"4 a <i The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri. Dec. 3, 1960. 9 SPORTS FRONT of, a g Detroit Pounds Bruins; Ullman Records Six Points . » Sandy's Royals Need PCHL Tilts er DETROIT (AP)—Norm UI. |' # Suge 4, Murray Oliver closed out the Williams 8:50, Ashbee 14:00. 2 °° man scored three goals and as- “~~ ; game at 7:52. Shots : . _— a By CHRIS ANNETT sisted on three others In leading | | Uliman's an a wie nn eee y | oes Red a Wines ts a 10-2 vic- | _ | his Ce ted a career Detroit 13 11 11855.” over ns in the He was th 's ing goa) Attendance 10,205. é ‘The Rr look too majestic as they skated off the only National Hockey League | scorer last season. % = o4 ice after having absorbed an 114 lacing at the hands of the game played Thursday night. Wri U Moncton Hewks Wednesday evening, but in all fairness to the Bruce McGregor added two |. SUMMARY ters rge ‘eed team they did not look that bad (in comparison to the Hawks) goals for the Red Wings, who First period—i. Detroit, Bark- Q i k i dig for 48 m.nutes of the game. aD |moved ahead of the Bruins into ley 2 5:04; 2 Detroit, Uliman & vick Election : / Alt cae. aney Sone. bee Lawlor stood out fifth place m the standings. (Deivecchio, Howe) 6:41; 3. De- é for the Royals as Peardon for the two periods that |Four of the five Detroit victor- | troit, Murphy 2 (Smith, Ullman), For Casey bP ye" he playe’ . ponever Peardon diopleced bia thumb and was @ \les this season have been over | 10:27. Penaltiee—Barkley 19:13.) iit BEACH Fla. (AP) == ‘ the Sea loop last son for when the i = veo he [se Srutae, D. tah 2:6 | Casey Stengel’s imimediate elee- , n he season ogy wane owe De | Ullman scored a goal and an} Second period—4. Detroit, UU- ‘tion to the Baseball Hall of managéd to. come up with the big play. Nevertheless the w' assist in each period. He com- | | man 9 (Delvecchio, Smith) 1:30: | Fame was recommended Thurs- inn — we of steam in the third stanza after they ‘ | pleted ate tone pele at = 5. Detroit, Fonteyne 2 (Godfrey, day by the Baseball Writers’ As inotted . ‘ inal period after ta MacGregor) 2:15; 6. Detroit, : Defense caused the Royals some trouble, although the ‘a pass from Floyd Smith. Deivecehio 4 (Ullman) 6:35: 7.| “the group voted’ xnanimously = a a bit Oyatieer ean, = pre rg | Gerry Cheevers replaced Bos- Detroit, MacGregor 4, (Barkley.| to urge the Hall of Fame com- that @ lack of gamnes was tha main reason for this dlecrepency |toa goalie Bernie Parent ‘st the Ma wg | mittee to waive the mandatory fe ; al ao both ould backskate almost to the | start of the second period. Pa- Awrey 8:21, Bergman 13:36.) five-year rule in Stengel’s case. ee ot tenes ene “esi enamr irent suffered a hand injury at 15:48, 4 - | Under the regulations, a persom ~ ee he “thing hat pod ne ee 1 gy oo |Chicago Wednesday mht and Third period — 8. Detrolt,| is not eligible for the Hall of and this. too Pony ated lack of ‘the soreness apveared to ham- Smith, 7. (Delvecchio, Ullman) | Fame until he {s out of baseball ing, ™ rectly altriauted to oo. per his olay im the first period. NORM ULLMAN :87; 9. Boston, Bucyk, 5 (Mac-|“for at least five years. Time and time again Moncton hed breaks, two on one_situe- Doug Barkley opened the scor-| donald, Oliver) 2:7: Oe tions, or three on two and it was only the great work of Frizzel ing at 5:04 of the first period. |Smith, McGregor and Uliman |troit, MacGregor § (Marshall, in the Royals net that kept the scoreboard from . Ullman scored his first goal 97 adding the final markers for the | Fonteyne) 2:49; 11, Detroit, UN- Frizzel must have handled close to fifty drives and Wood