I The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. April 15, 1963. l I SPORT ECHOES By Norman Macdonald Summerside Bureau of The Guardian Must Wait And See them the Boston Prunes. We think the Penguins have made a fine beginning. and (hope the Junior project will continue. The Spain Penguins lost three straight games to the Ottawa Montagnards. two (of them by rather decisive scores, with the middle one going into overtime. We’ll have to wait and see how 0t- tawa fares in the next round before a proper assessment of the Penguins effort can be made, but considering it was tbeirfirst try. too much could not have been expected 0 them. Did you ever see the standing of the Boston casters. both radio and vision. have ignored the series between the Penguins and Mon- til’Jllal'dS. We listened for re- sults from them in vain. They’ll give you the latest result of a game of marbles played down on main street. but a series be- By the way, Moncton sports-f ; twren the Maritime Junlor champs and the champions of. tile Ottawa Valley is just tool small to ‘ lion. l Bruins their first year in the NHL? We’ve forgotten the exact figures but it was about (four wins and over fifty loss- es. Some sportswag called A Decided Success see a stone going slowly down. the lee without that familiar! "swish- swish" is almost as’ startling as it would be to see a steam engine travel without a “chug-chug”. It was certain- ly relaxing. One thing we don't under- stand. .1 while after lazing through that game the hon- spicl iudges gave us an “E” for effort. None of the other boys on our team got the award so they ust have leaned a little harder on their ‘ brooms. Our opponents beat . us. and although the score was fairly close. I guess you'd have to call it a “sweeping” victory. The Summersidc Bag Com- pany sponsored inter- service bonspiel at Summerside Cur- ling Ciub was a decided suc- cess with Leo Shields and his Legion Boys coming through to victory. We curled for K-40 and in the third game our skip introduced an interest- ing innovation. He ordered us to stop sweeping. There is an old adage. “life begin 5 at forty”. but that. of course. is nonsense. There must have been a typo- graphical error there. What the man must have said was "loaf" not "life". Anyway. we all just rested our chins on our brooms and watched those stones try- ing to make it on their own. To .. How Much Good In Sweeplng? Which reminds us to ask you- only thing they speed up is just how much es their circulation. sweeping really do'.’ Years ago But the real we read in hIachan's magaz- sweepers do have a ine that sweeping didn’t do any rock's locomotion. good, but the boys tell us that with a We’d like to see two of our experiments have been carried best teams play against each . out to prove that the broom is ' ot"‘er one sweeping with an important weapon on the brooms. and the other just curlcr's arsenal. One curler leaning on them and depend- ‘ with considerable experience ing entirely on a guided l conceded a point: “As as musce It the non-sweepers those curl e rs who use the won, sa three in a row. that broom as a feather duster is would probably be. the last concerned." he said. “about the straw. Last Week’s Bouquet Dutch Underw ood won an But when it comes to curling award so let’s give him a battle fields. s ou_ You’ve got to hand the flowers Pinch- hitting was that boy's to Leo Shields. delight, they couldn't strike A super-duper skip, that 'm out. Real star without a dou proficient lot to do Last Week's Brickboi This week we cannot pick a fight with anyone we know The sportsmen are behaving well. or reasonably so. But all is not so logical in matters meteorological: Don’t those confounded wea- ther men know any word but "snow"? ‘3 Baseball Scores SATURDAY (1-1). McDaniel (‘3) and Ber- By THE CANADIAN PRESS tell. HR: Chi—Santa (1). . American League First Chicago Phila. 