: PAGE TWO TODAY'S SPORTLG FEATURES: | Oshawa City Soccer Club Play in Hamilton Today Dodgers Meet Sudbury for Intermediate Softball Title Collegiate Firsts Play in Lindsay This Afternoon "THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1932 SPORT PAGE TODAY'S SPORTING FEATURES ' Oshawa Sportsmen Mourn Passing of Walker Rowden ' Boston Bruins Start Training Grind in Quebec City . Mimico Swamped Winnipeg Argos Last Night by 16 to 6 Sudbury and Dodgers Play For Intermediate Title Today Prospects tor Rugby Games Played This Afternoon Varsity Given Slight Edge ' Over Western While Montreal-Hamilton Tilt Is a Toss Up Toronto, Oct. 22.---The foot- bail campaign in the east reaches the half-way mark today, the stage where surprising things usually gtart to happen in a big way.. The gunning to date has beén marked by only ome major upset~ Western's defeat by Me- Gill--but a string of near-catas- trophes has given promise that there may be more serious oppo- sition for the favored before the autmnal festivities are over. To Beat Wheelers Chief points of uncertainty this week-end are Montreal, Hamilton and Toronto. Called to whip the champion Wheelers in Montreal, Hamilton Tigers may run into stiffer competition than they can handle, the Varsity- Western fixture here is still 2a very open question and Balmy Beach are no more than slight favorites as they set out to dewn Hamilton Cubs in Hamilton. Not So Weak The widespread tidings that Montreal, without Warren Ste- vens, is a considerably weaker outfit than the 1931 title-holders are based only on the fact that the Wheelers have not been mounting up such high point to- tals as a year ago. But they have been winning in the same con- sistent way under Hal Baysing- er's leadership and the Bengals are unlikely to end a long list of triumphs without a stern strug- gle. A Slight Edge "'Beeanse they will be at home, Varsity holds a slight edge in the betting over Western's Mustangs --but that is about all, The Lon- doners come to town with Gordie Paterson, outstanding backfielder in shape for at least part of the battle while the Blues must scrape along without Jack Sin- clair. A Western win would throw open the intercollegiate race to three teams if McGill do what is expected and beat Queen's at Kingston. A Varsity win would just about sink the Western ship and leave McGill and Varsity to dyel it out. ou Sarnia To Win: No one has yet called Balmy Beach to develop into a very seri- 'ous obstacle to Sarnia as Imper- 1als near a second straight O.R. .F.U, title but the Beaches can 'retain their mathematical chance 'of winning the group with a vic- tory over Hamilton Cubs. Beaten 'in their first start at Sarnia, Beachers must win all their re- maining games to gain a tie with the Oflers. Hugh Stirling Ready Hugh Stirling brings the Im- - perials here for a light work out against St. Michael's College, in- tent on recording a fourth conse- cutive win, Balmy Beach move into Hamilton to face a fighting Cub troop that is primed to win --and would not upset the predic- Yous of the form players if they At Oftawa, Argonauts and the Roughriders mix it to see which remains in the cellar of the big four. .Mimico Beat Winnipeg 16-6 Toronto, Oct. 22 -- Winnipeg Argos, conquerors' of the Squamish Indians, and Western representa tives in the Mann Cup finals, suffer. ed a 16-6 defeat last night at the hands of the Mimico Mountaineérs atathe Maple Leaf Gardens. The Ontario 'champions took the lead ope minute after the commencement of the game and when Winnipeg dréw even one minute later, it was jhe only time that the teams were 'on equal terms during the contest. {The winners led 3-2 at the end of "the first quarter, added four during 'the second while the invaders were 'securing one, outscored the visitors 6-2 in the third session and 3-1 in the final quarter, ° * The Western team are a. much 'better aggregation than they show- «ed last evening, and it would ccca- sion no great surprise if they were 'to extent the locals to the limit in the second: game of the series which Shooting Match . 