reyeuanuaw p? proposes Pro- mteur World ||qekey title series .__._..- I l'f-(W)—'.l‘ho Wflwriéaummrue‘: fwmm l" “a; ideas- nager Art Ross mm, Bruins sketched a. blue- °l 0 for c, post-season 1d Series" uhlch would matrh ‘rorteur ltwkcles 5'35" mam Mam“ “M1942 stanley Cup champions. ma“, made 1-11,; proposal before l. lumen“ meeting of hockey 81" s and Royal Canadian Air rco glad,“ n, acknowledged its ful- iillment. would be con-tlnflem 0" "coral factors. id be mom llshed. he said [Ilgzwrtoyial “Cans isn Air For‘ ma; or the senior City belt“! ‘in the Allan Cup, as he was con- tueht they would. Myers wmfld m", challenge the stanley Cup - ,5 to a best-of-three some! {or the world's championship. Pro- less ncmlnal expenses, "mil be earmarked for the Air Io"; know that half Will‘ Wm l5 m. greatest ln the world." said , pointing at. Milt Schmidt, Bglflyc Bauer and Woody Dllmflfil. 10mg,- Boston stars who will fin- al, out the season with Fl rs. "m the rest of the "6"" "all! u 50m r can guarantee you should win the Allan Cup." Bowling HOLY NAME BOWLING PALACE International League A S. 1-i- t, Blanchard 152 10'! 155 rwuer 1s: 194 2&8 g, Doyle - 143 286 188 o, Peterson 197 131 223 It. McCloskey 1B0 188 291 Total-will. stud Steamers:- I. Stormy 15'! 208 188 l.MnGee - 1'15 219 19'! ii. McQuarrie 122 189 194 ltltfcLellan 190 156 213 it Harley 236 221 205 Total-ZBSS High single '11. MoCloslrey 291. sigh three It. Harley 002, Moore I McLeod Ltd. Married Men:- ll Huggan 184 160 15B Geo MoQusid 155 1Z2 126 W McLeod 1 2 159 156 IGOIt-‘l-On 98 98 170 l-JJIeertl , e12 24s 161 '1\1te.l.—2354. Bachelors:- l-tDtlylo all 181 121 C McLeod 125 150 1'11 W- Josey 133 141 106 li- sherry 15a 1oz 1'21 ll. Flemming 164 149 17,3 Total~22l3. 51811 single A. J. Hearts M3. lllfill 1411.100 A, J. H8811! 616. 1- M. O. A. BOWLING ALLEY! Service Club League “Printers: .Dullcan ..... 175 233 liGnudet 163 257 l? M. Carmichael 177 135 355 -Power 204 214 1s A-Bltermn . 208 105 335 Total; 3021, Flgnllfen: - all............ 1 1......“ . . .13 ‘£3 223 LMacLean . . 142 no 114 ~ s: ti: Tom: 2713...“... 137 ill-Y (iruds: G- Stewart Total: 3124 liinsmen~ ~Ri¢v - 15o 152 23a g films 200 159 212 Lkllfillolson 14a 169 151 q. aback . 122 144 130 -Hutcl1esoti 300 7,34 214 Tqial: 2610. "it" Single: c. MacDonald-MS. "in Three: a. Small-HB- Buslness Girls‘ League 190 190 21B 140 165 Z41 103 160 121 218 177 95 96 117 12B Buck Privates; Duncan kl-Maclrnnan 'T00mb5 ..... M. MacKcnzle Sltama Tlllel: 22st. ' Cllallorals: - enry 194 107 152 E. §.l§.‘.‘§.§‘°“.. iii it? 133 lmlllkjflb m 169 11v Tom: 22m las 12o 14 167 123 114 151 96 101 7O 174 Eloéfihsvug. .. . 112 11a 118i : 8h ‘Thug: léfelllgyrfioqghmL "- ll- L-Ttzd-afz-nifio Gab M‘ N PW Ll) r an, "V York 39 r... 24 14 l m no 4o ‘m’ $11521: 311194 41 we , 5'12 nu s4 41 Iraq", “to 14 one m 4s W .122: new '1 "m" reuse e I51: f: .._.e Surprise rink of the recent Island curling bonsplel held hare were the above qunrtettc. They are Pranler Thnne A. Campbell's Surnrnerslde rink who after fllull h W. R. Cruikahsnlds P‘ rlottctown four. Runners-up For Islan \ 1 y Title. winning three sir-allht. match“ bowed out in "the From left w right they are Premier Th!!! A. Camp- bell, skip; L. R. Allan, mate; Fred. McRae, 2nd stone and Henry Gsudet first stone. O. K. Presby Winners Of Keefe Trophy A fink skipped by O. K. Presby Di‘ Keel’ theiy defeating E. J. Gallants four by a score of 12-2, Although winn. lng by o. one-sided tuargin the match was close throughout. with e a1 outcome on each end being decided. by the last rock, Me bers of the wlnninz rink are 0- K- Presby. ski . Bruce McLaren. mate, Alf MacNe ll. second stone. Sid