"I .’ lMAkfitiaso‘ Are Intermediate A crliAaLoflmx-liwniouanli - Title l" Isa ultra!’- bljari‘ a u]; s rollicking. ma... cons- edytravslovein Parbaadliea- i i.i i iEllR.L$,_ii_il w,i-illlii “PililiCi-Z lililllilii iiow v 200 MUSICAL COMEDY YER- I-‘OBMBIB INCLUDING SUE CAROL — SHARON LYNN Bigger than big! Newer than new! or lies rd. i TALKIE SERIAL OF THE JUNGLE—-CAPI TOL THURSD “THE KING OF THE KONGO” For the first time you will hear the la nguage of the wild animals - lions, tigers, hyenas, jaguars, elephants, wild-cats and many others. serial such as has never been -even imagined! With Walter Miller and Jacqueline Logan. Biuer tllan blue! Better be among those present when the screen unfolds the most popular Follies ever seen , us" only \\ \\\‘“““ Httr that hot! i SENNETI‘ 4 T02. (Canadian Press) g i "HALIFAX, N. .8, Mar. 10.—’I‘he Truro Bees-cats won the amateur hockey championship of the Mari- time Provinces here tonight by dc- feating Bathurst, N. B.. three to two in the second and final game for the title. The Bearcats had a one goal lead as a result of their 1-0 victory at Bathurst Friday, thus the total score for the two games was 4-2. On Wednesday, the Truro team will leave for Montreal to play the Quebec champions Friday and Monda in the Allan Cup play-downs. It was the fifth time for the Bcarcsts to win the Maritime championship, in seven years. . The nlatch, one of the best exhibi- Atallllll tlons of the National game played in Halifax this se , was watched by the largest crowd of the year, pver six thousand people thronglng the Forum. Bathuret, 1020 Maritime tltlehold- srs. wiped out the one goal deficit sustained in the first game of the series at Bathurst Friday in the opening session and went one goal in fl " wing eluded goalie sbnsuustiscmm’ Defeated ‘Bathlirst In ‘Halifax L... Night 3T0 2,’.Winning The Series the score for the game andput the Beercats one up on the series. After fifteen minutes of fsstylay in the finsl twenty mlnutos of the match. Hymio McArthur, midget left winger of the new champions, went throughthe entire Bathurst team, drew goalie Bond out alld slipped the rubber into the meshes on the best individual play of the night. The spectators, most of whom favored Truro, went wild with joy when McArthur scored, Bathurst had an edge in the first period and out- shot the Bearcats by seven to four, although their margin was greater than the stops by the rival goalies indicate. 1n the second stanza goalie- Bond, Bathurst, stopped thir- teen shots to seven for Kuhn, while in the closing period Kuhn had six shots. ten less than Bond. There was much hard bumping throughout the game, but very little dirty play and only a few penalties were handed out. "although they cams in bunches and on two occasions there were only nine men on the ice. _ 5r. ies.-ransom, m. sum lo-Babe “Bill-h. hem erun ‘king of baseball this afternoon affixed his signature, to a two Y!!!» Omtract cai- ling for a Yca-rly- salary o! 180.000- The signing took place It the hotel the New York Yankees. after Ruth had been not WW1: by Rubi?“ formoimthsnsnbourintlashoiel Much spotuleitlion been coins on in baseball circles er the attit- ude taken by Ruth this spring. _ At one time he announced he was through and would continue his fest- ure side issues should the Yankee management fall to accept his pro- posed figure of $05,000 - Each had to give sway we $0.000 concession. the Sultan of Bret drink ping to that extent and the Rslppcst intense; going that much higher than they had offered. - While many figured the Babe would not forsake his favorite past- time, still his throats stirred follow- ers of the game. He has kept in con- dition meanwhile. Horse Racing At Malpeque ‘The Mslpeque Driving Club held its fourth race on Thursday, March 0th. Although the day proved un- suite of Col. Jacob Rupperi. owner