FMSTART . T SYMMARY alties: Talbot 10:33. Johnson 18:26. ‘ 13:51. Penalties; Boone 17:00. Third period: 3, Beliveaii (H. Richard, 7:45. Penalties; Johnson l3:52. 10:19. Penalties: Harris Pronovost 11:31. Provost, minor and major. 17:00,l Mame { ‘ _ Montreal,.T’oronto, Duff Cuiryi 1:37: 4. Mont.1‘eal,l.t‘!s0n) 7:54; 9. ’1‘oronto, Brian cul. Moore) lien 14:43; 10. Toronto, Armstrong L a bi ii e 7:22,‘lD|1ll. Migay) 17:04; 11. Toronto, 2l.lalties: [ris (Mallovlicll, Baunl 5:14; 3. To- Ilirsl‘ D(‘1'l0d' No scorin : « - .. :. Pen-,lonto. Barry Cullen 8:34; 4. D - ‘ - ~ - . 3:0]. McKCm]ey mm‘ 8 lPenalties. Fontinato 1.33, Thom- Kelly (Godfrey. Oliver) 15:22; 5. Toronto. Stewart (Arm- S. .- . . V 4:4::F('2nd‘/Eleltlod. 1. Boston, BuC_\;'k‘sl1‘_0ng, Mlgayl 17:34; 6. Toronto, - - 1 01111081. Bomn (Harvcy)lBrian Cullen (Barry Cullen, Pul- Belivcau 9:l6,(ford) 19:51. Penalties: None. Stops Third period: 7. Detroit, McIn- Hall 12 7 9_g23 {tyre (Arbour, Mickoski) 0:22: 8.i\v(,rsley 9 9 l,_25 (Stewart. llVli.r1ay (Duff) 17:40. Penalt 2 LSW5 lilllckoskl 13:03. y llmley 7 6 stops Plants 6 10 lsawchuk v A 10 11-1.. 15 , lCharlw.icV.k ‘V Fir?‘ De1'igdd1:mldAl$ni-oliln 3 - - SPMMARY Cunem ' « - ~ 3-1117; First period: 1. New York. (P f -. .* ~ I ul_o1d. Bllan Cullen) Gadsby tlilacdonaldi 19:31. Pen- _ Pilote 10:13. Fontinato (17:11. S - . . . flfiod. 2. Torontoiflar-. Second period: 2. Chicago, Fer. Mor— ~ lguson "iiesterenkol 8:33: 8. Blew’ lYork. Hebenton lSl1ll_l\'a)'|__ Mac. ldonald) 9:05; 4. New York. He- (benton (Sullivan, Fontinatol 9233. ‘son 13:12. Third Dcriod: 5, Chicago. Dineen Jlxachul‘. Vasko) 3:05. Penalties: None. Dutchmen Will Have New Coach KITCHENER. Ont. (CP) - Kitchener - Waterloo Dutchmen officials Friday announced im- port halfback Royal Bailey will succeed Harvey Johnson as coach of the senior Ontario Rugby Foot- ball Union club. He will be a To Pick All-Star Ball Teams NEW YORK (..P)——Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick said Thursday the starting lineups of t.he 1958 all-star teams will be decided by I! poll of players, managers and coaches of the two major leagues. Each player, manager or or coach will be asked to vote for a team in his own league. He may not vote for players on his own team. Frick said the 16 player rep- 1'esent.atives agreed to (’()-oper. ate in the plan. The 1958 game grill he played at Baltimore July Frir,-k’s annoIlncemen«l meant playing coach. the end of the fan poll idea. Since 1947 the fans have voted for the eight starters in each league. CAN'T BALANCE ' Obviously the 1957 poll in which Frick arbitrarily elimin- ated two Cincinnati players from the starting lineup after a deluge of Cincinnati ballots unbalanced the voting, was the basic reason for the change, "I have been in favor of the fan vote." said Frick. “But I am not in favor of the way it turned out. It has been a joke in recent years. The newspaper poll of fans simply is not practical. We do not get a true cross section there is no way to balance i~.. Erick estimated the total vote ‘Recllegs Will Try New Caps year. The opposing managers in the all-star game will select the rest of the squad, including the pitch- ers. When Frick stepped into the 1957 vote. it appeared that all eight starters on the National League team would he Cincinnati Redlegs. But despite his action. there were five Cincinnati start- ers in the opening lineup in the game, won by the American A/Ix. . 4 '7 $7'RANAl-IA IV IV//M’//V6 /953's A7257 fa!/R/V5/— 745 £05 I//551.55 OPE//— gay I FAY/4'5 57-Akr ram-no M/Ar 5//0620 as-' are 62517557 Elk at-'4; toms sauzws atassa /-7 . Por-tadown 2 Coleraine 0 SOCCER SCORES LONDON (CP) —— Standing in LONDON (Reuters) -— ‘Results the English d s t llsoccer matches in the United Leagues: (t0;nteal‘(ll)S)tiZSh football 7605 ms 2» my 5%‘-2’)? 