z/k -_--v.w .---,_.__. —'.-1' Kvww. BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING THE (JHARLOTT ET OWN p"- Wins i. ‘ l Leave T0 Join BallimoreClubl Al I-lamilton‘ ~ ag‘ b luarebrlggs and . Jclini y < l, clarelitt curls, have today for ; A rip, where they willl w,“ ,1 hllilt‘ Orioles of the: lia tern Amateur UlllICtl » teagtle a». |i..t‘ .»t....on training. 150th wk _ .51.; played last. year with the i Orioles. rpm l-ilpldiilf‘ of this pair brings lh: to a. i . ‘tn is‘. ‘(i hockey- ,“ 4 iii tillltl’ parts to Ugly, .. ft Clurelire are both well kilo-an ;il .pl rliiig circles local- , 1y and en; ly a lilrge number of l ‘ friends 111.11 ‘Alil be “Inhlllg them l urery #11111‘ 5‘ 1:. this scaiolfs hockey wars. The 0110.01; are entered in tht name Iellgla; \\'l'.ll the Hershey Bars 0n which lcahi llarry Currie and “Tic" WilLam» play. Other hockey- lsts m lcail- the Proiince were,‘ lrvlnc Itlriiic, Pcte Kelly. Dan Matheson, and Watson McEvvcn. Down The Alleys HOLY NAME BOWLING For Dr. F. C. Dougzm Trophies Last i;i,.li_t saw the finish of the l6 partners of the mixed bowling, and some very high scores were nlled. Sonic of the bowlers had In uphlll fight to make the next. lbund. 'l‘\\vl'.e partners were el_ lmiiiatcd mid the 1st round of the twenty four will get under way at I o'clock tonight. Please be on hand enrly. Wnoillllf; tire lust night's scores: i Interscholastic FIRST P-Tlvrilei‘ 1&2 209 261 F. Mallett, 161 130 180. Tbtaiqlaz. . SECOND i E. McMillan 2B2 1a’! 249 P. Gliudct 143 143 123 Total-Hill. THIRD iLMcLcJIan 165 177 251 E-Dousrml 1'11 11s 165 Total-lllfi. FOFRTII . itCmnci-on 135 175 23;; vtBilrkt- 9a 191 154 Total-tiles. FIFTH l-Douvvtte 257 15c 24o M. Gallant 119 169 133i Toial- 1073. SIXTH W. ilaipcimy- 21o 13a 212 R. Sinnott '73 149 23a Total-NCO. SEVENTH L. Corcoraii 199 132 20o Ii-Corcnran H9 140 163 Totalvltliili. ‘ Eltiirrli "llcflflir tan 101 211 K- Fur-p 1.5a 1:19 159 Total- 1013i 193 301 134 90, 221i 16% 194 14o 1:17 115 i:i.1~.\ l.‘\"l'll I'll} 1T3 180 1:2: 15s 151 ‘I'll IIl.I~"l‘lI .111 lllll 134 l3’? 1:: 105 137 "1 l’ll.‘iil.\\' NIGHT 15! Round of the 24 lluwlell 5 rv lb W. Marley. g aiiln l“: J. l). Webster. L“ ' it .\- l6. Rtihlll. I‘ . a V. Gayle. 1a .t- F. lieimesseyz i‘ \ J A llenllcyi p" A- . 2 ' laid. intent. .\< 1:. ia-arilian. 12' R~ “it; i" ll CL- ll. Corcwrnn. NOT Tlluv .|.iiic tk J. Callaghan. not ‘g Iv. ll any ]‘.|ll_\‘f‘l‘llI!f)\'E‘(‘flll- -'>‘-'-l kmdly- tzet in touch with mmllllciipnt nap-tr;- n90“ Tdfli-sten slcci ailoys get stronger ‘MP1’ lira‘. i' ‘ 11‘: r: T; ::‘_~‘l___ OIIBMORFS DRY GLEANERQ Try Our Dollar Service Queen Square Rugby Team Opening Game Of Series Queen Square took a. one-game lcad 111 LCIQIISC of Football trophy by delcatiiig the Wtst Kent‘ rugby squad at tlic U. A. A, grounds yesterday afternoon 6—3 in the renewal tciseholastic series. The series is the best two out of three gar-its. it wrl the first loss suifle. . by the Vl/crt Kcntcrs this season they ha»- ing previously won two games from Sunimcrsicle Academy. Both team‘; gave i1 gitill. e.