0 1 l Apostoli And Clash Tonight For New York Middleweight State NEW YORK. Nov. 1'1 -(AP)—- The middleweight championship of New York State will be fought out att-he Garden tomorrow night between a couple California Italians, Fred Apostoli and Young Corbett 3rd. The reason a more extensive title will not be_at stake ill the ia-round battle ls the fact that the National BoxingAssociation,‘ which rules the ganle in 47 other states and the District of Colum- bia. regards Solly Krleger of New York as the ISO-pound king. Corbett. a 33-year-old southpaw, won a close lfl-round decision over Apostoh in San Francisco inst February. That is the only smear on Apostolrs record, which includes knockout victories over Marcel Tllil of France, Freddie Steel and Solly Kriegcr. Unless a lot of fans change their minds in the last hours, the turnout illrcatrns to be a poor one, probably not over 10,000. The bruit-busting business nev- er was more ludicrous than this week WllhlWI) self-styled middle- weight champions fighting for the title and n third lnirililetvcigllt beefing , nd long that he is the head guy of the division. The combatants are Fred Apog- loll and not-so Young Corbett III, who will meet amidst wild dis- Interest in the Madison Square Garden ring tomorrow night. The third “champicn" is " 5019mm; Kriegcr. a Brooklyn boy. who t’; all intents and purposes has been handed the short end of the stick 9 (By The Canadian Press) Alex Connell was signed by Ottawa Senators of the National lfockey League 14 years ago today. lie guarded the nets for the Sen- ltors until 1933 when Ottawa drop- d out of the league. He went to etroit Red Wings in 1934 and in i935 helped Montreal Maroon; win the Stanley Cup. ;KEEPING WRESTLING NOVEMBER 13. 193B BOWLING HOCKEY. Corbett Will Crown b? "he New York State Athletic gimmlfmh- Krkser Whiled the as g“ °I A] 505ml. recognized “n: flmlllon in 47 states, onlyio e W35 Just another fighter in his own back yard, HgIgKCOmmissIon didn't recognise i“ champion because he hflcl won the title from meddle $19918. one of the Commission's Dfqblem children. It ordered A905- toll and Corbett to get together and then blessed the union wt h a gm?- llhf two Califomians are the E§Z'l‘.'“§8i.".’l‘ab§"l§i‘£§ul°‘ii‘.‘°"""" Lsigrklls thelad man. e dw- 9 1 t tk 911i‘! fight ehaas gt“ Trlessenatlfoufipél.‘ 03C} i‘ 9" lmkm! like a warmed _ amateur for o few days, is beginning to move and hit but he 5m‘ 15 i‘ 1°11! iii/fly from being a. Bu“ lso-Pounrler. Also he looks bad against southpaws Corbett is one of the southpaw- ingest 59111111101175 You ever saw. He ls 33. a toucn heavy in the legs aim “Pllbpnunded abuot the nog- 811. Cor ti; b t A ' coast lastewiiliaecar. Paste“ on the Manager H i C loudest and {mist atgllkrler Tn f2: {lsht business and he has been go- 1118 hard ever since the Commls. sion gav hi b around. e S 0y Sony the m“ "We bent Hosiak," be howls "We can lick both these mugs in the same night. What do they do? They say Sclly must fight the Winner of this thing before Jan 30. Tilats a crime. We should get the usual six-month rest." --~-_-- I __ _L._..—__-.—_—_—. Hockey Results International Final Hershey 3, Philadelphia 1 Syracuse 5, Providence 3. ‘Use Mlnurds for colds. SNAPSHOT CUIL ' SCORE ' 7 ‘Offset exposure, n In this snapshot, yield: more pleasing pictures. Use an axpooure quldo. WlNGlNG out of autumn, why not pause for a moment to total up your season's picture-score, before you dive into the fun of this winter's picture-taking? Take your recent prints, figure out your batting average. determine Your most frequent nllslnkee~and you will be better able to avoid those errors in the future. liow many tinles were you "struck out" by ullllcrcxpnsllrc? Bring out i110“! undorcxposeil flluls, anti study thelll. Arc they lllosily curly-morn- ilii! 0r late-afternoon shots? lf so, You should watch the sun more “Wiilily. When it is ucar the hori- lon, null begins to take on a yellow tinge, its light is luucll weaker-and You should compensate by using l Wider lens opening, or a slower shutter speed. Did you underexmse on cloudy days? Light is weaker thell. The lat- iiudc of modern illms will take care 0f reasonable errors in exposure. but on a dull day it's always safe. 1° Open up the lens to the next larger mal~k—f.6.3 instead of L3. 