seconds later and Ron Murphy | Red Wings in the third period. |man 10 (Smith) 5:30; 12. Bos- MacGonnell two of the more industrious Royals defensemen capped the Detroit three-goal | John Bucyk spoiled goalie |ton, Oliver $3 (Westfall, Bucyk) age” more ae ee fe too. . first pefiod at 10:27. Roger Crozier’s shutout bid at |7:52,, Penalties — Barkley :59, from penal” ee teat ao dee teers Pees Ullman, Val Fonteyne, Alex |2:07 of the third period and : a matches a clubs fr Delvecchio and eGregor Motor Aces! "As ft stands Fight ‘now the Royals have sot Yet | | scored tm the enccmdl period ‘with : CURLING DRAW oie Anbiatertt ige" athens aches woad’se | ONE SHOT, ONE BOWED HEAD, ONE GOAL (_ Jets Disclose | tse tsioving i tts draw Se tsn Rs ote desu, bee tee ik ts were ? , | Hockey Practice | », Ge Contentions Curt | pe, for so far the has travelled Boston Bruins goalie Ber. (12) in this first period action Ashbee holding off an un | Bribe er Club: Call us for programs, 1 ne ee eee ee ee cee lene Sa ee | nee ones cf Ok oc po hee ee ee identified Red Wing, on the The following players are ast-| 1 p.m. club bulletins, buai- | pounces in-on a shot by’De- the period. In background is Play. "|ed to report for All-star Juvenile | rw yoRK (AP)—An army| ice 3 — B Parent, B. Sonith,| "em letterheads. Al ° a - | t rum ae + &- JUNIOR RULING ANNOUNCED _ _trott_Red_Wings’ Ron Murphy Boston defenseman _ Barry (AP Wirep hate) ee art sc, oth at 8 pm, | recruiting sergeant was arrested |W. Carr, H. Rector vs N. Nich | “°T Suaranteed. | : \and again on Wednesday, Dec. | Thursday and accused of solicit- \olson, H. Douglas, C. MacDon- | GUARD The following is an excerpt from a directive that the | i 8th, at 6 p.m. Coach Wes Traim-|ing a bribe from a New York |ald, D. Pickard. ; RDIAN - PATRIOT Charlottetown and District Junior Hockey League Executive or wants to stress to all these | Jets football player to help him} Ice 3 — E. Matheson, F. Cor- issued announcing the punishments imposed on three players an ers ie sa e players that they must be at the |beat the draft. coran, Vern Mitton, Ned Dooley CENTRAL for “serious infractions | of the ree” ee ae , , Py and cesenee ready to play Fie player. ie ee p ea ee S. Dr. F. Jelks, p R \ N T E R y (a) : ; % . at pra : |22, was o have . D. Taylor. suspended for one game and to be . Abuse e : e | a Reid, Glen Olay. |the offer to the Jets, who called met ren eeareee ©. Pues r of the refereez will not be tolerated under conditions. and ; bourne; nee — Gordon in the . B. Jones, A. Rodd ve Dr. . hone 4-85 a much heavier sentence will be handed jon if any player Whitlock { ollects 6 Po} nts lis, Kenny Ballem, Alan Acorn,| Sonny Werblin, owner of the Higgins, D. Douglas, J.S, Tay- ee abuses the referees. ; y ‘ Pat Walsh, Ted Kitson, Robert | American Football League (ler, Dr. MacLeod. ’ ; eshte putas ip tetgia: ie eomanied tapen,Loneee aat . [Seamer eet eared ase Neat cope a koe eee pe psu leree, There was just a little too, margin but at the end of the ;goals for the duration of the = ‘ 8.30 p.m. until Jehuary 1, , and is to be severely reprimanded. Im | much of Bobby Whitlock for the | second period they had increas- | game. \by Doherty, Brian ney a are neooatend as = Ice 1 — M. McOuaig, B. Me- future, any player in the Junior League who attacks the referees | Provincial Vocational Institute |ed this margin to three. his CAME ON STRONG \Turner, Mike MacDonald, eee at at the shatter cola (eet. nena, W. Mae in any way will automatically be out of hockey for the balance {to handle as he led the Rogers | period proved to be a little rough third period was