Jtie Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat., March 26, S FRONT SPORT NHL Leaders Give Tilts Away By CHRIS_ANNETT This is starting to look like the season in the NHL that no team wanted to win the Prince: of Wales trophy. Both Montreal and Chicago are dropping ‘the big games with an _alarming degree of regularity but as of now it has hurt the Black Hawks a bit more than the Habs in their battle for first place. Take Thursday evening for example. The Black Hawks, with only five games left to play and needing a win as badly’ as an arm or leg, met the Boston Bruins and promptly lost 3-1. To add insult to injury the surging Toronto Maple Leafs again blanked the Habs on their home ice, this time 2-0. The loss to the Bruins cost the Hawks an opportunity to take over first place and that triumph by the Bruins 1966. 9 could have been the biggest” game of the season in the pennant race. However the Bruing.will have an opportunity to turn th tables tonight and tomorrow as they meet the Canadians in a home and home ‘series over the weekend. The Bruins have been.a nemesis for the Habs throughout the season and Blake will undoubtedly have his charges up for. the game. ‘Chicago however. will play only one game on the weekend, that being Sunday evening against Detroit. This will be the first time since midway through the season that the teams have play- eed an equal_number of games to add ‘‘but the Habs have a of the leaders. and fans will finally not have game in hand’ when talking The Black Hawks play four more games, counting to- ‘nights and the Habs five. The Hawks face the Bruins twice more and both the Red Wings and Canadiens once so it appears as if their game agaist the Habs will be the big one of the season for them. Montreal too plays the Bruins twice more but faces the Rangers, the Leafs and the Hawks once. They. have had trouble all season against the Leafs and so the match between these two arch rivals will prob- ably be the one that makes or breaks the Habs in their attempt to walk off with league honors. They still will have to beat the Hawks on the final weekend of the season but - « they, have been doing that with Toronto. ____The way things look. now the-game between Toronto and Montreal will quite” possibly be the warmup forthe f more regularity than against Stanley Cup semi finals should the Habs club win. This will be one of the bitterly fought contests in history should the Habs and Leafs meet for they have already put on some worthy battles this’ vear. RAMBLINGS rink of Dr. Wen MacDonald that they can bring home the championship . . . There will run away from Chuvalo. If experience counts any in national competition then the which left yesterday for the Canadian Senior ‘Curling Championships in' Winnipeg will have to be given ‘an inside lane to the title. Dr. Wen repre- ‘sented this province in Brier pagents in 1954, 1955 and ‘1956. However his mate, Johnny Squarebriggs tops the record of any other curler in the tourney as he has participated in a record five Briers. He was with Dr. Wen in ‘54, ‘55, ‘56 and’ = also attended the pagent in 1947 and 1951.- The Charlotte- ~ town quartet of MacDonald, Squarebriggs, Wally Rodd and Jim Cameron are one of the favored teams and let us hope Island’s first national curling be a Canadian closed circuit 4elevision blackout from Quebec City east Tuesday when ~ Cassius Clay and George Chuvalo fight in Toronto. . is down to his fighting weight of about 210 and it will be _ interesting to see just whether . Clay he keeps his promise not too HUNTER’S CORNER - "One Dollar Skunk Bounty Sees Thousands Collect on the previous might. . .between Poe eR town Curling Club. Bob Le- Clair LEFT skipped the rink and other members included -from the LEFT, Al Saunders, Dr. Jim Higgins and Jack Above are the winners of the Dillon. Printing Company tro- phy and prizes during play, in the Confederation-. Bonspiel being played at the Charlotte-. SUMMERSIDE Sandy's | Royals wrapped: up the P.EI.