| & The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri. Feb. 16, 1962, a SPORTS | FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN The Race For Second Elizabeth MacDonald Rink Retains Silver 'D’ Ch'ship ; ‘ ‘ |, SUMMERSIDE — The Eliza-| the Canadian championships im | played yesterday were as fol- ,8:30 P.M. beth MacDonald-skipped rink Regina in March. lows: |. MacDonald 201 000 101 38 i I leading 6-5 9 A.M. | P, Burden 010 211 010 06 through, the first niné ends in 64 to ve competition with the Pauline up, but the MacDonald rink’s | ) ge 3 ER i : g ; t i trophy, to the skip, Elizabeth town 135 to ; MacDonald, and they will rep- the semi-final round. 7 P.M.: | Tesent Prince Edward Island in’ Linescores of the three games| Ice 1—Leon Johnston, 5. | entation ceremonies. Leafs |Wings Edge | 7 ve. F. Veosto, A. A. CURLING TROPHY WINNERS to Campbell bea 7K the race for the National | Fraser, E. F. MacDonekd, K: /Primroses Nip York 43 on Norm Ullman's OF the 15 remaining in the regular schedule for the A rink ski by Fred | ed in the Alberton curling { stone. Missing from the pic: SUMMARY lee 2-Stan Gay, A. Rober- Georgetown 5-4 Biock Hawks, aime of these ase awoy from home, They play | you ritk skipped Dy Sees | rink, Pictured above bee alae - Rangers 4-3 | ‘First period: 1. Montreal,|oon, W. Brebsut, 'B. Vanider.. ge iy in Montreal on three occasions, Toronto twice, Detroit twice | Gusting trophy in a ten rink | Millman; Ed Turner, mate;| ‘fe ' first stone Douglas | Provost 30 (Talbot) 10:46; 2. ee L. A. oa In the intermediate ““B” ser- and Boston and New York once each. Their half dozen home | competition recently complet- - and Douglas Ferguson, second | Pickard. DETROIT (AP) — Detroit} Méntresl, Marshell 16 (Bach| 5. W. Jones, B. Haneveld, E. | i. playoffs Montague Primroses contests find Detroit Red Wings and Boston Bruins playing a | Red Wings, after tossing away Strom, J. C. Tremblay) 11:43;| J- Poole. defeated the Georgetown Eagles pair éach and Maple Leafs and Canadiens in town for single a two-goal lead, edged New 3- Montreal, Moore 12 (Geof-| 9 P.M. : | $4. Goals for Montague were: encounters. That's hardly what you would call an easy road frion, Richard) 18:57; 4. Mont-| Ice 1—Dr. x Macintyre, B. | °-*- F the ; Mal re a steht i mh i fi 3 = : S13 L iE i 35 g i i 2 sf FH i ete if i abe zg * | ing minus their top star Angie | Carroll, who is out with a hand | injury, edged a determined | band of Cape Traverse Evin- rudes 42 last night at the Sports Arena in the first game | of a best of nine Island Senior | Hockey League finals. What the Evinrudes lacked in | finesse they made up for in | hustle but it just wasn't enough | to hold down the league's first place finishers, Close to 1,300 fans watched the Motormen a 10 lead im the first and then fall behind 3-1 in the sandwich session before scoring again in the final frame. OUTSTANDING PLAYER By far the outstanding and busiest player on the ice was the Cape Traverse goalie Thane ‘Whitey’ Mann. The crew - cut youngster who was so brilliant against Old Spain Penguins, | played his best game of the front of 36 shots, many of them HUNTERS’ CORNER Columnist Sees Pesticides Causing Plenty Of Grief | se. sis mms out of their sails. The or Royals Cop Series Opene ‘Defeating Evinrudes 4-2 Sandy's Royals, despite be- | from point-blank range. | Whitlock, with a quick stab of One of the most sensational _ his stick, stole the puck off ; stops came in the second per- | John Noonan right in front of jod when Alfie Flanagan of the the Cape