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Oshawa Daily Times, 19 Oct 1928, p. 8

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1928 rae Numer of May Travel to S He Falls to See Rughy Pleasures If weather is in the least favor- able tomorrow, a large crowd of supporters are going to leave Osh- awa to follow General Motors of Oshawa, Intermediate O.R.F.U, team, to Niagara Falls, according to indications which were evident last night and this morning, The team will be leaving in the early 'morning, but supporters in vate cars can easily arrive at Nia- gara Falls in time for the game if they leave Oshawa around ten or eleven o'clock, according to those who have made the trip by motor ore. : One of the reasons for such a particularly large crowd which is expected to make this trip is the scenery along the road at this time of year for which this trip is noted. The Niagara peninsula at this time of year, some say, is even as heau- tiful as in the late spring when the peach blossoms prove such an attractive feature. One contingent of people who aren't thinking so much of the scenery, however, will be the play- ers of the local team, The sole purpose of the trip for them will be to enter Niagara Falls and con- tinue their sensational quest for the championship of the league. Every member of the team will be out to keep up the excellent ree- ord which has been set by the team in their last, and only, two games to date, and they will be trying to continue their enviable record of having had only one point scored against them in these two games, To date, Oshawa is short four points of leading the league with the greatest number of points which they as a team have scored, Their 238 to 1 victory over Guelph iw Guelph on October 6, along with their 18 to 0 win here last Satur- day, gives them a total of 41 points which is only approached by London who piled up a 33 to 0 win over Guelph last Saturday and who already had 12 points in their favor from their first game of the season with Niagara Falls. This gives London a total of 46 points but although London is again en- tertaining Guelph tomorrow, Osh- awa expects to run up a larger score than the London clan. The team is in first class shape for the game. Every night this week, despite the downpours of rain and the soggy field, the team under Coach Pound's direction has heen out and at it for hours at a streteh and helieve they have now perfected some of the weak- nesses which were evident here last week, Niagara Falls, playing on thelr home field, are taken for granted as being a tougher proposition than they were down here hut Coach Pound and his men are con- fident they will pile up such a score that they will at least en- joy the scenery coming home even if they don't see it on their way up to the Falls. Game Tomorrow WILLIE RITOLATO " \ NH, 19.--Accord- to despatc here from Stockholm, Wilkie Ri hola, ish dis~ tance runner and Oly winner, has run his last race as an amateur, This information was given out by Sigiried Steinwall, a me: of the Athletic Department at Dartmouth, and close friend of Huge Quist, Ri- tola's former manager, Steinwall was advised of Ritola's action through Yrgo Salminen, a high athletic official Nriting in the news- paper Idrottsbladet, which Stein wall is a correspondent. Ritola beat Paavo Nurmi last Sum. mer in the Olympic races and as he is nearing the end of his career he has decided to turn professional. He desires to meet El Ouafl, Arab marathon runner, and Joie Ray. Windsor Hornets Decide to Change "Jinx" Nickname Windsor, Oct, 18--The name "Hor- nets" has too much of the sting of defeat in it for the brand new Wind- sor hockey team and it is going to be changed, the Border . Cities Arena shareholders, who control the team, have decided, So there will be no "Hornets" in the Canadian Professional Hockey League this Winter. But the hockey players who signed contracts as Hor- nets will be performing for the name. The men who control the team have decided that the name "Hornets" car- ries with it unplpeasant memories which