Red Wings Defea MONTREAL (CPI — .'tlontreal'fence Canadiens did all their scoring inl bot. Turner. Johnson forwards: pull out to a 3-2 win for thelryveau. Geoffrioii. Olmstead. H. R first victory over New Yorltichard. Boiiin, .\I0(ire. Proiiovost. ' Bangers this season ,« Rclcrce Canadiens widely oulsliut LIl€Illllt‘.\l'llt‘ll Ra ceded th f’ t-:P li-h perlltgxirsgoals by Don !\l£arstilaSll.E aw i SUMMARY I Bernie «Boom Boom« Geoffrion' First period: 1. Montreal. and Marcel Bonin to scrape Ma r s ll a I I ‘(ie‘Uffl'lUn, Olm-‘ through. Bill Gadsby counted for‘stcad» 2 33 2 Montreal. C-eul—‘ New York in the first period HIlf.’l"Ifl'I0Il l(lllll\lL’it(I, St Laurentil Montreal had taken a 2-0 Ieati.l3 5:5. \cw York. (Jadshy and Dean Prentice scored for the Bzitliiiatc P ii p e l nv 1512 Rangers in the second period. lM0llll‘PBl. Bonin Ill. Richard.‘ Canadiens poured 48 shots at Moorev iii 26 Peiialties l-‘ontin- goalie Marcel Paillc of liall;lk‘l'S ato 30. Gzitisby l 50. ' while Jacques Plante of Montreal Second period: 3. faced 26. .P I’ 9 ii I I c e ‘Sullnan. llcbcii The Raiigcrs pulled lI‘lL‘lllsCl\t‘\I0ll lti J0. Pciiallics Proxost together after a shaky start butIl:35. Popein 6.-ii, Geoffrion 7 I29. l‘.’£‘.’.“‘.i.'l‘.§’J2?“..‘.’.5...°"..i‘l‘i.."?T§2i iS“‘w“ ‘*3 léfiaoa‘-" sL.‘i.‘iI.‘i§‘ ’i‘V..“..‘._;l period when Caiiadiens kept up BIPEIIBIIIOSI Sullii an 19.59. Harvey persistent drive in a bid for more 19 .39. goals before a home crowd of Stops: I , ‘ a 13 I2 18-45- In the four previous meetings Plante 6 1(}—2~i' this season. both in Montreal and Di-ZTROIT fAP"—GOl‘dl8 Howe New York, e Ranger: had scored two goals and assisted on lcored three wins and a tiefianother Thursday night as l)e-V Their loss _ night left troit ltcd Wiiigs edged Ho s t on them still in \L‘(‘llll(I place in the.Bi"iiiiis 32 in a bitterly contested National Hockey League race.:Naiioiial Hockey Let-i;:ue contest. trailing Canadiens by nine points.IThe triumph was Detroit's first home victory in eight games The teams played scoreless , Foniin-ato. Cahan. Gads- hockey through the first D€‘l‘lO€l., forwards: Sullixan. with Boston having an edge in Prentice. Baih- play. The Bruins outshot Detroit gate. G e n d r o n. MacDonald. 10-4. Ciesla. Creighton. I-‘oley. Popein. Don McKeuney put Boston in Henry, Lewicki front midway through the second Montreal — period. on a long screened shot, Royals & Aces Play Tonight The hockey match between the player, Darky Lovte. who ]tiin- Charlottetown Royals and Sum- ed the team in the game‘ merside Aces at Civic Stadium in I against Amherst Monday nightl Summerside tonig " per-jand garnered a goal and twor haps the most crucial one for the assists. Thane Mann will be home boys since the league start- the nets for the first time this ed. The Aces have so far been year. The little fellow made a right in the thick of it as far as good impression against Park- points are concerned. but a loss dale Monday night. and should tonight would put them well back be in pretty good shape for this in the race. So Hennessey and his acid test against the Royals hustlers will be keyed up to agsharpshooters. All indications high pitch for this match. and point to a thrilling game when ahould extend the classy Royals the old rivals pit their skill to the limit. Local fans will be against each other at Civic Sta- anxious to nee the Royals new dium tonight. Already The Cry ls Raised Break Up Champion Braves lioug Danes. Matt‘ New York. Lineups: New York — Paille. defence: ‘Goal: Plante de- oi‘ the Lou Angelea Dodgers was one of the first to admit the sit- uation for the rest of the senir circuit teams looked ominous. "Let's it." he id. much tougher for By . AN NEW YORK <APi — The Mil- waukee Braves have been base- ball's champions of the world for two months and already the cry in being sent up: “Break up the Braves." Time was when they said the ce makes it that us next year." LONG WAY BEHIND liai'\e_\. St. Laurent. 