li. " _ W* I §_*,"S.'1 1,1 -11 -111 -1_-@- -_ -_-___--s . . in ' _ . DECEMBER 19, 1936 ` _ _ 'ltlli CI-l_ARLOT'l`ETOWN GUARDIAN _ PAGE FIFT EEN BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING N li.W$°’1tt$PCRT WGRLD Boxiivo .‘Q¢_ ‘ff BASKETBALL f OTHER SPORT ° if. -i .s l imam its auuirnuucu A wt ol the D0ys are eyeing Lxrvut mom 5;,-get anxiously these days md lei; quite a bit peeved when me min came on Wednesday and wok away the snow. There was a nice foundation which if it had re- mained with the addition or some more snow, would have made a. real eedway for Christmas afternooir. gg long as I can remember Christ- ,M5 and New Year's have been cele- brated on Great George Street with mmdiy dashes in the afternoons. No; 5° much in recent Yell-S UB- wma there are not so many horses Up; by citizens or those from the Www; pam, but back twenty 'gan B50 it was fascinating to watch the steunefs coins up and ‘Wm and one would wonder and “pew to ,ge a smashup every min- qis, but it wry seldom occurred. swag; on each aide would be md Wm spectators who look a gen deyimf, in seeing their favor- W 1”,-1 me parade. The horses *ma to enjoy it too. as they would race like fury until they ,gm close to Grafton Street and ,hm wqnkl let up of their own ae- md, one chap, ii. bit too anxious w yin, wont. clean through Queen maui miraculously eseawd I like ‘slit a gg tovin. Driving vive the Victoria this winter? It having horses a th_em and brush without the danger that ' ekivlns on any 0! me eq; whore the cars are used._BY |. iietia effort it might be imslble to get the city fathers to SWG me hommm the privilege which they mg? ,ga ago of unmolested vé it. amy stmbmon alot, whose name ,gs on okay l-iorseman's lips three .5 ago, was ordered destroyed by rfmw J. lxward Randall, Har- raw, maine. port says he devel- aped a form of rhumatlsm the int- geg- pert of the season. The writer bets that it was laminltis, easuy mistaken Dr rhumattsm. Tiugzdun md . . ' '.,. 1041-4 x be seen in is ‘ine Jones Feaiiy at the County Fair. [, is being filmed by t/he 20th Cent- .iry For Stud‘I06, 13°-YNY 9'" Pommm' :iilfomia and partly at I-1oiiyW0°¢i~ \ii~. ci-itmmer has just iJL\1‘Cl\B-59.'-I 'rain A. Bdsliroml Oalllhlldi ll W0 ,-.~.ii~ oifi- trotting filly that is Self* zo ii.-.vc all the earmelks of e1_`€i\i- nt-ss. Let us hope that she will be ii worthy successor to the Old WN iiorsc. Guy the '1yo,mp~ Vail, a native of Ohio, is irainhg for Mies Susannah Perry. , veyy of Men-lo Park, csilimmis. " '_ " bas e real fine iliac of it now. with it string of pond bona and nienty of rush ` help. 'llfhh will be DUWS 1l.°l‘1o_\»» ‘Fri we Wm H ` ol “Doc‘s" when Bm-ie SWIW "' season of 19%-21 at Toronto \n';i Mount Clements, Michigan. ln the lht of new 2.10 trotters W L. G. Dlfffy Th# Hirse, more are over 200 ages npseoentillig the C\‘0D_ °f 1 . The only Maritime Province iagsm tu appear in the list is Silk irl, described as a. grey mare, six rs ok! by Oh Boy ZW 3-4. Clam _ opixiia mia by Bingon sua .07 1-4. r ndw record was taken the first heat of the 2.-15 trot it Charlottetown, August 21st. She Ins ativan by Frank Boutilier, Hal- ifax. and olmed by F. J. M11i'PhY UI ‘lie some eliy. Almost every boat leaving New lfo`r\: for Europe has on board one nr mole record race sin-1-lions or mares consigned- to parties in Hol- I i ul' ii..uy. ill t|ll.':.t: lziliiupciill Culin- trles the harness horse is making great headway :ind the races are at- tended by imint-use crowds. The pacer with the best record that we can find this season is the lour year old Lone Ace 2.02 1-2, by Red Ace 2.10 1-4, that made eight' starts, won every race and neverl lcst a single heat. Red Ace is ai full brother of Sco.lanu lbs 1-4,l Higlilmid Scott 1.50 l--1 and Ros; Scott 