. . d ine ‘rizzell's Royals Crush | >.D.U.Collegians 1 2-2. e ~ have. followed him ig..the job— H ockey, FootballDirectérs Have Yen To Fire Pilots ~ By JACK SULLIVAN , with nine each are Ottawa, Sas- * (8 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Jan. 9, 1959. ’ coach Malt Schfnidt for their fail- ¢ Boston general manager Lynn Patrick heard of the mutterings, ‘| gathered: the players around and told them to speak up... “Nobody said a word,” Fisher Juniors Visit S'Side Tonight Summerside fans should see the best game so far this season when the Charlottetown Juniors a : Canadian Press Staff Writer | Tommy Ivan, Jimmy Ski d| kateh ; nd Cal-| Ports Aces yg db — Saint i i to three ;jers, St. Julien, J. , Noo-| (Carroll) 13:10. Penalties - Belle- | * y Skinner an ewan ers a ° * ¢ : at Ci ium tonight. ing their debt hin eventos a hh the final’ whistle, - | man. - al —— Ionia. ar | Professional hockey and foot-|6id Abel: . | gary aesaee s Montreal] and| Before Patrick released the) ‘The Aces will be without Coke the Charlottetown and District -The Royals had Farmer Josey SUMMARY Third Ported: 8 cache tax ball club directors have one thing| BIG TURNOVER | | Winnipeg each has had eight, Ed-|mames of the players on waivers,|Grady aid Bonnie Howatt, but pckey League, were crushed 12-|in their lineup last hight. Josey| First Period: 1. Royals, Duna, 7 ; a in common : a-yen to- fire Chicago Black Hawks of the monton six and Toronto and Bri-| Fisher had them. in print—Norm will be trying hard to keep their by the Whitlock-coachéed Royals.|on a year's suspension, for hitt-) (J. MacLeod) 2:41; 2. Royals_-| Ver (Whitlock, Carroll) 1:56; 9. | é0aches. cm lead both the pro hockey|tish Columbia Lions five each. son: Best: Rethat “Meek Chev. unbeaten string intact. . Allie Carver-paced the winhers!ing referee~Waiter Lawior,-was}Carfoll (Whitlock. Carver) 12:25; TRt - Carver (Carvoll,- Whit~|,..In the —last—25-—-years—the.six} and football! teams in _ coaches aa BN dehneon, ’ cs "| The fast-skating boys -under -@ 5-@0a? effort: Angie Car-Tgiven “permission to play by Of-|3” Royals Carroll (K. Ready, jock) 2:58: 10, Royals -.J. Mac-| National Hockey League —clubs| with 12 over the %-year period. | BRUINS GROWE==— ———~—refils and Larry R€Seis"""—t Orinr=Gaswer’s +t “wih be l, Carver's linemate, came up| ficials of the Charlottetown and| yer) 14:54; Penalties: C. Ready |Leod (Dunn, Shephard) 4:26; 11.| have had 45 coaches. In the same|And Hawks have won the fewest} Red (Montreal Star) Fisher) REAY IN THE MONEY jjust as anxious to be the first are §.D.U..- J. Kane, (J.R. Mac-jperiod, the nine pro football! Stanley Cup championships—two.| gives some interesting back- (Toronto Star) Dunnelj | 0S to tumble the Aces off their it! ndBellevance top District Hockey League and iS | 4:43: Josey 8:40; Whalen 13:59. — reman for the Royals, scor-|being allowed to play in the.lea-/ Second Period: 4. Royals - Bel- victory“ eleud. Close, spine-tingling is in the -, for Civic Stadium and fans : ; the role of the headless] .. ; Fisher says the club has been| hockey coach: seem almost py ly er — - parts “ripped to shreds” by dissension. | Glamorous.” z It started shortly after Christmas| “How many shinny, men who ; Donald) 4:43; 12. Royals - Car-| teams. in nada—five .in. the} ii With | ground to the action of Bostor that Billy Reay, ‘“guillotined cone a pair. Dunn and J. MacLeod levance (unassisted) 1:14; 5. Roy-|ver (Carroll, Whitlock) 7:26: 13.|West and four in the East—have| Ottawa's Tommy Gorman as| Bruins putting four. forwards on by Toronto Maple Leafs, is mak- alee ch scored once. However, he has not been re-|als - Carver (Carroll, Whitlock) ; Royals - Carroll, (Whitlock) 7:35; / had 69. edach and in 1938 with Bill Stew-| waivers. dng The Royals took a 3-0 lead in|intated by the MAHA and would |¢:3g) 7. S.D.U. - Manning (unas-|14. Bellevance (Dunn) 13:43. Pen-|. Fewest changes have been| art as pilot. * first sed | not be allowed to er sisted) 16:07; 6. Royals - Carver alty - C. Ready 14:55. made by Detroit Red Wings of} Montreal Canadiens have had pir margin in the second period |the Maritime playdowns. : the NHL, mainly because Jack|eight coaches and Boston Bruins, t The bus taking the Juniors to 5-0 before the Collegians were| hockey future is still very un- Eaeeia Cacdans aietees > : will leave the Arm- so ‘ ‘ , I a perma-|.New York Rangers and Toronto} when the Bruins lost 6-1 to Cana-| get the boot from a big league i : . : » a a — certain. : HUNTERS CORNER ment gate-opener with the team.