l l, ll s .,_,-e | l l ` S Syl;-,x21-q;_r'»_5,--,yr_1_»;;f.¢.;5--.--,.-w._..5,,___|,_V--,WT . "=.‘é. ."6"-` ‘ ` lfgrrin ‘ 1 , 'v ~ - V . . r , .. _ ' , , -, . . a -.-aowl.lNc. -: - 1-.;- ", H -- .wnnss"`l.mc~ = i -lklitish .Consuls Take Advantage oQf Penalties In. Second..Period To Overcome Abbie *Lead } ` ` ` ` (C. r by ooaralaou speolsl wire) .ri-.‘§11d Hold It Throughout Tor- ..;"..i‘i,*‘?"`..;.i.~....".i....‘?.-...!’°°..l....“:. rld Third Session. if-.f;“.3J£ S’iZ...‘T§"l§““w.l,” Y 2.22 _ _ _ ‘ "*"_”_ l Mari/time rnoekey ssooelouoo to- = -Halifax Brltlsh Consuls, llvlng up to their reputatinnl day warned -clubs in me Ma;-mm, J-as a great road team, vaulted into a tie with Moncton. f“f_t’§““°"° H°°"eY I-'°*€“° WMS* _Hawks for leadership of the Big Four Mercantile League pm °n;.:1f1°‘§,nn,hg“°°“ m °°h°' "l'z'l'st night when they defeated the -local Abbie squad.5 to 3 "Teams ln me Mént,-my ,emo-, -U1 augame that had astumultuous an ending as any ever 3"°“lP P-lv °~.‘l¢ll'l¥ the Canadian fl_’f§f!_‘_0d _0l\ the F.ltZl‘0y'Stlf3€t.lce Forum. ` pmwum .Dunst nw upon their mm um. rl f l me were len ro ` °‘““' by M“““"‘° °1“°“- SWUHH nwanenlrrg all ol;Tn”f'i:elly broke out. wolv:?uTeswwenh°n tm °°"°m °' mm "°““”¢ ”°°" the time with Lavigne in the penalty 'box and the Abbiee pressing hu-4 em MV* D00!! alppmsched by Mur- vheh..M°sh" “uhm dl Gam” in the Wm” we nu* The wmbumts i-time representatives.” President offer swinging their sticks started trading' punches and before Referee MM' A 'HHH ¢°\l|d llrt them lrenneman and Graham started a. scrap of their Iegbhmao ,tim b°h?“mM°”‘t'e°‘1 -'F wml -i mg tg ' _ _ -‘ ' P31 ` ' Mer e clubs ma-|;mf;n;‘e M6671; y me m;lr°.H“';:é;T_;I7e°::’l|;dl“p‘*‘;y;"f';fI6§;’:a§§:' that no such move will be allowed M'n_s`Tier and Getliffe were given mayors with Brenncmen and Graham' md mm any N979' havmg. mis \`°`-5¢'f9|ll¢ 'two-minute sentences. the offenders watching the game from mrQ Fminn“°"e brginch °t the bench _for the balance 'of the glme. ' '- __ ' - 'Y " °°."b°’l 5' mm’ gum, prolmly not sa lgrullldnly puns or other League also & ”,ew””°°,,"'°‘°,. 1." ‘“°“‘°" b*"“°” '\§Y¢,¥¢h¢l°¢i k°'D¢ the crowd in an uproar as the tel-ma displayed a ‘An to orolslns style or pley..ror.'»ltlos puns o so the ew mmm ,hm M f °°*”° Wm* U10 ‘Ylllllefs showing superiority owr the losers when having .mu bmmade M mem” mmf gn _gvantage rf.; _ __ _ f -e,-arf-Riot Breaks - -'g ./.Qu-t .In Closzng sMi.nzites -Uf Gain-e .i , in man power. ‘.;=~.-15'. - “ _ ' lin Ja- fast. brilliantly played ' ripening period Abbie, gag,-,ed -5 the play sent the crcfwd into_ _a W' l-0 lead on Pete Kellynfcoum." frenzy with the wide-men type brcughlt in -from Winnl-peg is eg- or. o so from mme ond-the sooro bellllr displayed- The visitors were neoted-fo lnovmo the *fire-works. P5 just about indicated the play. Both 5h°1'°h“"d9d. U P°YT»°°“5 d1'°W U trip in penalty .and Bubar stop zoalies were spectacular at times P 8 ' .~ bi ped Getlfffe on two occasions from " a few feet out. Smith made the as the t- tcr rivals kept up a N.'st"cliP al- lnost the wlhdid“twen-- ty mln- ms-.