v alf Give ales Team forum Tonight’ fipetui skate without ball, 8 t0 10. Qdmission 10 cents. ices Play Newly Acquired’ " “K i d "i ne ’ ’ Tonight 8 Ill! (C3. By Guardian's Special Win) , Ont, Nov. n-fmdon Tofimsolfs newly-BBQ ' ‘ "kid lin!’ of Ray Cetliffe, Joffrg Desi- letflsnd Walter Brenneman, who closed their hockey in the min- tlnfis last winter, will got their ma: taste of the professional game touiim-w night when the ‘Doc's moi. their first invasion of Roch- ester, one of the International “ e’a new mtranis. three former Stratford mid- ge two of whom call Iondou "hqne" because their parents 1e- aids here, ‘ * cheques from thqmndon club today and turned outvéfor their first war after arrfilng from Saint Jena-ll. B. over the weekend. ' The season's largest crowd of nilbirds sow the trio steal the show at tbs pa-actice, with affective disflays or speed and combustion which repeatedly best Eieoppssmg ; defence and goalkeeper. Th; Tee » ' management is hopinfilie: three youngsters will supply the needed scoring punch. Jdckson Holds. Out For $7,000 (O. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) TORONTO, Nov. ll-Jlarvey ~ Jackson, left winger on the famous . "Kid" lina of the Toronto Maple 11cm, will continue as a holdout l, unlass he receives the $7,000 Na- ttlonal Hockey League ‘ ps" salary, t he told Andy Lytlo in an interview gpublished by the Toronto Daily gstfif today. He said he had never ‘ received the League “ p" wage. ' for me has been $0,700.’? he 1 fold Lytle. “I asked for $7,000 last ' season but played for less because , I wasn't able to finance myself without hockey money. This year I'm‘ not so restricted." Jn ‘ said President‘ Frank Calder had advised him to accept the $6,700 offered by Conny Smythe, manager of the leafs. but he de- cllned. .. K Iiiominated F or Presidency Of f Golf Assn. (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wirc) NEW YORK, Nov. 1l-—-John G. laiison, who played football and wlF-whils a“ “ Columbia Un- "lvaiity more than 30 years ago, waslnominated today for the prea- fidemy of the United States Golf v Asfiiiation. t roe Tries In Second Prince Of 11-0 Victory Por the second time in three days K1118‘! Collegiate ruggers from Windsor were forced to accept de- feat from an Island team when the Princa of Whles squad took their measure yesterday afternoon at the Abegwelt Grounds by an 11-0 score, all the winners’ tries com- ingiutbesecondhalfofthsgame after tho-losers bad held them on even terms during the first half. - Neither team showed the brand 01 111817! they are capable of. Showers during the game made the ball hard to handle and resulting fumbles mined many‘ backfield plays. However the players put up a dogged fight and the game was much closer than the score would seem to indicate. Prince cf Wales kicked off to 111111 the some and in the first few minutes Irlam dribbled to Kings iii-yard marker but the educated toe of Jack Saunders in the King's backfield brought the play to oenfllefleld. Rom here on the vis- itors Dressed hard and a penalty Placement attemptvwas low. Prince °1 W11“ 18111:: battled their way into Kins! territory but again the booting of Saunders forced them back on the defensive. Toward the close Saunders after- taking a clean pass from his picking quarter circled the blind side of the scrum to go to Prince of Wales ten yard llns before being stopped. The restl whistle found the teams at Kings l0 yard line, nesult of a dribble by "Bill Chandler ‘from inside his team's defensive area. Starting the second half Kings were weakened with the withdraw- al of lgsunders due to recurrence ol’ a head injury sufferedycn Sat- urday. Kai-as coins in at flying half. But Prince of Wales were a different