- If ' i mu "title es’. while with Wa enthusiasm ly andp ust r . cugéiout the sreasonbtgg. tx ave . ill wig for the ‘lime “l. they c p llo ap- n on < near-anus. n . tilt make a ‘o l. i-Ithe rogram " as tite of . . p.s€::..t...."c...... wom- hose lntere gigure skatiill- eore-s‘. > lLr. ' his tim and tfort in prom E1. i, "° ginter skating act- lties and in: puiii someway reciatlon in " lites of 1 S heir lll-IFOO "Phe Iagionalres, who scored an mpresalve 18-6 victory over the mdericton- itals, will imam-ls edecle-retlon of a iok-BrutmG la They th flrt 1c-1 " mo‘. = ~ qhrnpoe-tithst aasaint John‘ venlles, ‘ win from 9 z s ,,.. s r .-t§?3§s§r so? s??? rain ' _ gags i§§i..r§§.. i“ Wwgfili t‘ and mush ln the finer art of has given much can best show lo inter lid dinzflthe "ll; Augusta,'Ga-. April 4~'|- " llfld. Hockey ‘egiortdvires AA: Berwick a. as u. scm ~ c. ~" , ,,,,,,,, ,,,, Byron llslson Still ter’ talking ‘ ‘ ' lc Scentie- with scusaed the show this ycunl "m. mg" or our xsonynm rut, March ...(AP) - Byron Nelson has hit slump ger. said tod oveér- oifed and needaa few wee res playflllhe king p money layers ls suing up compstl on until i, he Masters‘ nueosnusu r (Reut&rs:h— St. Bonaventure, ners e championship the Boy Trophy. have crowned hockey on; lmdl after defeat‘ use 14 4cm the Maritbne but he's still the. “Mr. Bl! of golf and -wlll hold. that spot for. th next three or four years. Fred Corcoraa, .- ofesslonal Golf- ers Association tournament mana- ay. Pl 'd ‘ rtethtth 84- yearglolled illidflliyilst i‘: WIaIIOO "P. Oorcoran said Nelson la simply éfora- resuming tournament ln of last year-‘fi a 81‘. JOHN'S. Mid, Mama 1s ._ win- and been of s. s. Midgets, Nevwlfo and Grand Falls. the western cham- pions. in Wwo successive» games. and the nooxsv The Charlottetown Crystal - terday defeated the Charlottietmn _ Air Cadets 5-2 at, the Forum. SUMMARY First Period 1. Cadets Thompson (Barwlse) , Penaitier-None. leoossd Period I. QTY l. l Ni l1 D. J . Penalties-Noni? e ( name) ' ran-a rams Cadets Andrews. Crystals, Nicolle (Pierce) "s Pierce. . Crysta-s, D. Jardln Crystals, Kennedy e. v (Manor) Juvenile Titles llot Decided g SYDNEY, N. S. March 14 --(CP —-'1‘lie NovafiBcotia midget hockey finals scheduled to o en at Glace Bay tomorrow night as been dc- llved the return to Glace Bay o former manager Marlon MacDonald, secretary Gena Con- llflllltfll the M. A. H. A. announced h!" tollllht. Glace Bay Y A .~ C. and‘ '1‘ruro' are ln the provincial n a. . In the provincial uvenlle sec- tion, Dydne will o Thur y game-of the ome-and-home round mllabe played at ‘rruro March 32 Bull! .backin1lil0. oak‘. “ill?” twoml ' jvich champion of the d and - On Mondoy st. 1»...-1. »....c g y St. lfary’: Juniors r-iCPl-St. Patrick's ht raigtams e unior hampions, in a - ree first round memorial‘ cup series opening Monday. Boxer Allduotoll By -iloodlums KENOSHA. Wit. March. 13 .- (AP) - ‘Tony Bruno. ‘Milwaukee boxer. was abducted hoodlums who shot and killed g Raging, and left Mike's brother. Joseph. beaten and badly wounded at.a highway intersection north/of here early today. Detective Lt. Frank Burns of Milwaukee said today. Burns said that two of the men named by Joseph lllarina as among the four attackers had been ar- rsted on sissplcion, but that no trace of the middleweight fighter had been found. . Sheriff Milton La Violette of Kenoaha County said that Mike Farina, S2, was found in the cab l4 a at throumh the Jaw and left hand. Ha was us. Batching ls Shief Problem 0i Cardinals- - — atc ng appears to be Manager Eddie Dyer‘; chief problem today as he sifts a gilt- tcrlns collectlon- of infield, out- field antLpltching candidates with a weather eye out for a receiver of ennant calibre, hen owner Sam Brendon o: the St Louis Cardinals sold Walls- er Coo er to the New York Giants f0!