FRONT By NICK FILLMORE Senior Hockey For Us? THERE is talk of Charlottetown Nova Scouts lor Hockey League We don't want to hand down any kind of judgme- propcvsition at this time. we do want to mention some very rtant facts concerning an Island and queaion the a? senior hockey might have on the rest of the Island's ey attempting to enter the I at. on the Next season the mainland senior league will likely con- . list of Halifax, Moncton, Windsor and ew Glasgow. The scene for 1964-65 is complicated however. because Dart- mouth and Truro (building a new 3.000 seat stadium) are looking for a league to play in. unrlotte , we think. would have to put forth a pretty pod guarantee if they would hope to be accepted by the main- 1and league. The Nova Scotia Senior League last season w” m satisfactory. Windsor was too strong. Clubs often failed to ice full teams when they played away from borne. Games began . But for Windsor. the brand of play Was poor. Crowds were poor. llf Chartsttetown enters the league they should demand guaranteed unprovements. Islanders will not watch the kind of hockey Nova Scotla had lam season. We don't want players in that kind of league. Good Hockey Will Draw PROPERLY OPERATED, and with a playoff c ' team. Charlottetown. we drink. would an average of 1.- our 750 persons game. errem v that must be organized to perfection to compete with television, dancing, and other public ‘ wogfld have to be tin [or s . . best show, for money, that hockey can I . Transportation for the Island team is not the problem it first appears to be. ey could play series’ of games on the mainland and til ave e series. main] conception of ood transportation however. and the landers conception of transportation often have a certain de- gree of contrast. Th are hunderds of players available. In recent years however, so called "amateur players" have so high that they are actually hitting the hand that teak They seem to try and aim every possible penny anofatown amdthenas wh keyisn't too well in the Maritimes. Most towns want good hockey. but the players. not management. have upper hand. A successful Island entry in a mainland senior league would have to have better than 65 per cent d p o ers. What affect would this. have on the remainder of Prince Edward Island’s hockey players? Would they play in second rate Intermediate leagues? With the emphasis on Senior hockey who would organire the Intermediate? If a senior team is formed to play in a mainland league it would have to be suppo . by all areas of the Island. Wt: invite your comments on the situation. Off The Cuff IT’S GREAT to hear ABBY HOFFMAN and Nancy Misc- Cready. two of the nations best female athletes, will be in P.E.I. for Simunerside's Eastern Canadian Age Class track and field meet. If Island sport fans want to see some of world's potentially best. they don‘t want to miss the Summa- meet. July 25 . . , . . . . . ,.The municipality of Burnaby. adjaoamt to Vancouver. says it will lease .STA'FFORD SMY'I‘IIE a tract of land for 99 years if he’ll build ins pro- pose ,000.000 coiiseum there. The Leaf presrdent .last. week offered to build a mom-seat coiiseum in Vancouver 1f the city would give the land free. Vancouver .council has expr great interest and Smylhe has been invrted to go in the coast e lain his lan. However? '1e has turne own the Burnaby we? ...... .. 10.. We predict‘VERN HANDRAHAN will stick with Kansas City Athletics until the mid-season break. at l . . . . . . . . . . .. ROBIN ROBERTS. one of the American League's top pitchers at fill-years old. can‘t find the winning ' se his Baltimore Orioles aren't givirg his any runs erts worked 251 innings. recording a 3. "red faced" Chicago Black Hawk is PIERRE the NHL's most valuable defenceman yesterday. Tan H was secon . . . . . . . . . ,. The a .400 hitters in the major gues were TED WILLIAMS of the Boston Red Sox and Tony of oh New York Giants. Williams batted .406. in 1941 and Terry achieved a .401 average in 1930. lea- ln Ontario inen ' orwn' Big Prize Money) .