Stern TODAY'S SPORTING FEATURES Intermediate Team Won Close Game in Peterborough, 2-0 Marlboro Srs. Crept Up on Nationals by Beating Falls Canadiens Play in Toronto This Evening RMEDIATES EXTENDED WINNING STREAK TO FOUR Black and Rowden Supply coring Punch for Oshawa It remained for the Oshawa In- mediates to save the Motor City from a complete washout last night § far as hockey goes. In the past t has been said that when one Osh- team loses so does the other, "not so last night and the Red rted sextette walked right into eterborough and emerged with a gat 2 to 0 victory to stretch their inning streak this season to four, 0 date they have not lost a game nd are improving with every time The team had to be good last t and put up a determined fruggle against an inspired team iid were full value for their win, _ Although the game was played on sheet of natural ice that was no jts best, the play was fast, stren- s and exciting from start to ish with end to end rushes taking gir toll on the players who found going hard on the soft ice. The was good for the first five min- | of each period but aiter that ie snow accumulating on the ice jade the passing game which the shawa team rely on almost ime sible® The game was onc in hich a great deal of the credit for the win can be attributed to the e checking of the defence and sterling work of Burr in the IY «they had not played at best Peterborough would have "tolled un a big score by their gang attacks, It was the type of game ere the speed of the forwards: almost nullified and the defence d to bear the brunt of the work. : Clean Hockey The Oshawa team went on the ice 'with the idea of playing the game anly and lived up to their set an and for this alone can be ributed their showing on the play. "the goals were scored when ithe Petes were a man short. The a team drew down very few ties considering the condition ice and held their tempers iderfully under the pummelling they received. On the con- the Petes had an almost con- stream of players going to penalty bench and it did not their cause. Many of the borough fans considered that wa was lucky to win, This may been the case but they played wr selean game of hockey and took ntage of any so-called breaks came. their way, Orice in the d period Houck and Rowden t off close together and the 'played two men short for a . It was a crucial time with terborough throwing their full to the attack. Burr made smarkable saves, while John- d Walton worked Shemasives exhaustion trying. to hold off Ea aloe Black and Bill Con- LW nated on the only other ition open did yeomen service' ¢ up attack atter attack lew minutes that seemed . while Conlin pulled as b of faceing off the puck 'ewn goal mouth as any pro- al, It would be a great in- the other membérs of the pick otit a' star as every of the team did his full to make the victory possible. Close the opening play of the first PE ~eriod Peterborough showed that! they meant business and no mistake | Two and three men rushes came down on the Oshawa goal time after time- and for a while it looked as though a goal would result. But after the Motor Cityites became accustomed to th. small ice surface they took a more active part in the play.. After getting going play centred around the mid ice. The Oshawa players were finding the de- fence pair hard to crack. Black wa~ right in but Le Barr made a great stop, going to his knees. Dun- das cam, right back and was in on Burr hut could not get his shot away. Howe came through again on the next play but Walton hooked the ptick away at the last moment. Ellis went off for tripping Houck and Bond, Black and Rowden came out again, After several prelimin- ary sorties Black took a perfect pass fror. Bond at the defence and scored a pretty goal. Waltoh rushed and forced Lebarr to make a great stop of a fast shot. Burr at his end of the rink was not having it any too easily and was tested re- eatedly by both long and short obey He was sensational on a shot from close quarters from T Lebarr's stick. Morrison went off for bodving at ceptre ice and the Petes threw attack after attack up the ice in an endeavor to ¢ven the count, A¢ one-time Burr came at least fifteen feet out of his net to clear a rolling puck that his de- fencemen could not 'reach. There were plenty of scrambles around the corners of the Oshawa net but the puck was always cleared at the last moment. As the period closed Ellis went off for tripping Johnson. In the "second period the Petes plaved defensive hockey until Ellis came back and then turned on the speed and held Oshawa in their own end of the rink for minutes at a time. Ellis had a nice chance but was stopped by Johnson with a stiff bod¥ check. Dundas went off for trinping Morrison and it gave Row- den a chance to get in but Lebarr cleared after a scramble. It was hard to control the puck and shoot- ing was poor due to the moisture on the ice. Dundas gave Dallin a pass close in but he missed