'I‘al- but lloiie evened it up 25 onds later. Al Arbour of Detroit the first period Thursday night toIGoyette. Provost. Marshall. Beli-‘was in the penalty box when Mc- lKeiiiiey scored. . I) a I t o n McArthiirlof 1 off for Detroit. 4ld ‘ overpowered In Arsenault who scored three goals "II. J same thing about the New York Y a n k e e s. But the apparent nrengthening the Chicago White Sox and several other Am- Braves. They’ra loaded. and an inspection of their roster today shows why. cage to Milwaukee served en the Braves‘ chances of winning the 1958 National apolizlng the title for many years to com e. Vice - President Buzzie Bavasi Minor Hockey _ let the Braves catch me in that Roy Hamey. general manager of the Philadelphia Phillies. chip- ped in with. “Guess I'll have to go to work and do something now. But I guarantee you that I won't vise of theirs. Many other baseball men also feel the transaction which sent pitcher Taylor Phillips and catcher Sam Taylor to the Cubs for Ruth and the others was one- sided. At any rate. the other clubs have a lot of catching up to do. And it's going to be a mighty tough job matching a pitching staff headed by Warren Spahn. Iew Burdette and Bob Buhl. . backed up by Rush. Gene Con- ley. Bob Trowbridge. and Don McMahon. and embellished with Juan Pizarro. who recently fanned 19 batter: and pitched a no-hit game in the Puerto Rican winter league: Carlton Willey, the For Saturday Folloviinfl are the times and schedule of ganics for minor hockeyists of the (‘ity and sur- rounding area for th& Saturday’: games at the S a Arena'~— 7.45-8..'t0——Mldgetii — Royals vs. Vic s. 8.30-9.lfi——Bantams -Q C H S. Panthers vs. Q. t‘. H. S Wolver- es. 9.10-9.50—Bantams _ Q, ( icon and Joey Jay. ii I7-game \\ln- iner uho fanned 199 batsmen in I Spudniks 65-47 s.‘ . ‘leafed the Summerside Spudniks‘ H. 65-47 in an exhibition basketball‘ only 20-game winner in the Am- erican Association last sea- the Trotters Beat AA. The (‘Iiarlotletown Trotters de- ~ Montreal 4 ‘Quebec 3 I iywardsr Kenney. Horvath. Stasiuk. Bucyk. Canadians Edge Rangers;» E 3 i Boston How-e's goal came on a rebound Red Kelly‘: hard. close~in drive. Howe scored again at the 16:03 mark while Bob Armstrong was at mid-ice. crashed through the Detroit defence and blasted a 15- footcr home although Larry Re- gan \\3S draped around his shoul- ers. Norm L'lliiian gave Detroit a 3-1 lead early in the third period. ut Allen Stanley narrowed it to 3-2 with a slap shot a few niiu- utes later Lineups: S1095! Boston—«Uoal' Siniiiioiis de-‘Simmons 410 3-22 fence: Armstrong, Stanley. Bi- Sawchuk 109 9-23 onda. 1" l a m a n. Hillman. for- fence : He took the puck 10 Gievreflls. Labine. Mc- Mackell. Regan. Toppauini, Peir- Detroit — Goal: sawéiiuii; de- Pronovoat. Godfrey. Ar- bour. wards: Kelly. Howe. Dea. Reibel. Delvecchio. Wilson. Dineen. Ferguson. Prystai. Ken- nedy. Poile. Referee: Red Storey; linesmen: Art Skov. George Hayes. SUMMARY I-‘int period: Scoring: None. Penalties: Howe 6:59. Chevrefila 12:36, Howe. Hillman 19.37. Second period: 1. Boston. L