OQTOBER 14. 193s THE CHARLUTTETOWN UAKDl-AIIJ “m: St. Dgnstalfs Team Crush U. H. . 9-0 Winners Score Four Tries And Penalty Kick in Brilliant Victory ___.i__ A glllfltltil-lvfiriililg S. D. U. footb l" “Iliad. rial"! hlrh above the ex- pectations of local fans. 1'95"“!!! Proved they would be strong factors h. [his _\i';il"s rilziriilmc Intercollegiate series when they swamped thc (Emu University of New Brunswick teem 19-0 in their 1mm‘; ""1 in the western section of the Intercollegiate series. Two tric=, one of which was co nverted and e. beautiful Jscement W. gnrr tho gliilts an il-0 advantage at the end of the first half and [hpyilliliflii tivo additional tries for |¢$5i0il of the hard-fought game. A M“ (i! perstsiont forwarr h“ “z-ri- always 0n WP 0' i 9 ‘in pills il brilliant passing back- bfld ".51 niutic few mistakes led {IL-me Sllilli! overwhelming and Jinn-Ling victory. From the open- wliistlc they started to force m“, hem-gm- ommIlQlIi-I and but M. m, bud fumbles in the first m, minutes of the encounte they "um have had two touchdowns. l- _\'_ g, took the kickoff and on m}, suuesgiwp plays forced play [nfldB the Saints twenty-five yard marker but each time timid! hm" h.‘ by the winners brought the lall out of danger. Just after be- ing awardctl the first penalty kick o; "in game Saints started their offensive that saw them take the upper ilnlld of the visiting colleg- kni- nd Grant on two bell wiviighocgaslons tool! P193’ 11151119 m, u, N, B. ten and twice in the mm nf two minutes it appeared l, g m» Saints had scored; both were called back and as 918-1’ 0011' uiiued to rage on the visitors (ii-q yard line Saints 100i- their opportunity when in their anxiety bcross over they picked tho-ball from the scrum. The resulting penalty boot drove the ball to mid- field but Jack Coyle book it right hark gs he raced 30 yards before ping brought down. Again the pmurc was relieved as U. N. B. we awarded another penalty lick but the S. D. U. offensive finally told. Forcing continually they hemmed the U. N. B. squad lull-ls their 25; from e lineup at the south comer of the field Vince Grant snared the oval and the fast forward of the Saints raced through a broken field to plant the ball over the line. The score came Just l2 minutes aficir the ‘ to convert lite bull well inside the last while stripe on two occasions but on each occasion the kicking of the Saints relieved the prassure. Play was raging at midfield when Wllsh airddenly received the ball hr out on the wing; scooping the out tn the mercury-footed half- back dodged through. a broken field and had only the fullback to lbw him: it looked like another score but Walsh, at ng to drew the fullback away from his ielmmate by his aide heaved e wild pass that U. N. B. recovered. liere the visitors suffered e. bush break that coat them a. cer- tain score. Ploy was at U. ‘N. Bis i0 when suddenly Dwyu, recov- ered an S. D. U. fumble to break into the clear. He was 70 yards from a touchdown with the pack thiiinz him. It appeared as if he "-1 suing to make it. but Just 10 mus from the line and being hard pressed by his pursuers he defied to pass. The result was a wild heave that the S. D. U. for- pounced upon. The losers ken our inside the 1o for iris next coilple of minutes and it look- ed 1.5 if they were going to break ihlvllkll for the tying touchdown, but the best they could do was 1mg the Saints to touch for sar- lti’. From the tiwentry-five yard “Pout Saints began another liicnsive that was to give them ‘Qilfupoiilts __be Mi till: , % 6.95 mo ur lous SNAVINO BOWL! 11.00 lifllli . w; é Tn or: bovm INTO "ms west:- T"AT'$ warns. YOWRB-ALLGON’ To STAY =You'i.i. FmD Gunman-ea: re the half wa ended the visitiyggaji iii rlcr-riirsiilrsé demands a close _ POWERS, KING'S SCOUT- l’H wAauiNeYoo- “m; Hiau 85A: ocean"; 6o unvumsusu 1N Tvieel. DYS . “Kili- more points in the closing r- mark was reached. Kicking and running the ball