. The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., April 12, 1966. 7! : SPORTS FRONT Samicfinals ° _ Resume Today || By CHRIS ANNETT King Clancy and Punch Imlach were both sick men before the Toronto Maple Leafs game against the Canadiens Saturday evening. However when Clancy saw the size of the | needle that was given to Punch he ran out of the sick room and into the coaching duties on the Leaf bench. Stated Clancy “If I had had that needle: too I wouldn't have been "able to coach. tL ‘ The Leafs, apparently a lot more accustomed to their ‘own climate in Toronto are a changed club from the one that dropped a 2-0 decision to the Habs in the second straight loss they absorbed at the hands of the Habs. Johnny Bower, ready, willing and able after a long but with influenza is - ready to play this evening and both Imlach and Clancy * have sufficiently recovered from their ailments to throw a few vocal taunts at the Habs especially at Toe Blake. Blake was rather critical of the stragety employed by they Leafs as of late. He pointed out that he thought that the Leafs must be afraid of the Habs and-used the-brawl to illustrate his point. “They stick an extra man on the ice whenever there is a stoppage in play. That's a yellow way: of playing. They’re supposed to have the best fighters but . . .”’ Imlach and. Clancy beth obviously.a bit more voilferous . as they got before their home town scribes for the first derclap drives and two mighty putts him the first. man in history to | < ,win two. Masters .golf titles in’ a row La lumbus, Ohio, the final holes to tie for first. Place Sunday at 288, unleashed | a two-under-par 70. that beat Jacobs ives, By WILL GRIMSLEY : AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)—Thun-»} |half the total gate, which was{no more than 12,000, most of a mere $295.01. them season ticket holders. Although galleries up to an Nicklaus, in winning, pre- jesitmated 50,000 swarmed the served the modern - day domi- gave Jack Nicklaus an! aay pharort es ove | course during the four days of |nation of_the Big Three—Nick- my acobs an aay | jthe tournament, the playoff Brewer Jr., Monday. and made rea war ace acne at ee : | erowd was figured to number who now have won this tourna- 4 ment eight times in the last MARITIME a and the last five in a row. | Palmer, the heavy advance favorite, tied with g San- RACING jders for fourth at |Player, off his game, finished HALIFAX (CP) — There well back at 299. were three double winners, good| Jacobs collected $12,300 for combination and individual pays| second and Brewer $8,300 for The golfing goliath from Co- who _ rallied on by two shots and the | » Blassey. - eyed. scrambling | : ; ‘\and veteran Truro Driver Frank |third. Like Nicklaus, they got Brewer by eight, Jacobs shot [Daniels piloted four winners on |the $49.17 pocket change from rT paves es oa | \the: Easter Monday Harness ra- | final day's gate. Fic andsome, a year - did | |cing card at the Exhibition race-/ The victory also was a monu- a pro for 10 years, | ‘way here: {ment to casual training for a 290 and Started with a 35-foot birdie | putt-on the first hole and stayed; with Nicklaus—almost shot for | _Shot-through nine. -Then,- inch | by ‘inch, he had to, bow before | Nicklaus’ prodigious driving | JACK NICKLAUS Daniels piloted “Young To ~-to-wins“in-races-one—and_six-a: |Ohioway to victories in races | jthree and eight. ; Prewer Might was the winner lin races.five and ten. r big event. Nicklaus played \only one of the winter tourna- ents on the West Coast. tovk |a golfing and fishing holiday in ‘South Africa for six weeks and |then rejoined the tour for only ; and mastery on the greens. /no birdies on: the front nine, he The she shocked Brewer, saw his last hopes die on the ey alparen still dazed by his | 155-yard, postage stamp 12th— | three—putts—on- the 72nd green» nightmare all _week—when- Sunday that robbed him of a |his shot hit the bank and -elear—eut— --water—for- time in the series have accused Blake of being a cryer. The Leafs will undoubtedly revert to their plan of hitting the Habs out of the rink but it