. ' . gg ,ff _ g MM; ..._ ' ~ l 'rue cuARu.>*i'rs1'owN, ouA1u>1A1~. . PAGE seven-t . . Ti’ """"`l " f-'-" 1 nt, .Tri ii* i if , L - , 'e' *anna-t eowuuo BOXING HOCKEY BASKETBALL WRE ' STLING OTHER SPORT NEW$°‘n.$PORTWORLDv . ug in a third Ptrlod all-B001 mm; ,pint-gg by veteran Bill mm L. P. Unions eliminated Highfield Granite! from the City ww playoffs Saturday night at no Arena. winning B to 8 and ,vsmomins the Cranltes' two-ical gd which the losers had piled up m gh, opening game of the total- pay genes. The round score was Union 9, UIBBHAS G. are during Betula: to In ,vw 1 it was an ranites would L. P. U. Lund's long second ses- ,Du in which . elbows and muweNfg¢elyused,mdonthe ,hy the Union team had the edge. pm- five minutes in the finll pmod the score remained un- changed, but when Sharron pasted me Beriwtying counter behind gmc: on “Bmelt” Gillis’ pass the winners went on a wild scoring ms, mains five scale fo their wtsi before the fifteen minute wg had been reached. Bill Ryan pumping in three of them, two of mem in as many minutes and un- QEE; ei; sr; §§g§0a; "gn bot _ twld t~\1° “mend mve du!'1D8 assisted. . The Granites came te them- yelves in the last six minutes of mn game and 00ntr0lled tho Dil! but me deficit, was we lure el- mough their herculean efforts did bring them two counters. Murley me Johnson scoring on combin- ation efforts sm nym. D. Gills md Hiishes were outstanding for the winners While "Don" Lawtor. shifted from defence to guard the draperies. turned in s bang-up performance. osx, Johnson. W. Rodd and saunsen bein: the me-rk blurs of me Granltes’ cause. lineups: L. P. U.: Gall, Lawiorz defence. wynonald, Binns; forwards, B. ryan, D. ciiuis, Hughes, G. Giius, Sherren. Lund- nighnehn Goal. Blazer: defence, Saunders, Steed: forwards, B. Cox, Johnson, W. Rodd. Mllrley, Rodd. Hurry. Referees: Chick Williams, G. McMahon. SUMMARY Fiflt Period l. Highfield. Steed. unassisted. 2. L. P. U-, D. Gillis (Shermn). Rmslty: Hughes. A second. Period I. L. P. U., Lund (unassisted). Penalties: Binns (3), Johnson. . Thhd Porloil Bherrm (G. Gillis). D- Gillis (unassist- Ryan (unassisted). Lund (unassisted). .".°§"9'.* rr rr- rvrv fvré FS' F5' 9- L. P. U.. Ryan (G. Gillis). ro. Highfield. Marley (steam. , 11. Highfield, Johnson (Cox), lor play. In the second session the losers did all the forcing and succeeded i;‘g;1\sk1i`nu£k-it even-stephen, Le. . y resrgugrd, be t Baker unassisted. 8' ms Both teams scored a goal apiece in thi' third period and the were is a fair indication of the play. 7-4‘°'1°1‘ to Bursoyne. lust the re- VUN D15! of the opening Holman 8001. made it 2-i during the lsst tm minutes. wane rnmasmium banged in Archibald's pass with after Holman’s had beaten elm "money boys" 5-i in the first game of the series. As was the case in ihv cnenins same of the pmysrr series, their tilt produced the best hockey- Fast and than describes the way it was fought throughout. Holmsns outplayed their oppon. ents in the fh-st period, leading 1-0 at the bell on a Burgoyne to Law. cohnalties: Bsunders. Hughes. x. . HOLMAN’S AND BANKERS IN DRAW While the L. P. U. provided an upset in the first game of the evening Bankers failed to halt the fast Holmans Victors team and the latter squad won their way in- to the finals undefeated. Satur- dly’s game ending in a 2-2 draw lessthansminutetogoforthe equalizer. " rank Cox, breaking up qppos. ing attacks with his sweeping poke-check and at the same time Mlclnnls. Lineups: Bolm.an's: Goal, Baker; defame, B\1\‘80yne, Ferguson; forwards, F. Cox, Lawlor, Mclnnis, I-Iowatt, Holman, Whitlock, White. Burden, 'I.ePage; forwards, F. Mc Millen, Archibald, Johnson, Lap- thorne, Archer. Referees: G. McMahon, “Chick” Williams. ' summer Fill Period ~ 1. H0lma.n's, J. Lawlor (Bur- w : I.ePsge, Burgoyue. _ Second Period 2. Bankers. LePa.ge (unassist- edgensltiesz LePs.ge, Ferguson. Third Period . 