0000010201- 4121 .MSAnogglggommmW - 0 30 St. Louis 0000000210- 3 72 Short. Baldschun (1-0) (9)], , .000000000000901' 1 72 Hamilton (0) nd Dalrymple (15 mmngs) Ollis (10); Broglio, Bauta (9) Pizarro. Wilhelm (10) Peters (10) (13) and Martin; McBride, Osinski (12) Navarro (1-0) (14) Y r 1 Mil. 0000000001- 1 70 ; Craig (0-2) and Sherry; Hen- ldley (1-1) and Torre. ‘Los Angeles 010102000- 4113 Houston 104 00x- 5 83 Koufax. (l-l) Roebuck (6). Rowe (7). Pcrranoski (8) an Roseboro: Nottebart. (1-0) Mc- Mahon (8) and H. Smith. r . 000010000 - 1 5 3 21002001x- 6 73 . Barber (0-1). Hall (6) Stock (8) and Brown: Terry I20) and Howard. HRS: Bal - Smith (1); NY-Boyer l1) Tresll (1). Detroit 021 000 100 - 4 7 1 Cleveland 000000010 - 1 7 0 Regan (10). For (9) and Tri- _ andos; Ramos (0-1). Bell (6) Am -cn Leg 9 .. Latman (8) and Romano. HRS: Dem,“ on 300 0 7o " Del-McAullffe ‘1’ Elm“ ‘1) Cleveland 00002103x- 6120 Cash (1); Cic-Francona (1). Bunnng (0,2). Egan (7), Dus. a???“ 030000 ' 3 51 ta] (8) and Triandos. Freehan “hint-’10“ 000000000: 00 to); Grant. Walker (1.0) (5) Molehead ‘14" and Tillman: and Edwards Romano (a). HR. Rudolph (0-2). Dllckworth (2) CIC_Dava1mo' (IL Bronstad '5) Hannah (8) and Baltimore 000010000_ 1 5° hills. Bsn - Stuart (1) New York 20300000x_ 5 60 Minnesota 000002000_ 2 71 Estrada (0-1). Narum (3). Burnside (5), McNally (6). Mil- Kansas City 000003 00". 3 ‘0 7) and Brown: Williams Stigman (0-1). 1". Sullivan (7. 1ler ( ‘(1-0‘) and Howard. Pleis (7) and Battey; Wickers- ham (1-0), Wyatt (9) and H. (Boston 001400010- 6 00 Sullivan. 'Washington 10104100x-7 ll 3 - Stephenson. Kolstad (0-1) (3). New “xtmngfiolfigfifi, 3 3” 1Fornieles (5). Nichols (6). La- mwaukee 400010 my 5 7 mabe (7). Radatz (8) and Tili- Cisco (0-1‘) and Coleman; l‘nlr- ma": pamds BOUIdm (I'm dette (lo) and Torre. HRs: Nil-“4h .Klms ‘5’ and Reim- mckman (1) Snider (3). MiIHSchmldt (4) HR: Bus—Tillman Gabrielson (1). “1‘- Phila. 000000000- 0 54 Chicago at Los Angeles, ppd St. Louis 1200001.'ix- 7101 rain- Malhaffey (1-1), Klippstein (6) ,Minnesota 210000100- 4111 Duren (8) Green (81 and Oldis: Simmons (10) and Sawatski. s: StL—Sawatski (l) JaVler (1) Gmat (2). Kansas City 00050000x- 5121 Pascual. (0—2) Roland (4), Pleis (7). Moore (8) and Bat- (ey; Segui, Penn (1-0) (5) and Fran. 000100 010- 2 SZ'Bryan. HR: Minn—Allison (1). Chicago 000010000- 1 31 ~—-——--———— Sanford (2-0) and Haller: Hob- O bie. Toth (0—1) (s) Elston : Probable Pitchers and Bertell. HRS: SF-McCovey) (I) Mays (2). ' By THE CANADIAN PRESS MIN!“ 300004005 - 12 17 2 Probable pitchers for today's 00010003014 61 major league games, won and _ (1-0) and Pasharoni; ‘lost records in parentheses: O'Toole (l-l). TSltourl s (6) National Lug." Mrymgergsngi New York. Jackson (0-1) at blag—on (2) Mllwaukee. Shaw (0- . . me Lt- Anceles $33002: i; '5‘: No games scheduled. .Drysdaie (2-0) and Camilli: . . Kemmerer (3) Drott Snaps Streak et. McMahon (9) amtl Camp- I. TORONTO (CPl—Neil McNeil SUNDAY Maroons Satur ay night snapped a nine-game streak of Niagara Falls Flyerc 8 v fiction (14)) and Burgess; (02). Brosnan (9) and Ed- . Frn. 000000001- 1 41 by winning the third game of ’ 010100013- 3 71) the Ontario Hockey Association arichni ~(0-1). Fisher (6). 3 Junior final 4-] in Toronto's t0 and Bolton Jam ’ Maple Leaf Gardens. l" v E. attract their atten-i .. guy. bt. ,m (1‘ ed Charlottetown winning h lted Tile puck boullCes off tile foot of Detroit Red Win g goalie Terry Sawchuck in the AIexFaqunerPacesWings o 3-2 Win Over Toronto «but v- scoring a goal three-man (front of the Detroit net. ' th Douglas T BILL MacDOUGALL I DETROIT (CE—Rookie Alex unprotected ln. Hockey League Faulkner, left the National against his former teammates Wings scored a 3-2 victory over Toronto in the Stanley Cup final. The Detrmt win narrowed Leafs” series margin to 2-1. The 26-year-old blonde centre. iIN RIGHT SPOT ldraft last summer by Torontoll. Maple Leafs. scored two goals if Sunday night as Detroit Red)? , Tile two Pronovosts—Marcel haphazard and scattered. ‘and Andre—set up Faulkner for pulled Bower for the las root SAVE first period of the playoff game at Detroit last night giving Terry a chance to but often 1 They t 50 their attack was ,his game-winning goal at 13:39 seconds for an extra forward Fredericton Minors . FREDERICTON‘ (CP) —-The (Fredericton Minor Hockey As- ) sociation Sunday added two championships to its record. 