PAGE SIX z Leafs Twice Over Humble Americans Weekend T0 Xtay On Top With Bruins MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. NEW YORK. Nov. 30-(OP)-—Tor- onto Maple Leafs humbled tihe hapless but fighting Brooklyn m- ei-ictiiis for a clean sweep of their National League hockey double- lieader with a 5-1 trittmph tonight. Red Damon's young team. brat- 8-2 liy the beats lost. night u) Tor- onto, was ouiclaswd again by the league leaders. But for two periods they made the Leafs hustle. Pa}. Egan. stt-phocnore defence- man, sent Brooklyn away to an early letid in the first period with it blistering lfi-fotit shot. vtiiilc hing) Ktllilllllltlll. 'l’ortinto defence act‘. u-zts iii the peiinlty lwx. Ani- t-rn-ttns were unable to ttefend the liiargtii sticccs-fttlly. Lorne Carr and Bob DRVldsOII scored" for the Leafs in the first. szninzi. Syl Apps mad c 3-1 in the wound and (ioit ii Drilion and rookze Johnny‘ McCreedy zidd- at tallies in the dreary third per- md in which tiie _a.n.e'.e'; appear- ed tired trcm the strentrus week- end w "k. A crowd of F325;! saw the Brook- ie hkirl Robert- usiv all '3] ztgazns; superior forces. SUDLVKAR Y First Period L-Americsns Egan (Hi3. Thtirieri ' l6 "onto, Carr (Srhr nw. Davidson l" s-Kttntpnian, C. . Second Pt-rlnd 4~Ttii1llilKL Apps lnntidbtill, Diil- I 10305 _. “Anderson. ’l'iiird Period w-Torrntp, Drltlon (A0198. David- l: 2 .0’ t; .. ltfcCrecdy Langelle) 4: 30 Pcnalt y-Anderson. (Hamilton, SATURDAY’! Grlhhn TORONTO. Nov. 30-(OPi- B!'U":i§l_\"ll Ame 1 ‘.1.<l£l.i><’liCfi"'Bl‘nl5" ' admirers-lived‘ monzker Saturday night when they presented the most feeble exhibition of the cur- rent National Hockey League sea- son here to bow before the lcttgtte-leztdtzig lvloplc Lmifs 8-2. To make tnatzcxs inure humiliat- ing for the AHlQHClUh, it was Lorne Carr, one of that" former stars traded by B ks Red Dtttton for fottr Mitts, who paced the Tor- onto club to VlClOl}. The right winger, Just. off t." lf‘l_lU1‘_V shelf, was the only player to bag tvtto goals. The Leafs. in top £01m. took ad- vantage of the wokout to add 16 snoring points. s“ insy Schrlner, azict-licr Amcrk o ntd by the illtlt‘ rotite, piot 1 itirsl. with a coil and two Carr, Elih- '1‘.|\"l l‘ and Pete L ctli- each ad- ded two poziiis 1o iiicir totals. A crowd 0t 11,039 fans received new their first gimrso of the hot ' St-liiyuer to s-pt and a frcc sht was awarded scliriner skatrti in slowly to drive the puck paw Earl Robertson from l0 feet out. Rclxufison was tetzirn and time or "oronit. l tiilttrs were 1 . . Mi ksmen were Lanizclle. Gordie I on and l-iuik (ioidtip. Taylor sp‘ the (lcftliec in the second ported to score on rt lcne effort. fiven llt-tle pro- - "irc tctrrcd while his SYMMAItY First I'm-riot! t-Toroxito, Apps (Ikiriflscitl 2:38 2-11‘ routo, Carr (Taylor. Schnit- eri 12:17 . --lferon Sectintl Perintl 3~~Tti1‘01‘.[0, Langelle (Iftiinllton) 3'10 4—’1‘oronto, Taylor 7:3! 5—Brooklyn, Watson Anderson) 10:47 6—T;rontc STlPlDPl‘ ally shotl 14:28 Penalty-McDonald. Third Period 'i~Toront0. Drlllon (Langellcl 2:24 8—Torotito, Carr (Taylor. Schnit- (Armstronit. tni aloi‘ Den- Vitai ilostov ls (Cotitinued front page 1) Vim KicisUs Army Smashed "Von Kleistls army has been smashed." declalmed the announ- cer. "His 6th, 14th and 16th tank divisions. 