‘ vv [he Guardian. Charlottetown. Mon. "April 15. 1968. 9 Bdfldogs Crush Moncton 5-2 WINDSOR. Ont. iCP1—Wind- sor Bulldogs took a giant stride Maroons In Finals SASKATOON (CP) — Winni- peg Maroons whistled through Saskatoon Quaker defences Sat-. urday night to hand Quakers a 9-3 defeat and win the best-of- seven Western Canada senior hockey championship d-s. Maroons now go to the Allan Cup final against either Windsor Bulldogs or Tables were turned from last Hawks. “V0 8081 towards their first Allan Cup' final berth by defeating the hard-trying Moncton Hawks 5-2 before 3,055 fans here Saturday i night. ' The victory gave the OHA; champions a 3-1 stranglehold ini ‘games in the best-of-seven se- ries for the Eastern Canada senior hockey title. The fifth: game will be played here Mon-j day night. - Jerry Serviss, a centreman. converted from defence. set the pace for the Bulldogs, lifting them time and again with his Isparkling checking and scoring l Jacques: . Walter Pawiyshyn. year. when Quakers eliminated ‘Begin and Lou Bendo scored: "' Maroons in the western final. Veteran Fred 5 m o r e paced Maroons with three mar- kers_ oss Parke and Lloyd Orris each scored twice. and Reg Abbott and Chuck Lums- den scored singles. Jackie McLeod fired two Sas- katoon goals. and George Swar- brick added the third. Ernie. Terrell Scores Upset PHILADELPHIA (AP) —- Er- nie Terrell, fighting with a cut over his right eye. upset fourth- ranked heavyweight Clevelan Williams ' 10-round bout at the arena. Ter- rell won by a split decision_ Terrell, r a n ke No. 1 . weighed 198% while Williams weighed 210. 46-44 for Terrell. Referee Pete Tomasco also had it 46-44 for Saturday night in a‘ Y o lPenalties—Josephson 0 the other Windsor goals. ' i For Moncton, which played its‘ best ame of the series in an attempt to tie things up, Jac-=L ques Allard and Al Flanagan= ‘did the scoring, Allard's was a gift from Windsor goalie Wayne lRutiedge who waved at his shot Iwide of the net and pulled it into the c . Jean-Guy Morissette. in his easiest game of the series. 1: faced only 34 shots while Ru W ledge ic e out 21 of the 23 directed his way. Windsor took eight of the 15 iminors hande out by referee . Norm Warner in the fast. hard- hitting contest. MAR 1. Windsor. Be- (Kitikay, Josephson) 12:18. :42. L. Kiley 0:53, Begin 5:58. Mitchell 16:00. Josephson 18:04. . SUM 1 First period: ' gin ‘Ailard (Noleti 2:15; 3. Windsor.: Bendo (Pawlyshyn. Costelloli Monclon H a w k s‘ goaler Jean-Guy Morissette w e n t down on the shot by Windsor l Bulldogs' Walter Pawlyshyn but the puck slipped un der Rutledge's arm and into the net. The goal was Windsor's fourth of five they scored to UNDERARM GOAL tier-L. Gallant 0:37. r‘itzpat- usmnton lb‘itzpatnckl 0:29: I. s. rick 0:48. Gordon. McLeod 7:55. Ottawa. Chiarelli (Gordon. Hamilton 8:45. Slitt. (minors and majni'sl 14:05.135 Groulx 14:22, W. Gallant. Mar- tin 17:23. Second period: 2. Gallant 6:31. Pursey; Ior 7 12:05. Larkin 13:49. 13:55. Third period: 4. Ottawa. Fitz- Ottawa. patrick IGroulx. Byrnes' 11:32 Gold Cup and Saucer Bonus Film Night WED., APR. Nth-8:30 p.m. The response to our last film night was so great that we have made special arrangements with the U.S.T.A. to bring you another free program. 2 GREAT FILMS i t iton 10:11. Chiarclii 13:25. l sey 9:55. Ullditn 13:34; Purseyi Stilt) 13:07. Penalties — Stitt. tflyrnesi 18:42. Penalties—Law- . ‘ ' - '. H 1’ 6. Ottawa. Fitzpatrick :12. Chiarelli 9:44. Hamil- Pun 19:34. Gertsman. Biggai. IN PERSON Mox Seiler at the piano Moncton's one in Saturday‘s of- thrce games in the best- . ll ‘ ll fourth tourney in the Eastern seven series. The M onctnn . Flre Away You‘ll see the great Canadian Canada Alla n Cup Finals player blocking Pawlyshyn's "on" “‘Tie Silk" win the 1962 which Windsor leads w ith shot was Lou Kilt‘y. “Filmed at Saratoga Raceway” t . . Don‘t. i. By PIUS CALLAGHAN 1 When Toy Toy Gallant‘s drawI matic goal sent Friday's game Terrell. Judge Pete Pantaleo‘4i55i 4- MOflclon. Flanagan} between Ottawa and Penguinsl scored it 46-44 for Williams. The Associated Press had Williams out in front 46-45. ’llhe fight