BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING Z—-— — ---— Red Wings In creaseSection Lead DefeatingHa wks 2-0; O ,,,,,,.;_ ruins an mer S - s... B Bl k A k 3 0 vs. J __ ww r z. ___. , Ii_.__ a u“ NEW YORK, Jun. 17 ——_ Boston mm,“ fi _ d ' Bruins slipped another win over . d l1 El I I1 S the fading NC\\'\Ul‘i{All1€I‘-C3IIS to Iain. i _ s1... . » ‘.‘:*§“.-..‘.;.“.1 3:‘? t 1- H s d < ~ r 11 1 you“. I E in the National Hockey League Act’ ‘ I 1 H scored a 110111 in each Per iogtg‘ ,iod. lloomy 5111111: trteran Bruin imghy 1 centre, wok it pass from tvingmnn ‘g “q _______ __ i Lcroy Goldsworthy, shortly after m w ilzll’ nalt-ivuy imirk of the opening p .1.\ slit-bun \\1ri~1 , 11.11110 to split the American de- ‘uon , .1.111. l1‘ - Happy lince tuitl scuic. an” .. ,l.AI lc-l‘ AIc-nxrea. UuUlltiy Wciidnd broke away from Kc t . 1 1111.0 ugiiiii \>\' .1 i1 New York power play near the w ' ‘ t t 1.1. - y, the irciu1it~~ huddle 01 the second chapter and Bria‘; b_ scoreg. a cieaii-ciit ngiirker to put 1.1 non rctponsi .c 1.10 ruins two up. mith was in (IP91 11111 penalty box at. the time ser- IQQ I 1 ;-l 11.1111 when ‘ ring a two minute sentence because If‘? Boston had seven incn in action for in“ 1 it moment. 0! c uolusirorthy rang u the third iofi B ll 1h l p k osion iit y ztt e tail-tray mar 811ml of the List period when lie con- ! ' » - _ rein-ti Cook's dett relay. aeph 1-1 .1 :11 :1 vi 111',’ Haiti The tans numbered about 11,000. eatifli t '. llvlkk 11111 {I all; ~(- 11st (luring 1 sLFMMAIKY vmbei ' 7'5 Q t11...~ 111301111, 1t F151, Purifpfl Qn quid-n words with: 1» 11111111? 111 u-Bimton, Smith (Goldsworthy) Mud, i1 1111:: .~.i\v his 1;; 57 gflm- 1.- 1m Cunutlietis l9|_-|]a__,Ljg§: None int“- 11 qlllbl, their Wlln ~ ~ A m i L Second Period kmw .\ (v1 iin. 1t a “Rd 1' mt a Ntiiionul gwgmton, wetland 11,32 bu; 1 Penalties: Getliffe, Smith (2). 1 1 its; Third Period i. I as,‘ 1» Zlm-Btrston, Goldsworthy (F. Cook) i t V“ 11.32 ‘a i *'-""‘ Penalti s; Emms. ‘i ll Vt .. I ' INCREASE LEAD sou w,“ O w e n s i Agatn i _ ed o r _ CHICAGO. Jan. 17——<D16l.l‘Olg i Wings whipped the foun ering s“; A armed Preniler i Chicago Black Hawks 2-0 tonight and pulled out three full games ahead o’ the bunch in the Nation- al Hockey League's United States section. Brilliant little Larry Aurie and sharpshooting Marty Barry con- tinued their close fght for scoring U. S. Athlete 13.050 spectators. It was the 14th defeat of the sea- 111i 1x11 ‘ J. F‘ . secretary t‘ “(i111 Auliititiii" Athletic 1°? 111° Hawks- wh° gave a “Yappy . ,,.‘,,,,,.d 01,-“, stattfls performance but _were whipped L and mum Jump largely through r bit of the ill-for- tune which has dogged them all year. After Chicago had outfoughi: the league-leading Wing; through the first period and _most. of the second, Aurie scored the first goal. 1' grabbing a puck which hopped off iflii§lllOllS on each a and All-College world l"'(‘Ol‘(lS and Lillfil-litl‘. Owens ivns lifilgllilg mgngfl‘: 1 the sticks of both Paul Thompson i,‘ iwmlliwrr, hurdle; and Earl Seibert to race in and beat “ti, i wfnv) ' THC r169}, goalie Mike Karakas unassisted. EM ‘ “rip-nu Lmul- hams Earry tvss serving a penalty at the . 1 ' , ‘ ‘I ime ‘H, ‘ 1'“ !f_'"‘“"_’ql_q§:t' 253? Late in the iinal period Barry m ~‘ ‘ ‘ f ilj d took a pii~s from Johnny Sorrell “Q9 1*" , 1' “d hm“ L5 ‘m 1 and (trove the puck through Kar- UTH‘, n" ‘mill’ _ _ _ akas‘ lcgs, and fiom that point on i, o; *1" 1m" Reumimd. m‘; 1 the “lillgs fought off a final, des- Ii I11‘ :1 ..i(' .i..(. i. r .1 . k‘, ——-—-——- SUMMARY 1 o _ 1W English Cricket F“ "m" spci _ . Scoring none. tile" 7L8 a In To Tour Penalties; Burke, Blair. lu- [rt T D . . Second Period e . l C ommzon , _ __ it t 1. Detroit, All‘.'l0, loco. i Penalties: Bowman, Blair, Burke, Barry. i Third Period 2. Detroit. ‘Barry (Soiirell) 16.50. Penalties: McDonald. l‘ Hockey Results By The Canadian Press SATURDAY NATIONAL LEAGUE Canadians 5; Maroons nil. Toronto 3; Chicago 2 (overtime). (lanada Retains Lapham Cup INTERNATIONAL - AMERICAN Philadelphia 6; Cleveland 2. Pittsburgh 3; Syracuse ull. Springfield 4; Providence nil. _1.