-The_ Bliili STRETGII (Continued from Page l) field but Heatherbeli was full of ;_ trot and won all three heats with Ross K- 4-3-3. 5N1!’ 0-, 0-4-3. Mc- Elwyn the Great 2-7-4, Hanover Courier 3-3-0 and two other start- ers. Time, 1.11 l-4-—a new track record. The second heat was also a new track record of 2.11 and in . the third heat be spin sshssd it lo 210 3-4. O O O O The next start was at Montague August 5th. in the 2.15 Trot and Pace and it was a race looked far- ward to, as Piuoky Scott 2.00 1-2. recently purchased by Dr, it. F. Seaman, had been splendidly pre- pared by trainer Tyndall Semple ' and had actually worked a mile very close to 2.08 the week orior lo the race. It was a real contest with Plucky Scott winning the first, heat in 2.08 3-4 by a short margin, Heatherbeli racing her nil the way. In the second heat Heath- beil outfooted Plucky Scott in the race to the wire in 2.08 1-4, which was the fastest heat ever trotted in the Province up to that time, and a new track record for Mon- tague. Star G. was 3-3-2, Trixie Voio 0-1-3, McEiwyn the Great 4-4-4. Hanover Courier 5-5-5 and Ross K 7-0-7. O O O O lfeatherbell was a starter st Charlottetown two weeks later would he have wished to. Ho glor- ied in racing. in fact as Scott de- scribes it he "felt the fierce Joy which heroes fuel when meeting foemen worthy of their steel.” 1n my own experience I never had a horse that knew when race day arrived more surely than Heather- bell, His one good eye would flash and he would stamp the floor, Just anxious to get at them. H9 had to be turned away from the pole so as to utilize his good eye. but it did not make any difference if .he was meeting the fastest pacers in the land-ii’ you could get him headed down the trlack as they turned there were few that could outfoot him. O O O O Because of his peculiar confor- mation he could trot turns faster than any horse that ever stepped on the Charlottetown track. in fact that was one of his best places to wear out an opponent. He was a horse that was beloved by all and the name of Heather- bell seemed to weave a spell of enchaniment on horse lovers whenever mentioned. Great war- rior that he was. we hope-if there is a Valhalla for horses- that when the great. day arrives he will go to it and enjoy the most pleasumble- existence and be among the greats of the turf of all B508. I but was still suffering from a hock injury and wKs not up to his best form, finishing 5-5-4 in a. great race which was won by Dr. R. F‘. Seaman's great mare Plucky Scott with 1-1-3. her first heat being in 2.00 1-4 and her second in 2.08 2-4. (Plucky Scott is a picer). 1n the futurity races at Charlottetown held September 7th. there was s, match race between l-lsntherbell and McElwyn the Grcai, arranged to give Heather- bell an opportunity to set up a new track trotting record. This he did in the first heat when he lowered Silk Girl's 200 1-4 to 2.09. In the next heat he cut a quarter of a second off it leaving it at 2.08 3-_4. O O O O ; Heatherbelis next start was at Fredericton, Sept. 17th. The field included Chestnut Harvester 2.07 ‘l-Z. the leading trait-er in Maine, Lusty Frisco. 2.07 l-2 nnd Morning Express 2.02 1-4. Heaiherbell won in three straight with Lusty "risco 2-4-2, Chestnut Harvester 3-2-3. Morning Express 4-3-4. Heather"- heil ‘yore the Harvester horse doum by stepping on the outside of him to‘ the half in 1.02 ihcn fucking in and beating him out on the home stretch. The time 2.09. 2.08 l-2, 2.00. was the fastest lhree heats ever trotted by a Mari- time owned trotter In the Mari- limes and the only three heats faster than these were stepped by O O O The St. Croix’Di'iving Club sponsored Thanksgiving races at St. Stephen that uncovered speed that had been previously thought non-existent. In the No. 1 Classi- fied Milton Budlong was l-1-‘1. leading Rsmonadale, Carnation Indy, Lone: Ace and Inflation in that ordcr. Tinrc. 2.15. 2.13 1-4. 