——~ “all lightly regarded—round out The Guardian, Chariotistows, ¥ri, Nov. 19, 1965. 9 |— Ch'ship Fight More Than That the type of is not without ’ RAMBLINGS... Bret Hanover, with the pacing title already wrapped up, goes after hie 3let stake svictory tonight as the short-priced favorite to win the $151,252 Messenger af Roose- velt Raceway. The swift son of Adios-Brenna Hanover, also e leading candidate for harness racing's Horse of the Year title will be bidding for the triple crown, an honor won other horse—Adios Butler in 1959. Downing of “Shaker” Heights, Ohio, veteran Frank Ervin, already the triple—the Cane Futurity route to a career record of 44 victories in 47 races. opposition is expected to Hanover. Rivaltime has this year. Tuxedo Hanover third once in his last over, Bobby T. Knight, xe : avae clashes Toreador f J Olympic | '72, Alta., area as a of been prepared to see Montreal back Canada’s prior bid for the 1972 winter Olympics at Banff and then seek the 1976 summer games,” Mr. Maciej said in a statement Wednesday after directors meeting. ‘‘However, as our objective is the develop- ment of the Olympic movement and amateur sport in' Canada, we will not do anything 0 divide those people in our nation real Mayor Jean Drepeau announced Monday his city would seek the summer games in Jose Torres, suffering ih an intestinal illness, received Thursday am extension of the deadline by. which he must -de- fend his world light-heavyweight boxing ‘champiénship. The New York State Athletic Commission medically suspended Torres and said he would not have to sign for a title defence further_medical examination, re-evaluation and review pending : of his condition.” Torres won the light heavy title by stopping Willie Pastrano in the ‘ninth round at New York's i Square Garden last March 90. Under New York commission and World_Boxing Association rules, a champion must defend his crown at least every six months. jeaccounted for a goal apiece. | ‘also tied a pair. ‘Montreal leftwinger carr Johnny Bower's glove {s ready as the puck flies at the MONTREAL (CP)—Bob Pul- | ford scored a goal and assisted | on two others Thursday night as | Toronto Maple Leafs » downed | Montreal Canadiens 3-1 in a Na- | tional Hockey League game. ‘outout—from—one—line.——_______ The threesome of Eddie} Shack, Pulford and Larry Jef- frey, easily the best combina- ' ition on the ice for either club, | Ralph Backstrom was the lone Canadiens’ marksman, picki his fourth goal of the opening period. have’ 10 points, one less than New York Rangers and five be- hind Chicago Black Hawks and Montreal who are locked in! first place with 15. Toronto has ~ | | iGAME WAS DULL | Apart from Toronto's out- burst in the final period, the game was a dull, sporadic af- two stanzas. Both- clubs registered the. same numberof shots on goal— ponents reverse the trend in the last. two. Backstrom got his fourth marker of the season at 10:25 mark of the first period with assists. going to Dave Halon and: Claude Provost. On the play Provost was in front of the a real bench, but mana steer the puck to Balon. The right in on his wrong side only CURLING DRAW HUNTER’S CORNER Hazardous Conditions Hamper Goose Hunters * November is past the halfway .ed in the pret, we could have mark and December will soon oheasant hunting in a few years. be with us. The recent freeze Our huns are holding out in re I areas and abandoned with clear, blue ice approxi- farms that are being reclaimed that coated our ponds and dams mote mately an inch thick was follow- |by nature. ed by a downpour of rain. Goose, Our ruffed grouse — Native hunters were somewhat disap- partridge to most Islanders pointed as car travel on second- are furnishing sport to many hunters who, spectalize in our Our rabbit hardous. Sliding into a roadside crop does not look too promising —— as rolling at the moment. I have walked a off & log in a- pond. Our} lot of woodland trails this sun mer and, apart: from several ary roads could he desrit § ed as nothing short of ha- own local’ product. ditch was as geese got a much needed breath | or. dawning have stumbled across sizable coveys of Huns and on one occasion two covies were having top heard having daybreak chit-chat date ha- ith each other. We have a fair Hunters mont of Huns present this ‘this month sta fall. In some districts they are |fed and heavy but are hard fairly. common -but_farmers ate “handle. -They not inclined toward advertising break in a straightaway run their presence. This columnist don't lose any time circling has eleven covies pin-pointed se ‘dallying in the veral of which are well over the jin which they were started. twenty mark with the average Fox hunting is a sport that o in the 18 bracket. Our pheasants /hard to beat for excit have also made a remarkable thrills. We have a top crop of come-back, An observer, who black stockinged gentlemen and travels widely through. southern we also have a bumper crop of Queens and Kings counties, told field mice. Some meadows ap- me he knows of nine flocks of |pear to be alive with them. Mice Pheasants that average approx!