The Gesclien: Charlotictown, Pet, Mandh 11, 000. 7) SPORTS FRONT ~ |. Combination & Beats. Habs ee By CHRIS ANNETT An impartial Yugoslavian sports writer noted_yesterday that _| Czechoslovakian and Poland beat the Canadians in yester- day's game and how right he was. The Czeches took a 21 vie’ off.'af the obviously superior Canadians: and the Polish referee Andrei Chojnacki took two s away from the Habs. The Czches literally stumbled their win for almost every time they fe down the Habs either had a penalty called on them or a goal taken away. The classic example came on Ray Cadieux’s goal (it didn’t count of course.) The puck went into the. net but whether by accident or quick thinking. Czech defenseman Dzurila fell against the posts and knocked the' cage off its base. Results? The goal was >. called back and a faceoff held. Cheap penalties also hurt the Habs and the Czeches, sensing that referee Chojnacki was a hockey players dream for the “swan dive” call took full advdiitage, going down lay cost the Habs like ten: pins at every opportunity, Such a : : on a line with ~ their second goal. Marshall Johnson, pla Billy MacMillan had his stick entangled in a Czech play- er’s skates and completely let go of the stick but the er sprawied togthe ice just as Faulkner beat the goalie with a blistering drive. However this goal too was called back and Leneanon. sek (Oe peat. Hes Sree, Sinan ase tas. | tha’ \5 he had not tripped the player and even had done his utmost to avoid the accident. $ MARTIN FURIOUS However the height. of - inefficiency came on an infract- fon called on Seth Martin, Canadian netminder who was. sen. sational throughout the game. Martin came out of his nets end made a brilliant save off of Stanislav’ Pryvi, snatching the puck from his stick. However the crafty forward fell an Martin was assessed with a tripping penalty. Members of the | Sanaen nent Nery ng bee Se say the least following game. A personage of no FI ; ident of the Canadian Amateur ee aed that the combination of Cho}- Olivierihad set back the » Since the Russians. have taken over the rankings and the Habs have had trouble referees ot ibe n game he pened out that tatement after a game a impossible for him to choose an individual HUNTER’S CORNER - : - Fish And Game Meetin Bauer was asked for his opinions of the Favet cot that it. was betier for him like that, He also sald that it star because ee F | | | Lem EVEN NET topples during hectic bit of action between Canada and Czechoslovakia in the World Ice Hockey Cham- pionships at Ljubljana, Yug- oslavia. today. Czech goalie Wlad Dzurila falls on top of % HALIFAX (CP) — Ontario re- turned to the top of the Canadian curling championship | standing Thursday night with a 10-8 ninth- round victory over Newfound- land while Manitoba knocked Alberta out of top spot with a tight 9-8 decision. robin tournament ~ today: with seven wins and two losses. Race for the title became a four-way scramble after Thursday’s three draws with Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan jammed into _. Affected By Duck Problem hang like-a pa On Wednesday fe gy aoe nual meeting e eens County Branch of the P.EQI. Fish and Game Association was held at the Tees _ weet twenty sportsmen a le “7 have never attended a Fish and Game-meeting where bus- iness was conducted in such a quiet manner. The dismal] local -black duck picture appeared to ing and, possibly account ‘or the quietude..that ~prevailed.