ii-I.“ Red Wings, Canadians spin By W. R. Wlleltley icanadlan Press Staff Writer) DETROIT, (CP) — Ken Mosdell, 31-year-old centre. broke up An overtime game Sunday night to give Montreal Canadiena A 1-0 victory over Detroit Red Wings and keep the Montrealera in the hunt for the Stanley Cup. The goal. At 5:55 of the first overtime period. was Mosdell'a first in the post-season playoffs and came at A time when the defend- ing champion Canadiens faced elimination. The series now stand: at. 3-2 for Detroit with the sixth game scheduled for Montreal Tues- iia.V night. Mosdell wound up A. Aolo rush with a low shot to the corner of iiie not that beat. goalkeeper Terry Sawchiik. It was the finishing touch to A thriller that had the sell-out crowd on im toes most of the way. llcfcainrl 2-0 at Montreal Satur- day night, ciiach Dick Irvin of Canadicns bcnclicd goalie Jacqiies Plants in favor of Gerry McNeil who hadn't seen action since Feb. 11 when he was injured. And Me- Neil was brilliant as be stopped iabcllcd sliots from Red Wings $hal’]\—Si10lIl(‘l'S. , 'l‘hr zziiiiv was a riiggcd gruel- ling struggle with desperate, close ilicrking by both sides and life- <avini: prefnrmanccs by both goal- ics, Mc.’\'ril. ('an:idiens' former rr-gular, xic\'cr turned in I better effort. The end came with startling <|lfiCi(‘lln(‘SS. Big Moe started from his own end after a Detroit rush had been broken up and went straight down centre. He swung <i\‘r‘l‘ to his left as he reached the Detroit dciciicr-, pulled up in front ufi f'i(‘iEl1(‘(‘lll.'Ill Biih Ci()i(iilZllll,- iiiarlo a coiiiplcte turn and fired? it “as less than .1 foot off the ice when it swislied past Sawcliuk into the far corner. . In addition §o the switch in, goalies. conch Dick lrvin came upi‘ '\llil morn line shuffles. Gay Sl."\\'.'ll'l, l‘PC.’|iif‘d fi-um Buffalo \\i1Fl‘i the playoffs started, got his fir:-L start Sunday night and he was a linem.-ite. along with Lorne Davis, when Mosdell broke up the izanir A Deii-nil. coal early in the sec- ond pm-iorl was disallowed by ref- i-.»--e Bill Chadwick who ruled that Glen Skov had lacked it into the net. McNeil had dropped to the ice nn the close play and was up p"nl0SllllZ as the referee signalled no goal. A rwnrUfre:~-for-all broke out in the first period when Aeveral l.iR_1't‘1'S squared off and there was i-iiirh pushing And shoving. Four minor pPriRliiF‘! for roughing were hanrlnrl out. two in each side. Late in tho third period. Cana- Week-end Games In Finals during A change-over of lines, and the Red Wings turned on the heat. The penalty came only five minutes from the end of regular time and McNeil came up with A stop that saved his team when he flung himself into A shot by Johnny Wilson. who picked up Jimmy Peters’ passout and drilled a bullet shot ironi 15 feet out. The Wings started out in the overtime semion as if they wanted to end it in A hurry. Howe raced in to blast A terrific shot after taking Alex Delvecchio'A pass, and it was McNeil alone who saved Canadians from defeat right there. It was such a sensational save that the partisan Detroit crowd gave the little goalie a. big hand. Sawchuk followed with A. top- notch save himself when Jean Beliveau snapped a hard shot from 25 feet out. The Wings drove in again and Butch Bouchard cleared a loose puck as the Red Wings swarmed about. It was only a few seconds later that Mosdell got away on his game-winning effort. The teams were about equally matched in shols—McNeil making 22 saves and sawchuk 21. Lineups: Monti'eal—Goal: McNeil; de- fence: Harvey, St. Laurent, Bou- chard, Johnson: forwards: Lach. Richard. Mazui', Bcliveaii, Geof- irion, Stewart, Mosdell, Curry, Moore, Masnick, Davis, Olmstead. Deti*oit——Goal: Sawchuk; de- fence: Goldham, Pronovost, Kelly. Woii, Allen; foi'\va.rds: Skov. Les- wick. Pavelich. Dclvecchio, Howe, Lindsay, Dineen, Wilson. Pl')Sl(1l.' Peters, Johnson. Referee: