SiO Ra Oe’ x . ie - > Hawks Topp le Canadiens To Narrow Montreal Lead CHICAGO (CP)—A’ pair ot} : = The Gnardan, Chariotietown, Pot, Apr. 25, 1966: —o . “SPORTS FRONT Bunny. Ahearne. Is Interested. » ‘By JIM CUELEN’ John Francis ‘Bunny’ Ahearne, President of the: International Hockey Federation has written to Clarence Campbell, president of the National Hockey League, to confirm his interest in the commercial exploitation o&¢NHL game films on European tele- vision. This gesture on the part of Mr. Ahearne is equivalent of Fidel Castro applying to the United States for citizenship papers. The NHL will likely be polite in refusing to deal with Ahearne, but will probably point out he has shown little co-operation to them over the years and has made many critical remarks on Canadian hockey and the NHL in particular Among the most recent ex- amples of Ahearne’s work the international rumpus concerning six NHL stars operating. a hockey = school in Innsbruck. Larry Regan received permission from the Austria Ice Hockey Federa- ® tion to install Terry Sawchuk, Gordie | Howe, Tim Horton, Ron Stewart, chio in Innsbryck once -their Stanley Cup commitments were over. Later after listening fo Ahearne, the Austrian IHF recanted and barred backed this up by barring NHL play- ers from every amateur controlled rink in Europe. Consolation for Aus- tria came swiftly in the award of the 1967’ world hockey tournament. Now Mr. Ahearne has come back and claimed that he hasn't ~ J. F. AHEARNE got any authority to help Larry Regan even if he so desired. He claims: “the law that affects Regan’s plan was adopted by a vote of the International Jce Hockey Federation.” John Francis Ahearne, a balding, blystering Irishman, now in his early sixties, first rowed publicly with Canada in Oslo in 1952, when an angry hockey delegate from this country swung a punch at him in‘a hotel lobby. Ahearne-is-reported_to have kicked him in the stomach. Relations -since then have continued to be cold and strained, f~ i . In European amateur hockey, he rules like a Czar, exerting remarkable control over the Russians zechs. His admirers say he has done a fantastic job of promoting the game of hockey aS continent, where he is regarded as a first class, me dictatorial, administrator. One curious aspect about Ahearne’s negotiations with the NHL is that/ although hockey would be boosted before an audi- ence of many millions, the gap between the NHL professionals and Europe's leading amateur players would also be high-lighted: This was a risk, presumably, Ahearne was willing to take; for the long term good of the game. Tid Bits From Here And There Warren Spahn, who will celebrate his 44th birthday today, posted his first victory as a New. York Met in a 3-2 triumph over Los Angeles Dodgers Tuesday night--Spahn-— gaining his 357th eareer victory, also reached the 2,500-strikeout plateau. Marcell-Pronovost-and—Alex—Delvec-—. Regan and this select six. Ahearne * | sota' Twins first baseman, | stretches for ball to get the | out on Yankee third baseman ~ STRETCHING THE POINT Harmon Killebrew, Minse- Clets“Boyer (6) in second is- Rich Rollins to start eter. ning yesterday at Yankee Sta- dium in New York. Boyer had grounded to third baseman z ‘Twins won, 8-2. (AP Wirephoto) By -WILLIAM NEVILLE MONTREAL (CP) — Jacques ‘the latest standings: Joseph Durelle, father of Canadian Welterweight boxing champion Joey Durelle of Trois Rivieres, Quebec, died in hos- pital in Chatham, New Brunswick following a heart seizure. He was 78. Joey Durelle arrived in Chatham Wednesday by plane from Quebec to attend the funeral Friday at Baie Ste. Anne, N-B- National Hockey League headquarters may be moved from > Montreal to New York if a proposal: by Stafford Smythe, presi- dent of Toronto Maple Leafs, is approved by the NHL board of governors. Smythe ‘said in an interview that “‘since 20 of 26 pro- fessional teams in hockey come from the United States, I think the headquarters of the world’s largest hockey organization should be in the world’s largest city—New York City. Golfer Ken Venturi said