of ' Goals. A Victoria unions, Gilt hfld lkathg, rugged and mm: outfit from- tbs south shore. holders of- the hater- unediate hockey Uhllllplwlllp‘ of Prince Edward Island, last year. are again ’ ‘ cf all they survey so far as repeating their perfomenc- ls concerned for they, again wcn the Island title last eveningnslefeating second Abegwelisfliohinthesouth shore Rink. thereby winning the homeaud home goal count by a margin of twopoints. , ‘rhohioe last night. although heavy,- was free of waior, whim; made puck carrying not so bed. and some ea- cellent hockey in every period was dlshcdouttotlse largeerowd of < cheering, enthushstic fans. who came fmsnfarahdneariowitness the clash. _ Starting out slow. with both foams apparently feeling cad: other out, the period socnsd livenod up insulting in e. number of excellent solos and coin- binatlcn plays to the mouth of both i . inside thelllilo line. e sland rCllfllmps Defeated nouns? In Halifax Last toria Last NightZ To 1 Winning The Round By Margin Qf Two _ > ' For the remainder .0! the session it was bard. fast hoizkoy bu; no counts. ' Th» i-hirdperioa a battle my. sl. with the Abogweitg town-as m, m" “"5158 four P115’!!! info the m“ d m‘ n!“ m ll! mdeavor to ‘ mm" "0 I stubborn lulu Gibraltar defense that the Abegwcitts oouiq no; penetrate. -. ;_ It was ivml eaolaolohlup sffgjy; with thellosers playing iii-m. hockey in ovary period- Ther have nothing o. "reproach themsc wee for. They mm, ed in a great game and true Worthy of their steel. In the last period Jimhiy pow" was stnlcknthe face ‘by aflylng Duck and was forced to leave ti“ game. At the time of the gegretisbl, Iodlihltfowar was playing s, bu,‘ unrmsiauassbisnqg um, Memes had I8 stops; 141.90g 24‘ At the close oi’ the same ‘Mr. John notch s. few more goals, but, vim,“ _ favorable there was s. good attend- nets and firming "prospective tool- ancaThe race consisted of two class- ies. "Tid" McEwsn and Bill Mc-i es, namely A and B. Lood to make some senntional saves. The following is the summaryt- After foluiem minuios of filly s. Btowart. stellar Victoria forward ee- Lyman in the absence o! Mr, J, wright of Summer-side presented the lniomodim cub. emblemuuc bi the , Prince pdwsrd. Island Hockey (Flasm- l front early in the second period, but their rally was shortlived and the Bcarcats came back to score s. pair of markers before the middle canto and a-snows DAILY - USUAL PRICES i s i Holiday In ‘ London And Vicinity 1A l (Continued from page 4) AN’ OPEN DOOR i “Shortly after midnight a decent- . ily dressed young man glanced furt- _"1VETY round Trafalgar Square, hesi- é ‘ tated a moment, and then ran swift- 3 steps of St. Martin's = he tapped the door, “There was the sound of a drawn .bo1t, and the door swung back. The young man stammered. He was blue y Qwlth cold, and~there was something i. "felse: "1'm-1'm broke,‘ he said. ‘I've :_hever done this before. I've always ~had a bit of m0ney;'but—well‘. I've 1 “nowhere to sleep tonight, and- j‘ please can I come in?" i‘; “'I‘he door opened wider, and a -" pleasant huddle-aged policewoman said: ‘Come along!’ I followed. - “Down in the crypt of St. Mart- in's Church, the church whose doors > Qnever close, I saw a remarkable sight. , Broad, white arches spanned a dim ; i gloom. Certain benches were set ‘jificlng the cost, as in the church _~ - above, and others were placed round 3 the crypt. Lying, sitting upright, and \ ‘huddled in every position of which I the human body is capable. were men and women, homeless wander- ' ers over the hard face of the earth. ‘ “There ‘was no sound in the white ; . crypt but variously keyed shores and if, the small scratch of a policewomans l=iipen' as she kept a record oi Christ's ifguests. for such they are; and as I ' {looked at them these words sang in I that labour and are heavy laden, and will give you rest.’ ' "Sanctuary. That was it. They had ‘ii, e hunted air of having run hard 5:111 find this place, and having found ‘d. had abandoned themselves to ,4 dalety. 'l‘herc was‘ something else. illfrilcy reminded me of a picture that ; to thrill me when I was a child: géiggps rolled in their cloaks beside T ad fires. sleeping before a battle. ‘their battle was Ibmororw. ‘ "There was a young girl who could "flat sleep. . . . There was a ‘ i of prayer books, beside her. e or four other women slept together, leaning ~agcinst each r. .' . L ' v i, ,1 {Most of the men slept. some had ‘o, ovsrcoats. others had placed ._$i "j-isir coats over their heads. . . . _ elderly man, awakened sudden- shot out an arm to look at his -wstcb. But no watch was there he drew his hand under his coat - ‘as though it hurt. Boats extraordinary dramas have " mac-on the steps outside in A hours,’ said-a young man . with the church. girl was saved from" waits- Onorl-Qbrought in s boy so spa , ldltbat x newts dpen l 5 y lilmoiit JJJQiTme frfllenls—we make. the any heart: ‘Come unto Mc, all ye' 1'10; ziludlfl, l). .1..0lslnlehasl. fi delightful characters we discover when the ache and pain of hardship have worn off.‘ . . . . ‘We don't care what they are,‘ said the young man. “If they are in trouble, that ls enough). ‘(I hardly heard him for I was thinking that in this white place is the Spirit of Christ." ' iTo be continued.) I Coo-d Racing at O‘Keefe’s Lake 'I‘ile second meet of a series of races on O‘Keefe's Luke was held on Thursday afternoon. A large crowd of spectators were on hand, and enjoyed the contests. The first race, Class A, had but two starter, Sharpsburg and Wittawah. The f _st and second heats had cv- crybody guessing us to the winner. Wittmvah winning both by inches only. In the third and final heat. Shalpsburg was on his had behaviour making an easy will for Wittawali. Class B had five starters, which took five heats to rlccldc. Mabel C. won lst heat with Tarbaby a close second and Rex S. at Tarbabys shoulder, Princess Col. 4th and Lady Waltz 5th. Second heat provided a thrill from start to finish to within 30 feet of wire, when Mabel won by a length, Rex nosing out Tarbaby by a neck. Princess 4th, Lady Waltz 5th. Third heat proved. a repetition of second for three quarters the dis- tance, when Till-baby went to a break, and had to be content with 3rd place, while Rex and Mabel fought bravely for honors, Rex win- ning the heat by a few inches. Lady waltz captured 4th place and Prin- cess 5th. Fourth heat had three starters, Princess and Lady withdrew. They got away in a bunch and kept close for half the course, when Tar- baby pulled a boot off and had to pull up. Hex and Mabel fought it out nose and nose, Rex winning _by a few inches. Fifth and final heat was won easily by Rex as Mabel broke a strap and had to pull up. . Class (J had eight starters. Minnie P. won 1st heat and Billy Brown the 2nd and 3rd heats and race. Summary follows: Class A. Simrpsburg, McMillan 2 2 Wlttawah, McDonald 1 l 1 ClassB. Tarbaby, Calms .. Mabel 6., Grant , Rex 5.. Stewart .... Princess 001., Woods Lady Waltz, E. Cairns ... Class C. Jcrry,_1.ynn~ Harry J..-O‘Donnell. i Spitfire, Whclan . Minnie PI. Oiillslru. Bungo Boy. l-lu es 28 Cobalt Queen," ichael ... l ch‘. Mano surplus-pity .......~.....,2 8d!‘ Blllyyhrown. Bradley I l_l 4 Officials wsrebBi-artcl’. .1. W. Our- ALSO A THRILLING WESTERhN ' “SMILIN GUNS”.wit _.d__.___ ,so — Hockey At Highfield euiiumsy moot 0w 14nd!‘ "i North River met the Hifllfliim Gmnim, up Lindy: going down to defeat by a score of l io 1. The game was underway at 8.15 with a 890d sheet of ice, the G-l-anilos told-HI the lead early in the am. period when Sitead stickhandled through the de- fence and beat Newson for the am, score. There was some 8°00 plays made on both side-i 1°!