Rangers More in'i‘eresi'ecl in Sullivan Than NEW YORK (CP)-New York Rangers appeared more inter- ested in the broken jaw of their captain, Red Sullivan, Wednes- day than they did in their Stan- ley Cup semi - final with Boston Bruins. All the talk in the Ranger camp was on Sullivan's injury, instead of the Blues’ 5-3 win over Bruins Tuesday night in the first game , of the series. W;.;;e the’ R a n g e r s’ went through a light practice - and debated Sullivan’s jaw - Bruins’ coach Milt Schmidt was ponder- ing his choice of goalies for the second game Thursday night. DISPLEASED WITH LUM He admitted he was far from pleased with the performance of veteran Harry Lumley Tuesday, and the probability was that he would use Don Simmons for the second game. Except for Luimley’s play, and an expressed general .di»ssatisfac- tion with his team for not attl- ing hard enough, Schmidtvd-idn’t appear too unhappy about drop- ping the first game. “Two cheap penalties beat us," he philosophized, “and I mean really cheap. Outside of that ‘it could have gone either way. You can bet this one isn’t going to end in four games." ' Hank Ciesla, who took over for Sullivan after the redhead was dropped in the first period iy Vic Staswiuk’s bodycheck, worked out in. the same spot Wednesday and will be in the same slot Thurs- day. ' PRAISE FOR CIESLA Phil Watson, Ranger coach, sprinkled a few words of praise his way -— between accusations that Boston is trying to maim the Rangers. “Ciesla filled the hole and he played a hell of a game,” he said.’ “If he plays that way we won't miss Sullivan too much.” Then Watson returned to Stalli- van’s injury. . “Stasiuk had to skate an extra 20 feet to make contact. It was, a dirty rotten play if I ever saw one. We figured the Bruins would be out to cripple us, and now we’re sure of it.” But most of the other Rangers, including general manager Muzz Patrick, discou-nted Watson's ex- cited comments. “It was a fair check-tha-t’s part of the game,” Patrick said. ‘ Lot 16 Beats Freetown 6-1 The Lot 16 Rangers defeated Freetown_Royals 6-1 in the third and, deciding game, of their series. Lot 16 now goes against the Albany team‘ for the South Shore Hockey League Cham. ’ Los Angeles 004 000 000-4 9 1 A " Podres, L. Sherry (4) Negray .osi:on MAN, OH. MAN! 4 — 9 SW’.-1405/.4.4, ax: fflf szza.///5 CARD//VA): 5, /r/V0/4/s /4///£A>£ /9 /yzxr ' /00, 000 /5 ca/am/as . /-720M 7///was ‘ 70 A09 /re-‘ca/rp . ; /V47‘/0//AZ .5 254645 ‘ can/72457.‘ /7o»/ #56 100/(/#6 x-we fflf M7 5207 an/. 1/5 5147‘ ‘ 7//A7 )4//zz y/5.49 ME 43 Mrs #5 /I/E599 70 /I/A/(E /7 44/ EV;/V 3, 000. E.-my //Y M5 /958 55/7 504' 57/72)’ 5//0049 ““”:'*~ B560/ME 75/5 .971 MEMBER OF 7//E 3,000 #17’ CAJB. .4/VD .4/V0 775’;-‘R BA 7'77»/5 - 7/745 W0!/ZD Pl/7%’//if//V . -- TAIE at 7‘/M £XC[l/5/VE’/l4[. : 3- 7/A455 -B477/4/6 .65//M’/P czz/5 W/7// I/M/5_ /4‘/A6//ER. - - - By Alan Mover J Lu flan BASEBALL By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At Sarasota, Fla. Detroit 001 100 000-2 11 ~ 1 Boston 000 201 l0x—-4 '5 1 Hoeft, Stump (6) Byrd (8) and Hegan, Wilson (8); F. Sullivan, Susce (6) Wall, (8) and Daley, H. Sullivan (4). W—Susce. L-Stump. . At St. Petersburg, Fla. -St. Louis 001 003 030-7 11 2 New York 010 110 000-3 8 3 Jackson, M u f f e t t (6) and Smith; Turley, 'Du'.ren (7) James (8) and Howard. W-Ja'clcson.'L- Turley. i At Ft. Myers, Fla. Pittsburgh 402 000 00x-6 12 1 (8) and Walker,‘ N. .Sh'erry (5); Friend and Foiles. L-Padres. 