To Defeat Iavy iiflfliitiy‘ Team ileeting Tonight A meeting of all members all t'ne Navy hockey team. and all others interested, will be held tonight ut E M. c, s. Queen‘ Citlrlotte at 'l o'clock. Plans for (he coming "ason will be discussed. _ lit. A. Wins liaritine Grown HALIFAX, Nov 1'1 — (C?) - Dave Niokernon of Mount Allison University today vraa numbered won; his ulna matefls top per- formers after his kicking in Sat- g-mys suiidendesth struggle ‘.1111 st. Francis Xavier Univer- |ipy for the Maritime intercolleg- M¢ “(by crown resulted ln a 4.3 victory for the Sackilllc, N.B., rnllcgr. Nlckerson made good a penalty pa. in the first half to start the pope's scoring lat $0- lanky tor Dunc liliielntyre snatch- “ g 3-2 lead for St. EX. in the second with a well-earned try. Later Nickel-son's educated toe “on. piaceil a penalty kick cleanly over tlic bar f'"om a dif- “quit angle, and in spite of a. gap-wind, to end the scoring 4-8. lt was ironic for St. EX. that they lost this crlliial game with- out having had a try scored "mist them. Play was fast and mpg-h, eapecially in the second half. as the “ell-matched teams battled farioasly for the edge. Argonauts Defeat Montreal Alimttos MONTREAL. Nov. 17 —(CP)—- Probably the largest crowd in Cam adian football history-nearly 23.- OiIi-oaw one of the greatest one- mm shows in s 10mg tim; here Sat- urday is Joe Km] almost sinzle- mulled passed, kicked and ran Toronto Argonauts to a 12-6 win over Montreal Alouettea aind the ohnnpionship of the inter-provinc- m lmgoy Football Union. TiiIowIoothen-vital cogs in the w Ago machine that moyed into the Eastern Canadian finals against Leafs Come F romBehind Rangers 5-4 NEW YORK. Nov 1'1 - (op) ._. come from three goals behind tonight to de- .(at New York Rangers 5-4 ma lonal l-lociiey League crowd 0f 15.467 at Toronto Maple Leafs hold their Nat lead before (i Madison Square Garden. New York got (lie three first period goals mime back wiin a lrreai. display in the second and third periods which netted five goals lri a row. front as Montreal bent Boston. 4-1. thus leaving the Bruins in third place. Licnfs proved their thei fine comeback in the most ex- citing game played heze this sea- son. Ted Kennedy led the scoring parade with one gcal and two as- slots. SUMMARY First Period. 2-—Ne-w York, Leswlck Cooper) 3:55 3—New York. Lilprade (Hextall) '34 (Warwick. 6. 4—Toronto, Meeker (Kennedy) 17:20 Penalties Eziriickl, Leswick. Gardner. Thomson, Lnycoe. Bod- nar. Second Pciod. ' bdromnto, Boescl (Bodnsr) Ozl 6—'Iioronto, Kennedy 16:09 Families-Cooper, Lynn. B06118!‘- Thlrd Period. » 7—-Toronto. Lynn 8'20 ll-Torcnto, Mats (Kennedy) 14:37 l)—New York, Warwick 15:55 Penalties-None. Girl Driver Pilots Winner t At Halifax _HALIFAX. Nov. 1’! — (GP)- Shirley Gay of Halifax. a regular drive;- on tha local trotting track. piloted Darkey Tell to a win in the Class I! diaah on the Hllifa)! Common Saturday during the weekly harness races sponsored by the Halifax Harness Horse Club. Pat Levers won the Pree-for-All with his black trotter Judge and Roy Kidney won the dash with his veteran campaigner Martindel» Other winners were Previous in Class B. drl-ven by Dori Turner: Nellie Worthy in Class C. driven by Cecil Drake; and Helen Bud- long in Class D, driven by Laurie O'Brien. Toronto Balmy Beaches for the second successive year. But it was ifrol’: deadly-accurate passing that paved he way for the two Arso toaatdowna in the first half-one by hknseff and the other by hi! pass reoolvm- Royal Copeland-and it was his hefty booting and alert pal attempting that stopped Aioaattas ii the second half when mm d.