‘ m! rcst of u-ie neriod- but m 01°" m" ing. The second Perl“! 800"“ ""9 fast, boiil sides twins hard to awe- Goad combination by the Warren brothers kept simlWBU D1159“ °" tip toe turning them aside- flown minutes had elapsed when W. Rodd and Stead ‘billed, Blond booth! Newson for count two. The play ail- raged till three minutes before the period ended Kier Warren takes a hard shot at Duffel: skating in fast. picks up the rebound and 08800 their mi. and only wore. period ended two lo one, Granlios 1W0!- The mud period wag l, little slower starting away but grow hotel‘ ll it proceeded, botlh goalies making some wonderful saves. The combination of the Granltes forward line balli- cd the fast skating Lindys. Beven minutes of playing, Iowts passes‘ in slow. Sload w .1. mo. with m» ‘ hard wing slwt scored the Graniies third tally. The play was at a hot pitch by this time, Lewis and Coles making some good rushes but could not get by Lindy goalie. Jewel broth ers making some 300d plays, but were heavily checked by the Gran- ltes defence. ‘Ihree minutes to go when the Granite: combined, W. Rodd carrying the puck, passes to Stead who takes s. hot one at New- sorl. S. Hurry. catching ‘the re- bound which made the score four‘ io one in Granttes favor, ending the scorlnx for the game. The game was refereed by s. Philips satisfac- tory iohoth teams. 1.ine ups;- GBANITES LINDYS Goal E. Dullett O. Nowson Defence g A. Ooles I’ Jewell A. wwis Bi... cnson Forwards J Rodd ‘ D Jewell W. Rodd l’ Warren n. stem ’ x. Warren a. Hurry shot the winning marker in the last five minutcs- of play. Sammy Mur- dock. who has played in five Mari- time champlonship teams in the last seven years, was the outstanding player in tonight's game. at times holding the entire Bathurst. team at centre ice with his clever poke checking. Murdock assisted in one goal._ w Goals cams cheap tonight. Ofethue five scored during the sixty minutes, two were from nice plays, while the remaining three were lucky tallies. The first Bathurst score, coming after five minutes of play in the opening period, was ofl‘ Kenny Canon's stick andwss a roller from the wing that CITOOBIQCI Oil Skeet Kuhn‘; skew into the meshes. After three minutes of the second period . Kuhn , stopped Gammon! shot and then‘ put the rubber into the cage himself in at- tempting to stop a score. A minute later Murdock engineered, a smart Plly Ind pissed to Doggle Kuhn for a nice score. Exactly four minutes later Glennie! long roller from the bolus nine goals and the Blood hounds iomi sl_x. m the first period u" 31°°¢h°l1n<15 Dlflyod on the def- ensive but in spite of this the A1- bi-‘MP hi)?! Bot numerous shots at 011$ 00178 TYB-Vefae goal, which cul- minated toward the last o1 the m- iod in s score for the Regal; by 0*- Brien. This made the two teams "m M’ "10 WPhy. Beoond period was a scoring bee for Alberion. Mil- mI-ll. "O'Brien, and I-n-ofiit flinging ‘ in aiming the rubber m the Blcodllounds curtain. The Blood- lloundslsucceed in getting 3, “um. ber of shots at Kiltch without a- Wl- The union endllli c-o. rm third steam saw the Bioodhounds hold- llg the Rogals down, to- their for? flwfy and l-lowaitt succeeded in net- ting two neat goals for the visitors. Oulton notched up one-more tally M‘ "16 Rosa-ls and Just before the bell Clark made ohe final score for the Bloodhounds the game endim 7-3. The play Was a fine exhibition of good hockey both foams showing fine sportsmanship and their efforts so curry off the prize kept e large crowd of intereewd fans on their tip-, toes all the evening. The cup was presented to the winning team on the ice by the President, Mr. Down- ing. amid roaring cheers’ from the home fans. Mr. Downing in‘en ex- cellent speech med the Roll-ls on theirlllin obtaining the Troll!!! and conunelnod on the ex- cellent spirit of good sportsmanship which has been evident in the sees- on’s games for t!!!