191,011; ample, 1f you underexpcsed on bright, ""1117 days, when the light was at its best, you were simply using too tor speed. Au inexpensive pocket exposure guide will help protect you from such errors—-get one, and use it on every camera exclusion. They cost but little-and some are given away free. subject movement or camera un- steudiness? Here's ltil easy cure. Just use a higher shutter speed. if your customary exposure is 1/25 second at f.l1, try using 1/50 sec- ond at f.8 or even 1/100 second at f.il.3. And another point: when you press the shutter release, don't jerk. Hold the camera firmly, push the release easily. Pretend you're firing. a rifle at a distant. target, and tllc shutter relcaso lever is the triggcrf Are your pictures framed cor- rectly’! Do they show what. you ex- pected? If not, watch that new- finder! It gives you a "preview" of the picture. is focusing correct, de- tails sharply defined’! If not, prac- lice judging distance, so you can set the camera scale correctly-and try using a tape measure or range- firulcr for close-ups. ' A picture inventory is good camera ——note down your "weak spots"- and you're better set for a successful winter snapshot season. 21o John van Guilder small a lens opening for your abut- ANp-‘iiiieiflu GEAR FonMiIfN it NEWS How about blurred pictures, from _ ififnlig‘, Clfecrwufsummer snaps-- PiéK UP Q NEW CREW‘ FNew System Of Refereeing Prize Fights __i._ LOB ANGELIB, Nov. 17-'Ilhe 10b of refereeing a. prize-fight here is bwom-ins very complicated and wit-fusing. They don't use tile old method of simlvly raislnl h. man's hand at trhe end of e. bout. thus proclaiming him the Winner-they have a system now. After each round the referee announces the leader in that stanza and the re- wlt 1s ward. like when the Yan- kees get through batting and they tack up eight runs on the scoreboard. Customers May Howl Tile scheme is very worthwhile. 1118-11115! because it gives e cus- tomers a chance to howl for l0 straight rounds instead of having to be content with just, one big boo at the finish of the match. And the referee, too, who csmd Easily survive this one blast of disapproval and also duck the looming sports pages 1f things had R0110 $00.1’ the night before, can now show his‘ ability m absorb punishment for nearly an hour imlngdstill hold his ground, or his B 'I'he suite Athletic Csmmlsslon, alarmed over a succession of dis- puted decisions, accepted this gnlque scoreboard idea. It has een a sensation. of a sort. ever since. The fl-DeX of something was "gamed “'0 nikhts ago when Jim- lnv Garrison of Kansas City fought Georgie Crouch and Mr. Abe Roth, a. furniture salesman by clay, was gereree- The 81111911’ was stunned- "1 hot for limit-When Mr. Rbth at the end of the first round step- Jed Into 11 neutral comer, took p, telephone frcm an attendant and whlscted two other attendants stationed at the scoreboards at Ol-Ygz-Sltewendiswof the hall. is ep l mm on for l0 rounxzll; rlude went Galento Loses Prestige Over Thomas Bout NE“! YORK, Nov, 17—'I'he New York boxing mob is in mourning over the Tony Galento-I-Iarry Thomas affair in Philadelphia Monday night, fearing the game in general will be dampened by the splash. ' speculcallv, the lVLlke