Traverse net and Royals came hurtling in on a zeroed in on a surprised Mann. breakaway, Mann came out of Noonan had been trying to take his crease at the last te the puck out of his territory at to rob Flanagan of the marker. the time. Frankie Roper at the othe Alger Cutcliffe, who scoted end of the freeze had-a com- both goals for the losers, count- paratively easy night of it, be- ed his first one with less than ing called on to make only 16 three minutes remaining in the stops, opening period. The goal came The Cape Traverse lacked on a backhander from just in- some of the go-go power they _ side the Royals’ blue line and displayed against the Penguins, whistled into the upper right especially when they had hand corner of the opposing mean advantage. Although they cage. Royals counted the equalizer occasions they were unable to during a scramble in front of ‘the Evinrude net at the 9.45 a mark of the sandwich session. comeback drive in the third Defenceman Eutace Reeves period following Alger Cut- | had let a shot go at Mann and cliffe’e second goal of the night the blond - thatched cager to make the score read 3-2, knocked to the ice. Mann, along when Royals playing .coach | with a couple of his players Buck Whitlock took the wind dropped to muffle the puck but it appeared as if one of the players might have pushed it over the line as he was trying to cover up. .Alfie Flanagan put the Roy- ” < flip shot caught the far corner of the Evinrude net at the 73.20 mark and then Jim MacLeod little more than a minute later als in front for good when his | third-period goal Thursday night and pulled into a fourth-place tie with Rangers in the Na- tional Hockey League stand- ings. The Wings forged a 3-1 lead on their rivals but then ~.al- lowed New ‘York to tie it within a three-minute span. A crowd of 10,294 turned out for the game. : SUMMARY First period: 1. New York, Wilson 5 (Schinkel, Balon) 6:19; 2. Detroit, Delvecchio 21 (God- frey, Laforge) 13:07. Penalties —none. Second period: 3. Detroit, Jef- frey 2 (Howe, MacDonald) 16:10 4. Detroit, Gadsby (Howe, Del- vecchio) 17:58; 5. New York, Prentice 18 (Ingarfield, Henry) 19:35. Penalties—Goegan 11:58, Spencer 15:05, Gadsby 19:23. Third period: 6. New York, Gendron 11 (Hebenton) 2:29; 7. | Detroit, Ullman 22 (Howe, Del- vecchio) 6:24. Penalties — Goe- gan 6:16, Godfrey 15:50. Saves: Worsley 12 12 10—34 Bassen 8 10 10—28 Habs Couche 4 Bruins 9-1 MONTREAL (CP) — Mont- real Canadiens struck for five goals in the first period, added thtee more in the second: and another in the third on a pen- alty shot by rookie Bobby Rous- real, Backstrom 24 (Hicke, Mar- shall) 19:10; 5. Montreal, Hicke 13 (Marshall, Backstrom) 19:50, Penalties—Westfall 17:13, Font- intato 20:00. Second period: 6. Montreal, | Williams) 10:30; 9. Montreal, | Rousseau 16 (Talbot, Johnson) :43; 7. Montreal, Moore 13 (J. C. Tremblay, Rousseau) 3:42; 8. Boston, Westfall 2 (Mohns, Richard 18 (Moore, Provost) 14:16. Penalties — Talbot 1:30, Leach 18:20. Third period: 10. Montreal, Rousseau 17 (penalty shot) | 13:17. Penalties — Stapleton (misconduct), Fontinato 11:40, Saves Gamble 1618 8—42 Plante ' 10 11—33) | Eldon Batchilder with four | Saturday morning at the Souris seau to smother lowly Boston | rink. G’‘town Bantams Whip Souris 7-1 The Georgetown Bantams de- | feated Souris Bantams 7-1 ia the | neae vtch was gives the Georgetown rink on Tuesday night in the first game of a two Kings County. In Tuesday's game the goal getters were for Georgetown: goals, Newman McCollough with two and