i- Wwwtfi milliliter». (Osnlan has) OTTAWA. Dec. l9.—Ott.a,wa ore i lapse Bailey Makes Amaz- ng Battle For Life. (fhladhl has) 3081011, Dec. 18-1110 stubborn‘ ators and Chicago Black Hawkgl "Id to the medical profession, am- Pllyed a I»! overtime tic here to-l “"18 bill-lb $11M Irvin night before 4,500 people. The div- ived points gave Senators undispu- tedpomaasioncfthirdplaoeinthe Canadian Section of the National Hockey League and kept Hawks in D1 the hunt for leadership in the Am- erican group. Allan Shields Dill Bcnatora ahead | at the him-minim m"; 1,, m, he made ma: mt night's lilddeliipe‘ 111's!- Derilld. taking a has: from Mu Kaminsky. Paul Thompson evened it up early in the tiiiro period with ' ins." the wwrt laid- Lionel Conacher and Dock Romnea in tho assisting roles. The teams went into overtime, his chart is a bit nearer 31g than it was this morning. His tem- Chicago pressing all the way. luafplagjverglswaglzigforhisllfe am.‘ 5 Bailey, injured ‘Toronto Maple unabated imillht at the Hospital. ‘rhe latest report of . Donald Munro, who performed two delicate operations on the star hockeyistb fractured skull. stated, ‘that he still held the slight galnl 16a I t relapse. l’ “He ls lust as he was this morn- “no better ' l ! l and no worse He continued to take lnourishment through the veins and normal Taffy Abel, who hasn't soured n goal perature is holding between 101 and since the 1931-32 season, BIO-KB his 10i- hla Pulse ls B0 and tendlns 11°1H1°0fl118 record when he lumber- ed up the ice, half-way through the; Close to normal, 111131118 from 25 overtime and beat Beveridge from 20 feet out after taking a pass from Tommy Cook. It looked like a win for Chicago until Roger Jenkins took a tripping penalty. George Boucher threw five forwards over the boards and Desse Roche snared the equalizer on a double pass from Earl Roche and Jerry Shannon. SUMMARY First Period: a 1—Ottawa, Shields (Knminsky) :47. P€IlilitlBS——ShCpp3i‘d. Second Period: No score. Pena1ties—None. Third Period: '~'—Cl1l<Il1l;0. Tllilmilson (Conacher. Romnesl 6:55. Penalties-Forums. Overtime Period: B-Chlcago, Abel (Cook) 5:15, 4—Ottawa, D. Roche tshannori, E, Roche) 8:20. Penalties-Jenkins. May Suffe r Fractured ‘Si: ul l (Canadian Press) ‘NEW GLASGOW, N. 8.. Dec 19- Thrown hack on his head in col- lission with John Ros! of Holy Namc- in a junior hockey game m- niuhi. Rotor Mills i... in hospital villi n fltla-lillf‘ ifillllllf‘ of the skull Afzlfs. dicnce player for Thor- buru. and Ross were rushing along (ho boards in opposite directions will"! Ulfl‘ mtt head-on. Both crulhrd h tho ire and Mills went’ _ Doctors ‘i said an X rnj: would be taken to-I had l bur-k hrirrl mi his il9"d morrow to S’e if the been fracturcd. skull Wins Decision (Amoctaud Press) NEW YORK, Doc. lS-Charley Jifassera of Plttsburx won a split decision over Maxey Rownblmm, light heavyweight champion, in a IO-round bout in the Ridgewood Grove. 