lMlNOR HOCKEY , gist The Charlottetown _Royals k a two game lead in their ‘beswfseven semi-finall series .3, the Northside ‘ Combines 1“ defeating the visiting team lg; last night ‘at the Sports Arena, The winner of this 165 will advance against the New'Glasgow Rangers with the Winner taking on the New wick winners for the Maritime Championship. Buck Whitlock paced the is attack, firing three and collecting one as- Ailrie Carver. Skip Car- IW3 m’ and Merrill Pineau gath- ed singles for the winners'_ Gard Thompson scored once and assisted on another for the combines, Richard Cormier Ind Egimett O’Ca11aghan scor- ,i1 one each. The two teams battled through ‘scoreless first period with both goalies making great ,,a,,e5_ Thane Doyle in the NEW YORK. (AP) —Jerry Top- minim dramatic goal at 4:46 of , isiidden-death overtime enabled Won Bruins to defeat New gm-1; Rangers 4-3 Thursday night , gyieven their best—of-seven Stan- ” cup semi-final at 1-1. mppazzini, who scored 25 goals 1 Ming the regular National , Hockey League season, drove the 7 disc past the outstretched rigiht » ]g of goalie Guimp Wrosley and into the net. The exciting wind-up touched off , joyous demonstration by the .-Billlllls and sent the capacity .. capacity crowd of 15,925 in Madison Square Garden home de- jectedly. _ The winn-ing marker climaxed in uphill battle for the underdog Bi-uins. They trailed 3-2 until 11:13 of the third period when Don McKenney got his second goal of the game to deadlock the score. ‘ SUMMARY First period: 1. Montreal, Goy- ette (Talbot) 18:04. Penalties: Viiaiigiois 5:19, Curry 5:13, Ull- : man 6:48, Harvey 6:48, Miickoski ' 11:18. second period: 2. Detroit, Wil- Royals Defeat Co 1/Bbston Nips Ran As Halos Blast Red Wings Charlottetown net came with 13 saves while his counter. Dart John M7adinsky niade 11 stops. In the second »' C1 » Royals started to ggllloscoribg tslliéee Cgoals without a reply_ int: arver pull the Royals and 3 Ogle goal lead about two _ a all minutes after the Deriod had started when his hard shot hopped over the Sllrawled Noirtbside goalie The Combines roared ‘back ‘and Pressed for a few minu. tes. one hard shot take at 31- most Point-blank range hit the g°al'P0Sl.aI1d rebounded away l3l1ilck Whitlock scored his first 3.3’ of the game about three minutes later with a pretty goal._ Allie Carver who was standing about 15 feet inside ‘the blue line passed to whit- i1°°k who decked out M.adinsky ito score_ Merrill Pineau made mb son (McNeil. Kelly) 131/239; 3. M treal, Beliveau (Marshall, Olm- stead) 1u:13. Penalties: Goegan 5:18. Geoffrion 6:12. . Third period: 4. Montreal, M. Richard (H. Richard) 5:05; 5. Montreal, A. Pronovost (Goyette, Provost) 5:19; 6. Montreal, M. Richard (Moore, H. ‘ Richard) 112:23. Penalties: Talibot 1:19, Mickoski 3:35, Kennedy 5:39, Har- vey 6:33, McNeil 10:12, Goegan 1336, M. Richard 14:33. Stops: Sawvdhuk 12 7 16-35 Plante 711 7.25 MONTREAL (CP) — Maurice (Rocket) Richard, one of the greatest pieces of hockey mach- inery of all time, scored two third- period goals Thursday night to wrap up a 5-1 win over Detroit Red Wings and give Montreal Ca- nadiens a 2-0 lead in their Stan- ley Ciuip semi-final. Until the third period it was a close tn 5 sle, {the Red Wings threatening to pull out a win af- ter dropping the opening game of ‘table best-of-seven series Tuesday It was the veteran Rocket who led