BILLY MacMILLAN - Charlottetown Abbies, f today for Ontario and nce with National Hockey fague systems. PBilly MacMillan and Stan Pear- "Three members of. last year,don are enroute to Toronto Marl- itime Madget Hockey champ-|boro training camp. Roy Biggar are|will report to the Detriot farm aiclub, Hamilton Cubs. STAN PEARDON Three Local Midget Stars leadingForHockeyCamps MacMillan is 16 years of age and is the son of Mrs. Stewart MacMillan 4 Alexander Drive, NTER’S CORNER Sete he opening day of the dick, Hun and pheasant season Paren relegated to the mem- fy column. It was the Blue and en-wing teal that saved the “for the waterfowl hunters mh the Ring-necked ducks con- fbuting their share The cagey ack ducks didn’t hang around er the opening gun, some left More this event. and headed to the-.tidal flats and river aries pronto. The black duck was the lightest in years. le. take on teal was heavy, @king up approximately 75 per mt of the opening day’s bag: mg - necked ducks were not arly so plentiful as last sea- , but the Blue-wing teal made or this deficiency The Blues * The Black Duck Kill _ Was Lightest In Years year in half plumage. They were not very fancy specimens minus tails and looking as scraggley | as Marsh Hens but they packed) a surprising lot of meat on their vanes that made for delicious eating. Some good bags. of wildgeese have been taken since the sea-| son opened. I was invited cut the other morning on a goose hunt that looked as promising as a goose hunt can be but passed it up. I served my day shooting September and October geese. I like to see the hoar frost on the stubble or a light covering of snow. Geese are geese then. I picked up -a pair off a srow covered stubble last December ROY BIGGAR By THE CANADIAN PRESS Coaches in the new-look West- » Jern Hockey League, which opens a 70-game schedule tonight, are unanimous in predicting a tougher loop in 1959-60. Swing into its 11th season, the WHL is a seven-team, one-divi- sion league. Last year it was a nine-team, twin-division loop with five coast teams and four on the prairies. The better players of the teams which closed shop — New West- minster Royals and Saskatoon Quakers have been shared among the remaining squads— accounting for forecasts of a starchier league. The opening action has Spo- kane Comets at Seattle to meet the Totems, President Cup win- =e Charlottetown and the late Mr. MacMillan. Last June he com: | pleted Grade X at Queen Char- | lotte High School where he play- | ed school hockey for four years. During the past season centered the high scoring line for the | local midgets. ‘ Stan Pardron is the 16-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Stan Peardon, Montague. Last year he atended Montague High School and was a member of the Midget Abbies where he held down a right wing berth. Stan along with | Billy is due’ in the Marlboros’ camp Monday, October 12. | Should MacMillan and Peardon | fail to make the first Marlboro team, they have a chance to catch on with the ‘B’ team, the Dukes. Coaches of these teams | are Turk Broda and Ray Timg-| ren. While performing with | either the Marlboros or Dukes | their education needs wil! be well looked after by the Toronto club. Roy Biggar is the 15-year-old ‘son of Mr. and Mrs. Stan Big-| ners last season, while Victoria Cougars face the Canucks in Van- couver and Winnipeg Warriors are host to Edmonton Flyers. Calgary Stampeders are idie enti Satrday night. ‘Race Program ‘Goes Monday Due to the rainy weather and track conditions, racing pro- grams have been called off till Monday afternoon, Thanksgiving Day. The card is slated .to get underway at 1.30 p.m. sharp. Frank ‘Duck’ Acorn has an- other top-match card ready to go on this holiday afternoon. The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Oct. 8, 1959. aii “I won't guess at our chances,” says manager-coach Keith Aller of Seattle, one of the few WHL teams which has remained al- Saints, PWC Play Exhibition The Saints Varsity footipall team and PWC engaged im an exhibi- tion tilt yesterday afternoon, with the Saints winning 52-0. At the end of the first half the last “Year | Jack Hopper, a newcomer at SDU, who hails from Maryland, U.S.A. also came through for two touch- downs. Hopper plays halfback. The PWC squad, in a fine effort, | blocked three of thé four con-| version attempts, the fourth one} just being off target. | The Saints get their first taste of Intercollegiate competition this season when they tangle