Millionaires” Defeat Moncton Hawks 4 - 1; Hawks In Third Place -ing in the third. with Petersen MONCTON N By Oct 25 getting the assist. his second point -(cell Goalie Nick Pidsodny was 0' "Xe "l9m' sensational I at times torilizht 35 MEfc;1eecx,smag:ss!ta:&l (;:ob1:f::.une Sydney Millionaires racked up consolidated the Sydney vmory their first win of the season over Moncton Hawks. a 4-1 verdict on the M('llCl0ll teams home ice. The loss dumped Hawks back into thlr.-l piece in the Maritime Mrijor Hockey I.ea.gue standings bFhll'lri Glace Bay Miners. who moved 1:210 3018 possession of zcccnd plaice by downing the win- when he banged in Ed Marineail'5 pass. Sydney outshot Hawks 10-7 in the first period. but were outgun- ned eight to six in the second. Pidsodny handled 13 drives in the last frame as Hawks applied the pressure. : ; j - -D .i'i:'5...'”I.l3.”'.”.'f5.".”.:T" 3 am new- '. th 1 k f th c..F.;nSC;p:..:1fy :1 mg The three nights in a row play. I Ije 3's he had 0” a desg ing schedule was in evidence as rer:ilcA cw of Hawks. Onlv one Hawks legweary Imm games in (:33), bf: smmghommg ban”), Glace Bay and Halifax the pre- Hcrcrk iflPIl.i('(i Pidsadnx-'5 armor. ceding two m3m5' lacked me zip s;.::r.m tool; the lead in the gfefgi !'gm?l'l;l;f"?r”;;9 Vi 3”” dmc" -- -: - -' Pt -- . 3 - . ...n,.(l ;iz-Mziclaxuhf;iA3g.a(;lr;le Geemeie Sydney Wm be up agamst the K W35. "Alex Bi..uko”w same problem tomorrow night go 3 minute later on 8 when they return to home ice for . . - their third name in as many I:15cf”Il("m';i"s)lo::,l;,h Dean McBride nights. Theiraopponents will be Sam Kennedy opened the acor- Ham” St" M”-V'5' A Sydney - Goal, Pldsodny; de- fence. Levandoski. Marineau Roc- kty. McBride. Baby; forwards. Pet- Pilisodity Will Not crsen. Cupolo. Kennedy. Roach. loin Millionaires .:.::::r Moncton - Goal. Lockhart; de- fr-ncc. Matthews, Mav. Wincmast- gypxgy. N, g” on g5m(cpl er, Olson: forwards. Hamilton. . p...p.- (Pit. p.d5o(il1y, '.?7-year. Lallo. Schoies. D. Horeck. Pirie. Bur- rllcl rlr-irm-r-mrln who worked with mall. Klib.V. Marchalli. Fllloll. Hwniiltoli Tigers last year. will Schmidt. . not join Syrlncy Millionaires as Referees - Hcffering and Good. xliwilznilsly minoilnccrl. SVMMARY 'l'Iln ex-pro. n brritlier of Syd- 1.-i,.s1 puma hvxxis cmltcntl-er Nick Pidsodny. scoringg None N ”":'"'" "T V” '”"V9 (mm hm Penalties -- Rockev 5:50 Matth- ,oh in llzimlllon. Ont.. club pl'o-fews 18.45 i ' sirlnnl Roy Ducllcmin announccdi isewnd Period ""1"-”' 1-Svdney. Petersen 'jD'Dm (Robertson: 17:33 2-Sydney. Birukow (McBride, Storey: V 18:3! . Penalties - Roach 5:17, Scholes 5:33. Robertson 7:21. Kllby 7:2l. - Rockcy 13:40. 1 Third Period I u S 3-Svdney. Kennedy 1 ' ' (Petersenl . 3:00 4-Moncton. I-iorcck DUBLIN. Oct. 5 -(API- Can- (Matthews! 11:01 Ti(.i?.3llS and Americans took a big 5-Sydney. Robertson share nf the 1.690 prizes drawn (Marineaul 15:50 from the Irish Sweepstakes Drum Penalties-Petersen 10:30. Roc- of iortuiic as it rolled for nearly key 17:30. seven limits in Dublin today; Stops: The most. valuable tickets were Pidsodny 7 8 13-28 the 910 representing specific hors- Lockhart 10 6 4-20 :5, of these. 51 horses are pos- je- slbilitlrs for the start. tofwtlge . ' Calllbl'ld-.'C'.shlre race ncx e - :1 Maxim-Cortes T we a:'(-'. 10 tickets for eaxclh . horsc Holders of tickets on t e F B t i Wil':l'lll'l,: horse will receive :50.000. on the srrond horse 220.000, and on the third horse 210.000. Tickets on all other horses, whether they NEW YORK. 09:, 25 .. (AP) - rim or mt. l7Tll1'.' the holders-i329:':Promotcr Jimmy Milrray'tpday'"En- Then thci-.. are 50 cash prizes of nounccd the signing of light heavy- 2312 and TFO cash prizes of weight champion Joey Maxim and S100. Ton'lo.row 3.003 Prizes Oliformer heavyweight champion Ez- I10 will be draw zard Charles for a l2-round-non- Allllolllll nddrcs.