the net. Ellis went off again for charging Morri- son, while Morrison went off_soon after for a three minute rest for arpning about a penalty imposed upon him when Howe tossed his stick out of his hands into the crowd. With Oshawa short handed and only one goal down the home- sters threw four men up in a great attempt to score. They just fell short of it, with Burr doing great work between the posts, on shots and rollers from every angle. The period ended with no addition to the score. It was nerve racking hockey for the Oshawa players and most exciting for the fans who expected to see the home team score at any fhoment, Exciting Moments In the first minutes. of the final period Peterborough held the Osh- awa team behind their own blue line, The homesters seemed to be everywhere at once and the players just could not Greak away. Black and Rowden were both closely watched and not given an 'inch, They made a nice rush together to end the sojourn in their own end, but the defence proved too stiff for Black and he 'lost the puck. Houck ard Dundas went off togethér for slashing, while Rowden followed al- most at once for an accidental trip. It left Oshawa two men short. Bond dronned back with Johnson and Black played the forward line, Al- though backed right into their own goal mouth they fought with tooth and 'nail to protect that one goal lead. Black worked a sweep check STARTS \Y Marlboros Won Against Falls Niagara Falls, Jan, 23. -- Dis- playing the best form of any team to show on Niagara ice this sea- rou, the Toronto Marlboros walk- ed off with a 4-1 victory over | Gene Fraser's Cataracts last night in a senior O.H.A, fixture bere. Four thousand fans watch- ed the contest and all were will- ing to admit at the finish that | the Dukes were full e~alue for | their margin, Bill Christie produced a smooth | working club and no matter what | p.ayers he dropped over boards, they clicked to perfection. They combined nicely and looked good on individusl work. The | forwards checked back and gave their defence plenty of help. For the most part of the evening they | képt the Falls from breaking and on the few times they got the jump' the Robertson-Radke-Mor- rison rearguard either sandwich- ed their puck carriers or skated him into the corner, Claude Harris, while not hav- ing a Jot of work to do, took care of a few hot ones and his work was on a par. with his team- mates, The win put Marlboros within two points of the leading Nationals, and poke check time after time to | break up rushes with the crowd | velling for blood. Johnson relieved | the pressure once by shooting up the ice. He got a great raspberry from the crowd. Bill Conlin reliev- | ed Black in the midst of the flurry | and worked hard. Burr made a phenontenal save by lying on the puck on a hard shot. At the faceoff directly in front of the net, Conlin hooked the puck away and 'saved al dangerous situation. . At last Osh- | awa were back at strength and Pet- | erhorough seemed. to sense that | they had lost a great chance to win | the game as they drew up a little | in their attack. Rowden and Black | made a nice rush but Black lost| the puck, when in the clear in front | of the net, in the slush. Burr was | called on for a difficult save from Creighton, while Lebarr was, go od | on an end to end rush and shot by | Rowden. Bill Conlin scored on a | pass from Rowden but the play was called back for offside. Ellis went off for tripping and 'Rowden and Houck took full advantage of the opportunity and the forfmer scored | when Carl gave him a perfect Vass | at the defence. "Doc" went right | in and made no mistake about it, He crashed into the net and was hurt on the play but continued after a rest. The goal took a lot of steam out of Peterborough but they still kept up the bombardment on Burr, At one time the puck was lying close to the linc with thre, Petes clustered around, while Burr was to one side with no idea of where the puck was until it was cleared. It was lucky for Oshawa. The home team kept up the pressure until the end with Bond making individual gallies to relieve the tension, The Teams 'RBOROUGH Goal, Jz Le- defence, Howe and Ellis; cong wings, Dallin and Dun- das: alternates, Maudsley, Hatton, Creighton and, T. Lebarr. OSHAWA--Goal, 'Burr; Walton and Johnson; centre, Bond; wings, Black and Rowden; alter- nates, Houck, Bill Conlin, Morrison, and Hurst, Referee-- Elwood say. PET barr: def tre, Jarvis; defence, Coombs, Lind- Summary H 1st Period Black (Bond) ........ -Ellis2, Morrison. 