S'side Rink Cops Lions Bonspiel , Second consolation — Herb SUMMERSIDE — A Sumi....-| Schurman, skip; side rink skipped by Peter | Schurman won the P.E.I. Con- crete Co, trophy, emblematic of the Lions Clubs annual bonspiel,| Third consolation— Bill Lynch, | at Summerside curling club on skip; W. Stevens, mate; Mike Saturday. A Charlottetown rink, | Finn, second stone: Verne Wil-| skipped by Lorne Kelly, were | liams, lead. runner-ups, A delicious banquet was put | Teams winning consolation | on by the Summerside “ionettes, prizes were as follows: con-| Reg McLellan was master of | solation no, 1—Kensington rink | ceremonies, and introduced the skipped by Glydon Willis; con-| various speakers. solation no, 2—Summerside rink| His Worship, Mayor J. Ernest | skipped by Herb Schurman; | Morrison, on behalf of P.E.I. consolation no. 3—Charlottetown Concrete Products Lid. and of rink skipped by Bill Lynch. the Lions’ Clubs, thanked the Francis MacQuarrie, Wallie Walwyn, president of ladies for their sumptuous re- the Summerside Curling Club, | past. and Herb schurman made the Eric Jessome, international | presentations, the trophy to the councillor for the Lions’ clubs, winner, and prizes to all mem- said that next year it was hoped bers of the five rinks. jfo have mainland competition Toronto's Ron Stewart (12) Personnel of winning rink in the Lions’ club bonspiel which | slams the first goal of the winner—P an, skif: promises to become an annual! game past sprawling New Jack | event. | York goalie Gump Worsley FIRST FOR LEAFS Harry Howell (3) andLarry Cahan in the first period of the fifth game of the best-of- seven Stanley Cup semi-final in Toronto tonight. Other Leaf | | player is vee aehovtiok. | Leafs won 3-2 in advanced into a finals = a 7-1 triumph over Rangers on | y. Schurman, ry stone, Stephen; Wally Walwyn welcomed the; and Rangers’ defenceman Drummond, ions from Charlottetown, ae} Runner- ers Kelly, skip; | sington, St. Eleanors, and Allison Gill, mate; Charlie merside on behalf of the a Michael, second stone; Neil Mac-| merside Curling Club. Donald lea ayton Schurman eee, a First consolation—Glydon Wil- | witt to Harry Dye Hs, skip; Rayburn Orr, mate; in making the road 7 | Ed a ere second stone; Don ing for the ‘spiel. Herb Schur- Wood, | {man was song leader. Pender Regains Share Of Title BOSTON (AP)—Paul Pender, the old guy who was supposed to fade in the late rounds, came | like a whirlwind Saturday | night to butcher and bewilder defender Terry Downes of Eng- rounds as the strong, land and regain’ a share of the! sive Londoner world middleweight title. The | around the ring and belted him 15-round decision was unani-| with some thumping rights and y JACK SULLIVAN PD. Bs Press Sports Editor TORONTO (CP) Toronto | Maple Leafs cut loose with a devastating scoring punch Sat- urday night to overwhelm New York Rangers 7-1 and gain a Stanley Cup final berth, And al- most immediately speculation rose over the future plans of rookie playing-coach Doug Har- though each was tumbled once to the canvas by the pushing of his rival. Pender looked scared weak through the first three and | This was a win-or-else sixth | game of the best-of-seven semi- final for Rangers and they didn’t have the legs to match Leafs) who struck early and often for their deciding fourth victory) lefts to the head and body against two losses. Leafs built But in the fourth, the veteran up a 6-1 lead in the’ opening, 40 | boxing master began to show | minutes and added another goal | some life and in the sixth he | in the final period when all they took charge with his sharp com- | had to do was go out for a skate. bination punches to the head. Rangers went into the game Downes started to bleed from | with a big psychological block. a cut on his oft-repaired nose | They hadn’t beaten Leafs in 16 | in