‘ m“ ma“ ) __ 1 ‘WW "l'°°°“"““ °°"'""°- enrol: Wilson (L. whiter) a Ensign Joe (Bailey) S Winning owner: R. Kidney. Toronto Football “cler- C," ,, Previous (D. Turner) l 31 Tunis In Finals HAMILTON. Ont. Nov. 16 - iCPl-Toronto Balmy Beach. fight- ing book with a fourthquarteridrlve to score two converted touchdowns. (Saturday won the Ontario Rugiby Football crown for the second straight season with a 13-6 victory fax- i Harold ‘Oratton (W. Baker) Tom Yolo (Gay-Baxter) Pio Direct (Bonltiller) Mitzi Bars (W. Walker) Dartmouth. Beilie Worthy (C. Drake) Dolly Direct (Kaizer) Scotty McKane (Craig) . Sinnmary Frea-for-All Judge (P. Lavers) Sandy R, (F. Baxter Sully (l. Gray) . . .. Jacob Withrow (Dauphinee) Winning owner: P. Lovers. Hali- Dash Winning owner: Dori Turner, Class C over the scrappy‘ Hamilton Wildcats ind partly set the stage for an all- Toronto Eastern Canada final. The Beaches. surprise team in the Eastern Canada playoffsxsnatched victory‘ from the Wildcats grasp to lwrc their second upset and qualify ior the Eastern Canada. final in Toronto next Saturday against their traditional infra-city rivals, Mounts. The two teams tangled last sea- IM in the some final. The ' Argos whipped the Beaches 14-2 and then want on to take the Grey cup by dc- festing Winnipeg Blue Bombers. the snme club who will meet the winner (if next Saturday's struggle between the Beaches and Argos. Buddy Brown Miss Cleo Dale (Reynolds) 'I'he Bullet (Allen) . Halifax. Helen Budlong (I... O'Brien) Lady Chief (Balliday) Lady Allen Peters (Kalzer) Brown Bomber (McAlphlne) Lou Dillon (S. Weeks) Winni-ng owner: L. O'Brien, fax. Darkey Tell (S. Gay) . . 1 l Betty Direct (Isnor) . 2 3 Tracey Direct .. . . 3 2 (Baxter) Winning owner: Class D Class E Winning owner: Afosy. ‘Halifax. - Georgia Tech 35 Tulane 7 i233 'i'..’s?i"ii.‘lil‘i ~-»-==- e 1 Ir The cansaiaii ri-oq, mum ' _ "l "l Kent 1a Western Virginia o P w L T F A H! ‘Knew. ‘mmmt peflomunce, Lomilsnalpgi State 27 Northwestern BLUE BLADES .. 3,. 1.; i,=;,~,y,,g,.~,-,g;i.-;ig.,_i»c.qf W! /1 f/u.’ </I-|l-'I'I57r‘(/ '¢'.\'(‘i'¢'r' fin/nuli’ Gunmen‘ 13 4 29 13 "W "l9 Vlfiimy- RN! Hlmlll. sflmn" ' - 30"“) 12 435 35 speedy wingman scored t 1a 4 1 2 42 51 1o - W° 8°“ Detroit 5 1 35 M a for the winners and got an "m; Texas Christian 14 Texas t) ‘ Chlcllv i?! g a 2 33 41 . while Chicago's other goal was "5 13 SM-u ° Jump with but, ‘Toronto Toronto stayed two points out calibre by 1-New York. Pike (Laprade) 122i) Leafs have expressed plnincd that the dropping of over- time play in NHL. games hasbeen o. bad thing for the Bruins. always been a strong winner overtime and he 19918 l-hlt playing it loses year for the Boston outfit. there would not seem to be logical reason why should be any stroni" time than any of the other teams. The fact that they used to be does not mean that they are Bil-ll 111011-11" ed to be. that way. 0 -NOVEMBERi18, 194s today wear the Maritime Inte of their 44) win over St. Fran; talizing on two penalty kicks Caledonia in the battle for Maritime Senior Rugby title. 0 O III O "As has been so often said, th fans will tend to tihink toward the homesters." so E5. 4- l- + i» He suggests, "It would avoid ed some referees from outsld points, and then no one would b able to say they are partial. Qififi “It may be said that the referee will be getting it in the reek fare if the men in control of the 1 Ham o-N m (G I game were unknowns to all. ‘ ail-Tsagrgxhlohnf Whalziy) o + o + “'° 1 - - , 4.