"The (f/tvti HICKFY lll..\(IK ' A Home Product Popular Everywhere t» NICHOLSONS 'f0t‘ You" l‘\\' 1ST Manitoba Rink Wins Curling Championship Without Single Defeat (By Syd Thomas) SAINT JOfIN, N. B., March 0- tCPk-Slcntler. soft spoken Jimmy Welsh. a worthy successor to the great curling masters of Manhooa. lnrlay stood on the centre ice sitect pl st. Andrews Curling Club and iC-‘PlYCIl the Macdonalds Brier Taulr-rrtl. emblem of the Dominion curling championship which Welsh anti his Winnipeg Deer Lodge rink \\'I]ll without a defeat in the four- fl.’l\ curling event here. Weir-h and his rlnk-—his brother as nee-skip. "Jock" Reid at sec- yllfl stone and Harry Monk at lead ._5n-ept through the Brier meet to overcome all opposition and become ‘he fourth rink to go through a tune-game series without defeat 1nd the fifth which suffered no OSSPS. Tho other rinks, all from Manl- mo» “c! all from Winnipeg like the present one, were Gordon ll\ltis0n's in 1929. Ab Gowaniock's -u 193R and Howard Wood's in itilo. In addition, Leo Johnson of (‘Vinnipcg won the TJnkafd in i937 .\.tii st‘\'f‘ll \vlns in as many games. i\lir~ll only eight rinks were enter- rd as against. the presentrli]. Though Manitoba captured the 3 Tankard in regular play, the run- ner up position was in doubt unfl tonight when Saskatchcvwan and British Columbia squared off l.n l play off that Frenchy Dtlimours Trail rink took 10-9 with a timely tin-re l.n the twelfth end. 'l'lin<(~ two rinks and Northern Ontario wont into the final round ‘icd for second place, but though Saskatchewan easily disposed o‘. Quebec 13-6 and British Columbia squeezed out m. 9-7 win over Nova Seotia. the Northern Ontario rink lost g heart brcakcr in ‘Alberta game" can offer, with New Bruns- ivzd: handing Northern Ontario a loss in the second extra end match of the tournament-both with New Brunswick taking part --:nd was capped by a Brier re- cord seven end the victorious Welsh rink plied up against Prince Edward Island in the morning round. After the final stone was curled in the Alberta-Northem Ontario match members of the 10 champ- ionship rinks paraded on the ice led by the directors of the Do- mlnlrm Brier playdowns commit- tee-Art Candie. of Montreal -r.d Bill Christie, of Toronto—where they were drawn up for the pre- sentation of the Tankard by David Stewart. vice-president of the Mac- donaid Tobacco Co. Then Chief Justice Thane Camp- bell. of Prince Edward Island, s Brier trustee presented the en- graved trays to members of the championship rink, and Thomas Rennie, of Toronto presented go.d medals. replicas of the 1947 BCICI‘ button. Welelrs rink thus became the eleventh curling , quartet from Manitoba to win the Brier Tank.- ard in the 18 times it has been competed for since its inception in i927. There was no Brier held dur- ing the 1943-44-45 war years with the first post-war revival held at Saskatoon last year. Al- berta has won four times, Ontario twice. and Nova Scotia took the first one for its only victory. Next year's nleet will be held at Calgary. the farthest west the curlers have ever travelled for the dominion championship Just as this year's bonsplel was lhefurth- I-‘l. although nearly forcing on wlra end in a tense twelfth iicoil. The filial day's curling saw just about everything the "roaring C l-l IBYCO ‘BATTERIES APPROVE) IY CHRVSIII INGIIBII um‘: u.» (IHRYCO "rowan HNE BA'1'_"1‘ERY I proved by i-ilfftler engineers, an ‘planned by _ em to meet exacting mo em motor- '"l( 1' Ch sler ‘ an iftlfmlq I xhesi C RYCO BAT; r o supp y a constant surge o ‘it-‘l-sflgi power under toughest mndluons. ‘(our nearest Chrysler- i Ymouth-Fngo or Dodge-DeSoro cellar has them now. Power with i-HRYLO BATTERIES . . and be um. "CNRYCO" MEANS . .1 .. ~=.i'=’»‘=lé.