a b i ii at 10:38; 3. Detroit. Howe 16 03. Penalties; Regan 9:44. Armstrong man tHowe. Delvecchiol 4:30: 5- Boston. Stanley lH0rvat.h. Bucyln 13 48. Peiialties Hillmpn 303. Arbour 8.18, lliilman. Kennedy I2 39. A.s.5os I j 52am 5 The Charlottetown Guardian, Friday, 13, 1957 Parkdale Flyers BeatSummerside Barry’: Parkdale Flyerl show- a strong scoring punch e ummerside 12-7 last] Intermediate Aces night in the first game of th newly formed Island Senior Hoc- key League to be in Charlottetown. . The Flyers were led by Joey and Jim MacLeod. Flick Landry an Apps Arsenauit who each scored two t lya. The Parkdale crew led right from the start of the game. Flick Landry got the puck thnne Mann to put the Flyers into a 1-0 lead. Claude Gaudet tied up the game minutes later connecting on a pass from Gord Grady. Weather- bie again put the Flyera into the lead but Phillips got one past- Simmons to tie the score seconds er. Longaphie. Joey Arsenault and Cruwys also scored for the Flyers in the hectic first period with Phillips getting his second goal of the period to make the score read 5-3 in favor of Parkdale. Benny Grady brought Summer- side to within one goal of a tie early in the second period but im Mac got that one back aeconds later. Flick Landry got the l-‘lyers a two goal lead when his hard shot bounced of Mark Delaney stick and rebounded into the Sununerside net. Jim Mac- Leod then got his second tally before Gaudet scored once more. Parkdale. In the third period the Flyers N. H. L. Standings By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League New York 2 Montreal 3 Boston 2 Detroit 3 no Trois-Rivieres 0 Sbawinigan I-‘ails North Shore Bathurst 9 Fredericton 4 Onta o Senior Sudbury 2 Son 8 Kitchener 6 North Bay 8 ntario Junior The period ended 8-5 in favor of mm” outscored the Aces by two goals. Apps Arsenault teamed up with Joey Arsenault teamed up with Joey Arsenault to pat the Flyers into a 9-5 lead midway through the period. he added another minutes later and Gilli: put the Flyers beyond reaching distance a w ' later. Claude Gaudet scored his third tally to move the Aces back into the game and Benny Grady scor- ed a few seco s a few seconds later to lift the spirits of the Summeraide team. Joey Arsen- ault put a stop to that by scoring two quick goals. IBL President New Is Pleased MONTREAL (CPI Frank Shanghnessy. president of the In- ternational Baseball League. said Thursday that the major leagues "have had the green light so far in ruling: by the U.S. department of justice but now the green light may turn agdinst them." Shaughnessy was highly pleased over moves that may block the majors’ plans for ide- vising Sunday games. . “Now it looks as if we're get- ting somehwere." he said in ref- erence to Washington reports that Representatives Celler and Keat- ing may take anti-trust action as heads of a Congressional com- Shaughnessy led opposition to the majors‘ p n at the recent baseball meeting in Colorado Springs. “The greedy major league own- ers have been coming into our market to suck us dry with their Saturday game-of-the-week." he said. “ ow they want to invade our markets on Sunday too. This Week's Skating Program Monday 4:00-5:30 pm. Admission 2.30 & 10c Ottawa 4 Hamilton 3 St. (fatharines 0 Pelcrborough 2‘ j_.?_.