lqusd. Five minutes after the kickoff Bill Chandler gathered in a 1on8 pass from ‘a lineup at centre field. He raced 15 yards and 111911 111st as he was tackled heaved the oval perfectly to Mal-meson 11110011091!!! the rerriainlrig 35 Yards for a try after eluding three would-be tackles-s. Stewart's at- tempt at convert missed by inches. Prince of Wales threatened with two nice backfield plays but were halted 10 yurds out but their third 111161111111 ‘resulted in their second score. Larter picking a heeled p511 XIQIed-tofiiewart 80 yards out and the fleet wing half outracgd hi; 9911011 ‘ to the line. Chandler accounted for the two extra points with a kick that hit the bar but lobbied over on the right side. , K1118! were awarded a- penalty 1119711! after resumption, of play andEarasmadeaflnetr-yfora placement from 40 yards out but thcbtlck was a little short. A ut five minutes of la in time remained when P. W. “(Lyacg counted for their third try. A scrum was called on King's 25 yard line; the visitors heeled cleanly but Langille, breaking fast, scooped up the leather and battled his way throush his opponents m tn. line. Stewart's convert attempt was again a matter of inches wide. Three penalty kicks to King's in the remaining time of play crougrit a victory on their visit the King's team by their sportsmanship and clean play made a host of friends and it ishoped their visit willbeihe start of an annual one. Yesterday Saunders and Karas were the out- standing threats while the hard tackling of DeBlois on the defen- sive halted P. W. C. sallles cold. Jack Leightimr, Chandler, lrlcrn, Stewart and Larter were the pick of the P. W. C. squad although every player did his share in the victory. » Centre Pete Though no definite decision Luis as yet been made as to what course will be fo1lowed- in Moncton year mate k ‘ bez- handlcap 1n the call-over t half course for thros-year-olds, will backed‘ at 100 to l2, and A. Booz- threo favorites are lightly handi- capped. [W ° ConucksPlay Range rs v In RLUTFWARDIAN t. PORT wo Chuck Templeton ‘a “SPOR TRA 11's Mt ’l Tonight (J- P. by Guardian's Upecisl Wire) Mmheal will see its fir-d Nat- ional leaguo guns cf the hockey season tonight (luesday) wheuits Canadlens, under- new ownership and management, entertain Ins- ter Patrick's New York Rangers at the 100mm. It is the » only game scheduled. _ After ‘ mono only two teams will still have their baptism of fire ahead ofthern. They are the champion Montreal Maioons and Boston Bruins, leader of the United States section last yell‘. ‘llheir inaugural battle will be at Montreal on ly. ~ Canadlens, with sylvic Mamba as playing manager‘, will submit a new defence and several new for- trcit, JeanPusie "from Art Losieilr, up from Providence of the Canadian American league. ’With no holdout troubles 0011-. adlens’ early difficulties have been through accidents. 311w they lost Nels Crutchfield, brilliant young centre, through a skull fiacture. Iemne and Irvine llkew, defenceman, were bin-t in a pro-season exhibition series with Bostoninflallfaxaudwillnctbe ready for a week cr two. Rangers had their opening game Sunday night when they held De- troit's strengthened Red Wings to a 1-1 tie despite the fact Rangers’ star defenceman, Earl Beibezt, has iUtITFMiJATFEE .\ L1bB¢Biroacu~~~~-. not yet ‘accepted Moncton To Play Class .‘.