‘( ,tory on only Stamps Wallop Bombers 20-1. 4lln Western Opener CALGARY (CP) — Calgary Stampeders. spurred by the tan- talizing goal of making their first Grey Cup' appearance in 13 years. whipped Winnipeg Blue Bombers 20-14 Saturday in the first game of the Western Football Conference finals. Second game in the best-of- three series ‘will be played in Winnipeg Wednesday night. Third game, if needed. will be in the Manitoba city Saturday. A crowd of 17,230, bundled warmly in chilly 25 - degree weather, watched Calgary dom- Inate every department and win the game with a fourth quarter touchdown. The, result moved Stampeders to within one victory of the right to represent the West in the Grey Cup game Saturday. Dec. 1. The last time they did so was in 1949. ROOKIE LEADS Flanker Larry Robinson WF'C rookie of the year in 1961, Calgary's atta‘ck with 13 points on two field goals. a touchdown and a convert. Fullback Earl Lunsford got the other Stamp- r touchdown and end Jim Furlong punted for a single. Fullback Charlie Sh ep ar scored both touchdowns for Win- nipeg, defending Grey Cup champions. Gerry James con- verted them. The Stampeder defensive line stood out, allowing Blue Bomb- ers to penetrate Calgary terri- _ four occasions. Both Blue Bomber touchdowns were a direct result of pass in- terceptions. Winnipeg led 7-3 after the first quarter. 7-6 at half time and 14-12 after three quarters. Stampeders started the game with a strong march along the ground, reaching the Blue Bomber 20-yard line mainly on the rushing of Lunsford and half Jim Dillard Robinson his first field goal to 5 fl- back kicked cap the v . Calgary quarterback Eagle Day switched to the pass on Stampeders' next series of plays. The switch proved disas- trous as Winnipeg safety Dick Thornton intercepted on his own 53 And, galloped to the Calgary 17. Shepard went three yards for the touchdown three plays later. James converted and Win- nipeg led 7-3. Stampeders again moved to the Blue Bomber 20 early in the second quarter with two long passes from Day to end Pete Manning the feature. Rob- inson was good on a 24-yard field goal to make it 76. DAY PASSED AGAIN Less than a minute had elapsed in the third quarter when Norm Rauhaus ‘Intei- cepted another Day pass on the Calgary 52 and scampered to the Stampeder one. Shepard' bulled over on e next play E’Iluuu'III—z ant:4 James converted to make -6. Stampeders marched again after the post-touchdown kickoff drivmg 78 yards in 15 plays. Lunsford charged over from one .... q-o yard out to reduce the margin 1 to two points. Blue Bombers stormed right back, moving 77 yards to the Calgary 21. The drive went for naught when Jerry Keeling of Stampeders interCepted a pass from Winnipeg quarterback Kenny Ploen in the end zone. Calgary started its fourth- quarter move on their own 34. In nine plays they moved to the Winnipeg eight. Star safety Harvey Wylie then started an end sweep, saw Rob- inson alone in the end zone. and connected with a pass. Furlong completed scoring with 60- yard punt for a single. Calgary’s defence held Blue Bombers to a total offence of 114 yards—62 rushing and 52 passing. Winnipeg had 11 first downs. Ploen and Hal Ledyard, who took over quarterbacking chores late in game, com- pleted four of 17 passes. Calgary had 29 first downs on 189 yards rushing and 192 pass- ing. Day and Wylie completed 5 of 24 passes. . I MMARY Fi‘rst quarter 1. Calgary, field goal (Robin- son) 7:58 2. Winnipeg. touchdown (Shep- ard) 13:23 3. Winnipeg, convert (James) uarter , II 4. Calgary, field goal (Robin- son) 2:27 q arter 1rd u 5. Winnipeg. touchdown (Shep- mhr @nnrdism Charlottetown, Mon. Nov.. 19, 1962. PAGE 7 NY. Snaps Leaf Streak Emerges With 3-1 Win NEW YORK (CP) - New York Rangers ended Toronto's ive - game National Hockey League winning streak Sunday night by whipping the Maple Leafs 3-1 at New York. The fifth-place Rangers held the Leafs even during the score- less first period lead in the seco Jean Ratelle, Ken Schinkel and Bronco Horvath scored the New York goals. Centre Red Kelly was the lone marksman, beating Ranger goaltender then took a 2-1 nd. Ratelle 6 (Henry) 6:20: 2. New York, Schinkel 3 (Prentice) 11:15; 3. Toronto, Kelly 5 (Lit- zebnreger, Brewer) 17:18. Pen- altIes — Horton 1:55, Toronto, too many men on ice (served by Litzenberger) 14:39. Third period: 4. New York, Horvath 3 (Langlols. Schinkel) 13:06. Penalties—none. Saves: ower 7 11 15—33 Worsley 15 8 8—31 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Jack Price and Lowell Mc- Donald scored in the second period to give Pittsburgh Hor- nets a 2-0 victory over Quebec Aces in an American Hockey League game Saturday night. Pittsburgh's m a r g l n would have been higher, but a goal by Claude LaForge in the second period was disallowed. The puck had apparently entered he net, then bounced out, and finally ricocheted in, off Mc- onald’s knee. The ruling was that it had not gone in the first :f B (a In other AHL action, Hershey Lorne Worsley at 17:18 of the ard) 1:24 6. Winnipeg, convert (James) touchdown (Luns- rth quarter 7. Calgary, touchdown (Robin- son) 6:11 9. Calgary, convert (Robinson) 10. Calgary. single (Furlong) 12:00 MEchL runnnncvl. Giants Edge Eagles; THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Field goals opened ,a wider gap Sunday in what was a tight. race for the Eastern Division championship in the National Football League. Don Chandler boosted four three-pointers in the rain, wind and snow at Yankee Stadium and lifted New York Giants to a 19-14 triumph over Luckiess Philadelphia Eagles. Lou Michaels’ 24-yard field with 13 seconds left pulled Pittsburgh Steelers from behind and gave hem a 23-21 victory over Washington Red- skins, currently the Giants’ no 1 challenger for top honors in the East. It was Michaels’ third of the game. . A Roger LecLerc‘s 12- yarder with 31 seconds remain- ing gave Chicago Bears a 34-33 decision over alias and dropped the Cowboys into fifth in the Eastern_standings. n the other game involving Eastern teams, Cleveland Browns whipped St. Louis Car- dinals 38-14. Green Bay, as expected. con- tinued to roll on unbeaten and untied in the West although the NFL’s defending champions had a rough time before they finally overcame surprisingly stubborn Baltimore Colts 17-13. e victory was the Packers’ 10th of the campaign and kept them two games ahead of sec- ond-place Detroit Lions, who knocked off Minnesota Vikings 17-6. San Francisco 49ers out- scored Los Angeles Rams 24-17 in the other game in the west- fackersStil here to serve you ANY‘i GAIN TOP sro'r hour of the day or night‘ ' i Houston Oilers climbed ahead ,of Boston Patriots into first for 24 hour service. j place in the American Football League's Eastern Division b . MEIIIGAL PIIAIIMAItYfi Y b e a tin g them 21-17. Dallas Corner of Pownal and t strengthened its grip on the Western Division lead by heat ing Denver’s Broncos 24-3. Buf- Rlchmond St.. Ch’town : 2:11; EffédAg.aIfdca:£eégs 1“ tho WIIIIIIIIIIIIA DOUBLE HEADER HOCKEY TONIGHT (MONDAY) CIVIC STADIUM | Unbeaten from 23. 