-es title bout in the San Francisco Cow Palace. Dec. 12. Murray wouldn't disclose the terms but it was believed that each fighter would get 30 per cent. Charles won all four previous fights with Maxim. of holders , of ilCiiF'.S oiitsizlc Ireland are not rllsclosetl. ially that it was lcarned unoffic- Czlnmiians and Ameri- ntcd more than half of tick-e(s on specific easy going... ever wearing You'll cut a fashionable figure this winter in these Du-val Iionn , coatn- cut for comfort - Iiyled for ainarlnodn - i made for warmth. In Celnnou Woailioround. Full length. Brown or Grey Mouton collar. Rayon lined throughout. quilted to n warn: wool lntnrllnlng. 52. Navy. Taupe. Stem: Gray. Sun 34 to 16. At-oi-pow1uv-i-ouncyio- 42.50 ' org. M?LEOD il.alLi g H Hp? g. '.ByRou1on7 E 9):. G N) ;? s:m'-.:.-.. LL :( 1' -I. - . . N!-low do you like the speed of that John Bailey?" "Bud" ,Poile was asking in the Mlnen' dress- ing room ,after the game last night. "That boy can really dig in canlt he." continued Poile, in his friendly tone of voice. "Why he's only been on skates a week and when he really gets going he will be around the Islanders defencemen and in on the not before they get off the blueline." I O 0 He did not have much 10' Say about the game except it was good to win. "The Islanders have a good club and it will suit me fine if they stay the way they are right now. You know a for- ward should not be able to go around such a big defense us the Islzinders in ii rink this small." he continued. Asked if he had much trouble getting around them. he replied that he could not say because he hadn't done it yet. tout the Gray-Bon- stated that he Referring to liomme case he was willing to trade the two players to the Islanders in ex- change for Willie Marshall. "I need a centrcman worse than I need wingers or defensemen and I would like to have Marshall now because we have a lot of injuries. 1 could also use Bon- homme but they tell me he does not want to play in Glace Bay so I would have to trade him. However I told Leo Lamoureux that I would give him first chance on the trade but if we can not come to terms I will have to trade with someone else. After all I can not give them up for nothing, it's not my job to build the Islanders. . . . a Quarter! about the teams the Miners have played Poile stated that the Hawks seemed to give them the most. trouble. "They say they are a poor team but they must hnve our number for they have beaten us twice." He -f-igu-res--t-hat Saint John will be hard to beat. "They have a bunch of players that will fill your net with pucks. just like that Ron Rohmer over there. He only scored two tonight so we're plan- ning to let him go." o o u a Leo Lamoureux was busy on the phone following the game. There will have to he changes. he stated. Leo made a deal with Tommy Gorman of the Ottawa Senators for Larry Regan but Jorman will not let Regan go now on account of injuries in his club. "Bud" Poile and Leo mi.-t following the game last. night and were preparing to talk trade. . o . . Thelslanders played one of their hardest games but had ab- solutely nothing resembling any luck around the visiiors' not al- though they were ln scoring position several times. For the first time this year it looked from the press box as though they were the secomi best team on the ice as the Miners display- ed that they could take advan- tage of the breaks while the Is- landers could not. n t O swinging back to football. the coming week-end will see the Is- land's two senior teams in action. The Abbies will meet the Halifax Wanderers here on Saturday after- noon while the Eaints will meet Mount Allison University in their final N. B.