.-:'!nr!i .- .-aw. ,Dominion Grattan 1.59 and many ” Ollie? Hreats. He also has a four- ,year-old by Playdale 2.0-lI,',, a year- -tc know what is going on in the ' Bavaria. I hope to see some or . Raceway. N. Y." We had a pleasant visit the other afternoon from Charles Pooley of Vl0l50l'lB. who was accompanied by Waldon Woodside of the same place. Mr. Pooley is the owner of the broad mere Mollie Grattan 2.0856 by Orcus Grattan. sire of old by Abner T. Clegg 2.041;, 3 four months old colt by Jollity 2.05'.l and the brood mare Jenn Hal with a three months olri colt by Jolllty. Last but not least is Harvest Melody '.3.l0'. that is being winicred at Mr. Woodsides She is in foal to Russel Hanover .2.tliii'1, Many will remember the little Melody mare when she arrived from Neiv- foundlanrl some weeks prior to Oldl Home Week. lil3(l. niid without ever starting in a race or being; trained on a half-mile track prioi t.o coming here won the 2.ili trot and in the second heat equalled the tzlck trotting record of 2.l0li. then held by Abbe Worthy 2.03. Two attcriiooiis later she won the Free For All Trot with Silk Girl winning the first heat in 2.09'.. it. LITTLE SPORT ' IsKA1'I: . SNARPENEDI DOWN THE BACK STRETCH Cut 1- on-: lulwu can IN-Null um. um 11-? son. It will be remembered that in the early spring he changed Mary Merk over from the pace to the trot. She had taken a pacing rec- ord of 2.08 375 and had total win- nings of 54,259 at the end of 1950. This year she started the season on the new gait at Montague and won, also at Charlottetown and beat a good field of pacers at Triiro, July llth in 2.11. Shortly after Earle moved to Yonkers where he won several races and then on to Roosevelt Raceway. She won there but bruised her heel and iind to he laid up for some timc. llccovciiinz. the stable then moved to Foxboro where NIiu'v met and defeated the best irotters in as "my game from behind to 3-"5 25- hand the Islanders 1: 6-4 defeat e”-an ' Y rv iii if in. at the Forum last night. In the past. seasons crifiipnigii te”F':l;d?i1atleou;:;Ck:Vm;.1::,de0(g'Opel, 1-miiing 2.1 as me second per. .. A; I -. - - - f - . Y 5h" "J5 1' Jules mst Six um” did fairly well in the Islanders lml 3” ""dmw"y me mo"e3:::'Iec'; second. once third nnd once fourth; and her ccirnings totalled around 34,500 for the (921501), Many believe she can do 2.05 over a half-mile track and as a matter of fact the v;riter and others timed her in 2.10 over Charlottetown track prior to leaving here in July and it seemed. Just a jog for her. Mary is not only nrts last night. It was a tough spot for the kid to have to step into and he stood up to the Millionair- es better than most of the sup- porters of the team should have expected him to. Ills best period was the last when he stopped sev- en shots and this could probably be explained by the fact that he was a new trick trotting record. Harvest Melody won the next two. and race. She also won at Freder- icton and Halifax. Her breeding is- exceptionally good on both sides of! her pedigree. tracing back to greziti sires and world's champions Mr! Pooley is not a young man by any, means but is a very active one. He; has forty head of cattle. a larec, number of pigs and a farm with; its many tasks to look offer He is, one of the ni:-iny who have cofutrib- i uted to nirikinc this province a Garden of the Gulf. . His neighbor, Waltlon Woodside? l-5 R strapping young man and isl bitten by the "horse bug" also be-3 in: the owner of Melody Chimes, at colt by Big Gun out of Hnrvestl Melody. Big Giui is bred in the: purple and we believe is now :1 successful sire in Ontario. In ad- dition he has the brood mare Linda Darnell with her weanling colt by Abner T. Clegg 2.0-fl:-. We are very glad to have a lat- ter from Cpl. James D. Sutherland. No. US.'ii 001 232. Headquarters Btry. 169th AAA AW En (SP), -iiirfl Infantry Division, A.P.O. li'.Z. cfo N.Y.. in which he enclosed infor- mation on the horses which were being sold at Harrisburg, Pa. the prices they brought and the part- ies that bought them. His letter states . . . "Since leaving the U.S.