"4 ~~ SPORTS FRONT 1; Deserve Credit By CHRIS ANNETT - I pondered a lot of thihgs to which the new elty Junior hockey champions Prince of Wales Welshmen could be com-. pene after their tremendous display of determination at the Forum Tuesday evening and I think that just about the best eomparison ‘would be with the Montreal Canadiens, (just coincidence of course.) The PWC club was superbly trained and coached all season by Spy Ready and when the squeeze - on the Welshmen did Spy proud as they refused to say ie. : ‘ The Welshmen, as do the Canadiens, work as a TEAM, “and I do mean work. The Welshmen, just as the Habs, have ho equal when they are skating and putting out 100 per cent . but when they slacken off they are just another junior team. Perhaps they got a bit too cocky after the first period the other evening and it showed. It must have been the only time all year that they had four goals scored against them in a single period. However when they started to work again | nothing could stand in their way. . At the beginning of the season al! one could hear was that how the PWC crew were not-going to win this came or . how they were. not going to win that game etc. However they did not lose but two games in regular play and one in the playoffs. : This team was no better stocked with players than SDHS, its closest competitor, so just why did it win? First and foremost 1 think was the ability of vastly underestimated players to come up with the big performances at the right time. On paper Mike Brown s to be a better goalie than Barry Ellis. After all he a only 43 goals in regular season play as comparéd to Ellis’s 52. However it was Ellis that kept the Welshmen in the. game in the third period as he continued to. enhance his reputation.of having one.of the , best’ glove hands in the area..He ‘has improved more than - any other player in the league and in this observers opinion - deserves the most improved player award, if one is put - for-grabs. He came up with the clutch saves, he deserves HUSTLE PAYS Then there was the PWC defense and that-too was a tower of strength when the boys decided to skate. Lincoln MacKenzie, as awkward as he ars on ska was the big difference this year for the Welshmen as” a-mediocre club .itito a steady ope. Ken Rallem and Don Ellis were perhaps underestimated also but as fans might have noticed they got their jobs done. The best example of a lesser light on the PWC club coming off the bench and deing a perfect job was Gordie Ellis. He did not make a discernable mistake in the first two games of the serjes while he was on the ice. : f : The abjlity of the club to take training in the funda- mentals of \the” game, checking and skating were also big factors as the PWC. club won the series on. their superior checking ability. As one SDHS defensergan, stated, ‘they. * were beating us to the corners and-that counts a lot in any —_ The positional play of the PWC crew also helped to _ Sway the balance and it was only too obvious that many hours had gone into the clearing plays. and passing drills that were displayed. At tirhes it was almost amusing to see the reaction of a PWC forward-when he discovered that he had drifted onto the wrong wing. * game that wv which his tez question 2 & rough play. ‘ > As A. J. MacAdam, the SDHS coach put if. after the con: - test his boys had nothing to be ashamed of for they had given 100 per cent effort and just had been beaten by a better club. To the winners go my congratulations and to Saint Dunstan's my compliments on a valient effort that was not + Quite good enough. . . ° . . George Chuvalo took 147. blows in the eighth round alone. ‘from Cassilis Clay but his: jaw. remained just.as firm as the rock