! 'rlio Gunman. Charlottetown. 111nm. Dec. 31. 19044 SPORTS FRONT I Brief Summary i Of ‘64' Scene By JIM CULLEN v Summerside Legionaires captured the Maritime hockey crown, Herman ‘lemse copped the Northumberland Strait swim, Sandy's Parkdiale Royals advanced to the Maritime sen- ior k finals and then got themselves suspendcdl. June Byrd raced to victory in The Evening Patriot Gold Cup and Saucer classic. St, Dunstan’s University Varsit ey squad lost out by a hair to UNB in Maritime intercollegiate hockey play. Legion Juveniles from Charlottetown grabbed the Marl- time baseball crown. Lyall Dagg won the Canadian curling championship right here at Charlottetown and golfers enjoy- ed one Of the greatest seasons in island golfing history. These were some of the highlights of the year" just con- cluding and folks. both participants and spectators, had a whale of a 00:1 ime The lads from Suimmci's'ide raced to their Maritime crown without the loss of a single game. They lost out to their op- ponents in a round robin series at Montreal biit Joe Clarkes youngsters made themselves loads of friends before bowing out. Sandy Frizzell surrounded himself with a lot of line hoc- key talent and they surprised Sydney Millionaires by ousting them in hiimilitating fashion before Cape Breton fans. How- ever. the series with Windsor Maple Leafs proved a dismal slop and only four registered Royals made the trip to the Leafs rink. As a result MAHA president Edgar Peterson. culled of the series and suspended Manager Ft'izzcll and the absent Roy- als. Later at t e MAHA annual meeting. Frizzell was fined ’ and each Royal who failed to appear was handed a $100 TORONTO (CPl — Montreal Canadians overcame a 20 first Period deficit to dump Toronto Maple Leafs 4 - 3 Wednesday night and take over first place in the National Hockey League. A crowd of 14,621 watched Leafs jump ahead 2-0 in an im- pressive first - period perfor- mance. but Canadiens took ad- vantage of loose Toronto defen- sive play to roar back with two goals in each of the next two frames to go ahead 4-2 before Ron Ellis counted Leafs' last goal in the final minute. Leafs, who outshot Montreal 30-22, remained in fourth spot. five points ahead of New York Rangers. Montreal is two points ‘ahead of second-place Chicago jBlack Hawks. Claude Larose. Bob Rousseau. " 'John Ferguson and defenceman SAWCHUK SMO‘THiEiRS PUCK nal-ty, Early this fall, the indebtedness was taken care of :fld Frizzell and his boys are back in the good graces of the hockey governing bod Myron Bell out came when their June Byrd upset the _by winning the coveted Gold Cup and Saucer June was third in the opening dash (captured by Edgewood Scott) but headed the aradc In the second back to foul-till. leaving June Byrd with thebest summary. The Greenbricr management wore broad grins as Lt. Gov. J. MacDonald made the presentation of the beautiful trophy. _ Big Jim Pendcrgast and his assoctates staged another most successful swim from Bayfield. NB. to Port Borden. P.L.l. The event received national publicity and Jim and his work- ers surely must have been gratified by the results of their many months of work, That great swimmer. Herman Wil- lemise. was a heavy favorite before the event got underway and it was easy to realize why the odds were so heavy on Herman. He won the event in a real breeze. ack Kane's Saints had a great season in college hockey circles but they never got a chance to play off against the Uni- versity of New Brunswick. Saints finished in a llatfooted tie with Pete Kelly's Fredericton scholars but because UNB had beaten Saints in season play, they were denied a layoff. Na- turally Saints‘ followers were disgruntled at the ruling but ap parently it had been agreed upon before the season had got underway. Saints started the season in fine