NEW YORK RANGERS 1 x | TOWN WEEKLY MAGAZINE SECTION lO PRO HOCKEY EMPLOYS ‘FARM’ SYSTEM Top Row: (left to right) —Lynn Patrick, Larry Molyneaux, Art Coulter, Les= ter Patrick, Ott Heller, Murray Patrick, Babe Pratt, Alex Shibicky, Harry Wes- terby (trainer). Boitow Row—DPhil Watson, Bryan Hextall, Neil Colville, Davey Kerr, Clint Smith, Cecil Dillion, Dutch Hiller, Mac Colville. OEE ESE THE TURNING WORM Continued From Page 3 “0. K., Chief. That'll be all — the barber took off the big white apron and Marion Michael slid to the floor. “Fifty cents, young man, if you please.” Marion Michael slid to the floor. “Fifty cents, young man, if you please.” MARION MICHAEL'S heart thumped against his chest. His voice sounded far away and strange as he said, “I haven't any money.” “What?” the friendly barber looked down at the small face,’ strained and tense. “My father gave me fifty cents—” the boy started and choked. “Did you know you hadn’t any money when you came in, Son?” Small boys at home had given Tony understanding. Marion Michael nodded. “You shouldn’t do that, young man.” “But I had to have it done before my father came home—" something in the child’s face made Tony sense the crisis in the situation “—I couldnt wait.” : ‘“Have your father come in tonight and pay me, will you?” The child nodded. “Oh, yes, sure. And thank you for the hair cut,” he called back from the doorway. Marion Michael slipped in the service entrance, climbed the back stairs and reached the kitchen. Spread on silver plates were the silly little sand- wiches. He lifted the top of one exploringly, and touched its filling. Lucy pushed open the swing- ing door from the breakfast room. “Yo’ motheh lookin’ all oveh fo’ yo!” she began. ‘“Heaven’s sake, what you bin doin’?”’ as she caught sight of his bare bleached head. “Nothin’.” “Land ob Liberty! If yo’ was mine I'd whale de daylights out ob yo’. It’s time to pass ’roun’ dese here sandwiches. Better 20 on in.” Lucy placed a silver plate in Marion Michael’s hand and half pushed him through the door. Now for it! The room was filled with the heavy scent of flowers and thick with clouds of cigarette smoke. At the piano a young man was playing idly, and knots of people were chatting and laugh- ing over the teacups when the small grotesque figure entered, the silver plate in both hands held straight before him. Mother sat behind the silver tea tray. She gasped as she saw the clipped head and strained face of the little boy who came toward her, passing sandwiches. “Marion Michael Ross!” Mother almost dropped the teapot. Gravely as an image the small boy pacsed the silver plate. A few smiles that flashed across the faces of the guests were frozen at the start when they looked from the small boy to the startled mother. Mother looked as if she were about to have a good cry, and Marion Michael, heavy with the feeling of impending pun- ishment, knew that his own tears were not very far away. But no matter what lay ahead, his job right now was passing sandwiches. And pass sand- wiches he would and did. THAT WAS the strained moment of Dad’s entrance. He threw open the dor, and Marion Michael looked up, rejoicing. Now Dad would see it. No more a sissy. Taking care of Mother just as he had been told, doing as she told him, but no more a sissy. A man among men! Dad took one look at Mother’s flushed embarrassed face, around the room where some twenty guests were strug- gling to restrain smiles, glanced at the bare head of the small boy and grasped the situation. In four quick strides Dad crossed the room, leaned down and kissed Mother. The fifth step took him to the side of Michael Marion, standing very small and still, an empty silver plate in his hands. Dad didn’t kiss Marion Michael. Instead he extended his hand, took the small boy’s in his own, and shook it heartily. “Congratulations, Mike,” he said. “I'm glad you got the kind "of hair cut I asked for. I like it. It’s great.” Then he took a cup of tea,and ordered a lot of sandwiches and talked with everybody and the party was gay again. Marion Michael ran about, passing sandwiches with a light heart and an overflowing joy. Dad had called him “Mike!” In front of all that erowd. And praised his hair cut. It seemed an age until the party broke up, and as the last guests drifted away, Marion Michael — Mike preferred — heard Dad talking at the tele- phone. He hung up the receiver with a bang, strode through the room and threw open the win- dows. “It’s decided, Adele,” he said. Mother looked up from the cups and plates. “What, dear?” “I’ve just sent a telegram to the manager. We’ll start for the country on Monday.” “But, Michael—” Mother got no further, for Dad went on: “This young Mike of ours showed me the way to handle the thing. I’ve known for a long time that the country job was the one I should take. And I've been afraid be- cause it was a change, because living in the country might not be quite so easy and pretty as living here with all this—" he waved toward the flowers and the cake plates—“I’ve been let- ting you and Marion—I mean Mike, grow to be strangers to me just because I was a coward. But when I came in this after- noon and saw that small head I knew he wasn’t afraid, and I'm not. “We're going to the new job next week, we three. You're going to be well and strong in that fresh, fine climate. And Mike is going to learn to ride and hunt. And I'm going to have a home that I can come back to at night.” Mother loked up into his face. “I didn’t know you felt it so