2-13 1-2. Milton Budlong was bred by F‘. G. Kennedy. Souihport. PEI. His slrc is Calumet Budlong 2.02 3-4 and his dam Lou Patch 2.09 1-2, a mare which Mr. Kennedy im- Doried from Ohio, where she had been a great race mare. He was sold to therl-lte J. Pope Clarke as a two-ycar-old and given some training and christened Milton Budlong after Mr. Clarke's friend Milton Bell. Later on he was acquired by Marne Kennedy, O‘l'.4eary, who raced him in mat- inees and sold him to Art Brven- ion. Mr. Brycnton traded Milton Burllong for Calumet Bee Loni,‘ with J. D. Mehan. Si. Stephen during Old Home Week. ‘The No. 2 Classified was won by Tnlugl in three straight. best time 2.12. In the Free For All Wildcat Volo was 2-1-1. with Dale H. 1-2-2. best time 2.10 1-2 for Wildcat Voln. It was one of the best performances Wildcat Volo h-"d turned in since brought from Maine some months ago. Peter Pokey st_ Fredericton. Sep- . tember 13th. 1004-207, 2.00, 2.08 1-4. HeatherbelPs final start was at Halifax where a wet track and heavy going made a slow race which was won by John Dean. best time 2.12. ' O O O O In the Spring of 1001 Heather- ’ hell changed hands. passing to O. M. Alexander. St. John. N. 8., but was sold later to L. Barrieau. Acacia. N. B. That season he took Dart in six races winning one at Pnrt Elgin. September 20th, best lime 2.1’! 8-4. He was then owned by Mr. Barrieau. In me he only started twice. winning his first race at St. Stephen. August 21st. with 1-1-1. ‘for McKinney 2-2-2. Sunshine Express 3-4-3, Madame Belwyn 4-0-4._'ti|na 2.11 3-4. 2.10. 2.10 1-2. lie was then owned by William Aleirinder. st. John. up. O O In 1919 he mpde four starts but > liid not win any of them. 1n 1040 ' lie was brought back to this Prov- liifie by Samkennedy In. where ii! ended his track oireer with starts at Kenslngton. Northsm and Montague. His former driver, Pat _ McKenna, was up behind him but “the years had caught up with the h treat old warrior and while he showed tremendous Ioeed. rush- ing sway into the lead from mat __ irotters like Boulre Hanover, June .lvans. Millie Kalmuck and oth- . "l- vet the staying power to carry him through to the wire was latt- Jiis although the spirit and dc- Carragher the i I gosh and Trem y in ax year old racing for E.P. Taylor M Toronto. found 122 110""!!! l°° 3"" a burden at Jamaica Park gsgrrspxwidenerk l-lal! MN!‘ "id Tremhlay Leading In Scoring Race MONTREAL. Nov. 8 -—(CP)—N“il Trembiay, fleet centre of Quebec Aces, is the leading scorer in. the Quebec senior Hockey League. statistics released by official scorer Dow Harney showed tonight. l With 16 points-four goals and 12 assists-the smooth Quebec play- rnaker has a two-point edge over his linemate Bobby Carragher who has scored 10 goals and assisted on four others. Little Pet; Morin of Montreal Royals is in third place with 13 points, with Jim McFadden of the unbeaten Ottawa senators another point behind. Places Third NEW YORK. Nov. l -—(CP)-— Windfields. Canadian-bred three- today third a lenIi-h b-hind I‘. llanchb Cllvldol- ierminati i Half After m0”: byvzaullzlnzthswawetime the pair imposed on any player who in- Although he was considered metputbctptbe Widener filly I114 lures an opponent by "hooking." ihmilsh for turf racing yet he did cdlvadm swept past the 6091441" ‘d. ‘L M ‘h. Mt disappear from public view. oolt tbs Qrstch runthls time. - II "i! "r i‘! In could sue his mind its; fourth and last. m n! un-mm“. a u. n“ ,A4_A44' panes sum light con must: mi iilS ISIANDIIS g - 12:10’ "We" Mi — Cresosnts took advantage of Truro’s unfamiliarity with the rink in the early stages of the game and chalked up a three-goal lead before Truro started their scoring ‘G ~whlle penalties weakened the Bali- fax squad. With Stanhope and rtedrncnd of! the ice. Truro flashed in three goals to tie the score at the end of the first period, Crescent: took an early lead in the second frame but Truro came back with four counters, three of them scored in the short space of one minute and 28 seconds to take a comfortable lead. Crescents bounced back in the first of the third in a vain attempt