the sixth round. In the 13th, | games on Toronto ice since Oct. Pender's sharp punches tore | 6, 1960, and a win was neces- open a wide gash over Downes’ left ey alive and force the series into a Pender was cut over the left sudden - death game on the eye in the sixth round and again friendly Madison Square Garden over the same eye in the ninth. | jce Tuesday night. The cuts apparently didn’t; Any notions they had about bother him. Downes’ nose cut | this soon disappeared, Toronto | spparentiy: at oon handicap him | pumped three goals behind net- oo muc minder Gump Wor i Each weighed 159, They fought for a few scene slightly less ou hee ‘otis | after the closing bell 1 of the opening period. Rangers | WERE NO KNOCKDOWNS | roars of the crowd of 7,715. | were dead and eve f th There were no knockdowns in| The fight re $66,664. * 13,713 crowd at ‘lho a hord the rough, bloody brawl al-' was televised | Gardens knew it, Nats, Cincinnati ss" se2 Jump Gun Today mortems Harvey told reporters - hadn't made up his mind out his plans for the 1962-63 National oe, League sea- He had taken Rangers to a batiling fourth-place finish 1n rh van coaching year and they ven the second - place NEW YORK (AP)—Washing- sr ‘will be opened to base-| ton and Cincinnati will jump/| ball for the first time Monday the gun with special baseball'| with Mickey Vernon's Senators | opening games Monday and the| facing Bob Scheffing’s Detroit | rest of the major league field! Tigers before 47,000 fans. Pres- | pan start play Tuesday in a/| ident Kennedy will throw out the lay opening that is ex-| first ball before Benny Daniels | oooed te attract about 340,000 of the Senators and Don Moss! | Off to a slow start, the 31- year-old Pender rallied to chop up the game 25-year-old Briton | and win back the piece of the | title he lost to Downes in Lon- don last July 11. At that time | Pender art on his stool after | the ninth round. The alin "officials voted for Pender by the following scores on the 10-point ‘‘must” sys- tem: referee Jimmy McCarron 144-143; judge Joe Blumsack 145-143 and Judge Harry French 146-141. The Associated Press had Pender ahead 147-137, giv-'| ing Pender every round from the sixth on. enceman would shuck off his uniform and concentrate on nee the club from ench, Others said he might sa out of his three-year con- . rousing battle in the oe five games of the series ans. | of the Tigers settle down to The addition of New York) Wor before the roof fell in on them, me observers close to the Mets and Houston Colts to the’ rie, weather evdere ol Som | club said the 37-year-old long- National League completes the pager nal gene nad with a chance | YCRl, because he wasn’t happy latest phase of the majors’ ex -| of sho with the idea of transplanting nsion program, boosting a think | his wife and three ‘en age The T Tigers, of course, ague to 10 teams. children in New Yor they have a chance at the pen- | However, the same old New nant after their close chase ot | Leafs kept him too busy to York Yankees again are favored! the Yankees last s think about it Saturday when in the aan League. Once! Cincinnati will te? the scene | they med inside the New more the National League| of the other Monday opener with | York blueline and fired 47 shots romises to be a scramble with | the Reds opening the defence of | at Worsley. A standout through- Eo Angeles Dodgers the popu-| the National League champion- out the series, the rotund goal- lar choice. ship against Philadelphia Phil- | keeper couldn’t be faulted for The long campaign runs lies, whose only hope of escap- | | the loss because he operated he- through 162-games until Sept. me ie = rests in the two | hind a porous defence while his 30 | forward lines made life compar- "ey a the Reds’ 21-game | atively easy for Johnny Bower winner who tried to buy his |in the Toronto nets with only own ‘cemnieet during a holdout | 26 shots. campaign, will pitch for mana-| The Dave Keon - Dick Cuff- ger Fred Hutchinson’s cham . | George A rmstrong line ac- pions against Art Mahaffey, the | counted for five of the seven Phils’ youthful ace, oals. Keon and Duff each scored twice and singles went to STANDINGS Armstrong, F rank Mahovlich By THE CANADIAN PR rT? bl BATHGATE SCORES e| Washington's new $20,000,000) Bowlers Set For Tourney Kays’ Bros bowling team, the 1961 five-pin champions of the and Bobby Pulford vey in the Ranger organization. | sary to keep their cup hopes| time Montreal Canadiens de-| Yo ahead, took a pass from de-| fenceman Tim Horton, whistled| New York: Goal — Worsley. | wae dipsy doo Defence—Harvey, Langlois, Ca-| and Low dled in front of Worsley until han, Howell, Spencer. Forwards | Glasgow, N.S., past Larry Cahan, he had the Ranger goalkeeper | out of position and calmly flipped the puck into the open 3 2 he Toronto's first goal—by Arm- strong at 9:36 of the opening period—came as a result of a high, blooping shot by Toronto defenceman Carl Brewer. Wors- ley skated nearly 20 feet out of | his goal to stop it on the first bounce with his pads and before | he could scramble back into Po-| sition Keon flipped a pass to the | Leaf captain who lifted the puck high into a corner. | Pulford whipped a 35 - foot knee-high drive past Worsley | about three minutes later and at 17:52 Keon took a passout from behind the New York net from Horton and banged the puck into a corner. | Toronto’s final two goals were | scored in power plays. Rookie Rod Gilbert of Ran- | gers was sitting out a tripping ' penalty when Duff scored his | second at 17:06 of the middle’ period and Keon ended the rout at 9:53 of the third, 23 seconds after Cahan got the gate for | high-sticking Eddie Litzenber- ger. | y GERRY tabard TORONTO (CP) — Playing coach Doug vey of New rk Rangers figured Satur- day night’s Stanley Cup playoff | game would be a free-scoring | affair but he = surprised that | it turned out to be a lopsided | 7-1 i for the Toronto Maple | and | tract, reported to pay $25,000 a, Leaf. “The previous five games in this series were all pretty close | and I was expecting this one might break wide open,” Har- | vey said in the subdued Ranger dressing-room arated the teams five contests in the best-of- | seven semi final. Saturday's | Leaf victory gave them the round, four games to two. | Was Harvey ‘satisfied with how the Rangers responded in this his rookie season as a in the tirst | coach? “The club gave me the best they had all year and I've no ‘No Reason =Goal Says By BILL aga (CP) — nl Duff said Saturday night New y ers “had no a his way to a 7-1 Stanley Cup semi- ronto e best-o! — games to two. ' “The bounced in off the back of my glove and I made WL Andy Bathgate, Ranger right- gpm van aeseane aaa a 42 i9 2) winger with the smoking See, Mootrea a oe oe oats gee t ’ Last April, playing oe the mee tell 24 1522, the playoffs at 18:21 of the open- a ae Keefe oS coamen| G A Pts. Pen.| ing Oe aa on ‘ partially- | Mikita, Ohi 3 1 13 4) screen ooter that slammed Sco een nye in ue "gat Roe ane rs os S ioe eames | Dell Toronto . 6:8 4 over the line between his legs. trom Newt fond bowlers who| Kelly, Toronto 3 4 7 0 _ Rangers had 9 few other good their first appear-| McDonald, Chi 3 4 7 0 iroring Sepertunities, mainly tm were making ition. Tht 6| Hal Chicago 4 2 6 6 the opening period, but they ance in the compet ‘aunt | Moore, 42 6 6 were either he target or re- Ten te teak, tcying ence cgam|weerrem, Chi 3 3 0 4 a to bring the crown back to Can-|Hay, Chicago 3 3 & f oer ft ba , larmstrong, Tor 4 1 5 2 after Bathgate’s goal out Duff ada’s newest province. seals i i peat, Tor 4 1 5 10 put the game out of range at oS oe which | Keon, Toronto ss 0 3:17 