‘ $15,000. both he and Dyer thought that Joe Garaglola, a standout rookie from Columbus, would be out of the army in time for the 1946 season. In fact they thought he would be out before Coo er. Baht now the veteran Ken O'- Dea looks like the fellow who will do most of the catching in cnrly spring. The SB-year-older from Avon, N. Y., is a good spring hit- ter and extra spry before the hot summer begins. Last year he caught 100 of the team's games and drove in 43 runs with rs 354 average. Two gentlemen bearing the 1m- usual first name of Delbert cnme next in line. They are Del Rice, a holdover from last year who made a favorable impression on sev- eral other managers; and Del Wil- ber. who has been in service since 194i when he last played with Columbus. 0a., in the class B Sally League. Wilbcr has looked goutl in in the spring games. St. F. X. Team Wins Maritime Boxing Title FREDERICTON, March 1 ._ (CH-Featherweight are; pm, "fl PM from the resin tonight to slur out a final round victor the. won the Maritime intercoleglate gem boxing chambi ‘ for so, anc r Uh‘ st- too tie y a lllvvliiflwl varsity glued 1pm,. all‘; Mary's of lt-lallgix was e mtesm ,, U..N.B. ion “it: er . no entry . wli Sparky Flemfig “W039 en d.. The ' Antigen Fla, March fit, crowns while U..N.B.. 9 501M111. light. light heavy Amllseav Gig-lab classefih“ 0H8 earywe . Dou ' ‘fiummelled Lou Glovsnetlf. -. for e third roundtechnl- ockout, “m”? s... trauma» .u; ‘. vision, in London sometime in May Bil 1v» A ll;ll.l.. j Teams; - moss-ax. 1mm as - (on - to ma: etllibltion. assess m Maritime centres u- WlNCl-IESTER, Ont., March 14 Collm to~ t keta fiscal-three g0 " T. i challenge accepted. ‘is-i no ilcuairtsgdlncrown cuanom: _,,,_ , S'slds Burllng ' iiomllslitlons, Arc llefoldsdc g 4 mo. A ' sfimgilii hich the Link- eams were as follows: L. Llnkletter, lidacDonald. Charles M’ , my‘. _ cIvor Boy D. Morrison . szuu. is T. game Clark's by a score 02.111- . Al.‘ H Arthm" p. Fred , 5.8 . Crows, Norman MacDonald. A. Hopkins. the sink played with Arthur rink wh was defeated J. Badequs I --'I'he Bedeque Beavers entered the South Shore flnais_ on Monday night by nosing out Albany St. Pats 5-4 in overtime. Led b hard working Austin McDdnai , the winners staged a third period ral- ly to wipe out a two goal deficit, and tie the score atld-all. winger Albert Desltoches, former star of‘ the Middleton Bombers, sank the winning marker in the fourth minute of overtime. Mer- cury-looted Reg Bradshaw carried the Albanyattack and although closely checked he broke loose enough to oat his team's quar- tette of goa . Although the Beav- ers took the semi-finals in straight games. the faced defeat until the final gong. five final series that promises to be a honey. L. Campbell and J. Myers refere- ed to the satisfaction of all, Lineups:- BerlequF-Goal: Rogers; Defence: Smith, Muttart Murray, Muttart; Forwards: A. DesRoches A. Mc- Donald said. Austin DesRoches, Connolly, Gallant. Albany—Goal'. Dawson; Defence: Cameron Keough. E. Noonan; For- wards-li. Bradshaw, A. Noonon, J. Dougay. E. Dougay, Green, J. Dougay, A. Dougay, Thompson. ' \ Summary First Period 1. Albany, Bradshaw (J. Dougay), Penaltles- A. McDonald. . Second Period Z. Bedcque, Reid. 3. Albany, Bradshaw (Douguy). 4. Albany, Bradshaw. Pcnaltleh-None. ’ mus Period 5. Bedcquc, A. McDonald. 6. Albany, Bradshaw. 7. Bedeque, A. McDonald. 8. Bedeque, _A, McDonald Penulties-Nor|e. ' Overtime 9. Bedcquc, Albert DesRochcs. Pensltiee—None. Leglonaires Practice A hockey team has been celled for 10.15 p.m. today, after the foe Follies at the Forum. Hockey Challenge HOCKEY CHALLENGE ‘lihe Holy Redeemer All hockey team hereb simmers“ Crysta gm: of hocke Monday ease call 198 -J at Charlottetown between 12 noon and 1 p, rn. t HALIFAX. March i4 -(CP) University of New Brunswick and 8t. Ironels vier University will meet in Dalhousle University gym- nasium here tomorrow night ln a sudden-d ..th game for the Marl- tlme senior intercollegiate basket- ball championshi , . Morrison: rink won by a-accre of 14-4.. -‘ Willard ' IWC the stiffest kind of oppos tlon from the Albany crew, who never conceded The Beavers will now meet the Freetown Grads in a three nut of '—Frcc J practice for , the Leglonaires Stars night. if I . . o Black Hawks, ‘rational Hockey League t had 12,611 spectators howling guest o! the time, Summary First Period d-Detroit. Gauthier (Carveth. ett) 6'13 H011 . g-zaChlcago, Smith (M.. Berttley) 5 .8l—Chlcago, Mosieuko (M- neat. ’ le l 8-58 y . 