SBOVCVLIPNG I » HOCKEY WRESTLING N ‘Olin: ~ l eoxmc BASKETBAEI. omen SPORT .l;yron~ ‘Nelson ‘ Wins U.S.‘ 3:-Open? Golf Championship . Ployoff With‘ Wood 0’H'ara\ PI-i‘!lLADELPI-IIA. June '12-—(AP) —Byron Nelson, as durable as a cow pony from his native Texas, fired two great iron shots on the ..._. "J 12-—(cp> lallihllnrlllld é°“”§‘ hoizeiliiil the Pm" norrro. e - 9 9 mm fl’ '5 .,Snrlns HE,?.,,'5 Hugh nllliie bowed out of Mill course today and thereby won me ontarlo Tennis Champion- mgpm today when he Went down Wm smooth-stroking Ed O‘!-fare gotuwa 0-6. 8-4. 0-4- urpris the 43rd United States 0 n Golf Gham lonship. pe I-le ad to £0 to the ram treen of his second layoff round with Craig Wood b ore he could make the victory official with a one- - over- '10 to Wood's 73. But the blon bomber from Mamaroneck. N.Y-. was ready to admit their 5'-Wltle for the same’: most im- portant title was over as early as the fourth hole. On No. 3 Nelson used his sand wedge on a downhill lie and loft- ed a shot that almost. rolled into the cup for an eagle two. On the fourth, out-driven a good 40 yards and 200 yards short of the green, Byron laced into a No. 1 iron and saw his bail light onto the green, 13 feet short of the cup, roll up and nestle against the pin. When the pin was lifted out, the ball plopped into the cup for a deuce. Nelson's second eagle of the ‘ rites. ’ Ho tl1ll.hcwever. to drop the .91, by narrow mar ns. next two Eown The Alleys HOLY NAME BOWLING Duck Pin Mixed - oubles . - tournament. Right there the 2'1. 5. mm“ 10° 1” In 5 -old pro. from Reading P 5 modheli 93 s 1" 132"” ilhagmtliifi glgtygff won. He was follrl v_ pmeau 143 160 152 - , _' B-‘Wm 37 3‘ 61487] Evlogljilorllllllgel fliilln lvhllélip hlamillf . «»~w=- my ,' '§r::‘:‘:.;:.';*..:“.i.“:.s.*zl":‘..- 2° “H . o w °' ”""° “ “’° ’ " :*.::a.:*=:.:*;: sews“: J.Petereo|'i 122 155183 - en 8. 0. L.MoD°m11 73 °° “"’°°’ :.f’llly1l;'z:§t§ht‘§"§1°iiyltl§’il‘i§§nfl7r'E’$.nwlit.lé V. ooyle as 128 l§g_“3 3-fillrigian op:l1e(r:lliasnlprlloxisnel:ll='wCa- I. Douaan, ‘la 92 ;51I'1l‘&I’i!|(},)i0llti!51I’°i1D i?tllI’dly whflch van: -7- X"-°‘"Wfi 1“ W’ 199“ 50¢ steadyrfor a.n;‘chl;§i'cewo‘; ac:-lockup) 1 Wm '7 8‘ not wood. it meant he had lost c 9° ‘” ‘:2 5., ‘£'i’.‘é°'l'ili l‘l‘ail«.“.5”'.§‘.a.‘l.‘lt‘¥.°‘t"e§l‘°l..;'ii° ‘ ' E. In 3 G 9- Hui” 79 7‘ llllecali mien htad purtiired the {ar- W- H“°““ 1” B 1‘ . othel playolflflaexillll was iqrllgrgingour ‘ “°*““"“ " ” °”“ 1‘:‘..‘*3’..‘m‘.‘.Sy ‘at: "‘:’°‘.i. is en or e o - '1'°"‘¢“‘ “ 7 "°'°°" etoutrssscnh-rgipionsnbif hat lgingieurst. ' , W35 5 II y nny ‘'‘““''s n. Toomba shute in a p‘.Q‘off for the British i«’“r*>‘3:’«'y’ ‘°- rue: €"°.“..i.‘.‘°.;..:"...1°...3*.- z*}?.l’3d“El"€.’; ea 9 H 5 I-"‘“°fl‘7 AMIEMOM 1; Professional Golfers’ Association d final in two extra holes. In 1935. alter being tied by Gene Sarazen‘s double eagle. he lost out in a play- off for the Augusta. Masters. \ Byron, rated one of the greatest ll'0l'l players in the same. esiiecialiv info the face of such a bris wind :.‘...""+li’.".‘i.‘t’l’.‘.’;’.o*iil';‘..°i’..“’l3ai°°‘.‘l.’.; 1.29:" .A‘ tavnesters the‘ following ’yee..r rth Open at D‘, an 'the No -South um ' _ Pinehurst this Spring. N.‘ J olow. ‘:"""" 8. . ‘ ; will ho '°*‘°"“‘° Practice For 'ihe bite carried out for remain- liioot lvleea. rhyeravlel-0 003° o....a.,. - ‘us Stars Club city Igggue final-—Tod's' Taxi vs R‘l§’o"—is:aed LAIEII5 nml-N6 75, I. Tharewillbe apracticefor the Eastern stars baseball team at the Victoria Park diamond this even- lns at 6 o'clock sharp. A full at- ‘wendanoe is requested. CS. ‘ '1 p,m,—3por"l)y FVMIT VB. Tlfieil. Simmerings ; it v ”" 5\l”. A /.. WP. "Marco Polo", 1625 tons. Bum 1a51—solni John, N.B., by Joe. Smith ep.T.