\hlbi-; large . tion of football and kept the c-‘rovvu of enthusiastic fans on edge throughout the game. Play for the most. pait moved up and down the f.eid in sre-saw lt‘Sill?li as first oiic ; and then the other cf the two cvcii- ‘ ly matched tcilnis would apply the pressure. ‘The boys showed the selli- ors something in hall-following and deadly tackling. some good relief hunting featured the tilt. The three j trys went unconverted. , The first try came about five minutes from the opening whistle when in a neatly executed four man ‘ passing play Queen Square backfield ‘ ., ran the ball from their own territory . to cross the West. Kent lllic. Lilurier j Mac-Kinnon was oil the end of the play gathering in n. pass from Mac- . Gulgan. Queen Square made (he count read 6-—0 shortly after the opening o1 the sticontl half when‘ they dribbled the bull lo the West Kent line. A false tackle by an over- anxlous Blue and Yellow clad player resulted in award of a. try to F. Gallant, fast following lorwarrl of the Purple and white jcrseycd tcaai. “Babs" lritzgerald, tiimlnutive plck- i ing quarter, accounted for West Kents lone tally when he carried? the ball over following u fivc yard‘ scrum on the Q. S. S. line mid- way through the half The teams at. lilacs flashed bril- liant, plays that reflected credit on their coaches. Jim McCallum of Queen Square and Lou Campbell of West Kent. ' LINE-UPS Queen Square—l=‘ullback "itoriic, three-quarters. McClintick. Mac- Kinnon. MacGuigan, halves, Doyle, Blanchard, MCCHUJY, King, for- wards, Wilson. Gormlcy, Conway, Smith, Wilson, Gallant. Mahar. Subs, Doyle, Anderson, Hughes. West Kent —Fulll:acl~:, Forsythe, three-quarters Fitzgerald, Darragh. MacLcod, Halves Jay, Perry, Bell Hooper, forwards. Glover, Living- ston, Callbeck. Grant, Anderson. Matheson, LaCusta. subs, Far- qilharson, Andrew . Referee-Prof. W. J. hIilcDOlluId. o Jim Mclnnis Matched Witfi K i d L a n t z NEW GLASEOWTNS. Nov. 2 —- (CPw-Plaus were nearing comple- 'tion tonight for a fight program . in New Glasgow shortly that would see Jimmie It'll-Innis, of Charlotte- town climb ilito the rink with Kid Lantz 0f Halifax. The Prince l-Idtvard Islander won over Nick McMillan of Wesflville in Charlottetown in a pieliaiinniw’ seiap on the 'l‘olnmy Bland-Bobby l Allen card last week. Braddock To , Meet McCarty HOT SPRINGS. Ark., Nov. 2- (APn-Hcnvyavelght champion Jlin- my Braddock will mcct Jack Mc- Carty. Boston heavy, in a six round exhibition at. New Orleans. LIL, Nov. 16, the titlcholdcrs manager announced today. IIIIEIIMAIISM flbkunlllnnfnlanuvnn duh. llub Ital-cm pothllt tin nppl U QKOII yhneundbg Dlnon the MRICPJILIIIII ‘ of classic lii- - ‘and were given tryouts with the Q QIQJ’ v.‘- GUARDIAN IIIJJIII I u BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT PAGE SEVEN ‘Les Patrick‘ Rebuilds O Id l l l l Hockey Club, l NEW YORK, Nov. 2——March on time has finally caught: up with New York Rangers and Lester "the 2"’ Patrick, coach of the‘ hllic-shirtcd National Hockey Lea- tzuc squad. The “old men of Mali- hattaii" wlzo left New York last spring: as the first Ranger team to iail to makcthe playoffs in the club's 10-year history won't be back to open the new season this week. Some of’ the old ‘originals!’ wlll be on haiid but iii the main Pat-j rick must depend on the young- sters who were promoted from the‘ Philadelphia farm team last; season and other minor league material. I Patrick's First Test The job of blending the veter- alls and kids provides the first real test of Patrick as a tcam-btiilder. Patrick has been called upon to make only one or two replacements a season since he took charge, Bu; all that is changed. With the brothers Cook parted. Bun being sold to Boston and Bill acting as coach and utility player Patrick has selected the Colvillc brothers, Max: and Neil, and Alex‘ Shibicky as replacements. The kids‘ possess a. championship complex. having been in turn on the west- , em Canadian junior champions. j titlists of the Eastern United sm- l cs Amateur League and on the championship Philadelphia club of’ the Canadian-American League. New Defenccmen Patrick has elevated Joe Cooper and Babe Pratt to defensive posts.- 'l‘hc pair starred with Philadelphia Rangers last season. Cooper, a hard body-checker, will work alongside Ott Heller, who has slai-_ red with the team several years. Pratt will have Art Coulter, one of the hardest checkers in the league, alongside him. , Rangers’ number one line will. be made tip of Btiuchcr at. centred r flanked by Lynn Pittrick and Cecil‘ i Dillon, while the third line consists i_ of Murray, “iron-mun" Murdock as i pivot», and the veteran Butch l Keeling alid young Phil Watson 011i l‘ the wings. i Dario Kerr has had two scasonvi l. of big lctigue warfare in_ the Ran- . tzer nets and Patrick is not Worry- k int: about that post. Another of the originals who has been pushed aside by Father Time is Citing Johnson, the smiling de- l fcnceniaii, who will be assistant coach and spare rear-guard. The average age of the "young nicn of lti-inhatian“ is 25.4 years, and while the team appears fairly well balanced it has a glaring weakness that may spell disaster- the team lacks a top-notch natural lcft-handcr. Hockey Prexy In Conference NEW YORK, Nov. President Frank Calder of National Hockey l conference here today with a iiilm- i ‘her of League governors, it was‘ learned, but could not be reach-ed; l for comment as to what (levclop-l ‘ merits, if any. had taken place in rcgard- to the New York Americans franchise. The hotel ivhcrc President Cal- der stivved slatfll tonight he had chcckcd out late in the afternoon. It could not be learned who else attend-id the conference. The American situation showedl no outward signs of being cleared up folloivingf the League's action recently in declaring William Dtwver had forfeited his franchise for failing to mcct obligations to the League. the Ireagile was in‘ . l c-lcel __l l . _.>..-_a\l_-<.-uu—¢.. Q f agei- Mervin “Rcd" i posed of: Goal, Roy Wort , forward line. LBIHNTLINC up FATHER N.H.L. Teams PrepareMKid" For Opening Thursday MONTREAL, Nov. 2—-CPJ-Nili0 i’ fence, Allan Shields and Al. Murray Canadiens ltcd Dzzrand and Johnny Gallagher, l players in JVIOHLPEILI camp will be skating for berths with the National Hockey League team when 1t meets Providence Reds of the AIIlOIICBJI-IIILC‘.lliltlUil- al circuit. in an exhibition match here tomorrow night. At present there are 23 players with (Janadicns and all will go Uil the ice with their job's depending on their showing, Manager Cecil . Ilart said tonight. “We have to get down to 14 men by Saturday night. when we meet Bruins and we will have only thrcc more prac ices,‘ he pointed out. JOHNSON SIGNED while the forward lines were made j up of Ari. Chapman, Lorne Carr, , and Svliuclley‘ Scltriuer as the first i string with Joe Lamb, Eddie Wlse- Al man and 'I‘0mmy Anderson on the 3 second trio. The third lllic was‘ composed of Lloyd Jackson, Harry Ollivcr and lfarcld