encircle. 12s “ ‘Ex extra shaving are» ur ‘milidiitlnfi Gillette Sharia cream ._. .335 m SPORTING‘ NEWS. Red Wings ‘Behind, Tie. Dec. Detroit ited W k their iinx over Boston 8m file by com- ing from behind for a 2-2 hie tonight before a ked 18,900 crowd at the Boston mien. The Bruins have nottoppedtilcRadBhirtsinad-e- gular scheduled National Hockey ry Watson's rebound. Player-coach Dit Clapper, who had to retire shortly thereafter with an ankle injury. lofted a 50- footer through goalie Harry 11mm- ley early in the second period. The Detroit goalieb attention was dis- tracted by the mad-by Schmidt as the puck slid into the cage. Herb Cain rapped in Bill Cow- ley's forward pass from close range. The lines were changed for the resulting lace-off and Bep Guido- Corzfle From i BruinsZ-Z. drawbganinteuferencepeul- e Red Wind! packed the Boe- ton. none and. after much . the puck was fed beckto Oarl Lisoombe. who lifted a shot which hit the cross bar of the Bruin cage and dropped behind goalie Paul Bibeault’: back. optimum run Period 5c ring — N . oPeualty ~mgrawiord. l‘! ~ Second Period l-Boston. ................................ .1226 2—Boston.- Cain (Gowley, Egql) .................. ..10:l0 Ii-Detrolt, Liscombe (E. Bzluneteau. Qllackenbush) Penalties — SelbertfGflch." _______ u l Third Period 4—Detroit. Armstrong (Watson) 112i lln put the Bruins into a deep hole I “mlr- 11 -..:."....> - Base ‘s Blituers - A.B. (Ha-PW) Chand- ler apparently agreed By t0 bury the hatchet and wound up their winter meetings by approv- ing "unlilnited" night baseball for 1948. While the moguls were smoking the peace pipe with chandler be- hind iocked doors the dullest ivory trading market years perked up around the headquarters hotel Penalties - Big Leagaers And ‘Happy’ Chandler Bury Hatchet McCormick from Cincinnati. The break between (fnandler and some baseball men cloeed so sharply that/the former Senator was voted at least one “victory" dud-mg the final tirrce-hour session, in which his vote decided the "sky is the limit.” night baseball sched. ule 0r next year. ‘ t of the controversy oi’ “the getaway" ' night baseball and centred around what to do about the sifllllllii 0f hill} 51111001 - lobby iust about enough to keen players. The nazndtes. cnanellls 0- In R- Billing the franchise. Cleveland Inddans the proposal approved by the min- . wags‘; tgmperamerlta] Jim Bagby ors decided no iligirschcol stu- -— o. mm Red Sox for slim lefty dent. whether he still u in school 55°?“ vld Johnson and $5.000 in case. w not. can be signed or negotiL n, Duncan ...........i08 216 130 um u, w" “Bunny report“ m,“ ted W151, 51w,- hi3 @155; graduates W. Hogan . ~15? 194 153 come next season. the 1943 St. from high school. unlas he has ii Gllldet - J13 "4 137 Louis Cardinal field captain and been out of school a full year. In . Bevin 133 19° 19" infielder. Jimmy Blown will be that case. if the player has the , Doucette ........l98 1B0 1B1 wen-mg a Plgfgbuygh “mm-m consent of his parents he must -— - -"' Philadelphia Phillics purchased apply to the Commissioner 101‘ l -- 649 95° 113 veteran shortstop Lamar (swim spot in moulded baseball. The Toial—38'iI. Newsome from the Red Sox for Commissioner was given power to ,_ a jglpoftgd mo, investigate him and decide on" --0FFICE: Talk was the Brown-lto-Pitts- m its. qpd if he lsfolrayed. it ‘.1. Strain 23s m burgh sale would be announced ' b. open season M‘ =11 clubs »r_ Laflerty .....l54 21o 111 later This would give the two. to do blames with lllm- m, , l. Cameron . 