| Maple Leafs seven each. diens in Montreal and 5-3 to the| job wind up with an assignment ete dedneae Stas coon ee Lg : 4o 1947, and only three others! list in coaches with 10. Following ‘the players, says Fisher, blamed! ope??’ Dunnell asks. . ‘game. 2 Royals — Goal: Dillon; De- a fence: K. — es Carver scored twice within the|C. Ready, Josey; Forw : A, inst three minutes of the final |Carver, A. Carroll, Whitlock, W. me and Jim MacLeod came | Dunn, L. Shephard and J. Mac- rough at the 4:26 mark to make |Leod. <* ‘ >» score read 9-1 for the Royals.| St. Dunstan’s — Goal: Shep- Jackie Kane ‘scored the final |hard; Defence: Hache; Clough, pal: for the collegians 17 sec- | Whalen, Steele; Forwards: J.R. is later on a hard angle shot |MacDonald, G. Harris, J. Kane, pm about twenty feet out. The 'Manning, Rivard, O’Brien, Dem- ce Racing Goes At Causeway Sat. well-filled card of racing is) B Pace — Lillian Pointer, sduled for North River| Buddy Watson, Colonel Budiong, Hauseway Saturday afternoon. first dash will get underway} long, Bruce Budlong. 2.30 sharp. A Trot — Vivian Strong, Air Those horses not named in the} Lock, Sarah J., Lucky Logan, below will start on the card | Nokomis Bell. * pd for Wednesday, Jan. 14th. Saturday's wisest Time, Mr. Kate, Granville York, A Pace — Gingerbread Man,| Winston Budlong, Hardy Road, Bhrisdale, Royal Value. Gordon Mac. SPORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN : in ' ter of 1 hunting conditions! SUMMERSIDE ACES continue to show loads of power of normal hunting conditions . ‘ and although the kill was heavy; this hockey legue of ours. They've yet to taste defeat and by the ook of things their first setback appears a long ‘way off. a Their latest episode was a crushing 150 defeat of the } a7 who were beginning to show signs of causing real trou + this loop. -However, Wednesday night at Civic Stadium the iINavy never got into the battle and the Aces really rubbed it - We talked to Frankie Roper yesterday and Frankie certainl} had no alibis for the shellacking. He had the highest of praise for the play of the Aces who he climed were flying all roe: His own boys couldn't get going at all and that was that. — jidn't pan anybody only himself and he flatly_said “‘I was aw ; of victory achieved by the Aces, Roper was talking with real confidence about the first time — ars meet up with Summerside at the Sports Arena. You woul DESPITE THE MARGIN Frankie Budlong, Sandy Bud- ty), B Trot and Pace — Just in! Jgnuary’s icy grip on the pro- | Vince shows no appreciable sign | of lessening. There has been no heavy snowfall of late but -sud- den flurries. and high winds have resulted in heavy drifing. Fox and rabbit hunters report snow is waist deep in the woods: in places and around a foot and a half in others. It makes for heavy going for hounds, especially the short legged beagles, but many hunters are persisting in their eforts to find the bunnies and are bringing home enough for a tasty stew or pot-pie. The ground was bare this time last year and rabbits were white as e driveh snow. They were sure caught with their landing gear down last season. 