$ The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri, March 4, 1968, SPORT ECHOES Are In Store By NORMAN MacDONALD. ent that he was a bit . : Ro: an argum . Congratulations to | arp, but three capale, ex- 4 Rangers junior hockey team. A too sharp, } “team that can fight back from.perienced referees dished out a 3goal deficit and win the those penalties, and they aver- ‘game with a whirlwind finish | aged more than 2 per game. cs what it takes to make cham- |The teams didn't seem to have pions. They have a very strong a particularly chippy attitude to- tlefence and.one top-notch line | wards each other either. If‘seem- énnedy,> Id, andied that a lot of those boys Saat » leouldn't play defensive hockey without committing infractions. Congratulations also to our | Junior Legionnaires who did | so very much better than most of the home town fans We believe in obeying rules. If we were about to enter a park, and a policeman barred thought they would. True, » our way, saying no one was se | allowed in there, we'd harbor er oe ak ae | ill-feeling towards him. no | But if he said we could go and after we had entered, clobber- lopsided score of 10-4, another . by 6-0, but this one was as close as 1-0 at the end of the second period. They won one 43 and lost a» squeaker 7-6. The Legionnaires didn’t look Legion curling executive to that geet wine ane our Summerside curlers in not ea : ; pee Peal MaWitliains, Bill Dice, | declaring them ineligible woti : » . se } jof Verdun, = verdum”* he (Bul are expected to be here Sal-(Russia vs. Uniled States. . : yas over, Certain! ! . ~ We'll take i om in time for Canada’s next | GROUP B : kie, and Alan Gaudet, the me —— wee ts - ora 7 : FER gk dll ages a ee | urday time jor Cana | os y have ; rters : | atcrent They ‘probably | on the rules being followed to Ca ewas es rites d . tae mi 4 SUMMARY ~ | Norway 10012 22 different. They — probably , = eae a A og | wouldn't have beaten a team | the lelter, Tver the. | ‘}eVeah, it's like Brooklyn.” | First period — . 1.Canada,|W. Germany 1 0 @ @ 3 3 of all-stars from the city of “ 6 ee ae a ial e a eah, it's ve. \weuihuar Tea?: @ Canada, Cad: Yugoslavia 9 0 6 4-2 Nai Diamond “D", P P : ; 08: 3. | Romani. R ae ee wec Uniaee: | were allowed to play om occa. | - Sherwoc | Whi | lew oo ae iariss 4. | Switzerland ates a8 ‘put what. do you. expect from | sae eet (oe | ers a e ru I Nns rw ps |United States, Ruelle 14:10. /Hungary : : ° ., : . ° am w 1 . x } > OU. a town of only nan eee | runner without taking the oth- | w . S‘side School Pendle Coens 12:00 + [sate ese ee 8 . MONTREAL (CP)--Substitute | => come ge ; = oe . ir € — THURSDAY'S RESULTS beat Charlottetown, and they | er player out of the can now rest on those laurels a little while, and console themselves with the old com- fort, “wait till next year.” Imagine calling him out at se- cond hecause he was there | contrary to the rules. We -hope..the Legion executive has some good reason for such ac- tion and that they will let us know their reason. After all, tlemens game, At this juncture a little criti- ecism would not be out of place. Roth teams got far teo many penalties. If one referee had im- posed them all, there might .be' curling is a gen ~ Alberta Rink Wins; ‘|sland Topples NB. By DOUG MARTIN _-jehance. as they exhibited the VANCOUVER (CP)—The Ha-'same poise and clutch shooting ve) Jamison family rink of Ed- that marked their play all monton Thursday won Alberta's week long. first. Canadian. women’s curling | ROUND SEVEN championship. : into a third place tie with. De- fowever, after referee