A game Wings Explo To Eliminate’ i The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed., Be oe if By JERRY GLADMAN © DETROIT ‘CP! A pair of £ goals late in the third period by veteran Dean Prentice Tues- ‘day night gave Detroit Red| ~ Wings a 3-2 triumph over Chi- | cago Black Hawks and a berth in the Stanley Cup finals against Montréal Canadiens The victory enabled the Wings | ; best-of-seven | to capture the li semi-final series 4-2. The best-| % of-seven final series is sched: | uled to begin in Montreal Sun- | day. . / The goals, coming within 63) seconds apart with less than five minutes to go in regulation time, were the third and fourth of the playoffs for the 33-year- old Prentice, a native of Schu- | macher, Ont:, who came to .De- * troit from Boston Bruins mid- | ; : way through the season Andy Bathgate. mee et : lll * played a standout series for aie : + Wings; accounted for the other DEAN PRENTICE ‘ Detroit goal, his fifth in six gtapleton with his second of the, ; Bames. series and Phil Espositio, with The. Hawks scored both theif | his first, got them. : goals in the second period after cy MAXED BATTLE eens reaaastrte i Rast | ain ene trailing — 1-0: Defenceman Pat | The two - goal outburst by | WAITS ... ; ’ |Prentice climaxed a fiery, hard- | BATHGATE F ° fought contest during which . Reforestation \there were “several flareups. One player, Gary Bergman of the Wings, was involved in a brawl with rinkside fans. The Hawks appeared to have ithe game wrapped up in the | final period as they turned back inumerous assaults by the \Wings. Goalie Glenn Hall ‘sparkled in the Chicago net as ¢ {he kicked out labelled shots | from all angles. | Play slowed considerably in Henry Cooper Will Go For KO By GRANVILLE J. WATTS which Cooper regained the Brit- LONDON (AP) — “I don’t}ish title in an Clay’ tyl the end of this century, Wil- make predictions, but I'll go in| Cooper sal ay’s style |}jiam McMahan of. Vancouver, ) e there a try to end it fast,"’ doesn’t seem to have changed | president 6f the Canadian’ For- the first half of the third period Speed-Up Is Waged \ OTTAWA (CP) —Canada’s re- | forestation efforts should. be “gréatly increased’’ to predicted industrial _needs 'Eric Nesterenko, who was right de In Third Black Hawks started the play. He passed to Delvecchio who relayed it to : Prentice. Prentice dipsey - doodled in, pulled Hall to one side and jammed the puck into the open left corner. The goal came at |17:28 and brought a torrent of |items onto the ice from the 15,- 154 fans, largest hockey crowd |of the season at Olympia Sta- *|dium. The game was delayed }for almost~five minutes as at- tendants swept up the litter. e’ goals put Prentice, in his . |14th NHL ‘season, in his first _ | Stanley Cup final. SUMMARY : | First period — 1. Detroit, ' | Bathgate 5 (Prentice, Ullman) \2:51. Penalties — Pilote 1:34, |Gadsby 3:57, Hull, Hodge, Wat- json, Spencer 9740, Wharram |13:05, Hull, Watson 15:57, 18:40, -|Smith 16:38. 0 : Second period — 2. Chicago, + —— = —& GORDIE HOWE Esposito 1 (B. Hull, Pilote) ing, but they couldn't penetrate 14:24;. 3. Chicago, Stapleton 2 the shell around the Chlcage eet ew ee ie goal until Prentice finally foun \ rhird Sted Te Detroit, k. Pee centre Alex Delvec- |Prentice 3 (Howe, Delvecchio) chio, in his 15th season with De- |16:25; 5.—-Detroit, Prentice 4 (Delvecchio; Gadsby) 17:28. troit, set up both goals. On -the . i ; the |Penalty—Bergman 6:54. first, at 16:25, he pulled the aa inal Le puck loose from a_ scramble a against the boards and whipped |Chigago it out toPrentice, who. was |Detroit standing all alone about 10 feet| Attendance—15,154. 