Bill Chadwick, Lines- rnen: (__‘.eorge Hayes and Bill Mor- rison. SFMMARY First Period No scoring. Penalties: Olmstead 11:52, Bel- iyeau, Johnson, Leswick, Pavehch 16:27. Second Period No scoring. Penalties: None. Third Period No scoring. Penalties: Johnson 8:21, Howe 10:33, Davis 15:10. Overtime Period 1—MontrenI, Mosdell . Penalties: None. 5 5:45. Stops: i McNeil 5 0 I 2-22: Sawchuk 7 7 l5 2-21‘ Saturday‘A Game MONTREAL. (CPl—Johnny Wil- son's second-period goal and A long lift by Red Kelly into the open net in the dying seconds of the game gave Detroit Red Wings A 2-0 victory over Montreal Cana- diens Saturday night and it 3-1 clutch on the bcst-of-seven Stan- lil“l‘lX were givcn a penalty whcn vailiht with seven men on the Ice ley Cup final. Enosslaughter Traded To. New York Yankees By Jack Hand NEW YORK. (AP>——-l-Inna (Coim- iryi Slaughtcr, veteran St. Louis Cardinal Ol1lllFidPl‘, was traded to ihe world champion New York Yankees Sunday in the second startling player deal between the two clubs during spring training. To act Slaughter, the Yanks .iii- iiniinred they had given up Mel \\'i'iizlit. I. 13-2 relief pitcher from Kansas City, and three more men in he sent to Card farm clubs lat- ri-, Many baseball men. however, l)"lic\'e the slaughter deal was only the second half of the Feb. 23 iraiisai-tion in which the Yanks sold pitcher Vic Raschl to St. Louis for $75,000. slaugliier. a "hu.stle" guy whose name has bncn synonymous with ilir St Louis Cards for 16 yeais, iiili hr .13 on April 27. He has bern .a< rlosrlv associated with the Cards as Raschi had been with the .\‘ew York Club. Although Slaughter was supposed in be near the end of the string nftrr spending his entire career with the C:ii'rl.1, he played 14.‘! names l.-art scasoii. hit .291 and h'1'lf‘f‘i in all runs. His lifetime major lcaciic average is .305. Wnlvere Mystery The cminiry "boy" from‘-kn» ho-rd, N. C playnd againiit the Yanks in the 1942 world series. st=r::im_: dclciisivcly with Terry .\/[oorc He also played with the world rhampions of 1946. last Na- tional lieflkllr‘ series winner. hit- ling .320 in the so-ven-game nerlee iiiih the Plnsion Red Sox. To get. Slaughter out of the Na- limia: l.caciii=, the Cards had to obtain w:iivci~s from the other Nit- iinnal lmagiie clubs. How some of the clubs could waive on the old ivarhorsc. even at his Age. was A. mystery. liis salary. probably around $28,000, couldn't be enough ' TIME and For new or older cars . . . ,_ _,,I‘.xeluAivetoyour Ifflpquefload « i PORGELAIHIZE LONGER LASTING LUSTRI against our Service Department today. F. ll‘. MGLAIHE to scare off many. Slaughter was getting tough oompetition for his old right field job wii.h the Cards this spring but ‘everybody expected he would be playing his usual 140 or 150 games. Rookie Wally Moon, a .311 hitter at Rochester last year. and Joe Frazier. who hit .332, at Oklahoma City, were pressing him. Moon, in particular, looked like a. solid bet for the future with his speed. In St. Louis. Cardinals owner August Busch issued A statement saying “we have just traded one of the greatest baseball players in the history of the,St. Louis Car- dinals." He said the Cardinals are "building a. young ball club" but that trading Slaughter was “one of the toughest decisions I have had to partlclpale ln." Manager Casey Stengel didn’t indicate immediately what he would do with Slaughter. whether he two-platoons Enos with Hank Bauer in right field. playing the ex-card against righthanded pitch- ers, or whether he pictures him as the pinch hitter successor to ‘Johnny Mire. Enos will see pleniy of action. Hoop Series win" Open Ar Montreal MONTREAL. (CP)—-Si. Francis Xavier university of Antigonish N. 5., and the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association meet here to- day and Tuesday in A two-game, total-point series in