JANUARY 10. 1951 , rm: GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN" PAGE saivt:N' Ehatens To Talte Basketball From Garden ' NEW YORK, Jan. 9-(AP) - Ned Irish has threatened to pull professional basketball out of Madison Square Garden if what he termed "atrocious tactics" are permitted to continue. The executive vice-president of the big arena. addressing the weekly meeting of the New York basketball waiters, singled out the Syracuse, N.Y., teaim for partl- cular censure and said: "The kind of basketball they showed in last Saturday after- ,,,,on'5 game cannot be sold to the public. If this situation is not corrected, there definitely will be no pro basketball in Madison square Garden in future years." Syracuse won from the Garden- supported New York Knicker- ibockers in a rough-and-tumble National Association game Satur- dgy, 87-75, in overtime. The game, which developed into a free-for-all, produced a large number of personal fouls. Two players, Syracuse's Bill Gaibor and the Knicks' Harry Gallatin. were ejected from the game for fighting. a Sport Briefs WORCESTER. N. Y.. JHIL 3 r- tAP)-Jim Konstanty, voted the most valuable player in the Nat- ional League last season. 58-id i0' night he had returned his 1951 contract to Philadelphia PhlllleS- unsigned. The Phllliesl ace relief pitcher said the contract provided a.-salary increase. But, he " it was "not what I expected- added. Ivuauttmo IUNNERLISS DWARf BUSH STRAWBERRY ' its from seed the am year: easily F'l':Wn. Bush form. about one foot high. glo runners. Hardy perennial. Bears bundantly from early summer till killing frost. Has an intense luscious flavor an aroma like that of wild strawberry: nth nnd juicy. Neat compact bushy growth makes it highly ornamental as well as valuable in vegetable. fruit or flower garden. borders. air. A showy not plant too. Though smaller than comrnrrcral strawberrie. Mont Rosa is the largest fruit- variety we know from seed. jur- supply is limited. Order ear y. (1 ll"!- ”" '"""""' OUI. ato mi tern RE AND NURSERY IOOK gg. Htvii ..--'7 . DOMINION SEED VHOUSE 1'. .., .'..i win Garrison little league The Garrison Rifle League re- comrnenced activitlu after being closed down for the holiday period, with a match at the Aritnouries between the P.E.I. Regt. Officers. versus iP.E.l. Reg-t. "A" and at Queen Charlotte between 5th Sigs. Reg. "3" versus Navy "B", re- sults were as follows: AT THE AEMOUBIES P.E.l. Regt. Officers Capt. E. R. Burke Capt. L. G. MacNevln 2nd Lleut. R. V. Lufferty Lieut. L. W. Ford . Mgr. E. K. Kennedy . 98 D3 91 88 . 87 457 B1 Low score counted out l'.E.l. ltegt. "A" Sgt. G. R. Small SSM. W. Farrar Sgt. V. Douse W02 C. Oxford SSM. B. E. Shaw .. A was c: m oa.S3s:S.-. Low score counted out AT QUEEN CHARLOTTE 5 S35. Ilegt. "B" Sigmn J. L. Deltoche Sigrmi. G. W. Schleyer Sgt. J. B. Gallant Sigmn. R. J. Kelly Off. Cdt. G. L. Jenkins .5 - accxctztoo g-':&Ir.z.r-moo Low score counted out .......... .. Navy ..B.. LS D. B. Smith AB A. MaoDonaild AB R. M. Miller .. AB K. L, He-ustis P0 R. A. Wilson .. Low score counted out League Standings P.E.l. Regt. "A" .. Navy Officers Sigs. Regt. "A" P.E.I. Regt. Officers Na-vy "B" .. 28 LAA Regt. Navy "A" .. ,. Sigs. Regi. R.C.M.P. 28 LLA Regt. Canadian Team loses In Scotland PAESLEIY. Scotland, Jan. 9 (GP) .. The touring Lctilibridge Maple Leafs were defeated 6-4 Sat- urday night by Paisley Pirates, league-leaders in the Scottish Hoc- key League. The loss gave the Leafs a record of two victories and two losses in games against English and Scottish League teams. The Canadian squad is making a 60-game exhibition tour of European centres as a warm-up for the world hockey championship tournament starting in Paris Match 11. l ago o-at-up-r-u-tots-at-rsE .0-ybtotoia.-i-cc--1-1 otototot-no.0-.saaeo:! agqqqmg :3 canteen-uiwo NEW YORK. Jan, 8 - (AP) - The board of directors announced today that the eighth annual In- ternational Tuna Cup Match will GEORl".El0V(I,0itl take place at Wedgeport. N. S., Sept. 2. 13 and 14. strstssscms am?--s -- STALLID WA. 