Wednesday he will be out of action at least five weeks while taking medication for treatment!.of a circulatory condition. Venturi, who has complained of*nitmbness — in his hands, said Mayo Clinic doctors told him it is caused by constriction of the small arteries in his hands. Doctors said no evidence of arterial. disease was found elsewhere. The opening day of the trout |vote over the good and indiffer- jent combined. On the whole | trout were in an un-cooperative |mood. Some good catches were | made at Morell a day or, two jafter the opening morning. “The Twins Wallop New York 8-2 Tony Oliva smashed two home runs and Zoila Versailles drove in three runs with a bases- loaded single and inside-the-park homer in support of Jim Kaat’s five-hit pitching, paving the way for an 82 rout by Minnesota Twins over New. York Yankees Thursday. It was the Anavini league- leading Twins’ fourth ight and fifth triumph in six’ games. Three of the victories have been over the Yankees who now have lost three in a row. In another afternoon game Chicago Cubs edged Cincinnati Reds 3-2. Billy Williams’ eighth- | inning single drove in Glen Beckert with the run that gave the Cubs the victory over Cin- cinnati and .kridcked the Reds out of first placé'“: the National League. Kaat, a six - foot pound southpaw, struck out five, | walked one and hit a batter as ZOILO VERSALLES he recorded his second triumph five runs in the last three in- without a defeat. His team- | nings. mates backed him up with a 12-| Beckert, who also scored the hit attack against four Yankee |Cubs’ first run, opened the hurlers. eighth with an infield single = relief pitcher Billy McCool. af- a Dew ine tae go iC Roberto Pena had sacrificed Yy oe tae saiea = out post ee to second, in eae the second inning. He was wiiales — ee ee ee ane ale an agony! mi Beckert set the Cubs in mo- geo . a ae for | to" with a first-pitch single to singles » oi OF | centre. three runs. Hal Reniff and Pe- dro Ramos were hammered for | PROBABLE - PITCHERS } Island Tourney By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Probable pitchers for today’s Nearing Finish ., Major league baseball games, The Island Snooker tourna-. won-lost records in parenthesis: ment being played jointly at the National League B and M pool hall in Summer-| Milwaukee Cloninger (1-1) at side and Charlottetown’s Mr. | Chicago, Buhl (1-0) Cue is coming into the closing/| Pittsburgh, Veale (10) stages. . Houston, Bruce (1-1) (N) It is a double knock-out tour-; St. Louis, Gibson (1-0) at Cin | nament and the following afe | cinnati, Tsitiouris (1-0) (N). | Philadelphia Belinsky (0-1) at 40 Los Angeles Podres (0-0) (N). Jack Brown, Ch’town Keith Champion, S’Side 30 New York, Jackson (0-2) at Allison Tulle, Ch’town 30 San Francisco, Perry (1-1) (N). Bill Acorn 6Sr., Ch’town 41 American League John Kane, Ch’town 31 Los Angeles, Chance (00) at _3-1| New York Bouton (1-0). ‘31| Boston, Lonborg (0-0) at Bal-' 3-1/| timore, Roberts (0-0), (N). Earl Murphy, Ch’town — Vern ..Wedgé;” S’Side Harry Poulton, Ch’town Dave Hyndman, Ch’town 21, Chicago, Pizarro (00) at Hal Ladner, Ch’town 21| Washington, Richert (1-0), (N). ‘Bob Walton, Ch’town ~%1,\ Kansas City, Pena (0-1» st. 2-1 Cleveland. Donovan (0-1) (N). 1-1| Minnesota, Grant (00). at De- 1-1 troit, Wickersham (1-0) (N). Jeff Rogers, Ch’town - Claire Harding, Ch’town Buz Badin, S’Side. RCAF - so { best fishing was well wip toward HUNTERS’ CORNER BestCatches: In First Day's Action Colorful Hockey Veteran Feels Change Is Required. ? «They should make the crease ‘larger and legislate strongly more of a beating every season ee I remember the first . opening morning for trout’ after I return- ed from overseas. The date was 1920. I was working in Charlot- tetown at the time and came out on the Murray Harbour train on the night of March 3lst. The place I had selected for my first morning's -_ outing was a spruce bordered beaver dam about: a mile and a half from home. I had to catch the train | sae a eee MESS +iSS Penal- Bunny Ahearne States Opinion for Grenoble, France, and could | [stan eazle fo Sn Otc Yeni First Peried — No was brilliant on hard by Penalties—Rousseau 7:23, Niet empty net, gave Chicago Black |Mohns, Pierre Pilote and Hull. 7:51, Ravlich 8:56, Provost 18:08. Hawks a 3-1 triumph over Mont-| The Hawks — were up to full Second Peried—i. Montreal, real Canadiens in the third) strength with the return of Ferguson 3 (J: C. Tremblay, game of the best-of-seven Sfan- | 7 | Wharram and Pilote, who also Backstrom) 4:16; 2. Chicago, ley Cup final series before a| missed the first two games with Esposito 3 (Maki, Pilote) 5:03. crowd of almost 20,000 here a shoulder separation. Penalties — MacNeil, Beliveau | Thursday night. i Chicago was sharp from the 11:46, Backsfrom 17:02, Pilote The loss left the Canadiens | opening face-off. and continued | 17-53. |with a 2-1 edge going into \day’s fourth game here. Ken Wharram and Chico counted the third-period for the Hawks while Phil | sit scored the -other. Maki's goal | |was into an empty net in the |final minute with Montreal | | goalie Gump Worsley on the bench for an extra attacker. | | | } | | | | j } —— ° By ROD CURRIE In the France, N. 1 LONDON (CP) — John F. [Betton ee admitted . (Bunny) “Ahearné, président of | those East Germans giver tra- the International Ice Hockey | vel ssion by the allied Federation, says he's willing to|travel bureau in West Berlin. |bet the International Olympic! This of fice usually . grants Committee will grant “full rec-|visas to individual’ athletes— ton to. East Germany this | i such as: the two East German year. |skaters who competed in the Such a turn of events could | tworld " championships in the bring havoc to plans for the) | United States - this _ - -- but 1968 Winter _ Olympics scheduled act to. to teams. a conceivably force the IOC to! | UPSET BID find-a-new site for the games. This. practice was one Abearne, who attended last factors upsetting Canada’s week’s IOC meeting in Laus-| for the 1967-world hotkey cham- anne, Switzerland, said in an | Pionships, _since the IIHF —al- interview Thursday that the| \feady recognizes both —— matter. will céme up again at | betas Germany and there the Olympic meeting in Madrid | the possibility that as a , Lorne (Gump) Wors- | ley, the goalie who came to Ca-| nadiens .in the Plante trade, docu think much the ies “We get hit enough now smaller Worsley one Worsley agrees. there's far | too much traffic in the crease | jtravel by East German teams in October and “I have a very Canada, would have to bar the strong feeling” East Germany | East Germans. will get the nod. Canada weapeees to solve the In recent Semcon, East and Problem by splitting the iene jment — holding the champlon- ships in Canada and the “B” round in Europe—but the IHF jvoted to give. the games to |Austria, where there would be |Bo such problem. Ahearne said he did not want to speculate on what possible alternative arrangements might BASEBALL ScOMS at eek ce lee American League Minnesota 030 000 203—- 8122/ But if Fiance fefused to guar- antee entry to the East Ger- New York 100000 100—2 51 Kaat (2-0) and Battey) Down-| man hockey team, or it was de- West Germany have been rep- |resented by a combined team, thus getting around the Yan on ing (1-1), Sheldon (2), Reniff|cided to hold the games some- ° y (6), Ramos (8) and Schmidt. | where other than France HRs: Min—Oliva 2, (3), Ver- Ms ~ Feo; the IIHF would have to recon- sider its position at the next oe Septem- a). born olla 440 001 270—18 20 1 Washington 000 220000— 4 52 Ch’ship Bout Goes Tonight “ROBIN AND THE 7 HOODS" (Coler) Frank Sinatra - Dean Martin Seo 5, Srmeat stroad — Big, Deuhie Crees. Tw rival gan. Who is the killer? COMING MONDAY - TUESDAY, APRIL 2 - a “MARINE” KEITH CARMICHAEL Mikita 7:59: Larose 9:35; Ri- chard, .Harris, Mikita, Mohns 14:45; Harris, Ravlith, Nester- enko (minors) J. C. Tremblay a. misconduct) 19:37. | John Ferguson scored for the aaa , | Canadiens, his third of the play- volving. a Mexican reeree and, wer $13 322 offs. : official ini - | The clubs played to a score- “~<a on doctor ue less deadlock in the frst