-P, E. I. Intercollegiate game. Next week the Abbies will play an exhibition game with a Truro team here while the In- termediate Intercolleginte series between Prince rf Wales and the Second Saints will likely be resum- ed. At Prince of Wales this year Gordon Bennett and Jimmie Coyle were faced with the task of build- ing a practically new team from inexperienced players. Ten new players are on the P.W. C. lineup and in the limited time available they have been converted into,n smooth running. hard working squad. Coaches Bennett and Coyle have the boys working out daily in practise sessions against. the Abbles. Although they lost the first some of the series to the saints the P. W. 0. students feel that they can come back and possibly even mat- ter: in their next content. They still carry the some fighting spirit. that ha earmarked the P.W.C. team of the put and which has played such 1 promlnentpnrt in defeat: of their old College rivals. the snlntd. They are also looking ahead to next year when they ex- pect to have all but two of their players return to.Oollen. 0 0 rate dealt the Welnhmen It tough blow in an exhibition game this year agalmt Mount A. The city ltudents lost three of their but men in the persons of Joe Hoyt. Bill Undorhny and Hilton Carr through injuries. In the first Intercollegiate lame against S.D.U. they lost fwogmore good men for the .emolnder of the season in the venom of Brian Chandler and Gould Bin. THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN Glace Bay sparked by the shutout goaltend- ing of Cliff Hicks and a two-goal effort by Ron Rohmer. the Glace Bay Miners handed the Charlotte- town Islanders a 3-0 defeat and their sixth straight loss at the Forum last night. Hicks tlirned aside a total of 29 shots as the goal hungry Islanders vainly swarmed around his citadel. He handled 26 drives in the last two periods, 13 in each session. The Miners went into a 2-J lead on second period goals by Rohmer and Cooper. Rohmer completed the scoring late in the third period on a play with Bailey and Haley A near capacity crowd witnessed two fast periods of hockey after a sfuggish opening session. The game was cleanly played with only nine penalties being handed out. none of them majors. The Islanders drew five sentences and the Miners four The red and white clad visitors dressed only 13 men but they gave the over anxious Islanders :1 speed- skating lesson. After building up the two goal lead in the first period they lay back and let the Island- ers carry the play as they did most of the night. The win sends the Miners into sole possession of second place with 10 points. The Islanders have yet to get their first point. The Islanders outshot "The Polle- men" 29-21 and many of their shots were from close range. Sev- eral times they broke into the clear only to miss the net or miss an open corner in their anxiety to slip the disc into the twincs. Rohmer showed from the start of the game that he was out for goals when he fired the first shot at Hal Gordon about the 20 sec- ond mark. Phil Vitale drew the first penalty of the night on an interference play and while he was off the lit- landers plaved brilliant defensive hockey as they prevented the Min- ers from getting a shot on Gor- don. Play was ragged in spots during the period with Gordon having fivn shots to handle and Hicks three. The Islanders failed to get a shot on Hicks until after the eight min- ute mark of the session. But in the second period play broke wide open as both teams turned on the heat. Rohmer finally broke the tie as he lifted Cooper's rebound into the side of the net from 15 feet out. Gordon had no cllance on the play as he had just. made a sliding rave on Cooper: drive. Eight minutes