of Gibralter throughout the fight . . . It:seems a shame .that a-man as courageous as this can not advance further in his field than he fas but such are the fates of sport. Tyne Valley Cuffs Bruins The Tyne Valley Clover Farm- ers, showing fast skating pin- point passing attack manazed to jing from behind and {t resulted in their win ; The Bruins jumped into «a The Giardian, Charlottetowr, Thar. Merch 81, 1968 21) pwc Pucksters ; | dent the armour of sensational _oaltender Bob Herring seven times ~ at the Charlottetown’) Fucum last - evening as the’ ‘Farmers shaded the Murray) Harbour Bruins 7-5 in an. over- | time cliffhanger. The-win gave | them the right to represent Prince and Kings in the Porvin- | cial Intermediate B champion- ships. The Bruins, battling for their, lives im the best two of three! series came within 14 seconds of tying the series at a game | | went ahead again before the per- quick 1-0 lead as they had. scor- ed_.before fans even got settled | down at the :15 second mark but the Farmers tied it up 7 min- utes later on a unassisted effort | 8 " Montreat Canadians goalie Lorne .(Gump)~ Worsley stops * attack by Toronto Maple Leafs By BOB MYERS LOS ANGELES. (AP)—Pitch- to. their cliff-hanger 32-day hold- ‘Los Angeles Dodgers for “more than $210,000." er the exact figure. He flew into ‘Itown Tuesday to try to bring the two to agreement and said they rejected his final offer of $210,000 — $112,500 for Koufax and $97,500 for ° Drysdale. But Wednesday morning he $:30 P.M. (Club Mixed) Ice 1: K. Acorn vs. J. Square- briggs. Ice 2: E. Nicholson vs. Dr. by Ellis. However the Harbour iod ended on another solo ef: fort this time by classy Winston Clements who was a stafidout in the game. Tyne Valley scor:d | the only two markers in the| second period, Bagloe’s. first and | Gallant. Ice 3: R. Ewing vs. D. Came- ron. Ice 4; K. Ready—vs. (winner) Jenkins vs. Flemming. Ice 5: R. Goss vs (loser) Jen- kins vs, Flemming. AT SOURIS ing aces Sandy Koufax and»Don | — Drysdale wrole a happy ending = out Wednesday by signing with ; Dodgers general manager £. | J.. Bavasi declined to disclose ; increased the offer enough for - % L J MAKES BIG STOP . Peter Stemkowski (centre) and. Toronto last night. Montreal Ron Ellis during the Na- - tional Hockey League game . in. _won 3-1. (CP Wirephoto). Dodgers Finally Sign Aces Drysdale, Koufax Bs E | 4 { | Canadiens Win BigGame _ . As Leafs Fold In Third | ‘ \diens 86 points in the standings | py; KLES ". with two games left to slag. |" eae —< mt : | That left them four points jinated any 3 | of Mh ‘. |play with Eddie Shack serving | County 0 By JIM CRERAR wher he uncorked a hard drive ble early im thegame. the Leafs | ‘TORONTO, (CP) — Montreal from 35 feet out. that went picking up minors in the |Canadiens, scoring all of their through Bower's legs. : first 13 minutes of play. but they goals in the third period,| Ron Ellis missed: a good held the Canadiens off the score- clinched a tie for first place in chance to tie the. seore for the sheet. the National, Hockey. League Leafs twex minutes later when Then, late in the period. the with a 3-1 victory over Toronto he rolled a shot across the open lime of Red Kelly. Armstrong Maple leafs Wednesday night. goalmouth while his team hadiand Frank ahovlich got hot The victory gave the Cana- the manpower advantage. and kept Worsley on his toes with a- succession of close-in Gilles Tremblay got. the third’ drives. ahead Montreal goal also by popping , Worsley made’ an excep- ie the second - place Chicago the puck between Bower's legs. fionally good stop off Mahovlich wei (Black Hawks, who. also have 4 tr} ie and that opened=up play briefly. ; : ickled behind the Leaf goalie @ Pp