7wov.A: 279,307 73': rmamsr Newry Town 3 Linefield n 3 lllngdom Saturday: W L '1‘ Pts. ENGLISH LEAGUE ENGLISH LEAGUE Divlgion '1 Division I Arsenal 4 Man United 5 w°lV€rhampton 18 4 6 42 Aston Villa 1 Blackpool 1 Preston_ 16 7 5 37 . gallon 0 Leeds 2 Man United 15 7 6 36 rgumley 2 Chelsea 1 . West Brom 12 5 11 35 ljverton o Luton 2 Luton 15 9 4 34 Man City 4 West Brom 1 . Division 11 llewcastle 2 Sunderland 2 Char“ 1‘ 16 7 .5 37 llotts F 2 Portsmouth 0 west am 14 5 8 36 mm“ 8 Birmingham 0 Blackburn 13 6 9 35 Sheffiele w 2 Tottenham o L"?-F9001. 14 9 6 34 Wolverhampton 5 Leicester 1 Fldham ,l 12 7 9 33 Bristol‘ R 3 Ipswich 1 _ Division III Southern ‘ Wolverhampton 5 Leicester 1 Sw.md°” 14 3 10 33 Division II B“3h_t°’3 15 7 6 38 illristul R 3 Ipswich 1 Reading 14 7 8 as Charlton 3 Cardiff 1' Plymouth 16 9 4 36 Derby it Blackburn R 3 Ne“’p.°"t 13 7 9 35 Doncaster 2 Bristol C 1 N°r“'1°h; 12 5 11 35' . Fulham 2 west Ham 2 ‘ _ Division III Northern . -Huddersfield 1 Grimsby o Bury 17 7 5 39 mm or 1 Liverpool 0 Scunthorpe 16 5 7 39 Lincoln 2 Notts c 2 Barrow 12 7 12 36 ltiddlesbrough 3 Barnsley 1 B”ad.‘°rd 12 6 11 35 ‘.llllliemam' 0 Stoke 2 A°°““g".°" 14 3 7 35 Swansea 0 Sheffield U 2 Chesterfield 13 8 9 36 Division In Southern SCOTTISH LEAGUE Aldershot 2 Millwall 2 DlVi5i°“ I Bientford 2 Walsall 1 H93?“ 20 1 2 42 Colchester 3 Bournemouth 2 Cemc 11 4 5 27. P 3 shrewsbury 0 Rangers 3 3 Newport 4 Queen's P R 2 Clyde . 13 6 1 27 Northampton 3 swlndon o Hlberman D. . 9% 9 2 25 ' ‘ ’ IVISIOII 2B’§fi§§§h‘;m 1 Stirling Albion 18 5 2 33 ‘Port Vale 3 Exeter City 2 A’b“’ath 15 6 4 35 «Southampton 2 Southend 2 D“mba”°'.' 15 5 3 35. .mq“ay 1 Coventry 0 Dumfermllne 15 7 3 33 Cowdenbeath 12 5 6 30 " Watflird 1 Reading 1 lnivision 111 Northern -1 Barrow 4 Bury 2 ‘liadiord 1 Tranmere, R 0 Carlisle 2 Chesterfield 2 Crewe Alex 1 Hull City 2 I Darlington 2 Mansfield 0 rliartlepools 2 Gateshead 2 ' Oldllam 2 Halifax 4 ’ llochdale 3 Stockport. 0 3 Scuntliorpe 2 Workington 2 louthisort 2 Chester 4 HOCKEY scoles National League New York 3 Chicago 2 Detroit 2 Toronto 9 Boston 1 Montreal 3 ‘ American League Buffalo 4 Cleveland 7 Rochester ll Hershey 8 Providence 0 Springfield 4 1 Wrexham 1 Bradford C 1 Western League York City 1 Accrington 3 -Seattle 6 Victoria 7 SCOTTISH ASSOCIATION CUP Vancouver 3 New Westminster 6 _ L First Round Winnipeg 4 Edmonton 3 Alrdrleonians 3 Celtic 4 OHA Senior A Albion 3 Berwick 1 Cornwall 3 Pembroke 0 Allan (J Dunfermline A 2 Belleville 2 Kingston 3 ' ’ \ or U 1 St. Mirren 1 ' 1 OHA-NOHA ‘ '3r§cl1in 1 Montrose 1 Sudbury 5 Sault Ste. Marie 3 Clnrnside 0 Thd L:-mark 4 Chatham 2 Kitchener 3 Cowdenbeath 1 Rangers 3 Okanagan Senior Dumbarton 0 Clyde, 5 Kamloops 10 Penticton 1 East‘F‘ife 1 Hearts 2 Kelowna 7 Vernon 1 Esllrling 3 Motherwell 7 0HA Junior A Falkiik 2 Hamilton 0 Ottawa-Hull 3 St. Catharines 3 Ruth R 4 Peebles R 0 . . Still Awaiting anraer 6 Plymouth - 2 Swap Clearance SCOTTISH LEAGUE . P , Division I mllk 1 Aberdeen 0 Queen of s 1 Kilmarnock 2 , ‘ A ' Division 11 NEW YORl( (AP)-—Detroit Tig- l slbmath 2 Stenhousemuir 0 ers and San Francisco Giants " -Tnhnstone 1 Morton 5 still are waiting for waiver clear- ance to make {their three-man trade official. The swap sends Giants’ first baseman Gail Harris and in- fielder Ossie Virgil to the Tigers in return for infielder Jim F1m- gen and cash. It remains only for the other National League clubs llo waive on the. two Giants to (make it. a deal. J D [ Other match “N396 U 0 Dundee 1 ‘Elsi! ASSOCIATION cup M M First Round OM54 Glentora R 2 stllziléillle 11 3.1 ieldcéi 2 _ S erry iy lclrndelia 0 Ballymena 5 Wlvon 3 Distillery 0 K ’1i)91jan 1 Bangor 1 $1 7,°9E'n"’s€"ampfire BLTAGICSORDS (ti ear‘. . , .