5- C., tonight. Rosen- blooms title was not at stake. l-Ie wright-d 1B1 1-2; Massera182l-4. Christmas Suggestions We have a very nice Line n! CIGARS Marguerites, Simona, Bachelor, Punch, etc. PIPES Duahills. Meerschoum, Hands. Monaco, Ashley, Admiral, etc. In all shapes and prices We have some nice Case Pipes Fomflerly aelli ng at MM-Now - $2.19 Cigarette line is vIIC (If "It bCIL Turret, Winchester. Buckingham, Gold Flake Swat Corporal, etc. We ull a complete uu of Chocolates and many other wonder» ful Gifts. Jilly’: Ithaca Stan r081’ I n; w... lira! casnsorrsrowzv downward and his respiration is to so. ; "He slept this afternoon and it ‘seemed to be a natural nap. He. is unconscious but can be aroused. It is naturally advisable to avoid all possible strain and not arouse him any more than is necessary. Brain Condition Satisfactory "The brain condition seems to be satisfactory as far as I can deter- mine. He had definitely got no worse during th¢ last 524 1n view of the fact another mem- ber of the attending staff of phy- sicians hurried to Baileys bedside at one o'clock this morning and performed a lumbar puncture co- incident with announcement the patient had taken a turn for the worse, the statement of Dr. Munro that "Ace" had "got no worse dur- ing the last l4 hours" was taken to mean he had not lost ground in that period. Bailey's condition showed im- provement after the early morning operation. Shore on Verge of Collapse Eddie Shore of the Boston Bruins, the other principal in pro- fessional hockey's most serious ac- cident in 30 years, continues in a terribly hart-arsed mental stale. Broken in mind and spirit since he collided with Bailey in last ‘Ptimdny night's Ifl-Illei hi? w" ‘m the verge of a collapse today when he asked Charles P‘. Adams, Pres- ident of the Bllton Bruins. w wlwt a pilot u» which he could mini and regain his shattered health. Shore insisted. however. thag no move be made until Ba-UBYS “Eh?- for life was settled, Under suspen- sion now. 51°58 "m! 3mm“ “Red" Homer of the ‘lbs-onto Mo?“ iaaais. who felled him after he col- lided with Bailey, Shore is in I highly nervous condition and in- timatcs believe he will be unlit W play hockey for some time roll-I'd- less of what action National Hockey Leagm officials may take in the trasic case. Timely Tips On Sport Tonight. the Albies with KcllY. Nicholson and mnoianien reolwlnl Hudmn, Lswlor and Gulliver ll the second string will meet the Saint John Beavers in what l8 aptly termed the second section curtain raiser here. ' . The Beatcn-Kane-McArthur trio who drove four tallies past Rosier Monday night are expected to con- tinue their good The above line when functioning presents one of the Dialect scor- ing threats in the H. L. I Frank Cloris, Ymitbfui and hard masking Anus defeaocman was withdrawn in the second pwiod o! the Abbie-Hawk game. suffering irwi hip injuries sustained in the tilt played hare laatjriday night. Coach Jaltaon did not disclose who would form the local rear- guard in tmight‘: game. I I Rumor has it that’ Walter Fer- guson would be back in Abbie liv- cry but nothing definite has been announced. Harry Butler. Halifax referee. has been choaen by Pruldsng J. A. Hanway of the "Big Pour" to of- ficiate at tonight's pins. A local man. yet to be adtcwd. will also handle a whistle. . a O The Saskatoon Quakrn, who are going on a Euripeon (our, will Vince; their éofiquefui, the Mone- wn Hawks, before embarking at Saint John. O O he tentative date lat fa above encounter is Dec. 8'1. The Hawks shut out the Qua-hers in two straight games to give than the Allan Cub. ' ' . No foundation is flven the report that Bill Walker, Abhls idsfsnce- Iln, pulled a "boner" by slam- the puck into his (Ill citadel lg Abbb hawk tut, IN!!! SOOIII ' o n. s. can 1N1 Varsity. I: Port Oolbwne. I. . ilgln