NQVEMBER 21, 1935 Youthful Hockey Results International Hockey M68119 Detroit 2; Windsor 1. Cleveland 2; Roohooior 1- Natlonul B06519! M98110 Toronto 2; 305L311 1. Chicago 1; Montreal Maroons 4. Rangers 1; Amcricans 0. O. ll. A-:— BOWLING uocauv WRESTLING Centreinan CENTRE. or me TORONIO MRPi-E Lance. ‘ > ' ., ’ HE H615 SHOWN UORTHY Of THE 22mg; Péflczo IN HIM BY Mfluqom - MYTHE WHO BEOUGHI HiNi STRHiGHT FROM Juuloia Rcwxaro THE Hi6 "nu/ls l.’ cllvllucllv l E Al: u E A meeting of the City Hockey League will be held tonight in Holy Name Club at 7 o'clock- As the names of all players on the different teams MUST be hand- ed in at this meeting a full repre- Hlrmllton TIZPYB 3 9°" c°1b°111° sentatlon is required. The schedule 011C. will also bc presented at this meet- Toronto Dukes 7 University 0f ing and several other matters of im- Toronto 5. ‘ portance will be dealt with. Display of Model Suits AND OVERCOATS by MR. ART BRADLEY STYLIST FROM TIP TOP TAILORS“ FRIDAY and SATURDAY. liov. 29 & 30 He brings ‘with him a special display of model garment and suit lengths. Tip Top values are un- equalled anywhere in Canada. The quality of British woollens—the smartness of their styles ——and the excellence of their tailoring are all presented to you with the latest creations from famous stylists. one Price Only W. P. BRUCE Cl-IARLOTTETOWN TIP TOP STORE NEW Oi’ Tl-I fHE CHARLUTVFETUWN GUARDIAN E SPORTWQ RLD Con tests MONTREAL, Nov, flit-Montreal Maroous blasted Chicago Black Hawlks out of the National L League's unbeaten clnss- tonight when 111w sped to a 4-1 triumph in a wild, scrappy game that saw 17 penalties meted out, three of them misconduct affairs. A fist fight between Marty Burke and Baldy Norlhcott after the bell had ended the first period kept them out of action for 10 minutes "m 111111118 the second and Hooley 5111131 BOt the third misconduct for talking back to referee Mike Rod- den because he was put. on for 70118111118 Art Coulter. Both teams were s, man short when Earl Robinson blazed the first goal past Mike Karakss in the first period after coming in like a streak tn take Joe Lamb's pass out mm the corner. Art Coulter was in the Dollnlty box when Hooley Smith made a brilliant solo play to 511p the puck between Art Wiebe and M“ 1611111511? then round Wiebe 111111 8o in to draw Karakas for the Sogond rgarker. 115s llnco was in the penalty box when the Hawks scored their semnd P°Y1°d I011] with the veteran Howie Morenz leading the attack, He streaked in to pass to Ed Q1191- letts who flipped it back to Poul Th°1I1DBon for a drive that beat Billy Beveridge all the way. Herbie Cain scored the third Ma. roon marker in the first minute of the third period when he sped 1111°118h the Hawlk team and lashed a vicious drive to the corner. Smith wound up the scoring with 1111 oooond soar of the night less than three minutes from the end when he took Robinson's relay from Lamb and drove it in. LINEUP (lirlcoro: Goal, Ksrakss; Defence, Wiebe, Levinsky; Centre, cook; Wings, looking. Trudel; Subs, 3111119. Coulter, Romnes, McFadyen 130111115011. Morena, March, Onei- lette. _ "BTW"? G081. Beverldge; De. fence, Wentworth, Evans; ~Centre, 611018; Win85, Marker. Cain; Subs, Couacher, Shields, Smith, Ward, Northoott, Blincc,- Rob‘ l, Lamb, Miller. Officials: Mike Rndden and Newsy Lalonde. ' SUMMARY Flnt Period l~Maroorls, Robinson 4.59. 2—Mar0on5, Smith 14.27. Penalties: B‘inco, McFadyen, Wald, Ooulter. Burke (misconduct), Northcott (misconduct). Second Period 3--Chlcago, Thompson (Ouellette Morena) 7.55. Penalties: Isevinsky, Blinoo, smith <2 minors and misconduct), Wiebe. Thlrd Period ll-Montreal, Cain .34, 5—Montreal, Smith (Lamb, Rob- inson) 17.40. Penalties: shields, Levlnsky, Morenz. Lamb. . BREAK LOSING STREAK BOSTON, Nov. 26.