4. Bankers, F. McMillan (Archi- bald). F FV 9 , Ryan (unassisted). Penalty: Mclnnls. [If- leusonover the Stanley Cup hold- tn. The score was 2-1. With the Win. the Bruinh Went hte a tie with Chicago for second Wwe in the American division. two _ Wlnts behind New York Rangers. AMIBKB' PLAYOFF CIIANCIB BLD! New-vonx,-res. 11.-- gxirfsik canadian: muh; mme 0|' , Amujggng' ghgn. W look pretty slim sy defeating 'hem ii-1 before 1o,ooo in |. National HMG? League game hers. Victory i$'t.°`i‘.‘.‘.`i?“‘i " “'€£.‘I.*"‘li T.“'$ 0 -p scs s g lntemational division. The Habit- tifi tit" "?.!Z.."“‘.i~.°°.i.“‘°’° "‘“‘°‘ “ an , hfllnsdiens took thelesd on s goal y Aurel Joliet early in the first \’"1°<| by smart. close defensive VW- Ghbckins was careful until _ F-0-1°-u-m SKATING roN1GHT All Waltz Programme 14-BANDS-14 I smléayfmg, ' | ‘ 1'0|,”..a. I which ‘ as ii E: ` 39%, discount §,“;n,,g,_{:‘,”-,h;°:‘§t;,2§§‘,1'°M human “ummm” Goldsworthy slipped away for the final tally with the aid of Joliet and Pete Leplne. J RANGERS TRIM BED WINGS Dl.'I’ROI’I‘, Feb. 11.-(A.P.)-New York Rangers trimmed Detroit Red Wings 5-3 tonight in a thrill-pack- ed. National Hockey league match before 1,000 fans. Two overtime goals turned the trick. Detroit has mule I starts without gaining e victory. Outplaying the blueshirted visit.- ors for two periods ,the Wings had a one-goal lead in the third until Butch Keeling tied it up on s pass from Bill Cook. ._ _ . . lla. my .._.. ‘mu/ayevpy nnutltiml Shore Centre Of Near Riot After Knock- ing Cowley To The ce. BT. LOUIS. Feb. 1‘l-Easily out- Plflyills Boston Bruins throughout the third period. Bt. Louisliagles Sv-tim!-'-v night i.ooi¢.the hnbmwm- ers for a 3-0 ride in a National Hockey League match that ended Kelly rushed down for another good . 5110i- 196113’ Put it past Thompson but the seal was ruled we late by . the referees. A score of spectators rushed on the lee. Eddie Shore hit Cowley, knockin him to th ic ' send e. team of stars to England next summer to compete in the English chainpionships at Wi 1 don, it was decided yesterday at the annual meeting of the Can- adian Lawn Tennis Association. Laird Watt and Bob Murray of Montreal will definitely make the trip, while Marcel Ralnviiie, Can- adian champion, will also likely be included on the team. 'I'he team will leave Canada Jum 2 and stay in Iimgland to Aug. 2. END UF MARCH 'IOR.0N'I‘0. Feb. 1'i-The Ne- tionai Hockey League playoffs will g e e. Manager George "Buck" Boucher .of the Eagles rushed up and after a. few words with Shore swung at the defencman and a. near riot was St°Pf>€d when omclals plunsed into the milling crowd of spectators and separated the pair. The Eagles goals were scored by Glen Brydsoh, Carl Voss and Cow- ley. MON'I’R.EAL. Nb. 17-Hopes of Detroit Red Wings of taking a . Play-of! berth in the American sec- ' tion of the National Hockey League leadin n n erous es, , , "5 1f'33°5° 'W 1~w1°5°“5=1d Along The Sldellnes (By Pat Power) grew dimmer today following a 'I-3 defeat at the hands of Montreal Maroons here last night. The loss stretched the Detroit string of winless games to ll and all but shat- tered their chances of making the play-offs. before an Island winner is declared. . REAL VETERAN of - hockey Adhd one that P18-lied H 18180 part in L. P. U.'s Vicf»0l'Y W9-‘3 prominent at the Arena Saturday night.. We speak of Bill Ryan who started out on a hockey career twenty-three years 58° and Wh° showed in the above-mentioned gum that "Fat.her Time" may hsvetabenamofspeedoutcf his ones-nimble less but that he still possesses that keen hockey mind that in 1928 while he was performing with Bathurst Paper- makers, earned him a selection on several All-Star Maritime lineups in pomp;-my with such former stars In th, overtime Keeling scored again and Cecil Dillon clinched l matterswlththreesecondstogo by scoring when the ¢°8P°f\t»s Wins! were caught ‘far down the ice. Johnny Sorrell opened the scor- ing in the first. Murray Murdoch then tied it up and New York went ahead on Bill Cod¢’s first goal. Syd Howe evcned matters again in the second and Eddie Wiseman sent the Wings into the lead less than two minutes before the second stanza ended. Than came Kseling's tying gcslinthethlrdandthetsliies which gave New York the victory in the overtime. _______.