmen, Charlottetown. Fri. Jan. 8. 19840 HUNTER’S CORNER l Drastic Changes Occurring ‘ l in Nature's Winter Face The old year of 1963 is now III! of birds. Another winter visit o r the memory column and whati I miss from our winter land- 1954 holds for us is anybod y's scape are the “rain birds"...at guess. In reviewing the p a s t, least that is what I called them year one stark fact stands out They patronized our snow in bold relief the face of Nat-1 bound w i n t e r roads a ii d ure has undergone a drastlcl scratched and fed in the drop. change. * pings left by horses. They This summer I asked myself would let the s l e i g h a ti d. I number of questions that I, jingling sleigh bells approach could not answer. For iiistancef within in few yards be fore A n my rounds checking dams and dam sites I wondered why, everything was so silent u ntil, I suddenly asked myself the question: “W here have our kingfishers gone?" We all rest ember how we used to a huse the kingfisher. On every dam or stream there would be a p a i r or more. They would perch motionless on a dead tree or snag protriiriing a h o v e t h e taking a circular fl i g ht and alight in g heh in d the sleigh. Sometimes there would be 50 or more in one flock. The winter of 1904 bids fa i r to rival even the much talked about old timers of byg one 1 years. I plan on donning snow- shoes and investigatiiig some of our wood I a n d a r e a s and swamps just for old time's sake. I do niiss the c h e e r y cltattcr .- .' ‘ water as motionless as if car- ved out of m a r h l e. Sudden- ly there wniild he a swift d i re into the water and the div e r would emerge with a m l it now or tadpole in its beak and I of Tom-tits in our winter woods ...at least I haven't heard a ny this winter. They could he theft. a remnant at least, it one hap-. pened to be in the right p l a ce at the right time. players‘ rapt attention as puck appears to pause_ right in front llloiuenl of doiiht is holding of Chicago Black Hawks-New York Rangers game. It went in to score for Larry Cahan_ of Rangers. not shown. Watch- WILL IT GET i5Asr POST on Not? ing aire OIIICBIEO goalie Dennis De Jordy, left, away from net. Don McKenney 417» of Rang- ers. and Black Hawks‘ Wayne Hillman. far left. and Eric Nesterenko (151. (AP Wire photo) might as \A't"ll give the w h o l e It is not thought that o it r of n(\' (...,-"pl-p.,5, in ms. period story .. with sometimes a trout Hungarian partridge covcys seieral inches long. I n e v e r, will experience any tr 0 ii h le even saw or heard a kingfisher and yet. instead of having a feel- in: of thankfulness. a nostalgic ache siiddenl_v made its pre-3 sent-e felt. ‘ Our g r e at blue h e r ons... plain ordinary cranes to most of us...are about as scarce as. hen's teeth — and they h ave none except I gizzard to take their place. ‘ A year or so ago there w ould be several around every d a m and their chalky splash marks would stand out like a sore thumb on every dam embank- to date. The first snow was swept clear of our fields with the wood I a n d a n d swamps being on the receiving end. but t re is a lon stretch ahead of, us yet. A big cock pheasant made its appearance in the city after the last storm. He ap- peared in top fettle and full of. pep and conceit. A lady phoned; me and expressed fear that By BEN OLA” catch him. An old riiig - neck‘B can take both dogs and foxes f in stride but its the two legg e d creatures that are the ones ,our players, including goal- iscoring leader Bobby Hull. on i",‘the Associated Press National ::.r.1Lan1\ih(:.rfi,r:.l;\; iarrih wher: 1; “fie; I . f iillocke,\ League all-statr team _ i . a . or ‘men ion- . un er_in ormed me recentlyfm. me first ha” of the 19634-,4 mg was at the Corraville Dam; that our wildgeese left the arealseagon a few miles from St. Peter‘s.