Pails, l. Ifl Katmai. I: I} or) I league championship season, offiohl averages reveaL l spread anti 1M1. t, Madison Odin ‘ during the 1883 Americanldan ""1 it remained for a veteran, Willie had offered a minor bar ;Kamrn, Olevelands third baseman. hatch. The Garden ia ‘to set the only new individual mark , wold from Louil Bored. Groom's at for handling his position. For the Italian manager in ltd-h. d final lseventh time during his careerlaccsptance of terms for he cham- m Terms Will! Garden l SlIlTlEREl) CHICAGO. Dee. iO-Jlielding ra- corda were few and well w WW6 per cent fr: a hes unatchwith liflw ‘Baum! has willed‘ announoedtdlay. » laugh-en's insistence of or percentile of the alts Kamm lcd the league's third base-i pica. men. and turned in a new record tage mark of .984. However. his record of 3'79 chances in 131 games was short of the Major Lettgle high. Another Indian star. Dick Porter. tied the Major‘ League record for outfielders, turning in an average of 896. and shares tlio distinction with 5am West of St. Louis who had the ssrne figure in 1928. In an ll-irining game with De-I‘ troit on August 13, the Milwaukee, Pole unlimbercd his arm and on successive plays, thmw out runners who attempted to score from sec- ond base on long singles, cutting them down at the plate. l Joe Kuhel, Washlngtons young‘ first baseman, putting in his first year as a regular, ranked first with] .996. He participated in 126 double-| plays. three less than Irving Burns of Bt. Louis. Henry Greenburg of. Detroit. tied the world mark for unassldcd double plays by a first baseman when ho made two against St. LOUD 0n Bcptcmbcr 3. In spite of the weighl of his managerial duties, Joe Cronin of‘ Washington, was head and should- ers above the regular shortstops. The Senator pilot worked up an avenge of .980. with Jim Levcy of St. Louis second at .945. The catchers were well bunched, with Merv Shea of St. Louis turn- ing in the top average of .996 A pair of Cleveland hurlers, Clint Bmlwn and Wesley Ferrell, domin- ated the pitchers in fielding. Brown had 64 chances. 11 put-outs and 53 exists. while Ferrell licid l2 puts- outs and 4B assists. GRABIE GETS LUNE TMEY l m llV_E~_IlT|ME. (Annotated Press) BOSTON. Dec. l9—In action on their home rink for the first tinic since Ivvin “Ace" Bailcy suffered his tragic accident, the Boston Bruins tonight nosed out the Mont- real~Marcons 1-0 in a quiet. over- time game that was featured by the semationai play of the rival goalies. Bob Gracie broke up the game after 6.24 0f overtime play with a flukey tally. He was trying to pass to Harry Oliver and his high shot struck the stick of Cyclone Went- wonh, Maroon defe u, and caromed into the Montreal net to decide the game. Although the Boston hockey pub- lic was informed that all of the gat¢ receipts would br- turned over to Mn. Gladys Bailey. wife 0f the injured ‘Toronto player. the crowd was oondderably under 6.000. the smallest one of the Boston season. The receipts were announced as $5,842.22. STEWARTS Mill mlimllin llE Keith Mom's goaLflve seconds before the final ball gave Btewarfs rlakery an even break with Holmans at the l-orum last night, the game ending l-l. It was a scheduled game of the City Hockey League. Bill Brown's first period loll on a pass from Bob Holman, loosed tn be good enough, but a desperate five-man attack by Stewarts in the final period