lllll-»‘.‘lll‘_'Y rltuavi' .§,g9Q...-.',_..=-,-,.'»=,. »=- ~ < -.. r »'1‘i'I_'E - ' ~ E‘rowN GUARDIAN ` ` ' ' H PAGE sisvisiv " nf _ , ._ A _ , ,_ 1 ==`== "‘ noxmc * _ _jf 1 °' . _. HOCKEY BASKETBALL wRas'rr.1No r OTHER SPORT l Nfl)/S°‘....SPORT\)/OitiD _ L .ii INIIIIIUIC ,ENGLA DDEFEATSNJTCANA PSET 2 - eff" ~ §Cana¢la ’s Defeat A Biggest ;Upset In A History Of lternationall_Vi t, G' -fa! _fl _ N 81’ 017183 §..¢.-.nd setback _suffered By Iiiiisss of Constance nvidia Samuels, Chief Canadian H ` I 'F' Skating ,Competitggg n ‘gate ' fc an ml n Press b Guardian’ UARMISCH-PARTENKIRCEIEN. G¢Hn,ll§yl",°clt‘a¢lb,‘vg_°LClnM15 sur. icred two stunning setbacks at the Winter Olympic; “day me |;nK||§h i...»i<¢,»» team defeating ins title-aefendm 2-i after ins piniiinion-.. einer llfiili' 1" 'h° “`°'“°“`l "l'\l\‘9 lkllllll. Mrs. Constance Wilson Samui,-ig had been knocked out of singles competition hy_|,Nn°h|¢|,_ ' The Toronto star was resting easily in lioepiegl m||||h|_ 'I'-rc remit, of the Canadian-English tilt was the biggest upset in the final round. Foster Outstanding biggest factor .in tumin margin they minute of the thrilling game. _ Officers of the Canadian As- fociation were surprised. however, when Foster and Archer lined up with England tonight. They ap- parenxly expected British'officia.ls io renprocate their sporting ges- ture by not asking the Canadian team to play against the black- listed men. The downfall of the Canadians overshadowed the rest of th ro 0 D ' gram, which saw the great lvar Ballsrigrud, Norway‘s world cham- pion, win the 300 metre speed skating crown, and three other hockey games of the second ser- ics result as follows: United States 3 Czechoslovakia 0: Germany 2 Hungary i; sweden 1 Austria 0. . white 31st. ~ Tommy White of Saint John. the only Canadian speed skater here, lost many prcclous minutes on the turns in the 500 metro racc wound up 31st in the big The lithe Ballangrud equalled the Olympic record in winning tha event in 43.4 seconds. His yoimg Norwegian compatriot. Gtvnr Krog, followed him by 1-10th second in the finiil stand- ing, while Loo Freisinger, 19-year- °id Chiraaoim. finished third. Delbert Lamb and Allan Potts. two other Americans, were fifth and tied for sixth, respectively. living the United States its first Wints. ‘ White drew the applause of the crowd for his excellent style. The 10-(year-old former elevator boy of Saint John could not, however. hold hLs speed on the curves and thgecrobbed him of any chance to P0 tpoints. 1-its time was 49.6 seiprids. Mrs. Samuels appeared a trifle ihlky as she started executing linear-hool figures but she gained D ision as the competition pro- irressed. The crowd of 5,000 was electrified by her sudden collapse. Sonja Henle Favorite ' $01119. Henle of Norway, world champion sinca'i926. executed the lfitkv loops. rockers and counters of the compulsory figures with her “ml grace and remained the fev- orite for the title. §ecausc~0f the complicated sys- ltm under which points ‘ are Wafdfd. rating the competitors could be nothing but guesswork. it was generally believed, however. that if anyone was to give Sonja A stern run for the crown, it would he either Cecilia Ooilcgc, youthful English Mins. 01' tho United states champion. Msrlbeivinson °f_Bostcn. Both were impressive in thc prclimlnarics, as wasalso Etuiko lnada, a diminutive cn- trant from Japan. The compul- '°l'y figures will bc concluded to- morrow. In shutting out the Cscchosiov- lktsu hockey squad, the,Unitcd 30505 team gave its most im- pressive display of the gamk. After the exciting but scoreless "fit varies, anna ' sheugiuicuy 0! Montreal opened the for' "lt initial American goa1'1n the second. I-is was abreast cf, Phil ll Batte as thc iattcr carricdfthv buck and fcintod f/he Eutopchh ‘twice out ot position. 