1200 Ducks, Chickens and Geese 'Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday--Oct. 26, 27, and 29 at one o'clock and all day on November 11th at the Glenhodson Farm, Brooklin, Con, 7, Whithy Tp., on Highway No. 12 12 and 16 Guage Shotgun Ammunition Free--22 and 25 Guage Rifle Ammunition Free TARGET AND TRAP OOTIN SH G REFRESHMENTS Roy So sd > will be held at Maple Leaf Gardens un Monday evening. Despite the | fact that they only reached Toron- to yesterday morning they showed plenty of speed afoot, but their ten- dency to hold on to the ball until they were right in on top of Har- risun, and the Mimico goaler played the shots in .phenomenal fashion. The defense oi the visitors failed to protect Hawkins, and the goaler who held the fort for Canada at the Olympic Games was unable to do himselt' justice under the circum- stances. While 16 evaded him, there were a score of others on which he apeared to be beaten, but he out- guessed the attackers or cleared sensationally . He came out of his goal on numerous occasions and earned the cheers of the thousand- odd fans present for his showing. S------ O.H.A. Rules Are Explained Having given the hockey fans and players the new ruling on the forward pass that will be most pro- bably used in O.H.A. circles this winter perhaps some more reprints from the new rule book of 1933 will be appreicated. The rule regarding kicking the puck should reccive at- tention, Here it is: Rule 15 (a). Kicking the puck is permissable in the defending zone and over the first blue line and in the neutral zone or over the second blue line. If in the attacking zone the puck hits the skate of an at- tacking player in any manner and is thea played by an attacking play- er, play shall be called. Note. This rule permits kicking the puck in the defending zone, and the neutral zone and over the first blue line. The puck must not be kicked over second blue line nor in the attacking zone by an attacking player. So as to remove any doubt as to what constitutes a kick in the attacking zone the rule says that if the puck hits the skate of an at- tacking player in any manner, and is then played by himself or one of his teammates, play shall be call- ed by the referee, (hb). The puck may be stopped with the hand, but not carried, or held or knocked on by any part of the body except the kicking as pro- vided m rule 15, section (a). (c). The puck may be played in any manner by any player so long as the stick is used and is not rais- ed above the shoulder, Ragging the Puck 1. (a) The puck must be at all times kept in motion, Except to carry the puck behind the goal once the team in possession of the puck shall always advance the puck to- wards the opposing goal unless they be kept from doing so by players of the opposing team, A tace-oft ten rect in front of the goal shall be imposed on the team violating this rule. During this face-off no defending player except the goal- keeper must remain in his position in the net until] the "face" has been completed. (b) Shooting the puck the length of the ice is not to be considered ragging. Note. This rule is to prevent rage ging a puck by a team that is short handed and trying to kill time, Re- ferees should enforce this rule rig- idly, The penalty is a face-off ten feet-in front of goal, (¢) Players on both sides shall be onside when they and the puck are between the goal line and the ad- jacent end of the rink. Note. This legalizes a pass out from behind the goal line for a shot on goal, but the player who makes the pass must immediately endeavour to get onside and can- not make a second pass out or ins teriere in any way with an opposing player or the play until he has put himself onside. (d) On all face-offs every player must be on his own side or the puck. Rommel Given His Release Philadelphia, Oct, 22. -- Eddie Rommel, kunckle hall pitcher of the Philadelphia Athletics, was yesterday given his unconditional release by Connie Mack, manager of the club, : "Rommel was a 10-year man, having served with the A's from the start of the 1920 campaign," Mack sald. "Therefore no major league club claiming him on walvers, he was entitled to lis unconditional release." In the last two or three years Rommel has been more of a re- Hef pitcher than®a starting hurl- er, His best performance this year was his victory over Cleve- land in an 18-inning game, Rommel who is about 35 years old, is the last of the old guard of Athletic players to go. Repent- ly Connfe Mack announced he would not trade or sell any ball player to any other club in the major league if the player is to remain in the majore. His state- ment did not cover '10-ysar players entited to their uncon- ditional release. noons 2.80 p.m. Evenings, 8 p.m. Boston Bruins Start Practice Quebec, Oct. 22. -- Boston Bruins tumbled out on the fre here yesterday for the first work- out of their training campaign for the 1932 National