°.=::.;,:::t:.:=r"star's: “wmflfl bums this trademark are lunmneed y the men vvh an E o DeSGi "3 2:3 . (9.9 frlgmeeretlby » " C H R Y S L E R CORPORATION (‘f CTANAUA. LIMITLI) Parts Division cmtilsl‘. Plymouth, a. Pa: o Dalhousie SPORTS 72H PLM. ' '_ADULTS_: l0 Cents -- P. W. c. . s... “ANNUAL ICE SPORTS ' Vanni _ _ . ‘Welshmen . mm. u... 1e KATI AFTIR . CHILDREN: 38 Cont: est cast. EIGHTH ROUND 111 001 012 104-—1B Man. P.E.I. . 000 320 100 010- ‘l Sask. 003 302 103 11-14 Alta. . 130 101 010 000- ‘l N.S. . 200 110 102 000— ‘l Que. . 033 .001 010 1224-13 B.C. 010 110 302 100- 9 Ont. . 301 001 010 011- 8 Nor. On 100 201 020 013 0-10 NJI. .. 011 010 204 100 1-11 (Extra end.) NINTII ROUND Ont. .. . 010 000 201 011- 8 Man. . . 203 111 020 500-15 010 000 012 210- 1 101 211 100 002—- 9 002 105 210 110-13 210 010 001 001- 6 004 M2 020 310-16 210 100 101 003-10 121 002 010 010- l . 000 120 101 101- 7 SPECIAL MATCH Result of playoff for second place in Canadian curling champion- .. 003 012 000 2.03—10 . 110 200 112 010- l) Final Standing At Big Bonspiei 5 s § Manitoba British Columbia Northern Ontario New Brunswick Nova Scotla Alberta tario ebec Prince Edward Island MMUbQUVUI¢CQ a-lQOIvviv-Acnuo Victoria Ice Snort: Tonight l: School Sports night at Victoria. Rink. Pupils from Bon- shaw. DeSuble, Hampton, Crapaud. Tryon, North Tryout. Mlguvtlne Cove and Victoria are slated to take part 1n the various age races and it is expected to be a banner night for all. Special attraction of the evening will be the hockey batch between Forbes Kerlnedyk Bantams and Victoria Bdiool All Stare. MARCH 1,1941 111E CHARLQTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE SE V EN Featured by the hockey clash between Dalhousie Tigers and the Welshman. Prince c-f Wales annual sports night takes place at the Forum tonight and glancing over the program the students ‘lave gotten together it appears as if the students have exceeded their efforts of other years. I i I I Since the event was inaugurated a few years ago it has never tail- ed to produce the best of com- petition in the skating races and the hockey match with u mainland team always being brought in "lus cllmaxed the eyening": program. a o Tonight the fans will see none other than the Dalhousie Tigers in action and the Prince ofwales stu- dent body along with many hockey fans are wondering just how the Welshmen will stock up against the Nova Scotin crew that ls head- cd by playing-coach Tom "Windy" O'Neill. former member the Toronto Maple Leafs.‘ I of But O'Neil is just another name to the Welshmen. They have thelr minds set on winning tonight's encounter even though there is no importance attached to it and have been working out daily so as to be in the best possible condition hr the tussle. . _ The game alc-ne should be veil worth the price of admission. Tig- ers have clawed their way to vic- tories already this season and are reputed to play a wide-open. rus- ged brand of game This will f.t in with the Weluhmcnb" plans. Johnny Squarebrigga’ team irkes the ivirlc-open. rugged going end that is just what the packed Forum should witness ‘tonight. Gordie Drillon‘s _Lcgionaires tackle Summerside Ibeglo-n at. Sum- mersldc tonight in the first. game of the Island intermediate hockey finals and word from the local’ camp is that the entire squad Will go out from the opening whistle ' seeking a substantial lead that they will carry into the second and frnal game scheduled for Forum ice on Monday nigh: 110M. Sum-mersi-de fans are all 820E over the coming series. The Jack Schurman-coached entry has been rolling up victory after victory over Prince County teams in their march to the County title and their followers feel that the team will be able to add the Island title to their string of victories and from there go on into the Maritime playdpwpa.