Armstrong) 10:38. natty = ; q at ; Skip Gale Lee, third Mrs. Ja- thi oan = von St trot Red Wings, who were. idle Friday cooled out a Sour ae lexan 13:0. roe Soe Ta talntact a tabi ee: eat “aed ee Rifle | tently as if they were gold nug-| I had heard of him several mison-—in whose name the rink | U¢- Thursday night. would-be combatants in the first| Shots on goal by in the third period when hard bour. recently, ° y | gets. I. remember the Jaruary | years before I became game 4s regigtered-—-second Sharon Sask, 020.200 101.06— 6 Leafs outshot Montreal 34-31 period, the eruptions after that /Toronto = 14. § 12-94 board) « ehelck: abatiored glass Fred White : : 95 | day in 1898. . .| was eight years| warden. He was also a crack Harrington and lead June Coyle; Alta. 201 020.020 1— 8 registering a 14-9 margin in the were of a minor nature. - | Montreal 9 7 15-31 ‘atop the boards: 2 Gary Gormley at the time. . .When a small flock | shot and was the proud owner clinched the championship with'y _ . ’ 110 110 330 0—10 first period and an 8&7 edge im” For Canadiens it was a night) Attendance—15,457 Det * | Darrell. White ‘of seven or eight alighted in an|of a 12 “gauge twist-barrelled a 14-4 romp. against Vi Pike of 4.) ° oni 001 oni 4— 7 the middle frame. Only in the of frustration, as Gamble and a SUMMARY | Jim Gordon 94 | alder swamp about two hundred | Ithica. In 1930, while on a patrol Grand Falls, Nfld. ee, third period did Canadiens hold rojjing puck robbed them of| NEW YORK 5 BOSTON 4 | First period—1. New York.) Jerry Lecco a | Yards south of the school It was|at Pisquid Pond on’ July 7th, oS eee Sete: loli athertet with: | BL: 000 110 052 02-11 the edge, when they outshot many seoring opportunities. BOSTON (AP)—Rez Fleming Hadfield 14 (Fleming. Ratelle | Douglas White- - qq |@ boggy. spring filled flat with || found where two black ducks ; cha h Cc Nfld, 111-2004 100-10—-9- Leafs” 15-12->-~ —— oe esoRonto coach Punch Imlach | Put-in-a—rebound- -late in - the/5:20;--2-- New ‘York, Fleming “13 Harley ‘Fraser _ “ a- heavy .alder growth.. ....A-typi- had been poled ashore _at the perfect 8-0 record, British Co- ee 140 210 440 x14. The game threatened at times pave son Brent a vote of confi- third period for his second goal |‘Nevin, Hadfield) 8:39: 3 New| Bittie Duffy - - cal wintering haven for ducks. pond and was told of a big duck lumbia and Saskatchewan, tied 7" 01 001.002 x— 4/to erupt into another brawl- dence when he gave the Toronto °f the game Thursday night| York, Howell 4 Ingarfield, | ic St One of the older boys rushed | Supper at itis home on July 17th. ~ for second with 6-2, records, had) ~" filled contest, like the 33 draWiwarthoro Junior centre the|and gave New York Rangers a Marshall) 18:38. Penalties—Ken- | judy White 7 | home and returred with a single | He was toid that the game wart no chance to catch the Edmon- FIGHTH ROUND ae ae starting assignment against big 54 Victory over Boston Bruins nedy 8:12, Fleming 13:01, How- alien Richard barrelled muzzle loading -shot-|Gen was on iis trail but remark~ ton women in Thursday's final, | RURAL MINOR Jean Beliveau. jin. a meeting between the bot- ell 14:10. Fleming 15:30 Cheslev Buell ‘gun. He made haste to the.| ed: “Its in mv blood. . .1 can't mt thames. eee 100 001 002 0 4, eB Yourg Imlach did not figure t0m two teams in the National| Second Period—4. New York,! pat pitlard _swamp and shot one when the | Stop”. He- stop f - .. dn the’ five-year history of the Alberta. ; > 010 410 230 3-14) : in any of the scoring, but he|Hockey League. . Marshall 22 (Nevin, Goyette) | : ‘ flock rose. I can still visualize |: caugst ‘.m. event. Alberta previously fin- a | HOCKEY “Tgave a good account of himself} 't was the second New York-2:07;--5.