1'_ll_lz_ CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Fig-k Irvin Picks Rangers To Win Fourth Game 0f“ Allan, Cup Final A, April 24—(CP)-R.egina the second consecutive year. “mm underdogs to Sydne Mil- And Regin ockey hockey coach. Dick Irvin, Manager . L5 roared into town tonight of Montreal Cariadiens in the Na- mnflllent itie 1-1 draw at Saskatoon lost night was the turning point Rangers would win the (ourth en- a d lgmt they could win the fourth counter if ‘l... on home ice Saturday. Mil- close-checking and hard-hitting Eonaires tock the first two 88m" 5W1? in the Allan CuP _ m Cglgary last Saturday and 1n Regina Monday- A sell-out crowd of close to 7.000 “miners is eKDfiC to watch éoach Freddie Metcalfe’! YOU"!- t“'_gvefa,glflg olily 20.5 years in kmake b desperate stand Sat- gfiay lb prolong the best-of-five series A win for the Millionaires “mild send the Allan 00o EB“ 1°!‘ a’: most prominent tionsl rescue. expressed the belie; continued their “The Sydney club isn't as classy as tile fans believe." Irvin claimed. "They have been getting sll the breaks in the series. They still have to show me how they beat Mont- real Royals." (The Royals forced the best-of- flve Eastern senior hockey final tn lsixtegiagnes before they were elim- na . Montreal By Jack Mitchell Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL. April 24—(OP)— iiolilreal Royals. snllrillls from be- hind on a three-goal rally in the [ml frame, squared their Memor- 351 Cup series with Winnipeg Rangers at one game apiece tonight with s 5-8 victory-the first ever turned in by a Quebec team in the Dominion junior hockey final. The Royals, Quebec's initial final representative in 23 years of cup play, gamed the triumph on s pair a goals by blond Keri Moedell. Bunny Glover added a. third in the last-period uprising to put e teams all even for the third of the best-of-five series, scheduled for Toronto Saturday. Slkn centre of the Royals‘ Sec- oild-strirlg line, Moedell b his first tally at 8:86 of the th per- iod to knot the count at 8-3. He ‘ot til, winning goal shortly after orlaplay with Jim Peters. and 5- Glovor fired the clincher Just one minute latcr. Corning within eight minutes of the start of the period, the goals climaxed s see-sa/w battle in which R0 als had taken a 2-1 lead in the irli ial frame only to fail behind in the next. Two unanswered second period goals-by Hugh Miller and aim iiamion-sent the Western champions into the final frame with s one goal edge. Th; Royals. bolstered by the re- turn o: three players wlw missed Junior Even Memorial Cup Series With Winnipeg Rangers Royals the first game at ‘lloronw Monday l Frank vAcorn Wins Provincial Billiard play Frank Acorn won the provincial Billiard Tournament at the char- lottetown Bowling Alleys last night by defeating l Davey by 131 points before an extra large aud- ence in a 500 point match. Officials for Regina game PORT ARTHURbAprll 24-(CP) -Frank sargent. Vice-President of the Canadian Amateur Hockey As- sociation, today announced new officials for the fourth game of ‘- the Allan Cup series between Syd- ney Millionaires and Regina Rang- ers which will be played in Regina Saturday night. Sargent said G. W. (Curly) Wheatley of Trail, B. c_, and ‘Army Armstrong of Oshawa, Ont, will replace Dick Davis of Winnipeg and Leo Heffernan of Montreal. Sargent said the changes were made because "the objections which were raised after the first 4 through college nations, were much stronger than the club which bowed 4-2 in the initial meeting. one of the three, ROB-lie Ross Ritch- ie, turned in a brilliant game. while Bruce Ward “as a tower of de- fensive stre th and Grant Morri- son went we l-ID front. SUMMARY _ z First Period lfltzhllfill. Carragher (Morrison) Q-lwontreal, Planche (Mosdell, 4:1! fifglzflllliies. Bellanca (Macey) Perlaities __ Mortimer m, Plgrlche, Southwick (2). Harmon. leeond Period l-Ialnnipel. Millar (Money) 1:40 lnniloea. on. 4:40 Penalties -- Peters (2). Robinson, Carragher, Harmon (2), South- wiok, Helndl (2). Third Period (S-Montreal, Mosdell, 3:35 ‘I-Montreal, Mosdell (Peters) 6:20 B-alvlfintreal, Glover (Carragher) Penalties -- Morrison. Mortimer (2). Southwick. Peters. Helndl. Harmon, Mlllar (major), Carra- gher (major). BOWLING RESULTS f ___. I IIOL! NAME BOWLING alternation! League-Seanl-finals Last riltit on the Holy Name Alleys the Master Barbers evened up their series with Cudmoreh Dry Cleaners by winning the sec- ond game played in the best of three series. The decidinag game mill be played next Thurs ay night 8:30. Cl-IIIIIIOIO‘! Dry Cleans";- W. Cudmore 128 278 1'16 Block ‘no 234 1B9 B Albino .33 104 15a J. Rush 184 133 132 G. Cudmors 143 1M 138 Total-Mes. lifasier Barbers:- W. weather-hie 153 155 130 ll. McDonald 213 19a 142 H. Sentner 106 137 194 J- Hughes 2:11 1114 zoo G- Hooper no 150 154 Total-Zfrsa. Blah single W c d m. 111811 three J. i-lugbellntlillg. Brooklyn 02o 100 six-e 11 1 Bnlner, Tamulis. Crouch, Pear- scwle" l-i-‘BIIIQ 63% and Livingstone; Hamlin OWWH. Hs|glllfQSZ-- . ~ ‘mu 141 181 1W Ohl 00001000000-1 1s g- fdhtlfell 1'19 195 193 mama ooo ooo ooi ol-z 11 o G: Agééfion French and McCullough; Kling- ré fiinswhrth 108 2H 2M er, Lnnahan, Lannirig and Davis. "Tofifd?" 112 12° 161 Cincinnati ooo ooo 201-3 1 o “"‘-‘"°- -s¢. hauls 101 ooo ooo-z s o Fllllr B lls- l Derringer. B. Riddle, L. Moore, v n ° '_ Begga and Lombardi, west: Mc- 3' Du,“ if,‘ Gee, M. Cooper and w. Cooper. “ .*:‘.:‘;§,""= 13g ggg 111"» m... York .1 mo... summed. 5 iilifllmll 10o 12s R4 “I'd” . . ' o .5332“. f“ ffl INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Total_2939 - i 100 ooo-s s s Ladies high single M. Robertson gyghc", $0 w; 00x4 g 1 Ladies high three n. Duffy Gel“ high Blllllle V‘ Ainswortn gal): Gents high three o. Anderson Tonight at v o'clock:- Ill-angles League: Semi-finals first game. Deuces vs. Royals. This e will start promptly on time. m” 0 o'clock;_ “l? "l" League: All Stars vs. Vt Aces: M j . w m Blowclgyltgn nstrels. Stand 5 CIPTOWN ALLEYS Mixed lnalue-Semi-finala GT|§c;-s_ ' "on zoo 21s 145 g- smith 222 10s lss E-glllliih zaa 188 isa K‘ J chrll 180 20o lall l.‘ siiilélffd‘ ill ill iii Total-HM. Jcgllsln. 011L011 §glll§ke ilg 22s M Sinai-Khan 25s loi i A" lsa 212 i iii-int. ti‘; it.’ ti?» Total-g nil m n; cubic M: Tlael-s l i-s. / ' Ladies high single M. Burke 270. (mils high single e1 Smith zaol Gents high three J_ Poulton 658. To ht at ‘I o'clock-duck Ins. Kiu rig Hands vs. Four Sp es. Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 011 000 000-2 7 1 Detroit 000 102 10x-d 5 0 Kennedy, Allen and Grube; Bridges and ‘rebbetts. Boston 020 000 010-8 7 1 New York 003 008 001-0 10 0 Dickman, E. Johnson. Harris and Pytlak; Russo and Dickey. Cleveland 000 000 010-1 0 1 Oblong: 000 000 201-! ii 0 Smi , Brown and Hon-lsley; Lee and Tresh, (Washington at Philadelphia. postponed, wet grounds.) NATIONAL LEAGUI Phllldelphla 000 000 100-1 d 2 Cook. Pukas and Parsons; PW“ and Atwood. (Montreal at Syracuse; T°f°fil° Newark; Rochester at Bimini)"- postponed, wet grOIlINII-l ‘ AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas City 5: Toledo ll so, pan] 1- Indiana lls 5 Mlnneapola 0; Lo Ville I REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press) War Admiral. son o! the 81'9" Marl o'War. showed his speed for the first time over a mile-and- sixteentfi courss in the Chesapeake gm“ btJ-lavre de‘ once. low‘ years today. War Admmal led ti: fiei by six lenllths at the "ll- S . .._______-—-- “COM! AGAIN LATER" This is the story of a subeltefll who was wakened up the 111K111‘ b!’ fore Bal-bdia with the news that 500 Italians wanted to surrender. "Tell them they can tn’ he said aleeplly. "the battle isnt till to- game were renewed more vigor- ously after last night's 1-1 tie. we decided we would make the change and thus put both teams in a bot- ter frame of mind for the fourth game " best-of-fivc irst Sydney leads the series 2-0. having