~. But af- ter each team had counted once ln thefsecond ={‘e“s"s ion Corlsuls taking ad- LAWLOR l, catapulted into the lead. Lennon by .Halifax promoters for Dec. 26, it vantage of two Abegweit penalties l again ,started the play and after was announced here today. ln quick succession raced into a l being sandwiched my forced to - Out for revenge for the only beet- 3-! lead in 26-seconds with 0wen‘ the side of the net, udson poked ing ini-;csreer cf more th 125 Lennon engineering both goal, the heel pmt Sargent from the _re~ Nutt. Wltrrin¢ton~f¢llCTi1¥ C011-Sxr\e`!l=“ thrusts. A penalty-ridden third sultlng melee, It was the Abbies C5" Wi!! I--C1080 <-‘$01-S1011 Over the session sew a steady parade to the tum to ,press as Lavigne drew s N°!"4..5°°tlll\ blttler in Boston osoolty box for me entire twenty rest' with the umm followed D°°-_'Un I 1°-round flsht. -- -- minutes ond the vnltors taking shortly alter by Lawlor, but in WW" “'14, "fe Plewd with the advantage of the Abbles desperate Consuls hung on desperately, La- du-sky fighters "V19 *nd °“°l¢h¢¥' efforts to draw up on even terms. vlgne retumed just seconds before b99t.'T”» "-"““g°d 1°’ mm in the broke away for two unassisted the rest session but Lawlor still Erlmidligs ct? but Tedern 'mth' goals in the latter half of the per- had time to serve at the start 0! the-.éegnw han; o'v§:&§gg satis: e Abb ould beat men power even as he was chased for dumping Mosher but the Con- age of the break to again knot the count. Lennon, "forced behind the Abbie net, sent out a short pass to the uncovered McGlashen and the Consul centreman picked his spot before firing high into the upper riglrt'-hand corner. McCabe's pen- alty left the locals two men shy and Consuls on- the first attack the third period `lod before th - ies c _ . _ Bubar, the final goal coming with It was n. steady parade to the a ulnute and twelve seconds to timers as thetellnd P1!-yed Shvft- vl;`i;§;' hooded for almost the errtlro third T E A M or made a wonderful save off period. Lawlor had just-returnbdtc P. Kelly after the Abbie winger play after the`stert of'-theisegiiun had rounded Graham to coast when Lavigne again" ftkold thi right in just a minute after the Consuls to play shortixilidld when o -Trl whistle. The game wu he roughed Brennem.ill~in.,frolit'-of QF R9T.°"°° .D°““'5 the Halifax cage. Abbie; were buff work in last night‘s game we faloing the visitors withtheir pass- I wonder why the. official allows ing but a. whistle, when Refcrel - *_* the players so much leeway in re- .Davln claimed -Brennsminjmintlds (CJ, B; Gu M ,I swam wh) gurus to protestlrlgxhis--rulings. Tlllllllil ctllTg!T>ffeTl‘Tis;'d caTl}l‘:`Abe.c:§`d’:. DW' iL_Y°l° Um' - . ~ ' . versity! defence was decisively W°“’“ *°°k "° °"".l¥*9*' " -WY plarml lr. the uurd period here to H253 55.. ‘15l“i‘.‘.°‘.<”"°"......--é.'i2?".i¥-‘.22 l‘3§‘~*;.1,;=,“.°<=‘,l,‘,'“;\,l;’,';f=l=y ~-= “P = f°’ “ mppmg °"°”°°- C“"l° l*°3t'.`se0sonjx;rtTllenl;>'t¢licall¥I§l?tT1¥mtehe cd Huber witha hard drive as the mm-gollgu hockey ,me Tomonot locals wel-eat full strength sgalh..n 'ty '-' 1 | ` -nd B-lm served fm to lmao: rifrhw ..t'tf.¢?¢§il§o.l7'2:ll§T'"’ °' T°7 2:2. ~ ‘ »' 9 U 015- 0 ` Mat- ernwn was r' . _A V d .their sticks and they went torthe lets almost even for two period; [Tut ng con- V penalty box. Right after Brenne- bow-before Jem Paul Elle's marks- tl ugl up- T-ENN0N man had shctover the net Lawlor .Ullllllliil lllf1‘BZgressiveness in. the 1- r ,ns the tide, of battle surltd put Halifax two up on an unassist- 'fl,i`lllJ¢l'i0d. lille scored two goals rr éono to mo. For swomlnutes - ed effort. Breaking away from on me ull added another ln that zo ln oosuls prprroreu sonzent cog- noble nmol: no raced around the kflrst period went ll-“lf ‘:‘.;...