with) Acadia Axemen this Monday,| Thanksgiving day. The game will | be at Saint Dunstan's. PWC later on will engage in a! series of games with SDU Junior | Varsity. SPORT BY NORMAN ECHOES MACDONALD The world series is over, and now is the time for the boys who guessed right to look @as|/ jmuch as possible like a modern |gar, Kensington Road Charlotte-|version of Mohammed and stare | | have a real grievance. They are a trio of pretty promising hockey | players. One local sport has organized | town. He was a student at Queen |down their noses at us false pro-|for the coming season's activ- | Charlotte High Schoo! and last winter performed with the Mid- | | get Abbies. Roy plays both centre and left wing. He reports im- mediately to the Hamilton Cubs | and should he miss a berth with | this team. he hasan opportunity | fully three times as num- bus this season compared to Teal and Ring-necks will sorb a lot of_ punishment be- pulling up stakes. Quite a few hunters report the} opening day’s shoot on ducks i a pair of blacks in the daily} gE of 6 he could be considered tky. Others: were disappointed| ith their take of from one to Green-wing teal. There is ays the minority group who duckless at day's end me cotldn't hit the target while ith others there was no target} hit. My partner and I stuck it from before dawn till 3.00} in He was strictly a black) ek enthusiast and bagged his! black a few minutes before | PD p.m. -his daily limit. Two sa Ring- necked duck and | Green- winged teal was this mbes quota. I could have sho‘| y limit of Green-wings in a: f an hour after the shoot co m- mced. They'd alight within a} w feet of our blinds. One de-| little Biddy swam past. so I could have touched her| th the gun barrel, giving me B eye as she went by. ing a point of weeds. she; ppped for a last gander. wurn m for Green-wing teal October or early November. fey are fat tasty morsel on a platter. ly quota by three birds. I had to the acclaim of a crowd of 13,-|strom, McDonald. Hicke, Goy pair of blacks and a Ring-|619. Sophomore Ab McDonald/ette, Pronovost, Provost, Mar- ed duck. I decided I'd round) counted in the secord along with’ shall. ¢ my limit of 6 with teal. My | Pronovost’s pair. | Referee: Eddie Powers. Lines- finer was grinning at me with! six plump blacks but there e no teal to work on until! pair went zooming by with the Bed of lizht. I swung on the @der and killed the one be-| md. I decided at this noint to ick up and call it a day. The gek I shot was a fet behind its mate and I figur I might as well stop when I'ties, nine against Boston. Feud- at least halfway ahead. I fe a self satisfied audience at} yw elbow when the chips are) rw % In all my experience I never w better opening morning | ack ducks. There was only or>} ith pin feathers in the 8 and # were white with fat and both’ shot caught the far corner of the) alties: | 14:56, Labine, shook off defence-| Horvath 18:40. mder and flavoursome on the latter. I have heard complaints] hunters that the black) s they shot were pin‘ feath-| at 4:05 of the second period and | Lumley 5 eS TEE OE Maybe| McDonald made it 3-0 at 5:02 on| Plante ‘ and dry meated. pse ducks weren’t given time yfeed. There was no need fer ducks this season as hboth/ @ter and food was in abund-| nce all summer. Upland game rd hunters are reporting Huns) nder developed and not in eee age. It has been sta‘ed t” least fifty per cent of the co-| ’s Started are immature. We} Ways have the odd covey in y October that are hardly orth burning powder on but this is an exception. HEASANTS BEHIND Pheasants too are behind in de- Blopment: I saw a covey three peks before the opening dav were about the size’ of ro- ime. There is a cause for this p of affairs. T don’t think the feeding season was later than sual. One hunter blamed the} sason. He said the birds didn't} ed well on account of so much! et weather. Birds are not in- ined to put on weight when the Gather i® hot and humid. May-}| S he has something thre. My| winer and I went after eg Hs on Saturday’ afternoon ashed 4 birds all single aoe fl ended in the game pocket.