-1 PAGE ._six_ Bees Sting With 3 - I 2l-hit Attack Paul Dean T0 Undergo Operation t.\.l’. Hy tiuardlaii‘: Special Wire) . (QT. I.tll'l.~', May 3--I'aul Dear ailink [animal pitcher, agreed to undergo an operation (or a shoulder injury blamed In: trouliii- with his arm which has prcvi-iiirrl him from attaining his former brilliant form. An X-rxiy examination ha= showed ii piece of cartilage in the uniicr-sidi- of the arm join‘ has been torn louse. CRICKET itsiiiis t(‘.l' Cable. By Guardian's Special Vllire) LONDON. May 3—Close of plziy lcuics lil first-class English cricket maicl s. sartcd Saturday. follow: Dcrlivsiiire 427 tworthmgton 103, G. Pope 64. W. Smith 58. Mitchell w. Pollard nlX ivickets for 76 runs); lil11£‘:l.~ll11'_t‘ 2511 iOldfied 64, Lister 31. Mitchell six for 73> and lour for no wickets: at Manchester. Glamoi-gan 451: Kent 152. iTodd 57 not out. Jones five for 38) and 177 for five wickets; at Cord ff. Worcestershire 229 and 173 for five tMartin 53 not out); Sussex 3411 tCook 106, James Parks 104); at Worcester. ‘Ml. C. C. ..i9 and X17 for six (Wyatt 61. Compton 54>; Yorkshire 210 iLeyinnil 621: at lord's. Glouctvstershire 224 and 47 for one wicket; Oxford University 384 IBurton 192, Singleton 651; at Ox- Victory; ris BO WLIN G HOCKEY WRESTLING Giants Again Phils Halts Dodgers (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK. May Ii-Billy Weir. Boston's sophomore southpaw. t0- day chalked up his first victory of the season with a six-hit pitching performance that topped the Giants 3-1 :n Boston. 'I'1ie defeat. the New Yorkers’ fourth. dropped them a game and a half behind the idle first-place Piiates. One bad inning lost the game for Hal Scliumacher, Bil Terry's start- fing puchcr who was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the eighth, when the. losers scored their only run. 1n the fourth the Bees massed four oi their six hits for all of their runs. Hal Warsilcr singled to right, took tli rd on Gene Moore's single to the same sector. and scored on Tony Cuccinellds double. Vince Diniaggio then crashed a line drive off third baseman Lou Clllfh. s glove, scoring Moore and Cuccincllo. PIIILLIES IVIN SLUGFEST Scoring six rims in the last two innings after the Dodgers had nil- lied and tied the score in the sixth. the Philies ganed a 14-8 upper hand in a wild and woolly game in Broolzlyn. The Phils collected 21 hits off five Brooklyn l)i'.(‘lit'l‘.~, while the lNdgei-s made l0 from the offer- ings of four visiting hurlers. In the final zinalys . l1 was decided that Orville Jorgens was the winning pit- chcr and lefty Ralph Birkofer the loser. Herschel Martin and rookie Mor- Amovich delivered four hits hits apiece to lead the Philadelphia bombing squad. Martin also helped out by making three difficult run- hing catches in centre field. Tigers Win Slugfest From Sox iorti . Jim Mclnnis Working Hard For Title Bout Down to within one pound of the class weight limit and travel- ling faster than ever before Jim- my MeInnis is giving some extra- ordinary exhibitions these days as he eontiiiiii-s training for his title bout with Kid Laritz of J-Inlitax at the Foruih. Friday. May 14. Lnntz, Maritime buntarriweight champion is putting his crown on the block, dcfiiiiti-lv and stirely. and it is Mclnnis‘ sole aim to capture that. Maritime title. In conversation with his man- iiger, Gus Louimphic. last evening. Gus was all steamed up over the way his charge is fast rounding into condition for the most im- portant bout of his citreer. "I've never seen Jimmy so serious be- fore“. siiys Gus. "Every" morning I have him out for his roadwork and Jimmy is fnirly revelling in it. Then, once insltli- the ropes he is faster and hitting harder than ever. It is a. case of curly to bcd and early to rise and Jimmy is sure >l10\\1llg the cllccts of it as one glance n! his superb condition will testify to". Mt-liinis holds a victory ‘already over lhiiir. but on thiit tic-union both iiizlilers entered the ring O‘.'i‘l'\‘.