Cotton. Happy , iultllllS will lhLtl down the unlity Iierth. INIIITES “WINNERS TORONTO, Nov. 2»tCP)—-Eddie Powers‘ Whiies proved popular with a first-night Clt-Wd of 12,873 fans l at; Maple lrsllf Gardens tonight as ‘ they finally overthrew; Dick frviirs WINNIPEG, Nov. 2-—(CP) -— Ching Johnson, veteran (IEEICIICCIIIRIXI of New York ltangors, came to terms with the National Hockey league club today as defencemaii- coach. - ‘Though no lonsicr regarded as tl rcgillai‘ player. the 38-year-old Johnson may sec some action this season "in the pinches“, Mimatger Irester Patrick announced. His status with the club is simiiai- to that; of the VQI/Cftlll Bill (Took. coach of forward lilies and st;li an effective right-winger. DECIDES LINEUP OSHAWA. 0nt., Nov. 2~ ICPI - More than satisfied in the inan- net in which his team perforated in an exhibition game against New Haven Eagles last Friday. Man- ‘ Dlltloli today‘: stated he had definitely decided to start; the same line-up when the New York Americans open the Na- tional Hockey League season in Chicago on Thursday against the Blackhmvks. The team used Friday was cc-m- dc- . Truro "Be Scene 0f Rugby Title Ma t c h SACKVILLE. N. B., Nm. L! — Mount Allison University and Acadia Uni\ersity' will meet at‘ Truru Wednesday in a tilltitlcli death i match for the lvlztrltimc lnlcrcel- lcgiate Rugby title, a local team ol- ficiai said tonight 0 To Play With i Quebec Aces i l QUEBEC, Nov. 2 —— tCPl -- flay Mlalcnfant and Relic Botidreau, ‘ Moncton, N.B., hockey lll-LYPYS. were on the lineup of Quebi s Aces, new provincial senior group clitry, announced tonight, by coach Fred 1 Magurn. Aces open their season zlgliilt Royals at, ltlontrcitl \\'L‘(Il\t‘l~ night and Malcnfaal and lsnuclr ‘. wlll tiatrol wing lallfs on the 5.21111‘ Ilniiicti illrzr \\itli lather Lavolc or Pete .\l.l,iiil .1. pivot. l ' “Goose ” Coslin Rescues Pair SALEM. N.J., Nov, ‘lit/lib Leon “Goosz” Goslin, \'tll‘l"*'l ' fielder of the Detroit 1‘ .. t League baseball team. l‘t‘.\.ll.(| t... men adrift 12 lieu"- l‘l a d“ ilif." boat. on the Dc‘: -~ iii er tr‘ ‘ Goslln hooked a f ‘ v 1' spccdboat and pulled the dislbltnd‘. craft to safety. gorivim cxpc-riciice, who netted lWiCP find figured ‘in a th‘ ‘d coal. lRos-s Scores . KIT." Blues 4-3.. '1 charity affair, the name at'ra cti a lot of school cliil- j dren who war-lied 29‘ aspirants for l 'l‘oronto Alapie Leafs endeavor to inake a tznzil impression on club. officials. i The \'ll v was the first in the three-gain txhibitioii series for I the Wllltlwsillfié, w'l1o lost 11-10 on the rsuiizl, having been beaten 5-3 and 4-3 zn previous starts. There 1111s nolliine, "it, stake but the boys ditlii‘. ])‘l.l thi-ir punches and three lights were thrown in to liveli up things for tlic cash cilstomers. WINNIPEG, Nov. 2- Veterans of the Numnal IIllCkPy League spark- ed New York Rangers to a. '7—-2 victoljv tonight. over their farm team, Philadelphia Ramblers of the Iuternationell-American loop, in the i lid exhibition came of their lining camp series here. Bill Cook. Frankie Bouclicr, Mur- ray lvlurdock, Butch Keeling Cecil Dillon and Ott Heller carried the brunt of attack. toiiizht. Sccring: honors, however wear to Lyatti Patrick. of two years‘ N. H. L. Amateur Hockey ii.\Lit=.\:;, NOV. 2 -lCPi-~Ptlre- 1y pl-tifrsatnial hockey was lirzcd I13‘ Art; Rte». hianiltrri- of‘ the Boston Brute.