|* 86 was a year old and a lw- ¥ specimen, The remaining years but admitted that if one : lin the crops of birds bagged to j led with wild vetch. It has hard | black }then No 6 ghot. learn new tricks i i don’t develop much lis! until | and round as a} ling pin at this time and make} good ae as day dawned, When TI Hifted them by their necks thev felt of making the ‘B’ team in Bur- as if lead weights were attached to their feet. Boys-you can sb your light and middle weig but its me for the heavies. ee I have to get up before day- break that is. On the whole, hv ing has been surprisingly satis- 'factory to date. Huns have got-| jten cagier then ever according | San to reports. One hunter remarked|Thursday the Giants may trade that he found very little grain date. Some had their crops fil- seeds somewhat larger | keep. up with the times and sur-| | vive. . May Be Traded Horace Stoneham expressed sur- prise when asked about the re- port but ey have to/Stoneham did not they are to! possibility might be traded to fill the need | of a relief pitcher and infielder. lington, Ont. s Johnny Antonelli SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Francisco Examiner The said pitcher Johnny Antonelli. The paper said Giants owner said | the 29 the paper also discount that Antonelli, iC hriaions Down Boston Bruins 4-1. MONTREAL (CP) — goals built up a fattening lead for Montreal Canadiens Thurs- day night and. the National Hockey League champions turned | back Boston Bruins 41 in the season opener for the two clubs. | Maurice (Rocket) Richard, 38- As! year-old veteran started Cana-/|veau, p afternoon waned 1 was short! diens off with a first period goal|M. Richard, H. ‘Richard, Back- Bronco Horvath was the only | Bruin who. could beat acrobatic. goalie Jacques Plante. His goal at 15:18 0f the middle period climaxed a Boston power play) with Montreal shorthanded. The teams put on a lively, scrappy game for a_ season opener and referee Eddie Pow-| Secon period: 2. Montreal. ers handed out 17 minor penal- oars (Goyette, Harvey) 705; 3.. Montreal, McDonald! jing was at its height in the score| (Backstrom, Turner) 5:02; 4., less third period. Montreal, Pronovost (Goyette, Rocket Richard teamed up| Turner) 8:41; 5. Boston, Horvath ‘with brother Henri, the Pocket|(Toppazzini, McKinney) 15:18. Rocket, for the first goal at 14:16| Penalties: .Armstrong 6:08, Sta- of the opening period. The Rocket |siuk 9:28, Talbot 13:35, Stasiuk, 25 feet out at an the partly screened Het drive from 25 angle and net past goalie Harry Lumley. Pronovost man Fernie Flaman and scored! a rebound of a shot by I Backstrom whose hard drive sent!| Lumley diving to the ice Andre} fence: Before; Pronovost’s two second - period | Armstrong, wards: Horvath, Stasiuk; Bucyk, McKen- Meissner Mohns, Harvey 14:13, Bojvin 18:57 Mohns, Flaman. Boivin,| Ward, Erickson; for-| Leach, Gendron, Labine, | ney, Mickoski, Toppazzini, Burns, Montreal — Goal: Plante; de- fence: Harvey, Turner, Johnson, Talbot, Langlois; forwards: Beli- Geoffrion, Bonin, Moore, men: Neil Armstrong, John Ash- ley. SUMMARY First Period: 1. Montreal. M Richard ‘H. Richard) 14:16. Pen- alties: Mickoski, Geoffrion 8:91,| Turner 9:10, McDonald 11:15, Johnson 17:55 | that first 110 game may be the iboys are getting so phets who saw the wrong pic- ture in the crystal ball. When our team loses and the) lboys start crowing, we like to! lhave some jgame to point jshow that. the breaks to which of the! they would have won if it wasn't | for—----.- Some of\ the Dodger | lvictories .could have been cribed to the breaks, but cer- tainly not that- final 9-3 victory. If anyone comes crowing about | | that one, we'll start talking about) that one, we'll start talking about the explosive situation in| Iraq..In that final. contest Los Angeles were all over Chicago in just about every department of the game. There was no room .for alibis.- Early Wynn's mates didn't let him down. He tripped and fell down all by himself.’’, His inability to\ finish tip-off. Maybe the old boy’s el- bow never did loosen up right after that. It’s as good an excuse as any. Also, Dick Donovan, who ked really sharp up to this time, was a_ real sand-lotter in the finale. There were a number of heroes in the Dodger lineup (Neal, Hodges, Furitio. to men- | tion three) but Larry Sherry emerges as the greatest of them all. Sherry saved the first play- off game against Milwaukee, saved two in the World Series, | and won two. This is quite an achievement for a young fellow not so long in the game. In their victory celebration the boys may use champagne, but Sherry was the concoction that gave the White Sox their World Series | hangover. ; Punch Imlacs talked in such glowing terms of his players last spring, he had them. thinking they were rea! super-stars. Dick | Duff, Larry Regan, and Billy. Harris are all looking for more