‘ P. Murphy and A. Morrison Kelly 1. and M. Helena 8. Ipaced the winners attack as Referees for the contest were lthey each swished the twinea Pius Fitmatrick and Joe Mc- 18 90' . ruse wAN'rs com BEIiRU'I‘ (AP) - Lebanon's [Press Association is demanding IHUNTER'S CORNER I ma. J. Hughes and earn“ that ewspaper reporters be - i o f l‘ . e i IR. MacDonald each contribut- The following are the stand.‘ allowed t ' I M n F h L a c k .cd 4 points to the Souris cause ings in the double round robin themselvzscagifigt‘“ at: . \- .‘i. a y Souris All-Stars captured the -aiid C. MacDonald accounted mumey' Two newspaper offices and one King’s County Senior Basket- lfor two points. STANDINGS "Porter's 081‘ came under bomb 3 ‘ball Championship by downing Scoring for the losers were. So is 0 6 fuse“ during I‘lbanon’s 9190- 27 in J. Mc uir '. E Doucette 1. Montague 1 g :2: “on campaign which ended last week. 0 o o o ithe Morell lioopsters 46- e o . lg I n g 1 hoop action at Souris last night. .1. McCaulay 7. A. Ryan 5, M. Iz‘lorell r l Hoop Action U m m Gadottetown. l'rl. May 15. 1984. Mm_w..._.,w.. .a. .... MW... may... . . 0 Northern Dancer. being gal- ‘ loped around Pimlico race track by exercise rider Ra- mogi Cerda. barely made the Canadien's Starry Centre Is Awarded MHar’r Trophy M0 i (CPI—Jean Beli- veau. the highest-scoring cea—i the in National Hockey League history and a dominant figure in Montreal Canadians' rise to first place in the 1963-64 season has been named the league‘s ‘ ' most valuable player. e Montreal captain won the! honor — the H a rt Trophy and cash goes with it- ; on the basis of an almost un- beatable collection of points he pi d up in voting after the first half of the season. i His over-all points total was; ' 102, and that gave him a com ‘ fortabie margin over seco place Bobby Hull of Chicago Black Hawks, who received 581 d‘i Memorial 3 DERBY WINNER iN I’REAKNESS entry deadline yesterday for Saturday's 88th running of the $150.000-added race. The Vic- f» . x. . e i scored 28 goals and had 56 as- l l l l ,‘V .« . torian clubhouse In the back- ground was built in 1870. (AP Wirephoto) and 26 in the second half and Gordie Howe, the unmatchablc Detroit Red Wing right winger who won the trophy last year. had 10-40—50 to finish third over-all. The trophy. award of which was announced by e NHu Thursday. goes to the player “adjudged to be most valuable to his team." ’ Belivcau in the season justl ended broke Nels Stewart’s rec- 1 ord for most goals by a centre; —324—-and now has sists in 1963 . With 448 assists. Beliveau haul 786 points in 686 regular-season| NHL games and leads NHL ints. . . . A The 32-year-old Bcliveau. who, players in points - per . game u now has played 11 seasons in] averagc. ' the NHL. picked up 82 points oil k ’ Jinan,“ ' Iii: ‘ With the trophy goes 51,000.. g a possible 90 in the first-hall ‘ and Belivcau will get an add“; i balloting among sports Wmml JEAN BELIVEAU lional $250 for leading the first-‘ e and sports broadcasters in the I ‘ half voting. Hull will get $500 as v six NHL cities. 43 [mints—ho i'eceivcd none ln,‘ ova-,3” Funnel-Mp and Hodge Goaltender Charlie Hod gcfi the first half—to Wind up fourth $250 {or leading the. secondmen- who was a key man in the ca- in the over-all balloting. nadiens' drch for iirsl place.