| \Intermediate ‘A’ hockey crown | here last night by defeating | Pope Motor Aces 7-3 before ‘ap- | proximately 800 fans. | It appeared for a while as if ithe Aces might bounce back from their~ humiliating 18-1 de- bacle at Charlottetown Wednes- day night: The local - pucksters worked up a 3-0 lead in the first half of the game but then the Royals took over the show for the. final half, pumping seven unanswered . goals behind “an overworked Gerard Smith in the |\Pope Motor cage. Alfie Flanagan, who picked as| ;the star of the.game, paced -the | powerful Royals with three goals and two assists. His three mark- | ers came within axspan of the} |first two minutes and twenty-se- | ven seconds of the final period. | Two-of them came within the! first 52 seconds of the frame. = | | T | ALF FLANAGHAN a FORT WILLIAM, Ont Manitoba -grabbed a share -of first place with Northern On- tario Friday as Ernie Boushy of Winnipeg trounced Nova Seo- tia 14-5*in the ninth round of the national mixed curling championship. . % Len Kalichak of Goose Bay opened the door fop- Boushy, -. |mixed champion in 1964, by di- >i lrecting his Newfoundland four * |to a 10-8 verdict over Bill Tetley *jand his Northern Ontario rink icp Alberta's 5-3 ledger was good Lose Game To Alberta ninth-round results set , The for a share of third place with|the ostage for a head-to-head Glen Harper of Duncan, whose |Manitoha Naqrthern Ontarie British Columbia rink had the |clash for the tille in the final bye. Arthur Woodley of Campbell- ton, the victim of four defeats, moved even with Green and Harper «in the victory column by beating Doug Bell's Prince Edward Island representatives frony Charlottetown 8-5. , Ted Jurista ‘of Vanscoy moved | | round today. But first Manitoba had te dis- pose of Alberta and Tetley had jto sidetrack Saskatchewan in jthe 10th round at 8 p.m. EST |Friday. Nova Scotia mef On- jtario; Quebec faced Newfound- | and and B.C. played P.E,I. in other 10th. round games while | New Brunswick had the bye. MAKE THEIR MARK ‘Stari Bryenton, Bonnell | , Vautour. Members of the run- ner-up quartet were Bill Beer, were skipped by Wittrien, Dr. Le-« Y. Robichaud, Dr. R. Baird Paze and “Reginald. Mahar. and Bill Vaughan. Lloyd Shepherd, Dery! Doyle ; (major) 12.10; C. Grady 17:21. ‘and Dave MacLeod, all capital Second Period — 2. Aces city natives. chief with Tiny Crooks and |assisted) 9.12; 4. Royals — D; Joe Coyle assisting him. A total |Carroll (A. Flanagan, D. Law- of 15 penalties were called with lor): 13.41; 5. Royals — B. Mac- the .Aces having the edge with Intyre (A. Carroll) 15.29. Penal- eight. sae ' ties — C. Gillis (minor), D. Car- roll (double minor) 6.05; G SUMMARY |Deighan 14.34; BD. Carroll (ma First Period — 1. Aces — L. jor); I. Arsenault (major, 10 - Shepherd (G. Dalton, D. Mac- | minute misconduct) 19.36. Leod). 12.31. Penalties — V. Har-| Third Period — 6. Royals ris, A. Flanagan 8.13; I. Arsen-| 4 Flanagan (D. Lawlor) .24; 7. ault (major); B. Macintyre | Royals — A. Flanagan (unas- | sisted) .52; 8.-Royals — A. Flan- agan (D. Lawlor) 2.27; 9, Roy- als — Gillis (S. MacLure, , A. ‘850; 10. Royals — B. Junior Habs Eliminate ‘Wings. | Macinyre, (A; Areoneale; —. : Lawlor) 10.12: Penalties — B ‘FREDERICTON (CP)—Halifax |Canadiens defeated Fredericton | Red Wings 63 here Friday to Macintyre 2.33: C. Grady 13.49; B. MacIntyre 15.17. = |Charlottetown aggregation were lstalwart Bob Stewart managed | D. Doyle (C..Grady, V. Harris) | Red. Gravelle, was referee-in- 2.41; 3. Aces — D. MacLeod (un. | Summerside Midgets, appar- ently the only hockey team in Summerside that canput, up a) which — {decent