60th motor division and SS ‘Viking’ divisions are fleeinR in disorder in the direction of ‘lngaiirog. The Red army is fol- lowing close on their heels The Germans have lost 5.000 killed." The Moscow radio declared to- night that the qo-mlle road from Rostov to Taganrog had been cleared of Nazis. Tngnnrog ties 4o miles west of Rostov on the shore of the Black Sea. Rostov is on the north bank of the Don which in the neighbor- hood of the attack runs almost in an east-west direction, em/ptying into the sen. a few mllea below. Recapture l4 Village! Russian cottnter ottaclg on the Moscow front have resulted in the recapture of 14 villages in one dir- ection and 20 in another, and for- ged the Germans to give up the town of “K”, a. dispatch by Pravda declared. (The town of "K" was not other- wise identified, but it poaatbly was a designation for Kiln, 50 miles northwest of Moscow on the main Moscow-Leningrad railway.) Previous soviet account; said a Red army offensive across the frozen Volga river near Kallnin, farther to the northwest, had re- sulted in the recovery of at least four towns on the flank of the thin wedge driven to Kiln. The Russians have described this northern thrust as the most. dan- gerous threat to Moscow's en- circlement. (A broadcast heard 1n London from Kulbyshev, secondary Red capital, declared purtlcularlv fierce fighting trns going on in t. 1e Klin sector with the Germans increas- ing their intros tor lilf‘ Moscow tattle to '70 divisions, or more than 1000.000 men. tFeroetotis battling also was re- ported in the Voiokolamsk sector on the south side of the Germans’ Kiln wcrlgv. This account admitted that the (iarmnns had made some sicziht- advances at some "paces but only over the bodies of their own soldiers.» ’f“ne Pravda. correspondent d0- Icribetl the scene of this action as the "western front." and said tho aovict aft-ticks irate continuing tviiih increased force after the rc- ciipttirtv 0f 20 villages and the complete rotit of the 297th Ger- man division which lost 4.000 kill- ed and twouiided in fighting Fri- day. "The enemy is suffering trem- endous losses and is hastily re- treating." sttid PravtWs report. The correspondent definitely lo- cated nnother Soviet offensive in the Stalinogorsk sector, 120 miles rzotithemst of Moscow, where the Germans have driven their south- ern encircling claw 00 miles east of Tula. He said the Russians had retaken 14 villages 1n that. direc- tion. Stailnogorsk is an important point. in Soviet economy. as it fl!- tired in the first five-year plan as me =tte of an important deco-o- eliemlcal industry The population is about 80.000. The fury or the battle about hfosmw was indicated by a gov- - t-rnmeni proclamation declar- ing "to retreat for more than am,- m-p l; i; crime none shall forgive." r11 three-day old Associated Press dispatch from Kuibyshev said the noise of the battle could- not yet. be heard in Moi-cow but t"the city is ready for anything”) ibcnwhlle in the rout of the 00mins from itowtov, Prvnda de- ‘ d maid Mlflhll Von Klelst d fad f.om Taganrog, 4n miles BDSWV. The papa: uld he 1M m: n nmupoi, up mm: ‘ . ~ and SS divisions er) 5.05 Q-Torouto, Goldup (Stanowskii 9:23 10—Brsoklyn, Thurlar (Hill. Ben- son) 16:52 Penalty-Kampman. west; of Rostov, but did not say whether German forces had fled Willi hint. It said the pursuit of the rem- nants of the five tank, motorlmd chased out of Rostov ivas continuing and that boot-y included 36 trench mortars, 52 field guns, and 19 anti-tank guns. There was no mention of German prisoners taken so far. Taganrog (which the Germans captured Oct. l9) is a town of 150,000 on the Black Sea coast where metal and leather indus- tries have flourished. Street Fighting A Soviet information bureau communique said the reoccupa- tlon of Rostov was accompanied by street fighting. Noi-thtvard of Rostov in the Doncw basin the Russians reported a few days ago that they had made gains of 60 or more miles, endangering the long salient the Germans had thrust along the Black Sea. coast