play : : em a left .and drifted into the corper be- | SUMMARY : i loss mathematically elim- ‘tore Toronto defenceman Marcel First peried--1. Torontn, Pul- shopes the Leafs had, 4 to did it out. ford 28 (Kelly; Shack) > 19:33 ing “first. Toron Preseves Soe Coe en © oe — Prowovost 4:2, to, is. nded -in ar Penalties third, nine points behind fight’ between Shack ahd Mon. Shack 7:53, Harper 11 46, Stem- Toronto took a 1-9 lead in the Bower's solid ormance in| Richard 21 (unassisted) 9:16; 4. first peried on Bob. Pulford’s the ‘Toronto ol the second, Montreal, G. Tremblus 26 (Pro- 28th goal of the season and nel the first two periods were ‘rela- vest )16:36. Penalties—Montreal ther team scored in the second. tively dull bench penaltyserved by Cour- But, Montreal erupted in the Toronto in trou noyer 0:53, Shack. 4:20, Rous- third on goals by Yvor Cour- noyer, Henri Richard and Gilles. Tremblay to break up a goal- tending hattle beetween Leaf net- minder Johnny Bower and Mon- treal's Lorne ‘Gump) Worsley. WORSLEY A STANDOUT | Worsley was a standout. in the }game and kept the Canadiens in contention throughout. - Cournoyer's goal, his 16th of the season. came on the power Pope Motors _ Whip Nationals | Willard SUMMERSIDE Prince ,MacWilliams and Hockey League ~ action Leard each scored, once. an end for the 1965-66 | Williams, the scoring la high-sticking minor early in| came ¢ champ, jthe third. The goal was Cour- | season/ last ni ‘moyer's 15th of the campaign on | dium with . Pope Motor total. ithe power play. He deflected Aces/ capturing the league title | SUMMARY | Rousseau'’s shot past. Bower to by defeating Borden Nationa's| first Peried:—1.Aces D. Gau- } tie a scare “ rea BOY 148 ‘det (G Dalton) 4.26; 2. Borden, Worsley followed by smother-| The Nationals, SJ. Noonan (D. MacWillvams, A Taylor) 6.27; 3. Aces—G. Dalton (D. Doyle). 8.11; 4. Borden—G D. Mac- img a shot by Leafs George rusty from the layoff cau | Armstrong on what looked like the Aces meeting Royals in - a sure goal and Henri Richard land Intermediate A | put the Canadiens ahead at 9:16. ship play, were in the game Ls aaa the first period but after that the Aces. took over and in the sand- cee Roberts) 14.4. Penalties: —none. Second Peried:—6. Aces G Mac- | night. at Civic Sta- also added three assists to his (G. Roberts. jams! 13.11; 5. Borden-G. | (D: MacWilliams, G. seau 11:31, Fergus Shack 19:13. Shots on goal by: Montreal r Toronto Chuvalo Gains Clay's Respect TORONTO ‘AP? Cassius Clay left town Wednesday with mew respect for George Chuva- lo’s cement jaw and a bruised right hand to remind him of his unexpectedly tough fight the plodding. Canadian heavy- weight champion. on 19: 13, 7:10 13-30 12 10 17—39 Dundee said Clay left early with « trea) with’ threesgames le é : guson, kowski 12:38, Provost 17°30. “T knew we'd have a rough The regular ‘schedule “¢ eee gre imo d peried — No scoring fight,’ -said Angelo Dundee, © Sunday with the. figst ‘four fin- match at the Montreal blue line, Penalties—Harper 15.15, Pul- manager of the unbeaten world . ishers—Detroit Red Wings ak officials broke it up before any ford 17:00, Talbot_19 35 heavyweight. champ. “But I - ready have sewed up. fourth veal hiows were struck. Third period — 2. Montreal, thought he would get him out | place—starting.. semi-final play- Outside of the last five min- |Coiltnoyer 16 (J. C. Tremblay, of there in the late rounds. That ._ Gs ‘next week ‘utes of thé opening period and Rousseau) 5:35; 3. Montreal, Chuvalo has a great chin.” : Wednesday for Chicago after an | - examination of the swollen mid- - dle knuckle of his right hand - showed the injury to be only a ., bruise and nothing serious. °. ‘ Clay's immediate future was * in the hands of his Louisville draft board which had reclassi- 1-A.. Ed Jacko, -Clay’s** sonal. lawyer, said he under- registrant who has been. of the country had an ex- tended period of time—30 to 60 days—to appeal his case. Arthur Grafton: lawyer for Clay's sponsori group in Louisville, said the champ sociation champ, and. Chuvalo were possibilities for bouts in ° Toronto. Nothing was definite. . NEVER WOBBLED ‘ night Gardens. Clay must have rained . t Post Big Victories — oles. doers, Phillies By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS including a homer for the Ori- } put on an impressive ~of .puck-carrying._ The Moncton Stadium ice surface, Columbia crushed ite 17-2 in the fifth round of one of the biggest in North day to take a share of first Manitoba America, appeared to hurt Mor-|place with Ontario and Prince. - ; : | Edward Island. PTD A crowd of 3,300 watched the| The three rinks boasted four B.C. game, in which-Morrisburg out- wins and one loss each, a step 200 066 00x x— 2 083 111 44x x—17 shot. Moncton 35-28. ahead of Alberta and Nova Seo-| Bye: Alberta ‘ fags id jtia’s 3-1 records. , tae Scere . ¢ A traffic jam for the lead,| BY THE CAN RESS Summers! e which “developed Tuesday, was, National seniors curling extended when Jim Johnston of Ch2™pionship standing after the Wat iowa seniors curling Ontario ——--—-111-021-030-x—9 | apiece but a goal by Ivan Bag. i” the third the Harbour - got loe, his second of the evening, ayers a lowe ana eee knotted the score and froced the | : “match into an extra session. then to the end of the period he Ron MacArthur, who played in| £% third of the ‘night but the match despite having been |Zllis and Bagloe had two for confined to bed for the past two | Tyne Valley to knot the scory. days with a bad cold beat Hex- |The game was extremely clean ring at the 3:15 mark of with only seven infractions be- extra’ session on an unassisted | Ing called by Coyle and ref Moe tally and a minute later line- | soodwin. i mate Merryi Cameron clinched; ~ the win for the Clover Farmers | as he banged home the Valley's seventh marker. : ~ Tyne Valley held a edge in play over the defensively | National League inéed Bruins. Bob Herring in WLT F A Pt/|9:00 P.M. A the Kings County represen’a-|Montreal 39 21 8 227 169 86| Icej{: P. Sinclair; A. MeGre- tives goal was sensational |Chicago _ 87 23 8 235 175 82/ gor, R. Ferguson, E. Murphy throughout the ‘contest as te | Toronto ‘ 34 24 9 201 178 77\vs.°C. Nicholson, D. O'Connor, _.-nandied the barage of saots dir- | Detroit ., 30 27 11 213 188 71'E. Duvar, B. McNeill. sf ected at him in a cool fashia: ‘New York-—-18-39-10-180-249-46 ee-2: Two-year. curlers. — L. NHL STANDINGS - detinne By THE CANADIAN PRESS — a marker by Gorriee but cari 7-9 Ice 1 — Stewart vs Reid. | Kassner, 19-11 | Tee 1 — Eight Year Curlers. | Ice 2 — T. Doucette, B. Pierce. . 12 |AT MONTAGUE 17:00 P.M. (Mixed Bonspiel)- Ice 1: K. MacDonald, Johnstone, J. MacDonald, P. Sorrie, Ice 2: Winner of game A vs. & ‘loser game B. Munroe vs. H. Matheson. A. | Los Angeles’ Claude . Osteen and Philadelphia’s Jim Bunning | From Ice 2 — T. MacDonald vs Dr, went nine innings for the first jtime this spring as the Dodgers ‘blanked Cincinnati Reds 4-0 and the Phillies downed Kansas City |Athletics 4-1 in exhibition base- \pall Wednesday. . Osteen permitted “fist two hits and struck out eight as the ‘Dodgers iwon -their--fina! Florida lexhibition game. It was Los An- second shutout. against | geles’ Bears, vs. E. Murphy, B. Smit}, ithe Reds this spring. D; , M. Balser. i |. Bunning allowed the Athletics four hits including Larry Stahi's ninth inning homer. that de- iprived him of a shutout. Bill |White and~Ricl*Allen homered