- are the foxes natural meal tic- mately nine in each. One holds ket and they sure make the most of it. The plentitude of mice : \coukt be the cause of the high for in. the days when ‘they were fox population. More power to ... we have mice to spare eleven members. This chap most tertainly knows his Ring-necks Present in their thousands he them is emem and man, G. Schleyer No. 2 — J. Burden, N. Mac- | Neill, L. Bagnall, D. Shears vs | P. O'Rourke, Bill Hopkins, A.£. _ MONTAGUE , ‘ Curling draw for Montague to- jay: ,|7 P.M. Ice 1—D. McGowan, D. Clark- Murphy, N. Wolfer. Ice 2—F. Vuozzo, L. Fraser, R. Collings, John McGowan vs_ E. MacDonald, R. Ferguson, D. Sor- rie, H. Somers. 9 P.M. Ice 1—K,.T, MacKenzie, -J. Murphy, \. Coneen, L. Stewart E=-Duvar, H. Galloway. Ice 2—E. Shaw, Ken MacDon- ald, H. Robbins, K. Allen vs H. Moar, Ken Sullivan, Justin Mac- Neil, L. Furness. FORUM SKATING was a confirmed pleasant hunt-— er. If our pheasants ere le: to CAN CAN SET BLAZE their own devices with respect to survival, and their blood lines not watered anaengic misfits, ae has happen |heat to start a forest fire. The concave base of an aero- down by a bunch of sol container can reflect enough ' Saturday, Nov. 20 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Chikiren 15c; Adults 25¢ | . The win was the fourth this; season for the Leafs, who now | 28, with Canadien: outshooting i the Leafs t1-7 in the opentng |, 1- Phones Colt - b.c. period, only to have their of Me; 2. Joyce Renaux bf. 2. Per- ied‘ | son, L. Nicholson, 8S. Galloway; vs _P. Sinclair, M. Harris, G. Ee vs A. Robertson, P. DesRoche, Toronto Pronovost, right, watches to have Johnny Bower stop his | treal Canadiens 3: in the NHL for his third goal in five games, net, Toronto’s Marcel warily. Toronto defeated Mon- game Thursday night (CP Wirephote) Maple Leafs Down Habs; Pullford Grabs 3 Points Referee Art Skov called only hard shot. However, Backstrom, since his return to Toronto from three penalties throughout the who had followed in, dumped the rebound behind a startled | Bower. The teams battled to a score posing roam at will areas. Only key Worsley in the Montreal and Bower at the other Mr. Eric Moreside has return- ed from the sale at Deleware and | Newt fair with neither club capable |he gives the following list of lof breaking loose in the opening | horses that purchased here. in the The follow- are owned Fred Leshy and George Turner. i 1. by Don | sing Hanover dam Darnell Han- rover; _3...My Pal_Jimmy-b.c.-2— |Seotch Pay dam Sugar Byrd; 4. Success Kane b.c. 2—Meadow | Leo dam Penny (dam a full sis- }to Canny Pace owned by Horace | Willis); 5. Aura 7—208 m. Mighty Medwin dam Fama; 6. Nimitz b.f. 2. Nimitz dam Grey Sally; 7. Sally’s Wayside b.c. 1 by Wayside dam Grey Sally; 8. Lotta Nibley g.f. 1 Sonny Nibley dam Katie Nibley; 9. Jets Nim- = g.f. 1. Nimitz dam dJuzene et. Mrs. Francis Breau of Monc- ton purchased Success Rooster jb.c. 1. by Titus Hanover dam By THE CANADIAN PRESS ; WLT F APt Chicago 721 4 B15 Montreal 63 3 4 3115 New York 443 37 Bill Toronto 4622 3910 Detroit 253 7 37 Boston 253217 «6 REMEMBER WHEN . By THE CANADIAN PRESS Captain George Eyston jminutes later. It was his first The Leafs received their total |less middle frame as both clubs ‘goal since coming to the Leafs, Mar. Horsemen Lees Clever Ralph — dam Phone St. J Americaps of - the Jeffrey broke the tie just five } te be the winner. 