-. ‘l‘flf‘lfllll'l'illllllf TORONTO (CP) — The On- tario Golf Association an- nounced Tuesday it as ex- empted 85 professionals and amateurs from the qualifying: round of the Ontario Open If Championship at suburban Is- lington June 25-27. There is $5.000 in prize money to be won. including top prize of $1,200 and the top three pro- fessionals in the tournament will win starting places in the first world tournament at De- troit's Oakland Hills course Aug. 27-37. e remainin 65 in a starting field of 150 an lit-hole qualifying round at Islington June . Categories for professional qualification: The first 15 in 1963 Canadian Professional Golf Association ratings, top 10 from 1963 Ontario Open. top 1 Ontario Professional Golf Asso- ciation rankings and top 10 in 1 Quebec. in the Hunt Trophy rankings and the top 15 in the Mcnaughton-(Brooks Bur- sary tournament. Categories for amateur quali- fication: All players ranked in 1962-03. low 15 in the 1963 On- tario Open and low four in the 1963 Canadian Open. “((9.1 or FILTER TIP C(GARETTE'S n; will be selected in cl i leg of the triple crown. which By JOE REICHLER NEW YORK (Ayn—The I ' . oddsl against Willie Mays hitting .400 | (edgeable baseball people think San Francisco Giants’ superb centre fielder may accomplish the seemingly impossible. Ted Williams. the last major leaguer to reach that magic pinnacle. has always maintained the 3400 figure will be reached again. In a recent interview he picked Mays. Henry Aaron. Al Kaline and Mickey Mantle as those capable of doing it. “The fellow who hits .400 must ‘get off to a blazing start." said Williams. who batted .406 with Boston Red Sox in 1941. “Then e must avoid a long battingl slump. “He must get the breaks and l he must have speed afoot. You’ve got to get your share of infield hits to keep that average u p. I “The year [batted .388. (1957) l I didn’t get a single leg hit. If I had been able to beat out six infield hits, I would have hit .400 again.” NONE STARTED AS WELL Not even Williams in his .406 season got off to such a flying start as Mays this season. After his first 20 games in 1941. W11 liamt was hitting .375. Willie. this year are about 400 to 1 but 1 .' it Is surprising how many knowl- ‘ t w ., WILLIE MAYS for the same period. was more than 100 points higher. Stan Musia‘l. p e rh the greatest of all National League hitters. thinks Mays has a chance. “Common sense tells you that nobody. no matter how great a hitter he is, will hit .400 in this day and age." said Musial, whose highest average was .376 in 1948. “But if anybody can do it. Mays is the man. Willie is an extraordinary streak hitter and. who knows. l ORK (AP) -— Wilbert (Skeeter) McClure. an Olympic boxing champion with Cassius Clay in 1960.has a few words of advice for the candidates for 1964 competition: “Polish every facet of your skill. the jab, the cross, the movements. “Even more important adopt a gentlemanly attitude and hearing. The officials will be observing you even when you- don't think they are watching. Cassius and I picked all. the champions last time before the Olympics and we on] missed one_ just by watching how the boys handled themselves." McClure and Clay must have picked themselves because each won a title — McClure in the light middleweight division and Clay in the light heavyweight. McClure is rank . as a pro in the middleweight class. Clay, of course. is the heavy-) weight champ. ( “An international referee willl work with the team a month he- i OlympicBoxingChamp (gives Tips To Yanks “When I fought the Russian in the semi-finals, there were five judges. Four were from the Iron urtain countries and there was one Scot. They called it a draw although I had him bleeding from the nose and blackened his eye. The Scot put a dot after my name on his card. That meant I was more aggressive. That’s how I won the bout. "In the finals I fought an Ital- ian. He ran and I was afraid I wouldn't get the decision. Don’t . forget this was in Rome. But I almost knocked him out. They had to give it to me." McClure has adopted some of Clay’s tactics as a gag to at. tract more attention to his cause. His new cree ‘ -‘All you have to do is say 'I’m the greatest. I’m the or tiest. I’m the wonderfullest’ and keep repeating it in front of a (D n a mirror for three weeks. If it doesn't work I’ll go on an Afri- can tour." [Baseball's Best Players See Willie Hitting .400 l he might just streak right through the season.’ One of the least surprised by Mays’ remarkable early season hitting is Jackie Robinson, a National League batting champ with .342 in 1949. “A fellow asked me last win- ter abo‘ut Mays and I told him that, in opinion. Willie hadn't yet reached his peak," said the f o r m e r Brooklyn Dodger star. “I've always felt that Mays had the qualifications to be the next .400 hitter." HITS SCORCHING .481 Mays’ bat literally has been aflame sin c e opening day Through the first month of the campaign. Wondrous Willie hit a scorching .481. He has hit safely in all but one of his 21 games and through last Monday’s game. he had connected safely at least once in 18 consecutive games. Mays has had good starts be- ' fore but never like this. Two years ago. he had four home runs in his first seven games. But this year, 11 of his first 40 hits were home runs. en Roger Maris of New York Yankees hit his record (31 home runs in 1961, he did not get No. 11 until his club's 40th ' game. Babe Ruth hit his 11th ' homer in his 34th game when he set the record of 60 in a 154- game season in 1927. BALL MEETINGS SUMMERSIDE — The Prince County Softball League will hold a meeting at the CJ'RW radio studios. tonight, 8.30 p.m. All persons interested in the future of the league are asked? to attend, MORELL — An organization- al meeting of the Kings Coun- ty Baseball League will be held at More)! Regional High School. (Ma 1 , p.m. It is suggested that all teams be represented at the meetin CITY — A meeting of the Charlottetown Senior Ba ba League will be held at the City Armouries. tonight. .3) p.m. All of last season’s coaches and managers are asked to at- te . A nominating committee formed at the last meeting will bring in a new slate of offl— N a (9 rs. MONTAGUE - A meeting of the Montague House Baseball league will be held at the Mon- tague Curling Club, Thursday. 8 p.m. Reg-ulations for the com- ing season’s play will be drawn . n We Guardian, ? SECOND SECTION Charlottetown, Wed. May 13, 1964. PAGE 13 J PITCHIERS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS l Probable pitcher-s for today’s )major league games, won andl llost records in parentheses: . merican ague [ New York, Ford (3-1) at De-l .troit, Aguirre (0-0). (N). 1' Boston. Morehead (1-2) at Cleveland, Ramos (1-2). (N). Baltimore, Roberts ( 1-1) t Washington. Narum (2-1) or Cheney (0-2). (N). Chicago, Horlen (1-1) or Pl- zarro (20) at Minnesota, Stig- man (0—2). (N), Kansas City. Pena (3-2) and Monteagudo, (0-2) at geles, Belinsky (1-1) and Lat- man wi-N . National Le ! PROBLE A l gue burgh.Law (1-2), ( . (Milwaukee. Cloninger "(2-1) at; New York. Fisher (0-1). Los Angeles. Koufax (2-3) at. Chicago, Ellsworth (243). S. 11 Philadelphia. Bunning (3 - 1).( 2 san Francisco. Hendley (2-2)) SPORT or KINGS { ref eree doesn't touch you. He jus yells 'break.‘ If you hit the belt or hit with the hand. he will etol the bout warn you. Then i e next time is liable to disqualify you. ' wh— t below open : and T Dancer May Be ; Second Choice BALTIMORE (AP) — Hill Rise, who lost the Kentucky rby by a neck in the role of the favorite, probably will be the public's choice again Satur- day when he hooks up with Derby winner Northern Dancer and four other three-yea'r-oids - e in the running of Preakness at Pimlico. orseman expressed opinion on the probable favorite Tues- the “The Olympic“ rules are l l l Souris Seeks Title Tonight SOURIS — The Kings County senior basketball playoffs re- sume at Souris Regional High School tonight with Morell the visiting team. Souris leads the round robin series and a victory tonight would assure them e championship. In recent games. Montague defeated Morell 56-52 in Mon— tague and More]! defeated Mon- tague 43-28 in Morell. PLAYOFF STANDINGS W L Pts. Souris 2 0 4 Montague 1 2 2 Moreil I 2 2 SOURIS BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN ED CLINTON While baseball is dragging it's feet in getting underway. Track and field got the jump and we’re getting ready for a big season. At least four meets are scheduled for Souris this year, with three of them being held this month. This sport was never a very popular one. but. has been growing rapidly the past few years. and should have its big- gest year in the King’s County area. At least three centers will be having local meets within the next two weeks in prepara- tion for County meet day after watching Hill Rise put in his final prep with a 1:40 1-5 coking for a