later Cooper put the game on ice with a 30 foot drive. The Miners defenseman picked up the puck on his own side of the red line along the boards with only Larry Travis to beat. Sensing that he could not go around Travis he fired a screened shot that went under Gordon's lleds-Dodgers Trade lolinls NEW YORK. Oct. 25 - (AP) - A major player trade is brewing between Brooklyn and Cincinnati Reds whereby Ewell (The Whip) Blackwell may go to the Dodgers in exchange for one of their top- flfrzht outfielders. Brooklyn vice-president E.J. (Buzzyi Bavnsl today admitted he had discussed possible trades with Gabe Paul. new general manager of the Reds. Bavasl declined to say whether Blackwell was the man he sought. but added that another get-toge- ther has been scheduled during the draft meeting in Cincinnati. Nov. 20. The Reds are reported to have asked for either Duke Snider, Carl Furlllo or Andy Pafko - in that order - in return for The Whip. Blackwell won 17 games in 1950. 31 Two-Minute Miles This Year C0lLU'MlBU'S. 0.. Oct. 25 -(AP) -I-larriess race horsu turned in 31. two-minute miles in 1951. the second longest number in history. the United Stiles Trotting Associ- ation slid today. Since Star Pointer run the first two-minute mile for harness horses in 1&7. the annual output has averaged less thtn 10. The re- cord was 48 in IMO. Mciilll Wins Track And fleldifeei - 'lORON'lO. Oct. 15 - (OP) -A loooe - legged McGill University truck and field team retained their supremacy in the college rank: in- dny no it won the 44th annual in- tercollegiate track and field com- petitions at Vanity stadium. The ludmen. from Montreal. chalked up 74 points on men firm. eight Ieeondo. three third: and three fourth: in the 15-aunt The boot University of Toronto no second with I! point: while Ilcllnator from Hamilton Outskate lslanders For 3 - 0 shutout OCTOBER 26, 1951 Miners Sport Echoes From Prince county ' To abuse referees. '-0 msmulwe that their vision is slightly im- paired, and to intimate that. if their heads were cut. to fit their brains they'd be wearlna P08”-"5 shells for hats in a popular pass- time among the cash customers. part of their money's Womb 35 1" were, and not to be taken too seri- ously. Weire not averse to hurl- ing an occasional insult at 9. ref- eree ourselves, making sure before- hand that our way of escape 15 not obstructed should the arbi- ter decide to take active offense. but we wouldn't dream of reP0&t' ing any of these things imprint even if they happened to be Plint- able. It's just a game we fans play while the boys on the ice are playing hockey. O nrm. . Don Belli-Inger almost put the Islanders back in the running as he broke through the Miners' de- fense. He drew out Hicks but losi. his balance and the puck. Johnny Morrow picked up the puck and shot it by the open corner. "Buoko" Tralnor and "Buck" Whitlock spearheaded the Island- ers' drive during the second and third sessions. Near the end of the second period Johnny Morrow knocked the wind out of Sheldon Bloomer as be checked him behind the Miners net. Rohmer scored the final marker on another rebound shot. Big John Bailey, a speed demon on skates. broke down the right boards and passed to forward Glen Haley. Gordon stopped Haleyls drive but Rohmer slapped in the 12 foot re- bound at the 15.58 minute mark of the third period. The Islanders hammered away at Hicks in the last stanza but it was no go. Larry Travis blazed fl slap shot that hit the goal post and bounced to the side. Beaudry drove it short shot from the side that Hicks took on his pads and covered up before "Red" Favero got the rebound. Game Odds and Ends Kenora. Ont. born John Bailey put on the fastest exhibition of skating seen here in quite a while. Vitale and McLagan