‘B”" Hockey (C- P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONGIDN, N. 3., Nov. 11- in ur _ , Henry White, lessee, of the Stadium, this morning said that he would not be averse to entering a team in the re- vived southern {New grungwigk League providing arrangements for its resurrection are completed, Asfurobtaininganyoftbedls- banded Halifax Wolverines for ser- vice ln Moncwn this winter, no said he had received wwd from John holders that only one, Ernie Mosh- er, would be available. ~Mr. White this morning esid that e expected the plan mooted sev- eral days ago, of f s city league of four teams and playing s schedule romancing at, one; with the plan of picking a team from this circuit to Monntm in the southern New Brunswick loop, would be adopted. He planned on going mu; um matter today but could make no CrawleyWood Favorite F o r Nov. Handicap (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) IDNDON, Nov. ll—(C. P. Cable) -J. E. Cottrell’; Crowley Wood at 0 to 2 ruled favorite for the Novem- ay. The race, over a one-mile an a cheater on Nov. 23. be run at " Mistral was Sir Charles Hyde's man's Newtown Ford at l8 to 1. All TRIU HELD IN IEWEI. RUBBERY (C. P. By Guardian's Spoclll Wire) QUEBEC, Nov. ll-At the request A gentle landinfl 11y , largest balloon in a field near here laia today successfully ended man's most far-reaching the heights cf the stratosphere-to set of scientific instruments ever an unofficially recorded altitude taken into the stratosphere to good of 14 miles. daring wcrldeslaltittudeadrecordlu d an: brought , w bark 11B o 011! 1691109’! of the b llocn "Explorer II Conn, manager of the Allan Cup knoyfledgg o; m“ a sphere. long wait for and compensation for two previous disappointments on their moved smooth‘ the rocky wall of base was cleared 50 feet-at eight o'clock this morn- ing. miles climbed out of the gondola. 74,000 foot that fltevens and Balloonists Soar l4Miles ToRecord (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) WHITE LAKE, s. D., Nov. 11- the world's venture » into Twofllnlted States army later cal- venture captured the the super-atmo- The feat- climaxing a six weeks favorable weather Dart. to its c'imax after their camp's away-by only They landed at 4:13 p. m. C. 5. '1‘. after eight hours and l3 min- utes lorne 240 miles to the west ills! 11100 P. W. C. W111 1) 5 stub‘ -' ‘ pmVfitgnilllpléflef-I aw‘; mmwment m“ ‘my w and north of their camp near "$1,19- 5117111711811 1011111: to register ' Rapid City, B. D. "Not a scratch" was the com- ment from the field about a dozen from here when the two checkers sustain their figure, it will mean Anderson sur- feet the lfrecord d by some 2.000 passe hitherto imequalled-but never cf- zlclally recognised-record chimed for a trio of Russia airmen whose venture last year ended in their deaths. In spit c1 the favorable weather and generally ideal conditions at- teridlh! the flight, it had its high- ly anxious moments. One came a few minutes before when they huge balloon and an over-all height that of a 81-storey building-Anus ‘ummeting downward 500 feet to they landed w leased that the gondola—wlth equivalent to minute. But it nosed into the farm land without mishap and this word was wirelessed to anxious "very nice landing." An army plane piloted hv Capt. H- K. Baisley which had followed the big helium ‘illed balloon land- qi nan-by afterward. m fliers went at once to John Motheye farm near Btickney. They jumped into a farmer's car and started colleagues soon the for White u Lake for Jpkson, former general counsel jto 131s Association and one of its K a !_ n w_ a wicgpresidents since 1988, was Fume‘ "nargd by the nominating couunit- ; “we tee succeed r ‘* s. Bum of m“ Qumm Grainwlch, Conn. who wl11- ccm- Know“ Stewart pleQ a one-year term next Jariu- D6310“ Irlam “y: Mothers : Karas McDon. ‘ ‘ "7 H1111,“ M Mill 1. . Lawson c an Qirthday Greetings mm... nun... ~ Saunders McDonald I. (By The Canadian Prep) Forwards -\ ‘rt J. u. Conn, Jasident and Morrison. Mcbellan vznunagcr cf Halifax Wolverines, Tidmsrsh McMillan liolflrs of the Allan Cup and the L. Hams Gaudet ~Ca an amateur hockey champl IBJMJIIHB ‘Bulman % ip..He was born at Springhill, Bustin Grant , . 