showing against Charlot-| be held in the home rink of the ‘Sandys Royals Eliminate Aces For Playoff Picture. tetown clubs,. invade this city this evening for the second game of their two game total point series for the P.E.I. mid- get title. Coach George Trainor's charg- es_edged the Summerside crew 7-5 in the first game last week- end. The three big guns on the the big factors in that game as Bobby Whitlock had three goals Tom Cullen a pair and defensive one. The winner of the series earns Alberta, N.S. Gain Finals KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP)—: Nova Scotia came from behind to defeat Alberta 11-9 and earn a berth in the_finals of the Royal Canadian Legion national. curl- ing c pionship here Friday. They will meet the Garth Ruiter rink of Quebec -starting at 5 p.m. PST (8 p.m. EST) in the final. ’ The Frank‘ Hoar rink of Nova Scotia trailed 9-8 after — the eleventh end and scored three coming home to reach the final. 110 402 000 010— 9 002. 020 200 203—11 Alberta Nova: Scotia win the best-of-seven maritime | junior hockey- finals in three = lfrom Port thur his - Saskatchewan rink even. | It was Tetley'’s’second straight With Newfoundland in sixth Tetley fell Anto the loss rut loss, dropping him to Manito- place—both with 4-4 marks— | in the eighth round when he was ba’s six victory-two loss level. with an 8-7 decision over Art -* Auer oe ee aie J y i | Mac? s ov Lee Green of Calgary and:-his Lobel of Lachute. Que. | er ac om . Vv _ |defending champion Alberta | quartet from Sydney n adja rink missed a chance to create ‘Trailing the pack were Prince | gent ice sheets, Harper shaded '|a three-way scramble for top Edward Island (3 - 5), Nova Jurista 7-6, Woodley clipped : | plitte-when he lost 6-5 to Harvey Scotia (3-6), Quebec and On- yActon 15-9, Lobel beat Bell &5 ; * |Acton of Uxbridge, Ont. tario. (2-6), Q and Boushy stopped Kalichak e . | —— aaa ren —- eaarcunel me ; i NINTH ROUND T Quebec O10 010 202 1—. 7 RNa i a Dates Bebe bt OoCa ” | Sask. 100 301 030 0---8 | f oy ‘ Noya Scotia 000001 0202-8 ‘ | ° Manitoba 22 340 201 0—14 | “J Other’ rinks winning prizes U mM mersi e N. Ontario 010 192 121 0 8 Newfoundland 203 040 000 1—10 the privilege to travel. to New : Brunswick to play in the Marl- Ajberta time Midget tourney. which. will. Ontario 021 020 000 0—'S 100 101 110 1— 6 jeventual,N.B. winner. The game |New Brunswick 10 101 020 3— 8 |gets underway at 7.00 ‘o'clock P.E.T. - 101 010 101 0— 8 and good hockey is the order of the day to plan to be on hand. NOTICE! INCREASE IN INTEREST RATES Effective January 1, 1966 ~ CURRENT ACCOUNT SAVINGS ) Bye: British Columbia. Snmicmen + i | Teammate Buddy Macintyre paced up two. goals while Alan was the second highest point-| games. It was the ninth playoff | getter in the game with four as- | victory in a row for the Cana- Albany, Elmsdale' Red Wings A bounty of one dollar per | snout, with a section of the | his home and Charlottetown. white strip attached, was placed; Last summer our visiting tour- en ‘Jimmie’ Skunk by the.Pro- | ists expressed amazement, bor- ‘vincial Department of Agricul- | dering on horror, on the num- Tangle In Final The Elmsdale Rockets tangle with the Albany St. Pats tonight at the St. Dunstan's rink in the ‘Smelt’ Gillis and Dick Carroll | added singletons. Dave Lawlor | sists. diens, against no defeats. Scoring | Canadians now advance to the | |first round of-the Eastern Can- , jada Mefiiorial!