'N N AC sue. IN A Cut 5- OPE 9 Canadian Marksman To compete In Olympic Games Sonic Canadian farm boy who has an unenmg aim with a 22 may have the chance to become a world -hampio rifle shot at the next Olympic games in 1952 in Helsinki, Finland. This is the hope of K. N. Morris, executive director of the Canadian Civilian Association of Marlramen, who amlounces that the Canadian Olympic Association has allotted three places for matrksmen on its team for next year's Olympiad. It will be the first time in 20 year; for shooters to be included on it anadiain Olympic team. M.r. Morris expects stiff comp- etition aoross Canada for the three places allotted on the team. He estimates there are some 28.500 recreational shooters in the country today-alrnost double the number three years ago. Of these some 20,000 use the .22 rifle; 2,000 pistols and revolvers and 6,500 trap and skeet (shot guns). There are 585 clubs devoted to .22 shooting; 81 to pistol and revolver and 33 to trap and skeet. stressing the value of supervised target shooting, he said that to his knowledge not one member of the Canadian Civilian Association of Marksmen was involved in a hunt- ing accident during the past sea- son, thus keeping the organization's unmarred safety slate clean for another year. Mangrum Wins los Angeles Open l'.4& ANGELBS. Jan. 9-(AP)- Lloyd Mangrum won the Sl5,000 1-05 Anzeles open shooting a four-under-par 67 in the final round for a 72-hole score of 280. His sizzling finish overtook the leader for two days, Henry Run- Som. who slipped to 73 today and 281 for the tournament. Ransom started today's round with 208 against. Mangrum's 213 but couldn't stand the sub-par pace. Hg finished the first nine inleven par. against Mangrum's 32. three under. Then he slip- ped lwn over on the back nine to ll 38. while Mungrum was getting El 35. Far ls 35-36-71. Upwnrds of 6,000 fans swarmed over the tournament site. the Riviera Country Club. and watch- ed Mangrurn. who plays out of Chicago. sweeip first with his brilliant display of the game. , His early 67 in the final round put the - pressure squarely on Rmliom. a seasoned campaigner who also learned his golf in Texas and now plays out of St. Andrews. .lll. The load was too much for Henry. The victory was worth 52.600 to Mnnzrum. and Ransom drew down SL900. Slim Snead. who admitted Sun- day he was playing with a brok- en bone in his left hand. finish- ed with (l 73 for a 285 total "and third place. enrnlmz 51.350. The whiz from White Sulphur Springs. W. Va. stayed with par for nine holes today but slipped on the turn for home. leihbridge Maple leafs lose 3-2 LONDON. Jan. 9 - (Reuters) - Lethibridge Maple Leafs, looking sluggish after three games in four days, tonight dropped a 3-2 de- cision to Strea-them, English Na. tional Hockey League champions. In their first London appear. ance. Canada's hope for retention of the world hockey title showed little of the form that lifted them from the Western Canada Junior Hockey League into the shoes of Edmonton Mercurys, last year's world iltlists. it was their third loss in five games of a. 100-game .European pre-championship exhibition tour. Streatha.m's Joe Frechette oi Charny. Que.. opened the scoring In the first period. Rheal Ssvard of Cornwall. Ont., got the second English tally at 4.00 of the second. whlzzing a fast one past Leaf goalie Carl Sorokoskl. . Don Callaghan of Montreal got the final Streatham goal before the period ended. Leafs turned on the heat in the third, with Bill Gibson scoring off Jim Ma.lacko's pass-out'11-om behind the net. Playing-coach Dick Gray aoloed through the Sreatham defence and counted with I flip into the upper corner of the net. By Fago'y Ci Shorten 5' ur it you're Golv ESTOP" ,, ; THAT wins 10 us. our , Pea sreianxrino Go, . WHEN more eeumo - cu K'Cl.IcK' 0 x " THE WHEEL you can i ' its on Two om! ' 5l Go I ” TAKE IN A MATINEE inure A acmut-ziz -. oi. s,X i i ; Ll FOR 7 l B-s'G'5f'. E I 6- ' W3 Jtm&iSICCCE5iIJt.l4lCQt1I trl-Sign .t- 'u: NEW YORK. Jan. 9 - (AP) .. Gafher around the hot stove. friends. and we'll tell you about the wackiest events in sports in 1950. There were plenty of them, but outstanding in the minds of sports writer: and sports broadcaster: who took part in the Associated Press year-end poll were the big blizzard. the great fox hunt in Yankee Stadium, and the longest mile run in history. They didn't chuckle 'at Ohio State. however, over the great blizzard. Thirteen inches of show had piled up on Ohio Stadium be- fore the climactic game with Michigan. A snowstorm raged, a ll-mile an hour wind lashed the field. and the grlddcrs perform- ed in biting, 10-degree cold. And oddly enough, 50,503 fans- tics tried to watch the ghost-like figures manoeuvre. Not a. single first down was made by Michigan, which won 9-3, to capture the Big Ten title and a trip to the Rose