1 Playing before close to 1,000 :fans. the Midget Lions trounc~ Abbies 9-4 :and the Red Wings tripped the (Bantam version of the Abbies (ll-5. Both were sudden- death 7 for the New Brunswick- Prince (Edward Island championships. j Fredericton has captured pro- (vincial titles in the Bantam. 3 Midget, (tic. Junior and Intermediate A ‘divisions this year. ‘ ‘ e e n e y and Richard chammell spearheaded the (Lions with two goals apiece. KGeorge Miles. Brian Barchard. l'nle Hachey. Gordie Wheaton land Wayne Phillips scored sin- )gles. Jamie Kennedy sparked ‘ the Islanders with a pair. Joe Brown and Bill Weatherby shot 1 one eac . .1 Paul Pickard played a stand— . out game in the Fredericton I goal. blocking 34. John Rec ' made 28 stops in the Charlotte- town net. 3. Pee- Wee. Interscholas» 1 a ‘Olivo (9). Shantz «0-1) (10) and r r w Oliver. HR: Stl—James (1). I (New ok oooooooooo-o 4 Scott Harvey sparked Fredg ericton Red Wings with a hat; trick. Dave Hachey and Briani Saunders shot two goals apiece.l Art Gibson. Buston Harvey. Billy Smythe and Geoff Sedge-; wick got the others. ' Owen O'Brien triggered a pair for Charlottetown. Phil O'Neill, Bob Doherty and Bob- by Whitlock. son of lamplighter” Buck Whitlock. one of the all-time greats of Maritime hockey. scored singl- es for the ' s. _ Referee Forbes Kennedy, the Charlottetown centre who play- ed in the National Hockey Lea- gue this season with Boston Bruins, handed out 10 minor penalties. Paul Jelly made 33 stops in the Abbie goal, compared to 27 for John Tommie at the other - end of the rink l ) l A Bantam team from Dart- mouth was due to play in Sat- urday‘s playoffs but the squad could not reach Fredericton be- cause of road conditions. Moncton Players Are Unhappy Lot 3 WINDSOR. Ont. (CP) —Mon- .‘cton Hawks' players were an unhappy lot following their 5-2 loss -to Windsor Bulldogs in the fourth game of their Eastern 1 Allan Cup finals Saturday. Playing coach Doug McPhee. who used himself sparingly, : said that "this, by far, was our best effort." We should have had a 3-0 lead after the first, but instead. tb (Windsor) ended up leading 1-0." Disappointed Simon Nolet sat by himself muttering. "I should i have shot higher. I should have 'lsliot higher." . He had missed a golden op- ) portunity to tie the game 3-3 in the third when he broke in all alone but his low shot was a . Nolet was a surprise starter in the game. He wasn't going to play because of a bruised in- step on his left feet. 34ch and theflflawks were still leery of the refereeing in the series. "Those cheap penal- ties referee Norman Warner is calling aren't helping things." "I'm not looking for excuses but he definitely tries to even up and listens to the crowd too much." One call which particu- larly irked McPhee and t e Hawks was a tripping penalty assessed to Hawks det in the third period. A Windsor player was re- ported to h ave stepped on Ron's stick and off he went for tripping. It was while he was off that Windsor scored for a 4-2 lead. Windsor coach Harry Watson said that players "played ow per. "It's difficult to get them up. I was a little afraid for a whll We should wrap it up tonight but i hope the boys don't gel too over-confident." A _..~- -. ., and into the net before Bower winning 1 could make a ~ .