Burhoe. first stone, Pia. t thre y narrowe 0W1 rinks in the Dominion ‘Lifeocompeg tition in matches Played yesterday. last night captured the George R. e u E B Ottawa Air Force Team Looms As Strong Threat For Senior Hockey Honors UITAWA, Feb. 16—(CP)-Futureof the American league. understuciy is Mickey Dillon of Kirkland Lake Blue Devils, Allan Cup ehantpiczis in 1939-40. Ike Sinhpsou of St. Onit.. has lwen the club's for the last UWO years. quotations on Canada's senior hoe- key tca/tns were in sharp realign- ment tonight under impact. of war. Conch Bill 'I‘0u1l:y'.=. Royal Canad- lan Air Force Flyers of the City senior League have taken shape as outstanding choices for the Allan 7 at‘? ‘Ilhree creeks are they were vlr u ally unknown outside Otto-wh- A cosmopolitan military sccvlce unit. drtuvn front many centres 111 Ontario and Quebec, lflycrs leaped from obscurity when Milt sehm dt. Bauer snd woody Dumart. the tslentcd Kraut kids from Kitchener. 01.1.. Joined the I" force in Montreal. Tonight indications were anoth- er top-flight. ptlckrliusor, lcadinl; Aircraftman Jolllllkl’ A'~‘1“3-‘-°“' would join Flyers tomorrow when they meet Boston Bruins of the unions; Hockey League in an sr fonoe war charity exhibition 881m- Acheson was transferred from Toronto where lic ‘Pliltwfl Wm‘ Marlbcros of the Scrum‘ A Assoc- iation and Joined a new 81'0"? °l student pilots today for :1 four- mmth training course at nearby ‘ rt. Ulllalllll $2210 sitar. Acheson we! the recipient of several fifties-film‘ al offers uthen lic played lasft so“ with Moittrcal Royals o Qugtbeg senior Hockey M84114“- T°uhey_ 35-year-old veteran of eizht NHL. seasons who started his professional career wit-h Strat- ford in the old Canadian-American League in i926. computes the Krauts’ potential value to Flyfig at, "three or four goals a. 881M but even without their, help 11B- ures his elub might have not somewhere in the Allan 0H9 1'5“- l-fe rates as his best line o. for- ward unit centred by b11150" tplekless MacNlchol of motion- om," W110 1m the Michigan-On- tat-lo Lmaguc in scoring before he came here two years aso to dull"- cale the feat. with Fly?“- Flanking M-rtcNichol are Buddy l-lellycr, who wittli Blllv uayler org Nick Knot-t formed the hnc uiilc sparked Oshawa Generals to the Memorial Cup two seasons ‘s80: and Elwood C-arrpbell of Clinton. ont..vtf1o played with Strntford Midvets and Kirkland Lair‘? Blue ppvila before ccmlna to Ottawa. Helityer wits synod bv Toronto M3319 Loaf: ("I the N11111:. 8i. U10 erd of the 1039-44 straws and loin- Qd m? Flvays by w,“ p! Pltvburtzh. Mike MlV-er and Vic Haneberrv or Soul-h Pcrcurflrle. Ont: {Mk Qgymnur or Hull. Que: "fled Miller and Mack Blnie of Otawa and p-vl Ryan of CornoraW and Brock- ville, Ont. ccmprL-e the other W" forward lines. my flwwkgv. rormerly with Tor- tmro Young Rangers of the Juri- lor 011A. and several ‘Northern Ontario nulls. teen-s up on lie- fere- with Jerri" °h""‘in c’ l/“l- 8’ Iqdteirl. Que. Irltrvrw Ftvvcllf‘ form North f-‘lvrlrcv of the PM“. Fret“ Amrb-"r Tweet“ e"d "l"- tzet. Dfnliq r! O""'t1. OWE. Clim- p'."" "*0 otlvr de-"ncl- ~ir. Twine": first-stunt’. n-etmintlcr in Icn Pinio- of Kitchener. 011l- ibrmelrly with Springfield Indians I" W. Tidmarsh won from W. P. Jardine. 