The team as a whole did not <.ay ‘mmuauanr...u. of but still it was not necessary that mu a« the Falls were not as ble as they would. have led people to believe. The score is not really a good Indication of the play as the Kings had easily twoâ€"thirds of. the play in every period. Then. the appearance of Horne with the front| line for the first time this season kind ; Of broke up the attack a liitle but he| rap‘dly swung into line and for the Dunnvillie game the forwards will be: working us sweetly as ever together , Burnsbo w aing, while 1 epportanity t marked. Piaber in t e ©1* doe s uit whot. Me.Vicer was w pair Of swsto* an not too steady on | several nice im had hard Isck on after iime thes t« the Fulls defence c by Inches. In the second frame 3 skot the puck out of the co swlld under the fron frame 1 net, at the end of the goa Armstrong allowed it to c made Horne mad, and he s and again made the Ful look like a sieve and talli two. This period ended wi on the long end oi 1 two to Artie Clarke was Grimaby‘s third commt« wd the defence and qn ; the Palils goalle a mil« ring was done by cih Kings walked home by 3â€"1. "Pud" Reld was the marked man on the Grimsby team and he had two men on his trail all evening but even with this handicap the local captain turned In a nice bill. The Falls started out by playing a three man detence and it was a strong one too, ‘The three man game had the locals buffaloed for the first ten minutes of play and then Horme broke loose and stickhandled his way through the whole works for: a nice corner goal, . That goal was the anly one scored in the first period. . They threw out a greatly strengthâ€" ened team on the ice, to begin with, but they reckon«d without first taking Into consideration that Mr. George Horne would also be on the job sporting a Grimaby «weater and "Shorty" was the one big fly in the ointment to the Falls lads. Mc.Ateer of last years champâ€" lons was on the lce as was Mc.Czllâ€" ough of 8t, Catherines, and let me tell you right here that "Mac" is one sweet defence man. In the case of Nlagara Falls William Monest wigut the Porch Kings exte menr, the gave the city :&R-rhah a terrible tumble off the exalted piliar, where they had placed themselves. Previous to Monday night Mr. Bawtenheimer‘s -hl.anunl’hu “:t all figured out just how casd y were going to trim up Mr, Dixon‘s dandles. After the game in Grimaby which the Kings had won only by an eyelash the Falls boys got all swelled up with joy and laid their plans to turn the tables at "Pride Goeth Before A Fall" once quoth Mr. William Shakespear, in one of his flashes of wisdom, in the tap reom of the corner pub. EIGHT Dean, J. Rid Jost. G. Nepin, A. B. Mari, A. E. Cooke. Pront rews *. Mill. N. P. Mcisegor, W. C. Dulley, 1. W. e To . t‘ rarmes. C. Bakier uâ€"-e.l.uun..u..u:. . ® unade is to ste the famous "Allâ€"Blacks" rugby team ew Zealand, and British Columoia will see themt i the C Canadian Paci‘ic Ruilway announced when making public the fact tha; this !-lui of stars, on l: m of a their tour of the British Isles and France, wili return home. «The team, landing at St John, N.B., will visit T N ; agara Falls, the Cazadian Pucific experimental farm at Strathmore, Calgary, Banff, Vancouver and Victoria â€" At k they will see and probably take part in the Winter Sports &m-l. &s they are interested in Conadian Winter Sports and nnupnud-!oudumum.ndp-.