¢:..:-l.:>:= sri" W r...-......l...:....:l:. ylqgllno but t . X. A 1 up rg: no c lice. ra am wen. “W-"dm wmevs cbunwgmf gay, a sensational disp ay. HS to le pen and the Abbies surged lwbmmn Ynws hud km ON creek by McCabe and Brennemau forward desperately but their ef- Wm.” 5-“und me Bwml ,F "ITW- orged the pressure however and forts lend to Another Hslifax goal, 'ml ' “ °B° °l\1! came back on. Bubar was Lennon breaking away to beat ' he stopped Pete Sargent from si few fee; out, . -=-_ p~1T\ K vi é u open a§H§_ \ S a r - gi; t_ saved ’ ‘ere t s c- u lflrly from _ dlahsen, and Hud- son"'as th! udl-lblll for- -; we fl S \lroT;‘c right t h r o-ll g h l - r close- ug' "s h o i. s al rl d th e brilliant into 9-F5. out the Lavigne kept up the parade to the tflners as he tripped Drsileta cleanly They it 5 8 though Getllffe to beat from than a A near riot and Mother the Hallfat at the l from out as Graham minute ' after, breaking through one of Q o the advantage, the bell ending the tilt half a later LINIUPS ` To.Be»Ironed Out At slils had the advantage when Por- _ teous returned after only a few - - - ~ seccndsj Wolverines took advent-. _ ' " and the same player shot wide a, SUMMARY acxluc " lzAsl£,ll'll‘.l,¥_ll`I.-r. ; . crush ‘sl‘*`olr'l" m 1934 ' TBACK Bill-FTITIRTITUBS Dhficulties Expected I ' -Meeting on Tuesday. A-“'ll’»l¢“l' HUCUY Auoclation for 5i§§§ it of the .Maritime Hockey the `M'arllf.lme Mercan- Idlslle on Tuesday mlgurnent over four recently RETURN FIGHT (C. P. By Gnardiarfr Special Wire) HALIFAX, Dec. 14. - A retum fight between ‘fTiger'j Warrington, Llvernwl. N. s.. negro llgnthoovy- weight flash, and- St/eve Carr of Wa- terbury, Corm.,ha.1 been arranged Referee: Ernie Davin. ` First Period l.‘ Aoules. P, xglly. lzsl. Bsllalty: Cllrrie. ‘__ stops: dsrgrnt 9', nuoor la. ' - , MMM Pklod proline _rl , 2.. coorun, mother, us. ~ W-*NTB GA own. ro 1., .wl»m,..ns»llau. dia. it .os ,M 4; .ooowle uoonmio cuooool n- °ANF¢.RM D°¢-.1*-- <01’-1 - three Consul! , 10157.. ~ ' <9Wlll¥,t°_l3l9.ll.I°!¥l1e0i-galvanised but Lavigne ' s. -conimu, “Hudson lbenndoi l*‘°1‘ll*-‘l'*¢f.*1|.*ll'll’°l“N.1°l\H°lthll drool: isresnhii, Bub|.r.l4.,_. . nlrsr¢r|»¢" ‘- Lawlor (unassisted) Lennon tunuelswdlg sms oomlu lnlolvduodf " . l if -our me f Aueszlcnns oesvnr were 4-new CF\5URL`\’\l UST *W seelousm neuron oernuc. reno 11-is couéemuou mn me rnuuw (uP, -mo ww;-le "r»%“§.“é"r N35!" E czemm or nnvmr. os Few some as Possleuz sooeeo nenn~lsr1u:m.' 7 Along The (By Pat Power) Sidelines cible intheir home games since crew'popped up again to administer body checks. 8 8 Y- who attempt it. ' S WE UNDERSTAND the .rule A regarding this thecsptaln of the team is the only player al- lowed to protest anyvdecision he thinks not in ord`er.- Probably-n penalty imposed on a participant overeteppillg his boundaries would go a- long way- in helping to cool his ardor and avoid a repetition of last night when--at.-times, par- ticularly~on the visiting tesmfs part;- four and -five -hockeyists could he seen attempting to tell the official just what .they thought' of theruling in question. C. O ll NOfI'l-IH! FEATURE worthy of A oommendation last night ww the action of the fans when the fight broke out in the third period. They remained in their seats despite being highly excited and by their well-mannered action helped the referee end police in queuing the disturbance as quick- V .' ly as possible. ‘ APlll00'l`S IIAILBD OUT (Canadian Press) BHEI_‘PAR.'I'0N, Australia, bee. 14-Twenty five pqrcllit of the ap- riwt erolp in this. district was de- strayed- n recent heilstorms. LVANIZID IIDN n in a matter of sec- 10 -. ' ; _" ll“'°4‘.l°f» \|l!