- l7-—1CP1- 1 INTERNATTONAI, INTER- i COLLEGIATE 1.1 grunt 111' 1111 ‘I1 -*““'“1"‘i7-"" Iinivorstty of Toronto 3; Univers- 1 v1 <»1*1""‘1 111' i‘ 1 11v of Montreal 2. ,,.1,1 ,1. o1 ‘Forontoi Harvard 6: Princeton 2. 1 "1 "1> "1 13‘111"'° 1 Yale 4; Dartmouth 3 (overtime) .1 tciiin run lip . 111111 5am" u. s. msrcmv Amsrrun i - Canadian op- ll1 i1 . 7-1 A“ ‘A’ Now York Rovers 5; Boston l‘! 111 111 1 ‘t ‘ 14111 ""101" Olympics 2. a» .1 - ('11I11I11 1.11.1 11 1111 "1""- Hershey Bears 4: Pittsburgh l. L; im- wnu: provvtl the 11,»; httwt-"n Lewis mid ‘u- cWllllfllPllfi won? i’ Iii-ti. 15-9. Atlantic City 5; Baltimore 2. MONTREAL SENIOR. GROUP McGill (i: Ottawa 3. GOLD BELT LEAGUE Wright Hargreaves 3; South Por- , cupine 1. BRUISES SUNDAY MONTREAL SENIOR. GROUP Royals l0; Verdun 3. Canadians 3: Vlctorlas 2. lNTL-AMN HOCKEY SLNDAY GAMES i At Syrncuso-Syraciise 3, Phil- , dolphin 3, (overtime). 1 Pittsburgh 3: Providence 2- ‘ v‘ New Haven 2; Cleveland 2 (over- utvs (Grant Again Canadiens Blank MaroonsiFfed P6" UPSEB Budge 5-0.Before Record Cr0wd;. H181‘, T0 Win Title Leafs Win In Qvertime Tennls Show honors, each scoring a goal before v OF Tug: CHARLOTTETQWN GUARDIAN I'll TAMPA. F'li1., Jan. l'1—(AP) —- Budge. United States number one ranking amateur, by defeating the Oakland, Calif, redhead, 4-6, 6-3. tennis tournament today. Grant, United States third rank- tournument at Coral Gables lust Sunday. Budges smashing shots ln the opening set, but in the second he made retrieves which seemed al- most. impossible. Budge 10d 2-0 in the third set before Grunt won three guines in a 10w. Budge took the sixth game. Grant won the next two. losing oii- ly one point in each. They deuccd the ninth game six times before Grant took the game and set at 6-3. Grant played the best tennis of the tournament in the final set. .He won the first three games as Budge tried in vain to outguess and outplace him. The Californian deuccd the next game twice before finally breaking Lhwullli Grant's service to fin. He took the fifth grime too but Grant ran through the next three-games to take the set tit 6-2. Red lVings Take Lead In Midget Hockey League Midget Red Wings were too fast and too experienced for the Beav- ers Saturday afternoon in u regular league encounter and as a result Beavers were forced to accept their second straight defeat this time by a 5-0 score. But. although blanked the youthful Beavers put up a stirring battle all the way. They held the fast-skating Wings to a 2-0 score in the first two ses- sions while missing several scoring chances themselves but they tired somewhat in the final canto allow- ing their opponents to shoot three more counters before the {ma} gong. Red Wings victory gave them i first place in the standing breaking i the tie that. had existed bctwecni 1 them and the Canadians. Wings have yet to suffer a. defeat this season. i ilsland Curling Assn. Affiliated With Dominion (GP. By Guardian's Special Wlrc) LIBONIREAL, Jan. l’i—Mont-rell walloplng meti- ultra-city rival-t Maroons, 5-0 Saturday 1113111’ hem!“ a crowd of 12,300—largesi1 Montre- 2-6, 6-2, in the finals of the Dixie a1 hwkey attendance during the time. 'last flve years. 1 Despite the fact; they were minus skated tirelessly and passed peiteut- ly to hand Maroons ll crushing dc- Grnnt failed to get many of feat; Maroons took four penalties dur- ing the battle and while thrre of thcs; banfshments were being serv- ed, Canadiens hopped to the attack for four goals. They scort-d twicr in the first, period and thcn added three more counters m the second. SUMMARY First Period 1. Canadiens’ Joliat (Muntha, G111’.- non) 15:32. 2. Canndiens, Blake (Dcsilcls, Huy- nes) 19:42. Penalties-Gagnon, Mantha, Ev- axis. Second Pet-ind 3. Canadians’ McKenzie (Brown) 6:45. 