- day iilglii PAGE SIX Victo T w 0 T 1' t I e Games At The Forum T011 ighl Tivn Lshiiiu’ lioiiccv twins yet rc- Ill botli Si 1 to Ilfvilk iis Sisii-rs iiaiiie - 1111111)’ tli-‘ir . slrixiiii; l1.li./..l_‘.{ i- goal. Rlglll‘ in J-J \;1‘1oijv iiiiil (.1i‘l'\ 11.1‘ 11111111111; .4111:- ,~I.ni i‘ll|Jll.iII but 1l1..pln_\ 1111‘ suiiic i I)!‘ rctnriiril 1111‘ trin- ‘ ' of slip- Ilzulll to iiivii tiic will b1‘ tin-re in tonight to cheer the rind ‘l1_\’ largo 1. ‘uihi r.- girls‘ on ziilir-r clnuiipitiiiship affair bflllfls‘ t1‘: i" "i" tivo clever Midget team. and team holds a lv-nil. time two goals as 1.011 CtllllDDPlI.» Red Wings came through with a 5-3 win in Summerside the same night as the girls were upsetting the dope. Red Wings should hold their lead but the talireat from Sumiiicrslde is a lot stronger than was looked for and the ivizigs will have to be at. their best. if they are io add the wand crown to their City League HP. The pity-rim tonight promises t0 be int-Luisfifi: 1nd it large crowd in expected and it will be swelled no doubt by n farce delegation from Siimmersidc who plan on zpming down by car for the con- > tests . Down Ifie Alleys HOLT NAME BOWLING Dig Fnur League Five Aces , McDonald 244 304 243 'l‘icr1iey 219 252 230 McCain‘ ‘.143 202 346 Gramvcll 216 179 200 Robin 2G5 210 328 ’l’0;..1l 3630 All Stars Jov 191i 211 I85 .\l..ricy 19.2 I61 1B3 i‘. (ml 11:1‘ ‘.204 ‘I15 1B0 ‘ (‘rt-iiiiiry 191$ I93 1R6 F y 180 285 262 11.5.1 Sniclc R. ivItiCaIJP-IHG High 'I‘ltr<‘c R. McCiibe and Ci. ¢<rl_)o1i.il(l-»7ill I..\I)II'I.\‘ IKHVLIXG Kelly iuul .\I('IIIIII\ 'I‘ru|ihy niaii: to be <l.--‘1.i1~1> 1111i iiniiiilit at 1.111: Foriiiii 1111111 t will ILKVC 1 holncr. ,1; 1.11‘ 1111.1. iii oi '.IIU F0111: vionoii- t‘ll11llll)l'.llI.<I‘il]) bill ;iri11>.1:ii'.' 111v 111st hockey games of tlic season. The 1.11m .11 sing-i inc the Iuilliill“ iuidiiipiuiisliip 11nd the Mid- I121‘ Abbu- Sistvrs ‘ 111.11 lend ‘ .1111 iii Siuiimvrside; BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING hcckcy- rivals la t night wound up I 1li1-1i-svasoii'.~, duel in a red-hot ex- l II1bllI0ll encounter with the Rang- , crs winning out 7-6 after their op- ! Rangers and Abbies. bitter Junior Rangers Close JuniOrIAugusta Golf Hockey Season With 7-6 Tournament ry Over AbegweitsflPem Tilda)’ (By Paul MICINEISGII) (Associated Press Sports Writer) AUGUSTA, Ga., March 31- (AP)-——DOWl\ the sports trail for a finiil inspection tour of the locker iulilrllia‘ liacl conu- through WM] y rooms bciorc the August National ‘ 1,111‘ gulls in the last ten minutes ‘ of 11w same to cut down the big 1 lend the winners had piled up iii tile opening half of the final ses- slllll. Gaines between these two teams u.-ii.'l‘r enil up in a blaze of action I! =1 it‘! llii-‘JIIT capped them all 1111:: the play s of both trams .- .1111; a small-sized r191 m 1.1m , Iil\'i 60 seconds of play that saw " 2.11m‘ finish with four players 1K in the penalty box with ‘ _. irir penalties tanked onto tliem. " Front the start. of the game bodies were uwfi freely bin cleiinli‘ "It lust ten 1nliiute= as icniper. l strongly thi‘ players sinrtctl v it on plenty and tlic above 1111x1111 was the outcome. l However to get back to the crime ‘ ltzincer. took a 20 lend iii the 1 first period; Abbie: outscored the y \\"lll‘=l‘l‘,s 2-1 iii the scrond to trziil 31-2 a1 the bell but in the first EIIIIII. minutes of tlic third Rniigcrs shot 1.11.1‘ goals to IIH‘ Abblcs one to 1211-1‘ llllt) n 7-3 lczid Abbics how- i-vi-r pllI- 011 uni‘ of tiicir fa t fili- I.