' sir membership ‘ as- mdtrilymand much interest being Ml in the cornirfi season, mms of the Brighton orscshue Mb u, daily. adding improve- m mell- gron-zlds so as lye members everv advantage in 9 coming rked improvement has been ulldlng of platforms between four beds that will be 1n oper- lgon, These will come in handy " icularly during competitlo s no taking place in damp “my weather, if serving no other “r9956 than allowing those tak- .§,I,,min the ametobesure - d “oldln plietcltlh throth mud _ o d e case o erwise. yhich W *6 5,; a,‘ < rhen the club will swing Just tlvity is not; aslyet lfinown. lollasoupeo weesago n was start could be made by the m, o; May but weather condit- w,“ collod a halt to any such l m; and now it seems to devolve p n just when they can secure ' putty clay for the beds. ‘Iwo of ihe beds are suitable for pitch- |m right now but 1t 1s the plan o; the Club to have an oflicial mum; night and right now this will have to wait until the clay gol- the two remaining beds is available. . 5K 5E is still nothing definite gamma-about the coming City soft- all league. 0f course it is yet p; and the weather has been but aui le uputo the pt time, but notwit tending mules are starting to ur in morning Just llllvhat lies n store ocal soitba ans. "'1 as us! h d is also gong a ea apace l; the different tennis courts filmllghollt the City and starts alll be made on all three just as soon as conditions warrant. Many ewcomers have taken up the ame El recent years and officials o the various clubs are quite confident sf the galme holding true again this season. In fact increased Emlbgiléigp lists are being locked Mack the Grand Old flan of Basebal is a book that ‘Iillbeamustonthe list oi all readers. Fred Lieb has writ- lls life of the hiladel- ms basebal. lead most s ,, reeled is at Mack once was card to use the word “damn". "Connie _ peed up with a . quiet dmcnishment .o "shut your mouths". It appears the two play- ‘ crc paid no heed and Mack sud- " d "Shut your damned rding ti? *4 both were e arn. yylviaclde use of _.~ l I 1 iii lt isn't so much an age-old ques- don aa it is a duestlon of old age that confronts he baseball play- “ “w l'.£’ll‘.°.“o2i'.7i§llll§“l.l tenl "if? toptlle game after their alga. Not old age in the common sense, but old age in the baseball sense, as the scores of players who were nor better when inducted and vc spent or will s end two. three or four years away ronl the game. , will find themselves old men try- - ing to play a. young man's game. . particularly ii they have been un- able to keep in practice through r service games. An inkling of what might come is contained in the report that , Danning, New York Giants - catcher before T bounced he is through with base- ; . , is 34. ‘younger than a few other payers in the I. i '. 1W wile a“ l 1K lit ' y hilows like Red Buffing, crowd- . Ill. 4i); Bill Dickey. 37; Hank berg. a4: Billv Herman. ae: j Dick Bartell, 37; Johnny Mize. 32; Terry Moore, a2; Hal Schumacher. H: Luke Apnlirlg, 30: Buddy Has- : Mt. z Rollie Hemsley. 31; '99l1file Selkirk, 37; Bruce Camp- - hell. (l5: Jimmy Brown. 33: Lonn . 7'91’. 32: Ray Mueller. 33; Bo Kllhser. 34; and that classic grey- btlrd, Ted Lyons, 44. may find the back just tic long. Some oi them naturally would make it if they were discharg ‘ ~ Plsht now. but in most instances llere is no telling when their ser- cm _ "lliht come to the same conclu- l lion Danningwhaxs reached. 7i . t . Dannlng solved. roughly. 1-500th l! c major-league postwar prob- tm. estimating there are» about that many players in the service , lilo were members of major clubs Flinn inducted. l The names of man of the play- lgxghlznlralay‘ not re nan have ‘be-i O A l’ D “b. “s as muc s pa d r: HT EIIT I0 Ii HORSEIIEN n1 mectin of Edward lland I-lelng Olrelalt will he yum GEORGE A. CALLIIGK; President. ELocking developments t‘ duction. has an- 11 their abrupt departure and failure 4.... l Ball Pldyers _ 1B The Aaaéclaied Prcfl) 311'» My loll" thank; “m” 5- 5- 1319111!) Chandler 3f Kentucckry. stood by his gunsh- ay on b I baseball frfee ‘urge? 0t ‘mlmnfi PICS PM ' mglgpand any other kind of "I can't and don't i ~10"!!! lust because l‘“”‘§=o‘2."§ horse raci State. That's ob. llsation to aseball and the er- cln People." he said. " His comment came u the result oi a challenge from the Thorough- bred Club of America, whose board 0f directors at Le drafted a letter to him commissioner to elrplaln sinsled out horse racing s; evil influence to bsll player-g, The letter asked Senaf ler ii it was a. settled pol I art of organized basoba-i lnue rnal ng the spor ra . e letter racing is legalized, supervised and "Wflllble. and that the Thor- I Beats Braves (B The Associated Press) Big gill Volselle scored his fourth straight National League victory without a. loss as the Giants de-_ feated Boston Braves 4-6 at New, Yo!!! Yesterday in the opener of a- doubleheader. The second game wll called at the end of seven innings because of rain with the - g ome runs y Phil elntraub and Ernie Iombardi won the opener for the Giants be- fore a crowd of 20.161 (on; It was Lombardi’ {hull ' giving him the leaguedlaad. 