style this fall convincing triumphs over Acadia Axcmen and Mount Allison Mounties. circles Charlottetown Legionnaires captured tfhc .ia time crown and Danny MacCormack‘s A- ies went right. in the Maritime intermediate finals before bowing to Antiignnish. in football Varsity Saints were once again in the Atlantic Football Conference hilt ‘ Hilton was forced to go with a team shy on experience. Although only winning one game in their short. schedule the Hiltonites gave it a mighty fine try. St. Dunstan‘s High School won The Potato Bowl championship in a thrilling playoff with Summerside High. Curling greatest show on earth, The Brier. came to Charlottetown last March and Islanders loved every moment of this great show. They jammed he Charlottetown Forum on occasions and witnessed some of the finest curling it was possible to see. The local entry skipped by Art Burke .came up with a brilliant effort and with a few breaks could easily have won it all. Lyall Dagg from Vancouver de- : Toronto Maple Leaf goalie . Terry Sawchuk gets an assist from Allan Stanley (261 as he New Year's Day Football Draws A Huge Audience By JACK HAND Associated Press Sports Writer About 500.000 football fans will ay more than $3,000,000 to watch the assorted New Year's! Day aiid Weekend bowl games but the real stunner is bundle of $389,000 waiting for one of the athletes. Quarterback Joe Namath. a doubtful starter for Alabama in illicit Orange game with ‘ITexas Friday night. is supposed :to be in line for that fabulous $389000 deal to sign a three- :ycar contract with New York !.I(‘iS of the American Football League. Namath's physical con- diiion probably will remain un- certain up to game time. How- ‘ever. it is expected he will get linto the game in relief of Steve .-o :3‘ (D Sloan if the occaSion demands. Minor Hockey The following is the Charlotte- town Minor Hockey schedule for . C tbroncd Ernie Richardson as champion, but it came after :F‘riday and Saturday. January on the Sh-cnrvth of an 11.game is leading in assists-v Winger Larry Mickey of St. a bitter battle. Art Burke almost forced a playoff between 1st. an n . . . h . :Louis Braves has been fined Dag: and Richardson in the final game of the week. Dagg PEE WEE . . , . ' .“nbcmf‘” Streak and Bobby Hull Mikita. the league scoring ‘1 _ . _ ‘ I ‘ SUMMERSth _ L n m a n ,, tt 1 f n 1. mt _ it 00 and suspended for one trailed Burke by one coming home in the twelfth but man- 7.00 '1 m. —— Foxes vs Loyo- . . . '5 he ",‘g “‘95 0. ‘9 C c champion last season. has 12‘ name for .1 h' J h M aged a singleton and forced the contest into an extra end. tes: 7:45 a.m. —— Rams vs Bis- Drug combmcsl Ewen a hlgh‘ “But'. sald Bmy Rcay' the goals and 27 assists for 395M“ f 5has mg 0‘ n ‘ac. Dagg again managed to get one in this overtime play. Ions: 8:30 am. — Otters vs preseason mung are now HaWks' Coat-h We‘ln05(lfl.\'- . . " ‘ ' . I an o t e Memqh's wmgs Al other curlers had a great time for themselves and Zebras; 0:15 am. — El 's vs ngmmg. to Slay 0}“ f ‘1 aSti “don't overlook Stan Mikita.‘l’mms~ He "3‘15 only Hun: the 23.5321}: at St'. Lgflfigec‘ 27' competition was actually fierce in all brackets of play. lSettci-s: 10:00 am — lcc Clean~ place m the Prmce County He's the 11051 White Hi the: Home “mm? whose h“) goalsi .— Art MacKenzic once more was on the Willingdon Cup team ing. 10:13 am. ~— Rat-onus vs Hogkcy League' . flea... e and has been a major ‘" Tucs‘lay "l'e'hi‘s 4'3 conquest: and made the trip west for Willingdon Cup play. brother Mer- Wolves: 11.00 am. — Sprinui-rs . 35' shunt“ Fella" qweumglfactor in our streak. 0‘ New York “8113015 enabled lin copped the Island amateur. John Estabrooks. Saint John .vs Caribous; 11:45 am - Lions bummcrsme Jumm' L?81°"a"esi—-—————~: w w--~ r-—‘Chi('820 [0 lie Montreal Cnna- Bv THE CANADIAN PRESS ‘ was .