4. Canudiens, Brown (BllS\\'t‘ll. (ing- nonl 7:55. - 5. Canadians. McKenze 15:150. Penalties-Carson, Conuchcl‘. Third Period scorlng—none. Penaltles-Morenz’ Desilets, Trot- tier. DOWN HAINKS TORONTO, Jan. 17—(CP)-~Tor- ionto Maple Leafs took a firmer hold on third place in the National Hockey e‘s Canadian division,‘ Big Hockey Bill At The Forum Tuesday Night Tuesday night is hockey night at the Forum judging by the pro- gramme that is to be run off with no less than three league encount- ers being scheduled and nll of thcin promising stiff competition. Midgets open the evening with Red Wings and Canadians provld~ ing the fireworks. These teams are battling for the top berth in the league and the result is largely a mater of conjecture. The much-talked of meeting between ‘Junior Abbies and Ran- gers comes next and what a wow of a game that promises. Deadly rivals these two junior teams hit the high spots every time they meet and Tuesdays encounter will TORONTO, Jan. l7--The execu- tive committee of the Dominion; Curling Association at a week-end ‘ met-ting approved applications for‘ affiliation from the British Colum- 1 but Association, the Vancouver brunch 11nd the Prince Edward Is- lfllltl Assxwiation. ‘Twelve different associations which constitute four- fitlhs 0t‘ the registered curlers in Canada are now enrolled with the Dominion body. E. P. Atkinson. honorary secre-Y titty of the Assoc atlon it was. learned, has been flooded with iii- qiilries regarding the visit of the! Scottish curlers during the 1937-381 season. The Scottish curlers rc-i canny accepted the Dominion body's 1 invitation to visit Canada. i The annuitl meeting nf the Do-l minlon Curling Association wll.l bci held in Toronto early in MurchLMmi ~.___ __i OUT OUR WAY park next summer. i prove no exception. Cross Roads and Alexandria will’ be the third set of teams to take to the frozen surface. Those games never fail to provide action every minute and fans willl get their money's worth out of this grime a- lone. BOSTON, Jim. l7~iCP)-Al Mc- Coy, Quebec-born New England heavyweight champion. cut hiinsclfi another slice of fstic dynanfwi when he accepted a 10-1'ot|1id nuitrh with Max lV-‘qi-(‘k of Chii-ugo ut Boston Jan. 25. Marek is the typc of fighter who will likely give McCoy plenty trouble and may upset his bout with Joc Lotus scheduled for 11 Baton ball 1by defeating Chicago Black Hawks Bryan M- "B11'$y” Grant. the At- Canadians sported a six-point laud 3-2 in a well-played overtime gamei l lnnta giant killer, won his second today 1n me Canadian Section of here Saturday night. successive tennis title from Donald me National Hockey League after assured them of keeplnfl °1l15 91 u"! The victory cellar over the week-end. Nick Metz won the same for Leafs in the third minute of extra He and B111 Kendall broke away from the 011108-80 0101116. be“ dcfencemaxi Earl Selbert with some 6d Player. defeated the Californian 38,59 siebert, the Flying French- nice passing and coasted close 1n on ln the finals of the Miami Biltmirc men gave a dazzling dispiay a5 they Mike Karakas. The game. witnessed by 10,000 persons‘ bristled with disputed goals- Each team was credited with one their opponents held was scored from inside the creme and Toron- 1 to players put the puck into the net twice in the third period and saw the piuy called back.) An injury (o Karaks, Chicago gouler. held up the game 15 min- utes in the third period. A puck ‘ caught the netmnn on the upper lip and four stitches were taken in the wound. Mush March, Chicago wing- mun, also was injured, suffering a four stitch cut on the elbow and zt tvrcnchcd leg tendon, SUMMARY First Period 1. Toronto, Apps (Drillon, H. Jack- sont 17:19. tPt-iuiltics-Tliomtxwn, Homer. Second Period 2 Chicago, Brydson (Kelly) 9:04. 