Canadiens out of danger af- in 2nd Contest; ines 6 To 31 it 3-0 two minutes later with! help from Stu MacLui'e. Mac-« Lure’s hard shot taken at thel Combines’ goalie hit Pineau's stick as lielwas waiting at the side and slipped past into the net. In the final stanza, both teams‘ scored three times with the final result being 6-3 in favor of the Royals, _The_C‘ombines wasted very little time after the third period had started, scoring their first tally after only twenty-hree 5e°0“'dS 0”!" Play The Royals the game beyond the reach of the Sydney players by scoring at 16:57_ Carvers’ goal came as the result of a tip-in of Junior MacLeod’s hard shot. Summary First period: Scoring none. Penalties, MacF'adyen 5:38, Josey 9.36. ‘Second period: 1. Royals, S. Carver (Ma\:Leod) 2:32, 2. Roy- als, Whitlock (A. Carver, S. Car- ver) 10.24; 3. ‘Royals, Pineau, (J. Ready, M;acLure) 12.28. Penalt- ies: Josey 13.23, MacCarron 15.- sarted back and Buck Whitlock 30 got the goal back for the Royals two minutes later. Whitlock completed his hat trick about the half-way mark in the per- iod, scoring with help from Allie _Carver. Cormier got the Combines back into the game at 13:40 and Thompson made it 5-3 at 14:48, both tallies were unassis-ted_ Allie Carver took gers 4-3 -ter only 5205 of the final period. Andre Pronovost scored 14 sec- onds later and the Rocket sent the crowd of 14,153 into a delir- ium with his second at 12:23. SUMMARY . First period: 1. Boston, Mohns (Staniey, Ma-ckell) 5:05; 2. New York, Bathgate (Henry, Creigh- ton) 5:28; 3. New York, Bath- gate (I-Iebenton, Gadslby) 8:58; 4. Boston, McKenney 19:38. Penalt- ies: Bucyk 0:34, Fontinato 4:00, Mohns 7:18, Flaman 8:31, Bath- gate 9:58, Mackell 18:07, Howell 1807. Second period: 5. New York, Gendron (Helbenton, Ciesla) 7:24. Penalties: B-ucyk 11:38, Boone major 11:55, Henry major 11:55, Bathgate 12:19, Mohns 12:38. Third period: 6. Boston,» Mc- Kenney (Mohns, Mackeli) 11:13. Penalties: Johnson 13:30, Evans 13:30. ' Overtime period: 7. Boston, Toppazzini '(Mac~kell, McKenney) 4:46. Penalties: None. Stops: - Simmons, 10 9 6 2-27 Worsley. 6 o 3 1-21 A—15.925 This week’s hockey for the ‘ lliiiors at the Sports Arena will lieall playoffs. Following is the schedule for Saturday: 7:45 - 8:25—“B” Bantams- S.§. Cardinals vs. Royalty Orio- ks. I’-:25 - 9:05 —“B” Bantams-Q .11. S. Gulls vs. Q. C. H. S. Robins. 9:05 - 9:35—“B” Royalty Springers vs. Sparrows. _ 9:35 - 10:05-— “B" Pee Wees- W. K. S. Hawks vs. P. S. S. Spitfires. ' 5 10:05-10:35-—— “B” Pee Wees - Q. S. S. -Eagles vs. Winners Pee Wees- Royalty ~» Springers- Sparrows. 10.35 - 11:15 - “B” Final - Wiinner Bantam Cardinals-' ~ ggioles vs. Winner Gulls - Rob- 11:15 - 11:45 - “B” Pee Wee Final Winner Hawks - Spitfires vs. Winner Eagles, Springers vs. Sparrows. 12:00 - 12:30 - “B" Paperw’us- Royalty Bluebirds vs. Q. S. S. lledwings. 12:30 - 1:00 - “B” Paperwts - P. S. S. Ravens vs. P. S. S. Fal- cons. 1:00 p. in. 1:30 - “B” Paper- Wts - W. K. S. Wolves vs. Win- hers Bluebirds - Redwings. 