- A. I do not get much of a chance sport. I happened to get hold of this copy of the Hanover Evening Sun and read the list of horses be- ing sold. Since I have been here I found that they have lcc racins the same as on the Island. They race at It resort for servicemen which is up in the mountains of these this winter as I am very in- terested in harness racing. I hope you will find use for this list and two of the races held at. Yonkers . We thank our good friend for having remem- bered us and we are sure there will be many in this province who will remember him also and will be glad to know that he is continu- ing his interest in harness racing although so very far away from home. His present location is not too far away from the headquart- ers which Adolf Hitler built in the Bavarian mountains. The Bavar- ians are very thrifty people, good farmers and stock raisers and that part of Germany would appear to be as interesting a place as any to be located. 'Best of luck, J. D.. and we hope to hear from you again. Charlie Mason. well known Maine driver. is not located at the Lewis- ton race track and among the re- cent additions to his stable is the pacer Jimmie Highland 2.00 25. that forced Tassel Hanover to es- tablish two new world's records at Lexington. He also raced two heats at Delaware. Ohio. faster than 2.04 and is eligible to the 2.14 class Prince Chief 207 took his record over the Northvllle, Ill. halt-mile track this season and was the winner of eight of his sixteen Iltarts. Another good prospect is .lill Revere 2.09'.i, bay trotting mare that has performed quite well the past two seasons. These horses are owned by Joseph Cook of Poland Springs. Maine. Jimmie Highland cost C7500 and Prince Chief 33.400 at Harrisburg. In ad- dition to those horses Mr. Mason has it. number of others that he is wintering and will later move fur- ther south to winter training Earle Scmple dropped in to see us a few days ago and we got some particulars about his race exper- a last trotter and fast pacer but is perfectly mannered with excep- tional breeding. her sire being Long Key 200 and her dam one of the was settling down somewhat. With a year or two in it senior league F-rankie would possibly be ready ,,7o1.ld.S mm, broad mares FM for competition in M. M. H L. Worthy M. 2, 2.143;. dam of manv l'1ay' , . . others including the mare Gray , ,, Mist 3' 3.03:2; by vo1Omm,V,tha,, VI On a couple ofntlieh .,oadlisd 123: sold for slfl.O00 at the dispersal ll,”,e icmed 01" 1m rem) from sale of the village Farm" Lang" ll1i:l.smdeT(;ii:1eluCS1eil:e0i3ille Time: the horre. Pn. Earle brought home sbgdney mnwrds Caught the Is. with him a great trotting prospect in the two-year-old Dean Gallon by Bill Gallon 3. L59. dam. Louise Hanover by Dean Hanover 1.58”.- He was in the stable of Johnny Simpson and would not have been sold only for the fact that Johnny has become a private trainer for the Hanover Shoe Farms. lnnders forwards and deicnsemen up the ice and broke away with on- ly one man to beat besides Roper. This was the case when Frank l-iatligatc scored. These were about the only occasions on which the vis.tors appeared to be much of a ,threat as they otlierwise played an iunaggrcssive ;:.ame. This colt is an exceptional trot-1 . ter having been timed in 2.11 overl a half-mile track this season. He is staked in some of the largest fcturities for 1952 but it is not likely that Earle will continue the payments as it would mean that he would have to be southern trained. He also bought the pace: Patclien Volo 2nd at Roosevelt Raceway. He had taken a record of 2.09 there. and the pacing mare Kay B. Braden with a record .rf 2.15, eligible to the 2.22 class He also brought back with him for Clayton MacLeod, Wcstville, N. s.. the trotter King Wyn 2.10. This horse raced as a three-year-old in 1943, took zi record of 2.16 25 and was first to the wire on five occas- ions. In 1949 he won the 2.26 trot I Prince Edward Island junior hockey pltiyers still rank with the best in the rest of the Mori- timcs. The other night fit Sack- villc wlien,thc Amherst Ramblers and the Moncton Bruins played to a 5-5 tie, all the Amherst goals were scored by Island juniors. liizirk Delaney scored three. Paul Scliurmiin find Iton Man-Artliur one cocli. l.)elmicy also iind zin assist. while Schurninn set