11 7 12—30 8-10-10—28- out. Prentice fired into the right corner as. soon as the puck touched his stick. — ERIC JUST MISSED After Detroit goalie Roger Crozier made a brilliant save on REMEMBER WHEN Clever Sencio, Filipino as- ‘pirant to the world bantam- weight. boxing champion- ship, died 40 years ago to night—in 1926 — in a Mil- waukee hotel. He had suf- fered a cerebral hemor- rhage after 10 rounds in .the on top of the goalmouth, Pren- tice scored the winner. De- fenceman Bill Gadsby, a 20- British Empire heavyweight much. <L seated Bios of his | estry Association said Tues- 2S brrecarylogtl opeciy Rigi A i He Cooper said ‘recent fight wi orge u- | day. ; Tuesday. ay aa valo, ae At present, Canada grows |The Wings _never stopped _try-| Cooper was talking about his ‘He likes to move and jab.|more wood than is needed by| title fight with champion Cas-|Chuvalo didn’t seem to have | the industry, but ‘‘theve-is ev- | sius Clay in London May 21. -|much success to the body. ery. indication that by the. end “1 have no plan worked out.|of the century our: present rate e “Clay is a fast mover with) c p ian b will be I'll try and put my best punch | of growing wood will not be suf- 3 a ee ee. Ee | ficient to satisfy the rapidly in- to try and get inside and catch [right on his jaw.” | t h joe him with my short left hook,” | : creasing demands, he told the | 5 association’s one - day annual Omer ee a ae | a meeting ‘hére. | ck sauce w Ring | AITT a pening i ueoaet ea Cooper, ranked. sixth by Ring | tree p ng is ; | is Magazine, demonstrated the ef- | said | CHICAGO (AP)—San. Fran- & fectiveness of that punch, Clay during their previous fight in London June 18, 1963. . The Briton dumped Clay in| the fourth round of that sched- | uled 10-rounder. ee Clay__came back and cut} Cooper so badly about the eyes | “in” the next - round —that—-the referee stopped it and awarded ‘‘When one considers the time jcisco Giants unloaded a bar- needed to grow trees to com-|rage of four homers, including mercial size, it is too late to|the 508th of Willie Mays’ ca- wait until growth balances cut before undertaking increased planting programs.” Wood .growth could . be n-|eago Cubs Tuesday. : : . lie Erles run rally in. the. eighth inning BOSTON (AP)— Boston Celtic | turned loose their big guns in the first-half and—breezed fo a : 129-109 victory.over Los Angeles the fight to Clay. Lakers Tuesday night, tying the _‘‘T've proved that Clay. can be | National Basketball Associa- put ‘on the floor,” ~Coopersaid- | jion’s championship series at-one- program of three planting on ac- | pehind to spoil. Leo Durocher’s eessible.__abandoned __sub-agri- |home debut as manager of the cultural land and in areas—of |cyps L cutover where natural growth | " is not adequate but where high ‘eighth with Don -volume | “Vou can reach him. It's up to| sons Chan sea crops * could be pro- teen “= Tun double the winning 4 me now to catch him with a|~ the Celtics built “wpa 71-47 SUGGESTS co. ow. f ” S CO-OPERATION ‘ geed—puneh. . halftime lead~and —withstood—a-}—Co-operative —action between: Jesus Alou started the rally | | against reliever Ted Abernathy “singled him™ home, | hit and fourth run-batted-in for the Giant captain. After a walk and another out Landrum jeracked his double. | FANNED CLINE. The Cubs got one run back in the bottom’ of the ninth before {Bob Bolin, the eighth. Giant |\pitcher, fanned Ty Cline for the last out, with the bases filled. Cooper was interviewed in the | brief Los Angeles flurry in the dressing room of his regulate [Ouro Pestod petore a sellout gymnasium at ‘the Thomas A|‘°-0W ,909 at Boston gar- : den, : This was also the case in fhe Beckett Pub on Old Kent Road.