IT’S THE PAYOFF ‘his is what happened to one, did not think Leafs would dis- fellow who didn’t think Toronto] pose of Boston Bruins in the Na- Maple Leafs would reach the Stanley Cup playoffs against Mon- treal Canadiens. Jim Duchesne, 24, a goalie with the minor league - While Habs Check Injuries oafs Hold St By RON ANDREWS’ Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP)—While Mont- }real-Canadiens.teokan inventory} of their injuries Wednesday the frisky Toronto Maple Leafs had to be ordered off the ice by coach Punch Imlach after an hourlong Practice. ants ; .. Leafs; their confidence restored -} after. Tuesday night*s*-3-2 ~over- time win cut Canadiens’ lead to 2-1 in the best-ofseven Stanley -|Cup final, wanted to continue their workout. But Imlach told them to save their energy for to- night’s fourth game here. Canadiens, on the other hand, loosened up for only a few min- .| utes. Some players who have seen little action in ‘he series so far stayed on the ice a bit longer. P| HABS LIMPING Coach .Toe Blake's major prob- lem, however, was the injury *~g which has three. players on the limp and another two just get- timg back to peak form. Jean Beliveau, the club's ace _ | centre, isn’t optimistic about get- ee ting into the series. Lochhead would give a freé hair- cut if he lost; Duchesne would tional Hockey League semi-fin-/ pay off by sitting in the, barber als. Grant Lochead, Toronto bar- ber and rabit Leafsupporter, said shop window for a full day dress- ed in his goaltending outfit. Bradsaw Flyers of Nobelton, Ont.ihe was balmy. So they bet —/ Duchesne sat it out. (CP Photo) CHISOX STREAK IS CUT SHORT - Pittsburgh And Detroit Still Seeking First Win Pittsburgh and Detroit, two teams who were supposed to be pennant contenders, still are look- ing for their first: victory after losing their first five games. The Pirates fell before Cincin- mati 10-5 in the only National League day game on Wednesday. Vada Pinson, Jerry Lynch and Ed Bailey hit home runs in the IG-hit attack on Bob Friend and bwo successors. Detroit went 10 innings before bowing to Cleveland Indians who Won their fourth in-a-row, 2-1, on Woody Held’s third home run of the season. Although manager Bill Norman refused to talk pen- 2-nt this spring most observers figured the Tigers az a distant iireat to New York Yankees. CHISOX FINALLY LOSE Chicago finally was tripped up by Kansas City. The Athletics the White Sox’ four-game winning streak with a 108 tri- umph. Bob Grim, who hit a grand slam home ~un for Kansas City in the third, was knocked put in the eizhth. Manager Harry Craft used four pitchers before he finally stopped Chicago after the Sox had scored seven runs. ‘Jerry Casale broke in with a flash in his first big league start, hitting a three-run homer while pitching Boston to a 7-3 victory ever Washington. New York Yankees were’ sched- led to play a night game in Bal- limore where they slaughtered the Orioles in Tuesday’s opener. Milwaukee idle after winning in-a-row, is the only un- team in the National e. Two National League games were on the night schedule in California. San Francisco Giants, beaten once in four starts, face Chicago Cubs. Los Angeles Dodgers were scheduled against St. Louis. HEAVY HITTING Cincinnati continued to get , hitting from Pinson, Bailey bynch in its triumph over ungh. Trailing 53 goirg to the last of the sixth, the Reds tked out Friend while scoring times. Joe Nuxhal!, the win- per, gave way for a pinch hitter in that inning and Bob Mabe fin- ished up. Held broke up the game at Cleveland with his second homer sy days cff Ray Narleski, a! LPO Aa LaLa BaD La LD DHL L aL La SSDS 2 DPM a wD. Me, former teammate. He had hit a grand slammer off the relief pit- cher in Tuesday’s game. Kansas City poured it on against Barry Latman and a long line of Chicago pitchers but they) had to hold tight during that] seven-run White Sox rally in the eighth. Among the nine hits were homers by Grim and Kent Had- ley. After Grim’s grand slammer, Joe Demaestri was hit over the left ear by Latman’s pitch. X- rays showed no serious harm. Liston Stops Williams In 3rd MIAMI BEACH, Fila. (AP) — Charles (Sonny) Liston of Phila- delphia hammered out a techni- cal knockout over Cleveland Wil- liams of Houston, Tex., Wednes- day night in the third round of a scheduled 10 - round nationally televised fight. The end came in 2:04 of the - round after the gangling Williams had been floored twice. Williams staggered to his feet | and Liston, who has now won 15 of 25 fights by knockout, moved in to finish it off. He flailed Wil- liams with both fists and the Texan went down on his back. He rolled over and got to his feet but Peerless ruled he had had enough. Liston weighed 21242 and Wil- iams 210%. : . SPRI Casale’s home run in Boston was one of the longest ever hit at Fenway Park, a drive over the wall and screen in left center that bounced on a roof across the street. Russ Kemmerer was the loser. BASEBALL American League New York 000 001 002—3 5 2 Baltimore 000 000 100—1 6 0 Ford and Howard; Wilhelm, Harshman (8) and Triandos. L- Harshman. Kansas City 125 200 000—10 92 Chicago 0 000:070—8 11 2 Grim, Tomanek (8) Meyer (8) Gorman‘ (8) and House; Latman, Shaw (3) Raymond (4) Arias (6) | Staley (8) Lown (9) and Lollar. W-Grim. L-Latman. HRs: KCy- Grim (1) Hadley (1). Washington 000 010 002-3 7 1 Boston 020 014 00x—7 11 1 Kemmerer, Hyde (7) Kralick (8) and Courtney, Porter (8) Ca- sale and White. L - Kemmerer. HRs: Bos-Casale (1). Detroit 000 000 010 0—1 9 0 Cleveland 000 100 000 1-2 6 1 Foytack, Nar'eski (8) and Ber- beret; McLish and Nixon. L-Nar- leski. HR: Cleve-Held (3). National League Pittsburgh 300 002 000— 5 92 Cincinnati 102 005 20x—10 16 2 Friend, Daniels (6) Green (7) and Foiles; Nuxhall, Mabe (7) and Bailey. W-Nuxhall. L-Friend. HRs: Pgh-Lynch (1), Pinson (2) Bailey (2). The regular - season scoring || champion said Tuesday that he'll more than likely follow his doc- tor’s advice and sit out the re Maining games. { Beliveau suffered a spinal in- jury in the third game of the Montreal - Chicago semi - final series and hasn't played since. There have been reports almost get into the next game. STILL HAVE HOPES Club officials aren’t counting him out entirely. Coach Toe Blake said he wouldn’t dress Beliveau tonight but didn’t discuss the chances for Saturday’s fifth game at Montreal. 2 Meanwhile, defenceman, Bob Turner was trying to work out a charleyhorse picked up in the third period Tuesday night. But Blake said Turner definitely will dress tonight. The other player on the limp is Maurice Richard, who plaved the ‘irst two games of this series after being out since mid-season with a broken ankle. The Rocket suffered a groin in- NEW YORK (AP) — Probable Pitchers for today’s major league games (won - lost records in parentheses): National League Philadelphia at Milwaukee — Roberts (1-0) vs Burdette (1-0) Chicago at San Francisco — Anderson (1-0) vs Jones (1-0) St. Louis at Los Angeles (N)— Broglio (0-1) vs Koufax (04) + (Only games scheduled) American League Kansas, City at Chicazo Garver (0-1) vs Wynn (1-0) New York at Baltimore—Dit- mar (0-0) vs Bamberger (0-0) Washington at Boston—Ramos (10) vs Moford (0-0) (Only games scheduled) Bantams Meet This Evening Gordon Roper, coach of the Abbie Bantams, provincial cham- Pions, has asked all his players to be at Birchwood High School this evening at 5 o'clock. It is important that all players be pre- PRECIOUS MINERAL Uranium was first identified . 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He's stopped tougher ones.” Rookie Bill Hicke, called up! »from Rochester Americans of the American Hockey Leegue. and -@ressed for Tuesday night’s zame will be in the lineup’ tonight, Blake said. ~Imlach=says his club is just “beginning. to..find. the - ange against the Canadiens.”’ “We proved last night that By RON ANDREWS Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP) Richard, who just about symbo- lizes Stanley Cup records, is iti danger of losing one of his most cherished *marks. But he’s still got a hatful of others. Muscleman Marcel Bonin has emerged from the file of virtual unknowns to threaten the record of most goals in a Stanley Cup playoff year, held jointly by Ri- chard and Jean Beliveau gf Mont- real Canadiens. Both players scored 12 goals in one year of Playoffs. So far Bonin has nine goals and with at least two more games to play the native of Montreal has a good chance to beat the record if he continues the pace he’s been setting. RECORD PERFORMANCE Since the Rocket set the record in the 1944 playoffs in nine games and Beliveau equalled it in 10 games during the 1956 playoffs, only Bernie Geoffrion of Montreal and the Rocket have come close to tying it. Geoffrion scored 11 goal’ two years ago while Richard, re ‘urning from a severe skate ‘ash just before the playoffs, also scored 11 last year. As for the Rocket's other rec- ords, he probably has little to worry about. He either holds by himself or Now News and tion. Workout jury last Saturday but “layed dur. have had Duff's shot, Blake said: show them again in the next they’re not invincible and we'll Marcel Bonin Threctens Richard's Cherished Mark shares with other players 13 Stanley Cup records. Among them are most goals in playoff competition, 81, and most points, 122. His nearest rivals in the two departments are Geof- frion with 48 goals and Geoffrion and Ted Lindsay of Chicago with 9 points each. REGAINS RECORD Richard, who missed the Chi- cago-Montreal series because of a broken ankle, lost one record but regained it in the first two games of the final series, Lind- say passed him for most playoff games, playing his 122nd in the final Montreal-Chicago game. Ri- chard played in his 124th Tues- day night here against Leafs. While Bonin drew the raves as the goal scorer this year Mont- real defenceman Doug Harvey quietly knocked Gordie Howe’s record of most assists in a career out of the books. The Red Wing right winger, who ranks second to Richard in* goal scoring in NHL history, had 48 assists after last season, Harvey gained credit for nine assists in the nine games he’s played so far to run his 11-year career total to 56. Dickie Moore another Canadien sharpshooter, 2lso has a good chance to kick Howe’s name out of ancther section of the records. JUST