—All that, was needed ‘to complete the picture was a miniature casket with a black duck therein: It was the opinion of the meet- ing that the expansion of the duck season into the month of December was not from a conservation viewpoint. October 1st was decided upon as the opening day for wildgeese instead of the fifteenth. Last year geese flocked to the stub- ble fields around October ist end a number of the poaching fraternity promptly threw the season wide open. In short they enjoyed a two weeks hunting spree_all_ to themselves. When the season is’ thrown wide-open on a 6pecific date the geese are wised up in one quick lesson. A few poachers enjoyed a field day, or days, during the first two weeks of last October. It was thought by a number that the black ducks should be placed on the -protected list but decided later to cut the daily ill to-twoblack..ducks.and a possession limit of three from the viewpoint that ‘a half loaf was better than no bread’’. The suggested ten days open season on Hungarian partridge & @ move in the right direction as the Huns are not a scarce game. bird at the present time. This columnist knows of the where- abouts of 11 covies running from 11 to 23 members in each covey. - ‘The present close season on Huns gave them a scant fifty per cent protection as we have an army of teenagers on the rounds that shoot at anything that moves or sits ... if they happen to’ spot their quarry, They don’t look around first to pee if anyone {s -watching but shoot first and look after. For example: A few days ago a farmer from the general Or- well! area stopped me on t street amd gave me the follow- ing account of an incident last |N fall to which he was an eyewit- ness. He told me he has a covey of 11 Huns on his property. He also fed a covey all winter and figures that the present covey. ... or the parents of this covey ... ‘were among the birds he fed last winter. He was doing a spot of fencing along the highway ‘when this covey of 11 birds walked past him and ente! the road-side ditch and menced picking up grit. At this momént he saw a car approach- ing with a truck following not far behind. When the driver of the car saw the covey of Huns in~‘the ditch_he jammed on the brakes and stopped so short the truck following “hehind:nearly ~crashed minute the car stopped end the first shots hit over then. and the next three under them when they zoomed skyward. Nothing daunted the three nimrods fol- lowed after the covey to another field they alighted in and ro ed another’ six shots in ar Ragged pend pd all under this time. The farmer told_me if they had killed any birds out of this covey he'd have | taken their car registration irgnmber and them: As it" was the covey, still eleven strong. were back-on their old stamping ground the next day but were very alert and edgey for a few days. The foregoing is repeated daily in many country districts. Not long ago another hunter, not a teenager ®y a long shot, told me that last fall he was driving along a quiet wood- land road when a beautiful cock lpheasant walked out in front of the car from the right ditch. The big multi-coloured cock stood on the edge the left hand ditch and waited until the hunter got the gun loaded: ~ Just ~as~the--gun—butt- reached his shoulder the cagey old cock dipped into the ditch and was seen no more. The pre- sent era is an age where its every hunter ... or most every hunter ... out for what they. can shoot. It has been this column- ist’s experience during his game patrol work that an approximate ten per cent of the hunters will religiously obey game laws. An- other teh percent will have to fight. with themselves eas to will I or won't I. The other 980 per- cent have no conscience what-so- ever ... if they feel they can get away with it—that is. Four Players © Suspended Four players in Intermediate “A** hockey ranks on Prince Ed- ward Island stand susperded un- til further review according to a telegram from Maritime Ama- he |teur Hockey Association presi- ara Steve MacDonald, Sydney, Players involved are two members of Borden Nationals, Dale MacWilliams and Charlie Sark, Pope Motors’ Leroy Clow and Ralph Josey of Sandy’s Ro- yalls. All were involved in dis- putes with officials. The telegram regarding the suspensions was addressed to J. Pius Callaghan, past president of the MAHA. CYO HOCKEY In CYO hockey action at St. Dunstan's rink recently, Tracadie Cross beat