\ L Wins & E The Armed Forces offers young men opportunity for travel_ and adventure. and a chance to earn good pay while learning a trade or ’ ‘specialty. Young ladies also have an opportunity to serve their, country in the RCN (Wrens). : Information on careers in the three services can be abtained at the following tocations: could have won the champion- Niagara Favored By BOB TRIMBEE _ EDMONTON (CP) — -—Nia- ‘gara Falls Flyers ‘turted from” belting opposing hockey players to belting golf balls during the .weekend while sitting out a three-day layoff in their Cana- ship series against Edmonton Oil Kings. Flyers enter the third game tonight with a 20 lead in the best-of-seven Memorial Cup se-. ries: They are strong favorites to a avenge a 1963 loss at the hands of the Oil Kings in the Bationa! final The powerful Flyers, who ,dominated the first two games with their heavy hitting and hard skating in winning 3-2 and 5-1, took to the golf courses in 7Odegree temperatures during the weekend The layoff was caused when Edmonton Gardens was booked \for an evangelical meeting » SUMMERSIDE— i Coach Hap Emms of the Fly- RCAF ASSOCIATION 11 May—11 AM-6 PM.” CHARLOTTETOWN RCAF ASSOCIATION (2 May — 11 A.M.—6 P.M. er Contact ARMED FORCES ‘‘@rs criticized Canadian Ama- teur Hockey Association of- BILLIARDS | RELAXATION Flyers | To Win 'ficials for not reserving arena facilities. Art Potter, CAHA past presi-~ dent, said the Gardens has been booked four years for the meect- ing While Niagara Falls players toured city golf courses to help eliminate bordom,-the Oil Kings went through vigorous two-hour workouts af a south side arena. attack due to combinations Club officials reported play- ers who suffered the flu last opener..of the. series... - . All Edmonton regulars ex- RECRUITING CENTRE | —at — lo hae hb ck en he ha ' knee. were expected to be THE ARMOURY = Ch’tewn Billiard Clab ready for the third game. Sim- Kent Street Charlottetown 175 Gt. George Ph. 2-216; Mons’ status was to be de- : teen EEE cided at game time i: err You Can Win - FABULOUS nen a” OT oN s | A i PRIZES Like This -- - at a leading hotel, plus one hundred dollars’ cash for meals _and_ incidentals. A TRIP FOR | TWO TO THE WORLD'S FAIR ncludes—Two returp plane ickets, room for five day Chuvalo Fig t | Is P ned e ostpo night St. Louis 1-1) at Philadelphia _ {Bunning 2_- 3). night- : Houston ‘Farrell 31) at Les | Angeles (Podres 2-), night League American Detroit ‘Lolich 32) at Balti- more (Roberts 40), night New York (Stafford 60) Boston ‘Lonborg 61°. night Chicago ‘Horien 22 or Buz- hardt 30) at Minnesota (Kaat SECOND SECTION __ “Gevers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow” Charlotictown, Mon, May 10, 1965. Od BO ae, i a ls lla Rr a ee ad ' a ° 7 MARITIME CHAMPS .- Bert Siecle (right), coach af school’s athletic banquet at tic senior “A” competition this the Maritime juvenile champ- the Belvedere Golf and Winler - S¢ason. The hockey team under jon St. Dunstan’s High School (4, saturday eveni The ‘he guiding hand of Bert hockey club, is proudly dis- — = ag Steele captured the Mariti playing the stop-waich pre- Malpeque road insutute 7 : , —. sented to him by team-capiain learning capiured champion- juvenile hockey crows Cecil MacDonald. The presen- ships in hockey, basketball and ‘urmament staged at, Fred- | tation took place at the hizh football in Isiaiii Interscholas- ericton. .. NeedlesCountTa kesPrep; Flag Raiser Wins Withers - : ae er NEW YORK (CP)Neediles’ race without betting and first : Count ran away Saturday with prize was worth only $5.90. It the Preakness Prep at Balti- took Needles Count 1:47 35 to more after Jacinto had been negotiate the 1 1-16 miles, more , apd then Needles Count, declared than five seconds slower than ‘Pimlico track record. muddy and the The track was ‘Preakness eligible among the