(l'illl‘. "This 111111‘ thev both viii‘. be wiihin the iliiss limit and it. i- my firm hclicl tliiit the title ‘v11! bi- livid by IVICIIIIllS when the fight is over." concluded Gus. iruniuiiii Curling Plant For liharlgttetown PPfITllnSlOn to increase the capi- tal of the Charlottetown Curling Club Ltd. by $15,000 will be asked at the next session of thc Provin- cial Legislature it was decided at l meeting of the shareholders last night. President D. A. MacKinnon presided. Ml‘. R. R. Bell was ap- pointed secretary to act until the annual meeting. He replaces Mr. D. B. Stewart who resigned. Mr. C. M. Williams acted secretary during the meeting. Old shin-c- holders would be issued shares in the reorganized club to the extent of one quarter of the value of their present holdings. the meeting de- sided. A request was made at a meet- ing of the Charlottetown Curling Association recently for the Our- ilng Club to increase its capital tn provide for the renovating and enlarging of the present building and the installing of an artificial lee plant. An up to date club house would be included in the plans for the new plant. Cost of the ice equipment and building changes was estimated to be 813.000. An old flame may bum a lei- lowupbutittekallndwlnltoh ‘i0 It him all. runs when Greenber bail over the score ard in tAJ’. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK. May 3-A home run by Hank Greenberg with the bases full set off an attack that enabled the Tigers to defeat Chicago White Sox 12-9 in Detroit today, sweep- ing the series their hold erican Baseball League, and strengthening n lirstfplace in the Am- The Tigers were trailing by four walioped the the third inning. scor ng White and Cochrane. who had singled, and Gehrnger who had walked. It was the second homer of the yeiu- for Hank. who was out of action near- ly all of last. season with a broken wrist. He also wzilkcd twice and got a single in five trips to the plate. Pitching was ineffective on both sides. The Tigers got l9 hits off four Chicago hurlers. while the Sox belted two Tiger liurlcrs for 16 hits. Victor Sorrell. who pitched to the last two Chicago batters, in the iiintl. inning. alone wcnt un- scathed. 5-2 Favorite To Capture l H a ri d i c a p t(‘.P Cubic. Ily Guardian's Special Wire) LONDON. Muy 3---Art.hur Salns- biir_v's William of Valence at 5 to 2 tonight wus the peoples choice to taki- the great Jubilee Handicap at Kenipton Park. May 8. . Second in public favor in the call- nvci‘ at the Victoria Club was A. K. Nizicoiiibi-i-‘s Tempest II at 17-2, heading the King's horse Fa rey at 10-1. Other odds quoted were: Lord l-Iiirewtiods A dine. James V. Hank's Hts Grace, J. P. Hornungfls Pikc Burn, 100-B; the Aga Khan's Tiij Akbar. 100-7; N. Christeyfis Commander III. 100-ti; A. Saviie's British Quotu. 25-1. BASEBALL SCORES INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Toronto 001 001 000——2 13 3 Newark 101 120 OOx-S 7 2 Berly. Mulligan and Heath. Hcv- inig; Donald, Sundra and Rosar, Rochester 100 112 023-10 I5 1 Baltimore 005 000 200- 'i 11 4 Knufmnnn, Judd, Smith and Po- land: Rhodes, Pettlt, Ohagnon and Savino, Gray. Buffalo Jersey City Harris and Crousc; don and Redmond. Montreal 200 032 100-ll 15 II Syracuse 000100110-3 8 8 Duke and Kies; Pearce, Holmes and Liogett. AMERICAN LEAGUE 012 010 (NB-l) 12 2 100 030 000-4 15 4 81.1165, K131‘- Chicaso 202 001 1l2— 9 16 1 Detroit 004 1101 40X~12 19 0 Cain, Chclinl. Dietrich. Lec And Sewell. Rcnsa: McLaughlin, Hatter. Sorrell and Cochrane. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 000 000 010-1 0 0 Boston 000 300 00X—3 6 0 Schumacher. Smith and Man- cuso; We? and Lopes. Phlldeiphlo 331 100 042—l4 21 3 Brooklyn 022 013 000- 8 10 4 Walters, Burke. Jorgens, Lamas- ter and Atwood: Butcher. Hamlin. Birkofer, Jetfoont, Eisenstet and} N e w a r k In Tie With Leafs For Leadership (AP. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL» May 3 —- Pound rig out 15 hits off two pitchers, Mori- treal Royals earned an 8-3 victory W31‘ the Chiefs in Syracuse today, ufith every member of the team col- lecting at least one sale blow. Marvin Duke of the Royals was touched for eight hits. He banged out two singles. Most effective blow of the game was Bernie Cobb's triple with the bases full in the fifth. Walter Cazen hit a homer 10f the Chiefs in the seventh. BEARS TIED FOR TOP In Newark the Beats registered a 5-2 vctory over Toronto's Leafs, withiTim Henrich iea-iiirirg u. sev- en hit attack and tied Toronto for first place in the International League. Hcnrich cloutcd a thrce-bagger in the filth with George McQltinrl Mid Bob Seeds iiboztrd. In addition he singled in the eighth. Atlcy Donald started for Newark but was derricked in favor of Steve Suiidra with two on and none out in the eighth. Sundrsi retired the Mill‘. aided by a double pliiy. John Berly. Toronto's starter, went sev- en innings before retiring in favor of a pinch-hitter. seamen-lg Hopeful Of Title Bout _,_____ tBy Eddie Brietz) (Associated Press Sports Writer) (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wile) NEW YORK. May 3 — Max Sclimcling came basil: from Germ- [any today ‘to begin training for a prize fight. that may never be held. Exactly one month from today. the temperr-rm" " -'--1 is hool- i-d tn fight. James J. Braddock It the World's heavy». gut title In llliitlisnn Square (iurdcifs big bowl in Long Island Cit-y. But while Schmelini! goes to Spi-yulator. N. Y., to whip himself into condition. the champion is in the mid-west training for a. built with the hroivn liombcr Joe Inull in Chicago. June 22. No promotion has been done on either fight. Both the Garden and the mcn back of the Chicago vent- ure are awaiting the ruling oi Judge Guy Fake of Newark on the Garden's application for an order restraining Braddock from fighting Louis until he has fulfilled his con- tract to defend his titlc first against Schmeling. "I have a contract. with Madison Square Garden to fight Braddock iJunc 3 iuid I "intend to live up to every tietiiil." Max said. "It thei is no fght. we shall see what we shall sec. The New York State Athletic Commission has promised to protect. niy interests.’ CHICAGO. May lk-Protcsts hillt- ed the projected training camp o! Joe Louis, negro challenger" for the world's hi-ayviveight. championship, at Liikc Geneva. Wis., today. Julian Block. co-manager of the Brown Boinhcr. told friends he doubted,» if lie and Louis would go anvvrliert‘ they were "not. wanted," though they had been invited to train at Lake Geneva by city offic- n", (leorce Hottcn. secretary of the Luke (lent-ta Home Owners Protec- tive Ass lion, headed thc group which directed the protest. Remember When tBy The Canadian Press) New York saw its first Sunday baseball game 18 years ago today. The (Lay was ly. THE Cl'lARLU'l"lE'l\)WN GUARDIAN Game (By Paul Michelson) (Associated Press Sports Writer) tAJ’. By Guardian’: Special Wire) NEW YORK. May 3-—-'I‘hcre's nu escaping the bitter-est and truest l'\lO.III of sport-"They never come ck" and the latest to learn this .. .ter truth is bulging Shanty iiogzui. An old star may return and sky- rocket tu glory liut it's always just- a flash. Babe Ruth, Bobby Jones, Jack Dempsey, Jim Jeffries and must of the brightest stars of yes- terday have tried. They learned it. couldn't be dune. Shanty, the poniierouii catcher who hit the comebac‘ trail with Washington Senators. only to tail, took his bulk off to tlic minor loti- giies today, rnuiuliiig out pruinimy thc saddest sport story of the yciir. He suffered untold iigonies as iic shunned tlic heavy foods his big 200 pounds-plus body demanded and yet he lost his greatest fight. JERSEY CITY DRAWING BIG CROWDS The richest gold mine opened in baseball