— Boston, Stewart —13 Irene-Beaton— - —g7 the blood stained pocket-it made ; $25.00_and. costs and the pride ’ 023 110 001 0~ 8. ~ ‘throughout the hard-fought eon-|Victory over Boston. in two (Maxner, Doak) 7:55; 6. Boston |Darrell White in the snow when it fell as|0f his life. . the $150.00 Ithica vividly as if it were yesterday. 12 gauge dcuble was ordered ished second three times, third |B.C. once and fourth once. NS. Mrs. Jamison, her daughters Rae | Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Coyle and Man “outsider’’ Miss Harrington suc- ‘ 100 001 110. 3— 7 101 030 203 1-11 030 201 010 09— 7 ceed the. Peggy Casselman rink ann 020 300 0. 8 of Winnipeg as national cham- aay. 013 201 012 1-11 pions. EIGHTH-ROUND PLAY Ont. 110'303-001 2-11 In other eight - round play Que. 093 010 110 0-— 6 ——-——*Phorsdays~ gpg : Set June Shaw of Kenora, Ont., won 11-6 over Nicole Janelle of Port Alfred, Que. championship eight rounds: Marg Cooke of Vancouver PWHL edged Rene Snow of ee Alberta BOR Barbara Macnevin 0 isle, : > Sask., broke a 7-7 tie after eight | Saskatchewan i wooo ends to win 11-7 over Joyce British Columbia 86 2 Reek of Dauphin, Man. Quebec 844 Kay Hoare of Summerside, | Ontario 844 P.FE.1., broke an 88 tie after) Nova Scotia 8.355 eight ends and won 11-8 against | Manitoba 835 Shirley Pilson of Bathurst, N.B./ a Mrs. Jamison- and her three Newfoundland 8 2°6 attractive blonde. rinkmates| New Brunswick 8 2 6 Prince Edward Island 8 2 6 never gave Newfoundland a - St. Dunstan's Pucksters. Cop Win In Ove BOM pn Hoge ge The Provincial Vocational In- stitute did everything but beat the Saint Dunstan's High School at the Charlottetown Forum fast © evening as they forced the Saints into overtime before they bowed 6-3 in a valiant effort. The win gives SDHS a 2-0: lead in the Charlottetown and District Jun jor League semi-finals. - #PVI had battled back from a two goal deficit in the third ta tie the match and then missed | on a series of breakaways that | 4 kept them from ending the game | Pa: right there and then, The Insti-! 2 tute also had a goal in the first period but it was not. counted as the referee Don Whelan felt it had hit the post. Gary Cudmore emerged as the her@’ under pressure as he went through three periods get- fing one goal and then -banging the winning and insurance _mar- kers be hind the’ overworked John Reid who was_ brilliant throughout the contest’ Bill Weetherbie had the other over- time tally while Alan Flood and Rill LeClain scored: in” regular play. PVI got brilliant performances from almost every member on the. team ‘but Bob Whitlock stood’ out along . with Kevin Smith. Whitlock scored all three markers and just missed on se- vera] other occasions. Bob Whitlock got the Institute on the board as he opened the scoring in the game with a neat deflection but’ Gary Cudmore tied the match up at thé 10.11) ALAN FLOOD mark-as he took a breakaway pass from Lidstone, aftér he blocked a slapshot and shoved the puck under Reid. Play con- tinued fast and. furious in the se- cond but the Saints had the only tally as both goalies played per- fectly. Brown in the SDHS cage blocked several breakaways but it was a long screen. shot by Lidstone that caught the corner of the net and Reid moving the wrong way that was the only shot to enter either net. Alan Flood took advantage of 4 momentary @VI defensive lapse te fire @ backhander paot Congradulations. ed\us