\Ilt‘.\‘ and 11.111 1111;111:111. the sour" t4‘ 7-5 ju~t before Lin‘ fights broki- out and then when orilei- liiul becn 1 restored the IOSQX‘, puilgd ivitliln one goal as Flniiiiiiiziii idiot iii.‘ final goal of the iniiin‘ with lust 20 seconds playing time loft. Leading the coal ucticrs was "Buffer" Worth with four; Kelly of the Abbles and McKinnon of the Rangers with a brace‘ of tallies each. Blacquicre. Pound. Andrew‘. ‘Grant and Fla-nnigan had a goal apiece. SUMIVIARY First Period y l. iRangers. i Saunders) 2:00. WON-h (Whitlock, ‘ 2. Rangers L Blarquiere (Mc- 1 Kinnom 5:00. i Penalties: McDonald <21, , Second Period a. Abbie r ,-, gm, '1 Rangers Worth 10:00. 5. Abbi..- . .. 111100. Penalties: (i.l.l:< imalori. Grant l imajor) McKiiinon. Darragh I Third Period 6. Helicon‘: Worth 1:00. 7. Abliics Kelly iGr-ani» 2:00. 8. Rangers McKinnon 5:00. 9. Rangers McKinnon IL. Blac- q-uicrei 7:00. l0. Rangers Worth 8:00. 11. Abbies. Kelly (Grant) l0 00. l-2- A-bbies Grant (Flanniiran) 16:00 13. Alzbles Hannigan 19:40. Penalties": Dowliiic. McDonald, gPcuncl. McDonald (major. Andrew Imaiori Saunders niiiajor», Kelly, imfljOfJ. Acadia Primed For Title Play WOLFVILLE. N. S, Mnmh 31»- Fresh from victory over varsity’ Grads of Haililax ill {I10 ioniuhi for Saint Juhii Sr-iiiovs. wilplav a IIWI-llllillt‘. serics here for tin‘ Mltviiime 11111‘. Th1- fii"=t 11111111‘ is schetlulcrl for t0- iunrrow niulrt and. tho .\t'1.'1)ll(I for Friday. Ivniipu~Q l til 154 I74 1.3T I12 I38 use» 11H 110 1'71; :71 i114 11:1 12;.’ 115 \'t_\Ii‘ Hurts 151:1 199 I64 I231 152 11.5 1131i 13L’ 1T9 1."! I23 12d 1111i 111i 121i HI‘ I . iiiile G. Keenan —27l High 'I'Ill‘I‘C G. Kcviirin-ISBI Tonight at 7 o'clock Mixed lmnguc ‘Isuzu. \ . 111' kv Sirikcs. Alert; vs. liri-ikiim A! 8.15 I‘. W. \VI)I\I‘"- 1's, l-“ in: l-‘rrnclimcn. Dciiccs is Stvlr- Marw, Hornets Even Title Series (C). By Guardian's Special Wire! PITTSBURGH. March (II-Jitte- bizvgli IIOfllPLs evens-d their Inter- nnllonal-Americiin hockey league wistorii division playoff series with Syracuse toiniiiii with a 2-1 vic- torv 0\‘(‘l‘ tlu‘ Sim-s, ‘The Ilium-i victory 110d the series at. two games canli and forced the ixmi IIl"f‘l‘ of fire JOIIBI. to a fniiil sawoff match in Syracuse Pri- fuv the riiilit to melt the eastern division winners, either the FIIEIIIPIOII Philadelphia Ram- blers 01‘ Springfield Indians. ‘frniibles always seem to learn to add and multiply a lot. cum- m they do to subtract. Acadinls squad ivns primed for "P1011 IW =1 pup rally .11 which rvrry student at the University 11a» [‘l'l‘$FIll. Preparations w-r-rt‘ be- iiiz marlt‘ to Imus!‘ the lamest “Wit-WI in LIN‘ APRdift zviiiimsliim slncc 1930 iA-hru III!‘ cnllczi‘ lea-m rwichcd the (‘iniadifiii finals. Ted Ellsworth and Roy I,()(~,k_ lmrt will start as qinirrls on tlu- Nnvn Scotia tram with Bufpflc Halcolm. Dave rliilcy and Grggp: Cnnn on the front line. George Doirnt. Ben wlsnn, B01) Mam"- ioih. Kcithliotldnm ailfILPs Bnvm‘. ivcn‘ slated for rcllcf thity, Canadian Pair Hit Of Show (C. I‘. by Guardian's Spcciifl wire) NEW YORK. March III-As New York‘; annual figure-skating car- nival drew toward a tliorouiiily successful clasc tonight the Tor- i "m0 Dair of Miss Louise Bertram ‘ and Btewait Rcburn continued to ' rank as the outstanding hit of the . show. i The incomparable Karl Schaefer and bcauteous blond Melitta Brun- ner. Austrian professionals of grace 1 and unerriiig ability held the no. one spot on tlic program. But the QLIKIIGIICCS*FCIIOIIL crowd; of l6.