ORY MILES ( ference playoff Biche Giga pulls Palmer, a “ries is at i Gerry mplete Old Country Soccer Standings (AP) ' Lintt LEAGUE-Divisien 1 ~Soccer WTL Pt ray, whe added that further ee oe 26 o discussion on the 1952-53 le . 72 Grimsby Town i: 4 27 | league set-up will be made in 9 2 3 Oldham Athietie 10 6 1 26\ @ round table conference over 34 York City ®8 6 3 22 the radio here probably later $24 8 Port Vale 8 5 4 21| this week. \ a 2.6.3 Wrexham F423 Mr. Murray said the proposed Division SOOTTISH LEAGUE—Division A international league was feas- AE 9$i BB East Fife 7 1 1 3§/ @ble financially but because the 934 4 Celtic 5 3 1 49} Alaska teams do not get started! 842 2» St. Mirren 622 2 much before Christmas, it was 724 @ Hibernuan 583 better to forego the idea this ; ae --® 15 ww Aberdeen 333 “a. invitational matches | hivision Sou ) Division B may be played. més @ Hamilton Academicals 711 ion ax — 11 24h Stirling Albion 701 14) EAM. 2 ; : rs nied Ss sR — = ae that will 2 Stonehousemui . ae : ee 5 2-2 18) make up the senior league are ed seni oe : — 4 a) Mansons, last year’s champions, who will be piloted by playing- RECORD treal Canadiens’ ¢ ley in the Lam fod Sioan and, behind G SCHEDULED FOR NOV. 15 vate. Fe Thice Winnipeg Blue Bombers flash victory ton Eskimos at Edmonton tn the first ¢g Quarterba _k Indian standing including Toronto Map e A few minutes later the Rocket « former star with Montreal Mar ens and New York Americans dim M« re ame Jack halfback cog Im the At ieft is dependa ble Winnipeg Satur day Tommy Saturday's i, smiles following thelr 28-12 of the best-of-three Western Jacobs (centre; passed for two Pord two-touchdown Winnipeg machine, is at right. (CP Peto) a matches: Division IIL (Northern) elebrated Rocket, Leafs’ net to ored him, def ‘aceman Mauric« g0al 324 Richard, blasts a sizzlker past score. his 323rd goal in National 24 to tie the record set in 1940 Behind Richard Leafs won 7-5 in (CP PHOTO) Wwrison The ling Club Makes Draw For New Season pert ‘inal prepara- } Ber Seal Cove to Gladding, W. Stone; the 1952-53'A. §. H Curling 8. Simpson, J. Tucker, J. Bennet; g, Dr. H. McDonald, R W. Meighen amilton, W. J. MeLean, J |S. Hunter; J. Laurie, J. Schuman xpected to be-| EB. Man ad ope ning! entatively H he official) Following are} ton, R Radford, H. Sheardown, Nickerson ; son, &. Gonick; T. Bateman, J. Paul, D. Frizzell, at}A. Kristmanson; Rev. L. Sieber, A H. Ash B G. N. Moore, Brown, W. F. Holmes; t rhention: “| Rowbottam, P. Bell, W. C. Baxter, veconds and} |H | Donald, Hone, C G.| Dr ’ Other; R. Collinson, }Parwar ‘ 8. Elkins, | Seat, Kyelfsen, A. a.) 2ohnso ir, J. Cross; kins, Dominato, V, W. McKenzie, A. E,/ son, Cc Quast, J. D x Webster, isay, J. Mus- E. Turner, Millar; Ww Ww man; K. Warren, Augus McDonald, Ostertag, R. Rudderham, McLeod C. Dixon, Andy Me- E Garner, D. McPhee; Wilson, J. Taylor, D W. Doumont; H. H Paulsen, A. Rivet, R. E E. Holliston, R. Wil- A. McBroom, C. Wat- W. C. Ander- E. Mah oO d, E nm; A. E, Smith; Barber, W. Meinnis, J (1520), A, N. Other; B e Wa ho got elected, Eisenhower plays golf; recently shot an 81, Port Chester, N.Y. loover, Truman walks, NAY bye ‘ difference of opinion Me fishe rmen, ‘hese sports is considered competitive, President Sports-Minded; t One Since Harding ‘SHINGTON (AP)—The White House has, for the first en G, Harding was there 30 years ago, a presi- n for a competitive sport, It would have, too, Adlai Stevenson plays a golfer, and a good one, He shot consistently and once had a 79 at ‘ing came a couple of fishermen: Calvin Coolidge D. Roosevelt swam in spite of his physical handi- although here among some fish Skallmarud, A. Murray, J. Mc- Leod (1773), E. Quast; G R. Ford, H. Deary, T. Newton, T.| Nicoll; J. Rogerson, W, J. Scott; D. Souter, W. Lambie; W. D./ Smith, W. Wasyk, R. E. Moore; Dr. L. M. Greene, J. W. Wakley, | R. L. Johnson, G. Dibb; Dr. A. A.) Miller, A. Hadley, W. Armstrong, : EB. Lugrin; M. A, Mathews, D. Bedford, M. E. Martin, R. H. Parker; K. Robertson, N. Parker, S McLaren, L. C, Eby: E.. R. Gordon, J. D. Notman, W. An- tila, J. Blain; Dr. Wright, C. Moore, G. Cook, J. Horne ON THE ALLEYS Oldtimers lead Mixed Ten-Pinners Oldtimers continued to lead the pack in the mixed Ten-pin bowling league and this week took three points from the Spares. Top man in the league was E. Lugrin, with 493, and A. Jonasen of Northern Distributers had high single of 193. Jean Sharpe had high single for the ladies with 173. Team high single was chalked up by Tiny Mites, with 775, and Oldtimers had high three of {2,119 Here are results: Oldtimers 3, Spares 1; Northern Distriputers 3, M.C.’s 1; Chumps 2, Tiny Mites es HISTORIC COUNTRY Moslems form the major part of the population of Albania on the