that helped trainer Jim Malo- three starters, coasted home five lengths in front of Deutren and 10 ahead of Cav-N-Lad. Rey decide to scratch Jacinto. The colt also had nicked him- self on the right ankle. which he hurt two months ago and kept him from racing. Sue Baru scored an upset in Pimlico’s filly counterpart of Belgian Cyclists A comper-trailer ing bags, four air on eligible). St. Peters Koad or A CAMP TRAILER ... . camp ® s . enamel p‘cnic table, insulated picnic jug, 4 gal. water con- mattresses, air pump ELIGIBILITY Any person who purchases a used car or truck valued thousand dollars or more from Hillside Motors Ist and June 30th (employees of Hillside Motors me eo WL Pct.GBL it was the second straight Les Angeles 16 7 686 victory for Needles Count, Cincinnati 144 9 688 2 owned by Abraham I. Savin. Houston 15 10 60 2 The Prep was an exhibition Milwaukee 10 10 300 4% Philadelphia Tl 11 SOO 4% Chicago ll 2 47% 5 San Francisco 11 13 458 5% St. Louis e012 & +2 New York 965 3 7% Pittsburgh 83% 33 8% e ‘ tore toee. » Triumph WL Pct. GBL Chicago 467 6&7 — Minnesota i 9 65 $$$.4% + #TORONTO ‘CP’ — nik Van Los Angeles 15 9 65 *% Steenbergen of Belgium tied the Cleveland 1 8 539 2 world record for six-d2y bicy- Baltimore 2 0 SS 2% cle race wims Saturday nizht Detroit 10 11 476 4 when he and countryman Emile Washi 10 14 417 5% Severyns won the international New York 9 13 409 5 six-day race here. Boston 8 12 408 5% Vam Steenberzen’s win was Kansas City 5 6 27338 9 the Stth in his %-ear-career. 1 aE the same sumber won by Abeqweit Electronic fo pc and coe ot ‘North. toria. B.C. and now of North- Service Centre fetee., : | . Who won his last vic- 1l Elm Ave. ;tery just about the time Van Anytime — Anywhere Steenberzgen won his first was Tv - RADIO MARINE RADAR the first to congratulate the INTERCOMMS su te snore ‘Belgian as he drove across the ANTEMMAE 2WAY RADIO -—= lime im Saturday's race i aced by the sensational md- 2. Phone 834-329 img of Severyms. the Belcians McINNIS P. E. DOYLE stole a on the field in the = last 10 qinutes of the race to wrap up the victory Until then. the Luxembourz New Peerless Ltd., Led. i CONSOLATION PRIZES Ist—$100 G*ft Certificate (from one’ of Charlottetown's -_ leading stores for merchan dise of your choice). 2nd—$50 Gift Certificate. ~ See Preston Wood, George Carragher, Gerry Carragher, Alden’ Rodd, Leigh Crabbe or Rollie Johnston. HILLSIDE MOTORS Ltd. ~ ; Dial 27-1243. Charlotictown “Where Customer Service and Satisfaction Come First” Beverages Enjoy The All — ;Winners as they drove seven sprints. each worth 72 points given on a 642 basis for the in Wlap i within the main mara- |thon. They are fised to break ties between teams which have covered the same number of to- tal laps at the end of the race SET VICTORY POINTS In the last hour sprinting is continuous and each sprint vic- tory is worth 72 points to the winner. The Italian team of Leandro Fagzin and Mime de Rossi fin- tshed second. also lapoinc the field im the last hour. They co%- ered the same number 4 laps as the Belgians but had oniy 717 sprint’ points, compared with In Race 1,355 by Van Steenbergen and Gillen and Lejangue wound up third. a lap behind the lead- ers with 1,174 points. Torchy Peden said- “I wouldn't have been so happy to see my record broken if_1_ were still riding Id be try- imz to do something about it.” Van Steenberzen, who has be- come a millionaire through bi- cycle riding. has a cha to break Peden’s record in a bec City six-day race beginning Friday “45 ord. sani The final drew about soon asl break the rec- 1 am going te quit.” he nicht of the race Meet In Montreal N SPORT SKEET ST. JANVIER, Que. CP Representatives of the provin- cia! and Maritime Skeet Assoc- jiation will meet at the Montreal Skeet,,Club Monday to discuss the setting up of a Canadian skeet shooting