= There were three in the bu och.’ and I only saw them once. The (‘orraville Dam is on the h e ad- waters of the .\lidgell River. TOOK A TOLL I saw another in the be a v eri dam country and trout fisher-. men report seeing the odd on e in the. back c on n tr _v areas.i Cranes and kingfishers were; he hunts in before the seas on1 closed and while feeding con- ditions were normal. He told me that the use of rifles on th e geese that caiised their dcpar-1 ture. Another ardent goose hunter reported the same thing happened in his area and from Mario Junior A iii-‘E..‘.‘.5‘"E‘2 °f.‘i?§... ‘Sift?-'.‘°.."."”"‘?.;' S*- C*‘‘“"*"“ .3 M°""“‘ ‘ anmwfi to hp med to hut” Oshawa 5 Hamilton 2 blamed by manv trout fisher-‘ game. oeese remained all win-3 N0” Sr-""8 senior men for I depleting out trout.l ter in zome sections Rollo Mflmmn R Ham“ 5 They did take their share there: Bar for instance had ee re wmdmr ' New Glasgow ‘ is no Question about that‘. bu i, there all year. One day gin mid-V (ipmral Pr.°f°.ssl°".a zihy haven't the trout. respond-1 January I counted over 150 of. M1nne:'§:'i;:nfar$;n§:l:'I;:;lA, accordingly after the k l n - the hi b l a ‘ ‘ fisher and cranes have practgi-I hooker: at Rrilllii Vrriiiipii Kmhpner 1 Ppmrhnmugh 5 Jean Beiiveaii. veteran Mont- .real centre, was named Most Valuable Player and Jacques Hockey Scores 1 By THE (‘ANADIAN l l l l l l l i Hawks Place On First All-Star Squad L a p e r riere, the Canadiens’ NEW YORK <APt — Chicago young detenceman. was chosen lack Hawks Thursday p‘.aced-outstanding rookie. Goalie Glen Hall, defenceman Pierre Pilote and right winger Ken Wharram were the other Black Hawks picked for the 111’.- stars. Defenceman Tim Horton of Toronto Maple Leafs and Bell-1 veau rounded out the six-man squad selected on performances through games as of Jan. 1. Named the second team _ 0 3were goalie Charlie Hodge andl PRESS jleft w real inger Dave Baton of Mont- . detencemen Elmer Vasko and A‘. MacNeil of Sydney. NS, and centre Stan Mikita of Chi- cago and right winger Andy Bathgate of New York Rangers. HALL. HOWE JUST MISS Runners-up in MVP considera- tion were Chicago's and Detroit's Gordie Howe. man Terry Harper and left eally fa d e d from Nat u r e ’ St haven‘t been there for pears. picture board‘! One sprayer; The eel grass failure in th e washing in a trout stream will early thirties caused our gees: kill enough trout to feel thou- to shifa their migration route_ sands of cranes and klngfishers, The inland lakes In M 3 , ,1 9 About the only bird that. as supplied top goose hunting vet. shows no appreciable signs the first in memory. The s a m 9 of losing F.’I‘0U0d I5 M13 C 1‘0“’-' thing could occur ‘if the rifle He is known as plain Jim Crowl menace is not halted. Even after. ttrmany but he is the neare 1 t1, the eel grass returned it to 0 xi ihmfl In N8lUT9'S Wfllm lhllt‘ years before our normal fall mild‘ if’? IIODOUTS In the lnd_!‘.S-3 flight of geese was resumed. tructahility column. I imagine-twat;-11 it bays ""1955 _‘.m, “.3 that the crow will outlast e v en; 10 man himself. Saturday Minor Schedule PEE WEE scuttle our fall goose hunt-. _ _ ing. R e p o rt s are coming inj Till‘ ‘‘'”"‘‘Y' 3" °l"591"’9T- 3 "(ll quite regularly about what cau- :;“"9:n°f YN:,“'d"9-hazklfd "'9 VXh91'9' sed the early take - off to o u r‘_ boiyionmiheliarsm ii wiiosnihe siiovi“ “H "mm M geesa i "H5 " F°x°s "5' Que“ birds that I enjoyed watch ing.5 FINDS METEORITE 1 “'00 '" Elks vs,‘ seals’ In my mind-5 eye I can “in; An American expedition BANTAM5 _ up them nying in flocks of 100' cently found a fragmented 474-11145 —— PHHl»l1_9FS 175- T|flf"‘-‘- or more. 8' low lever] aornss; pound meteorite near Dalgpty‘ 12.30 -— Bl‘llll1S VS. TQl‘I'leI'S. the m,,“.y fields’ They Hewi, Downs Station in western Aus-~ PAPERWEIGHT just a few feet above the s n ow: "'3“5- ‘ 5300 mm‘ M‘ 1" Pehcans "5' and their low. sweet chatter‘ made our winters more bear- able. My brother Art and I would try out our homema d e bows and arrows when a flock visited the manure pile b e s I de: the barn but never scored a hit.