Hockey season, With them appeared the Boston Cubs, Hub entry in the Canadian-American circuit, Art Ross took the kinks out of his assembled hockey talent with a hard, driving physical traininz session after breakfast. The large squad, uncomfortable with excess poundage of soft summer months, grunted., creaked and panted through the ordeal. They were happier when they got or- ders to dive into the trunks for skates, pads and sweaters, anid Ross sent them out on the ice to start their training grind in earnest, The Bruin Cubs and the Que- bec Beavers of the Eastern Can- ada Hockey Association = will play an exhibition game here next Tuesday night. Big Nels Stewart, 15 pounds lighter as the result of an active Summer, and declaring himself ready for his best season In hockey, donned a sweater that he has often banged about---that bearing the Bruin in the centre and the word Boston across it. The husky centre, twice voted most valuable player in the Na- tional Hockey League, for years one of its leading scorers, beean practice under Art Ross' tutelare here, a result of his sale by the Montreal Maroons, whom he led in the Spring of 1926 to the | Club's only Stanley Cup cham- | pionghip. Stewart's acquisition by tie Bruins gives him stranze bed- | fellows. His scraps with Eddie Shore of the Boston defence have | given the game some of its high spots, while he was always readv to exchange stiff checks and, if | occasion arose, socks, with other burly wearers of the uniform. Eddie Shore has not arrived vet. The defence man owns a large farm on the prairies and | has not yet sent all his grain to the market. He will arrive early next week, according to Ross, terésted in baseball and hockey. | trict, Sport Snapshots "Thanksgiving Day loomed up, and was featured by a delightful organ recital, given by our hos- tess on the splendid pipe organ of St. George's Church followed by 2 lovely duck dinner. At three o'- clock, we started off for home, by The Times joins with all Oshawa Sportsmen in extending its syn- pathy to Donald "Doc" Rowden, who last night was bereaved in the death of his father, Walker Rowden, who passed away suddenly, The late Mr. Rowden will be greatly missed in sporting circles in Oshawa being a staunch supporter of all types of sport being particularly in- In the later sport he was always to be found at the rink and on many occasions went out of town with the hockey teams representing the city, Mr. Rowden was highly thought of and will be greatly missed, FIND VITAMIN B » The Oshawa City Soccer Club have had to make last minute changes in their plans for this afternoon, It was at first thought that they would be playing this afternoon at Alexandra Park against Beaches United, of Toronto in a Major League fixture, but last night they were or- dered to play a sudden death game in Hamilton with the Dominion Glass team in the Ontario Cup playdowns. for the game and the game scheduled for this afternoon will be played LJ LJ later in the season. . » * There will be only one game this afternoon in the Toronto Rugby Football Union Intermediate Section, that being at Weston where West- sides will try conclusions with the husky Weston crew. sides win Weston will be out of the league race, but it is to be expected that Weston will put up a strenuous struggle to remain in the running and may upset the Toronto squad. w » Bunny Morganson, author of Sport Slants in the Evening Telegram, assertion the Oshawa would not be forced to play in the Central Ontario Baseball League if He said that the Oshawa club, now holding a franchise in the C.O.B.L., could resign and play in the T.AB.A. This. amy be one way out for the Oshawa Club and mean that the re- building of baseball in the city can go ahead on the foundation laid dur- i At least the Oshawa Executive have not been al- last night came to bat with thc they did not wish to. ng the past season. lowing any grass to grow under their feet and they have placed the whole matter in the hands of the secretary of the O.B.AA. \ While of a quiet disposition, The team left early in the day » : dred Goodeve, nutritionist of the » way of Consecon, Wellington, and Bloomfield, of special interest to me because Dad attended college there when a boy. We stopped to look over a ball game at Brigh- ton, ate at Port Hope, and reach- ed home at 7.30 after a very en- {Jable outing, thanks to Si. and ert.' IN VEGETABLES Montreal.