they would rather forget. The monicker was more or less wished on the first amateur squad that ever played on the artificial ice here, It stuck when pro-hockey came along. But it doesn't mean anything and ft is particularly inappropriate since the Windsor Hockey Club colors are now red and white. Mores over, some of the shareholders opine, the old name might "jinx" the crew Herb Mitchell will lead in the 1928- 29 camapign, Not one of the players who per- formed as an amateur "Hornet" is still with the club. Rolly Huard and Andy Bellmer are the only ones left of the original salaried sextette of two years back. So it will really be a new team, from the goal-tender to the last utility man, and it will be highly proper that it should bear a new name. Fans of the Border Cities and dis- 'trict will be allowed to pick the new nickname for the ¢lub, RANGERS SELL COX, WHYTE AND CHAPMAN TO PROVID'NCE Springfield, Mass, Oct. 19.--Abby Cox, goalie, and Art Chapman, cen- tre, members of the Springfield In- dians of the American Hockey Lea- gue last season, received word from the New York Rangers today that they had been sold outright to the Providence Reds. Both Cox and Chapman will report at Providence tomorrow. The Rangers have also sold "Clucker" Whyte, wingman, with the locals last winter, to the Philay delphia Arrows of the American Lea- gue, 'R EXP by the Birdie UGBY LAINED THE OFFICIALS The three main noises in any rughy game outside of the and those who cheer leaders, the water boys think they are somebody, are the referee, the umpire and the head linesman, Other officials besides these, and playing a part in the machinery that makes a game along smoothly, run are the timekeepers, the yards- y men, and the touch judges, To start at the last first, the yardsmen are the youths who go rushing up and down the sidelines with a pair of sticks in tow which are separated by a ten yards long piece of rope or chain and which serve as the means of telling whether a team has made its necessary ten yards in three successive "downs" or not, The headlinesman accompanies these youths and sees that the sticks are kept in their right position, The head linesman usually also determines whether a team has made its yards or not, The timekeepers are usually two in number although in important games there are sometimes four. When two, as larly, officiate, one man attends to penalty time while the watches straight time and must warn the head linesman when only three minutes are left to play before the end of each quarter, The head linesman in turn must inform the captain of each team, and then take the time watch when there is still one minute to go, When the period is over, he must wait until the completion of the play which is in progress at the time and the blow his whistle, 'In some divisions of Canadian rugby there are also touch judges whose duty it is to inform the referee how and where the ball goes outside the boundary lines of the field These men, when seen remind one of who follow the play along the side] the officials of a similar nature lines in an important Ts Lan mporian soccer match, waving their handkerchie the ball goes out of play. For the most part, however, these officials are dispensed with and the referee, umpire and head linesman assume these duties. The responsilities of the referee and umpire in a game will be explained in our pext article, Al ALEX WORKS IN THE MAW TENANCE GARAGE OFFICE OF THE GENERAL $OTORS INTO SENIOR COMPANY N 1920 £X CAPTAIN! tr HE RECEIVED MIS RUGBY SCHOOLING AT HUMBERSIDE €.1. ANP UTS BReAX NG PARK OTORS-RUGBY~ TEAM AND ¥y we FOR ARGOS INTERPROVINCIAL LAST YEAR il . As Johnny Warwick sees Alex Park, pivot man and reason extraordinary for 'a goodly portoin of + Oshawa's Intermediate O.R.F.U. success, -- -- -- tring Anas HE 1S A BALL PLAYER OF NOTE WINNING THRG CHAMPIONSHIPS WITH Ma CORMIC JuNtoRs 5 3 Sl AS A HOCHEY PLAYER HE STiCnS OUT PLAYING WITH PARKDALE CANOE CLUB. AURASLEE (Cuanrons) AND THE TORONTO CITY HALL pot -- HE'S IN THE LILLIPU TIA CLASS LINE WILLE Cardinals Pay Huge Dividend St. Louis, Mo,, Oct. 19.