3. Chicuuo March (Trudell) 12:16. Penalties-none. Third Period 4. Toronto, Apps (Metz, Davidson) 16:30. Pc-nalt.les—Scibert,X-In1rvey Jack- son, Levlnsky. m Overtime Period 5. Toronto’ Metz (Kendall, Hamil- ton) 2:09. treaty-wow- Cunningham Defeated By ‘ ‘Unknown ” NEW YORK, Jan. 17--(AP) — Glenn Cunningham, starting tn the first handicap race of his colorful career, was defeated by a oomph-ra- tively unknown New York Unl- versity freshman and dropped B. time decision to Lou Bums, Man- hattan's great. miler, i.n the annual truck and field meet at the 165th infantry armory Saturday night. Starting fmm scratch in one of the three LOOO-yard handicap races Cunningham failed by inches to catch diminutive David Urback to whom he gave 55 yards. Burns, intercollegiate outdoor half mile and mile titlist and also start- ingfrom scratch. won his heat in the good time of 2.17.7, less than six seconds buck of Cunningham's world record of 2:101. Urbiwk was clocked in 2:16.41 with the burly Kansas only a fraction of a second slower. The third of the three heats tvent to Cunningham's perennial rival, Gene Vonzke of the New York AC. Vcnzke won easily but his time of 2:172 was the slowest of the thicc events. Venzke also started from scratch. ’ MISSI-IS TWO PENALTIES BOLTON, England-Bolton Wim- dcrcrs defeated Charlton Athletic 2-1 in a recent. league soccer contest but the mulch will live long in the memory of Jack Mllson, Bolton star, who fnlled with two penalty shots. both ot which he drove against the crossbar 1 Y r0 In (l; Ch ‘ Grumlch Associated Pram Staff Writer) 1 msw YORK, Jun. iv-maenck John Perry, the paddle-footed. 1 pipe-smoking British player is I worth the money to pro tennis. i iwhother he is worth a top price 0149.90 against Ellsworth Vines In the alternating hush and hand- clapping of Madison Square Gar- den l; something else 1118111111 But; the recently-turned pro, lm- 1 nmculately turnod out tennis titan ls a natural showman~the nnswcr to the pro tennis troupes praycr for color. Even the experts who led off . ,on their wrong-guessing for 1937 , by picking Vines over Perry in the Britons pro debut agreed that a sorely-needed personality had i come to the ranks of the tennis mercenaries. Not forgetting that Bill Tllden with his enormous ego and con- sttant: carpltg was the greatest box-office draw once upon a. time, i they hailed the advent of Perry i as the lift that woud keep the pros ifrom handing the game back to IIIIG amateurs for a. time, at least. From the moment he stood at. a. attention under a spotlight the i band played "God Save the King" (and the ring-worms who infest. the place ordinarily wondered why they were playing "My Country ‘Tis of 'I‘hee”> until Vines event- ually folded, Perry was a. show- man. Whenever he pased a lincsmnn. Perry ruffled that gent/s hair. He minced all over the court. on over- size feet that do a duck-waddle—- with never an extra step. The befuddled critics, who found some solace 1n the fact. that Vines was a. bit, sicker with influenza than Perry was, were pulling for the Englishman before it was over. You cannot hate a. man who is totally unperturbed by the biggest orowd that ever saw a tennis match-at a 89.90 top. At i-"et point, n. gallerylte let out a loud, uncompllmentary sound as Perry tossed up the ball at ser- vice. Perry echoed the sound as he let the ball fall to the court with- out serving. Nothing ruffles him. In fact, he is at his best when the fury ls at its height-and in the past he has been at. his worst when the going was easiest. Bill Tilden once sized him up as "the best-worst or worst-best tennis player I ever saw." After their first pro match Vines confided that Perry's earnings prior to his professional venture which stands to net him something between $75,000 and $100000 in his “honeymoon year" was $10,000 for i som~ movie work in England. This i Pay-Off was not exactly c1'ickct i when Perry was ranked as an am- ateur, but it lightened the bin-den of those who sent him around the world as a tennis player. Local Navy Team To Play Came In New Glasgow NEW GLASGOW, N.S , Jan.1'l- (CEU-Chester Gregory, President of the Plotou County Commercial League said tonight the Navy hock- ey tcam of Charlottetown would meet New Glasgow Consols in a game here Jan. 29 and a team pick- ed from the four Pictou County commercial squads the following night. It will be the first time in more than 15 years s. Prince Eciivard