to regain the lead and garnered two additional tallies before the Truro team equalled their ithow- ing to capture the contest with a decisive 0-0 score. Bill Maclntyre was the big gun of the winners, gathering three o! his team's tallies. while Kink Mc- Donald and Jack Fritz each gath- ered two counters. All but three of 'I‘ruro's goals were scored while the Halifax Squad was pinyin! with men in the penalty box. As a paid crowd of 4.112 fans watched. Steele sewed up the game for Truro with a fast one- man breakaway just seven seconds before the final whiatle. Truro Bearcats Win Opener 9-6 From Halifax Crescents In Big Five Hockey League HLLIIAIN .l- (OPi-A With ltymie - on the sidelines Assault and Lucky Draw moved hi8. flat Truro Besmst squad open- -ed their Maritime Big Plva hockey llllfln with a 0-0 victory over Hall- fax Croscents here toniflst in a game in which penalties played an important part. _ SUMMARY Pvrmmts. Powell (Stlnhope, Wade) 2.04 F-Omwnts. Wade (Powell) am Fvreweats. O'Neill (Grey) 1.5a 4—'l'ruro. Maelntyrs (Grabowaki) 12.50 ii-filirgn. Manon-dd (Robertson) .52 " (i-Jrrum, mo: 14.20 Pemltiea-Stallliqih Redmond. libltl. Medynski. Second Period. 7 — Crescents, Wade (Isarabie. Campbell) 1&2 0-1???’ D. McDonald (Steele) ii-Truro. Maclntyre (Prits) 1431 10—'I‘ruro. Maclntyre 14.50 1l—'l‘ruro,1“ritz ([3. Roach) 10.24 l2. Medynski (C. Roach) 15-min». Steele 10.58 . Penaities—-Maclntyre, C. Roach, Madynski . (By Alan Harvey, Canadianfresa Staff Writer) NEW YORK. Nov. 8 - (OP)- Footbail built up tonight to a new kind of "lost, week-end." Literally "lost" ' to everything except football, thousands of fans jammed hotel rooms reserved six months in advance for the gaudy climax of the United States coi- lese season-tomorrow's Army- Notre Dame game in Yankee Stadium. ASainst a background of the biggest betting turnover in grid- iron history—about $15,000,000 will hiiige 0n the result-hotels report- cd not a single room nyailable "all the way io Philadelphia" in the stampede io attend this 33rd meeting of traditional college riv- Army - Notre. Dame‘ Tilt Highlights T0day’s U.S. College Football Schedule Scalpers prowled Broadway and the Bronx offering tickets at $220 pair-and finding plenty of tok- ers. Late betting shaved No-tre Dame's 6-5 favoritism to even money with a slight shift of sentiment toward Coach Earl (Red) Bialk's Black Knights from West Point Military Academy. whose big guns—Doc Blanchard and Junior Davis-pow- ered Army to 25 straight victories starting in 1944. ‘Newspapermen went frankly overboard for the game. Even re- strained writers agreed that for color. tradition and crowd aplI-Biii. this was the biggest sports attrac- tion in the United States since the Dempsey - Tunney "long-count" fight, perhaps the most alluring als. gridiron spectacle of the century. —CONTINUED— Rule 58.—I'1lgh Sticks (a) The carflllis of sticks above the height of the shoulder is pro- hibited, and s minor penalty may be imposed on any player violat- ing this rule. at the discretion of the Referee. (b) A goal scored from a stick co carried shall not be allowed, except by a player of the defend- ing team. (c) When a player carries or nolds any part of flis stick above the height of his should r so that injury to t-he face or h ad of an opposing player results. the Ref- eree shali have no alternative but i0 impose a major penalty on the offending player. (d) Batting the puck above the height of the shoulder with the stick. is prohibited. and when this occurs there shall be a whistle and ensuing fact-off st the spot where the offence occurred. un- less otherwise covered bv the rules or unless a nlaver of the defend- mg side shall bat the puck into his own goal. in which case the Know Your Hockey the centre line will divide the ice into halves. Should any player of a team. equal or superior in numerical strength to the oppos- ing team, shoot the puck from his own half of the ice, beyond the goal line of the opposing team. play shall be stopped and the puck