will remain to be seen just how well they get along.. There is an old addage that one | can not do on things at once: It showed in the last game ~ maged-three~shots- Other race winners were Ves. two tournaments before ~ the tan, Hey Gahagan, My Lady R | Masters. /and Honorette. Young Topper | The 210-pound slugger started \paced-the- fastest three “furlongs his comeback surge on the final jin—48-3—seconds and the fastest |Holes Sunday, rallying for a as ¢ ‘eon the lb ch aor en nets in the t =) three-quarters of a mile in 1.42: However all that Pohitting just might have payed off as LN '‘M OMIN HOME BOYS | mustered a serious challenge. | two-over-par five. | 7 a champion Monday. ~ Henri Richard severely, sprained his left knee sed, con contrary |. I CC iG With two over-par scores and | The snub-nosed Dallas baitler las Restan\end Chiower.” one gai that the aha aa ‘Richart goes and fans will get Cleveland Ind- “OVGF THE" ating a alillo. ang — : tat the isth Sd Teh Bar fey Tot . to see tonight as the third game of the semies gets underway. | ‘ans cutfielder, sliden for home’ in" yesterdays season opener. paver ll no Cleveland “CURLING DRAW iknicked down again when ‘he REMEMBER WHEN “CURLING DRAW ss Deve Conn ee omer ou ler n ‘again went two-over-par at the Olympic skiers Bud Wer- in a ninth-inning ey that —— is Johnny Stevens. ner of the United States and. The following is the curling | 17th. gave Cleveland a EXCUSES, EXCUSES | sear, “for ae aenien ‘Bight at the! The Masters victory was | Barbara Henneberger of I guess they’re television players muttered Billy Reay | \Nicklaus’ third in four years) West Germany were killed ’ after his club absorbed a 7-0 lacing at the hands of the Detrdit- | f. (Rotate) _ |and added another page to hig; ‘W, years ago today—in 1964 Ice ict Thomson, B. Jones, list of records. In 1963, he Le-| 7 When an avalanche swept Red Wings in the second game of their best of seven semi- sfinals and saw the series knotted at one game apiéce.’ That was just about the best excuse that the Chicago mentor could dream up for the loss and per usual not too much | ‘credit was given to the overlooked Detroit club. Fans who have followed the Wings closely through the season might have noticed the formation of the~lines was more than a bit shaken up for the game Sunday and that the Wings were hitting harder than they have been down on their film-making unit —at Samedan, — Switzer- land. Organizer Willy Bog- ner was exonerated by a court on a charge of ignor- ing warnings of snowslides,... ! in which 31. other skiers were trapped. ‘66 Baseball Grind Opens; . Tribe. Scalps Senators = Ward, ore vs. B-|eame—the: youngest winner je at ee V Metton, B:~Smith, jthe age of 23 and last: year he tore the Augusta National Hace Es 216,30) Alan—Smith—vs.\course—to—shreds—with a record le 3 Game 39. \271 that-beat Arnold Palmer ees ae Ready vs winner and Gary Player by__nine | strokes. ai or Whitlock, EF. Mac-) The 26-year-old fairway —ace 9 TODAY’S DRAW in quite a ‘while. After Paul Henderson had heen unable WASHINGTON (AP) — Samjwhen Howard’s smash struck |walked, . took third on Alvis’ | Donald Ned BP. to hold Hull in the first game Abel shifted him to a line McDowell struck out nine men/the left field foul line marker, |single -and scored on Leon! ; Dooley, at-'now joins Sam Snead and TRAINS KILL TWO - : IN THE with Bruce MacGregor and Norm Ullman and gave Brian {as Cleveland rallied with four|about 25 feet above the ground|Wagner’s sacrifice fly. ae G. Kays, J. Sheifoon, [Jimmy Demaret as. three-time! yzamMI (AP) — Eleven rail- a ac ‘Watson thé chore of guarding Hull. Things worked out very runs in “tke ninth inning and/and fair by only eight inches.| McDowell, the 1965 strikeout teeing, B. Crockett: |winners_of this event, one back way workers were killed when well indeed as Watson by Hull’s own admission did a sterl- i 5-2. in the|Ken McMullen, who had sin-|leader of the American League ce 5 E.Thomson, E. Tedford, of Palmer, who has won four. t train llided Sunday at HENDERSON and "mg. job of coverage and the new line held Stan Mikita, [American League baseball(gled, scored ahead of him... allowed only four hits in his, Ge one Br, Kelly vs. D.