‘ Bill Boyle's Juvenile Kinsmen certainly stamped themselves as distinct threats (o the Summer- side Klnsmen's juvenile title at summerslde Wednesday night when they held the defending champ- ions to a. 2-1 score in the first game of their two game series for the Island crown.‘ . Now with a game on home ice coming up and with only one goal to overcome the youngsters are confident they will be able to take the measure of their opponents and advance along the playoff trail. But although the margin is only a slight one it may be a very very tough one'to‘overcome. U I Lat your this Summer-aide Kins- men team. given little chance to capture the three province t-tle were held to a 4-all draw at the Forum against Sydney shipyards in the first game of the finals. There were very few fans who conceded them a chance to come through 1n Sydney but the game- ness and fight that is lmibucd m nll Summcrside teams came to the fore and they came triumphantly home with the t_rop’hy.tucked away. I ‘hat was dc-lng it the hard way; we are not saying or neither are we helping that history will repeat itself here on Saturday night ‘ca! the game shapes up as a close hard-fought struggle all the way. These youngsters can really fight when the chips are down and when there la a title at stake and Sot- urday night should produce just that kind of a battle. can Postpmld The Director of Physical lfitnele last evening announced that the University ems mo, m. Juvenile hockey match which was slated for Victoria Rink. Saturday nldit between Pail; Rovers and Victoria Juveniles. bu - peace until a IIAI‘ date Z h VICTORIA RINK SATURDAY NIGHT - ROCKET. dill Skating AMI NINI MIL! client ILNLDOGS Vs. VICTORIA IOMIIRS a Last Ice Race 0f Season At S’side Saturday The Summer-side Trotting As- sociation will sponsor another lice race on Saturday afternoon. March 8 at 2 o'clock. As this is to be the last race of the season those bringing horses are asked to make a special effort to be present. The horsemen will meet tonight. Fri- day. in the ofifloe of MacFarlar-ie Produce Co. Ltd. and entries will be accepted until B o'clock. Bus To Victoria A special bUs carrying bantasn hockey players and spectators wlll leave the bus stop this evening at 6.35 sharp for the ice sports at Victoria. Canadians And Rcd Wings In Due-ail Draw MONTREAL, March 6 —- (OP) — Montreal Canadians and Detroit Red Wings fought to a 1-1 No- tional I-Imkcv League draw io- night that allowed the Wings to pull within a point of New York Rangers in the fight for the fourth and last playoff spot. With tacit team having played 53 cf its 60 scheduled games, the Rangers have 46 points while the Wings. unbeaten in seven games. have 4'7 points. Tonight's counter left the Wings with a record of four victories and lhreg ties with- out any defeats marring that spell and still left them as one cf (he "hottest" teams in the circuit. Although cutshot through the game. the Wings were always a vic- tory threat as a result of Harry Lumleys fine goal tending and a second period goal marked up by Sid Abel while defenceman Ken Rear- don cf Canadians was off for hook- ing. Abel's goal came at 14:02. just about 30 seconds before Reardon was due back on the ice. It wasn't until the fifth minute "of the third period that Canadians. a virtual cinch to finish uo the standing in first place although they still haven't made certain of the top spot mathematically, were able to tie the score. Billy Reay tzot the game-knoltlng tally on a play where Emllg “Butclw flouchard drew an assist. Actually. it was difficult to per- ceive from the sidelines whether Abel had actually "scored" the De- troit tally. Roy Conacher slammed a hard shot at the Montreal goal from a bit inside the blue line and the puck seemed either to hit Abel's body or glance in off his stick. 