over the head for tres- | passing, that would be differ- | ent. This seems to be what the | me. It's | | nat in the rules, but they do it. netminder Bruce Gamble, play- [ le “real nets, was the vict{m of all “Canadian women's curling _ standings after | Emory Ruelle, left, of Water- loo, loha, pushes pack into the net past Canadian goalie Seth LJUBLJAN to a> flying ‘world hockey (Canadian National Team m2 Wallops U.S: In Opener Canada‘s~ national team got off excitement. ‘Bhursday, night by trouncing the- | United States 7-2. | The Canadians were obv | trying to make a fast start in| Mayasich 5:40, Tsch- i. es ee ae Ruelle | yy 3 . championship here BIG FOUR ALL WINNERS . Shots on goal by The Russians, the Czechs and United States the Swedes—Canada’s partners Canada in the big four—all posted easy, Attendance—10,000. torie: inst vir- s Thursday aga LJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia A Yugoslavia (CP) ‘caused a lot of p re-cournament | Huck 3:34, “i : start in the 1966 6 3S 7—IB 919 7—35 RASC ad cok U.S. SCORES ; Martin, right, for first U.S. pionships today at LjubMjana, (AP Wirephote via cable frem offi score in world hockey cham- ‘Yugoslavia, Canada won, 7-2. Ljubljana). oS ae in jing his secénfl game in Toronto Maple Leafs nets, came up with a sparkling performance to shut jout Montreal Canadiens 4-0 in a | National Hockey League game > | Thursda Leafs got y night. two goals New York Ranger netminder, it} as his second shutout in NHL | play. He previously registered one while with the Bruins dur- ; ing the 1961-62° season.” Lorne Worsley, in. the Mont- four Toronto goals. . KELLY GETS SEVENTH Red Kelly-picked_up his sev-' enth of the season atid Peter Stemkowski his third in the’ opening period, while Bob Pul- lford with his 24th and Frank | Mahovlich with his 26th, took’ care of the third period rally. the teams fought to im Toronto Toronto's victory moved them Wednesday night. ‘Nhe following games are sch- | eduled in the Rural Minor Hoc- | key Paperweight Division at St. | Dunstan's Rink Sat. March 5, ‘Terry FH ; t s hurt. : : | 1966, These are the second)” .7 ote bi tus eae . came at 15:22, a few seconds ing 13:24, Robinson 16:53. iGary Gormley ed seasons then in the winter He never huntec again for over ‘games of the total goal seml- i. fact that young Imlach was |fter he left the penalty box) Third period—8. Boston. West- ‘Jim Gordon and ick that. tried to. wie. /'es sears. The total file snd finats in the house ‘eagee: doaty five years old when Beli-|Where he sat out his fourth pen- fall 9 (Maxner. Williams) 4:38, | David Murdock fer Wah ws sever liver very COMMS mounted. to 9006; The ICE NO.1 . -- lveau. then a member of. the |@ity. of the game. \9. New York, Fleming 14 (Pla-|Douglas White long. five cent piece had a hole in it 7 am. — Clippers vs. Bisons. | Quebec entrv. inthe Senior; He tucked in a_rebound of-ager. Marshall) 15:22. Penalties Douglas MacLeod - | was overseas on the great and_I_carried_it as a_charm for 7.45 a.m. Seals vs. Flyers. Hockey League, was coached | Shot by Bob Plager while Bos Westfall 5:06. Plager 9:30, Fle- Joe Osbourne adventure from August 1914 to long years. If we had penalties ICENO. 30 Barons; ~~ {b¥.-the-senior_Imlach.____. |ton.was a man short. /ming 13:90, Westfall 14:08. jRex Harris May 9th, 1919. After November like that dished out now our a = - sae _ : Kelly enemed: the scoring at| Boston’ had come trom” behind) Shots~on-xoal-by——— ~~~! y Buel ttt my unit~tst Division. -; Waterfowl hunting wouldn't be. 7:45 a.m. — Canucks vs. Blad- |, ; to tie the. score at 3:38 of the'New York 15 19. 