Hal MacLean with a single. The lone goal for Souris was scored by B. Lapierre. The two teams will meet again on j | having five of his ten shots in p. Taylor | the sean . game home and home series | ring against four for L. Dowling with the winner meeting the win- mers of the Montague and Mur- | tween Fred Hooper and Perc ray Harbour Bantam series for | Landrigan, had to be broken b the Bantam championship of | S| ee Retr . B. Fer-,| M. Poole, J. Sullivan, D. Clory, ne A. Nich- |B. Beck and B. Ballum one olson, B. Bayond, D. Herring. each; for Georgetown: 4H, McG: | Kennedy, K. G. and A. MacPhee each one goal. Warner vs. P. Sinclaig, K. The game was fast and close | MacKenzie, E. Duvar, R. An-| with both teams showing geod near. | form. Mutch, MacLean Lead At Shoot Al Mutch and Wendell Mac- CLASS ONE Lean, firing in class one of the! Al Mutch weekly competitions conducted) W. MacLean by the Charlottetown Civilian| Ken Jay Rifle Club, turned in scores of H.T. Vesey 98 of a possible 100 at the RCMP! D. Durber ranges. B. Breedon In the final judging of their} CLASS TWO . F. Hooper nod for top spot, by virtue of p.J. Landrigan MacLean. E. MacLean In class two a 95 point tie be-' L. MacDonald CLASS THREE the “‘x”’ count, and Hooper won B. Hillstrom out over his opponent, with 4-x’s E. Coles against 3-x’s. K. Dowling A young lady sharpshooter, | CLASS FOUR Edna Kelly, defeated her three! N. Stevenson - SSssiss 2228 SSSSaer B22282 competitors, scoring 92 against] G. Hogg 91 for her closest rival. With a} R. O'Rourke score of 90, N. Stevenson with a} W. Cullen two point margin over the sec- W. Dowling ond place marksman, was de-| R. Ford clared the winner. | D. MacDonald , G. | Stevens, R. Gallant, C. Gallant ., made that within a quarter cen-| The nicest goal of the night : / IN mentioning the British Consols play in our column earl- A few days ago T received a ill be off the stick of Aleer Cut Bruins 9-1 before -13,834 fans | all on the phone from a person) tury...25 years... there w came s Alg Thursd ight. . a a Mos whe wate moc cooperative wih us during the week, © who questioned a report that s| no fish or marine life of any} life in the third period. ‘The Tmwelay mai". oo a. | agen SCORES | Island Senior Hockey League Finals ae those are Gordon Bennett secretary-treas- | skunk was seen waddling about| kind in the Great Lakes and St. shifty forward picked up ~ place Habe lu ccints ip front. of urer of the P.E.I. Curling Association and Gordon Stewart, | the city while the thermometer, Lawrence River waterway unless ioe = ~ abe - o NSSHL president of the Charlottetown Club, registered well below zero. He| steps are taken or means found) R _ right, shifting three . | New Glasgow 4 Moncton 8 .... TONIG Our congratulations go out to Wally Rodd, chairman of the | told me he alwayasthought that| to prevent it: Birds and, ani- meeuhe on aos i wen wad then Beavers, Lot 13 | New Glasgow leads best of HT FRIDAY provincial times commie for —— job, me very | skunks hibernated all winter. I) man 0 omens by the in-) iting go with a waist high Pl 5 5 D seven meres special thanks te Andy Bagnall assistants Tanton — have seen the tracks of 014d) creased use of poisonous sprays, that caught the far corner o and Wellner Jr., for much needed assistance during the | make skunks on February mor-| top killers, weed killers, bug and -~ man ay raw cy Goce Bay &. tadece 3 CIVIC STADIUM an ta . | mings when the thermometer | insect killers, etc, . | Referees Jack ‘Spy’ Ready sUMMERSIDE — The~ Sum.