the Canadian semi-final for in» lniei-rnedla’e baakrtbiill championship, _ The colleglam, last year’! Dom- lnlon champions, won the Maritime title Friday night. defeetlng Wood- stock Senators '72-69 to take the two-game, total-point series 126- 121. LET US YOUR CAR WEATHER make An appointment with Chrysler Denier “ ' Phone 7358 - 7359 Detroit took the only two games played so far in Montreal and lost one of the two at home. Wilson's goal at 2:09 of the middle period came with An unex- pectedneaa that bewildered the crowd of 14,583. Both teams were aborthanded through penalties at the time. on a faceoff in the Montreal end. the puck went to Wilson and the 24-year-old winger fired backhander from about 25 feet out. Goalie Jacques Plante reached for it. with his hand but he missed the partly—screencd shot and the puck went between his pads and into the net. I Hit Open Net Keliy‘s goal came with only seven seconds of play remaining. after Plante had been taken from the game in favor of an extra for- ward. Canadiens battled desper- ately inside the Detroit zone, try- ing for the tying goal. >Kclly snared the puck near the righ' boards, lifted a lmCkll£|ndel' and the puck went into the empty net at the far end. Veteran Elmcr Lach was} brought back to the Montreal line- ip for the first time since March 17. He was tmiiicd with Maurice IROCKPIV Richard and Eddie Mazur and played a sniart, Saturday evening !Z:In1P of the Island kctball playgoyvns. \Vales snappy quin frat A smaller but Street School team in P. W. C. Street. last year’: champs, lioth interscholastic iilnydowns this yea lot of credit for t tliey played ians. The step up ranks in itself is n i‘l spite of the hright they spotted hoys they gave a of themselves and lots of opposition (‘cubic round l:oine and home Island tillc. pas-feeding game. The shots on goal were about on Plante and Canadiens 28 on‘ Sawchuk. Eleven penalties were called ’ Four, including Gordie Howe‘s major for slashing Doug Harvcy,i went to the Red Wings. Cana- dians’ seven included Geof1rion‘s misconduct. penalty midway through the third period when he dallied in going to the penalty box. Earl (Dutch) Reibel, Detroit's power-play extra forward, was in- jured in the first period when he, and Bert Olmstcad of Montreal collided. First Period No scoring. Penalties: Davis 1:03. Olmstead Second Period _ 1-Detroit, Wilson tPrystai) 2:09 Penalties: Woit 1:37, Richard 2:05-17:38. Howe 4:12, major, Leswick 15:24. Third Period 2—Detroit, Kally 19:53 Penalty: Gcoffrion 10:-17, minor and misconduct. Stops: Sawchuk ... . . 12 10 6-28 Plante .. 7 9 11-27 P. S.fifi lnlerscholaslic Hoop Series In the first game of the Island iiiterscholastlc girls‘ basketball playdowns at P. W. C. auditor- ium Snturday afternoon. Prince Street girls S\\'i1l‘l1[‘ll"(i \‘Vr~st Kent girls by the score of 40-8. Following is the game siimninry. P. S. S. I-‘G I-‘S PF Ptl. M. Roxerson .. J MacDougall lilatheson Milligan Harp:-r R. Shelfoon W. Maci’herson Maccarvell Currie Jenkins Totiil M wo°°P‘)4°7“:fi:""\7 \l©©33-‘OH‘l\)l0>-‘ oacramzommmvl ..a an In -6 - ouoouiooarour W. K. S. . Cudniore Owen Johnston Smith W. MacDonald 8. Houston . Davics Stewart Total '1 :.:o3~Ab--O99 M3323‘:--op-t mo:>oo—-cooo.—- c»:a:>—-o:~:a:zn"5 msromc srafifiiz Maine. now largest. of the New Erigland states, was visited by 7:55, Pron-avost 11:48, Curry 15:57. T equally divided, Detroit having 29117111!‘ UK‘ 590"‘ W85 32:21 for P- Niitlonal League- .'’.