8., November l2, 1889. He ds- dhumhill Donahoi. jrotod a great deal of tlmq and en- Macklin (capt) Chandler i‘ to first bullglnglg of the Wol- Subs z‘ es tiring s seven years Bonngjgnu _ . sln%the team is now Canada's Oly- Johnson ‘ 1 k ' hockey sdpsd. Referee: Allen Findlay. of Scotland Yard, investigating l. 0100.000 gem robbery in Imidori, side it was‘ 19 degrees above zero ~ but, the fliers calmly reported over the wireless, they were quite ‘comfcrtatf-e" in their fur-lined flying suits. The duo used the most complete they had reported ‘ strato- | effect. ‘lhey 51599150811 .1 Captains Albert W. Stevens and scope and cosmic ‘ray recorders. Orville Anderson-At lbrations sustain their barometric computations 0074.000 feet as the zenith of their soaring-my the They took pictures of the earth from various altitudes. The flight was sponsored by the National Geographical Society and the U. S. Army Air Corps. RAPID CITY, B. D., Nov. 11- on its stratosphere flight (time is Central Standard). 8:80 P. lit-Nov. lit-Inflation begins. 11:45 P. liL-Twenty-foot rip-in faibiéic halts inflation; patch ap- pl e . . 8 A. M. Nov ll-‘Balloon takes off from natural bowl at sunup. 8:15 s. ltL-Capt. Albert w. Stevens reports "ev O. Kl” from 11,700 feet. (Next reports came from Capt. H. K. Bailey, following in a plane. Then direct radio communication was resumed.) 10:07 A. MP-"Explorer II." over Niobrara River in Nebraska. hl ill 000 foot level. ' 10:25 A. M.—Stcvuis reports bal- loon at 28.000 foot mark, scaring 600 feet a minu‘ , weather 40 be- low (wsmlizrade). 11:17 A. MP-Gievens reports bal- loon at 55,000 feet, 15,000 feet into the stratosphere. 11:29 A. ltL-Balloon at 60.000 feet. Capt. Stevens reports. 11:55 A. lifll-Balioonlsts "some- where around 71.000 feat,” nearly 10,000 feet above ihe United States and world official record (Bettie- Frtrdney, 1933) of 61,237. ‘their position was 10 miles north of Martin, Neb. 15:11 P. liL-"Just exceeded rs- cord" Stevens radios. ‘HeroineJoins Pro Ranks‘ m» 8 . z o dill! immlgrati tnmtm _ i1 ‘sflhmdm’ 3° "§‘l‘“.“u§:,‘ o; Settle in ioiig-d-stxiaiip c: l‘; I. g man oni c ' " . ~ mn- M- ' M“ srmm~'.....*t Police and immigntion author- 1" m‘ Mummy m. . d,” lties awaited arrival of the liner pguwetedmflatyed“ ‘med ‘ma. , rm Baturds night andimmedl- two hours. Stevens w eleased the ‘m’ m" ’ M“ m“ “m” iauamvvusttiisaapoo foot level ma“ AND ggéfillflflgmgnnimmgwigmam and “dropping too fast.” r01; ssv; more» I-rmm- - M, v» nswtxmnm. .. 2:. ‘- * Wlnueus automatic oper- ' ~11" I alien-cools our-m "m. swam. ‘ absolutely unlfcmi. Giant shaman- an-welghlng 4 ions and cilant- abd". 1. 1', "'L'Tn-'I|""IMI,I.' d u" "Quebec on request of Irltisii police. w“ “m. “m4” mm ""°"' """ ~ “"" ..:::.r""t...":.t".".:."‘.."s u~=-~~,:-.,.~= “- 1 ~ ' ‘ on ' from lie world‘ st not bal- overpvaduessny, audios. m.,,,,,,,,,m,,,,,gqm,g,_mm.mw;mmmm,m luvslmnvoliedetthlsl-osblenl scientific observations. Above and saamaasmwtlhswhflflm bflfidlfibiflildplllloi ty- uewhm~bsuaellowsdnwofl BebwJiis woman 10mm. lhIboItIititloI-Min saauiiu- nsdliiiuaausbmseabysvsm elim- » z ~ 11am; wlriwtslriag iota blue. U.S. Tennis" M“ —-—— r (A. P. B Guardian's Special wire y ) m; 5 it i v Mac Tier Retained By Ca I e o n i a (or. n; Guardian's smut was) ‘TI-AW BAY. N- 8. Nov. ll - s Montreal ‘PM’ Our. emblematic of master-n an and m: s is-o drubbing in Q K9111 on defensive most of 111° 1511119 B! clover andspeady Cale- donia forwands, the Bank c1 mm. treal msew their line crossed offensive from the wooing whistle, Caledonia forwards promo steadily. Prom a scrum in front of the visitors goal pogtg, 