5:00 - 5:30 - “B" Papervvts - Tryon Beats Abbies 3-2 '_l‘lle Tryon ladies won the 9111.108 Edward Island Hockey amliionshiip two years in a ‘ ‘W by defeating the Charlotte- town Abbies 3-2 in the fourth and _ iding game at Civic Stadium "1 Sllmmerside last evening. Be- e this game, the teams had ‘won one game apiece and tied “I9 game. The Physical Fitness “Thy. emblematic of the Lad- Championship, was present- : ‘l to Tryon after the game. The and champs scored the only if M1 in the first period and add- all 3110111161‘ in the middle frame. lone point in the final ses- .. meme’ ‘l°“ they were leading 3-0 but Abbies scored two quick g°3lS in the dying minutes of ““*.8ame to draw up within one 39“ Of tying the contest. Jes- ‘ellowatlt scored two g0'a‘l5 TW011 and Amelda Kelly one my Ma«cLean, who was the It“ Player for Tryon last year will they first won the Island :1 $3. scored both goals fol‘ the W rlottebown girls. MacLean 111 on the Tryon goalie again again but Edith Bruce. 111 Pets for Tryon, did an ex- ffgfiouaiy fine job of catching r hlgll swift shots. Gordon the ‘W1 llie 1‘ and Bill Ledwell were referees. Lineups Mcllarlottetown Abbies —— Goal, 3' G0“; defence, S. Lord, M- mikei L. Muttart, K. Burnett, ‘ Delorie; forwards, Judy .119?» Margaret Bradley, Mar- Bradley, Gail Johnston. Pal 121. 137°“ — Goal. Edith Bruce‘. lone Wright, Anita westhalfei‘, Alice Gordon; for- 5: Amelda Kelly, Margaret Jessie I-Iowatt, Carol‘ uby Clark, Nancy Mac- . Coach and manager. omas. Watt, . °“"ie. R D°I1ald Keith L. Macbean. Betty Mac-- Winners Ravens - Falcons vs. Winners Wolves vs. Bluebirds ,- Redwings. 5:30 - 6:10 - Bantams- - Q. S. S. Elks vs. Royalty Bisons. 7:00 - 7:30 - Island Paper- weight- Summerside vs. Royalty Bears. 7:30 - 8:00 - Island Pee Wee - summerside vs. .Q. C. H. S. Lions. _ ‘ 8:00 - 8:40 - Island Bantams- Summerside vs. Queen Charlot- te High. 9:00 - 9:45 -Island Midget- Summerside vs. Abbies. 9:45 - 10:30 - Skating for All. OFFICIALS 7:45 - Leroy Barnett, Willard Barrett. 9:05 - Don Frizzel1,- Bill Mac- Millan.\ — 11:15 - Gordon Wellner, Fred- dy Burke. 5:00 - John Davis (Sr.), ny Flannaghan, 7:00 - Gordon Wellner, Roy White. 8:00 - Ledwell. CURLING DRAW. The following is the draw for Friday night at the Charlotte- town Club. 7 P. M. (SEAGRAM) Ice 1 L Turner, L. Llewellyn, D. Beardsley, C. Whitenect, vs. A. A. MacLeod, J.’ E. Burnett, 0. K. Presby, B. Cox. Ice 2 C. J. MacLean, D. Walker, G. Bennett, L. Blakeney, vs. R. Parker, H. C. Trainor, Dr. Cox, H. Douglas. Ice 3 R. Carruthers, G. Mul- holland, F. Johnston, B. Rogerson vs. E. MacNutt, R. Jones, H. Sear, Dr. 0’Han1ey. Ice 4 E. Wood, F. Cox, Dr. Hooper, A. Wellner vs. E. Tan- ton, G. Henry, F. Maclnnes, M. MacMi1lan. ’ 3:30 P. M. , All Ices open for mixed curling or challenge games for souvenier tumblers. Flyers Leave City Tonight Barry’s Parkdale Flyers leave for St. Basile tonight at 6.00 p. m. The following players are asked to be there: Goal: Ward and Simmonds; defence: Longe- phiie, Duffy, MacLean, Moore; forwards: A. Arsenault, Carroll, Weatherbie, Cruwys. Sim‘ monds, J. Ar-senault, Gillis, Mac- Den- Walter Lawlor, Bill Lot 16 Wins Clwampionship Lot 16 won the Island Inter- mediate “C” Hockey Champion- ship last night at Bedeque Rink by defeating Sherbrooke 12-4. The Physical Fitness Trophy which is emblematic of Island Champ- ionship was presented after the game by the Rev. J. M. Finley on behalf of Brig W. W. Reid of Charlottetown. G. Camipbeli scored four for getting three and E. Strongman collecting two’. E. Gorrill, J. Gor- 111, G. Ma=cLean got singles. G. Rannahan scored twice for the losers with Cook and Gallant getting singles. PLAYOFF STANDINGS Best-of-seven dsemidinals: Series A W L F A Montreal 2 0 13 