1t didn't seem like an inten- tional play on Abel's pert but he received credit for the goal. SURDIAIIY First: Period Scoring; None. Penalty: McCalg. Second Period I-Detrolt. Abel 1R.flOIllOh€1'. Taylor) 14:02. Penalty: Rcardon. Third Period Ll-Montreal. Reay (Boucthard) 4:40. Penalties: None. Eastern Driving Club Races The Eastern Driving Club held races on Souris River Wednesday, March 5. The course was rather soft. but the fa-ns sow very good racing specially in the Class C Trot and Pace. These horses are improving each rue and all show good signs of making good race horses. SUMMARY hie For All King Bruce (McDonald) Grace Sywnbol (Mallard) Betty Direct (McConnack) .. 2 3 d!‘ Winning horse owned by Ade McDonald. Clue B Pace Llddle l-lll (Mclnnla) .. Rollo Bay Boy (Burke) . Dot Leowls (Bushey) . Winning horse owned Mofnnls. New Zuland. Cllll C ‘hot I hoe mun Spruce» (J. Longpbe) _ 1 an an 1 811v blllhmou (one) e 2 dh 3 2 Queen L. (J. lmigphe) 3 3 dh S Winning horse owned by Joe Lin-who, Goren Bree. Moncton Trims Truro 4-1 (To Even. Big Pour Playoff Series TRURO. N‘. 5.. March 6-(CP)- Moncton I-Iawks tied their best-of- frve series for the Maritime Sen- ior Hockey League title here to- night by defeatlns ‘Pruro Bearcats 4-1. The fifth and deciding gauze will be played in Moncton Satur- day night. Moncton’: Bell-Whitlock-Charl- ton line carried the mail for Hawk; with Bell and Charlton each scor- ing twljce. Whltlock was injured in the third period when he was checked hard by Ab McKlnnon and may be out of the gume for some time. s Buddy~ McEachern and Dait Barkwell teamed up for 'I‘ruro's only goal halfway through the third period. Hawks started their scoring early in the opener when Bell counted on 9, play set up by Whit- lock and Charlton. Near the end of the period Charlton took the puck from Bell and scored. The only score of the second period was Bell's, from Whltlock. The last score for the Muncton trio came early in the final per- iod when Cherlton scored from Bell and Whltlock. The game was a clean one wrth only three penalties. Summary First Period 1--Moncton, Bell Charlton) 5.32. Z—Moncton. Charlto 0. . (Whitlock, (Bell) Penalties: None. Second Period 3—Monct0n, Bell 14.47. Penait ies: (Whltlock) Trainor. Steele. Third Period 4--Moncton, Charlton Whltlock) 222. 5-Truro, McBachem (Barkwcll) (Bell. Penalties: Demchuck. Challenge Accepted We, the Lower Bedeque Minks. hem-by aoeept the challenge of Mll- ton Hornets to a hockey game in Bedeque Rink Saturday. March 8 to start at 8 pim. sharp. Fred Jeffrey. Capt. Legion ‘(can Playing in S’side Tonight Charlottetown laaglonaires travel to Summerslde this evening where tonight they tackle Summerslde Legion in the first game of a two game total goal series leading to the Island intermediate hockey title. Through an error on the writ- er's pert the game was stated to he slated for last night in yester- day's issue. _ Legion will take a complete lineup along for the game in an effort to capture the all-important first encounter but the team and its followers are expecting the toughest kind of opposition from the western county band who have piled up a lengthy list of victofles in recent