H... n, l I . l l I . '- W Youthful _Mauro Vazquez of scheduled 10-rounder at Los An- Mexxco, Winner of all his 20 geles. The referee stopped the fights, smashes Canada’s Ar- fight in a moment later with the mand Sav01e down against the former Canadian-lightweight and ropes in the first round of their welterweight champion again New System For Canada Cup Golf Matches Is Reiectecl MEXICO CITY (AM—The or- ganizing committee of the inter- national championship and Can- ada Cup golf matches Monday night rejected a new system of pairings after first saying that it would be used on two days of the 7B - hole competition starting _ SPORTS FRONT By PIU S CALLAGHAN NEW YORK RANGERS, who just a few weeks ago couldn’t buy a win in the National Hockey League are burning up the loop these days. The New Yorkers went into Montreal on Saturday November 8 with an unimpressive record of only two wins in thirteen starts. They had tied five contests and lost six. Chances of breaking their slump didn‘t appear bright as they took the ice against the Canadians. Twice they-had three-goal bulges on the Stanley Cup leaders and blow them. But they hung on .Iomg-mough to grab a 6-5 verdict and right then and there the victory march was on. THE NEXT NIGHT they went into Boston Gardens and crushed the faltering Bruins 5-1. Saturday they played hosts to the Bostonians and again beat them 4-2. Sunday they took on the league leading Canadiens and edged the Montrealers 2-1. That made it four victories in four starts and right now the men of Phil Watson are in third place one point back of the Bruins. However, the Rangers have a game in hand on Milt Schmidt‘s gang. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS forgot entirely about their Satur- day supremacy when Detmit Red Wings visited there this past weekend. In the two previous meetings between these clubs, the Wings had not been able to even make the red light glow. On October 25 in Toronto the Leafs had blanked the Red Wings 3-0. A week ago last Sunday Billy Reay's outfit hung a 2-0 blank- ing on the Detroit club right in their own backyard. On those performances, it didn’t seem likely that the Red Win-gs would be the team to spoil the Saturday night shows at Maple Leaf Gardens. WELL THE WINGS did turn spoilers and whipped the Leafs 4-1 before a stunned Garden crowd. Detroit played good hockey and Toronto turned in a horrible pent'ormance to lose 'a great chance to close up ground on the Reich Hawks and Red Wings. The next night the Leafs left the comforts of home and invaded Boston Gardens where they were good enough to hold the Bean- towners to a 4-4 tie. This week the Leafs have two games and both are against the rampaging New York Rangers. Wednesday the clubs tangle in New York and Saturday they renew the feud in Toronto. The Leafs could be in for a really tough time with Bathgate and company going the way they are. Watson sees a chance to go higher in the standings and the fiery Phil wouldn't want an outfit like the Maple Leafs to be stumbling blocks. But then hockey games don’t always go the way they are predicted. Every club knows how true that is and Rangers could find the Maple Leafs the toughest customers they’ve encountered for quite some time. We’ll know better about 11:15 Saturday night how tough those Leafs were. THE OFFICIAL OPENING of Charlottetown‘s new curling rink is set for Wednesday night, November 26. The new five-lane rink came about because of the tremen- dous player interest in this great game, an interest that far over- taxed the facilities avaflabble heretofore at the Charlottetown Curling Club. The man who was the driving force behind this project Was Dr. Wen MacDonald, one of the province’s outstanding curlers and several times skip of British Console winners in this province. Dr. Wen started the new-rink agitation last May and after several meetings, the decision to build was arrived at..Dr. Mac- Donald had associated with him on the building committee Dr. Lem Prowse and Andy Baghall and all three worked their hearts out to make sure that things- would be in readiness for a Novem- ber opening. And they have accomplished just that. THE OVERALL LENGTH of the new'rink is 1561/2 feet. The width is 80 feet. The ice surface will be flooded by 22,000 watts from 64 hanging type reflectors. The banquet hall wall has been taken out and replaced with a glass wall through which spec- tators may watch the games in progress on the five ice lanes. Additional spectator space is provided on the east and north ends of the rink. ‘ With these splendid new facilities, the Charlottetown Curling Club should surpass all previous seasons in the way of providing curlers with the maximum of enjoyment. Nothing has been spared to make the new rink the very finest. It will serve more curlers, something that just had to be done when you consider the increased membership each year. New applications for the 1958-59 