* some gm... ‘ BY SAWCHUK save. (27) is Frank Mahov- of seven Stanley Cup final lich. Detroit.won the series. game t 3-2 but Toronto leads 2-1 hes (CP Wirephoto) l closest they got to'shot at tile Detroit goal and from a Sawchuk blocked it. But the crowd in-Toronto efenceman was Allljohnny-on-the-spot to push the Kentlpuck into the net. Pulford—j Wings were apparently a loose.arguing that Sawchuk had tlle rec—Ed Litzenbergel‘. B o b puck that Sawchuk soon tucked 3 smothered the puck and that / away beneath his pads. .play should have been stopped The Wings took a 1-0 lead*but referee Frank Udvari, after after only 33 seconds of the firstlhearing their case, refused to period ‘ Stasiuk that bounced on the ice on a screened shot bylgo along Wlth them That set the stage for the goal by Faulkner, of Yankees Move In Front; Jam-Up Seen In National By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Yankees swept into their accustomed first place spot ' the American League while a jam-up occurred in the National League during a full Easter Sunday of baseball in the majors. The Yanks broke a first place tie with Baltimore and Detroit. defeating Orioles h' Cleveland Indians shut out the Tigers 6-0. Kansas City won its third straight. beating Minne- sota 5 - 4. Washington nipped Boston 745. and rain washed out the scheduled game between Chicago and the Angeles at Los ngeles. In the National League, Pitts- burgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies joined San Francisco Giants in first place on tins combination of results: The Cubs stopped the Giants” unbeaten streak- at four, 3-1. , The Pirates shut out Cincinnati 1-0. and the Phils. with reliever Jack Baldschun winning both games, beat St. Louis 4—3 in 10 innings and 5-4. All three share the top spot with 4-1 records. In other games, Houston beat as Angeles 5-4 and Milwaukee handed New York Mets their fifth straight loss, and third sh-utout. 1-0 in 10 innings, Stan Williams, acquired the Dodgers in a winter trade for Bill Skowron, pitched a five-hit- ter for the Yankees, who scored all their runs in the first three innings off Oriole loser Chuck Estrada. Cleveland pitchers Jim Grant and Jerry Walker combined to blank the Tigers on seven hits. Walker, who relieved the in- jured Grant in the fifth inning. helped his cause with a two-run single. ookie Vic Davalillo also drove in two runs with his first major league home run. Larry Jackson checked the Giants with three hits before wilting in the ninth. Lindy Mc- STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League ) l i l) - Daniel saved the Cub right hander's first victory. Santo led against Juan Marichal homer and single. scoring runs. With Bill Virdon's bases-loaded sin. ROD gle was all Pittsburgh needed. the Cub “fen” Alvin McBean didn't allow a a . . two run despite giving up 10 hits in outpltching the Reds' Joey Jay. Maroons Make Allan Cup Finals SASKATOON (CP) —Winnl- peg Maroons whistled through the Saskatoon Quaker defences Saturday night to hand Quak- ers a 9-3 defeat and win th e best-of-seven Western Canada Senior A hockey championship Maroons now go to the Allan Cup final against either Wind- sor Bulldogs or Moncton Hawks. Tables were turned from last year. when Quakers eliminated Maroons in the western final. lashy Maroons were ahead 3-] at the end of the first period and 6-3 after the second. They scored three unanswered goals in the third. Veteran Fred Dunsmore pac- ed Maroons with three mark- ers. Ross Parke and Lloyd 0r- ris each scored twice, and Reg Abbott and Chuck Lumsden scored singles. Jackie McLeod fired two Saskatoon goals. and George Swarbrick added the third. Parke gavo Maroons a l- (I lead at 4:25 of the first period with assists and Abbott. Maroons went ahead 2-0 at 8:02 when Dunsmore deflected a long shot by Bernie Grebln- lb 1 w from Dunsmore . to m a k e it 3-1 with Orrls get- ting a scrambly goal from Jim McKenzie. The game was delayed for 10 minutes when Winnipeg goalie Julian Klymkiw was struck on the head by a Quaker shot at 8:55 of the first period. Klym- kiw, who was wearing a mask, was not cut, and remained in the nets for the rest of the game. The second period was 58 seconds old when McLeod scor- ed from Senick and George Hunchuk to reduce