“ We figured we had the latest in arrows ribs from a discarded; umbrella and tipped with fea-i thers purloined from one of our3 hens. Looking back over the 7.45 —— Lions vs. Bisons. 8.30 — Wolves vs. Raccoons. 9.15 — Caribous vs. Coyotes. 10.00 — Ice cleaning. lo Ouebeclournament I years I know now it was thel Ivan Doherty, president of the ~viewed by about 100,000 specta- feathers that saved a hit on our‘ Charlottetown Minor Hockey As. ‘tors during its eight - day run. targets. If the feather was too Lsociatjon has announced thatl The 16 - player team will be large, or not adjusted properly.l it would zig zag like crazy. I dol firs‘ “me win have an em,-Vicoach. Billy l)0l1€I'l_V is team Centennial Pee Wees l l i 1 Prince Edward Island for the M00194 ‘W Brill‘ LFWIS 85: feel certain if we ever did have. in me [M9,-nmi,,nal pee_w" captain. with D'Arcy Murp h y‘ the luck to spear a snow bird‘, Hockey tournament in Que-m,,_. and Bobh_V_M8CMlll8n IS 3995' we'd have been sorry boyslcitl Feb 1,3’ find Wm be rfiitants captains presented by the Charlottefoii'n;cmer me Centem."al§' which recently won .tion, which includes teams from our Show Bird flight. ‘rerun invitational meet at Kent- few and far between in thislvm°' N's’ age and the birds low in num-l, mg; t}?;‘:nge"e‘fi"lv.gg.g,t°:u::e£?l The winning team in the tour. bers. It is years since I 11 Hem mm M wahljshmm. .;,'_._ nament will be presented with a seen a snow bird and the in st ‘ ‘ flock I saw held a scant score II n misses. LOW IN NUMBERS 17,000 and 20.000. .eral years ago and has I owitl‘0Pl1.V and its Player! NNIVO ‘grown to the point where it Isicrests and button souvenirs. ‘Ill CIAHJITITOWN hockey tournament in Quebec Lewis is seen giving a few Oeltetltlall til compete In City it was learned yesterday. pointers to three members of Qh“l'&¢’O0Wfl nctureqldseveooechlrtu theteeu.'niqes-eh-osnleft 1 .- jtowns with populations betweent The Charlottetown team will. competi-3 Face Busy Day Cranes. Rink No. 2 —- Owls vs basis of detailed Consultations! 1? __ D. Hawks. Rink No. 3 -— Jays vs. "l.7 a.m. — Springers vs. Rams‘ Budgies. 6.00 Rink No. I —- Falcons vs. Loons. Rink No. 2 — Robins vs. Bluebirds. Rink No. 3 —— Orioles vs. Redbirds. 7.00 Rink No. 1 -— Larks vs. Gulls. Rink No. 2 — Crows vs. Ravens. Rink No. 8 —— Doves Practice. GAME OF THE WEEK 8:30 — —-Mtidgetaluvenile. Stu- dents vs. Packers. Lineups- Packers — Coach — V in c e Mulligan. Goal — Carl Mac- Quaid. Ginger Breedon. Bob Peterson. Wayne MacDougall, D. Murphy. Forwards — Bil LV Weatherbie. A. Arsenault. Cecil MacDonald. Joey Brown. Angus Houston. D. Atfleck. Ralph Kel- ly, Mike Duffy, Dom Josey. Students oach Billy Mulligan. Goal —- John Reid. De- fense —- Kevin Smith. Doug Murnaghan. Pat Walsh, Neale. Forwards —— J. Kennedy, J. MacEachern, A. Flood, Cyril MacDonald. Gary Clow. Junior MacDougall. Lyle Huggan, Joint Campbell. Cairl Livingston. REFEREES SCHEDULED: 7 am. — Brian Lewis. Joe Coyle. 10 am. — Cliff Ready, Jamie Kennedy slim. to S p.m. — Billy MacMillan, Allie Carver, Vince Mulligan, Bill Mulligan. Brian Lewis. Les Barnes, Grant Croc- kett. Defence- , Four Players winger John Ferguson of the Canadiens, defenceman Bob .\Ic- .Cord of Boston and Pit Martin, Chicago. Defence: Pierre Pitote, -were not intended The AP all-stars: First team——Goal: Glenn Hall, 1 MONTREAL (C?)