--People spend dol- lars on buying bottles of Vitamin B when they could get plenty for five cents in vegetables, Miss Mil- Child Welfare Association of Montreal, told a group of teach- ers in the Household Science soc- tion of the convention of Quebec Protestant Teachers' Association, The amount of malnutrition in America was appalling, she said, and it was the teacher of home economics who stood in the best place next to the home to teach children that their mental alert- ness as well as their physical health depended to a great ex- tent on the food they consumed, Dean Sinclair Laird of the Macdonald College School for Teachers stressed the importance of having more household gelence taught in schools. If a wider cur- riculum were provided girls could learn ahout ™ata=i~le ans fabrics, be taught darning and mending, and I-- get according to their income and Should West- Baseball Club to food value. It was unior.un ORME GAMSBY TE Orme Gamsby, the well-known Orono sportsman, spent the Thans. | giving week-end on a trip to Prince Edward County and the Picton dis- For the benefit of his many friends, Orme below tells the story | of his holiday in his own inimitable way i-- ' "We arrived at Newcastle before BRITISH FINANCE 13 REMARKABLE United States Government-| al Report Gives In- side Story Current "Commerce Reports" is- sued weekly by the Bureau of For- eign and Domestic Commerce, Un- ited States Department of Com- merce, contain a striking reference, to the position of Great Britain, and the remarkable financial recovery which it is realizing, This article reads as follows, ~ "The last 'of the British 'crisis credits' obtained from France and the United States last year, in an effort to maintain the British cur- rency on a gold basis, was repaid on September 10, The treasury credits amounted altogether to the equival- ent of over £80,000,000 at par, of which half was borrowed in dollars and half in francs, The whole of the dollar credits and half of the franc credits had previously been repaid before the due date, but the remaining half of the franc credits was in the form of British treasury 1-year franc bills that had becn sold to the Fkench public and therefore could not be repaid before the due date, It is believed, however, that a consider- able portion of the bills had beca previously acquired by the treasury on the open market. "In addition to these treasury cre- dits, which were arranged yat the end of August last year, the Bank of England had previously obtained franc and dollar credits amounting to the equivalent of over £50,000,- 000 at par. The latter credits were arranged at the end of July, 1931, and two-fifths of the total was re- paid at the end of October, while the remainder was cxtended for a further threc months. The total amount thus borrowed by the bank and the treasury in the unsucessiul attempt to avoid suspension of the gold standard, was over £130,000,000 at gold parity." Magistrate: Why do you say the prisoner was drunk? Witness: Well, your worship, he was having a fierce argument with a taxi-driver, Magistrate: But that does not prove that he was drunk. J A-R-E-N-A Pablic Skating every day. After. General admission, 25c.' Chil. dren, Saturday afternoon, 10c. New York and New Haven Pro- fessional Teams practice daily 9.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m. Everybody Welcome 9.30, 7.30 in the evening to take thie tran- sit bus due at 7,30. It arrived at travelling, it appeared, as a special unlimited, and from its ir- regularity in arrival 1 jumped to the conclusion that it must have had a lady driver. At Belleville, we crossed the bridge, and started out on, to me, an unknown road. We passed deserted canning and cheese factories, and saw a nice cherry or- | chard, but could not stop long en ough to pick any, if there had been | any to pick. - Finally, we reach- ed a nice, homelike resort, with a light burning in the window, but ssleep had apparently taken possession of {ts occupants, and when the door was opened, we re- ceived a rather cool reception. However, coffee and cakes made their appearance, and that helped some to warm up the atmosphere, Soon I was comfortably quartered between flannelette sheets, but did not sleep any too well,--never do in a strange bed. 1 wag up before daylight, ----- but that's nobody's business, -- and encountered a movable egtairway, the funniest thing | ever met. Assistance loomed up, however, and relieved the situation. "Breakfast was enjoyed in a great sun room, overlooking the Bay of Quinte, running the entire