'rho French Canadian _slid thc bud* miie .nur me is- -gain h of the net. ltid Frank in led in to coaipictetthcdo- Nine minutes later. La Cette - ‘heturiaeauamihamm dim ceo. so or mam i-im °,\l’fison'a l Canadian 1, ._ ' ‘af-. ---~ -1 ut' ' ' ‘lf , ` ‘ “F 'NWO WC? "“' '| ~ the Canadians was the Eng- Jimmy Foster, former and Moncton player the Hawks of the_lat- the Canadian amateur 1933 ,and 1934. had a com- territorial not pierce armor after Ralph' Bt. Germain, Montreal and Ottawa. had beaten him in the 13th iho lilsiory of the International Winter Gam , 1( "1 1| team Siwrtinr the Merle Leashes been asferiai iancliymgie "|1i:1m1.u1 did not oust them from the championship hunt. Vlegm-|¢. gy" |||m'“,.,. tomorrow and Germany later apparently would lift the Canucks into l- cncecf the professional Bmkatoon I Sheiks. The Swedes who turned back Austria have been brought along-'by Vic- Lindquist, who wa: a mei_nl>er_ of the .Winnipeg ,team that won _ the Olympic ` hockey championship for- Canada in 1932. A shock to United Stat/es cham- pionship hopes came in the bob- sledding _competition A.merica's two entries, piloted by J. Hubert Stevensand l"raricis,'l‘yler of Lake Placid. N- Y-. Wvtmd up in fifth and. lfith places, respectively, at the and of thefirst da.v's racing. r.. _ _ Boston Bruins Overwhel m Chihawks 7-I _ (C. P. by Guardian’s Special Wire) BOSTON, Feb 11 - Boston Bruins, tripped twice 'in a row during their furious dash for is National 1-lockoy League plavoff position, regained the winning ` stride by overwhelming Chicago Black Hawks '1-1 tonight before 12,000 fans. Burly Babe Siebert, who regist- ered twice unassisted. sent the Bruins on their way by driving an angle shot past goalie Mike Kar- _aizas after six minutes of play and Teddy Graham, another Boston flcfcncernan, clinched matters. by l-E1-lminil with Sieberl. after 17 minutes. The lone Chicago goal came 18 seconds after Graham turned on the red light, Glen Brydson scor- ing in combination with Don Mc- Fadyen and Johnny Gottsclig. While rrnning up the ropheavy =core, highest the Bruins have totalled this season and the most one-sided upset the Hawks have suffered, the other two Boston defenceman, Eddie Shore and Bill "F'lush" Hoilclt. cf North'Sydney managed to drive angle shots past .Kar-akas. Dit Clnpper scored twice. Hollett, pullvd iip from Boston Cubs to fill in for the injured Roger Jciikius. had :1 few de- fensive lapscs but ills offensive play was brilliant. _-vi 0’Ma`hofzy Sued For Alleged Match- Ran - out (A. P.“By G`u`a`rdian's Special Wire) .GALVl!BON. Tmms. _ Feb. _i1_-_ Wrestling champion Danno O'Ma- hcny was sued for $151215 today for allegedly ‘running out on-a match.. The former Irish guardsmaxrs manager, Ja-ck McGrath, also was named‘m the action. filed by pro- moter Ralph Hammonds who said 0'Mahony caused him “that much `grlc!" 'when' he 'failed to appear here .Saturday night -for a. match with Juan Jumberto, Mexican wrestler. How Tlrey Stand (C. P. By Guardlan's Special Wire)_ OLYMPIC HOCKEY s'l‘.AN'JlNG ‘ Group A ¢-2g¢¢-€ oo -ooH Great Britain Germany Canada .......... Hungary Group K* United States Sweden Austria Czechoslovakia 0 o-H robin aerles. with each (No tie games played. Q -mw1 »n~»> Bild 'U OO QQ!-‘IQ ~oo> bi "U os: 2 0 Round team in group meeting other three. Two leading teams in each group ad- Lau_)yers.And Rovers Take Ki l k' R' k I t C ,n,oc, ,rn no amp Rovers curling learn, skipped by Bill Townshencl pushed their way to the fore in Charlottetowns curi- ers elimination series by two vic- tories in yesterdays matches while it vfaveriiig Kinlock team dropped tivo matches, lust their grip on first place, and slipped down to third position on the standing. Big 1=lo\ir,sl°w1ins> 7100- i'i-Abbies, Pound (Kelly) 7120- 18-Ahbles, Grant, B132. 10-Abbles, Cameron (Fiannigan) 9:37. 