| Nobody—until this day—had|the Santallana railway crossing} CUDMORE Doug Mohns and Ken Warrem like a tiger his prey. opener Monday before a record|ROARED BACK eight-inning stint. He: was re- | Nichateoe Gill, A. Piercey, N. jever put two Masters crowns in Camaguey province, ae. ae aero Geel ae ee woe aes ae first-day crowd of 44,468, in-| But the. Indians roared back placed by pinch hitter Salmon! .g:39—Ail ices for Scratch | eee evan radio reported. Men’s City ‘Curling St ac Oe ah Geant: Poon tha eae and the, (cluding Vice - President Hum. |with one out in the ninth. in the ninth. games and retail | WON *$20,000-PLUS Championships ae uid take the Hawke | the big Bi ‘Atter “all ja loaet phrey. | Larry Brown walked and Dick} McDowell, 17-11 during 1965 en triumph was worth $20,- alle: 1 -“—gne-more-game_in Chigago will_be-televised—and_accordi: Frank Howard's two - run| Howser ran for him. Jim Lan-jand the league's earned run ---At Souris (East pack ‘Trophy) |000 to the already wealthy | _ AT BELVEDERE to the Hawk coach the Wings are TV players. NOTES * De ‘omer in the sixth inning had |dis’ pinch double, then a walk jleader with 2.15, lost much. of | 7-9 Ice 1 — Durling vs. C. Gal- | Nicklaus, plis $49.17 as his alae . : troit managed only six power play goals ag. : the Hawks |Siven Pete Richert a 2-1 edge, |to pinch-hitter by Chico Salmon his effectiveness after striking | = |share of the Monday playoff Thureday: : three on Sunday . Sid Abel wryly |but the Indians came back injoff relief pitcher Ron Kline, |out six in the first-three inn.| .-Ice 2 Open ...._. s.. |gate_ receipts. i 6:45 PM. ~__eommented after the last game that it was the first time ithe-ninth_and-won_with the help |single scored Howser and Lan-|ings. However, the Senators got | “S11 (Kaisner Trophy) ~~ | The $49.17 represented one- A. Burke vs. D. Cameron. D. along time that the Wings had shuffled lines and then |of a pair of two-run singles by |dis and both Salmon and Dav- |0 , a -_W. MacDonald - added “But we haven't done too-much of anything against ~|Vie-Davalillo_and_Max Alvis. \alillo moved up on an error, |for Howard's homer. Sonny| lee ‘2 Dalayney vs. H Poole. \representatives got it—of one the. Hawks in just as-long’. .. Roger Crozier used ‘black The vice-president, subbing |Alvis then hit his two run ~sin-|Siebert—pitched—the—ninth after |= oes grease paint under his eyes in the game. Viewers of color TV |for President Johnson as the /gle. '|McDowell was lifted for a pinch probably thought that he had had his eyes blaciened in a |man to throw out the first pitch, Cleveland scored its first run jhitter. fight or someting, leaped to his feet and cheered 'in the- third when Davalillo| Emmett Ashford, the first i - Negro umpire in the majors, made his. debut at the third base position. He was not in volved in many plays: : Ist Since 1913 ~ _ | CINCINNATI (AP)—A. steady ¥ fin gS. Rea ~|rain that started “about noon deadlock their best - of - seven|Uliman set up three of the | Washed: ce ey Stanley Cup - semi-final series |seven Detroit goals. National League baseball | with Chicago at 1-1 after the| All this left Watson covering \opener against New York Mets }. Hawks took the opener 2-1 Jast |Hull, a job he was given oc- |Monday, marking the first: time’ Thursday. 'casionally while with Canadiens. since 1913 that the Reds. have | The series has shifted here for Watson must have learned |had to postpone a season’ the third and fourth games to-/|well as he gave the 195-pound opener. night and Thursday. The fifth |Hull little breathing room—Sun-| ~The game was rescheduled | game will be played in Chicago day. Once, when the two hbe- /for 1:30 p.m. EST today, an |Sunday. came entangled, the Chicago open date for both clubs. Although he didn’t score a (player took a poke at him. The weatherman had forecast | point in the- one-sided contest,| “Aw, we were just talking, the rain but hardy fans, accus- | Watson kept Chicago's. ace |throwing it back and forth at |tomed to Cincinnati’s phenome- scorer Bobby Hull from scor- each other,"’ Watson said. “I nal luck, had Crosley Field two- ing—no mean feat. was just trying to do a job, |third filled by the time the THIRD GAMES TONIGHT You are wilted te Our -- = 2 In Store a GLIDDEN PA By -AL McNEIL : MONTREAL .