up two of Delziney's counters Defense- mnn MacArthur hzid one assist. All three players are from Sum- mersidc where they have been playing hockey for the past. sev- eral years. Delaney and Scliurnizin are pretty ftiir hnll plziycrs rind played with the Summerside Cur- ran and Briggs team last summer. at Old Orchard. Me. mile track in Another Island junior Thane 2.10 US. We have no line on him D0340 Played "N5 l0l' lllc Ami for 1950 or 1951, His giro. caiumisi herst team. Brion Lewis find Stu Eigiis, is the site of quite a num- MiicLirrc of Clinrloitctoivii, who her of good trotters that have been "re Wlfll lll” ”'”"l' md "M "my racing this season. lllill lllgllli o 0 o . Twenty four hours is probably Asked about the difference in racing at Yonkers and Roosevelt as compared to Maritime ovals. he said the tracks are so wide that if a. horse draws an outside position and stays there for any length of time he is covering an awful lot of extra territory. One thing he not- iced at those tracks was the ab- sence of any rough driving. Every- one seemed to have lots of room and did not interfere with anyone else. That is probably due to the very close supervision given by the patrol judges. He said the tracks are very hard and there are an awful lot of lame or sore horses as a consequence. fill that prevented left winger Jim MucKenzie from playing with the Halifax Sriints instend of ihe Is- landers. Last Monday when the Saints were in town Couch Will Fields admitted that he tried to get MncKcnzle but was one day late. "We played Shfiwinigan Falls nn exhibition grime and I liked him then," stated conch Fields. He added that he had it in the back of his head to form -'1 line with the Maelfenzie bro- thers Kenny and Jim on it. It would be ll good line and also. good for publicity. he stated. . o a a While Murph Chamlicriiiin's Vancouver Canueks are still in second last place in the eight team Pacific Coast League. the Cnnucks have been setting :i pretty hot pace according to the Vancouver papers. The writers are even liegiiinifig to suggest that the CilIllI('l(S nrc the hottest team in the league to which the William A. Irving, Cherry Val- ley, P. E. I., is the proud owner of a weanling foal by Calumet Bud- long 2.02-H, dam, Queenie Kalmucl: by -Kalmuck ." ' . It is a light bay of handsome conformation, very stylish looking and gives ev- ery evidence of speed. Friends of :9 Mr. Irving share with him in ad- Hum Rock fmshes 3 ,wami"g niiration of the youngster and we "mm the d-anger of o.l"'Con-H- dencc. To illustrate his point hope that he will turn out as good as their expectations. Murph gave the papers " awry about Conny Smytlie and the Toronto Maple Lcnfs. Most everyone who races at Fox- . . 0 a bore knows Paul Bowser is one of "Con always has 8 nsuul of the big shareholders, but perhaps they have forfzotten or are not aware. that Paul in addition to be- ing a great wrestler some years tickets to Pittsburgh in his hand." Murph said. "He is not the least bit backward tibout handing them out either." There was the night ago. was also a great harness not so long ago when the Leafs horseman and has owned some of swnrmed all over Chicago and the--best in the Year Books. Ac- cording to the writer Tap Good- outshot. them something like 45- 14. Chicago won the hockey game enough, Paul awake or asleep. though 1-0- One of H10 youngest dreams of harness horses. Trotters 0l the l-OMS hopped into the and pncei-s are his life and his first dressing room after the gnnm love. At sixty-five he is as chip- Smlllllg llrllllllly "ml l0l"ll.V lime per 55 . debutante and enjoys Jog, claiming "We was robbed." He glng horses. "Glad you came out r1'::mlflcllflY llllllpy ""0"! ll all- to the track" was his greeting as he got down off his siilky. "I drove on the Grand Circuit with your grandfather Henry B. in the good old days. Come into my office" Photos lined the walls. eyes of too Smythe noticed the smile and beckoned the youth over. "Son." he said. "lies that a smile I saw on your face?" "It sure was Mr. Smythe." the boy gurgled. "Didn't fences in the us. A. the past sea- ycontinucd on page 7 we look great." "We lost a line- in " SPEEDY " SPEED” I mooam vou HAD A DATE wm-0 DDLLV AT EIGHT moo l?lD1N6l &l.'