14 z set the world’s land speed record at 311/442 mph. 2B years ago today—in 1937— in his twin-engined ‘‘Thun- derbolt’’ car on the Bonne ville Salt Flats, Utah. The 4#-year-old Englishman beat the 301.18 m.p.h. record of Sir Malcolm Campbell, set two years before. The cur- rent record is more than 550 m.p.h. Adults $1.00 JUNIOR HOCKEY FORUM Sundy, Nov. 21st — 2.30 p.m. ~_| | $.D.U. HIGH SCHOOL ROGERS RANGERS Regular Admission Intercollegiate Hockey DALHOUSIE TIGERS S.D.U. SAINTS University Rink, Saturday, Nev. 20 2PM. Discount to al! students. Gt. George St. - Dial game, none in the opening 2 minutes, one in the second to Montreal and one to each club in the, third. : The Montreal line of Red Berenson, Claude Larose and John Ferguson were on the ice for the first two Toronto mark- ers. Attendance was 18,376. SUMMARY First period: 1. Montreal, Backstrom 4 (Balon,'* Provost) 10:25. Penaities—None. Second peried: No Kennedy Leads PWC * pes To 11-3 Romp Over PVI any Bearer 1 CK trying to break away from the | Heneten) 19; 14 - newly acquir- type of gamé that PVI was; Third Period: 8.—PVI, ed centerman, Jamie Kennedy. | playing proved too much for |(Squarebriggs) 5:27; 9.— ° the Welshmen to a 11-3 vie-'tnem and they had to settle Kennedy (Turner) '6:21; | 10.— °C@- | for, only three more goals. PWC, Ellis (Arsenault) 6:26; 11, High-flying Jamie Kennedy |—PWC, Cyr (Taylor) 12:15; 12.— broke the ice again and at |PWC, Kennedy, 14:05; 13.—PVI,, 10:46 scored his second goal |54 s (Stanley) 14:55; of the night: MacKenzie at |!4 » MacDonald (R 14:20 and Turner at 19:14 got |Doherty) 18:37. Penalties: PV1, Squarebriggs, 3:20; PVI, Mitson, ., — markers for | 05; PVI, Squarebriggs, 12:20; The third Lie hottest PWC, Duncan, 13:35; PVI, Acern, period, al 15:03; PWC, Duncan, 15:37; contested stanea of the night, py; ' MacQuaid, 18:01: PVI, Acorn, 19:4]. F = g was filled with seven goals, five of which belonged to PWC, and cight penalties. PVI led in this department with six. cd af | he & ay j is ze Rw F iE i [ & & 5 : i i g f 4 scored against them also. It looked as if PWC was going scene Announces Awards Forum in the firet few minv- | tes of the last period but PVI turned on the steam and at David Morton, a Senior student from P.Q., won the Most Valua 5:27 Stanley, one of PVI’s more award for the St. Dunstan’s versity football team, it was nounced last night Coach Ed Hilton. Morton was chosen vote taken ambng the and managers. Cyril ald, the leading rusher Saints who missed two through a shoulder injury, trail- ed Morton by only a few points. _ However, MacDonald was & shooin for the Most Valuable Back award. He is a more Arts student from lottetown. In the other voting, Bob Hickey of Summerside edg- ed out Steve Clarkson of Monta- gue for Most Improved Player. Both are Sophomores. The winner of Rookie of the Year trophy was Brian Conrad of Halifax, with Bobby Driscoll lof ou Mass., coming a close second. All of the above awards will be presented at the annual sports banquet held in the spring. HOCKEY ge é i g E g i 3 EF i f ms Eg i j | aft g ' i 2 * a i ie i: : t z i 2 f i 34 Ete ie # b se ae -_ 8 & - e ie 8 le & g : q ® z : He z i z gat | | F a = li of it, and at 14.65 last goal for PVI. bat wee — less authority | SUMMARY sone. and there eae ‘antl (eames tet 8 eee nee lughes put PVI on the score- 5:26: board at 14:30. The period ended the way it started with . PVI Hughes (MacQuaid, Stanley) beng Penalties: PWC Second Period: 5. PWC Ken- nedy (Turner, 246; PWC MacKenzie (Kennedy) 14:- 20; 7. PWC Turner (Kennedy, ‘Hockey Practice There will a practice this Rogers t Penalty—G. Tremblay 17:15. Third: peried: 2. Toronto, Shack $3 (Pulford) 6:09; 3. Tor- “jonto, Jeffrey 1 (Pulford, Baun) 11:23; 4. Toronto, Pulford 3 (Kurtenbach) 19:34; Penalties—- Berenson 0:18, Baun 19:00. Shote-on--goal--by? . %615—28 Toronto Montreal 115 12—28 visions will st art their -ched- uled play on Saturday, while the Midget-Juveniles and Bantams will commence next week. Rams vs Seals; 8.90 a.m. Lions vs -Springers; 9.16 a.m. — Foxes vs Zebras; 10 am. — Ice Cleaning; 10.15 a.m.—Wolves |Bisons; 11.45 a.m. — Racoons ivs Coyotes. - BANTAM “Friday, Nov. 19th, 8 p.m. p.m. — Bears vs Comets. PAPERWEIGHT * Saturday, Nov. 20th, 4.30 p.m. — Ice 1 — Crows vs Hawks; Ice 2 — Jays vs Falcons; 5.10 p.m. |_ Tee 1 — Eagles vs Owls; Ice (2 — Sparrows vs Blackbirds; \5.50 p.m. — Redbirds vs Blue- ibinds: Ice 2 — Sparrows vs Owls (Practice). MIDGET-JUVENILE "Monday, Nov. 28nd — § p.m.: Canadians vs Bruins; 6 p.m. — Rangers vs Hawks. Tuesday, Nov. 23rd: 6.30 p.m, — Maple Leafs vs Red Wings. Wednesday, November 2th: 6 p.m. — Juvenile Practice. WE GUARANTEE DEPENDABLE DELIVERIES OF TEXACO FUEL CHIEF Home Heating Oil Warmth without worry all winter long! Deliveries right on schedule so you can never run short. Fuel Chief is the finest of its kind—economical, cleaner burning, and protectivs to your heat- ing equipment. Call us for Texace Fue! 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