3 Detroit 0 2 2 13 Series B _' New York 1 1 3 7 Boston 1 1 7 3 HOCKEY SCORES By The Canadian Press National League Boston 4 New York 3 (Best-of-seven - final tied 1-1) Detroit 1 Montreal 5 (lVLon~treal'leads best-of - seven semi-final 2-0) Maritime Senior Northside 3, Charlottetown 6 (Cli=arlol:tetow«n leads best - of- seven semi-finail 2-0) See Us For Best Result! And Q Prompt & Courteous Service , HG “Call. Write or Phone” , MEYERS srnmos Charlottetown R Leod, Landry, C. Weatherbie. SKATE . SPORTS . GIRLS, BOYS, OPEN PROVINCIAL INTERSCHO-LASTIC At TONIGHT -- 7.30 P. M. , : ' to ether winner of first and second Raws brmgmglaicegs in County meets. Full Hour Skate After Meet Admission: Adults 50 Cents MEET ARENA and RELAY RACES Children 25 cents the winners with I. Strongman ‘ Third period: 4. Combines, O’- Callaghan (Thompson, Cormier) .23; 5. Royals, Whitlock, (Mac- Leod, S. Carver) 2:21; 6. Royals, Whitlock (A. Carver) 9.16; 7. Combines, Cormier 13.40; 8. Com- bines, Thompson 14.48; 9. Roy- 3'15. A. Carver (Whitlock, Mac- Leod) 16.57. Penalties: Josey, Gouthro 4.51, S. Carver 11.29. Stops: Doyle Madinsky 13’ 11 12-36 11 25 16-52 lTvvo Horses Are Killed In Liverpool Foxhunters Chose AINTREE, England (AP)—Two horses were killed Thursday in the Liverpool foxhunters chase near the site where the Grand Na- tional steeplechase will be raced Saturday. Petit Plain fell and broke his neck at the second fence of the two-mile, seven - furlong steeple- chase. Royal Lark stumbled and broke his neck on a fence at the far side of the course. The Foxihunters chase course is laid out almost adjacent to the Grand National : course. Four Kensington Wins Over Springfield Kensington defeated Spring- field 9-5 last night in the second game of their series at one game each. The next game will be played Saturday at Kensington. B. Champion and A. Andrews each scored twice for the win- ners with K. Sudsbury, Gallant, W. Harrington, Kennedy and G. Bernard getting singles. For Springfield, R. Weeks scor- ed two and E. Sinclair and B. T-hebeau scored one each. horses were killed or destroyed in the 1954 Grand National. The going Thursday was perfect although there was a heavy rain over Liverpool Wednesday. The winner of the Foxhuniters was Surprise Pa.cket. FEVER GRIPS BRITONS Meanwhile, G r :1 ii d National xfever gripped most Britons as the post time fro the 112th running of the worlds most famous jumping race approached. A field of 34 was ex-pected to start in the gruelling 41/2-mile race with its 30 obstacles. A final odds callover is sched- uled for tonight at the Victoria Club in London, but there is no doubt Wyndburg will remain the favorite. Latest odds listed the Scottish-own-ed jumper at 17 to 2. Wyndburg finished second last year to Sundew, who later was hurt in another race and was de- stroyed. The first Irish Hospitals sweep- stake of the season is based on the Grand National. With pros- pects for softer going, Goosander, a mudder, dropped from 20 to 1 to 18 to 1. Mr. What, Sentina and Spring-silver also /were 18 to 1. From the beginning of the General Motors Golden jubilee year, we have firmly believed that our Golden Milestone cars and trucks are outstanding. And the overwhelming enthusiasm of your response, as provcn by actual sales, has fully justified our optimism. Latest available figures show that you bought 35,706 General Motors cars and