!I.fi' VHJILET". BUT WHEN I 601' ORNE MOTOR wzu. NE won? as some I LET ME RS 50. I DECIDED ' TO CALL IT OFF. HO MOT .r 7 :1. 32:11. I OLDCIWOBILE Cult-1 .1 i New Vice- 6-4 Bill Dinnini,"s Sydney Million- aires wezitliered n torrid first per- iod nltnck and took advantage of every break that come their way struck three times in five during the session to trike over the lend. They blinked the red light twice in the final 20 min- utes while the best the locals could do was gather one goal. The Islanders, playing without the services of their regular lgoalie Hal Gordon. tore through ,tiic Millionaires at will in the lfirst period and did everything ibut lift Pidsodny and the not out of the rink in their attempts Ito score. They did score twice but they missed enough chances in the first ten minutes to win the game. Frankie Proper took Hui Gor- don's piece in the net and turn- ed in" an adequate job. The third period was his best of the game as he turned aside seven shots. Several of the drives that beat him were from close in and ones on which he had little chance. George Robertson displayed some of the wares which earned him ii bonus instead of a fine by the Millionaires executive. Robert- son scorcd twice and helped set up Cliff Roach on another. Frankie Bathgatc. former Is- landers centremnn, scored the Millionaires fourth goal. He also drew two penalties and put on n Bnthgutc display that was slight- ly reminiscent of a few of his zanier games here last season. Other Sydney marksmcn were Joe Lcvandoskl. and Ronnie Mat- thews. Vitalc Sen r('I Pliil Yitnle scored his first Itoiil of the season late in the second period to put the Islanders with- in reach of the visitors. Don Bellringcr and "Buck" Whitlock scored for the Islanders in the first period while Walter Pawly- shyn completed the scoring for the night. The win lifts the info fifth place in the standings with a total of 26 points. two less than the Glace Bay Miners find two more than the Illllllllx Saints. from Wiilt Pawlysliny. nine minutes later the Islanders went into n 2-0 lead when "Buck" Whitlock deflected Johnny Dut- chakls slap shot into the twincs. Millionaires Take Lead ngain the four times. the ball to score counted started rolling with n the Islnnders defense and out in front. of Roper. Robertson faded key game 1-0 iind you're happy." Smytlic growled. "My boy. there is never an excuse for a loss. and nevef a time anyone ,should be happy to lose. Here." he stiid. handing the. boy the railway fic- ket, "is your new home." Sherbrooke Looks For Help . From Other Clubs SHiE'R.BR.OOKE'. Quc.. Dec. '7 -(CP)- Forest Keene. sherbrookc St. Francis t ' manager, said today he expects help from other Quebec senior Hockey League and professional clubs within a week. Keene said he would get players from other clubs to reinforce his hapless saints. 'Satnis. operating at II 05000 def. left, were planning to quit the loop. But the Sherbrooke City Council recently voted 33430 to help the club and 07,000 is being " f C from ” ' men and other sports enthusiasts. here. saints have been at the bottom of the league for the better part of this season and attendance has dropped considerably. In 26 games saints have won only seven. NEW YORK. Dec. 1 - (AP) .. The possibility of I championship boxing bout between Kid Ciavilan. world welterweight titleholder. and European champion Charles Hu- 3:63 of France was disclosed to- Y. conunava. 0.. 1 .. (App - Baseball! minor lealuu wound up their-,onnual convention today by eliminating the ban on dtcker- lng with high school players and asking the majors for half their Millionaires agrmtened Tile Islanders ' But before the Islanders were defence, Travis, Millionaires Mcbazan; R9b9"30'l Gray, Pawlyshyn. ringcr. solo rusli that curried him around Macxcllzm Monvwy Bmudryl fensc. He went to The Islanders were in the middle stanza Moneymen Levadoski that caught the back Three minutes handing a pass-out ner while the tennis strength. Batligatels goal cam of the Sydney carried the puck with pad the puck Phil itors by Whitlock's rebound. drew an assist on the the Mills in the final Pawlyshyn pass behind Pidsodny. The Islanders hc rcccivcd his first tripping: Willie Millionaires the time. llL' Phil scored his first goal. good performance that must have hui't. riod referee Hugh smart defensive ploy stopped Roach Sydney--Goal, Pidso ing. Whalen: Charrlo':tctow.v -Goal. forwards, Bonhotn me. Officials-Macbean n (Dutchak. Morrow) 3-Sydney, Robertson (Beach) 8 :50, Bathgate 4 :46. (Hildebrand. 