____. MUNARBHS HELIITUIIRMV ...__-_-s PSE., lst. 55;; te. its _igiiis §§§i ,@2333 seg.; spectators. ' The tie ended a h exten § afoot the Alberitnfismsv and Hobie I _ as Chee Gregory. the We DEW Crosby, another Charlottetown boy. Jack Ingram and the Lane boys. Find and Temple, of Halifax. 0 O O ILL! '1‘HIR.EE smart K0!-18 in B the third period went s. Ions way in clinchlng the game and series and his young teammates were loud in their praise of his performance. surrounded the future activities of the team and it speaks well for tho behind the scenes that the locals failed to quit and fought it out to the me Qoodgelinw and J.-,hnny Sorrell bitter end, even though on the receiving end of some tough brea However, all that is history and interest will new center on the Downtthree goals shortly after the The Maroon second line of Herbie Cain, Russ Blinco and Earl Robin- wI'IlH Il-IE ANNOUNCEMENT over the week-end that the Abegvrxexlts so Wen on E Mori S e to ab ' his Bankers: Goal, Rice; defence. were through for this season and would hang up their blades next. fall rolls around, finis was written to senior hockey in t Province and brought to a close the most turbulent season that Island goal and wo assists and Bunce R fans have ever witnessed. Almost from the outset a state of uncertainty Koay and m mils; Bob G,-,wie ks H, n t ns pre gr off eight points. Cain notchlng three goals for himself, Robinson a Se sco'ed two goals Herb Iewis Eb ~ each scored for Detroit. Intermediate and Junior playoffs, the playoff dates having just made known- by Vice-President J. E. Stems of the M.A-I-`f.A. In classescharlottetown should be well represented. Abbies appear to about the class of the Island League while the two finalists of the City League, H0l.ma.n's and L. P. U., are quite capable of giving any in - mediate squad a hard session before conceding defeat. Junior Abbies have again iced a. formidable squad in defense of their last yea,r's lsurels, although they too will encounter plenty opposition from the Royals a e I-IE WINNER OF THE City Hockey League faces a tough schedule T this coming week when they will be forced to play four games in ‘ five days, three of them coming on successive nights. At present Holmans and the L. P. U. are on the eve of their total-goal series to , decide the title. They meet at the Arena tonight in the first struggle 3' H°1ma“5» B“'3°y“e (L“'W]°’)' with the second game on the books for Tuesday. Out of this series will emerge,e. winner that meets the fast Montague Primroses Wednesday at the Arena and then travel to the Eastern metropolis Friday for the second game. A lot of hockey for even seasoned players and a task that will require the utmost in the matter of physical condition. O I O I Bruins And Black Hawks l-IILE HOLMANS doing the expected and elim.\ns.tlng a w baitling'Bankers team from further competition. L. P. U.'s st Q ning defeat of the favored Highfield squad came in the nature of an Go I t I F r S d upset. Their two goal margin built up in the first game seemed suffi- n 0 O » cient but several shifts in the Union lineup proved the necessary strat- ` e 0 . - egy and gave them the necessary scoring-pun.ch to rap home six goals Po 6 hi a hectic third period and put the ultimate verdict beyond a. doubt. ga Their coming series with a cagey Holman team should provide fast and rugged hockey. The finalists play an entirely different brand of the omoscog rob. 11. _ Boston the middle of the third period after ““*‘°““e§iP§*15“;g‘_‘,’5uff1‘°mU“‘!