almost a Stanley, Barry Lo eo eae i puens ie tara Tare of $200 Gregor vs A. MacDonald, L. Le- of the 1985-66 season. . a four goal de-|on the Rangers as they domia- |replay of the second stanza with (McQuaid, Lowel eee ae ect cs ak Wi” ger, E. Ford, H. Mitton. (ec) Wayne MacDougall, SDHS, misconduct and match mis-’ | ficit with, two third period mark- | ated the play but failed to cap- |one exception; that is, the Ran- |Dowling, David Scott, Ja ent citictal ‘bentiftad’ the “esl- lee 2 — HR. Carruthers, Ez. conduct, suspended from League play for next two games in | ers, to a 9-9 tie, at the Char- | italize on the many ‘golden op- | gers were able 40 outscore Pvi, |Senault, Robert com age ai Shalt fat, Wintreé Lowa MacDonald, S. Willis, J. Shel- which hie team participates in League play lottetown Forum last night. | portunities’ which were pre- four goals to one. Bobby Whit: |by Whitlock, Wilbur Ca ae sae Oe RY » |foon vs G. Kays, B. Boyles, L. No doubt there will be some discussion over these rulings | Whitlock had picked up two | sented to them. jock, who played the first 14 |Hennessey. ane! e Es Campbell, H. Douglas. but. on the whole they are very fair and reasonable. Referees {goals in the first andysecond | The goal tending became a bit minutes of this period without a| + lee 3 — J,.Burden, N. Mae- are on the lee to control the game and when players start to | periods to give him four for the | steadier and only six goals were (Test, figured in all four goals. MINOR HOCKEY Neil, L. Bagnall, D. Shears vs E. dispute every call that they make then something has to be night. He also had two assists. scored In this period. Four were |He, scored two and assisted on | Tanton, A. Bagnall, H. Sim done by league officials."In this case the executive has done Alden Cameron was the top picked up by PVI and two by the two. He went on to play 17 min- monds, G. Proctor. et | something apd let us hope that it has come in time. on ste te Ve. Hie spered Rangers. ee ae Is T (lee 4 = W. Redies, K- daw, § -trick a one assist. ; s game me G. Newman, G. eyer' vs G. : In this period as in the first, | tT ‘ RAMBLINGS... Bota bevid hel ao Frat | gi, ts period as In the frst gat tse two teams vicxed'c EQGAE DE GALT D FITTS —frccnctiso'nouree, Brook: WE GUARANTEE Stanley picked up two goals and | sooear to be much of a factor | 27Y Points. Previously. in games | eee: | DEPENDABLE DELIVERIES OF Taare vil OE a ekdlan ela dclor tue © one assist each for PVI. | against PWC and SDHD, the two A Ice § — P. O'Rourke, B. Hop |. a ig of a color film un the ana- as far as scoring went. PVI, | houses of the league, they ; , dian Curling Championships which took place last season in | ; The game started with PVI | in the first period, was the only ave been beaten rather sound. re e e@ a Se kins, A. McCurdy, .B. Steveson TEXACO FUEL CHIEF Halifax at the Charlottetown Curling Club tonight. There will forcing the puck into the Rang- | team to score with the man ad- ; ; vs G. Stewart, K. Kennedy, A.) 4150. seating Oil be two showings of the film (7.45 and 9.90) and the general peer Fe and after a brief | vantage. However, Bobby Whit- | "1, other ie at the “Saditor | Gill, M. MacLean. 