- 000 for each performance since Sniiirdnyfls inaiiguriil--rescrved their loudi- t huzzahs for the young Can- adian pair. In iIu- words oi‘ the Hcrald Tri- bune. ‘this graceful couple has been ihc applause target of the bill show." The Times called them "the hit cf the carnival" and said their 1 tremendous favor wits due to their flawless katliig and the whole- | some treat provided by their rhyth- lhvmlts. but up to r Um- y cud to Tin‘ New Briiiisivick CIIlI-lllplfillsi I)\‘(I thi- ioiiil-roii‘ 1 “'01! 1 Golf Clniinpioiisliip commonly Iknoivn as the “Horton Smith eu- dowmcnt; " Ghost . . . Smith, the ex- Jophlin ghost is roaming again “Ylllllbf of two out of three [Augusta nationals lie stood out i far klllti niixiy as tlie niaii i0 beat ‘for ilu‘ bsigcsi prize of early spriiii; gvii. Odds placed him on Ian even par iii the betting ivitli , Liglitliurse Harry Cooper of iCillCflqt). but nine out of 10 pips‘ ‘picked the lanky blond with the I lllillilif putting touch. ' "ibiiiv . , The pros say "it , i1't Iiiippcii here," meaning that 1 llob Jones hasn't a chance in tlic 1 72-liole. IPQiir-iiny jllllllf. over the rolling tcrrniii 01 the ciitimpionshii) lay- out. 1311i. thi- Mllllt‘ pros arc piiyivig ilii-ir old conqueror II great. tribute ‘They're iill bi-itnii; uu liiin, pru- biililv to insure ilieiiiselvcs against the prospect oi looking silly should I11‘ \\I'1l, "1 .'lI\\'.'I_\'6 but nu Bob." 1rd \\l‘l‘ Bobby Cl‘l1IL‘IL*-Illll\k. “I Iuoii ii lciv gHllIiI by bctlilig he'd -\(‘Ul'l‘ his grniid slam in 1930 and I'll but on iiiiii every‘ iiuie lie plirvs. 1 No. I iirfiit IIIlIIk lu-‘liy-veii be tip iilllltlllg inc innit-rs. But I'd be i tickled if he did, Aiici, you can't‘ g 1111i." Uuqucstion- i Imagination . ably, Sam SllPflCI ‘is the greatest hope of tlir‘ yoiuiqslers but. the Ioldstc-is don't. think he can win ‘H115 slio\‘.'~-too much imagina- tiou Philosophy . Tom Armour, who won everything in sight ex- cept the Augusta National, held court around the 19th hole today as most of the field guvc them- selves pep talks. Tom is the _iuim<"s “locker room champ." 'Witliout a blink. the silver soot picked Ky Liaffoon of Chicago to \\1ll Chip Shots . . Gone Sariizen luis been nssitrned the job of brininiig Tony MflllPPO home again. (‘icin- brought Tony 1n first at. the 1936 National Open, giving 'I‘nny advice over the filial holes that. vestiltctl in his great victory. Toiiiorroiv, Gone will be paired with Tony again. Tony will be 32 years old Sunday. the clay some one will b0 crowned champ. . Volants Advance At Expense Of Q u e b e c A c es 1C. P. 13v (iiuirdiuiils Special Wire) MOAFIREAL, March 13-- The Rciiiliartli. brothers, Phil and Geno. 11-11 thc siiprising Hull volniiis llllO the Eastern Canada Allan c1111 bflllll-IIIIHIS tonight by ".\'(.‘Ol'lll_LI‘ ‘.111 ilircc goals as the Ot- uiiva and District Champions ilefcati-ri Quebec Aces 3-2 in the 1 third 111111 deciding game of their striilhuirii pluyizif. - Victory‘ .'~f'(71‘(‘(I on a late third- ]It‘I‘lfllIv,L;(li1I by Gcne, brought; an tin‘ brst-oi-thrce series actually went four games. flint Nova Srotia sriiior haskctbnlljiliiv- ‘ V"‘I"Ill-“- WW“ w‘) “Elm L‘) 9°99 offs_ A(-fl\'IIl1'UllI\‘(‘l‘§ll_\' was ready 1 with tln‘ hrnviei‘ Que-bet- Champ- ions. won tIu‘ first 2-1 and drill!