of the second period on a} this oa champions| oe 6h | ingarfiel NY 3 2 5 4 hotly - protested goal, Rangers ak auesedy. |Balon, NY 22 5 2 Claimed he had batted in de-| Sts aw waaean ° 3 : : rom the —_ ag ‘ onl 0) 2 3 Tom e Ww ove Shearwater and Stadacona al- ‘Matorien eT 4S 4\ ber reteren Fresh Udveri ral ae rwise igtist Greta te 2*| NBA SCORES no move to push it in,” hesaid in the Leaf dressing room after | the game. “I don't see why it Harvey Surprised At Lopsided Score TORONTO Maple Leafs left-winger Dick | ond period. seco goal that sent Leafs on chete | as he relaxed in a chair after the game, final victory. The win gave To-| silly at times during the series, -of-seven series | This is eo first time we got Maple Leafs Enter Finals; Harvey's Plans Uncertain : INEUPS —Ingarfield, Bathgate, Heben-| Balon, Wilson, Gilbert, Gendron, Hannigan. Toronto: Goal — Bower. De- fence—Horton, Stanley, eee Brewer, Arbour. Forward eel. Kelly, are Dui, Armstrong, Pulfo: perce ie Nevin, a Millan, Referee — Udvari. Linesmen —Pavelich, Armstrong. Po SUMMARY First period: 1. Toronto, Arm- strong 4 (Keon, Brewer) 9:36 2. Toronto, Pulford 4 (Litzenber- ger) 12:43 3. Toronto, Keon 2 (Horton, Duff) 17:52 4. New York, Bathgate 1 (Gendron, Howell) 18:21 Penalties—Balon 6:43, Brewer 18:45 Second 5. Toronto, Duff 1 (Stanley, Horton) 3:17 6, a nets Mahovlich 2 (Horton) 5:01 7, Toronto, Duff 2 (Arm- | strong, Keon) 17:34 Penalties— Wilson 9:26, Pulford 13:03, Gil- bert 17:06 Third period: 8. Toronto, Keon 3 (Kelly. | Duff) 9:53 Penalties— Stewart 3:55, Cahan 9:30, Spen- cer and Harris 1:54 Saves Worsley 15 11 14—40 Bower 10 8 7—25 | complaints,” the all - star de- | $58, fenceman replied. ‘‘My fellows played the best thay could in | this series but the Leafs were a bit too powerful." - time stalwart with Canadiens until this year, Harvey says made up ia mind yet whether | he will continue his dual capa- | city oe Rangers “ en't ‘giv en i any ne wit T'll do next sea- e been ae all my ‘thinking. to this serie Rangers’ star right - winger | Montreal much to say about the semi-fi- nal. I felt it because my knees really bothered me.’ Bathgate | has oe knees and he’d her ae ae his athletic octivities to the golf creer He’s a good golfer and | | hopes to land an assistant pro- feeatenat’ s job in Vancouver, where he lives, or in Toronto. To Protest Dick Dutf The %-year-old winger got a second goal at 17:34 of the sec- Toronto coach ‘eae Imlach was relieved a “I'm glad it’s wer” he said “They had me scared The Lest ‘coach praised the Rangers. ‘You don't have to be ashamed of that club,” he said, Defenceman Tom Horton, who got three assists Saturday and | | wouldn't be allowed. Thousands | led the series’ point-getters with of goals go in like that. They bounce off legs, arms and other ed | places fs were ahea $1) mi glove nesday afternoon bs the series at 3:17 of the second Soa Geis ond oon fy with “Thousands of goals go in| t appeared to take them the best wishes of all local | SATURDAY Tike that,” he said in the —_ all the steam out of the Ran- sport Los Angeles 108 Boston 122 dressingtoom. “They bounce of! . They squawked loudly to pnt the is; | (Boston leads best - of - seve? legs, arms and other mae." Frank Udvari but in) Te s K g,| final series 1-0) Whatever it was, it marked) vain, ie P= . ai) . Sunday io a Rangers in = Rangers protested that Duff, John- eles 129 Boston 122 first pla appearance ide the New lent, PRM Perry and Stan Joke-| Ts Crweven series tied 1-1), | 1958 aes, | kone gal exe, pushed | Sree Within two minutes F Mahovlich, skating Additional Sport Page 10 had defenceman Alla S tancdeg's we | two goals and nine assists, said | “there were other guys who did | lot funny. Either “Points are The Lea d Duff claimed tt bounced in Off when Dutt got his first goal of they're going for you or