— (A.P.) —-To- ronio Maple Leafs broke their three- game losing streak tonight by out- battling their old time rivals, Bos- ton Bruins. for a 2-1 triumph in a bruising; battering game before l2,- 000 fans at the Boston Garden. These two rugged hockey forces, who revel in dealing out solid body checks, punished each other through almost 36 scoreless minutes before Harvey Jackson put the Leafs ahead by completing a combination play with Charlie Conscher and Red Homer. Early in the third frame Homer cracked the Boston defence and drove s. hard close-up shot that pulled Tiny Thompson out of the Boston cage. As the goalie sprawled on the ice, he was struck on the head by one of the sticks in the lively scrimmage that broke out in front of his net. Before he could get back to his station, Pep Kelly hooked the loose puck of! the right boards and drove it into the empty cage to clinch the game for the Leafs- Thers were less than five minu- tes remaining when the Bruins scored their tally. the second of the season. Just before this succeu. the Leafs had to play with two of! the ice but they were at full strength when "Red Beattie beat goalie George Hainsworth with the forward pass he received from Babe Siebert. The Bruins packed the enemy zone during the remainder of the game but nothing came of their (Ilamb) Leafs, Maroons & Rangers "iinners In Lively NHL. Last - Night Red 5011191’. bruising Toronto defenceman, drew his second mls. conduct penalty or the Sargon 1n m, flrflt period after he and mu cow. 1o! got tangled up while carrying high sticks. Horner was banished for two minutes by referee Ag Smith and Hilln" Oblected so strenuously Jflotllng the ofliclal, that the mis.’ conduct penalty was added. Bu" LINEUPS “m GW- Thompson: Defence Siebert, SHOTS; Centre, Welland; Win85, Beattie, Clapper; subs‘ Shannon, Kaminsky, sands, Mother, Cowley, O'Neill, Besler, Graham Jenkins. Toronto: Goal, Hainsworth; De- fonoe. Day, Hollebt; Centre, m. 11151111; Wings. H. Jackson, Conn- ch91‘; 511115. B011. Thoma, Finnigan, K9113’. Mew. A. Jackson, Homer, Clancy, Blair. Referees: Bill Stewart and A. G. Smith. SUMMARY First Period Scoring: None. Penalties: Blair, Homo;- g (minor and 10 minute misconduct). Second Period 1—Toronto, Jackson Conacher) 15.13. Penalties: Kaminsky, Jenkins, Kelly, Finnigan. Third Pcflnd z-figévflw. K911i’ (unassisted) (Homer, 3—Bosion, Beattlc (Siebert) 14.27 Penalties: Finnigau, Homer, RANGERS, 1: AMERICANS, o NEW YORK. Nov. 2s. - Butch P19911118 100k a tip from his race horses tonight and came through in the home stretch to give New York Rangers a 1-0 victory over the Am. ericans in their first intro-city struggle of the National Hockey League season. A crowd ‘of 13,000 attended. Charley Mason did the jockeying for Butch, eluding the American defence and putting the puok in position for the winning shot otter seven minutes of the final period had elapsed. Mason drew goalie Roy Worters out of the cage by fok- ing a shot. then dropped the disc where Keeling, tearing down the middle at a furious pace, could flip it over the netmindens shoulder. The Amerks had the better of the argument through the greater part 0f the game but couldn't put the puck past both Ching Johnson and goalie Davey Kerr. Penalties had the blue shirts in trouble frequently and in the second period the Amerks had l9 shots against four for the Rangers. Most of them came in one five minute stretch when the Rangers were short hand- ed. Another concerted American drive just before the finish produo- ed a penalty shot for the losers when Johnson fell on the puck to keep Eddie Wiseman from shooting. Wlseman and Manager Red Dut. ton were outstanding among the Americans. The lineups: Americans - Goal, Worters; de- fence, Dutton and Murray; centre, Chapman: wings. Carr and Schrin- ol‘; subs. Stewart, Oliver, Emms, Voss, Wiseman, Klein, Brydge, Jer- wa. . 31111891’! — ‘Goal, Kerr; defence, Aims and Johnson; centre, Bouch- E1‘; Wings, W. Cook and F- Cook; $11118. 9111011. Murdoch, Patrick, Keeling. Brydson, Connolly, Mason, Starr, Heller. - Officials — Odie Cleghorn and Eusebe Daigneault. SUMMARY First Period: No score. Penaltles—Ayres, Emmg, Byydge, Second Period: No score. Penalties-Starr 2, Dillon, Mason, Dutton. Third Period: 1—Ra.ngers, Keeling (Mason) 7:47. Penalty-Johnson. N. H. L. STANDING , Canadian Section P W L D F A Pts Toronto 8 4 3 i 24 21 9 Canaldlens ..5 3 2 01311 6 Maroons....5 3 3 0115 6 Americans .. 7 1 5 110 19 3 American‘ Section P W L D F A Pts IChicago 6 4 1 1 13 9 9 Rangers....8 3 3 2 911 8 Detroit. 5113675 Boston . 