-1. American I.eag1|o l<lcrshc,v 1 Cl:-vcla Cleveland leads final 3-1. Qiiebeo League-— Montreal 1 Ottaw final 2-0. Allan Cup- Winnipcg wins western semi-final Memorial (.'tip— ‘ St. Boniface 5 Quebec wins Sebastian Cabot in 1496. I’ ml ""fiBu3 gour favourite i iiiiuiioi Egypt. stretching 1 “\ ‘fire A Perfect smoke of in Popular Price T smorrs El Producta .nnimn‘o1e P. W. C. Defeats ‘ P. S. S. 66-41 In Hoop Playdowns just a bit too much clasii to de- IE6-41 before a fair crowd of fans auditorium. Prince who are taking part against the experience good robin playoff for the P. W. C. led by 3 baskets at the rnd of the first quarter. At half (Canadian Press) Saturday Detroit 2 Montreal 0 Detroit leads best-of-seven final Ottawa leads best-of-seven semi- Moose .law 1 Winnipeg 9 Nelson 1 Penticton 4 Nelson leads host-of-seven west- :-rn semi-final 3-2, one tle. Fort William 7 Fort. William wins best-of-seven wcstern semi-final 4-3, one tie. Ontario Junior... St. Catharine: 4 Marlboros 3 St. C . . . . ,-W;-n ;.:;i"’§.'3°" lead‘ best at Palmolive Shave Cream Mnrltlmo .luvcnllo— eivu Y0" In Halifax 2 Campbellton 2 Halifax wins two-game lotnl- point finals 5-4. :---1--— Siindny PA1inolive'A beard - Aoftenin Momm-[Al Cup_. oils wilt {our whiskers rig I Eristview 0 Quebec 11 best-of-three east- ern 5em|.fina1 2.0. Ahave.Youlookyour bestfrom Qu..|,.,¢ L,“,,,__ mornin ullmgbt. . Ottawa 0 Montreal 4 T‘.’Ph°P"i'" ’ll'."‘ 0 _ _ , wit A mo ive nnniltngia lends host of sown si-ml- Afi"Sh"eLmion. Ann“ («“p__ Soothe: our face sudbun, 4 Man" 4 from a Ave to First game best-of-seven east- ern final. LONGEBT DAM W0l'1d'S longest river dam is the Gabel Awallan on the Nile _oool-smoking El 'r”. ‘notch in perfect condition. First In Mast AUGUQPA, Ga., (AP)—Ben-Ho- gun and Sam Snead tied for flrlt. place in the masters golf tourm- ment with A pair of ordinary per- formances Sunday iis amateur Billy Joe Patton g. 5 ed and lost on the final nine. Hogan and Snead finished the 72 holes with totals of 289—high- est winning figures in the tourna- ment's history. Snead had an even par 72 for the final round and Hogan a 75. They Will play off for the title in an 18-hole duel today. Pa-tton, the boyish-looking slug- ger from Morganton, N. C., who caught the fancy of the huge and crowd at the masters, was tied r:, with Hogan going into the_ last nine holes. But he gambled on his long wood shots on the two per five holds on the back nine. went into the creek twice and finished B. stroke behind the leaders with 290. in the first Juvenile bas- Prlnce of tette showed game Prlnce by A score of interscholastic in and juvenile r, deserve II he fine game colleg- to juvenile big one but the P. W. account viill provide during the series and Patton had an under-par ‘I1 for his final round, getting ii. hole-ln- Marcello 148 3-4. for the sched- uled 10-rounder. SUCCESSFUL Mill PREFIR PAIMOIIVI nd 3 best-of-seven as best- of-seven 4-2, one tle down to 1 in level. You I A rlonr shave — An ALL- AY in 6,400 feet. Guaranteed fresh from the new Hl?l\/IIDOR F.l.E(f’l‘I()N Look for Simon‘: fAmou| ~ humldor on ciur counter: everywbelil. ' Air-tight plutic cue. with scientifically treated humidifying unit. keeps your favourite Choose from the complete selection -— all fregrul and fresh As the day Simon made them. Hogan Anil Snead Tied For luvenile Hocliey Tifle For Halifax CAMPBELLTON. N. 3., (OP) - The Maritime Juvenile hockey nhampfombip went to A Hnllfnx team Saturday night for the fourth ltuight year when Halifax At- lantic‘: luld Cornpbellton Cuba to I I-2 e. 'I'hiA gave I-nlifax the two-game. total-goal series 5-4. Atlantic: hav- ing won the first game 8-2. with the title goes the Hon. J. L. Ral- eton trophy. Mclnnfs starred for Halfax when his uneufsted tally in the third period knotted the game And prov- ed the series winner. Belgian Champion , Knocks Out Briton ers Tourney Hoop Games Scheduled Tonight This evening At P.W.C. Auditor- mm the Physical Fitness Dlvidon in scheduling three more Ia.lAnd basketball playdown games. At 630 p.in.. WKB. Girls will play P55. Girls in An fnteracholutlc fixture And at 1.80 P.B.S. Boys will tAke on Prince of Wales in the Aecond juvenile playdown game. At M0. P.w.c. Girls will play the flrst of: home-and-home games with Abbie sisters for the right to meet sum- merside Girls for the Island Girl!’ aenrasr, Northern Ireland. 