season have now passed the 80 mark. Everybody connected with this energetic project deserves the plaudits of every curling fan. It’s a terrific accomplishment and one that stamps the Charlottetown Curling Club as one of the most progressive in the Maritimes. Here’s wishing the curlers a tremendous season. THE OTHER DAY we reported in this column that Solly Hen:th had lost personal property (about $150 worth) while his St, Louis Cardinals were beating Japan’s All-Stars. Well it‘s happened again and this time nearer home. While St. Francis Xavier University were edging Lakeshore Aloucttc Flyers on Saturday in Montreal in the Eastern Canada mll‘l‘mClelC final. thieves rifled their locker room and made a {only substantial haul. Seven players lost wrist watches. wallets and uliirr personal 1tems. in addition an undisclosed amount of rash was taken. Well, if you can't lose one nay, LhAx‘B‘s always some guys IISS Kent St. I rho can come up with another way. , FIRST RUND Fl-NSH slumped to the canvas. The time was 2 minutes, 29 seconds of the first. Vazquez weighed 133% and the loser 135. (AP Wirephoto) Thursday. As'a result of the last-minute decision, twoman teams repre- senting 32 countries Will stick to- gether through the four - day event. Fred’Corcoran, tournament di- rector of the International Golf Association, already ha (1 an- nouncedthe change to the press when the committee reversed it- self on the grounds that the pro- posed system would be “too con- fusing." Corcoran said the local committee had approved the new system. SAME SCORING The proposal was for the play- ers of each country to play to- gether on the first and last days of the tournament. 0n the second and third they would be split up, each playing in a threesome with two players from other nations. This would not have affected WINNBPEG (CP) — Winnipeg Blue Bombers worked out. on a snow-packed practice field Mon- day, priming for the second and possibly deciding game of the Western Intenprovincial Football Union final series against Edmon- ton Eskimos. Bombers scored a 30-7 victory at Edmonton Saturday in the first game of the best-obthree final. The second game is Wednesday night at 8 pm. CST (10 pm. AISTI, and the third, if necessary. 2 pm. Saturday. Coach Bud Grant's elation at the comparatively easy win was tempered by the doubtful condi- tion of two top bacwielders— speedy Leo Lewis and crash full- back Charlie Shepard. READY TO PUN’I‘ Lew-is, one of the individual stars of the Winnipeg victory, sc- verely sprained the big toe of his left foot when he fell on a Winni- peg tumble late in the third quar- ter. Shepard tore a muscle on the hip the first time he carried the :ball Saturday. Manager - trainer Jim Ansley “me up...“ "\ Guum‘n‘l'ud by‘a -. >_ Good thus-keeping .f . “Inn—n Have a Wall— Problem? Solve It With lover Jil‘ T TIIE ORIGINAL STYROII WALL TILE This beautiful bathroom can be yours. Miraplas comes in 27 Ids- clnaiing colors, all the way thru to the back. Easily installed. Cleans like china. Not affected by common household acids or olkalis. More economical than you think. Guaranteed in writing! Nationally advertised in Good Housekeeping, House Beautiful and House & Garden. Terms. ,Ask for color folder. [OOK FOR THE NAME MIRAPLAS ON THE BACK OF EVERY TILE! \Y m DOUGLAS BROS. & JONES LTD. Dial 6565 5 It's Tough At The Top For Ballymoss LONDON (A-P)——I-t’s tough at the top—even for a race horse like Ballymoss. ’ The four -year - old American- owned'col't has been variously de- scribed as “great,” “fabulous,” and the “horse of the century." Now the British flat season has ended and some mild debunking is going on aimed ’1 cutting Ballymoss down to size. “I cannot rate him (Ballymoss) as highly as Ribot (the Italian thoroughbred) or certain other giants of the past,” commented Tim Nickall-s in The Sprung Life —the bible of British horseracing fans. Hotspur, the London Daily Tele~ graph's horse racing writer. said he rated Ballymoss an outstand- ingly good footwear-old over 1% miles “but not in the Ribot class." CHARIDTI‘ETOW‘N GUARDIAN, NOV. 18, 1958. Ballymoss won £85,1-24 ($238.- 347) this season for his Philadel- phia owner, John McSli-ain—a rec- ord for a European-trained race- horse in one season. Six days ago Ballymoss finished third in the Washington, D.C., International at Laurel, Md. ' Many experts argued that Bal- lymoss’ defeat at Laurel made no difference to his value because that race was decided on a track with sharp bends—entirely differ- ent to tracks on winch Ballymoss has been brought up. Ballymoss won eight races out of 17. He blossomed into a cham— pion as a four-year—old, winning Europe’s two richest events this season—England’s King George the Sixth and Queen Elizabeth Stakes and the Prix de l'Atrc de Triomphe. Packers Have Found Their ’Moscow Legs’ MOSCOW (AP) Canadian hockey coach Jack O’Reilly says his Kelowna Packers have found their “Moscow legs" after a hard, practice session and V'Ollld give a good account of themselves in to- night's match with the Sov1et Wings club. _ O'Reilly said Monday night I'llS men had suffered fr 0 m the strangeness of the city. the Rus- sian players and the food before their first match but after the practice session appeared to be in top form. George S. Dudley, secretary- manager of the Canadian Ama- teur Hockey Association, said he had no regrets over the Canadi- ans’ 4-3 loss to the Central Sports Club of the Soviet ministry of de- fence in the opening match of the five<game series Sunday. “Ten men in the Soviet lineup were members of their national team that toured Canada last year,” AHL Secretary-Tr easurer Parleys Hobby Into Job By BEN CLAN HEMPS'I'EAD, N.Y. (A‘P)—The sign on the lamp post in front of the two - storey house in West Hampstead, N.Y., read “J. El- lery, American Hockey League.” Once inside the seven - room I structure it‘s only a few steps down to the basement. “Come into my office.” said Jim Ellery. The basement floor is carpeted. Pictures of hockey players adorn the walls and there are enough typewriters, filing cabinets, desks and mimeograph machines around to keep more than a few people busy. ’ the scoring in the dual competi- tion over the long, well-groomed Club de Golf Mexico course. The Canada Cup team competition is decided by totalling the 72~hole scores of the two men represent- ing each country. The interna- tional championship goes to the player who has the lowest 72~hole aggregate. - Japan’s Torakichi (Pete) Nalca- mura won the international title at Tokyo last year and teamed with Koichi Ono to take the Can- ada Cup. They will defend the titles here. The 7,216-yard, par 72 course on the outskirts of Mexico’s cap- ital is in perfect condition. t I Representing Canada will be Al Balding, Toronto’s touring pro. said Shepard, who returned in the second quarter to handle his reg- ular punting duties; probably will be ready for the same job Wed- nesday. But it was doubtful whether he or Lewis would be able to ‘ Sta-r defensive tackle Bud Tins- ley, who saw limited action Sat- urday after suffering from a virus infection most of last week, likely will be ready for heavier work in the second game. A tarpaoulin covers ‘he playing field at Winnipeg Stadium where some 18,500 fans are expected to attend Wednesday night's game. Bombers devoted .part of Mon- day’s practice session to defen- sive formations to combat the Eskimos with Canadian uarter— hack Don Getty at the Edmonton helm and elusive Jackie Parker in a halfback slot. The Esks switched to this combination Sat- urday after a rock-ribbed Winni- ‘ rive here today. This is where Ellery works. He lives upstairs with his wife. Estelle, and their seven-year-old daughter, Nancy. Ellery is secretary - treasurer and pulblicity director of the AIHL, a six-club professional circuit with teams in Buffalo and Rochester, N.Y., Cleveland, Hershey, Pa., Springfield, Mass, and Provi- dence, R.I. LAWYER HEADS LEAGUE The president of the league is Richard Canning, a Providence lawyer. Canning makes decisions on player suspensions and other matters of a legal nature. Ellery does everything else in- and Henry Mar-tell of Edmonton, winner of this “year's Canadian Professional Golfers Association championship in Calgary. Ben Hogan and Sammy Snead, _ who took the Canada Cup in Eng- land two years ago, will repre- sent the US. SPECIAL SERVICE PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (Merv—Soviet TU-loli jet air- liners of the Czechoslovak line which will shortly fly twice weekly to Cairo are being equipped with prayer mats—for Mohammedan passengers. The prayer mats are being .mstalled because the expansion of the ser- vice means the jets will be air- borne at dawn and sunset, the Moslem prayer times. Iniuries May Hamper Bombers In Game Wed. ' while he was at uarterback. Grant refused to take the Ed- monton squad lightly althmgh Bombers have beaten them in each of their five encounters this year. Eskimos were expected to If- WINTER RETREADS I 5 LOW AS $9.95 with class A trade in new and used tires for complete tire service see 0. K.‘ RUBBER WELDERS 64 St. Peter’s Road We are tubeless tire experts peg defence contained Parker IT’S GETTING lATE! Will. this matter. Subs. can be arranged ' LET us some YOUR GIFT PROBLEMS A Guardian Subscription’is a year-round gift and a. .pleasmg daily reminder of friendship and good- The Circulation Dept. will be pleased to assist in Write, call or phone your instructions to— THE GUARDIAN Charlottetown 8506 or the Guardian Bureaux at Summerside, Souris, Montague, Alberton Carrier delivered . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15.00 per year P. E. I. Rural Mail . S 9.00 per year Off Island, U.K. & USA. . . . . . . $12.00 per year Give A r GUARDIAN Subscription This Christmas at the following rates: eluding sweeping the office. He makes up the schedules, handles the finances and bookkeeping, maintains the player statistics, writes and edits the annual AHL ores and radio guide and signs :heqrues for payment to referees and linesmen. r Ellery also doubles as a. minor official in the National Hockey League. He has worked as a goal judge, penalty timekeeper and of- ficial scorer for New York rang- ers’ home games in Madison Square Garden. Ellery, 44, and a native of New York City, parlayed a 25«cent piece and a hobby into his job. “I saw my first hockey game in the Garden in 1926 and paid 25 cents," he recalled. “That was a special rate for high school boys. “I began keeping my own sta- Riders WiII Seek Chart~ In Playoff Arrangemen By BERNARD DUFRESNE Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (.ClP)-4The Big For“ football league’s playoff arrange- ments will be changed next sea- son if Ottawa Rough Riders can bring the other clubs to 'cm- way f hinkin . ~ 0 The Ottgwa club, which feels it is at a disadvantage under the present playoff schedule, plain-srto ask that the three—game playolfs be spread over three Saturdays, ' of 10 days as now. mile? (Jim) McCaffrey, Rough Riders‘ general manager, said Monday that under the present arrangement the team getting the bye into the final—the first-place clulb — “automatically gets the championship.” T The present playoff arrange- ment provides for a semi-final be- tween the second- and third-place clubs on the home grounds of the club finishing second. ‘ ' The game is played HI mid- week, inunediately after the end of the regular schedule the. pre- ceding weekend, with the Winner starting the two - game, total- points Ifinal series the followmg Saturday. HEAVY SCHEDULE This means the winner of, semi-final plays three games I!) eight days, with only four days if rest between the end of the l4-game schedule and the semi- final. “It’s too much to expect any team to play three games in eight days and be physically and men— tally rested for the third,” says line coach Bill Smith. Riders finished the regular sea- son with a game at Hamilton a tistics on the Rangers just as a hobby. But some years later I met Dayey Kenr (former Ranger goalie) and he suggested that I show my figures to Lester Pat- rick (coach). Patrick ately hired me as the Ranger statistician. ' He was with the Rangers for five years and after he got out of the army was hired as AHL statistician. Esp-n a recognized diploma ~ Atlantic Provinces’ Gregg Shorthand Speedwriting Shorthand Typewriting Bookkeeping Business English Business Correspondence English Literature and Composition History Geography. Arithmetic Science Geometry MARITIME CORRESPONDENCE COLLEGE 142 KentStreet West Lindsay, Ontario invites Inquiries and applications for the 1958-59 term which begins during November. COMPLETE COURSES IN GRADES X, XI. XII COMPLETE COURSES IN COMMERCIAL TRAINING * TOUR SPARE TIME PROF - w BLY. «Studentsl. may ‘ write, Examinin SPECIAL COMMERCIAL EXAMINATIONS. FOR RESIDENTS AND FORMER MARITIME RESIDENTS ONLY Commercial Subjects Offered Academic Subjects Offered STUDENTS MAY TAKE SUBJECTS FOR SAME TUITION FEE. your inquiry to The Principal. by HOME STUDY. SPEND Board examinations 3nd Spelling Business Mathematics Salesmanship Canadian Law Office Management Office Procedures & Filing Algebra French Latin Physics Biology German UP TO THREE urday, travellgd it?) ontreal for the sudden ea sngm-i-final ' last Wednesday an: after only three days’ rest opene the two-game final at home against Hamilton Tiger—Cats Sat- “fillets a breeze for Ticats, who ‘von 35-7 and now carry-a com- rortable 28-point bulge into the 'st game of the final series, in Hamilton next Saturday. "EARE-D WORST ' Rider coach Frank Clair varned before Saturday’s game "tat it would be asking a lot of a am to come up with a Winning erformance w ith only three .ays’ rest after the semi—final. He gave his players Monday off, but went ahead with planning for the second game of the final in Hamilton. He reviewed the films of sat- urday’s game, then called a meet- ing to go over their mistakes. week ago sat most inexpensive salesman yo- can employ - - - a GUARDIAN- PATRIOT WANT AD Phone 8506 They will practise .. Riders came out 1 rough tussle with l. jury, but with a long u) and bruises. DIRECT S FRO! HALIF ‘ To. ST. .IO ' Nfld: M-S Belle Nov. 8 48” Dec. 5 - M-S Bedf ', Nov. 5 - 14+" Deal- Through rates from origin to St. Jdn's, your [1qu thence 'N. ' St. John's, _ . Newfou . Halifax . » gnaw“... Ln.“ AVAILABLE NOW A h ,«fa ' 64 ST. PETERS ROAD O. K. RUBBER WELD CH’TOWN, r source. At any branch advance. Savings rate. Anyone of good character who has a regular income from a pay- roll, salary, profession or other WHERE do I obtain a personal loan? Bank of Commerce. WIIA T (lacs 0 loan cost me? Six percent per year deducted in IIOW do I repay the loan? 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