$8 Tho Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon, Mar. 26, 1962. Saints Cl obber Welshmen97- 61 Saint Dunstan's Junior Var- sity cagers advanced to the City Basketball League finals Saturday night when they de- feated PWC Welshmen 97-61 in the second game of a two-game total point semi-finals. The Saints now meet Jack Ross's Pirates in the finals which get underway tonight at | 7 o'clock at PWC gym. The Hockey Tilt | Goes Tonight : At Arena | Sandy Frizzell and Myron Bell, managers of the Royals | and Penguins of the Island Sen- for Hockey League have picked a team to battle a team made at of RCMP and City Police at the Sports Arena tonight. This should be an interesting eontest with both Sandy and Myron donning the blades along with such players as Roach MacGregor, Duck Acorn and Dave Boswell as teammates. For the police team there will be such players arlie Ready, Bill Ford and “Dave Biggar of the City Police and Jack McGuire, Miles Foster of the mounties along with others. Game time is 8 o’clock with a oe to follow Here are the lineups: - CMP: -—- goal - Junior Mac- Leod; defence- Charlie Ready, William Ford, Maynord Roy; forwards — Dave Biggar. Shorty Williams, Sid Hurry, Jack Me- Guire, Miles Foster, Erie Bis- ho Pp. Sandy's — goal - Gunner Mc- Cormack; defence -—- Mike Hen- —' Roach MacGregor, Larry Campbell; forwards: Myron Bell, Brian Lewis, Sandy Frizzell, Jimmy Poulton, Duck Acorn, Dave Jack ‘Spy’ Ready. Officials: — referee -- Buck Whitlock: linesmen -~- Jack Kane, Alfie Flanagan. Old Spain ‘Spiel Ends Wednesday On Wednesday night at 7 o’- clock the final game in the Old Spain Competition for first and second year curlers will take place. The two section winners will play ten ends for the Old Spain prizes. Winner > Section “A'? was by Nelson Ball with Charlie Michael, mate: Rod MacKenzie, nd; and Doug Reid lea ‘“R was won by Bus Jones, skip; Al Gill mate: Alex Wilson second; and Gerald Dun- , bar lead. Announ CITY & QUEENS | WE TREAT the sick well Giggey’s Pharmacy week- end special—Wampole’s Leth- | inal, regular $2.95 extra bargain. 8 for 3.99. Open 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. | SPRING RATS arriving daily. including hats for tiny tots; The Elite Millinery, 142 Great George St. Open all day Satur- day 9-5. PARENTS ARE asked to en roll pupils for Grade 1 for Sep tember, 1962, this week at Echool ‘Board Office, Phone # $837, CROKINOLE party Brook- fleld Hall. Thursday, March 29. Lunches, prizes and door prize, sponsored by Brookfield W.1. | PARK ROYAL players present their three act comedy “Its a * in Heartz Hall Thursday, Marc , sponsored by Trinity UCW. BONSHAW variety concert in Hampton Hall, an night, March 29 at 8 p.m GIVE new hope to a crippl child through buying Faster Seals. Send donations to box 608 Charlottetown. COMING May Merry Minstrel Dame Auditorium. PRINCE COUNTY AT GALLANT’S: See and hear the Baldwin Electric Organ ehurch or e@ model, tw ed | 14-15-16 the Show, Notre ) tone. "Even. . J. Gallant Phone R40-31, Howlan. ' manuel, the Pirates after ponents, YMCA, failed to show up in the first game. This decis- ion was made at a league exec- utive meet Saturday. Halftime score in Saturday's game was 40-15 in favor of the Saints. They ee to out | score the City students in the second half but the eanaen | put ” a gallant try, especially hey found themselves — only 3 players in the dying meaes of the game im Hogan was the big gu | fi - Don Desroches-coached | aints. Hogan emerged with = points, Pat Smith and -_ Wong w nners-u 19 points each —_e Phil a | \lally racked up David east, o ‘the pace for the losers with 19 and Winston | Smith followed right on his heels } with 18. Referees for the game Scott see. and Donnie nel’ MacLea Here are the lineups :— SDU:—P. Smith 19, M. 19, J. Hogan 26, P Ce ™, T, Maddock 10, J. Chinery re Pwc:—S. Ladner 8, Reynolds 10, re. TD. Weale 19. Mac- ane. a Gallant 4, Smith 18. Tota PWC Wins Second Tilt; Lose Series BATHURST. NB. (CP) — Prince of Wales College of | Charlottetown came within three goals of winning a berth into | the Maritime Juvenile hockey | finals Saturday nieht when they | rocked Bathurst Papermakers 7.4. but drovned the two-game tntet-snal semi-final series 11- Rathurst won the opener 7-1 Friday The new!v-crowned N.B.