| @!8¢e Bay takes series. Wwe must not forget our good ae vine aereee had registered 8, degrees below| 1 remember as a boy going to. and Don Whelan called a total merside Beavers and the Lot 13 Summerside —— ee draw which made things so zero the night before. As a our garden for fresh vegetables) < Oe a | a ean hockey team fought to a 5- all S‘side Midgets ’ | em S . tag : Riwon' posome to work with al tess generico, __| Writer, wth noctie sucak.| for nner and scing thirty or hem ane, “hgh entened amt Civic Stadium Wednes * eis bi i i i ter- | ° is the time of waddling skunk| a small, slaty grey bird with) to break out in ene mua “S ‘oa glad ‘Notch Victory ; . from drift to drift) two long white feathers down, Periods but icials ; 3 eh: | | ‘ layers before anything Summary: First Period: 1,| ra : Satu rda Mi nor through the winter woods. Driv-| either side of their tail. ae pote, Sar aneer Only one Lot 13 — C. Morrison (L. Stong- | oe anes 46 The amo by a force behind their reck-| only Juncoes I see now, and it is major was called. this going to man) 2. Beavers — L. Poirier | int mersi idget Stars — » but strong as the moon-| @ rare occurrence, are in some Raiph ‘Farmer’ Josey when he (E. Chafe): second period: 3.| powered the Kensington Mid- : ROYALS vs. EVINRUDES it shatters in the silver| secluded swamp or woodlot. I = “| gets 18-1 in the first game of | that sha P waded into Ev White in the Lot 13 — E. Gorrill (M. Camer-| 8° "oie series played yer | ; woods, the love-lit males brave| remember watching dawns ing frames 4 é Hocke Schedule the nights of February. Orion| break in the thirties while the) First’ Period:—Evinrudes—A. "'p chute S Lat 8 -E, Gomi, tetday at Kensington. | glitters high in the southern sky) air throbbed with the massed) Cutcliffe’(A. Walsh) 17.22. Pen- (p Birch): Third Period: 6.| The second game in the Mid- ee as the high-plumed, Diack and) singing of myriads of song alties:—Gallant 7.13; Josey 13- [ot 13 — p. Birch 7. Beavers—| get playdowns is scheduled . for Here ts Charlottetown's Minor, 12:00-12:30 — Paperweights — | white animals plough from den) birds. I felt as if I was sitting in 26; Howatt 16.48; Reeves 18.16; p schurman 8. Beavers — P.| Civic Stadium this Saturday. to den errand...” | a Cathedral. It has been a weak/ Sark 18.16; Josey (minor, ma-_snurman-9—Lot 13 = D- Birch | a lot from) chorus this past few years and| jor) 19.55. sos — Nemes — | tind, ee See Se a ney panel E Boge oe 0 owl lays her| @f as a y poison wu . ves (A. Flanagan) 9.45; Preeti = cnn a om early in February = the| on potato tops was a mixture of| 3. Royals—A. Flanagan (B Wh- CURLING DRAW QCHS Beavers ve. BHS Bears. | young break the shell around) Paris Green and flour to kill the| ttlock) 13.20, 4. Royals, Jim Mac 5:00-5:30 — Gold C # ond Saucer 10. Beavers — P. Schurman. : 8:00-8:30 — Peewees — 00-8: Paperweights —| mid March, After April Ist the| Potato bug... Colorado Beetle to| Leod (Cruwys, Noonan) 14.56. tne following is the curling Px Swallows vs, Sherwood | pss Tigers vs. Sherwood Bull- | appetites of the fledgling young| give its real name. Today spray-| Penalties—A. “ter 7.05; B. draw for rFiday at the Char- ue Oricles fe phn "| Require a.lot of food: to satisty| €rs are in the potato fields) Ciumntt 8%" Noonan 19.33; Wttetown club: | 8:30-0:00 — ws BES | "5 :50.6-05 -- Bonterra — Phate, | thelr . At this season of| throughout the season, This win.| Cubctile DMIT. eee nde, 045 P.M.