\’§““e \$w '0‘. pt‘ -:0 u - I! -. bov- 211 --As line a melee cargo as a man "over Slowed In. ilra 50Wl~oF his lpe, an extra 1 lriandlly, lrogrant ibbocco that certainly cllelcs wlili~,Mal'lllinc,, men. Mlgliiyaasy out Ilia ton.‘-ymoopii, Inellow»arl¢l's_ail|(ylng.lo tlia my cooler smoke and a dryer pipe -llIoI'§‘:Roubudl ~ ' . -. - Around The Sport Front * 3}’ ALAN EANDAL Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK, Juno -12-(GP)-— At last somebody has done llr— traded a Jockey for a horse....two owners/made such an ‘even-up trade at lihir-mount Park on clos- ing day . . . . ..Charles Kranz ex- changed the contract of 18-year- old Charley Clark, apprentice Jock- ey, for Tramway, six-year-old race horse owned by Butsey Hernan- dea....Olark rode his first race two weeks ago and won....Tram- we won 04,206 in purse money in year .... .. A.ustmlia.'s racket-armed trot- tera are back on the Davis Cup trail t, Jml Bram ch and Jack Crawford are on United States soil to tune up for their series against Mexico June 80, July 1 and 2———'I'l1ere’s barb blood boiling these days between New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox . . . . .. Roeevelt Raceway, which cost 800.000 cocoanuts to build. was open yesterday after a long stretch of dlsuse....but it was only to coax odd two-«bit coins from mot- orists who wanted to park their car while viewing the U5.-British _ polo matches....A great number of Rosevelt Racevway'a 60.000 seats never have been sat in....they made the great raceway so tough to drive it was too tough..,, From the tactics Tony Cialento is using on his (par males, it looks as though Galento’s gallop with Joe Innis June 28 will be some- thing like a street brawl. . ..provid- ed Louis lets it get that far out of hand, of course....Walte-r Hagen Jr., is Ia chip off the old wood.... Walter Jr. is captain of the Notre Dame golf team and during 11 rounds in the past collegiate cam- paign he avenged 71.81 strokes... Bob skene. the Indian-Australian who plays international polo for Great Britain has figured it out that his pony carries him between 38 and miles an hour in many short dashes for the ball....Jack , adrwag betting commis- sioner, reports t era is virtually no betting on the Louis-Galento fight not even’on which round Tony is going to get stiffened. BASEI.’>Al.L RESULTS (Canadian Press) ewark. 000‘000“0l3 Wicker, Nohem and Becker: gfldlbllfll. strincevich, Haley and olsn, PLAYFUL PLANE EANWORTH. Emir-An 311331530 took ofron its own here when the throttle was accidentally opened when the engine was being Start- ed’ The machine crashed 50 feet gway on top of a. bomb shelter, men with $940 idle.'ha.'ve lentlit lo the «Wern- mgm (0, years, without in- ._l!_-’l3,_5° ~ mat. 'rhe lg:-ctrlotic benefactors are Wmim, &d “ Program At A By some nnmrzl . Associated Press Sports Writer ’ OOOPERSTUWN, N.Y.. June 12] -(AP)-—'I‘he first 100 years are always the hardmt and old man basebalhtook off on his second cen- tury today after being hailed and feted at the biggest birthday party tossed him during his century of rule as the No. 1 figure in Ameri- can sport. There were ,parades, decilcations, spe s. a Babe Ruth "corne- back,'f all games and what not for more than 11,000 pie who poured into this pre ty village where Abner Doubleday sat down on A hot day and invented the Na- tional pastime. Commissioner K.M. Landis, high 5111853 of baseball, was there to lead a cheering. He received plenty of lusty rooting assists