|§f ¢'U_l*fl9\`°0ll'¢lltt\lIlVr\Tl' even' the sldes only to here _ ltissf, Dsalleu; por-wsu, b°.pe_l‘mltiod`-till' the sed. of`i0M. T WILL `BE».hard to convince the Abbics today that "Red" Stunrtfs . team 'doesn't hold ll, "jimi" over them. After proving next to invin- feat of thc season, and it being this same team that cupped the other decision in the opening game of the league. But the locals failed to display the same smart hockey they are capable of. Their combination efforts with the exception cf the first period weren't clicking and they failed to take advantage of the breaks when members of the'0onsuls were serving penalties. But- the city team are bound to have an off night and from the way they have been- going lately the 'break was bound to come. They are only two points out of ffm; place and with two home games next week it wouldn’t be sur- prising if they regain the lost ground. _ :L - 1 o-_ t 0 O ‘ > HAT'-'Ill-Ilf,fLOUALB lack nothing in courage was ably demonstrated - last nlghtz- They battled right to the end even nfter defeat was a foregone conclusion and with a little more assistance from "Lady Z.s§k'*‘ their'efforts"might have been rewarded. ~They all worked on a ut a. par but Leo.Sa.rgent, tuming in his usual brilliant game, de- served s better fate on his performance. The defence came ln for a lot of criticism last night but although they may have looked bad at times there were others when they slowed up the visitors with well-directed Lennon,'MeGlashen, Lawlor and Bubar tumed in scintillating per- formances, wtlh the former addingthree points to his scoring average, \vhil€ "Daddy" Bubar, playing the best hockey of his career this season, was well-nigh unbesftable with the exception of one of the goals scored against him. The defence duo of ‘Graham and Lavigne were the usual tcu h barrier to 'et b and rocky- is the way made for the forwards the start of the season, the Halifax to the locals their second home de- Seeks TryAtMar- .itime Welter Title (C. P. By- Gnardiarrs Slleclal Wire) AM.HERSI‘, N. S., Dec, 14.-Batt- ling Johnrly.Lliford of Saint John will haves. crack at the Maritime welterweight title soon lf local pro- moters succeed in matching hlrs with Bobby Orr of Joggins. Liffor knocked out Orr several months ago but later was beaten by Bobby Allen. Since then Orr has captured the title'1`r0l‘n Allen. SCORES DECISION (C. P. By Guardia-n's Special Wire) 'I‘0'R»0N’I`0, Dec. 14. - Tommy -Bland. 14-5%, Canadian lightweight champion, scored~a decision victory over Baby Joe Thompson, 147, of 'Boston tonight. - - GOLD MINE CHANGES HANDS hmm, 1lostrillo.Deo. 14.