U (I‘DDJ' . a-uw.‘ -—-—ww u- v v ' Morissei’relsOutstanding As Hawks Nip Windsor WINDSOR. Ont. (CPi—Paced by the goaltending of Jean Guy Morissette. a lively band of Moncton awks drew first blood in the Eastern Canadian Allan Cup finals here Sunday by upsetting Windsor Bulldogs 3-2 in overtime. E Doug Howatt shared hero honors with Morissette by steal~ ing the puck from Windsor defenceman Jacques Begin late in overtime with his team a man short and scoring the winning goal. Oscar Gaudet scored his 79th1 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Iprll 8. 1988. 11 and 80th goals of the season for the other Moncton scores while Jack Costello and Bill Mitchell clicked for the Ontario l-ldckey Association Senior A champion Windsor shots in an unbelieva-i ble performance. At least half of them were considered dan- gerous attempts to score by the powerful Bulldog crew and the Bulldogs. little five-foot, five-inch Caus- But the story of the game was} apscal, Quef. native had fans Morissette w h o stopped 56‘“ shaking their heads in disbelief. ° ! JFK To Help Big Leagues Open 1 Season Today lit: i.:"d.:::'3rr.i:’:.:°:: 3131! By JACK HAND President Kennedy. a stylish righthander with an easy rock- ing chair delivery. will help the big league baseball clubs open se y by throwing out the first ball at Washington. Cincinnati also will jump the un with its traditional opener at Crosley Field. Nine more games will be played Tuesday to complete the first wave of baseball openers. If the weather man is kind. about 350.000 fans are expected to turn out for the two-day 11-. game schedule. 1 As usual. New Yoi-k Yankees are favored to cake walk to an- other American League pen- nant. In fact, the latest Las Ve- gas odds are a discouraging 1-3 . . lforced overtime with less than inant support from the baseball Baltimores Steve Barber after. . t writers who also select a Yan-lKennedy has finished his chone.E three mmmes to go mm “mm kee-Dcdger World Series. St.; Louis and Pittsburgh also re-l ceive consideration in somel quarters and even the Phillies. a strong-finishing seventh last year. are regarded as long shot. possibilities. l Once again New York Mets| are expected to bring up thel rear in the National League and Washington in the American. However. the Mets had a final string training season. i Birdie Tebbetts at Cleveland.I Eddie Lopat at Kansas City.; Johnny Pesky at Boston. Bobby; Bragan at Milwaukee and Bob. Kennedy. head coach. with Chi-. cago Cubs are the new boss-5 men. For the first time since. quote, .1960. there are no new ubs‘ DODGERS FAVORED icreatcd by expansion. In the National League LosIMANY NEW FACES . Angeles Dodgers are favored by Washington fans will get a a slight margin with San Flam host of new faces with Chuck l By comparison. Wayne Rut- ledge made only 18 saves at th other end of the rink. OPENS SCORING . A l Costello tipped Begin's longl shot home early in the second.“ lMoncton in rout. itche About 47.000 fans are due. gigebzzm Mlcanet In the Den- The Orioles also have 'new-l ' . comers at lml’Om‘m 905mm“ tnrgflgigin glyegtlrgentaltllgtelgll Winter trades brought shortstop; the plied Momswe with 12 Luis Aparicio, right fielder Al shot; The“, while defenceman isnmgtltlhgnt: ctatcher Dick Brown Georges Roy serving a booking Ci . S ta} mg lllle-UP. . penalty, Howatt intercepted Be- ] ncgnnat counts on 30,000 i gin's pass from behind his ownl pus 0 watch the .Reds open net and fired it home beforel against Pittsburgh Pirates. Jim anyone could make a move. l OTooIe, a talented southpaw The second game will bef with a fine spring record will played here tonight and the: In addition to the known reputation of Henderson and Cudmorc for qudity men's wear . . . season of the year . . . our reputation stands for tailoring . . . depth of choice . . . o: well as the distinctive styling so popular with fashion-conscious men. The differences in our style. qualify and tailoring have made fter a scoreless first periodic” WHO" 0 - - WNflng “I'M WI“ add f. . for any i-Eil’ $341 P'Ich for the Reds against Earl third Wednesday night. i Francis, another pitcher with an Harris Rink Takes Spiel SUlllMERSIDE ‘ The Jim .Harris rink of Summerside won the Island mixed curling bon- excellent Florida record The Reds will have rookie Tommy Harper in centre field, and poSsibly Pete Rose at sec- ond base. Rose moved up to the varsity over the weekend after sparkling in Florida. Howev r. Don Blasingame is the holdover at second base. \ Pittsburgh will show a new in- cisco. the defending champions, also well liked. (fincinnati