‘ McLean cup. More intend than ever warshown thh year by the public in-tlse-Associa- ticn as the recon! ationdance at the gamstbcvisltarswsrsentsrtainedfo ebaaneimwiatbdakzsrton Hell. fllelbseupwssasfollows.‘ Iieedhoanh legal It linen Goal n. 0a.. _ y vex-q. Weddell. a wiuss Defence Hewett l. ‘outed ' p. lholvett forwards 0. llewm casino ' c. Macmillan! I. lliilalm i w. sfsewiilhoa is anon . ‘n. clerk léfibfist" ' ‘ ' l. Wshtar fifla I Immersion. .""‘ lflayoifgemeeshowedinftorule. f 1f. Iowans: .. ... B wl ' 119$ flilht on the L. 0. G Alloys the No Names met and defeated the Polansbyascoreofioopinsfnnn rolled high single 0! HOV-pills while Rita. MMFBflLfie rolled high three oil 608. Following is the lineup. Pagans Dotnerly 118 l0’? 173 oeurzlerlynn .. ..._'i3 1oz 144 Gladys Hughes .. 118 ‘i2 135 Ann Walsh .. . . . . 14s sac 105 Charlotte Crelghan .. 131 167 108 Total .. .....l837 No Names Palm)’ Gsudet .. ..... 122 172 1'10 Florfio Flynn ..i..... 141 135 18B Bertha. Mcoahe o4 loo 151 6885c Hiflils .. ..... 121 165 134' Rita MsoFsrlal-is 18o 208217 Total 0042303 14st night the Eurckas won over ihe Vagsbonds by 183 pins. M. Stewart of the llurekss lulled the high single of 190 while G. Beer sf the aims team hid the high tot- al of 473 pins. In the secmd match _of the even- 1118 the Rsnlonas defeated the Alphas blfthesaifemlfil-hoffiflpins.' K. MacNs-ir of isle ltsmonds had the filgih single of I01 while B.‘ Iovc of the owning team rolled tho mun- est three string scores of 02s pns. Iiblowlng are the pool-es and ma. ups: ‘ llurekss M. Stewart .. 125 107 llo o. Beer muss 105 B. sbsuui ..uso lsa e1 F. MacDonald .. lsc 158 us i- .. as 111 lol cw cs1 on Tom .. . ...2o1z Vagebouds B. Bentner .. ..... ..se 12o ill M.l1ng .2 ..... 11s m 14s m lie 111 11s lso lol / . as‘! ca! em Total .. ~. .....lssc Bsluonas D.Mathescn.. m lso lso Oxloiwther l4: m in r. ‘lieed .. lsc lac iss .1. nua- .. ll’! lea us museum" lss sol m I'll If’!!! ‘lhtel .. ... ... ... ... ... “.2237 v Alphas l. IAHIC! .. ...»... B. ti. sesslssoe J. hsltchu. ......... A. .. 182 1d’! 1M I'll 181 l" ll I 1B0 ll I lid ‘II 1N llll Ob in c- aowbuccfronloas i, o, ‘. s M‘ u ... safest s" ‘has "JIM _ Class A. Eastern Lady (Thompson) l 2i 3 Billy Kale (Champion) i. 2 2 Helen S. (Baby) 2 1 l Class B. Bqb Mao (Campbell) 2 11 Malpeque Peter (Bryenton) .. 1~~2 2 This club intends holding’ a race _of: Thursday, March l3. This=will include a free for all pace. free for all trot. and two other classes A and B. The two prizes offered are two rugs donated by Hon. H. A. Darby and Mr. D. P. lifcNutt. Albony And , Kensingfon Play Dra_s_vn Came On ‘Iucsday night, March 4th, the Albany St. Pats took advantage of the Cape ‘Ii-averse special train for the big play-off game at Alberton. and came to Kensington for a friendly game with the Granites. Mr. Thomas-Noonan of Albany is the genial and efficient manager of this ambitious aggregation of young hockey players, who were pursued by the bets nolr of hard luck in their aspirations for the playoff in the McLean Cup series. with ambition to spur them on and a new rink next winter at Albany. they will make allthe local hockey sextettcs look to their lsurels. The game end- ed in a tic score, 4-4. On Friday night, Mar. 7th, the St, Pats again came to Kensington to try conclusions with the Oranites. The second game ended tilth a vic- tory for the Granltcs with a score of 2-1. The ice was heavy, owing lo the effect of mild weather. Both teams played a consistent systematic game, featured by much passing of the puck, clever stick handling. and admit snappy stops by both net tenders. , Ian Darrach refereed both games in a ‘msnn highly satisfactory to the oppos‘ teams. The nervousness induced by fear of making mistakes soon wore off, after which he func- tioned in the capacity like s. gentle- man "to the manor born." An ar- biter in a P. E. Island hockey gems in those piping days carriers, r0- sponsibility on his shoulders. second only to a supreme Oourt JudgQ-if he knowingly gives s "raw? deal, be may as well quit the country. Next week promises to be a lively one in hockey circles at ‘Remington. Aibel-ton Plutoorste-fricnds cf tlli Albertonltegals. wast to beck their judgment in the ability of tbs lugsls to best the Victoria Unionlbyabct of $200.00. 