5-Sydney. Robertson (Cupolo. Roach) 6-Sydney, Bathgate (Cupolo) .. . .. 'l-Charlottetown. Vif 8-Sydney. Roach 9-Sydney. Matthews (Roach) evened matters. let go a blueliiie later scored his second goal into the cor- shuoing advantage over Marsliall. were 3 Wm Sim;-L utloiicn and thousands of geese are received biggest hand of the night as he 59550” Clo-still all Old llllle 80050 iliuntcr came to me with his eyes cc, Levandosky, Matthews. forwards, Cupolo. Plrle. Birukow, Roach, Hildebrand, Robertson. Bathgnfe. Dufchak, Marshall, Bell- First Period x-Charlottetown, Bcilringer f-Bonhomnie. Pnwlyshyn) 8:30 2-Charlottetown, Whitlock Penalties-Leyandosky second Period 4-Sydney. Levanrfosky Matthews) t Robertson. Cupolo) THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN Millionaires Come From Behind To Win From Islanders und lifted a buck hand over Roper's body. p Willie Mursiiull made the nic- est individual play of the period by splitting the Mllllonuires de- tlie Sydney goal mouth but Pidsodny held out a man short when the Joe shot of the mesh. by back were at full e as the re- only one Is- land defenceman to beat. l-le slip- to Bnthgate who Robertson' 1951 DECEMBER 8. this season...it ended on Wed- nesday evening, Deccmber 5th. On the whole it was a good season. I watched it come in at Cavendish as the dawn wind rustled the dy- ing leaves in the stately beeches and the clamour of wildgeese, breakfast-bound from the Park. throbbcd and died and rose again in the clear morning air. I saw it go out as a misty moon rode over Orwell Bay and the low- suit of a quick two man break outipitched, contented gobble of rest- end. Bill Cupolo ing geese drifted in from the sea- ward gloom off Donald John's. O O O 'I.'.-.- November flight this season topped all full records since the flipped a hack hander over Roper. Vitale put the within a one goal reach of the v1s- goose shooting is coming back fast back handing Islanders "Buck" Larry Travis Play. Roach and Matthews scored for stanza. With their op- lionaires. Game Odds and Ends Frankie Roper made the firstl penalty N Johnny Duichak turned in ti fiilfly and Bathzate slap shot with his ankieils chock full of geese. and" he stopped a f in the third t MncLean' to award the game tol lwgue Sydney if the fans in the northi end persisted in throwing at pidsodny. La,-ry Travis made altheir system and that they still things i when he and Robertson on i Gray. The Millionaires dressed only 12 men with seven of them the Sydn0.V 9059 Ricord. H01 being 1-orwmds, Gordon and "Rcd' Favcro were Don Bellringer opened the visitors in the press box. "Red". scoring with a short shot into the side of the net while Sydney patients in the sanatorium. Blgi were two men short. Bellringer Phil and Piclsodiry started to defen- dny; I Dinn- Roper; Vitale Tralnor. Whitlock, nd Giilis. . 15:06 16 :29 1 '36, the 6:05 eel grass died out in 1933. Our and the fall flight bids fair to rival the good old days when No- Ivember geese gathered in thous- lands in our bays and estuaries. Farmers living along the shore of a little over a nifnute to go Walt!Poivnal Bay and in the area bor- knocked Bah Gray's daring the East River complained lof being kept. awake enjoyed ti 31-21 when the massed bands phonkers tuned up. I well remem- ponents and worked in close for nlber One ClB1'k- lille 00i0b9I' nlillltl gzrent many of their shots. The Is- in the days before the First Great lenders had the better of the pen- Wilr. when nlties, receiving only four trips tol I the box against, six for the Mai. din of their concentrated calling at nights of the something disturbed the geese off Irving's Bar and the filled the night with sound that beat against oneis ear drums. I I I O A lot of geese were shot this fall and a lot more missed... save of me game :1 iong snot gfflsometlllllg that is very easy to do