11m; "Grunts" Mcfnnls plunged across thelingononsofthgbsggplgyg d the game. vlloklnz Perfectly. the Caledonia but the three- quarter line was given little chance to function by the hard-tackling Mcntrcslcrs The Caps Brawn mam shined Plollty of ground, however, b! 10110111118 up on high kicks. The 311111191’! - plowed several "was during the first half by drib- bllns the ball deep into Caledonia Wfll-ory. Wheeling cleverly from a scrum soon after trig first Qflg. 4on1: try. they dribblcd mm their own 30 yard line and forced full- behind his own posts. looovorlns. Oelodonia went back into Montreal territory and slim 391111117 Vey, wing ihmQ-quartgr, "Nhlwllonceworoastheline in the corner. Referee Stan Scott "1941 1110 Play back, however. v9? 1111100 it all up Just two min- utes before tho whistle ended the first hal . He. soomd an easy one bye taking a. well placed pass n/ggy u“; 111" 111m mine McIntyre who had grabbed a loose ball and made a brilliant N yard run before flipping the ball to Vey. Montreal began to tire in the second half and the Miners conditioning showed u H11‘! Wlyfihmuzh. stocky "Mutt” Morris crashed through the Bank. crsfrcrn theiriityhrdlinoiosccre "'1 l 11111-111118 ~hrrken field run. Conversion of his try ended the scoring. The game left the Caledonians 1n possession or the McTier Cup, a “Why they have held for years. The series was decided by the sud. den death game. . Perry Forced T0 ‘Withdraw From Tourney (C- P. Cable By Guardian'- smm lflinst ilmer Allison in fllg United States chanrplonship swam" and nu decided not to 111:! for four months, _ 911'!‘ hri after h: defegutgdcemlgfiakwuspsgymdo Cain Sign; i PVit/i Maroons - tundra-Tapas: was) ggrt 1%., t a ti: g t? t. football struggles witnessed on I IOMIEXémIIlBB-IOOCDIIIIIIIOXOI zizmthe Nomads 8811111 1111114111 1° g, g-all tic yesterday at the Abel- weit Grounds in the third of the Island series. tackling and two fights were all thrown ‘into yesterday's 11111111118 struggle. reeling had been rllh in tbs two previous yesterday it reached its climax. A killing pace was set from the open- ivll: layers l) that the)’ Mood up to 11 all 111a "Y through. Both tries cams in the first half. saints sot theirs early- Butler being cu the nmnllll 91111 m“ o: a backfield attack, coins owl‘ in the corner while the Nomads vicious counter attack sffsl’ tho 5- D. U. score bore fruit and l 119111 minute before _ Jimmy Coyle pouncing on a kick from behind the s. p.411. lino. I 1 5 game stated that without a doubt it ms lihg most 1118806 battle Dill’- ed in recent years and 1n the B81116 ' breath stated that should the teams continue the some brand of rugby, minus ti), fighting of course. that football would not fake 1on8 to regain its lost popularity. Nomads by a clever piece of back- gm, 5mm“, ,0 mm m, “My £111 work, battled inside the Saints rcd and white team take the 91s? beck to centre field. Controlling thcplsythe sslntssottowlthlh 15 yards cf the line. A penalty kick to the 8. D. U. directly in front of the posts made things look gloom! for tilt city team but Butler's placement attempt was wide. tackling took its toll at this fill? when McDonald and Jordan were players were We to resume P1!!- Tralncr and Henri-"ssey brokeawa! for 20 yards t0 B88111 P111 1'17" 11°‘ mads back in their defensive acne and from this point Saints scored p the opening try. mom a scrum the saints heeled cleanly and Butlsl‘ takirg the last pass, there were 00f them, went over in the comer. H1! try for convert was short of the uprights. ‘score instilled more fight into the Nomads. Jenkins blocked a kick in- side s. n. U.'s 2i yard wads to the dywd line but his Doss to Smith was called back. Pinioarli kick eased the pressure but again the attempted kick and Jimmy Ccyle playing with a badly 111111101! ‘ eye fc'l on “lg loose bail for the tieing points. Hunter's kick from a difficult ang’e was a beautiful attempt but the ball sailed under the bar low by about six inches. Starting the second half both 513m ET “uoviiluu soxruo A BASKETBALL l ornnn scour In Bitter in ne of the mimic». touched Dunstan’: chives-sit! fill” smart pas-sins nlv-vl. wlolld struggles kickoff and it speaks well 10!’ stamina and condition the rest period ked Old-timers *“ 111B Right from the opening whflle yard line but a fumble saw the to take time out but both Aswastheoass Saturday the to For o cooler pipe . . . A meiiower smoke ' e5 i $21 2;; it? l1 i‘? 111 § i? “any rted to m. 5am held the advsntaso t1! 91,11 swung up inside the as yard marker. latter boo whiff... a9?! Saints 20 70rd .1116. like the "Bedhead" had an 011911- fisldbuttboballwok-I-bfiml" and worked Anaaaulgo leather the icd and white squad‘ onoo more and for the remainder of 11F game it was a see-saw battle V1111 we Ncmsds- either Pllnfl-lli W dribbling out of danger on more Quarters. iamr, ircnmrsell: Halves. waalen. ccyle, Mcmnis; Phrwards, Jenkins. ‘mornbs, Jordon. Smith, Moxenno. Hillier, Arsenault. mn] Leads Ma rksmen Mt]: ,_. Saints And 5 A ‘Nomads Battle To 3-all Draw. Struggle f ~ kicidns and ma" Nomadjyg. ted It fromliisliyardlinoa-ud- following iastdrbblod centrefreld. Back cams Tenulrlnutos before full time tho <1 .1 ht cg the game flared uD mute: i while nearly $111"~1°n°‘1- s. free-fcr-all but peace w" 1111111- 311,- gnmg with fourteen pill-YB" apiece,‘ C. T rclibldd and the teams finished inor and McDougall ~ e by ‘ Morris- gey gm- their pairt in the uprlslni. Lineups: ' Nomads: Fullblolv 3W 111111191‘? lapthorne Lmilllpll‘. s. D. 0.: murmur. Pineaui Quarters, Walsh, B. minor. J. A. McDonald, m, ucnonsld, Mullins: 11101118161. f C. minor, Kelly. C. Connolly. Liandrlgln, 8111190911. l5 Anensult: Halves. But- Ia uteri: s. .1. 1!. Manner. U.1iI.B.._: New Record , ma. no»). l1 mmmroamv As M. Mason, Hoyt itaticn to- day led University of wick marksman at New Brims- the Devon withascoieof loloutof each your der the supervision of the Deming: of Canada Rifle As- sociation. The score is believed to be a Dominion record in tNs competi- tion, eqlll-lling in points that ob- " the Nomads! wglo $111111» 11m tained by s. Ross Cameron. {fid- Bsnkoflifontreal Cledoni “MW” *1 '1 111M111" edctomintllesemo combo o! gay”,- m,“ 3m, saw”: the situation. Here the first fight u“, y,“ "o, mm, howevgi E111, Irhmgqtn vey broke out but it was queued wit; scored pcssiblcs on both the» nus Mot- °.;'.'..“‘;l..“‘.....““°..;'°“.2‘..'-...';°'“... u-..:""=:......*"" stigma 810123,? Mclnnls was stopped threg times Cameron lost his single point on Hgwggm 56mm Hm Mcmnm in a row. one time having less than the 500. h.“ m m. pvm-lg standoff Ha" Mew“ s. yard to g0. Saints dribbled out d ‘give eight ‘hsctzcrswmbm- 911ml Wins Fward G. Nicholson “"3" mm m‘ Kunm- bwt‘ d ting)‘: be scat to Ottawa as n. Morwood Forwards Attwood “ m“ .1113“ n“ m“ touch ins team m‘ marked un ‘lee 3, M01100; ;_ a mum,“ on B. D. U.s 5 yard line and this mm“ m b" ‘hm the 13mm“ Brim a. Wsdman “m” *1“ “°‘“""‘ W" ‘ucwu record’ and 1a more than u. n. n. 3111111“ D. Nicholson "m" ‘ “m” w“ m’ “M” registered mt mr. m 1m and KM“ McDonald §§$L“,,§$f,'d§.§§d1°d,§:°u1;? ma u. u. a. captured the Dom-_ 9W1» n. Bcutili ' - - s 3.53mi, a wadmf; McDougall tearing in fast blocked {nfifmwflyfh “"1" “ '1'.’ wsnxaa rs wnma-a rormon. my. ll-Obis Walksa Bfififll HOBO. 0110130111150 1h MW Bouth African heavy- Welalit in a lo-rouud bout here toi ' I rm. "rse- the ned ind ieil the ‘ rns. ‘ ‘ov- ant Produced sad in . 1 spotless factor-lbs. ‘Wrippadls