-P.F.1 champion Ponermakers advane- ed to the Maritime finals. No date or lencth of the series have heen announced. | The Isla crew, paced by ae fast-moving Hendman-Mac- | w-Lawior line. threw everv- | thing it had at the ee es ers. A sparkling 44-s formance hy Se Cutt fentner In the Charlottetown net | held the Bathurst team at bav. Veniot, who fo. were ‘Fun- | Total— bc Tobe, ‘Hyndman scored four tHmes for Dave year potted two coals and Gord Mi Kav a singl Between the B rst pipes. Don Branch tintshed with 2 stop: A peld crowd of 1,200 saw the test. cements THE CAPE Traverse Women Institute will hold thetr regaae rd party ‘ape Traverse | Hall, Monday. March 26th at | 8.15 p.m. | KENSINGTON rink tonight, Monday, Farmer’s League, 4th | game of finals, Hope River vs Seabrook Farms. Game time | R 15. Admission 255 and 35, skate | after ATTENTION Presbyteri men, Malpeque. Freetown, Ken. | sington, Pot Luck Supper Mon- | day night 7.30, Kensington Pres- | byterian Church Hall. KINGS COUNTY TOP QUALITY watches, | clocks, jewellery repairs and en- graving. Pepler Jewellery, Mon- tague, | RECORDS, RECORD players, | transistor radios, sales and re- | pairs. Pepler Jewellery, tague. RESERVE April 18, for B.1.S. Play, ‘The Irish Professor’ in Montague High Aud- a sponsored by the Mon- ague C.W.L. CHECK your Aprit ru, | Digest lucky number | foo! store. We have a meee hist | of lucky numbers. You may be | a winner. Hilchey and Vanider- stine. A VARIETY Concert will be | held in Cambridge Hall, Tues- day, March 27 at 8.15 p.m., age by Peter's Road Y.P.S RESERVE March 3%, for benefit pantry sale at T.M. | Liewellyn's, sponsored by the Rebecca. SPECIAL Due to Snow Storm r3.$ will continue the MONDAY P.J.’s DIAL 4-8583 FREE a ~ TUESDAY EXTRA SPECIAL Fresh Grade “A” Young Fowl 6-7 Ibs. - 35c lb. NOTICES | NOTICE LTD. ir opening sale 9 PM. Ice 1—~Dr. P. Macintyre, uw Sullivan, J, Cudmore, W. Nad- dy, vs At. MacDonald, K. Hug- LTD hes, K. MacDonald, F. Hotton. . Tee ae . in Nich- ie : olson, caaae abon vs or 4-8586 S iets, ke Seca, B. YX and, A. Johnstor | on the talent-deep league cham- Curling Draw For foapinn is the curling schedul | for Montague today (Monday). 7 PM. Smith, D. Coffin, K. Sullivan vs K. to view the season's first race at opening day of New York's Fans jam the apron space | Aqueduct racetrack. Modern the pack th ugh | stretch in background to take | the first race, a_ six-furlong THEY'RE OFF AND RUNNING en gg Veteowiie up, | claiming event for three-year- olds. The winner paid $6.30. (AP Wirephoto) ‘Habs Set Scoring Mark In Downing Detroit 5-2 DETROIT (CP) — Montreal | Canadiens honed their shooting eye for the Stanley Cup play- offs, Sunday night by routing fifth - place Detroit Red Wings, | 5- and setting a National ockey League scoring record in the process. he five Canadien goals gave | them 259 for the season which | | beat Montreal's old league rec- ord of 258 in 1958-59. Billy Hicke led the assault with his 19th and 20th goals! making him the seventh player | | Pions to score 20 or more this | season And the newest -Canadien, | Gordon (Red) Berenson, who | wound up his college hockey at | the University of Michigan less than two weeks ago, was the one to break the total goals) record. Berenson capped a snarp bit | of digging at 6.47 of the finai| behind the net and then lacing a rising backhander past De- troit goalie Hank Berenson was fourth gam playing his an amateur tryout with Habs and had to} 1 decide by Tuesday whether he would turn professional for the Stanley Cup playoffs or finish} 6:19; out his school term to get hi | degree: In addition to Hicke and Ber- enson, Claude Provost, scored his 33rd goal and Bernie Geof- frion his 23rd for Canadiens who | built a 3-0 lead in the second ‘period before Detroit scored. Norm Ullman registered his 26th late in the second period for Detroit and then Gordie Howe scored his 33rd after Montreal held a 5-1 edge in the final per- iod. Montreal, which won its fifth straight league title this season, finished up with 98 points, sec- ond best