2 i Quite a few my acquaintance are complain- ing that rabbits are scarce this winter. I asked one hunter what made him ‘say that and he ofer- ed the following comment: ‘‘Last year we could shoot as many more in the same swamp. This or woodlot it stays cleaned out” I explained that there was a rea- son for this state of affairs. The winter of 1955-56 saw the rabbits coming back strong. It was a win- end of open season saw abund- ance of bunnies left for seed even after predatton took its an- | nual toll. | | JUST THE OPPOSITE 1956-57 was. just the oppostie. Winter set in during Nov., and held on until] its last road block- j ing blizzard on May 3rd. Hunting | pressure was practically nil and leven predators went hungry. Rabbits .went underground as it were. . they burrowed under | snow-covered thickeas and didn't January So Far Has Been A Really Chilly Month rabbit hunters of |g point. . the parties who go to year once we clean out & swaMP; Queens and Kings counties in a ed prairie wrapped im a white | sheet. It may be a long time be-. fore the-rabbit kil last season | will be duplicated. Farm boy: | shot back loads in a few hours without the aid of a dog. As onc teen age nimrod remarked: ‘A!’ you had to do was kick a bush and a rabbit would hop out”. | Last season every covert, even | the extensive back woods sec- tions, were crowded to their, doors. Once a small woodlot or | swamp was shot out there were others ready to take their places. This season the situation is re versed. When a rabbit has food | and suficient elbow room they | stay put. Some hunters claim that we have no scarcity of rab- bits this winter. This is true up to | Pa viferent area every time out | are the ones who fetch | & e the most rabbits although novody is bringing home too many right now because hunting conditions are all in favour of the bunnies. Some hunters I know cover both season. NOT SO MANY We haven't got nearly so many rabbits as we had last season.| We were certainly over popula- ted last year. Farmers tell me woodlots, extensive ones, where rabbits were thick as flies last winter one sees only the odd track. In other areas where hunt- ing was only fair last season a good ‘ population is ‘present this winter. The question at the mom- ‘ent is: “How much hunting can rabbits stand and yet hold their own?” Kt is this columnists op- inion that if this season was a repetition of last the rabbit po- pulation would be at a very low winter they are so scare thjs We want 25 good used television and are ready to give a BIG Trade-In Allow- ance on Wonderful New ADMIRAL for ‘59 Television. Admiral for ‘59 - PRESENT “The Kent" have to nove out for days at’a| ebb come January 3st. . the date Z i i he > ga coach to be showing any confidence after t . | | angen wa absorbed the night before. But Frankie was|time unless it was for exereise.| om which the season closes : Model C21G11X Super TV Con- . Roe openly predicted his lads would take the | 1957-58 saw a different picture. A Last s@ason the -tred was to’ : : 7 | - _ o ot the ieucues ae next time they’ meet at the Sports | rabbit was just about as conspi-| shoot as ‘many rabbits as pos- ole with new hor izontal full fid ocs ee sien cuous as a person would be stand- sible and the kill was regulated lity transformer chassis deliver Arena. It’s pretty hard & ce oe scala tal bga these tement but a glimpse back at the Navy 0 s es stop and think. The Tars were mauled by the Royals in mid- December. vet they came back last week and really slammed Sandy Frizzell's boys. * ; We think Summerside is a better club than the Navy. How- lever, we can’t for the life of us see them walloping the sailors the way they did. Navy has a lot of hard-working hockey players and such players usully get their share of glory. Perhaps when they get the Aces in Charlottetown theyll be able to make amends. at least to some extent. NG ROPER told us was identical with Buck Whit- ae a toeent of the other night. As. we watched the Aces and Juniors battle here Tuesday, Buck said that the Summerside ganz looked twice as good on Civic Stadium ice. Roper had the game comment. This would lead us to believe that Aces are going to be terrifically tough to handle in their own backyard. They o us right in’our yard the other fight but »me out and agree with Roper on that | ing in the middle of a bald head- (Continued on Page 9) Here's Saturday's Minor Schedule Following are the games sche- duled for Minor Leaguers at) Sports Arena, Saturday: ' 7.00 — 7.30 — Peewees Q.S:S. 'Rams, -vs. Royalty; ~ete., Cubs. 7.30 — 8.00 — Peewees Q.SS. Elks. vs. P.S.S. Hornets. 1Q.S.S. Finches vs.