finally and the university roared its approval. set the stage for a furious laught by the vy had things 0 goals by Dem- it 43 at the 58 mark and then got things even little less than four ter, with Cfough and Champs drawing assists. seemed as though the comeback was all in vain ite Z z melee a oa : 3 in the eheyty Poth z &, indicate the play as Saints up several great oppor- to get on the score sheet. own wildness around the — i came through for the Aces Charlie Hogan’s boys had a fortable 4-0 margin. then on the battle Saints’ favor. It was the most game the league has ed. Saint Dunstan’s ed their bodies with telling fect on incoming forwards the Aces weren't taking the erties in the third session they were in th first. Father well’s charges enjoyed a wi margin of play but the sented the more polished and took great advantage their opportunities. Saints’ showing put new life to the league. The collegians, feared to be a weak sister, served notice that they'll give teams plenty of trouble in new loop. They take on a job Tuesday at the Sports when they-visit Sandy Frizzell’ Royals. : Twelve penalties, .all minors, were called by referees Walter Lawlor and Art Perry. The Aces served eight of them. SUMMARY First Period: 1 — Aces, Dei- ghan (R. Gallant) 6:24. 2 — Aces B. Grady (Coke Grady, Clow) 7.25; 3 — Aces Schurman (U. Gal- lant, G. Harris) 17:05; penalties Grady (3) Noonan. Second Period: 4 — Aces U. Galiant (V. Harris) 11:55; 5 — Saints, Demers (LaBrie) 15:35; 6 — Saints, Browne (Ryan) 19:23 Penalties — V. Harris (2) Third Period: 7 — Saints, De- mers (unassisted) .58; 8 — Saints, Demers (Clough, - DesChamps) 4:30; 9 — Aces, Coke “Crady (V. Harris) 14:15; 10 Saints, Browne (Ryan) 14:22. Penalties U. Gallant, Grant Grady (2) St. ggelis ab3ER2FRas 2 net plus some great goaltending by Thane Mann had them trail- Aces Wi s Royals of Charlotte- and Hogan's Aces of | Sum- meet once again at Stadium in Summerside to- and if they can put on a on performance of the game was played last Friday even- fans are bound to be happy. very often in the past few has there m & more ex- hockey match playved- at Stadium than that battle be- the Royals and Aces Fri- 9 OR Fee nee 3 ut i ak Ai Julien. 5 ll Host Royals Tonight be giving it all they have to turn the tables on, the home’ forces | tonight. Eustace Reeves, one of great defence quartet of last appearing in Royal livery again tonight. It is possible that the Ace rearguard corps may be strengthened by the appearance of Frank Steele, who did a good job on defence for. the Aces two years azo. : : i Charlottetown club «mart ng from that unéxpected defeat by the P.E.I. Aces will certainly Trotters, Notch Victories A sustained drive late in the! particularly ‘pecond half brought LePage’ Trotters from 11 points down to victory by one point in the last few seconds over the BYC Trot- ‘ters, in a City Hoop League tilt. The final score was 45-44. In the second game of the doubleheader, YMCA romped to @ 97-2 win over St. Dunstan's. It was the first one-sided win in the gchedule so far this year. The Basilica Youth Club with Gillis, Cummiskey and MacDon- aid breaking sharp'y for the bas- ket on long passes which caugh! the. Trotters off balance ro! > a 19-14 lead at half-time: and fmcreased it to a 11-point spread midway throuch the second. _ However, the Trotters tightened their defence. and their shifty @entreman, Maclean, sank re. bound after rebound to cut the “Margin. With a minute and a half to go and down five poitis the Trotters kept pressing until they gank the basket which gave them Victory by one point secends be- fore the horn sounded. MacLean facked-up*21 points. ' Patchell was the top scorer for, the “Y” team in the second game potting eight field goais and three foul shots for 19 points. Ed Murphy, before he was banished by the referee had 12 points to lead ‘the Saints scorers. Poor shooting by the SDU team foiled their attempts to keep pace with the heavier “Y"; squad, who alsa @zhibited a good passing attack Ingo Is Disgusted