(CP) — Mont- real Canadiens, who hold a two- game edge in their best-of-seven Stanley—Cup semi- - final series with Toronto Maple Leafs, prob- ably will be without the services ‘-of centre Henri Richard for to- night’s third game in Toronto. The Canadiens, who. won 4-3 and 2-0 on their home ice last Thursday and Saturday nights, left the Forum after a 90-min-| # ute workout Monday determined | # that this bela be their final trip paents if the eck el ae S:h0- 5 the. his ping him o score game was ca 808300. er = Moutcoal'g General Manager \SSHADOWED—-HULE... — -{When—he gets. on he gets them -The—teams--made—a~stab--at J appearing on the field about 15, Pare ae Peeeenasaea ean ee scheduled | : ; « Art| Tont Whenever the explosive. Hull was on the ice, Watson was close by, jabbing, talking and pestering the super-star. - Detroit coach: Sid Abel had Paul Henderson chasing Hull in| the opener with considerably fired up. ._ “Yeah, I was out. there to bother him. He wanted to win the game. I would have -lassoed him if I had to." Hull admitted Watson did a good job. Sam Pollock and coach Toe Blake were still visibly incensed over reports in a Toronto news- paper that the Leafs were out to ‘‘get’’ certain key players on their club in Saturday night's brawling game here. minutes before the 2:30 p.m. starting time, but. the | players soon went back to their | warm and dry clubhouses. j Milt Pappas for the Reds and | Jack Fisher for the Mets had] been named opening day pitch- | | “Tm not: against tough} less effect. Hull scored the win-| “e's good,” the muscu- ames,” Blake -said. ‘I’m just BRIAN WATSON. . ning goal in that one. lar left wine o Phat can you |ers and both figured to—hbe| . 3 | Abel decided to shift Hender- |say after that?” named again today. Friday, April 15—9 a.m. against a club official. naming, { ~ players—on_the—other-team they: “Weld only be hurting the ‘son-to a line with hard-working | ar t to get before the game player and ourselves if we did|Norm Ullman and Bruce Mc- pacts. a @ : that,"’ he added. Gregor. They covered Chicago's Pollock said he shared his By JERRY GLADMAN en ae -Ken en_Wharram-Doug | The year 1887 is the only one in which —-the——Reds— haven't opened at home. since the Na- tional League was founded in| 1876. That year, a series of _!‘We have to play it. rough,” said Abel. ‘‘It’s our best chance.. We just have to keep belting them. However, I thought we |were a little rougher in the first to 5 p.m. FREE. No ob- ligation. Just call and chat about your special Glid- Tone Weed Stein © Creates beauti rea’ wutiful “NPERT POLYURETHANE = Plastic Liquid ©@ Primes, finishes eoach’s sentiments and it is up DETROIT (CP)—Bryan Wat ° _ el ae rainy days caused the game to Use on furniture, s legisiate against such inti aod, 5 pond eee alishetas” pohpete that tne" auld ees. seine a ‘tat anne oye, be moved to Louisville, Ky. ees a : Tong as varnish : g rane painting problem or ad- ;who couldn’t nail down a steady dation.”’ ‘job~- with Montreal Canadiens, Abel. “We took a chance going |but it’s nice coming home with “| into ‘something new without |it tied up. Now they have to|, BRITAIN HANGS. ON Per Ot. Per. Ot. $4.50 — ~vice-on-redecoration-col-— Glidden Lustre They were referring to’ a Tor- has become an overnight hero + onto newspaper report which /in Detroit. at nC UGE wa sulartiviys aoe ato | Spain's sharé—of-the world | quoted Toronto coach and gen-| watson 23, a utility man for ‘right back to the old lines.” jet aircraft market now is 9.3 a vise eet ee ‘Detroit Red Wings this year CLAIM KILL AT 7% _ per cent. ach as saying e afS stter his brief fling with Cana- | SHIFT WORKED would have to get certain Cana-|diens, was one of the stars of As it happened, it worked é pet ome an ae eae diens’ players early. if they Detroit's 7-0 rout of Chicago|perfectly for the Wings. Al-|(AP)—Freedom