Jamrbs 8100p is afraid the blasting given T0ny's third-round knockout. vic- tory will keep customers away from Friday night's middleweight scrap between Fred Apostolt and YOUIIR Corbett III at Madison Square Garden. The fight fan is a scary bird at ‘best and the locals think it was a dirty trick for Galento and Thom- as to flush the flock lust when winter was coming on. “It was nothing but, greed," de. ciarcd the managers of several big- hiwle flshters. “Here we had what looked like b big season cumin’ up 11nd these {nuke have to come along and ruin lt. Galento ooulda walt- vd a few months until he ma Clear recovered from that pileu- monla and then fought a, real flirhter. Now he's ruined. The consensus is that Tony is runed. all rtgh-t. He is no lonner" welcome in Philadelphia, and any cilances he previously had of ggt- ' time a big mm under Jacobs’ w. arpllvclestar? ‘acne. 0s o h "ir-“J-‘tii? better exhlbltio: Tlfgrgz g-llhmb: however, no more loud talk gbgut: Galento chalienklnz Joe Louis for the heavvwelsilt title. There never was much sense to 1t, for the good- gelllred Tony was not (I'll his best .35’ more than a second-rate gkhter with a striking capagity r0;- eer. BIG HOCKEY RINK MELBOURNE —(CP)— Canadian hockey stars will be invited to el- form in bourne's now $368000 ICE-Smith! rink. it was announced here. Plans call for the rink to have a. surface of 20,000 square feet, SPEEDED FOR. OXYGEN MANCHESTER, Etngland——(CP)—- Collapsing in a dentist's chair while under an anaesthic, Mrs. Edith North. Z5. died before oxygen could be aldmmis eled. A police car made v-rueiobgmlwutlesiufivulsuorlv-L , $377M.- KMICA. BASKETBALL House League Opens v-aTOHTKhl. 8:00 p. m. Sharp- Doubleheader Game Admission 10 Cents 14-292. Renaud and approved by Dom OF THE CHARLOTTETOWN I GUARDIAN T Drub Lowly Leafs Defeat MONTREAL. Nov. l7 —(C P)- Goalle Harvey Teno made a brilli- ant major league debut tonightas Detroit Red Wings smothered Montreal Canadlens 7-1 for their first National Hockey League vic- tory ln five starts. The loss left Canadiens winless in five games. Replacing the suspended and fined Normie Smith, Teno allowed only a last period goal by Rod Lorraln. Smith looked on from the slde-' lines as the Wings gave Teno a. five-goal edge in the first period, then rattled home another count- er in each of the last two periods. Marty Barry and Ebbie Good- fellow each scored twice for the Wings while Don Deacon Syd Howe and Carl Llscombe got. the others. Detroit, Goal, Teno; Goodfellcw, Bowman; forwards, Early, Bruneteau, Howe. Subs Iieliy, Liscombc, Wares, Kilrea, Mutter, Deacon, Abel, Mason, Mc- Donald, Stewart_ Canadlcns, Goal, Cude; defence, Siebert, Busweil; forwards, Hay- nes. Gagnon, Blake. Subs. Goupl- le, Evans, Lorrain. Mantha, Sum- defence, merhlll, Cain, Gracie, Ward, Trudel, Wentworth. Referee —Clarcnce Campbell; Tlinesman -Klng Clancy. SUMMARY First Period l. Detroit, Barry (Wares) l0.- 2. Detroit. Deacon, (Stewart, Bruneteau 11.57 Detroit, Liscombe (Deacon) 12.29 4. Detroit, Barry (l-Iowel 16.54 Detroit. Goodfellow 17.32. d , Goodfellow Kilrea) ([43. Penalty —Goodfellow. Third Period '7. Canadiens, Lorrain (Mondou. Mantha) 8.04 8. Detroit, Howe (Barry, Mas- (Kelly,- 7-I; l-O. Canucks Amerks KELLY GETS TALLY NEW YORK, Nov. 17 —(C P)- A goal by Regis Kelly 1n the third perod gave Toronto Maple Leafs a 1-0 victory over New Yonk merlcans before a crowd of 9,000 1n Madison Sc_\ re Garden to- night and grit tile Leafs within striking dis nce of the National‘ Hockey League leadership. The Toronto squad took second place in the league standing, be- hind the leading Chicago Black Hawks, as the teams treated the New York crowd to the best hoc- key seen st the Garden since the season began. It was a rough, powerful