--A dividend of 20 per cent, has been declared by stockholders of the St. Louis Gard- inal Baseball Club. Sam Breadon, president, will receive approximately $30,000 of the $50,800 to be distribut- ed, This is the third dividend declared by the present Cardinal organization since its inception in 1917 and the largest to date. Dividends have been curtailed by heavy investments in minor league club to develop players. The' 1928 dividend is twice that paid after the pennant and world's cham- pionship victories of 1926, Harris Probable Pilot of Tigers Degoit, Mich, Oct. 19.--Stanley Harris, former manager of the Wash- ington Senators, was mentioned as the most probable successor to George Moriarty as leader of the Detroit Tigers by sport writers and fans to- ay, The main stumbling block in the reported plap is the desire of Clark Griffith, owner cf the Senators, to have Charlie Gehringer, Detroit sec ond baseman, and a star with the To- ronto Leafs in 1925, in trade for Har- ris. Griffith's offer of such a trade was refused last August by the De- troit management as was his later re- fusal to trade both Harris and Os- wald Bluege for Gehringer, : Harris has repeatedly expressed his desire to come to Detroit. ONE-WOMAN COMMITTEES (By Canadien Press) Toronto, Ont,, Oct, 19.--A distin- guishing policy of the W.CTU, which is meeting in this city for its fifty-first Provincial Convention, is: "One-woman for one work" The idea grew out of a conversation which the founder, Frances Willard, with a Quaker acquaintance, It was an era when the function of com- mittees wis rather overestimated and Frances Willard asked her friend what constituted a "perfect commit- tee," she received the reply: "I think to do a work well there should be three members on a committee, one excellent worker, one permanently out of town, and one dead." BIBLES AS GIFTS (By Canadian Press) Toronto, Ont, Oct, 19~In con- nection with the annual meeting of the Canadian branch of the Inter- national Association of Gideons in this city recently the Toronto Camp undertook to furnish 500 Bibles for distribution in the hotels in Jerusa- lem and 200 Bibles for the natives of Korea. The camp has. placed 145 Bibles in Pekin. The present objec- tive of the International Gideons, as announced here by the president of the International Association of Gid- eons, Samuel A, Fulton, of Mil- waukee, Wisconsin, is to place 1,000,- 000 Bibles in hotels by December, The association placed 100,000 Bibles in hotels in the United States last year and 5,000 in hotels in Canada, APPOINTED DEACONESS Winpipeg, Map., Oct. 19.--Miss Mary J. Young, 2 member of the Deaconess Order of the United chureh has been appointed to duty in connection with religious educa- tion work in St. Stephen's Broad- way United Church. Miss Young received the degree of Bachelor of Religious Education at the summer convocation of . Boston University this year, and during the final year fio her course was director of reliz- us education in a church in Au- burpdale, Mass. » had SPORT SNAPSHOTS All good teams have nicknames termediate O.R.F.U, rughy team. It's all right in one way to say Ge O.R.F.U. i when you're in a hurry, part of what you're talking about, ings. They're usually shorter than which they represent and therefore But that's getting into technicaliti age reader, There's no technicalities required Oshawa's Intermediate team, the honour of having thought of the may follow the team for ycars, We didn't hesitate, either, when rugby being received here the way it this class of rugby will only be here this year, for a while at least, even i minute in every respect and it's our Somehody with an eye for busine him in cigarettes for the rest of the little skating during the actual wint and we figure it's just about time we ome" style of climate, ever, providing it isn't that cold the is beginning to fall, And so John Ross Roach has be it is also a matter of recollection to s Those 'days are gone forever, J in the NHL, chance to convey more in his head line, where around