matched two of the tallest men in rin history against each other. Terrell is six - foot - six and Williams six- four. For Terrell. gaining his 32nd victory in 36 pro bouts, this was by for his biggest victory. He had lost to Williams last April 2 by a technical knockout. Wil- liams now is 55-5-1. Bisons, Barons Notch V By THE CANADIAN PRESS Final-period scoring splurges reversed the fortunes of all four teams in the American Hockey League's two semi-final series Saturday night. Buffalo Bisons scored six in the last frame to defeat Prov- idence Reds 8-1 and take a 3-2 lead in their semi-final series. A five-goal last-period splurge sent Cleveland Barons to a 5-1 victory over Hershey Bears. tie- ing the best-of-five semi-final se- ries for the Calder Cup at one game each. In Hershey. Dick Van lmpeI rapped in two goals to lead the five-goal splurge which carried the Barons to victory. Hershey won the first playoff game 5-4. The next two games will be played in Cleveland TRAILED TWO PERIODS Trailing 1-0 entering the clos- ing od, Cleveland shot into a 2-1 lead when Gary Berg- man and John Ferguson con- nected tor two goals within 15 seconds. Van lmpe then smacked in a rebound by goalie Ed Chadwick at 4:54, which was followed by player-coach Ed Glover's long shot at 10:47, Then Vam Impe sank a 25-footer. Hershey was shorthanded when Cleveland's third and fourth goals warn scored. Cleveland's Les Binkley. who turned in a atiio per- formance, came up with 30 saves. and gave up his only goal to Hershey‘s Willie Marshall with his team shorthanded late hi the first period. In Buffalo the Art Stratton- (liowatt) 10.41: 5. Windsor,l ‘Serviss (Micallel) 16:50. Penal-- ties—Shepherd 3:55. Roy 5:32,! lServiss and Mullins 12:16. j 1 Third pri : 6. Windsor.! ‘Pawlyshyn (Bendo) 6:04: 7_. Windsor. Serviss (Begin) 9:37. Penalties—Pawlyshyn 3:05. R. ‘Gaudet 5:40. Micallef‘ 10:37, Noiet 15:46 O. Gaudet and *Assclin 19:31. Saves: ‘ .Morissette ' 911 9—29; ' a 6 7—213 ictories lDoug Robinson-Johnny McKen- zie line scored the first three .Buffalo goals. Each member ihad a goal and two assists. ‘ Ron lngrim. Brian Cullen. ‘ y Dca, Cliff Schmautz and .Brian Smith got the other Buf- lfalo goals. Zellio Toppazzini tal- llied for Providence 1 Al Mutch ', .Tops Field With a possible score of 100 points. Al Mutch of Charlotte- town captured top honors in into overtime. it proved the: last gasp of the Maritime Jun-l ior hockey champions. Therei was nothing left for overtime, nor for the third game Saturn day which Montagnards won- 6-0 to clinch the series in three‘ straight games. l In drastic contrast to Fri-l day’s tussle. Penguins showed) Saturday little of the abilitiesl which carried them to a Mari-l time crown without the loss oil a single game. This time theyi were merely going through thei motions and they were beaten! in convincing fashion. The de-i terioration started early in the‘ opening period and the Babyl Birds were never in the con-‘ test after that. It was only a 1- 0 hockey. game after the first 20 minutes' right by young Carl McQuaid'sl spectacular goaltending. The 16-year-old St. Dunstan's High School lad had everybody applauding him for his net-> minding feats. He was beatenl twice in the second and three| times in the third but the| youngster didn‘t have a ghostI of a chance on any of the half> dozen. l It‘ true that Penguins muf-l fed a few good chances and: were outlucked on a few moral However they were solidly‘l trounced by a much superior! outfit Saturday night. After} that overtime thriller of Friday. hopes were high for an Old Spain triumph Saturday. MontiesSidelinePenguins; "core Easy 6-0 Win Sat. ! ou didn't have t at h 1 Judge Jack Styles scored its Second Peri“: 2- Moncton-j Guardian-Patriot Sports Editori y 0 w c mUCh of Saturday‘s action to figure% out the winner. The Monties‘ were full credit for their con-l vincing clincher. ‘ Penguins left Ottawa Sunday at noon and will arrive in Char-l lottetown tonight. They're na-i turally disappointed but they can take consolation in know-- ing that they were the cream‘ of the Maritimes. They didn‘t' fade for want of'trying. They“ faced a superior club and lost a hockey series. It's as simplel as at. 3 Penguins scored a goal Saturfl day late in the third but th e- referee disallowed it. maintain-‘ ing a man was in the crease, The loyal Ottawa 1 s1 a n ders weren't at all happy with the official's call. Everywhere you moved. you ran into Islanders. Indeed only for former natives of PET..