30, 37 and 26 yards out Dwyer Takes 0 I 0 Bowling Ch ship ‘ SUMMERSIDE — Jim 11wyer won the Crest Lane bowling championship at the new alleys Saturday, defeating the defend- ing champion, Earl Smith, by 79 pins. Neither boy was up to his usual form, and with said afterwards that it was his worst game in years. Scores — Smith - 185 - 185- 154 —524 Dwyer — 215 - 196 - 202 Next Satwday's games will be pnesent cham- alllenger Harold ' ' n is spon- . eco sored by Butternut Bread. — penalties. second period. The Rangers. who now have oaoom FOURTH IN POLE VAULT beaten the Leafs three times in the five games the two clubs have played. received another solid game from Worsle . gnomish goaltender kicked 31 Toronto drives. STALLS LEAF ADVANCE The loss prevented the Leafs om advancing higher in the standings. They ar in thir place with 19 points, more than the Rangers. Referee Art Skov had a rela- tively light night in the penalty department, call g only four The Leafs received ree of the minors but none of them figured in the scoring. ARY First period: No scoring. Pen- alties-Balon 0:37. Stewart 5:14. Secon period: 1. New York, v-l :- 0 out 5? seven and came one in each period Tommy McDonald’s touchdown run with Sonny Jurgensen’s pass on a play covering 66 yards and Tim Brown’s 61- yard sprint gave Philadelphia is 14-13 halftime advantage, but Chandler's third field goal late in the third quarter put the GI- ants ahead for good. The Eagles' Howard (Hopa- long) Cassady suffered a bro- ken right leg in the second half. He will play no more this season. Michaels hadbootsof37, 19 and 24 yards against the Reds at Pittsburgh. Norm Snead‘s passes and Billy Barnes' run- ' gave Washington a 21-6 lead after three periods, but Pittsburgh’s 17-point outburst in the final quarter was too muc for the Redskins. Both touch- downs came on the passing of Ed Brown, who came off the Steele)r bench after Bobby Layne was injured. SCORES 0N LONG RUN Dallas' game with the Bears at Dallas was close until the Cowboys opened up a nine- point gap in the fourth quarter when Amos Bullocks broke through and ramped 73 yards for a touchdown, a club record. The;-lead didn’t last long, how- ever. Billy Wade put his pass- ing arm into operation for the Bears and moved his club yards for a score. LecLerc did ‘the rest with his field goal. Fullback immy Brown made four touchdowns in Cleveland’s easy verdict over St. Louis. and quarterback Frank Ryan were much too much for the Cards. Brown collect 85 yards in 19 tries. Ryan com pleted 13 of 21 passes for 241 yards. A 103-yard kickoff return by] Herb Adderley and two great defensive stands helped Green Bay in its squeeze past Balti- more. The Packers had to de- pend on a 23-yard scoring dash by Tom Moore in the fourth quarter and a last-ditch goal line stand with three minutes left to get their 18th straight triumph, including exhibitions. since the 1961 campaign. Balti- more led 13-10 going lnto the fourth on Johnny Unitas' yard pass to Jimmy Orr and FOOTBALL RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS SATURDAY Eastern Conference Hamilton 28 Montreal 17 (First game of two-game, to- tal-points final) Western Conference Winnipeg 14 Calgary 20 (First game of best—of—three, final) Senior Intercollegiate McGill 15 Queen's 13 (Sudden death final) Ford 1 “P St. Francis Xavier 12 Saint M ry's SUNDAY Eastern Canada Junior Sarnia 14 Montreal ndg 29 (Sudden-death final) Canadian Intermediate East York 7 St. Vital 29 (Sudden-death final) ational League Baltimore 13 Green Bay 17 Chicago 34 Dallas 33 Detroit 17 Minnesota 6 Philadelphia 14 New York 19 St. Louis 14 Cleveland 38 San Francisco 24 Los Angeles 17 Washington 21 Pittsburgh 23 American eague Dallas 24 Denver 3 Boston 17 Houston 21 Buffalo 10 Oakland 6 us. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Penn State 49 Holy Cross 20 Dartmouth 28 Cornell 21 He Pittsburgh 7 Army 6 Princeton 14 Yale 10 Syracuse 35 George Washington 0 Harvard 31 Brown 19 Columbia 21 Penn 7 Gettysburg 22 Temple 15 Buffalo 6 Colg te 0 Lehigh 13 Lafa ette b Villanova 34 Rutgers 12 Boston College 41 Boston Uni- versity 25 MIDDLE WEST Notre Dame 21 North Carolina 7 Ohio State 26 Oregon 7 Dayton 8 Wichita 0 Miami (Ohio) 38 Cincinnati 16 Oklahoma 13 Missouri 0 Toledo 21 Tulsa 18 Iowa State 28 Kansas State 14 (Minnesota 7 Purdue 6 Iowa 28 Michigan 14 Michigan State 31 Northwestern 7 ‘Wisconsin 35 Illinois 6 Kansas 33 California 21 Nebraska 14 Oklahoma State 0 SOUTH West Virginia 49 The Citadel 0 lemson 17 Maryland 14 North Carolina State 24 Vir- ginia Xavier 14 Kentucky 9 Mississippi 19 Tennessee 6 Florida 20 Florida State 7 Georgia Tech 7 Alabama 6 Duke 50 Wake Forest 0 Vanderbilt 20 Tulane 0 eorgia 30 Auburn 21 Texas 14 Texas Christian 0 Arkansas 9 SMU 7 Texas Tech 21 Colorado 12 Arizona State 45 New Mexico State 0 Arizona 7 Texas Western 0 Louisiana State 28 Mississippi State 0 Louisville 14 North Texas State 0 South Carolina 26 Detroit 13 FAR WEST Baylor 10 Air Force 3 Brigham Young 14 Wyoming 7 Utah State 19 Utah Southern California 13 Navy 6 Canuck By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor BUNBURY. Australia (CF)— “sightseeing” warmup has turned out to be an eye-popper for track experts at this British Empire Games site. The reason is mercury-foot Vancouver. Morning-line odds made him the heavy favorite to become Canada’s first double winner in the 32-year-old history of the ames when he made hacks of the field in the 220-yard run at Bunbury oval. He followed this u with a tremendous anchor leg with Canada’s 440-yard re- lay team that lost by inches to Australia in a pre-games event. A co-attraction of the meet was Toronto’s Bruce Kidd, who as the burning ambition to be- come Canada's first four-min- ute miler and wants to “do it before someone else beats me to it " But the loose, soft and undu- lating track quickly dissipated any chance of this and Kidd won in four minutes, 6.8 sec- onds over Aussies Trevor Vin- cent and Albie omas. It was same for the sprinters, with times for nearly a mes athletes were about a second slower than their best marks. METHOD IMPRESSIVE Jerome was in this category but he won in a way that im- pressed observers with a clock- ing of 21.6 in the 220. An hour later be h a rrell e it down the straightaway after spotting the Are Impressive Harry Winston Jerome of in Athletes Aussie anchor man about 10 yards and Dennis Johnson of Jamaica about three. He whipped past Johnson, a 9.3 loo-yard sprinter, and was just nipped at the wire by the ustraiian. The Aussie team was timed in 41.7 and Canada ' 41.9. Running with Jerome on the relay team 'were Bob Fisher- Smith. a native of Vulcan, Alta.. now living in Ottawa, and Bill Crothers of Toronto. streamer in he Perth Sunday Times said: “Jerome seems to have mortgage on games sprints.” British, Australian and New Zealand newspaper reporters praised his performance. In the 220, Jerome was the winner almost from the start. He started off with a fine sprint. settled down to an eas loping stride and let down al- most to a walk as he crossed the finish line way ahead of the field. The meets were held in this coastal town and at Geraldton. Bunbury is abou 300 iles south of Perth and Geraldton he same distance north. At Geraldton, Bob Watson of Langley, B.C., uncorked the best pol vault of his life to win that event. He topped