-W.K.S. Hawks S. S. Otters, vs. Spine’ Park Bluebirds. 1.00 —.130 — Paperweignts, | Royalty, ete., Canaries vs. WK. | S$. Colts. 1.30 — 2.00 — Paperweights, | ng 18.000 volts of picture powe! ‘Golden Signet’ Cascode — tune: » “ul-push on-off and ton controls toe oe Stage”’ picture frame 0° “Black Magic” pitcure tube ‘or blacker blacks, whiter whites. 5S” full fidelity -speaker. Tilter’ 1 Optic Filter. Slimline Cabinets in. Walnut. —« es a us we haven't seen anything yet. 8.00 — 8.30 — Peewees Q..C.| 5.00 — 535 — Bantams, Q.C You May Be Garrison Juniors will try tonight to bring an end to the H. S. Foxes vs. Spring Park : S. Gulls vs. Birchwood x cs "ie i i s gles. Aces vicory sing. This ne bat Civic Stadium abd once acai |SUWEET, | eg wy. |S 610 — Bantams. @.C . wi avy , a : < : j . . . : Seoover, ts the Juniors they are meeting a squad that will logan vs. Royalty, ete., eid S. Crows vs. Birchwood Tig- H A P P Y * 3 foie cael ieee pr agransegg aged er tat wane ima | 9.00 — 9.30 —-Peewres Roy-| 6.10 — 6.45 — Bantams, Birch. ; = : skated off with a 3-1 margin. Had the Juniors continued o — omg ayy exingg vs. Q.S.S. Snip- — Bears vs. QC.HS. Beav- | With your old TV, but you should ; ? z : sa , r PS , >. ° = ~ : eee, Se rent of the wy, Aces might well have sutfe 9.30 — 10.00 — Peewees Roy-| 6.45 — 7.20 — Bantams, QC. ee the difference in 1959 Admiral t gare Carver's boys aren't heading west tonight with any ~ ete., Ducks vs. P. &. &. ais yaa See t is simply wonderful.: What a t ideas of losing this one. They still =e — Prag Con 10.00 — 10.30 — Peewees P. S.|lers vs. Arrows. : : big change there is in this new ‘ Aces end belieye that tonizht's as for this one as the|S- Spitfires vs. Q.SS. Jays and| 8.15 — 9.00 — Midget, Abbies sawerfil model and the price 1 f.‘Summersie fhe should really fora out for this one as, the Sr ot aya . mes 2 YEARS TO PAY fem, time these teame met at Cvme ee ee oan Ther |10.30 — 11.00 — Peewees Q. C.| 9.00 — 9.45 — Midget, Vies vs. LOW. a oe geese gion 700 fans at the Stadium, so tonight H-S. Sparrows vs. Q.S.S. Snipes | Darts. e | Your old set will be a large payment on your new Set. — ; fime there were more ‘il top the 1000. mark and Cranes. ' 10.00 — 11.00 Juvenile — — One year Warranty on picture tube. you can bet the figure wil! . 11.00 — 11.0 — Paperweights | exhibition — P.W.C. vs. Abbies. “WE SERVICE OUR TV” 3 : a4 — PSS. Ravens vs. Q. S. S:| Officials: 1S ; : CHARLOTTETOWN is at present working on its senior team jy 7.00 — 9.00 — Dave Lawhor, | , . for Maritime playdowns. This team will come to a great wasn 1cas -. 13.00 — Peceeweldts |B bald. : one ’ from the_ranks of the Royals and the Navy. However Orin Carver, | 5's ¢ tizers vs. Q.S.S. Set-| 9.00 — 11.00 — John Davis, j Sena tet eo oF alent miral. Out - Performs ers ‘qualify for the junior squad in M.A.H.A. playoffs. i | 12.30 — 1.00 — Paperweights, Q.| 11.00 — 1230 — John Davis, |p "i - ° el We understand the Aces will go senior as well and pera "Aa | (Sr.), Bill MacMillan. a : s add to their team before the January 5 registration date. / o = 12.30 — 2.00 —Bill les, Don E ; S. 2 intermediate t@am is also to_be registered from the. capital city | Kensington Tops Frizzell, Bey SLIMMER PROFILE PICTURE TUBE CONTROLS . - me f in addition to the Garrison Juniors. — : 5.00 — 7.20 — Gordon Wellner, | : Me : Senior players around . Chrlottetown . ae ee wa tke New Glasgow Dave Lawlor. New “Slimmer-than-Ever" cabinets hug New Admiral “Black Magic’ 110° alum- Pull-push “‘on-off* control. Pull and the gg ene cpa Ape sagen ody Mere aaa be a unit if 7.30 — 945 — Don Frizzell the wall. Cabinets as little as 14'2” thin, inized picture tube eliminates distorta- set comes on. Push and it turns off, ** ao hope Lig ga etinar ggg tioned could certainly oblige Kensington: tapoes a Glas. | Leroy, ete Cant MacCal thanks to'the new and improved 110° hag oe ee ora Sr sa without disturbing Ge volume sttiing! DN | . < ; Bae -5 las J ensing- ‘ hs — a : More su , contras an y . : along this line and it would be good for both centres. psy a - os aoe . deadions | tum, Vince Mulligan. , Picture tube