fwqpyfi. “$.1- ..-_ _. it‘ I Keen Competition __-_' At Curling ‘-_ " Rink Saturday The result of the President's and Vice President‘: Mulch st the Curling Bins Saturday w; n victory for the ice President's by a total score of U to iii. Mr. D. B. Stewarra team had the largest margin of victory and each member was presented with a bag of flour donated by Mo. Hlbbert How- IJ-i. The presentation touk plsco dur- ing the supper attended by about ih rty five uienibcrs_ Father hlclnlyro anti .\ir. Norman W. Lowther were guest: of‘ the Club for supper. The following sre the scores for the diffsreat pl; President I‘ lee President liibbort i-Towiitf. 'i‘eii (‘hnntll-‘r l-‘rcti (‘ordn-ell W. L, iii-emu" l). Mathesnn Frank McDonald J. A. Fraser 391cm“- ._ s__ Art 501mm T. Phllli J. J. Morris J, S. AicDonsI); G. E. Full t‘. _\i. lVilliuisis l). B. Stewart 11- .W. ‘If. Townsend w“! nil“? l‘, E. Palmer H. Winchester J. W. Bouiter Phil Cobb l)r. H. McIntyre S. Moors: C. Black Judge Saunders J. it. Cameron 0. D, hlcGregor R. Worthy Geo llclaeod A, 5mg; W. A. Stewart F. A. Johnson _§ _8 9'" 3- 9- KBQPIBB J. s. Walker Dr. P. A. Creclman F. A, A. Mulch g- :1 ‘islet-fr J. a. Bentley ll ll Y ins, Frippl 1. B. Johnson W. C. L Art S illett ufmglflfi W. . Lord - R. R. Ball B- A. llcKJunon Hal Spillett -—T -1i W- 0- Bus: John Hewitt W. f‘. Davies W. Swindoll If. A. Campbell W. H. 'i‘ownsend l- 96m J. J. Morris —D .... _Two games were also played in the aiisninetion sei-iea nf the Junior fglvlilllplflflflll]; with the following re. l G. McLeod Brent Smith J’ B. Johnson Johu Hounitt W. Houston J. E. (Xmerun W W. Lord W, C. Davios J’ S. Walker , , I B Worrlw Dr. B.DC.MIQS:ID.IIIE Y"! Duffy Judge ‘Saunders Artohiilm ll‘, Cordwi-ll w -4 Jr. Crystals PVinners In Uvertime the newly organised Junior Crystals took a close decision over lummersid High School Friday night at the Crystal Rink, when their overtime tally broke a i-sll deadlock to make it 5-4. prise of the evening, with the score reading 4-1 at the middle of the second period they put on s great drive to tie the score at four-all st the endbf regulation time. The game was fast throughout with many powerful plays by both teams and developed quite rough at times with several players tak- ing the nod in the penalty box. W. Arsenauit broke through the High School defence to beat Ai-nett close in for the opening score. W. Perry followed with the second tally for the Juniors to end the scoring for the first period. The second period opened fast with Turner taking s pass from Jim Hogan to score the High School's first marker. The Juniors then scored two goals, the first by It. Boates on a pass from Arsen- ault, and the second on a. solo ef- fort by Boates. C. Hickey took a pass from C. Hogan for the school's second score. The third period found the High School on s strong offensive which was rewarded by two well earned goals. Captain Jim Hogan getting the first on s long drive that beat Lsrkin cleanly. C. Hogan took C. licksYs pass to tie up the game at 441i at the end of the third At the two minute mark of the inc ‘ t cinched the game for the Juniors when his ankle-high drive found the corner of the net after glancing off Ar- astt’: pads. - ‘rho School was by no means lshasrtenod and soon had the Juniors bottled t!) behind their blue line where they held them c until the bail and were only pre- ‘naiiur in: k Neil. t. Wimb- .I.Il6&hfld oowmvc nocxnr wnasruuc CHICAGO. m. an pair victory over . r ‘é Z onto Maple Leafs, gave the tertainment. Johnny Gottselig scored the fir erican minutes left of the session. Inciting needed -only 25 seconds through the final 2o minutes. IMPRESSIVE VICTORY