PE Tie Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. April 18, 1963 SPORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN Mr. Campbell Acts THE public address announcer in Chicago Stadium has a per- fect right to have a team of his choice in these Stanley Cup finals but he hasnt any oe to be making any comment as a pubiic @ddress anicunc Clarence asashall: president of the National Hockey League, fairly well worked up Sunday in Chicago when he listened te ‘unnecéssaries’ thrown in by a gentleman by the name of Bob agora Bob has hecome almost overcome by the doings of the Gawks and has let his feelings run away with him He hasn’t been sticking to facts but rather he has been pushing his opinion upon the fans in the rink and the fans on radio and television. Now mind you, this certainly doesn't make a team win or lose. However, he does cheapen the affair and when it does Mr. bell has every right to step in and cry halt,Not only is it his - but it is his duty as president looking after the interests of lubs. - Stadium is the only place we have heard opinions expressed by the public address announcer. All other rinks have individuals who give the cold hard facts to the public. Sunday night we wondered when a stop would be put to this practice and it didn’t sunrise us one bit to learn Monday that Campbell had sent his edict to the Hawks management, Now ff the NHL prexy had some way of stopping this hor- rible vractice of throwing just about everything on the ice, things tm Chicago wou'd be nearly like any other NHL city. But, then, that’s hoping for too much, What About Meetings? + WE HAVEN'T heard a sound of any baseball or softball meet- fags on the Island Perhaps there have been some and we missed out on them but at least, Charlottetown, Summerside and King’s County hav- en’t done anything as yet. We know it will be considerable time until play actually gets gnderway but we think that some of the organizational work ghould be started now. Undoubtedly things will begin to take shape in the very near future. A rink skipped by Sybil Mac- CHAMPIONSHIP RINK | club. Along with the ch4m- left to right winning rink ; eee at es j : ; are:— Sybil MacMillan, skip; Migs, wen the Copeienieren® pionship went the Wellner | Isabel MacDonald. mate; Tess ladies curling championship trophy, emblematic of this Lecky, second and Kitty Mac- | last Wednesday at the local competition. Members of the Leod, lead. e | MI 1A Team f OF ced Sultans Tonight Charlottetown Pirates host To Cede Hoop Series MONTREAL (CP) — Mos- | , real's YMHA Blues apparentiy | night. | will have to drop out of playoff competition for the national Senior B baskethall champ!on- Those Olympics MONTREAL Olympics are in the Allan Cup finals and that makes Amherst Ramblers look mighty good. The Quebec champions were the first ones that Amherst en- eountered on the Allan Cup trail, The Ramblers managed to take the first game in overtime but lost the next three. That loss to the Amherst squad was the only one suffered thus far by these Olympics. They sidelined Ottawa District champions in straight games and then upset the Ontario Hockey Association champions, Kapuskasing Kaps in four straight. This last triumph over the A winners was certainly unexpected and must have OHA offi- elals shaking their heads, Now the Olympics head west for the Allan Cup finals and after their great showing to date it would not be surprising to see | them go all the way. Folks in the east will be pulling for an Olympics’ victory. Reiser Has Job aaa that great outfielder of Brooklyn Dodger's days, Pete Rei Well, ‘Pete is at Los Angeles these times holding down a enaching job with the Alsonites. Pete has plenty to think about but one of his ambitions is to make Frank Howard a better slug- er. Says Pete: ‘Frank Howard hasn't got the same snap in his swings he had when I had him as a rookie at Green Bay in 1958. I'm no psychologist, but I’m going to try and get Howard back to his Green Bay days, when he stood there flatfooted and hit bullets. We're not going to talk about what happened to him these last two years.’ If Pete can accomplish this task, the Dodgers will surely he @ much more serious contender for the National League crown, Terry Is Grateful YOU would think that Ralph Terry would always remember with real disgust that world series home run ball he fed to Bill Mazeroski ia the 1960 world series. That was the ball that won the world championship for the Bucs from Pittsburgh. Asked recently about that pitch, Ralph had this to say: “That home run I fed to Bill Mazeroski, that won the 1960 world sories for the Pirates, didn't stay with me too long, and I'll tell vou why it didn’t. “T walked over to Casey Stengel as soon as I en elubhou: se after the game, ‘Casey’ I said, this red the ‘I hate to aa it like Casey replied: “How were you operatin’ — what were you tryin: to execute?” he said. “1 tried for a low one, breaking and away,” I told him, ‘“‘it came in high.’ “At least you pitched as you should, so I ain't eomnlainin’,”’ he said. poke those words like the old pro he is. They gave me a lift needed when I needed it most. Otherwise I might have brood- ce the rest of my days. I'll always be grateful to Casey for thern Indians Beat Red Sox 5-0 CLEVELAND (AP) Dick Donovan pitched a_ five-hitter for his second straight shutout over Boston as Cleveland In- dians beat Red Sox 5-0 Tues- | day night. Donovan (2-0) ee out six and walked thre Willie Kirkland hit a solo homer in the eight, his first of the year. He also had three singles for a_ perfect Rookie Al Luplow hit his first major league homer in the sev- enth with no one on. Bill Monbouquette (1-1), who pitched 12 scoreless innings against Indians in his last ap- | pearance, stretched it another | three innings but was charged | with the loss. night. | ship, it was learned Tuesday RCAF Sultans tonight in the fourth game of a best of five series for the Island Senior ‘C’ basketball title. The game will be played at PWC and game time is 7.30 sharp. Coach Murray Waxman sald his team is unable to play on the dates set by the Canadian Amateur Basketball Association because they conflict — the Jewish parents holiday: “So haven't oe able to get ‘ian changed and it looks as though we'll have to forfeit,” said Wyman, a con- ey firm operator who layed on Canada’s 1948 Olym- | ie basketball team The Blues were to it =~ John, N.B. YMCA in | iy total-point series hak fat urday and Sunday with the win- ner to advance to ~ ae eee eae Sarnia, -Ont., MCA in ait April 2 25 in a anes of-thre | But a high "sitar: fall on April 24-2 WILL HAVE TO CEDE “‘We can't play on those dates and since there is no point to advancing we have been told we'll have to cede the series with Saint John,’’ said Waxman. “We asked the Sarnia officials if they would agree to move the Cerulty Believes He Can Persuade Herb To Continue MELBOURNE, Australia) (AP)—Percy Cerutty, the coach | | See guided Australian miler | Herb Elliott to fame, still he- | lieves he can persuade the run- | ner to change his mind about | retiring from international ath- | letics. In an article written for The | Melbourne Sun, Cerutty says al- though he thinks Elliott has made the wrong decision, he does not think it irrevocable. “I know what Herb has had to put up with and I know he has reasons for wanting to re- tire,”’ Cerutty says. | “But I still say he can do all | | the things he has to do these | days and still come back fidence—he never did have a | great deal of confidence in him- self. “Right now he has lost con- dates back a couple of days. But they said they couldn't do it be- would be unavailable.” oa n sald the players on club offered to put up money rv of their own pockets” to guarantee expenses for the Sar- | | ale oo, if the dates were set cep! Big Cove Cops | Mar. Crown NORTH SYDNEY, N.S. (CP) — New Brunswick's Big Cove }iemacs captured the Maritime Indian hockey championship here Tuesday night blanked the Cape Breton cham- pions, Eskasoni Eagles 3-0 in the second game of their best- of-three series. Big Cove won the opening in the round Monday night by a 6-5 margin. Big Cove scored single goals in each of the three periods, Steve Joseph opened the scor- ing in the initial session while Vincent Paul tallied in the sec- = frame. Peter Sock closed the scoring in the final period. | cause three of their players | bac | "Bat they still wouldn’t ac- | ey MODERN PRACTICE e first minimum wage laws were introduced in New Zealand in 1894. SHOP Chihawks Square Series; Trounce Maple Leafs 4- . BULLETIN By JACK. SULLIVAN Cc: Editer CHICAGO (CP)—A scream: ing, debris-throwing crowd “ nearly 20,000 sang a resoundin 8 victory song Tuesday night as Chicago Black Hawks crushed Toronto nore a 41 and squared their best - of Stanley Cup final "0. It was one of the —* cup games in years. — e out in each period, elle axed by a