the bar at 14 feet. six inches. His best previous effort was 14 even. Alf Groom of Summerside, P.E.I., got a fourth in the pole vault with a vault of 13 feet, six inches, well below his best effort of 14 feet, three inches. Bears defeated Buffalo Bisons 6-2 and Springfield Indians drubbed Cleveland Barons 6-3. In Springfield. Mass, the In- dians broke 100se for four goals in the third period to hand Cleveland their sixth straight loss Saturday night and their 15th in 16 games. ' Mighty Ala NEW YORK (AP) — Georgia Tech upset mighty Alabama 76 Saturday, ending the longest college football winning string and seriously damaging Alabama's hopes of a second straight national championship. Fullback Mike am scored Georgia 'Ilech’s second- quarter touchdown on a ' F'- m (D m mne- yard drive and made Billy Loth- ridge's conversion kick stand up as the margin of victory when his jarring tackle thwarted a two-point Alabama conversion try in the fourth quarter. The loss was the first in 27 games for Alab Rose Bowl berth w1 triumph over Illinois while Mis- sissippi, Texas and Oklahoma ugar, Cotton and Orange Bowls. Southern California had to come from behind, then get a‘ bit of luck in winning an eighth straight game, 13-6 over Navy. Navy almost pulled it out in the closing moments when they had the ball on the USC five, fum- ama. b Wisconsin virtually clinched a ‘ 35 took giant strides toward the 30 Pirates Shut Out QuebecAces 2-0‘ It was the eighth straight win on home ice for the Indians. Bill Sweeney and Wally Boyei each scored twice and Roger Cote and Ted Harris added sin- gles for Springfield while J Ferguson, Hank ie sis and Fred Glover scored for Cleve- and. At H e r s h e y, Pa., rookie Wayne Rivers scored three goals Saturday night as the surging Hershey Bears defeated Buffalo Bisons for ' sixth straight A m e r l c a n Hockey League victory. Rivers knocked in back-to- back goals with long angle shots in the second period, then picked up third in last pe- riod on a 30-foot shot. Other Hershey scorers were Les Duff, Larry Zeidel and Cle- land Mortson. Scoring for the Bisons were Jack McKenzie and Larry Wilson, who counted in the last 19 seconds during a scramble in front of the net. .— Georgia Tech Upsets bama 7-6 were knocked out of the race. Minnesota (6—1-1) edged Purdue 7-6 and Michigan State ramped over Northwestern 31-7. ATTACK DEVASTATING A devastating ground attack led by Jerry Stovall and fierce line play carried 10th-ranked Louisiana State over Mississippi State 28-0 in their Southeastern scored two touchdowns for LSU, now 7-1-1, and the LSU defence allowed Mississippi State only two yards rushing. In some of the other major games. Dartmuth remained un- eaten and untied and clinched of California at Los Angeles -0 and Duke moved closer to its third straight Atlantic Coast Conference title with a 50-0 rout of Wake Forest. Minor Hockey Officials Plan bled into the end zone with the Trojans recovering. Mississippi won their eighth straight. 19-6 over Tennessee. The victory coupled with Ala- bama's loss, virtually assured New Mexico 41 Montana 12 Rice 23 Texas A. and M. 3 Orle4gon State 25 Colorado State Stanford 2! San Jose State 9 ‘Nevada 14 Idaho State 7 ' Standings National League Eastern Conference Nick Blelski’s field goals. Chandler's field goals were 7:30 p.m.—-Konsington Bombers vs. S’side Aces 9:30 p.m.