both knocked the wind oitt of Bailey in the fin- al period. Johnny Dutchak had the Islanilcrs' best. chance in the first period when "Bucko" Trainor sent him into the clear but Johnny missed the net. "Buck" Whitlock laid down a beautiful pass to Denis Smith in the first session but Smitty could not beat Hicks. The Marshall-Bell- rlngcr-IMori-ow line swarmed around the Miners net for nearly a. minute in the first period but never got a clean shot on I-licks. Larry Truvis played his usual good gime. always in the right. place at the right time. Vitale. Tralnor and Whitlock played their best games of the season. M. A. H. A. president Walter Lawlor was struck on the side of the head with a flying puck in the second period. ”Buck" Whit- lock almost scored on a nice play from behind the not in the third period. Larry Travis showed he could throw in right after being charged into the boards by Bailey in the second period. Islanderx -had the drive and spirit but the Miners had too much speed. I There comes a time. however. when the actions of referees de- serve notice in the 131655. and We believe that insofar as Messrs. Goode and I-Iefferlng are concern- ed, the time has arrived. We would hesitate to say that these boys are consciously partial to St. John or any other team the Islanders play. It may be that l..amoureux's Buckaroos are just paying the piper for 3 tune to which they danced last year. and against Halifax in the first game this year. But. '1f ever the Charlotte- tonlans stuck to legitimate hockey and forgot about the rough stuff it was in the 4-2 loss against St. John. The boys seemed to he going all out to show the fans that they were not the roughnecks they had been called. one But throughout the contest they continued to get, all the worse of it in penalties. some so obviously unjust that a spectator knowing nothing about the rules of hockey could have picked them out as smelling to high heaven. Favero and an opponent engage in a spirited high-sticking duel. Fnvero gets the gate but not his sparring partner. Willie Marshall received positively the cheapest penalty it has been our displeasure to wit- ness. and it was significant that Hefferlng instead of waiting for Lamoureux to protest to him went over to the Charlottetown coach and started to explain things to him. If ever a referee looked as if he had made a wrong decision and knew it, Heifering was that per- son. Macloaganls stick was being held in the third period. but did the refs notice that? They were John- nies on the spot though when 10:- Lagan, irritated at the other's 11- legal tactics, slashed at his op- ponent. McLagan was jugged. We didn't see and cant give any oom- lon on the Vitnle major for flat- tening Ubrlnco. All we know was Line-ups: Glace Bay: Goal. Hicks; fenzc. Cooper. Windley. Bloomer. Myketyn: forwards. Poile. Fraz- ell. Rohmer. Haley. Leger, Ander- son. Am:-ideo. Bailey. Charlottetown: Goal. Gordon; defence. Vltale. Travis. McI..agan. Dutchak; forwards. Trainor. Fav- de- SCOHHR: None. edly the turning point in the con- Penalties: Vliale 1:30, Bailey test. 4:04. Dutchak 4:51. - I - Second Period Fans sitting on the penalty 1-Glace Bay. Rohmer (Cooper) 1:60: 2-Glace Bay, Cooper . l5:36' Penalties: Bailey (two penal- tiench side of the rink must en- joy the dramatic talent of Goode when he waves on Islander to the sin bin. Goode missed his calling. ties) :36. Travis :36. Leger He should have been a trngedlan. 13:38. Dutchak 14:56. when waving off Vitale or Dut- Third'P1-rlorl chak particularly, he strikes ;. 3-Glace Bay. Rohmer pose. and thunders out the offense (Bailey, Haley) . 15:58 and the penalty with rare historic Penalties: Clements 10:31. ability. You'd swear it was Lady Stops: Maolaeth in her sleep-walking By Gordon . 