GOTHENBURG, Sweden (Reut- @rs)—A “fed-up’’ Ingemar. Jo- hansson said Sunday he was “‘al- ‘Most losing interest” in a return i heavyweizht title fight with Patterson. Ingemar, visiting his hometown beginning a three-week ex- tour of South America on iy, complained to report- tal the boxing scandals and er repercussions that broke ‘in the United States after. he from Pat- June. ?vs Dr. Prowse, A. Saunders, A. -| N. MacLeod, id} Journal's editorial The clubs are very evenly mat- jched and the game should be a | dlose, suspense-filled one oll the {| way. YMCA. in their opponents end zone, McGonnell handled the whistles in both fixtures. | The lineups: | LePage’s — MacLean 21, Lad- jmer 12, Collins 6, MacKinnon, Arnold, Farmer, Chinery, Mc- Guigan 6 — 4. BYC — Cummiskey 18, Mac- Donald 9, Gillis 15, Ready 3, Howatt 2, Grant 2 — 44. YMCAr — Patchell 19, Phillips 7, MacLean 9, Thompson 2, Mc- Gonnell 5, Atkinson 9, MacDou- gall 4, Perry, Kimble, MacKin- non, MacLeod 2, Doiron — 37. | SDU — Todd 3, Tingley 6. E. | Murphy 12, Smith, Ryan, Mac- | Donald 4, MacMillan 10, P. Mur- | phy 2, Callaghan 2, MeWade 2, | Mullally 1 — 42. sj] and moved into a fifth-place tie George Scantlebury and Pete! 117 with a slim 1-0 win over De- ” Saturday was another action- packed noisy day at Sports Arena as hundreds of young hockeyisis ranging from 7 to 18 years of age worked out under the watch- give an hour or so each week to help Minor Hockeyists Have Busy Day ot | boys who are in doubt should con- minded that Saturday's schedule which is a particularly heavy one is always published in Friday's Guardian and Patriot through the kind co-operation of the management of the papers and sult Brig Bill Reid, Fridays, on games in order to avoid disap- pointment. One more week will. be devoted to workouts so that coaches and boys can get organized then week after this regular games will begin and count in league standings. Records will also be kept of goals scored, etc. and results will be published regularly. ETCH STRING By THE CANADIAN PRESS Some of Saturday night’s Na tional Hockey League interest i shifted to the bottom of the: | league as the front-running Mont- real Canadiens continue making the top a runaway. Chicago Black Hawks picked up their fourth win of the season with a decisive 6-2 triumph over New York Rangers at Chicago with Rangers. It was Hawks third New Yorkers who have gone seven games without a victory. The Canadiens meanwhile stretched their unbeaten string to troit Red Wings at Montreal. Lopsided Win win this year over the skidding! j ; Jacques Plante marked up his second shutout of the season’! while Jean Beliveau rapped in the winning goal at 19:32 of the sec- ond period. It was Jean’s 11th this year. LEAFS, BRUINS TIE In the other Saturday game, the} Maple Leafs salvaged a 2-2 tie with Boston Bruins at Toronto, | lifting the Leafs into a second- place deadlock with Detroit. Rookie Stan Mikita paced the Chicago attack on Rangers’ new goalie Marcel Paille with a two- goal performance. Bob Hull, Ron Murphy, Ken Wharram and Ed die Litzenberger counted the NSN — Curling Draw | The following is the curling | draw for Monday in the Chicken | Bonspiel. , . > | 7 P.M. {® Ice 1: — Open. | Ice 2: — B, MacNeill, H. Dob-! son, T. White, Ian MacLeod vs! D, O'Rourke, A. ‘i Wright, E. Douglas. - Ice 3: Dr. MacDonald. A. Anderson, L. Windsor, Dr. Craig vs C. MacDonald, R. Boyne, B. Acorn, W. Carr. kee 4: — J. Squarebriggs, G. | Kays, Dr. Drysdale, B. Phillips }vs D. Cameron, N. Nicholson, A. Zaken, J. MacDonald. ald. Ice 5: MacLean, — t Dr. Giddings, H. D. Fraser, B. Scott Ballem, B. Moore. 