‘ "suwtnuu * uocncr Y ‘Overcome Early Saint John Lead To Win Game 9-6 And Ta ke Series SAINT JOHN. N. B». March 1t—iCP)—C‘ ‘ottetmvn Abegwelts showed continued superiority over Saint John Poniiaos tonight with a 9-6 victory, winning the New» Brunswick-Prince Edward Island junior hockey championship by a round acore of 16-8. The Abbles will battle Halifax Canadians for the Maritime title and a place in the Memorial .4£H&HZS,lt1AliJQLNUC) VICTORIA UNIONS DE |6-3 Island Team cup playdowns. Trailing 2-1 going into the second period the travel-weary Abbies rallied in the second to outeoore the Pontiacs 4-2 and put on an even stronger burst of speed in the third to notch four more while the New ih-—swlck championawere getting two. m THIS CORNER . SAINT JOHN, N. B.—'1‘.raln-‘ weary and leg weary after a l5- hour trip by train and boat, Jun- ior Abegweils last niflhl- ShlYWf-‘d their courage to the fullest when they downed St. John Pontiacs 0-6 in the second game to take the round by a 16-8 margin, the some edge they enjoyed over Amherst St. Pats. Playing without the services of Buffer Worth after early in the first period, Abbies came from be-| hind a first period lead of the, Pontiacs to increase their lead and at the end oi’ the game had the {gyeiiil going John fans cheering r e or . iii iié lit iii They were u. Jubilant gang in the dressing room after the game. Eagerly looking forward to the Halifax series, the local youngsters are more confident than ever now of taking the Haligonians into camp and this opinion “if shared by not a few of the S nt John fans. - llé iii 9K iii- Pontlacs, just as game s team as ever tied on skates. were naturally disappointed but they certainly went down fighting and at the end showed their sportsmanship ' coming to the Abbie room in a body and congratulating tne v.0.- tors, The ame was s. rugged, brist- ling a air throughout with heavy bumping go_ing on in every zone, but the only real disturbance oc- curred when O'Toole and Grant traded punches in the second per- iod that saw both get major sen- tences. élé 4- , .1 eié Ahbies were full credit for their victory. After their shaky start that saw St. John have a. big margin in play in the first period the Abbies’ smooth passing plays began to click and from then on they were in command. 9K 9K i6 iii Early in the second they gained the lead and from then on were never headed. Pontlacs could do little with the close-checking for- wards and smart blocking defence, and continually Abbies would break away on dangerous sorties into St. John territorggak The entire team played well night, but again there was work of Ev Jay that caught the fancy of the fans, and skat both waysEv last night scored four goals and made the plays for three others and his per ormance just put another clincher to the fact that he has come back to . 1K iif iii iii Another player whose perform- ance was ou nding was Whit- loclr. the smal centre man of the Abbies’ first attacking force, who was a tower of stren h oflensive- b1 and defensively. e picked up two goals and an assist during the game and only for the sensational work of the St. John goalie could easily have doubled his total. 