--President Clarence Campbell of the Na- tional Hockey League nounced Thursday he has fined coach Red Sullivan of New York Rangers $200 for encour- aging violence during a game in Montrea‘. Dec. 12 betw 1 Rangers and Montreal Cana- diens. Ca -pbel in his statement said also that there was a "dec- laration of immunity" by Sulli- van to one of his players, to the effect that the player per- sonally wo d not have to pay any automatic fine. Campbell related the incident c a M Badfield of New York. who en- gaged “a brief stick-sw-tng- tn-g duel for which they were nalized.“ The aitercation was renewed in the penalty box “in the form of fisticuffs." Both players were given misconduct penal- ties. “which exhausted the bal- ance of the playing time and both retired from the game." “In a subsequent dressing room interview reported in two New York papers, Rangers coach Red Sullivan is reported to have stated that he told Had- ’ ‘that if he got another shot at the guy in the penalty box to take it and not to worry 3 to 5: about the automatic miscon- ne.' uct fi "My investigation shows that re is no doubt that state- of e kind were made y Suliivan in the interview as reported. but Sullivan contends that his instructions to Hadfield as an incite- "§% Detroit centre, trailed Laper-,Chicago and Tim Horton. Tor- mem to cause further trouble ‘riere for rookie honors. ,ord . as 22 this year. However. he {trails teammate Stan Mikita , in the scoringl ‘race. Mikita has 21 goals and.‘ 28 assists for 49 points. Beii-I‘ ,-veau. who scored only 18 times: [last year, has 16 goals and 32_ ‘assists for 48 point. I-Iull has, i and Beliveau I46 points. 1 1 The league itself selects all-; stars and trophy winners an-j inualiy, with one poll of hockeyi ;writers and broadcasters in‘ ‘each of the league‘: six cities, taken after the first half of tliel season and another based oni games in the second half of the- lseason. 1 Players receiving the highest. total points in the two part.s ofl bal ting are the final winners. The official baliots for the season's first half will be coin- piled in the NHL‘: Montreal of-1 fice next week. Leaders will re- ceive $1.000 and runners-up $500. The Associated Press, select- ing an alt-star team for the first .time. made its choice the .with the coaches and managers of the six NHL teams. 4 ,‘ FOR MONTAGUE‘ Following is Montague curl- ing draw for Friday, January 3rd.: Clarkson Shield Competition 7 P.M.-—Section 1 1-D. M. Gowaeri. G. , B. Bryant, D. Briand. De5RoL-hes. K. Mc- D. Olarksou. S. Mc- I . Murphy ..S. < in Kennie. lsinnon. Ice 2-J. Cudmore. N. Hooley, D. Herrimg, E. Murphy vs. A. McIntyre. G. . Sharpe. I I-'.M.—Section 2 Ice l—~Dr. P. Mclntyre, E. Shaw. D. Sorrie. D. Champion vs. 1'‘. Vuozzo. E. G. MacDon- ald. K. Sullivan, J. McNeill. Ice 2—C. Nicholson. A. Net- son. M. Wigginwn, B. Sharpe . Dr. . A. Johnstzome, A. Jones. B. Fenguson. C. Solloo. 4. in J. ‘vs. G. Anderson. C. Whi ' onto. Centre: icago. Second team—-Goal: Charlie Hodge, Montreal. Defence: El- mer Vasko and Al MacNeil, Chicago. Centre: Stan Mikita. Chicago. Left wing: Dave Ba- ton, Montreal. Right wing: And Batligate. New York. Third team—G0al: Ed Johns- ton. Boston. Defence: Jacques Lapcrriere, Montreal and Doug Barkley. Detroit. Centre—tRed Hay. Chicago. Left wing: Ca- miile Henry. New York. Right wing: Gordie Howe. Detroit. CURLING DRAW The following is the curling draw for Friday at the Char- lottetown club. 6.50 P.M. Friday Knock-out. (Spares needed.) D. Matheson. A.E Love, Simpson te, W. ce Piercey. H. t Carr. G. Rodd. l Ice 2 —— H. Dobson. E. Ford Bud MacDonald. I. Webster vs. ‘. R.C. Parent, A. Gill. Geo Wil- son. J MacLean. , c Cox. N. MacNeill. -V. Chisholm. A. MacEwen vs ,3. Boyles, Dr. Willis, H. Ed- . I wards. Dr. Cameron ,1 CURLING DRAW l Ice 4 — L. Turner..K._ Kennedy J. McBrearty. B. McGili vs. M. Reeves, K. Dalziel, '1‘. Walker, S. Willis. Ice 5 - D. Jardlne. Cyril Mc- Donald. D. Wood. G. Gallant J. Brooks. F. Cox, F. Miles, B. Partridge. 