period ' of tonight’s world “ B! I A R anc each scored a goal in ‘the KEN WHARRAM ing title aut on ae LL DS second. Wharram counted the Kingpetch of and ‘| Winner early in the final 20 min- | contain: his jinemates,-Maki and- Salvatore Burruni of ~~ FOR ~~ ame juies and ‘the Hawks. held the ae. ae ae Bally. .. margin. until Maki tallied. Scooter Wharram,| it thought final RELAXA . |"Chicago was a far ditiesest'|Stan Mikite ond Doug Mohes per tentic tet cose tntos ee Tien team from the. one which | wasn't too impressive ‘during | ter three postponements and | — at — dropped the opening two games| the contest, but Wharram, who|miych letter writing when a Sted ttn te ead | a twisted ken, made up ter | nanrel sores, Ramen Store| Ch'tows - Billa’ Club wi ° up : handed out solid body checks | With his goal. agg come Ay Dele Ot. Compe PGA and were the aggressors for) TR | seore. might. have. been | _ _ _ _NXavAXAwa«a——___— most of the game. or sides but for netminding Chi- While Claude Provost contin-|real’s Worsley. ‘The veteran |” ued his excellent work in cover- | Hall. kicked out 22 shots to 25 | MONTAGUE ing oe emis <aumlenive Bobby | by Worsley. “ Hull—limiting him to only one} Hall made Dick Friday p-m. assist “for his third straight| Duff in ic be saves on Dick | ap in game without a\goal—the rest | Bobby Rousseau and Gord Ber- Sririey ve of the Canadiens Were unable to 'enson in the second and Rous- Matinee Sat. 3:30 p.m. - Bing Crestiy a} Alves Wiichcorh’s Gee <oxter). dark past — |Hannan (6) Duckworth (7) Will- Bunker (1-1), Palmer (6) and Orsino; Ortega (0-2). Green (2) Of the four countriés bidding against France for the 1968 25 Brackley Pt. Road Ch'town the headwaters of the river be- for the return trip to the city so | but he’s not high on the chances tween Grant’s and Mooney’s.| decided I had better:go back af- of finding a solution—"The only Some clean, heavy trout were ter supper and cut the holes in|W@Y-you'll keep some of those | creeled that indicated they were the ice. I‘left withthe axe ‘over guys out of there is to build a | recent arrivals from salt water.|my shoulder and ... a strip of | fence. The a weight was in the beef, a section of trout line and |” and a quarter class al-|a few in my pocket prond and quarer class a-.a few hooks in my mcket, CURLING DRAW pound bracket. I would wet a line or not, but} The following is the curling On the opening day anglers ‘decided to have the where-with-|draw for Friday night at the had to work hard for what they Jl just in case I had a moment | Charlottetown Club. zi _ A few got their limits of weakness. Father was a |? pam. og a creas. A party of left StTict disciplinarian wjth zeepect Ice 1 — D. O'Rourke, C. Bol- |the city at an hour t would © game law observance. iger, G. Procter, L. Redmond vs 1 them at their favourite 1 found at least 14 inches “1 Giddings, D. Stewart, H. pool at midnight. They fished in clear blue ice and by the time I | MacDougall, - Redden. | the Montague area. They sure bad cut two holes the sun had) Ice 2 — D. Cameron, D. Le * : group. it wes vanished behind the spruce Clair, H. MacLennan, M. Dea- i the ieacies betes the first SPires to the east and the winter |con vs B. Dillon, H. Love, S. trout was creeled. Boy, that dusk settled -swiftly. My con-| Harper, C. Conners. ; is shiver just to think eee a Panoght ot the Ice 3 — Dr.» MacDonald,’ M. vray 1 Was.a6 a day Wok what-so-ever. I thought of the |Jardine, K. Myer, H. Rossiter aa tee treet oie a fifteen inch. time from August 1914 and May |vs R. Ketch, S. Flemming, L. ar ta ic te bracket. 