- the rink would have been close to empty. About 700 watched but Monties were robbed out-1 the final battle. ’ For most of the boys. it was‘ their first trip outside th e Maritimes. They , most of it and will have plentyl of tale s to relate. Penguins, surely enjoyed it more than the; Canadian Amateur Hockey As-’ sociation. That body took a‘ really solid financial setback; on the series as Ottawa fan 3‘ showed little or no interest. 1 Hospitality was of the high-. est order during the stay ,in‘ Ottawa. Everywhere the Pen-l guins went. they received noth-. ing but the best. Rink officials. hotel operators. restaurant owners and CNR personnel all combined to make the Ottawa. But trip a memorable one. last week's competition c on ducted at the ,RCMP ranges by the Charlottetown Civilian Rifle ub. Closest to Mulch were Pei-icy Taylor of Winsloe and Wendell MacLean of Charlottetown. who split second place honors, when each registered identical 98's. Following are the individual scores: A. Mutch 100 P. Taylor 98 W. MacLean 98 T. Vessey 96 R. MacDonald 94 D. Johnston 93 E. MacLean 91 B. O'Rourke 90 P. Pitre 86 R. Marley 85 P. Cudmore 83 B. Morrison 82 W. Cudmore 81 M. Ziabeck 80 G. ogg 811 J. Peters 90 Shields Rink Cops Inter-Service Spiel SUMlidERSFDE -- Leo Shields and his Legion rink 'won the in- ter-service bonspiel at the Sum- merside Curling Club on Satur- day. The Shields rink defeated an RCAF Ass'n foursome skip- ped by Harry Dickie in a game that went down to the last rock to decide the winner. The final score was 3-2. Y's Men No. -; Qu- rink skipped by Dr. Ellis Clark won the first consolation and Kmsmen No. I skipped b Lloyd Lawless. were winners 0 the second consolation. Personnel of winning rinks— Chunpion Legion team-Leo Shields. Fred Folland. ml Dob Banks. second Itone;' enry Gallant, lead. Runneo- up RCAP‘ Ass'n. Hurry Dickie. skip; Otis Pick- msic: Dan Cormier. sec- stone: ltoy Johnston. lead. First consolation winners —- Y'I Men ~Hillsrd Clark. skip; Gordon Simmons. mate: Cha 3.11m. second stone: Graeme Hakletter. lead. hand consolation winners— tlfllmu— Lloyd Lawless. skip; 11m Harris mate is Le IN. Cd " one entered outside of Summer- - was expressed to the ladies for phy by Cliff Ramsay. who also presented the individual prizes to the four rinks. Bert unter was master of ceremonies. Sou- venir prizes and "E" for effort were given to Ed Foley. Dick Wedge, Errol Laughlin. and Norman MacDonald. Jim Harris was master of ceremonies at the 6 o'clock banquet. He introduced the members of the head table. and asked all participating curlers to introduce themselves. Deputy Mayor George Key b r o u g h t greetings to the curlers on be- half of Mayor Morrison who was unable to be present. He had a special word'of welcome for the st. Eieenors Lions Club rink which was the only side. and for the szcees be- cause it was their first year in competition. Applause was given for the sored tile 'spiel and for Cliff Ramsay. their representative. Winners of the trophy in form- er years were 1969~Rotary: 1960— Leglon; 1961—- Kinsmen: mitt—Rotary. The thanks of the meeting local bag factory which spon- mo d Angels Nip Chisoxi-O In iS—lnning Thriller jor league hit. delivered as all pinch-hitter in the 15th inning, ended the longest major league game of the young season Satur- day night and gave Los Angeles , Angels a 1-0 victory over Chl- cagO‘thte x. Kirkpatrick. 18. ended a score- less duel at Los ngeles by: puncing a single to left to score Bob Sadowski from second with the winning run. Sadowski bad singled and moved to second on a single by Bob Rodgers. Ken McBride, who pitched the first 11 innings for Los Angelel. did not give up a hit until, the eighth inning. The White Son > got only tihree hits in the 15 inn- in gs. I Eisewuhere. power hitters put? on a show. ‘ L Led by Willie Mays of San; Francisco Giants and seven afternoon games. Mays' blast. off Chicago's Paul Toth. came in the eighth inning and ghve the unbeaten Giants their fourth victory. 