mile. He gal- loped out the 1% miles in -54 1-5 The workout compared with the relatively slow 1:42 3-5 per- formance of Northern Dancer in his final workout Monday and the brisk 1:38 1-5 by The Scoun- drel Sunday. Hill Rise’s workout completed the serious preparations for the Preakness field. Roman Brother and Quadrangle will be theldother Derby starters in the ie . The probable field was in- creased by one when trainer Bernie Bond announced Tues- day that Haul-riot N. Ball's Big Pete would be entered in the 1 3-16-mile Preakness. th six starters. the second also includes the and lmont Stakes. will be worth $176,700 with 3124.200 going to the winner. Manager Owen Siill‘ Critical ON'EILDA. N.Y, (Am—Steve Owen. who coached New York Giants to eight Eastern Division titles and two National Football eague champions . re- in critical condition Tuesday in a hospital oxygen at. Owens. 66, was admitted to Oneida City Hospital Saturday. The nature of his 1 as was not disclosed. He has made his home here since he retired as Giants coach in 1953. Owen later coached in the Ca- nadian Football ague for Tor- onto. Calgary and Saskat- chewan. He was an dian Coach of the Year in 1962 while at Saskatchewan. Last year Owen coached the nowdefunct Syracuse Stormers of the United Football league. s. mg’s County Interscho- lastic meets will be held in Souris this year. And the meet has been made into a two day affair. The Elementary schools will hold their meet on y 29th. while the seniors will have their meet the following day. RECORDS NOW KEPT Last year. the first official records for King's County were established. so that all times and distances recorded at last year‘s meet are records. Some new records will be set this year. as new events have or added in the elementary divr n. We may have some new teams in the King's County Baseball League this season. Most of last year's teams will be back. Those teams we know for sure are Morell. Mt. Stew- art. Souris. St. Peters and Georgetown. Two others. Peak- 2 o es and Cardigan are still unde- cided. It would be hard to ima- . ' 5-s-l—. 3M \\ (mm l «a MONEY! 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' SOURIS BALL ENTRY The Souris entry is a team- that has been playing for three 5 y ars as a t m. The players are former Nova Scotians. em- ployed at the filieting plants in» Souris and who have now estan lished residences in King's ‘County. They have played ex 1 hibition games against KC) ( teams and ave given a l fairly good account of them selves. { For the past two years thc' league has kept stactlcs. withl this writer acting as league sta- tician. These should be contin- ued. and the teams urged to co-operate more fully. Only a few of the teams kept up the co-operation last seaon. As one of the oldest, and the ' best attended leagues in tne’ Maritimes, records are a must. Complete figures on the past two seasons will be sent to an coaches within the next ten D. ays. Minor baseball in Souris for the coming season has yet to be decided. The Town League (for boys eighteen and under) will definitely operate but the different age groups have no plans. Last year. the Recreation Commission hired a coach. and purchased equipment. and the investment paid off to the tune of three Island titles. for Sour- thliliggesf year in minor base a . COMMIsSION CUTS-BACK This year. the Commission has decided to cut down a spending. Both in regards to Equipment is not a luxury. but a necessity. but some e towards hockey rather than to- wards both sports. . The Commission may alsol the new a coach under A badminton tournament w l l I be held in Souris at the Re- glonal High School the part are now open . names in to John Hughes at the h sch Let's make this first tourna- meat a big success. that Cincinnati, Jay (1-2) at Pitts- .fair N) be c I athlete i l )' ‘habit they can't bmak.’ [curs wmn Don Macintosh. supervisor of Regina. thinks an athlete's per-l Commission still lean hesvxlyln'mmm g Washin find it hard to secure the ser- ; my ‘7’ “d pert. v of set-up. Definitely. they will not ( Baton be able to get a full-time coach. I Cleveland ata of the month. Elimination emadiy ( rounds in the high school class Ban—Helmet (I) being played. Any- Jones (3): Clo—Held (6). one. wishing to take part in the New York 20000 even should of their Pittsburgh Pirate's Manny Mota slides into home plate in the first game of a double- header earlier this week at FEW SAY lT’S O‘K Nations COaches Blast Athlete's Smoking Habits Los An- By THE CANADIAN PRESS to drop players from teams forlthe U- or 5‘ fencing team and Coaches and athletes across persistent smoking is John Met- Western Canada 1011 011311910}! qui MOTA COMES HOME Forbes Field against Milwau- kee Braves. Milwaukee catch- er Joe Torre makes a driving stab to put the tag on Mota country nearly all agree ras, athletic director of the Uni- sm is a perso among adults, ontrolled in yo A Cross-Canada Survey by The Canadian Press indicates more professional than amateur s are addicted to cigar; 15. Gibson (3-0) atiettes, cigars or pipe tobacco.) . . ' Warren Stevens, director 0fo do, do as I say" method, He [givmg up smoking helps an ath- . athletics at the University of averages about a pack of cigar-£1916 to get In Shape. but once of T ettes a ' Toronto. says all the U “at Houston. Bruce (3-1). (N). coaches are opposed to athletes. lsmo in “It has been a tradition that. an athlete who is serious about fl-Iockey League player, forbids (lins. last year‘s Canadian unl- ' smoke. But (members of his varsity teams (versity training will not ‘ there are always a few who will‘1 break the rule and you can’t? be a house detective to enforce( it." \ Harry Griffiths. athletic (ll-l rector of McGill Un versity in Montreal, estimates that about, 40 per cent of the college's ath- j smoke. i m not against the habit if it’s taken in moderation, if the boy can give it up for 0 or three months," ‘he said. “I, don‘t like to see them'with a? letes “I. but should London. uth. ‘ ‘ (a disciplinary measu says. “Smoking is not good for! condition and generally do th as! af- versit of Western Ontario in Smoking y . haven’t noticed any marked dif- ‘I use the no-smoking rule as re." he doesn't e athlete any good." Metras uses the “don’t do as day. Pete Kelly. athletic director of the University of New runs- wick former National to smoke during training sea- sons. He says: “The United States' report has brought the matter [However. the greatest respon- home a little closer. I think there’li be more voluntary re- fraining." SETS EXAMPLE The staff at the University of British Columbia sets an ex- ample to its athletes by laying off the tobacco habit. reports Bus Phillips. physical education director of UBC. Arnold Lowenbuerger. direc- ;tor of physical education at the NOT RESPECT“; ! University of Saskatchewan. athietics at the University of;_formance is reduced by smok- Alberta in Calgary, 'says the old( fear that "smoking cuts down; li‘ifZ. He doesn't see any difference on an athlete's wind" is the rca- 1 whether an athlete smokes cig- son why few of his basketball .arettes. Cigars or a pipe. ’players smoke. One man known in the past, Possible 4 Seen In Su SUMMERSIDE BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN A three team Town Baseball League. to get its players by BASEBALL SCORES By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League Los Angeles 0l0100000— 2 62 Chicago 200000001— 3 71 Moeller (1-3), Perranoskl (9) and Roseboro: Buhl (3-1) and (Bertell. St. Louis 012 100 000-— 4 10 0 Phila. 001010— 2 80. Simmons (4-2) Craig (8) and; cher; ahaffe (2-2)‘ Short (3) Green (4) Kh'ppsteinl (5) Baldschun (7) Roebuck (9)) and Triandos, Dalrympie (9), 1 Milwaukee ooooaoooo— 2 sci New York 000000000—0 31. Fischer (4 - l) and Torre: ( (Jackson (34) and Taylor. HR:‘ 1) (Mil—Carly ( . nFran. 001020900—0100; Houston 000 000 000— 0 5 2 } Marichal (6-0) and Haller: ; coach‘s pay and equipment we Brown (1-3) Jones (8) and Bate- g ho find this hard to understand. ‘ man. HRS: SFaMnys 2 (13). American League soaoooooo- s so. gion 000000000— 0 “- McNaliy (3-1) and Orsino; Stenhouse (0-2) Koplitz (4) Che.- Ridzik (9) and Lep- HR: Bit—Powell (4). 002 102 000— 5 12 3 400 001 01x— 6 9 o Spanswick. Heffner (1) Rad- (2 - i) (7) and Tillmanz, latter Grant, McMahon (2-0) (6) Ab-, 9) and Azcue. HRsz. Bressoud (1)1 31 Dow not as soon as possible. Icy (5) Reniff (8) and Howard, .lm through the toilet: (3-1) and Freshen. HR.