faced off at the rink end spot of the offending team. unless on the play the puck shall have entered the net of the op- posing team. in which case the goal shall be allowed. (b) If the puck was so shot by a player of a side below the nu- merical strengthof the opposing team, play shall continue and the flee-off shall not take place. (c) if. iiowever. from a face- off. the puck shall go beyond the goal line in the opposite half of the ice. it shall not be considered o. violation of the rule. (d) If, in the opinion of the Referee or Lineman. a player of the opposing team excepting the goalkeeper is able to play the puck before it passes his goal line. but has not done so, the face-of! shall not be allowed, and play shall continue. (c) If the puck shall touch any sgengglpfiekmcimchem’ llmrmflty’ iy 50 per cent of last seasons‘ take Th!“ ha“ aithoughr it is too early to make any e inite statement on the 12 cigzfigamfifldig°nd (Luwbie- gatch. Miss: also appear ‘spotty’. u, sumnn (Oman) iry are not i0 be found on som_. Wednesday's norwvesier Ill: in- itcmltcsnt snow flawries we; e made to order duck day. and dud shooters were no’. slow to take ad- vantage of the oaportunity. The, day being a City holiday, urban) Iunaun ware out in force and many secured theda-ilyhlclimitofll birds per hunter. 1t is rumoured in reliable circles that some didn stop when the limit of 12 was rcnchcd but kept or tiiz-cwing lead as if their lives depended on shoot- ing as many liirdf as they could. I It takes the first snow flurry ts‘ start the ducks moving. The ‘raft! will often ride out tne heaviest sale without breaking up. but the snow flakes whirling and slanting in the wind acems to excite the] birds and fill them with a. wild restlessness. They decoy well in a snow squall and have the urge to move in close to land. The kill wur iwavv on Wednesday but the big majority of the ducks shot were oi. the northern red-legged variety. with the bright ycilow bills. 11x. northern flight is heavy this fall and at present thcre is n dearth of black ducks in the lnla d river: and on the off-shore tidal flats. and bays. ' EEEEEEEwwwQ;;wwwEEwEEEEEEEEEEQEEEEEEEEE ass Initial reports coming in from trappers indicate that; the musk- rat. catch will only be approximate- of their former favourite terriwr-l ies, but arqreasonably abundant on, other streams. Local fur buyer: have expressed ’tnv opinion thm] prices on all types of furs will b; down from last season If that isi true. the long fumed animals iii; fox, skunk and raccoon will be hardly worth trapping as this type of fur reached a 112W low last you. O I O Fox hunters with hounds count the sport almost as nluch as the price received for the pelts of th“ animals shot over their hounds Then again, there is always the c"- peciation of connecting with a platinum, white face or the old, reliable silver Even a ‘patch’ (known lo the fur trade as Cros fox) causes considerable excite- ment. Some of them are very hand-l scmc animals with the blending d red, rust and silver colors and of. len fetch hlgllc‘: prices than the silvers. I I O At time of writing. Gordon Brown, Pownol, is creciitcd with shooting the firs: fox c.f the sca-i 5011mm. was a: nice rcci and was] bagged on the owning day. Nov-em- ber 1st. His shooting companions. on the hunt, the two E.i's. Rcbcrt~ son and Wood, hat. an opportun-i ity to make it n twosome but muff- ed their chance. Pcor ammunition is blamed for more misses than all‘ other causes combined. No official word has been received from seV-I crai keen fox hunters in Prince County. and if they were success- ful in bagging a fox on the open- ing day, it will boil down to the hour in which the fox was shot in: order to officially declare tile win- uer. I I I Many large covey's of Hangar-t ian partridge are reported seen a l frequent intervals since the season closed. Scme of tnem hold as high, as 24 birds and it is evident that‘ those covey's did not run foul of. the numerous humers and theirl setters that were continually afield} during the smiling month of Octoq ber. If they did, they were lucky and didn't meet me seasoned huh-l ters with a pinch in each barrcL, 1'11 bet a dollar to doushnuts that if they had crossed the path of the staff with his ever and under browning. its a certainty that the covey of 24 would now be 22. Oh. well, its a good thing for the birds E 1E E , E E E E E E E El El E [-1 ngnoonnnnnnnnnnnn XMAS PHOTOGRAPHS —FREE— With each Order, Metal Frame, ony size. oven MONDAY to sarusosv Evening by Appointment.