6—31 Clara White th ion | i. the sad mess its in. In the _ 3:47 of the first period when he |t°. ; eis : WAS Wit ee MEET OF COMO STON | Tale Gaitigg Y “The followi the results Shot a backhander past a start-|third period after spotting New | Boston 10 11-29) Adeline MacKeodle on the Rhine. A few years after Mts a9. Bipniir tebe e following are re York a 40 lead. Ed Westfall got’ Attendance—9,739 Charlie Murdock my return I got married and | U2!¥ Waterfowl checks with Paul of games played in the Rural) Minor Hockey . Bantam— Pee Wee Division's first games of a two-game total goal semi-final | series. Pad Wings 7 — Wayne Snair. Ricky j ‘ever 3, Gary Campbell 4, Rangers—6 Willard Creamer, /Gordon Betts 2, Ken Constable | 3 i j j ‘Bruins 9 — Lyle / play and Bob Whitlock scored on _ another beautiful deflection of a -Mmerous:-—breakaway—- | rtime Reid only 50 seconds into the third but that was the only time) that they scored. PVI controlled Steele slapshot and a blistering shot from the left boards to knot the score. The Institute had nu- | ties in the closing minutes but failed to knot the score. Cudmore got the first of three | SDHS goals at 4.45 of the over-, time session as he blasted a™ slapshot that » just trickled | through Reid’s pads. and then! when PVI was forced to open up | pumped two more into the PVI | cage. Weatherbie got the final | marker on a solo effort as he stickhandled past the defense and deked Reid with only five seconds remaining on the clock. SUMMARY First Period — 1. PVI Whil- lock (Smith, MacDougall) 6.22; ‘2. SDHS —-Cudmore (Lidstone) downs: 19.11. Penalties — Affleck, 1.26; Kitson, 9.49. Second Period — 3. SDU LeClair (MacIntyre) 3.18. Penal- ties — Smith, 10.00. Third Period — 4. SDU Flood (Affleck) 50; Eva = Chicago 30 18 7 210 152 71 vs Rams: 11.45 a.m. — Zebras Whitlock (Steele) 2.05: 6. PVI — ti : dy os ~ Montreal 31 17 8 186 146 70 Vs Lions. Whitlock (Walsh). Penalties Toronto % 2 9 165 1561 ‘ Lidstone, 2.11; Kitson 12.26; j : . Playoffs in the bantam divi-, 8 P . 5, iiaiad ‘ Detroit 2% 22 9 186 159 61 .. = 30 or 10 00 M Smith, 18.40; Weatherbie, 18.40, N York— 16 33: 9 173 222 41 sion. of the Charlottetown Mi- e . : inertia Affleck 18.57.°°" Overtime — 7. SDHS — Cud- Boston more (Affleck, Flood 14.54: 8. SDHS ~— Cudmore ‘Weatherbie ' Klood) 8.19, 9. SDHS — Weath Ocean, is surrounded ® 000 “square miles of empty sea.'‘'A’’ section and first-round los- jerbie 9.56, f R in the > |first period and two in the final | |\frame to aid Gamble’s cause. ' For the-foFmer Boston Bruin- © boosted directly over the shoyl- der Shephard, 13:51 of the period as he com-; 'James Wood, 2. Gary Brown, bined with Orland Kurtenbach Hawks 3 — Bobby McGuigan, and ~ ‘MORE |7 (Shack) 3:47. 2. Toronto, Stem- cepiton. Danny O'Rourke and jkowski 3 (Kurtenbach, -Baun) | Art Ballem both put their re- 13:51. Penalties—Ferguson 4:19, cords on the line last evening Harris 8:16, Bover 10:26, Kur- tenbach kowski, Larose 15:22, Ferguson idouble: minor 15:22. Penalties — Kurtenbach, , a jtually helpless opposition. _ : Recnameee : a : gl Russians toyed with Po- ‘GP)—Standings in the world ‘Americans in. their places after | 8-1, the Czechs blasted East hockey tournament after Thurs- ‘221 exhibition oes to them in eae eet Seamed) GROUP.A f man ence m ied | UP... : een naan ‘for a. while, and Sweden) WLT F APt. ' |stomped to a 5-1 victory over | Russia Vee Be a8 BULLETIN ‘“\ |Finland in a ragged game. ' zecho. 