in the team's history and only 14 defeats, number of setbacks in 17 sea- sons. oa First period: scoring. Pen- alties—Berenson % 30, Kennedy 203. Second period: 1. Montreal, Hicke 19 (Backstrom, Geoffrion) : 2. Montreal, Geoffrion 23 (Backstrom, Hicke) 13:47; 3. Montreal, Provost 33 (Talbot, Berenson) 15:00; 4, Detroit, Ull- Penalties—Odrowski 3:37, Hicke 7:23, Third period: 5. Montreal, Hicke 20 (Backstrom, Geoffrion) :90; 6. ontreal, Berenson 1 (Geoffrion) 6:47; 7. Detroit, Howe 33 (Odrowski, Delvecchio) 15:22, Penalties—MacNeil 3:36, Delvecchio 5:45, Godfrey 15:37 (major and minor) 15:37, Geof- frion 16: man 26 (Stasiuk, Gadsby) 19:31. | NEW YORK lay Bobby Hull scored his 50th goal of the season Sunday night and tied the National Hockey League's proudest record in the final game of the regular sea- son, won by New York 1-1. The 23-year old wa got his big goal before the game was five minutes old, and frantically sought the — breaker the rest of the wa Hull also tied New York's Andy Bathgate for the ews scoring lea each points. Bathgate got ae te s first goal. Hull, however, will get the Art Ross Trophy be- cause he has more goals. Rangers used their number two and three lines as checking lines to frustrate the blond bomber’s dashes. Hull’s 50 goals equals the season's scoring mark set by Montreal’s legendary Maurice (Rocket) Richard in 3 games in 1944-45 and tied by Cana- diens’ Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion in 70 games last sea-| son. Hull also put together ql 50 goals in 70 games. CLIMAXES DRIVE The goal climaxed a ee a, drive for the husky ack Hawk who a 35 goals M4 ‘his last 31 gam He got the big a at the 4:58 mark of the first period. | Fleming intercepted Al lois’ pass in Ranger ae pc shoved it over to Hull who was skating across the goal. Bobby banged in a backhander from about 10 feet out while being ridden off by New York's Harry Howell. He beat Ranger | goalie Gump Worsley on the short side. Both Hull and Bathgate got extra ice time as they sought the individual scoring lead. The game meant nothing so far as the team standings are con- cerned since Chicago had se- cured third place and New York Hull, skating with two lines| and playing the point on the power play, had 33 minutes and 15 seconds of ice time. Bathgate, | working in the same fashion, 18 8 8—32' had 34:02. Hull got off a total! commented. ALSO WINS ROSS TROPHY Hull Ties Goal.Record; Andy Loses Out In Race f ‘ f b f t BOBBY HULL of seven shots on goal, Bathgate four. MISSES CHANCE The 20 - year - old Bathgate, or his first scorin, title ide het Z ake opportunity ne the last 4¢ seconds, when Hawks were at a two man disadvan- tage. Ay was held in check by Flem: Both Bathgate and Hull were mobbed lay: and — to centre ice where they shoo y eee s 28th goal o season came about five minutes after Hull’s marker. too! long pass from Earl igarfeld and flipped ina ons ing the corner of the n period was scoreless. Goals Ingarfield, Andy Hebenton and Ted Hampson in the third pe- riod secured it for New York. Dean pent assisted on the | first thr Firs ceitedi 1. Chicago, 50 (Fleming) 4:58; 2. New York, Bathgate 28 (Ingarteld, Pren- as! 10:19. ; Henry 1 amt. yea aia No scoring. | enalties—Melnyk 4:13; Langlois : 57; ee 15:46; Prentice 15:46. Third : New York, mentee 26 ( Prentice, Harvey) 2:05; New York, Hebenton 18 tccudeen Harvey) 6:23; 5, New York, Hampson 4 (Heben, ton) 13:44, Penalties — Mikita 5:01, Cahan 9:12; Balon 17:0; Hay 17: a, Pilote 18: 29; Nest. | erenko 19: Sabon Gaaine ‘At North River ‘| Dunstaffnage and Milton That tied it at 1-1. ™ second | | saneese to play the fouts of the best of five series in the a River “C’? League at ver tonight at 8.45, me leads the series 2-1 in games and a win tonight will give the Dunstaffnage team 'the Lloyd MacPhail trophy Hull | which will be presented, if it | wins, ene the game. In a school hockey game, preceding the: “Cc” a finals, Winsloe meets Wi Hull Visualized 50th Goal Bathgate Is Disappointed By BOB EXELL NEW YORK (CP)—Did Bobby Hull think he could score No. 51 after getting his 50th goal of the season early in Sunday night’s game against New York Rangers? Hull wasn’t