-lh&ia’ mtcphymm.thnmumonhhr-nl‘# â€" possibly at Victoria Februury 18. Next the team will proseed to San Francisoo, where ney will probubly play ‘ other and on ;:brun 25 they sail for home abourd m gl'udnn-hunr-lnun liner "Tabith." 4 7 'l’g "Allâ€"Blacks," who will bave played 20 mawhss in ritish Isles and France before tkey ieave, and who ard o scheduled to fly across the channe} to play at Paris and Toglouse, are probably the most fsmous ; footbali team in s# the world, nlu is expected that shere will be a tmwu for sea‘s for the games oz the Pucific coust. #20 6 *4 rs to the "AUâ€"Hlacks" which toured w and A in 1908, and was unlr unce defeated, the L. thant ut wet itsalf too gou! of returning to New nd with a o.-“;ln- list of victories and sweems to be well 'm; of abjective, a: out of 30 matches on the E schedule it has thus far won all ".“7“. by S S Dean, and 4 ..lr,"‘e are 20 athiswes in the@ourl ega of whun the I"M'.:E is 24, height 5 feet 10 inches and r-l'l W k for a team of -uncs&w-. forwards, who are to be the stronger portion of the aide, h the B well balanced une, are under six feet but average 180 pounds in weight ve PB .i:\:‘un ?.nf-'-ul "Ml'-.l.l‘n?n" party. as the u-'- iuN'.iu it a cvmmwa:'tu. ,'.‘:L,. to H and and. * , Departmen atural Resources, Cansdian R * = s Canadian Mhmz'-uwm.hf'u"'â€"uurh-kuu-mmâ€"nmu& ° & u mpany them‘across Canada, o 7 Grimsby 3; Falls Iteld d 10 #eor, the nots was the same old andt turned aside many a USE US n frame work of f the goal. Ref 4‘ it to count. and he sallied f the Fulls d and tallied n ALL BLACKS TO PLAY IN CANADA started but elence and it e three man iloed for the y and . then stlekhandled e works for woal was the t period. Mc.Cullo late president, Dr. 1 L. Buck, Peach Kings in Fâ€"iday nights game wore black bands on their left arms. The aboys feel the loss of their mentor keenly and went into the Welland enly and went into Welland fray withâ€" out any too much heart. O, H. A. group. The "fish" town deâ€" feated Brantford on Friday night last to cap the howor, . Marvin Wentworth, won of Police Chief Wentwo‘th is a member of the Brantford team. nc As a tribute to the memory of their As is expected of the clown ol the drama, the 'I‘h)'#n must play his best, to the ful! extent of his umh and ability, alt the time, even if his heart were breaking or his h _rhd The hockey "Fan" seems to have no memory, Oh) y the actual doings on the ice interest him And forgotten a>e all past victories and all the chanipionships achieved, on the night when the team hapâ€" to lose. * M-Hem-. saints almost, when they win ; they are most dupklbll‘ creatures when they lose; and their managers, hailed as Caesars and Alexanders one day, are transformed into conspirators of the deep; est dve in a night. l The hockey "Fan" who would have pity for a sick horse at a race track, forgets that hockey players are not made of steel and whaleâ€"bone, and that they are subject to the ills, and the fatigues and the humors, and the changes in the weather and their consequences, of which the "Fans" themselves suffer. ‘Therefore, the successful hockey manager must have the temâ€" perament of a cherub, the face of a brazen image, the back of an| elephant in the matter of breadth, and of a duck in the matter 0“ shedding abuse, and the patience of a Job combined with sha Ac.t | Port Dover LOOP MORNING MHR. CARSON less being As is AN QOLD, OLD STORY Still they wince oec nday might. â€" lie scored two oT We three Sduin .ite_all other sport "Fans" the hockey "Fan" is