for the Phillies. Detroit Tigers’ Jim Northrup iwalloped' a bases-loaded triple ~capping-——a--five-run. sixth...inning ithat helped_.carry. the Tigers to _ However Tyne Valley kept com- | Boston ee ‘lottetown Minor Hockey Lea-. gue Juvenile. team which will participate in the Maritime Juvenile championships at the Forum this weekend. Follow- ing this tourney the club is abe : v Bob’ Doherty, Bill MacKin- -fon and Paul Stanley (LEFT TO RIGHT) are only three of the classy young hockey stars dotting the roster of the Char- THREE CLASSY YOUNGSTERS ‘slated to-host.the St Lambert | 4 ¢ 4 an 11-7 victory over Atlanta Braves. Joe Torre and with Torre also smacking three singles. Norm Cash. connected | fot Detroit. John Romano drove in. the - |tying and winning runs. with a| | |single as Chicago: White Sox got Orioles 4 - 2. had three’ hits | past Baltimore, Frank Robinson Tracadie, Albany Battle Tonight mn The Albany St. Pats take to) ‘| the ice tonight at the Borden rink to. try-and overcome a two point deficit in the last game) ef tworganetotal-point.series.. for the .Queens-Prince County Intermediate ‘'C’’ championship. In the first game Tracaflie de- | feated Albany 9-7 in a penalty. in- | Juveniles, the Montreal and district champions in what is being termed as the Fastern Canadian Invitational Champ- ionships. alties were ‘handed out. The wigner of this series ob- ‘ | tains the fight to oppose--—the_, | contestant" from Kings County Brace “A at Firchal! , for the Island Intermediate ‘C”’ title’ Fhe game is slated to start [at boo a ied ‘ ve by "Billy | *|Cowan homered for the Braves fested contest. A total of 16 pen- day San Francisco Giants wal- loped California Angels 15-3 and Shades PWC idecision over Scotty Anderson St.Louis: Cardina]s defeated Bob Cliv lof Winnipeg and defending | Boston Red Sox 3 SUMMERSIDE. — bash champion Manitoba and Wen-. j with io wan sixteen point | Geil Mancdenall Gt ae COLLECT 20- HITS side Bigh School to an all-im- | Cha | Gaylor Perry worked eight portant first game victory in Ji) we apie roel r Dae linnings for the Giants and their best two out of three game | aes Saskia ar oars lbelted one of three San Fran-| series against Prince of Wales Lune leisco homers. Willie . McCovey yesterday at Summerside’s Civic | |and Jim Hart also homered ee aac on eet a ithe Giants who collected 20 hits. ince ales cagers 38.to 4/0. |Paul Schaal‘and Ed‘Bailey con-| before approximately 120 -~ Biver af Copper Cif produced nected for the Angels. wren ee — a - = cia = a Key Curt -Flood’s 10th inning home es davliyed hia i bert, Rhuithewias F sana ad: jrun off Dick Radatz gave the fine ball haadii oer itive: = % j}Cards their victory over the the ball from Prince of Wales an : ares Island chien \Red Sox. Boston's George Scott | for about half a minute. Sum- Manitoba Sierta . ok tee ‘ ; ‘/merside’s Bill Bishop played an . ‘ta played New- had tied the game with a two-| mer . ke \feuiadilatad. od with out pinch homer in the ninth. | Seer eeane agg anak — iSaskatchewan and New Bruns- _An other games. Cleveland In- cos rinkletter. controlled the Wick .met Northern Ontario | in \dians “and ~Chicago~°Cubs~were- Thackhoanise, ‘both “grabbed” off the: sixth_round at 8:15. p.m. ischeduled to play at’ Mexico 19 nds abbed CST. Ontario had the bye. ‘ ig : | DART RESULTS | penetrate each other's tizhtly ° os | played ‘zone defence. ;¢.. Rounding out the game's ¢ following are results at g , op tesant play in the Inter Club Scorers were Gordon Carr and ' ; Brian Peters with fiifle points Lesion “B's at Brace “A” 0.5) each for Prinice of WWales while | Sask. 010 202 091 x= 6 gave Nova Scotia a 15-5 verdict | lover Jim Burgess of St. John’s. the Newfoundlarid-skip, and-Art- Northern