20B week msior and minor lzet-wlletll- The "lemme-i lilbleizitht ‘m5 Connolly ,, ers, which were supposed to have proposal for elmlnn on 0 " . Richard come up with a neat post-war berr- player bonuses and eiiiflilxdfid the gain basement rush of ivory buein- major-minor agreement or one .. ess a total of exactly five deals. In year. with the addition of the - Total-WM. 1h,- onlv two previous tions, amendment mm the com- : High single: B. Duncan, 278. the Phillies bought pi‘ “ Johnny mlssioner the authority t0 Groin}; l- High three: .1. Strain are. Humphrles from Chicago White baseball legislation detrimental - “rdlnu; Shops, so; oincd, m. Box and first-sackcl- mnnk (Buck) to the name. - _ 551D: I. Elerrell 1D 210 I. liowalt .. 154 114 R. McKenzie 1M 195 C. McLean 216 234 J. Gales 58 241 ‘ 948 904 Total-BIO! i 5.: ' J. Marlin ... I16 144 -’ H. Hennesre Z66 230 °' . iusg 2N 164 "G. Gallant . 249 181 1'3. Duncan no m D7 1106 004 Total-NOB. ' Hllzh single: J. Coles, 258. High three: J. Coles, 892. H Points: Shed, 2; B, d; YEO Theatres “BETWEEN ~ TWO WOMEN" 3., ’ vluv romvsorv no“, mm,“ REMEMBER MIIEII soulus A- nldhn rm- TIUIBDAY.II'.M.' "mo mk-,---- Jog Louis, Detroit's Brown Bomb- IIONTAGUI , , g1 Uaoud-lnl ill FRIDAY - l P. M’. four rounds an. New York 10 years lATUItDAY—8 r. u. m. tonig t. it was ime MATINEE autumn. "mo: LQ.0.F.HALL10P.M. u. ,, 155m ‘w, Bflly ‘ newt. summer. i TONIGHT'S ' THE NIGHT ,s_.__... Attention All Curlers e l rs. WILL JOIN m HEALTHFUL ~ SKATING comm Banquet of tlcvflouu _ . ‘Willjg Heidi: ‘ K IIIIOIIIIIIDAIIQUIIIALL n" mumficnuu.’ 1”’ . Montague Curlers Hold Meeting A very larlielly ins of Curlers was held the Montague Rink on Dec. i2 presided over by Mr. A. G. Parks. A resolution was passed thank- ing the Macdonald Tobacco Co. through Mr. J. C. Montgomery. provincial agent for donation of a new-curling wcmboard. New members were voted attended meet- in Oil It in planned to op lcm with the President's and Vice President's contest followed by s dinner IR, the Legion Home-L. Ilse Straw To‘ Keep Football Field ilry D. Dec. 12 - (AP)- Olcvelarld Rams and Washington Redskins will battla for the Na. titonal Iibotball league chlunplon- ship on a dry field Slmday, but to firm iootilng the Ram y co tlu. Ohio strarw market. Looking forward to the Rams’ first title tilt general manage Cfrlild Walsh determined to pro- tect the lakefront Stadium grid. iron. not only from possible snow but also from frost. A ta-rvllulirl can keep a field dry but it won't stop a field from ireezing. The answer was a straw mattress. ‘roday the Stadium gridiron il hidden under five inches of ‘but under the cover is a triple pro- tection of paper, straw and tar- paulln. More that. 900000 pounds 0i’ straw were needed. Former Fastest Horse ls; Dead (By The Canadian Preu) NIWMARKET, England, Dec. 12 --The 16-year-old sire "Gold Bridge," fastest horse of ills time, died in his box today, "Gold Bridgef’ won the Kings Stand Stake: at Ascot twice and W" "find l0 Mud after winning the Nunthorpe Sweepstakes at Ylgk in the record time of 4'1 sec- on l. He aired more than 1M winnerl. .' 1v » v. "also ly" '. . _$port Briefs wit. cal-warn itfilithelaifl. DURBAN, louth Afllcu, Dec. 1B (Reuterfl-A ltronl Professional United Staten tennis learn includ- ing Donald Budge. Bobby Riggs and e Kovlcl; soon In visit Bouth Africa for rnatcllu, Norman , today. Only the lack c! {Inna drt was holding up the trip, e . , Irllvogvihalll In Roy Provvse had hls Canadian Legion hockeyists out for an hour's drill last night at the For- um and although little cart be judged as yet as to just how _ lltrong or what the ultimate lluc- up will be, it was quite evident that among the large number try- ing out for berths there is loads of skating ability, hockey savvy and brawn that should go to make up a capable squad. l. And familiar hockey faces, espe- cially during the days when Island junior teams were ruling the roost in Maritime hockey