3 At Phoenix,.Ariz. ' Baltimore , 003,010 010-5. 8 1 San Fran. 4(1) 030 00x-7 12 1 Zuverink, Lehman (2) Pappas (7) and Triandos, Ginsberg (7); Gomez, Giel (6) Grissom (8) and Testa, Thomas (8). W-Gomez. L- L eh m a ii». I-IRS: V SF-Mays 2, Cepeda -2, Spencer. pionship. \ or Qu At Mesa, Ariz. a Milwaukee Phila. eens Rounour Cleveland 020 300 000- 5 14 3 Chi. ’(N) 211 .140 10x-10 13 1 Narleski, Daley (6) Lary (8) and Naragon, Porter (8); Elston, Mayer (4) and Tappe. W-Mayer. L-Narleski. HRs: Cle-Woodling, Wertz; Chi-B-olger, Moryn, Long, Goryl, Tappe. At Tampa, Fla. Kansas City 010 000 000- 1 9 1 Chi. (A) 0 000 263 30X‘-14 13 0 Urban, Craddock (5) Tsitouris (6) Trucks (7) and Smith; Pierce, Wilson (7) and Lollar. W- -Pier-ce. L-Urban. HR: KCy-Me1- ton. At Clearwater, Fla. ‘ ‘O00 102 052-10 11 2 010 001 000- 2 8 2 Paine, Jay (4) Willey (7) and Sawatski; , Simmons, Cardwell (8). Lipetri (9) and Lonnett. W-Jay. L-Simmons.’ HRS‘: Mathews. Mil-Adcock 2, At Lake Wales, Fla. NYk. B (AL) 001 400 030-8 8 1 R’mond (IL) 000 010 000-1 4 0 , Ford and D a r r e 11 Johnson; Bet-’he«l, Staf‘—ford'(4) Gallagher (8) and Command, Wind1e~. (7). ' W- Fond; L-Bethel. ‘ Curling Today For Montague Curling schedule for March 27, at Montague. 7:00 P. M. East ice: J. S. Desroclies, H. Cape greton 3-2 Iiiman, A. Sullivan, F. MacDon- ald, vs. R. R. Beck, B. McGow- an, F. Vuozzo, H. Coffin. West ice: Dr. L. A. Johnston, Leona Sin-clair. E. Shaw, A. Nel- son, vs. I. G. Phillips, D. Nichol- son, E. Duvar, Bud Ings. 9:00 P. M. East ice: Dr. P. McIntyre, H. Clair, D. Coffin, Dick MacLean, vs. H. L. MacGregor. Peg Sulli- van, B. Haneveld, Bill Macin- tyre. ._ West ice: H. Moar, C. Stewart, B. Koke, C. Gordon, vs. A. A. Fraser, E. Clay, D. McGowan, M. Poole. CURLING ,RAW Th folo-wing is the draw for Thursday night at the Charlotte- town club, . 7 P,M,- -- Ice 1-H. C. Atkinson, H. Spillett, D. George, M, Waddell vs. F. Hansen, E MacLeod, W, Rodd, I. Walton. Ice 2-—Dr. Gallant, A, Mac- Donald, E, MacDonald, R. Ketch vs, D, Saunders, K, Acorn, T, Mitton, D. Bell. . Ice 3-Dr. MacDon-ald, N, Nicholson, L. Johnston, R, Man- ning vs. J. S. MacDonald, H. Maclnn-es, B, MacGregor, 1. Trainer. Ice 4-W, MacLaine, D, Won- nacott, F, MacMillan, T. Whit- lock vs. A. Likely, D, ‘Rourke, W, Hayward, B. MacDougal1, 8:30 P.M.- Ice’ 1 (Old, Spain).-C. White- nect, Mr. Kelly, L. MacP-hail, Geo. MacLeod vs. A. Carruthers, J. Beaton, A. Cameron, C. Cud- more, Ice 2-D, Came.-ron, S. Beaton, K. MacDonald, D, Smith vs. J, Burden, A. Bagnall, C. Whitlock, R. Ewing. Ice 3 (Tumbler Play) (Rotate) -B. MacNeill, B. LeClair, L, D. MacKay, R, Vessey _vs. Dr,’ Giddings, G, Stewart, M. Mc- Guigan, W, Scantlebury, Ice 4-J. Squarebriggs, Dr, McEachern, E. Gillespie, S. W. Willisvvs. Dr. Moreside, L, Well- ner, T. White, J. Balcom, Ice Follies Here So-on Word was received last night from Mr. Wally Scan-tlebury con- cerning the Ice Follies which are scheduled to put in an appear- ance in Charlottetown soon. Mr; Scantlebury stated that there is do certain date set as yet for the follies but they were expected to be at the Arena sometime during month of April. Sports the BIG EXPANSION Manufacturers in Australia are spending more than $450,000,000 annually on new buildings, plant and machinery. 