trucks from January 1st through March 10th this than the number sold during the some in 1957 ——.an increase of 14.1%. At the same time, the unsold stock of GM vehicles on hand across the country is practically the same as it was last year. This is 4,406 more Thanks to your magnificent acceptance of our products, GM plants in Oshawa, Windsor and.» St. Catharincs have been hard at work keeping up with the demand. Currently more than 18,000 people SPORT FORUM Cbampionsh Sir,—- Forty-six years ago gruelling fifteen round fight took place for the Welterweight Championship of Prince Edward Island. The principals were Louis “Kid” Lafferty of Charlottetown and Jack O’Hern of Tignish. The The scene of action ,. was the Lycum Theatre on Prince Street and the date was mid-March 1912 the ring was pitched on the stage. The pair of fighters stripped to the waist it was a bitter cold March evening and the contrast between them was striking 0’- Hern was pale he looked like a Sunday school teacher. Lafferty was in appearance every inch the real “bug” he looked and acted the part and needed no makeup, he scaled 147 to 145 for 0’Marn. The battle opened up fast each strated out at top speed, if for no other reason than to keep from freezing. At times the boys stood toe to toe and punched it out a minute at a stretch much to the delight of the packed 8 ip Battle Is A Great One To Remember When the fourteenth round got underway both men were cover- ed with blood. It was one of the most vicious fights in the history of pugilism in this City it was ruled a draw by the re- feree. 4 house in attendance. are employed General Motors making an trucks in Canada. . All this activity— the direct result ofyom puchatos —means that our many suppliers, employing fian- sands more people, are busily at work across Chriadas To maintain this activity, General Motors plans -to, spend‘ more than four hundred million dollars for goods,.serviccs and wages in Canada during 1958; ‘ To our thanks to you,thc public.,.wc adds spefil gratitude and appreciation to the great fainily of General Motors dealers and salesmen. Their confi- dence, and hard work are making significant contribution to the communities in which they live, and to our entire national economy. To them, to suppliers, to all GM people and to you, we publicly word of express our gratitude. OSHAWA. ON_'l"_ARlO Y0u’re keeping General Motors people and our suppliers busy all over Canada 1 E. EL WALKER Pmidmt and General Manager GENERAL MOTORS ‘oI= CANADA, LIMITED ci-ievRoi.E:r.- PONTIAC - OLDSMOBILE‘ -: BUICK - CADILLAC - VAUXHALL-T CHEVROLET& GMCTRUCKS Both took a tcrriffic heating The Guardian Page 9 Fri., March 28. 1953 Lafferty who had been taggef by boxing experts as a Pot?“ tlal champion started to slip and eventually retired. I am Sir; etc., WILFRED O. MCCLUSKEY City. This Week's Skating Program MONDAY from the light gloves._ The fight Skate__4 to 5.30 was fought on the winner take Skat _10 \ all basis. Several hundred dol- RECC Band in aue,-,danc¢_ during the fight. Neither Lafferty nor 0’Hern TUESDAY was ever the same after that HOCKEY fight. O’Hcrn dropped out of the . WEDNESDAY game and not long afterwards Preschool skate 1:30 to 3 Skate 4 to 5:30 Adult Skate 8-to-10 RADIATOR THUEISIDAY H0 EY . repairing FRIDAY i : gliilzlfgg Physical Fitness SATURDAY Mmms RADIATOR SERVICE DIAL 5232 SPORTS ARENA . GM-25I|