- 1‘<'11ll(I l-0. A third uriinc, by Qiicbvr ivus thrown .- of n, disputctl goal. fl ‘ out br CORK‘ IR/Ig-I V ITIIFE STATE Nliiri-h J1:- IAPI - 'l~l(‘l' liillifh. (iflcird i1‘i' silo b,\' ' blillllfid ITISII Rcpubl (‘all i'\l'lll_\'. 1v 1'1‘ $141?" $141- sales, expliiiii- ‘ urdziy b‘. police. Autnoritios Iiml rofuwii 11> issiic [Wlifilie- for Lily‘ AIOX yo THE CHARLOTTETOW “TI NEWS <1 $10111 voii‘ ed in all events of the City Bad- ouries last night. Favorites acl- vanced in all matches and the stage was sct for the finals tonight which will bring together the lead- ing shuttleoook artists of the five city clubs represented. ma. W. A. smith and Mss E Bourke. Island cliainipions, are . strong favorites to ictain their 3 doubles title, although they expect- ,‘ ccl to meet strong competition from ' Mrs. R. Cudmore and Mrs. H. 1 Cudmore. Ln the mixed doubles the defending cliaimifoiis Walter Goss and Mrs. H. Cudmore bat- . tied their way impressively to the semi-finals, but are slated to inect strong opposition from one or oth- er of the teams which zidvantcd 1 with them, D Gass and Mm E. Bourke and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. '1 Smith, I In the men's doubles W A_. 1 Smith and F‘.A.S Jcnes stamped . themselves as leading contenders I IIIUIOIIBII another team rrprestcnt- ' ing the Y‘.M.C.A.. Earl G ss and . Bill Henry, did not set: acfion and 1 along with Bill HIIIIDPIIIIY and G. ‘ .\lcM-.ihoii of the Holy Nlllllt’ Club are ranked highly. The singles promises to be a brother duel with W;ilti‘i' uiid Eiirl (loss fighting it out. for inniwi-s. Biidminton has iniide t-rcniciidoiis strides in popularity in Ihc ('lI_\' and 1 a Iflfgp crowd is cxpcctfd to be on i liniid for the finals tonight. Action ' aplenty is promised. The strategy I of play in the game DIJIOCS great stress on volleying and, fnr that I reason. it is a game of infinite ac- J Lion and far faster than tenn‘s. l Experts insist that it requires far more speed o.‘ hand and foot. than and also does tennis. Bani-final; or finals were reach- minton Tournament at the Arm- flrtrfrftiaridsri Joni-s. 1fi-7._15—5, 15-4. GU A RDIAN Good Badminton Features - Opening Night's Play Of Annual City Tournament triple the durability. Last night's results follow: Ladies’ Doubles: first round- Misses D. Klrwan and M. Mac- ‘Donald defeated Misses M. Stew- iart and V. Scarth, 15-6, 15-5; MISSBi B. Prowse and E. 'I‘aylor, defeated Misses D. Hearts and O. iJohnston, 15-1, 15-3. Semi finals, ‘Ivlrs. W. A._Smith and Mifs E Bourke defeated Misses D. Kir- ‘wan and M. MacDonald. 15-1, 15- .6; Mrs. R. Oudmore and Mrs H. . Ciidiiiorc defeated Nlisses B. Prowse and E. Taylor, 18-3, 17-14. Mixed Doubles: first round-W. Henry and Miss V. Scarth defeat- ed G F- Hutcheson and Miss E Taylor, 18-13, 5-15, 18-13; J. B. Johnston and Mi s B. Prowse de- fcatcd’ A. Doucette and Miss M. Duffy. 15-4, 15-10. Second round: W. G055 and Mr... H. Cudmore de- feated W. Henry and Miss V» ,Sca1-i1i, 15-6, 15-13; H. L. Spil- lett and Mrs. R- Cudinore defeat- ed F. M. Nash and Miss D. Kir- wini, 154, 15-12; D. M. Gass and Miss E Bourke defeated Earl Goss and Mis 0. Johnston, 15-5. 12- 5. 15-5; Ml‘, and Mrs. W. A Sniiili defeated J B. Johnston and Miss B. Piowse, 7-15, 15-11, 15-12. 