‘ led the second-half voting: with Minnesota Bomb . Chicago HOWE PLACES THIRD Hull had 32 in the first liai. g] and one for a third. -1 poll. 1 I It is the second time Beliveau‘ Vhas won the trophy. I ; The point tabulation is made I on the basis of five for a first- . place choice. three for a second Cubs ‘ Harness Racing ls Cancelled I Harness racing scheduled for: The month of May is within a day of the fifteenth and cold. disagreeable weather has pre- dominated throughout. To date it has been an un- productive trouting month. The ‘ water is still ice cold and trout lack the fighting spirit although in good flesh for this time of year May 6th it was dull with a stiff sou’westeriy breeze blow- l ing and I figured that it could be a ' time for another fishing outing and I had lots of ‘time’ at my disposal. GONE FISHIN‘ I paddled down an alderbor- dered creek channel until I came to an open pool approau- mate twelve feet wide and twice as long. I figured it would be a good spot to get the cast limbered up before reaching the open water where I plan— ned to fish. I covered the barb of the Dark Montreal and Par- befle with a small section of worm and made a few limber- ing up casts before letting the offering sink well below the surface I figured that some action was brewing as there were signs of some underwater dis turbance. When I commenced to reel in I thought for a mom- ent my offering was snagged on a sunken log or alder stub until I put on extra pressure. I could tell by the feel that I had hooked into a hefty trout d no special difficulty in keeping it clear of the alder tangle on the pool’s border. . . just giving it the butt and put- ting pressure on the line kept it within a safe circle. TWO AT ONCE The fight was of short dura- tion. if it could be classed as a fight. and when I brought my quarry to the surface at boat- side_ I was surprised to note that I had two trout on. . . a pound and a quarter one on the I remember one year fathci coaxed me to try the rainbow s at Keefe's Laloe on Octobc‘ Sist. It was the last day of the Rainbow season and a bitter Nor-wester carried snow flui'-; lies on its breat . been out in below zero weather that wasn't near as chilly. I wore gloves and rowed with the reel booked in the seat. I had about forty feel of line out and the wind w a .s kicking up quite a chop. After twenty minutes 1 dc-i cided that the game wasn't worth the candle and was my the act of towing ashore. Any‘ kind of trout were forgotten and my only thought was to get ore and warm myself be- change course and head back. 20 MINUTE FIGHT I fought that trout for a fun twenty minutes before it be- gan to slow up. Several times I thought I had the battler beat and had. her . . . it was a bet . . almost within reach of the landing net but apparently her ladyship didn't like my looks and balked at reciprocating my overtures. Each rush was shorter and slower and eventually the sil- very beauty wia in the This trout fell short of the four pound mark by several ounc- es. At one stage of the battle I figured it would crowd the forty pound mark. This April trout fishing leaves me cold in more ways than one June is the month for this col- umnist. . . rout are at their peak. firm. palatable and full of ' ht. hgl o n Parpelle and a three quarter pounder on the Montreal. They lay on the surface as docile as a pair of pet lemon and I lifted them over boatside without the use of a net. June these same trout would i— =1 SMOKING WAS FATAL At one time, the smoking of tobacco was punishable by death in parts of Germany. Persia and Russia. have made the alder tangle in a matter of secon . When the water of a lake or dam gets too hot on the sur face in July or August it has the same slowing effect on trout unless they have the poundage to fight deep. I have hooked Rainbows in O‘Keefe's Lake in July and August that would make a few wild rushes until held in the warm strata of wa- ter near the surface. ?HE @AINT ' ‘ AKERS co. All Kinds of Point D. A. MacCANNELL 140 Great George St. Tel. 4-8850. Ch’town 1000 Colors ' |iiom a Mutant! Ltd.| SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9— SATURDAY UNTIL 12.30 Specials in all departments - - clothing for all the family at bargain prices - - many items also on sale in our Home Furnishing Department. on THE ISLAND It's MOORE & MCLEOD LTD ‘roun FAWRITE SHOPPING CENTRE. fl ' ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS: his fifth and Versalles his first.| the Charlottetown Driving Park? 3 (AP) — Slugging Minnesota Rollins also doubled across two: saturday has Pee“ Fanceued [0" Ithe second time in as many shelled Chicago for_12 runs .on runs in the seventh. k fiyeg homers "ti tigeuflrstlioyr Victims of the explosion werel W‘Ereras'k se t t. In k nm 5 in was in a 3-. v1 -i . 1 c repre ii a we uc ' Iory over the White Sox Thurs-l Chwag", Starter . GaTy Pew” Acorn said last night that too day. arid T9110“? Eddle “Sher. Pet‘ few qualification papers had re- Harmon Killebrew. Don Min-iers. now 3-2. was roughed for turned from the US. Trotting cher and Rich R ollins each three homers and seven runs ml Association. belted a three-run homer. while thre innin 5 Fisher ave u He said there were only )7 ‘ Bob Allison hit a two-run shot 9 g ' . g pl horses working out at the track . and Zoilo Versalles a solo blow. two homers and five runs in ""5, with papers. The first race N _ " Rollins also doubled in two frame. will probany be held May u. once Killebrew added another h ' th ’hth " h' . 2 $.12: horns; T H E A T R E ; the 10h 5th” lameness “:1... M 0 ii TA 6 ii E i " °"5 .E.‘.§ti..§°°.ii..°.°‘i£§? s m ? 3'9 "9V" , Mincher got his sixth. Rollins, nixi‘ngéoos 't 10;“; P-m- I ,_____.—_ a. : p.m. ' - Weakness Facts ‘ "ms Nurrv PROFESSOR" ‘ any “w”? home Are Released I srARiiiNG co-smnnmo L ' ‘ JERRY LEWIS and STELLA STEVENS COMING MONDAY - TUESDAY—9 PM. "KETTLES AT HOME" ‘ i I BALTIMORE lAPl — FaclsI I and figures on the 88th runningi : of the Preakness Saturday: I I I Blace—Pimlico. Distance—1 3-16 miles. With Marjorie Mlain Post Time—5:45 p.m. EDT. ‘ Entries—Five 3-year-old colts. and one gelding. ' Purse—$150.” added to non:- instion and starting fees: $100 each 147 nominated. $1,000 for eaQi entry and $1,000 for each sister. Valle—8176.700 if six start with $124.!» to the winner. .-| motto second. 815.0% to third.‘ ' mirth. ‘ (They just bought a 1964 Meteor.) Now you see them. Now you don’t. That’s the way it goee'witli the Johnstons. But after all. would you let a M '64 Meteor sit at home? This wagon. for instance, on anything-room. (In this wagon, you flip the second sent really make a gypsy out of you (you'll look great in down and you've got enough space to stow an 8-foot golden Drive it a while and you'll wonder ladder or, like the Johnstons. all you need for an ’ where Jolting bumps and tight corners went to. The old-fashioned picnic).Horne was never like this. Today, things inside it alone are enough to hire you out of your .see your Mercury denier. (Tomorrow, the world i) Mmcms-dmmmdwrud reenlqu IfncCenmodn‘ii Canada — STEWART MOTORS LTD. Greet George Street Olin-Hom- GRANADA LOUNGE Takes pride in presenting for your m». m... ._ (3.3.... "inning pleasure Miss Moide Rogerson. m. year's time—1:56 1-5. vocafisf' “‘3 Wm b. MISS “W's 3:2” “me — Nashua. 1955. firs, P. F m m mm "- fwan. Weinvinyoun hour this outstanding vocalist. Friday “I m evening. W at 10 and H pan. armchair and into a Meteor. This is where comfort takes over. You have plenty of leg-room. head MMMdemm‘. .___— MacDONALD’S SERVICE STATION South. LEI. -l paws...— 1.41 x-rrvn. - Brno—qua- ‘1‘!-