20+-Abbles, Grant, 0:50. Penalties-Blacquierc. Campbell. BDYAL8 DEFIIAT SUPEBIOBS 2-1 In an exhibition game, Junior Royals took the measure of the Su- perfors by a score of 2-1. The game wasfought at a fast clip throughout three abbreviated periods. Royals went into an early lead in the first period as Jay sh°t 110108 `Wllf Whalcn’s pass for the only acorc of the session. Throughout the second session, Royals pressed continually' but superiors scored thc _only goal, Dowling slamming in Peters' rebound to_ knot the count at 1-l. LMA in the third period Stan Mc- Oiintick gave the Royals their vic- tory as he broke fast at centre ice to cutwit thc opposing defence and goalie. backhanding the puck liigh into thc draperics. MONTREAL. Feb. 11-Waivers were asked today by -Montreal Can- adiens on three members of the tail-enders in the Canadian section of the National Hockey League. Those on whom waivers wen asked are: Pit Lepine. veteran centre. Armand Monliou. winger. ,and Irvine how, defenceman. Trounce “ Maroons 7-3 .il (A. P. By (maniian's Special Wire) DirmoI'r, Feb. u~netrcit ned Wings flashed a dazzling attack in thc first and third periods and gave the Montreal Maroons a decisive 'l-3 trimming before 10,000 fans here to- night to take it firmer grip on the leadership of the National Hockey Leagues American division. Chi- cago's defeat by Boston permitted the Wings to go four points ahead of the three other teams in the ec- tion, all hunched in second place. In beating the Stanley Cup cham- pions, Detroit poured in three fast goals i.n the opening period, scored .another in the second period, then closed with a, three goal burst in the final frame. Defeat' prevented the Maroons from going out in front in the Canadian division race where tlieyuafe tied with Toronto Maple Lea . PLAY DR-AW MONTREAL, Feb. 11. - (C.P.) - After outpiaying New York Rangers for most of the game, Cana.1Lens hod'to be satisfied with a 1-1 tie in their ,National Hockey League game tonight as ‘Dave Kerr per- formed iu brilliant style in the New York net and a tight checking band of' Blue Shirts protected him well in the pinches. Canadiens outshot the New York- ers 34-24 and had the odvantagain every period but the third, when Rangers tried desperately for a. goal in 'an effort to keep pace with Boa- ton and Chicago in thc battle for the American section’a't.hird place. The tie left the Bluc Shirts in a deadlock for second place with the Bruins and Chicago. Canadiens cut the idle Americans’ third place mar- gin to two points in the Canadian section. Today ’s Program At Olympics (C. P. by Guard.ta.n’s Special Wire) Hockeyz- 2:30 p. m.--Canada. vs. Hungary- 4:00 .p m.-Czechoslovakia vs. Sweden( 8:00 p. m.-England vs. Ger- IDBXIY. 9:30 p. in.-United States vs. Austria. Bob-Sleds:- 8:00 a. m-Final heats four- man championship. Speed Ekatlng:- 9:00 a. m.-5.000 metre champion- ship. Skling:- 10:00 a. m.-18 kilometre race. combined event. Figure Skatingz- 9:00 a. m.-Women's school figures. (Subtract five hours for Atlan- tic Standard Time). TUESDATS OLYMPIC HOCKEY RESULTS England 2; Canada 1. United States 2, Czechoslovakia 0. Germany 2, Hungary 1- Sweden 1 Austria 0. DOWN THE ALLEYS HOLY NAME HALL BOWLING Commercial League Anchorsz- C. McKenna .. K. McMillan .. D. McMahon ._ J. Bitner .. G. Mclvfahon .. Total-2828. Eagles:-» ` E. Vessey G- Gillis .. -- J. Tierney -.. .... J. Malone ... . J. Hogan ...._ Total-2822. High single G. Gillis 298. High three G. Gillis 666. Tonight at 'l p. m. Spuds vS~ Hawks and at 8.30 Invlncibles VS- Prince Grocery (Big Four League). LADIES BOWLING Kelly at Mclnnia Trophy Hnrrlcariesz- A71 289 126 150 276 177 212 185 162 160 162 178 145 208 147 211 223 ` 165 217 225 184 187 201 190 197 -146 189 298 155 152 130 170 232 168 G. Doyle .. P. McKinnon .. M. Mcrarlane .. -- M. McKinnon .,. Total-2229. Co-Edl:- 1'.»D0\l8Bl\ ~.» -..- F. Mailett ... .... G. Garnhum .. H. MJ:Millal'i ... .. M. Walsh ... Tots-l-2492. _ High single G. Doyle 380. High three G. Doyle 886. _ N. H. L- STANDING Canad Tor to...... Americana .. Canadiens . . . Amcrl Dotilolt Uhloilb 176 133 132 146 116 183 113 143 104 111 135 170 163 201 135 194 201 122 167 247 166 102 114 131 166 121 :assi-szasi :=~r§=:=:v§ was-.sgguacnuug ease assed S88> 233* 2531 385 .KIIIIII ....