Gee Scores Twice To Give Red Wings 2-1 Victory Qver Bruins O.H.A. Hus Only Four Teams This Your TORONTO. Oct. 12 —(CP) - The Ontario Hockey Association senior A campaign, opening Friday night, takes on a new appearance this season. The circuit is cut to four teams. the hapless Stratford squad sitting it out this year afteradismal 1948- 45) seascn. A lot of newcomers will be seen around the circuit, with a 50-50 mixture of veterans and rook- ies in prospect. All four teams see action on the opening night. Owen Sound Mer- curys come to Toronto to tackle Toronto Marlboros, last year's champions. Hamilton Tigers, "the old men of the mountain," plav host to the Kitchener-Waterloo Flying Dutchmen, Carl Ripley To Coach Amherst AMHERST, N. 5., Oct. 12*(CPi‘ e-Clirl Ripley of Amherst, former "Eastern United States Amateur l-lockey League star, will coach Amherst Ramblers of the Maritime Senior Hockey League, it was re-, ported tonight. 1 The report said efforts to get‘ (“qrence (Windy) Steele of Monc-l ton. N. B., as Ramblers coach had fziilcd. Ripley and his twin Frank starred for Amherst teams and played with Air Force squads (luring tlic war after a hitch in the United States. Thirty-six players went two drills in the Mount Allison Uni- versity Gardens at nearby Sack- vilic, N. B., today. The roster will be cut to 24 by Friday and the team picked for Saturday night's opcning contest with Halifax St." ‘Mary's, defending M.S.H.L. champ- ions. Ramblers, a new entry which picked up the franchise of the de- funct Dartmouth Arrows, will usc the University rink until their own is ready early in November. Appreiiiice Jockey is Sensaiiolal By JOHN PATERSON TORONTO, Oct. 12—tCP)—A kid who climbed aboard a horse for the first time last fall and who broke his "maiden" in June, is riding down the stretch to glory- , 100 winners in his first season as , a jockey. Horses “run like hell itor him." He is 19-year-old apprentice jockey Charley (Be Right With) Bright from Muncie, 1nd,, who is already nudging the 100-winner mark with much of the season in '\\'lfllCl‘ tracks ahead. He's a go- ahead horse pilot and the pride and joy of the two-buck bettors who have made hay on the 102-lb., four-foot-eleven boy in his first year on Ontario tracks. in the last l2 days of racing at suburban Long Branch, he has had 30 winners. This included a ‘i049 record five in one day, a couple of fours and several threes. 11c hasn't had a winless day for weeks. Success and pay cheques like last week's $1,050 aren't going to his head either. He sleeps in the . tack room at the stables of his contract employer, the J. Montana Stable of Buffalo, N..Y., and is in bed cvcry night by 9:30. Most of the money he scnds home to his dad, a tool-grinder and dather of ll children. Charley is the eldest. His agent, Johnny Jones, trainer of the Canadian section of the stable, books all his mounts. Char- ley gets "live" horses and they "run like hell for him," says Jones. l "1 can't explain it and nobody else can. He sits up there on their mccks~more like Johnny Longden than anybody else-and talks to them. And they run.“ Like the other clay, when he brought Stamp Mark home first. It was the mare‘: first score in 37 starts. Or the time he coaxed sprinter Callandria to run a mile and a sixteenth a winner. DETROIT. Oct. 12 -(AP) —'I‘wo big goals by centre Georgie Gee counted heavily tonight as Detroit Red Wings opened defence of their National Hockey League champ- ionship with a 2-1 victory over Bos- ton before 11,061 fians. 