town here this year and make enough poc! Ross is a pro player who is known personally b his home having been only sixteen miles north o Oshawa's Intermediate O.R.F.U, team needs a nickname, and Oshawa's Intermediate O.R.F.U, team being a good team, it needs a nickname, Suggestions are now open for the official nickname of Oshawa's In- neral Motors of Oshawa Intermediate team when you want to speak of the team but it's all wrong It's also all wrong when you want to write a concise, snappy heading for the Sport Page and find yourself confronted: with "Intermediate O.R. F.U, Team" as simply the shortest possible means of indicating what or a That's one reason why nicknames are so popular in Sport Page head- the bona fide name of the team they give a Sport's Editor a better ' es which pass unnoticed by the aver- however to choose a nickname for ORF.U, team, so everybody try their luck and turn their suggestions in to The Times or to any of the members of the If no one makes a suggestion, we're thinking seriously of coining a nickname ourselves, so go ahead folks, try your luck, and see who gets nickname which, once it gets going, we said "years," With Intermediate is, there 1s no danger whatever that for a season and then die out, To change the subject, it looks as if we're going to have skating here f we aren't going to have very much hockey, The artificial ice plant at the Oshawa Curling Club is up to the i + candid opinion that it could manu- facture snowballs at ninety in the shade, ss could build an open air rink some- et money to keep year, » The plans up at the Curling Club are only to allow skating practically when no one of the club desires to curl, which means there will be very er months, The weatherman seems to promise a decent sort of a day for tomorrow, were getting a break in this "over-rrr Rugby teams don't like wet weather no matter how you try to serve it up. Some players would rather have it cold any day than wet, that is how- ground is frozen stiff and the snow Probably we'll have a taste of that too before the local season is over. en sold to New York Rangers. John many people in Oshawa, here in Port Perry, while ome that this same John Ross Roach was once right here in Oshawa, trying out for an Oshawa hockey team. ohnny's now one of the top players WOULD ABOLISH PASSPORTS Toronto, Ont., Oct, 19.--A cam- paign for the abolition of the re- quirements of the British govern- ment that British born travellers going from one part of the British Empire to another should possess passports, will be conducted by the Canadian Steamship and Tourist Agent's Association, the acsociation decided recently. Members of the Association are confident that, in this move, they have the sympathy of the travelling public, who have to abide by "this unnecessary trouble". They will endeavor to pring to bear upon the British Gov- ernment--ihrough tbe Department of External Affairs -- sufficiently strong evidence to have this class of passport eliminated. FINE CEBEMONY Toronto, Ont., Oct. 18. -- One third and final marriage ceremony for Judith Revault Magalhaes, of ina Romero, of Toronto, in St. John's Roman Catholic church took place recently, Twice before have the couple been united in wedlock, The first ceremony was done by proxy, an uncle of the bride taking place of the groom, who was in Toronto when the ceremony took place. The second was a civil rite performed before a justice of the peace. The first marriage, a survival of an an- cient Brazilian custom which called for the bride to be married at home if_the groom is absent, took place last July. SAFETY FOR BICYCLISTS Montreal, Que., Oct. 19.