1 Men's Doubles: First round: W. IIIIIIICIIII)’ and CI McMahon de- ii-iiicd A Linkletici- and H. Wig- uiorc, 15-12. l3 3. Second round: P. A. S. Jone.» and W. A‘ Smith iii-tented G. F 51111091108011 and J B Johnston, 15-9. 15-12; F. M. Nash and D M Gass defeated A- Douccttc and T. MiioFarlane, 15-8. 15-8; Walter Goss- and W. F. Duffy 1 (Iefeated n, L..Splllett and c. n. Stewart, 15-6. 15-7. ' i Men'= Singles: semi final: E~ I Goiv» defeated W. Henry. Ill-ii, 15- 9: Walter Goss defeated F‘. A. S. I Gorman Voices Confidence On Eve Of Opening A With New York Rangers MONTREAL. March ill-Brlmful of his never-failing confidence, Tommy Gornian took his Montreal Maroons to Tew York tonight for the opening of the best of three Stanley cup semi-finals convinced the team has the power to "over- power" the men of Patrick. “We won't make the same mLs- take Toronto made in untier-csll- mating the Rangers," Gorniiiii said. “They are a smart, crafty tuiini with many smart money players. But I‘m sure Mafoons can take them.” Gornian said he wouldn't make a change in the lineup that pulled out a three giune victory over Bos- ton Bruins in their preliminary round. But for the second game here Saturday night, lit‘ thought Jimmy Ward would be back in act- ioii after a long illness layoff. Ward, one of the fiiicst skaters in the N. H. L. and a. lending goal- gctter, should add punch to Ma- roona‘ already-potent attack and considerable strength to the back- chetikiiig department. “A team that. has Dillon, Bouch- er, Heller and Keeling. boys at their best in the playoff, can't be taken too lightly.“ the Maroon manager commented. “But Marooiis are strictly the team to beat for that cup.“ iBy Georgi‘. ltlaguirc) .. .. (Canadian Press Staff Writer) NEW YORK, March 31-—tCP)-— As Montreal Mavoons and New York Rangers pit hockcy skill and brawn against eiicli other here 1.0- uiorrow night In the first game of the Stanley Cup semi-final series there will be a bit of drama 0i than 16,000 persons will be un- lIIVRPB. Blilbicky, sharpshootini; ung tvingman WPHYIIIQ’ Broad- OI"I‘ OUR WAY F which the sellout crowd of more 1 Game iway blue, will be seeking further - vindication of charges gosalped around the National Hockey league earlier in the season. Rangers’ braintrust was aware at. the time that Shibiclty was worried but did not know the rea- soil for it. While they were hold- ing a daily conference, however, sliibicky burst in on Manager Lester Patrick. Captain Bill Cook and centremaii Frankie Boucher and blurted out: "So they're saying I can't take it. clil Well I'll show them." He was gone before words of encouragement could be offered. His play became more aggressive but his scoring fell off. He finish- ed the regular season with 14 goals and eight. assists, sixth among Ranger marksman. Patrick, Cook, Bouchcr and other oldsterls kept advising the Winnipeg youngster but it was not ‘until the Blneshirts had knocked iToronw Maple Leafs out. of the ICilp derby unit Shiblcky intimated [he thought he iiiiii proved his metal and stood cleared of what tiatrick branded "isolated chat- ,._,. Slilbicky scored a goal in the Leaf series and though suffering from a bad charley-horae after be- ing checked by Red Homer of Leafs in the first game, remained in action until the closing minutes of the second contest. l-le has been getting daily treat- ments for the injury and will be in top shape for the Maroon opener. as will Ching Johnson, ‘ veteran i-narguard and bouncer ex- lI‘ll0l'iIlllill'_V. Neil