5°55 Sewnd 8041. which broke a 1-1 tie early in the third period. maintained a remarkable Detroit record of not having dropped ar. opening game in 10 years. The last time the Red Wings were beaten in their first start was in November, 1939, ln Chicago. Boston scored first in this initial game of the N.H.L,'s stepped- up 70-g2me season, but Red Wing goalie Harry Lumley stopped th: Bruins cold after Paul Rnnty took John Piersons pass-out at the corner of the cage to score Boston's lone goal seven minutes after the game opened. Gee whipped in a 30-foot angle shot 5 l-L! minutes before the first period was over, tying the score. Murray Henderson of the Bruins was serving penalty box time for tripping when Gee got that one, but the Bruins had no alibi for his third period clincher. Jack Gelineau, rookie 24-year-old Boston goalie, was effective enough most 0f the time. 1n a. ccreimony between periods. the N H.I.. president, Clarence Campbell, presented Detroit with the Prince of Wales Trophy. em- blematic of last year's league championship. lle also awarded the Hart: Trophy to Sid Abel, Red ‘Wing captain, as the league's most valuable player last season. Lineups: Boston-Goal, Gelineau; defence, Quackenbush, Crawford; centre, Sandford; wmgs. Wppazzini, Creighton; subs, Henderson. Fla- man, Dumart, Harrison, smith. Ronty. Maloney, Kryzanowskl, Pier- son, Horeck. - Detroit-Goal. Lll-TtlEyI defence. Reise. stoivart; centre, Abel: wings, Kelly, Lindsay, Gee, Howe, McNaib Peters, Babando; subs, Martin. McFadden, Glover, Couture. Black, Enio, Fogolin. Officials: R e f e r e e. Melville (Butch) Keeling; linesmen, George Hayes and Hugh McLean, SUMMARY First. Period 1—Boston. Ronty (Pierson) 2—-Datroit, Geo (Reisc) 14:35 Penalties-Sandford, RelsmEnlo. Henderson, Babando. 6:58 Second Period Scoring — None. Penalties — Lindsay, Henderson, Fiaman, Horeck. Gee. Third Period Ik-Detroit, Gee {Lindsay Kelly) . 3:26 Penalties — Peters, Reise, Hen- derson. i. H. L. Results New Haven TP-rovidence l. Cleveland 6, Springfield 1, Pittsburgh 4, Hershey Z. Indianapolis 2, Buffalo 2 (tie). REACH SNOWBOUND I-III ITERS MISSOULA, Mont, Oct. 12- (AP) -— Rescue workers to d a y reached the first of about 100 snowbound big game hunters in a rugged Idaho wilderness area 100 miles west of here. The rescue crews, carrying food and fuel, re- suffcrcd by the sportsmen. who had been marooned more than 43 hours. TASTE IN MOVIES LONDON, Oct. 12-—(CP)—Brit- ish children like their movie her- oes lean and athletic. They don't like middle-aged actors. An ad- visory group has just completed a survey of the likes and dislikes of the 400,000 British children, main- ly between the ages of seven and ll. Child audiences prefer adol- escent actors slightly older than themselves. They enjoy watching both young children and extreme- ly old people. They like animals, particularly dogs and horses. ATTENTION All Monitors 5 IttF lilil SIS BEST The Annual Ran e Competitions will be held 10 Oct. 49. Be sure to at the ARMOURIES on FRI. 14 OCT. 49 for details, regarding competitions, prizes, etc. Transport will leave the Annourles at 0880 hrs. 10 Oct. 4 for the ranges. ported no serious hardships were THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER 13, 1949 Coming through with a close 10-9 victory over the Chatham Ironmen at the New Brunswick centre yesterday afternoon. the Summcrside Curran and Briggs baseball team captured the firs‘. round of the bc-st of three-game series in defence of their Maritime intermediate baseball crown,which they won last year by defeating the Woodside Combines in the 1948 Maritime playoff series. According to tlic mainland rc- port on the game, the Summcrside boys took an early four-run lead by chalking up two runs in cacti of the first two innings. while holding their opponents scoreless, only to have Chathani conic roar- ing back in iheihird, fourth and sixth innings to pile up seven runs at the end of that time while only allowing the locals one morc in‘ the sixth to revcrsc the entire picture to hold a two-run load over the Summersidc crew. - - . . It was a big seventh inning rally that netted the C. and B. boys five runs to put them in the drivers scat for thc rest of the game, and despite the fact that they were licld runless in the last two in- nings while the New Brunswickcrs gathered two in_the eighth, the present N. S.