4-Debrolt, Quuckenbush 16:50 5—-Detrolt, Brown (Watson, Arm- strong) 18.59 Penalties -Cocp€r. McLenahau. l-loreok. Second Period 6—Deiroit4 Quackenhush go, 1).. Bentley (Smith, oi) 7:04 - indsa . Third Period . tl-ullbetrolt, Stewart (Conaoher) fllé-getroit, Holiett (Conacher) IOI-Deiroit. Lundy (Quackw- bush) 17.27 Penalties —- Gauthier, _ iioreck. Lindsay. (Arm~ Penalty Washington Soon Bark Horse In American League BY JACK HAND HAVANA, Maren 13 —-(AP)— Washington shapes up as a dark horse in the American Baseball League race with added power from big Jeff Heath and continued fine pitching making them .a dan- gerous threat... Just how dangerous and how much of a threat remains to be seen but the "Cinderella Boys" of 1945 rate considers/titan. Nobody ave them a tumble last spring ecause the looked like the same team that inlshcd a badly bee/ten last in 1944 but they were up there on the neck of- Detroit at the finish and almost grabbed all the money Heath's performance rnav be the key to the Senators’ fate. The hus- ky native of Fort, William, Ont... is the kind of slugger Washington was crying for last fall. Manager Ossle Bluege honestly thinks his club has a chance with hitters like Buddy Lewis, Cont’ Travis, Stan Spence, Mickey Ver- non andiieaoh to drive in the runs Washington probably will go to_ the post with onlv one righthanded hitte in the starting lineup. Jerry Prld y at second base. but that doesn't worry grey-thatched Os- e.. The infield setup after about three weeks’ training is Vernin on first base. Priddy at second. Travis at short, and Sherry Robertson at third base. All four are returning servicemen. Gil Torres. the 1945 regular shortstop, will give Robert son competition nt third and might unseat him. George Mystt at sec, 0nd anti the veteran Jne Kuhel lit firs», are leading candidates for their old iobs. ideal-h will plav left field. 5081105 in centre and Lewis in right despilf all the promise shown hv rookie G1 Conn, n .372 hitter at Chflliflllllillia- Remomhr When By Tho Canadians PRES Frankie Frlsch, former manager of tne St Louis Cardinals baseball club, signed a. one-year wlllrllc" seven years ago today t0 bfclldcasfi play-by-play descriptions of ad home games of the Boston Bees an Boston Red Sox, during the ensui-HB season. A loophole was left illeslllle contract that Frisch might r 8n if given the opportunity to manage a major league club. Hockey Scores QUEBEC SENIOR SEMI-FINAL Montreal Royals 6 Quebec Aces 2 Montreal wins best-of-five series -l) ONTARIO JUNIOR FINAL Toronto St. Michael's 3. Oshawa Generals 8. _ (Beslrof-seven tied l-l). LONDON, March 14 -(R¢euters) --Coventry City defeated Derby County 3-1 today ln s league South British soccer game. it was the only soccer contest of the day. Allan. Cup Se iglaygifs from coast to a mot ' a a wfllugrwri m” h fi.e'"”"noni o.’ have rosn the wars and ‘lmum m" m coming from across the _coun .. ‘ They niude Al Shlli from Toron m Culverweil, bollh hi1 es ds.. m‘ “us. slurs? ries Returns To Former Prom inen ce Maritime final us the sound. fast aka Halifax Navy entry and Saint ohn Beavers, a mixture o1 fenceman Ralph Croucher. therest and Dou Smith, former Hamilton and Kite ener football player. The B vars’ outstanding players are d encemen Walter K e and Jack welghbag over 200 poun IVO i0 the next two - . . A! MAPLE HILLS FRIDAY. MARCH l5 . DANCING Q to ‘l ' "Melodies-s Orchestra p Admission. 85c 7'liua leaving 1M‘ rket l“"'.".'.‘.'