sure. “I knew that they were going to check me closely after that because of (Andy) Bathgate,” Hull said after the game. “If Bathgate hadn’t been close to me (in the league scoring race; ‘they wouldn't have checked me that hard.” The Chicago Black Hawks star said he went into the game with a sort of premonition that No. 50 tg be his. ‘T’'ve had a lot of faith,” he “I said a. little prayer = the game—as I always “But . ‘visualized it when I was having a little rest this| afternoon.” STILL ANXIOU: While his scoring streak {s) still strong—4l goals in his last) 47 games—Hull is looking for- | ward to going after Montreal | Canadiens in the playoffs. Despite his one goal, Rangers’ Bathgate showed more than just a little disappointment at not being able to pick up the one elusive point that would) have vaulted him into the} | league scoring title. Bathgate told how the Hawks managed to interfere with him) for most of the game. “He (Reg Fleming) held my) stick all the time,” Bathgate’ said. “I guess I should have tried harder to break away.” | ‘We're in anyway,"’ he said, referring to the fact that Rang- ers are in the National Hockey League playoffs for the first time in four years. ‘That's | what counts,” Bathgate added. Bathgate was more peeved at | the holding tactics of Eric Nes- terenko than those of Fleming, | ie said Nesterenko was poking | the elbow into him at every chance, “This Nester, he’s = that all the time," said Bathgate. “Fleming wasn’t dirty about {t. Fleming came to Bathgate on the ice after the game, appar- |ently to apologize. Bathgate couldn’t remember if he actu- ally said anything period by skating around from! the least Bruins Defeat “zz Maple Leafs 5-4 BOSTON (AP)— Don McKen-| ney, who had not scored in the| previous 14 games, intercepted | a pass and tallied 23 seconds| from the finish Sunday night as) ya clos e National ockey League season with a) is 4 victory over Toronto. McKenney got the puck at | eats ice, faked his way around | Larry Hillman and fired into} the far corner | Until then, it appeared Tor. | li onto, though outplayed much of | the way, would pagan ‘ 44) tie on Dick Duff's second goal | of the night and the hares rte! goalie Johnny Bower. In the tuneup for Laafs’ open- me Stanley Cup battle with ae York, the aging Bower was uperb against the best skating | exhibition staged by the 48 | place Bruins all season. on made 50 saves, falling just Pe is Gump Worsley’s 52 NHL ark, ae Boston scored three straight times to take a 43 lead | in the middle period, Duff got the equalizer after Bruins goalie Bruce Gamble had gone down stopped Billy Harris at the op- posite corner, Duff's two goals gave him 17 | for the season, eight of them at | Boston expense. Eddie Shack fed a pass to Duff who soloed in on Gamble to beat him at 5:17 of the first period. Two minutes later Tim | Horton shot Leafs ahead 2-0 as he fired a 25-foot screened shot. Bruins got that one back at | 13. when Jerry con't | ted Pat Stapleton’s t slapshot, A penalty to Doug .Mohns gave the Toronto power play a chance to oun oe the lead o 3-1 Duff slamming in 12:1 iio rebound from Billy Harris. With Harris off for holding Bruins narrowed the gap again at 6: the second Mohns in a pass from Johnny Bucyk. Bruins tied it up at 3-3 at 8:39 on a goal by Char- lie Burns, Bruins shot ahead 48 at 14:53 when Tom Williams grabbed a Bucyk rebound and beat Bower cleanly Leafs came right’ back to tle Ice 1: — Dr. L. Johnston, B. , MacKenzie, E. Clay, J. it at 4-4 at 17:43 when Nevin's | 25-foot — shot caromed in off ‘iskaneay then sealed the vic- tory for Bruins in the third pe- riod First period: 1. Toronto, Duff 16 (Shack) 5:17; 2. Toronto, Horton 10 Nerd Mahovlich) 7:49; 3. ton, res 19 (Stapleton, ‘Geein) 2:13; 4. Tor- onto, Duff 17 (Harris, Mahov. lich) 17:34. Penalties—Hillman 13:42, Mohns 15:27, Hillman 18:03, Green 18:03, Arbour 18:23, cond pe 5 Boston, Mohns 16 (Bucyk, Oliver) 6:07; 6. Boston, Burns 11 (Leach, Top- Wil- Toppazzini) Harris pazzini) liams 8. Toronto, 4:53; 15 | (Nevin) 17:43. Penalties—Boivin 2:58, Horton 4:00, Harris 4:53, Mahovlich 13:14, Mohns 19:53. 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