toward the Caucasus. (The Germans admitted Satur- day they were evacuating the cen- trial part of Rostov "tn order to make the most thorough prepara- tions for necessary measures ag- ainst the population" which was accused of participating in gucrllla warfare. Whether these prepara- tions contemplated rzizlng of the by bombardment. was not stat- Thc Moscow radio said tonight that hundreds of women and children and elderly people had been shot before the Germans were driven from the city. Death Of .199"? out fpagve wiring houses, sold electrical fix- tures. His electrical shop was io- cated on the corner of Queen and Kent Streets He retired from active business life prior 1,0 be- coming a Councillor. Although ill only a week, the da- coaswrl had been in hoor health since inst January when he stif- fered from severe exposure. He laecanie lost on his only home from Lodge on a crfd nlzht and wim- dered about. the streets until he became oxliatisted and sat down mi a snow‘ hnnk. 11v was found ftbflllt eight. o'clock tn the morning blocks from his home, Rushed to the hospital immediately it was found that his hands were badly fromn and lie suffered 111 effects fioiii Lhc long oxuosttrc. He romain- ed a patient in the hospital for several mouths. The deceased had been a prom- inent Mason and was one of the oldest lodize members in the prov- lnct‘. In 1831 he was made a Mas- ler Mtuon tn Victoria Lodge. A. F. and A. M.. No. 3, Charlottetown and in 1800 became Worshipftil Master. He was honoured tn 1009 with the election to the office of Most Worshipful Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of P. E, 1. After this he served as Grand Secre- tary between the years 1910 and 19 B. He. was also a member of Alex- andra Chapter. Royal Arch Mas- ons and oi Prince Erlwarci Pre- ceptnry (Knights Templar), " ills wife pzedeceascd him, Stirviviiig is ti. son, AJl-illll‘. Tor- onto. who was a \'€t(‘i‘tl1\ of the World war and is now serving viith the Canadian Army; a (laugh- ter, Mrs. Alice MacKlnnon. Ottawa: a stefmlfillzhter, Mas. Joseph Mac- Dontfd. Motmt stewnrt; three brothers, Wesley. Sackvtlie, Mark and Nelson ln Los Angeles, Calif; two sisters, Mrs. Herbert Lord and Miss Mary, an artist, both in cape Traverse. The funeral will be held this afternoon at 2.80 from ‘Prinlty United Chin-cit, Charlottetown. In- terment People’: Olmflfly. UNCLE saws mm The United states Wither h r- out maintains about 6.000 PM: THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN DECEMBER 1_ 1941 Sport shorts From Britain in. By Douglas Amarnn Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. Nov, 30~(CP.i-—Sl)0l't shorts frcm Britain:- The day after Emanuel Shlniwcll. mctnbcr of Parliament who has been criticizing the government. referred to A. V. Alexander as the Mrtlkeeper of the cabinet," the F ' L.rd of the Admiralty re- (‘C-Hid this telegram from B. How- ard Baker, amateur football goa-l- combined for a pair of goals, de- fender, cricketer and tennis plav- feat-ed a sliotnhanded Detroit Red Wing for key ltengtie Liverpool warships week from one square Garden Saturday night. eru- "Here ls £20,000 ($89,000) gottikrcpcr to another." You can't be too careful about your train connection these days. The Not-ts Forest team. to g0 to Norwich for a lllsletld ol south and wound up more than 100 miles from its des- 11111111011. Cpl Peter Kane of the Air Force, former world flyweight . g champion, i1'l‘ to the ring after nih layoff ‘tkuiziiy’ hfefiliiichey of Glasgow in l-lte second round of a lO-round bout. Kane is being mentioned i now as the logical challenger for 3—New York. Juzda 8. Jim Brody‘; Ditpire bantamwelght 4—New