Colvllle. kid-line . pivot who suffered a broken jaw i in the Leaf iousls, W115 much im- proved today but. will wear a specifil protector over his face. _ By WILLIAMS l1 i‘ "\|,l4l‘ . WA “w De MafWVrites Glowingly . Of Johnny Miles BOSTON, Mess" March 31_(CP) —Nova South's Johnny Mile; ran "the fastest marathon of all time" when the Sydney Mines runner won his great victory here in 1926, says Clarence Dc-Mar. himself seven times winner of the Boston road classic. in his hock "Mara- thon" which goes on sale tomor- row Warm tribute to Miles as an ath- lete is gpaid by the veteran mara- tlioner. He devoted several para- graplis to the youthful Bluenose speedster, who startled the sport.- ing world by his remarkable win. “When the Boston Amateur Atli- letic Association came round in 1926.’ chronicles the 40-year-old athlete, "We were pleased to have Stenroos, Olympic Champion, as an entiy- Some people thought he and I would have a close battle but ‘barring accidents or discour- agemients Stieiiroos was a lot better than I. However honors were tn g0 to neither of us that day. Johnny Miles. with his heart set on a great. victory. and pictures of Stenrcos and De Mar in his pock- et, not spoiled by any advise or urging, just practised when he felt like it all winter. and came down to run the fastest marathon of all time." Johnny ran the course that year in 2:26:40. It was found to be 176 yards short. “Any mariiihoncr can do 176 yards in 35 or 40 seconds," ail-flies De Mar, so Miles corrected itimo would not have been over two hours, a6 minutes, 20 seconds, a mark that has never. never been approached in any marathon, any- WIIGTQ." . The volume. in s. fblue Jacket, bears the familiar picture of De Mar breastlng the tape. Only a fortnight ago he ran a remarkable eighth in the 20 mile north Med- fcrd race. No ghost-writer aided him in the volume-the words are his own and like his marathon races. it is not spectacular or with frills but is straight. to the point‘. i He criticizes various Olympic conunitbees and takes a iB-b KI‘- sportg writers who said he was "slipping" many years ago. He congratulates the Boston Mflrflmon Committees on providing excellent facilities and policing. "Still," he writes. "individuals get in the way. During the last race a. drunk got between me and the finish-at Chestnut Hill-and was ibound we should shaike hands. I busted him on the chin but skin- ned my knuckles on his thick beard." ' TAXES LOWERED (By The Canadian Press) OHIINOOK, Alta.—While many municipalities worry about heavy taxes this little village 150 miles east of Calgary rcduovd Property assessment value 25 per cent and lowered the mill rate front 17 l0 10. zawom m» CIIIIIIPIIIIISIIIIIS At Stake Tonight ABBIE SISTERS VS. CRYSTAL SISTERS FOR CHAMPIONSHIP OF P. E. ISLAND ~ AND tumour RED WINGS vs. MIDGET CRYSTALS FOR CHAMPIONSHIP OF P-" E. ISLAND FIRST GAME AT 8 O’CLOCK SHARP ABBIE SISTERS HOLD A ONE GOAL LEAD RED WINGS HOLD A TWO GOAL LEAD SUPPORT THEM TONIGHT WITH YOUR PRESENCE- SKATE AFTER GAMES BOTH GAMES AND SKATE-—25c- THIS SPELLS FINIS T0 LOCAL HOCKEY THIS SEASON THE ooos ARE ON THE ABBIE SISTERS BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT Canadiens "Favorites In Crucial Game Of Title ' Series With Wings Tonight (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL. March (ll-Mont- real's courageous Canadians. speed- ing along hookers rockst-rewn comeback trail, found