they're not. When they’ re going for you, you get a lot.” Centre Dave Keon, who got two goals and two assists, praised New York — Gump Worsley who earlier i the series said the eager io was giving him a hot "Bin said he “didn’t get toe scored a oer oo. 5-1, | | Sean the peint tate the net with many ome Ye but he’s a full steam his glove, | real competitor. Burly Hawks Oust Habs; By LAURENT CHIASSON CHICAGO (CP) — The burly Chicago Black Hawks, led by Glenn Hall's superb netmind- ing, Sunday beat Montreal Ca- nadiens 2) for a berth in the | 1962 Stanley Cup finals. The shutout win, before an unruly crowd announced at 16,- 666, gave the Black Hawks a 42 decision in games in their | best- of-seven semi-final series. They now meet Toronto Scaeeae Leafs in a best-of-seven | fmal-round for the coveted tro- phy, starting in Toronto Tues- day night. The big crowd let loose with a thundering ovation when the | game ended. By winning the round, the Hawks completed one of hock- e@y’s great comebacks in recent Hamilton Evens Series TORONTO (CP) — Hamilto Red Wings evened the all!- on. tario Junior finals at a gam apiece Sunday, defeating Tor. me io. Michael's Majors 5-1. Red Wings, who dropped the coos of the beth of-seven e Friday, were held off the pbb sheet in the first period Sunday but out- Played the defending Memorial ~ champions thereafter rris, Bryan Campbell Rivers, Earl Heiskala | ell marnes ald of New tallied for the winners. Mike Walton got the -ton, Hampson, Henry, Hadfield, | lone Jone goal for the Irish, for the Irish. Hawks, Leafs - Open Series On Tuesday CHICAGO (CP) — Chicago Black Hawks and Toronto Maple, ous above the r Leafs will start a best-of-seven | final series for the Stanley Cup in Toronto Tuesday night, National Hockey nounced Sunday. Second game of the League an- round also will be played in Toronto! Thursday night, The third and fourth g will be played in inner They are tentatively scheduled for | et April 15 and Tuesday, April 17. Tentative dates for other games, if necessary, are ‘Thurs- day, April 19, in Toronto, Sun- day, April 22 in Chicago and Tuesday, April 24, in Toronto. The Maple Leafs get prefer- ence for home dates since they | finished second in regular- a m: son NHL play while the Hawks wound up third. spaliipattnaseecniiaimteavatblginag. ening cies 5 Shoemaker Reins Jaipur To Big Win NEW YORK (CP) — Jockey Willie Shoemaker rode Jaipur oo fog and slop Saturday | to a convincing victory in the duct It was the first start of the! season for George B. Widener’s Jaipur, one of the top two-year- | | olds of 1961 and only colt in a oa for the Kentucky) Shoemaker brought the colt | home 1% lengths ahead of Town- e Newson, A. send B. Martin’s Sunrise the | seasons. They dropped the first two games of the series, then stormed back to win the next four. Hall, nicknamed mister goalie here, stopped 41 shots in a bril- liant display of goaltending. STOPS LOOK IMPOSSIBLE At times he came up with seemingly impossible stops with Dickie Moore, Claude Provost and Jean Beliveau being his chief tormentors. The Hawks got all goals in each of the first two periods. Ab McDonald, an hab, counted in the first and Ken Wharram in the second. Stan Mikita, the series’ leading poiut- | winger gathered in a long pass getter, assisted on both goals. It is the second straight year Hawks have eliminate Cana- adiens in a semi-final round. Last spring they also won 42 in games as Hall produced shut- outs in the fifth and sixth Last spring the Hawks went on to win the Stanley Cup for the first time since 1938. Canadiens turned in their best effort of the series an- carried a fair edge in play hg the Hawks. But it turned out a night of frustration. | For example, in the second period Moore got in all alone in front sof Hall after taking a pass from Phil Goyette. He ! io ean