8.30 P.M. Rendezvous Ti-why (Sen. “A"i Ice 1 — Open. Ice 2-G. Kays. R. McGregor. K. Ready. K. Jenkins vs. E. Tanton, E. MacDonald. Dr. Jelks. A. MacFadyen. W Ice 3 — H. Peters. A. Love. . Dr. Higgins, G. Lidstone vs. R. g Ewing. Dr. N. MacNeill Ice 4 —- B. LeClair. J. Camer- on, G. Bennett. W. Farrell vs. G. Stewart. K. Acorn. C. White- nect, J. Vautour. Ice 5 — A. MacDonald, Whltlock. C. Flemming. B. Kelly, Dr. MacKay, r. o'- Rourke vs. W. MacLalne. D. Wonnacott, H. Thomson. R. Carr. 1 l to vigil. Assistant cmtsln Bobby Mscllltllan. Captain Billy Doherty and assistant eepteta D‘A.iw I the eight competing rinks re; mained undefeated Thursdayl bogsptel at Maple Leaf Gardens. Thursday night. Undefeated after three round , were the Norm Houck rink from Winnipeg and rink from Hanover, Ont. In Thursday’: third round the Mann rink. last year‘; Ontario champion, knocked out the fa- vored Hector Gervals rink from < Edmonton 14-7. I-Iouck kept his tournament record unblemished with a 13-5 victory over Ray Grant‘; rink from Untonvllle. Ont. Gervais was also unbeaten going into the third round against Mann. but was plagued with inaccuracy throughout most of the game. WON FIRST Another Edmonton rink skipped by Matt Baldwin won its first game of the tourna- ment. edgtng the Mike Slyziuk rink from Detroit. the U.S. na- tional champions. 9-7. . hard-luck rink so far in the ‘spiel has been the Doug Cameron foursome from Cher- iottetown. Going against world champion Regina. the rink d . on 0-7 decision. In Wednesday’: games they were beaten 13-11 by Styztuk and 10-6 by Grant. The Richtmleon rink. skipped by Ernie, includes his brother. Garnet. and cousins Arnold and lies. The: have won the world llameron ls Winless ,ln Curling lourney i TORONTO tCPt..0nly two ofltitle four of] the five years it after three rounds in the round- ‘Cameron nobtn Tournament of Champions Richardson raw was slated for Grant Mann l I t I 1 vs. town Se-nior Championship . Jean Be1iVe8“- in the penalty box but a sim- Hull. who tied the league rec- Left wing: Bobby Huil. Chicago. ,ple warning to Hadfiejd with 50 goals two years ago, -‘Right wing: Ken Wharram, Chi- on the alert to be to protect himself while in the penafty box. SULL1VAN’S CLAIM "Sullivan also contends that the reference to the ‘automatic fin ing taken care of‘ was never communicated to Had- lleld at any time but was sim- ply an expression of his per- sonal senttments of satisfaction at the time of I-Iadfield’s ac- the pa tions in defending himself in the penalty-box fight. "Regardless of the exact words used by Suilivan in the interview or the impression he wished to convey. I am satis- fied that he was quoted sub- stantially correctly and there is little or no difference in the text of the quotes in the two papers. “Both aspects of the quota- encouragement of ytio s — h. lfurther violence and the decla- l lRed Sullivan is Fined By.President Cam g _ " __ _ ._..a...-.~»._....-..-o.-. —~——- gw YCIQ,‘ RAN GERE3 RED SULLIVAN ration of immunity of the effect of the normal disciplinary ef- fect of the automatic fine—- clearly contravene the league‘: yaws. “Furthermore, any action on nt of any oftlicial of the club to offset the effect of such a fine would make the respon- sible parties and the club it- self liable to very heavy pena‘.- ties. 0‘ these circumstances. I consider that a of $200 should be imposed on coach Red Sullivan and it is ordered accordingly." FIFTH THIS SEASON Campbell's action marked the fifth time this season that a 1 control 1 La. ‘coach or manager has been ifined. i As the result of a brawl dur- ling a game in Toron . 