i [Mm Whitlock ’ pgcliMBER 3, 1942 fiavy 4W1 1 1| "and" home four goals in the second | l-lll drew in the opening ehuhker Walk I ' ‘n; in the llx-tenm City 1MB! Mme n the Forum with s e4 ‘hwy over n hud-rilhuill- oollrllfllll Mr Force teun. throughout every session Navy after seeing insh- nenla 0118!! u" ""1"! ""19 550k with two counters of their own me lead. Before the opening period had finished Air For-es jlered flitting a fast clip imam a g middle seslhn. mm the opening whistle Coach . “W10,- sent four men inside the _" M. 1:10pm biuelino and the move ,,. m“, dividends. Bess than eight minutes from the start Navy led 4.3- Air Force came flying back to mo‘; the count th two Q1131! “L, but the New offensive was ‘Kw; m be denied and before the Waco ended the "Ta:s” had re- wyered their two goal lead, Au through the third period the temls hammered at each other wiry miIlllTA but this time both W585 performed sensatlonally to keep their cages clear of rubber. m“ teams played shorthanded continually throughout the penalty- lnfested tulenty nlinutes of play as '11’ rose 0 a {filygt pace begun to take its toll o; the player's stamina Blanchard ,, ma Whltlock were the big guns in the Navy's victory as the former junior Royals teammates chalked glgllt scoring points between shot two goals, glanchard Milne, McDougall and ' smith accounting for the other "my; has two goals for the Air . Ne; team with Smith and De- ; ‘M; rappng home the other two. 1 Play started away at a fast clip f. right from the opening whistle and m; clock was nearing the ten z" minute mark before either goalie hi; armour dented. Both had culls but both squads We" . sure but had to yi }. o ' the next seven minutes it was an ? even battle al the way with "glint Navy swept into the lead as '" for the second half. everanxious as they skated into close scoring quartes At 0 55 as 1i Yo: Pczmin ‘ ‘ L": “g, .-e n the disc f1 1 a yr: nblc at the boards wolkeu ll s yay out in front to back-hand a low drive behind the Navy goalie Two minutes after Melnle on a irlg play with Blanchard and iilock knotted the count For goalies performing in sensational rtylo to keep out rubber ' Ion shorthanded ls M¢D°u8i1 waved to the box but the losers Med w take advantag< The per- m was in the final two minutes llcmscn broke through only to leg the wafer. Blanchard raced in “ to snare the rubber and his permrt pusout saw Whitlock slim the ' rubber into the cage. But before the session ended Poulain on an identical play as his opening scor- ' inz cffort put the Air Force team ; back on even terms as he worked into close quarters to again rifle n ' backhand drive home. Navy came out on the offensive Four men parked inside their opponent's bluellne had the R.A.F. station . team c11 the defensive; for over foul- minutes they stood the pres- eld as Blanchard _ ink Wbitlock’: passout to dent the tvines. Navy were controlling the ' phy at this stage of the gune and Bullth breaking away from an Air force attack deep in Navy territory shot the tars into o. 4-2 lead as he went the length of the ice to have . Gilligan, R..A.F. netmixlder at his mercy. Air Force becoming accustomed Jo the Navy‘; gang attacks sud- denly started to make thing) hot for the Navy tezm and at 8: ; De- cloux hard working right winger l fired 111 Apps’ rebound to make it i-i. Three minutes and 14 seconds . liter Whelan between the Navy's Dim had robbed the losers of three goals the KAI‘. tied it up on o. three man passing