sh cl: W__ _L, \\"""_ ',‘Here are the winners of the J .R. Williams Memorial trophy 'l'ues., April 8, 1958 The Guardian Page 9 an annual award in Ladies‘ cur1- Curling Rink. Left to right: Paul- Gladdie Carruthers, second stone mg circles at the Charlottetown ine Burden, skip; Etta Bell, maite SPORT or KINGS . It's About Time To Start Talking Baseball As we said last week, hockey is over and it’s still too early for baseball. However, it’s not too early to talk about baseball. Is the King’s County Baseball Lea- gue going to function this year? This question was raised near- ing the close of last season. Mor- ell, the defending champions, will, no doubt, be back as strong as ever. Mount Stewart will pro- bably again seek admission to this league. Georgetown will pro- bably be back. That leaves Souris and Peakes as question marks. ' Last fall, rumors had it that Peakes would drop baseball and turn to softball. Everyone is hop- ing that this will end up as just a rumor. Peakes has always fielded top-notch teams. Win or lose, they always gave a good ac- count of themselves. The base- ball fever always has been strong and maybe by the time the sea- son rolls around, they’ll be there. That leaves Souris. They enter- ed last season without a diamond and played all their games away from home. With no place to practice they lost all their games, although some were fair- ly close. All kinds of plans to repair the diamond had been made, but very little was done. Unless definite plans are made this year, and followed through, the same story will happen again this year. Now is the time for the base- ball club to get together and make plans for repairs to the diamond. Then, as soon as the ground is dry enough, they can get these plans into action. Otherwise, they won't be pre- pared, and last year’s view “wait until tomorrow” will pre- vail. Turning to bowling. Nothing definite yet as to the King's County 'I)itie play. Something else is needed here. A trophy. Possibly some merchant, inter- ested in this game could come forward and put up a cup for an- nual competition. If all centers would agree, the use of the Souris Parish Hall alleys may be secured for this roll—off. The Mixed League has been underway for three weeks in Souris now. So far, it’s proving to be very close. There are eleven teams entered in this lea- gue, and out of these eleven, scix will be in the playoffs. Top bowl- ers so far are. Men, Clarence Gallant, Ken 0’Hariley and Henry Larter. Top three for the wo- men ‘are: Bernadette Mahar Irene Kassner- and Emma Mac- Donald. Results of last week’s games are: Sputniks 4 Tessie’s Trois 2, Dodgerettes 53/4, Amazing six 1/i, Old Pros 3, Eastern Hicks 3, Satellites 31/2, Old Timers 21/2. Harris Rink From S’Sicle Wins The Smallman Trophy The James Harris-skipped rink of Summerside won the Small- man trophy in the first day's play yesterday of the “Maritime Mix- ed” Bonspiel. Mr. Harry Holman presented the trophy to Mr. Har- ris. Other members of the rink were: Willa Somers, Wyman Mil- ler, Eleanor Harris. Runner-up prizes were won by a rink skip- ped by Eric Johnston of S’side. His rink included Doris Morrison, Lloyd Lawless, Noreen Gillis._ Winners of first; consolation prizes ~ Harold MacLeod (skip) Eileen Gordon, Earle Cannan, Christine MacDonald. ‘ Second consolation prizes - Russ Crockett (skip), Irene Silliphant, Roy Grant, Winnie Grant. SCORES 9:00 A. M. E. Johnston 201 110 10 5 R. Crockett 040 002 02 3 P, Crockett 010 003 00 4 H. MacLeod ‘ 101 120 23 10 11 A. M. - - J. Harris 003 040 01 0 S-L Lutes 110‘ 201 10 6 H, Holman 010 031 01' 6 