Corran Ban by the score of 7-2 to even their best three of five final at one game apiece On P.E.I. Clubs prepping second spot. Ron Northcott of Calgary, Hersh Lerner of Winnipeg and Bob Pickering of Avonlea, Sask., All had 6-2 win-loss records and increased the possibility of. at least one playoff game- A playoff, if necessary, would start at 7:30 p.m. ast today. Saskatchewan defeated shoft- handed Prince Edward Island in tround nine 17-5, while in éther |\games Lynn Mason of Burna- Northern Ontario foufsome, {rom Haileybury 1211. and Quebec's Bill Tracy of Bagotville eked out a 10-9 decision over Charlie Sullivan of Saint John, N.B. Vie — Halifax club drew the ye. by, B.C., edged Bill Grozelle’s goes over. Can- ada’s Roger Bourbonnas, 14, raises arms to celebrate goal by Ray Cadieux, not shown. Goal judge refused to allow shot as a score and Canadians lost 2-1. Team voted to quit jade oe “ puck as net Nova Scotia was 5-3 after nine draws; British Columbia 44; Prince Edward Island, minus Art Burke Newfoundland's Mac- Charles rink from St- John’s and Northern Ontario were at the bottom with 1-7 marks. for 9 a.m. AST today. Manitoba was to play Newfoundland. Prince Edward Island was to meet Northern Ontario. . New Brunswick was paired with Saskatchewan. Quebec was to go against Nova Scotia and Al- berta against British Columbia. Ontario drew the;bye. In seventh - round games Thursday morning: Nova Scotia 8 Prince Edward Island 6, Sas- katchewan 11 Manitoba 9, On- tario 9 Northern Ontario 8, Al- berta 14 Newfoundland 7 and Quebec 11 British Columbia 8. New Brunswick had the bye. Results of the afternoon eighth round: Alberta 11 Ontario 7, bia 6, Prince Edward Island 10 Brunswick 5 and Manitoba 14 Northern Ontario 8. Bye; New- | foundland. | Ontario sliced the '§7 after nine. ends. Ni “=|Lo Visit MONCTON (Special) — Monc- ton High School’s _ high-flying will be in Charlottetown Satur- day for an exhibition game against St. Dunstan's High School at the SDU Arena at 2:00 p.m. ; The Moncton team, unbeaten this season, swept through the WAKE Conference League on seven wins and a tie and have a_ brace of exhibition victories. They are rated as the team to contend with in the New Brunswick ‘Interscholastic Ath- letic Association Western Zone Hockey Tournament at Newcas- tle March 16-19. Coached by Charlottetown na- tive Howie Trainor, assistant “sports editor and news editor of ‘the Moncton Times and Trans- cript, the equad is currently for the tourney “We've heard a lot about the Charlottetown team”’, said Train- or, “and we expect still com. petition’. He said that this was the kind of team he would like to play. . .“‘someone that’s going to be tough"’. “The team’s heavy artillery is n the first two lines”, he said. “Our thirdline forwards have come up with key goals during the season, providing me with a pleasant surprise’, Trainor said. Charlottetown native Pete Pineau centres the first attack- ing unit with flashy Cliff Ken- nedy on right wing and hard- Doug Ross on left. Stu Cooke; a native, of Rich- mond Hill, Ont., donned the purple and \white of MHS for the first time this season, and cen- tres the second line. j Lioyd Mosher, one of the mainstays of the Monctdn’s juve- nile team, is at right wing with oe Brian Murray at t; Coach Trainor said the third line is undecided ag of this writing, but that nifty, Dale Turner willbe at centre He has to choose between Ron | Hebert and. Grant Rainey for Purple Knights Purple Knights ~ hockey ~club* little, ‘Martin Kelly led the short- | right wing, and Colin Keefe, Lou” into the car. In a matter of se- conds three teenagers hopped |handed Tracadie team with a out, each with a double barrell. |hat trick with J. Power and E. ed shot gun in their hands. He |Walsh contributing.a pair each: szid they must have had the’ J. MacDougall and W.: Doyle glins loaded while in the car for were the Corran Bann scorers he saw no loading activity. Be- fore