a cruel, thoughâ€" HE WADE GOOD 10 winn re of their town. deâ€" night last nally | A new Peach King, unheralded snd !uu-unu. introduced himself to the fans t the Arena during the second and .:hnrd'lu-ri:dn of F:&.mt'l game without even g t the forâ€" mality of -mm to the mayor of the town. _ ‘The newest acquisition to the :nnk; oLI':: red and ;hgu‘ ]Il'; mply clami out on t ce an ::'i'th st‘ck and puck showed the cash customers what a real hockey player {looked like. â€" He got very rough with lnu- boards at times and, despite the 'numnin l::dd out by Ik‘l“n ll!‘- s in t personagesof wo ';:;;dmhcn. he went right ahead afd won his game, The player was no less distinguished |: ...f..'.'..' , ban "Pud"" Reid" Junior, of h ville. and for a threeâ€"yearâ€"old,he .:::a:.'i‘: :nlu and -:::um mz hockey player in t loT a?rtilku say he has lt‘ edge on Howse Morenz. The fans fell for his olavine snd he The fans fell for his playing and he received a continuous ronr.( ap» n!i;'w-k";' _F:‘k.h he is truly thankful, hh nt to convey ‘?.i_: A\.l:.:h to fl:‘m people of this disâ€" P oib c d aa E27 ECmm Well, like father like son. 1f this{had recover> his . Jerry was boy continues in the glb that he has|back on left Mr. Matâ€" started in the Fruit Belt fans of anâ€"]thews was c Cup a little mark other decade are going to gaze upon|in his red ‘book. a junior that they will be proud of. The 0‘d river. a rest for By the way, Mr. Reid is the only :awhile just to ticket buyers daddy on the teamâ€"twiceâ€"both boys. get the‘r nerves ‘and when that ’ After the game he visited the hings‘ dress ug room and> c ,'l.-ued the team on their win Welâ€" jland, and expressed the hope that through for the championship. _ He fl‘il:grd some of the mu made b certain players, particularly the 'o'l of Reid senior. After he left the dressing room "Smoke" McBride suddenly discovered L':l.' one 6f the Kings‘ sticks had also t. ‘ under DIXON SIGNS UPp A REAL PLAYER would win the group and go unfair criticism tish Columoia will see thent in the his lu{'dllnn.uthnumd ..K:o;u.mwnvmw Banff, Vancouver and Victoria At interested in Conadian Winter Sports and rugby uhhnmum |o‘n Pm.'l.‘, g 1 Â¥ 1 'm ;ltn;:'u ‘I‘nm::""m:l:' * ho ard nee they iea u.."-m (:.::..'u ::‘v m team in for the games oz the Pucific coust. #20 a duck in the matter of combined with the deafâ€" THE INDEPENDENT, GRIMSBY, ONTA C PS misston whose object Ja to .I.;n ces, Canadian Paéllie RiI \ wed with the men there, has been C + hi e e is on 4 C spreoe And o "captâ€" tal 1 4 0 SP ?\ o oferniete ... n lerry. I mot sc a goal this winter, had struek his stride, and everybody sat up and waited eventualâ€" ities. y did. have to wait long, for by the ‘time another s‘xty seconds had ticked its way inio obâ€" livion, there was another explosion from the resr of Buddy Fisher‘s dugâ€" out, and when Mr, Isaac Strohm. who stands between the posts for Welland, had recover>| his compure. Jerry was b'::i on Mlhd'e“h.fl lndrM'r xln‘; thews was. c a little mar in his red ‘book. h The 0‘d river driver took a rest for swhile just to let the ticket buyvers | _ The first brace of peridds were rather slow and «lr..n?- because the Kings were mastres of the works at all t‘mes, and while they pulled off some of the most bcautiful plaving ever witnessed on local ice, still the opposition was not strong enough to make it a haré ‘ought battle, The thitd per 14 opened up with a smash, bang tha, set every! grogâ€" gy. _PJay had only been. way two minvtes when sometb m ed. A streak of white -fl a of red on the «¢ze« came out from behind the Grisby goal and disapâ€" peared in the distance. _ Some peoâ€" ple believe yet that Tom Warner let wose a streak Of.chzin and it he did, b; shot three € of it through the hir in this m- When the blinding flash of this streak had cleared> from the vision of the fans‘ eyes the little round dise was in the )\:clhn.‘.un. the vldthg.- was wiping % brow 440 Hetn RaviheRs wer ‘l"’ figure out what had 1 t ‘\_ wks To':. be ilty of .g crime W \mey vedhi onltnn Sn & | pMi o a my el i emp on one. %. wraveci m'!“?l That is about all the Kings had, was a workout. _ Mr, Reid, .hh fat» tened his scoring sverage by notching two tailies, but he could AOt"=~ * ay inch on Old Man Burnside, who also grabbed off a pair and retained his lead of one on the Beamsville boy. Mr. Artic Clarke, from lml.-. added another counter, the score five to nothing at the of Tl:: ‘u-rang':‘ern.d irat e of periods were [gghcr slow and draggy because Ii.‘ That is the official score, the Grimsbyâ€"Welland game played Moshal‘s Palais Royale, on night last before a crowd have been all seated in les® two sections of the rink. _ Yem are great telephone hockey lo_llog# JERRY CARSON COES OK A GOAL GETTING SPREE Big Defence Boy Sets Fans in a Frenzy With the Speed and Brilliancy of His Attack on Welland Goalâ€"Kings Had An Easy 8â€"0 Victory. Welland, + ol the works at |.. lhely “r:: of beaut ving lor‘:luitï¬. still the L us C 9v 9R mMmB o Paao ow m _ \ jf“sfs C §» ol l ’\«Q /ï¬ns the PEP that satisfic i ,A\flw/ MHMatfnme Ihmrs on mte. o @5 y Under the wn-tu "Sports" the followlag sppeasred last week in Th ‘l‘..mo'w:fl iuvn e l "ete "SOMETHING NEW. INTERESTâ€" * ING AND HELPBTL iN THE go0NG SERV:CE* Oh,. yes, twice, Mr. Herbert Matâ€" lh-:( of Toronto ;I;h 'g‘ood"hl & 8 and carâ€" m a h'h:'h?.'uu. but what he wanted that for, 1 don‘t know; because he didn‘t nced it very often. _ Jean Swayze says he‘s.s good referee; so, 1 guess that‘s all I‘ve got to say this HERES ONE POX THE LITTLE RED BOOK they didn‘t. \vIt is to be hoped that Â¥r. :rz‘“mr'\vii loan the Peach Kings the of this little cherub for the rest of the winter whenever the ocâ€" cas‘on demands. :’V:ll, 'hl'ln all for this |In-c. Tat . yes, lw?t to tell you t Mr. Percival Archibsid Dixon, officâ€" Pomeah mine shiy is min on the able to trim up t Du-vl’e' Mudcats at the local reâ€" frigerator on Fridn‘.d.hl. of this week. ‘I‘m goin‘; be: you? . g* _ John Ritéhie McVicar did not play up to his usual form. . He had only been home a few hours from a visit to his fomily in Renfrew when he went on the ice, and in the third period the clongated kid broke one of n'-'.'. skates. But ‘he wasn‘t needed very badly any way. ‘ _ By the killtpcmr'uion of the Fonâ€" :.rt Lumber, Co., Mr, Winton _ Ross isher looked after the net for Grimsâ€" %";e.ll‘i‘ don‘l‘;l!'i:l he had any cinch. empendfeldt Cuucumber was a very lad st times lm!’rt:l the evening. but he had the, "They Shall Not Pass" sign _ Well, the rn-n i8 gll. over ‘and: the last reports from Parry Sound are to the éltect that the celebration was a wonderful r'uâ€"mn the _ town band was sick with: the croup and could not attend the homeâ€"coming. HF o e P e TE Mr.