FOUR BACK Moore so-far has five goals and Notices Will be a ae a ee a m Oe eee aE eee eee ee ee / ~ lrishman Heads “ British Golf Team addities te Carr, were Michos. ae al” tied up | ‘Boi head w ! up w we heads for Montreal for the fifth game.” er oe : Leafs have only one major in- jury. Centre Larry Regan, suffered a broken right hand dur- ing the Boston-Toronto semi-final, is expected to play tonight. Most of I : i i i fii rae i iy i i g ' | } | | if if evident Tuesday night. ~ wh SEF F i Hi i F j 4 “I ihe a | f i ui Fy ul “ i % z a, f | i ll assists for 16 points, just four behind the- mark Howe estab- lished in ‘1955 when he scored nine goals and assisted on Il others in 11 games. In team records, Canadiens have bettered some of the marks they. held before this season and could improve on a couple more. This is their 19th year in the Stanley Cup final series, includ- ing five before 1927, the year the | ‘oaded NHL gained sole possession of the trophy. It is also their - 2h straight final appearance ard their 35th year in the playof.s. | Of ..urse the biggest of ali rec- | ords is one Canadiens now share with Toronto but could gain sole possession if they win the Stan- ley Cup this year. It would be their fourth. straight cup cham- pionship, Leafs had three straight in—1947,1948 and 1949. ; Ted Williams May Remove Collar Soon BOSTON (AP) — Boston Red Sox reported Wednesday that ail- ing Ted W'lliams may be able to remove the protective collar from his neck in about two weeks. The Sox said Dr. Charles A. Fager, neurosurgeon who treated * a # tf i f i | tr g a ! rf t sd re Li 2 f GET YOUR Tr ceed: HERE | THE BIKE SHO 183 Great George St. Charlottetown EASIER TO FIND! The Change Comes Next Monday As the “Favorite Paper in Homes of the Whole Province,” The Guardian is taking steps to become an easier-to-read newspaper for its audience of some 60,000 readers in almost 15,000 across-the-Island homes. Several familiar departments will appear in new locations and be made easier to find with brightened presenta-. East Meets West on New Provincial Pages section. district. - we Le ude uh che le ule le ue ull ule ee dle deed dhe de he dee ue ol lle ud ul uh a, ule afl dl deed de de de de All main items of late Island news, as gathered by The Guardian’s news bureaus in Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris and its corps of correspondents will be featured in future on pages close to the front of the paper. - Pages two and three are to give their principal emphasis to provincial news — will become Provincial News Pages. This means that late reports from the East (Kings County), the West (Prince County) and Central (Queens County) are all to be grouped on the two facing pages, so geaders in all districts will find it easier to share news of common interest. Page five is to become the main City News base Together At Last on The Page Everybody Reads All the various kinds of notices and announcements that have in the past been scattered through three or four different pages are to be brought together ir new departments on “the page everybody reads” — right beside the classified advertising As in the past, they’ll be grouped by districts, so the reader from Prince County, or Queens or Kings, will be able to turn at once to the announcements that interest him most. But there’ll be no more turning from page to page to locate notices from different districts. attention of the entire readership of The Guardian, even while being addressed particularly to a special audience within one Every notice will - + \ Under the new plan, the principal presentation of Island and city news, which has previously been spread through the whole paper, will be concentrated in the first five pages. Of course every page of The Guardian will continue to be packed with good reading. But it will be made easier for every reader to turn at once to the news that interests him most. As in the past, The Guardian will present the Island's whole news story—a province-wide news report that is unmatched anywhere. The chief change is to be in presentation, as a means of serving readers better. This means that announcements are te be made of much more value to those who insert them, at the same time they are made of increased service, and easier to find, for readers. Notices of the kind that now appear under the headings of “Eastern Guardian,” “Western Guardian” and “City and Cen- tral” will be grouped in a new department devoted to “Ammounce- ments”. Notices dealing with “Coming Events” will be brought to- gether in a similar grouping. All notices relating to births, deaths and marriages for the whole Island also will appear in future in. the colemms adjoining “the page everybody reads” — the classified advertising section invite the \ At first the new locations being given to across-thetsland news and announce- ments, starting next Monday, are likely to seem strange to many readers who turn to former lotations through force of habit. But soon every reader will find that the new presentation makes The Guardian easier to read — improves its ser- vices as the “Favorite Paper in Homes of the Whole Province.” THE GUARDIAN