13-6: while . V. Splllcttnwals an 11-5 winner v rinks now battle it; out for nior ourlinll trophy when be W.'I'. Weir, 9; HR. Carrutherl 4. J. E. Burden, 9; C. MacKinnon ‘l. Challenge Trophy HI. spillett 9; W. R. Cruikshank 8 ‘(First game of a. round robin series between three rinks) Sets A hot pace rllfllll-shootci- or ‘Ilookes’ entry in the niens armor Intercity Baskgt- tail lnug-uc here. is setttii pace 1:1 the individual scoring race and has been one of the mainstays of their quest. for the league title. McConnell, who came here from Winnipeg about three years ago, is rolling up points faster than ever before witnessed in these parts. He. has s-lvislted the points in l4 games this season for on exceptional average game. He has a, field age of .338, which means he sinks about one in every three shcts. Tookcs have set the pace lately but now share first place in league points each and a sudden game will be necessary to determine uho will win the bye into the finals fcr the league championship. 1n his first year of here McConnell topped the league in individual scoring. Last. year he transferred from Tookes to Maple beefs and his average fell off, But, once again teamed with Tookes, he is firing with deadly accuracy. Manager Ian McLeod of Tookes says MoConnells is attributed ehiefllv to the fact that» he never Iris fly at the lioskct until he is ‘HF’ m‘ lllli R 59-50 chance of converting. Miners trounce Millionaires 9-2 GLACE BAIY. N5... Feb. 11- tCPJ-Deltznccman he, ran i'.1l‘3llgl‘l the Sydfi¢fY_ "i190- lners defected Mll- llcnaircs 9-2 in their Breton Hockey untrue ltlfififlmwe of the season here. The Kendra. Ont. scored in every FQTWL m the first, two in the another slnslc in l“ Pat Desbiens, Glace ran his scoring string ft. Millionaires with t licpe of entering lh l‘In1slcs~ 01:111.. olnynli while North Sytlttu 10 r of its matches l0 fcrce North sydney for the last playoff spot. R.C.A.'F'. Flyers, Bruins battle To 5- all tie UITAWA, Fob. 17- (CEO-The season's most publicized hockey strait-Boston Bruins’ Kraut-came back to amateur ranks tonight; and scored the final goal with less titan a minute to play as their new team, Royal Canadian Air Force Flyers, bsztled Bruins to o. 5-5 exhibition tie. Centre Milt Schmidt finished the game cff with a flourish on a pass from linemate Bobby Bauer at 19:28 of the final period before 7,604 fans whose admissions biought. an undisclosed sum to the air force benevolence fund, The city league Flyers, trons- fcrmed overnight; into outstanding fzworltcs for the Allan Cup, got. just the spark they needed from the Krauts-Ba.uer, Schmidt and Woody Dumart, linemctes and buddies with Bruins since 1937. Against the faster Bruins they provided a blend of brilliant. yet. spotty hockey which always pleas- ed the dignified audience com- prised in part of high-ranking rtnilitory chiefs and cabinet minis- rs. Flyers entered the third period shielding a. 3-1 lead but; two goals by Bostoifs Jack McGill followed by successful thrusts from Lloyd Gronsdal and Eddie Wiseman left Britlns holding a 5-3 margin with four minutes left. But. Flyera weren't. through. An unheralded third-string forward, Mike Miller, coasted in from the left. side and beat Frankie Brim- sek from close range to revive lagging air force h apes. In the thrill-packed final min- utes, thc amateurs swarmed around the Boston cage before Schmidt got. his second goal of the game to tic the count. Renlembér When (By The Ca dlan Press) James J. Corbett. fcrnter heavy- weight. boxing king, dlfll at, his New York home nine years ago today, Ctcrbtott stunned thespoits world Sept. '7, i892, when he knocked out the great Jchn L. Sullivan in 2i rounds in the first heavyweight battle under Marquess cf Queensbury_rules. THE .57.". ___ARI-Q'LTE. .70. __ E_'E_Q_Q6BDLAN Canadiens Improve Chance Of Making Playoffs By Handing Rangers 2-1 Setback uonal Hockey Leofllle Iii-W“ “Km with q, z-i overtime victory 0;)?