—Halitex. Larable 19.44. ‘ butrii; tfivgnriiuigyl Liliana; it may Penlmess: myety“ be possible it will have taken place." 5 HIM d rem“. Import or not it is still our comld- _ ‘x’ Gray 5'05" cred opinion that there will still be Fannie‘: Myketyll- 5W4"- the "dyed-in-the-wool" supporters Kyle- ever-ready to holler "We wuz rob- “l-ml "PM! They are as much a part of Palm“. 00PM (Gray) 8.24. the game as the game itself. ‘I-saint John. Price (Esta- brouks) 16.89. ’ Oiii In the flurry of offseason trad- Wings start this National Hockey League lng that saw Detroit Red season with a revamped lineup. Manager Jack Adams could bows today for at least two deals- those that brought Centre Taylor and Leftwinger Roy Coin- acher to the Win85. O 1' '0' ‘I’ Together this pair added up to Z scoring points in Detroit's first 10 games. which means the WlTiS-i could have been in a lot sadder plight than their present fourth position without them. #010 Oddly enough, Toronto Maple themselves well pleased with the deal that sent Taylor to Detroit for big Harry Watson There have been no com- plaints from Boston Bruins about Joe Carveth, the rlghtwlnger whom they parted with Conacher. for Il-"lri-fi In each case, Adams gave -l' + '1' + The 23-year-old WBFSOII» injured m; at present, ls four years younger than Taylor. At 28, Cab. ti h" two years 0.11 Conac LFDUI. Basioni main interest in this (i681 M- Bellnel’) 19723‘ probably was in winger for left-herded Conacher. gaining n right- + O 1- 0 A Boston sports writer has com,- § 4- i ‘II According to him iihe Bruins haye n mt several points a 6 4- + -l> Of course he mlaht b6 1'10!" bl" W)’ Bruins in extra (he li.ii.L. Standings IOOD ICE MUSIC BLUE a MONDAY CAN Ii MADE A HAPPY DAY-LOOK FORWARD TO A PLIASING SKATING SESSION. Mount Allison University ruggers collegiate football crown as result Xavienat Halifax Saturday. Capi- the New Bnmswick-Prlrlce Edward Is- land champions won out by the bar- wt of margins to qualify to meet till as referees in the Big Five may be do- in; their level best, but no matter how impartial they try to be, the they lean oplnes Dave McKay of the Moncton Tim- iot of (hard feelings if they import- no matter where they hail from. but it would no doubt out down the fan.- take Billy ‘ up f younger players for tiwo veterans he needed to balance an inexperienced team- wlhlch may 1mm)’ why. as in all good horse-trading. I explain -‘ ' all sides went away happy- i onth?‘ 600ml by rookie Hank Blade. i-Qhlolso. inlet-i (Hamill. isos- s-osimwhfiimm BIO. a e ( cston) 18:“ Pmalt smith. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN John Beavers again were frustrat- ed in their attempts to break a second-place tie with Moncion Hawks when, in spite of a furious last-period onslaught, they fell before Halifax mescents 4-8 Sat- .urday night in a regular Maritime IBig Five hockey game. The win didn't alter the fourth-place stand- ing of Crescents. The home club. in registering their second victory in four starts, showed conslde ble improvement over their offerings in previous engagements and came from be- hind twice before assuming a lead early in the seéoria period which they managed to cling to for the rest of the game. . Fast-wheeling Jimmy Gray was Crescents shining example-he scored once and set up two other tallies-but easily the outstanding performer of the evening was big Walt Kyle, Beavers rushing de- fencemsn. Kyle. wlio bowls over opposing players like nine-pins merely by noddihg at