1t 1919 while I dreamed of fishing Turner, M. MacLean. : as oe. clean fish through the ice. The war ended| Ice 4 — A. Ballem, M. 0” a ahea ie aed . the November llth but I was with | Rourke, J.S. Taylor, B. Brook- kelet Oe cleaned nad mou in, the Arey of Occupation in Ger-|ins vs H. MacInnes, J. Coady, its stomach and that soon would /™28Y until late April. The aight |B. Davis, B. Fraser. have been disscived. A trout|Sadows were creeping screws} ice § — B. MacGregor, Nt. cag ag k of coating any. | ne dam when I hitched a biob MacDonald, D. MacLean, J. Al- thing that resists dissolving, | meat on a hook, took a few |bert vs P. O'Rourke, Marguer- like a hook or lure, by coating it turns of the line across a gloved ite Stewart, G. Brookins, J. wih Utalie’ or ee thing simi- band and lowered it in the first | Hall. lar, and that too will eventually hole I had cut. For maybe 2/830 pm n % disa The bulk of their Minute it hung stationary and Ice 1 — B. LeClair, M-. Toole, cae ear ‘a: te ond then, as if caught in an invisible | V. Fraser, E. Myers vs G. Ste- , aa aches. ee current it swung against the ice wart, C. O'Rourke, A. MacNeill, ee “Soker™ Seen. Sitennsl ee For a few minutes | let it | Jo. Vautour. : _~ a e the a” against the ice edge - and}; Ice-2— C. Flemming, H. Mac- time ote caught ne then pulled a ten or H inch trout | Kenzie, L. Bagnall, A. MacKin- big trout ; onivad or au out on the ice. Two others, iden-|non vs K. Jenkins, M. Docken- ne arrived at of- tical as triplets, followed the |dorff. B. Partridge, P. Dalziel and sec a rather first. : Ice 3 — C. Campbell, Liz Mac- een hte on-my desk..I- | cleaned the trout on the QT; Donald, B: Crockett, E.- Bagnall Searing tio cuagichons eter | et eee in on the secret.|vs K. Dalziel, M. MacDonald, I. : San aes Mother said: “Robbie doesn’t MacKinnon, G. Crockett. ‘ne a a “er oe 4 come in from the barn chores; Ice 4 — B. Acorn, I. Murray, i wae ine was glassy and milking until eight o’clock.| G. Gallant, W. Robinson vs. T. ee eee ie Te met my I'll put-the trout in the pan’ at} Whitlock, K. Duffy, M. Pursey, t's I was able to 7.39" _. he'll never know but! E. Macinnes. Be nription of the what they were caught this| Iee 5 — A. MacDonald, F. ree ane could have When I entered the | Rossiter, P. Perry, L. Hennes- Soll Go ib With Gin bande ena ot 8 uae to eight the | sey vs. Dr. Gallant, Helen Mac- ar : aroma of frying trout made my | Donald, G. Rodd, M. Dowling. S surprised ‘to learn that| mouth water. Father came in| NOTE — If unable to = were still ice covered. They | ey ae an uns ae folee conuet be est fy seenste | Sane gota aie ae | i smi sani, propped peel one Causeway words. that we had put one over a patronized by anglers.' That's what she thought. When wa‘ \Gmeame oe told me that he'she placed the delicious smell- le as ae oan racing was ing trout in front of him he in as well ofer one quietly pushed it aside with the hundred people were on the ice semark’ ‘I'll not have any trout cutting holes and fishing. My this morning Margaret.”’ He ai- cient tnt me be sow coe lens ways called ber Margaret when being caught and it aie was on his “dignity’’. Turn- taken in the open water near ‘ing to me he said: “You can on wa open and fiehiag |ing Sood or” te tad a Oa Ot | question there. To date 1 have short whenéver I ‘crossed him \had no news with respect to the ap” and that was fairly often. Cardigan Causeway. In some Mother also decided she 2st ee cere ey eee ae ons a sual Goteies at whit white There was a time when thetimes. When I ate my own trout always use | trout season opened on April ist and her's too she really heam- and fishing through the ice was ed. Those were the ~ old KIWI SHOE WHITE |the usual way of ist day angling. days that are gone forever. . : & ' “ games — Canada,.US., Norway hite (8) McCormick (8) and Ca- and Japan ty 5 ie milli. HRs: Balt—Robinson (2), Blefary (3), Aparicio (1). nen-NATO country. National League Cincinnati 010 000 O10— 2 60 Chicago 100 000 1ix— 70 O'Toole, McCool (0-1) (8)° and Pavietich; Koonce, Abernathy (1) (8) and Bertell. HR: Cin— Edwards (1). a NOW! Enjoy The All , New Peerless poceiaes Here's of your choice, “If We Sell Them—We Service Them” Guarantee Hollandia is superior to any imported Dutch pipe tobacco in taste, aroma 4nd easy. buming qualities. If you are not completely satisfied after you try it... return the pouch with the unused por- tion and we'll buy you the pipe tobacco Pipe Smokers! } hy { AY t i ee) ANY ey Louit Dobbelmann Holiandia Pipe Tobacco 810 York Hen Pipe Tobaco B10 Yor Mile Rd. Don Mi, One ee