circles, are beginning to make their ap- pearance at the different practice sessions. They are not "kids" any more but now veterans of World War II and they are gradually again taking up the game that they gave such promise of making good at. ll- Ill 4v There were four of them pres- ent last night. Art Perry, a big strapping youngster when playing junior but now a big six-foot husky showed loads of skating power and stickhandling ability lalt night. in the skirmishes he took part. in and should with a few more workouts under his belt rapidly regain his old form. i fi ‘ll 1- Then there was sllm, blond- headed Ev Jay. Small in stature Ev has been away from the hoc- key wars a long t.me while serv- ing the Royal Canadian Navy but his weaving, tricky style that used to bother opposing players a great deal a half dozen years ago was still quite evident and he ap- parently has lost little of his speed. 0 1' 1- 1- Fultie Pound, a doubtful aspir- ant when the team was first broached, has evidently succumb- ed to the lure of the game once more, He was out there last night again displaying his fast breaking dashes down centre ice from his defence post that many a time in the days when he was performing here and later with Sydney of the Cape Breton Hockey League, used to bring thzicrowd to their feet. O ll- 1- Smooth skating Levl Blacqulere, a veteran of Italy now and with a little extra poundag on him,com- gleted last night's quariette of oys who are on the comeback trail. A tricky stickhandler and possessing a hard shot he, like the other three will require plenty of work befcte rounding into tip top shape but by the manner in which he was plugging away lust_nlghl, it won't take awfully long. _ i i 1' l- Therc were upwards of iwcniy or more additional players outlast night also and the majority them are likely to develop into strong hockeyists. The writer did not know many of them very well as they are more or less newcom- ers to him, but as the practice ses- sions get stiffer and Coach Prowrle ' will see that they are made just. so, a more definite account can be given of them. We picked out the above four not through any bins at all but rather as boys whom we saw come up through the ranks. and it was a welcome sight to see them back in their hockey regalia once more. O 1' And speaking of coaches for the City Hockey League, acquisition of Roy Prowse by the Legion means that the coaching duties of all four will bawellgcoked alter. Roy, after long service with the Navy, also comes back to the game he made a success oi as a defence- man. Breaking ln a good number of years back he performed yeo- man service with Moncion, in fact while with them he was respons- ible one night fcr practically beat- ing the Abegweits single-handed. fi Q '0 Later on he returned to perform brilliantly with the Abegweits, in fact he received a tryout with the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League. Roy didn't quite make the grade but in 1926 through to 1928 played pro hockey with Regina Capitols where he drew much acclaim with his work behind the bluellne. 0 O '0 l» It ll not the first coaching job Roy has held. lie has coached the Crystals of Summerslde to Island titles and then took the Abegwelts over to land the ‘title with them. Junior and intermediate teams have also come under his care and in addition he has proven to be one cf the most capable rflcrecl in the Marltimes. O O O lo the Legion will be guided by a man with a wealth of hockey experience behind him. He a strict coach all the way. This writer kncwl ‘that from experi- ence. He rule: with an iron hand Ill the time but a fair one. A hard fighter himself he wants a) under his charge to fight ult as hard and will stand for no lhlrklng