--An ac- tive campaign to make the streets of Montreal safe for bicycle riding children is planned by the traffic committee of the Province of Que- bec Safety League, As the first step in the campaign the League Babia, Brazil, and Germinal Far- has enlisted the services of Fred St. jsome timé® ago. k SALAS LSS sass sass sass L MOTORS' INTERMEDIATES EXPECT VICTORY TOMORROW Shh 0 J A AN A J le PUNTS and TACKLES By the Dopester pT br ron ¢ Industrial clations at 7.30 am. Saturday. Rondly be hers on time as it is a long trip and the management desire to get to the Falls in sufficient time so as to allow the boys to have a rest and a rub, Speaking of rubs, the team is in- deed very fortunate in having Harol Cox, or "Coxey" as he is known, for a trainer, This man certainly knows his stuff and his work with the team will go a long way in their winning their remaining wames, "Coxey" has trained many well known teams in the Old Country, and now he is doing his best to keep our General Motors team in as good shape as possible. You know folks, rugby is one of the most expensive games to play that there is when you figure on each out- fit costing about $25.00 you are just fringing on it. For example, you have to carry 20 players, a manager, a coach, a trainer and usually one other which amounts to 'about men, Coupled with this we have to make three trips, the shortest of which is 100 miles and the longest 170 miles, Officials at our home games run us about $30.00 for 2 capable men. Then there is liniment, bandages, doctor's bills and a thousand other incidentals. And all these items must be taken care of in the shortest sporting sea- son there is. We have 3 home games. So you sce folks it keeps us hustling. Aut the big consolation is, that rug- by is the greatest game in the warld and it is already proving one of the greatest drawing cards in Oshawa's sport's column, Get going now and get your tickets for the Guelph game and let's hear you cheer for the Gen- eral Motors Infants, The bunch got in a valuable day- light practise yesterday and it should put them right on their toes for their game tomorrow, Coach Pound drove them hard and the gang were pretty glad to turn their faces homeward at 6 o'clock, . Even now their interference isn't what it should be hut we are looking for the gang to get under way at the Falls tomorrow and put into effect what they have been taught, * 8 # If the line will give our backfield real protection I don't think the have anything to worry about at all so do your best, warriors, to bring home another victory, John Ross Roach Traded by Leafs to N.Y. Rangers New York, Oct. 18--The greatest goaltender in professional hockey, John Ross Roach, of the Toronto Maple Leafs, was traded today to the New York Rangers for Goalie Lorne Chabot and a cash consideratioin of about $10,000 ,adding a final bulwark to the great strength of the world champions, E The acquisition of Roach to replace Chabot, who was badly hurt when struck in the eye by a puck during the 1928 Stanley Cup series, followed the Rangers' unsuccessful attempt to land Dave Trottier, crack centre of the Canadian Olympic champions and a star for several years with Toronto University and the Toronto Grads, Toronto held an option on Trot- tier's services, but Col. John Ham- mond, owner of the Rangers, was promised "second choice," at the re- cent league meeting here, However, Connie Smythe, manager of the Maple Leafs, sold the option ta the | Boston Bruins for about $10,000, When Hammond protested he was given a chance to negotiate for Roach, Although Smythe set what experts considered a prohibitive fig- ure; Hammond received the bid this morning wired acceptance, and put a cheque in' the mail. Roach, one of the mast' popular goalies in the National League, is ranked second to Roy Worters, of Pittsburg, He has played with Tor- onto since 1920 Rey helped win the Stanley Cup, emblem of the world title, for the Toronto team. Chabot has played two seasons with the Rangers. His hockey value in the future is considered problematical due to 'the injury suffered last spring, Manager Connie Smythe, of the Maple Leafs, stated last night that the Roach-for-Chabot-and-$10,000 deal had gone through, and he thought both players and the local club would be benefited by the deal, He refused to discuss the Trottier report beyond stating that Trottier had originally promised to play with the Leafs if he turned professional, but since then the amateur star has apparently