9K ‘is it‘ it Abbler entrain ‘for home this morning. Tomorrow they meet Halifax Canadians in the opener “l”? f WEAItY TRAIN JOURNEY 0n the road from early in the morning until l0 o'clock tonight, when they arrived in Saint John. the Abbles were a weary lot of boys when they were finally ready to start the game. Heavy ice in Northumberland Strait held up the ferry on which they were pas- sengers with Victoria. Unions, in- termediate hockeylsts who also were late for their game at Sussex. The brilliant Ev Jay, fast-skat- ing left winger of the Abbies stood out like a beacon on a dark night as he notched four of his teams goals and assisted Reg Flannigazi on a fifth. Stellar work by Keith Langllle in the second and third periods nullified any serious Pon- tiac scoring chances and'Bill Gig- gey. blond net guardian oi the ndlans. was given plenty to do after Abbie forwards found their skating legs. They peppered Giggey from all angles, but. the little fellow had no chance once the sharp-shootln combinations of Whitlock an Worth and McEachern and EvJay found their range and began slip- ping through the Saint John de- fence. Two major penalties were hand- ed out by‘, Referees Pat Power oi Charlotte wn and Jimmy Murphy of Saint John when Joe O'Toole, Pontiac defenceman. and Vince Grant of the Abbies’ resrguard came to bl s. The line : Saint John-Goal. Giggey; de- fence, Fortune, O'Toole; forwards. Murphy, Ooughlan, Osborne, Gor- ey, Stanley, McCormack, Riley, Charlottetown - Goal, Langille; ach, Grant, L. Jay; forwards. MacEachern, WOTUI. Flan an. Dowling, E. Jay, Blacq- ulere, tlock. Referees-Pat Power. Charlotte- town; Jim Murphy, Saint John. Summary: First Period l-Saint John, Osborne , (Stanley) ——- —- — — - 2.20 2-Saint John, Stanley (Osborne) — - — _- - 10.42 3~—Charlottetown, Worth (Whitl k 19.20 0c ) — — -- —- — Penalties: Murphy, Smith, E. Jay. Second Period kflharlottetown, Whitlock — 3.90 5—Cha.rlottetown, Flannlgan (Grant) — — — — — — 8.85 6—Saint John, Fortune — -11.45 ‘I-Charlottetown, E. Jay --12.4e M 8—Salnt John. Garey (lVicCoi-uioclr, Smith) - -ld.tl il-Charlottetown, E. Jay — —10.50 Penalties: O'Toole, Grant. Third Period lit-Charlottetown, E. Jay (Dsrrach) — - - — - 8.00 ll-Charlottetown, E. Jay (Grant) — — — — - - 8.42 12--Saint John, Stanley -- — 900 lo-Charlotteiown, Whitlock 9.03 l-i-Saint John, Murphy (Fortune) — - —- —- - 13 55 l5--Charlottetow'h, Iilahnlgan (E. Jay) —- ——- - -- - 18.57 Penalties: Smith, Dowling, Dar- rach. Dorks lead in shantung. The best colors include rust, hunter green, wine, and raspberry-also pale w 11h blilLaélilLll-illilelflllk- deserve lma of support it is this gang of fast skating hockeyists who girthelilggglg, snsL 11. cvenalun¢h_ "I always rely on a heavy duty Gillette Blade to shave my wiry stubble quickly and give my face an invigorating iiilc. For clean, comfortable, long- lasting shaves Gillette Blldce win with flying colors!" t . . That's w moat men prefer Gillette ades. They skim smoothly through the toughest ‘precision-built to fit the Gillette‘ Raaor. At dealers everywhere. f M‘ 25o.- lO for 50c. nismumsw. ‘ilh€ll_lrllell__ure,,ll9§lell- Dethroned _. In Close Game SUSSEX. N_ B , March ll -(CP)—Susscx Rovers won the New Brunswick Prince Ed- ward Island Intermediate Boo- key Championship tonight. edging Victoria Unions 8-2 I mu taking the round 5-4. Rovers -'wlil meet Port Morten. N. S.. for the Maritime tle_ Nutter-‘s two last eri goals decided the issue. the Victoria Unions. last year's Maritime ‘ out th¢ first two periods by one goal. the Rovers tied the score with less than s minute of the third stenu. gone and scored the winning counter with less than a minute to play The first game played on the Island Friday nlglrt ended in a two-all draw. ..'I‘he Island (‘cam showed great improvement over their first game and a met a blttcr defeat. They- open the scoring to ht and the first stanza ended wth them leading 1-0. The score was tied in the second but" before the lod ended the Unions again put em- selves in the lead Mt in the final and most crucial session they failed to get a counter. The game was fast and evenly contested. Both goalies tumed in stellar performances, Danny and Lester McLeod sham- on the Island lineup with Nutter. Harmer, Brew- ing and Bev R-?"':lif'e turning 1n good games for We P"'er=_ Qn o». rnr’ ~. ~ ~F - 9m, tested that they had scored ti? whining s . . f: and several. fans were uuesiloned. but mme were of the opinion that the disc had crossed the goal mouth. | Victoria Cross Wins Trophyln Close Contest Victoria Cross Maple Leafs won the ueneral meutrlc uuo when they defeated iWODeERiAS sunk lists 2-1 at Montague last night. The Rink eliminated the Montague School team. other member o1 the Com- munity League. The first period ended scoreless _snd in the second session the (cams split a brace of counters. In a hectic third period Peardon took Kennedy's oass to give Victoria Cross the winning marker. LINEUPS Victoria Cross: Goal. J. McLel- lan: Daence. A. Osudet, A. Moose; Forwards. G. Kennedy. N. Camp- bel.. S. Peardon. L. Campbell. T. cl ll cEwen. Montague: Goal. A. Fraser: De- ‘fence. S. Kerr. C. Bell: Poi-wards. L Strong. H. Martin. A. Peters, L. ‘Fraser. P. McDonald. SUMMARY First Period Scoring: None. Penalties: Strong. Moore. Bell. Second Period 1—g10e6ntague. C. Bell (A. Peters) Pgiaoria Cross. n. Campbell Penalties: Strong. Gaudet. Third Period il-Victorln Cross. Peardon (Ken- nedy) .55 Penalties: None. Referees: Floyd MacKinnon and Lowell Poole. Miniature Rifle Shoot J. C. MacKenna captured hon- ors in the No. 6 district s1 miniature rifle'sihoot at the - " ouries last night when he chalked up s I. W. W. Walsh and D. E. Mayne each carded a 95 for soond place. Other scores were: A. B. ren 92 A. D. Machtsster 91 E. R. Burke 90 P. P. 90 g. goundersww . . ooper 4 D. L. Rice B6 V E. Connors 86 O. h 85. ii DAY PARTY —'- your. isAsktlBALl. Ulliizk scum I Moncton. Maroons Display Power Defeating Miners In Title Opener 16-1 Rats had previously l‘ MONOION. N. 8., March 1b— (OH-Monclon Mai-cons, continu- illl along the trail blazed by the falgflus old lifnonown Ha l etc- n came thin. compare v y easy reach oi.’ their next objective —eenfor hockey championship of the Maritime Provinces for the third consecutive year and aberth owns. roons guxialhe ‘first BN3; of teir final . 3 or Mari e supremacy. The Nova Scotia tltleholders, with a record of winnin against Odds. will stand at bog‘ oi Sydney Thursday night wi Maroons heavily favored to clinch the Nlind. Miaroons scored in one. two. three style tonight, counting one in the 111st period, twice in the second and thrice in the third. Defence- mmi Charlie Phillips led his team to victory with three goals‘ and diminutive Bebe LeBlane tallied twice. All were ssslstcd. Powers shot the other goal. Pour major penalties were a. fea- ture oi.’ the battle. Rod Anderson and Phillips suhered them in the first period. and Powers andMc- 5% were the victims in the Defence. lilcNelll. Memories: Mun- Mcballum. ' Wins. Bell. h , Power; Left 1B8. Babe LeB anc, H. 1116mm. ' suiuiuanr rim Period 1—Moncton. B. IABIIDO 1.1M 2-Glace Bay. R. Anderson 18.12 Penalties: R. Anderson and Phil- lips (majors). Second Period 8—lliilonclmi. Powers (L. LeBlanc) Charles. ‘rhkd Period 4-1.4}. w. Philli ' Bell‘; 10135- N’ (Appmm Penalties: Powors. Joseph, m. . TH E LAST ALIFAX cmAoigus IN SPI RITED HuRnL FORUM" Wednesday ‘rue uouR _ a.so P-M. 0UR OWN ABEOWEITS g vs. 60,...