-P. E. I. champions were able to hold on to that extra run to come out on top a winner. o a n a Considering the fact that the Western Capital squad made such a fine showing against the New Brunswick Provincial champions minus the valuable auistance of four of their star players in the persons of Les Gaudet, Alan Stew- art, Gordie MacKay and Emmett Mulholland. the prospects look good for them topping off the title again this yearn as they will have these four boys on the roster with them on Sunday when they meet: Chatham in the second and third game (if necessary) nn their home diamond at Summcrside. a a Mulholland and Gaudct are at- tending college at Montreal, while Stewait and MacKay are attend- ing Acadia University, and as was the case in the Nova Scotia-P. E. Island intermediate playoffs against Meteghan Shipbuilders, it is ex- pected that all four players will be transported back to Summer- side to put the team at full strength for the final game or games. v a Most of the local sporting in- terest at the n oment will be cen- tred around the openlng of the big TO-game National Hockey League schedule which got under- way at Detroit last night between the Boston Bruins and the Red Wings, and the commencement of the Maritime "Big Four" Hockey League which will be launched of- ficially on its way on Saturday night in a joint opening at Saint John and Halifax, the Moncton Hawks being the visiting team at Saint John and Amherst ‘Ramb- lers at Halifax. As far as the NHL. ll ccncem- ed, ft will be the biggest in hist- ory and probably one of the toughest too, with all six teams playing an additional ten games more than previous seasons, and extending over a period of 24 weeks before entering into the playoffs, commencing on October 12th and concluding on March Mth" making a. total of 210 games in all. Although not quite as extensive as the N.I-I.L., the Big Four League roster, will also be the biggest in its history as well as its earliest opening date, with 1M games in all to be played over an 18-week period co ‘ i; on October 15th and closing on February 18th. Although the Big Four haven't as many total games to be played as the N.H-.L., due to the fact that it la a four-team league against that. of n. six, but as far as individual teams are concerned they will ac- tually play two more games each than will the N.H.L. teams, each playing '12 times as compared with ‘l0. ‘fir: Late To Classify WANTED - TWO FURNISHED rooms. Write AB care Guardian. v. u. o. A. MEMBERSHIP ‘CAMPAIGN OPEHS MONDAY, OGTOBER 17th WHY NOT CALI. A1’ THE Y. M. C. A. FOR YOUR MEMIIISHIP CARD? CLASSES ARE NOW FORMING S’side Team Edges Out Chatham Ironmeai. 10-9 In Baseball Finals Opener Player Changes c. In Offing for Si. louisliards ST- LOUIS. Oct. l2-—(AP)—Ed- die Dyer will be back as manager next year, but some player chang- cs are in store for the St. Louis Cardinals if deals can be arranged. Owner Fred Saigh, still smart- iiig ovcr the collapse of the Card- inals in the final week of the base- ball season that cost thcin the National League pennant, left no doubt about Dyers status. "I am completely satisfied with Dyer, and hc will manage the Car- dinals in 1950," Saigh said. Although Dyei"s two-year con- tract doesn't expire for another year, thcrc had been some spec- ulation that he might be replaced. The Cards lost out to Brooklyn in the pennant chase by one game. Saigh disclosed he had already sounded out four National League clubs on possible player trades. l-lc