-;""'i SPEEIJERS MTE' H nl: " is-lllwlllsi SPUIWRAITS llrrlln lv srwro. . , . HUUHEY TRTTIHS Success In Modern .Ice ' Game Not to Swift- . est But Rather to Acrobatic. - -__»-_ (Written for The Calmdhn Pnsl By Victor Service) 'I‘ORON'DO, D60, 14-Brig time hockey-the fastest game in the. There a-re fast men in the Nation- al League like Howie Morenz of Chicago Black. Hawks and Hee Kilrea and Buzz Boll of Toronto Maple Leafs 'but none is a speed skater. Those who use skates for the sake of pure speed have never crashed the ranks of major hoc- key arld only one managed in make any kind of showing in the minor leagues. Evan amateur clubs are shy of skaters who go in solely for speed despite the fact that up- wards of 30 racers have tried to catch on. Mike Goodman, who 15 years ago was a leading speed skater in the Canadian and United States west, is the best in that category ever to tackle hockey in a. business way. For the last. nine seasons Mike has played for Duluth Hornets in the American Association. As an sma- teur he helped the famous Winni- peg noloono win me olympic tn-.lol in 1920. But Goodman failed to rise to National League heights. Another racing skater who actu- ally made something out of hockey was Everett McGowan of St. Paul. Minn. Twelve years ago lvllofloww gathered in an international speed skating championship and then for several years held lt forward line berth with Springfield Indians of the Canadian-American League. 1-lie never set the hockeyyflrrnalnexlt on file and made his exit in favor of “faster” material s few -yesrs ego. Altogether the chances of a speed skater shining in the puck gcume appear pretty remote. Quick breaks stops and the twisting and turn- ing so essential in hockey have the speeders baffled. _For instance leaping over 9. dozen barrels was right down Bobby McI.»es.n’s 8110? but when it came to lumping a hcc- key stick the Chicagoan was stump- ed. 'rwenty-two years of startling speed-skating performances meant little as fur as hockey went and his efforts to catch on with minor league teams were without result. Montreal amateur circles had nothing to offer Edmund Larry. A home-town boy who held l-.oth omn- teur and professional international speed titles. Charlie G0rman. 190- pound Bltint John. N. IB.. hustler found even -intermediate amateur, hockey toogiough a £81116 md 0-!- ter a short stay Ypturned to rac- ing. 1-Ie was one of the -greatest of speed skaters. Two othels who held internation- al amateur racing titles. Russell Wheeler of Montreal and Eddie oloster of Toronto, were lmaw to click in amateur hockey com- pany. In Saint John Tommy Teh!! lnixw speed skating and interme- diate hockey but that's as fsr as he goes. Alex Hurd of Hamilton. Ont.. one of Oanadvs epeedskat- ing standouts in recent years. at- tended several workouts of Hamil- ton amateur clubs but never mast- ered the game sufficiently to get a place on any term- ~ Billy Logan of Saint John. who ranks high in the speed-skating circles along with Hurd has fath- omed the way to get the better of the game-stay out of it altogether. FULLER, LIGHT- HEIGHT THREAT _.l- - - (A. P. By Guardianb Special-Wire) ‘ NlllWYORK,De0.14.--Sammy l rullor, .quot-Boston nsllm eoveno- ed astepneareraahot atohamptun Bxatl-ln“sybymu'Hl-'irhtweiigilt crown ts- 11 I -Glllld. ~ round , demon over clever Eddie Cool ofkhiiadelphil, inthe main bout at Madison Blillare Garden. Fuller weighed IW uid C001 107. - A crowd of 7,500 so/w the Boston- ian warm-up after a slow startand ‘outpunell the highly-touted Phila- aolplllen. It vm me one on-dm teet-back for Cool. ' In the 10-round semi-final which followed the main bolt. Johnltanry Lewis. Ollifomh negro llllt-MSW* ions over Maxis Rcdlnblocm, de- Il'l0%. ‘ OAI!! lt. midst Oenaliiehl. ‘ ‘ Bow !