'v , I 4 Hints THE County ...Y .:3ooooo N RW a THE cnmuorrno Page 6 The Guardian Thur. March 27, 1958 @aV€i‘S SYDNEY (CP) Two un- matched goals in the third. period gave Buckingham, Que.. Beavers a 3-2 win over Cape Breton All-Stars here Wednes- day night. It: squared the best- of-five Eastern Canada Memo- rial Cup quarter-final at one apiece. It was a case of Beavers living up to their name. They worked harder than the Cape Biretoners throughoru/t for the comeback victory. Beaver-.; t-railed 1-0 at the end of the first, and 2-1 going into the third, Pierre Hayes tied it at 7:17 of the final when he whipped around the Cape‘. Breton cage after" taking a pass from Louis Bardleleau tand poked the puck into the corner, Cape Breton was a man short at the time of the tying goal, but the teams were at full- strength when Mike Donaldson fired home the winner at 11:32 of the third, Hilary Lawlis other Buckingham goal, He got Guy B-eaure'gard’s rebound as the two were left alone in front of ,go»alie Joey McMullin. For Cape Breton,’ Lou Roy and‘ Doug Polley were the snipers. Both netmimdeirs were out- scored the , Defeat standing, with McMullin es- pecially strong for Cape Breton- He kicked out 38 shots. Buc- kingham's Bernard Laverne stopped 26 drives and saved the game late in the second when he made good on a break- away by Eustace Reeves, Buckingham held a wide edge in play in all three periods, but found themselves trailing until the final 10 minutes. Lou Roy, a Cam-pbellton, N_B. product, sent Cape Breton ahead at 13:21 of the first when he slipped a back-hander past Laverne with Polley, and Jim Locke assist- inig. Lawlis tid it at 2:10 of the second. Polley fired his own rebound over’Laverne six minu- tes later to regain a one-goal lead for Cape Breton. Cape Breton-Goal: McMillan; defence: V. McNeil, D. McNeil, Reeves, Cyr; forwards: Locke, Polley, Roy, Verbeski, Long, Keddy, Moore, Keeping, Salyzyn, Synishin. , Buckingham - Goal: Laverne; defenc e: Hayes, Donaldson, Beau r e g a r d, Bardleleau; .for- wards: Fong, M. Lawlis, Fillion, Middlestead, Charlebois, H. Law- lis, Mercer, Lafrance, Parent, Paquette. SUMMARY First period: .1. Cape Breton. %lr$’I'5'nQe€0ampfire -ro iupeove ~/ourz AIM, SHOOTING AT CLAY PIGEONS THQOWN BYA PARTNER WITH. A HAND TRAP IS AN EXCELLEH WAY and Here’sWI1a-Ht’s Dot By JACK SORDS MAKE SURE YOUR SHOTGUN FITS YOU; ‘a can ‘ Z l " GENERALLY, THE. LENGTH OF PULL IS RIGHT WHEN THE BUTT FITS INTO THE cs2ooI< or THE Forea- ARM wm-1 THE FINGERON THE TRIGGER IF WHEN YOU PRESS You)? CREEK FIRMLYAGAINS1‘ THE COMB 700 CAN'T LOOK RIGHT ‘DOWN THE BARREL our SEE rr Foi2EsHom'EN- ED (A), ‘maze is TOO Lime am? In THE COMB AND YOU'LL SHOOT HIGH. n= uuoesz -rue SAME ClRCUM' smnces you see ONLY THE Bszeacu. YOUR GUN HAS‘ TOO MUCH ononkr . THE come Kirk \\( /I” _, [wit/4» I n= ~/ourz eon i=i-rs You PERFECTLY our you s-nu. MISS, GENERALLY ma COMMbNE$T REASONS THEQEBY SEEING ‘IUO MUCH OF TNE BARREL