—Albany St. Pats vs. O’Leary Maroons Admission: Adults 50 cents; students 25 cents VIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘ Quarterback Earl Mora in- jected life into Detroit’s listless - , offence and guided the Lions ~ §from behind to down Minne- g BOWLING ‘ sota. He threw two tghirdgiefiiod _ _ touchdown passes en an R MON Fm' 2 5 ~! Gibbons for the 14 points that N Ni erased a 6-3 lead the Vikings R ' [AMFg held on field goals by Jim ' ~““ Christopherson. t/IIIIIIIIIIIIIA ‘ BBODIE LEADS 49ERS LIBERAL NOMINATING CONVENTION for purpose of nominating two condidotosfor ‘ \Sth. DISTRICT QUEENS Charlottetown and Royalty’s Monday, Nov. 19th. 8 p.n1. Rollawny Club Joell pol \ to hove five dole,- qatas In attendance. REGISTRATION 7.30 PM. sun-a- DAVID WALKER , “ President LLOYD WEEKS ' Secretary ‘ THURSDAY-— This Week AT Civic Stadium MONDAY— 7:30 pm. Prince County Inter- mediate hockey — Kensingtoni Bombers vs. Summer-side Aces 9:30 p.m.—Albany St. Pats vs. O'Leary Maroons. San Francisco spotted Los Angeles an ope ing - quarter field goal before John Brodie W LT FAP New York 8 2 027219116 Washington 5 3 222223612 Pittsburgh 6 4 022628012 Cleveland 5 4 120917111 Dallas 4 5 1288260 9 St. Louis 2 7 1166263 5 Philadelphia 1 8 1165 257 3 Western Conference Green Bay 10 0 0209 7420 Detroit 8 2 0 23112316 Chicago 6 4 0207 24712 ~ Baltimore 5 5 020317210 San Francisco 4 6 0192258 8 Minnesota 2 8 0178 272 4 Los Angeles 1 9 0155 219 2 ~‘American League Eastern Division . W L T F AP Houston 7 3 024419914 Boston 6 3 1281 2341.3 Buffalo 5 5 125623411 New York 4 6 0202290 8 Western Division Dallas 8 2 029717616 Denver 7 4 0281237 14 San Diego 3 7 0225 292 6 Oakland 010 1148 272 0 went to work and guided the 49ers on three long-range scor- ing drives. Brodie passed three yards to Bill Kilmer and 37 yards to Jim John50n for six- polnters. Zeke Bratkowski. like- wise, had two scoring serials for the Rams, 27 yard I Phillips and 10 yards to Dick Bass. 'III’I’II’I’I Pattersons Watch Repairs 5 E! 3 SATURDAY NHL TORONTO 3 DETROIT 2 First Period: 1. Toronto, Har- ris 6 (Kelly, Mahovlich) 5:00; Penalties—Young, Pulford :12, Young 3:58. Pronovost 8:23. Pul- ford l7:4l. Howe. Douglas 19:55. Second Period: 2. Detroit, Ull- man 6 ( Barkley, Delvecchio) 6:38; 3. Toronto, Horton 1 (Duff) 10:07; Penalties — Doug- as 6: S e 17:38, Mac- Donald 18:13. Third Period: 4. Detroit, Howe 8 (MacDonald, Delvec- chio) 1:36. 5. Toronto, Kelly 4 (Stewart, Stanley) 8:56. Penal- 990 p.m.—Kenslngton Bombers vs. Ibany St. Pats 9:09-10:00 pan—Skating FRIDAY- 1:36—3:06 (Pre) School SIICIIII Free. 9:15 p.m.—ISHL Hockey. RCAF Flyers vs. S’alde Combines '~‘ AWTRD AY— 2:06—4:06 p.m.—-S|tating 8:00—10:00 [nun—Skating SUNDAY-— TUESDAY— Mlnor Hockey Night. FAST EFFICIENT warmasmv— W 1:30—3:00 p.m. (Pre) School Skate. ‘ 3:00—5:00 p.m.—Skatlng Enioy 7:30 p.m.—Prince Conn late . - gleam-a FHoekey— 'ryuity v.11; m Trouble - Free over . 01¢.” a Maroons "men n W "OCT WIT“ SHELL STOVE & FURNACE OIL CALL R. C. BARWISE DIAL 4-4316' MALPEQUE ROAD Authorised Shell Agent for ties—MacDonald 6:53, Mahov- llch 8:15, Gadsby 15:32, Barkley 16:32, MacDonald 21:00. 15 14 13—42 5 9 8—22 Saves: iSaWchuk Bower CHICAGO 4 NEW YORK 3 First period: 1. Chicago Bai- four 2 (Hull,‘Evans) 1:49; 2. New York, Prentice 3 (Harvey‘ 4:53: 3. Chicago. Hull 6 (Lunde. 7:00. Penalties -—- Evans 4:24, Nesterenko 10:18, Fleming 12:26, Balon 15:57. 