changed his mind, for unknown rea- sons, and he informed the Maple Leafs that he did not care to and would rot play for them. "After be- ing told that," stated Smythe, "we took Trottier at his word and the matter is closed as far as we are con- cerned." BULLISH ON PEPPER Toronto, Ont,, Oct, 19, -- The pepper market is showing a decid- edly bullish trend. This condi- ment is dearer than it has ever been, according to One groeer, Oddly enough, the cause of high pepper prices is a rubber scareity of two years ago. It will be recalled that rubber was worth considerable money Things were Aull with the pepper growers and they switched over to rubber. Just how this is dope is not nown but the fact remains that the fertile areas of the tropics saw rubber supplant- ing pepper. As was inevitable, less pepper has been grown and pow there is a pepper scarcity, National H League 1928-29 hy Arranged = Day by Day The National Hockey League, with last year's tem teams again competing, opens its 1927-28 sea: son on Thursday, November 15. AM clubs will be in action and three of the opening games will be in the three Canadian cities--Montreal, to and Ottawa--while De- troit and Pittsburg get the other fixtures, The schedule calls for 220 games, with 22 home battles d [for each club. The official list of dates follows: Thursday, November 13 Rangers at Detroit; Maroons at Canadiens; Americans at Ottawa: Chicago at Toronto; Boston at Pittsburgh. Saturday, November 17 ; Canadiens at Toronto; Bostom at Ottawa; Chicago at Maroons. Sunday, November 18 Rangers at Americans; Pitts: burgh at Detroit, Tuesday, November 20 Maroons at Rangers; Canadiens at Boston; Toronto at Ottawa; Pittsburgh at Chicago, Th November 29 Ottawa at Maroons; Canadiens at Pittsburgh; Toronto at Ameri- cans; Rangers at Chicago; Boston at Detroit, Saturday, November 84 Maroons at Toronto; Americans at Canadiens; Detroit at Ottawa, Sunday, November 25 Boston at Chicago; Pittsburgh at Rangers, Tuesday, November 27 Ottawa at Americans; Toronto at Maroons; Pittsburgh at Boston, Thursday, November 20 Maroons at Detroit; Pittsburgh at Canadiens; Chicago at Rangers, Saturday, December 1 Canadiens at Ottawa; Americans at Toronto; Rangers at Maroons; Chicago at Pittsburgh, Sunday, December 8 Americans at Detroit, Tuesday, December 4 Toronto at Canadiens; Rangers at Boston, Thursday, December 6 Americans at Maroons; Rangers at Pittsburgh; Chicago at Ottawa. Saturday, December 8 Ottawa at Toronto; Maroons at Boston; Detroit at Pittsburgh; Chicago at Canadiens, Sunday, December 9 Rangers at Detroit; Boston at Americans, Tuesday, December 11 Ottawa at Chicago; Toronto at Rangers; Americans at Boston; Detroit at Maroons, Thursday, December 13 Ottawa at Detroit; Maroons at Americans; Rangers at Canadiens, Saturday, December 15 Canadiens at Maroons; Boston at Toronto; Pittshurgh at Ottawa. Sunday, December 16 Americans at Chicago; Detroit at Rangers, Tuesday, December 18 Maroons at Ottawa; Canadiens at Chicago; Pittsburgh at Ameri» cans; Detroit at Boston, Thursday, December 20 Ottawa at Rangers; Canadiens at Detroit; Americans at Pitts- burgh; Toronto at Maroons. Saturday, December 22 Ottawa at Canadiens; Pittsburgh at Toronto, Sunday, December 23 Detroit at Americans, Tuesday, December 25 Maroons at Toronto; Americans at Rangers; Chicago at Boston, Thursda;y December 237 Toronto at Pittsburgh; Detroit at Canadiens; Chicago at Amerl- cans, Saturday, December Americans at Ottawa; Plits- burgh at Maroons; Detroit at Tor. onto, Sunday, December 80 Chicago at Detroit; Boston at Rangers. , dan 1 Tuesday, Ottawa at Boston; Maroons at Pittsburgh; Oanadiens at Ameri. cdns; Rangers at Toronto; Detroit at Chicago. Thursday, January 8 Canadiens at Ottawa; Pittsburgh at Rangers; Toronto at Chicago; Boston at Maroons, Saturday, January B Ottawa at Toronto; Maroons at Canadiens; Pittsburgh at Boston. y, January Rangers at Americans; Detroit at Chicago, Tuesday, January 8 Ottawa at Montreal; Toronto at Boston; Chicago at Pittsburgh; Canadiens at Rangers, Thursday, January 10 Maroons at