‘- bvfnrt» a l.» al service club lid. . t "It is a lihililt‘ U llllkf? P19“ _\‘0llll|I.l/‘l's go oat zltid play tinder fills-C pretenses." the National Hoc- key Lcaiilc. Manager declared as he scored "so-called amateur hoc- r" - eleven Colts — I I ' For Pzmlrco i t _ l llrkljflltilOftE, Not‘. L‘. —tAPi —— I-lleticn colts, most, O1 111°!" “THE at sailed, were nail ' wit-U’ 501'.‘ inc Pinilico futurity", one of Aliier- l ~ '5 Tlih and important distance . events for L‘.\‘O-yf‘t\l'—OI(IS. {till/S “atSJlORT WQRI Scores K. O. Over Ledden SAINT JOHN, N.B., Nov. 2 - tCP) -—"Kid" Lulu of Timmtns, Ont., now fighting out of Moncton, NB, won a technical knockout over AI Ledden of Saint John to- ‘ night as Ledden failed to come out for the eighth round of a sched- uled IO-round go, headliningabox- ing card here. Ledden replaced Johnny Lifford. who has been suffering an injured hand and a cut, over the eye. At the last minute Ledden offered to substitute and although he put Hi1 a game battle he was not in cori- rlltion to last the limit. _ Apart from the third round when the Saint John scrapper landed WlCKCCI rights to Lullrs head and face and the second and fifth which were even, Lulu was ahead all the way. l In the six-round semi-final “Bull” Tcllluo, formerly of Tim-i mins. Ont., and now of Saint John ~' was ovcrmatched with "Kid" Hart of Moncton in a featherweight battle. Hart was named winner after the youthful Tellino clit- pointed him in the sixth roulld. Hart, the more rugged and seven pJunds heavier, forced the fighting but, Telllnds dancing about the ring made him miss many vicious swings. Hart's wicked right hand smash to the solar plexus in the fourth slowed “Bull" up for the, fifth but in the sixth he mixedg freely. Sp ringfield Downs Reds OTTAWA. Nov. 2—-tCP.i - In 8. wide open game, Springfield 1n- dtans of the International-Ameri- can Hockey League tonight defeat- ed Providence Reds of the same league, 7-4 in an exhibition game for their fourth straight pro-season ‘ win. Paced by Ted Saunders and Alex Smith with ttvo goals apiece and stanza. l iuson shot through a a LuluilBoston Bruins Eke 73-2 Win Uver Maroons “To Take Lead In Series HALIFAX. Nov. 2—tCP) —Bos- ton Bruins outsped Montreal Maroons to a 3-2 victory here to- night in tht: fifth game of the team's Nlaritime training tour and took a one-game lcacl in the series. Bruins led all the way, out- scoring their red-sweatered rivals 11-1 in the second period and add- ing another in the third that‘ Maroons matched near the end of the game. Leroy Goldsworthy, Charlie Sands and Cooney Welland tallied the Boston counters While Jimmy Ward and Earl Robinson marked Uh the Montreal ‘goals. Both teams played well after a slow first per- ind but. the Brullis held an edge all the way with a passing attack that was disconcerting to the Maroons. Tempers flared for a time in the final session when Ray Getllfle, a Boston rookie. and Dave 'I‘rott:er tangled. The latter was sent to the cooler for jamming Getllffe u, the boards and later Joe Jerwa and Stew Evans exchanged blows but neither were banished, All four penalties came in this period. Maroons surged In at the opening of the third but o sustained nt- i tack failed to net them a goal. Seven ntillltes after the bell, wet- land broke away and shot. from the Maroon blue line after