9 Bele rayne Hughes received | lock ‘picked up his second goal | Me following are the revised | Cyril Cohnick, Ralph Shepherd, | | Soeeetos Baie oo peeadian ae oe Namath signed for a reported $400,000 -last year nd is proving his value as the Jet quarterback, with a solid at Rookie of the Year honors. Three other big-money ets have played little or not at all this season—quarterback John Huarte, $200,000; flanker Bob Schweikert, $100,000, and fullback. Cosmo Iacavazzi, $100,000. Ewbank said that: although bonuses were unrealistic, salaries on the Jets were “‘in line.” “Namath is not the highest-paid player on this club,”” he added. “The highest bonus yes. but not the highest salary.’” HUNTER’S CORNER Duck And Goose Hunting Has Slowed To A Crawl December is with us once | sign of geese or distant honk. | iog to break the monotony of the wait. A glance at his watch showed it was twenty-seven minutes after nine. He thought to himself: ‘I’M wait until nine thirty’. He must have been cold when he gave himself a mere three minutes but the three min- utes was more than he needed. ... the first flock ceme at the two minute mark. Eleven geese swunk to the decoys and three stayed with them. He barely had time to pick up the birds when another smaHer flock arrived. They swung’ well outside the stool of decoys. The first shot crumpled a goose that was killed clean. The oosé selected as a pepe for the second shot was extreme rarige but dropped to the stubble and started running. 1 didn't aopear to be able to get airborne and he managed to run it down. It. was such a slim, dainty creature he didn’t have the heart to act as its ex- ecutioner and carried it to the car and placed it on the floor between the seats. I received a phone call at the and went home to ex- again and winter is waiting just around the corner. The tempo of the duck and goose hunting has slowed to a crawl. For the past two weeks, or longer, the geese have taken refuge on sat water. Eelgrass and goose onions may be a far cry from plump grain kernels but they can at least dine in safety and quietude. The du>k hunting petered out because there were no ducks worth the name to hunt. After the opening morn- ing our local blacks were t lof the picture entirely and big northern blacks were just a eeting tarzet at rare inter- als. Experienced salt water gunners are convinced that the ight of northern redtegs this all ig down an approximate tty per cent and that our own blacks are tottering on the of non-existence. kill on wildgeese this sea- was almost fantastic. One y Of goose hunters had bag- 7% wildgeese by November Brd and topped the one hundred D the thirtieth. Another , had a score car. It was a gosling, or a goose, of the year, and was trim as a Picture with not even a feather g & z 3 3 i 3 eu Eee : int a4 from end to end at a fast pace and it wasn’t too often that the red light didn’t blink before the puck left one zone or the other. There were seven goals scored in the first period. In one case two goals were only seconds apart. PVI came out of the first of the night in the second ver- the Rangers was serving a two- minute sentence for not play- ing by the rules. At the 10 minute mark of this stanza coach Larter of the Ran- gers pulled his starting goalie, Gallant, in favor of Clayborne It looked as if Clayborne was starting off where Gallant had left off as he was on only min- utes after he appeared on the ice. However, he- settled down and. allowed only two more stanza enjoying a slim one-goal By JOE REICHLER MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)— San Francisco Giants acuired relief ‘specialist Lindy McDaniel from Chicago Cubs and Calli- fornia Angels landed veteran first - baseman Norm Siebern from Baltimore Orioles ia trades that highlighted the ma- jor league baseball meetings Thursday. ’ The Cubs acuired two young players from the Giants—pitcher Bill Hands and catcher Randy Hundley—in exchange for the 29-year-old McDaniel. The Cubs also threw in reserve outfielder Don Landrum. The Orioles