1.59 3--1, and was recently* purchased as a sire by the hun- o\'er Shoe 1~”arn\s. Vansandt 2.00 3-4, tha noted ion of San Francisco 2.07 3-4 and Ma- bel Trask 2.0l ii-4, has arrived in Europe en route to Vlcimii, where he enters into the possession of the Vienna Trotting Club. John Hervey writing in The Har- ness Horseland reviewing the career 01' Peter Volo 2.02, recently de- ceased, says; "A year mer memor- able for the galaxy ot gi-eat horses it brought forth, was that of 1911, this being particularly true as re- gards slailions, the models of the bieul that 'irc thc shapors of its course and the foundatioustones upon which it reposes. That Spring there was fouled in Kentucky no less than four of them that from the moment they were old enough to begin public uppcumiice, began to create sensations and break rec- ords, and when a. few seasons later they had completed their careers and we could stu'vcy them singly and together, it was with rt sense of wonder that four such extraordin- ary animals all emerged, as it were, at a bound, and sped forward to new goals never bei`ol'c attained, and far superior to any hitherto arrived at. This extraordinary quartette com- prised Lee Axworthy 1.58 1-4, by Guy Axworthy. Lu Princeton 2.01, by San Francisco, Saint Frisco 2.01 3-4. by San Francisco, Peter Volo L41 2.02, by Peter the Great. There was also foaled in that Spring of 1911 in Kentucky, that marvelous lace mare Mabel Trask 2.01 3-4, whose amazing races with Saint Frisco down the Grand Cir- cuit, filled the headlines of the public press. The first rules for light harness racing were made by the N.Y. Trot- ting Club in 1925. Philadelphia fol- lowed with the Hunting Park As- sociation; Baltlmore and other clubs followed and in a. short time most of the tracks in the Eastern States were racing under what was com- monly called New York or Long Is- land rules. ' In 1869 a call was issued to all leading tracks to send representa- tives to meet in New York Febru- ary 2nd, 1870. Forty-eight associ- ations responded. On February ith these men adopted a set of by-laws and rules for what was called the National Association for the Promo- tion of the Interests of the Ameri- can Trotting Turf. Tlu`s name was afterwards changed to the Nation- ziiTrot.t1rig Association, which it still goes under. From its inception in 1870 up to December 1895 it had five secretar- ies. From then on lhe ex-Canadian, W. H. Goclier, has been Secretary continuously-il WWI D€1`10d Wdily of forty-one years. It is safe to say that every harness man ln America. knows of W. H. Clochcr, and he himself is acquainted either through coiresponrleucc or records of own- ers and horses, with almost every one of them. Mr. Gochcr inust be close to mriity years of ago bitt seems us active in mind ns ever he was. It is real mitrvcloiis how he keeps li' IQ, Bgisqum, Germany, _Austrla. in t£li_cl1_lv_it_l_i _ tlic__llll;ldl`€d-S Of gzdii 'O“ BRITISH I CONSOLS an made lrom linen _Mont sxi>§Ns|\;tDT0BA$_<05, _ I un omet tc- |I;ql|”::y°q|h¢| popular blond. ‘ PLAIN OR CORK TIP ' i _*_ ______.. __ ._,,_,____,g _ ___ ____ ___ _ ____ _ ___L_ _ _ __ _ _ ,W _ '- - - Hockey Seen ,junigr Ranggrs Sh0wlSchmeling As Profitable BY SCO'I'1'Y RESTON Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, pee. ia- (Ari - Lester Patrick, silver-haired presl- dent and manager of New York Rangers. recommended hockey to- day as “the most promising sports business and profession in North America." As a profession, he pointed out: “The average big league hockey; player lasts 10 years. If he's a` lop-notcher, he'll make aroundi $10,000 a year and he plays tori only 4 i-2 months each year.l ’I'here's no minimum salary in ourl league, but _the average is $4,500. “Anybody who gets into it now. as a player has a great chance be-l cause the demand for men whoi know the game is going to bei great in the future.” As a business, he says: “Hockey has been the most con- sistent money maker of any sport in New York. In the last few years, the promoters of boxing, for example, have taken a beating. Here in Madison Square Garden, hockey has been the biggest mon- ey-maker." 