§’1‘;’§hf>’,‘, ‘:f,§\u“;°i§,e‘,§‘“f,“,§,§§§e'§}§eif1 ’;,°§;,,,§‘;f,p,;“y,f{§ Bruins gave Chicago Blackhawks a Armand Mondou's speedy solo :usb 9 11188 . a th P sn wack that has been brmzmg them Emu” :%,ms¢‘:f,§,e:§iv%,P1f€':§,¥%1t¢h.:g had msn tggugggxr £13; \-,y'n\e;,¢mn .8 gnmsdisengeinidgoarspbliiing 1; be close throughout and fans who attend 7 ° “W P y P’ urea of ienty mulls snmnwr is to be decided by the iixst vietorynf the National League Carr and the Americans threatened We B55 P ° to get a few more before Leroy ° ,° ° , , , f1*P 0! 9' °°i“-; ‘ _ un. ND YET ANOTHER series is A slated to commence this week. Donation of the Weliner tm- phy has, as was expected, aroused considerable interest between the two colleges, Saint Dunstan’s and Prince of Wales, and both squads have been practicing daily so as to be in the best possible shape. sos AINT DUNSTAN’S are taking S on City teams almost daily and continue toshow improve- ment while P. W. C. bolstered with the addition of several Junior stars and under the guidance of Harry Richardson boast their strongest lineup in years. U U C KE GAMES, reeking with that T old college spirit, should t\n1i out te be closely-fought tussles all through. The opénor of the best out of three series is scheduled for the College rink Thursday night with the second taking place at the Forum the following Tuesday. put on a spin't that brought them been start of the final session. Detroit both be up to within a single counter but tel' faltered as the Maroons rallied their forces to rap home three goals in the last half of the third stanza. John Hess Roach. veteran Detroit netminder, played a brilliant game although he let seven shots get past him and time and again he brought the crowd of about 4.000 fans to its feet with sensations' saves. _ ..'IURlON'I0. Feb. l'l-New Y01‘k‘a Rangers can cheer tonight about winning four of their six scheduled games this season against Toronto Maple Leafs, but its doubtful if there is a. single chuckle anywhere in the Renae: esmp- The Leafs made iihe final game of the series s. picnic for 13,00) fans here Satur- day nilnht by scoring s. smashing 5-1 victory. - With Hervey Jackson on the side- lines with an injured knee, Bob De/vldson also out of action with an injured hand and gallant Happy Dav taking his tum nn defence de- spite s. broken hand. the Leafs went bank to hee.v_v-hitting methods to subdue the Blueshirts in emphat- ie fashion. begin Merch 22, 23 or 24 and con- -. Y lm 1 T 1' t - =' .v . Q Dates championships of the Province: league winner. . league winner. P Moh. 4.-N. B. winners at P. E Mob. 6.-P. E. I. _winners at N. L, P. Unions .And Holman- ° cruel. 1-.....,........-.J :I Canada Will_ In te rm ediate A n d l "' Victors W'in Way Into SPORTRAITS S§~';gm Junior Playdowri .. City League Finals Anngu d- Toaowro, rieb. 11-'canada will n c e_ Rb. .lock Stems, Vice-Presid t f the M.A.ll.A., h mile' following schedule of playdowns";or olntermedide and :\‘:ni`;:“l:loe=; INTERMEDIATE PLAYDOWNS lbb. D0.-~M0ll¢I|'Ile It ®l\’|MbfA!w‘n league sy|n||g|1_ Feb. si.-Island League winner at Mclean League winner- Feb. Z2.-Mcfsean League winner at Island league winner. Feb. 22.-Charlottetown league winner at Montague. Feb. 25.-Island-McLean League winner at Montague-Charlottetown Feb. 21.-Montague~Chsrlot¢etown league winner at Island-Mclean Mols. 1.-Nova Scotia winner at P. E. I. winner. Meh 4.-P. E. I. winner at Nova. Scotia winner. with nsts churning the air. Ns“slu ' Catching the Boston defence flat- Meh' s'_P' E' I"N' S' Winn" ifooted in the final session, the Eng- ' les scored two of their goals. As the siren shrieked for the and of the game Bill Cowley and Pete Mols. 6.