Ontario's first win, 8-46} 'Cooksville gave Ontario a 95 five rounds: . . PWL British Columbia 541 Ontario § 41 P.E.I. $ £3 Alberta 431 Manitoba — 422 Saska § 23 Quebec je New Brunswick 41:3 Northern Ontario | es ae Newfoundland an ee . , eginatn z April = Brush Cuts .. Adults . = City while Minnesota Twins FIFTH ROUND played Houston Astros and We fesson for the low score | Childten, Fri. & Sat. .. Washington Senators met New |. . Nfld. - 000 003 191 0— 8 York Mets in night games| ye ene emereide High, Nova Scotia 221 310 040 215 . Charlottetown Barber’ s | Both teams foued it hard $0 i. ontario... 392010 210 x 8 MARITIME JUVENILE CHAMPIONSHIP © “NOTICE... _ Association © 160 Mode! with 18 b.p. overhead cams, due! cerburetors, end tele- 25 Brackley Pr. Wd. the following prices will Pee $1.25 see eee “gee . $1.00 4 seggns soe -|| Buddy Brander for Summerside 4 Bats Mess at Lesion “A” 1 Righ and Dow "Lothian tor Po PLAYOFFS * = Firchall at CLA 41 a of Wales each had eicht was a a es ; * wrANDINGS Paha i (Boys-16 - 18 Years Age Bracket) : eo 0 ew 2 | F id il . fs a md | tiday, April Ist - 8.00 P.M. ; Legion “‘A" &) 54° 36 10 Sata Mess. 0 34. 168 | 4 Ts OUR AD | NOVA SCOTIA WINNER vs. CHARLOT TETOWN = : . Ps « 35 55 70 q <o pe ppg SSSI SETS . SR amg ronan meer renee sm vwerns mn reine eres cane eres ear ta cea <> ae teresa fee tape vngimnnae pm Firehall m7 28 62 $6, Volkswagens Saturday, April 2nd 10.00 'A:M: : Ue ins ginieteo ais red. ~ ae Our Specialty _, NEW BRUNSWICK vs. NOVA SCOTIA. ~ y ; . “omple: : i ‘ : ae’ Legion “A” at Lediom “BY LV twagen parte | Saturday, April 2nd - 7.00 P.M: «2. - Sportsman ; ’ . ; i agi a wares gee Mose at Brace “A”, RUDISCH'S. . | CHARLOTTETOWN vs. NEW BRUNSWICK © igh single-Sam Sampson— A : : = os ia dele Mess, Paul Murphy Brace | sonnet Adults—75e Students—50ce “B60, , . : = } “ ‘ ch “4 = fe. eee ee eee eee eee mh eee i. them to sign. : a wich session they pumped seven i _ boy’ see mo I mow Seale" the Borden cage ‘ni |Desthan Wallan, D-”Mac. 0 Mumcha.on the fal Sar ment at a press ee ith: the losers only managed to|Leod) 1.3. 7. Aces—D. Dovie | once. Pt ide and 23 ad winner ; : carner two. er ae ay Some thought it was a little op one side and: 23-98 ge ‘ The ‘only bright spot for the | feet —G- Dalton (ae iG. than the lopsided score at hue oe ES ee ase See -. “7 _| Nationals came in between oS oes ar 19, Of the officials, who had Clay Rowex seemed (6 sumer SANDY KOUFAX DON DRYSDALE | Borden ‘player Dene ‘MacW0:| “J ‘Noonan. G. Keough, (te, Wumner 73-45, 74-43 and rhea the attitude of all when he said: : 2 : [ tale nae orients : A: Taylor) 15.20: ft, Borden D. fee ates streets a noimas “Let’s put it this way> Don and |assured that the two wanted; The National” League cam- her the ; in| MacWitlams (A. Taylor, G. | sai I are both happy.” ” to play ball. ‘paign begins April 12. . the lnapee. Teamenate and'play. (Roowgs) 16.42 12. Acco —W. Gas |S ere JS2S aad Sn Bavasi said he talked Tues-| An interview was arranged at, Koufax said he has not thrown ; « hy [ing conch’ dun Backend wes (2s (G.- Deighan, D.. Macieod) | it Soham SAS eee ‘lday night with the players’ at-|an unidentified hideaway Wed-\a ball all winter, but his arm | : also presented a plaque for being 17.12; 13. Aces—D. Macl enn aa . who thought a torney, J. William Hayes, and inesday morning between Bavas!|feels good and his elbow, which (Deighan, C. Gillis) 18.45; ° 14 | aT i ¥ ‘ ? | . : : top scored in the first half of | +; ‘draw would have been fair. To ier ae a ge evades. jall but put him out of business ‘i canna rAces—G. Dalton (D: Doyle, .