7 ,between Chicago Biack Hawks land Toronto Maple Leafs, lcoach Billy Reay of the Hawks and general manager - coach .Punch Imlach of Toronto were leach fined $1.000 for failing to their players. st October Reay and gen- leral manager Tommy Ivan of l,Chicago drew fines-Ivan $100 land Reay S100——as the after- math of a game misconduct penalty to Hawk defenceman iHowie Young. Ivan was fined lfor going into officials‘ .room and Reay for stailing tac- ‘tics. Royals Take Series Lead Sandy‘; Parkdale Royals book a one game lead in their bea of seven series with Johnny’: Flying Hawks -for the 0hiarlottJe- ' ' when they ed the Hawks 11-10 in a thrilling hockey match last night. The game wasn't decided un- til the cure evvenly-malrohed squads had played a little over two mrinuties of sucltd Ron M1rcDousga1l from close in for his fouirtii mariner of the game. For the Royals I was a comeback victory as they trail- ed 10-7 early in the third pa‘- iod but came on Royals were sporting three new players this imiportant they all nerd picked ll) four his goals while centre Billy picked up his second tally of the period a few minutes later -to give the als the lead for the first time but Donnie Mac- Cormack scored near the end of the period to maike the score read 3-3. The Royals broke the tie early in the second period with Jim Maacheod getting his find. tally of the game but Louis Smith tied it once again minu- tes later. The play see-sawed back and forth with both teams coming 1;) with some nice . Ange Can-roll and Jim MacLeod scored in rapid suc- cession to give the Royals 3 two-goal lead but Matcoormaok and Gerald Noonan connected about dive minutes later on again tie up the game. Mia - up his third Lead _oftheperiodtoputthewln- nens ahead again but MacCor- mack came right back to beat Maclnntis and again the game was tiied up. this time 7-7. The Hawks came out flying in the tthiird period out before the Royals could get the I oommandina 10-7 lead. Louis Smith twice dur- ing this brief span while Billy |nSudden Death Overtime log the ten-miivu-to ovevrtzime session and an a result of this no g s wens scored by dither squad. As the teams took no the ice for the sudden-death peiiiiiod the game had slowed down not» sidenatbly. Macbeod broiitzfl the large crowd to tmeiir feel as he took a pass from Reeves and cruised in on QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL Now available fhrougtiout P.E.|. Contact your IMPLEMENT DEALER TO-DAY AT ' THE FORUM FRIDAY— aLm.—Minor Hockey "'““ e.I'n.—-P.W. . e l-6:30 p.m.-Minor Hockey I-8:00 p.m.--Commercial ._.. ........i 22% ' League 8:80-10:30 p.m.—'l'eens and Adults Skating Vince M played an _ 0 gram. ma .1," Shenry puoked u-p_t.he other scored the tying goal late in 18111!- Uie Derltofl 00 I6 II! the The Royals roared back and has been hed. W9 - Jack Kiene dammed in two mmD1£%N33w1_, Th‘ 'w° ‘mm ”°“'''d "* quick markers to bring ilhe o1o221o1o1o0—a "' "" ‘M ’°"’°‘ ‘M ”“ “W” "W" W‘- Houck iooio120:i140—13 3"“ W1“; :3‘ 5' burl? ‘W-‘Y l°°P*”:_':d°“': afigvfg H h 5' I I . iGervall mm-ed on . émpa,-mg mun Wm‘ l""° miwia 1°“ in Mann ti22212030t)02—14 M at M M . “'9 P°m°d- ‘*0 ‘end *1" Wm Baldwin 001003210 020.. 9 He’'’‘‘'‘‘ n’°M_c Into overtime- Slyziuk 200020001101-— 1 3°‘ ‘4"‘“' ""“ Both teams seemed tired nui- Fovnm ROUND have a chance on. Kane got Baldwin 000100 200 310- 7 ' '9“ “mm M!‘ *0 59 “P Gervais ti02oo20o..010—i4 "'9 lame but 511911’! “M Cameron 010 izozzttm-12 “SN back to W the 10-01‘! Houck 010 31200. 021-13 Id awn with Siyziuk 001000010 100- 3 -cw-‘nod Iwt Mwwllan Mann 01001040030241 then scored for the Royal! in Richardson 104102 031020-14 awn tie up the limit» Ken! 1 l HOCKEY TONIGHT ‘ FRIDAY CIVIC STADIUM GAME TIME 9.15 P.M. l IORDEN NATIONALS VI. SUMMRSDI COMIINES Admission Adults )0 cents: Students 35 cents 1 Clle eyes them with em Fox’; "Bachelor Flat.” living today mascope-Danae color comedy ee-stun IIIIIC at the Celltel fleette. Torry none: