______..._._. Abb ,__ v .1 _.~ Ann ions“ Meet Maizie fiffiiitiTitle H0131? éréflla. higgjnlltdlll‘ l-lockef Association, ' k cope; " iollywinsbrawb new $1M W; - western pl smut: w vice prenldgnt a, w, piquwlyq __‘ na,_sasr.;__saa will be appellate. f "f: 'w‘Lp"-f" . " a ..\.', , .' q-aglfncuegottawa, . . 20,-0.1}. slot 99bit and zulimlct at helm :0!‘ :.:.u may, aqua: Isa-owner mu.- igt. Jismks-or QtfliMfi-Ivg so ra- ‘ Winner looms for Winnipeg, sugar. ‘lay, March 23. t” "so .1.’- é-vii? Olfawe m" Qsirict mime.- ‘WW3. to v " uong .*."*!'1" or chip; -. _ ' u 1 r . I win-ta >.. at ‘Ijoronto. UH"; C; ' - l ~11“: 0 ¥1H¢<?< f‘ greatly" ,, Jolflon was tobuild tin-indoor amphi- item. Qilhfldd. 1cm‘ dydown dates are beinli .r 2- £11:- lmout oapa or QWIHWII-IWJW‘ . yin-re‘ sat-s warm 11w- _ 31nd umdgv. Marmfilth. and l’. lielgltewa and b _ , McMuIM-Queboor» u, kiwtutdiy, n. a. at asd-clstgilb or Quebec, Ot-r é’ die-Ottawa. ‘and Quebec at p.11. A. Torr. ' Saturdel‘. finer-s WolhrmCanada .s Wi r attest .1“ 1 Present New York Struc- . ture-g-To ‘Cost $7,000,- 0O0;—For' Chi. 7 Qllils. 'March 1—Patrlck narf on‘, whosellfetlme am- rthéatre large than Madison Square flan-den in N _ York, will realize his ,.dre_a.m whefivihp Chicago Stadium opens itsldoors thh month. <,_ Around ' new structure fof steel 41nd mat-bl , which cost $7,000,000 and will seat ' 5,000, is woven Harmon's story of _£appolntmentb and rebuffs. The ES-y -old, gray-thatched sports veteran claims he overcame that lpiig- series ofdisappolntmcnts by his L '. yIlOIQOIIY philosophy, "never stay lick- . ‘ sport, professional and ama- '. , toil}, you be staged m tile amphithe- atre, Boring, hockey, bicycle racing, hsel-geilball,‘ swimming and even foot- bllll and baseball may be played in . t“; Stfldilfllhfl ‘ ' " _' . I . , ..., -~'s. .,_ J. Wu '7 Qdiriclfles Visit vlglrosterday _l\‘fr. Cmcker agave a very interesting lecture with - i i i ,_.:-_. plidoshon the 1928 Olympic games at ‘Quasi Nwrmschool. In the after- prion m. qrocuer met with the Phy- smw ' ' ’ ‘t cQnl-lnittae and lat- _ or had supper with forty of the jun- _'lo_r' boys. Following supper another -'|d1k an the Olympic was given. . ...._,In the evening a. very interesting illustretod- lecture was given showing Canada's paltln the Olympics. Many wonderful slides showdlli the Cana- , dlan athletes were dbplwed and ‘Mr. Crooker impressed upon the audience ‘lhe importance of training our youths {today to ppepare themselves for the next. Olympiad in 1982. lVR-J Croglrer who L". Dlrrctor of ‘Physical Education for Canada and one of Canada's replnstentatlvesvto the vmntplos leaves for Sydney this mor- ,Tiil¢Ai of ’ tQrias‘4-3. 00¢‘ “ move lhgn several occasions» Q‘ _, . ‘i _ the clever neimlflnding of .1 - ; w?) dmlonkfiiAd-class and al- ‘ ewes-human endeavors against . . 5°45 . ‘hard shots which looked L e eouphrl but only oulnhated m __ r not ntkldllg. lmwllbflfi 105$ 4 TD I H“, “IQ 80030 ll Surpass, Even the" Minna, sensational puncber from ,...~'..i€: W?‘ GHNINPEFVIWN (IIBMYDFRI! cy Victoru-Allan C 1,. BYQUINHALL St. Patrick's Day this year will be emphasised by something aside from the wearing of the green, In the East and the Middle West and in Canada it will mark the start of the play-ofi for the Stanley Cup in the hockey leagu the world series of the lcc game. Down at Tia Juana, Mexico, the day will mark the running of the tenth Coffmth Handicap, an event which "Bunny Jim" has nursed In! from a thing in swaddling clothes until today it ranks with the big money turf events of the year. Jim long has cherished an ambit- ion to make the race named in his Onor the richest in the world, but. to the fact that he has tacked on codes of extraicoin each year he has never yet seen his dream realized and lmdvflbbbdly again this year he fwlll find that the Belmont Park Fu- ttuflty next Fall will outstrip him when it comes to money value. This yea/r Coihoth is yodellng in turns of six figures for the first time and will contribute 0100.000 as his ‘share of the puree. wltn sateen stun; ers out of the eighty-six harem entcr~ cd, which seems to be a reasondak: Jeotimute, the handicap to be run over 01:00am. dirt loo Click,‘ ' ' m n» second? ’ bugle at Madison tonight. Glhk m, b!" r " ‘ 7 - a ., fllnllruvnwol.u, l 2:13:09 2m‘ glut i3 ficefpisms 43mins; tn: ma" . . . ~ ~ Boosting Turf Figures Tti-‘Fri ‘IBM! ha. ‘NM. ' space me- Biéé OALl-QP across the border this year will be worth $120,400, with the wlrlnens share $05,400. That's big money even in Tia Juana, where the boys from the States ore apt to scatter hczwy dough over the gaming tables and where a bet of a. thousand smackers 0n one fllp of the dloe doesn't create much more excitement than a. stray dug galloping down the street. And stray dogs are plentiful tn Tin. Juana.‘ But even with the well-known Cof- froth generosity flitting on all six cylndms the event must rank second when it ls remembered that when Ugh Strung boot Rogllish Bye a head in the Futurity last September his share of ille purse amounted to $97,970. And probably the takings ln the Futurity this Fall will be even greater than they were last year, But while the bulk of the small fortune offered in the Coflroth Han- dloap comes directly out of the poc- kem of the association, it must be home in mind that the chief riches. about $100,000 worth, come from the ovmers of the gee-gees entered in the classic. This is due to the fact that no declaration foes as poslble in the Mexican event and the only contri- bution of the owners are the entry and starting fees, $l50 being charg- ‘(Qmtfin In») P?!“ N! 1m. l-nu ' r‘ grsity tum mites £11m series Bhldlnfstonmflto Oheretoniglrt. 1111i! wiregtficprlou last nigh/t. Al,“ "‘_=_,____.__. _ ,___ ill lo s E8 A“, N. 5., ‘NB-l’. 1-4118 walla-a Umerntlos debit-ins team ‘ the affirmative of the f. ‘tsunami Nllllrlfiflllt m; house is op- _@9¢ ‘My fi all forms of censorship," giipn the deelniep over debaters bubonic Ulivwdty hen to- _ fivofomd l v‘ bvwrrn; a \I~/_ sfi“. *a:<1r.l"n' ed for entrance with $500‘added i0 start. But the Colfroth Handicap la building up in point of riches and im- portance in the racing world and this year, barring training accidents, “Sunny Jim” will have the best field in the history of his ovcnt. Gliiord A. Cochrane ls going to make a strong bid in the classic with Genie, win- ner of the Dwyer Stakes and the Em- pire City Derby last year and second to Vito in the Belmont‘ Stakes. Ed- ward B. McLean has what l; looked upon as a great chance with Jook. Both of these entries will carry the top weight, 128 pounds, in the Coff- roth. p Aside from the Futurity and the Coffroth Handicap the riches purses on the turf last year include the Bel- mont stakes for thrcc-year-olds, $63,- .‘430; Hopeful Stakes, $454,100; Grand {National Steeplechase, $35,850; the Prealmess, $60,000; the Plmllco Fut- urity $150,750; the Gadson Bryan Memorial, 943,000; the Kentucky De:- by, $55,375; the Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes, S32 B00, The most valu- able event in Illinois was the Wash- ington Handicap which was worth $27,150. Plenty of big purses and Coiiroth, it seems, docs well to rank so high up under the circumstances. Copy rfiit, 1029, King Futures Syndicate, Inc. LSIEYXIINS Local Hockey . Tonight at 8 p. m. the much 101°- ‘ed Clarke Bros. hockey team clashed the Bunk of Nova. Booth team. ‘undisputed champions o! ‘Wmhm faflav-"and even further. The "Money Kings" ave been ‘tninirlg faithfully for the pllt two years and are now at the height of ‘their game. The following lineup should make things very slippery for the "Banana gmgW-and perhaps tum them in- oo lemons. _ ~ Goal, Ficlor; defence, ilbert. ‘Woods; forwards, Owen, DesBorough, Cleveland,’ Cameron, Mchrlme, Lo- gan. l A. J. Oxford, Bottle Popper.- LATER Clary Cameron, heed coach and fl- nmohl advisa- report: all plum in ‘K31 mama and lust waiting m ‘mt wanna. _ w, “p ._ .. ss.":*'::: t‘... Mb; in on Ellxwhenewnssrha_ so. 1*, nterediate caviar slams m: u: than: Port Hégin Ladies Team D outed 3 Goals to 1 hwsday Night At Surnmerslde IDE, March l-Follow- lng up their string of unbroken vic- torles, the Crystal Sisters defeated the Port Elgin, N. B. ladies hockey team in the Crystal Rink, here, on Thursday night, in a well played game by a score of 3-1. The Sisters had the edge on play throughout the game and but for the phenomenal work oi Legerc, the Port Elgin girls’ goalie, things might have been made worse for the visitors than they were. Burke, the outstanding player on the visiting team, was most unfor- tunately hurt in the second period and had to be carried off the ice, to remain of! for the balance of the evening. In the first period Ann Green dld the scoring for the Crystal Sisters, making two goals. In the second period McLcllan made a sensational solo run and landed the rubber in the Port Elgin net, a piece of work that nearly brought down the house or raised the roof. Score 3-0, the visitors having failed to tally. In the final session N. Larson, who was the hit of the evening, scored the visitors‘ only goal after just one minute of play. The balance of the period was strenuous but scoreless. the game ending 3-1 in the Crystal Sisters favor. The game was played on an ex- cellent sheet of ice, before a large and enthusiastic crowd of spectators. The Port; Elgin girls were chapcroned by their manager, Rev. Father Fra- ser of Port Elgin: The lineups: - Port Eight-Goal, Qegere; defence, McWllllams, Larson: forwards, Burke, Gladwln. Knight. Corney, Oryshl Sisters-Goal, McNelll; de~ fence, Campbell, Gay; forwards. Ileerd, MeLellsn, A. Green, N. Green, Lllglrleftcr. lllr. rimpn Billlphant refereed the game for the ladies-S ‘PEG’ WHEN Mil BHHIP ‘TORONTO, March i-Cvordon Hud- son's Winnipeg rink, representing the Province of Manitoba won their ninth straight victory in the MacDonald Brier Tankard here today by defeat- ing Saskatchewan 14-9 and annexed the Canadian Rink Curling Cham- pionship for the second consecutive time. Other scores were Alberta l5. Nova Scotia l4, New Brunswwk l1, Quebec l0, Northern Ontario 9, 0n- tario 7. n ft: l. o. c. W ‘ ’ vmflltonibelnlpsol- leys the Invincible: met and defeat- ‘ed the sous» by a mllorlty of zoo “pins. Ivan Harley rolled high lin- file of m and also had nun tam Of "U. PWHOWUI‘ IN thbz IWR! 3nd lirmps: mutants u. Harley ... “Midi r. Harley ....1a1 C. Bmon ... ...'_,...m v. than '..t..m j " ‘- * m 1g “Q l“ L‘ v '- L .» "7:~."‘..“,i",. Wm- ‘I ‘Wo- - » vwmlus , _ . , . y nemlzmeaunanu. mm m no _ > . "of _ n. anger; ....m m aos .5 _ ' _ .1. Martin ....m m m ; l Q" J. Oeluhen out” m 190 -_ - t, W. Qpugly ... ..l'n m lfl (cumin ma) . _. i , It. 3., Maren _ Large Crowd Expected At 4 Today/s Races" Five Classes Including Fast Trot- ters and Paces On Bill-of-Fare —Ideal Weather Should Show Record Attendance. . Today's ice races should draw the l mnls, They typify 1n tnelg partlc lerzestettendance of fans ever l0 T n13,» animal kingdom the Phil! 511mm equims in Milan in the hi» ‘ ideal of athletes from the dlys o WY of the winter pastime or the the ancient Greeks. ‘Watch them “$90” C! 1111135" in this Province. | thcy flash down the stretch‘, Ii , With the probabilities promising f m“, cungg o; gngrgy trammg... ideal weather‘ copdltions both for ‘B, single objective, and you'll lmdflt "mi and horsesmverythlns minis w- stand the invisible bond that“ -,_ c Ward: a reflect afternoon's nrosrarii ' them with their human counts -. l‘ F. and a heads-up exhibition or horse This winter his be:n an excepltgn TBWIE- cl one, so far as 1c: racing l; we: . To look over the list of entries ap- I qgrned_ and the vlcgm-lg awed‘; pended below, the most sanguine and | m“; making up 3 13;“ pel-cmtg rabid, even the most blue will 142.91 our leading and most ‘influent satisfied that horse racing ln 811 1w citizens are to be congratulated’ 0 flourishes will be dished out for the the many succcssu enjoyed think i approval of the above mentioned 5011; ,‘ . "dyed-in-the wool." The following are the entrl7y t Trotters and pacers making llp a cl“, A pm>_am;m Aubrey card of fourteen in all will ansxvcr Ola. the starters gong, and from Class A (Xagg A Trot-Finger; Aubrey Pace to the flnal C Trot it looks n: tain Jackson, Peter Verde.’ , though a treat par excellence ls on Class B PcceQessica the Dre! the horizon for all who enjoy the Colorado lliaclz, Dorothy E. i lithe, beautifully muscled, satin-skln- Class B Trot-Grace Forbes’ Ma - ned speedstors of the ice and turf. Volo, Bonnie Brook. Sliced, grace and the very poetry o! Glass C Trot-Eva. Brook, motion are personified in these anl- Don, The Alli-e. *0» i: . I 4 Looking Over N. H. L. l‘- l Youngsters In Big players been culled out film t lesser leagues in one seaso for n NEW YORK, March l-As the Na- lcnly does this position re ire un tlonal Hockey League teams com- usual ability us a stlckha er, s’ ~ menoe the final drive for a play-off shot and fast skater, but requir _ berth and the farm show intense ln- I the pivot w have that r e ablll i . terest regarding the result of each i‘ for ntalrlng plays for lib ings an v a match, a casual glance over the llrw- 1 above all things, in the w ds of 1A8 up and summaries of the games re- ter Patrick, manager o the No v veal that few-very few-of the York Rangers, "a. good cntre m youngrtcrs who graduated from the have hockey brains." minors and BtETWdvpTB-fifliilli lfBlll- Andy Blah- llves up t lng with the major league teams last quiroments yust a little fall, have survived the gruelling conl- tho rest of the quertette i palgn. Most of them have been shlp- ion of Iflster. He rates Bfih‘ on pod back to the minors for furEEcr jceause of his heady vlbrkj seasoning, but the few who have made the grads stand out as players ohand fresh from the Unr first, rank. Manitoba. Vic Ripley, however, Four young stars from the minors v close to Blair for the wosltlono I shine particularly bright this ysu‘: jccdtng rookie, Patrick thinks, been‘ and thorc Ls much dispute a:- to which 1 the lightweight Chicago blond of the four is the brightest find o£.s'.a:'rcd u-lth a last place lub. the year. These players are Andyi Tfllmuy German, mane. Blair, star centre of the Toronto Nclv York Americans, and dlhple Leafs; Ralph "Cooncy" Well- ‘hom. coach of the Pitt; ‘and, brilliant utility forward of the! Mos, am emphatic ln the ~B0ston Bruins; Vic Ripley, clever l tiorzs that Ripley ls the young centre with the Chicago Black ‘ the year, thCilQh the above critics‘ . Hawks and Herbie Lewis, elusive cal- admit that Blair's play so fir has - - tre player of the Detroit Cougars. y brilliant and that in reality there Nev-er before ln the history of the , little to choose bet-ween any o! th ‘ N. H. 1..., have so many fine centre 3 four rookies mentioned. ‘ Maloney Licks 7 I - f‘ Tom Home? m . ' 1 . BOSTON, Mar. 1—-Jimmy Maloney Boston heavyweight, gave Torn Hee- . ney o! New Zeelnnd a bad beptlnd 1-3117“; M53" 1 here tonight in a bruising ten wqlvqh“ m“ t,“ mo“ m4 f - lnltcll of a home and honlo -w__m\ m mm Red Ravens m lama. lhlonay posited u» NW gimitedr hockey championship (Canadian hoes) I Zsnhnder winner-a loft noses and 2M lifiewry romd. Honey's face 319 Ill 288 bribed, but he was m. tun; vllllmlyat the final boll. u. ’ held at; Moneton Mhnticl 3. 1 victory m. mum ms l,‘ . N. I. and 9.1.1. hockey,’ 4 gm u» $310 m. __l.l.ohnllplonsilrtlnllr- " l, .-,1~ 091a‘! to