attack. Sharing the rubber in the centre ice zone Chambers sent a long Dims to Cayler. Cayier gathered the disc in and as he let drive from clcsequarters Smith of the RA F’. plckcd up the rebound to drive 1i right past Whelan for the equal- izer Air Force had a great opport- unity to go into the lead as M Adflm was chased to the penalty bench but Whitlock with his term Eiwrthanried snared a loose rubber misc to the Air liprcc cage Iu have Qll-‘llnn at his mercy. Kehler drew ice first Air Force penalty right lifter the score and Navy took every advantage of the extra manpower Blanchard feeding McDougall a mi’- lust over the R.A.F‘. line and the i-"lilcr fired homo n hard angle dive. lt proved to be the final Slurp 0i the game but before the resslrlrhnd ended the losers missed out tvvlce in a row as nice passing Bill's carried them in close. The fina. eriod was probably ‘he most excl ing of the grme. The i" Koalies stood out like beacon 5 fls they robbed players right the gcnlmouth time and again "iii when the netmlnders weren't xlolng till! the over-anxious play- gs were missing wide-open nets. Q"! Penalties were handed out 5AVE YOUR CLOTHES un 1/ HELP THE WAR EFFORT Order Only Who! You Need BUY ROBINTEX e .. ouAurY mamcs ' FOR ICONOMY Well-Known Al Clothe Of Distinction And Durability All YOIII TAILOR I0! fliilBiNlilf _ s u I T i N c; b fiiiliiiiiiililll will: .l- mlllllrujlllvl As City League Opens pin drawn on even terms but the Navy deluge or “mm- “m. high pitch and Kel Ragged, Fast Hockey ls ‘I f Witnessed By Good Crowd Nfllodnftorbelnghlldee uNavyhoekey dilfihi the session butoe the m“ bears out neither side could get an organized attack working Navy were short two men for gouj- mm. Lites durin one pal-t of the period i" i119 “Write 1111.11 squad Cillllilllt Bet I ncoring attack or- Bflfliwi only they ma ccme within inches on more than one occasion, The teams were playing four to a Side as the final whistle ended the encounter. Lineups l-LA F : Goal. Gill - 1M1. M18911. Byers; rgsvgiafgfif.’ Hin- Abps. Decloux. Smith, Chun- bersalftayler, Token, Kehler, Mc. Navy: Goal, Whelan; defence McAdam. Mcmllgsil, Brown; 10,-.‘ WW8 Dunning. smith. Whitlock, Blanchard, Milne, Macbem Thom. son, Crawford. ' mRlfferees: Leith Jay, Tarky Whit- ki“ "Mttiirii" — aw. r, - ard)11.58 0c Blanch ii-ifgaig. Vilhitlock (Blanchard) li-Alr Force. Poulain 19 oz Penalty: McDougoll. The six team city hockey long; certainly got away to a fly start at the Forum last night and if the games that are to come will continue on the same pattern as encounter then in- high pitch when playoff time. rolls’ a ‘orig. The Navy-Air llbrce tussle loft nothing to be desired in the way of fast-rugged action from start lo finish. How the teams stood up in the gruelling pace with very lllnliud practice sessions under heir beOts is indeed c wonder and once the Players have reached their condition it can easily be seen that the schedule reduce the fastest. most rugg encounters witnessed here in a 800d mpny years. / Not that the brand of hockey displayed last night was outstand- ing. That could hardly be ex- pected but at that in spots last night some very smart casing plays were much in e idence. Other times it was mediocre but that will be remedied before many more games have been played. . _ ' _ The two teams that pla ed last night showed loads and oads of promise and hockey ability could easily be rec ized Once the different coac pared their squads d the strength they intend