| six Boston yers scored in| e “>In the large bar below, ar field of forestry needs for. rec- A/double figures: with John Hav- | reation. Beatle-type_group—was_rehears-/licek and _Sam_. Jones - leading “ce tek “bird screeched wet 21 points each: Larry Sieg: H : Rie cl and cursed in another corner |fried contributed 20, Bill Russell | On the wall was a glass case /19 a Tom Saunders and Don | ouston Co ts enclosing the red gloves with!Nelson 11 each. 2 S e L A _ourprise | oUrp the three levels of government should begin~ now, Mr. Mahan said. SPORTS FRONT | NEW YORK (AP)—Tim Me- | game ted a Nitional Lelie : Carver's bases-loaded triple in|record. - the fifth inning led St. Louis to a 5-2 victory over New York!a Mets Tuesday: The defeat, dropping the Mets to the .500 level, Orlando Cepeda, Hal Lanier jand Jim Hart also slugged -ho- jmers in- the Giants 16-hit at- the 10th | “sn Sot ween | Three-run homers by rookies straight for “Sack Fisher. His Randy Hunttey aes Byron last victory was over the Cards, Browne had helped the Cubs last Aug. 21. 4 iclimb into a 9-6 lead through ‘St. Louis routed Fisher in the | five innings but the Giants ae fifth. - |kept pecking away.- he winning pitcher was! Mays hit his third homer of Ken Boyer Leading Mets By CHRIS ANNETT | | Ken Boyer, traded to the New York Mets during the off Larry Jaster 4 : ith three- season is making his former owners, the St. Louis Cardinals, | Ken Boyer, who made two-er- leart re a ena ee-run Giant collected 6 hits in 12 times at bat inthe opening thres TOTS hit his first homer as a |" Y=" ON 00 & Boyer es at ba opening | e : : : . ass ‘a Ta Meta ‘climbed aver tue 466 |Met against his old mates with | HOUSTON (AP) — Houston ithe bases empty in the sixth.'Astros knocked Don Drysdale RBI time ever as they took two of their three games with the Atlanta Braves. They lost the third game - . - Maybe the Braves should go back to like the courts told them too... The Halifax Junior Canadiens reached the end of the road the other night as they lost their fourth straight game | | BASEBALL ROUNDUP 'By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |Henry (9), Priddy (9), Bolin ; ; : ; é |First \(9) and Haller; Broglio, Faul to:the Shawinigan Bruins . . . This marks the end of the line ’ ’ for the Junior Habs this season and it will be-interesting to Detroit 000,000 000—- 0 51) (4), Jackson (6), Abernathy see what they can do for a repeat . .-. In this observers | Boston 331 000 00x— 7° 90 | (0-2) (8) Hoeft (8) and Hundley.” opinion they are going to be hard pressed to. take the Mari- ~)~ Monbouquette (1-1), Sparma|HRs: SF—Cepeda (1), ° Lanier time title next season for the teams for a new Maritime fae SP ane Ae and uae (1), Mays (3), Hart (1); Chi— Junior loop are already being considered . . . The Junior Habs,. |!@Ne. Morehead (1-1), Sanders far from the opinion of some fans did not have the best |(6) and Tillman. HR: Bos—|Los Angeles 201 200 000— 5133 personnel in the Maritimes and a good Junior. team from Yastrzemski (2), Scott (1). Houston 010°140 02x— 8 100 Charlottetown could have beaten them ee had been lBecandl ae aul Wastin ie al. Halifax played together as a unit for the entire se : ; = eet tare pebably tb beat Gatdlitionsd club incthe _|Delelt 000 021 210— 6 121 {rell, Cuellar (1-0) (4) and Bate- Atlantic Provinces, bar ‘none. That was the only thing that (Boston 000 000 040— 4 60)man. HRs: LA—Parker (1); made them stand out when the going got rough. They could | McLain (2-0), Pena . (8), |Hou—Bateman (1), Wynn (2), beat teams of superior