0nd 1100!: use pc 4. Chicago Wharram 6 (Hay) 9:58. Penalty —Hillm‘an 14:13. Third period - 6. Chicago Hull 6 (Lunde) 9:12: 6. New York. Hebenton 6 (Bathgatel 10:18: 7. New York, Gilbert Charlottetown and West of Charlottetown S:U—&0:Hklth‘ an. A; L (Ratelle, Henry) 12:31. Penal- s—none. Saves: Hall 6 9 4--19 Worsley 17 6 10—83. CHICAGO (AP) —— Jean Beli- veau's goal ear] in the final period earned Montreal Cana- diens a 1-1 tie with Chicago Black Hawks in a wile, hard- hitting National Hockey League game here Sunday night. The deadlock, the second be- tween the two teams in four games, dropped the Hawks two points behind league-leading De- troit Red Wings, who beat Bos- ton. The Canadiens remained in fourth place but now trail Tor- onto Maple Leafs by three, points. Toronto lost to New York. Jacques Plante in the Cana- diens net was the games‘ out- standing performer. The masked netminder kicked out 16 shots in the first period and wound up the, night with 33 saves. all, the Hawks goalie also was credited with 33 saves and handled 15 shots in the last period. Bob Turner scored Chicago’s lone goal in the second period while teammate Bill Hay was in the penalty box. Eric Nestor-- enko took the puck away from the Canadiens deep in their ice and fed it to Turner in front the Canadiens“ goal. Referee Frank Udvari called 12 penalties during the rough game and several brawls Were averted only by fast work by the two linesmen. Montreal’s Claude Provost was sent to the hospital for x- rays of his ribs after being checked heavily into the boards by Chicago‘s Elmer Vasko early HOCKEY SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS SATURDAY National League Chicago 4 New York 3 Detroit 2 Toronto 3 America'n League Quebec 0 Pittsburgh 2 Buffalo 2 Hershey 6 CleVeland 3 Hershey 6 Cleveland 3 Springfield 6 International LeITgue Hull-Ottawa 5 St. Paul 0 Muskegon 8 Port Huron 3 Fort Wayne 6 Minneapolis 1 Eastern League Clinton 2 New Haven 0 Johnstown 3 Charlotte 1 Knoxville 5 Greensboro 5 Long Island 6 Philadelphia 3 Western League San Francisco 6 Calgary 0 Vancouver 3 Seattle 3 Portland 4 Spokane 1 Eastern Professional Syracuse 2 Kingston 6 Calgary 0 San Francisco 6 3 Vancouver 3 Seattle 3 Portland 4 Spokane 1 “Mo Senior Gait 5 tar-Io Junior Montreal 4 St. Catharines 0n Chatham 4 Habs, Chihawks Play I-All Draw of and. defeated hapless in the second period. SUMMARY First Period: No Scoring. Penalties —- Richard, McDonald 2:02, Nesterenko 2:55. econ period: 1. Chicago, 'Turner 1 (Nesterenko) 8'21. Penalties—Moore 6:01, Hay 8:11 Ole Miss of the unofficial South- eastern Conference title and a in the Sugar Bowl. Texas, with an 8-0-1 record, continued to drive toward the Cotton Bowl with a 14—0 decision over Texas Christian. Arkan- sas, beaten only by Texas, kept its hopes alive with a 9-7 come- back victory against Southern Methodist. Texas and Arkansas each have one Southwest Con- ference game yet to play. Missouri 13-0 and took charge of the Big Eight race. Halfback Lou Holland scored four touchdowns on runs of 15, 18 and 35 yards and a 16-yard pass from Ron Vanderkalen in Geoffrion 13:21. Third period: 2. Montreal, Beliveau 4 (Marshall, Talbot) 4:39. Penalties—MacNeil 3:46: Moore 7:27; Mikita 7:27; Ri- chard 9:18: Johnson 17:08; Mur- leading Wisconsin to,“ easy but important triumph over 11- is. The victory left Wisconsin with a 7-1 record, 51 in the Big Ten. Purdue and Northwestern, the only other Rose Bowl eligi- bles with a chance of taking it, phy 17:08. ' Saves: lante 12 12 9—33 Hall 6 12 15—33 Wings Down Bruins 3-l BOSTON (APl—Detroit Red Wings got goals from Floyd Smith and Parker MacDonald before the game was four min- utes old, kept up the pressure Boston 3-1 Sunday night to maintain first place in the Na- tional Hockey League. Defenceman Howie Young added a third Red Wings tally in the second period on a 25- foot shot from the side. mid jeers and catcalls, the last-place Bruins, who saw their winless streak extended to 13 games. committed major de- fensive blunders on all the