observed it might be difficult to arrange for trades since other clubs hesitate to strengthen a pen- nant contender. But the owner expressed wil- lingness to part with front-line strciiglh, perhaps a pitcher. to get ivhat he wants. His talks with officials of the Giants, Cubs, Dodgers and Pirates have been only preliminary, but may be resumed at any timc.Saigh said. He did not name any of the players he is after but said he wants a catcher. a right-hnnd-iiit- ting outfielder, and an understudy shortstop to provide some rcst for the veteran Marty Marion, AUSTRALIA BECKONS. YOUNG BRITONS LEAVE LONDON, Oct. 12— (CP)-Aus- tialia has thrown open her doors to young British people. More than 200.000 jobs are waiting to be filled in the Dominion. Australia House here says there's no limit on the number of un- married young pcople it will pro- vidc with free or assisted passages during November and December. Steamship tickets are issued within 24 hours after applicants pass proficiency tests in desired trades and a medical examination. Selection officers are stationed in 12 provincial cities. Before the end of the year it is expected 40,000 Britons will have arrived or be on their way to Australia. Next year's target is 50.000. In addition. thousands of others wont at their own cxpcnsc. Aus- tralia also has takcn 50,000 Europ- can displaced persons during the year and will opcn her doors to a further 100,000 next year. All-Star Ball Team 0n Tour STAMFORD, C0nn., Oct. 12 — (AP) - Birdie Tebbetts’ All-Star baseball team today opened a two- week bamstorming tour, which may take it to Nova Scotla, with an 8-2 Victory over a Stamford nine composed of minor-league and semi-pro players. The major- league and semi-pro players. The major-leaguers gathered together by the Boston Red Sex catcher may play Halifax, Stellarton, N.S., and Kentville, N.S., after playing several New England dates. CHATHAM, N. 13., Oct. 12 — (SDeclaD-The Summerslde Cur- ran 8: Briggs baseball team, inter- ymedlate champions of Nova Scotin and Prince Edward Island, minus four of their regulars, Les Gaudet. Mulholland, G. lilacKny and A. Stewart, managed to eke out a 10 to 0 victory over the Chathani Ironmen, New Brunswick champ- ions at Chatham yesterday, put- ting them one up in the best of three series for the Maritime tltlc, the last tvro games of which will be played in Summerside on Sunday. 'l'lie Sumnicrsitl-i tczirn gave one of their poorest defensive displays of the season, committing five errors and misjudging a number of fly balls that fell in for hits on an outfield that was only part- ly rcrlnimcd from the forest, mak- ing it vcry difficult to cover ground. Fourteen hits were charg- 0d against Joe Bernard, but the C, 8: B. nce flingcr was invin- cible in the final frame, getting three Chatham batters, two of whom were their most dangerous hitters. P Summersidc went into an early 4-0 lead in the first two innings. but at the end of the fourth frame Chatham was leading 5 to 4. Sum- mcrslde evened it up in the sixth only to sec the lronmcn go into a two-run lead in their half of the seventh inning, the score thcn reading 7 to 5. Curran 8e Brink's scored 5 runs in a big seventh inrTing against Butler, who was obviously tiring at this stage. The C. 8r B. boys were never headed after this, though Chatham crcpt to within one run of them in the eighth. Two smart double plays, one in the fourth and one in the seventh helped Bernard out of difficult situations. Joe did a lot to win his own grime, batting in 4 runs. Bennie Grady drove across two counters, BOX SCORE = '0 O S'Side S, Bernard, 2b Landry, ss Allen, 3b Dcighzin, c, rf Schurman. rf, Gallant, if B, Grady cf .. J. Grady, 1b G. Bernard, p .. . . xCampbell, rf . Totals . . - x-Rcplnccd Dciizlinn '> roe-a EQQDNMMHONHO: C mdONn-luvdbr-IQHN o .1 gLlOQUJQOb-IUVO-bw Eio-awcooown-n; h. i '5 O OJDJNUIDQDHUI) Chatham AB Jardine, ss Martin, rf Cabel, 1b Mills, cf Sutton, c .. MncMillan, 3b J. Daley, 2b . R, Daley, if Butler, p xKanc, c xxRamsoy, if Totals 4'1 x-Rcplnced Sutton in 8th. xx-Rcplaced R. Daley in E I 1 At-JIMHUIUIMUIUI-h tDOQNOHOOOP-‘H-lifl zidi-lblONt-lsdb-‘NH-lw Q l4 JOOQQUIOICJI-lldl-ll-l h! r40 G-©QDQI-I>JDC¢Q i“ :r Summary Runs batted in, S. Bernard, B. Grady 2, G. Bernard 4, Martin, Ca- bel 2, Mills, Kane, 2, Butler: trip- les, J. Grady, Martin: stolen bas- es, S, Bernard, Landry, Allen, Jardine, Butler; sacrifice hits, S. Bernard, Martin: left 0n bases, Chatham 10, Summcrside 12; earn- ed runs, S'Sidr.- ti, Chatham 5; double plays, Martin to J. Daley. G. Bernard to Landry to f. Grady 2; struck cut, by Bernard 5, by Butler 3; bases on balls, off Bernard 2, off Butler 5; hit by pitcher, by Butler (S. Bernard, Campbell) by Bernard (Butler); wild Vpitch, Butler; passed bails. Sutton 2. Umpires: Plat, Reg Phillips; bases, Henderson, Daley, Cook. .22000l500l0lI 5 002SOZMO 914 4 S’side ., Cbathnm LOID AND mo! ALLIITON A One of Britain's top-ranking horse judgofia coming to Toronto to judge at this year's Royal Winter Fair. A well-known figure in the hunting field, lord Allerton who, with Lady Allarton, has been in- vlted to officlate at the fair, will be vlllting Canada for the first time. Lord Allei-ton wu judge this year at the Revuby and district qrlcul- ture committee's show in Lincolnshirt, Eng, and won many prizes in point-to-point riding before the war. Until recently ha held the p0- lition of field master of the famed Fernle hunt. ~ moacowooauofi ‘ laced than townsfolk." liurelle Stops Ace Ilollloskoy In Fifth (By The Canadian Press) CHATHAM, N.B., Oct. l2—Yvon Durelle, 158, Bale St. Anne, N.B., stopped Ace McCloskcy, 160, Dart- mouth, N.S., in the fifth round of the main boiit of a boxing card here tonight. Lloyd Durelle, I26, Bale St. Anne, dccisioned Buzzie Urquhart, 124, Dartmouth, in a four-rounder. MIIHTAGIIE YEO THEATRE I FIiL-SAT. a THREE MHSKETEERS I In Technicolor With lune Allison, Lllll Turner, Geno Kelly, Frank 1mm III], Van flaffllu, Vincent Price and John Sutton. Action, Thrills, Romance, Adventure and Everything. Arnold Fleiger, 163, Chatham. knocked out Jake McDonald,_ 163, . McAdam, N. 3., in the fourth i round of the semi-final. , A heavyweight match between, two Chatbam boxers ended in _a i third-round knockout for David Cassidy over Tom Stayner. Joe Delano, Newcastle, and Ir- nie Durelle, Bale St. Anne, fought a four-round draw. Valera; Pro Goalie Joins Beavers SAINT JOHN. N.B., Oct. 12 -— (CP) - A veteran professional goalie, Floyd Perres of Port. Ar- thur, arrived in Saint John by plane today and worked between the pipes with Saint John Beavers tonight as coach Jack Keatinfl sent his charges'through ii brist- ling workout. The addition of Perres, last year with hiladelphia in the American Hock League. brought Beavers’ goalie department up to full strength. Formerly with New Haven in the American Hockey League, Keith Anderson has been with the team since last week-end. Perres has a long record in pro- fessional hockey. After playing with a Cornwall Allan Cup team, Per- res turned professional in the 1940-41 season with Omaha in the American Hockey Association. The following year he played with‘ Philadelphia and Indiana!)