Bowl. The most elusive runner since the days of Red Grange showed up in Yankee Stadium. It was Rey- nard the Fox, a gaunt critter about three feet long and weighing about 15 pounds. Reyinard first was spotted by watchmen the night -before the At-my-Michigan football game. They finally got Reynard one dark night in December. There was no haying of hounds, no scarlet-clad hunters. Reynard. blasted by a shotgun under the stands, has been suited and mount- ed in the Stadium press rootn. The world's record for the mile run is 4.01.4. The slowest? The 8i-1 days, 12 hours and Z! minutes it took for Don Gehrmann of Wis- consin to win the Wanamaker mile. Gehrmann was declared the winner Jan. 28 when he finished the mile in Madison Square Gar- den in 4.09.3, a breath ahead of Fred Wilt. Four judges were even- ly divided on the outcome and chief judge Asa Bushnell de- clared for Gehrmann. After that followed a series of squ-aibbles with Wilt declared the winner and then Gethrmann. The dispute raged for months. Finally Dec. 9, the U.S. Amateur for all that Gehrmann was the victor. -..... ia.m...m.... Watches for Argos Stirs Storm In Civic Circles In Toronto TORONTO. Jan. 9-(CP)- proposal to give the Toronto Argo- nauts football team 3100 wrist watches in recognition of their Grey Cup victory last fall has stir- red a tempest in the civic teapot. civic fathers and someisport.s- men are divided on whether the glory brought to the city by the Argo triumph warrants confront- ing the 1951 taxpayer with a bill which controllers and aldermen say may go as high as 33,500. Aha issue may be settled next Wednesday when city Clerk George Weole gives City Council a list of watch prices. Controller David Balfour is on record as favoring the watches. "Nothing is too good for these fellows,” he asserted. "We get the advertising from the Argos. We should say thanks and not in a cheap way." Controller Leslie Saunders argued that the Argos are professionals. He said he wouldn't give them even :5 watches. . But Mayor Hiram Mccallum re- called that the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League also are a professional outfit. The Leafs received wrist watches from the city two years ago when they brought home the Stanley Oup. The Mayor said the Argo watches, although Worth 3100 each, would not-actually cost the City that much. other council members plug- ged for less expensive gifts-metb ala at 85 or 810 each, perhaps, or till pen sets. Bob Moran. Argo president. said the argument was "small potatoes." The Grey Cup success had brought I t 'tremendous advertising. goodwill and out-of-town money." sportsmen were far from unan- lmous in their views. Lionel Dona- ohor. picked recently as Canada's most outstanding football star in the last so years. saw it this way: "I frankly think that. with taxes so high. there are many other things that could be done with the money. Let someone else step in, like the Board of Trade. which spends money on advertising. We shouldnlt make the taxpayer pay. That's loading the horse too much." St. Mary's Juniors Defeat 59. F. X. HALIFAX, Jan. 9-(CP) -Hal- ifax st. Mary's juniors came from behind here Saturday to defeat at. it of the Ant.igonish-Plctou-Colchest- er senior "B" League. 8-4 in an exhibition hockey game. They will play a return match Tuesday at Antigonlsh. Halifax tied the score in the middle period after the visitors scored twice in the opener. and then outscored st. F. X. 4-2 in the finale. Four Players Sign Dadgerf Contracts IROOKLYN. Jan. I -. (AP) - catcher Bruce tldwards and three other members of Brooklyn Don- gsrs signed their 1961 contracts. it was announced Saturday. This bring the total of Dodgers signed to six. in addition to Edwards. George shuba and rookie: llli Antoneiio and Dick Williams also came to Athletic Union decided once and P Francis Xavier University. leader , Lists Wackiest Sport Events During Last Year West Prince llockey' League Meets . The West Ptrince Hockey League held its second meeting since its formation at Oiieary on Wednesday, January 3, at 8:00 P. M. The President. Dr. L. G. Dewar, occu led the chair and opened the eeting. Minutes of the first meeting were read by the sec'y- Treasurar. J. R. Rochford, and on motion of W. H. Bernard, seconded by H. Barbour, were adopted as read. The executive then drew up the following League-By-Laws: 1. The West Prince Hockey League will play under M. A. H. A. rules. 