accepted Dick Simpson, 22-year-old rookie out- fielder, for Siebern in a straight player swap. “On the s of what we need most,” said Giants manager Herman Franks, ‘I think we we made a terrific deal.” It was the firet trade by the Cubs since they hired Leo Duro- cher as manager last October, and it received his full endorse- ment. “We're looking to rebuild,” he said,‘‘and the only-way to do it is with the young.” _ THIRD IN WEEK Siebern, 32, was the third vet- eran acquired by the Angels in the past week. The others were 35-year-old: third baseman Frank Malzone and 39-year-old pitcher Lew Burdette. “Siebern answers our need for a left-handed hitting first base- wildgeese dropped in at his pond and when they left the two of his geese left with them. We left her in a pen with some Mallard ducks. She is now living the life of Riley . . . lots of grain, gravel and water at her disosal and she and the Mallard ducks and drakes get along famously. The old gander keeps calling to her but she makes no reply whatever she may be thinking. One thing certain she has him guessing and he is certainly quite steamed up over her pre- approachable. Methinks she may be but she most certainly knows her stuff. It will be an inter- ng courtship to watch but <. it she is as lukewarm as ghe pretends to be I’m afraic he is in for a disappointment. day. Sapettmres e sertchnnnentinn ett wtp rf : sefice so close, but as yet un- | 000 abe San Francisco Gets Cubs Lindy MacDaniel, LINDY MACDANIELS man to team with righty Joe Adcock,” said manager Bill Rigney of the Angels:” From Baltimore's viewpoint it was a case of ac a prom- than Siebern, whom they h. anyway. “Siebern lost the first base job to Boog Powell last year and at best he would be sitting on the bench most of the year,” Orioles’ manager Hank Bauer said Simpson batted .301 at Seattle last_ season, hit 24 homers and drove in 79 runs. He also stole 29 bases but struck out 148 times. In 1962 he hit .315 with 42 hom- ers and 113 RBI for San Jose of the California league. SLUMPED BADLY Siebern, American league ‘all- star performer in 1962 and 1944, slumped badly last season. He hit only .256 with eight home runs and 32 RBI in 106 ames. He was acquired by the Orioles from Kansas City in November. 1963, for Jim Gentile and $25,- The deal involving McDaniel was the second engineered by the Giants in two days. They obtained southpaw Joe Gibbon from Pittshurch in exchange for | outfielder Matty Alou Wednes- iod when Mike MacDonald _ of | . |Murnaghan, 5:44; Gallant, 5:51; : a. 12:07; Squarebriggs, 14:- || MINOR HOCKEY "2 \town -Minor Hockey = |weekly playing schedule {rom = |Friday, league, PWC downed SDHS, 65, in a bitterly fought match. SUMMARY First Period: 1. PVI, Hughes (Stanley, MacQuaid) 1:01; ~2. ‘RR, Higgins (Bevins, Newson) 4:57; 3. PVI, Cameron, 6:05; 4. RR. Whitlock (J. MacDougall) (6:55; 5. PVI. Cameron (mitchell) 8:09: 6. RR, S. MacDonald (Fol-/ ey, M. MacDonald) 9:25: 7. PVI, | iStanley, 11:25. Penalties Gal- lant, 2:27; Chandler, 10:36; | Jr. MacDougall, | |Walsh, 11:11; \14:00; Bevins, 16:05; Jr. Mac- ‘Dougall, 1-6:45. ° Second Period: 8. PVI, Mit- ,chell (Gallant, Squarebriggs) | |2:01; 9. PVI, Stanley (Acorn), 9:35; 10. RR, Bevins, 9:52; 11.