games. Murray ilarllor Team Wins From Cedtown Outaooirlng their opponent; 2-1 in the middle period and then sexton after both teams had but- open-lng union. Minty Harbour homey squad Wednesday captured first place l.n the southern King's County hockey league by downing Georgetown 3-1 in s fast. lnistllng enoounte. played mt Georgetown rink. Wlth a fair oiled crowd cf fans ln attendance. the game was piny- ed at a fast wide-open clip all the way that kept the funs in a high state of excitement throughout. Goals by G. McKay and 11.. Chap- man gave the winners a 2-0 lead early in the second period with clown cutting the margin in lzulf at the halfway mark on a counter from the stick of S Mc- Nelll but the winners telly 11y W. MdMll at the eleven minute ml of the looting put the clincher on the evenly-fought struggle. W. Miclean of Mil-ray Harbor and ll. Chaprmn of Georgetown both drew majors in the thiid per- iod as they clogged it out with each other in In outbreak that saw both teams finally get into it and furs crowd onto the ice before things quietened down. Lineups: Murray lI-nbor: Goal, B. McKay: defence. W. Harri-s. L. I-Iu-rla. a, G-iepnnn; foevnzfi. L. Herring, . McDonald. E. Harris. P. Bar- m. w. McNeil, o. uelny. Ceoagetovm: Goal. B. Does; de- fence. W. Melean. W. boven. for- wards. S. Mcleau. H. Stevens. W. Inndry. A. Landry, I‘. favundler. shooting the only goal of the third: lcrobatlcsmfancy u” ‘o ‘D wade“ dmw in the, clown and novelty numbers. beauti- St. -Mary’s Wins Opening Game Df Junior Series BYDNEY. N-B. March a -—(C'P) — Halifax St. M-HTTB. defending Maritime junior hockey champions. ddwsd sydney Sunbemns 9-2 here ‘might l0 "*6 l-‘he first some of a "VD-Same total goals series for the NW"- 5°°U8 111111011’ hockey champ- ionship. Second game will be play- ed in Halifax Saturday nl-rht, Mmfi’ 3'1"“ si- Mary's. ‘sated 55 "19 simtngefil Maritime Memor- ial Cup threat in years, kicked back in the second and third cer- l°d= 1° $111k Sydney Sunbeams _Sun»beams showed remarkqme flBht all the way. St. F. X. - S. D. ll. Meet Next Week ANTIGONISH, N. S., March ¢_. (CP)-—St. Francis Xavier Univer- iitl’. Nova Scotla intercollegiate “Wiley flilislfl. and St. Damian's University of Charlottetown, New Brunswick-Prince Edward Island college champions. will meet next week for the Maritime title. it was announced here todny. It has not been decided, however, whether the two will meet in a sudden- death match at 'I‘ruro, NS. ur a. home-and-home series. Believe Record At Big Classic SAINT JOl-IYN. N. 13.. March d —(CP) - Ailtflollsh Jimmy Weiltsh and his Manitoba rink set. what is believed to be a record for Dominion curling championship play when they set up a seven end in their martch with Prince Edward Island this morning, the Little Scottish skip wasn't too surprised by it all. While complete records uteronf available. old time followers of the sport at l.n-c championships here agreed it was the first time since the Brier competition was started back in 1927 that such a high count had been scored in a singllc cnd. When the Welsh rink marked up that seven 0nd and went on to wln the match and cllnch the title. Jimmy almost managed an eight end. a perfect heads but he w-as a bit too long on his last stone. St. Andrews Leads Intermediate Series ST. ANDREWS. N.B. March 6- (CP) — St. Andrews Senators took a strangle-hold on the New Bruns- wlnk lutemlediate hockcytitle to night by lrouaiclng Bathurst Paper- makers '7-2 in a fast. clean game. The Senators. with coach Pickles McNichol and manager William O'Neill. will leave tomorrow for Bathurst. where they will meet the north shore team in the second