5 11 5-21 scene. He sends the visitors to the By Hicks . 313 13-29 penalty bench in the calm. even -.- voice of the professional and neutral referee. Why all the extra feeling in the case of Islanders? 0 I 0 Getting back to Prince County. Jimmie Gra4iy'a play in the Mid. dleton-Holman series proves that Jimmie hasn't slipped any in this baseball business. "Chick" Wlhalen, not knowing Jimmy's ability to come through when the chip: are down. didn't give this member of the old guard the opportunity his ability Wnrrlnfl. For Sale TENNES EE SUE, which should ma e a good brood mare; DIRECT V0120 2nd. Brown Elecfedn Bruins' President BOSTON. Oct. 25-(AP)- Wal- ter A. Brown today was elected president of Boston Bruins. He also is head of the Boston Gar- den-Arena Corporation which re- cently purchased in controlling in- ierest in the National Hockey League club. Arthur H. Ross was named vice-president and general man- ager of the Bruins. was third and the University of Western Ontario at London. Ont. was fourth. Mclwaster earned 17 points and Weatem 15. Two senior intercollegiate rec- ords were broken. Slim Don Mac- Fnrlane, n smooth-pacing sprint- er from Mclwuter. knocked one- tenth of 3 second off the existing 100-yard mark not by Toronto's J.H. A I , Ruuell in 1928. MneFarlnno'I time pp 3'' wu 9.9 secondl. Don Blair of Mc- JIMMIE POWER, Gill broke his own high jump roc- 173 Queen st. ord when he pushed the bar to 0 feet 2?. lnchu. 1 FORUM NEWS MONDAY-CHILDREN'S SKATING .. 4 to 3:5!) NIGHT SKATING .................................................- I to 10 TUESDAY - IIOCKIY - ST. JOHN VI. TILANDIII WEDNESDAY-NIGHT SKATING ..................................... .. I la 10 'l'HUlSDAY- - IIOCIIY - OLACI BAY VI. IILANDIII THIS WEEK Ubrinco was a stretcher case until 4 ero. Clements. Whitlock. Smith. big Phil got his major. then he Simpson. Marshall. Bellringer, got up and played good hockey, Mmrow. Beaudr.v. If the attack was unprovoked then 1 Officials: ltiaciocan and Gillls. responsibility for the loss of the SUMMARY game must rest on Vitale's broad First Period shoulders. for this was undoubt- By Jack Hand NEW YORK, Oct. 25 -(AP) - New England support for rugged Rocky Marciano, unbeaten Brock- ton. Moss, slugger, today shaved the odd: close to even money for his big 10-round test against Joe Louis tomorrow night at Madison square Garden. Walk one side of the street and you hear it's 6 to 5 and take your pick. on the other side, Louis re- mains 3 7 to 5 favorite. By ring- tlme. the 37-year-old Brown Bomber may go to,8 to 5. Coast-to-coast. radio and tele- vision will beam the heavyweight fight to millions. Still some 15.000 are expected to pay 8150.000 or more to see it in the flesh. With 5185.000 from TV and radio rights, the fighters will slice up a juicy gate. Louis' 45 per cent should be about 5132.00) and Marcianols 15 per cent around 014,000. Not since lxiuis rocketed up the ladder from the Golden Gloves has I non-title heavyweight bout excited so much interest. Louis is the magic name that lights the flame. But the lure now is the chance of being in on the kill- that night when some youngster will knock the Bomber into retire- ment for keeps. Up New England way they think the time has come. They say the 27-year-old Marciano. with the smashing right hand wallop will put a period to the 17-year-can ear of Louis. Generally speaking the profess- ionals of the fight mob-managers, seconds and matchmaker-s-like Louis. The man-in-the-street goes for the kid from Brockton. A crowding puncher with little boxing flness who has registered 32 straight victories. Rocky must nullify l..ou1s' jarring left jab to survive. Ten years younger than the 37-year-old former champion, Marciano gives away 