the farmer could even in the poorly played and¢_at, times chippy game handled by refer- Attis-and Pete‘ Jensen for left. The defense corps has the ability for hard-bumping but | has been playing a poke-check- ing game all season. Paul Whit- j Ee the team captain, and new- comer Darrell Steeves, make up, blink his eyes they pumped six ees A. MacLeod and L. Murphy: one combination, with rugged shots at the covey and never -touched a feather.. The farmer told me that the covey flattened like paneakes on the gravel the Third game in this final for the |Kelly. and MacInnis Trophy will |be played at the S.D.U. rink next ‘Sunday at 8 p.m, (sixfoot-one, 190-pound) Larry Atkinson and tough (five-foot- | ten, 180 pound) Brian Miller, the jother pair-off. Ch'tow The goal-tending duties are handled by big Brian DeWare. | The-husky;~-six-footer, -—main-- tained a goals against average of 2.67 over the regular season. He’s backed up by Larry Nel- son. Of the team personnel eigat players were on the city’s juve- nile or midget all-star squads. On the juvenile team, was Pin- eau, Kennedy, Mosher, Whitmee and Nelson were on the midget Saskatchewan 10-British-Colum-— Quebec—-9;—Nova-Scotia-6—New-; and-DeWare while Rose,- Turner- Rutan celben ive. tournament over what it cal- led ‘‘unfair’’ officiating. After a long discussion with Cana- dian offficials and the team adviser, team decided to finish. out the series. (AP Wirephto cable from Ljubljana), ;; Ontario Has Brier Lead; Island Drops 2, Wins 1 | had a. chance for one point in the 10th, but chose to blank it intentionally and get last stone in the \ith. The device was profitable as Northcott drew for two points in that end. Gurowka, needing three points to tie, had the advantage of last rock coming home. However, after a couple of key misses the Cooksville- quartet ran out of rocks and let Alberta steal a single when Gurowka: slid past the shot rock with his final de- livery. SEVENTH ROUND EIGHTH ROUND squad. To ee ‘We were glad to hear that the Borden Nationals decided to play out their series with Pope Motors Aces. Their refusal to do so would have been al- most a knockout blow P.C.H.L. which has % straight games in each contest wag | struggle, three of them by a single goal. It is our opin- ion that with lady luck throwing \a few more smiles at, the, Bor. iden team. The count of the first ‘four. games might easily have ibeen deadlocked at two. games each. The - minor penalty which started the furor. was one which, as it was on side of the rink, we didn’t see very clear- ly. Not that..it would have made any difference if we had. Referees are closer to the play, and ‘have a better chance to see rule infractions. They make mistakes, like all the rest of us, but they have to be piretected against as- sault. and battery. If we're going to Jet. players cross- check-referees;—we'll--have- to give the referees | sticks | | 4 ; Borden Nats. Continue By NORMAN MacDONALD ‘so they can doa little cross-checking themselves and we're not sure the spectators would enjoy such duels. Re- cently we read of a ‘mild’ al- tercation between: a Charlotte- town player and a referee, and we got the impression that the altercations that Fri- day evening were also on the “mild” side, but our vision is we're not a steady witness. > points * record gave it eight points and © third place. The Swedes, beaten P.E.. ‘100 021 001 001— 6 Nova Scotia (Mani 301 001 010 210— 9 Sask. 020 110 103 003—41 Quebec 021 301 011 020—11 B.C. 100 020 100 103— 8 Alberta 042 006 010 010—14 Néld. 000 100 301 200— 7 | Ontario 201 002-002-002=-9- no longer 20-20, so perhaps | By the way, suspensions in y Rector. By CARL MOLLINS . LIUBLJANA, Yugoslavia (CP) ment took on an entirely new complexion Thursday when Czechoslovakia defeated Canada 2-1 on a last-minute goal and moved into first place while 3-3. tie by Sweden. It was a heart-breaking loss for the Canadian national team, seeking