draws strong pen-‘ Hinton in right field the only; repeater from the starting cast of 1962. Don Rudolph will face Frank Mahovlich Coming To A group of Charlottetmvn citizens have more than a cas- ual interest in how Frank Mia- hovlich of lihe Toronto Maple I Leafs is going to make out in " this year‘s Stanley Cup final. The ‘Big M’. something of a disappointment in the semi-final “V areal Cana- one assist out of a total of 14 goals scored by the Leafs in the five game. is ‘ g to Charlottetown on Tuesday, May 7. to diline the first Spurio- mea’s Dinner sponsored by the St. Dunstan’s University Ath- letic Booster Club. at the Chair- lottetiown Hotel. Mahovlich, one of the super- istars of modern professional hockey. was the leading scorer and paintgetter for the Leafs this season with 36 goals and 37 assists for 73 points. as the 15 years. But series with Canadiens, Frank never did get untracked as Dave Kenn paced with tiliiee goals and slsts. backed up by Bob Pul- ford’s two goals and two as- EXPLOSIVE TYPE Frau: Mahovlich. 25 years old and with 200 pounds pack- ed on a six-oat frame, is the explosive type of player who canbringtihefanstothe‘ feet. No other player in the NHL breaks so excitingly. and he has the ability to spot an op~ poutunilty and strike with dead:- ly oocmacy. only field with only Bill Mazeroskl. the second baseman. remaining from the 1962 quarter. Rookie :spiel at the Summerslde Curling ‘Club during the past two week- ‘ends, and the Mapco trophy that Bob Bailey at third. Dick Scho- l goes annually with the champion- field at short and Donn Clen-iShlp- Th? Hams rink beat thel denon at ‘first are the replace- 1 Go” S’Plcer tourmme 1“ ' thim lteen ender Saturday night by the l 3 3 C13,... FRANK MAHOVLICH back on before making his first appearance in Prince Edward Island. Tickets for the sm-aplate dinner are now on sale at three Charlottetown d rug stores: Stead's Pharmacy, Hughes Drug, and the Medical Phar- Out of town requests may be mailed to Frank Mac~ id, Robinson‘s Supplies Ltd.. Charlottetown. or to Ed Hilton. St. Dunstan’s Univer- . double win n e r on the lO-dash harness racing card staged on| Saturday. _ Spencer, Jollity Bars. Keen a. Becky’s Prince. Dave Grattan.. the q'uinella $13.90 on Kinney iscore of 106. ‘ The Mapco tirophy was pre-l sented in the Harris rink by; Reagh 'I‘inney on behalf of Mari- 1 time Asphalt products Com-- pany. L Kinney Forbes Double Winner HALIFAX (CP) —— Kinney Forbes. owned by the Tartan Stable of Halifax. was the only Each individuali lmember of the rink received a: .prize. also presented by M12. jTinney. The Bob Hopper rink‘ .were. the consolation winners.‘ ' efeating the George MacPher- .son rink in a squeaker whichl ;was in doubt till the last rockfi l'I'he final score was 5 _ Ronnie MacDonald presented the consolation winners and run-1 nersuup with individual prizes on l behalf of the club. Halifax's North Commons track Other race winners were L.C. Buddy Lybrook, Merryw o o d . 39°10? and WayCham - Personnel of lrlnks -— Mapco Fastest time for the three pm,th Mme” __ Jim Harris. elghts of a mile, rack was 50:2.skip;‘N01-ma Maegan“. mate; seconds by Jollity Bars in th emalph MacFarlane' second Sleh T899. lstone; Norma Bowness. lead. The daily double paid $51.00 on \ Runners-” __ Gard Spicer, Keena and Bllddy Lybl‘OOk. thelskip; Ann Spicerr. mate; B. Far- exactor $37.80 on Merrywoodtqwhar. second stone; E_ parqu. Hector and Hi Lo's Kindy a n (I har, lead, l Consolation winners -— Bob Forbes and Jarettown Ann. lHopper, skip: Fran Seel, mate; Highest single pay was $12.70 lG. Seel. second stone: Ann King. on Buddy LybI‘OOR in the third. lead: runners-up —l George Mac- L,C. Spencer returned 911.30 IniP‘herson, skip: Bernice Cook. the lat and Dave Grafton $8.00 ‘ mate; George Mitchell. second in the eight. lstone; Glen Mitchell. lead. Use your Charge Account or Open One r— MORTGAGE FUNDS AVAILABLE Residential, CommerCIaI and Industrial. Current Rates ROYAL TRUST One Toronto hockey writer says Mahovlich can look so lazy that ‘lris laziness takes on a kind of freedom. Yet within seconds he explodes into the most exciting player in the game." Frank shrugs off the ‘laziness’ mange and explains It as positional hockey. Mahovlich. an awesome figure as he barrels down left wing in full flight. has miner's hands. fullbaok‘s legs, dancer’s blips. atevedore’s shoulders. and a sleepy. Slavic face. last year. he is the elded son of an mini-grant goldminelr from the hank-oak country in North- em Ontario. 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