from -a score of men whose names are found in almost every baseball blue book ever published. The baseball museum and hail of fame with its relics of bygone days was dedicated; so was Doubleday Field. built on the actual spot where‘ Do4ubleday’s pioneers Ifirst trotted into action a century ago. Eleven living members of the hall of fame, renewed feuds and friend- ships and baseball as it was dis- played in 1839, in the 1850's and in l989—was reeled off by teams of achoolhoys, soldiers and picked major leaguers, wearing the uni- forms of the periods they reprsent- Men who have helped make base- ball history—Babe Ruth. Connie Mack. Hans Wagner, old Nap La .1019 and Walter Johnson. to name just a few—sat on the platform as Landis dedicated the hall of fame “to all America." Ten of the ll living members of the hall of fame were presented with engraved bats. and a ruffle of l Four-minute Mile Possible Says Wooderson . 0 094415 Wooderson th tiniest llllg ldney ‘ " in the business, arrived in the United States today and said he figures the four-minute mile is no longer a. pi earn. He wasn’t cocky about it. Thero’s notlrihg at all oockyabcutthisalim sodium as whle peers at you -.thro spec . both - year-old sydnel/Q:ndmEi.s trains. Al Hill. are quietly confident that Wooderson will knock off all the United States’ best Se-t/uirday in Pl'lnx>etom's invitation meet. and . A 4:08 mile is possible. I'd e y set a pace of 60 for the first quarter. and 61 for non of the next three." lBaseball Celebrates Its Centennial With Varied Cooperstown drums and the sounding of taps answered the calling of the names of the 14 deceased members. 'I‘y Cobb, the old Georgia Peach of Detroit Tigers was delayed en route by illness and didn't arrive until after the ceremonies. But the other 10 were there from Connie Mack, the '16-year-old dean down to Babe Ruth. the freshman of the ot. In addition to Mack and Ruth were Honus Wagner. greatest short stop of them all and still active as coach of Pittsburgh Pirates; Tris speaker, the old ‘grey eagle" of C , alter Johnson, the "big train" of Washington; Nap La Jole a great Cleveland star of the old days; George sisler, holder of the worlds’ record for safe hits in a single season; Cy Young, who won 511 major league games; Grover Cleveland Alexander, the shutout artist of his day and Ed- die Collins, former great second sucker for the Athletics and Chi- cago White Sox. . Ruth, Johnson and Alexander, got the largest ovations, but all were warmly received by the fans. Afterwards the immortals don- ned uniforms and marched with the major leavuers and amateur players to DouL‘.cday Field for the "cavalcade of baseball." A sell-out crowd of more than 10. saw a team of National and Amer an League players, selected by Hans Wagner via the "choose- up" method. defeat a team cap- tained by Eddie Collins, general manager of Boston Red Sox, 4-2 in seven innings. The high spot of the afternoon. V was a “comeback” by Babe Ruth, who lumbered out as a pinch hit- ter for the Wagners. The Babe, for of'f’hls old time form. popped weakly to catcher Art Jorgens after missing one strike by a country mile and fouling odf another. /' Golf Results At Summerside Over twenty took part in the Point match at the Summerside Golf course over the weekend, and some fine plays were seen. Lance Arsenault Norman Macuod P’. . Crosby Dr. iI‘ohr1i,sttcn .ohu- e e are . Ennis smi R. C. 1-fciman Craft Aground In Louisburg Harbor (By The Canadian Press) IDIJIEBURG. N. 5.. June 12- Holed below the waterline and leaking badly, the 3.270-ton Brit- ish ateamsh‘ Pmolver beached heaself in Louisburg Harbor today. ‘U -at I-lhI@IFC7|a~}@~IO. to it from sinking ‘(er shehad . hwegxmfi “Ltheportin A eevy X. The freighiu, bound from Bos- Plan Merger 0f_ ‘um ,0 mg“, Wm mp mm Ems“ Aways .i‘i'l£ o... i..:“......