them. spear- headed the Saint John attack, par- ticularly in the third period when Crescents found themselves bottled up in their own end for suolliz- ingly long periods of time. And the big blond fellow, who played nearly the full 00 minutes, plied up many a Crescent rush on his broad back. I‘. is Summary First Period l-Saint John. lbeBlsnc 14.22. Penalties: Powell. TRURO, N. 5., Nov- 1'1-(GP)\ Rolling along st merry pics‘ atop the\ Maritime Big Five, Truro Bearoats slapped down Halifax United Services 11-2 hers Satur- fily night for their fifth con- Halifax Crescents And ‘Cats Week- .EAL1iI‘AX, Nov.‘ lr-(cri-sllm end Winners was the fifth straight loss for Ser- vices. Following up their 10-1 drubbing of Saint John Beavers Friday night. Truro went to work on Scr- vicea with methodical precision and all but two members of the team figured in the scoring, They ran in three goals in the first period. added four more against one reply in the second and an- other in the third. Playing coach Cliff Roach set up five goals and scored one him- self for a point-total of six and first place in the league's scoring column. Billy Maclntyre potted three 3Jlll_ll'ld Bud Mclachem. Lou Medynskl and Kink McDonald got two each. The 11th went to Bert Steele. Services. who held Truro to a mere 3-2 triumph in Halif-lx enr- lier in the week. scored their first goal early in the second period when it still wasn't too late and their second in the third-when it was far too late. Bus O'Gr.:idy tallied one, Jack Spidell the other. Summary First Period l-Truro, McEachern (McDon- ald) 2:05. Z-Truro, Mclachern (Kearns) 3.3. (i-Truro, Steele (McEachcrn. McDonald) 8.00. Penalties: Spldell (major). Mac- Intyre (major). Second Period kflervices. O'Grady, (Mont. Osborne) 5.06. S-Jrruro, Maclntlre (C ftoooh, Medynskl) 6-10. l 6--'l.‘ruro, McDonald (Kearris) 0.50. ‘F-Medynslrl (d. Roach, Kearns) 14.07. 8-—'1‘ruro, McDonald (Grabowski) 16.25. Penalties: Kearm. Third Period 9—'l'.\ruro, Medynski (C. Roach) SM. lti-lervlces. Jackson) 8.10. 11—'1‘ruro, Maclntyre (C, Roach) 18.04. Bpideli (hfont. secutive win against no defeats. It Detroit filimhs Aheaiiflfilhioago In it. ii. L llaoe DETROIT, Nov. 17—-(A.P)— De- troit Wings-climbed ahead of Chi- cago into fourth place in tho Na- tional Hockey League by pasting the Blsckhawks 11-2 hers tonight to the satisfaction of 13.334 strictly partisan fans. The hard-checking game wag marked by nine penalties-five against Chicago-and thers was a man off the ice when five of the game's seven goals sailed into the nets. Summary First Period 1—Detroit, Abel (Oonacher) 6.44. sift-Detroit. Lindsay (Howe. Abel) . a-lcliloiigo. Hamill (n. Bentley, Penalties: Dick. Wares. Stewart. Second Period 9 4—-Chlcago, D. Bentley (Kalotg) :98 5—Detroit, Abel (Taylor. 0on- acher) 18:04. B—-Detroii, Taylor Cunacher) 19:30. Penalties: McCaig, stews", Ma. riucci.‘ (Gauthier. Third Period 7—Det1'olt. Llilldy (Stewart) 15131. Penalties: Dewsbury. Horcck, Marlucci. SATURDAWS GAME NEW YORK Nov. 1'7 - (AP) ._ 971113940 Bled: Hawks, sparked by ""06 80818 fl-rd two assists from Al“ Kaleta. stepped cut of the National Hockey League cellar Sat- lifday night b; beating New York Rangers 6-2 before a crowd of 15,516 at Madison Squaro Garden. The victory movrci Chicago one point ahead of the Rangers and 7 the idle Detroit Red Wings and 7 Al: Demarco and Bryan Hextali 7 scored the New York goals in the first and third periods. SUMMARY 1-21“; Izmir. De Mum (Whrwick) sandman. YOU MAY SKATE 0R PROMINADP "gt- ' ' 5M0! hlbl- B-Now Yolk. rr t ll (Include. . 