York, Hextall title. git-Hie in which Deunlt enjoyed n lead for four minutes of the first period scheduled 25-foot, blast that football into the cage off defenceman Babe game, catight. a train going nort-lt Pratt's stick. Winnipeg Blue Bombers Win Dominion Football Crown TORONTO, Nov. 30—(OP)—In spectacular inc-tingling fashion, Winnipeg Bue Bombers played Rangers tohip Red Wings 4-1 their courage to the last, ounce Sat- urday and defeated Otta/wa Rotigh Riders 18-16 fcr the Canadian Football Championship before nmrly 20.0w fans jammed into Varsity Stadium. Balding Cites McOanoe, veteran acting captain of the Western Champions. fired the shot. that. brought down the Rough Rldws in the third quarter-a 38-yard field goal-but the minutes before and after that fatal blow to the Rldem were as packed with drama as any National Final in the 21-year his- tory of the classic. For the tense seconds that it takes to kick a. field goal, it ap- peared as if Rules would ti? the acme a third time late in the fourth quarter and force ove-time With the sccre 18-15, Riders had bulled their way t0 the Winnipeg NEW YORK. Nov. 30-—(CP)-- New York Rangers, led by Brynn Hextall and Pliil Watson. who team 4-1 in a National Hoc- game at Madison A crowd of 12,581 saw a roused Jimmy Orl rule's was def looted on SUMMARy 10 and Georee Fraser. the giant Oftwvn. middle Whose‘ specialty is .. .. i‘$“‘§"}?'lt saris “it”??? r“ I‘ .1‘ m 9 . 0y 1_1)ei,;-¢u, Qrlandn (p24 The decision was sealed when celebrated his 2—New York Hexlall (wittsom Fraser's kick was wide bv a (wt a, give- 1045 ' The bnll rolled to the deacfine- by knocking‘ out Penalties-Kilrea. Shlblcky. giggouglilgllat 511$’ lyilelgéélyjévgggg Second Period slmggi“ '28 —' (Watson. Quebec plays Tustlnllfiz58 5-New York, N. Cclville 18:00 Rosemary Curt/s. well kntmm in Penatties-Orlctzido 2. Pratt. Slew- sotithem England as a hockey and tennis player, was killed 1:1 an ac- cidont. W. L. Handley, one of England's Scoring-None. I most famous motorcycle and car Penalties-Abel, Heller, Pratt. racing aces. wia. killed 1n a plane crash while working for Air '1‘ . llirpOft Auxiliary. Known as "the man nothing can scare,“ Handle cnce crasthed a motor- cycle a 100 miles an hour and an- other time turned a car over at high speed, broke his back and was ln a splint fzr nzoriths. They sank the Ark Royal but they can't sink til“ spirit of her a 23-3 verdkt over men, Two days lifter the atrcmft Deflflls for the Fastern Canadian carrier's crow arrived in Gibraltar rugby chfl-lnfioflshlo at Toronto six from their torpedoed ship they had their football team in action against the Black Watch. The Block Watch won the malzfi 5-2. Col. Sh- Gordon Carter. who presided over the Ascct. horseraoe meeting for more than 25 item's, has died in his 89th year. Known to his friends as "Troops," Sir Gordon was bcreved to be the only trooper of the Life Guards of’ his generation to rise to commission- ed razik in the rteizlment. He be- came its commanding officer. Senators, Flyers Remain in tie ‘s MONTREAL. NOV. 30--(C'P)— Ottawa Senators and Cornwall Flyers are still tied wt tho top of the Quebec Senior Hockey League standing after the week- end games. The race is so close on- l_v three points separate the first place and cellar teams. ‘Ihe Senators du heated their feat of last week by oeing 8-2 Bat- tirday night at Ottawa and coming here to beat the Royals 2-1 in a. hard-fought struggle. In the rthet- game on the Sunday twin bll‘ the greatly improved Cinadiens defeat- cd the Comwuli Flyers 4-2. Edmonton man: ls Wheat King CHICAGO- 111., Nov. all-NAP) — William Miller of Edmonton became wheat king of North America Sat- tirday when his reward variety of hard Red Spring type wheat was adjudged best at the 42nd interna- tional livestock exposition and grain show. The reserve championship went to R. P. Robin of Shaunavon. Slick, who exhibited a Mlndum Durham variety. Miller's entry weighed 66.8 pounds to the bushel, while Robin's sample wciqhed 64.4. 