‘ the slipping lfifltllle lelders- F New York mnem- Wlw 1W "l" {$311, lgraifiht game and fifth 0f t er s . Victory. spoiling for Rangers the "Ott Heller 18h " in which they honored their durable defenoemfl-Il of l2 years service. brflllflhl? 5""- adlens 11p to half s some mm Detroit ma Winks and Brooklyn Americans who are tied for fifth plum and tldhtened the 118M l" he“ fifth-sixth place filly-OH spgoach Dick Irvin of Oaziadlens had to break up his Razzle-dazzle line for most of the game, when Gerry Heftfernan, the right. wing- er, took a. puck on the riglht side of his mouth. ripening I. cut that re- quired elght stitches But the kid; got back to start the overtime periccL-and promptly won the game. Thirty seconds after the face off they went swirling in and over the Heller-Pratt. defence, posed back and fortih quickly un- ll Buddy O'Connor ‘W85 in scoring posltion, half way to the penalty- Jeffries talks Of rigid rules IJOS ANGEIJES, Feb. 1'l—(OP)— The principal criticism James J. Jettlfries makes to modern day flatltcrs is that felw of them pay much heed io rigid training rules —8I1d rigid ls the word. The big boilermukcr, who held the world's heavyweight champ- ionship Bsainst all comers from 1899 until he retired undcfeated in 1905, knew and practiced all the rules of hard conditioning__ _M1les of rcadwork. hours of Tlllglvork and bag punching-and years of training before he began his real career as a prizefighter, were part and parcel of the Jefl. ries success formula. He wen and held his laurel; in the hardest kind of way. That is why Big Jim today holds a. cefl-nln scorn for some of the fancy-dans. Present (lay {ism spectacles draw an interested eye from big Jim, but he takes them more or less in stride. After all, he dominated one of the greatest Periods in the sport, and whipped the best those dnvs had to offer. Tlwice he wjhipped the great Fitz. slmmons. twice he knocked out the boxing master. Corbett. and his victories over the runners-up of that day, Sailor To-m Sfnirkey. Joe Choynskl. Gus Ruhlin and those big bruisers are epics of ring hi5- rv The one knockout against his record. when Jack Johnson stopped him in 15 round.- in 1910, came five years after he had officially re- ired from ring action. He was s5 years old then and weighed 285 pounds It stands today as, no (i=5. grace against Jim Jeffrirs. Far from it. Jetffrles. born in 1875. lolls the most. of his time fishing. keepinq an administrative hand over his little farm and fight club in sub- urban Burbank. cnsrafin "SUICIDE" sou/m z; VICTORIA ar-zavrsrrs. 1 The Crapaud Suicide squad de- feated the Victoria Beavers 2-1 in a fast and exciting game of hockey at. Victoria Rink on Wednesday night. In the rugged encounter llwro was olcntv of action as hclll teams put on the pressure. Getting away to a good start. Norton of the Suicide Squad open- ed the scoring early in first period. Play slowed down s lit-tie during the second session with the Beav- ers scoring once to knot the count. There was more excitement in the final period as Ferguson slammed in the winning counter for the Crapaud team. shot. tripe. His low shot. gave K0811? Jim ‘liens-y no chance. Both Hef- fernm and Peta Morin drew u- season sis m‘ had taken the leld in the second rlod, on a golf shot. by Alex Shi iokv that. bounced in the sir, eluded goalie Paul Bi- beauitks desperate stab. and fell over his shoulder into the can. Canadiens tied. it up in the third period when ‘Ierry Rcaxdon snared his own rebound _and fired it. back into the empty side of the ooze. SUMMARY ' lint Period Scorlng—Noue. Penalty-Watson Second Period 1—-'NeW Ymflf, Stilbid‘! (N. O0]- I- the Crystals gon ville, Pike) 4:21 Penalties-Guilty, Warwick, Heron. Third Period Z-Canadlens, '1‘. Bcardon (Blake. Bouohardt 3:15 Pen sl tu-Qlllltv . a wertlmn t 3—Canadien_<. Oégonnor (Heifer- nan. Morin) . Penalties-None. Paekoae 15¢ ‘l: Ib. fin 70¢ WILL PLEASE YOU- RAGE SEVELL SMTE “FOR HEALTH e-fgeligiltr There Is Abundant Pleasure As \Vell Skate Tonight R.C.A.F. hockey Team defeats Crystals 7-2 In the third hockey game o! the between an RCAF‘. team o. o draining 3011001 and the crystals the Airmen outplayed the Sumrnerslde team to a 7-2 vic- tory. The first game was a tie but the R.C.A.F. took the second and ing coach Jack Schur- sblo to be present at both these games. The R.C.A.1=‘. scored the opening goal in the first. period by Gunter, supported by Cztshln and Powell at 3.6. but the Crystals evened the soon at the 4.00 mark by Davis go- thrmlgh the defense after belhl; handed the pass by Btcelesnd Gal- lant. The rest of the period W's-s o game closely contested but- at the 19.20 mark Novlck on a play slur‘.- ed by Lawlor from behind the net to get the goal, the period ended 0d opened with g all out to even the score led by the attack of Gal- lant. Davis and backed up by goalie Bobbie Schunnan and a, stout de- fense line, but at 19.39 the R. C. A. F. fliers sgaln scored to increase their lewd 3-1 Lawlor getting the tally from Novick and Fry. The third period was a period of high scoring the R.C.A.F. four goals and the Crystals second one and last goal on s pen- SIRSAMUEL GflVARD,jnxnderdtbeOwatIlieauabQhq was born in Halrfmr, N.S., in 1787. With Efifisb firferem‘ be formed 4 company to carry out tbe Government’: proposal h unbrtimrc steamship: for railing vault in Ibo trans-Atlantic ma? Irwin. Knigbled for bx’: services bl tba Crimean Pa; b: Md ended a banner in I859- USTLY FAMous It’s character that has made Rosebud the Maritimefs favourite smoke. Mellow, ripe, mild and satisfying, if you smoke it once, you’l1 smoke it always. Rosebud PI PE TO BACCO Handy Humidor Pouch 15¢ Lew Jenkins Takes beating PHILADELPHIA, Fen. 11 —lA1'f _']":tking one of the worst bcstingl in his career, hi; fare it gtuy mess from cuts over both eyes and bloody nose, Lew Jélilllilf’ hopes regaining the lightweight boxing chan-gionship suffered u sever» set- back tonight. wli- Itlzvflv punched out a deem-m: l0 ‘Olllld de- cisiiott over the former txilenoltietr before 8,000 at the Alt-nu. :i alty shot, scored by Gallant. Brnith breaking away at m? 435 ma!‘ smred the opening tnl-y’ of 13155 It'l- sion. the next two were ' red Underwood both on of: fmm Wartley. Novick scored tnc lolly-h on o. pass from A. Lawlor, W-Ch o€ktocond to l0- eu : RCAgz Goal Taylor; Defenoo, MacDonald. Hoar. C<lm"<\‘~1. 311111111 Forwards, Gunter. P1» . Cnsuln, Pry, Lztwlor, Novick, StllllViUl Un- derwood, Viiurtlfiy- _ Crystals: Goal. Bobbie bciimmsn! defence, Woodside, csuant. Ugrwflv 1yn_ forwards, Steele. C- 6119551 Davies-S. __._,_-_ NEW INDIAN MONEY msrw DELHI, Inclia-(CP) - ‘B’! Indian Government is mintdDS It half-ems coin to meet the 8N5" 1y increased demand for mall 001B!- The new half-anus rmdi-w QT"- ent. anna coins will be minted in It nickel-brass alloy to save nickel. TlPPlE AND “CAP” STUBBS WELL. HE BE GLAD SHE LEFT-- --MR.BUDGE HAS GREAT RESPEQT FOR COUSIN NllLLlE, AN’ I5 VERY sonnv st-te LEFT-- AWFUL NAR AREN'T YOU '5 wfoofsltu Mnfaruolee new ESCAPE CAP swans: DON'T vou SKY _ ANOTLAER woes- NAMED t1 AN Loom GRANMA! coo/ls DON'T MY “°~.e.§“.?“°e'..‘ eu|cl<l LOOK! MR. BUDGE" CHILDRBN eET au By Westover weutnflwu wtsu T0 MAKE HIM M0115 so, I SHALL, ASXJUR SERVA 5E fiLAl) To AS3131‘ You ' Ot-Lfiascotyotn Rsuemasma ‘(HOSE LOVE scenes mun: HAS MADE wntvare PERRY 414920;. 0oz; "re AT n _ HE TRYlNe To gMAmrcv tyre To,‘ live _ DAVL- -_,“’-* Servo‘