| /PVI, Squarebriggs (Mitchell, Cameron) 11:20; 12. PVI, Cam- eron (Squarebriggs) 17:21; 13, RR, Whitlock, 19:02. Penalties Squarebriggs, 3:54; Walsh, 7:56; Walsh; 12:55; Bevins, 16:02; M. MacDonald, 18:27. Third Period: 14. PVI, Mit- chell (Acorn) 3:23; 15. RR, Mac. Donald: (Whitlock) 4:29; 16. RR, Whitlock (Bevins) 7:45: 17. RR, J. MacDougall . (Whitlock, T. MacDonald) 11:03; 18. . RR, Whitlock (J.. MacDougall) 13:28, Penalties - Murnaghan, 2:25; The following is the Charlotte League Dec Dec. 9h.: BANTAM | Friday; Dec. 3rd. — 5 p.m. —| 3rd., to Thurs., Blades vs Senators. Saturday, Dec. 4th. 12.30 p.m. — Hornets vs Bisons: 7.00) p.m. —, Indians vs Ramblers; 745 p.m. — Aces vs Clippers: \8.40 p.m. — Bears vs Maroons. | PEE WEE | Saturday, Dec. 4th, 7 am. — Caribous vs Racoons; 7,45 a.m. — Foxes vs Bisons; 8.30 a.m. —| |Rams vs Zebras; 9.15 a.m. | ising hitter. 10 years younger Otters vs Springers; 10 a.m. — Campbell, Don Hayden, ad Ice Cleaning; 10.15 a.m.— Lions|| Walsh, Angus Beck, not counted on playing regularly jvs Eiks; 11 am. — Wolves vs Lawson, Alan Stevenson, Allan \Coyotes; |Setters. 11.4 a.m. -- Seals vs _- PAPERWEIGHT Saturday, Dec. 4th., 4.30 p.m. Ice 1 — Jays Vs Eagles Ice |2 — Sparrows vs Redbirds; 5.10 |p.m. — Ice 1 — Blackbirds vs ‘Bluebirds; Iee 2 — Crows vs (Falcon; 5.50 p.m. — Ice 1 - |Hawks vs Owls; Ice 2 — Crows and Bluebirds (practice). | MIDGET-JUVENILE | Monday, Dec. 6th., 5 p.m. /All-star Juvenile Practice; 5.00) p.m. — Hawks vs Redwings | Tuesday, Dec. 7th, 6.30 p.m | — Leafs vs Canadiens Wednesday, Dec. 8th., 6 p.m. — All-star Juvenile vractice Thursday, Dec. 9th — Rang- | jer vs Bruins, | NHL STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS W-LT F A'Pt | Chicago iis 1 62 8 23} Montreal 10 4 8 62 41 23 Toronto 783 @ 5117 New York 5 8 5 53 59 15 Detroit 5 8 4 54 5214 Boston 8 2 38 __ [ists of teams in the bantam div- | iston of the Charlottetown Minor | Hockey . Association, effective Friday; Dec. 3, 1965: < MAROONS: Chris Nicholson, ‘Colin Younker, John Dillion, Owen Lowery, ‘Kenny Doiron, Alex Pierce, Kenny Cormier, Ken MacDougall, Ralph Ross, David Rowe, Gary Doyle. RAMBLERS: Bob Hennessey, | Harrison Robbins, Donnie Car- | michael, Frank Roper, Gary Stead, Shaun Murphy, Joel Fi- chaud, Tom Prowse, Terry Gee, Mike Quinn, Grant Gaudet, Alan Mason, Mike Conway. SENATORS: Shane Dowling, Danny Grant, Barry MacKinnon, Ronald MacNeil, Brian. Sobey, Pat Griffin, George Thompson, Bill MacIntyre, George Larter, Gary Cooper, Dave MacEach- ern, Billy Stavert, Jim MacMil- lan, Rowan Fitzgerald. INDIANS: Mike Connolly, Bernard Higgins, Grant Killorn, Edward MacDonald, Ross theson, Bobby MacGuigan, Jam- les Birt, Kenny Dowling, David Roberts, Bill Partridge, Eugene Power, Peter Butler, Gary Wool- ridge. COMETS: Ron Jeffrey, Allan Dave aa an Ready, Gary Campbell, Terry Connors, Wayne . MacQuarrie, Michael Murnaghan, James Bell, Mich- ael MacDonald, Darrell Hen- nessey, Bobby MacMillan. ~ BLADES: Neil MacLeod, Jim Andrew, John Thistle, Biair Crosby, Louis Doherty, Robert MacInnis, Ricky Carver, Bob ael Grant, Howard May, Justin Madore, Alan Wood. HORNETS: Selwyn McAssey, Paul Saunders, Bruce MacLen- nan, Ken Savage, Allison lis, Irwin Ellis, David Brown, | Norman Frizzell, Merrill’ Weale, | Danny Robzertson, Ron Camp- bell, Kenny Downe, Gary Camp- bell. 3 ACES: John Mitchel! Philip Brian Gordon Dowling, Don Patribuen, Phitip |Claybourne, Gordie Beck, Don MacNeil, Billy Stewart. BARONS: Paul Norris, Andy Matheson, Leigh Smith, Allan Pickard, Ronnie Peters, Roger Cook, Kenny MacKinnon, Ern- est MacDonald, Garth Reeves; Philip. Connolly, David Doiron, Donnie MacRae, Stephen Mc- Cabe. CLIPPERS: Martin Ross, Gor- don Bell, Eugene Ward, Les |Merriam, Danny Taylor, Fran- cis Brown, Gerald Campbell, Derek Dillon, George Rogers, |Don Doiron, Urban MacDonald, Gordon Cooper, Kenneth Huch- es. BEARS: Paul Turner, Peter Williams, Wayne Snair, Neil Robinson, Tommy Irwin, Chat- lie Scott, Boby Judson, Barry Doucette, Blair MacQuarrie, Robert