- , .. Red , Wings 1 Canadian officials were described AP 833 2 5 -a 3 5 S gozil-tending brilliance of Jimmy for England under a cloud of controversy, sent Canada 's Olympic hockey team down to an amazing 2-I defeat tonight. Far superior in every tlepfirt- ment excepting in goal, the Canadian hosts directed an al- most incessant barrage on the Old Country net before tumbling to their first defeat in the his- tory of the international winter games. However, their hopes of maintaining Canada’s unbroken chain of Olympic champion- ships, stretching back to 1924, and to 1920 counting the year the ice game was first demon- strated, were far from squelch- ed. They have two games re- maining in the second series of round robins and victories in these, over Germany and Hun- the title. Dramatic Climax Upsetting the Canadians was a dramatic climax to the acrimony between English and Canadian hockey officials over the eligibility of Foster and another English-born player who grey hockey-wise iii Winnipeg, Alex Archer. They were suspended by the Can- adian Amateur Hockey Association last year for leaving the Dominion without permission. Tho Inter- national Hockey Federation con- curred in the suspensions on the eve of the winter games, but they were waived for duration of the Olympics at the behest of the Can- adians. i as surprised, however, when the English team included Foster and Archer in the lineup tonight. Ap- parently they did not expect the British Ice Hockey Association to ask the Canadians to play against two players blacklisted by the C.A.H.A. Trick Goal But they were more surprised when a. trick goal gave England the lead 20 seconds after the game got underway. Cv. Davey. a forward recruited from the Streatham club, collared the puck in English ice and hoisted it from the Canadian bluelirie, It drifted into the net past the startled veteran Canuck goalie, "Dinty” Moore of Port Colbomc, 0115.. and to the amazement of the packed stadlum_ Thirteen minutes of heated chafkes brought a. tielng goal. Big R9-1190 St. Germain. Ottawa-born star of Montreal Royals, captured a pass from Jimmy Huggarty of Port Arthur in England's zone a.nd feinted Foster out of position to score. That was the last mistake the netman made. It was Foster who played goals for the Moncton Hawks who won the Allan Cup and the Canadian amateur championship in 1933 and 1934. Cai'iad.a’s Olympians knew of his brilliance, but tonight it was 5UD€i'-brllllHnCe he flushed in their eyes. ` Foster Too Good Through the scoreless second per- iod and in the wild, pulsating third. the determined Canucks crashed the Old Country defence almost at will. Shots rattled on the English citadel from every angle and from every distance, but Foster tended them off to the jubilant shouts of a crowd that was largely pro- English. 'I‘he decisive goal was caged by E. Brenchley. a member of Rich- mond Hawks who has starred for England throughout the Olympics. It came after G. Dailley of Wemb- ley Lions had carried through the Dominion‘s defence to feint goalie Moore out of position before flip- PUJ3 a short pass to the waiting Brenchley. The all-imiwrtant goal came in the 14th minute of the final period. It grew from one of the few Eng- lish raids that -threatened Moore during the last two frames. Faced by the deficit and with only a few minutes left to play. five Canadians charged deep into Efliilish territory. They drove the Duck at Foster every time they could get a stick on lt. but the Old 0°\I\1¢ry side nursed their advant- llo by repeatedly firing the disc the length of the ice. Thrilling Spectacle the game was 'probably the in gary, apparently would place them among the four finalists for 1 Prem v. iiiiectatoru point of view winnipeg, and viewr oiand. 0! .i...@-__ r Goal- tending t Brilliance Of Jimmy Foster Gives Old Country Victory M Canadians Far Superior On Play But Were Unable '1`o Pierce Armor Of Ex - Moncton Hawk Goalie. _ ‘ (C. P. Cable By Gua'f