100 6,02 Canada struck early against | comets : 3 : ‘ : 2 3 EAL ony ould-be | the. United States, but the Amer- weden | ; Pas a: MF reciau eam managed to stay within | Finland STO E80 title bout here between Cassius Scoring reach until the third pe-| U.S. S18 3 70 2 ‘Clay and Ernie Terrell indica- Tied. It was 3-1 for Canada at/)E. Germany 910 9 69 ted late Thursday night they the end of the first. The teams | Poland te 186 ait ans to the fight ix | Matched single goals in the sec-|_ THURSDAY’S RESULTS Montreal, even if the Montreal 7d, but Canada zipped far Russia 8 Poland 1 ‘ is unavailable. bgt ae a lawyer and | Soals in the. third. cer of Main Bouts Inc. of | York, said the fight could | torium in the Montreal suburb head with three unanswered Czechoslovakia 6 E. Germany Sweden 5 Finland 1 - The Canadians gave this|Canada 7 United States 2 hockey lesson with~sticks pur-| ”. SATURDAY chased from the U.S. team just Canada vs. Poland ~ before the game. The Canadian | Czechoslovakia vs. Finland sticks were help up in transit, Sweden vs. East Germany a Te rrr the Verdun Audi- ‘oom |the tying goal after a great ef- -) fort by Tommy Williams, who \earried the puck all over the New York end before getting a chance to pass. in front. ; New York scored three times a aad whipped Air School in the and an assist in the initial | terday. stanza. Pan i Hadfield scored first “at $:20, | poking in’ Jean Ratelle’s re- | and an assist with a deflection of a Bob Ne- | Gordon Betts vin power-play slap shot Harry Howell scored-—for--8--assists.—For- Marshall scored at 2:07 of the second period before Boston got | going. ‘ Z standing Ron Stewart scored the first Cause. Air j Sherwood Elementary School | two-game-total-point represent Prince and Queens in the first - County i nthe Proyincial Inter- its four-goal org Stoner and | scholastic B championship at the Vic Hadfield each had a goal, RCAF base in Summerside yes- Bob MacGuigan stood out for the locals with a brace of guals bound and Fleming followed Ken Constable, Terry Gee and lly. Ken MacDougall had 3-0 first ‘period lead and Donny. John Graveile had. the ~ only | marker but Ken St. John and goalie B. Normand played - games elieg ‘|\Boston goal at 7:55° of the School will play in Cha |) middle period and then had a town next week. ada, Mott 12:28. Penalties—Cur- Norway 12 Britain 2 rie 11:40, Davis 13:32. |West Germany 6 Austria 3 | “Third period — 7. Canada, Romania 4 Switzerland 3 Huck (MeKenzie) 7:12; 8. Can- Yugoslavia 6 Hungary 4 eda, Faulkner 11:25; . 9. Can- " GROUP C ada, Johnston 19:30. Penalties—' Denmark 9 South Africa @ HUNTER’S CORNER | Present Day Duck Hunters Have Mistaken Conception quid Pond was the home of. black Marshall Johnston first game of their series to while Jack Shaw, each had one tal- three the.-RCAF —team The big majority of our pre- sent day hunters are under | ducks. It is an aeornninee — nl that our local | and a half long a a mile. ina losing | Oe ducks al wide and is covered over the arshall J [te ducks always wintered in Tn verwrng | province but—-such—is—not the case. On very. rare occasions a few black ducks would be re- bulk of its surface with a heavy stand of wild rice. It was the home of the black ducks and goal disallowed a few minutes later when referee Vern Buffey | ruled the. play offside. ford 24 (Shack, Kelly) 2:49: 4. Don Awrey and Forbes Ken- Toronto, Mahovlich 26 ‘Keon, ned? got the other Boston goals_- of REG FLEMING BOB PULLFORD 2 : RI FLE }. nights and the sixth loss in a’ Awrey 4 (Martin, Doak }12:25; Harold MacK ru- 7,, Boston, Kennedy 4 (Langlois, Billie Duffy -__Stewart test. At one int he ee oul, TOW for the cellar-dwelling B