F. Bryan 101 100 10 5 E. Johnston 113 013 00 9 P. Crockett 000 100 21 4 R. Crockett 200 210 00 5 Rangers Beat Kensington W The Lot 16 Rangers won the first game of a best Of three series with the Kensingion Bomb- ers at Civic Stadium last night besting the Kensington team 8-4 and taking a one-game lead for the C.C. Baker Tr0lDhy- DaV1d Birch and Jack Gorill each scor- ed a brace of counters. The Rangers went out front by ii 2-0 score in the first Period. were ahead 7-1 at end Of Second Frame, but the Kensington team outscored them 3-1 in final stan- za. SUMMARY First Period: 1. Lot 16 - D. Birch (E.Gorrill) 16:50; 2. Iiot 16 J, (:0;-1-111 (E. Gorrill) 17200- Penalties — E. Sinclair. Second Period: 3. Lot l6_- J. Sorrill (K. Stroiiginaii, G. Birch) 10:29; 4. Lot 16 - D. l\‘laCK€l1dYlCk 12:56: 5. Kensington, Jollimore (Smith) 13:00: 6. Lot 16 - D Birch (J. Gorrill) 15:07; 7. Lot 16 - 1- Slroiigman (G. Caiiipbelll 153393 8. Loi lo‘ - G. .\lacLeaii (W. YQO) 18:40, Pciialiics —— B. Champion. Third Period: Sinclair «W. Cliampioii) 5:20; 10- 9. Kcnsiiigtoii — H. MacLeod 033 001 11 9 3P. M. S-L Lutes : 141 111 12 12 F. Bryan ')00 000 00 0 H. Holman 101 000 20 4 J. Harris 020 113 04 11 51>. M./ E. Johnston 102 122 8 H. MacLeod 040 000 4 P. Crockett 003 001 4 R. Crockett 140 110 7 6:30 P. M. , S-L Lutes 003 011 0' 5 J. Harris 130 100 2 7 H. Holman 220 010 3 8 WlL|.IAMS MEMORIAL TROPHY WINNERS l Ch"rown and Pellerin lead. Alobies Defeat Chatham CHATHAM, N.B. (CP) - Charlottetown Abbies captured the New Brunswick - Prince Ed- ward Island Midget Hockey crown Tuesday night, edging Chatham All-Stars 4-3 in a sud- denwdeatih contest. A second overtim-e period was neces- sa-ry. Billy McMillan fired the de- ciding marker unassisted at 88:43. He opened the scoring in the first game on a pass from Fight Could D-raw‘ Really Big ‘Gate SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—If ei- ther Eddie Machen or Zora Fol- ley wins tonight in sensational fashion, a battle between ‘the winner and heavyweight cham- pion Floyd Patterson can’t miss drawing a million dollar gate, says George Parnassus, ebuzillent Los Angeles promoter. Parnassus says he‘s just the man to put on such a show in the Los Angeles Coliseum. First he must overcome ‘the opposition of Cus D’Amato, Pat- terson’s manager, to fighting Macihen, the No. 1 contender. D’Amat<o hasn’t committed him- self on Folley, the No. 2 heavy but the 12-round Cow Palace Machen Folley bout is an Interna- tional Boxing Club co-promotion. F. Bryan 002 201. o 5‘ 8:00 (Play—offs) S-L Lutes 010 000 1 R. Crockett 103 213 10 H. Holman 100 010 2 H. MacLeod 432 201 8 E. Johnston 201 030 6 J. Harris _ 030 103 7 Husbands! Wives Get Pep,Vim; Feel Youiige; Thousands of couples are weak, wom—oul exhausted because body lacks iron. For new younger feeling after 40, try Ostrex Tonic Tablets. Contain iron for nevy pep, vim; plus upplement dose Vitamin B1. In a single day, Ostrex supplies as much iron as 16 doz. raw oysters, 4 lbs. of liver, 16 lbs. of beef. “Get-acquainted” size costs little—only 60¢, 01- get Economy size and save 75¢. All druggisfs. the- Lee. Violette. helped by White and Richard, knotted the count less than a minute later. Voutour then took a pass from Keoug- han to give Chatham the lead. At the start of the second ses-, sion Voutour scored again be- fore a brace by Rogers and Flannagan deadlocked the count. The third period and first overtime were scoreless. D’Amato, conducting all - out war with the IBC, contends Maohen was once offered a title fight axld turned it down. Parnassus said he feels he can get through to D’Amato “be- cause I manage my own affairs, with no connections with the [BC.” R HOME DO IT Now NOW! Don’t try to fit modern living ‘to old fashioned wiring. We will check and correct your wiring quickly. neatly and economically. FREE ESTIMATE CALL NOW PA|.