' It .1‘?- »" t‘ 1' ‘i - a1 .. . . . v _ N l, . . . .. _ t . i.‘ . i. _ .. .¥ 1165104131532» 1924 THE CHARLOTTElQWN GUARDIAN SPORTING NEWS iiiiiiii wii Beiat Montreal in 10p- Thirteen or fourteen years ago, John ‘McGraw paid $11,000 lor enlng N’ H’ L‘ Fix‘ Rube Marquard. and the baseball world, then an institution ol over 20 ture $00M of Pears’ standing in a professional way, gasped, When Barney Dreyluss 2 to 1 peeled olf 822-000 tor Marty O'Toole, fans and magnate; blinked and _ condemned the orgy of ext-a _ sweeping over the national game. The Boston Bruins. Art Ross’ Eight or nine years later $100,000 and over was paid tor Babe Ruth, last band of Dllirli chaser! Illflllv and hardly a icultcr was heard- Now. pro hockey has unwrapped” itself ‘ thhir debut in tlhisNugiolgl-fll "ilckeypl its swaddlinq ciclhes and offers undreamed of several years I00 arc . iniufgf an; bandied about with sangtrold. Montreal coolly offers twenty grand tor v “m0 0r 2 to 1_ A Tecm-d attendmrithe choice ol three Ottawa players. Salaries below $2,000 are considered , u, v‘rwcd .11"; game. and when the paltry wages. Business opportunities are presented that would make a » PAGE SEVEN , ‘ . (‘rowds Came So Thick We Could Hardly Wait on Them All. FULL SlURE HQUSE CROWOltID SPORTING COMMENT PRO HOCKEY uuwnaavso 5. ..=-_'- _ ' ‘p _ V, tiiinl Wlltltillig‘ blow, pantlenioiiiuni captain oi industry stare in amazement. Altogether the status of the t‘ , 4-"_-._. i i" .= ' b ~ -' hulk" l°°“"- “l” “Wong” "l ‘he hockey player has been als d t unheard-of d r O i th 4 l I I I \ i - " 9 until“IliivligidlndvgiaThrfodziovflld Wm‘ of the players about to irasseoutooTnthe picture, as: ti; fcrrvzisr '1 ‘ ill all‘ iu i ‘ ‘ ' ~ -_<-O—} heard chanting an anthem regretting the tact that they were born a little too soon. i i. 6i iitiss . 50800" midi: the grade in attendance anyway in its first protes- B l N “clonal engagement. Five thousand fans saw what must have been a very satisfactory game, according to press reports. For an exhibition l _ "ilillfe that isn't to_o ‘sad. Bruinsh ave been given tons ol space in the L"! night the Yachtsmc“ won Boston press, Most of the wntoups are apparently written by “experts? , lroiii iht- U. N. R. hy 104 ping on to whom some ol the finer points of hockey are as foreign as n pair of. the iii-agile Alloys. skates to an Arab, but quantity makes up for quality. Reading some of (l. lfliisory n! the Ytirhtsmcit rolldthe “c” . . pts one would think the Boston Bruins were about to leave ‘Ill hiuh single score 210 pins. _ r-"nowlng are the scores; their lamiile»: to go over the top at liivs o'clock in the morning- They BUNKER HILL OVER AGAIN The Toggerygsets the Pace in Value-Giving It was physically impossible to serve everyone. People came from all parts of tho city and vicinity and n11,- ' flocking to this unusual Season Money Saving Event. N ever have we hold a sale that provedso popular with the thrifty folks of Charlottetown. VACTITSMEN: H“ l“ Fr mean well, however. andthey leave no stone unturned to impress the < "‘,§§f.,,;y" 143 21,‘, 2,',’4'|"‘='il= of the same is it animals to-tliii” °" '""° Public. Women were buying, men were buying, overcoaiii furnishings and hats galore. Merchandize is going at a tre- A Rt .. . 