2nd. Period i 1. Osh. 743 Penalties,- No score A Penalties--Dundas. Morrison (J | minutes), Ellis, Jarvis, ja 3rd. Period 2. Osh... Rowden (Houck) ....17.00 Penalties Houck, Pundas, Row- den, Ellis. { unfortunately the |. Fon | Sport Snapshots | The juniors lost a tough match with Newmarket last night. It was a case of two good teams coming it was Oshawa that score. The Blue Imps gave a cour together and one had to wir and came out onthe short end of the ageous display of hockey and came from behind on several occasions but just could not get out in front. BJ LJ Ld Morton had all kinds of troub played both good dnd bad hockey { game here before the visitors got at least one lucky goal. market outfit are- well coached and They will be td Ld le with the Newmarket shots and at times, As was the case in the The New- know what to do in any emergency. hard to beat on their own ice It was agreat misfortune to have Maundrell handicapped with in- juries sustained in practice, a lot of work on It thre Authors shoulders, { best hockey for the Blue Imps and deserved all the credit they received. . . w the team out of balance and put Kelly and Peterson played the Oshawa will. get three moré chances against Newmarket before the season is over » LJ They should get at least one victory out of these games. LJ] * The Intermediates practically put Peterborough out of the running for group play-off' position last night with their 2 to 0 win right in Peterborough. received have from the fans. Th and are playing the game for the pleasure they get out of it. right spirit in which to go into the the The Oshawa team deserve a lot more credit than they are a strictly home brew team That is Their cy game and get results, next home game will be on Monday night here when they play Bow- manville who although they have runner-up position, only played two games are in the Blue Imps Played Great Hockey Against Visitors Newmarket Played Well |; and Were Never Headed Although Locals Drew Up on Even Terms Sev- eral Times--Blue Imps Were Handicapped by Injury to Maundrell -- Kelly and Peterson Best for Oshawa With Cain and Dillman Starring for Visitors Showing a slight but distinct su- | periority over the "Blue Imps", Bill Hancock's Newmarket Juniors eked out a 7-6 victory at the Arena here last night in what was undoubtedly the best group fixture played to- date and one of the best games seen here this season, A large crowd was on hand to see the two best teams of the group do battle in their first league meet- ing and they were given "an all- round display of the winter pastime, as both good and poor hockey were displayed at different stages. The visitors were unquestionably the better team on the night's play and deserved a win but at that one or two of their counters could be listed in the "breaks" column. Newmarket trotted out a well-balanced team, husky, exceptionally fast and most of the red-shirted players having good shots, with the. result that Morton had™a busy evening. The visitors relied mostly on their speed and shooting for their goals and Dillman, their stellar custodian, was given good protection by a couple of good defencemen who were dangerous on the attack. Game Is Lightning Fast Newmarket were never headed | di'ter the initial counter of the game { although the "Blue Imps" drew up even térms three times, they finally nosed out with ofily few 'minutes to play by Cain's goal, 'The brilliant back-checking displayed was 'one™of the features of the battle. The game was spec- tacular and the dazzling speed was | were like wine to the fans but while are not trying to present an alibi, the "Blue Imps" were at a real dis- advantage. Maundrell, who suffered a painful injury in practice on Thursday night, was used very little with the result that Authors bore the brunt of Oshawa's relief work and' Kelly and Peterson were forced to play almost the full sixty minutes. At that, Kelly and Peterson were the two best local men on the ice, scoring five of Oshawa's six goals, Eddy Drinkle was a constant scor- ing threat whenever on the ice, Oshawa's defence got in the odd body check but they failed to cope successfully with Newmarket's speedy attacks, being more valuable on the attack than defensively, Morton made some brilliant saves and had the toughest of tough luck 3 a couple of the Newmarket tal- ies, Cain grabbed the limelight for the visitors but the fine work of the rearguard men, Dillon, the goalie, Malyneaux and-Vail was one of the chiet factors in Oshawa's defeat. The visitors flashed real speed and there were marked evidences of fine coaching. Visitors Open Scoring Both teams opened cautiously but the fun started m earnest after Ainslie's penalty, the first of the game. Malyneaux scored first when he took Cain's pass and batted the rubber past Morton. Thirty seconds later, Ainslie equalized on a lone rush. Bodied at the defence, he recovered and beat Dillman with a blazing shot to the far corner, McArthur drew a penalty and while he was off McCully scored but his circling in front of the defence had put his wing men offside and the play was called back, Authors made a spirited try then Vail scored a rather soft one on a high shot from in front of the defence. The puck was high and turning. Morton seemed to think it was over the net and moved out of the way, only to have the rubber hit the twine. To the "Blue