to U. N. Hfs 35 yard line Higgins. made his mark on o. high U. N. B. kick. He was 35 yards out but his placement at- tempt split thc uprights m run the score to 6-0. Still forcing end well inside U. N. B. terrl Saints started a beautiful back- field play that carried them over for their second try of the game. Gallant. rancy B. D. U. forward snared the ball from a, lineup, raced 10 yards before heaving "a lateral to Tralrlcr and as the iat- ter plowed his way to within five yards of the line Gallant was right beside him to take the return also and plant the oval directly orbital‘ the ilgfiBhinmfl-S’ kick for 9 V will. 8D posts. The time of the placement was 28 min- utcs Ind the filial touchdown came m? four minuta or the half re- There was a kicking duel with honors even as the teams started play in the second half and it was the visitors who had the first soorim chance as they forced to within tweglty-five yards of the Saints Iirle. Recipients of a pen- slfry kick they elected to try a placement but the attempt was wide of the mark. Play was very even for the noxt 10 minutes as both teams took turns forcing the play in their opponents zone. Both hill-fillies were displaying some beautiful passing attacks but hard tackling backflelds were stopping the thrusts before they made much heacirwa/y. But with 13 minutes of the half gone Seinrls finally click- ed on one of their combination: attacks Saints were thirty yards out When play started from a. scrum. The ball passed through the hands of the entire three-quartcr lino before being handed to Walsh for out on the wing. Walsh had fificen yards to go but he outraced the opposition to cross over in the fer corner of the field. The at- tempt to convert from a difficult angle failed. Shortly after and list afitcr U. N.'B. had threatened again, McKinnon. fast halfltneman of tihe Saints was stopped only five yards from the line on an- other of the spectacular runs the Saints back field were pulling off all during the game. Both teams were tiring from the fast pace they had set. since the outaetofthegantcandasare- suit. play was much slower tlhsn in the opening half hut again Balms rooters had plenty to cheer for as Walsh raced thirty yards down the sidelines to go over standing up and place the ball directly behind the posts, from where Higgins’ educated toe again made no mistake as the oval went soaring between the uprights, to make the count read 19-0 and end the scoring for the day. ‘Ik-yirlg gamely and hard for a touchdown U. N. B. again forced inside Saint Dunstans territory and when they were awarded a penalty kick directly opposite illlo posts and 30 yards out it appear- ed es if Saints were to lose their shutout victory. But the place- ment kick, s. beautiful attempt just mined the mark by the mat- ter of inches. Before the 981:; shove it with a RAZOR ITSILI PAYS IOI ITSIJ 7l Slew, stu-riuv f! Major League Baseball And Nat. Hockey League Farm Systems Similar (Canadian Press) WINNBPEG, Oct. iii-Some close hockey observers believe New York Rangers ultimately will be to the major professional hockey what the New York Yankees an to baseball, as e result of the farm system employed by both organizations. Yankees, with their powerful "farm clubs" Newark Bears and Kansas City Blues, champions of the International and American Asociation leagues respectively. have the cream o! the minor league crop from which to choose recruits. Rangers are rapidly ac- quiring a "chain system" equally as potent. In addition to Philadelphia Ramblers of the Irvtenvational Am- erican League and New York Rov- ers of the Eastern United States Amateur league, Rangers have added Edmonton Athletic Club Juniors to their amateur hook-up and have Vancouver Lions of the Pacific Coast league available se s seasoning ground for young professionals Here is how the Ranger system operates: Ranger scouts across Canada recommend amateur to Manager Lester Patrick