fighters hoped_ to stop the Montrealers. ‘Black Hawks in Chicago, Sun- |though Mohns was all-over the |Mozambique Liberation FiO iday. ice, the line failed to-do any claimed ' Monday they. | killed | RICHARD MAY SIT OUT is _ The victor; victory enabled Detroit to/damage. Meanwhile, the chunky more than 70 Portuguese sol- | sufring a sprained left knee ake ; cReetnay TA GOOD SERVI Volkswagens Halifax | of the incident by CAHA officials. | Junior Canadiens will be with- | | __He said the Halifax-Shawinigan out the services of star forward | series will be a best-of-seven af- Paul MacWilliams tonight when | fair and not best-of-five as orig- they meet Shawinigan Falls inally announced. First two Bruins in the first game of their | games will be played here to- | Eastern Canada memorial cup treatments for the injury. During Monday's practice. ses- sion Blake tried various com- binations, acting on the assump tion thet Richard will sit out the game. : HALIFAX (CP) as a. result of a board check wy , |}March. A_ statement released | Pee wiih ie a ae : Paul MacWilliams by the front said eight freedom | Are Our Specialty “extremely doubtful he will fighters were killed and 14 Clapton ie’ at‘ pemaite The best value at cost per Matching colors, semi-gloss, . mae i action Tuesday, although he : 4 Volkswagen parts. “square foot applied. 2694 col- high hiding, easy to apply, shculd be \set for Thursday Is . , ours! The best. bbable. The best. a egk d did hot skate M it: RUD H'S i a oe Qt "Per Gallon & ichar i ot skate ‘on- . ‘ er Qt. P Gall er Qt. ' er day, but had his Meg strapped S UJ [ fl aR GARAGE ose : q after taking physictherapy * a Alberry Plains ‘a 45 ‘1 0* y ® $920 sq%0 LOOK bargain hunters!. Glidden i he. Washers & Dryers New Shipment of © Honda Bikes: and Cars WELLE He had Dave Balon_centering | ni aS ght and ‘Wednesday. If Sha- Dick Duff,and Bobby Rousseau, semi- fi series. ; 5 wa anv" ad. defenceman Tean Guy “Team manager Fred MacGin-| Winigan wins dne or both games, | MUAY CGUUE ES UT LATEX WALL FINISH”. . Ot. $1.50 $4.95 Palbot working. at left wing on ivray said the club was inform- | @ third game, will be played in ATi: #808: Cee ye uince a line with Jim -Roberts—anded.by the CAHA Monday that | Halifax Friday. 1f Canadiens win a Yvan’ Cournoyer MacWilliams’ stispension im- | hoth games the ‘series will be | SLGULa Ie CLC oe Le SEMI GLOSS €4 a teed Phe Oe RL eck. Or. 1.75 Gal. i 6.95 The Ralph Backstrom Jobn eh coenwall’ Rey’ eae duel ' finished on Shawinigan ice ; Ferguson - Claude Larose trio! wit ornwa oyals ence- : ; ; @ remained intact. as did Jean man Dave Woodward h ne HOUSE PAINT, oil base $286 ree e Ha lan Gal: 4.95 Beliveau, Claude Provost and 7, has been set at three ga . / i Gilles Tremblay. In addition he ' aprtihocngn fri out he fina D wo . i various: aie Hie: oe win wall series Wat ended Sunday. | ance 160 Motel with 18 h overhead Noel Price, who has yet to, Detencerman Brian HL aha . cams, dual calberians. and tele- If ne. 5 Oo. Ltd. see -action mn. the _blueline ee spot,was the star in the final | : | scopic front suspension. Pane Mae Nai a was work: oame, scoring three goals, in- : @ 4xcycle-engine aT ae om woes ne cluding a breakaway -effort in Ais Fantastic economy “nig ro H d Wi H | ”" ot misnt pul Baton in. wstead ine jast minute of play to give LA. Easy to ride ant cas in one canadien * 6-5 win and the’) MAIN: BRACE Absolutely sate ent 5 araware e ave i" c hen again I just might try Rous : NO DOWN PAYMENT ‘i * — = becihve pity I think | "MacGlivray said. the Balitax Come Along and EASY FINANCING Queen Stret Dial 4-8501 Charlottetown ural’ centre anyway (club ha ginally nn . iehk the way he likés to wander ”’ lthat MacWilliams and Wood- Join The Fun Keith eo a He said that if Richard is not) ward were suspended for the:re- | ay ‘ ‘ eg td, ! Glidden * Glidden) 100 por cent right theretsno use mainder of the Halifax-Cor nwyall | Members an Gur sts Welcome 28 Siekley Pt. Rd. Dial 4-6423 - rk 7 putting him im. es ase only pending further study ‘ iy + BGs 5 : a Se See eeenEeTT 3 eee . one oe a > nee : RR pao ae Saeed oe