Chicago; Toronto at Americans; Rangers at Ottawa; Boston at Canadiens; Pittsburgh jat Detroit, y, January 12 Ottawa at Pittsburgh; Canadiens t Maroons; Americans at Toron- to; Detroit at Boston, Sunday, January 18 Detroit at Rangers; Pittsburgh Ottawa at Americans; at Boston; Chicago at Canadiens. Thursday, January 17 Americans at Maroons; Boston at Detroit; Chicago at Rangers; Canadiens at Toronto, , January 19 Maroons at Ottawa; Rangers at Canadiens; Detroit at Pittsburgh, Sunday, January 20 Toronto st Detroit; Boston at Chicago; Pittsburgh at Americans. Tuesda y, January 22 Chicago at Ottawa; Detroit at Maroons; 'Toronto at Rangers; fens at Boston. Thursdap, Jennary 24 Maroons at Americans; Rangers t Pittsburgh; Toronto at Cana- I. known at last night's meets ing that Mike Kelley and othe er representatives of the O.A. LA, and also gentlemen from Toronto to present the trophies won by Oshawa dure ing the year, would be present at the gathering, Providence Buy Three Canadiens Montreal, Oct. Har Pete Palangio and either Wildore Larochelle or George Patterson, of Canadiens, have been sold to the Pro- vidence Minor League Club, accord- ing to announcement made here to- ay. Hart was relief left winger wit the Canucks last season, oA Par angio was with Detroit and Windsor, Larochelle and Patterson both saw service with the Canuck sub line. It is understood that Jean Dubuc manager of the Providence team, will attempt to swing a deal with the Pittsburg team whereby he will trade Palangio for Charlie Langlois, hefty Pittsburg Pirate defenceman. 18--Gizzy Saturday, January 96 Canadiens at Ottawa; Chicago at Toronto; Pittsburgh at Maroons, B (Sunday, January 27 oston at Ran : at Ren gers; Americans Tuesday, January 20 Canadiens at Americans; Toron- to at Ottawa; Chicago at Boston. Thursday, January 31 Chicago at Maroons; Boston at Toronto; Americans at Rangers, Saturda;, February 8 Maroons at Pittsburgh; Toronto at Boston; Ottawa st Casnawes, ¥ ag AN February 3 oronto at Ameri H a Chine! cans; Rangers Tuesday, Feb Maroons at Rangers; Toronto at Pittsburgh; Chichgo at Detroit; Americans at Boston, Thursday, February 7 Chicago at Americans; Detroid at Canadiens; Rangers at Ottawg, Saturday, February 9 Boston at Maroons; Pittsburgh at Toronto; Detroit at Ottawa, Sunday, February 10 Canadiens at Rangers; Amerls sana at Chicago; Pittsburgh at Des roit, Tuesday, February 18 Maroons at Ottawa; Canadiens at Pittsburgh; Detroit at Boston, Thursday, F 14 Ottawa at Maroons; Canadiehs at Chicago; Rangers at Toronto; Boston at Pittsburgh; Detroit at Americans. Saturday, February 16 Ottawa at Pittsburgh; Maroons at Toronto; Americans at Capas diens, Sunday, February 17 Pittsburgh at Rangers; Torontd at Detroit; Bestop at Chicago, Tuesday, February 19 Ottawa at Detroit; Pittsburgh at Boston; Maroons at Americans. Thursday, February 21 Ottawa at Chicago; Maroons at Canadiens; Americans at Pitts burgh; Detroit at Rangers. . Satwring, February 28 anadiens at Toronto; Pittsur, at Ottawa; Rangers at Rig Sunday, February 24 Boston at Americans; - Detroft at Chicago, 26 ¥y Ottawa at Rangers; Maroons st Boston; Pittsburgh at Canadiens; Chicago at Detroit, Thursday, Fel 28 Toronto at Maroons; ngers at Chicago; Boston at Ottaws; Cana diens at Americans, Satorday, March 8 Ottawa at Toronto; Maroons st Chicago; Detroit at Pittsburgh; Boston at Canadiens. Sunday, March 8 Rangers at Detroit. , March B Americans st Ottawa; Rangers at Boston; Chicago at Pittsburgns Maroons at Detroit. Thursday, March 7 Ottawa at Canadiens; 'Toropte at Chicago, Saturday, March ® Ottawa at Boston; Americans at Maroons; Detroit at Toronto, Sunday, March 10 Pittsburgh at Chicago; Cans~ diens at Detroit; Boston at Rang- ers, » Tuesday, March 13 Ottawa at Americans; 'Poronto at Canadiens; Chicago at Boston; Rangers at Pittsburgh. Thursday, March 14 Canadiens at Maroons; Ameri- cans at Toronto; Boston st De- troit; Chicago at Rangers. Saturday, March 16 Toronto at Ottawa; Boston at Pittsburgh; Americans at Canss 4 »

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