brought about t4. tlelng counter. The stopping of Price, in Hoimalfs net, was the big feature of the gami. with his team weakened by penal- ties he stood of! attack after attack but finally bowed as Acorns drive rustlcd the cords. The lineups follow: Stewart-Goal. Murley; defence. Carmichael, Bradley Mcliellsn; for- wards, Whitiock, MoCabe, Mahar, Whalen, Mahar. Cairns. liolmnns — Goal, Price; defence, Ferguson and Bevan: forwards. P. Whitlock. Lawlor. Mclnnis, 801- man, Brown, Blanchard, McDonald. Referee-M. Diamond. SUMMARY First Period: 1—-H0lmans, Brown (Holman). Penalties-P. Whitlock, Carmich- ael, Ferguson. Second Period: No score. Penalties-Whitlock, Bevan, Blan- chard, Ferguson. Mahar, Calms. Third Period: Zt-siewafls. Acorn (unassisted). Penalties-Ferguson (2), Molnnla, Bevan, Mcoabs. Blanchard (I), Whltlock, Lawlor. Wheat Export Shows Decrease (Canadian Press) UITAWA, Dee iii-A decrease of almost 2,000,000 bushels was shown in wheat export clearances for the week ending Dec. lb, as com ‘ with the paecedlng week, and s de- crease of more than 1,500,000 bush- els as against the corrsponding week of last year. according to a report issued hi!” l?! the Domin- ion Bureau of Statistics. Export clearances of whaat dur- ing the weak ending Doe. 15 amounted to 1302M’! bushels com- pared with 8830.780 in the previous week and 8.001.103 a year ago. Clearances by ports were as fol- lows, the figures in braahts being those of last year: Vancouver-New Westminster 006.43 0.061.193). United sum ports 315.000 (s04.- 000). Mammal 199.171 (nil), West saint John 144.100 (409,000). Bali- fax nil (HMO). total 182D‘! (8.- 001468). ‘rwmty weeks Dec is- Montreal IKQ. lnlgia l ulnsnl. flirt» nmnn [Elli NER- l I 3rr».~i;_».§ BMBKIIAIKS“ ill-I 11th i¥ssareeiylhtemflihs to keyinaguagsme h!’ KIWI?!- Dllt la-(Aw.i'.)— Dk$ w“ Ill“? "Bil!!! only goal ‘hm a penalty ldt lAmafkl l‘llllll Wortora down m the ice and and'a shot calcined in, apparently Iron: behind tbs 11st. BUIIAI! Ind PIIII: i-Detroit, Welland (Borrell-Aur- lc) 182M. . Penalties-Mindy, Imus. laeald Isa-lode No score. » . ‘mild Ptlod No score. Penalties-Nata. I ' ‘n. HOCKEY IIINIURS (IVER fill LIMIT All’ SUSPENDED (Canadian Pleas) MONTREAL. Dee ill-As a result of the discovery J. P. " r and Roger Oormler were over the age limit, six games played in the Quebec Junkie Hockey Association hare have been discarded and the Halls ordurd t0 start thsir ache- dule llain by the Quebec ‘ ‘ Hockey Association. Ranger, Canadian dsfenceman, was suspended for a year and Oor- niier, 8t. Hancsis forward. was bann ’ until Janu y 4, when he will be able to play’ for the St. Francois seniors. Claude Bourque. Rene Boudreau and Rena Malenfant. laat year's members of the Mancini: led 1h- dians. ldaritimsa‘ Junior ehsm play for Olnadilns Juniors Tropical Storm Claims Lives BASSITERI. 5t. Kitts, Doc 19- (O. P. Cabin-Tropical squalls, striking swiftly at small boat-l. cla med two lives over the week- end in the waters about this West Indian Island. Off Bandy Point, a woman died when the sloop. Simone, overtaken byasqualLsankIr-a. W. Hey- linger had left the French settle- mmt of 8t. Iarthefemy as a pass- enger on the boat, accompanied by hat 701ml ‘ . Swept ovarb:ar'd in the fit-roe blow, she was drowned. The four sailors who manned the ship took wtheamallboatwththeboyalad rowed i6 miles to short. In mm Channel. a fiat an was drowned when a sudden storm capsiaed his boat. shore watchers aaw the accident, but before they could reach the spot in other boats he had disappeared. I TRYING ' EXPERIENCE TOLD B Y ‘ N. l. Dee. IO-(O- P.)