carrying for the season then the bran of will ra should h k . witcheit be a noticeable lruprovemennin‘ th: s-tteudsnce. But from an attendance standpoint last night the crowd o! m1; was exce tionally good enough. We would ju ge there were between five and six hundred ople in the Forum and not. a sing e note of dis- satisfaction was heard is the crowd filed their way through the doors. O I O O Yes the rather gloomy outlok that had been han ing over the league fo the (pas two weeks bri htened consi erably last ni ht h0g1 from interest shown and he brand of hockey the boys dished out, The games will be no ‘omk tea" affairs; the boys really laid it on at every opportunity and with this keeping up success csn be easily disferrlalzlc.‘ And mother matter that wee decided lest nilht was the num- be , that would take e rum each week. w dslderaibl: doubt e1; yes r By a no gun 3011111 be played. on lrriday nights. '01 u: it does not necessarily meaneghorthis double bill will be o regu er ‘feature of the schedule. o Dom Do :- Bwvnfl Period 1 urinary". 158 12: in M Dover 91 110 170 Fnhffavy. “lawful-d (Whltloclrl 4.46 M powther 166 a] loo +111 a “'l=1~~'§.. (Apps; B00 s: ‘i? _ . ‘ " l p‘ 1012500 8-—l\11‘ Fflrce. Sm th (Cayler, Cham- Fgers) 1.14 our quuh. 10_§W. hitlOCk 12 S4 A Sentner 23d 14B 1V! 1 any. MlcDougoll (Blanchard) J McLaine 139 19'! 1B4 ___ 3.99 A Thorntm 22a 101 10s 6M" McDowell. McAdam. .1. l-icwaw 15a 104 136 Mine. Kellie!‘ M. Mmqey 214 124 165 Third Period 5|gym1t¢rg;_ 1 E M e1 l8 151 1'!‘ 800W} —-N<'mv 11 or lac no 14s Penal. es: McAdam. Milne, Mc- B Thornton 131 181 l3! DWBBXI. Qficloull Smith W Bums 114,153 ‘.16 Eva. McMillan 80 98 96 Hit and Miss- O. th “"219 1.97 D. Hooper 160 1'16 124 E. 111111 137 156 110 M. Heath 161 123 140 E Sutherland 16d 187 185 the season. I O pidlv improve and < (i 1111€fS ‘m1: __cg_anwrr'lrrowrr GUARDIAN fiver Air PAqr savor LF-orce Team B! Orin Iobertco Associated Prose Sport: ‘Writer NEW YORK, Dec. 15—(AP)_ Frankie Sinkiwich, for me 135; two years a member of the All. Anti??? team. his been vo e n States No m athlete o! ma. ' 1 ‘m’ The Youn stcwn. Ohio half. 51°!‘ W110 1B Georgia's Bulldogs to a Rose Bowlbid, polled 94 points 1n a wide-open ballot race that saw 69 sports editors participat- ing in the Associated Press‘ on. nual poll spread their first lace votes am l6 athletes. gink. wich was seed in the No. 1 slot by i5 eixpe and hers Judxod him either the second or third best performer of the year. A Year 8K0 the 22-year-old grid- Sinflwich Is Voted Unzted States- Leading Male Athlete For 1942 i iron we, now in the Marine Corps reserve, received only 12 votes a3 Joe DiMaggio, New York Yankees outfielder. topped the list. DiMaggio didn't receive a vote this year. Ted Williams, Boston Red Box outfielder who led the American Lefiue in hittinz for the second str silt season. was runner-up for second successive year. He re- ceived l2 first-place votes but fell down on seconds and thirds and Dolled 55 Points on the basis of three for first, two for second angoonilfg d n u on. Green Bay's . catching end, and Johnny 8a“. ley St. Louis Cardinals‘ mokie pitcher who whipped the Yanks twice the world series, were nexti ll with42 d mspecfivege an 38 points, BO ill/LING BEBEKAH BOWLING LEAGUE ‘High Single: A. Sentner, 2:15. _HiBh 7F“; A-_5_¢!!i¥1.