Bill Cupolo. Frank Bnthgfite wasllls 1: long time , only on the ice ten seconds bcfurclgoose dinners were Cnloyed 85 was for; The sincc so many the case during the season just ended. The weather is keeping still with us. The day after the popping. ”Whadda you know”, he fairly shouted, "X Bay added rather "ucfully, tithe seas- cnls over." 0 O O A few goose limiters feel that they didn't get the ”bug" out of to settle with the bluck and wliltc disfurbcrs of a have a score four .lJ0(iinl llqloklidntglild S9L'0Nl Plllce a break in we Second pc,.1od' The man's peace of mind. some had romaine U C II - . .. . . . tter than avera c luck oth.rs . . . fuo Sydney foitiaids were thorns be H - 9 Rllil" u:V"l3" B'l:!"”h.SF"Vleu'& 1, me Side of me Isiandcrs an had to be content with one bird or ”:l:kencb5”m;ef;:lSenm'n pBoh mpmp itwo at. the most. Some, despite a Aubrey K612”. spurts Editor of heavy hunting effort, have yet to shoot a goose. I know several old timers who muifcd a good oppor- tunity to score and were denied broadcast the third period to the the chance to redeem theiselvcs. These are the hunters who feel that the geese owe them some- mok a pass in from of the "9. mugh it up on” but it only awthing and who watched the hands About mounted to a skirmish. of their watches slowly creep past the zero hour with a feeling of frustration and disappointment welling up in their breasts. in O O I have no regrets over what transpired since the goose season opened on October ltlth although I have to class my- self with the ”one goose" John- nies. The goose I bagged on the. opening morning was my first and last. I made one other attempt on a November morning when slushy snow covered the ground and a marshy chill seeped through layer upon layer of clothing. It was a blank, but who expects to connect with geese every time out? Often what has all the earmarks of I sure thing fizzles out flatter than the proverbial pancake. O O O Personally Many goose hunters have no one but themselves to blame for going home empty handed. It never pays ioff to be too greedy when out af- 9 :30 ter geese. .. 12:22 ale fwhltlock, Travis) ..... .. 14:55 Penalties -MCLBEHH 5:46,l Bathgafc 13:23, Dufchak 13:23. Third Period .. ..., 9:21 (Gray. Trainer) ...... .. 18:59 Penalties-Bellringer 14:173. Hildebrand 11:20, i Whitlock 15:32. Robertson 15:32. Pidsodny 1o 9 5.27 Roper 6 2 7-.15 This scribe will settle for one goose any day...Ioleamed to play it safe a long time ago. If a small bunch of geese come in to the 'rig'. whether it be three or less. I'll make the play supnostng a flock of one hundred are only two gunshots off. A goose in the hand is worth fifty on the offside Continued on page 7 15:30 SNAP Sill!-IyFlHlSHINC 10-Charlottetown. I Tlawllyshyn Rolls of film developed and printed and sent out the same day Prints double also at no extra cost. Any 8 exposure roll sac. Reprint: to each or I0 for 350. Mill Film service. Charlottetown. 138 Nllt St. radio-television revenue. Kenwood O..V E N-C O I IS "CANADA'S NATIONAL OVERCOAT” the Since for MIN Charlottetown l.E.l. New Deal -F A possible deal with a club out- side f.heiMaritlmes, which would provide the Islanders with I sec- ond goal tender. is being worked out between the Islanders and that club. it was learned from coach Leo Lamoureux last night. The goal tender may be purch- ased on a straight cash basis or he may be exchanged for players. There is a very slight chance. pos- sibly a 100 to 1 shot, that he may be in the nets tonight when the Islanders play the Moncton Hawks. There are also complications in- volved ln the deal which may pre- vent its completion. Coach Lam- ourcux would not divulge any of the details for publication. The new deal was made neces- sary when right winger Bruno By The Canadian I-lress A pair of week-end victories could put Toronto Maple Leafs into first place in the National Hockey League race. It isn't that easy, though. The Leafs, breathing down the necks of the league-leading De- troit Rcd Wings. need but two points to pull even with the motor city crew. In meeting the two tail- end clubs this week-end they could do just that, but gaining a win or even ties in the pair of encounters may be harder