8:30 P.M. | Tee 1: — Open Ice 2: — D. Hill, K. Ready, J. McKennan, Dr. Saunders vs F.” Hansen, Dr. McEachern, B. McGregor, N. MacKay. Ice 3 — M. Bell, Dr. George, G. Wellner. L. Stone vs D. Saun- ders, G. Greenough, R. Manh- ing, Dr. Higgins. Bagnall, J. Squarebriggs, CC. Dowling vs Dr. Gallant, F. Mac- Millan, Bill Main, N. Kelly. Ice 5:— J. Burden, O. Flinn, R. Ketch, A. Garrett vs F. Cur- tis, F. MaciInnes, S. W. Willis EDITOR RETIRES OTTAWA (CP) — Chester J. Frowde, member of the Ottawa 5 Ice 4 — J. S. MacDonald, A. { SPRING PARK SERVICE STATION SEE US FOR... Your fall change over. We Specialize in... ®@ Antifreeze i @ Winter tires 4 || @ All minor tune ups PHONE 6824 4 ao ee | gree een SO RIGHT FOR HIM .. . ... FROM You B.V.D. AND FORSYTH DRESS SHIRTS Harvey Woods and by Ford DRESS SOCKS i Abbey Currie and Park Lane TIES HOOLEY'S MEN’'S;. WEAR. ARH HBRMAMMMD WMI RRBMPHR BWI Y 3. WRI De ed Winnipeg end zone after he had blocked a_ kick. third-quarter play when the Ham- ilton board of strategy called for a third-down field goal with Tiger- Cats in possession on the Win- nipeg- two-yard line and Ticats behind only 3-1. But the big play. and the one that will be talked about, was the fumble by fullback~ Gerry Mc- Dougall early in the final session that Bombers turned into their There was the and he was downed on the three. there on “the play that broke up the tight-fitting game. There was an ironic twist to the touchdown. pass defender in Eastern Canada! pro football, had just returned to the Hamilton bench from thes a ‘dressing room where he had an} injured ankle frozen and Trimble, had inserted sophomore Len Chandler in his spot. had been used mainly on kick-off runbacks during the season, was practically deked out of his uni-| form by Funston, a late cut this|/F= season by Cleveland Browns of the National Funston had been touted as the man to watch in pre-game gos-| sip and his catch justified his! . Shepard smacked over from Ralph Golston, the best deep! The 23-year-old Canadian, who at | $74.50. L for 1-3 Units. or “more. PERFECT PIPE By JACK SULLIVAN three yards out after the fumble. Nothing could stop the inspired Canadian Press Staff Writer |He booted four singles—two of, Bombers. In TORONTO (CP)—The fumble is}them on quick kicks—was top|they took over ae still the best play in football. ground gainer for the Bombers| 33-yard line a Winnipeg Blue Bombers proved) with 54 yards on 16 carries and|pass from punter Cam : that point Saturday when they) voted by sports writers and| Chandler failed to gain ; capitalized on a Hamilton Tiger-|broadcasters as the oustanding| sary yardage. : Cat bobble to send them on their} player in the game. end Ernie Pitts f way to a 21-7 Grey Cup victory}; The Bombers started to move| md zone for 5 over Ticats in a final 10-minute after Steve Oneschuk had kicked|. Gerry James 5 offensive surge that produced 18|his second field goal at 14:46 of| kicker, made : points and turned an unspectac-|the third quarter, a 27-yarder|Verts. He also ' ster Sumie inte 8 rearing clovs:|(that put Tiger-Cats ta treat 1.2,|Ssid geet immodiotely + stand quarterbacks scurrying into dying ace of the re cats the |Bombers moved downfield from > days. It also boomed out Win- F ae over! Hamilton’s near-touchdown oc- nipeg’s second straight Cup tri-| > war eppedt during | the sp ovr te encase) ead ethane sn 2 m - fifth for the west in the last six|in the i907 cup final Summers The Bombers had been throt- The big crowd sensed that a e: tled in their own end of the soggy| teak was necessary to blow the k field ‘tor’ nearly 59 msinates by| seme Wwite open amd it wass’t Minor Hoc ey INEXPENSIVE Ticats whose. unimaginative of-|* 4 ees = 7 z > fence sputtered and died when ae kicked his ort dois, — car oais menial bad HY-LO they were within striking range , ae 5.00 — 6.00 p.m.: No. 1 Paper- : : more than two minutes later| %- oF P.