revenge for last year’s humiliating 8-0 defeat by the A Czechs at the world tournament in Tampere, Finland. Pryl with. 28: seconds. left gave the only team in the eight-coun- try championship round-robin group with a perfect record. HAVE 10 POINTS The Czechs have won their five starts and lead the tourna- ment with 10 points. Russia dropped to second place with four wins and a tie for nine Canada's 41 won-lost by East Germany 41 last Satur- day, are fourth with three wins, one loss and a tie for seven points, The Czechs are in the driv- er's seat. as the tournament: approaches its windup Sunday. Each of the top four teams has two games to play, but all are tough. 1 Canada now must defeat Rus- sia'Friday and Sweden Sunday to keep alice its slim -chances. The Czevhs meet Sweden Friday and Russia Sunday and they. need only a win and a tie from the two games to clinch the ti- tle. CHANCES BETTER .. The Czechs had figured that by beating the Canadians they ‘would at least take a solid grip on second place. But that was before the Swedes tied the Rus- sians. Now the Czechs have a golden opportunity to win their first gold medal since 1949. | The Canadians bitterly iblamed the officiating for their idefeat. Two Canadian |were not. allowed and the team \played shorthanded for one- ‘third of the game. Canadian ‘players spent a total of 22 min- utes in the penalty box while the Czechs had only eight min- ules. t Goalie Seth Martin of Trail, B.C.; who played brillantly for Canada, never had a chance on 001 300 110 200— 8 |the two Czech goals. The first RURAL MINOR HOCKEY The folowing ee of games played ( game of a 2 game total goal series) at St..Dunstan’s Rink in the |Rural Minor Hockey 1B, ORB ge ge Wings 6—Gary Campbell, Paul Rowe,. David MacEachern 2 Habs Lose 2-1 To Czechs; Swedes Deadlock Soviets The world hockey tourna- | Russia was held to a startling. A goal by forward Stanislav | the Czechs victory and left them | goals |tin had a total of 27 saves to| The Swedes had two spells of sheer glory as they led the Rus- signs 2-0 for a while_in the sec- ond period and 32 early in the third. For the first time in the tour- nament, the Russians couldn’t click with their precision pase ing plays as the Swedes fore- checked. them ferociously. The Russians kept their top forward line — Konstantin Lok- tev, Aleksander Almetov and’ Veniamin Aleksandrov—off the ice for most of the scoreless first period. * Nils Nilsson sent Sweden into , home don’t think the Czechs :} jbeat us,” Faulkner said. “It was ithe officiating." A cheap penalty ruined Faulk- iner’s shot that went in late in lthe third period. But the Cana- idians were especially bitter about the disallowed goal by , |Ray Cadieux, a native of. Ot- ‘'tawa who lives in Ste. Adele, 5 [Ques early in the , second pe- | @bout a foot , said defence- man Lorne Davis of Regina. Then Dzeurila and a Czech de- fenceman fell back and knocked | | | | } | | was t | } over the net. the lead on an. assist by Nils Polish referee Andrei Cho}j- Johnsson at 7:06 of the second nacki called many of the dis- period. Three minutes end 40 puted ities seconds “latér Sweden made it . pena . —)| “We wouldn’t tolerate that: gikind of refereeing in midget; 4 jaceney in Saskatchewan,” Davis’ jor Oi heey ‘said. { Lionel Fleury of Quebee City, RAY CADIEUX ____\president of the Canadian, Ame- by Jiri Holik at 15:58 jof the |teur Hockey Association, said |.NILSSON GOT THE GOAL dey first period was-scored’ while |Chojnacki and Gennaru Olivieri| Lindberg made the final relay. the Canadian side had two men of Switzerland, the second ref-|and Nilsson, skating at full in the penalty box. eree in the game, ‘‘set back the 'speed down. the centre, drilled Pryl’s unassisted goa! at calibre of world hockey officiat- the puck into the roof of the 19:32 of the third period came jing for years.” _ ; when he picked up a rebuund | Father David Bauer, team ad- lost among Canadian