“ .0. Maritime Junior flhampionship wmcn ream wlu. wm uua 1m: 1' GI‘! EARLY WILL BE AN OVERLOW N0 PASSES — N0 CONPS. NO DBADIIBADS _.@.@.@.@@©.@@@@@@e2 iF-Moncton. Phillips l“ ‘ ache) 8.08 o-igeolrllfton. Phillips (Appleby, r-avr to. B. LeBl (s Bars... m" "c" LINEUPS . : Goal McGillivi-a- Scoring (C. P. by Guardian's S eiai Wire) MONTREAL, Marc lc-The National Hockey League teams headed into the last week of the schedule tonight with Gordon Drlllon, Toronto Maple Leafs’ sec- ond-yesr star, still setting the pace for about 140 marksmen 0n the scoring records. ‘ Basslns two points dur thel last week" Drlllon added a t to Ala maT gzer ltesmmaatlsflyl DPS- 011 ‘s esgue s ties give him lg, dlvld tween goals acid assists. Apps has 20 and 25, for a 45 total. Drillorfs 24 goals also leaves him in front in actual scores, two up on George Mantha of Montreal Canadiens. Leadership in assists gags to 29118. with Drlllon in sec- I ac . Paul Thompson of Chicago Black Hawks remained at the to of the American division durin e week and in third lace in combin- ed standing. e is credited offl- a y with 21 gosls and :22 assists. (Unofficial compilations, however. give the Chicagoan only 21 assists, ptggltlglxl‘ lthls wouldn't change his A neck-and-neck race is under- way between Red Homer of Tor- onto and Art Coultcr of New York Rangers for penalty lesdershl . has a0 minutes, though coal)- has been out of action for sev- Penalties, Phlfllps. Powers, (ma- jor). MacNeill, R. Anderson, Me- lellan (molar). Drillon Continues To Set Pace As Schedule; Nears N.H.L, Windup MARITIME SCOBERS MONTREAL. March 14—(OP)-- It was still Gordie Drillon of ‘Ibr- onto out in front tonight as ms National Hockey League movsd into its last week of regular action -—the last week of any hockey M. tion for at least one and probab three of the" circuit’: Maritime Dlayers. Official scorin statistics showed Drillon. s Monc n boy, whoheads ell scorers in the league, with 40 points. ll more than his closest Maritime rival. Bill Cowley 015“- ton. Eddie Wiseman of Newcastle. N.B.. a big factor in New York Americans’ fine showing this sea- son. held thini place with 30 points, ,and Ray Getllfle of , ormerly an amateur in Sain John and Charlottetown. was fourth Drlllon. Toronto Cowley. Boston Wlsernan. Americans Getllfle, Boston Hollctt. Boston Dasllets. Canadians Hudson, Detroit Smith. Mai-cons lamb. Detroit Co o n»uaon:§3§fl »uu:§§§> .~.s.=ssseF Montague Leads In Ma cA rth ur Tro p h y P I a y Accord! to reports early this 11101111118 “Montague. mirlers .wer.e well lsuruu-ied on their way turning hack the- Charlottetown threat for the McAi-thur trophy. At pres time the Montague club roled up a 21 ‘point advan e with one match le t to be play . The E. MacKlnnon rink of Mon. tague defeated the Charlottetown rink by P. R. MacLcins 15-9, wh e in another match the Montague rink piped by J. W. won from the F. C. Moore rink fl-‘i. -- lav" sruiassmsuo“ 'nPm£s fiD|N$§PPOmW: so tou~rrA'vouvuomw LIT HWirMNEnkMY unru- cuiuzzvc A m§%'fi“¥fi$&s$ ‘zxzfig successfully carried out ling Club on Saturday All the games were hotly contested and each member of the winning well attended. WRIGHT Thor!!! Boeclal interest of the day cent- eon sklb by His Honor Ju e O. G. by R. R. winning four spectacular games roll ~up unusu- alv lame scores in e acme. The personnel of s am is as follows: I. fin-let stews-e. m -8n s e. l? Judie Duffy p. of the komy . D rich . was an in - ested srfictakn- of e . At the supper e b! lg E.".