game, with little to chose between the sides. Nick Metz started the play that led to the lone goal_ Kelly, skat- ing along the right boards, picked up the disc and beat Earl Robert- son with a low, tricky shot. Americans, Goal, Robertson; de- fence Murray. Jet-we: forwards, Stewart. Anderson, Wlseman. Subs Field, Gallagher, Chapman. Carr, Schrlner, Beattle, Son-ell, Golds- worthy, Jackson, Smith. Toronto, Goal" Broda; defence, Hamilton, Kempmanr forwards Chamberlain. Metz. Kelly. Subs, Homer. Fowler, Davidson, Thomas Apps. Parsons, Mann, Marker. Referee -_Mlckey Ion; ilnesman Normie Shay. SUMMARY First. Period Scoring —-None. Penalties --Hamiltcn I, Gal- lagher, Anderson, Homer. Second Period Scoring --None. Penalty —Kampman. Third Period l. Toronto, Kelly (Metzi 6.06 on) 16 27 . - ___ " 1 P ualtles — Davidson, C a r r, Lifcedxrfllgéez Mother’ Gagnon D Chammberlain, Hamilton. i i §RESULTS HOLY NAME BOWLING Commercial League Spsts-MBB. Prince Grocery—2785. High single L. Cameron 301. High three L. Cameron 673. Tonight at 7 o'clock:- lSports Talk (Associated Press-Despatch) NEW YORK. Nov- YFAWWQ Detroit you can get a bet that Dutch ClWk won't be with the football Lions next Yeah-- Kflfi may, Harry Kipke will ‘take over his coaching job lhBI6~~ Duull, the grapevine says, wants to take a crack at college coach- ing...lt looks like Joe Louis vs. Maxie Beer early in April for that San Francisco shonv-qirovidvdthe boys out that way set the -'.-Vl°°° guarantee on the line 0f Miki? uacobs by Dec. 20... Dan Hill, the elf-Piedmont Base- ball league prexy, ls in town and will tell you modestly that his boy Dan. Jr., is quite a bit of centre on the Duke football team... Ell-lightweight champ Lou Am- bers, who doesn't have to worry- what with those annuities and all --takes the conleback trail to Cleveland against Frankie Wai- iace, Dec_ 6, and then to BMW" two weeks later. swapping punch- es with either Sammy Fuller or Mike Caplan...The Sugar Bowl folks also hit town. and wouldn'- mlnd it a bit if they could land an Ivy League outfit or Carnegie Tech for their classy show down N'Awleans way New Year's Day... Bernie Bier-man loses 19 110m his Minnesota football squad by graduation this year-bub Yollcim pretty well bet he'll come right-up with three deep in '39 Hnywfiym The Apostoli-Corbett middle- weight outiniz in the Garden $011101’- lrow night shapes up like one 0f those ol McLarnin-Petrolle punch parades. Folks who have seen her say Hazel Franklin, the 13-year-old who just arrived from England for a figure skating 101"‘- ls a young edition of Sonja Henie olsiméivo Grounds For Injunction VANCOUVER. Nov. 17 —(C'Pi —- Atiorney-General Gordon Wi<mer claimed in British Columbia Cmlrt of Appeal today there is no basis in fact or law upon which Mr. Justice A. M. Manson could grant an injunction restraining the pig; lnlon llonllnun w. Tho Rnv iirmltn hsnolntlnn. A iiu-fll- A smwb Boar-Summits din-H- iiusr i-lsvnwnum: up an" iiicoflion .1 Mu-mennnm-wcnunumsm SNIOVIB-NWR v/lmvvous-P‘ yy§§+§¥§+4 O~O+Q§#&O-Q-O+O 4FQ-O§-¥Q—O+O-O+O-O—O-§+§O—OO-O4Q4 R BOVHJNG §' ‘Commercial IimLgUCjEIMILILIGJIL M§1111!1CS_V§-___1i9_11_I£-d131l5-____ iii V» v vQ-OQOOQQ-Q-Q-Q-VQO40—OO~O-O- laws Alerts vs. hnrperlal Biscuit. At 9 o'clock: Big Four Lcaruei 01d Timers vs. Five Aca. CHARLOTTETOWN ALLEYS Tonight at 7 oclock Mil-Bod’!- Grocery ps. Pattersons -vincial fuel board from carryini; out one of its orders reducing the retail price of gasoline. The Attorney-General was pre- senting the Crown's 111911651 "N" the Supreme Court Judge's in- junction, granted Oct. Z-i at the request of seven gasoline manu- factunng companies and two gaso- line retailers. “While the tniungtion is in force the people of British Columbia. are losing between $4,000 and $5,000 a day in increased gasoline costs.’ Mr. Wismer told the three presid- ing Justices. “This is a matter of greatest im- portance. At the same time we wish to have cleared up the point of law upon which injunctions are granted against public bodies whose actions are based on prcvincial statutes." The order reducing the price o! gasoline was passed last month by the British Columbia Coal and Petroleum Products Control Board and approved by the Provincial Cabinet. Public Health Extension Work - UITAWA, Nov. l7—(CP)--!rk- tension next year of nutrition sur- vey ln Canad and inauguration of new investigation work in this field of public heultll were announced to- day by Heath Minister Power. Hts statement followed a confer- ence which discussed the Dominion Government's participation in the work of the Canadian Council on Nutrition and of Canada's further ion surveys. The conference was told of sur- veys being canted on throughout C Dr. R. E. Wodehouse. Deputy Health liflnisier, who has just re- turned from an international nutrit- ion conference at Geneva, said the meeting. attended by rcpresenmL- ives of 15 countries, had unanim- ously decided to intensify field stud- ies with a view to setting up accur- ate dietary standards. It was indicated studies similar to the one in Toronto ma be made in Quebec and Nova Soc-la. studies of the analytical content of foods offered for sale and con- sumed by the Canadian people, one in the Connaught Laboratories and another in the hospital for sisikilskqmh 11°91 It 31212"?- partlcipatiou in world-wide nu rlt-- m; SPORT WORLD [Teno Stars As Red Wings‘ Ring Comback BY ALAN RANDAL (Canadian Press Staff Writer) NEW YORK, Nov. 1'1 —(CPl— Nobody seems keen on the idea except Jersey Jim himself but it looks as though Jim Braddock is serious about a ring comeback... at any rate boxings Cinderella man resumed training in a Mall- hattan gym today.. .Jim's last night was nearly a year ago when, tired and puffing at the end of rounds, he gained a close decision over Tommy Farr....since then the restaurant business has eaten up most of the earnings... Jay Kerley, retired naval of- ficer who is promoting a New Year's eve_ football "classic" in Philadelphia says about a dozen outstanding teams have reported favorably on the proposal.“ The United States has decided in be represented by an all-star team at the world amateur hockey championship in Switzerland Feb. 3-12....Col. Fulgencio Batista, Cuba's strong mall, dressed ill his best military bib and tucker, will be guest of honor at tomorrow _h18hts Apostoll-Corbett middle- weight fight... Slxto Escobar, bantam champ, is 111911511118 to defench his crown in his homeland, Puerto Rlco....K, O. Morgan andi-Iellry Honk gm mention as possible opponents... T‘he New York post devotr-s its “daily mp" today to Art Coulter and Muzz Patrick, New York Ranger defencemen, for shaving off their beards in Chicago S Rangers Hand Black Hawks iFirst Defeat CHICAGO. NOV. 1'l—(CP)—-Chl- c go Black Hawks‘ four-game win streak was shattered tonight by New York hangers as the Stanley Cup holders met a 1-0 defeat from the M/EllhNLBJIiTAES, who pushed games, Llneups:_ Rangers: goal Kerr, defence. Welbe Molyneux. Chicago goal, Karakas. defence. M. Patrick, Coultcr, centre, Smith Wings. L. Patrick, Dillon. MacKenzie. Gottsellg, Levlnsky, Blinco, NOTtlICOLE, Beslcr, Dalllsirom Jenkins, Desilets. Referees-Babe Dye and Donnie McEadyen, SUMMARY I 'st Period Scoring-none. Penaltes—Bl1nco, Hextail, Couli- er. Second Period 1—Rangers, Watson (l-Icxtall, Pratt) 1B 35 Perlcztiés-uvlnsxy. Heller Sel- sen. Third Period Scoring-none. Penalt us--MacKenzie, Pratt. Keep Mlnards in the home. Jim Braddock Said Keen On lWliEYl he |hea\'_v\v'cight wrestling champion- Iship" will be defended ill [different cities tomorrow night: their own undeleated rull to thrccl P11 subaL weight. champion" BfJXINC BASKE I BALL OTHER SPURT PAGE SEVEN - "You wouldn't mind ii “The purer! fomi in which "So many candles on embarrassing." SWE ET CAPORAL CIGAR ETT ES they were Sweet Cops." l tobacco can be smelled." Stake in United _ States BY PAUL liflCllELSON Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Nov. l7—-(AP)— Battling Pistone, whols our WYCSt- ling editor simply because nobody else will have any truck with the mysterious business today tried to peddle his job. Even Pistone, a carefree fellow with a love for fgtlres, couldn't endure the med- e.n trend in the grunt industry discovered the “world SOVGIl “Give me a simple job like counting the number of people who pass 42nd Street and Fifth Avenue at noon time," requested the upset battler. "I can't keep up with them ally more." The list of title bouts is un- believable-even for the wrestlers. Seven "championship matches" for the same title in seven cities on the same night unquestionably sets a new high. This is the pro- gragl that caused Pistonts sur- er: At Tampa, Flax "World heavy- weight champion" Dick Shikat vs. Shnlsm Whale-em Aleichcm. 593101"!- centre, R/Cmnvfi Win35. At Cincinnati, 0.: “World Thompson. March. subs: Helm-rnheavywgtghg champion" John ‘slpPgfiy- éwlvme- L-Nl- Ciélqyilb- Pcsek vs. Nlg Wilcox. a S ' m‘ i‘ Hex a1’ 1 er’ At Philadelphia; "World heavy- weight champion" Brcnko Nagur- ski vs_ “International world heavy- Jim Londos. At Wichita, Kas; "Super woriu heavyweight champion" Everett Marshall vs. Joseph (Joe) Doakes. At S‘ Louis: "World heavy- weight Lchalnpion" Crusher Casey Texas: "World vs. Ali Baba. At Houston. heavyweight champion" Leo Dan- iel Boone Savage vs. Elmer Wig-- girls. At Brldsoport. Conn; “World heavyweight champion" Steve Pas- sos vs. King Kong Frankenstein. Some of these matches, warns Plstcne. may be changed at a moment's notice. "It'll be the biggest wrestling night since day before yesterday," he said “Eight were listed for that night but two were called off on account of bad train schedules when the promoters saw the crowds. By late Friday night. ‘we'll have only seven ‘champions.’ Londos is the International champ. He even claims the title of Mars. Friday night's winners will be _Sl_likat, __Pesek, _ Mal-shall __C§ey._ v Penman: "95" Underwear ls undergorment that has won of men and boys, because of comfortable, well-tailored fit Seven Diffe reni Cities Tonight Savage. Passes and Londos Wish I could pick football winners like i the WTPSHPTS." Walters Announces Date Of Wedding l7 -—-(CP)- HALILLLX, Nov. ‘ of Captall Date for the wedding Angus Waiters, skipper of trio schooner racing champion Bitte- nosc, and pretty Mildred Butler of Halifax finally has been set. Captain Walters disclosed today they would be married in Halifax , Dec. l5. _ The announcement came during a speech in which he appealed for help in keeping the Bluenos which retained the Interns" an Flshermens trophy in .aces with the Gertrude L. Thcbn 1d, fora Canadians. Captain \.a‘.‘c's sax-l it had been suggested the schoon- er b: solu to Canadians c; S! I. share. He said he was certain every Canadian ‘M'O‘ll BLDSCHDC voluntarily. , _ RAZOR For tho close, clean shove that insures all-day FACE- FRESHNESS O ‘OHS IKAVINO IOU!“ ‘LOO Illllll 0O! VALUE- For '10 years the Penmons label on Knit Goods 1111;. DECAL an outstanding symbol of value. A trademark that the buying public hos lecmled to associate with fine quality,‘ correct style and enduring comfort. typical of these qualifies. An the approval of generations its health-protecting Wdrmihe and long wear. Available in shirt and drawer! and union luih iri- eluding tho popular NuCul style ior Mon and. Boy‘.