mazuma before they scraw! their signatures on the dotter line. Of course, we don't know what the they may prescription delivery? Third period: No scoring. Pen Bucyk 14:32, Beliveau H. Richard 15:40, Stops: 7 13 11--31| RR 9-W STANDINGS Pronovost’s second, at 8:41, National teceee came while rookie defenceman! WLT F APts| Autrey Erickson was draped, Montreal O26 4: 3 3} about him, Pronovost driving in; Chicago 8 8 fs 4 |a backhander from an angle ae +t i 4 6 feet out. New York O16: 2 3 4% LINEUPS Toronto 000 00 O Boston — Goal: Lumley: de-' Detroit 000 0 0 O Starters For Monday Afternoon .30 P.M. Royal Train. Callie Hal, Long Dan, Lily’s Pointer, Ken's Fede Ist Dash 1 The Shiek, Mary Leah, Premier J. Morriell Woody, Sonny Budlong, Propane, Lady Clegg, Jolly | Abb, Cooly Boy, Blue Mary, Nellie Helen’s Dréam, Ted Gennessee, Jean Clegg, My Darling, Jolly Dick. - ’ Myrtle F, |Here Am I, Neil's Lad. Raven Abbe, Cathy Clegg, MacGee Volo, Ch'town Driving Park s « Walter. Bangs. Dainty Dianne, | ea Ginger E, ‘ e ree were o* birds of the Prompt Delivery Certainly! Here's some- thing to keep in mind—a service that may be vitally important in an emer- gency: If you hive pre- scriptions to be filled and no one to bring them in, telephone us. Qur messen- ger will call for the pre-— scriptions and return with the precisely prepared medicines—There is no extra charge. And, of course, we are always glad to make free delivery of any item to \ your home or office. THE Jenkins Pharmacy REXALL | Dial 4219 & RELIABLE@ Mtle incident in the |Campbell, who as will jeurler skipped a. Summerside lities. The Summerside curlers have had their annual meeting. |Horace MacFarlane _ succeeds Earl Cannon as_ president. Alex | a_ schoolboy ~ rink to an Island championship, ‘Tgamé were against our boys and | is vice-president, Harold Rodd is |secretary - treasurer, and the new directors are Jim Harris, as- | Harry Dickie and Arnold | Lennan. ‘New-Look’ WHL Coaches: Predict Tougher Season most unchanged. “This is going to be a lot tougher race than it was last year.’ Totems again have 1958 - 89 scoring champion Guyle Fielder and outstanding goalie Bev Bent- ley, plus several other stars of last year, Most notable improvements to Vancouver are all - star centre Eddie Dorohoy, second to Fielder in scoring last season, and popu- Jar veteran Colin Kilburn. LARRY SHERRY IS REAL COOL CHICAGO (AP) — Larry Sherry sat on a trunk in the wild winners’ clubhouse show- ing no more concern than he did out there on, the mound, The fact that wave after wave of reporters took turns throwing questions at him did not seem to faze him a bit. Perspiration was dripping from his face and his uniform looked like it had just come out of the laundry. But the 24- year-old rookie somehow gave the impression of comfort and ease as he answered évery question slowly, deliberately, thoughtfully, distinctly. “No,” he said, “I wasn’t nervous out there. Why should I have been? It was just en- other ball game to me.” Of course, it wasn’t just an- other ball game. It happened to be the final game. of. the 1969 world series. And all Sherry did was pitch 5 23 scoreless innings of relief after coming to the aid of starter Johnny Pod- Tes. Sherry’s brilliant pitching in this, his fourth successful relief appearance in the series, pro tected an early Dodger lead at the expense of Chicago’s Farly Wynn and Dick Donovan. “No, I wasn’t tired,” Sherry said. “The fact that Alston anager Walter . Alston) called me in early didn’t bother In fact, I told Joe ‘pitch- ing coach Joe Becker: I felt I could go five or six innings. I guess he took me at my word. me “Naturally, I am happy the way things turned out, but in ne way, I'm not so happy. \lston promised me I'd start morrow (Friday), if the se- ries went into a seventh game, and I was really looking for- ward to it. PANT Thanksgiving Holiday hp SALE! its ny slacks lose itll E crease @ Wash ’n Wear @ Fall weight @ Worsteds, gabardines @ Originally 14.95. Flannels 1.95 FREE CUFFS @ White and grey @ Heavyweights @ Originally 1.00 pr. HENDERSON & CUDMORER [ WHERE QUALITY IS SURE JJ All-Wool WORK SOX ~ OC pr. 3 PRS. 2.00. — TOPCOATS Originally 50.00 @ New fall stocks 3 95 Dry Cleanable — Shower Proof SUEDE JACKETS GENUINE LEATHER Beige, brown and navy. Originally 20.00 Scotland 4 * § 5 CANVAS WORK GLOVES Regular 50¢ Pr. @ Hi-Back c= $5,29|3 ras. $1, 00; ENDERSON d CUDMOR amt WHERE QUALITY IS SURE _ KITCHEN and CARHARTT OVERALLS 2 Zipper style @: Reg. 6.25