victory over Detroit points. hockey most of the way. tally from a around the minute. Cecil Dillon, and Bill Cook rapped home early lead. PLAY DllAW ST. 1401115. Feb. 3-—An les here league game. sent Eagles into a one-goal lead. Goldsworthy near the cage. home the puck. was onsidc. team could find an opening. Hi “Y”Grads Continue defeating the Senior "Y" 46-32. LINEUPS 4: Goss, -f., 18; Morris, g. Storey, g.; Keefe, f.; Pierce, f. darson, I; Garnhurn, . Referee: Keith Johnson. ‘riiners: Johnstone. scorer: Cyril Johnstone. P. W. Canadiens Play Draw" M- P- by Guardian's Special Wire) Zoals in tho last period by Lolo Couture and llartie Burke tonight gave Chicago Blsckhawks s 3-2 courunr Hawks a rousing battle and the crowd of 10,000 a lot of hockey en- goai early in the second period to put the Hawks ahead. The Ameri- cans tied it, up two minutes later on Red Conrfs goal, and before the period ended took the lead. Obs Heximer punched in the last Am- sccre with less than four Couture on a play with Norman and Paul Thompson, of the third period to tie the score: and Burke, chubby defenceman, batted in the winner about half way NEW YORK, Feb. 3-—A stirring windup enabled New York Rangers to complete s full month of tri- umphant progress in the National Hockey League tonight with a 5-8 Rod Win55 before a capacity crowd of nearly 10,000. It was the 12th game for the Rangers since their last defeat, Jan. 1, and increased their third- placc margin over Detroit to five The blue shirts built up a 3-0 lead early in the third period after both teams had played defensive Three goals inside of four min- utes was Detroitfs contribution to the third period excitement with l-ierb Lewis, Wilf Starr and Desse Roche doing the shooting. A short time after their final counter Bert Connolly poked homo the winning wild scrimmage net. and Bun Cook scored an extra goal in the final Ott Heller the tallies that gave the Rangers their offside decision by Referee Duke McCiirry which many in the stands ques- tioned tonight gave Montreal Can- The man School proved the W- aidiens a. l-l u: with st. Louis m- in a National Hockey The decision came in the second period during one of the most thrilling games seen here this sea- son, sfter young Bill Cowley had Leroy Goldsworthy tied the score on a. pass from George Manths. who, St. Innis claimed. was behind the blue line and passed forward to The referee ruled the play which was completed by Goldsworthy banging ‘For the rest o! the game, includ- ing ten minutes overtime, neither Undefeated Led by the sharp shooting of Jack MacLean and Wallis G055. the iii-Y Grads continued their victorious run through the Y.M.C.A. House League Saturday night by team In the second game of the even- ing, the Princc of Wales girls‘ bas- ketball squad outplayed and out- smarted the Blue Dots in a regu- lar scheduled match, winning 26-8. _ Gnds: Macliean, L, 16; Cox, c.. Partridge, f., 8; Jones, g.; Senior Y: Walker, f., B; Walling. f.: Saunders, c.. l4; Henry, c, 2; Mstheaon. g.: Lsngilie, f., I; An- 4 George ltlcDougald, l-‘t. 0.: I’. Ayers, c.. l; Gay, f., lfotluigan, L, If; Doyle, f., h; IRangers And Black Hawks tWinners As ' And Eagles S T A R IN PIIII NIIBIIEY Kelly, Connolly, Mc- Manus Miller, Cow- ley and Webster Are Prominent. of (Canadian Press) _ Bert Connolly turned in the best performance cl firmer Maritime hockey ieagucrs in the National Hockey League over the week-end when he punotied home the win- ning goal in the third period for New York Rangers last night after Detroit had rallied to tie the score a; 3-3. Rangers got another in the last minute to make the final score 5-3. Connolly also aided in one