‘ NY—Lopea (4). \ bucrgcr smokes cigars. Bul Graham Power. coach of Entries mmerside the pool system, was formed at the annual meeting of the Summerside baseball organiz- ation held at the Canadian Le- gion last night. There is a possibility that a fourth team may enter RCAI“ Station ‘ummerside. The air- force team however. would nor be included in the player draft. Elected for the coming sea» 15011 at the meeting last night were Wilfred MacNeill. pres) dent: Gene Nowaiski. vice-pre- sident; Howard Waite. honul~ ary president: Grcd Deighal:i secre tea r George Taylor. publicity direc- tor. PLAYERS WELCOME If the RCAF is not able to submit an entry all players from the base interested in playing baseball would be cc. tainly welcomed by the other three teams. In an earlier meeting at Queen Elizabeth Park this ev ning. 25 players were register ed. If players can be register- ed soon lcaguc will be operat- ing almost immediately. it is pcd All intermediate players arc requested to appear at Queen Elizabeth Park. Thursday. May 12. 6 p.m. All junior players are reques— ted to appear at the c u i on Home Monday May (a. 7 p.m. WASHINGTON (AP) — Dave McNaily. 21-year-old left-han- der. pitched a two-hitter and Boog Powell hit a three-run homer. leading Baltimore Ori- oles to a 5-0 victory over Wash- ington Tuesday night. Chuck Hinton doubled to right. ml“ "3—7 33‘in the first inning and pinch? ning, Meyer (M) (l) 1)- 1hitter Fred Valentine poked a lanydiing b middle in t sixth for the only hits off Mc- ai . two after taking the throw from shortstop Dennis Menke. Mel Steiner is the umpire. two years ago. states: ' some time ago and th, I ference. To tell e ru me to re- think smoking helped lax a lot." I Bob Pelletier. athletic direc- (tor of the University of Ottawa land a cigarette smoker, says 1you're in shape, ‘ing doesn't seem Les Prince. coach of McMas- (tevr University (Hamilton) Mar- a iittle smok- . hurt." hockey champions. com- lmen : , "Schools could take a much }more definite stand on smoking. lsibility lies in the home. We've ,got to stop youngsters before {they begin to think they are big men v smoking." l Bobbie Rosenfeld of Toronto, la member of the 1928 Canadian lOiympic track team. sees noth- (ing wrong with athletes—either 'male or female —— taking up smoking after they leave the athletic world. l LE She recalled that when she was competing. "It wasn't re- .spectab‘le for ladies to smoke." George (Punch) Imlach, geta- JcraI-manager-coach of the Tor- .onto Maple Leafs of the NHL, w‘lhad no comment to make. He .15 a non-smoker. and through .a spokesman. said because of :this he did not feel qualified to ake any statement. “When an athlete reaches the professional stage of his career, he is old enough to make deci- sions like smoking. for him- self." said Lew Hayman. gen- }eral-manager the Toronto Argonauts of the Eastern Con- } ference division of the Canadian LFoolball League . Ralph Sazio. coach of the ‘Grey Cup champion Hamilton iTiger Cats. sa‘: “I started (smoking when I was in the (army. When I started playing .agaln I noticed a difference and (Immediately cut it out unti’. I started coaching again." ( Sazio has sliced his usual so ‘cigarettes a day down to 10 and is seriously thinking of quitting I altogether. Pipe-smoking Red O’Quinn, (general-manager of the Ottawa ‘Rough Riders of the CFL, ad- mitted about half of last sea- ‘son‘s squad were cigarette :CLAIR HEAVY SMOKER ‘ But Ottawa coach Frank Clair is a bit different. He's a pack- ;a-game man. He lays down the (law at the start of the season about late hours. drinking and the rest. but never mentions ;, smoking. He expects the may- ers to make their own decision O :1 Frank Bouchcr. former ( NHL star and now nnnis- l . of the Saskatchewan .3 Junior Hockey League. thinks « he has the smoking problem (licked. l He only smokes half of each cigarette. working on the theory (that in this way he avoids tat think I whether an athlete smokes or I. not." he says. “I’ve played with ) lots of guys who didn't smoke f and they puffed Just as hard as I did." Bud Grant. coach of the Win- nipeg Blue Bombers of the CFL—a non-smoker and dead against lt—prefers none of hh players smoke. But he will linlerfere w smokixg p (providing they do not do it the dressing room. on it: lng field or in his office. Coach Toe 31m of the .real Canadiens of the .a believer in moderation. 5.: i'l is . li- inst“ he excess. it's bum n his! (are so. "a":