in many a year is tlic Jer- sey City club of tlic International League. a new farm of New York Giants. Fiii" ahead even 0i some M11101‘ League clubs iliul have millions 01' dollars invested. the "Little Giants" of Jersey City so far have attract- ed 83,293 paid admissions iii eight days at home. MONEY. STORY BEHIND COMEIIACK The inside of Tony comeback is money. Tony's made more than $1.000.000 but his father invested most 01' it. so tightly in real estate that Tony can't get any spending money un- less he fights. Tony has a $75,000 trust fund but it won't start paying him off for several years. As soon as Tony picks up enough dollars he'll qu.t the ring. champ- ion or a beaten man. No one knows the perils of fighting beyond one‘s_ prime better than Tony, one of the smartest little fellows who ever fought for a living. Canzonerrs Vines Nearly B la s ts Perry F ro m Courts NEW YORK, May 8 — (AP) — Ellsworth Vines almost blew Fred Perry of! the court with his bullet selves to beat the British star in straight sets. 7-5. 6-3, 6-3. in their pm tennis match tonight before 6.000 spectators at Madison Square Garden. The victory gave Vines a margin of 29 to 27 in matches won over their tour. The lanky California profession- al played one of the most dazzling games of his career as he found the range and blasted the Briton. All told, he scored ‘.10 clean siccs to overpower and crush his riviii. In the eighth game of the second set, Vines scored four aces in a row to win the game after work- ing it to duce. In the final set. the Californ- larrs serve was so hard and dead- ly accurate that he scored two clean aces encli tinic he served. Ten aces rattled oil‘ Vines‘ rac- quet in the third and final set. in which he again held his service throughout while breaking the Britons once. Vines rushed away to a three-panic lead over hlii frustrated. tiring rival and ex- changed games thereafter. Several more matches have been schedul- Feller To Face Yanks (AP. By Guardian's Apeclal ll Wire) ST. LOUIS. May $—BOII Feller Cleveland's sensational l! yell’ old pitcher. will be ready lor duty against New York Yankees at Cleveland Saturday or Slin- day. Manager Steve O'Neill of the Indians said today. Feller has been taking it easy since April 24 when he pulled I muscle hurling at Cleveland against Si. Louis Browns. D r m; i n g F o r Z o n e Tennis Finals (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wis). NIaW YORK. Miiy 3-—The United Slates Davis Cup tennis players will gather here within a week for intensive practice for the North American zone finals with Austra- lia's nctinen at Forest Hills May 29-30-31. Joining Don Budge, Geno Mako and Frankie Parker, who carried the United States to a. surprising 5-0 swcep over the Japanese atian Francisco, will be Bryan M. Grant. tiny Atlanta. Ga... star, Joseph R. Hunt of Los Angeles and possibly one or two others. should the Uifted States elimin- ate the Australians, the team will sail from New Yoiwk Saturday. June 5, for the intcrzone finals and. pos- sibly". the Davis Cup challenge round at Wimbledon. Jack Crawford. Adrian Quist, Vivian McGrath and Jzick Biom- wicli, making up the Australian team which crushed Meitico 5-0 will arrive here Sunday for practice. Down 77w Alleys HOLY NAME BOWLING Big Four Leiiguo Playoff Final: Last night on the Holy Name Alleys the second game of the Big Four went. to the Five Aces to put them two up on Prince Grocery in the best three in five series for the Holy Name championship. This was a close and exciting fin- ish for the Accs as the Grocery boys put on It. wonderful strong finish but could not pick up the lead tlic Aces held from the first two strings. Next game will be played Wednesday night at 9 p.m. Fives Aces: Semi-Finals Kelly dz McInnls O-Il Practice For 3th Battery Softball Team A11 members of the 8th Battery Softball team, and any others wish- lng to tryout for a berth on the squad. are asked to attend practice at the Victoria Park Wednesday . ll 0 gr gilcrzigan evening at 6 o'clock sharrp. it; éliiiiil. ill ~ ww- t» mp- == B. Rob,“ m, 222 u” she could not stir thing! up a Tomqnam couple of times e year under the. Prince Grocery: ' ..