4 1 3 0 3 4 2 Canadians ’ Clever Goalie A 0N THE SlDELINES-T i. seems almost a hopeless task to games played between the two they do. noth’ alt-hon h the hockey may be of a However, this stale of at’! divided is impossible to ascertain. U U , ivertlng from their usual run o the above date that has brought doubtless a packed house will greet ' 8 I ttention is called to the meet- ing of the City Hockey League tonight in the Holy Name Hall on Richmond street. The league is scheduled to open Wednesday night next and as several important inat- ters are yet o be thrashed out ll: is eompulso that. a. full represen- tation of the teams entered be on hand. oases arry Currie, youthful Charlotte- town hockeyist and winger on on last year's Abbie team is cer. tainly proving a big aid to the Her- shey Bears of tho Eastern United States League, a team he joined lit the start of the season. In almost every game Harry figures in the scoring summary and last night scored one of the five goals his team accounted for in beating the Pittsburgh squad 5 to l. . . t - a fast skater with a. terrific shot. Currie was one of the best juniors ever developed in the province and lllS success occasions little surprise locally. He was a star with the Junior Abbies when that team captured the Q1181!“- Maritime title and his work ag- ainst the brilliant St. Michael Col- lege team in Toronto in the East- ern Canada final drew marked at- tention from several coaches in the Upper Canadian city. His career will be followed with interest- I I I I 1 election of Port Arthur Bearcats as Canada's Olympic hockey representatives is not meetinl; with approval in Montreal circles‘ Royals taking the attitude that they are entitled to a Dlilyflfi- The" protest however is not likely to be considered as President Gilroy, with a. habit of sticking to his statements, has made it quite clear that the selection of the C. A. H. A. is final. lr-o-c-lr-E-Y‘ UNDER THE WORSHIP MAPLE Russel-n At 7.80 CAN ADIEN YOUTH NIGHT AT THE FORUM ' Friclay, Nov. 29th‘ PATRONAGE 0F HIS MAYOR KENNEDY p. m. MIDGETS Vs, LEAF MIDGETS ' At 8.30. RANGERS JUNIORS Vs ROYAL JUNIORS Admission: Adults 25c, Children 15c. Bisonsl Seek Services Qf Len Burrage (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) FORT ERIE. Ont., Nov. 26- Mnndger Nighbor of the Bililalo Blsons has been carrying on netw- tiations for tho services of Lon Burrsgc of Moncion, amateur, held at Pbrt Erie through inability to obtain admission to the United States. ii; was learned today. Bur- rsgo would be used to strengthen the orange shirt defence, now con- sisting only of Capt. Gamy Leder- man and Tiny Teasdale. The Maritime defencemun was enroute to Join Pittsburgh Yellow Jickets an amateur club. Porpoises, sometimes called be- lugns or while wha‘es, are takfn in the Gulf of Saint Lawrvnce only. The skins are tanned for leather work up any amount of interest in foams picked from the camp of the Abegwelfs. Last night's attendance was again disappointing to my the leash and the wonder of it is that the players put up the exhibitions airs is not to be wondered at. With _at stake the fans fail to work up any degrcg of enthusiasm and high class quality with said enthus- iasm lacking the game appears drab and colorless. But all this is to be remedied, Henceforth games arc to be played with the pick of maln- land squads and the locals will have their chance of displaying the true worth that is contained in their ranks, something that with the team O I 8 f programs the Forum management are presenting a big Ice Circus Friday, Dec. 6th that should draw s. big attendance of skating enthusiasts. WorlrLfamous figures in fancy skating have been contracted and will present a ll-act circus on glowing accounts from the press in towns and cities in which they have performed. It has been a. long while since such u high-class troupe performed in an Island rink and the performance. l I I Currie Aids Hersheyln lVin HERSHEY, Pa, Nov. 26.