~ Lancelot Hayhoe once more covered himself with .Iot{ and bruisâ€" en _ This kid has struck his stride ang there are cight men on the Welâ€" land team that are very much aware of the fact had been utourhlml to the satisfacâ€" tion of the M. D‘s., ‘immy John Jackâ€" son, Geo. Hoshal‘s hired boy. handed Jerry a ‘:Itnlm from Stratford conâ€" veying the sad news that brother Bill had scored two gosls for the Indians. This made "Ger" so mad that he !nu went right out and grabbed that little rubber by the neck and fox trotted his way .to the other end of the rink and presented it to Mr. Strohmâ€"only he .znf'l::::h':'i ice b:.hhd lln:ui'n- stead o t to him on a e. It was very rude of Jerry, but still in the heat of battle a guy is liable to m: lot of the littlkk parlor forâ€" _ The three old reliables, Reid, Clarke m-u. were still reliable: and some of the nicest combinaâ€" tom -1 trick plays that the fans ever fooked at. un <shooting. This kid has been off color in his goal getâ€" ting all winter, but now he has his old batting eye work ng. so player of the Peach Kings who oaticd _ 1,000 . in _ the â€" game against Welland and set the ‘ans in a frenzy bz his marâ€" vellous >speed, _stickâ€"handling 22 -wnun" v'll‘ln nll.flfl:;by : WY acciH 0 elland at PTart Colbori« i f 27 â€"Nigga s Falls. at Wellana |h‘"t part of . Port Colborne ai Danavlile ; - 30â€"Port Colhorne at Critwby I DunmtHie at Nisyora Falla ; _JuNIGR | 2%â€"â€"CGrhpaoy as Nicgara Fualis . | FR‘.DA‘ 39â€"Niagara Palls at Ham on Peach Km nOCOKEY SOHEOULES INTERMED!IATE Fox C Mr > imment it in y ° Sn ns . 7 hung out and * _ Watch out for the GRAND CARNIVAL first part of February. ~_ _ CHMHOCKEY _ TONIGHTâ€"Thursday and Saturday Nights of this week. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Nights of next week. 80 Fairview Road, in Lakeview Gardensâ€"6 rooms and Jâ€"piece bath, electric Mlnl;cm l-* lh(‘.lar.cl.mnn. hot water boilnr wired for gnk stove, newly teonl-d llnrouho\!u. large lot, s‘de drive and garage. Ti Pricitcw Reegâ€"This besutifut California bunugalow, 6 rooms and 3â€" piece bath on ground foor, open fire place, built in cab 8, large cellar, furâ€" nace, hot -‘::.‘bdlu connected, c!lemic light fixtures and ':l.ud “b{ “nuu: large ited; good gurage. te possession. t â€"mh?" the year. ~ Will rent _tkmi:l" months to good tenant. pet Arena News If Lou Marsh, of The Toronto Star. keeps on he will soon have his pink covered book of ‘knowledge filled to overflowing. . His l-ln\c effusion fol« lows: "Roth f‘-‘:u -llhdhnxnnd Peacock Alley .up st 1 rena Gardens _ after Peterboreâ€" n m â€" -h-;r“‘ the schooters the merry cackle. e gu‘fawed long and loud while he watched a Ct,aue merchant from Peterboro collect important money from . the . stakeâ€"holders. ‘ ‘rhi-'()rimul. business man trotâ€" â€" ted in froim "the Life Lock City last nim and broduced.a ba‘e of yellowbacks that an _ ~strich couldn‘t hurdle. * He threw away . the elastic and invited the firm of All & Sundry to lay Parkdale ‘ money in to him at 8 to 5 and P ~the PEP that satisfi /g:nttzrflt‘lemn evera‘\sn ho‘ ed and enioved for over thirtyâ€"five vears Ub bbENHEbbHNbbb iTb bIbbb T bEEDHESbEEIHHEbGI DPb IG reqbiq i In vronh. the Grimsbyâ€"Dunnuville E: Dunnvilte. which the Peach No viewsr shone wporliie Serhur "af t & oung ter The Dmnm"k Gazette, says in part: Grimsby Peach flhn -:c:ud into Dennville last Friday :r t in » cont dent frame. of mi and when they departed Mater in the , evening nothing hadjoccurred to disturb their serene" confidence. .. Grimsby | fans,â€" whoâ€"accompanied their prides, thought they had a aweet team, and what their pets « did on the