Just one more hill ahead tonight in their path to the Stanley Cup finals. As the semt-fixial series with De- troit Red Wings stood deadlocked at. two games apiece, only a single match lay between Canadiens and a new bit of hockey history. For 1f- ihey wip tomorrow night, they will become the first‘ team ever to reach the final after diopping two straight in the last round but one. Cecil Hart's squad took those two strikes at Detroit. then came back to get two in a row at liome- And IRideaus Are Ti-ounced By Redmen 12-3 (C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) OITAWA, March 31-—Copper Cliff Riedmen defeated Ottawa Rid- eaus 12-3 tonight in the first game of the Eastern Canada hockey fixi- als. The second of the best-of- iiii-ee series will be played in Tor- onto Saturday night, the/winners now. again on home foe, thel’ "e to meet the Western champions, “worded the “time @1188 011 "W still undecided, in the Memorial eve of the crucial encounter. Cup [may The champion Réd Wings were definitely underdogs tonight. Be- sides the psychological hazard of two lost games, they were still without their all-star goalie, Norm Smith, out with an injured arm. Rookie Earl Robertson, who dmp- ped a 3-1 verdict to Habltants last night. was certain to be in the net- ting tomorrow. Hurt had nolworrles as to his man's fitness. Burly Babe Slebert Was liobbling around today with a t-iiue; but the Canadlen master- nilnd explained he was just rost- ing a sore foot and would be haiid- i111; out ilic bumps as usual around the blue linc tomorrow’. Only other injury was goalie Wilf Ci1de‘s brui "ed foot, which caused nothing more than discomfort. Manager Jack Adams-called “Jolly Jack" when the Wings an winnIng-—had nothing to say. Jim Norris, Jr.. son of the Detrolters’ owner, was more talkative. “If we A third game, if necessary, l: scheduled also for Toronto Mon- clay night. but. on tonight's play the 3,500 fans who witnessed the one- alded game, were convinced the ftedmen will eliminate Ottawa in the two straight. REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press) The Stanley Cup kcrit-s betweel Montreal Canadians and Scattlc was called off for the season owing to an influenza. epidemic in the Canadians’ camp 18 years ago 11o- day. With the deciding game to b1 played at Seattle five "Flying Frenchmen" were taken ill and rushed to hospital. get that first goal tomorrow night and play the right kind of hoc- key.” he ventured, “I think we'll win.” ' BOY ! TOM SURE NM) THE RIGHT IDE/i. SMOOTH SHAVES ARE A ClNCI-I WITH THE BLADEIHAT WAS DESIGNED FOR YOUR RAZOR m OWhy do million: of well-groomed men built: 0f! the Blue Gillette blade? Not mwely because it 1a the world's finest; blade, but because when used in the Gillette Razor it complete: the smoothest shaving LOmbInl ion ever developed. To enjoy smoother, cleaner shaves-shave the Gillette Way. Auk your dealer for Blue Gillette blade! today. Blue Gillettgiiiiiies Praclsion-mada fin‘ the Gillette Razor 5’ 25¢ 10f” 50¢ OUR BOADING HOUSE Major Hoopla with TRYTHIG one on / YOUR CRACKED i.iP--DAiAE is u ‘bwki, ~40 1H‘ 601.5 owuEP. 0F- A ‘THREE 41104:: cmcus wm-i "mauve: OF nmcuua 61121.5 AND A¢R£flif6, wHQ ARE N H5 HNR FQOM IF T. HADNW’ BliulfiED MY TOE ON éOME OF YOUR APRIL ‘FOOL xlkEé, I i’ W584 A KICK AT "THAT HE éAlD 1o sEND YOU AROUND! HE WANTE IN Town? mo we viibisvT come HERE "ro woos-r? MV wows!‘ HE MU5T M M}?