~ Cup playoffs ‘for the Aces were | ture in 1932. This columnist was the..prime..mover, or. instigator, for this measure. When I made the confident assertion that we had not hundreds, but thousands of ‘stripers’ in the province I ‘was considered-as being off my | rocker. . .completely off. The) first year Sounty was paid on a) fraction over six thousand skunks end this total had reached the eleven thousand mark at the elose of the second year. ‘Farmers told me that the first few years the bounty was fm effect the skunks were as @reen as the proverbial cabbage and were like lambs penned for ~the slaughter. house. They soon learned that ‘it didn’t pay to) edvertize’ and many. farmers) were unaware they were hosts tothe. black and white stripers amtil they had occasion to move a building or their farm dog got too inquisitive. It was a sad day for this province when the skunk set foot on this fair land. Ta_a few years they had almost eompletely wiped, eut our Com- mon Terns. . the small black and white members ofthe gull family . . .and our bank swal- Kiows. The eggs they swiped would make millionaires of any- eme who corralled even half what they ate. One farm wife got a shock she didn’t get. over 2 for weeks. She had left the egg gathering chore until deep dusk and when she put her hand into a nest she got a handful of skunk fur instead of eggs.. They have . learned a lot and today they are expert mest robbers and are eeldom caught in the act. | . The one dollar per snout paid | early thirties was real money - worth at least three times | the value of the present day | ‘green-hack’ and yet this bounty, | emall as it was, held down a eidentally the nest robbing skunk ‘was-in-too cramped quarters to self and has a stfong eversion to BO. A skunk is.as clean as the proverbial” wiiiStle in’ his home’ Hughes,... J.K...MacDonald,..0 per skunk. skunk population explosion’. In- i? la shoot without drenching him- | Munroe. 'M, Nicholson, G. Gal- a loway, P., Warner. ber of dead skunks littering our highways. No_one_ appeared to care whether they were removed or not but their bodies were left at the spot where they died. One morning last summer I was driving out the Trans Canada | Highway through Hazelbrook. It was quite early in the a.m. and | when I spotted two skunks that had, been killed by cars during jthe night I ‘stopped, as I had a round point shovel in the car and dug a hole and buried them. While I was in the process—of interning their odoriferous bodies several cars stopped and by the looks their occupants gave me they figured I was about due for’ ‘the butterfly net’. One lady tourist told me we | had a charming province and that. its: beauty was-unsurpassed but the number of ‘black and white pancakes’ littering our modern highways gave her ‘heartburn’. They are definitely not a tourist attraction. . .that’s a sure bet As this column goes to the press I understand Harold | Smith, Pownal and Hon. David Stewart, Charlottetown teamed up on this ‘skunk’ question and there is a good possibility. that a $2.00 bounty per skunk killed in the province may be okayed by the Legislature. The Hon. J. David recognizes a ‘sure bet’ when -he sees one but. . let us not forget it was Liberal Har- old Smith, Pownal, who fought }and worked to get this skunk | bounty put back at two oe CURLING DRAW AT MONTAGUE p.m. | Fay Ice 1. D’' Sorrie. P. Sullivan, Coneen, L. MacDonald vs f, Ice 2 -—C. Nicholson, &. life but carries dynamite in his |Hennigar vs J. MacLean, A. Me- hind end and uses it only as a Gregor, L. Nicholson, A. Bears. tast resort, or what he considers a last resort. p.m. + Iee 1 --- A. MacLeod, C. Ings, Two years ago our biologist L. Furness, B. MacKinnon vs R with the Department of Indus- _ tty and Natural Resources. . Mr. Charles Bartlett. . .without | Robbins, ,| Thompson, E. MacLure. FP. Johnstone, N. Ice 2 — G. Warner, L. Mac- | League . But this is far from the-truth. | Keon is not under-rated nor over-looked nor unnoticed “ He is simply taken’ for | : | granted. even offering a suggestion on Leod, C. MacKinnon, M. Baiser any control method to compen- ivs J. MeNeill, H. Robbins, H. sate for. the ‘bounty removal— | Matheson, B. MeNeill. fave the skunk complete immunr- | “Spares: E. Worth, B. Smith, tty except for automobiles. 