'I'hus. Canadians retained that! possession of an honor which they have held in competition with Unit- ed States wheat growers since 1928. Today Canadians walked away with major honors in oats and bar- icy. wl‘!!am skladan of Andrew. Alto... was named as the oats king and another Alberta Man, Paul Francis Pawlowskl nf vllna, won the bar- ley championship. Skladan won the title with his sample of Victory variety oats, weighing 40.1 pounds to the bushel. He was the oats king in i938 also. Runnerup today was Alex M. Stewart of Alisa Graig, Ont, show- ing Alaska variety. Stewart himself is a former oats kinq. having taken the title in 1937. Neither Skladan nor Stewart was here for the show. The 1940 winner was Pawlowski. njir. ~t>ILv'r's MESS" WESTERN DISERT- (CPi - Officer's memes of the R.A.l"‘. fighting squadrons halve been re- yfaced by the "pilot's mess" whore sergeant pilots and their com- mtssfevned colleagues live and cut together as they do in the Smith African Air Force. NEWS AT TIIE CAPE CAPE 10W?! —(OP)— Qt the historic 8t. 060110! BL. db when stood for many yam the big-ver- andahea general pat-office. The Qane Times has erected a m-Idérn, eight-storey "east a in a warm Na won" an» _ lost. to Winnipeg 18-12 in the na- IIIIMIOMNEWPORTFIUFFSMM Tie with Pats art. Third Period QUEBEC NOV. 30-(OPi-Quebec Aces. flBhting an uphill bottle for the-greater portion of a cbec Senior Hockey League gzunc here today, held Mxntreal Pats to a 2-2 deadlock in '10 minutes of play. C1056 to 6.000 fans sw Pats. backed by smart goallng and a standout prrfcnnnnce by rle nee- man Jack Vt'i"k'"=r~n. t"'"*= a l-O lead 1n the first period and hole‘ tile - rdwr unti‘ l"? than tvro . utes of play remained in the third pared ithzn Quebec scored to send tire conivst‘ into overtn-e. Each team _=c"r~‘ "n; in the ad. dltlonal l0 minutes. BERNE-(CIW- Because he list- ened to a 8.11.0. broadcast an It- alinit doctor. Ticozl Novarn. WflS sentenced to two months imprison- ment. finezl 4.000 lire (ore-war $8001 and had his radio confiscated, says a Milan messame. Remember When (By The Canadian Press) Ha-mfiton Tliér‘. fielding one of the lt"f.=t p"i'~'=rfi Wasteixri Catt- ad'fin teams in years, ounchad out 51min Im- years azo today Hamilton litter onai final. and the Grey Cup went west for the first. time, Bitiilioiivo 1?;- FATHER Hawks lose First home game To Rangers 5-1 CHICAGO. NOV. 30~lAPJ—Chi- ca¢o Black Hawks tonight. suffer- ed their first defeat- at home this season when New York Rangers mowed them down, 5-1, before l8,- 511 spectators in the Clucago stadium. The Rangers thus sup- planted the hawks in third place 1n the National Hockey League. The R. tigers. who defeated De- troit Rcu Wings 4-1 Saturday night achieved their sixth VIClDtY in 11 starts by ripping through the Black Hawk defences twice in the IlISt period‘, once in the second and twice in the final frame. on; Heller, hard-driving Ratiger de- fencenian, counted two of his team's goals while Mac Colvllle, Phil Watson and Lynn Patrick chalked up the others. SUMJHARY First Period 1-New York. Heller (N. Colvlllei 10'55 2—Ctiicag0. Allen (March) 16:32 Ii-New York, Heller (Watson. Hextall) 19:14 Petialtles-Selbert, Pratt. Marluccl 2 ( misconduct), Hextall, N. Col- vtlle (misconduct). Patrick. Second Period 4--New York, M, Qolvilie (Shiblcky, N. Colville) 