Buchanan, Bobby Mac- Kenna, Paul Carmichael, Joe Gillan. ~ BISONS: Barry Gass, Ernie Dunsford, Wayne Jordan, DArcy Murvhy, Daryl Harding, Der- rill Sectt, Mervin Power, Aus- 6 12, tin MacInnis, Blair MacKay, \sons. El- Hooper, Ray Smallwood, David \assigned, also the playing sche- | Lloyd Gass, Kent Gorveatt. Rural League The following are the revised { | league. BLADES — Paul Sullivan, {Douglas Saunders, Douglas Con- stable, Paul MacLean, Dougie Wheatley, Mark Mullin, Joha Pius MacDonald, John David |Hennessey, David Livingstone, Southport, Carl Shepherd, John Johnston, Andrew Hurry, Grant Ellis, Philip Carmody. Charles Mullin — coach. CANUCKS — Paul Maclsaac, James B. Walker, Donald Ro- bertson, Joe MacAskill, Stephen Moore, Gary Wood, Ronald /Young, Larry Druet, Kevin Mac- Isaac, David Livingstone, Paul Farquahson. Vernon MacCar- ville — coach. | FLYERS — Wilfred: MacDon- ald, Patrick Power, Derwia- Banks, Philip Steele, Kenneth MacInnis, Kenny Higgins, Ste phen Maclsaac, Mark MacDon- ald, David Wall, Michael Carra- gher, Donald Love, Lloyd Mac- Lean, Ned MacAleer, Bruce MacMurtry. Fred Johnston coach. SEALS — Ian Maclsaac, Gary MacCarville, David MacKinnon, Garth MacGuigan, Roddy Ves sey, Gregory Reddin, Gene Young, Roger Sherren, MacDonald, Brian Lewis. Watts, Arthur Newbury, michael.. Lloyd Shepherd h coach. j CLIPPERS — Pat Sullivan, | [Comets vs Barons; 6 p.m. — MacRae, George Wigmore, Mich- \prian Watts, Wayne Cameron, Raymond Kelly, Kevin MacCar- lville, David Hughes, Tony \Young, Jackie MacKay, Shane |Young, Carl MacCarthy, P aul} Gormley, Blair Bernard. Roy Murnaghan — coach. BARONS — Ronnie MacDon- | ald, Brett McDearmid, Gregory: | \MacDonald, Sterling Banks, Aa- | drew. Walker,- David Carragher, Raymond Wall, Warren Doiron, Mike . Doiron, . Paul. _Sudsbury, Keith Irving, Leonard Shepherd, | Seott Livingstone, Blane Living- Istone. Clarence Walker—coach. | ACES — Tony Martin. Ken- neth MacDonald, Philip Handra- hai, Dennis Reddin, Joseph Pa- | quet, George Meggison, Alan |Thompson, Paul Bernard, Ste iphen Howard, Burton Howatt, Pius MacCarthy, David Maclp- nis, Jimmy Crawford, John Ni- icholson,, Mike Carmody \eoach. BISONS — Lawrence LeBlanc, Eric Thompson, David Lowe, Tommic Langille, Camille Le. Blanc, Stewart Cannon, Stephen ‘Livingstone, Randy Cirrie, Guy ‘Breau, Joey Gallant, Allan Gor- don; Temple Hurry, Patrick Cur rie. Jackie Coyle. George Steele — coach. Parents and players please Note. Kindly retain a copy of this issue so that you may be inform ed of the team to which you art dule as listed below. Saturday, Dec. 4th, 7 a.m. — Ice ' Blades vs Seals: Ice 2 Flyers Canucks; 7.45 a.m. Ace vg@arons; Clippers vs Bi-. Stephen Dowling, Gary Moore, | ~“b- | Jim Killorn, John MacMillan, teams in the paverweight divi-_ sion of the Rural Minor Hockey | Children 15c; Adults 25¢ Allan. Dennis | Car- | can never run short. Fuel Chief is the finest of its kind—economical, cleanes | Forum Skating ‘ burning, and protective to your heat- | ing equipment. Call ue for Texace | Tonight 8.30 - 10.00 Frs!Chiettoie Senior Teens 35c Dial (15 years and older) 4-731 Adults 50c 7sl2 Saturday Skating 2:00 - 2:30 p.m. Products Ltd. 203 Gt. George St. Ch'town Petroleum © OPENING FRIDAY, DEC. 3, 3 P.M. GRAND OPENING TUESDAY, 7 at.7.30 P.M. DEC. Parkdale Amusement Centre St. Peter's Road Porkdale. P. E. 1. LIONS GLAUCOMA CLINIC SOURIS HIGH SCHOOL Sunday, Dec. 5th 2 P. M. to 4 P.M. Four Doctors in attendance Clinic under the direction of G. G. Houston 20 beds to residents of SOURIS & DISTRICT 40 years of age and over BE SURE AND ATTEND. COME IN CROWDS — Ch’tewa