-Hershey Bears defeated Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets, newcomers to the Eastern United States amateur hockey lea- , gue, 5-1 tonight. ! Gibson and Currie, new men in the Bears‘ lineup, shared in scoring honors with the old-timers, Gus Mancusco, Hank Lauzon, and Russ Russell Gordon Drillon, formerly of Moncton, contributed the Yellow Jackets’ sole goal. Down The Alleys Charlottetown Team Wins Over Summe " The Prince Grocery bowling team, played in Summerside Monday night_ against Sinclair 8c Stewart's team, the Prince Grocery winning out by 286 pins. N. J. Clow had high single of 315 also high three of 703. Prince Grocery: Frank A. Johnston 161 214 214. Robert Bradley 234 201 202 Tom Campbell 222 201 237 N. J. Clow ¢24 315 164 C. E. Praught 214 200 211 Total 3214 Sinclair a Slcwarts: Doucette 266 142 186 Smallman 172 180 15B Montgomery 140 210 139 Gallant 19B 303 200 Total 2928 Majority for Prince Grocery 2B6. HOLY NAME CLUB BOWLING Commercial League Anchors A. Ryan 179 130 163 J, Heron . 262 131 228 A- Gormley . 209 179 156 A. B. Gormley . 133 196 192 G. McMahon . 186 222 189 Tota1—2757. Eagles Dr. Dougan ......... 177 19B 129 CLO High single, J. Heron, 262. High three, J. Heron, 621. Tonight at 7 p. m., spuds vs. Hawks; at 9:30, Prince Grocery vs. Holy Name All Stars- LADIES‘ BOWLING Hurricanes G. Doyle E. Dougan .. N. Kerwin .. A M. Duffy I. Dougan M. Walsh A. Walsh H. McMillan F‘. Msllett . . . . . 171 Total—2l22. High single, G. Doyle, 320. High three, G. Doyle. 542. Hit and the oil extracted from the flesh is used commercially. Tonight at 7:15, Five Aces vs. a Miss BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT Displaying s. better passing st- tsck and backchecking like fiends throughout the Bruins sprang a surprise on their reputedly stronger opponents the Abbles, when they captured last night's exhibition hockey match at the Forum by s, 3-1 score. Starting out in a. dull manner with both teams displaying n. close-checking system of play- the game wound up in a blaze of act- ion with the Abbies sending wave upon wave of ganglng attacks ag- ainst o. defence that refused to wilt under the pressure and a goalie, young “Had" 3101111115 11151 out of the junior ranks perform- ing, with the poise and coyness of a. veteran. Although inking the excitement and tcnsencss that s. league game engenders neverthe- less the players went to work with a. will and gave of their best throughout the sixty minutes of P1 Y a . Two beautiful passing plays saw the Bruins gain s. 2-0 lead in the first period, Steele and Squarebriggs beating Stull; they added another in a fast middle‘ session, Steele ac- counting for his second goal of the evening and a. torrid third period. featured by a fist fight between McInnis and Stewart, saw the winners hold the desperate surges of the Abbies ‘to one counter, Storey beating McInnis on a three man passing stick with less than four minutes to go. Lawlor penalized in the first minute for checking Kane gave Abbies a chance for a gang at- tack but Bruins held on and Mc- Innis had only one stop to make. So close were the teams marking their men that in the first 10 minutes neither goalie had a dif- ficult save to make. Bruins were the first to score with Steele On a beautiful pas-ins clay with Lawlor beating Stull from the edge of the‘ crease. Whitlock, Stewart and Fitzgerald forced the play for the Abbles after the score but. couldn't click across the Bruin-s blueline. With the two frort lines onpgain Bruins made it 2-0, Steele racing to the defence and then slipping Squarebriggs a Perle“ no mistake, , “5nag" made smiling the disc into an empty’ net after drawing Stull out. The time of the goal was 18.37. Play spceded up a little in $119 second period but scoring chances were few in the first 8 minutes- With Carmichael and _ M01600 chased for roughing Abbles forced and Kane and McKle both missed chances from a few feet out by erratic shooting. McInnis saved brilliantly a moment later from Whitlock and Stewart. Bruins got their third goal at the 15 minute mark. Steele slamming in Square- briggs rebound after Snag had picked-a loose puck inside the Abbie line. It was close-checking hockey starting the third Period. A fight between McInnis and Stewart en- llvened matters considerably the belligerents being chased, McInnis the aggressor drawing three min- utes and Stewart two. Carmichael was chased less than a. minute later to leave the Bruins two men short but despite the gang attacks of the Abbies the youngster in the Bruins net could not be beaten. Sticking to their ganglng tactics Abbles finally broke into the scor- ing column. McLeod worked his way to the blueline fed Storey s. pass. Storey taking a return from Fitzgerald slammed it into the cage. Lineups:- Abbles: Goal, Siull; defence, Mc- Kie. Gandet. Storey; Centre, Kane, Whitlock; Left Wing, Williams. Stewart; Rlgll Wing, McLeod, Fitzgerald. Bruins: Goal, McInnis; defence, Gross, Carmichael, Simpson; Centre. Lawlor, McInnis; Left Wing, Squarebriggs. Acorn; Right Wing. Steele, McFarlane. SUMMARY 1st Period l. Bruins, Steel (Lawlorl 10.58. 