length of the house, and furnished with rock- ing chairs, swinging sofa and other means of comfortable repose. Mo- tor boats and skiffs were visible be- low, and stone. steps led down to the water's edge, with a railing which made it comparatively safe for some, but not for a sixty-cight year old kid. Almost a Disaster "I visited various points of in- terest, among others "The Lake in the Mountain," which was the scene of a very narrow escape from drowning or disfigurement for life. The car would not 'whpa' when told, and away it went. A gasp, a crash and a smash, and it finally dropped into a Noah's Ark, which saved us from a real baptism. Willing work- ers appeared on the scene. A block and tackle were pressed into ser- vice and a telephone call was sent for reinforcements. Mr. Hoskins appeared, accompanied by a huge St. Bernard dog, and in due time away we went agajh under our own power. By the time the day, with its abundance of good cats, was over, we were ready for a sound sleep, Next day was Sunday,--and that mcant the Presbyterian Church for me, where we had a fine sermon by the Rev. Mr, Scott and nice walk home, the latter due to the fact that some good Samaritan had stolen the gas out of our car. No Imck Fishing "We went out in a motor boat in the afternoon. Both the girls in the boat fished but had no luck; it served them right. We were sup- posed to be under the guidance of a qualified enquirer and pilot, but nevertheless he landed us high and dry on a sand bar. The girls were almost terrified, but I man- aged to keep my equilibrium. We finally got off but we nearly ran out of gas on the way home, and 1 was constantly changing my LLS HIS STORY OF INTERESTING AND EXCITING TRIP position in the boat in the hope of relieving had another lovely summer resort, jointly owned and operated by the girls and attended a band concert given by the Hast- ings and Prince Edward military tand. An appeal for funds for the Picton unemployed was made, and only $45.55 realized. nearly enough ate, he thought, that many girls tcday got married without know- ing any of these things and the result was often disastrous, SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER'S RECORD Toronto.--Rev., D. A, Cowan area. From the mochine ¢ the situation, We meal at the inflicted a heavy toll on the enemy before reli | ron. Wournded Peraruavan soldiers are shown in the lower photo in the military hospital in Ascuncion, Paraguay. Parazuayans claim | to have virtually annihilated five Bolivian regiments, WHILE WAR RAGES IN GRAN CHACO Bitterest fighting of the war in the Gran Chaco is reported raging as Paraguayan troops, estimated to Aree, one of the strongest Bolivian positions in the entire disputed "1 nest in the top nhoto, Nolivian gunners number 14,000, attack Fort 1 ishing Fort Bog writes to the local press from Port Elgin, Ont.: A Brockville dispatch claims that Mrs. Cood of Frankville had taught a Sun- day school class for 50 years, which constituted a record. It is indeed a fine record of service. But I am afraid it {s not the rec- ord. Mrs, Angus Currie of Port Elgin has taught continuously for 57 years, and in that time has missed fewer than 30 Svndays. Two years ago, on Mother's Day, the Port Elgin United Church Sunday School, formerly Knox It was not but I enjoyed the Presbyterian presented Mrs. Cur- rie with an enlarzed portrait of herself and an address. The por- trait now hangs in the school room. Perhaps some' ofie can beat this wonderful record of service." Sunday oR GOOD MOLASSES" Yr Teoblc "Good news doesn't travel as fast as bad news. It spreads like good molasses --slow and steady." Mr. Picobac was referring to the steadily growing popularity of Picobac tobacco among pipe smokers. - "And another thing. ..speaking of molasses", continued he. "When people get the hanker for Picobac, they stick to it. They don't try it once and forget it. There's something friendly about Picobac...something in the quality... something in the way they grow it and cure it down here in Essex and Kent --that makes a mild... cool ...sweet smoke." LJ] {J ° LJ Picobac is a pipe tobacco, on sale everywhere. Try it. --and don't forget, you get more tobacco for your money. Jj ii -- Good for making cigarettes, too, LL Ny we RY y of a 1 STR-- |p : Handy Pocket Size Tin 15c¢. 34 Ib. Humidor Tin 75¢. Picobac Tbe Pick of Canada's "Burley Crop -- Grown in Sunny, Southern Ontario. "IT DOES TASTE GOOD IN A PIPE |" Imperial Tobacco Company of Canad, Limited