whatloever. Bo it can be taken for granted that if the Leg- ion ccnnot ice the moat polished iquad in the league they will cer- n ice one of the hardest light ng. Ilockoy Results NATIONAL LEAGUE Detroit 2, Bolton 2 (tie), LlIOAI IBAGUI d I Pimb h ‘I. l'!, Prcvulgnce ‘I, 0.1L IINIOII A lteflordn d, Btratfcrd ‘fiat. nockml m. ‘ £1 old 2. nnn-nuuu-udn--_- ~.. Scarves Belts PHONE 1230 llotod British Jockey Killed In Accident FRILFOBD HEATH, England, Dec. ll -- (Router!) — Freddie Fox, noted Jockey and hone trainer, was killed in a road ao- oident here hilly. Fox retired atoll-hound o! i986 i the lite King ll-ii‘ hil luf- twc reopens ‘Flo wll Britain's champion jockey in i930 with 180 win- neru. Lew Jenkins Mill Attempt Comeback (By The A-oclated been) _ JOSEPH, 0., Dec. iS-Jlew Jenkins, former lightweight box- ing champion, announced today he will 1o into training next Mondly ‘n “onion for a come-back nl- tempt. .1 nklns. anpearing here~ (p bill-billy show after getlinr r 75-" ‘ Flv-aw‘ wUflhNavw-(n W” '1 '5'.) ".02? lull that i" l- irnin down o» tile Welter iirnll. . I v-IU-I u CAPE and UNLINED GLOVES PIGTEX DEERSKIK The finest range we have ever shown -- l Cashmeres, Rayon: and Wools. “Better Men ’s Wear” 14a GREAT GEORGE STREET llnly llama Bowling Big Four League CAR-DB: McDonald . Brown Power . MacFarlame Smith Report for November: Bent D 0|‘ Grade X 8r.: i Shirley Ocoke: 2. Mary Watts: i. Norma Lewis. Grade X Jr.: l. Marmleriu Ves- S"\‘. ul-ld: IX Sr; l. Aletha Brown; ‘z. Vlvlan Andrews: ll, Anita Lewis. I“ d.» lX Jr; l. Gerald Rabin- Ylll: l Christine Proud: p‘ ‘c n Lewis. Grade Vii: l. Rural Andrew; Grade Vi: l. Itreda Newson: 2. Dean Watts. Highest Average: Silirrley Cooke. 95.3 per cent. Perfect Attendance: Freda New- son, Christine Proud and Marguer- ite Vessel’. Anne MacPherson. c Primary Deperim Grade V: 1. Jackie Andrews and Norman Brown (equal); i. Laken Lewis; 3. Donald Crockett. Grade IV lsnzfllci Rose Watts: 2. ' l. Joan Vesey; 2, Elaine Cooke: 3, June Dennis. : Geollxe Andrews. I grade II (a): uniel MacDon- Grade H (b): 1. Betty Andrews: Watts. Grade I (a): Alan Brown. : 1, Elizabeth Watts: 2, MacDonald and George Proud (eqhsi): s. Grade I (o): Beryl Highest Average Watts, 98.5 per cent. Most stars for uflthlnetic — . Holt rters for _ - Ilhiue Ocohc and O Mae- Dcrnid. Perfect Attendance: Betta An- drews, ma» Derlnis. Frankie hw- ls, lllasbeth. Gladys. Muriel and Merril MacDonald. and cecll Wlnnifred Rayter. ‘Beecher. 10NDON — (OP! - War-hips are brinrlnqr 115.000 Chrlstmrs nvddhu '1'"! tor" 0'13"“ "'""" ...-l as”... fan.“ q-n-Q, gun, y, P~"‘2'"l 1s '11“ of the "Thar-I you, Britain" fund I. H‘ A wide variety and a most Popular Gift Open ‘All llay Wednesday For Your Convenience HARRY A. MacDOUGAL A SEASONABLI‘. IAD The road of life has many bends, It winds though dale and hill; Some scenes are known, like well- kl-lown friends And some are unknown still. The first brief miles wind through the Spring Where sunny youth pervades: It's travellers walk and laugh and 5 (l. Toward more quiet gladcs. Then life runs through it's Sum- mar-land. Where fuller Joya are known, It's travellers wait. and under- stand. To gather fruits Spring-sown. And lane. this winding load still n ‘fllrough- lovely Autumn days. Where joys. blended cplorl nd To life a paeon oi praisel . ‘Till late. the road of life ascends 0‘er winter's glistening height home awaits and love descends And rum u. 1m in sishtl --I. line! Oct. 19. i945. ‘llgiand-(OP) Fraser. BIRMINGHAM. -'l‘wo Birmingham doctors. Hr.‘ A.P. Thompson and Dr. ohn Malina. have ‘Wflttfll in the Przctliicnrr. "The unrestricted we oi ncllLclllln by the public .~..:u!_rl not be encouraged. ""' oily be used when ti! “Qiitlall of‘ the patient no . n‘