—(Legion) Owls vs. PSS Ps etc. Bombers vs. winners the year required by the| ter 1 made inquiries as to what) | (ine (Clough) Hayy . Ice. 1—Open, , 9:00-9:30 — Peewees — PSS Denvere Beas. | fledglings is at its peak. Ducks| happened the trout in th- Tud-| B. Whit! on lnrascice, ce 2G. Stewart vs. Dr. F W C AUDITORIUM a Hornets ve. Sp Pk 6:06-6:40 — Bantams —/ and geese crowd our marshes; 90" Dam, Alexandra, lac um- ae eanalties "tes Prowse. : ohwe ve 9:30-10:00 — ata — | QCHS Panthers vs. BHS Tigers. and a myriad, of song birds and mer... they just seemed to dis-|— S21: A Walsh 712: Jo. Ice 3—D. O'Rourke vs. D. ° QSS Otters ve. Parkdale Ter | "¢.4.7:15 — Bantams — Sher-| other feathered life are moving| appear overnight. I was told) SO do) ” Saunders. as riers. - wood Battlers vs. QCHS Crows. | northward and immature rab-| that a farmer was filling his aay. Ice 4—A. Love vs. M. Bell. Monda Feb 19th-8 m . ecto toca —- Pena 7:15-8:60 — Bantams — BHS bits may be had for the taking.| SPraywart at the dam and acan| | Ice S5—L. Wellner vs. H. | y; ° p.m. : WKS Colts ve. QSS Wrens vs. BHS Hawks. |The hunger of young owls s| of poison fell off the cart into Fvinrydes Royals Peters. ; * In P 10:30-11:00 — Paperweights ae 8:50-0:25 — Bantams — Pkdle never satisfied and if they were the water.. exit trout pronto. : ' f, 8:30 P.M.—(Seagram)— ' erson s QSS Loons vs. QSS Salpes. | ou Biuewings vs. QCHS Gulls, born in June when leafy foilage| THINK IT OVER In Action Tonight (Spares needed). Featuring 11:00-11:30 — Paperweights =| 9:49.10:15 — Bantams — BHS provides a screen for our fea-| In closing I am going to give] Ice 1—Open. THE GOLD CUP QSS Larks ve. Sherwood Eagles vs. BHS Tigers (exhib). thered life and lush grasses) readings of + se erage some} SUMMERSIDE — It's a long at os ne: - 19 1H BLETONIAN ve ais aries. ms te =. | 10:15-10:50 — Midgets — Vics and flowers provide cover for| thing to think about. PESTICI-| tine since the Warning. “come. ’ vs » 60-6 AM ‘ ' L613) — Papen. | We. Arrows, field mice, ete, only the strong- DES... THE GREATEST) cotty'and avoid the rach” hea Swart. F. Cox, L. Blakeney, & SAUCER GIRLS §/ ° W:80-11:3 — Midgets — | est of the young would survive.| THREAT “The current wide-| to be given regarding a hockey“; A714. | ae satal é Darts vs. Royals. | Do I hear readers exclaim: | spread and ever-expanding pes-| match at Civic Stadium in Sum- an . ae - Zakem, * 1960-61 LITTLE BROWN JUG : Whe Cae SMe (OR God.) Seite oreteam pees he sree) srerside, Wat it looks os if to-| Sone, sects -W-Mene. . , est animal life in) night's the night. | tng D. Jardine, D. Crosby 7 Teka de _— The Cape Traverse Evinrudes, jie 4p, -Wonnacott, D. in full color ‘i oresta i cinderella team of a decade, George, c. Flemming, W. Carr | ~~ | 1 -* ee “ ~ have disposed of the Old Spain! ys 4. MacDonald, C. Campbell, erson ' 11,001:35 — Ball Boyles, Mike tn other words mere man. by ehesting. worse | ‘olla, | Pengeins % we games. and Dr. Higgins, J. Brooks. eapeninan. tet Gon oe eee coe nee THE LOVAT ies Pasa |e en S| ee, Se See, wette than| task, that of winning over the Ice 5—Open. the mid-winter blues SCOTS + PIPE BAND * You'll see the Island’sown — - Joe O’Brien win the 1960 Hambletonian - * In Person with Blaze Hanover “BOWSER’” GALLANT ; and “DIDI” WYNNE i 4 I ngte i ‘ ‘4 li i da i ! i i i i ' rf 2 < @o = fig7it 8s g i i i i l t i i i PFErs ig st Ess 2 ii #5 : z 1 z gauh | Fe al Fs o5bg 3 4 at th to Silver collection at the door to prizes for bands turvive| be the main object of life for enna of Our| many men and the manner of has been its acquiring is not given a oe Ann the race. B Solicitor But money if Dudds; | longer