0P¢n “'19- (AP) -— Belgian bantamwelglit champion P l e r r e Cossemyns knocked out John Kelly of Britain in 1:15 of the ninth round of A scheduled 10-rounder Saturday night to Acore An upset victory over the former European cham- pion. Senators Talie 2-0 Edge In Games an I "" ‘ID Gu ' Throw Hockey Club Olli- Then Aiiolotlile FORT WILLIAM. Ont. (OP) _ Police removed I-err! Deejardina Emddent of the St. Boniface hoc. ey club, from tho Arum here Thursday night And-!k1dAy.n;yo, Gordon Canon Apolqlhed for they - l mu Ind aide:-mu Ana , “ “.2 of the st. Boniface pollen ' 1,. lion. llid he was roughly ’_ zed by the police. . v, st. BonffAce in overtime defeated ooliunbua club, ukahud. _g.p.-.. Aentatlvu in the Memorial ‘Cup plnyofu. 5-8. No charge wu laid A¢A.inAt Du. in-dine. He acid he wu lelrched At the police Atatfon and his per. sonal effectr were taken from bu pocket; Deejardlna aid the Arena in. cfdent occurred when went: in the playew bench to Bill) them on the back for A game oomebgck, Two policemen ataudlnz in the enu-Anceway Ahoved him away. even After he identified himself AA the st. Boniface club president. They seized him by the arm: And forced him outside. -——————_._ BROCKVILLE, Ont... (CP)—’I‘or- onto Danfortha won the Canadian intermediate ladies basketball championship Saturday night, ae. feating Brockvllle PAA Cngettea 55-40 in the second game of their two-game. total-polnte aerles. Dan- forthe won the first game 48-35 and the round 108-81. Additional Sport on Pl§_O_I_E'i . Lh h] to L Mk o.rrAwA' (CP)_ otmwl sub Coaaemyns weighed 118 3/4 W C. and at the final whistle the °’“’ °’‘ ‘he 7m 0e ge l C1 W" broke 6 1-1 deadlock with . pounds. Referee Andrew smyzii into oontention after he seemngy d I Isvorc hoard road P.W.C. 66, P.S.S. had faded on the ‘mm mund_ pa“. 0, thh.d_pu.1°d gm], hen SM_ announce merey that Kelly 41. Pa for the 6mo_yam Auguam “rd”, mam to wade Momma] came in under the 121 pound Following is the summary:-- Naxtilonal Course ‘is 36_36_,m. Royal‘ a_l in the ‘wand “mo 0‘ limit for tho bout. I.’ W’ F‘ " ‘ FG FS PF ml’ ' His was the closest finish my their. Quebec Hockey League semi- _\f Ladncr 10 0 4 20 t _ has made in the “nail. 7» Parlrldie - '1 0 7 4 :$_;:,:r ii-.Y,.e;nk Sm.amm,, tied The win gave the Senators A .1, Rcvell .. _ R 1 3 17 is 'I and lace in 19" 2-0 edge in games in their best- Y'~- m‘”“°"d 4 ” 1 3 Ne M‘ or sec p ' f ven next The won theo n- - t ' tr lies behind ° "5° 93- 3' 3”’ A~ M3“L”°“ 2 0 4 4 but‘ he “as “.0 0 er 2-1. in overtime. P. Landrlgan , 6 1 o 13 Jimmy Demarets winning score. Johnny Arum”. Phu Mummy Tctals 32 2 14 66 " and mu Red - L. oonected . . . singles for the winners while the :- ---— - F‘; F54 P’: J08 MICEII Wins lone Montreal marker came from a 3" °" - ' Ray Laplante. n. 1.:-e 2 .2 2 7 5th Straight Victory .j_ MQNTAGUE Mo" }. 6 0 3 ' ii. ‘iiv/l:i:(l1..ean 2 o 0 ii sosron, (AP) — welrerwelxht . s. MaicLenn . 0 0 0 0 Joe Micell of New York scored his . L Llewellyn .. 0 0 0 0 mm straight boxing victory sat-, F- P<‘ak€ 0 0 0 " urday night with a six-round tech- “W5 » 7 7 7 4‘ nicul knockout over Steve Mar- 13' M“"K"" - 0 1 2 cello of Providence. 3- 1.. in A nat- R°r5‘“"’ W’ F: T_”h"l"°“‘ lonally televised bout in Mechan- ' " "" ic: Building. Hockey scores Micell weighed 150 3-4 Ind Mild Style leader: for over M5 your! Ala IIOCK HA1! from 35.9.! distinguished suit in quality field. YEO THEATRE A l_ini3lMMllNS°siiiuilillANliEll iii.ii"r.nmii°iiii.iiiii= game?’ _ «wen ucweivlw '°. “i,u.s.ss$u\i\o Q Tailored by Piiomss Bmio (ionic: The Garneti Satin-Faced Venetian Ii the original . . . the Incomparable. It has achieved national recognition as Canada’: but-known and moIt\ 79.50 MCLEOD LTD; TIJES. 12 -13 i'E¢°'i'i"i'i'ii‘i"”t.i' naps KERR-i_i,5islll|lilll0N' U5‘ “' flietop