Island hockey team played here. LONDON-Charles Laughton no- ted English screen actor and his wife, Else. Llanchester, are donating the entire salaries they receive for acting in "Peter Pan" to Great Or- mond Street Hospital for Children. Z, / Canadlens Maroons Toronto Americans Do l rolt Rangers Boston Chicago WILLIAMS ‘TOUR BOARDING HOUSE MAYoRn/ouw HONOR, 1141s l5 MAJOR HOOPLE, THE MAN wt-to FELLED AND CAPTURED "me BANDITfREDDVfII-IEFQN-a ‘rt-ten wtsAm/isv HIM AND ‘RECOVERED e100, ooo srotszu mom OUR BANK] THE ‘BANK HA6 VOTED r tIPQRT wQlll-D BOXING FINE BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT WW1? MORRIS S/ines Second Victory '"-——.::: From Perry In Straight Sets . DETROIT, Jan. 17-—(AP)-E1ls- worth Vines. showing no truce of his recent, illness, whipped fled Perry in straight sets, 14-12, 6-2. 6-1, before 6.500 spectators here Saturday to draw within one match of evening the count in their pro- fessionul tennis toiunament. The extended first set decided the match. Perry never was able to make his shots count after the tall Californian took the lead in the 25th game and then broke through the former amateur cham- pions service for the set. Vines, who lost. three successive matches to Perry before his first victory at Pittsburgh last night, was in full control of his ground strokes and frequently manoeuvred the Briton out of position for fact placements. Perry scored the first break in service in the long first set, with a. beautfiul cross-court return of Vines’ service, 1m overdrive of the baseline by the American. The professional titleholder, however. came back to even matters, break- lng through Perry with scorching drives that forced-the Briton on errors. Perry again broke through Vines’ in the 19th game, a service ace counting the Americans only point, but Vines, with two succes- sive placements and a. kill at the net, gained the set. Vines was at. set-point with 40-15 in the 24th game, only to see his opponent score a placement and force him into errors to pull out the game. He wasted no time winning his own service and then. with the score 30-1111 in the 26th grime, Clllllf.‘ the brcrk that ended the rxl12"""1' 1" t. Onc 0f Perry's drives hit the net cord and jumped out of the court. At set-point again. Vines drove a hard placement to win. The American pro quickly ran out the match no Perry, apparent- ly tiring, won but l9 points in the second sct and 13 in the third. In a one-set exhibition George Lott defeated Bruce Barnes. N. H. L. STANDING NATIONAL LEAGUE CANADIAN SECTION AMERIC AN A MAN WHO, CITY. risr.__.__r —-——*' -——-~- L. P. U. Ekes Out l-O Win Over Victors A goal from the stick of veteran "Dee" Gillls, ln the. dying monientt of the second session gave the Lab- or Union team a 1-0 victory oven H0lman’s Saturday night in a City League encounter. 'I‘he win put the Union team one game up in their series with Holmans. it being their ‘ victory against on: defect. . The game was another of flan hard fought, rugged arfahu the teams usually display with play being very even as both teams nus- sed wide-open scoring chances. Gulls’ goal that gave Joey Mao- Donaldls tea-m the verdict came from a. mixup in front 0t the los- ers net Gilhs firing tzho ntbhor home as the players fought M! tho disc outside the crease. Girls Teams Battle To Scoreless Draw Prince Street and West Ker! School girls teams bottled to a. fin- ious scoreless draw M: the I'm-tun Saturday afternoon in the second gameoftthelrbestmtofflvosel- ies. The game was ruggcdly played throughout with thrills and spit-ll coming in quick suocesoion. De- feated in the first game tho We! Kenters put up a much better bat- tle Saturday uhd if they keep to their present form it is going to be mighty hard to pick a winner. FORUM BAND TONIGHT Perfect Ice wnu A mists, MET n: tu-tamommsots . crnzen! rr l5 (unset) m uouon "r0 Possum Towou, m 14s 1.1mm or we 1141s MEDAL Tucson! NIGHT nocmsv CROSS ROADS Vs. _ ALEXANDRA Jr. Abbles vl. Ir. Rangers Cnnadluna vs. Red Wings Major Houpk WHEN, mceo“