and Admiral pioneered hor- ever need. Direct’ beam electron gun (All Models). Tone control provides the jas : : g led aa ; i izontal chassis design. ~uS, int every icture exact tone quality you desire. : SOME PERSONS are of thé opinion that the crearn of Char- cor for top spot in the | g sharpens focus, pinpoint every pictur - yy lottetown -hockey talent will be able to handle the men of Windy BR Chansion and: Bo Slecisis ° : ‘ Slecie. That may be so but it's going to be a really tough chore. |,,b;, Champion and. F. Sinclair) Hi, Corby Distillery CHASSIS ‘ OPTIC FILTER These Aces have been working as a unit for quite some time |ners &. Mann, C. MacEachern Limited PICTURE FRAME and are going to - een tae = ae and -Sudsbury scoring one ach. Performance-proved Horizontal Cascode : New Tilted Optic Filter Glass. Eliminates é lottetown has to ° od ¢ oe eBiaggcie ae Fe cam G. Gallant paced the losers with “Super” Chassis makes picture brighter, Admiral’s new Golden Picture Frame glare from the picture tube by directing ee matter but we are a me e a gues: Ss his four markers. A. Pineau scored sharper, easier to look at near,to or far puts every program ‘‘on stage’. Grace- light and reflection downward. Scienti- ; can = une island Pes ae 4 "1 Island- wi but | the other goal. ak oe from the transmitter. It's TV's mighiest fally designed, this costly, metal frame fically tinted to filter out annoying glare _We are not going to attempt : oo a eee ee iI ; ° . power plant with dependable “‘printed’’ lends a touch of tasteful glamour to TV too. Slips out for easy cleaning (all we'll go 'this fare l nless the Charlottetown team gets: severa Twin: Bill Played circuits. cabinets. All. Top-Front-Tuning. Contgols. models). games together against tough opposition, they will be in for a} " real surprise when play for the Island crown rolls areund. A few ! : ie cece whos Tey or Om aaoce haloes tee te wee, | At North River WE WILL BE PLEASED TO TAKE EVENING APPOINTMENTS Perhaps they won't be stopped anyway, but whatever chance | ia ts Oil eee doiibte? ' Charlottetown has depends on the amount of work the team aces acca teninine pf N FIRESTONI ; gets as a unit. ay n * : — _ This could be the best Island playoff in many a year. eine aad Memeaane auaee ee ca sa : .. |5-all tie. Scoring: for Dunstaff- BOSTON BRUINS’ general manager Lynn Patrick has rallied | ‘ ), Thomp: HOME & AUT [ [TD to the side, of goalie Don, Simmons: He attributes the Bruins’ eeeienks SS per * * ASSOCIATE STORE recent slump to the fact that the team is “just giving away too fae Hampshire : Stactl aon (3) > ? oe many goals..” ci 3), 187 GREAT GEORGE ST. DIAL 5547 | 24 CENTRAL ST. DIAL 3220 : Simmons has been taking quite a riding from the Boston fans In th aad ; Gi 7 a ; rowing impatient with the way things are | me mee ee ee, ta aa . al who naturally ape growing P a) ®S 8F€ Road and Milton battled to a 2- pa J) rolling. But Patrick has come to the rescue of his goaltender all tie, Scoring for Milton were av and expresses himself in this manner: ‘. Ferd nad & Meciise sat N “Our trouble is not in the nets. I wouldn't say Simmons |; Glasgow Road, O. MacRae . couldn't have played a little better, but we will not change goalies. | ang Ashley. ls iia ‘ We're just giving away too maby goals. That's the trouble.” to . f We still think the’ Bruins will make the playoffs although RABIES IN CITY they afte skating on thin ice rigis now. We don't think the Detroit TORONTO (CP) Nine foxes| Philippe A. Langlois, whose Red Wings will be participants in the semi-final round of Stanley |destroyed in the Metropolitan|appointment' as general sales Cup play and we,are expecting the New York Rangers to eid Toronto area in the last few|manager. of H. Corby Distillery . this spring from the sidelines. months have been found rabid, a|Limited is announced by G. | ; ‘ We know such a prediction will find plenty eof .opposition but | spokesman for the Ontario health] Ross Harrington, president and ae y wisely or ‘not we are making it department, estimated Wednes.!Seneral manager. eS Oh, yes. Weve been wrom bcluie 4 day. l