deeply, Michael, being away—" “We didn’t know Michael felt it so deeply, either, wear- ing that picturesque crop of curls. It took a lot of courage for him to have it cut.” Like a whirlwind a small boy came running into the room. “Dad! Mother! What do you think? I was eating a sand- wich and look—it came out. My front tooth! See—" Under the close-clipped scalp the child’s face grinned widely He showed a yawning space. “Don’t I look funny?” “You look fine!’ said Mother and Dad in unison. THE LATEST and most impor- tant development in present day hockey is the appearance of the “farm’’ system for developing new talent. Responsible for the innovation is Les Patrick, veteran manager of the New York Rangers. The days of the individual star in hockey is past, Patrick told us. Today, the average big time hockey team #8 composed of a group of men of equal abil- ity and drilled in the impor- tance of teamwork. The star system was the result of the short squads of other days, when with only 10 or 11 play- ers at his command, the man- ager had to keep them in the game longer. Today, with even amateur teams averaging 15 men to the squad, and the play speeded up as it is, it is no longer necessary to keep the “men on the ice as long. The current Rangers team is unique in more than one re- spect. In the first place, all but two of the men on the squad were developed by the team in one of its farms. These two men, Art Coulter, who was ae- quired in a swap from the Black Hawks, and Davey Kerr, who was purchased from the Mon- treal Maroons, pre-date the establishment of the farm sys- tem. In brief, the way the farm system works: The Edmingten, Alberta ‘“Roamers,” while not owned outright by the “Rang- ers” are the first link in the farm system. Here it is that young Canadians (the backbone of the sport, incidentally) are given their first crack at com- petition. The ‘Roamers’” is strictly an amateur aggregation (junior) and the boys average from 17 to 19 years of age. When one of the junior group shows sufficient promise, he is moved along into the senior amateur unit, the New York “Rovers” and is given an op- portunity to display his wares at the Madison Square Garden, When the player has shown sufficient progress and ability to warrant promotion into the professional ranks, he is sent AHA RHR A to the Philadelphia “Ram- blers,”” which is rated as one of the best teams in the Minor Professional ranks. It is from here; that he is promoted inte big time on the “Rangers.” Strangely enough, the num- ber of hockey players gotten from colleges is negligible. Most ‘of the present day big leaguers are natural born skat- ers and hail from Canada. The importance of the farm system is again demonstrated through this fact. The manager of the amateur ‘‘Roamers,” always anxious that his team contain the best material available, is always on the lookout for up and coming stars. These men are on call to the manager of the ‘““Rangers’ at any time. The development of the 4 R's idea came about quite by acc dent. Les Patrick, pilot of the “Rangers,” ‘was interested im amateur hockey only as a hobby. He rented the Gardem for Sunday night games for the pros, and the use of the rink in the afternoon went with it. Consequently, he threw it opem to the amateurs to encourage interest in the sport. At that time, the amateurs were banded together in what . was known as the Tri-State League, consisting of Atlantie City, Hershey, Pa., and Balti more. With the availability of the Garden, three New York teams were added and it be- came the Eastern League. The New York aggregations were the New York Athletic Club, St. Nick’s and the Crescent A. C. They were painfully bad. A group of sportsmen ap- proached Patrick for his opin- ion on what was needed to perk up the New York teams. ‘“Cana~ dians,” he answered. The interested parties asked Patrick’s co-operation in build- ing a better set of outfits to rep- resent Gotham, and he accept ed. His first step was to estab- lish a school in Winnipeg and to invite the most promising youngsters in the vicinity te complete. That was in 1934, Continued On Page 13 EEE ERATE WORLD'S FAIR BUREAU ARRANGEMENTS now have been completed by the New York World’s Fair committee for an ever-changing program of international music festivals all through the Fair season, Vocal and instrumental solo- ists, symphony orchestras and famous conductors of world re- pute will be presented in the World’s Fair Music Hall which will seat 2500 persons. Every land and every period in music will be represented in this series of music festival pro- grams. AVIATORS WHO have contrib- uted to the progress made in the science of flight will appear in person at the Aviation Build- ing. Each day during the Fair, some aviator will give talks on his own epoch-making experi- ences and will explain: the sig- nificance of new triumphs in conquering the air. TOWN’S new service, the World’s Fair Bureau, is open to all readers of TOWN Weekly Magazine Section. This depart- ment will gladly answer any questions about ‘interesting points to visit, where to stop, routes to take and other ques- tions relating to the World's Fair in New York. TOWN’S World’s Fair Buream supplements a special weekly directory, with information om popular-priced hotel and apars- ment hotel accommodations im and around New York, te- gether with announcements eof restaurants, amusements and entertainments that you will want to take in while on your trip to the fair. 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