\| ( I g.‘ ‘?AlNBow moor THAT .GEAT5s (QLOQNG FADES BLUE - LIGHT A HAWK HAS suca UNUSUAL , STGHT THAT, WHEN SOARING men IN -1142 A12, rr CAN SPOT A Mouse MOVN5 THROUGH -me GRASS‘ seww SO CU2tOUS ARE RACCOONS THAT -- Now! Of all leadlrlg makes... Here they are! Two-door hardtops, four- door hardtops, two-door and four-door sedans in three great 1958 Plymouth series. They’re_ the lowest priced of (all leading makes-yet they're years ahead in design. . . years ahead in features! 1 It isn’t often that you can get the most by paying the least. But here’s your chance. And it’s a honey! Plymouth prices on all the most popular models are right down in the cellar. Yet Plymouth isthe most advanced car in the low-price field. The Fashion Plate for ’58. The sleek, new beauty with modern Silver-Dart styling . . . push-button Torque-Flite automatic drive . . . eye-opening new V-8 or newly improved Six Thrill-Power GO . . . advanced Total-Contact brakes . . . and Torsion- A1 RE Ride, too. We the extra-smooth, extra—level ride that doesn’t cost you an extra cent! in Canada! League 6-5. l l>LYlVlOUTH BRINGS vou THE LOWEQTPRICED CARS built CINCINNATI (APJ——Cincinnati‘aluminum_ foil and Redlegs, with a lot of firsts al-jsponges with a D6I‘f01‘al€d C°"“-‘T’ ready to their credit, are going*inserted in the cal)- Players, Coaches, Managers’:Yl9¥?.:...l“7?l?*““f’?/~ 3~1“’53T“*e “"'*‘."dl?‘.“ P31-=?.-.‘3. to try out air conditioned cap! at spring training. General ‘Man- ager Gabe Paul said Frida_r. The air conditioninlz 0011915‘! of a water-cooled band made of inslilite The caps must be made of a contrasted to about 750,000 last material which is impervimls lc water, Paul said. One aDPlK’3’ tion of water is eXP§“—'l9d i0 re‘ tain the cooling quality T0‘ 59V’ eral. hours. _ Cinnati had. the. first profes- sional baseball team in the coun- try, was the first. to have nigh? baseball. the first team to travel by plane, the first to have ‘air conditioned dugouts and the first to air condition the press box._ “We also want to he first in the National League’ pennant race this year,” Paul said. It sure makes sense to pick Plymouth. And it sure makes sense to do it right now—-—in mid-Winter! For one thing, you get the pleasure of owning your new Plymouth all year, not just part of it. And for another, you get the assurance and comfort of an all-new car with safer tires and brakes—brand- new battery, power plant and all _equipment—— when you need them most. V - -How about it? Why not come in and trade this very week? You pay less. You get more quality, more reliability. You get your new car when it’: most welcome! ’ ' CHRYSLER CORP()RA"l‘l0N OF CANADA, LIMITED //// // room. plate for 58% P mouth .hl9.lU...M~0l.’QlM.f) otoilol . Good news under the hood! New refinements in engineering bring you the finest quality Plymouth Six or V‘-8 ever built. Six cylinders never sounded so smooth, performed so economically. And the V-8 offers you “ plus" performance without equal. Take a demonstration drive in a Plymouth. See what we mean! YOU'RE ALWAYS A STEP AHEAD IN CARS OF THE FORWARD LOOK ... QUALITY-CRAFTED T0 HlGHl-CST STANDARDS OF THE INDUSTRY ~/(MG SQLVIIZPEL ‘ Ila‘ BAT:-‘ we to; ours! MAMMALS Wu,-cu use We rec; Panza 05 =L._=..4r 0*:-3: so cuter: F1 ~':~ A~'= oats, sucu AS ml-: FLYN6 $QU(Ql?ELS, ME!-Pi-':LY r‘ “J —— TEAPPEQS‘ OFTEN lJA~l3 SI-1I.~(~’Al?i‘lCLES 0.25 ‘MEI? SETSAND QELV out ‘mg ‘coon (Ml/E-STlG.Ai’lr~l6 AND STF?P|NlG INTO THE ‘TRAP N-sngauu-5.-—n.A-5 F. R. MCLAINE LIMITED Malpsquc Road, Charlottetown x A MULLEN MOTORS Mount Stewart