“‘".::..a.;:.si:; it when Ca Walker rdered ..::. .. .;....i:.:=~.. or an m if-'黑«‘m on menlt-oon-trolled * I avia- "3 "°“"‘e‘m,°’f,, §°“"‘l"": h‘}m,o,_° tion corporation which will merge Imperial_Airways and British A -- wavs into a single oraanlzwtion in the irilterasts or "efficient over- seas air transport servioes‘.' were made Duibllc tonight. Details were disclosed in the E...._-.. overseas Airways Bill. which was introduced into the House ad Cc«mmons'~-last Friday by othe Air Under-Secretaryucautfiulil Harold Balfour. ‘é“.p.".a€"kl.’3l“ - e and national meabiee a\\\\_\\V ..*$.'\‘R“=.~."“-.~.‘li.‘c."-‘:\“e§.\'\‘\\\.\ seour lih fullest develop- 31.212120 eonsislierit eW'l‘l>hBlr M f mt overseas -gervices at reasonable rates." Expropriation Of Land Is Proposed APEBT. Jlu 12-Outright exgggrlavbion ofm Jewish-owned acrlgspfor Hanan-ry's landhil pans-its will be nmnooed to Par- omt by the Oolzledrrunent. auth- rlfwli ieiirneo also that!‘ am. ' _ ;o....to_..,..« _for_dandruff. of all nor powens. KING'S is 4'3 H" 5! The ship had run into one of the many rocks outside the harbor mouth last night as dense fog egiévgtbped the Cape Breton Island c . . a 91-year-old craft, is registered in Iiialmouth. Eng. She is owned by the Chellew Navigation Company. Fair Weather For Maritime Visit? SAINT. JOHN. N.B., June l2—— (OP)-—iHo_pes of local idenls that the weather man ‘would smile upon the King andVQueen as they visit Saint John tomorrow were boosted tonight as FM. names. Dominion Observatory Director. as West winds would likely weather. The barometer had been un- steady for the last two days. south west winds bringing overcast skies and an unpromising outlook for to- mcrx-aw. GA!‘ DIE!‘ probable’ l ring fair 1 ' Second Straight Victory For I The Red Sox A 'l-run splurge in the are inning that drove Pony Daley to the showers allowed the Red Box to coast to an easy 12-5 victory over the Vltamannas last night in a scheduled game of the Sumrnerside Town League. In the disastrous third the Sox sent 11 men to the plalte, collected two singles and a double, were given a base on balls and with the aid of three errors by their opponents sent seven run- ners scampering across the plate before the side was retired. It meant the ball game and ended Daley'.s tenure in the box. Murray Willett taking the hill held the Box to four hits and four runs in the remaining frames but Vltas never managed to catch un to their op- ponents. Youthful Gerard Bernard hurled beautiful ball for the Six during his five inning stretch on the mound allowing only one run as a result of an error by Dodds with two out in the fifth. Arsenault re- lieved Bernard and yielded four runs in the remalnging innings three of the counters coming in the Vitamanna's sixth turn at the plate. / A. Clow and J. Casey were the big guns at bat for the Sox each collecting two hits in five while LeBlanc wielded a potent willow for the losers getting two doubles in four trips to the late. The next game will be on ura- day is postponed fixture between the Vita: and Kensington. Next scheduled game is on Friday be- tween the Red Sox and Kensing- on. BOX SCOTIE Redsox ABRHPOAE Morrison, ss 4 1 0 0 3 0 Landry, 3b ,5 1 l 1 3 1 A. Clow, 2b 5 2 2 3 2 0 Dodds, lf. 4 2 1 0 0 1 Deighan. c. 4 1 1 12 0 1 Casey, rf ii 3 2 0 0 0 I. Clow. 1 5 1 1 ‘I 1 0 A.Landry,ri sooooo Bernard. p 3 1 1 0 1 0 Arsenault, p l 0 0 l 2 0 Totals 41 12 9 2412 3 ‘J AB R H PO A E Desroche, rf 4 0 1 l 0 1 J. Wedge. lb 4 0 0 4 0 1 Kelly, of 4 1 0 1 0 0 LeBlanc, ss 4 0 2 0 3 2 J. Hogan, ab 3 1 l 8 2 0 . Hogan, 2b 3 1 1 2 0 3 Boates. if 3 1 1 0 0 0 Phi1lips,c 3 0 0 is 1 0 Daley, p 2 0 (I 1 o 0 Willett, p 2 1 0 0 2 2 Totals 32 5 6 24 ‘I 11 BY INNINGS 468 78 R H E Red Sox 01'! 