2. Bruins, Squarebrlggs (Stcclel 18.37- Penalty: Lawlor. 2nd Period 3. Bruins, st/eeie lsquarcbrilzssl 15.00. . Penalties: Carmichael and Mc- bcod. - 8rd Period 4. Abbics. Storey (McLeod, Fitz- gerald) 16.10. Penalties: Stewart, Mblhnis, Carmichael. GOOD IIUNTING CHURCHILL, Man- NOV. 25- —- A caribou herd a half-mile wide and extending for 26 miles, rarely seen in the northland now-a-days, made good hunting for trappers here. The animals, estimated at 50.000, seldom come so far soul-h from their Arctic 19'7"’;- VE Bruins Build Up Earli Lead To Defeat Abbiesg 3-1 In Exhibition Gamé Buy Jewelry Coupons to win $20.00 _ value. _~ Watches, Rings, Ros- 3 1 aries at a bargain. “ CheslerA.Campbell" ' Jeweler, Queen St. ' ~. Fennell and Chandler Building 01,515.13. will 5th Straight g Game 2-l (C. P. by Guardian's 511N111 W515i Speeding Detroit Olympics w their‘ fifth straight inter-patio Hockey League $111119 "l? Detmlll last. night when they downed Windsor Bulldogs 2-1 in a; 01089‘ checking contest that saw all tho goals scored in the final 20 min- utes. Yank Boyd, speedy Windsor forward crashed into defenoemau Bretto in the second period and suffered LOIlCUSSlDII and a possible skull fracture. . Both Detroit goals came from the stick of Art Giroux, the first with the aid of Gordon Pettlngfl! and Waite Deacon and the second when Roulston broke away from a Windsor gang attack and flipped the puck to him for a score. Don Smillie saved Windsor from s. shutout when he blasted in a. goal after Bill MacKenzie and Aubrey Webster, fromer Moncton Hawk, had made the opening for him. The Cardinals went n little deeper into the eastern division cellar at Rochester where they lost a. 2-1, declsionto Cleveland Falcons, last-place team of the western section. Each scored once in the second period, Vic Ripley counting for Cleveland Nick Was- nie matching that one on a pass from Ralph Rennie. Lloyd Gross scored the winning goal in the third period on a solo. A woman spectator was struck in the face by a flying puck and suffered a broken nose and s. cut over thd eye. Syracuse won the only other game 8-1 at Pittsburgh with Mnrkle, Mann and Burke the msrksmen while Desse Roche scored Pittsburgh's marker on ' pass from brother Earl. _ Braves Ta ken Over By N at. League (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, NOV. 26.—The Bos- ton franchise was fonnally take over tonight by the club owners o the National Baseball League at thl climax of protracted and involved financial woes. Ford C. Fricx, ‘the League President, announced un- animous approval of this drastic step after the latest conference on the Boston Club's tangled affairs.‘ Frick said the action was token ‘because of the failure of the Bos- ton National League Baseball Com- pany t0 fulfill its contractual oblig- ations over an extended period 0i.‘ time." - t The Leoguc President said he would consider any proposals sub- mitted in writing before Dec. 10." the date of the annual league meet- ing in Chicago. He said no proposals had been re- ceived but that the league guaran- teed there would be no break in the operation of the Braves regardless of whether or not the club was pur- chased. It had been reported recently ihab a wealthy New England shoe manu- facturer was interested but today‘: action apparently indicated than possibility had failed to bring fruit. ‘File amount of creamery butter produced in Canada during the first nine months of 1935 was 194.704.1158 pounds, compared with 191,356,694 pounds in the corresponding period MOTOR OIL lOO°/o PENNSYLVANIA AT ITS FINEST nos wsm on. co. or cannon. bro. non-rural. mos-re, usnu nlsraraurons THE FRED C. MANNING C0. LTD. rumnx, a. s. of 1934. This represents an increase of 1.7 per cent for the period. it's the QlL in the can that counts! EDQL