25 pounds - about 210 to 185-and nine lnChP) in reach. Bill izinicii” Signs With Bruins I BOSTON. Oct. 25 (AP) Bill Ezinicki today lzave up his idea of playing professional golf's winter circuit and signed to play with Boston Bruins for at least one more National Hockey Lea- gue season. Tiziiiicki. muscular and fiery winger. signed after talking with general manager Art Ross. He agreed to go to Hershey. Pa.. to get in shape. Ross figured ”l:Izinicki's in Pretty good shape. always is. wont take him long to get ready for hockey.” -Ross said Ezinicki wont play with Hershey, Boston's farm team in the American Hockey League. but will work out there twice daily until he's ready for action with the Bruins. Best guess was that Ezinicki would report to the Bruins in Boston NOV. 6 when the Bruins play Detroit Red Wings. Hockey Scores Quebec" Senior .OliL'-IWH 1. Montreal 5. . Quebec 2. Chicoutiml .1. Sherbrooke 2. Shawinigan Falls Quebec Junior 0Granby 1. Montreal Nalionales H. Ii. ' Providence 5.. Indianapolis 8 Thunder Bay Junior Port Arthur Bruins William Canadian: 2. A. 8. Fort ll.H.L. Standings (By The En-iirvlian Press) w L 'r r, A Pu. Detroit . 4 1 015 .5 3 Montreal 3 3 l 15.17 7 Chicago 2 2 2 1216 0 Toronto 2 2 1 11 11 5 Boston . . 2 3 1 11 12 5 New York .. , 1 3 1 9 12 3 . C lose, NI-i.ouis,i Marciano For Tonight .m...........m.....m.g.g Halls - Black I I 2 - All Tie CHICAGO. Oct. 25 - (cp) - Montreal Canadians and Chicagc Black Hawks battled to a 2-2 1.. tonight in a National Hockey Lea. gue game before-a crowd of 6.943. After trailing through two pe- riods. the Hawks brought me count to 2-2 at 4:41 of the lhird period when Bill Moslenko. on assists by Doug Bentley and Pete Horeck. rapped one past goal... Gerry McNeil. ' Horeck was purchased late tn. day by Chicago'from Boston to fill in for Bop Guidolln, who ,9- quired four stitches in his right ankle as a result of a cut re. ceived in practice. The tie moved the Hawks into sole possession of third plan: while Montreal advanced to willi- in one point of league-leading Detroit. Maurice Richard hit at a short-handed Chicago club at 10:57 of the opening period to give the Canadiens an early edge. It was the with goal of ill,- career and hi! fifth of the sea- son. At 9:51 of the second, Paul Masnick made it 2-0 when he converted Paul Meger's pass into the net past I-fnrry Lumley. Thirty-three seconds later. Jimmy McFadden counted 'Chl- cago's first goal. with assist; go- ing to Pete Babando and Gus Bodnar. Then came Mosienkn's game-tying score. SUMMARY First Period i-Montreal. Richard (Loch. Olmstead) 10:57 Penalties: Olmslead. Martin. Quackenbush. (Lach (2). Second Period 2--Mon-tleal. Masnick (Meger) . ........ .. 9:51 3-Chicago. Me adden (Babando. Bodnar) 10:21 Penalties: Lowe. Bentley. Third Period 4--Chicago. Mosienko (Bentley, Horeck) Penalty: Meger (motor). Boat Blows Up Al 165 M.P.H. - 4:11 LONDON. Oct. 26 -(Reutersh Speedboat ace Donald Campbell said tonight his ”Blueblrd" was doing 116.5 miles an hour. five faster than the American-held world record. when she blew her top and Malcolm Campbell who set '1” re"- cord of 141.74 in. p. h. in 193 with the original Bluebird. hid hLs mechanic Leo Villa. with him when the explosion . occurred. Neither was hurt. The t.wo were putting the latest version of Bluebird through her paces with a try at the, record. 160.323 m. p. h . held by Stanley S. Buyers of Seattle. HAP SHOT FIIIISIIITI6 Rolls of film developed and printed and sent out the sun! dav. l'i-int: double time at no extra cost. Any 8 exposure roll 85c. Reprints do each or 10 for 35c. Mull Film Service. Charlottetown. non sans JUST LUCKY (2:11 3-5) and FRANCES MncKAY APPLY WILLARD STEWART. 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