than it looks. With four regulars on the in- jured list, the Toronto team will c-iitertain Chicago Saturday night and the fifth-place Black Hawks have enough of the old college try to dump the Louis on their home ice. Sunday the Leafs go to New York where they will have another crack at the cellar-dwelling Rang- ers, appearing for the first time under their new coach, Bill Cook. The blueshirts, languishing at illc botoin of the six-team ladder with but six wins in 23 starts, could use two points to advantage. Cook may be the man who can drive them to it. In Montreal tonight (Saturday) the Cnnadlens will entertain De- troit Red Wings in zi batle for third and first place. The Wings ivili be seeking to stretch that slim two-poilif lead on Toronto while Montreal is but three points behind third-place lloston. Sfiii:lny's other games will see Montreal l'clurni,ni: to Detroit and Boston moving into C-hlcago. To Heave Unruly Fans From Rink VALLEYFIELD. Que.. Dec. 7 L (CF) -- President Arthur Vinet of the Valleyficld Braves said today that unruly hockey fans will get the heave-ho - and for the sea- son. i A ruckus broke out in a recent game when Ottawa Senators were playing here in a Quebec Senior League grime. Police went into ac- tion. Vinet let it be known that per- sons throwing things on the ice or Jumping on the ice will be put out of the arena and barred for the remainder of the season. '5 Ch S0 to ' I AND REMEMBER Toronto Could Take Over Lead This Week-End YES. HICKEYTS TWIST IS JUST WHAT YOU WANT IN A PURE WELDFLAVORED CHEWING TOBACCO IT HOLDS THE RECORD OF HUNDREDS OF ISLANDERS "FR OM" mus TIGNISH" IS ALWAYS FRESH. ST E A D I LY AND MERCHANTS SELDOM IF EVER HAVE OLD STOCK ON HAND Islanders Club Considers or Goalie T "Red" Favero refused Ta Glace Bay in a straight trade 10,. goalie Bob Arneil. Although Leo had the power to make him go 0.. suspend him. he did not wish i;, use such measures. After negotiating for several goalies since early this fall tn.- Islandera have been forced intd securing a goal tender at nearly any cost since the severe iii) in. jury to Hal Gordon in Sydney Wednesday night. . If the new goal tender is not available for use in tonight's grunt: and coach Lamoureux does not think that likely, the Islanders will use Hal Gordon if he is in conrli. tion to play or Fran-kie Roper, who turned in a fair performance for the Islanders last night. DeMarco OIITNIHIIS Sandy Saddler NEW YORK, Dec. '7 - (Alli Lightweight contender Pflilfly (ie Marco proved he was the brim- roughneck tonight as he cut. fought, outsmarted and outpointcti featherweight champion sriitzly Saddler in a 10-round non-title tug of war in Madison Square Garden. In the face of xi warning by ni,i,. ert Christcnberry, State Athletic Commission chairman, "to lIlill(F it it clean fight," both boxers tiiri-'.v the rule book away throuigli most of the rugged scrap and u'Ci'c warned repeatedly by referee George Walsh. The decision, a split verdict. was Brooklyn Paddy's second sirnieiit victory over the tall. sklmiy liti- pound champion. De Marco, ll 3-fo- 2 underdog, outweighed his rival 130 to 126. Curling Today No games are scheduled for the Charlottetown Curling Club today. However, there will be scratch games in the afternoon. The first mixed curling of the season is scheduled for tonight. I NEW YORK, Dec. '7 -- t.x - Herb Dickcnson, 20-year-old left winger with New York Rangers of the National Hockey League, was returned to Cincinnati Moliairks of the American League today. MIAMI. Fla.. Dec. 7 - (AP: Four golfers tied with 132 at the end of 36 holes today in the .s1o,ntin Miami open tournament over the Miami Springs municipal coirrsc. This UNION LABEL appears in ': E 7 THAT HICKEYS IT SELLS 3 L A c , K 1 w I s r HICHEY And. Tobacco Co. Ltd. Manufactured By Y B L A C K T W I 8 ,T NICHOLSON 0' Ch'town FOHIIINIH DAY BY DAY uonnu - nooxlnr -'nA1';11rAx - 9 P. TUESDAY-CHILDREN'S SKATING GENERAL SKATING WEDNESDAY-GENERAL sximuo .30 THURSDAY-CHILDREN'S SKATING -................... 4 (0 5- FIIIDAY -- HOCKEY - SYDNEY -- 8:80 SATURDAY-GENERAL SKATING I GENERAL SKATING .....................................- 8 0 M. 4 to 5:30 3 in 10 B to 10 3 ...............-- to 5 10 .4-