game of the two-game total-goal series en Saturday night. Ice Follies At Suuris This evening, Walllc Scantle- buryb Ice Follies of 1947 will be staging its opening appearance of the season at Souris. People of tilts eastern centre are assured of aflnc evening's entertainment featuring figure skating. fut girls and special customes. A special bus eu-nytng the full Follies cute will leave the 1711s stop for Souris (this evening at 5.15 sharp. Referee: F McFarlane. SUMMARY lat. Period. *—None. Penalties-None. 2nd. Period. L-Murray Harbor. G. McKay. 2.10 2.-Mu.rray Harbor. R Chapman 4.40 3 —- Georgetown. s McNeil]. 10.15 Peflailrty: W McNeil. 3rd. Period. 4.--Mur'rny Harbor. W McNeil 4S. Hurts) 11. .\ THEATRE IICIISE ll 92M STREET Wlfllaln lytbe Lloyd Nolan Montague: s-T- Mon. THE BIKE SHOP The lltllllt‘ of "Spurting- t .lnitl~." .illil litt) 183 GREAT GEORCE STREET t l('\ Close Game Witnessed As City Hockey League Playoffs Get Underway - In as closely a contested st-nqgle as has been witnessed all salon long Sflnts and Navy lng semi-film! game of the City Hockey League last night bottled to a S-all draw in the open- phuoffs. with the lead see-sawing back and forth five times during the encounter flu small crowd of spectator! new the two and tongs nil through the piece ln teams battle web other ballad n elose-checflrlg and at time: foot battle. with the two goalies Daivls and MeKinnon having a lot to any 1n the druw verdict; an each came t‘ “ with Ipeuacular saves h! the dying moments of the game ul first the Saints and linen the "Tare" played shorthamded through penalties. Tlhe tilt saw two players perform the hat trick. Johnny Hlgldll getting (Jlrec counters of his better games of Other scorers for the Navy‘ were Hennessey, Kelly and Brad- lqy, the letters goal knotting the count at six-all while for the Saints Thibault and Methot had a counter apiece. Neither team hit anything near their real form in a listless first period of pllay as they each shot a goal to leave the ice deadlocked at 1-all. Saints. with five regulars out of lhc lineup. did most of the forcing all the way but although they came close several times they had to come from behind finally to earn an even break on the period. Davis and McKh-inon both came through with slrlart saves on a couple of occasions to keep their goals clear of alien rubber. The Period was thee-quarters gone and not a sign of a score ivhcn Navy clicked for a count- r-r. Ifannigan snared the disc at centre ice. swerved around the lcftt side of the defence to out in towards the net before whlp- I Ding a pass across the goal- mouth that Hlgson slapped in. Back came the Saints in three attacks with Davis robbing Mtmar at point-bionic range but. the lat- tcr evened matters seconds later as he snared a loose puck 15 feet out to pick the unprotected corner of the net. for the equal- izer. They opened the game utp a litt- tlo wider in the middle session with Carmichael drawing a pen- ally in the first aninute but the man-power advantage boomer- angcd against the Saints as Navy after coming close seconds before slammed the rubber in for a 2-1 lead. I-Icnnesscy slapping Hig- son's rebound home. Less than four minutes later with Mcthot in the penalty box Navy widened their lead to 3-1 as Gordie Kelly converted Jay's short passout. Saints got back into the run-l ning 69 seconds later as Til-libault tipped in Methotks drive on a power play and three minutes later the game was all even oncc more as Mahler batted in Mc- Istiacs rebound. For the next six minutes play ranged from one end of the lice to the other with both teams missing ohances. Thibault cs/pcclzilly