111s game tche played in ltemlngion Male-possibly on Ride) ‘ ‘(fulfi- ascension?‘- -» . a". curing the Ilse about mid ies. elud- ed the Abbie forwards and defence iolgo close in and beat Melina m the oviainc is-irv or up nieht This opening oount gave the home fans plenty scope to cheer. They made tho rafters ring with flmaisdJD- plause. . . ,. 'I‘h_e..viaiiors.although lfififll hard. for an even tally felled. ln,thie per- iod ‘i. o register. and both. lineups answered u... rest bell Illflt the home- sters tucked behind ahoma and home lead of two goals. ‘, ' Th» second period started away last. with the Abegwella forcing the issue and KXHnL-Mfllfifi.» “W314! goalie. a number of ' moments. Tfhe determined attack of the Ab- cgweits was fhallygrewarded one: .. sight minutes of» play when “rhitlock scored on- Bevan! rebound. The visitors were handed applause inthls brilliant score. This tally was responsible in sand- ing both-teams away at the face off in a whirlwind game of‘ hockey. The pace IOt-lbffthdflldxt eight mllutos was terrific, with both goalies timi- ing out-rubber in ecinfllieltlm fash- ion, D. Molicod. Viotia-la forward. sli- lsst counting on Mclwen from Just MenrsWalfes-Mlemandslobnll. ion their msgmfieent victoryi and at the same time paid slowing tribute to the second Abhiee for thq splend. did manner in which theyooyrisdihs light to their opponents. lnboiih Fm‘- H. tmlwr s i ; Aiittwelte i I Unions G081 : T puma lmmiMclood Defense fievans Prank ‘Pldgcon iisunders .1; Mcltod Forwards ' Walden: ' in. solar McMillan S. Stewart Acorn Di McLeod Power 1. Molood ' '. Logan Dannie, lifclmd owes ‘ l sevens i orrrotans i lieferee-"Ohek" Timers-E. 1'. Acorn. William Pool- ey. Penalty timers-M. Mclleslln. Gof- don Mills. ‘Ilia Visions ' Driving Olub are nothing "if not‘ opllmlnic. They have it on good authofltythat ‘a cold spell is due nbiiwsi- bun weight. and so have arranged for‘ reoes‘ Wednes- day afternoon. ’ " ' ‘ The classes which‘ are listed below will bring 0st some fine flnlsllds. partioularly an’ free-fcr-all-trot when one fine fsnttlhg bssrdats has up m lilrhebs what they'll! ‘the linallocrsoecf the season. ' ‘ Bboilld the weather tum out‘ cold uses] wlilbilih glad and feet time will softly be Racing i Qn W_;_;e_>£1nesday _, rllss-roa-sal. ‘r Watts Edition. Oapt. J l. 8Y1" Mao. Peter Verde. n...- ms. Class a Pace i, i i i Betty Mozart. niisn.,l.so<rpiil_ Br", Colorado 11., Lady lidiarquc. llililo Tim chimes Aubrey. \ Class a m0 i ‘Yul Edit. D5999: WWII], Ill-ll! MIG. ‘ In addition there will likelir be e guess reee pswidiolim" Fm l” awash to start. Don. Halal made. _ - rel-wards x. ‘rhesus A. March! o. lenses D. Murphy h. semen n. oeudst n. Nassau i l. narrash .1. MacDonald I A. neraerd ‘ - n- aerasrs (8.) ~Sthiilsy Bridge 5 u; ""108 Racihgp '5.“ getting nest about, ‘ "'1 prominenrborssmsn were in I W15‘ snce frommthor sections. its-Hi" ome- and aim Robinson. 1km” in. L-Parkman. ormr Bvdi IPW“ Johnstonc. tbsymttd 110v" PM“. long rover. waoiletely buns 0 5°" Bus» mo». wuliw \.P"'»'"”" oeesge 01mm. Pad!” Below ‘is tile-summary: 1- ~ ass can. ovens Iovlew (osmvhlli 11¢ emu. (anyhow) ......sa -_. ' u. 2i imam) . 1.x a" new cues mummy)!" . sole, venom) mar-ii duel ‘ '" .........4r$¢¢'- ‘. gllnatfllleu. Dionshib to the victorious vlrsiorla. u“. ions. Brief speeches were made by" Masswhocongratubtodtbawinners‘