*.B.-P.E T_ winner. British Columbia’s Seed no: i e ivs Seals. ‘ ""‘lasmd the Combmes 10‘6i IdiE‘IlS IOI‘ the MD DOSilion Will! I National. league Canadian junior crown and Ron IlcClair. Maine made off with BANTAM her“ 1351 mghli C10§lng the 839‘: c I. D ‘39 points. w‘L“ F AM. 1“he Maritime ~ 12:30 pm -r Blades vs Ci-m- ‘0 a "‘"e W”. mm“ between‘ ur m9 raw “Mikita also has been tops Montreal 1' a 98 "4 n 1964 Prince Edward Islanders saw our] participated in ‘els 7:20 p.111. -— Hornet". vs "‘9 “V0 aFCh l‘lVi‘lIS- ddonqivelv i- Re“. ointed “t Ch~ , I H 1'. more sports than at any other time in the province‘s history. it IFlycrs: 8.05 pm. —- Senators vs The Juniors, who have scorfi A . “1 “co [1: I i] “ pi n Isa-{:0 1? n lino 1.“ 39‘ was Centennial Year and the Garden of the Gulf inhabitants Knights, 11:50 pm. -~1ndians vs ed 16 goals in their last two It ".1 H" “.m.‘ “e are tlm Dmm 1” H a 8? ‘8 3‘“ surely made the most of it from a sports angle. Things hum- IAces: 0:35 p. a-.-.":.-. vs games were paced Bobi mm Hort,b?muse "f penamos Tpmm‘.‘ 121?. g 9” 8432 in all seasons and sports followers are hoping for .2- con- 'Barnns. Perry's hat trick and two goali The followin' ," th‘ 1, “I and he always does an ovutstand-i lNcw \Ol'k 101, , 7510127 tinuance of the same in the year that lies ahead PAPERWEIGHT performances by Pa MCWll-Idraw at Monti“; {mi film'hjl‘“ ml" _ 305m" 7 20 4 7010718 ' - - ~ - W 5:00 .m. A. ice 1 » ('ardin-Jiams, Billy Machllan and January 15,, "‘ als vs Sparrows: Ice 2 ; Eaz-i Alan Gaudct. The latter nam- 7 p, _ iles vs Ducks; Ice 3 -- Paleonsied trio.also earned three as-. Ice One —- J. S. DcsRoches. R. IV5 Jayfi , [SlStS_aplece- lShaw. G. Warner. E, Coldwell . 5240 DJ"; - 1091 - Redbll‘ds. Gritty Leroy Clow, Combines vs. W. S. Macintyrc. E. Dun- Thanks A Vs Blackbirdstfl Ice 2 " plug-idefcnceman was perhaps over- at“, D. Sorrie. O. MacDonald. hu‘ds VS ROblnb- 109 3 — OMS Vsj shadowed by the feats of op- Ice Two — A. Robertson. F1. ,0 a" F I I d D k H t , ens-m ce 1 Wm vsumsmtij players but played a fiacfiomld. fiacDo-nald. .1. | - ‘ ,- - * . — -_ .‘super game. registerin the urn vs. . ac zie. E. . or s O‘TIOIesi Ice 2 " ‘1““5 V5 Lalksi game's second hat trick.g iMacLugi‘e, L. Munroe, N. (iallo- OUT k"NI Ice 3 — Hawks VS C‘I‘OWS. The Game lowly ed andi “pay. The old year of 1964 is tot- the highway below Tea uni PRACTICE more mm a shooting deyrby may! P.M. f' d tering on the brink of oblivion with two hunters aboard. With Lorne Hennessey “mums Illeibe thrown out the window, En.i Ice 0142 —— F MacDonald. "en 5' as young and cherubic 1965 is :the car still in motion one of appearance 0‘ Elle followmgi main Drug are requesting that it"K. Sullivan. L. Nicholson. ‘1. . poised to take over. e all the pair had a .303 Army rifle i mailers at the I'mum E". ;be put under protest because of Mame-‘0“ V3. F~ VUOZZO- 0- H0" You ya know about what 1964 gave us ipoked through a window and I eqmpmem 3‘ u 3-m- l'r‘day'. the ineligibility of Billy MacMil. ring. S. MiaeKinnon. J. K. Mac- and all we can do is wait. p0..- .was pumping shots into a can I Jan' 15" I, _ 13“ from Charlottetown. At pre- "and: been sibly with bated breath. for centration of geese. off the Rifle: ,BObby Je‘vcn'. Ploy]? Eighth; sent the league rule States float 1°? N" “ l" A' Jl’hns'om A‘ what the New Year has to offer. Range. Apparently they \vsre‘F'd'_ “Rogg lung/I'D 1% , layer Over junior age. (20) S““""‘“ J- MCLeaf‘v "- Sic?