‘iMER ELECTRIC PHONES 8543-8544 RADIATOR Allgy Q repairing St. Q recoring Off Q flushing Elm Ave. MALLE'l'J."S RADIATOR SERVICE DIAL 6232 By W. R. WHEATLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CF) Dickie Moore's tie- breaking goal at 13:52 of the second period, when Jean Beliveau lured goalie Don Simmons out of position, gave Montreal Caiiadiens 8 i-1 win over Boston Bruins Tuesday night in a bruising, battering opener of the Stanley Cup final. Berni (boom Boom) Geoffrion scored for Montreal at 12:24 of the opening pe*iod, a bitter 20- minute battle all its own with 13 penalties, and Allan Stanley winged in a shot for the Bruins at 5:54 of the second period. All three goals of the game were scored while the scoring team had manpower advantage. Leo Labine of Boston was sit- Moore, National Hockey League scoring chaimrpion this season, supplied the winner at the height of a roaring Montreal power play. ROCKET PASSES Mau-rice (R o c k e t) Richard fought his way deep in the Bos- ton end, well to the side of the net. He passed to Beliveau, a few feet off to Simmons’ left. Simmons apparently tried to pre- vent Beliveau from shooting. Bel- iveau pulled the puck back, Sim- mons took the bait. Again Beli- veau pulled back and Simmons appreared ready to dive for the puck. invin- 115011 6.4.... OUTOARD MOTORS F. R. Mclaine Ltcl. Charlottetown, P.E.I. We announce with pleasure this opening of a new Headquarters for . Johnson Sea-horse outboard‘ motor. We cordially invite you to drop in and see the action-packed new 1958 Sea-horses. Eleven great models. 3 to 50 h.p. Time payments avail- able. Here too, you can get expert com- plete advice on the purchase use of your boating equipment. and OUTBOARD MARINE CORPORATION OF CANADA LTD. ting out a tripping penalty when’ l ) !EL\lV IKESW - man meanwhile was also sucked over toward Beliveau, and Moore was left uncovered at the far c o r n e r of the net. Beliveau passed across to Moore who took his time and calmly lifted the puck into the net on the open side as Simmons tried vainly to scramble back. The h i g hly geared teams started the opener of the best-of- seven cup final in a fashion morel resembling mayhem than! hockey. PENALTIES HEAVY Referee Red Storey iaved of- fenders to the penalty box in at, steady stream. The teams finaly cooled out but not before 13 first- period penalties had been im- posed-—two short of a playoff rec- ord—inc1uding two major penal- ties for fighting to Henri Richard of Montreal and Doug Mohns of Boston. The penalties dwindled to six in the second period and two in the third. Both teams were tiring in the final stages but were still giving all they had. Simmons was pulled from the Boston net, in favor of an extra forward, with 28 seconds of the third period left. ’ MISUES NET Canadiien-s fought off Bo=sto~n's last desperate drive. Bert Olm- stead relieved the pressure by firing the puck down the ice, with no attempt to aim for the, off the side boards and shot wide at the open net from a sharp angle, missing it. The roaring, screeclilng crowd of 14,316 saw one of the most savagely fought first periods in cup play, with rocking, solid body checks and plenty of off- color stuff. The crowd saw also brilliant goal-tending displays by Jacques Plante of Montreal and Simmons, despite the slender Boston goalie’s questionable gamble in the second period. Larry Regan was sitting out a Boston bench penalty — for too many men on the ice — when Geoffriorn opened the scoring. The Boomer, used also for a few turns on this line, took Don Marshall’s backward pass and rifled a 30-footer past Simmons. The shot appeared well screened, with Beliveau camped directly outside the crease. 