™.: Ivo. 1 Faper of the pean ons line. In that bers got their first touch- ae Major vs. No. 3 Paper- SALAMANDER for the record 33,133 Eastern) own. a : wot Mabe. Canada football crowd at the wa-| McDougall’s fumble was picked PERON TO STAY FORCED AiR terfront Canadian National Ex-|UP on the Hamilton 43 by tackle} CHUDAD TRUJILLO, Domini- hibition Stadium, Buddy Tinsley, at 35 the “old|can Republic, (AP) — Jyan D. HEATER ¥ man” of the Winnipeg club and a} Peron, exiled former dictator of QUICK KICKS tremendous performer throughout| Argentina, said Friday he has fio o The Tiger - Cats spotted the) the afternoon. plans to leave the Dominican 200,000 BT.U.S. per hour. Coste western champions an early 3-0 Republic, where he has lived less than ‘4 of comparable lead and went on the prowl to|PERFECT PASS | ._,,| Since early 1958. He was respond- Gesced tir motiels. avenge the 35-28 beating they The dispirited Tiger-Cats didn’t ing to a reporter’s inquiry about 4 took from Winnipeg in 1958, but| know what hit them. While Bomb-| recent rumors that he intends to great defensive play by the Bomb-|€Ts lined up and McDougall was| move to Madrid or elsewhere in If you now own one or more ers and alert, booming quick-kick| being verbally spanked by coach| Europe. Hy-Lo Salamanders, you cam punts by fullback Charlie Jim Trimble in front of the Tiger- - buy Forced Air Conversion ard turned them back. Cat rote Kenny ~ Dnits for $49.50. Ploen i a perfect strike to It was an unusual game in end Farrell: Funston at the five New Hy-Lo Salamander com- plete with Forced Air Unit Standard Hy-Lo Units $29.00 each $26.75 each for 4 Walter H. Carver ~ | hes m Pr te Distributed by : Beso aas aeaeeein | GOODSPEED-MILLARD STOVE OI! 0) FN GLE: 2 S| 4% Elm St. EQUIPMENT, LIMITED Trure, N. & Football League. THIS WEEK ROYAL CANADIAN CORPS OF SIGNALS Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, for young men inter, ested in Operctors (Radio and Teletype) echnidens (Radio teletype terminal eqnipment , gen er.” store, motors and otha aiecariaal and siectreals equip f ments) linemen (Constructing and maintenance of line, cable | and antennae systems) i Think of all these advantages? i (1) A well paid job with » forare j «2) for advancement, travel and \ ' 3) Many additional benefits pel * \ ee: ACT NOW I... INTERESTING NEW OPPORTUNITIES WITH THE You must be 17 to 35, fit and able to meet Army enrolment standards. You ean get full details by calling, or mailing this coupon te your local Army Recruiting Seadquarters Eastern Command Ahern Ave. Halifax, N. &. Telephone: 3-9181 Local 26 if send me tel and me fol detalls on The Royal Canadian AAG(™) Age Oty Town i Last school grade sucesesfully completed ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee a 7 i i ! = ' ! J ing touchdown and 11-7 ippi } = winning an press clippings. st =a t SHEPARD TOPS . i St The 23-year-old Shepard, for-| S@@ . . . a ee: A L The : t Pittsburgh Steelers, scored from THE 4 JUST MEN : oe san Baer Every Friday Night SP ORTS ARENA AUTO BODY REPAIR } 9:30 — CFCY-TV SPRAY PAINTING | ae a . iia ‘ £ you exace j : . eee | PLEASE CLIP and SAVE... It Will Be The Only Notice oters. Camille Henry and Dean! GAUDET'S AUTO || TOM DAVIES | ~ : — —_ i ~ ing — Children ................. 4:00 to : pear BODY SHOP Texaco Service Station MONDAY Skating : . _Defenceman Thin’ Mecten ‘weal te at Thess eee Le vee. Dial we Adults .....-..-++22+++++0+ 8:00 to 10:00 t nto savior, connectin ' late in "the third "period for the — am — il TUESDAY St. Dunstan's vs. Royals—Game time .......... 3:30 tying goal. Ron Stewart got the F i cnt Tin Maeda ine Ge ANNUAL MEETING | 1:30 to 3:00 Se ey || WEDNESDAY . eee Skate ..cccccccsccccscese ae ae y P.E.I. CURLING ASSOCIATION aaa” 1d ty hse eed gc eg cb cand at diy ind ig dha 8:00 to 10:00 Bus’ Can Carry | will be held in the Club Rooms of the : oc deen 8:30 Fans To S’side SUMMERSIDE CURLING CLUB THURSDAY Summerside Aces vs. Royals — Game time ..... : | mat. \ A bi Sandy’ al NES : : . eee es . nee! WED DAY, DECEMBER and. FRIDAY Teem Bue BEAU i cccacsecesce ae deeee Oe aay. a oan en ys — yop Gaboury Trophy Play will be held the same day % 2:30 to 4:80 mn ren 0’. : ‘ i 13 i ae e 00. clock. Anyone aa to attend with Ist ‘game commencing at 1:30 P.M. SATURDAY Children’s Skate ....)..-++++++++-+++ i 7 the game is welcome. ; —— iii os aaa ie ; + + IMMEDIATE DELIVERY: ON POTATO & TURNIP f TAGS © *No Delay! *No Waiting! Orders Accepted In Large And ‘Small Quantities! PHONE 8506 Charlottetown ENTRAL PRIN The Guardian - The g Pa , >= er ee ee ee oe