“ no" Old 1964 will go down on theistirring them up for hunters]S:;a; 'Maclggsfid aficioflnam: 5‘2;th PlayMWIIRhufi junior cm glahvg margim‘fln' 5‘“ y i ' s v o — “' ' ‘ ' ‘ .1. '. ‘ was ac ‘ an's sec record book a the ,ear I a rigged out in the lrvmgs Bar ] Cormler' Terry‘game with the Legionnaim since . . _. grand! is. a ry Steele. Bill MacLaren, Mike Campbell. Jim MacDougall, bumper potato crop and a price ,China Point areas. This happen-‘ that kept in step with the crop. ed in Nowmber He told me In former years when the price who they were but did not think was high the potato crop was it worth while toreport them. re” poulmn’ Jack Arsenaun' game m the second period when. D90? and When the‘ price was - - "0t 0*“ a minimum “"9. in Bob Doberty. Ted Kitson, Ron severly struck on the left ankleI 7 ant—Brian Lewis. %4’ high and potatoes In top def ‘any case. Furthermore he might Carmichael. Robert Campbell, by a shot. The ankle was noii; o .m to 1:15 p.m.—~Al'l m mand the crop W85 50 9001‘ ll ;haV0 had tI‘OUbIe PI‘OVlng they Jim Dowling, Brian Foley. ibroken. iArscnault, Les Barnes. I bordered on being a total‘were firing into the concentrat- Norman Kirkpatrick, Don The Juniors held a 6-1 leadi . . . . 1 .failure. This season both cropiion of geese although they took Dunsford, Vince Carragher, after the first period but the' Rink 1—Walter White and and prices were tops and. bct- off in scattered confusion. Bobby Younkcr, Lowell Brown, Combines roared back though Bob Younker. i ,ter still, there is no indication I was told by an eve Wit-.Joey Hennessey, Peter Clark, trailed 8-5 after two. " Rink 2—L10yd Hillier and‘ r T David Jenkins, Owen O'Brien. Tom Gauthier. that the price will lower. 0n the ncss, who hunted at Whitlocks contrary all signs point to a con- ion the opening day. that an apt ;tinued upward trend. Poor orlproximate forty odd gunners .very ordinary. potato yields in lined the shores. or were out in the sister Maritime provincesiboats. turned the day into jand in Ontario is given as the IRoman holiday. Ducks were .cause. This is all to be good ‘scarce. an approximate 75 teal JVCY- , I -for past experience has proven jwitb a sprinkling of black ducks A“ goal tenders "1 the Mid' that when the farmer prospers Iwas the total number of ducks 59‘ league “’9 also requeSted Blair Mayne, Alan Jack Durant, Ken O'Brien, Der- Bobby Irwin, Acorn. Stewart McCallum, John Tbler- ault, Bobby Whitlock. David Scott, Frank Eustace. Ernie smothers the puck during last nights game in Toronto against Montreal Canadiens. Bob Pul- ' The Rose Bowl once-beaten Michigan, 3 solid favorite, and twice-beaten Ore- gon State will ' largest crowd. The usual 100,- 10 starts and ranke beaten Nebraska in the Cotton watch. ALSO CHARITY GAME Louisiana State and Syracuse will draw a' ut 60,000 m the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans and night game be will played before 72,000. rday for the clash of Florida n 11 State and Oklahoma. Also 0 Legionnaires i joining them. .Legionnaire defenccman Dickey was remov MacGuiigan, About 50.000 are expected to the- pairing of I bring out the 000 for a worthy charity. 000 sellout has been announced concluded Sunday with 60.000 in Undefeated Arkansas, winner of the Orange No. 2 to NFL Playoff Bowl between Alabama in the final Associaiied Green Bay an Press poll, tangles with once-: Bowl at Dallas where 75.504 will teammates have attracted at-iBllffalo Ems If he deem” to l Gator Bowl in Jacksonvtlle Sat-f I an} Referee Schedule the. _ Combine goalie was replaced by sub Tony Rivard after the opening period. ford (2m and Bob Ham 1le away from net while Henri Richard cruises in from right. Jean-Guy Talbot scored for Ca- nadiens in that order. Talbot stickhandling the length of the: ice to score while Montreal was a man s or . Red Kelly. Dave Keon and ‘Ellis counted for Toronto. Canadiens' goalkeeper Charlie ~ ' TALBOT GETS WINNER Montreal Regains First With 4- 3 Win OVer Leafs footer past Sawehuk. who had no c ance. Montreal's Dave Balon was serving a holding penalty when Talbot stole a Toronto pass in the-Montreal zone. broke away from Billy Harris and Leaf do. fenceman Kent Douglas to beat Sawchuk with a perfect corner shot from about 15 feet at 11:05. Ellis scored his goal on a par- tially screened shot from a face- off in the Montreal zone at 19:44. one of 10 shots fired at Hodge in the last period. SUMMARY First Period — 1. Toronto. Kelly 7 (Ellis, Stanley) 12:25; 2 Toronto, Keon 8 (Brewer. Hortonl 17:11. Penalties — La- perrlere 0:31, Talbot 1:45, Ma- hovlich 5:00. Richard Shack 11:38. .Brewer 12:46. Second Period — 3. Montreal. Larose 10 (Richard) 2:19. 