1 At present. a rule on the booksl oi’ the National League limits the direct salary of players to $1,000, but there are ways of getting more. Patrick estimated that Ching Johnson, former Ranger defence! star, has saved $100,000 out of his lioCk0y 0H1'1lll1E!S~ arid Eddie Shore' of Boston Bruins is said to have; laid away around $150000. i Top-salaried men in the game' todny include Shore, Sweeneyl Schriner and Art Chapman, Newi York Americans; Charlie Coriach-l cr. Toronto Maple Leafs; Ebbic Goodfellow. Norm Smith and Herb Lewis, Detroit Rod Wings, and Paul Thompson, Chicago Black'-_-~-_1_'___._._,__ __. ,__ Hawks. '"_""`“` " Class In Defeating The pfofessm" Senior Abegweits 5-4 Gaining momentum with every game Junior Rangers last night set Hal Gross* Abbles back on thelr‘ heels when they trounoed the sen- iors 5-4 in ii. wide open hockey bat- tie. Grabblng the lead ln the first minute of the first period Rangers showed definite superiority in .the first two sessions to build up a. 4 to 1 lead. They staggered slightly in the final frame before terrific Abbie onslaughts but managed to hold their lead in the final nve minutes to skate of! the ice with a well-deserved victory. It was a. surprising win for the youthful crew of Rangers but nev- ertheless one that a small crowd relished in. Showing thc same smooth passing attack inside their opponents’ blue line and handingl out bump for bump when the go-1 tied the seniors to a standstill. There was no denying them once they had grabbed that early lead although at times in the third per- i iod the Abbies rapidly gaining the' upper hand made things mighty hot for them. l Allison McAlecr, subbing in thc, Ranger net for Gordon DeBlois,, who is ill, gave a great perform- l ance and is the second midget 5 player within a week to display his l ability in great fashion. , “Tarky" Whitlock shot two goalsi in the first eleven minutes of thcl first period to send the winners off on the right foot. The clever cen-r tra got the first on assists from McEachern and Ab McKinnon,i while he took Wood‘s pass for the second. A Stewart to Pud Vlfhit- lock play at the eighteen minute mark saw the Abbies break thc-lr gooseegg. but less than a minute* later Rangers got that one backl ing got rugged the winners bat-‘ when Aubin Blacqulere counted in a passing attack with brother Levi and Robertson. Rangers scored the only goal of the second session when Buffer Worth fired one into an open cor- ner after Ev Jays pass had sent him into the clear. Abbies started to press mighty hard as the third got underway. Three minutes from the start Gor- don Stewart rammed home their second goal; Pud Whitlock got his second counter of the night five minutes later on a pass from Ste- wart but Levi Blacqulere shot what proved to be the winning counter at the fifteen minute mark when he worked in alone to drill a low hard one behind Mclnnis. Abbies l i l i l i I 1 Spun:-W Credited Wit Greatest Upse I (A. P. by Guardlan's Special Wir NEW YORK. Dec. 18--Joe Louis who was the experts’ be‘t friend a. year ago because he never let them down, wa; set down -by those same fellows as being the party of the 5 second part of the greatest sports ` upset of 1936. , Max Schmelirigs knockout of the erstwhile ebony executioner was; rated by a majority of Unltedf Stttes sport: writers as the most siartling result ol’ the year, far and uwa ' surpaisiiig anything that happened on the country's grid- ' irons. Thus, Schmeilng received his second laurel wreath of The l "” »f_r _A_P_ by Guardians Swm Wm, _ e nego a ions ARANAC LAKE N Y Dec 13 indy Tommy at stake in F0 N.H.L. » § 1- -1.