Maroon's lead to 3-2. Maroons went ahead 4-2 at 3:22 when Abbott scored unas- sisted. banging in his own re. bound. Parke made it 5-2 at 7230 as he went down centre and took a pass from Abbott on a two-man brea . , Swarbrick lifted Saskatoon hopes at 12:30 when he split the Maroon defence and beat Kly- mkiw to make it 5-3. Jerry Walker assisted. But Maroons soon restored their three- goal margin as Orris was passed into the clear by Bill Juzd'a. smore drove in Grebin- sky’s rebound at the 49 second mark of the third period to in- crease Winnipeg’s lead to 7-3. sky past Quaker goalie Don F m- minutes Campbell. At 9:48 Saskatoon cut the lead to 2-1 with Me- Leod scoring from George Sen- ick and Maurice Oftebro. Maroons came back quickly only Nf-‘ll’foundlandi‘l‘ GVCF 10 play. Norm Ull- i Bishops Falls. Ni'ld., who scored Play in the NHL. led a fabt- l ‘ man had passed to Floyd Smith only 10 goals in the 70-game _ WL Pet-GEL Skating. tough DCIFOit team that and Stasiuk grabbed the puckiNHL season. New, Y0?!" 4 1 1300 — only slightly resembled the club after Smith’s shot was blocked SUMMARY Baltimore 3 2 -600 1 that lost in the first two games by the Tat-onto defence, F, t low 1 D t _t St etrolt I 3 2 .600 1 of the best of seven series in Keon scored at 14:56 on 3.. "5 per. ' ' em“ 85' Kansas 01117 3 2 (500 1 - _ - luk 3 (Smith. Ullman) 233‘ 2. Chicago 2 g .500 ll/2 Toronto ward goal' The fastSkatmg Toronto I’con 4 (Duff Brewer) 1 The Wings [00K the lead! centre [00k a pass from ‘Pe‘nalfles—Puxf‘grd L05 Angeles 2 «2 500 twice only to have the Leafs tie Duff. raced into the Detroit Héwe- 16_44 - » Boston 2 o .400 2 the game. Faulkner‘s goals. in'i zone. cut in toward the net and S - - lad. 3 Dt it Cleveland 2 3 .400 2 the second period. broke both) collided with s a w c hu k. 130tth 9]: e 1;" (M'a GR '0: "iv!- Washlngton 2 3 .400 2 ll . , fell, but the puck kept slidingipglnotog’“ 3,13. “4 31.01,“) mo' anesota 1 4 .200 3 It was the third time ln this and Slowly crossed the goal-j - .n )- 3'06. 5. N a “1 Le e year‘s playoffs he has scored al I ma. (Horton. 2 (K8 y 1 . . . a o agu gamewmmng goal He got two' ALEX FAULKNER ' ‘DetI‘OIi, Faulkner, 5 (M. Pro- . W L Pct. GBL ‘ ‘ Detroit's semi:final against . ,BREARS TIE 0 o . A. Pronovost) 13:39, san Francisco 4 1.800- - Chicago Black Hawks and his,“ “19 Sécond PCI‘IOd. Andre fed; Faulkner broke that l1rst tie-Penalties—llorton 9:35, Stanley Pittsburgh. 4 1.800 - Nave“ mm] no“, Stands at five. 21-119 DUCR i0. Marcel from deeplon a 35-foot shot after he ii4:44. _ Philadelphia 4 ‘1 .800 - V‘ic Stasiuk. who sat out mean Leaf territory and Marcel. atltrapped a bouncing puck. He‘ Thlrd period: No scorlng. St. LOUIS 3 J .600 . 1 (series; second game because of l the 99ml. let UY- Faulk'flel‘ W85 steadied himself, coolly took Penalties—Mahovhch and Howe Milwaukee 3 2 .600 1 ‘an injured Shoulder he suffered l Standlllg In BXBCtlY the right arm and fired it high into the 2:07, Kelly and Goegan 2:37. Los Angeles 3 3 .500 1%. in the semi-final scored the 5pm m from M Torontogoab comer- Dough-511117- Chlcago 2 3 .400 2 ‘omer Detroit goal: 'tender Johnny BOWEI‘ t0 tlp the’ Horton‘s goal, which tied the) Saves: Houston 2 4 .333 21/; Dave Keen and Tim Horton We“ “1‘0 “‘0 not ‘score -at 2-2, was protesth in Bowe" 10 8 10—28 Cincinnati 1 4 .200 3 were the Tel-(mm scorers, Leafs fought to tie the score. i‘Valn by the ng$- Red KCIly Sawchuk 10 10 10—90 New York 0 5 .000 4 95/62/7163,? 0 all parts interchangeable 0 bikes in all sizes. Junior. Juvenile and Standard 0 boys' and girls' bikes effect. specially priced at 39.9 ONLY 1.00 0 buy now while this special price offer is in "SUPERIOR" BICYCLES ...made by C.C.M . CANADIAN TIRE Stewart & MacRae Ltd. 1 ASSOCIATE STORE 06 Queen st. ial 4 o ’1 later combined with Joyal to make it 8-3 and Dunsmore increased the margin to 9-2 slightly more than a minute later on a pass from Abbott. 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