-New Brunswick winner at P. E. I.-N. S. winner. at New Brunswick winner. ‘ .mmol rmrnovms N -4 HB between Junior Royals me Junior shine' to be completes not ister then Feb. 22. loss. to determine chuloiiewmi city ernm- io D5ll|P~ Feb. 25.-Summerside at Charlottetown winners. lab. 21.-Charlottetown winners gt Summa-g¢¢_ . I. winners. B- winners. Mols. 8.-Nova Scotia winners at P. E. I.-N, B, wim-ig,-,<, Mob. Il.-P. E. I.-N. B- winners at Nova Scotia winners. tinue each Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday or Sunday thereafter, President Frank Calder announced here yesterday after the morning session of a meeting of N. H. L. governors. complete playoff plans were given out. A change in the refereeing sys- tcm, to take effect immediately, was made. In future referees in- stead of working for three periods at one end of the rink will work 30 minutes at each end, the first period at one end, the third period at the other and 10 minutes of the second period at each end. President Calder said s player dispute was discussed but nothing year. are divided into five series. They ere: Series “A” - Teams finishing first inthe Canadian and Ameri- can section meet in best three-of- five games series with the first and (Continued on Page 8) W” S*="lfd~ Mary Gratten ,iM v 1h) The playoffs. the same as last Nancy Sue (Claris eg” R ii:|N siigtni 'Phd ViCfDi’i8» Driving Club G Y R o y a.l"s _ D e fe a t Canadiens cl advertised for Saturday did not all MONTREAL, Feb. I7.-Royals tp- fill and as a result onl two wer G day begun their quest for the senior y nm Ulf- The <=°U1‘s-2 was in soon group, Quebec Amateur Hockey ss- order and there was quite an at tendance cf spectators. .Following are the results: Class "B" Trot and Pace www www WN Almer Worthy (Holmes) Best time 35 secs. Class “C” Pace Peter Frisco (Jay) ..... .. Cricket Be-Sure (Hooper) .. Time 42 secs., 37 secs. Starter: Doug. McLeod. Nw BD Judges: J. A. MacDonald, Char- .cr “<1” .loc 1-QU isp' tgiium .em - sociatlon, title with s. 3-1 victory over Canadiens before 6.010 in the first of a two-of-three-game series. The teams finished first and fourth in the final standings while the sec. ond and third place teams, McGill and Ottawa Senators, begin a lim- ilar round here on Wednesday night. ies Snow. Timers: Allie Wood, Nizil Math- eson. ve H Wednesday afternoon. Nh/#_ V lbs’ c//M ~__` I-Y GRADS basketball team re- " turned home Saturday D181* after their unsuccessful in- vasion of Mt, Allison hoop court. Naturally disappointed at having their whining streak broken the boys are nevertheless high in their praise of the treatment accorded them. _ . _ _ T TI-tEY PUT UP s. mighty stiff argument before suc- cumbing is realized by the score. They went into an early lead only to lose it in the final minutes of the period. After they saw their opponents increase this lead at the dlt of the second sedan thf Grads came with a rush only to again drop back in the final min- utes after drawing up to within striking distance.. . l SHOES PLAYED a le-me part in ,the outcome, the win- ners sinking nine out of ten to points, while the City team had an off-n.ig.ht in this department of the If a third game is necessary to decide e. winner, the site 0( the account for s like number of' $5019. S EB D ‘"iiiin\<|iiiuat=» HAPPY in Ti-iEi:»e AND WE RE HAPPY out HERE WITH ROSEBUD / wav 1-iuRR\/_ JIM -'ri-IEV ne 2;;-;`\ ~"M0mN¢; _ / ~ e ` LIKE H\M ,n ’°**”ii--|iiarsssttauirttiit e o wwe: 1 both' 'mem' .heats niet-rw Ar=°reiz Ani. :ri-tennis no one 'Tl-UNKING U-UN HADPY WE WERE' WHEN WE WERE FIRST MARRIED DI&°| MSJUST ABRINGING ur FATHER _ ` 7 A _ny GEORGE MCMANUS I GUESS IM THE I-UCKIEST V*/OMAN \N THE \%R\_D~#Abl> I us 1; ‘i °H:wLL° '_ Y 4.4 i 711-is wi-note i=».Mu.Y _V cAN"r ea i.uc\