Adriatic Sea, |to vevert from a senior j league to Senior “B”’ after Don | | Forward, local representative of the B.C. Amateur Basketball As-| te ‘quired ability. | school is wrong in disallowing sociation will not form an inter- | nations! league with Ketchikan , and Metlakatla (Alaska), be- | cause the northern teams don’t get started on time. This was decided at a meeting | in the Civie Centre last night at whieh a large number of play-| ers Were present. The association also decided | “A” sociation, announced that this | city had been ¢hosen the site of | | the previncial senior “B” play-_ | offs this season. Delegates further decided that | the leading team in the three-| | team league will represent the city when playoff time arrives’ "/ and that the coach of the win-/| | ning squad will be able to select | | reinforcements from the other clubs. Under this system, there is more incentive to win said as- : sociation president Art Mur- | coach Don Hartwig: Gordon & , Anderson, with Alex Bill, one lot the top coaches in the city, j}and Columbia Cellulose, with | Helge Holkestad former well- (known player here taking over | the reins of coach for the first | time. Last year there were five teams In the league, but due a shortage of player- material, the association de- cided to reduce the number to three with games being play-, ed every Tuesday and Satur- | day at 8:30 pm. in the Civic Centre. Play begins Nov. and centinues through 15 to | March, There will be two girls teams; | one from Booth Memoria! High | | School and the other a com- mercial squad, and they will | play every two weeks. Association officials, in de- | ciding to floor only three senior | Squads, said tne city cannot produce talent necessary for a) larger league and still maintain | a calibre of play that will be | Pleasing to the customers, Shortening the season and choosing the top team to repre- sent the city should also do! much to sustain early season rivalry. CRITICIZE HURST There was some criticism, | |noweares, of the refusal of A. M.' Hurst,. principal at Booth High School, té“attow’ High scttool stu- dents to play in the senior “B” | cireuit. Angus McPhee, former prom- inent player, said: “The player situation could be greatly alle- viated by the use of several! high school players of the re- I believe the this use, or more correctly in| declaring students who do par-| ticipate in senior competition ineligible for the inter-school team. “It is not fair either to the boys or the association, In the several years this policy has been in effect not one graduate has made the city all-star team. This alone condemns it.” Holkestad makes his return to the game this year as coach of the Cellulose team after several years on the inactive list, ex- cept in a social way. The onus is now on him to prove that his opinions are as practical as they are entertaining. Fred Jones, secretary-mana- ger of the Civic Centre, and Fred Calderoni, who is the referee, will draw up a league schedule this weekend. Carl Liscombe of Detroit Red Wings scored three goals and got assists on four others as Detroit smothered New York Rangers 12-5, in a National Hoc- key game 10 years ago tonight. The leftwinger from Galt, Ont., four seasons earlier had scored three goals within one minute 52 seconds. een TWICE AS MANY A United Nations estimate puts the population of North @& 213,000,000; South America 107,000,000, : i ' . i Wednesday, November 9, Lydy | in color while the smaller hobs jeat has reddish fur. _,. ; Prince Rupert Variy ineaw @ _ wer 4 Hockey Score Okanagan Senior Kelowna 5, Penticton 7 (over- time). Kamloops 4, Vernon 2. WIKL , Trail 2, Nelson 3 WHL Saskatoon 7, Vancouver 3. The: Canada Lynx ig Silvery eee emnn ltt HE j i | LOSING EFFORT—Substantial ground gaifis by Edmonton Eskimos’ Normie (China Clipper) Kwong weren't enough to ward off a 28-12 defeat by Winnipeg Blue Bombers in the first game of the best-of-three Western Interprovi cial Conference series turf after a sweep around end took him five yards. Pusing him is Winnipeg’s Tom Casey. A { Bomber player sprawls in front of the referee. ‘SPORTS ROUND-UP \' By GAYLE TALBOT derful days and nights for Rocky Marciano, the the heavyweight championship of the world. | pleasure-filled for Al Weill, the colorful Broadway character who plotted Rocky’s course to riches with one hand, his left,’ while with the other he held a! strangle grip on the fight game as matchmaker for the ali- powerful International Boxing Club. It was a clever piece of busi- ness in every respect, and Al is) proud and happy to take both the bows and the money piling up at an alarming rate. Asked if he had ahy slight) misgivings about Rocky’s return date with Walcott next spring, They are fully as long and? —— at me and said, ‘Is that true,) Al?’ And I told him it was. It was only the second time in my life I ever told a fighter that Well, you saw what happened. Forty-five seconds and he land- ed as sweet a short right as I ever saw. They knew he had a left hook, but they didn’t know about the short right.” How about Ezzard Charles? Had he and Rocky taken on added respect for the former champion since watching him hammer-up Cesar Brion in the Garden last week? “Well,” Al said after some either here or at Chicago, Al; thought, “we might be fighting said positively not. “Tl tell you why,” he said.| “That night Walcott was in the greatest condition .of his life. | good | | again. He dealt Rocky a lot of | 5 | He can't ever be that punishment, yet the kid still| | had enough left to knock him} ;cold in the 13th round. Rocky | will get him a lot quicker the ‘next time. “Another thing, the next one | won't be held at Philadelphia. | We had too much against us down there... . ‘SHORT RIGHT “When Rocky came to the corner after the 12th I leaned jover him and I said, ‘Rock. | you're in trouble. You're behind, and you might never get an- other chance if you don’t knock him out now.’ Rocky looked up iT’S IT'S SIMPLE | Hawks Work “For Coach Abel CHICAGO (AP)-——How able is Sid Abel? Newest coach in the iNational Hockey League, per- Sonabje old bootnose has proved miore stimulating to Chicago ; Black Hawks than a gailon of benzedrine. The man who captained De- troit Red Wings to four straight Nationa] Hockey League titles as Gordie Howe and Ted Lindsay, Abel has produced a minor mir- acle by lifting the hopeless Hawks of a year ago into strong contention. How does he do it? Simple, he Says. First, the Hawks are hustling for him. Second, he believes the deal with Toronte Which put Al Rollins in goal, Gus Gardner as centre on the No, 1 line has helped balance the team, And third, somebody had to apply a monkey wrench to the Hawks’ porous defences, “I had to tighten 'em up,” he said. “That was ebviously their worst failing in past sea- Sons. They scored enough. But they weren’t keeping the other guys frem scoring. They played as individuals. Now they're a team.” And, as an aftermath: “Please don’t go overboard on us. We're not a first-place team. I'll be Satisfied if we make the ,play- The Hawks haven't been in the post-season games since 1945-46, finished last five of the last six years, They’ve since been coach- ed by Johnny Gottselig, Chuck Conacher him some time, and I make a penne never to criticize a future opponent. That's not good for a style or he isn’t born with it, and he can’t change to some | , other style.’ vas ‘toa the McKinney Tro- ‘phy 12 years ago today as the IF sini long and won- ™ost ‘valuable player im the, NEW YORK (AP) These — Western interprovineial Rugby. | Union. shoemaker’s son from Brockton, Mass., who knocked consin University, was am out- |! out Jersey Joe Waleott just over a month ago to win/ “#ndins Placement Kicker. Kwong heads for the vr a Remember When | sig a star quarterback | nipeg Blue Bombers,’ Kabat, a product of Wis- Ty ra. aoe business. But I'll say this about} Charles’ new style—this crowd- | ing in and punching all the if | time—every fighter is born with |] | GET READY FOR WINTER We've got the Oil, the Anti-Freeze, the Batteries, Tires, ‘AND DON’T FORGET TO TEST YOUR BRAKES Chains and anything else that your car needs . for SAFE WINTER DRIVING. oot Superior Auto Service LIMITED Phone Green 217 3rd Avenue W. pivot on the production line with’ Mortson on defence and Cal|' iiky A revolutionary new * inside “Fite Saka ts Sy pletely di ight in ~ the White Lamp (right) & that it glows evenly all © over. There are no bright glore spots as ot 3 the centre of old- style frosted lamp & (left). Such diffusion ° does away with harsh glare and shadows are 4 reduced to a minimum. | visible .. . GENERAL @D ELECTRIC. WHITE LAMP The G-E White Lamp — bright all-over — is designed to reduce the risk of eyestrain when | you're studying, reading or doing any “close” | work. This new kind of lamp bulb is four ways | better. It softens shadows so they're hardly reduces reflected glare . . . spreads light evenly over the entire surface of the bulb . . keeps its cleaner, whiter beauty for life. This remarkable new lamp — the result of | years of unceasing research and development — is typical of the persistent efforts of this Com- pany to make G-E Lamps stay brighter—longer. Ask for G-E Lamps by name. extra lamp Division CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC COM PAMY LIMITED “wad Ofise: Teronto — Sales Offices from Coust te O--—t ew Lamp) bright all over...lessens shadows, glare and eyestrain ——, culer fee aod drying 6 are te ever you need it.