1x1 15o ~— . . ' _ , , h. Fan?‘ __ _ 1* m ,7, “ n _ r W d mendous rate, but this big sale has only started. You have never witnessed the l1kc.. Our stock 1s new and up-to- .i. riyhti . . . . . i 11:: m. 83 a e, theminute" Buy now. 121 792 815i Returns HOIIIG ’i‘tii:|l zssii. . , , . .= . . . moo-em %-—~>'> 0®—&<~o-->oo-¢-e ------ s AIlEYS t 221i. nun; (I “mummld ' ' ' ' ' " 121 154 113 New" llflllliiwllik hockey fans E ‘ i lilntyrlreeii" ' ——_ throunh his service with Frederic- N 5 I N 0 n ‘ _ t‘: poyle 144 181 13o TELEPHONE co BOWLING li-(‘litluilrlrllgdllilillgidVéllpuiggylilglltligrlzlawi: a e doz menys Hea __“'_',_—‘“" ' out with "Nowsy" Iaiondcfs Saska- ' ' '_ ‘ ' Tomb M84 705 Us 85"‘ LEGEE toon tt-iiiii oi tho wohtern Canada 0r ' 'l‘oni;:ht thi- lnvlntiihlt-s zinil llanti boy..- will lHllllP for honq-rs, This ' should ho n goml game and the inns im~ ruining to son it Who will win. Sillllfllily niiziit on tho \-'.M.(‘..A. Alloys ilii- liisiilaiiors won lroiii Jim-i Switch Hooks liy a majorly of 2'11 tziinizalioii. Wuiio ucctiinpzinied tho Shviks to 110M011. where they play- vti ‘Fhiirsiiziy night against l'he Bos- ton Bruins. of tho N. ll. L. in an i-xliihilion match. Ho was not used in iiily of the games in "which Ila- loiiiii». WDTktlil out his Sheiks against rlii- (‘zinzitlioiis illlll other eluiis, hut wnrki il out in priiclicv. ' Wade stated thiit the hockey 0t. tho hrzintl wheh he hail set-n put up hy Saskatoon illlll N. ll. IA. clirbs was wit lhu fnslvst klntl. He . ._ _ pins. ‘M! (Wflmum ’l‘ln,~ following are the scores: t t Charlottetown = Wsuimsa . I it‘. Monro . . . . . . . . .. ' 17~i liili Bowling League... .~ 118 1... »ll. lii-iiiziii .. R9 141 Tilt-Fl‘ ivas another game of the |'- MPllllllfi 137 144 lit-astute League bowled last night J- Gilrilllill" - 0- 201 133 llt'lli‘ljl‘ll liip Rntllo tinil Tt-iiinsittirs.’ '4' a w tin» iiilti~i~ winning out iiy 201 pins." ' 330 719 303 Tih- sfllifPS were its follows: | Tillilla 3002- Tizaivisrgns; ' . SWITCH HOOKS: ii. Josoy _ _ _ _ , _ _ __ 153 117 135 S, ll. Smith . . . . . . .. 131 141 214 (l. Lziiti-r .. . 122 64 t 8R W. slil-‘INTF -- ~- 142 ll .\li'|lllll'lll . 120 o2 iii? lRilv/yiifiy 1171; sory . 120 lfiti 179 1- ‘l’ -'\ l’ -- li. Jflstly . . 12s W. A. Smith . . 153 174 173 Ifz-iibiilcio 1+1 11s m ’l‘iilnl~ 1X30. y Total» 22-11. RADIO: i ' .|_ canal] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 35 122 145 0n ‘Piiosday, Nov. 25. the Trans i (‘nsiolln . . . . . . . .. 145 iiiilivrs lill‘fi‘t'flilz‘i’l’;(llil‘v insulators liy \ titvtiniiiilil 101i n major ly n l. p118. It. Daiziei 130 -—~ ~ l., 1min)" __ 9n 75 145i 'l‘hori- will hv n match gnmo Dec. '--_.__.-- _-_~.~ Iiril |i(‘l\V1!l‘ll the Rovers and Stars. 441i 504i 670i Th0 highest iienrii of the ovnlng ’l‘fllfll~——<lfi2n_ was rollotl hy B. Joshy 1H6 pins. would roqiiiri: SPIISOIIiIlK to stay w’ih hockey of that class. Thu following are the scores: TRANSMITTERS: E. MoNevin . . . . . .. 187 177 141 ll, hlcAulay . .. 135 151 ll. ltevnan 124 167 1V, Dvwzir .. 161 165 G. ilrtuly 102 117 697 699 741 Tolal- 2127. INSULATORS: it‘. Monro . . . . . . . . .. 158 J. Gnriihiim . . . 116 .1. MoAiiiny . 105 < TA. Sir-wart - R6 W. Smith .. . . . . 1-i3 1R1 148 700 G11 613 Tnt:il~192~l. OMEN skaters will take pride in the beautiful models of C.C.M. Automobile Skates designed especially for them. Model F, for example, is a little jewel among skates. Wonderfully light, yet exceedingly strong. Shaped for speedy, graceful skating. And so brilliantly finished it shines like a piece of new silver. With a pair of these on your feet you can skim over the ice with,‘ the ease and grace of a swallow, and enjoy every minute. I These beautiful C.C.M. Women's mod- els are made of the ssrne Chrome ickel. Steel as in the models used b the champion hockey players and the C.C.M. Spec Skates used by Miss Gladys Robinson, the Women's International Speed Champion. The blades are hard as plans outside, but with an interior “core" of tough stee that makes C.C.M. Auto- mobile Skates practically unbreakable. All: our dealer to show you C.C.M. models for ladies. f you are a '_‘figure" skater, ask to see the C.C.M. Fi re Skate and the Winter Club. There are also C.C.bT.umodels for men and boys——tor everybody -—£or pleasure skating, hockey and racing. Canada Cycle & Motor Company,’ Limited Ientusl. Toronto. WIITON, ONT" Wllanlpa], Vancouver can. utooilc Model r-sm; 2 to 1014-85-00 i tiful Models forWonien I! your ankles bother you, use C.C.M. IMPROVED STEEL ANKLE SUPPORTS IIULMAIPS Summenside . Hockey Headquarters C. C .M. Skiates are best GET YOUR SPORTING GOODS AT HOLMAN’S , $25-00 MEN’S SUl i n u I I tlier Hose, regular 85 cent value. Sale price NOW Swing W ...........59.. 3 g -;- ehg-Q- 9 {M3 02-50 MEN’S . WORKSHIRTS Extra heavy drill khaki shades. NOW ....$]_5Q or» 4)» <1!» 9-0 <3 03-00 MEN’S UNDERWEAR Combinations, tru knit make. For suit NOW..... .... ......$g_g5 ->—>é{-o—e- 02-50 DRESS GLOVES- . Grey suede, unlined. Excel- lent value. NOW. $138 —$—~l-l—$€—{ 00-00 MEN’S SWEATERS Heavy wool ribbed. The real thing for winter. NOW .....$3_39V $16.50 pppggiut; $30-00 OVERCOATS GOWNS Lovat shade, 3 piece belt, i“ Shades "f 0'0"‘ “"0 Rich greys and lawn plaid check lining. NOW.. greys. NOW . . .. shades_ N0w_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ '>-->o -o-—o--s eo€— 02-00 MEN’S CAPS $250 MEN’S Hundreds 0f articles we A large range 0f patterns. A large range of ‘rich pat- - k 7 001115- Nllw - - - - ~ $1.59 prices tell their own story. _ @ <-¢-4>-<\- o- ¢~ ~c—o-oo4~ terns, regular 75c, 0n sale NOW .......49 $35.00 BLUE suns Best English indigo, neat smart models. For men who know. NOW.$27.5() }—i-t3~-i——i\g< 030-00 MEN’S SUITS Heavy brown tweeds, the real thing for winter. NOW ONLY . $3.50 MEN’S WORK PANTS Heavy wool. Excellent wear. NOW . . . . $269 $2.25 MEN’S CAPS Heavy wool and fur ear bands. All sizes. NOW.. .. “$125 iiee-t- G %—1 t- have no room to list. Plain Save The To g’ ge rym iiitisi» NOW 123 Queen St. Charlottetown, P. E.I. Buy NOW