association. The meeting was called by Hugh Galand of Westmount, Que. a member of the Mont- real Skeet Club and one of Can- adas better known skeet shoot- ers. Galand represented Can- ada at the world skeet \cham- pionships in Cairo in 1%2 In addition to the discussions en setting up a Canadian skeet organization, the delegates will decide on the program for Mon- days shoot. The plan is to have am international-style competi- tion 30 enable shociers to zet rezistered birds in: this sport Imernational skeet - differs from North American skeet in two basic factors In intcrma- tional skeet the gum must be held with the butt touching the shooters thizh or belt umtil the bird appears. In Norh Ameri- can skeet. the competitor is al- lowed to hold t gun to the shoulder when ling for the bird In international skeet the bird may be thrown from the trap at any time up to t§ree sec- onds after the shooter calls for it. In North American skeet the bird is sprung with the ‘shoot- ers cal! The meeting must also decide how it will determine the team |which will represent Canada in the international postal match and where that match will be fired. the Preakness, the Black -Eyed Susan Stakes. She won by three quarters of a length over Wen- dy’s Crown. Cavans Rose was a nose back for third. : $146.40, $1800 and $11.2 Wendy's Crown returned $760 and % and Cavans Rose $10. RUNS TO RECORD At New York. Flag Raiser, eighti-place finisher in the Ken- tucky Derby a week ago after setting most of the pace, scored |a record-breaking eight-length victory Withers Mile at Aqueduct. With Bob Ussery im the sad- die_ Isidore Bieber's colt set a record for the event im 1:34 1:5. Gallant Lad was a distant ond. with Record Dash another 12 lengths back im the nine- horse field. ‘ Flag Raiser earned $39.000 and paid $6.20. $3.90 and $3.30. Gallant Lad returned $5.99 and $4. and Record Dash %.20. At Chicago. Terra Hi and Turn to Reason each won a di- vision of the $35.000-added Iili- nois Derby at Sportsman's Park Saturday. Terra Hi. owned by Vireil Spivery and ridden by Larry Spraker. grabbed the lead near the far turn and won by four lengths in the first section of the I's-mile race. Squaw Point Rifle Shoot e j cheese ee sere aap i Thee pres i tu Rea li 4 “A E by | University will/ assist Mr. Me- : ‘Yanks Defeated: the Stanley Cup finals Coache« interested in atiend- ing the Clinic are urged to con- tact their Provincial MAHA re- presentative or the office of their Provincial Director of __Physi- cal Education. A maximum of fifty coaches will be accepted 21 from New runswick, 15 from Nova Scotia, 6 from Prince Ed- ward Island. and 8 from New- foundiand. The deadline for ap plications has been set for May 2th.” Phils Trip Cards » It was the first time since August, 1960, that the Senators | won a four-game séries” from the Yankees. Doa Zimmer snapped a 2-2 tie with a sacrifice fly to right with the bases in the seventh inning. Ken McMullen drove in another i centre. Frank Robinesn’s pinch hit, bases-loaded single drove in ‘wo runs in the ninth inning and gave Cicimnati a 53. victory over Pittsburzh. Robinson's hit came off Bob Beale. who liad just reheved Al McBean. and climaxed. the | Reds’ three-run rally. POWER PHILLIES ; Home runs by Dick Stuart and Johnny Callison powered Philadelphia Phillies to a 42 Victory over St. Louis Cardi- r rum with his third hit, a single to for the world’ champion Cardi- mals last year. It was Sadecki's fourth loss_ Unbeaten Camillo Pascual cruised to his fourth pitching triumph as Minnesota Twins a third inning solo home run. Pinch hitter Bill Skowron’s single accounted for a Chicago run in the seventh. but an in- ning-ending doubleplay pulled Pascual out of trouble. At Los Angeles rookie’ Jose Cardenal! slammed a homer and single and stole home, help- ing Fred Newman notch his fourth straight victory as Los “Angeles Angels” beat Kansas The victory was-the Angels’ seventh in their Tlast eight games and 12th in the last 14. Newman. 