\03n ‘Chuvalo @ winner would: “CURRING DRAW. A, eccorting ty rans Don lat uring, eels even beter, FM erst ide Devle was he Gael, A Penal. Save teen the ring te elared the. Coveney: ew RECORD | MONCTON (CP)"— Moncton | top pointgetier of the game with | thir Peried:—15. Borden—G [eacher credit for & sek Dell: roe follwing in te cri [ROBB comping a record of 268, Hawks. a nam witout rage | ‘ou coals aod five aussi xan, J." Noanan, 3 Mace amet Sandy, Roula, The Ce draw for Thursday night at the Both then arrived at the press fe the world ‘champions last in the- 1965-66 hockey “Ba | Leod: 133>°16 Aces—G. Dalton ; oa that tietown Club, ~(Spares.\conference and the verbal shoot: 5+ Koufax iled a 204 trounced Morrisburg, Ontario five goals and helped set up a '(p Gaudet Dayle) 3.30; 17. Bor. |2!! night but he proved only Charlottetown (Cnt: SPOTS Jing. which began when the pair Sent, Dole se the best in combines 10-3 in the opening | couple more. Other goalgetiers | den Keoughn (Roberts) 7.49;-18. the cam take it. . 7 — * (Presidents) : became holdouts last Feb. 27, the majors. It, marked the | Pee oe te tenrioa ‘pepo nn sper gs — o_Gal- | Aces —D_ Doyle. (Shepherd, Dal- | aay oe ss was over. z . "| Allan Cup quar’ e Gau- ton) 10. hee D- Dosst CO ee Ice 1: L. Johnston, A. Gar!" the pair originally asked for fourth straight vear the south: 10. wednesday might. | | det, Greg Deighan and Dave | tahennand, a ) oa 1 MARITIME ; rett, F. Dillon, G. Miller’ vs.) three-year contract for a /Paw. led the National League in “"so-ond- game in the hest-of-| MacLeod singletons, -- i . Dalton) 14.50; 21.) = : |J. MacDonald, E. Ford, B. HP 's1 99.900 to be divided equally ‘tat department. five series will be plased hete| Gabe Keough led the atiac kts, 22 Borden We lead b.| ~~ RACING. Hin ee raatot- A Gall, m, [Detween them. orn league’ strtkeoit tecotd cf 20 By thew defunct Maritime Sen Lor. the eee ena hat | MacDiliiams. _W. _DesRoches) cP t Cantwell, J. Farquharson VS. RELEASES PLAYERS and completed 27 of 41 starts. | ior Hockey league Jast season, =< wae ~ wee geal = —T 4 .|F. MacMillan, 8. Beaton, B.| Movie producer Bob Bannér Koufax then added a pair of ‘took advantage of poor defensive | jams Rogerson, D.- Shears and director Buzz Kulik, -mean- | Victories in the World Series! work by the Combines to build | : Ice 3: G. Kays, J. MacLean. |while. had been reached by | against Minnesota Twins, win-/ up an early lead. Moncton led | e ; §. Harper, Dr. D. MacDonald |Bayasi and agreed to release: fifth and. seventh | 50. after the first period and | : Tie y 1 vs. G. Bennett, A. MacEwen, F. ithe players from a contract to/games. | 61 going into the third. S an uartet Miles, Dr. MacLellan. ‘appear in a film scheduled to|- Drysdale Was 23-12 with a 2.78 Phil Doiron, veteran star a | Ice 4: T. Whitlock, F. Cox, |start at Paramount Studios| ERA. He won\one World Series Maritime senior hockey, led the i eS D. Livingston, Dr. L. MacLeod |April 11. - game and iost one. _ o Hawks with thrée goals. Bon Le ; _|vs. Dr. Prowse, E. Thomson, Ed | Koufax, who at 19 pounds ts) Both received a reported $75,-| Blane scored twice & boos ee . McCallum, M. MacFadyen. ‘about seven or eight under his'000 in 1965. Bavasi's original | with ~_— Mullins, Paul Her. | ae |_ Tee 5: -T.W.L. Prowse, B. |playing weight, said he hopes|offer for 1966 was $100,000 for Howatt, Re® Ais ime | Xe) arin Ske "irs Po ae Ball, E. Tedford, A, Trewin va. \to cut down the usual six weeks Koufax and $85,000 for Drys-| tert Hartley : ae T. White, Dr. Webster, H. - of spring tra to weeks. |dale: ae : Wayne | = : a : ave re at ayne Brown and D. P. Cas- - : ie fin, Leo. Carragher. | a scored for Morrisburg. WINNIPEG (CP) — British |Quebee 110 000 102 x— § oe "5 New Bruns P.E.L. 003 101 050 2—10 * Children, Mon., Tues:; Wed: & Thurs:-75e-}---