°£-j3°- such is the case then it is quite definite that the league will dis- continue them for the balance of U I I And as a. parting word it would be nice to see a. much larlzel‘ Pei‘- oentage of the civilian fans in at- tendance at future games than was the cue lasiznlght‘ Henry» Annstron the former triple xing champion staging s comeback, says he will fight Ray (Sugar) Robinson at the drop of a hat and doesn't need any sym- path even if the New York Ne- ro is the standout welterweight Ln. the United ‘States.’ Reports that Robinson declined to go through with a proposed Armstrong because of for and reluc‘ n» to former featherweight, and Welter champ. rejoinder from Arm- COO‘ "I don't want anybody feeling sorry for m. I haven't done so bad in whipp sheik Rangel, Earl Turner, Rodo o Ramirez. Juan Zurita. Leo Kodak and IPritzi Zivic. ‘Ihose boys are as good or better than Robinson's last three opon- ents. Jack Lamotta, Vince Delil- curti and Izzy Jannazzo. “If Robinson doesn't want to fight. mo that's his business. I accepted that fight in New York because I think. ‘can beat him. There are some inmates who be- lieve the National and American leagues will be more evenly bal- anced in player strength next ear and closer competition will old the interest of the fans and. perhaps, make the change in the quality of play noticeable. Things might nun: opt that way. Sustained interest surely would d in the Anlcrican tue of changed con for champi among three or foln clube. instead of s one-team race featuring the Yankees. I O I The Nat. Leagueisin the habit of eomin nip with two-oomered strflli or the championship. 1f it can esent three or our teams closely unched in s stretch drive in 1943, there will be brisk at the turnstiles regardless of how or ad the brand of base- all being offered happens to be. ______.__i srnmoaorw SANTA To dis tches soy S00 “SP2, ogrnnunlig‘ min has 1m South Africa for the Union's fight- ing troops in the Middle East, East 40.000 leiwe 140,000 parcels. _.__-__-——— BTRADDLES BORDER in Quebec mince. expressed that such doubleheader: l d i! "°"“‘ H?’ '&e'>w‘li°"i-‘rl‘5»““ml l 81o tine League circlgs next ‘was’ if, vir- Y ' ____,_ Beebe Plain Ls half inntrle ‘hm 0g! Vermont and half > llmfina CAPE TOWN -(CP)—— His Maj- esty's South African Ship suderoy has been rc-christened i-LM S A S Patktown to commwncrate o ship of the latter nr-ne lost during the evacuation of Tobruk. UNCLE SAM’! COPPER No“ Longer Recognized As Ghampion NEW YORK New ‘zgrk Btfmtlledrlifllletic Cifrimmls- son ay w ew reoognit on as bantamwe ht champion from Lou Sallca of rooklyn for failure to defend his title in a. commLssion- sanctioned bout in the required six months silnoo the last defence. The Commission said it sponsor o. bantamweight pionshl-p tournament. Salica. has been recognized as champion by the New York Com- mission only The National Boxing Association has recognized Manuel Ortiz since Ortiz defeated Salica. in a lz-roumd bout in California last ,_ mber. The New York Conlmls- sion refused to recognize Ortiz, maintaining its rules required l5- round championship bouts. » CHICAGO, Dec. 1s —-(A.P) — Chicago Black Hawks’ veteran hoc- key defence line of Earl Seibert and Art Wlebe will be reunited for the first time this season Sunday night when Wlebe joins the club. The Hawks announced today that three moni-hs of efforts to get Wlebe to come here were reward- ed when the defenccman -finally got adequate help in his Vermilion Alta , bakery so that he felt he would cham- More than 211cc cm tens of cog»- “er are ‘c I" ‘lfii S_t_at§_ annually in the iilnl! a; our- 01m WAY could leave the