legs and viser and associate coach, was drove it past Martin. pale and upset after the game /HAD BRIEF TIE . |and clearly had to restrain his ‘ | A brilliant goal by Roger comments. i rov’s eighth goal in the tourna- |Bourbonnais, a native of Ed-| ‘‘It's better to make no state- ment. He is the scoring leader monton who lives in Riviere Qui ment after a game like that.” with eight goals and seven as- Barre, Alta., had tied it up at} Czech coach Vladimir Kostka, 8:57 of the third period. qwho had predicted his team Winger George... Faulkner of would finish second betind Rus- Harbour Grace, Nfld. the sia if they beat the Canadians, team’s leading scorer with six {said he was satisfied with the oals, sent Bourbonnais streak- |refereeing, ing through on the left ‘with a| “If the Canadians \had won beautiful pass and he skated in|they would have beet? satisfied. at high speed to shoot past|We won, so we are. satisfied." Czech goalie Vlado Dzurilla| The Swedes set up an electric | But after only two minutes of from 12 feet. jatmosphere from the start of ithe final period UM Sterner The ‘pro-Canadian crowd of |their game against Russia, also {knocked a rebound past 10,000, including many Cana-|watched by a crowd of 10,000. |sia’s Victor Konovalenko, dian servicemen, shouted their They leaped im like terriers heads off. But -the powerful whenever a Russian play Czech forwards kept firing|started to develop. } away end in the end Pryl’s goal ‘LOOKED TATTERED .... paid off. | The Russians, who previously The Czechs did most of the had swept through the tourna- attacking in the game and Mar-|ment with the rhythm of the Bolshoi Ballet and the -disciple of the Red Army, looked sa tattered. : Lars-Erik Nilsson and " Hans Lindberg ssed and from one tases of the to the other. inet. | ~The Russian first Mme event- ually swung into action and Al- utes later, Vyacheslav Starsh- imov levelled the count on an ae sist by Victor Yakushev. Those two goals came in a ty- pical Russian burst of brilliance and many thought Sweden's bid for glory was over. Daurila’s 17. | “I just hope the people at Bantam— Peewee Division Tuesday Mardi | Junior hockey championships. Fredericton came on strong in the third period to make up a three goal deficit and come on to mainland last weekend and then itrounced-the-weary- day afternoon, 13-1. The Fred- ericton club is a big fast skating Ice 2 — B. Acorn, H. Howatt, J. MacLean, D. Pickard vs_ K. Jenkins, E. Thomson, G. Schley- er, Dr: MacDonald. : Ice 3 — A Jones, Harvey Dou- glas, K. Thomson, I. MacNevin vs Dr. Kelly, H. Edwards, S. Willis, G. Proctor. Ice 4 — C. Asprey, K. Kenne- | dy, K. Myers, A. Tulle vs H. Dobson, Dr. Willis, N. Dooley, \E. MacLean. | Tee 5 — K. Ready, D. Jardine, G. Lord, D. Mosher -vs-B. Le- Clair, R. MacDonald, Ed McCal- «lum, E...MacLauchlan, - P /8.30 p.m. | Ice 1 — Open. | Ice 2 — C, Memming, B. Da- ‘vis, F. Miles, Dr. MacLellan vs |° \H. MacInnis, Pud Whitlock, C. MacDonald, J. Pierce. | Ice 3 — Dr. Prowse, G. Gal- \lant, M. White, A. Trewin vs J. |Vautour, B. O'Rourke, G. Rodd, - |barred from field hockey next 5 time can be very deceiving. For | om A. Mac- example, at this time of year a thon, @. Wet Dt t ites: six month suspension can mean Leod vs W. MacLaine, H. Thom- as little as six games, unless the \son, D. Kilpatrick, D. Shears. player under suspension is to be) [Ice § — R. Ewing, B. Ball, J summer. A - year’s suspension neg ga could mean about 20 or 28 days. i ee Nay Donnie MacWilliams is still | collecting “hat tricks’, He got { | another Saturday afternoon, | Dave MacLeod continued to | top everyone in the art of at- Challenge rr, B. MacLennan, Ice 2 — L. Munro, R. Leard, D. Sorrie, C. Nicholson vs P. DesRoches, L. Furness, E. Du- var, G. Nicholson. 