Imps" goes credit for the préttiest goal ot fhe evening. Pet erson broké up a Ngwmarket at- tack and broke fast, flanked by Kelly. The Harmony Flash drew the defence together with a pretty feint-and then gave Kelly a perfect pass. Kelly completed the play with a lovely shot, ,to again even the score. They tried the same play again but Kelly was outlucked and the period ended with the teams deadlocked at two all, Malyneaux drew a penalty soon after play was A in the sec- ond when he tripped Drinkle. Edd: nearly scored on the play, the pur } slipping past Dillman a the post. Vail made a good and shot. There was a long bound and Woon came in to the disc into the mesh, was sent off and Malyneaux ed shortly, Newmarket tu the speed and h d th A to Peterson who beat Dillman with | a great shot. This made the score | 6-5 and the crowd took new heart, cheering wildly for the tying goal-- and the "Blue Imps" responded, Ainslie was off and Mann follow- ed a minute later. Authors was given what looked like an undesery- ed penalty and Malyneaux was sent | off. It looked like cvening it up. ! Peterson pulled a "Merriwell" act when with only four minutes to play, he sifted through alone and beat Dillman to mak, it six for one and a half-dozen for the other, It looked like overtime until Cafu made his bid. The puck was check- ed but not enough and it glanced off Peterson's stick and then oft Morton's skate to the back of the net. Morton's view had been block- ed and it was certainly a heart- breaker. That's what makes the blue more "bluer" and the game ended with the visitors winning by the odd goal in thirteen, and Osh- awa trying desperately to tie it up once again, It was a real good gamé& and pro- mises a real smart series when these two teams meet in the group play- offs, which is now practically assur- ed. | | The Teams NEWMARKET, --Goal, Dillman: defence, Mallynaux and Vail; cen- tre, Mann; right wing, Wilson: lett wing, Cain; alternates, McArthur, Doran, Woon, McCabe and Stick- land (sub goalie). OSHAWA --Goal, Morton: fence, Ainslie and McCully: Drinkle; rirht wing, Peterson : Maundrell, de- centre, wing, Kelly : left alternates, Authors, Wilson and Peterson (sub goalie). Wi' Besom and Stane Dr. Brock J. McLeod H. Lander Jacobi . Lambert, skip--13 skip--11 ' F. Hogarth C. Saze R. Beaton W. Hare, skip--12 I. James . Jacobs . Gay . Parsons, skip--14 A. Lane E. Colvin B. Carlyle Dr. Henry, skip-- 8 Muir IR. Young { W. Brownlee W. Young, skip--12 | (eo. Hill J. H. R. Luke Play third round Trophy competition at the Curling { Club, very one S. H. (| P. games Jackson Pp. Garrard . Germon skip 1. Wright . Flath Moore E. "skip-- 0% Larmer Bonnetta . Morrison Armour, Som, sided games were especially on the part of Fred Ellis and Art Germond, the Schell continued last night in the Drew of the E. W. very close and als are; C. Hopper R. Reed W. Rodd W. Lambert -13 skip-- 3 d, n Henle on, wy, nD P. Fi 16 Moyse M. Alger GC an ning played, The results of skip-- 8 | Jim Hastings Ed, man "|W. H, A, Patte Chas. McDougall Chas. Anderson F. Dobney, skip--14 skip-- 6 SAILORS SURPRISED BY KITCHENER Kitchener, Jan, 23 -- The Twin City Green Shirts played splendid hockey here last night to defeat the Port Colborne Sailors 3 to 0 in a senior O.H.A. game. The Green Shirts were full value for their win, tallying a well-earned goal in each period and playing as they did last | night they would have turned back any team in the léague. They had everything in a hockey way and had the speedy Ports bottled up most of the way, except for a few minutes at the beginning of the contest, when th, visitors looked good. The Ports' loss with Marl- boros' win put the Dukes back in second place. Tt wag the winners' second victory of the year. . A FRIENDLY WARNING Jf you have a weak heart and cannot stand intense excite- ment or even shock, we advise you NOT to see this production, If, on the contrary, you like an unusual thrill you will find it in "FRANKENSTEIN" t. Lg y TR RANAE in behind their own blue ,. NO THRILLEF::=3 | |! ag Bt, West AT THE NEW MARTIN ~ FOR FOUR DAYS ~ STARTING NEXT TUESDAY, JANUARY 26th. FRANKENSTEIN THE MAN WHO MADE A MONSTER 'MADE CAN T WELL, MAKE A TILLIE'S MA You CAN BY Your SweeT LIER ON THAT - | be © WORT HT WITH J ------ WN E \JH trying to clear from a. Ainslie lifted the puck int net to make the score 4. son scored for Oshaw slipped the puck over scranible which ensued or's fine rush. Jeff - a minute later 'when check spilled an attac scored Newmarket's period ended with the ¢ Locals Come From ), ; Score ' Two minutes after iod opened, Cain wa ona long shot fr | This looked to hav fair for. the evenigl awans immediate they have plenty launched a withe finally Trad its rc produced the bef of the night, LE Yeu a penalty when and scored with man tried to cate glanced into - thd * Nefenglith rushed down the puck TT 7 LONG WiLL HE BE AT Your SOLACE? Rf nT In NAL Ili (ULL Vit ia ii, A Jil J