of Rangu-‘s earlier goals. At. St Louis Bill Cowley former Halifax Wolverine blasted in his team's only goal as they tied 1-1 s, in overtime with Canadiens. Pete Kelly former Charlottetown Abbie had‘ Rvefnl good tries in 0106c but was baffled by young Wilf Cude in Canadians’ nets. Bill Miller and Sammy McManus turned in fine efforts as Montreal Mnroous trounced Boston 3-1 Sat- urday night. They alternated at centre-ice between l-iooley Smith and Baldy Natlmott who ac- counted for two of MSPOOD-S’ goals. Dave ‘Irott-ier got the other. Aubrey-Webster figured in both Windsor goals as they went down 5-2 to Cleveland in an Internat- ional League game Sstmday- eight. He scored the first himself then geVeDonQnAJIIeapass for tihs tatheroneJ-Iefaiiedtcgetintothe summary in Qindsy night's game against Detroit. In the Canadian-American League Dougie Kuhn from Trum and Jackie Resting from Saint John accounted for two of the goals in Providence Reds‘ 3-1 triumph over Philadelphia Arrow: Stimdoy night- Dean Absent As “Brain Trust” Of Cards Meet (AI. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, Feb. 8—Thn “brain- trus " of the world champion St. Louis Cardinals gathered in one hotel suite today but Jerome Her- man ("Diny") Dean, who'd like to get 335.000 for his pitching labors in 1W6. failed to show up for A scheduled informal discussion with his bosses. Owner Sam Brandon, business manager Branch Rickey, playing- manager Frank Frisch and various spectacular l c..... rLfQZcZFI - EIR 5 OVER TH€ IEO NEIRE RN MlLl DI$YRNLE$ fiTFtBt-BH ‘g0? THESE EVEN SPOR TBA 11's Indiana University Runner Triumphs In ' Indoor Meet ._..__.., (By Alan Gould, Associated P... Sports Editor) NEW YORK, Fob. fi-Talring the spotlight from Glenn Cunning- ham's one-mile triumph over Gene Venzke and Bill Borithron in the lvfllirose A. A. Track and Field‘ Carnival Saturday night, Hombostei of Indiana University raced to a world record victory in the classic Millrose 000-yard event in his second conquest of the meet. Hornboetelk time of one minute, 11.3 seconds wiped out the 10-year- old mark of l:ll.6 made by Alan Helffrich. l-Iornbostel, lanky, bespectacled runner who holds the inter-col- legiate half-mile title, performed a “iron man" registering his record triumph little more than an hour after whipping a strong field in the l.000-yard run by 2:13, within a second of the world indoor mark. . He was a. bad last, off the marks, in a field of four in the Millrose "600" but uncorkcd a daasling sprint, to overhaul his Indiana rival, Ivan Fuqua, and Milton Sendler of New York, 1984, win- ner of the event, on the last lap. The overflow crowd of 16,000 gave l-iornbostel a terrific ovation for his victory and astonishing Charles "double," which outshone the night's highly heralded feature- the W r mile-in which Cu was expectedly challenged by Pennsylvania's Gene Venzke instead of Bill Bonthron. Cunningham, passed by Venzke with a. lap to go after heating off 1 FliliitiLS. icinicunus in gratin Alex Hora, of Kirk- land Lake, Ontario, Is Individual Star of resumed t. ' *- s. Meet, Matt's? Dtsband _ ‘mnfln, m,“ . rim to- r.‘ spu- (cgntgiqo, Rh 131mm. 035$ '1 aglflnylfib. 8 _l m?’ States indoor ioe skating records m“ m-‘Wg g Qhg_-§_tsi smaicnr tenor: , were smashed in the western in- W sgHtqrgqlil’ , BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT - ' ‘ in‘, auilffiillvf‘ Toronto In’ slump» L08? ‘fl-ITO illmerks; Maroons Defeat 3.1‘ (c'-ibago'uiiif'igijssf.”wlilitimi'ili Cup CIIIGWPiOHs > win intheirlastfour games, fibrou- to Maple Leafs tonight were trying to account for temporary loss of their scoring Dlflwh hitherto ‘ door skating championships before s. record-breaking crowd of 11,600 spectators in the Chicago Stadium Saturday night. Alex f-lurd of Kirkland Lake, Ont. was the individual star of the ircet, winning all three events for class A men and establishing a new United States record in the two- mile race. Kitty Klein of Buffalo, achieved two of tho records. In the 440 yards she bettered the record made last year by Edith Kingamill of Winnipeg. Miss Klein came from second place. i in the last half to defeat Dorothy Pia-My 0f St. Paul. . leiis Brooks Hitter was third. I'm new record was .433: the old $8.5. Miss Klein established her sec- ond record in Winnipeg the first semi-final heat in the J-A-mile for class A women. She skated tho dis- tsnce in 2.18.1 as compared to her record of 2.22.6 last Year. She won the final heat, but in slower time. Hattie Donaldson Briggs of Toron- to was second and Mrs. Potter third. Pat Maloney of Minneapolis sat a. new record in the Mil-yard dash for boys under l4 years of age. He won the event in 42 seconds, re- placing the old record of .4311. In setting the row record of 5.58.3. 1-10 second better-than the the established mark for the two- mile event l-iurd went into the lead on the last lap and held it against Frank Stack, a. fellow townsman from Ontario's north. Eddie Schro- der of Chicago, United States olym- pic team captain, fell elrly in the race. but managed to finish fourth. Hurd also won the one-mile race with Stack again second. Marvin States outdoor champion, faihd to qualify in this‘ event because he fell and crashed into the board in his semi-final heat. - The men's class A Ado-yard event was an all-Canadian affair with Hui-d again the winner. Stack was second and i~'.~rb Flack cf ‘fbrcnto third. I-lurCs time was 31.4. second period and nn a leaf I808 attack Charlie Conacher sent s long. H pass over to "Flash" I-iollbtt I-fld his close-in shot eluded Wortcrl to ganging act in the third period. Her- arry Oil gerts an Oliver drew the passed perfectly to Hergerts. latter was in alone and had little difficulty beating Hainsworth for the winning goal. Maroons today were a little closer to the tcp of the International Na- tional Hockey League Canadian sec- tion following a sparkling 8-1 vio- Boston " nson of Minneapolis, United my 0m ted by the possibility of s grudge battle in the first meeting of ab? _. trains since the memorable nislit o Jan. 22 in Boston. the Maroons crebt within nine points of the ‘mi-onto Maple leafs, section leaders and hold four games in hand. disbanded Irlng the wees-ind by the ldoncton . Inhibition Aleoiaiion, pm“. Millie"!!! tea-m. it was sn- nosncrd tonight. Till outlawing o! the team by tileC-AJI-A. and the hlllra was primarily a t t r i b u t - able. however, to the veteran WQLTFRS- r11 leafs peppered as shots it the fast-moving American Gilli-OS“. . isn, one s penalty shot from Char- lie Ccnacher, and Wortera onlybad toiookbabind oncstofind the k. Americana’ first ‘mi cams fig: seconds before the Dflfllld 611 ' ed. ma not-nei- was in the penalty box and the New York crew were gauging when Rabbit Mclleiab came m mt. memoir and shot," ahead to Obs Keaimer, who pivoted m * and shoved it between Hainsworthb skates. _ Red Dutton was penalised in the llbll In dlsblllil the team, The Pillars will bs given their release: from the club, it was said. Whether or not the hfioncfolr Exhibition Aloclatio I!!! be interested in amateur ‘tion to be considered at some "All" ID9- llltllinly not this "N05. Mflcllllt 0f the Associ- ation shied. - - tls the score. While Iicafa were putting on l ver broke away. rcargusrd and The hockey next season, h a qilea- NAITAKEI > fWings . Looms As GreatesttSports Pro moter. . .83. , , ‘ Bankin- Associatcdw Sports Writer (By Guardian's Special Wire) CHICAGO, iiieb. 