who in turn irwiica the players to his sn- nual fall training school here. Best of the amateur-s are taken by Patrick to New York where they penform with the Rovers in the U. S. amateur circuit. As these players develop, they are given opportunities with Philadelphia in professimlnl hockey. If a pie/yer fails to make good with Philadelphia and yet appears to have promise of development, he can be sent to Vancouver for seasoning. If the player makes good at Philadelphia, Patrick brings him up to the Rangers at various times during the winter to gain major league experience. At the same time, Rangers have the first call on junior players at Edmonton and no other N. H. L. club can sign them. unless Pat- rick decides they can be of no use to him. This farm system has paid large dividends to Professor Patrick. Of the tentative 1938-39 Ranger line- up, only two players are not graduates of the system. Goalie Davie Kerr was obtained from Montreal Maroons and defencernarl Art Ooulfcr from Chicago Black Hawks. Last year three players were promoted to the N. H. L. from Philadelphia, centre Clint Smith and forwards Bryan I-lextall and Bobby Kirk. This trio spent the 1935-36 season with Vancouver Lions and then moved as a unit to Philadelphia. for the 1936-37 season. Murray Patrick and Larry Moiyncaux, regular Rambler de- fenoeimcn, played several with Rangers near the close of lest year when injuries forced ‘uwu Ranger dcfenceemen to the side- es. Dutch Hiller of Kitchener, Ont. moved directly from the amateur Rovers to the Rangers late last season and fitbed right into the Rangers’ style of play, largely be- cause the Rovers employ the same checker-board pass attack used by gen "older brothers" in the N. Drillon Gets In Some Skating (or. By a u.“ Special Wire) TORONTO, Oct. ' — Gordie Drtllon, Toronto Ma ie Leaf t winger who led the ational Hoc Y League in scoring last season. couldn't wait until next Week when his team starts training at. Preswn. The Moncton N. 13., sharpshooter wagtllsktlitmg lirebewi-tfi“ workout o ow rig a m HP on the ice, Drillon said he weighed 181 pounds, four more than when he reported for trainl last ses- son. A summer of soft and ten- gltif keplt‘ himmin Splendid physical ope, e sa . _ Dl'illOn said he haunt yet bee“ tendered a 1938-39 contract. l-le an- ticipates no difficulty. however. 811d expects Manager Conny SHIV-he i0 arrange the contract on a. bonus plan for scoring productlornnDrillon figs ma; would be okay with Drillon ls not the only Lee-f eager to "set $019k!’ All but three o; 115g year's team are now in ‘P0- ronto. Those missins. but exPecifd this weekend, are PEP Kelly. Mur- phy Chamberlain and BinBO Klimt!" man. tirn ly kick by Plu- giuilbiii ‘G. fullback relieved the pressure. The Kflme ‘indw- 1"“ alter U. N. B. had taken the ball inito Saints territory on 811091" penalty kick. The Karrie rebounded in fine foot/ball throughrmiso Unlike the previous Mount n Barrie V68‘ teujayfl; gaggle produced Ill-Lilli} backfield work by both teams. both squads showed mini’ n" passing attacks and as a result fans witnessed some sensational open and that only deadly tackling halted- "’~"°l§“,.’.“'“°‘....“m°°ai“il" led I. l1 8-55 ' aible manner. He ruled strictly all the way through and as a result 24 penalty kicks were handed out with the vlsltinc U. N. B. squad receiving seventeen of them While saints were recipients of '7. Another feature of the‘ Dame and one well worth mentionim was tlhe facgodtlhat for ethe time n a 8 ma“ l’ 9-" ' ers were unhindered ‘by sowicwn flip playing field being roped off and as e result the large crowd of fans were able to witness the match much better. tca- :- gwn, Ifilllback, Stewart; three-qualifiers. Covenoy. Dwyer, MacDermott. nurses-s: halves. W11- son, MacKinxion. COWS’; fOFWB-fdl- Murray. Good, logic, Wolsten- holme, Fletcher, Brebner, Brown. 