2-1, A homer by Willie McCovey had accounted for the Giants' first run that helped give Jack San- ford his second victory on n three-hitter. Len cracked his first major leaguei home run to give Mulwaukeei Braves a 5-2 decision over New 1 2:101“ '0“! "In York Mets. The homer camel with two on in the first inningl off loser Galen Cisco and paved I victory. The veteran Braves' Moder permitted only three hits ' as the wlnlcss Meta lost theirl' ' hits- were home runs. by Du der. his second. and Jim Hick- man. Frank Robinson cracked hi! 1 Moms s tirirdl straight defeat upon chlnson's contenders. Pirates tied into his first trlum charged with four him six in two games. broke the old mark of five in a full sea-son by Joe Boehling of Boston righthander. the way for Lew Burdettn's first 31:12:" rim. idefeated NEW YORK (AP) -— Bonuleohn Tsitouris for five in the Baby Ed Kirkpatrick’s first ma- ‘niniih. Bob Friend went the route for p h but was balks. giving Thatl ashlngton. There Were sevenl balks called in the game. Home runs by Car Sawatski. : Julian Javier and Dick Groatl featured St. Louis Cardinals 7-0‘ victory over Philadelphia Phil- lie dhutout. permitting the previ-‘ ously unbeaten Phillies only five ‘ hits. 1 s. Curt Simmons threw the Detroit also waiioped threel [home runs in defeating Cleve-j ‘I by Dick McAiuliffe, Billy Bru- ton and Cash and Indians 4-1. The blasts were E Phil Regan- went the distance! N for the Tigers, allowing seven1 Cash of Detroit Tigers. the big l hits. nnchwhniz I home run by. boys slammed 19 home runs in Tito Fm“°°n3~ ‘ iSAL'f'IMORE ans-ran Home runs by Tommy Trash? d Ciete Boyer highlighted New York Yankees 6-1 victory. over previously unbeaten Balti» more :bles and a single and drove four runs in support of~Ralphi i'l'erry. who threw a five-hitter" Gsbrielson. a rookie”? 1” "mad View” at tho . Tresh also had two dou-1 in sso Al Smith accounted for the‘ till a home it. Dave Moreheld. 19 - year - old pitched a1 shutout in his major e debut as the Red 50): Washington Senatorsi Red Sox scored all their 5 runs in the second inning wheni Dick Stuart led off with a home 1 run. Roman Mejins singled and Lu Clinton homered I . Kansas City Athletics n homer of the season for ‘g trimmed Minnesota Twins 3-2 at i Cincinnati but Pittsburgh routed { Kansas City. with both tenmsl three Reds' pitchers for 17 hitstbunchlng all their runs in the.I —-lnciuding a home run by Bill ! sixth inning. ‘ Don Dryedlle. the top winnerl red Hut-iin the majors last year. wool 12-4. Thethis second of the season for Los \ loser Jim‘ Angeies Dodgers as he threw a O‘Toole for three runs in the five-hitter for a 3-1 victory over] Won the Ill. 3“ Co. tro- their delicious meal. first and roughed up reliever.the Colts at Houston. International Tro ' t! 1' "The Best of Greyhound” “Rated the World’s Greatest Trotter” ‘ P. W. o. AUDITORIUM no ADMISSION CHARGE 0“ Even in defeat. the B a b yl sanl memories. 0 rules events. Attention Horsemen There will he a question period following the film the 1963 classification and early closing Silver collection to be used for transportation and prizes (1 Bird lads made a h 0 It SUMMARY during 1963 Gold Cup and Saucer Para e. friends and they hit Charlotte-i First period; L Ottawa. lame town tonight with loads of plea- (Gordon. Hamilton) 4:15. Penal-g " DODGE PUTS NEW FROM HERE TO TIIERE. EVERY TIME YOU SMOOTH ROUND A CORNER OR FINGER TIP INTO A PARKING SPOT YOU’LL BE GLAD YOU PICKED THE BIG, LOW-PRICE DODGE. AND IF ‘ENJOY' MENT’ INCLUDES PEACE THOUSAND MILES“ OF IT. CHRYSLER CANADA LTD. YOU BE THE JUDGE Picknpyonrfieecopyof' "’GJShowdown" ~givcsyonfitllfacts—compesu fln‘waninonehdebooklet. Wendall G. Barbour Ltd., 123 - 127 Euston St. Charlottetown, PEI. ENJOYLIENT INTO GETTING OF BEND, DODGE IIAS THAT TOO. FIVE YEARS OR FIFTY 44o Two-Door Hardtop *mmuahanwymamanfinwwsommih mumps-Mm. rot: Dodge dealer hasfil"dclailr. .~"