faking a D355. The puck was deflected oft’ Beveridses skate into the net. Maroons were unable to get another tally until near the end when Rob. maze of Players from right wing. Portland was off’ Brain's defence at the time for tripping Ward. The first period was slow and uneventful. Except at; odd moments , play failed to show much brilliance. The Bruins were more effective than the Montreal teamythroughout but the playing of Bill Beveridge in the Maroons nets kept them score- less. Red Beattle of the Bruins did not appear on the ice. He received a minor injury in Saturdays game. Cut ‘ Wentworth Portlanfi Forwards Gracie Welland Ward Gold-worthy Nortlicott Bun Cook Montreal subs-Conacher, Carson, Blinco, Robinson, 'l‘rottier. Mac- Kenzie, Cain, Marker. Boston subs- Jerwa, HoLr-itz, Smith, Clapper. Getlifie. .\'lc_ Marius llcatty‘. Cowley. Salads. SUALWLARY first Period No score. Penalties. hone. Second Period l~>BO5L0ll, land) 4.48. ‘l- -Moiitrtal, l~i 08. 3 - Boston, Simds tCoivlr-g. l Penalties None, Goldsworthj: t Wei- Ward iNorthcoitl 1T U7. Third Period 4 Boston. Welland, 1.25 Tr-Montreal. Robinson, 18.29. Penalties: ~ Holietz, Trottier, Conachcr. Portland. ‘Northwestern Regarded As » N0. One Team NEW YORK. Nov. 2-tAPI—~In g battle or ballots almost as fiercely fought as their struggle in the ‘had at Evanstoii, Northwestern displaced Minnesota today as the no. onq college team of the United State‘ 1 in the National Football ranking poll conducted by the Associated l Press. Majority support was swayed by, the Wfdcats 6-0 triumph that snap< ,l’>€‘d the Gophers tviruiin: streak, . but many experts apparently WP?‘ backed by Benny Grant's superb LINEUPS. > goal tending. the Indians took a ~ §l1Q¢ siatiftricd as to Norihwc. "r11 J‘ lead of one goal in the first per- Montreal Boston “w” m’ ‘V’ . _ , l Nothwithstandlng the mixture oi iggflslcgélefhé: Bevorldgo Goal Th ‘sentiment. 31 of the 43 contrzhura; - - . ompson . _ _ three more markers in the final Defence blxznihgotzlo tgifilfln Elfin-S Shore p o c“ 1m 1 with I Major Hoopla OI IR BOARDING HOUSE’ F You SAY You can MANUFACTURE YOUR ILLUMINATED ‘FUNNEL KEYHOLE rota 10¢ 1 5HALL HAVE MY ATTORNEYS DRAW UV ‘THE ARTICLES OF "I. HAVE COMBED . ll l ‘Fl-is "E's A tor IN KEYHOLES, IF- You ;__ c0014 iuro THEM= AND sea. or r012 rpm? ARE IN A ‘DITHER BlG COMPNxiiEfi UMF e-HAP-R-RUMF -- Efiov. YOU ARE Rléil-IT, MR. BlLT MORGAN ! THE some ooovs Dl5TRlBUTOIZ5 . / ‘PRODUCT ON "THE MPRKETMA- " CAMPING ON MY 1200125112? , ,1 - % To 012T MY é; /// ..tl iii ‘Yv- HAVE BEEN 1 . m. 1-».- f‘{_'M‘AA_ I *'=I:;_i’Z_'_E._ _. .. IPJCORVOR AVON I MMEDl AT ELY“ ‘THIS l5 THE 5ORT OF PROPOSlTIOH FOR WHICH NlGHT AND DAV; BEGGlNG THE COUNTRY, viii) HOOPLE _ . ‘ SHE save You Yes- ‘TERDAY 1114's PAPER 011 THAT 30¢ LEFT, BOY WANTS W5 \ 1t; will be the first ring appcar- H _, -- _ ance for Braddock since he can- MY-IWNECég-v. .m)D R L celled a title bnut. with Max Sch- . MAg-rggrgg ELEctED-QS- m- . mcling of Germany because of an L. Irf‘; -- gmsgaéw, mg/TEBMEZRD cl PROIE‘M'O|V'E5|NG".G_ arthritic Iinnd. '- MMQF THE YOU HAVE A .__-—_=—_—_ I TOWN-BUT I MUS!’ 1.0T oi=_ ME TO Acczivr A MILUON UHQE DOLLARS FOR cactus-we AMOTS, izlaurs I-(q: MY WORD,’ hffNHA ‘THE BlLTMOPGAN MiLuOMS WANTS BA“ OF MEMHAQQ} 3 TO KNOW . Mug’ INCH Mk6 v?) IF You ' have AuY I t . w is... . .- s... Lsp-p, " “ _ - .