1 /G. Clarkson. E. Murphy, D. O'- remarked to an official a few Connor, L. Johnstone, P. Mcin- ay ago that the skunk popula- tyre. R. Ferguson, E. Shaw. hon in the province had doubled im the last two years on ac- . me count. of the bounty removal and | hee 1 = Dr. a he told me I was wrong. . .de-'¢ and A. Mac finitely wrong. If this columnist Doucette, B. Battersby, is wrong—why has the niiither ee os 3 m skunks killed by cars on our © Iee 2 — R Solomon, K. Small- highway doubled in theJast two wood. W. Dingwell and D. Young rears” A farmer-frem the Vil-| R -facLean. S* MacPhee, ‘vs lage Green area told me that Pp. poole and M. Richards. ene morning last summer he 9 TO 11 (For Kassner Trophy) counted 11 skunks that had‘been| Ice 1—Boertein vs. ;Mallard killed by cars: . .the majority’ Ice 2—Pdole ve. Ching. . ae dL. Marold, nald vs. E. H and QCHS Pucksters Grab City Crown Queen Charlotte High School,;corner on a breakaway. at the | led by the heroics of Bobby Je- | 11.13 mark of the second session. well and Wilbert who got five goals between them captured the’ scored on a weird effort by Ron city interscholastic crown at the | Carmichael who fired a shot’ Forum last evening as they | that hit the backboards: and then | dropped Birchwood High School | trickled down Simmonds’ back 5-2. The win was their second in| into the net. Nevertheless the | the best of three series and gave| club scored a minute later and | them the crown from. the de- then followed with ancther two fending title holders Birchwood.’ quick goals..-Wilbert-Birt- finish- | Play was held by the QCHS-ed off a-beautiful three way pas- | pucksters for the greater part of | sing play as he blasted a slap- the game but the score remain- | shot into the twins, Bob Jewell ed close until midway through) broke inté” the “clear, faked the third period when QCHS a shot and- then slid the puck slated the game away with a around Claybourne and then Birt | three goal splurge in a bit over! got his second of the evening. | four minutes. Bob Jewell gave |-Gary Foley finished out the scor- |QCHS the lead at the 4.13 mark) ing as he went the whole length jof the first period on a power | of the ice and backhanded the \play as his long backhand some-/| puck past Simmonds but it was |how squirted past Claybourne; not enough to keep QCHS from oy then ran the score to 2-0 as| regaining the trophy in straight he picked the upper left hand | games. « | By JERRY GLADMAN ‘Canadian Press Staff Writer | ' Someone once suggested tiat | because so little is written about | Dave. Keon the’ little Toronto! Maple Leaf centre is probably | one of the most under-rated | [players in the National Hockey | Cons! | his has been the case ever | since 1960 when the native of Noranda; Que. stormed into the league and captured rookie-of- the-year honors. Coach Punch Imlach knows he doesn't have to worry about '“Davey’’ when the team is’ go- | jing bad. The 26-vear-oid centre | /can be relied upon for a 100 per. ‘cent effort every time cut. | “He is the most valuable player in the NHL, the best cen- tre and the most consistent guy KEON NHLers, having won the Lady DAVE in the business,’ Imlach once Byng Trophy—awarded to the said ; oe player. combining talent and | IS. EVASIVE gentlemanly conduct—twice. Because of\ his speed and {knack of evasiveness, he is probably the hardest player in the league to nail with ‘a’ solid bodycheck. He weighs ,only 160 pounds and is a target for the big men on opposing teams. But he seldom goes down berause jwhen they try to hit him, he jisn’t there : | He is one of the cleanest \players ef the current ¢rop of | Keon will be with Leafs to-,| night when ‘they attempt td. pro- tect their thitd-place