3. — A massive man, maker of a fortune, in wheat, 4s about to become the greatest Bruins here Sat- ay. Before a crowd of 10,000, attrac- Bsldy Northcott, Maroon: left- IIIIIEII CNIBAEII Owner of Detroit Red Y1 --~siin|um MONTREAL. Feb. 3.-Montreai the tiring Bonthron, came on with a characteristic rush to win by a half dozen yards in 4:11, which set a new mark for the Wanamaker mile, although short of the Kan- sans own world indoor record of t 4:084. stunt. by other officials or the Cardinals’ far-flung enterprises all were in town for the baseball writers‘ an- nual dinner tonight and for the National League imeting Tuesday but at nightfall there still had been no sign of Dean although the great right-bender was registered at the same hotel. "This business is all s mystery to rrn," said Brendon. "The last I heard from Dean he was perfectly satisfied with the terms we offered and was ready to sign. I don't think together." "BIIEWIW A GA IN II N IIISING ENII in the siioth game of the Sanc- tuary Boys’ league the Basilica squad displaying smart scoring punch once more defeated the Hloly Redeemer Church, the tilt ending 5 to l. Beaten decisively, however, the losers put up a much better battle ward only to be thwarted stonewall tactics of Norrie in 5 :5 i? g3 n 2r s gag; F§2g§§§;? =r§r§- we'll have any real trouble getting u Brenneman, To the present Kt-‘lly. wings, (C. P. B .7! y Abegweits Off Tomorrow Battle Will it materialize? Ever since Red Stuart stated so decidedly that Ahbics’ hockey team is superior to our farmer ‘iSig l-bur" entry which numbered such stair Dcsllete. Gotliffo and discussion has been hot around the city. It has finally Bot to the" stage when the pros and cons demand a. showdown and the suggestion has been made after the present Allan Oup series is decided that arrangement be made. it at all possible for a series of matches be- tween the best all-star icani Saint John can select and the Abbies. Red Stuart's statement was, "I would far rather play the Wolver- ines against your former team than this team. I always felt we could defeat the other team. We don't feel that way about this team. They 1M1 arc certainly a. bunch of lighters." The Abbies‘ team consisting of Sergeant. goal. Gross. Currie. Mc- Kie, defence, Kane, lnwlor, centers. H. Currie, C. Steele, right wing, Nicholson and Squarebriggs. left with Whitlock spare and trainer "Pat" Adair will leave to- moi-row moming for Halifax. They than the score would seem‘ to indi- "In manager Dunbar will possibly also trip with the boys. The start on Tuesdayisheingmadesoasnottc delay the game Wednesday night in the "Garrison" city. which would happen were they to leave the morning of the game. The woivor- 9h,“ inas will arrive here Thursday sv- cning for lridsy night's game. -'l‘.hewinner of theprassntssrni-y final seriaswillbahcsttothowin- nor of the Quebec senior group sar- ies which inoiuhs Montreal and Ottawa hams. Acadia Noses Out _ Port e. Williams 6-5 Suntan-Special Wolve rines ITFZIM“. SCORES NATIONAL LEAGUE Americans 2: Toronto 1. Boston l: Montreal 8. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Detroit 2. London 3. Windsor 2, Cleveland 5. Syracuse 3, Buffalo 4 (overtime). CANE-AMERICAN Philadelphia 4. Boston 5. SENIOR. GROUP HOCKEY Saturday At Ottawa ottawifSenators 8, Verdun Maple s 5 from every angle. Sunday At Montreal Verdun Maple Inafa B. Lafon- taine 4. Royals 3. Canadians 3 (tie). CAM-AM. HOCKEY FINALS Providenm 3. Philadelphia i. Bostmi Cubs 0. New Haven 3. INTSRNATIONAL LEAGUE d Cleveland I, Detroit 4. Rovers Defeat Huskies first IOU. . W. . . makcthe W!!!) 5.. IHI. I- Acadia High Scoring G a m e A t Stanley Rink . The third game of the Macken- zie and Wigmoro Hockey Dengue between tho Graham's Road Mon- archs and Stanley Dairy Kings was as fast as any seen here this wiri- ter, the Dairy Kings nosing the Monarchs out by a score of 10-2 and outskated and outplayed them The first period opened fast. Gordon Fytfe, the Kings‘ stellar de- fence ace, carried dawn center ioe and passed to Humphrey who scored from close in on a nice backhand shot. Then three miri- utes later Humphery scored again. but it. was ruled offside. Just before the period ended "Nobbie" Walsh, taking advantage of three men ddwn the ice, lifted a. shot over P. MacKaye shoulder to just land it in the upper left hand corner of a win- ners piaysd s dashing. fast passing game that carried the play right to the goal mouth, Bumphery, Quinn and the Elmer's caging the disc for three goals on bflllllllt 911m. llscfecd on a. neat pass from Campbell caged their ThothridstansswastheDsiry winger, scored a first period goal on s pass from Lionel Conacher gave - Maroon: “s lead but Dit Clapper turned in s beautiful solo goal in the second to even it up. With nine minutes to go. Dave ‘Irottier put the game away for the Mas-cons. Parke in front of the Bruins‘ nets. he snared s pass from lhrl Robinson and slammed it home. In the final minute Hooley Smith beat ‘Thomp- son on a gang play with Baldy Northcott and Russ Blinco. - Bell League Meeting ‘ The annual meeting of the Boll league was held in the Town Hail. Remington, on January 4th, with the President, Mr. George Webster, in the chair. Minutes of the last meeting were read and adopted. The officers for the following year were then elected as follows: Hon. President-Mr. Douglas Bell. President-Pr. Lorne Bell. Secretary-Alma Gardiner. The first game of the series will be played in Borden Rink, Kenning- ton vs. Cape a verse. _ P. W. 0. IIOCKIY The “fourth Year" team bolster-- in the ’ . a NOITI WINIIDI IOIOOL i1‘: d Detroit, costing $5,000,000, Norris is u ml! 0148b nlllmlltcd AMBJM build v tedweight more than in 103i. ti» _ been increased b! N: sports operator in the United States. He is James Norris, Sh, of Chicago owner of s grain company bearing his name. He is already interested in hockey. 1 Owner of the Olympia arena in act in acquire the Chicago Stadium. built at a cost of 86.500000 tomor- row when ‘iM-dersl Judge James Wilkerson releases the huildina from receivership and orders it turncdover to Norris, largest stock- holder. . . . Norris already has 8600.000 sunk into the building, larsect of its kind in the country, and when he ac- quires it another 0400.000 will he re- _quir_ed to’ settle unpaid obligations. Norris: _with his son, Jimmy Nor- ris. Jr" and A ur N. Wirtz, a Chicago "real est to operator. will form ‘a triumvlrate to operate both the Detroit Arena and the Chiclsfl Stadium. They bought the Detroit Arena two years ago and then Dur- i. Detroit Rod Winds of the ; National Hockey league, the Olym- pics of the International Hockey League, and firmed several ama- teur teams to keep the mart before the public in "themdtcr city. Norris, s. big six-footer, weighinl sac pounds. is a tremendously en- thusisstic follower of sports, partic- uia hockey. and boxing. Ho 1N- quen rewarded bis Detroit players with a bonus of from s50 to 010° after each game when they mid!’ l gectaoulaijdrive a year ago for the aiional League championship. nsooan nsnmo season i _ manna -'- New records were mated, in the Hull fishin! industry last yaar when the land- red-potinds, or 314,764 hun- ‘Standing a "nsuxes