ks The Hawks y their mom- ents too and fired 31 shots on’ peaineel's ao goalie Jac- ques Plan HAD LITTLE CHANCE Plante had little chance on Chicago's goals. McDonald got the first at 4:02 |Finals Underway Tuesday Tremblay, Backstrom, son, Hicke, Geoffrion, Marchal Chicago: Goal—-Hall. Defence Pilote, Vasko, St. Laurent, Ev- ans, Turner, Forwards — Hay, Balfour, Hull, Mikita, Whare ram, McDonald, Horvath, Nes- terenko, Fleming, Meinyk, Kur- k. of the first period when, stand-| ylu ing uncovered on the right side} of the crease, he deflected Mi- kita’s goalmouth pass Plante’s far side. Mikita could easily have taken a shot him- self, but elected to pass in- ead. Wharram's goa) came at 13:39 of the second. The fast right from defenceman Dollard St. Laurent after a faceoff in Chi-| cago zone, got by Lou Fontin- ato inside the Montreal blue line and rode in alone on top of Plante The two assists gave ae 18 points for the series, He h at least one point in each of the six games, getting three goals sists. It was a fast game and clean | all the way. Referee Eddie Pow- to be | ers handed out only five minor penalties—three of them going) to the Hawks. None figured in the scoring. L lontreal: Goal — Plante. De- goalie somehow managed to re-| al a: hi Tremblay, MacNelil, | cover fast enough to stop the| | shot with his leg, Not Luck, Says Pilous Hawks leafs Hawks Just Better y JERRY LIKSA cmcaco (AP) — “It wasn’t luck, we just were a better ckey team than Montreal." Thus spoke coach Rudy Pil- roar in the vic- torious Chicago Black Hawks | dressing room after the Hawks bounced Montreal Canadiens out of the Stanley Cup playoffs with a fourth straight victory, 2-0. “If there was a turning point in this deciding game, it was Glenn Hall's great one-handed ave on Dick J} 's wide |open shot in the second per- iod,’’ said Pilous. | The Hawks were fn front 10 when Moore swooped down com- | pletely alone, faked twice, and then tried to blow the puck past Hall. The Hawk goalie stayed with each fake and then stuck his left skate to save the al. ‘BIGGEST SAVE’ “I guess that may have been y biggest save of the sea- son,”’ said the weary Hall. “I | could see that it picked up the of the team and that’s what made it important.”” The Hawks will be raring to start the final rsdn agantsi Mapl ‘onto Tues- day, Pilous said, ‘ales this se- oo much out of us.’ “You know this was a ter- [a | our | | 500 Gotham stakes at Aque-| | CURLING DRAW | The following is the curling | ri for Monday at the Charlo- own Club. This is the closing “‘gpiel” for men. is a points competition, each team playing two games. (Spares needed a3 M. Ice 1—E. Taylor, B, Mac- haan's re of eight three-year-olds not} Gregor, Dr. Beck, J. 8. Taylor vs K. Acorn, F. nen B. | Sopher, S. Bryen Ice 2,.—D. tecmen, 6 . E. sane ve J, Cameron, R. Ewing, Dr. Mac- County, Marian R. Frankel’s | Kay, F, Sampson Ice Sidluck was third. Jaipur No more than two goals sep- | Andy Bathgate didn't have | boosted his total winnings to 252,684. He paid $4.90, $3.10 and Rourke, “It was a tough series and | $2.60 while Sunrise County re, DUM and $3.50 and Sid- turned $4.70 - ck paid $5.10 to show. Citadels Lead Montagnards - QUEBEC (CP)—Quebee Cita-| dels overwhelmed Ottawa Mon- | tagnards 5-1 Sunday to take a 2-0 lead in their best-of- Eastern Canada Memorial Cup | semi - final series. The third | game is to be played here Mon- | day night. Yvon Lacoste led the power- laden Citadels with two goals and Jacques Ruelland, Yves K. five sae, G, Ande’ 3.—Dr, MacDonald, Wheten earned $38,025 and | Whitlock, C. acDonald vs Art on PO. ii Don MacLellan, G. | vg hte, Gallant, A. Bal- | lem, Dr. Higgins, B, Stanish v |G. Stewart, Had MacInnes, B. | Dion, «o Caron. R. Carruthers, D. | “Matheson, B, Jones, P. Whit- lock vs L. Wellner, F. MacMil- | | Jan, B, O'Rourke, W. Carr. | 8.30 aa M. 180 oy fee 2. Ice 3.