—8er Hue mail! at hdf and. Canadian Mounted Police Cutter Bayhound returned bleak seal Island today with [our fishermen and bodies of three ship- lnatu who were inflated to death by breakers on the Island's rocky T. lhhdiall. ‘fhnlght the four Joined i0 other and left mi-inu-ieimmncaums vin- wityuuwiuuwnn in an native vilhge, Isl knit. N. l. KILIE INSTANTLY “Ivan and Joe must have been killed right away, for they hit the rotk a terrible blow right head ” Baa-thy of Boa- of the four island today. bury. Noam. one brought in from the . umau (meal on mm a» sdlounlr SUMMARY 104), Vancouver-New Westminster Dom’ Reva Iver eavafrly Pridcy llllht landed Sat- , 16.309309 (Ii-fllllllll- 9119b“ 5-‘ ' urda afternoon. Meanwhile eight Pint mm 491.6057 curiae stag» 01711710118 m bggn “Qgfl u, by m. “an. 901%.. mmsoni- wxi-uaemeahauunaeo No scoring. 37.084 (1107336), Churchill QJUL- “pd-I a n. 0nd,“) 3e;- Y.grmouth and you; ‘l, yguq *"-***-="“"- "also in mm». t =- M- w Second rum mfooc». view-ii an (maul. gafcwwfififlfllflfgf 11".: nos-r smIr or mans No scoring. Ezflsligeisiluliermiilsilsoiiglulah w“ "n m mm“ "'°“'" "llmll- "m left u» mniiaii mom: Penalties-Haynes Lamb Ward. ’ ' l l" “"1111” with the mm defies." said natty- ’ ‘ . ncsivcdfromhaaqqwrtcucl qnwmggmyyuyamm“, Th“ “M Pohce E339" i?“ cl»; Sig‘? CI??? 1'» 113i» in” :1’ HM:- fi _ (‘Well Wwllaffllaaiiwitataaclm-acrintotr; m mm‘ F01’ WOYkGTS Wlnnlnaa. and second place to m4 h‘, egg;- m». sq- we; "'““"'N“" ma Rllidlll, Railway li - m“ m, “y” o m, I stable in Monotm. ram-w o‘ 3h m, “mafia l Q3,“ "1' Prnnziikhbplacaiwenwmrgtwoflewlrul- qgQJ-gaqamgql mug o 50mm and. (“mummy '°° °‘°°""4 d" film?!" "- 3M6. gckettplys@ Pmmlwfa-i .2P_gng]flg._NQnc, turned to '0,‘ ‘t the ‘an . o! m“ t“ w lfi w“ h“ QM’ Woollen and Worauda Plant home p1.“ go 1 q wmgmm ‘g q u‘ m in“. m: Spools of ‘Thread-A small a“? M” "n u‘? W11°°°I1= “I was hr hobs N! W III! sash-curtain rod attached with 13,1”. Q “Wu”; m mmplf,“ ' until tulips wan n asuid an. b"°"°"‘°"‘° “““°"4“°'“" guarded arwaranncnaai atrium Q"‘m“i.'ii'J“'i-A'J°'”" u h ‘u’ w‘ ‘n. m h fvlnr “his! 12h elixir-git, ivr h°:‘|who followed u: wile» we an batons and min all all: "awn" ~m*h'g~4 l; m’ "I 19°11" 1' . *1 l" - iii iayeea. l "Y1 "1 P11“ 11¢ ""1 l" *1="Yl°- msbceiiltlpas ova were marched up but “fi::g@¢~ h run“ “M- 'themallatraetlvtheirnnifornud no-lowaidiaciddhcaamed. "' .. - . i i Brlnsinz U» Father - I ‘ T's wm-i “ I . “w? ‘ “EOMSXQ .'.:==-. w A14‘! gzgaalcr-rm ~ k338i’! +0 ' Mwel w ~ i _ - - :1 .. » l‘ l- ._ '1 a ._ “c OF ILL - FA TED SHIP St. John Beavers VS. ABBIES TONIGHT 9.00 com: arm sun a cnasr cam: Reserved Seats-50c, 75c, $1.00. Balcony—_-35c. Children’s Seats-fie. Seats on aals at Forum Box Office this morning at 10 o'clock. at" sill MEMBERS, ER’ aroundtotlialeawandandmak aianding. " BAIIMISTAKI- "e “But poor Joe nude a bad mis- far the light and finally came to a and we hiew he was dead r - eand easy. I kn-H’ and we wcri- smll lama as the others "About nightfall they munc. him rm “ a GILLETTE I BLUE BLADE5 ..; w“ """"'"'“ mgnsranoaibllllnnawaqaavuommw- ' of fi33HHflflE~ -w onttnra c0 l 5 lor~25¢ ' Q13) s, 44 ‘.2 l]! Y " - McMan