1'9. T"! s-cliicaso. Hamill (Koiota) 10m Oiivilla) rfaxs. N o-cnioaso. Hamill (Kaleta. I '1 . Klleta (Wares. Ham- NIGHT nmtleyi rem - ilton) 10:25 Penalties-Manned. Jiamiranda. Alouettes o ton Wildcats 6 ham 28 5t. Bonaventure 26 Kings Point 0 Hobo-rt 12 Rochester 0 Colgate 25 Syracuse 7 Army 34 Pennsylvania 7 Washington 0 (tie) Dtla 39 South Carolina 0 14 Tulsa 17 Baylor 0 Stanford 7f Washington State 3 U.C.L.A. O1 Montana T Onion State I California-i Oanalan Football Booms Stanowski, Richard. Scoring -None. rAui; SEVEN Record iirowii ' SeesMapieLeafs Trim ilanaiiiens TORONTO, Nov. 17 —(CP)— Largest crowd ever to witness a hockey game in Canada, 16,315 fans watched Toronto Maple Leafs take undisputed leadership of the Nat- ional League Saturday night‘ when they whitewashed their arch-rivals, Montreal Canadians. 3-0. The record throng climaxed one of the most colorful ballyhoo cam- palgns in modern hockey history as the Leafs‘ Cornn Snlythe screamed “woodohoppers” at the Habitants after Frank Seiko, his former as- deliglifful to smoke PIP: Sol-gr Uri» ASK FOR l. Ui PLUG EN 5 L slstarit and pfiiellt Montreal. boss tabbed the Leafs publicly as “wrestlers.” There wasn't an empty seat in Maple Leaf Gardens and fans plac- ed cash on the line to stand four deep. Record-book thumbcrs similar scenes at the previous largest-crowd game when 16,242 fa/ns jammed into the Gardens to see the Leafs down the Red Wings in the seventh and final game of the Stanley Cup finals in 1942. The team that Smythe rebuilt continued to baffle the experts and the Leafs’ win over Canadians marked their sixth victory and third tie in 10 starts this season- not bad for a‘ club which finished out of the money last campaign. They outskated and outfought the champions all the way to give goalie Walter ('l‘.urk) Brods his first shutout of the season and cs- tablish him as the current leader for the Vezina goaltending trophy. generally rated as the No. 1 reason for the Leafs’ comeback. Broda has allowed only 22 puck: to slip past him in 10 contests. ‘Illa, Turk was the genre's individ- ual star but the scoring hero was Ted Kennedy, who won't be 21 till next month. The centre bagged both of Toronto's second-period goals after Captain Syl Apps open- ed the scoring in the first session. Playing their third game in four nights the Canadians were tired and only a. shadow of the team which won the world championship last spring. Their main stumbling block was Brcda. recalled of of lz-rrui-o, Macfntyra (c. mm.) “mu” 15.12. n"; pm“ 13-7711". c- 300071 19-45- le-Toronto Apps (Stewart, Bodnar) Penalties: Medynski, Kean-is, 5:31 g Howell. Penalty —Meeker. Second Period 2-Toronto. Kennedy (Meeker) 6:54 FOOTBALL SGURES i’;I-.°°°"‘°' “°’“‘°"’ ‘s’“°""‘" Peralties -— Reardon, Bouollard. Third Period l! Ba Oanalan Pnu Ill lot lira! Toronto Argonauts 12 Montreal 0.31.11. Final Toronto Baimy Beach 13 Hamil- lntoruiedlatc lntoroolegfata Western 20 Queen's 2 U. l. College Football Results East ' Columbia 46 Lafayette f) Penn State University 33 Ford- Yale 30 Princeton 2 Comell 21 Dartmouth 7 Temple 27 Buckneli 6 Buffalo 28 Carnegie Tech 0 Rutgers 55 Lehigh 6 - Harvard 28 Brown _t) Williams 21 Amherst 13 William and Mary 20 George Connecticut 12 New Hampshire i2 v MHIIQQ Michigan M Wisconsin 6 Nebraska 33 Iowa State 0 Notre Dame 27 Northwestern 0 Minnesota 16 Iowa 6 . Michigan State 20 Marquette 0 Maryland 24 Washington and Lee Georgia 41 Auburn 0 North Carolina 26 Wake Forest North Carolina Stat. 2'! Virginia Texas Tech 14 Oklahoma A (i: M Oklahoma 3'1 Missouri G Rice 2'1 Texas A d; M 10 Pbrwut tongs. Kaieta (M. Bentley) ll i Penalties —Thcimson. Leger. other point when he came back af- ter a wobbly first set to defeat Bill Moreside of Dalihousle 2-6, 6-4. 