—H. Peters, Z oe Jenkins, Dr. Crai rson, F. Church, | B. © hn ual MacDonald, a] Flemming, W. Farell, J. Vou-| | tour vs R. — Goyette, peek | dec Beliveau, Rousseau, G. rific series,"’ he continued, “and | we had to play championship | jane Nabs Series Opener hockey to beat team like Montreal."” “We beat them at verre game they wanted to 'm sick and tired of naeeke sauee Tomahawk tactics, We skated with them, we checked — re Fagan we outplayed m all t ae poriouan’ interviewers the Hawks won only one of seven regular season games at Toronto. “But we have a hell of a good chance to take it all again this year,”’ he said. we're rolling now, after a slow start in the regular season.” |—Wicks, Haye Referee — Powers. Linesmen s UMMARY : 1. Chicago, bol (Mikita, Secon pe : Wharram 3 (St. kita) 13:39. Penalties St. aurent 1:42. Geoffrion 2:02, Third peri No scoring. lod: Penalties—None. Saves Plante 10 6 13—S8 Hall 13 11 17-41 : Kapuskasing, Olympics Meet In 1 Cup Series DSOR (CP) — Kap ar "GMs sparked by the tre mendous four - goal offensive show of rookie centre Mare | Tessier, Sunday handed Wind- pulled Hal! out, but the Chicago | fence—Johnson, Talbot, Fontin- a Bulldogs a 7-3 defeat to take their best-of-five Eastern Allan Cup semi-final 3-1. It is the first victory of such importance from an entry in the Northern Ontario Hockey Asso- ciation since Kirkland Lake won the Allan Cup in 1940. Kaps now meet Montreal Olympics in a best - of -seven Eastern Canada Allan Cup final series. erry Labelle scored twice fer the new champions while Nick Rukavina got the other one. Bob Brown, Lou Bendo and Tommy sen scored the goals for Windso: ee am (CP) — Green Ghos' defeated New Weretond eines 67-83 Saturday in the opening game of the home-and-home, total-points series for the Senior ‘“‘C’’ Nova Scotia basketball a Len Walsh and Matt Allen were top scorers for the Ghosts with 17 points each. . Steele .| led the Cape Breton champions with 14 points. The second game will be play- Reporters and photographers ed in New Waterford later this were shut out of the victorious | week. Hawks’ dressing room for about 10 minutes while owner Jim Norris made an veer ee that brought a sound loud ss en the ae stgame interview ended ones someone asked what was the Sera, ae : ta series? Pilous replied: more games than they ais. be In the Montreal dressing room coac x Toe Blake was talkative. He said: if They got the breaks and we didn't, They took advantage of their cares and we didn’t. We | played every bit as well as | ae But don’t get me wrong, | didn't fluke it. They never an and you have to give them | redit. “Both goalies were very good. But (Glenn) Hall was great in the clutch. After all he got a shutout and he picked a helluva time for it. When you stop Dic- kie Moore, you've done some- thi ng. “If we had gotten one goal tonight, it might have changed the whole thing. don't score, well, But when you milder finer hetter flavour | | '27-LB. TROUT 71S LANDED « ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)— a big one didn't get away from James Tobin of near- by Witless Bay Sunday. Tobin reeled a sea trout ‘om a pond near his home weighting 27 pounds and measuring 41 inches from snout to tail. Most sea trout caught in Newfoundland ponds weight under 12 pounds. ‘Sultans, Pirates Tangle Tonight SUMMERSIDE — RCAF Sul- tans and Charlottetown Pirates Ketch, F. Fox, L, will battle for the Island Senior ’ Seal ketball championship Smi Ice 5.—D. O'Rourke, L. Turner | with the first game slated for Blakeney, H. B. Ww. Mac- | this evening at the RCAF Stat- Boyles, A Wilson vs Derome and Denis Gagnon | Laine, FE. “Giese, Ma lem gymnasium beginning at | Jack scored singles. Take the 11a the train kids free u half fare eC BM MulehS mr Lia CIGAR FOR OVER 25 YEARS nder under 12