- olis in Hie American Hockey league and was with Indianapolis for the 1942-43 season. The fol- lowing two years he served in the armed forces. Perres returned to professional hockey with Indianapolis for the 1945-46 season and later that year played with Minneapolis in the United States Hockey League. In 1946-47 and 1947-48 he er- formed for Eddie Shore's Spr 8- fleld Indians in the American lI-fockey League and last year was ‘with the now defunct Philadelphia Rockets in the same league. iiravelling Movie Brings Thrillers To Tiny Villages By NORMAN CRIBBENS Canaian Press Staff Writer -CR.O0KLANDS, Westrnorland‘, England, Oct. l2—-(OP)—Inhabit- ants of this tiny lakeland village. numbering fewer than 200. n0 longer have to travel 15 miles t0 see a movie. They nmv have their own mov- ie show- -once every two weeks. It is brought to the local church hall by a man with a truck who travels from village t0 villi!” throughout Westmoriand with two IG-mlllimetrc DfQiectbrs. 8 load of candy and a quantity 0! potato chips. Twenty-four-year-old Leslie Ayre ls the unveiling movie man. u..- operates the protectors. takes ticket money at the door. show! customers to hard, wooden Seats and sells refreshments between the reels. En route from one small com- munity to another, he shoots his own movies of local events for incorporation in a prollrflm C0!!- sisting chiefly of American "horse operas" and detective thriller!- "Ym on the road six days a week," Ayre laid. "After the last show Saturday night I drive the! truck back to my home ln Winder- more. The weekly round starts again Monday rimming." Ayro finds that westerns l0 dtlln but with Lakoland villagers. perhaps because 4o per cent of his audience: are children. One 0f hi! biggest hits this season was the fart-shooting Hollywood melo- drama "The Dalton: Ride Again." "In one village on my circuit. the vicar objected that there was too much emphasis on crime in this film. I pointed out that the Daltons paid for their crimes in the last reel and had man! N- deemlng’ features. . J-he show went on." What the hard-headed northern villagers call ‘mushy love ltuff" gets a distinctly hostile reception from lakeland youngsters. One in particular had ruch protracted l0" scenes that the dialogue was a1moat_ drowned out by the Imam 0f children leaked in the from rows. "I have to be painful," Ayra laid. "ma sort of sexy drama that packs people into town movie houses may get me into trouble if I show it In a village. Country- folk generally are rnora straight- Ayro ha; been on the road with his movie show for the last nine mouths, ‘but only recently added Crookianda to hi: two-week schedule. In consequence flu rustic Crook- landa Inn-only rival attrac- tion for mile; round-nu fewer‘ otntomm on movie nights. Other trips the villagers flock theta for a sing-song around the ancient bar-room piano, or play dart! h Sport Shorts From Britain By MICHAEL 0'MARA Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Oct. l2—(CP)—Break- up of one of the biggest and most successful thoroughbred empires in the world may have been fore- shadowed by a recent remark to reporters by the Aga Khan: "Really I have too many horses; I must sell some." The lndian potcntate runs horses regularly in England, Ireland and France, occasionally in India and the United States. With his son. the Aly Khan, he owns five stud farms in Ireland and thrce in France. He has head- ctl the list ofyvinning owners in England ll timcs. With winnings already in excess of £46,000 ($142,- 600) this season. he seems assured of leading again, Despite these successes, costs of keeping rricehorses are mounting. Already one Indian prince, the Maharajah Gaekwar of Baroda, has cut his once-extensive stable sharply. England's biggest owner of act- ive competitors remains Dorothy Pagct, who has more than 300 flat-racers and steeplechasers in training at six establishments fin England and two in Ireland. The biggest European owner of all is textile king Marcel Boussac. This grey-haired. volatile French- man has about 100 horses in train- ing at Chantilly, and his Fresnay- le-Buflard stud farm houses what experts regard as the finest col- lection of