4. Montreal, Rousseau 7 (Duff, McCrearyl 17:43. Penalties Larose 9:39, Talbot, Pappin 11:13. Richard, Douglas 12:16. . ’ . JEAN GUY TALBOT Stanley was trapped in the Montreal zone. Dick Duff, 8 for- mer leaf. took rookie Keith Mc- Creary's lead pass and went in to fire a hard shot.at Sawchuk. Laperriere 13:12. Brewer 18:08. A MORE) Third Period — 5. Montreal. hustle Montreal's Dave. Balon (Cl’ Wirephoto) iHodgc made several spectacu- ‘lar stops among his 27 saves. including four on Ellis, who was Toronto‘s outstanding player. c rookie. whose goal was his 13th of the season. put the puck in the. net early in the first period, but e score was dis- allowed because a Leaf player The rebound went back to Rous- Ferguson 7 (Bee sham La. seau. who popped It home at rose) 8 34. 6 Montreal. Talbot 17:43. . 11:05: 7. Toronto. Ellis 13 Ralph Backstrom was allowed (Kelly) 19:44. Penalties—Horton 0 to roam free behind the Leafs 3:45. 3310“ 10:3 . net to set up Ferguson for his tops scoring shot at 8:34 of the third. Hodge 10 8 9—27 The burly winger drove a 20- Sawchuk 003—18 was in the goal crease. Minutes later Ellis hit the post with Hodge beaten on a hard shot. Kelly opened the scoring by poking Ellis's rebound behind Hodge from the goalmoutb at 12:25 of the first period. I Kcon made it 2-0 when he de-i Saturday afternoon the East- be waving contracis in front of West Shrine game in San r‘ran-ibacks Ray Ogden and Bud cisco will pack in another 60.- French. tackle Frank McLean- n and centre Gayion McCul- flectcd Carl Brewer‘s bluelineI shot past Hodge from about 25| feet out at 17:11. Frank Mahovlich lost control of the puck in the Toronto zone to set up Canadiens' first goal. Henri Richard grabbed the loose puck and fed a pass to 'Larose in front and the winger isank his own rebound as net- ough. Texais' Ernie Koy Kicker and fullback. and Olin Under- sce theiwood also have been drafted. Bob Timb e r l a k e, Michigan's fine quarterback, can choose between New York Giants and The weekend program will hex owl (1 St Louis. the two second-place teams. Several of Namath‘s Alabama. tention from the pros who maylplay pro. Gala New Year’s Eve Ball at The Rollawciy Club Music by The Maritime Best The Hy Notes Dancing from 10 p.m. till 2 u.m. Admission $5.00 per couple, limited 100 couples. For reservations Dial 4-7142 or 4-8830. Pick-up reservation before 5 pm. Thursday. H awks H of Sireakffifi:..::l.::.1:. Due TO Miki’ra Rousseauu tied the score 2-21 NEW YORK i'Al’l ~— Chicago Black Hawks, hottest team onI ice, have forged into first place “l‘vc. llscd Mikita against the. best centres in the league ini DETROIT (CPI JaCk recent games and he has cut“ Adams, president of the Central . . flayed every one of them He-S! Professional H oc k e y ague. in the National Hockey League second in the scoring race aMlannounced Wednesday that left CPHL Pixy -\ Fines Player I I I I SATURDAY l ‘ Bob Doberty. ink 3—Leo Doiron and Der-T rcll Poulton. ‘ .tbe city prospers. Money sure Itbat came to this former top to attend: -flowed freely this Christmas of ducking ground. ‘A lone teall . . ' . 