5, 1), U_.: Fullback, Plneau; abyss-quarters. Walsh, Smith, coyle, MacKlilnon: halves, Hig- gins. S. ‘rralnor, J. ‘n-ainor; for- wards, A. l-lenn-essey, L. Connolly. Chisholm. Gallant. Grout». MM- Donald, MacNell. Down The Alleys HOLY NAME BOWLING l Duck Pin Mixed League Last night on the Holy Name Alleys twelve very evenly marched. cou/plesmttlod hard to stay in the running as tonight will be elim- ination night when twelve couples will be dropped leaving thirty six couples to continue. Following are the scores:- E. Doucetrtc 127 145 140 P. Mclnnis '71 101 90-674 R. Duncan 113 142 134 D. Brown 8B 84 106-667 J. librd 132 103 109 P. Harper 91 117 113-665 R. Mcllellan 130 121 127 M. Walsh 91 99 89-657, J. Peterson I45 106 130 E. Mitchell 96 83 79-639 F. ‘Iierrlay 93 10:3 120 M. Brown 10'! 90 99-616 R. Ellison 83 129 94 N. MacKay 85 108 101-600 R. Laiwlor 106 121 9'1 S. Smith 88 78 108-598 n. Dalzial i 103 105 o4 R. Sinnott -‘ 96 88 108-594 L. Brown 129 131 129 L. Ellison 7'7 60 70-591 E. Callaghan 106 118 109 A. Birch B9 92 77-500 C. McKenna 107 142 109 ' D. Kirwam 80 65 78-581 Tonight At '1 O'clock IE8 GENTS M. Connollv E. Michael M. Aylward P. Whltlock L. Corrlgan Rcv. d. MacCormnc I. Dcugan C. LeClair H. Coyle E. Toombs M. Clinton I. Berrigan D. Ooyle D. McDonald A. Wa E. Blanchard M. Carr V. Gallant L. McDougall J. Hughes E. 'O'Hol101an I’. I-Iorlncssey D. McKenzie L. Corcol-sn CIPTOWN BOWLING ALLEYS COMMERCIAL LEAGUE l-Iolmalfs victors-NOB. Sea Gl1li5—322l. I-figih single J. Williams 292. High three S. Moore 727. Tonight. at ‘I o'clock Pal-tersons vs. Mounties. and Electricians vs Red Indians. Clerks Tigers-Gilli. Kimmen-MBO. High single Dr. Duffy 317. HMI/tilifee D1‘. Duffy 827. Rel-lowed and approved by Dollnlon Headquarters The Boy Scout: Aeeoclaflol. l1’ Must Have. Lumen 0m’. SOHlI-t ow, wan‘ w; Went 4 ‘f-gn-ANBTHIMAP \$ Lvmo cu ‘ll-IIDISK in ‘the Caner RooM- f Arretz_ o r side which tile oommlitee boat had (By Tom lone victory. FDOUBT AS T0 MILEAGE Bluenoseks elapsed time of four llours,_;i9 minutes and l0 seconds was within about five lnirluies of the record for tile course. But, be- cause of the lightness of the pre- vailing southwesterly breeze, never exceeding 16 miles an hour, many expressed doubt the schooners acJu- ally sailed 4U miles. The doubts received some support from the rival skippers, who had difficulty llildillg inconspicuous trawl buOYS used tc mark the course and who expressed belief they were improperly placed. Use ot‘ such marks in water already lib- i-‘rully d0tted with trawl buoys on illore ilrosalc iiu.y was perhaps un- fortunate, A port of the Bluenosds was established on the second eg of the course, a IO-mile beat. ‘Ine- baud went: far to windward of the true turning nlcrk, her crew misled by o. flshermenis trawl buoy, be- takcn up a station. 'I‘oday‘s course was charted as a 30 mllc equalateral triangle with a {wfc-éllrilt? "tail," the tail to be sailed After an 11.50 a. m. starting sig- nal, delayed from 9.05 by lack of breeze. Bllwnose was first across the line, but Tllebaud. footing faster soon drew up to weather and passed her. lt. was o lead she was unable to hold and the bi defender soon weathered the chalenger to Ium thiasflve mile mark firsc by 39 sec- Oil Then b an the l0 mile windward leg, on wlich Biuenose increased her lead to 12 minutes and 15 sec- onds. The relative positions of the schooners remained almost un- changed throughout the balance of the contest. A course intended to send the corltenders twice around an 18- nuie course has been charted for tomorrow. Captain Angus calls it a. merry-go-round and some support- ers of ‘Thebaud say the latter has 80mg advantages on it because the smaller vessel can turn more quickly than her big opponent. The committee set 9.05 a. m. as start- ing time. Following the lO-imile windward leg today, Blucnose turned the mark 12 minutes, 31 seconds ahead. and was loading 11 minutes 19 seconds at the conclusion of thr following leg. a broad reach. After