--it 1 ur Joe Cambria. pre ident of the even C , _ ,. . _ .. d today she hoped to \\in the Album' Club' “as quot Mmoffeef l\l`clrtl1 American uomeiis speed H0'10Uf@d By Gomes During The Week-end 3`1.°....’.`,“°““.”...f“‘.‘.i1§ll.‘.' ‘t.;.3a§ii sr-noch-m`}>»`°»=ni»% by "Milli Bi\_‘\'li THIS .'\I~`TFIR.\`()()\` _l 3-5 l Wonderful Ice llic-27c f-;_____' ~~~;;~'__ __ _-;-_ :_ _ ri ‘Down The Alle s tams 1 y meetings. 3 mmm ,_ S _ L k L C0 a ues l Larry MacPhail former general The attract’ ‘B amnac B e l g *___* manager of Ciiiciniinti Reds and high 5°h°°l Studemi for “'ll°’l‘.ex`: *__ M _ _ - - . 1 pcits ha\e predicted a brilliant _ __ _ , __ ONTREAL Dec Ta-(OP) the Giants began bidding fox It future looked ahead to :i vtinterof C \ R Bowl “G U “"1" .-1 ommy. et half line star o Ot at stake in 1-cu Weekqmd games _ ham said wda, owe mu p,o\,ab1v women speed skaters, climavc _ b0w______ ___-__ _____\‘ ______j_‘ c ___ _ football chantp?ons, was honored today by his associates in the Do- minion Bureau of statistfcs The r r Woo ock. N B., boy was presented with :tn eiigrnved p:cket| front now' but they can lose thatl leadership if Red Dutton‘s New lfmm dst _' ' _ 1 York Americans can win two s‘r:i’ght_ That ls, provided Can- adiens di both their 'week-end watch and chain and with a. mlm- “P ber or gold p_ecc5_ igames against New York Rangers. » Birthday Greetings (By The Canadian Press) To Gabby Hartnett' first-string catcher of Chicago Cubs in the, Nalioiiril League, bom in Woon-` socI~i-M in Noi Trade Dean par round' George Von Elm ofl so inclllmd bicvdl, ,.,dim_ hnxmm i Grace Bleiiklxoi~ii Hollywood, former United Statesl and .qmnching "he bag., ` _ E, MacDonald diiwieur golf champion, took at t'.\'o-‘ *l* __ HN hom Coach __ 'hnr fafhm. W. C. D.'i\'ics szmke lead Over Olin Dutm' °x'l ST' LOUIS' Dec' 18 “ Bhmchl Ralph Millie 't foi'i~ner` '\nnis=ur` open king, at the close of the see-§ RICKCY. general manager of St; ska-____ of Nm-_e - - , 'laws' Rough Elders' 1936 Big F°‘~“` Canadiens ofl Montreal are out in Lead In close the dealhlwith Cambria on the N°1`lh Anlwlcarf ~-If I Wm ,mythmg of imp0,.t_ the late arrival of 1-. i_'a‘i':’i' ance." she said, "it will be because mmf; M;-_ Afbllzf “lm f ` of the training program I carried b°“g mls -‘P 1”" *‘ . ‘ Abbic< c‘o\viif:\li_ , out during this past suin'ner` _ ABBI‘Eq_ 1. l H `i 1 M6 221 1 f' l.'i7 lfil 112' l-H i_"i ` 5 261 140 hi l*i`_’~I 94'-` r T ond round of the $1500 Soughemi Louis Cardinals, said today Dizzy, - HAWKS: California Open today. ' Dean. ace pitcher, probably would _*___ , C_ _,_ MCL,_,_n Von Elm rang up a 68, four un-_ ml' be lfadfd- md] 1 5 H. Hyde der par, for it 36-hole score of 137.; Ri‘1`kf`Y~ ‘f"h° smlght _m P lit s i T. Vei-gc . Dumh L95 Angcies D,-0_ 105i A bail, the eccentric hurler fora sms _Louls _ M_ M,`_,Cm,_,__C,, _,_, and wok a seven on me tl"-gemari fortune in cash and almost fi coin- y fm but finished with A 71 for 3' plclo baseball team. quickly adzlccl P' ` that didn't mean he was going to Rosenbzoofn _ _ 139 l . Willie Hunter, veteran Scot styl-1 Gulf' t\‘Yln¥~ It was J"-*L ‘hat "0, ist who shot 61 yesterday, posted, 011? sofmcd Wiiliniz to nay 012| imvggg, 'is for 140. Price- `""‘" A. Smit ff *W ' 'fs ""~”""* " P”“1 D“““' f"°““g"' l““u“`” "fl is P iw rau=\i~niiii's spd-iai wirei C. 1ior;,' llil liui ll* if 1912 1073 llii liT l‘\7 l'f}i H7 1111 304 173 139 223 ltill i/“fx iv,i:i _ '=' iii Frm" the ""p"°5S "amc p“S5mg` PaSt0r K»O S er has offered Louis rt gunrantf-c=1lni‘ol