`¢_>rk_Aniu-loans at Toronto. ` ' ' J ' world-is without a speed skater. velgnewnouelas e~eouols.a-seeli- 'throoed lllht bow! chmtlllllt, mmammegxmwymmw overfflonysh cflcqton. tswu-weighed 114 ma slmooo . . sorrlnuno well:-I'-*tu rl. rr. r.. cg lslii l _ lg? lgtllglll . g ?~= 5 -; #lit-T lrenle _ . gf." ' nomo el nn yolk ' ' ,__ _. H _.~_.. ..._- '- llflégtli” ill’ all-rl-ill .-ll .;§rg§tE§; §§g§§ 2? ll-ri.” l rests .ownaaendeavcrlodio E the ret- wss out but wmlout remained who did ill. The mmenlt l _.._.__, The get ol the ciioaufpion uh,"-,¢. yell'-old raoestmllbon Prollectom-(3) 1.59 1-4 was much sought after nt the recent Old Gbry Sale; They avenged 81008, highest 59,1, avenue for or my me IWOWUG ork auction. 2.02, sire af ereged $1,002. Bmosiiaion. open- Y and will il 2 59.3 Elil .girl lg ni 3 ug*-*lr it-lit réigr nil” Terms, will in 'binds Centennial nllilllone 'for the TWUIW-time foreign ng,1.j,m5 Willbcmptesented. it the 09,1, lfomla lhmosltlonwlrlmgpmgm :£5 wunoullrl- ` hlwitbfldnesin §r gt E Th* 110112 wlpers are faking ` UNI-t cncmmagernerlt ilmm, the re. °'“*- Old Glory sale at New York UM the fed that the average off the horses sold was $571 as ‘against $535 for 1033 and $313 for 1932. Tlhe Hmsanan and Fair wo,-ld SWG ¢dll4>\'l=llv= “Tho New York ` sale demonstrartes beyond g, mum UH-t lldh-t harness horse affairs are f°~" “Um 58108 in a slump. On the Clwllrm' they are e dooloesly going °°°°°m» and #|105 foot is most ”“"-°°“”°°d, 111 ll °°mw.°ls°n'.of tho trotting horse'mol-ret this roll wlu. °°‘¥¥ll°¢Ul»y mcrlnets generally. The following are the mmm Priced yeerllngs at one old olooy by the different sim. ny pete, V010- 2-02, 'rho Moser, amos, Pm' Zvmllwll. $5.000. By volornlte ' (3) 3'” 1-4- Frl-lwomllw. $3,500, V°W**- 33200- By Protector (ax 1-5° 1-4- Dwlslvn $4.600. stood- frst. $3,100. By nbboouls $2.01 1-4 38»mT.W0lle $1,625, 1-Us }113}m,¢ss 211100. By Dillon Axwol-thy (3) 104 ' - WNW Helwver $1.316, noi-yi Hanover $1,000. By Scotland 1.59 1-4._ Scot Molilwyn, ;3,400_ By Guy Dey, .Master-plone $2.000. E- J. Baker; st. charles. nl., whose stable is .eanmaigned by gg, FH-lln. was -the heaviest prmmw- at the -New York -auction, sgcm-ln; flve yes-rlinasot o. total cost of sitsas; Mr. 'Borer rooently loot _llev-fly itll his valuable stable to- gehhsr with homes and equtp. "1°l*lf.inafi|ewhicll occurred at the Indiulapolls noe track. Mwlélllls to reports the noted Mem °¢tr=‘rs.“ Mae woot, ootolnoa - the filaywlerln Miorris by Pl-oteemr - (8) 1.0 -1-4 and Evening sun by r V°l°\_nlt» <8> 2m 1-4, ot the New l YM* BITQ. _ '1ll\°.°hl°. .own Mum-od my ' 3-05'1-§..."N;°°N‘ takentover' a half-, l mils- tnok.vmseold'».tfahe0ldGlcry Allie `toJohnl't.'Bullva.rlWhitneyvlllc M6-lllr. fdr*0i'.ooo.- sho looks .lure a wonderful-buy me ohoulrghmve the 2.15 clam pecan .at her emy. - Fire insurance tothe amount of l30.0_00»ha`a been oollcctcd by E. J ; Behr. Bt. Ulmles, Ill.. for horses dQt.'wyed Nt vlrivll rice -wick mee, In soaking or ure mp mlll0\'|‘»lifl¢l with , c me can payments elwasl have for my 1 llillilll li-ill . lf- ' 5 tr flilillrl-§l§§l§i.‘- lf-fi E-lwf llrllglait opemllil ln.