stick-swinging duel betwee the Hawks’ S big Fr Mahovlich of a No damage was done Referee Frank Udvari slapped them with game - misconduct penalties with less than three minutes of the game remaining and both skated to there dress- ing - rooms. Mahovlich was pelted with debris from the frantic Hawk fans. All told, Udvari called 24 pen- alties—the two game miscon- ducts, one misconduct, four ma- jors and 17 minors USE SAME FORMULA who shut out Leafs 3-0 in Tuesday's third game | here after two straight losses | in Toronto, used same success formula of hitting hard from me openin mered at Leafs for the operin 5 two periods—when all the goals were scored—and then played it cozy in the last 20 minutes. It could be a costly game tor Leafs, who lost goalkeeper Johnny Bower, a non-comba- _ in the first period when pulled a leg muscle after Seine the splits to save on a ankle-high drive by Bobby Hull. Bower limped off and spare goalkeeper Don Simmons was and SAVE atE ATON'’S called in from the stands. —— was Hull and penalty-killing | Reggie Fleming who killéd | Leafs with goals. Each got a) pair while ns scoring was handled by v Red Kelly in the first yor after | wks u Fleming’s first goal—at 15-4 =. the opening as tnad to be the winner and it was a eae touch, He hadn't able to score against Leafs in 14 Toronto - Chicago National SIMMONS YIELDS THREE Bower was beaten on Hull’s first goal and the masked Sim- mons, who gave up hockey a year ago to sell mink rather than play in the minors, yielded the other three. Exactly 61 seconds after Simmons took over, Flem- ing beat him with a low blister- ing drive in the corner to the netminder’s left from about 15 feet out |e Ironically, too, it was Chi- | cago’s first shot on goal after the 31-year-old Simmons took over. This marked Simmons’ 22nd playoff game. He minded the nets for Boston in 1957 and 1958 and had two shutouts in 21 games, t was clearly evident early to the hysterical crowd at Chi- cago Stadium that this was go- g to be a sock-’em, rough-’em- up battle between the two ams. The crowd had hardly settled in their seats when Murray Bal- four, who was wearing a helmet following a head injury in the second game at Toronto, and Leaf defenceman Bobby Baun Hockey League games this tan Mikita | ¥&4"- tangled behind the Toronto goal. ; } a was the signal for play-| First pe ers of both clubs to shed their|6 (Mikita) 10:35; 2. icago, gloves and pick partners. But| Fleming 1 (Nesterenko) 15:41; they acted more as peace- | | 3. Toronto, Kelly 4 (Duff, Arn- moles than warmongers, much | strong) 18:08. Penalties—Baun, as they did in later moans of | major :17, Balfour, major :17, fist-swinging. | Mahovlich 1:46, Brewer 7:8, But these brief battles didn’t | | Horvath 7:08, Nesterenko 12: 05, stop the heavy check par- | "aon 17:37, arte ‘: Cues Hull Chi ticularly by the Hawks who sp-| °° io uf hee parently went out to soften up| (ing ae Pema “¥ Pole —— - “8 uit h | Nesterenko) 7:31. Penalties a ae ie ae urent, "he ee ~ | Stanley 5:21, Pulford (miscon- parently has discovered | duct; 7:31, Stewart 10:53, Flem- eee in this series, good piece of Captain G Armstrong and Mahovlich the first minute and a hal From that point on, a ‘the | final period when the Hawks sat back and simply protected the: = n ing 10:53, St. Laurent 12:42. in | Shack 8: ing 14:30-1 7: 24, Mikita, 'Mahov- | lich (majors and game miscon- ir | duets) 17:24, Evans 19:31, 41 lead, they matched body- | Saves check for bodycheck with th the | Bow wer Telia Leafs. And the Hawks appeared | simmons 211 5-18 to hit the hardest. | Hall 9 714-30 “I have to admit one thing,’’ | coach Punch Imlach of Leafs Nikola Tesla, Croatian-born said after the game. were the aggressors | didn’t back down from them.” dio-controlled boat in 1898. Mallet's Radiator Service 30th Anniversary Radiator Repairing Recoring and Flushing 17 Alley Street Dial 4-6232 | | | Tube Type 670/15 Each | 710/15 Each 760/15 Each 640/15 Each 650/15 Each 560/13 Each 640/650/15 Each 590/13 Each 1 4.98 670/15 Each 1 7.42 600/18 ran 14.98 710/15 rach 61 8,88 14.49 640/650/13 rer 15.98 760/18 Each 20.82 16.44 vraag oat a 800/15 Each 20x46 800/14 Each « iis i acer 20.64 820/15 Each 20246 14.49 550/560/590/600/15 Each “BULLDOG Master Ride” NYLON TICES Specially Priced Full 4 ply cord construction. Workmanship equal to original 2.00 trade-in allowance on your recappable tire. 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