6-2. In the last singles encounter Breen Marten of McGiu ousted Ian Rusted Spencer and Duford combined to defeat the Dalhousie dvililes pair the second doubles event another McGill combine of Duff and Mal-fen trimmed Dunlap and Fennall 6-3. 6-3. MONTREAL, ‘Nov. 17 -—(CP) - McGill University netmexi won the dominion championship last Monday tihey subdued Dalhousie University by (winning every match of the sev- en match series. intercollegiate tennis when lack Spencer of MoGiil had lit- tie trouble beating Blair Dunlap of Dalhouste 6-1, 6-1 in the first singles event. Colin Ramsay of McGlll out- stroked Herb Creighton of Dal- housie to win 62. 6-3. Bobby Duford of McGill was extended to three sets to overcome Fred Fennell 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Jim Duff gave the McGilliruls an- Dalhotrsle 9-7. 6-2. Rusted and Moreside $4, 6-3. In Blake Scores Three Goals As Habs Defeat Bruins 4-1 Meiiill Wins Tennis Title BOSTON. Nov. 1'1 - (AP) With the veteran Toe Blake per- forming the three-goal "list trick." Montreal Cansdlens subjected the Boston Bruins to their first Na- tional Hcckey League home set- back by a. 4-1 margin tonight be- fore a packed 13,900 crowd at tha Boston Garden. Canadiens, in action for tho fourth time in five nights. outskatod the well-nested Bruins from start to finish. Blake sent the Flying French- inen on their way during the 13th minute of the opening period when. while retreating from the Boston zone. he intercepted a clearing shot and swung inside the defence before blasting goalie Frankie Brimsek with s, sizzling six-footer. Tile Montreal left winner's other counters were registered dllfintl ‘h! first. 1'1 minutes cf second period action. with ‘visurim (the Rocket) Richard assisting on both. Bloke’! No. 3 went in while the Bruins were short-handed. Summary First Period L-Montreai, Blake 12:54, Penalties: None. Second Period 2—Montreal. Blake 4:48. S-Montreal. Blake 16%!) (Richard) (Richard) Penalties: Schmidt. Guldolin. Third Period REMEMBER WIIEII By Hie Canadian Press Hamilton Wildcats dropped a, 6-0 decision to Toronto Balmy‘ Beach two years ago today but a] nine-point lead piled up the prev-l 4. Montreal, Rosy (Gravelle) 7:11. . . i-Bosi-on. Cowley (Guidolin, Henderson) 16:41. Penalty: K. Reardon. -_. __. ‘ straight Ontario Rugby ‘ Football Union title on the total-points round. Montreal's highly-regarded Navy squad upset (he Cats for tho 0 %/n for the 6th time. ._,-» ./ W? ivllb é . . MATGIIEI) GAIN this year every player of the Montreal Canadiens wore C.C.M. Matched Skating Sets and they won the Stanley Cup V’? y l. SKIN’ 1K1" if /./ fw/‘l/ (/ l/ g/‘(r/(‘f W?) (f. ious week gave them their second Grey Cup the folloiwing week. i/WMW IS WON 0N // Hi6 SETS The "Allan Cup” was wonilast season by the Calgary Stam- peders, making them the Canadian Senior Amateur Champions, with C.C.M. Matched Skating Sets on every player ‘but one. The Winnipeg Monarchs won the "Memorial Cup", making them the Canadian junior Amateur Champions, and every player but one wore C.C.M. Matched Skating Sets. Such overwhelming evidence as this on the excellence of C.C.M. Matched Skating Sets on every out of skating can be your guide so purchasing. 'C'C°M° IHTGIEE SIITIIG SETS .'.7/( .' ////// /