$.€“‘.l....t?' “d. history of curling ill early when m mum h’ um ti?! The . J. MAbOIl-Phll Cobb match not been concluded at an early . , CIWWII Montague . K018 E. MacKinnon is w we w A igéoqmdm éiégmolaim 1.. A. Joh u Ciflewn Mon e D. Maclltinnon J.H. MacGregor . Bimini B. Maclesn 2- lglflnll-YN 0.8L. Wlshllman IlPPlE d around the final game for the ‘ e tetm Down The Alleys non NAME nan; nowtmo - srcial League lhipenlal Biscuit 00-8140. Hawks-MM. High three o. onus s01. High single u. Gillis m. kdies Bowihg Rod Willi-HBO. Hillbillies-INS. nigh sing! M. Oonnoll 190. High three. F. Flynn flyb. l7. N. it. Hotel Mixed Lellile Canadians-SGT. rrlihi rs-fllild 8 . Ladies nigh single I. Bradley 102. 1y Ladies high three I. Bradley £00. - Genie high single A. MoKearnfl Gents high three A. Melisa-lane err-rows sowuso mars mwi-‘S-Krd.“ Ladiu hill! Blnlle P. Mokinnon 13am awn three r. new»... dents hidh single s. McNeill agimiahlll threeB. mum: '1. gauges-as 2. u high ' sinus r. Mallett ".- uim r. mum: woo. Gents single D Purcell 2!! Gents high ‘thgee D.'Puroe11 086. r rm “a. showman ' ‘r. Smith. udct Kane. 1m c . A. Ta lor A: I. Pegue . K Aozrn & A. Sherry. l Remember llfhen FiiIiFiiiii=====iiEE====i==========-. asncour mucus, m mug lmn_._._.___se¢ rwo scum: one“ nus-r wanes sins sows m owns BEIKING To REP-J c THEE 55 RESENT TEE MARITIMES‘ mo“ E s!“ wws ° n: oounnou SEMI-FIN-i ans c>(é©@©© © @ @@@@©@@ © @ ©.©.©@ nocnéks PLAN OPENS TUESDAY 0.00 A.‘M.. CHILDREN'S slams THIS AFTERNOON ABBIE SISTERS SPECIAL T 0 N l G H T > 2% Hours — 15 Bands HELP THE GIRLS FINANCE THEIR TRIP T0 UPPER CANADA YOUR 25c .WILL HELP. """'E§F'"""""""'“"""" uld be scans mi?“ 121'?“ in the w rink ‘the 6111b Dllfll to bu ‘can organ-w recently nur- flie old- “; in the March l4-—((I)— P. . . LL! OCK Wheniood Canada's we“ M“ u fessimial baseball emu-a dége bowedmlo outh tllast m!!!) . Mimi: . w e ment here Aug.10, one of three Yeartcamwasdlshedeutcsmssb- of baseball's immortal f will 1BR 4-2 defeat by the suPB 0X ma- - W“... zen: “ma. "at; Mo‘ o, _ . mm; 5mm“ Oaunell. a Fourth Year who is Z Wm mull‘; more notorious than noted, figured supervisor. semi-pro authorities “m” 7 l“ u” “ummwu” "5' ‘munnfit mum and was decisively dealt with Y wuflh x“ mama,“ M. m. the checking and sandwichlng leo- mtlonai Auadaflo o‘ “m, tics of the Third Year defence. 1i “mm, ma“ n. -v!'<>- is understood that the no Years aoceotoe. return game only! on ndlt n erl s. I Will wm filtrate one of the three oldtlme I m, m m” m, mum. - avers rsntee somLgppqsiligg. “I'm not inking ol big d rill: as you think . . . ” “Yo! you ore, Ii you've the one who swiped the hen‘: Sweei C095 l” QWEET CAPO RAL CIGARETTES ‘The para! Iona in which ‘ can be smoked." uonsas Fealsirf Will have arriving last of March and 1st of Avril 150 mares and geliififgs.‘ These will be horses I W" handle when farmers are through with work. Signed WELLINGTON McNEILL By EbWlNA mun on ' il.JusT HAF1* fr-tmvLAN"' -» 1' .4. 101F090 pic-on“ .