___ . HOCKEY SCORES? CANADIAN PRESS I P . F 46 Thursday night‘: itcoreii I. va. Royalty Sport 0rio- ' game at Civic Auditorium last] New York 2 Montreal 3 I03)-1l.l0—Paporwts—P. S. S Tigers vs. 0. S. S. Bruins. fl.lfHI.30—Paperwis ~ Q. S S adwings vs. Royalty. Sport irda ii.soi2.oo—i>nperwu— P. s. a. Falcons va. P. S 8. Rovers 12. . Foxes. Royalty. sport Sparrows vs. P. S. 8. ‘:0-7.6-—Practlce—Sonior and scoooi gir . .0-uo—MideItI-—Flym vs- uu.is'_iiiiam—vic- n. A!- town. IJ8-IUD-|lldaeta—Rayala vs. Dub. ‘night. The first half was close. ,ending 28-26 for Trotters. but the ihomeboys faded badly in the sec- yond half. Glllis snipers with 27 point: and his teammate. liioacii. had 24. Arnold Spudniks with it! and Doucette loco 13 ll. , Spudnicksu ;|IaeEachern 10. Doncetta I3. leott 6. Lidatone.-~ Total-47. Referees» Chas Ballem and Earl Smith. New League In ’ S'Side A badminton League has been the i ‘I § :- led the , 65' glorified bus driver. The judge ' granted him a ' Boston 2 Detroit .1 . Games Saturday. Dec. 14 Boston at Montreal Chicago at Toronto ‘New York at Detroit CRUEI. CUT LONDON lAPl — An airline pilot told a divorce court Thurs- day that his wife called him a divorce on grounds of cruelty. By THE w i T A Pt _ Montreal 2617 S 4 9 52 38] wednes(iay]1fi?'m' New York 291212 5 67 so 29 l"°°'5f'_‘°° 5 3.9, Boston 27 12 i2 3 7.5 69 27- Adm 3-)0 8 family Toronto 27 912 ii 71 73 24 , , Detroit 27 913 s 52 79 2.2 W€_‘dn_€Sd8.V 4-0230 Chicago 26 iii: 5 as 21: Admission 25c & 10c ‘ SPORTS ARENA Monday & Wed. Nights 8-10 p.m.-—Adm. 50c Tuesday—8:l3 p.m. Maritime Senior Hockey— Amherst vs. Ch'town iThursday—8:1.') p.m. Island Hockey League 9 ,v Aces vs. Barry . Friday 8-I0 p.m. i Admission 50c & 25c I Saturday 2:30-4:15 'Admission 25¢ & 10c “'2 AnnualMeoting ‘ Jersey Cattle Club Will be held at the with dinner.at 12 o'clock lowedbymeeting.Dir¢tonwilIniaetat11a.In. Alllntei'eatedinJ¢iIyaat'ainvltdb%. Rendezvous Restaurant Tuaaday, Dec. 17th. fol- vuvuvuvuiuavuvuvu-uvucuw-—¢—.-—|‘I‘I'v‘l 4 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I C Finest count I I44 x 76) Sanforized Broadcloth 0 Newest short point colIar—somo French cuffs . usually found only in $5 and $6 brandgd names 4*‘ ii a a SPECIAL SALE PRICE Made especially for H. & C. by leading shirt malteir TOHIDHT & SATURDAY HIDHT n.n:ni*zxn.':en:nzncn::s-.ve.ir2n.~n:e2e.~mx.s:s;~e.s;s:si . i it FROM HENDERSON & CUDMOREI Repeat of a 8e|lout—Aiiother shipment arrives today WHITE SHIRTS .29 _n:r2:n22:r1'En'£:}':‘l:&;’;2y,"""""“"""“'Ey;?g-“'*““"“ ““*‘ *.'''’’‘r‘._‘‘ : Imported from England J 0 Warm weight 0 .Beautifuily Gift Boxed Regular 5.95 and 6.95 FUR LINED GLOVES 0 Grey and Brown 4.59 IAEGER wooi GLOVES Brown, Grey, harcoal I 0 Also some nylon lined O O Beautifully boxed SOX 0 Regular $2 value / 0 Large color choice 0 Beautifully boxed All Wool and Nylon DIAMOND 1 .37 I I I 4 SUEDE JACKETS Top Quality Suede Leather — New Lower Priced Than Similar Cloth Jackets 9 Batter quality New Zealand Suede . 0 Soft pliable. smooth finished leather I I 0 Finest chromespun Iining—knitted wool trim Regular 0 Navy Blue and Chestnut Brown—Sizes 34 to 46 Broadcloth 8. Flonnolotto Regular 40: each Regular to 1.25 ' 0 By Tooke and 0 Gift boxed IRISH ‘LINEN Handkerchiefs 3 ,0, -l.oo=-mi . PYJAMAS Princley , 4.79 Boxed HAPPY FOOT SOX O 10 colors ' 0 Sizes 10 to 12 0 Gift boxed 195° _;;..;s..--s .__§‘_.._...h...._._.......L§‘—_ I UBURBAN COATS so iiiw COATS ARRIIIE TODAY C Twoods. Sno-Flake patterns. chaclmeliarcoals VI/arm quilted satin lining: for zero comfort. \ ALI. COA'lS~ARE $21 to $59 VALUES EXTRA smrr 1'0 saws YOU \ 3;: llililiililiifi-Iii-ETEIIAICIT 17.95 .3. .._o—....-. ...... .. i I .3 V .9‘ Av ._-_—_—;._-.-.-.-._§—.._ ._._-.._.___...._.__ I