ability simply by outhustling them. |Sherry (8) and Freehan; Lon- ' It will be interesting to see which club lands a franchise in @borg (0-2),. Santiago (5), Sa-! Atlanta 002 000 001— 3 712 Charlottetown next season and if a Maritime Junior loop will dowski~ (7), -Brandon~ (8) ~and | Phila, 7000 100-000—-1-4-4 be established. If PWC and SDHS can attract between 1200 Ryan, Tillman (8). Blasingame, Carroll (1-0) (5) and 1500 paying fans to the Forum then what will the best ie ; s and Torre; Bunning (0-1), Juniors on the Island pull? |Washington —_ 001 050 110— 8103 | knowles (9) ‘and Uecker, Dal-. | Baltimore’ ° 211 506 05x—14 15.1 rymple (8). “PROBABLE |_Ortega (0 .! 1), Narum_ (4), jLines (4), Humphreys (5), Cox (7), Kline (8), Closter (8) and 4 ‘Gay Brewer must be getting rather: sick of: playoffs-—.--— He Jost his second in a week at the Tourney of Champions Monday as Arnold Palmer whipped him by four strokes. However the case was not the same as in the masters where Brumley, Camilli (8); Palmer, Brewer blew a short putt and allowed Nicklaus and Jacobs Watt (1-0) (5), Drabowsky (8) j _to catch him . . . Palmer missed an eight footer on the final and Etchebarren. HRs: Wash— | PITCHERS “green to force the eine a « the _ ean ever Lock’ (1); Balt--F. Robinson | but made up for it in end when he a e marbles, (4.) Blefar (2), However Brewer won’t be crying too much. He made $20,000 |By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS during the week for being only a runner up... However |New York .000000010—1 70; Major league probable pitch- Palmer pocketed that much for his one win alone. Cleveland 000 300 00x— 3 62ers for today with won-lost re- Stottlemyre (0-1), Reniff (7) cords: Bill Russell, defensive star for the Boston Celtics who and Howard: MeDowell (2-0) American League has led them to the National Basketball Assocjation basket- and Crandall. HRs: NY—White . Chicago (Horlen 0-1) at Call- fornia (Chance 1-0) (N) Minnesota (Kaat 1-0) at Kan- 001 001: 000—.2 62 sas City, (Talbot 0-1) or (Shel- 110 010 00x— 3 50 don 0-1) (N). ball champions for the past seven or eight years, has become the first man ever to break the color barrier in the coaching of nro sport. Russel Was named as the coach of the Boston Celtics, taking the plaee of Red Auerbach who is retiring (1); Cle—Whitfield (1). Minnesota Kansas-~ City Russel is the first negro to. coach a_club in major sport and Pascual. (1-1), Merritt (6)-and New York (Friend 0-1) at | it may open the way for Negro*baseball managers and foolt- Zimmerman: Dobson (1-0), Cleveland (O'Donoghue 0 - 0), ball coaches ie Krausse (f) and Suarez. (N) ; rt 0-1) The National Hockey League President Clarence Campbell : Se cethesr Gil, Ni has vetoed a suggestion from a leading automobile company NATIONAL LEAGUE Detroit. (Wickersham 0-0). at thet a car be donated to the winner of the Conn Smythe Trophy. Campbell did ‘not’ or could not deny the company | St. Louis 00 041 000— 5100 Boston (Stephenson 0-0). rents te sent the car to the winner but it will have to New York 001001 000— 2 62 National League be entirely s@garate from the trophy. The feeling is that if Jaster. (1-1),.Aust (8), Woode- San Francisco (Shaw 1-0) at the league alloWed the manufacturer to award the car then shick (9), Dennis (9) and Mc- Chicago (Hands 1-0) the different firms would all‘ be wanting to give. awards to Carver. Fisher (0-2), Eilers Atlanta (Johnson 0 1) at the different winners of the different awards such as the “(5), Richardson (6), Ribant.