business to p‘ayl YEOPLTP! MI-vli-"sl 1:111- slim, Like a eight unristulas, the Notional Leagusiw- day issued‘ its official pitching ro- cords confirming that Mort Cooper of St. Louis Cardinals was the out- standing hurler 1n the senior cir- cult in 1942 nine years, and 0111 team-ma h 19)’ I 1.68 in 19 m .8 ti season. Cooper is iiutstanding N. L. liurler By J UDSON BAILEY (Auoeinted Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK Dec. l5 — (AP) — XDOTE reminder that there are shopping days till The figures disclosed that Cooper the 4'{‘YP4 on IIRVICE. m... 1. u. aux u. s luv. on beet ce Car York Giants reached his peak 33 and his l0 shutouts a1- had an eamcd-nln average of 1.77, the lowest in the senior chcuit in that he started the most games. won the most games and had the most shutouts. Of 23 pitchers who worked least 10 complete games, alone had an earned run HVCTBQB of less than two per nine-killing game 1.11.". w“ . 1S 6 9Y- Pod 1m in wirmin 310W 9- CQYDVraI in the United States Army, won 2i lost six compared with Cooper's 22 and seven The rookie also ielcéand in eamed-run average with at Cooper g percentage. Bea:- games and WiLS mast since Zfubbell Bv 1. R. WILLIAMS m me some number that / PiCKibY TH‘ on. 1 - ‘-' Leak 3051.21‘ , CLiN-aép s | HA . 4/ IN "TH // '“/ w‘ . soélzvl wAe KITCHEN igl- o ~ DELAYEI? BUT / WIMDEQTO é/l g -- -" WHERED vou err ‘THESE ¢ i" p t. t 5°» ' _ a l ‘e >1 / 2 < I GQTLLIM _ - \ g AND ‘Ti-ii’: MNLMAN wlu. corner Mos i6 weAalkl‘ i sea nwr "rue srurr= oleculeee LIKE Mews- l. tstatstlvsrcsrsir. b - . . SOEAiUi-UL; "I. RUG-R now BRTLLIANT AND ‘gift: ' - i! % l‘ l é ii a M.‘ ’ xi < 1K; . - ‘ 4 I " HAVE AN i "/ AUDVENCE s I / l f v,/ MASOR = ‘ Brains Defeat Red Wings‘ 3-2 To Strengthen Lead hold on the extended a C9D Scorirlr-Nono. Penalties-Orlando, Bhewchuk, Second Period 1~Detroit, mbe (Brown) 1015! oil (Cowley, Clapipfl’) Penalties-Cowley, mwlom Third Period stage, BOSTON, Dec. 15—(API~—-w!71l.:——DQLTO1L, Brunetebili Flash Hollett setting tho Boston Bruins strengthened their National Hockey League's lead by topping Detroit Red Wings 3-2 tonight as their unbe season string to nine games, I UMIMABY first Period (Li-icon Brown) 19122 Penaltier-None. Practice For Y.M.G.A. Team All members of the YMCA, hockoy team are asked to be hand for u workout st the Pong ‘his evening from 6 to 6:46. 187 DEGREES DBO! The greatest variation of tempu- atmc~187 degrees-has corded in northeastern RY OUR BOARDING HQUQE field's BULLV iDEA.'-~ ‘I QIMPL‘! STOW THE BOOTLEG HiTTlN‘ ‘Ti-XE JACIAFOT HE REACHES . , COFFEE no Tl-us Mmusov, WiTH AN not.’ - "THE Biberi ti-Boston, Cain (Hollett) 14:3’! where the marc-JYY hi: a winter (P-Boston, I-Iollett (Cvallingerl of 94 degrees below wro and 19:08 uunmer high of 93 above. — SKATING FOR HEALTH 8-10 PM m ronun wt m. mli/IAJOR HOOPI Ti-iifi l5 A5 EASV A5 OKAV! lF YES-SIR“ MR6.JIGG$ OVER MRS. WENT are!‘ NOW TA Au. THTS TAP - Bsuwxeaqsf . M-IAT’ ROLLiN TH 5 THAT ' PIN we TABLE .' MR6. JIGGS TOLD M; TO PUT THE2E-A‘5 SHE WANTS TD U55 IT- HELLO! ls THls THE edonlwapro HOSPTTAL? r2 JlGG’5- WILL. YOU séoo BACK TH‘ BANDAGE6‘ TILLIE c" OI<\E,'THERE ARE AT ‘rl-usr "IMAGINE, CLARISSA BUDGE BLTMPWON KS TH‘ CLARISEA MR- BUDGE NAMED HIS CAT AFTER- ‘WQJ REMEMBER HER, DEAR" THE TQILER BY WAY 0F CONSOLATION. LQTS Oi‘ HOMEUER GiR\$ THANWOLLLOOK ONE iN kfii‘ so Tux-z w/TNKuEsTRQ‘ , FRIENDS OF YOUisfibOi’? "WHAT? 3E2: . T EYWQE RELATIVES i BETTER TH\S P\C TURE MORE C LOSELT ai-tooms, i FQRGNE