won the game at Calgary saturday 8-6 and he second in Regina Monday 8-3. The third in Saskatoon last night ended 1-1. Cincinnati Turns on Cards For 3-2 win NEW YORK, April 2i-(APl- Cincinnati Reds turned the tables on Cardinals at St. Louis today, scoring a run on Lonnie Frey: ninth-inning double to win 3-2. Three times in a row at the start of the National League season the Card nag stollpfid the Reds and twic victory came in the ninth. Fiddler Bill McGee pitched no- hit ball for five innings. Frank Goodman broke the spell with a. single in the sixth and then the Reds combined two hits, a lalk and a stolen base in the seven 1 to tie the count at 2-2. At Pittsburgh. an infield‘ hit by Rip Collins with the bases loaded ave Pirates a 2-1 victory in 1i nings, breaking a four-game los- ing streak for the Bucs. Larry French appeared to have the Barrie well in hand until the ninth inning when Bob Elliott doubled with one out. Vince Di- I maggio, who won the only two revious Pirates’ vciwries with ome runs, popped a fly Mitch fell between Dominic Dallessandro and Louis Novikoff for a two bigger. scoring the tying run. At Brooklyn. Luke Hamlin, the ‘hot potato" pitcher of the Dodgers, turned in his second straight low- hit job to down the lowly Phila- delphia Phillies 6-1 before a crowd 01' . A . Downing the National League cellar-occupants; for the second day in a row, the Dodgers presented ll revamped llneu and settled the issue early wit a two-run attack in the second inning. headed by Dolph. Camlllrs fourth homer of the year. ABNEY WOMEN'S INSTITUTE The April meeting of the Ab- ney Women's Institute was held at the hmie of Mrs. Edward Haherlin with the lvioe prescient presiding. Meeting was opened by repeating the Creed lzl ulilsori. ‘Den members answered roll call by "make a rhyme or pay a dlrne." Minutes of last meeting were read, approved and signed. Re arts were received and new comm ttces appointed. Secretary reported that rug had been hooked by members and tick- ets to sell on some were distribut- ed among those present. A receipt for nine pairs oi’ army socks was received from Red Cross and secretary reported that three sweaters and eTht more pairs of socks were ready to send and that more yam had been sent for. Members decided to send $5 t0 Canadian war service fund. The Questionnaire 0:1 Agriculture was iscussed and lied in. The Dro- gram consisted 0f a duet by Ml‘!- C. F. Richards and Florence Reh- ards and a reading by Mrs. How- ard McKenzie both numbers were much enjoyed. Recepts for evening amounted to eighty-five cents. Mrs. D. J. Buell sent an invita- home for next. meeting. Roll call to be answered by "my mother's name." It was decided that we have an exchange of bulbs. seeds o1- f 0W- er slips at next meeting. ‘Die Na- tional Anthem brought a. v-lw pleasant meeting to a close. Alter meeting a dainty lunch was served by hostess. assisted by MES Tim’ (judging: and Mrs. H. Moore. CORKY KNEW. The teacher was questiorrng lit- tle Corky. "So far. Corky." 9318 scolded, “you haven't been domg so well, Now this one should be easy. Spell 'cloth'." The b"y‘s face was l1 blank. H0 was stuck. "Come, now." urged the teache . "surely you know the word ‘cloth.’ Whst are your trousers made of?" "Oh." replied the boy brlkhl-ly. "my father's coat". rt is the best slzn otesreatneillre that it opens a foregputid and, rnorrow. Tell them to come TIKIIPBIM 1 be - "Pete bo sh" - DI l. 1' r 1'01! w‘. like the breath of morning land- scapes. invites us onward-Fuller‘ N? tionntoc. members . to ..ineet..at..hcr. . . " Yankees climb To top; Beat Red Sox 6-3 NEW YORK. April 24-—(APi— New York Yankees bombed their way into first place in the_ Amer- ican Baseball Lelzue today by downing Boston Red Sox 6-3 for a sweep of the two-game series. _ Marius Russds steady seven-hit pitching and a 10-hit attack. fea- tured by Charley Kellers three- run homer, were the winning I11:- l.... il. was Russcrs second victor! of the