9 p.m. ee Ice 1 — H. Robbins, C. Mac- Kinnon, K. Sullivan, E. Shaw vs H. Matheson, A. MacLeod, H. Moar, John MacDonald. Ice 2 — J. MacNeil, G. Mur- phy, J. Murphy, Dr. Johnston vs H. Galloway, S. +E. MacDonald, Dr. P. Macintyre. Spares — K. MacDonald, D. Clarkson. yt S TRANSFER “LTD. 101 Longworth Ave. JENKIN | j | }win-11-7-in-the first game on the | Juniors Sun Dial 2-1206 — West Royalty $1. F. Cote and F. i : ~ =" §mnaillwood tallied for- the win- } on ners while Petrie had the losers oaders an ETS [cay matter. Bach of the six teams meet one another in @ : round robin and the leading B | T e h team will be declared the cham- ttle Tonight. : t a e nig a Hockey Practice Rogers Rangers host the Fred-|bers of the UNB team are now There will a hockey prac- ericton Juniors here this evening |in Red Wing harness and have tice ae members . in their third of a best of |given the club more than a lit- | POSry a seven playoff the N.B.-P.E.1. |tle help in their playdowns. z ry ° one asked et gee Norm “Hawk'’ Larter will be N.B. 000 100 101 020— § Ricky Carver 2 Rangers 4 Gor- margin to |Nova Scotia 000 020 010 201— @ don Betts, Kenny Constable 3, [unit oe As yt ‘orthcott Hawks 8—Joe Allan Martin, ae heir syae, Five 110 101 201 210-10 | Barry McKinnon, Shawn Mc- through : — ne O01 620 020 o01— @:|Tsaae 2 Hoey aa oat : ruins ayne Ga ; Sees 010 302 102 041—14 Wee ao we ee Harness Races . Ontario 10: 200— g | Wings .. gers 10, Bruing v0 2/11 Hawks il, Hawks + Bruing| GO Saturday Alberta 010 402 010 021—11 will play 1 sudden death game, ‘ Ontario. 201 010 102 000— 7 |the winner to meet Wings. _| The North River Driving Club edule My the ee that they intend to rh ing Quebee 010 020 200 ae oF ouse Fee P.E.I. 201 i01 oon tah ce league play-offs for Sat. rch |this Saturday on the causeway. |12, 1965 at the S.D.U. rink is as| The racing strip is in perfect NINTH ROUND . | folows. : condition and the weather out- Sask: 903-222-020-102=17-ICE-NO-1..._..__.._______ look is-ideal for ice racing. _ P.E.L 010 000 201 010— 5 |7.00 a.m. Seals vs, Canucks; The entries will be in the NB '120 102 010 020— 9 aa lee ‘wuhing @ one thet Quebec 002 020 100 203—10 | Flyers vs Blades horses may do so by telephoning eee a heen mrt Bisons vs. Barons. 2-2357. ms F ve Bi ° 830 La aerate = am. — Rame ve Zebras; 9.15 | 0 011 012 10310 ’ am. — Otters ve Sprtagers; 10 es a TODAY'S CURLING DRAWS [ten = tcc Geasing, 1018 am. Tberta 10 000 040 202— 9 ~ : — Lions vs Elks; 11 a.m. _ = 102 001 101 020— 8| ane following ts the curling AT MONTAGUE Wolves vs Covoten; 1.45 am. ] oe B.C. __49|\draw for Friday night at the’) Continuation of ‘Monday's 4 — Seals vs Setters... te aan see neil N. Ontario Bo oot |Charlottetown Club. (Sparesjend bonspiel. re a aa ta 4:psn Sees bad enemas sal tole- jneeded 7 p.m. ‘ Saturday, March + & p.m. : : (Schoolboy. curférs welcomed | ice 1 — L, Stewart, N lee 1 — Bluebirds vs SPORT ECHOES as spares tonight.) om, W. Macintyre, Bs, becdons ee een 2 ee ST EE 7 p.m. an Vs G. Warner, A. Wright, K. 4 P i e > Ice 1 — Open. MacKenzie, J. MacLean. , gles; Ice 2 — Owls vs Faicons. 5.20 p.m.. Ice 1 — Crows vs Jays; Ice 2 — Owls and Eagles (Practice). cocrrene at the reigns and he feels that |. MARITIME JUNIOR HOCKEY | SEMI-FINALS FRIDAY, MARCH 11th—9.00 P.M. (Please note time) SATURDAY, MARCH 12th—7.00 P.M. (Please note time) KEEPS CANADA CLEAN CANADA’S LARGEST MANUFACTURER OF INDUSTRIAL CLEANING SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT tack. Hé\sweeps down the ice like a broken-field runner” in football. He also got three goals on Saturday. Gerard Roberts played a_ particularly | fine game on defence for Bor- Souris Midget challenge | the winners of “B” cate- gory hockey, one game, neutral ice, For particulars and SUNDAY, MARCH 12th—2.30 P.M. (Please note time) FREDERICTON, N.B. den, belting the Aces hither and yon. Gabe Keough and Fv White teamed up for two pic- ture goals. Record breaking crowds are expected to make | their-way to Civic Stadium on | Friday and Saturday....°. phone: John Jarvis Souris ‘Adults—$1.00 CH'TOWN ROGERS RANGERS ° we 2 Students 50¢ kL. N