visi- tors' scores. : Near the end of the second period, Jerry Toppazzini foiled Terry Sawchuk’s shutout bid when he fired from close range through the Detroit goalie‘s egs. Boston coach Phil Watson, criticism. was hanged in effigy by a group of fans who hun monkey doll from the first bal- under recent public and press H g a Saints playing 3 Oklahoma bl a n k e d sixth- ranked and previously unbeaten wee Big Season Last evening Claauiottebown Minor Hockey officials an- with thisCityfoi-thepast several managem and sin-rounding areas under the supervision of Brig. Bill Reid and his group of competent leaders who have done so much to make the lea- gues succusfiul for the past moral years. Prelhninary plans have al- ready been made for the year'l program and meetings of lead- ers of various school groups will be held early this week to fin- alize plans for registration, etc. HOWever, boys of the various age groups be pleased to ear opening practices and ne- BYC, Phalanx Play To Draw Senior BYC and Phalanx battled to a 42-a11 deadlock at the ‘Y’ Saturday night in Gold- en Ball hoop action. Emmett film of the BYC team was the big star of thegameandputonaone man show, counting 37 of the 42 points scored by his team. At half time the Phalanx team was leading 23-15 but the BYC team came on strong in points to 19 by their opponen. Bill Doiron, Fred Burns an Keir Johnson were the big guns for the Phalanx team, Doiron scoring 13, Burns 12 and John- son 11. The lineups are as foil G. Nicolle 2, T. King 1, Gallant, E. Ellsworth 37, Q. J . MacDougall 1, PC. Burns 12, K. Johnston 11, R. Benton, H Ladner, R. Scan , B Total 42. at SDU taught sees the host to Pirates at 7 o‘clock and at can BYC plays RCAF. arper, Action cony at ston arden. The tag "Watson" was affixed to the l. The Bruins haven‘t won since their opener, a 5-0 decision over Montreal Canadiens. SUMMARY First period: 1. Detroit, Smith 3 (Ullman) 1:48: . Detroit. MacDonald (Delvecchio) 3:43 Penaltles —. McNeil], Stapleton Second period: 3. Detroit, Young 3 (MacDonald) 14:42; 4. Boston. Toppozzini 2 (Boivin. A. ronovost) 16:17. Penalties Gadsby 2:41, Green 6:41, 17:09. Jeffrey 11:01. Third period: No scoring. Penalties-Young 18m, Bucyk Local Golfer Scores Ace Donald ‘Jiggs‘ MacDonald joined the elite holde-in-one club at the Chaitouetown Golf Club yesterday. notching his ace on the lS’i-yard' lumber 12 hole using a 7- iron. 2 This was moistened the latest hole in one ever scored at the local club. , gs' was playing it a time * with Jim Walker, pro at modem. ‘Jig - some Moncton and l Fnank Maclnnis. 16:02 Saves: Sawchuk‘ 11 413—3 Johnston’ 6 19 11—27 Friday's papens f Saturday's or schedule of practice sesame. SUM-Hi Gridders Cap Island Title ’ SUMMERSIDE — The Sum merside High School football the second half, scoring 27 of 7-0 paint when fumbled a forward PWC end zone, and a Welsh- man po on the ball. Yeamans made a nice yard run in the third quarter. but the . defence tightened Ed the viswons' failed to go over. Duke Rodney Wins Classic by a neck Saturday in the 850.- 000 American trotting classic, closing - day feature at Holly- wood Park. Duke Rodney held off Silver Song and Rodare in taking the IVs-mile event in 2:15 2—5.. The favored Su Mac Lad, all-time trotting money - winner. was scratched because he failed to warm up properly. Duke Rodney paid $5.”. WEALTH OF SALT Romania has huge deposits of salt, found in layers in many of its mountains. ADDITIONAL SPORT PAGE 85 Conference night game. Stovall’ gistration will take place tib- Saturday running throughout the: day. Players are asked to wood:- : .Y’S—t .2”.