of Montreal defenceman |'": Fleming's tie The following are the results + 19:49. Penalties—Woy-._ Marven Gordon - breaking goal towich 8:27, Hicke 11:01, Flem- Randall Richards other species: The King of the . Poachers also lived close to tiie pond. He was as cute as a. pet fox and hunted in season or out, , as the spirit moved him. 2s ported in the province and ~then would be a minus quactity for ifive or six years. They were | wever given a chance to survive SHOOT but were hun'ed down as persis- enzie be : The appearance of a grizzly bear | confiscated. He never cradled it ‘n his arms. . .it was ' wouldn't create as much excite- ment today. There were no clos- |sold in Wolfville, Nova Scotia. again SSSPRRSSSLLLKFKKS SRRRRER Sharpe and his Piper Club plane. led Worsley after taking a per- fect pass frem the side from, winger Eddie Shack. | J Shack had tied up Montreal | defenceman Jacques Laperriere ou r at the blue line and J. C. Trem- | : | blay backed in on Worsley suff- | ; iciently to act as a screen for | os e e Kelly's shot. : wnt me «oe LA Provincial Legion There comes a time in the;around and stole one in the fif- majority__of Curling Bonspiels_ that the two undefeated _ rinks SUMMARY lock horns and. the Provincial First period—1. Toronto, Kelly Legion Bonspiel proved no ex- Bob Baun to beat Worsley. | of it. In afternoon play | and in the end it was the Ballem rink that ended up with a’ big one in the loss column as they / fel 10-8 in a closely fought Second period — No ocoriae | match with the O’Rourke quar- r- | tet. 11:40, Douglas, .Stem- town -11-5 in another game that | had two four enders in this, D. O'Rourke per 12:15, Stemkowski 15:26, | Three enders in both the sec- game and that proved to be too | {C) $ Ferguson i6:53, Harper 19:18. ond and fourth put the O'Rourke much for LeClair to handle. The | H. oo oot wee Third period—3. Toronto, Pul-, rink in the drivers seat and to loss sent the latters rink to the | (S) 001 002 001 2xx— 6 Se Olan ae ae _ =| aid insult to injury they turned | sidelines. | STCIGeS, : = : |B. LeClair ‘under Robie W. Tufts, Chief Fed. IS OUR BYWOPD CURLING DRAW) MINOR HOCKEY SCHEDULE [4 ssten (27° 17° Nimes, Wawte’'<S" P| Volkswagens f : imes, . N.S. Pis- The following is the curling. “ tae 401 O01 104 Oxx—11 GP F946004-0000000600005 v draw for Friday night at the ~The following is” the playing yers will” continue play in the (c, maa “401 204 102 10113 2 + +«BuSsiness Men’s: ¢! ——Are-Our- Specialty ‘Charlottetown Club. (Spares schedule for Paperweights in ‘B’ bracket. ree ee) 8 nit —1 z ; LUNCH 2) ineeded). |League playoff competition for Coaches are advised that all, (¢) = 030 019 050 01010 ° $| co line of genuine ect a this weekend: | players - the bench- MUST be ; 3 Served Daily 75¢ 2 lenuh trea era Tee eee nn rt maa Te used in playoff games; failure to | pyr 3 rett, G. Brookins, G. Miller vs. PAPERWEIGHTS - comply with this order will au-| iG soup 103 000 200 xxx— 6 ¢ Dows Restaurant 3 RUDISCH'S Dr:, Kelly, Harvey Dougias, D. | Saturday, March 5th, 4 p.m. tomatically result in forfeiture | p Sinclair * 3 . CornerPowhal & Grafton +f GARAGE ’ MacLean, ‘J. MacShefférey. Ice 1 —.Redbifds vs Blackbirds; of came. { a ne 010-311 022 xxx_—1 3. Charlanabowa oe Alberts? Os ae Ice 2 -- B. Jones, N. Dooley, Ice 2 — Bluebirds vs Sparrows. Following are the first round g p.M. DRAW e Ls. seceneenesieceod | 4.40 p.m. + Ice 1 — Hawks VS |g Owls; Ice 2 —Jays vs Eagles. | 5.20 p.m. Ice 1 — Crows®vs Fal- Ice 2 — Jays practice. eee ‘D. O'Rourke Friday, 5 p.m. — Bisons vs (Cc) |Comets; 6 p.m. -Hornets vs Ma-| A. Ballem, (Cc) K. Doucette, K. MacNevin vs Henry Douglas, J. ShelMoof, R. Pigott, F. Brown. 