* )9‘. ‘ . petroitq Red "efeat Ch icdgo 7-3 o-o-L-r QYIYION NIJON r <IvI-WH'I' Marlo Go lez the 24- ear. Brazilian. Arrriazgeur Champign ti: been a welcome addition ti; the winter tour this year. m; be; showing to date was at Pensacola. Fla., where he was the leading amateur with a score of fit l have been Plilred with him several tin-ea and he has played very well, The South American, who i, m; and slender and sports a mustache, only weighs _124 pounds, but h. gets an amazing amount of dis. tance off thetee for a man of may weight. He accomplishes this be- cause his full smooth backswing reserves all of his weight until he hits through the ball at the b°t§ tog: ‘to! his lVlliII$t u“ eore comn o s co l!!! fill to joinxthe tour Gonuzgtlg won the Bao Paulo Open in his home city of Sao Paulo, Brazil, with a score of 271. Martino Pose. the outstanding Ar entlne rofes- slonal who was helFeJll 1 , n“. iahed second. This gives you some idea how ca able Marlo l5 on his home groun s because Martlrie is a good olfer in any country. Gonzo ez also won the Brazilian Amateur Championship in 1939, 1040, 1941, 1948 and 1946. He won the Argentine Amateur Champlo - ship in 1940 and 1944 and the Ar entine Open in 1940. n his previous visit here, which was in 1941, arlo was greatly disappointed because he did nqt qualify for the U. S. Open at Fort Worth which was won by Craig Wood, but Gonzalez was only ~19 at the time and has greatly im- ng on that trl was the 07 he shot at Elmhurst urlng the Chicago pen. n Marioctarted laying golf very %oung and won is first title, the razlllen Amateur Championship, at the age of 17. His father, Joe Gonzalez, is a professional golfer insurance business and says he has for money. Coming here from a country where the language and cur/toms are so difflrent, Gonzalez has done very well. I realize what this means and ho\v upsetting it can be lo a golfer‘; game from my own experiences whlle in South Amt-ri- l1. “Some day 1 hope one of your top professionals will come to Brazil to stay," he told me. "It would mean a great deal to the game in my country." I asked Mario if there were any new prospects coming along as golfers in South America that we haven't seen or heard of up here. He told me that a 23-year-old Ar- gentinian named Roberto Dc Vi- cenzio is the current sensation. "i-le is a big, strong fellow and a vcry long hitter," Gonzalez told me. “He also has a very good short game. I am sure that he will be coming up here to play. Maybe next year." Mario has become very popular with the golfers because of his charm, ready-wit and his ability to llike thr- kidding that has been tossed liis way while he hus been here. Onc story going the rounds about him is tllc wny he handled a golfer who got a little out of llnc by calling him n lucky so-anrl-Fo when he made a recovery shot from among the trees off the fairway to place his ball on the green :. few fcet from lho hole. "Mister So And So," said hiurio, calling his opponent by name, “In Brazil we think that, but we do not say it." . Atomic liesoarch Banks lligh in llew Russia Plan MOSCOW, March 14 - (AP) — The Communist Party newspaper Pravda said today that atomic cn- e research would play a huge roe in Russia's new iveyeaiwplan. A full-page article on the sclenv iflc part of the five-year-plan said: “Soviet physicists. chemists and engineers of various professions are golngeto be extremely busy with the prob ms of the physics of nt- omlc action. the met rods of liber- ating inner atomic energy and other problems." IPuII-time lobstermen on-thc coast Malta operate from 100 w qf 150 traps or pots eac which they visit daly if the weath r permits. rial-III» FOR SALE Bless ‘TAT-Stallion (‘l years old) will well bred with exchange him for a young pacer. W. SMITH ll’! Powlll . SS. \ incur oved since then. 111s best show-i in Sac Paulo, but Mario is in the ll no intention of ever playing golf lie » 3-l3-3i A GLAMOROUSSIIOW 0F