(8), Philadelphia (Culp 0-1), (N) Norris and Calder trophies. This would give the companies | and Grote. HR: NY-—Boyer t) Cincinnati (Maloney 1-0) at invaluable publicity for, a relatively -small price for one Pittsburgh (Cardwell 0-1), (N). thing and then it would be unfair to the current sponsors of San Fran. 120 031 130—11 16 1 St. Louis (Gibson 1-0) at New NHL hockey who have stuck with the clubs through both Chicago 000 450 001—10 11-3 York. (Hamilton 1-0) good and lean years. This was an excellemt..decision on the Herbel, McDaniel (4), Linzy Los Angeles (Osteen 2-0) at part of the NHL. a, 1.(5', Gibson (6), Perry (1-0) 47), Houston (Bruce 1-0), (N), : - reer, and put together a three- jj jfor an 11-10 victory. over Chi- jj creased now with an expanded! The Giants had to battle from |: San Francisco won it in. the | Landrum’s § with a one-out double and Mays jf the fourth | ring with champion Bud Taylor. year veteran of the NHL but never on a Stanley Cup winner, ants Captu re Slugfest; Mets Drop Back To .500 DON DRYSDALE JOHN ORSINO out with a four-run fifth inning |the first four innings, and the and defeated Los Angeles 85/Orioles held on for a. 148 vic- Tuesday night tory over Washington Tuesday Jim Wynn's two-run homer jnight. off Bob Miller in the eight in- | Frank had three hits, increas- ning clinched the victory. jing his average to .476, while Drysdale, a 32-day holdout Brooks added two for a .400 making his second start of the jmark. season, took a 5-2 lead into’ the| : + PITTSBURGH (AP) The fifth but departed for Johnny red < bot Bibueeh Pirates Podres after the Astros scored eee, |backed the seven-hit pitching of two-runs—and_had_two runners | Steve Binks witha T7aie ate on. : | t and won In all, Drysdale was touched |tack Tuesday nigh for six runs and six hits in 4 1-3|their sixth game in seven jstarts, trimming Cincinnati 7-3. innings. He also walked three. Ths. vistery: wai’ the focril BOSTON (AP) — Boston Red|straight for the Pirates, who Sox shut out Detroit Tigers 7-0/are—tied for first place in the Tuesday in the opener of a dou-|National League with San bleheader for their first victory | Francisco. of the season, but the Tigers! CLEVELAND (AP) — Fred took the second: game 6-4. ; Whitfield hit a three-run homer Dave Morehead and Ken/|and Sam McDowell struck out Sanders combined for the Bos-|12, sparking Cleveland Indians ton Shutout. Morehead was sail- |to a 3-1 victory over New York ing along with a two-hitter Yankees Tuesday night. The when his shoulder stiffened |triumph was the fifth..for...the. after five innings and Sanders |Undefeated Indians: went the rest of the way. | _Whitfield’s shot over the right Home runs by Carl Yastrzem- |field fence in the fourth inning ski and rookie George. Scott |provided all the runs McDowell paced the Red Sox attack. needed in running his record to Bill Monbouquette, making /2-0. jl his first. start against Boston’! Roy White's homer in the since being traded to the Ti-jeighth, his first in the major gers, suffered the loss. GREEN BROKE NO-HITTER Right-hander Dennis McLain held the Red Sox hitless for 5 2-3 innings in the second game before Lennie Green poked -a single ‘into right field. ; The Red Sox rallied ‘for four runs in the eighth before Larry Sherry finally retired the side. The victory was the second Tun. and walked four but was tough in the pinches. He pitched him- self; out of a one-out, bases- loaded jam in the fifth by strik- ing out Roger Maris and Tom Tresh, Mel Stottlemyre took the loss. that rolled foul, then fair just inside the third base line up a two-run third inning that car- ried Atlanta Braves to a 3-1 vic- | tory over Philadelphia Tuesday | properties H. L. SEAR — | 110 Qugen.St. BALTIMORE (AP) — Fran ° \ i and Brooks Robinson helped Dial 2-\ 27 Baltimore score nine runs in ‘|mates Seiichiro Sasaki and To- |Morio Shigematsu of Japan last leagues, gave the Yankees their McDowell gave up seven hits ————>>>E>E>E==——————————— 1 | BET 512% SIMPLE INTEREST _| WITH TORONTO-DOMINION — B-YEAR SAVINGS GEATIFIGATES: Available in convenient amounts from $10 to $50,000 in —two-starte—foe-MoLein.Jinf.». Lonborg, the first of. five Bos- Mortgage Funds | ton pitchers, took his second | | — Available | PHILADELPHIA (AP) —| © Wade Blasingame’s slow ~ bunt | on residential | By MORRIS BROWN BOSTON (CP)—Kenjo’ Kimi- hara, 20, of Japan, won the 70th running of the Boston Mar- athon Tuesday as the Japanese team swept the first four places in the event. Kimihara came on strongly mear the end of the 26-mile, 385-yard race to outrun team- oru” Terasawa, second—and- third. Fourth was Hirokoazu Okabe. a The time was’ 2:17:11; well-be- low the record- 2:16.33 set by year. Fifth was Norman Higgins of Santa Monica, Calif., sixth was Dave Ellis* of Toronto, the first Canadian to finish. With a little more than four miles to go Terasawa, 31-year>- old coach-trainer of the Japan- ese team and Okabe, 24, were ‘dueHing—for—the- lead—-with-Kimi- and Sasaki falling back. But Kimihara came on in the final ‘stretchand-beat Sasaki by 13 seconds. TRAINED THREE WEEKS Ellis, 28, an English native who has been in Canada six years, said after the race he only trained seriously for the last three weeks because — of cold weather. : “TI tried to stay with them,” Arnold Palmer Moves To 2nd PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP)— Arnold’ Palmer, who beat Gay Brewer in the Tournament of Champions playoff Monday, | took over Brewer’s No. 2 spot | Tuesday in the top- 10 -money- | winning list of the Professional | Golfers’ Association. Japanese Dominate Boston Marathon | ~Paul-Hoffman,-24,-of—Toronto, + --- THEN SCOR ES 2:35:53. Charles Saxon of Tor- onto 59th im 2:51:45 and Doug- las Walker, Toronto, 154th in 3:31:48. mM As they did a year ago, the.. Japanese ran all opposition into the ground before settling mat- ters in a private duel, Break- ing on top, the Japanese fol- ‘lowed a pre-race plan to stick together for 20 mNes. said Ellis who was only about; Then, with-a ae lead on 60 yards back at the 20-mile|Higgins and Ellis, they turned mark, -But; he said, his legs|virtual sprinters in heading for stiffened and. he had a cramp /homeé. in his left leg. His time was) 2:19:47. | The. next Canadian to finish | was Andrew Boychuck of Tor- onto, 13th in 2:27:20. Ron Wal- lingford, 32, of Hamilton, was 16th in 2:30:06. was 19th*in the record field of 415 starters in 2:32:37. Rogers Pratt. of. Toronto was 24th in| This ane no’ penalty, plan is based on shares in Canada's original and most experienced mutual_ fund, and provides for dollar averaging and compounding of income. _ 7 Write or send this for free prosp and 32 years record, without obligation. EASTERN SECURITIES COMPANY LIMITED 146 Richmond &1., Charlottetown NOTICE Palmer collected $20,000 on his four-stroke victory at Las! Vegas, Nev., pushing his total of. money considered official by the PGA to $47,967 and his grand total to $66,778. j Doug Sanders remained in| the top- spot among official | money-winners with $49,540 and | a total of $69,258. - z Others in the standings. in | order, with official, unofficial | and total winnings reported by | the PGA: Brewer—$45,677, $3,236, Residents of P.E.I. who attain the age of 19 years must register separately under the Hospital Services Commission of P. E. |. 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