10:30 Penalties-Patrick, DalilstromJ-Iel- ler. Pratt. Kaleta. Cooper. Third Period a-u-tggw York, Watson (Patrick) 6—Ncw York, Patrick (Jiizda, Hex- tall) 19:12 P€flBit1€S~W8.PWl'0k, Junda. Mar- iuocl. N. H. L. Standing P W L D F A PM Toronto 10 B 2 0 41 22 Boston 10 8 2 0 36 17 16 New York ll 6 5 0 4i 34 i2 Chloe o l0 5 4 1 20 26 ll Brook yn 11 3 7 1 23 39 7 Detroit 11 3 '7 1 23 34 7 Montreal 9 1 '1 t 33 3 Minot-d’; relieves aches. Boston Bruins Toke Two Games From Canadieng Over Weekend 3-l And 3-2 BOSTON, Nov. titb-KJPJ-Hostnn Bruins scored two goals tn the last two minutes tonight to gain a 3-2 victozy over Montreal Canadians before 12.000 fans. It was Bruins‘ second win in as many nights over the tall-end Monti-elders. ‘the t. tug and wlnnin goals came w thin 23 seconds, w tie de- fenoemm Kenny maiden was Ln the nalty box. As soon as he loft the cc. the Britlns hurled five for- waids into action and Roy Con- iwher gained the equalizer by cag- in: Bill 0owley's passout. Dutch Hlller then rapped in the wlnnln oai from 20 feet out, with ackson assisting; Canadieits 1'92! tered both than‘ tallies during tho first period and then tried to protect their lead by erecting a tight blue line defence. Johnny Quilty rapped home the first after taking a ass from the veteran Rat’ Getll fe, and Toe Blake accounted for the other, dorms the last m‘nuic of the pet- lod. while Conny Tudln was serv- ing s. penalty. SUMMARY First Period l-lgalxzndlens, Qullty (Getlltfe) 2—-(.‘anadieus. Blake (Chamber- lain) 19-40 Penalties-kindly: <21. liecnnd Period Scoring-None. Penalties-Bauer, Gowpliie, forti Craw- Thlrd Period S-Jbostcn. Jackson (Hamill. Hillel’) ~i—Boslon. Conaclter (Cowley. Du- mart? 18:48 B-lrston Hitler (Jackson) 10:11 Penalties-Hollow Reardon, Blakei (IO-minute misconduct). SATURDAY'S GAME MONTREAL NOV. S0—(OP)— Boston's mighty Bruins continued to ride atop the National Ltague hockey standing with Toronto‘ Maple leafs as they came through wlhh a 3-1 victory over Canadians in their debut befric Mont-real farts here Saturday night. Flashing th~ PFVJQI‘ both on nt- tack and at defence which carried them to the Stanlc last, season, Bruins 51mg? mfigm with two goals in the mm“ " W WW WP the Struggle a,‘ m? " the Habltants could tlo w“ 011t- a single tally in the may frame. which ivas nullified by M” iiélgjthl-lub tally m the c1051.,‘ ML OllKh Still wltho home toe Oanadlens uh u‘; will; 0“ good bitttle agahm J1. BM l and held a slight territorial m“ from early 1n the second pen‘ u SUIIIA R Y First Period 1—B<>st0n. Schmidt (no . figcgtu-‘l. Stiilth tisatteiiorhukaffl, Penalty-Damon, rd on. Second Pei-ind S—Ctmadiens. 000mm Reardoni 4:48 Pcnaltles-Wlseman. K. Ream“ (Morin, g, reaches Ind helps nilien hell! msiiifulmflmit liniuiw time and ‘trim and keeps the: iii-iv.’ p. c N Ark Jon dnr ixlfir lifniibolau- u n. nmr ma, 50¢. at ENTHUlATUM Bin-s COMFORT Daily By George MicManun ' ‘CU i-ravzo ME1-_\QJ'IZE nor ' FOOL-DO ANT TO CATCH \OLll2 0F A COLD? Thimble Theatre-Starring POPEYE true-u / REACH sPiNA no MATTER MERE I QOES l tum. 41m. s: MUST "IOU LIT H ALWPHS FUL? was. wounds ‘l an instill.‘ HONEST AND ‘5lNCEEE- Natl . ‘ amputation-g mum‘ h; > TIPPiE AND "ca?" STUBBS BY Edvl" . ‘ --~» ~ ---— ~--—-—- --- -—--~; ~—» , SOME ‘oImEiiTv/AY LISSEN sues YOUR cousi~ COUSIN MILLIE sAu: YOU AN’ WHEN st-te SAW you. YOU ISNT To Gun, VsmN. MILLIE"! sut-z ISN'T VISITIN’ ME net/unmet: use so MUCH o¢= us 1' BACIQ-Ut-b-Ul-b-TENDER "ro cs1’ u . 5,96; m NOW so ON AN‘ "ran. HIM i M MORI s»! c N, 115151055 "Amw" W‘ WHAT i SAlD--- SHE N omx HE WAS CAPTLRED Arias-- nv “i,_.-,.....- DUTY a-usr Manure! ‘flip Lap, ‘IHATJVE GOTJO ' \UUCAN'TLET'EM