SKILL AND BEAUTY_ FORTY-TWO PERFORMERS ICE DANCES, ICEROBATIICS. NOVELTIES. CLOWNS. DAZZLING COSTUMES, APPROPRIATE SETTINGS stuns! g \ Anuurs .. .. .. socsnlrs ¢H1svsa~--~-*¢sr¢="- BECAUSE THE rl-ls sl-lavs . ‘v A lAra ss@'$'1*$" t. V. . c g" Yaqtiaflfll dryontqyowfaer-glveyatiaaifla llsatsdoailnilbwmWbstysnwsal lsas-labcreanylltflalaolflatlsr-ii thalatberyooptwithflfebaoyflllh ilgmnulatlsertbatflbfllyfl! andkaepayourbeasdaoftandwetlll wlsolaahave through. , Recent his prove that lsllabaof iloldallploll%lfll§flllllb— othesleadingbranda taatatLTisiabl asatiarolroaordsaadeatifiofaeaGet Ufebuoy Shaviagfieamforflllllll UAOCIHI shaves-nets Iltll do" wstsrorsusedblsda. a MONTREAL, March 14 —(CP) — Toe Blake banged in a well-timed goal with less than four minutes to play tonight to give Montreal Canadians a 3-2 tie with Toronto Maple leafs, 1n the Leafs last op- pearance on Montreal ice. The game was one of‘ the best Leafs staged on Montreal ice this year and play was kept at sa daz- ln sp until the last. part of the third period when Toronto re- d on a defensive play to ro- tect their lead and the fans cap- ped for action. Leafs sailed in front at 9.10 of the first period on a goal by Gus Bodnar. - Canadians broke into the scor- ing on a goal by Maurice Richard, scored in the Rocket's own spec- tacular way. Richard took passes from Glen Harmon and Toe Blake in the vicinity of the right boards, weaved around the defence and coasted in on goalie Turk Broda and fooled the latter with a shot that never left the ice. _ afs staged a determined al- tack in the mid-session and their offensive paid dividends when Bull- . Canadians And Leafs Tie In Dazzling Game by Golham sank a SD-footer be- hind goalle Bill Durnan. Poile and Bodnar were credited with assists on the play. ‘ Blokes counter in the final frame came just as his team mate Kenny Raardon was stepping out of the penalty box while Canuclss were staging a three man sortie down the ice. Rl hard and Elmer Lech were credlte with assists on the goal. . Summary Hrstterlod .1—-'I‘oronto, Borlnar (Polio) 0.10. 3—Montreal, Richard (Harmon Blake) 12.3. I Pcneltlcs—Goldl'lam, Hamilton. Second Period 3—Toronlo. Cioldham (Poile, Ezi- nlcki) 11.08. i Penalties—None. Third Period rf-Montrcal, Blake (Lach, Rich- ard) 1614.7. ' Penalties-Reardon, Pratt. Explain Potato Export System OTTAWA, Marsh 14 —-(CP)—- Prices Board officials said today the export of otatoes from the Maritlmes to uobec and Ontario has been put on a permit basis be- cause of a shortage in the cast. E, J. Chambers, director of the Foods and Vegetable Division on the Board's foods administration, sald- the potato shortage was at its worst in Halifax and that the per- mit system had been imposed to enable Maritime growers and deal- crs_to meet the needs of meir home consumers first. The permits are issued subject to approval of the Wartime Foods Corporation at Toronto. Quebec and Ontario QU iUKlES COHSUIIIETS \ .\ I it K. T] OF 1946 rwNrY-rwo NUMBERS ‘ are drawing their supplies from a number of sources, including a small quantity from the Marltimes under permitand larger stocks from the United States. . Distrlbuion of potatoes in Carr ada was thrown out of balance tr a failure in the Maritimes last sea 5011.. LINCOLN, Ncb., March 14 — (AP) -- The final score was 6-4 and it wasn't baseball or hockey but, strange as it seems, a basket- ball game today in the annual state high school tournament here. Benson High of Omaha defeated Norfolk, Neb., by that score, set- ting a modern tournament record for low scoring. When synthetic yarns are stretch- ed while wet and heated, a certain degree of molecular arrangement takes place within the fibres which may weaken them but does not re- sult in immediate bunk. l By Ken Reynolds 71/‘1/ SALES “Look. Mr. Jones. just for fun I nnvsivered a Guardial Want Ad for another Job-and got li- a c FRIDAY NIGHT 8 O’CI.0CK . SKATING AFTER TIIE SHOW ms