120 0112 9 8 Vitas 000 013 10 5 8 ll SUMMARY Earned runs: Red sex 5: Vitae‘ 3: left on base: Red sex 9; Vitus dry 2. Dodds 2, Kelly, C. Hogan, '1; runs batted in: I Clow 2. Delg- hen. .7. Casey 2;‘ Bernard. H. Lan- Boates, Wlllett 2, LeBlanc: two base hits: H. Landry, I. Clow, A. Clow Lefilanc 2, Desroche, C. Hog- an~ ase on balls: off Daley 2 in 3 lnnings (Dodds, Morrison): by Willett 2 in 5 innings( Bernard) by Bernard 2 i (Hogan, Boates); by Arenault 2 in 3 innings( C. Hogan, Phillips); struck out: by Daley 6 in 3 in- nings; by Willett '1 in 5 innings; by Bernard 8 in ii innnings; by Arsenault 2 in 3 innings; stolen bases: Jelly. Desroche, A. Clow, J. Dodds, Casey. Umpires: At the plate Monkley; on the bases: E. Arsenauit, F. Dal- 'IOROlN'IO. June 12-—(CP‘— Tony Lazseri. the old “pooah ‘em up" kid himself. is coming back to the minors, perhaps as the step- ping stone on the road back to Major League baseball. The one-time New York Yankee one of baseball's greatest infield- ers during his 12 seasons as a Yank, has been signed as playing- manager of Toronto Maple Leafs in the International League. suc- ceeding Jack Burns. It will be Tony's ob to lead the Leafs out of the es , where they rest 18 1-2 games cat the pace. The change in leadership was made with the agreement of Burns, who will remain as the club‘s first blluran, President Don Ross an- nounced today. There had been rumors of a managerial shift ever since the Leafs took to the road last week after a disastrous home stand. Far from the form with which he scintillated as a member of the powerhouse Yankees, Lazzeri ner- erthelcss should aid the Toronto cause at field and at bat. With Chicago Cubs last season, he was good enough to hit .266 in a utility role. The end. or interruption, of his major-league career was s\\'il't mps _.-this year, Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants releasing him Tony Lazzeri Signed Cellar Place Leafs "Ute International League after la rief service. Tony will not take over active leadership of the Leafs until they return from their present road trip June 17. Until then he will confer with General lzrnager Dan How- ley and other officials, seeking layers and means to strengthen l)he team. Leaf officials were con- fidant Lazzerl’s long-time connec- tions in the Majors would help the ttleam gain help from Big League cubs The announcement of Lazzerlit appointment was followed swiftly by front-office activity that brought ivwo new players into the Leaf roster. I-leinie Manush, re- leased by Pittsburgh Pirates re- cently, was signed and Mike Mecla, burly right-handed pitcher, was traded to Syracuse Chiefs for catcher Tommy Heath. FLYING BOAT FLOUNDERS CALCU'I'I‘A, India, June 12—(CP Reuters)-—The Imperial Airway: flyinc boat centurion was report- ed todey to have fioundered in the Hoofly River while attemrpting to land at ilrs base at Bally. Four passengers and the crew of five escaped injury. ggt publication. ey. Soorer\—B. Johnston. 200 CENTRE OF CITY ' SllPEllVlSEll Every 24 hours we print I com- pletely new and refreshingly differ- Read your paper; daily. YOU GET ALL THE LATEST LOCAL, NATIONAL AND FOREIGN NEWS THE llllAllLOTTETOVlll GUARDIAN UTOS ' V. 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