41 held the A’s to five hits but needed eight-inn- ing relief help from Bob Lee, who made his 12th appearance in 24 games and recorded his ‘ seventh save. Joe Adcock and Lou Clinioa each hit a single and double. and Jim Piersal] collected a single and triple as the Angels pounded loser John O'Dono- ghue, 1-4, and three successors. At Boston. Fred Whitefield. Cleveland's part - time — first baseman. drove im six, runs while smashing seven hits in nine trips and the Indians bat- tered Boston Red Sox twice, 94 . and 10-7. Platooned at his position ear- lier, Whitfield rapped a triple, two doubles and four singles. driving in three runs in each game He also scored twiee and Bafrowiy missed the cycle in the opener when his home run bit to right was foul by a fost. SPORT ECHOES ~ Baseball League Holds Meeting By NORMAN MacDONALD The Summersiie baseball lea- gue held its amnual meeting Thursday evening and after electing new officers left all The first practice shoot of the season was heid at Squaw Point Range Saturday afternoon. Wea- ther conditions were near per- fect as Tpr. Harold W. Jones from Summerside posted the best score of the day. 9% owt of a possible 30. Four other shooters followed Jones with scores of ad Saturday «May 15th commenc- img at 1 o'clock the P_E.1. Pro- vincial Rifle Ass'n will hold the first inter-Maritime team trial shoot. Eiczht members will be selected to represent the Island team. The match will be held at the Bedford Range near Halifax on June 1h The inter-Maritime team match is the oldest teafp match im Canada and becan i 1461. This match has been held cach year since with the exception of the two world «ars The following are the com- plete results of Saturday's shoot Harold W Jones Eldon MacLean D. O. Clark J* AK Mtuch > RC. Barer Mrs. Betty Domevan Rov L_ Coles F/L N. J. Donovan ¢ Ronnie L Clark Rey Vesser Eric Baller Cadet Wilbur Brt Cpl Geo Davies BASEBALL SCORES e008 O00 166— 1 Minnesota 1 1% @x— 6 Howard ‘21. Bolle 7 Martin. Burcess 35. Pascual ‘40° and Zimmerman HRs Minn — Versalles (2), Pascual Chicace <2 % ether matters to be looked after by the new executive. “Don Mc- Eachern is the new president Doa been interested in a wide variety of sports for quite few years. He was among the athletes in the 100 vice-president Grady m handling the Junior Le- gionnaires hockey team. which won the Island title the lasi two years. Timmy McGuigan. in- comimg secretary treasurer stopped a lot of rubber for the Sammer:side Combines last win- ter, so he should be able to han- We had a call from Jim Jen kims. coach of ba year’s In- mans Plumbing softhall team. and slated to coach the RCAF |: beys this wear Jim made it clear that the RCAF was not re- quitiaz any airforce boys to play with the Eagles. They are all free agents and can play for whatever team they choose Well, nothinz could be fairer than that. The airforce team May end up a pretty stromg az- gregation adding Jim Jen- kims and John McLaren to ‘ast years team would accomplish that — bu: if everyone plays with the team he wants to play with. no ome can ask for more than that. We'll just have to keep our fingers crossed and hope for a fair share of balance amoaz the different club-. The rumor circulating was that the airforce personnel had to play with the RCAF if they were picked by the manazoment Thanks. Jim, for clearing the matter up— die the net profits and losses of the club. Yes. we know. people have been tarred and feathered for making better puns than that: still it has been said that the pun is mightier thas the sword.) heads, and These bers executive. aera nf rin cilaflt Fi : q* . | Thi x ; f : e 3 t \ gram is te be, we'll reserve comment fill later. \ t yy