Jead over Detroit Red: Wings in Toronto ‘The only other gameltanight has Boston Bruiris vistting Montreal Canadiens fas Sunday's: schedule has Toronts | at New York, Montreal at Bos- ton and Chicago at Detroit. ‘ = ) | However with only two min- | figures i | utes gone in-the third Birchwood feues Polcvan aan ifight. Tuesday: against the Ottawa and district | champions. ~Halifax- won the series~ opener $2 and took the second 7-2. ieee games were played at Hali- | fax, Want Club In Europe TORONTO (CP) — Sid Abel, and manager-coach. of Detroit Red Clay- Wings of the National Hockey | heavyweight League, says the Wings are ‘seeking. approval_.to_.sponsor__a | club or work with a league in| FACTS - FIGURES TORONTO (CP)—Facts Principals: Cas siu s Clay, Louisville, Ky.; George Chu- Europe. : | valo, Toronto. ’. | Abel; whose team ifs in town At stake: Clay's share of for a game with Toronto Maple world heavyweight title. |Leafs tonight, said: Date: Tuesday, March 29. _| “Our first step is to contact | Time: 10:30 p.m. EST. Bunny Ahearne and work} Distance: 15 rounds or less. |through him. Then if we can Site: Maple’ Leaf Gardens, |win his approval we would like Toronto. : om Seating capacity: 17,500. with a league over there.” Prices: $7 to $100. } Ahearne, who lives in Eng- GOOD SERVIC | ni» to.either sponsor..a club or work} final game of the Prince County Intermediate “C’’ Champion- ships. Game Is slated to start at 9:30 p.m. ‘ The winner advances pete with the Queens County representative in the semi-finals for the Island Int “‘C’’ Cham- pionship. ‘to com: t Volkswagens Are Our Specialty | Complete fine ef genuine Volkswagen parts. 5 RUDISCH'S -- GARAGE - Alberry Plains Promoters: Maple Leaf Gar- land, is president of the Inter- dens and Frank Tunney, Tor- jnational Ice Hockey Federation. | onto. : Abel explained Detroit's inter- Gate receipts: Promoters es jest: : : timate $180,000. “With the NHL due to expand Other receipts: Promoters es- |by an additional six teams the timate ancillary rights, includ- | season after next, we do not ing ‘closed-circuit television in |know how the source of talent) Canada and the United States, | will hold up in Canada and the @ ga can be deposit- or withdrawn at _any time... in person : or by mail, "THE. MAJOR TRUST COMBANY, . (the Hyndman Bldg.) 57 Queen St - Charlottetown : PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, CANADA Hours 9 - 5 Daily — Closed Saturday ~~ ~$94-4910 a will gross t $500,000 to $600,- | U.S. 000. a niet $ “So the only source open am Fighters’ purses: Promoters en and we want to get in) estimate Clay will gross about | €2%Y: tag and Chuvalo about $130,- | New Shipment. of Honda Bikes Fighters’ records: Clay 22-0, . e ene Chuvalo 34-11-2, , ockouts. Officials: Referee and two, and Cars judges to be announced day of fight. TALE OF TAPE Clay © Chuvaloe | 24 Age Ye (Bs | 6:3"! .» Height 61" ! x-217 x-Weight x-210 | 79 Reach 77. 4214 Chest Normal 46 160 Model with 18 h.p. overhead , 4414 Chest Expd. 49 cams, dual carburetors, and tele- 17'4 “Neck. 18 scopic front suspension. ot Waist: 33... @- 4cycle ‘engine: ~ 15 ~. Biceps ° Sor Fantastic economy ial j13 Fist. if Easy to ride ; 19 Wrist 9 Absolutely safe 25 Thigh 25 NO DOWN PAYMENT 17 Calf i EASY FINANCING 1214 Forearm . 912 Ankle 12 Keith Carmichael ‘ Ltd. x-Exact weight will be deter- | Charlottetown to: Montreal Moncton Saint John Corner Brook mined at weigh-in Tuesday at) 11:30 am. EST FEDERATION BONSPIEL ~CON CHARLOTTETOW “J MEMBERS . DANCE: ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTATION OF PRIZES. - Every Night this Week Come and meet the visiting curlers Toronto Winni 25 Brackley Pt. Rd. Dial 4-6423 | ms ' N CURLING CLUB These are examoles of complime and GUESTS eae ces including new Red Bargain F F ‘Hite and TTR,