resailing the five-mill "tail", Biucnoso won by ll min- utes, 58 seconds. This the uwo sailed on almost oven terms eix- copt for the second leg when the challenger wasted two tacks and worked lilucll farther to wind- ward t-llzlil necessary searching for the buoy. Blucllose had difficulty finding the 35-‘111110 mark and Captain Walters expressed his opinion of the course after Bluenose was tied up by “firing a Halifax friend: “We won (issrpiic the baby buoys." Bluerloscls fishermaifs staysail, a. pircc of canvas invented and de- veloped by fishermen, but since adopted by yachts, blew out while she was beating up the second leg. The big piece of canvas, split almost in two, was hauled down quickly and six of ller crew prone on tilc clock, with palms and needles. Gaye an lrrlipressive ex- amrple of speed sewing. A smaller staysnll sent. up in its stead soon was l-claiacrd by the mended one. Sail-makers in the loft of Marion Cooncy, Wilt) made Tllebaudls sails worked lntc tciligllt. on more per- manent repairs. Bluenoses elapsed me on the windward leg of one our, ~13 min- utes. set something approximating the price cf an America's Cup race, collsic" lug sclloollcrs cannot. pcint ilcarly so close in tile wind a; . and was short. The cup de- lrant Yankee established .: ‘.(iS for such a leg, but she szlllcd it during a “snol-ter" whereas today's race was contested in weather admirably suited to a canoe race. r The airways observer of the coast guard. stationed at nearby Rockport, reported the maximum velocity of l-he breeze today was l6 milcs an hour and absence of wllitccails indicated the wind sel- dom exceed-ed l2 miles an hour. Argument. over the course in no way detracted from Bluencsek victory. To Captain Angus went credit. for taking the lead on the opening leg and Captain Ben did not. ivnit to be asked before he in- nirir-ci mistake: accounted for the wide extuvion of Bluenoseis lead on the second leg. N031‘ ISN'T, CAPTAiN-iwos MAKlNG AFRESN COPY FOR- Piucrice- Mm I've 6'07‘ m: Owls/MAL m m» POCKET.’ supported argument’ l of one hour, 15 minutes, _ Capt. Walters’_ Big Salt Banker Leads Challenger Across Line By IZMinates .__.___ Horn-n, Associated Press Sport: Writer) GLOUCESTER, Mass" Oct. lit-The old Queen of the North Atlan- tic, Captain Angus Walters‘ big salt k ‘ . tCaptain Ben Pinch challenger for the International Fisherman's Tro- , phy, the schoone Gertrude L. Thcbaud, leading the aspirant for the '. title around a. purported 40 mile course by l2 minutes. ' Thebaud sailed away with the honors gagamcnt of the three-out-of-fivo series, Blumose, today defeated Sunday in their opening en- leavtng and: cute pith Says Operation On Hull's Arm Su c cessful (By ALAN RANDAL Canadian Press Staff Writer) NEW YORK. Oct. Johnny Longden, the IOZ-pound riding star from Calgary and Ta- ber, Alta... is leaving the Wheatlsy Stable when his contrast expires Oct. 29....leading jockey of the year, Johnny has signed a one- year contract with Mrs. Vera Braggk Stable .,.he rode winners no. 177 and 17B today... Young Corbett‘ Ill writes from Fresno, Cal, to say his right name is Ralph Capabianca Giordano. he fights Fred Apostoli ill Mad- isoll Square Garden Nov. 18.... Leo Durocher is the first playing manager Brooklyn Dodgers have had since 1909 when l-larry Lum- ley, heavy-hitting outfielder took over from Patsy Dorlovan.... War Admiral checked in at Pimlico today for hLs Nov, 1 race against Senbiscuit....and a lot of people won't really believe the "match" race will come off until they post the mutuels on the duel ....Mr.s. Payne Whitney of New York, owner of the Greentree Farm, is the first woman to re- ceive a life membership in the thoroughbred club of America 110108 D1"? 