‘ PHONEl4LL Kennel llluh Spring Bircuit Announced AMHERST, N. S.. Nov. 8 —(CP) -The Maritime Kennel Club today announced that its spring‘ circuit would begin at Saint John, N. 13.. June 10-11. Other dates will be Moncton. N. B., June 13-14, Amherst. June 16. and New Glasgow. N. S.. June 20. l The Charlottetown unit has been i asked to make known its ‘ ' ' on tlhe allotted dale of J-une 18. Lf not the date will be taken by New Glasgow. Circuit entries will close May 31. 0iosing_Roliy Gives Bombers Rugby Title wmnrrrxs. ....;“=._.<=p._w...- nipeg Blue Bombers tonight wore EEEEEEEEEEEEEEE RemembranceDay _ November 1 1th - PROCLAMAlTOP-l IY HIS WORSHIP IJEARLE MocDONALD Mayor Of Charlottetown Whereas Remembrance Day, November llth has been mode o Statutory Holiday by the Dominion Government, I do hereby declare and request that in compliance with the sold regulations oil pioces of business in the City of Chor- iotiefown should remain closed during fhot day. Given under my bond this eighth doy of November i946. ly Order, JAMES A. FULLERTON. City Clerk. COOK'S EIEIIIEIEIEIEIIEIEEIEIEIEIEIEIEIEESC l , STUDIO Johnson Reported Slightly Improved WASHINGTON. Nov. 8—(AP)- Walter Johnson, famous one-time American League pitcher who Ms 1060 Malart . 2000 Man East . 2200 Marcus . 0000 Marlon 4500 Macfie .. 1000 McKenz 2520 McMar . that all of us can“. make p, double the familiar mantle of Western most every chance we get. If we Canada fuilby 0h8mi>i0li9 0-301‘ could, there is n possibility thatiupsetting Calgary Stampeders l2- some of us might shoot more than‘ 0 before 5,600 fans in Osborne soul shall be allowed. Inle 50.—Hoiding An Opponent. A minor penalty shall be 1m- posed on a player who holds an opponent with hands or stick or in any other way. lnle 00. -llooklng. (a) A minor penalty shall be imposed on a player who impedes or seeks to impede the progress part of aplayer of the oppodng team or his skates or stick before it shall have reached his goal iine. it shall not be considered to nave been “iced? (f) 1f. in the opinion of the Referee or llneunan. a legal pass has been attempted by a player 'to another player of the some ride. and the puck is not touched by any part of this player and goes beyond the opponents‘ goal lino. it shall not be considered as tent; to take what we actually need- ed and let the resl. go. s t Some amusing incidents are, coming to light, having to do with‘ experiences encountered in the field. The latcs: ms to do with n slight run in with a farmer that had a humorous ending 1t ap- pears that a qu-tricttc o! will k110i"! IPIM from the city were out look- ing for Runs. On a qillfl 5W0 mid- mgy we" ,, ' ,, an abandoned farm when they copied I 18189 covey sunning themselves beside a clump of lilac bushes that grew beside the one time Bite 0i the house. It was the first game seen for the day anzl all hands hastily dis-embarked from the car with shotguns in baud. Alas. their sally over the road fence was rudely halted when the farmer who had the property leased. happened to drive by at this most inopportuue moo-lent. we really should and not be con-fstadium here Saturday and taking the home-and-home series 30-21. Stampederavlctors 21-18 in the first game at Calgary. were with- in six mlnutes of their first West- ern crown since 1011 when the storm broke. ' In 54 minutes Bombers had been able to Whittle only one point off the Calgary lead. Walter Dobler's kick to touch in the third quarter for e single still left the home team two points behind and time was running out fast. 1f anything Stampeders had outplayed Winni- peg up to then. 