AND - El2$‘HOOfl.IlG' SLOWIHG OR STDPPNG CAUSING l-{SUFFICIENT LEAD ‘l I \ 0 ng -*I,5oo,ooo IN IMPROVEMENTS FOR ""5 l0TE AOUR! N AIRPORT! R S W! HG, By W. R. WI-IEATLEY Canar‘ian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) - Detroit Red Wings, ignominiously de- feated 8-1 by Montreal Canadiens in the first game of their Stanley Cup semi-final, got no sympathy Wednesday - certainly not from general manager Jack Adams. V“They couldn't have beaten the Roy“(Polley, Locke) 13:21. Pen- alties: Hayes 3:29, Moore 5:47, Polley 5:49, ‘Vince McNeil 7:48, Parent 9:44, H. Lawlis 19:09. Second period: 2. Buckingham, Cape Breton, Polley (Locke) 8:33. Penalties: Keddy 9:40, V. McNeil 10:11, Oyr 14:54, Donald- son 19252, H. Lawlis (miscon- duct) 19:52. - Third period: 4. Buckingham, Hayes (Bardleleau) 7:17; 5. Buckingham, D on ald son (La- france) 11:32; Penatlies: Hayes 1:04, V. McNeil 6:17, D. McNeil 9:02. Stops: McMillan 415 9-38 Lvaerne 10 7 9-26 H. Lawlis (Beauregard) 2:10; 3._ Verdun (local team) juniors last night," fumed Adams. Adams was reported to have been just as vitriolic in talking directly to his players-“maybe you are a National Hockey League team but you didn’t play like one . . . ‘if you have no feel- ing of pride you don’t do erve anything better than what hap- pened to you.” MIGHT D0 GOOD Adams agreed that the terrific lacing might do his club some good and that the players would strike back Thursday in the sec- ond game of the best - of - seven series before the teams move on to Detroit. But he still wasn’t going to be- come too enthusiastic. “For years I've been dying with these guys. Now I'm not go- ing to die any more. Not for ' hockey players. It’s their money, not mine, they’re tossing off.” Coach Sid" Abel agreed his Wings couldn’t have been much worse. - “We’ve got to hold down pen- alties for one thing,” he said. “That Montreal power play will Adams Has No Sympathy For Wings After Defeat murder you.” Abel said he plans no line changes for the second game and feels his club should rebound from the trouncing and play more in its accustomed f:.~s'.:ion. ‘HAPPY, BUT CAUTIOUS . Coach Toe Blake of Canadians v '0 was "both exhilarated and can. tious. they’re. still dangerous,” said Blake. “You can write off that lopsided score. There probably won't be another game like that i " in the series. “I was glad to see our power .._ play had a lot of hustle for a change. In the last few games of the season, after we had clinched ‘ the NHL title, there was a let- down. same lineup in Thursday’s game with the same lines working. This indicates that Bernie (Boom V Boom) Geoffrion, who made his appearance Tuesday after being sidelined two months, will be used almost exc-lusiveily on the power play. _ ' HOCKEY PLAYOFFS TONIGHT Maritime Champion Semi-Finals. A CHARLOTTETOWN ROYALS ‘ . . ,Vs. : _ _ NORTH svonsv comamrs , GAME ‘TIME 8.30 P. M. Admission: Adults 1.00; Children 50: r a OUR County! Tickets on sale all day at the SPORTS. ARENA SPORTS ARENA “We outplayed them from the start, got the jump on them, but -. Blake said he will go with the i ...i.... /_ fubfished by the Queens County Consergative .A,SSOci2lfi0lIs '-.,s£I....l.-fa... . /ii.‘ 2 .:.; _. A .._.-.;: \a.