9111c! P100 9111 9195 911$‘ Errlblematic of distinguished ser- vloe to the turf.... Good news about Carl l-lubbell. ..Dr. Robert Brashcar of Knox- ville, Terln., who assisted in an operation on the Giant's screw- ball pitchers arm. says the oper- ation was a success and the Hub will b2 effective on the mound next season... Babe Ruth, let out as conch for Brooklyn Dodgers, wished them the best of luck today but didn't say what he plans for tile future ....many think he may lake a rui- nor league managing job and prove himself rcadv for a chance to pilot a major league outfit The Al-Ys Paul ltlickclsoil says it's even motley promoter Mike Jacobs worn. be able to lure Maxie Baer into the ring against Joe Louismgeneral opinion is Max had enough of the Brown Bomber the last time they met though since then Baer has proclaimed himself f‘a new man".... Poul al- so will take even money the next. 13-(CP)—-‘ l D0 u b leheaderé BLUENOSE EVENS SERIES W115 NTHMEBAUD “l lint can't atop humming ‘Oil Ma Mo, get that man ior mo" "Wily, does he smoke Sweet Caps 7" SWEET CAPORAL CIGAR ETTES ‘The purest form in which tobacco can be smoked.’ Hoop Bflli Tonight What promises to be a close and exciting basketball doubleheader is scheduled for the Y gym to- night, starting at Boclock when the Y Ettes tangle with the Co- Eds in a girls encounter and the fast; stepping Y Knots take on the P. W. C. five in the boys same. The ladies always play n £10538 brand of basketball and tolllgllts game should prove to be no ex- ception. Things are somewhat dif- ferent in the boy's 89m?- Y Knots, victors over Monctcn Bombers in an exhibition tilt are highly favored to whip the C01- lege team but-and it would not be surprising at all-they may get. a. lot more argument than they expect from the Collegians. P. W. C. teams of late years have the habit of puttin! 0n their best displays when the odds scum staked against them_ rind 1f they are at the top of their game tonight the fast-stepping Y Knots will receive a merry battle of it all the way. " Girls game gets underway at B with the boys encounter following at 9 o'clock. DRAGGED BY RAKE MORFFLACH. 595k. - (C?) - I-lal-old Morrison, farmer, miracul- ously escaped deabh when he fell under the prongs of a hay-rake and was dragged a mile by his runaway ‘team. He crawled four miles for aid and is recovering from cuts and bruises. big heavyweight ‘chsunpiorl fight will find Louis versus Lou Nova at Yankee Stadium June 19, 1939. ARE look to Penmans Knit style and quality. oflers comfortable fit. .;.—;-—__= Si. Mary's Meet Axemen For Title HALIFAX. Oct. lfi-(CPi-St. Marys defratmi Nova. Scritla Twit ll-0 hrre toriny to u-i»: tile Hali- fax City Intercollegio». EHEH-‘Yl Rugby football title and enter the Western Nova Scotin finals a- gainst Acadia. St. Mary's previous- ly llud eliminated King's 16-0, The Saint: scored twice in the first half. converting one of this tries and ndcicri another try in the final ilurioil. They how will meet Acadia in a llome-anci-home series beginning at Woifvllle Oct. 22, . .n..1! Two Teams Forced To § id e I i n e s (C-l’. By Guardian's Special Wire! MONTREAL, Oct. Iii-TWO 50M of riders dropped out of the For- um‘..- six (lay htkc race tonight. Cllllillf.’ the iicld down i0 nine teams as they stcercrl into the 1,- 500til mile. The Montreal-Detroit. combin- ation of Laurent. Gadou and m4 Otiavaere rind the Reg. fielding- Bcbby Thomas pair from Toronto ailcl tile United States fell by the wayside after almost four days oi! p0 ailing, The surviving field remained we! bullciloci with but three laps separ- stint: lenders and trill-omens. The German duo. ilinn and Yopel were in a tir- for first in mileage pith fllrec otlltrs. and led Torchy and Doug Peden in points with 455 lo 400 WHEN QUALITY AND COMFORT COMBINED ...s@¢¢lya>z.aan.<zlnn.¢ Every year an increasing number of Canadians Goods for leadership in Penmans "95" Underwear, for example, pro- vides u. combination of fine materials that wear and launder well, and sldliul tailoring that Available in shirts and drawers and union lull: 1n- ciudinq the popular NuCut style for Men and Boys. 438171)!