2. The entrance fee to the League will be five dollars (86.00) front each team. 3. Home team will have same published in local papers. 4. The idle team will supply one referee and two linesmen. In the event that the idle team is unable to supply the officials, the partic- ipating teams shall come to mut- ual agreement as to whom is to officiate. 5. If a game ends in a. tie during the regular schedule, after the regulation time has been played ten (10) minutes overtime should be played. 6. First and second place teams play-off for the League Champion- ship. 7. Each team will supply one timelreeper and one goal judge. it. No limit to the number players a team may register with the League but the number of players dressed for a game must. comply with the M. A. H. A. rules. 9. In event of a new player mov- ing into any of the towns compris- ing the League, he must be a resi- dent for two weeks, and then his eligibility must be determined by the Executive before he can play in any League game. 10. All games to begin at 5:00 . M. The following motion was pre- sented by W. H. Bernard, seconded by E. Turner. and after some dis- cussion. carried unanimously. Motion: That a list of available players he presented by each team at the first scheduled game and at the end of the week's schedule, be presented to the Executive for ap- proval. Britain Challenges For worldls ttomen Tennis championship N'E'W-'YOl'vK, Jan. 9 - (AP)- Britain has challenged the United States for the Wightman Gull. sym- bol of the world's women tennis team chamiplonalilpg and it is like- iy that the bid will -be accepted. The decision will be announced at the annual meeting of the U. s,. L.T.A. Jan. 20. If the matches are held. they likely will be decided Aug. 24-5 on the courts of the Longwood Cricket Club. Chestnut Hill. Mass. Mrs. Hazel Hotchkiss Wlshtman. donor of the cup, is it member there. The competitions are held an- naally and Britain hasn't won since 1930. The American girls swept. the matches in both 1949 and 1960. Eathbridge Team Shows Lit-rle Promise FALKIRK. ;co?and, Jan. 9 - (Reuters) Lethbridge Maple Leafs skated to a 3-1 victory to- Scottish Hockey Association. But in winning they revealed little to make their backers him)? over their chancea in the world cham- pionship tournament in Paris next March. They were fieeter than the Can- adian-packed Lions, but showed sloppinees around their own net that might have cost I lot of goals against higher-class opposition. "Forgotten Men" Sign Contracts BROOKLYN. Jan. 9 .. (AP) - Joe Hatten and Jack Bantu, ”for- gotten men" of Brooklynts pitch- ing stallf last year. signed their Dodger cdntracts. flatten, 33-year-old lefthandos, worked only 08 innings last year, winning two and losing two. Ban- ta. 25-year-old sidearm tight- hander, had a 4-4 record for Brooklyn before being shipped to Montreal where he won four and lost seven. Snort Briefs BALTIMORE. Jan. - (AP) - Baltimore called off today. at the request of the Federal Govern- ment, plans to build a second deck increasing seatittg capacity of the municlvpal stadium to 00.- 000 seats. The National Produc- tion Authority asked the city to , t, completion of the Me- morial Sladlum "until the situa- tion ia more favorable." MONTREAL. Jan. - (GP) - Tommy Manastersky, stair halfback with Montreal Aloueties of the Big Four Football League. has given up his football career to devote full time to professional hockey. it was learned tonight. Manaataralty, signed a professional hockey contract recently with Montreal Canadians ,of the Na- CIILAIIIIIIIIIJIIIIAPI tional lsoclrav Lealuo of. night over Falkirk Lions of the ' ow important can at mam be! Today, the Canadian Army Reserve Force assumes a place of im- portance to Canadasfreedom that is almost unparalleled in our history. . In order that this country may take its rightful place among free nations of the world in the preservation of peace and freedom, Canada mm! be strong. Canada must make her Reserve Force strong! From Newfoundland to British Columbia. Canada is calling men from every walk of life-men who are willing to devote part of their time to serving Canada. ' Canadals need for more men in the Reserve Force was never greater. Visit the Regiment of your choice today and get full details about how you can best serve your country during these critical times. Get complete information at your local Armoury nowl JOIN THE RESERVE EORCE NOW! 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