40-FOOT BLAST Staniery’s second period goal, tying the score, came in similar fashion. Beliveau was in the pen- alty box on a tripping change when Don McKenney and Flem- ing MacKell combined on a re- lay to Stanley. The Bruin de- fenceman powered a 40 - foot screened shot that whistled past Plante. Bost-on’s big scorers in the semi-ifnal against New York- Jerry Toppazzlni, McKenney and MacKell—were blanked but Boston defeiiceman Fernie Fla-gnet. Jean Beliveau picked~.it upithreatenel several times. Differ- ent Montreal llnes were used against them, partly because of the deluge of penalties before the teams got sorted out at full strength, but for the most part it was the Beliveau - 0lmstead- Richard) Marshall line. SUMMARY First period: 1. Montreal Geof- oore's Goal Gves Halos 2-1 Stanley Cup Victory iby Regan‘) 11:44, Beliveau 1318, §Labine 16:47, Pronovost 16:47. Second period: 2. Boston, Stan- ley (McKenney, MacKell) 5:54; 3. Montreal, Moore (Beliveau, M. 13:52. Penalties: Beli- veau 4:25, Harvey 6225, 19:33. Mohns 6:45, St. Laurent 9:4-6, La- bine 12:45. frion (Marshall, Harvey) 12:2-1. Third period: No scoring. Pen- Peiialties: Labine 0:55, Flaman alties: H. Richard 16:47, Mac- 3:03, 5:17, Beliveau 4:00, Provost Kell 17:25. 5:17, Stanley 7:08, M. Richard _ Stops: ~ 731, Mohns and H. Richard ma-gsimmons 15 11 16-42 jors 3:00, Boston bench (served'Plante 12 7 9-28 ' drea (Maccarron). 9:10; 5- ROYGI5 Blast Royals, Whitlock (A. Carver, (Continued from page 8) over control of the game. An- gie Carroll got that one back lust 10 secocnds later to again give the Royals a one goal lead. Jack Ready and Allie Car- ver each scored his second goal as the game wore on and the Royals kept 1-using to the attack. Menrill Eineaui and. Angie Carroll put on a pretty passing play minutes later with Carroll getting the goal. Whit- lock scored his third tally of the evening to sew up the game a little later and Gallagher added one for the Combines at 17:07 «to complete the scoring. SUMMARY ‘ First Period: 1—~Royals, A. Carver (Whitlock) 2:31; 2-—Roy- als, Whitlock (A. Carver) 8:46; 3—Combines, Maccanron (An- drea) 8:57; 4-—Cornibines, An-- Q S. Carver) 13:27; 6-—Royals, J. Ready (MacLure) 17:27. Pen- altics: MacLure 7:03, K. Ready 10:17, MacCarron 10217. Second Period: 7—C0mbines. M‘acLennan (Andrea, Cormier) 11:03; 8--Royals, Carroll (Pin- eau, MacLure) 14:50; 9—Com- bines, Mac-Leod, MacFady~en) 19:34. Penalties: Whitlock 10:- 43, Andrea 15:37. Third Period: 10—Combines, Maccanron (MacLeod, Andrea) :46; llel-‘toyals, Carroll (Mac- Leod) :56; 12I—Royals, J. Ready (Pineau, MacLure) 6:14; MacLure) 7:30; 14—Royals. l3-Royals, A. Carver (Pineau, Carrol1( Pineau) 12103; 15-Ro- Carrver) 13:43; 16—,Combines. yals, Whitlock (A. Carver, S. Gallagher (Comler) 17:07. Pen- alties: Gallagher 19:37, S. Car- ver 19:50. i — For keener moments wcet Lot 16 - E. Slrongziiiaii (E. Camp- bell) 3:10: ll. Keiisiiigtoii - E. Dunning‘ U232: 12, Kensiiigton - L. Smith 17:30. Penalties -— G- Camphcll i2). 1.. Champion. L. Smith. E. Sinclair. R.€i'0N‘-95 '*i Eiistace Reeves and Gerard Ber" uard. PETERBOROUGH . CANADA Manufacturers of Lawn-Boy and Lawn-Cruiser power mowers. 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