11964 ,duck circled the pond at least lday Perm“ "I Prison {0“ 110061 with two gunshots high and an ap- imeaslfl‘e When a flagrant ViOia- proximate one hundred shots ition occurs. Whether or not you were fired at it with the gun- irealize it waterfowl hunters, ners yelling like wild Indians. lthe future of local duck hunt- When there were no ducks as ling hangs in the balance. . targets. regardless of range. ,could go out like a light unless they amused themselves shoot- drastic counter action is insti- ‘ at Red-winged B 1 a c k .tuted without delay. Not so many Birds. The flags and reeds ap- ‘years ago I wrote in this col- peared alive with them My Iiimn that I watched the work of informant stated that not. very 1a lifetime go down the drain many were killed because they ‘overnlgbt and the men were such poor shots. 'I'hey .brougbt this about were tried hard nevertheless. All fessed sportsmen. they needed was something to time hunter remarked to fire at and make a noise. The "‘Yau cramped the style of too fact that Red-winged Black- many big shots". The strange be through in three years or birds are protected did not cn- part of it is: if I had It to do iless. The season will close it- jtel into the picture. Hunters over again i wouldn’t change self. The penalties handed down inow-a-day make their own laws my style one iota. Icouldn‘t look .by our can or Migratory ,as they go along. myself in the glass if I did. My Bird infractions are the Joke OH The old year of 1964 will go ipolicy always w s: “The big- the century. Instead of a fine of down on the records as the year lger they are the harder they thirty dollars plus thirty days 'buniing for sport hit rock bot- fall." Boiled down to its last in jail. without the option of a .trim with a bang. Whether or analysis. . . a man has to live reprieve. they receive the not it will ever return bangs iwith himself. if the right people minimum of ten dollars and a in the balance. The appointment [take a hand in the present Wild- pat on the back. . . a special magistrate to near ,llfc situation and take 'the bull. A man who only hunts on oc- .all connected wt game. ‘by the horns” we could save cuion, he enjoys the past'muilaw infractions combined with hunting for sport for future gen- to the full but time is the de- in complete revision of game ierations of hunters. 'cldlng factor with respect tollaw penalties. Scuttle this tool In this more pleasant train ot this . ld me recently idoilar fine. Raise the minimum lthought I wish all readers of that he saw a car drive along fine In pom and throw in ii 30 :the column a Happy New Year I In the hunting realm. special emphasis on waterfowl, :1964 sure hit rock bottom. The opening day on ducks was the disappointment of the century. jOur local blackducks were .down so low the bottom prac- tically fell out of the 1964 crop. I ven e teal were down be- low the fifty per cent mark. It is this columnist's firm cou- Vviction that. unless a close sea- .son is declared in 1965 on all 'species of ducks. including teal, ring-necks or what have you. duck hunting in this province with respect to local birds Will 5 n C 8808 u- .u- Kent Street Cudmore DrycIeaning Ltd. . . . May YOUI New Year be ‘As Happy As You’ve Made WAMEST WISHES gem. FOR A HAPPY NEW YEAR. Charlottetown Gt. George St. Charlottetown A Special New Yea r’s Message TO I | 5 Our LoyOI Friendsond Patrons ‘ . JSTEWART MOTORS LIMITED Your Comet. Mercury. Meteor Doctor Churlot tetown Arnlast Propane Gas Great. George St. Dial 4-3500 ‘ l. N‘itt for the ‘ I . Let us all pray for this New Year to be peaceful and prosperous! Thank you for letting us serve you. MARITIME STATIONERS 154 Great George Street Dial 4-3627 SEETHIS SENIOR HOCKEY ' F O R U M NEW YEAR’S DAY - 2.00 PM. SUSSEX "BRAIS" 's. JOHNNY'S "FLYING HAWKS" Admission: Adults $1.00: Students 506 PLEASE NOTE TIME: 2:00 PM. —- JAN. lst Skating. previously advertised for this day mnoelled. Tickets available from members of the “Flyh‘ll Hawks” team and also at Forum office-