mares, stallions, foals and yearlings in the world. Frcsnay-le-Buffard. a German headquarters during the war, is at the southern end of the Falaise Gap, scene of some of the hottest fighting seen by Canadian troops aftcr the Normandy break-out in 1944. Boussads stable is valued at a- bout $12,000,000. His stake win- nings in the last few years total about $2,000,000 and he topped French owners competing in Eng- land last year by bringing home £42,566. Hockey Player's Wife Complains of Beating DETROIT. Oct. 12 -—(GP) —- Pete lloreck, 26-year-old Boston Bruins forward. was accused today by his wife of beating her so sev- erely six months after they were married that she required extens- ive medical treatment. The charges were made by Mrs. Anne D. Hor- eck in a suit for separate mainten- ance. the stone-flagged corridon. The men of Crooklanda- an so settled at darts that no "foreigner" has won a game there for months past. A mnn from Inndon bent their champion performer last Juno and his name hs been men- tioned with awe ever since. ‘Irvin Thinks‘ Chicago Will Win N. H. L. Easily m MONTREAL, Oct. l3 —(C,P, Montreal Canadicns rested today in preparation for their hockey opener against B, team that dfilplut Dick Irvin said should win ti“; National Hockey League by 1° points. The rather surprising flppyagtal came from Irvin today after he had watched Chicago's Blur-k HHWks in workouts at Montreal Forum. Th. Hawks. who open the Nayiana, Hockey League season against cm; adiens here tomorrow night, miss- ed a playoff spot last year, Irvin ‘said the llruvks’ goal-scor- m! 1511")’. mllrll in evidence "My, season. should be even better i)“, year. He recited figures to Fhiflv that such stalwarts a5 Gaye Sig“. art and Roy Conaclier lcgplhpr scored double the number of man that fou.r of his o-wn leftwlngey; could amass. ‘ Irvin thought the Haw’; 495mm the Week soot his! year, would be much improved. Bob Goldhaiii is in Brest shape and Bill Gadsby in“ had an additional year's crp n. ence, said Irvin. On top of all that he figured Frankie Brimselcs p185.’ ence in the Hawk nets would make a big difference. Irvin said the llaivks in practice are travelling at lflp speed and 5p. pear in great shape. He didn't crawl out on a. limb so far as his own club ls concerned but has already let it be known they should be in the thick of the fight. Injuries last 3cm- namqy proved disastrous, and the team finished third. Irvin was still undecided about the formation of his lines. Adjutor C010. the rookie frotri Sherbrooke, hasn't yet signed; iior has Gram Warwick, Just bought from Boston Bruins, with whom lie had come to no agreement. lrin expects to start his first for- ward line with Elmer Lach at centre. Maurice Richard on left wing and Gilles Dube, another rookie, on left wing. Conccding that Warwick will be signed. Irvin said he may use the ex-Bruln on left wing for a while with Lacli and Richard as scmo- thing of an oxpcrlment although Warwick is n rightwinger. Bottling CIPTOWN ALLEY! >COITIIIIFITIIII League Big Flve—3616. Five Aces—-3121 High single M. Williams 313. High thrco M. Williams 796 Points: Big Five 5; Five Aces 0. Checker Tnxl—-2'I55 Alerts-BIBS. High single A. Doucette 2G1 High three S. Peterson 687 Points: Alerts 4; Checker 1 REMEMBER WHEH By The Clnldllll Press George C. Foster. Secretary of 5t, Louis Browns of the American League. and James R. Kearney. a director of the club, resigned l0 years ago today, apparently in a protest over the team's disastrous 1939 season. in which the Brown! lost 111 games. For Winter Motoring: 0 0 0 DRIVE CAREFULLY IN A CAR THAT IS SAFE! mo GBAFION or. Our Prescription r. n. mm Ltd- IIERIPS IIOW YOU OAN BE SURE: Let our factory-trained mechanics give you a Jhorough job. It you depend onus you can depend on your car PHONE 86°