-th trditi Deana 91* 'e .». over a. hal(-mile trwk. He wa. over for $3,000 and is a sos grand old warrior single r ra S -l°l'm E- Kelly. B0-neor. Mo-ins. whose stable was campaigned lm-| by “R/ed" lie-Nitin two years age, lr lnterestl»I¥ hi-.nnelf more and more in young moe prospects. His Mar- ilee Hanover (3) 2.04 1-4 was | sensation this season and he hor l‘°°€l’ll»l'll llurclmsed three when tim/t with their wonderful breed. lnzshvl-0¢mlkegood.Onelsby Volcmltv (8) 2.03 1-4 om, 01 Gelety Guy. u. :lull sum so 1.... .Axwvrmizhy 1.48 1-4. Bhe is fthe dam of three in 2.10. 'llhoslsnli-I item may Gal ebovr 0! our them ll sis- 2.l4, owned -7 Smnmemsid-e. and that the dm, G, Dusty Frisco 2.07 3-4. owned by C, H. Gnarndier, Charlottetown. gs* leagsr- FS 58' éiigsg :£5 read-ers thdt ter o( -by i l r s E § Wh of the year rolls alrorlmd and Mr,J.P.KehoeofCsp¢ Traverse commences to think of the woriihwhile oocln-reuoes of 1934 wlltc.hhehBdnll|andin,hlgme_ ~m0fy- will no CMM hsfken back in -the day some three years ago w spring when _Aubrey was foaled. and other mem- 'Wfl 04-' a. look at Ml# lilllih wondered wrist the moore would hols for nm., P64415' AWN! il I limba blur: we are a bit more than us'1lally .,~__ MN9l»0d in because of the fact itlhet he is sired by Colonel Aubrey, 'ilhwt the writer won two race; w-Wh him on successive days from large ri‘iel&. of horses and also drcrve ts an exhl-bitlorrreooni of 2.10 3.4_ A. rwe mentioned before in these '°°|’“ll'|llS. he was meant for a. two WIUWW Dwer bil; in accident in- tellfered and he laced under the severe handicap of lameness. But there is more than that to interest "S in Paddy Aubrey. no dom wo. -by a. horse called Pet¢reHo~ Petrellu W355h`°dlhV0ll20dt-ilegmlltslres of thc. Liste nineties, Prodigal WUUSG 8011 have not bred on but 'WhlOSe b100d is Vkltlible lin the female line, several of the great 08-"IS 58108 by Prcdimll or having lPl'0di89-1 blood. 'flhe chm of Petrelio was The Huntress 213 by Onward silver. one of the greatest horses that ever went down the Gfuld Cirmilt -arid after his racing eereer sold to -Austria. where he became e suc- cessful sire. The Him-lmess was also fthe dam of Mhrmiot Druln 2.03 1~2 wiho mood plvdm unde- lfeeted on the Gmnd Circuit, also Twltm.~(3) 2.07 3-4. The wrlielland the late Ham- mond Kelly attended the Old Glcfy auction in the full of 1912 and assist/sd George Bain, the »a.ucti.on‘eer, by bidding on every- 'llhlhl that was put up for sale. 'Il-lowever, we got a great surprise when Petrello was lmcoked down 'W mt? f0l‘ $120. The dlilfivulty was tv ron hlm book to oherlottoww... It who lllrlw o problem lemlng mm lthrouglh the streets of Boston don-n ¥odtl;e pier, in company with Mayor gi: lite all -After Petrello's arrival ou P- E I. he was tlu-ned over to the lair J- P- Il'V1!l¥. 0590 Traverse, wl‘u ‘took a half interest in him. llc showed flashes of greet speed but after going a. few hundred yards lie wollld'ms.ke it change ln his lstrida. Nothing could be done ul overcorile this hum and Petrello never become s suoesdul race horse. However, he carried good -blood.end that is showing up in Pedoy Aubrey ln oomeloaeloo wi-on fthe excellent Colonel Aubrey blood Pl-'$40' Aubrey as you 'well know suecusfully the pssl season, taking arsoord of 2.22 ln Wlllfllvfl the '-three-you-old futur- tty lt Charlottetown, September ill. UU hclk 90601111 t0 Signal B!ll»tM"2.l8 .14 It Oli¢lNttda0wl1 xanax ms Noi-umm. _ lkuldd train- TIAVTN been some thref 1 OYUH- Mr- Qld full ' _l ls ox- ~.. finsscfnerlt mf ’ sly- H*-*lit cgi;-,' §".» sri l .xt ~ t I i I |I`\» I. i . _ & r I \ Tll1s_` ' . ' ‘ Afternoon suuoguoc- ,__,,. .