__._____gm5e of housachtnmc‘ R. Bradley 242 211 353 A. Burke 198 219 253 K-_O‘Brien 166 157 I09 P. McIiu-ils 1m 310 341 Total—-2.'i16. J. Clow 252 1'14 220 "We 0111" J. Cameron 195 211 264 B. McCabe 128 206 100 TQgai_333g_ G. Young 1'18 297 m High single F. Tierney, 320. M- MOI-Qllflfl 153 164 139 High three F. Tierney. 828. M- DQ118011 I22 184 11'! A. Sherry 1B0 I47 1.16 LADIES BOWLING PLAYOFFS Total-mad. High single G. Young. 297. High three H. Praught. 019. BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT i T‘ Gilli! Comeback Attempt Fails As "Shanty" llogan Goes Back To The Minors “l! iiltullti |llll. il ll) mill/xxx; 7 Frankly we uepioiidallbeloclliatGi-adilisvem ‘"1. I.“ ll means that we offer you a "straight" cigarette, lust Nature's good old Virginia, with its own natural flavour flflavoiirthstdoeenotnoedtobe "built urfarliicially. Goodiobsoooillomucli belle: that wer-bolierbryoiu throat -—belter lor: your nerves. a/tcttca. FINE VIRGINIA G , u] JUST CHOICE TOBACCOS .- - - NO ‘GRTIFICIAL PLAVQURIIQE Y.M.H.A. Team Replaces Toronto Squad As Can-t adian J r. Hoop Champions _, MONTREAL. May 8 — tCP) — Montreal's Young Men's Hebrew Association dropped a 29-28 decl- sion to the Simpson Avenue Unit- ed Church team from Toronto to- night but won the Canadian jun- ior basketball title on the total score of their two-gune final round. The smooth-passing Jewish boys, eliminated last year by the Tor- onto team, took the total-point Home Run Sluggers (By The Associated Press) Yesterday's Iioiners: Greenberg. Tigers, one. The Leaders: Johnson. Athletics, 4; Walker. Tigers. 3; Ott. Giants. 3; Greenberg, Tigers, 2; Mize. Cardinals, 2'; Manush, Dodgers,‘ 2; round 48-45 after five minutes cl overtime. Regular play had ended with the series deadlocked iii Ill- 39 The Montrealers had gone inlfl the game with a, four-point. ail- vantage gained in the first: match here. 1n that encounter, last. Sill" urday, Y.M H A. took a 20-16 will from the Simpson Avenue chum- plans. a SOFTBALL MEETING A meeting oi‘ the city 500mg League will be held sit the Nor l.lll.'-l, however. Sahel? Plrfllllfltgfifllllfi fgr ghliglhllfd slgehjihtrctrfrfilytcliflil Vngalionds- Tmphy mgr??? Tlgsocvltulngetllijilglylesdfillhe wlxglhfgxlfeadTllttaalllltixuArraitiricsn Tl Na- 5709716311 Hotel at 7.30 p.m. w: pulled oiita 4-3 win over their Nat- the latter part of this month. R. Mi-Farlgne 157 179 293 semi-finals best. two in three ser- tional 2'1, total M. l night’ M1 wants dcfilgfils {Ling}; ‘igxizlzilvaLeaizue rivals. The enabling v »__ _ ___._....__ H‘ prfluuh, 222 129 a“ res m, the fight to meet me Tip _______________ term! lhll 1'01"! 8° nmuw on i s tossed- few dayspreviouii- m" a follr fiuslicr may have A. B11121] 93 14.2 19a Tops I01‘ the Kelly o McInIilS Everyman iiu no troubles-and Plea" "1"" l “PM” - ' an eight-cylinder car. H. Corcoran 106 165 149 Trophy. most of them wear skirts. hand‘ ___:_.::¢- (tor OUR WAY f MA-AH! come HERE AND see n= HE HA$ some cnzos woos» BACK ‘THEREII mow l-IE ms... MAl-l.’ By WILLIAMS i OUR BOADING HOIJSE ‘NANNNN GJTFHOM nsv, MAJOR! Hemat- A zssms ENTERED u TH‘ Dena-v unmet: ‘e14 VALE."-~ 1 awe 14o: consi-mJNo-ian A mm, once! H5 WA-b ~60 ‘FN5T ‘I-GY wxo 1o ciuo-i ‘I-l’ ates-m mount: ms NECKITO new i-im ewtom RUNNING g1“ Fr with viii-i I t armies ‘THAT aueino Fan. A TWO-SPOT AT aetmourr, ~40 He Poi-Aer: ms M058 oven 14' HILL Fine? AND BROUGHT ME. A tom: .cl= uueseevs! ~\\ lvlajor H0011" FAW.’ 1 WOULDN'T new A FARTHING on ‘THAT aunt.“ "ti-ii ouix ‘M45 l-E WON A RACE, His IJQEJAEY auMvEw OFF Hi5 EACH AND 601.0 HIM. BEFORE HE CAME BACK 1o 1H5 5TAND5 ‘r0 ‘TAKE A aow. 9i ..t t, 6- ? A