5 dice 5 — T. White, K. Myers, Cons; a s. ‘ Saturday 12.30 p.m. — Sena- H. Crockett, J. Hughes vs .D. The following is the _ Playing Douglas, S. Willis, D. Kilpatrick, Schedule for the Pee Wee divi- tors vs Bears: 7.15 p.m. —- Ram-| A. Robertson L. Carragher. sion in the Charlottetown Minor blers vs Indians: ‘8.00 pm. —|(M $ p.m. - Hockey League: |Aces vs Barons: 8.45 p.m. --|G. Storey, Ices 4 and 8 -. Legion Play- PEE WEE ‘Blades vs Clippers. (Cc) Saturday, March 5th, 7 a.m.— | Bisons vs Wolves: 7.45 a.m. Elks vs Foxes: 8.30 a.m . Coyotes. vs Caribous;* 9.15 , a.m. By THE CANADIAN PRESS — Setters vs Racoons, 10 a.m : National League — Ice Cleaning: 10.15 a.m. Seals : W LT F A Pt Vs Otters; 11 am. ~ Springers Catala doesn t NHL STANDING FORUM 94 nor Hockey Association will “start this weekend. The first round will consist of to the 15 36 6 140 231 WAVES TRAVEL FAR Faster’ Island, in t Pacifie two games, with total goals i,WW,e ‘count. Winners continue im i Adults 50c e Still Unbeaten Gordon Stewart took his two th.. However down 7-3 the Bal-| games against Art Love and de-_ lem rink fought back pieking up | fending champ Athol Robertson | a two in the ninth and stealing | by scores of 13-10 and 11-5 to the tenth to make a close game ‘remain in contention for the top ‘honors. However for any rink O'Rourke to win the competition they are had defeated Henry Larter 106 | going to have to beat the O’- in a game that was conceded Rourke foursome and they have. after 10 ends and Ballem pourc- been curking of late that might de on Bob LeClair of Charlotte-. prove to be no little task. went only ten rounds. Ballem 2 P.M. DRAW SKATING TONIGHT Senior Teens (15 years & older) 35¢ settled on a farm at Mount Al- bion. I never saw, or heard of any wintering black ducks until mid-January, 1926. As the last clear light lingered in the west momentarily, before night took over, J dumped the water out of the horse tub ‘and as I stood listening to the sharp frost snaps as the water flowed over an ice bed I happened to giance east- ward and saw a flock of nine black. ducks flying-in the direct- ion of Pisquid Pond. It was a thrill of thrills. T learned later that they wintered in a -boggy, spring filled swamp at the head | of the pond. Migratory birds | were protected under the Migra | tory Birds Convention Act dur- | ing the off season and | saw to! ‘The top black duck count was eleven thousand eight hundred ‘odd black ducks. 90 per cent of those were counted in southern | Queens and Kings counties. 14 blacks were the most [I ever counted west of Summerside and they were in the wild Harper's Ferry section. : miles from human habitation. The only black ducks in Prince County worth the count were an apv- proximate sixty in the Dunk River area. This. proposed wet- lands project leaves this colum- nist cold. We have more wet- lands now than we need. We have enough now to last us for years. Constructing more is akin to building a string of Play ; e tels in the middie of. ¢ it that this flock was left alone. be a Sa RES They were left strictly alone and pay? Desert - - - loves labour | soon several hundred were x Some seve win. | 010 120 240 Oxx—1o, TINE with us. | 030 310 100 101-10 4. PLAY-OFF HOCKEY CIVIC STADIUM FRIDAY 9.15 P.M. SATURDAY 2.30 P.M. Borden Nationals vs. Pope Motors Aces Admission— Adults 75c; Students 50¢ Advance sale of tickets—Enman’s Drug Store, Borden Phar-\ macy. Civic Stadium. 201 001 021 010— 8 i "900 101 003 00x—— 5 022 010 110 31x—11