'I'he turning point came when Martin (Butch) Gainer broke through on the Bombers 25-yard line to block an attempted place- ment by Billy Wusyk. The ball bounced back to the Winnipeg 46 and although Cal- gary recovered they flsiled to gain and surrendered it on downs. Then Dobler, Bombers’ quarterback. Brown. negro boxer of New Brunswick. N. J., after being knocked into the ropes in the third round of a fight herefl-lurs- day. was caused by a cerebral hemorrhage resulting fmm a brain concussion. County Medical Examiner William C. Wllientz said today. been critically ill since April, was 9000 Mew-it reported "slightly improved" Lo- 5975 M118 CW0 - day at Georgetown Hospital. 13°40 Myiflm ~ Johnson, a9. suffered a setback 1500 Masher - earlier this week but since has 400 N98"! regained some ground. He is being 3°99 New 314i! treated for a brain tumor. 7909 New C01" - 2000 Newnorth 250 Noranda lIIGHIrAND PARK. N. 1.. NOV. $25 OHrien . a-The death of 21-year-old Billy 2000 Omega . 4000 Omnltra 4500 Orenadn 8000 Oriac 30260 Osisko 5000 Osu .. . 600 Patnour 3500 Paymaster .. 45400 Morzone Mines 213810 Pen Rey 800 Perron 2000 Pore k _.... .... -.. 1200 Premier ..._. __ _... of an opponent. by "hooking" with his stick s. (b) A major penalty shall be HES Drive out AC "icing the puck" and the play shall continue. (g) If the Referee or Lineman snail have erred _in calling an "icing the puck" infraction when a team is below the numerical strength of tbs opponent, the puck shall be faced five fset in- side the defending sous of the tum at the greater strength. and midway between the sides of the rink. (h) If the Referee or Unesman shall have erred in calling the "loin the punk" infraction when both tllms are at eoual numer- ical strength. the puck shall be ‘ fassd tn the neutral sane at the free-off spot farthest from the s: of the team last in posses- ' m Io mums) AUIIIQIJNS ANTS l O O It was apparent that he had I01- ten out the wrong side of the that morning for he shouted fired a perfect forward from mid- ‘fleld to Harry Fitzgibbons on the m Stampeders‘ 20 and the Winnipeg end roamed across untouched. " ' d8‘ 1h - m an D.“ ‘ lust after the kick-off. Bombers’ m’ pnmta r hmpmg m; Iarry Hood intercepted a forward thssswas memberofthsqmr-WWlflflImG-lssrfsflbuttwo tette of hligtoors who could be de- triu netted only a yard. with third pended on to wrangle his way out and nine to l0. Doblsr dropped Nildodwan to wangls his way out hack for what every one-includ- empdsie by the $11111: ‘eplitoedienitng 1111;‘ ‘ti: starnpeaen-belrevud to be stickingthe mu eo .slun a c. the air and pulling ‘the trissrr.’ Instead thb wily North Dakotan The covey very cousins; mac 1:0 fired another perfect pm to new across the low in-o a iri-gh; Dough Gauthier behind the Cal- iv flrgéledi-gd-“Yilfxfrewamr garv line and it was 12-0. and with a most wnssish Ifin 0n '-'< face menu-cu Tomas pnrta the opposite m. u; m. ms ms ridge are they now? He was on took their shot. They were success- es; "$.33 iii.'.'.‘.i..".l.“..°l'..’.°t"..ll.‘t'“t..ii‘“t i011 for the 11d‘ fared farmer to do is. those four partridge tasted bet- 3050 Reva . ‘I00 Home I100 Indian 6400 Kirk L 2000 Lenin 1000 Lli. LL ~ Australia hasroorespzofes ofantsbut stand by and ws-tch while the ier than any of the others that than II 0th: sealant. laugunnersclimbedtlsslsacsnnwarsahotlstarintbsow. 1000 Homer . 40M Ionics; . soco Hugh am _.. _.: 10w Inspir 1275 Int Nick ._... .... .... scoo Jackal .. 7000 Jason 88700 Joliet 626 Kerr Add s ...... _.. 2100 Kirk To .-...' _._ .... 330 L Shore .. 000 IAbrad . 10200 Lapaska 000 Preston . 8600 Purdy 10007 Quemont -—— 01700 Regcrt (Continued From Page 6) 1M0 Roche". no 0° um 500 Rouyn .. 1200 Goidvue 1:93:03]? h“ coco Halliwell “"‘ 1000 Harker . 288 5'“ Am‘ 3°00 “mic 25600 Sannorm “m Hdwny __ 2000 Senator . 1100 Hedley w” shenm 1500 Sladen .... .....--.. ..-»...-.. 18000 Silv Millq- 1N0 Slrlnger .