icescertainly bore out their pride and confidente. They ir mmed the Mudeat® to the tune of 4â€"2, and the locals were never in the race. The Peach Kings had speed to burn, their forwards combined well. backâ€"checked furâ€" GRIMSBY. ... . Port Colborne. . . flights Faiis SCRIBE LIKES PEACH KINGS How They Stand even. . He was almost trampled under foot by the rush, but he backed nr against the wall and stood off the oncoluh' horde. HMe took everything the city slickâ€" ers ol‘m‘ him and looifl:o-7 enoug up & new string o chop -.'37::&&..'. _ On the ulflc’r'ï¬hr Grimaby were cas‘ly ‘the better team.=the local defence falling down bauty in comurhonF;o thcb u:_:mdid «support isher y Carson and '}a‘:'\‘.m -hC-o-Mulion l’l; prac y a quantity, an at times the locais acted d {l they h'l:‘::m heard the word "backâ€" € t % ‘ously, and the defence played a sterling game throughout the enâ€" tire evening, while Fisher in the nets, given such splendid support, turned in a practically unbeatable game. FRIDAY, JANUARY 23rdâ€"Dunnville SKATING FOR â€" A real game, ames iMaved W The old Spectator‘s alibi is sure .-::' to have a lot of explainâ€" ing to do. _After predicting that the Ambitious City‘s {-nbf team would m wa the h Buds by â€" a ul majority â€" M w youngsters crossed him by away with a 3â€"2 win last n in Hamilton, . It way a real hockey game with the |issue i}lnm n::u tup to the final gong, the locals having the better of the play throughout, but bein» unable to beat Rohmer. _ Row‘ng Club notched‘ the only talâ€" Loose pucks that have no f1ther and no mother alwayefind a kind hearted samaritan in Old Man Burnside, lnz game Nicholas picks up a couple stiay ones that seem to be lost and kindly conveys them to a good home. Mostly in the bpposing teams net. He sure has a gooat knack for taking things that don‘t belopg to him My Black Cat Says:â€"A flapper i? any other name would be just as Irre= #ponalble, 3 "Aus"* Marsh handed the goal end for the locals and turned in a good card. _ McCartney and Hillier were the regular defence and did some mï¬ï¬‚uy clever blocking as well as conâ€" til lh’|’| some nice rushes. _ "Colâ€" onel" Farrell went the whole route mt right wing and played his usual steady hard.game. _ "Ping" Hill,. at left wing, backâ€"checked well and did some clever stick handling. _ "Red" Farrel!, at centre, was the most specâ€" tacular player on the ice. drzwing rounds of applauss for his clever work. _ Stewart and Walker reâ€" lief men and both hand‘ ‘t% nicely. _ Harry Reid 4d .t iob and was perfectlv satisfactory to both teams. Grimsby . ... .. P;:C:lhwn Grimsby ... .. .. Dunnville. .. ... H.R.C Grimsby of the first periodâ€"Litzen d 3!1- on a pretty rushâ€"that Ulnl‘a no chance of saving. Each team notched one in the 2nd â€"Litzen again dnin‘ the trick for the homesters, while "Red" Farrell rank the bell for the locals on a pretty end to end rush. _ "Red" kicked through with the tying score in the last spasm, a quick scoop from a faceâ€"off doing the job. _ With only a few seconds go. _ "Os" Stewart drcledch ï¬ tion net and slipped one by to win the ‘rw that the capable net guardian didn‘t see. PEACH BUDS 3: H. R. C. 2 HOCK.*Y sCOREs lborne. . .6 Niagara Â¥ai ce e ared Nhsnr- Falls Urs . sies ut Welland 4. P ing s;:nn in I'he.l-n::'m:. rom a fac m )l?’l.lu only a few seconds Stewart circled the ;.ï¬ d slipped one by 1925 , January 21, Niagara ~F $ gs "ak T. For h 1C is 18 i M 9 i 17 > .1§ > Lt â€" IY oal t#