firing wide with Davis nt his mercy. but Saints con- tinually hunting for goals real- ized on Muller's counter from a scramlble. But in the see-sow battle the load was short-lived as Hiigson. alter being hauled down when in the clear realized on the rc- milling pcnulty shot to make it 4-a1l. 35 seconds bcdore the end of the period Higson sent. the Navy ‘Qick into the lead when he scored on Kelly's pass on a play deep inside the Saints defence Zflhf‘. mg chance in the first five min- utcs of the final session when Methot skated rigtht ln on top of Davis or?! to have tltc latter kick the drive out. but the same Mcthot vras back al 7:40 to knot the count as llc fired McQualdKs pass bcrtl: wrJsl high lz-ln 11'1" cords. Less than a minute later Joe Mahar with his third goal put lhc Saints out front again. tak- ing Blanchardb pass in the cen- tre zone. swcrving in and draw- ing Davis to slide the disc into the empty cage. ‘The goal was a signal for a succession of Navy power plays. Three times there were wild ‘scrambles around the Saints cage without the puck crossing the linc until finally Ted Bradley. on Saints had the only real scor- ror the Navy team and Joe Maliar, playing one the season sniping four for the University outfit- the rubber in. Davis stood tn the breach for the Navy three times ln the lalt four mtnuitee with sensational saves off manohard and Mahar. Navy had a chance when Manor was penalized but could not; oop- ltallze while Saints with Hen- nessey serving the last wan min- utes of the game l.n the box. couldn't break through for thl winning counter. Linc-ups: Saints: Goal. McKinnon; 0e- fence. Rodgers. Med-tot; forwardl, Mahar, Blanchard, Mclsaac. ‘ID11- bhgultz. MeDougall. McQuald. Delg- n. Navy: Goal. Davis; defence. Hennessey. Carmichael. Josey’. Stewart: forwards. Hlgson. Flan- nlgan, Bradley. Kelly. Jay. Bian- ohard. McGregor. Referee: Roy Prowse. SUMMARY Flrlt; Period I-Navy, l-ligson (Flannlganl 15:16. ., z-Saints, Mahar, 18:87. Penalty: Josey. Second Period Zl-Navy. l-lennessey tlligsonl 1:52. 4—Navy. Kelly (Jay) 5:44. fr-Sainta. Thltbault (Metbdt) 6:53. 6—Saints, Mahar (Mclsaacll 10:11. ‘l-Salnts, Muhar, 16:20. &-Navy. I-Idgson (penalty shot)‘, 18:20. 9—-Novy. Higson Penalties: Mcthol. Third Period Metho t tBradley) 18:5. Carmichael t 2), lib-Saints. (MnQunidfi 7.40. 11 Saints. Mahal- (Blanchard? ~32 8. . 12—Navy, Bradley (Higson) 13:04. N. Billivenile- Final Tonight MONCTON, N. 5.. March 6—- (CID-Second game of a total-goal home and home series between Moncton Canadians and Saint John North End Indians for the provin- cial juvenile hockey championship will be played here tomorrow night. The teams played a 2-1 tie in the first game of the series at Saint John. Racing on New (ilasgovl Ice A large crowd of racing fan! were on hand to see close finishes on the New Glasgow ice Wednes- day aftemoon March 5. with Reuben Lee. Jay Volo and Goldie Worthy being the winners. The ice Was in good condition and the boys plan to hold another meet on Saturday if (the weather permits. SUMIIARY Clue A Reuben Lee (Bemard) . Bob Ca-nuck (Andrew) Claus B Jay Vola (C. Smith) Lynda Darnell (Gamester) Clan C Goldie Worthy (G. Smith) Betty Worthy (Dolron) . . .. Starter-Jeremiah Peters. Judges-L. LeClalr. John Peters, and Wat-field Orr. NH are Ml-l NH HH NH Hal Ht- blue a pus from l-ligson bsckha “ '1 Fancy Dress Carnival BEDEQUE RINK stonnav. MARCH nun Prizes hove been contributed by lending firms and politicians of led-aqua and Summenide. Nov on display at Ralph Callbeclds Store. loilot Vote by Spectators to decide the Winners Mayor Arnei-t will present prises. Announcer-GE. Smith. ener