year. Emcrszn Diclunan lasted until the sixth inning for the Sox, when he was taken out after be.rig charged wiili all the Yankees‘ ilins. The Yankee: woil by their old trick 0t punching ' scoring. They counted in onlj‘ ‘""- innuigs-the third and t“ ' t each time tfleyiiid it in threes. V’ flljl At Detioit,- Frankie Croucher,‘ promoted from the Tiger beiich,l celebrated by tripling in the sixth’ inni to drive home two runs and‘ beat t. Louis Browns 4-2 and re-| wardTommy Bridges for a good pitdtlng job. 1 The driv b Uffllldlfli‘; who rc- placed Dicfi garteli at shortstop yesterday in the Tgiers’ efforts to get more hitting, brought Detroit out in front, and Rudy Yonk cinch- ed the victory by walloping his third home run in the seventh At Chicago, Thornton Lee of White Sox allowed only six hits for a 2-1 victory over Cleveland Indians, - Dario Lodigiarirs triple with two men on base in the seventh ‘nning gave the Chicago team its only runs. C. N. B. EARNINGS MONTREAL, Que, April 24.—'I'he gross revenues of all inclusive Can- adian National Railways system for the week ending April 21, 1941, were $5,797,459 ascompareli with $4,870.483 for the corresponding period of 1940. An tincrease of $1,726,951. 0r 42.2 oer oen . Chi-LEA. to Take wire vote ‘New Waterford Wins Mar. "title NEW WATERFORD. N. 5.. April 24-(CP)-New Waterford Strands won tlie Maritime intermediate basketball title tonight as thev downed the University of New Brun- swick 45-38 in the second 0f a two- game series. taking the round by an 88-65 margin. Going irlto the final battle with a 16-point lead as a result of their 43-27 win over the college men from Fredericton. N. B. in last night's opener, Strands increased it by one point at the end of the first half when the score stood 21-2‘) MIDLAND. OnL, April 24-(0?) -—Georg,. s. Dudley, Canadian Am- ateur Hockey Association president. said tonight that instructions had gone out for a wire vote on the venue for the fourth and fifth games c: the Memorial Clip final series. Dudley said ne did lot 0X- pect to know the result until Sat- uniav. ‘ . He said he had received reqllfiiti from the Quebec, Ottawa and Mar- itime branches for such a vote. The fourth and mill some: o! the series are scheduled to be Pllyfid i_n ‘Toronto but the Montreal branch seekis to have them played in Mon- trea . The Mgnlreal request was made several days ago but in order to have the vote taken it was MW- sary to have two other branches join in the request. I After Montreal Royll-lfl 5'3 "h" and added another seven in the final. , , Jersey City i Beats Bisons JERSEY CITY‘, April 2ll-—(AP'T— lotszng singles by Dusty Cooke and third Buster Maynard and a sacrifice by straight International League vic- Hershei Martin in the second. Ell/I tory today, taking the opener of a. the Jerseys their first two runs. Al from Buffalo double be; Maynard and a single n Jersey City scored their three-game series B15011: 3-2. The Little Giants collected eight to be the winning run in the sixth. runs olf Earl —-———~—- ' hits and all their toly over Winnipeg Rangers to- PAGE SEVEN ___ now mo: m came w. .11 double tog. row» EVERYBODYS lALlilllG ABQUT. ~11 NORA ! l :l::::r::.:: l0!“ IACI 4 sea 10' IAINORA IlADES SAVE V00 HONEY on EASY RUDD-LOOKING SHIVHI‘ _ WW: ' ltlltlflllly Bliile lllltlc anon. [rllulle Cook, who worked the first seven innings for the visitors. _ A Shlfl-‘lg by Jogmiiy Davis. foll- by Mar produced what prov True Enough "I just heard hing sily he was night. the series stands at one-all The third game is scheduled to be veral big organizations!" la d 1n Toronto. close touch with the heads of s3 “Yes, he‘s a barber." j OUT OUR WAY By J. R. Williams l WHAT'S THAT ? HE'S UNDER ‘THE ETHER Riel-Fr Mow .1 WELL. To HECK WITH ‘THE ETHER.’ PUT HIM 0m TH’ LINE QlGHT Mow-- Tl-lls 1S IMPORTANT-- vEQY» WHAT? - - ‘W/umqwz/al/fih . i___.________- L‘ SLEEPS TH’ SHOP SHUTS DOWN.’ .,. i’ .\)‘_'~;; . 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