0mm Sweep Doubleheader At 8t. Louis. the Cardinals won both games from Chicago Cubs 0-2 and 5-1. Aces Max Isnler and M121; Cooper were the winning pit- The double victor moved the Cardinals into a tird-place tie with the Windy City crew. In both games the Red Birds built their eads early ‘at the ex- pensc of startifi itchers Bob Chipman and H , both of whom were trying to better their 1-1 records. Dodgers Win Two Luis Olmo’s eight hits and a bunch of errors in Philadel hia. Phillies‘ infield gave Broo Dodgers a double win over t e Phillies 7-5 and 10-7 and a sweep of the four game series. Olmo's personal demonstration of hitting prowess dwarfed such Camera New Wrestling Titleholller _ B LYNN IIEXNZEBLING WI H THE BRITISH 8TH AT SBQUALS, Italy. May B-(Alfi-Prlmo Camera, lowering former world heavyweight boxing champion. wound up thewsr after thenGermansf departure by de- hlmseli as “completely neutral" and a much wiser man. The one-time "Anlbling Alp" of the prise ring says he is now the heavyweight wrestling champion of Italy. and plans to make wrestling is career. Camera was found living like a country gentleman in his 12-room stone house here at the foot of the mountains. With were his wifc. Josephine, whom e mar- ried in 1089. and their two chil- ren. Camera, who weighed 266 pounds when he won th ionshlp. now we perfectly fit although his most strenuous exercise appears to be ridglgg a -bicycle and chopping we . " Camera said he did not know Joe Louis was still champion. and had never heard of Billy Conn. l l to return is in the nature of a sudden blackout of an era-the era of the Dannings and the Ruf- finga and the Dlckevs and the Greenbergs grid ‘thegkficrrnans. New names. strange namesl sprinkle the major-league lineups, today, but the fans might as well, start learning them and studying up on the hworgzs as!‘ the players. Some of them may be around a long time. and if they are replaced immediately after e war. they, to be replaced by ky youngsters in their 20's than by retumino veterans in their middle or late 30's. whose muscle tone. athletically ordination may be gone forever. Y 9|? =16 it! The young fellows who are talr-, ing their places now will improve steadily through constant applicp- ion to the job; the servicanen in he higher ago l are dis- :_nteorati 'i_"l_l_at tel tory. a . . | AIIGTIOII SALE l l will sell on Wednesday. May 0th at 2 lalrll the pro- perty of A. R- Wile, lltuai- ed a1 corner of Elm Ave and | Hayfield St. Store and- dwelling combined. J. S. BIGGAR. ”- kw".‘.‘$E&,,,,,_ I 1' nlnnlflfi or Chand- k cioZlvBizz Vols speaking. and co-' h, Auctioneer W Must gtay clear c Of Horse Racing Is Commissioner's Edict o hb dACl b ' lg‘ at it u ‘was proud to be a P . "Yet it is the onl form of bot, U118 which you have chosen condemn for the benefit of the newspapers." the letter continued. Mr. Chandler. reached at _home here, said he has some hon. cred friends in the horse breeding business. but he couldn't let the 13in that consideration. 1' players cannot be - lowed to associate with bookrngg- ors ‘and other gamblers, or I have trouble." he said. The Col-nmissioner said he would ‘stay away from the races himself. I will not tell the players to do something I cannot do my have been a football coach always kept 1n mind the kind of tfllllllllfl I expected my players to - '. Chandler earlier had ban credited with a declaration that $5 baseball players and umpires would be expected to stav away from race tracks "to avoid public ccn- d sure." elle _ 4-3 In Chalking-Up 4th Victory h,“ and Guerra; ' Brookiy u I Philadelphia ' G and I I t __grl-: cllA-Rwrrltfllown GUARDIAN ll l; luvs- . Baseball Iiesolts asruanficasuel > asauloalvuaoua 3512'“? 1'53 $9.315?- l ‘l’ no% hhdllllaiiman. mlrleary. Rey- Tresh. - "' m‘ ooo-v 000 Garbark: . Garbar u '1'! n: I " Barton‘, 5a m. Dubici and M. P9171’. Blrrett and f "£25 U! 3Q", Eon En“ 3",‘; §2 ‘S ‘I Y8; 5 uhlriifon ' 100 Ncwsom; Sheibfand, national. uacua’ gnaw“ sci loo vn Philadelphia 000 010 000.. vis and Owen;' Schana, Karl, Ripple and Chetirovich. Second o 001-1011 1 1 5 1' . Barr t. Mancuso. I5. 008111. Car- Fette and Jdasi; ~F6ldfllam Adams and. Lombardi. Second Game: , Boston ' 001 000 003-4 l0 l New York 103 000 02x-6 10 2 Barrett, Huichings. Wallace and Iiluttz; Mungo, Adams and Ber- s. 1' . 01140880 103 000 100-6 10 0 St. Louis 100 000 000-1 8 Derringer and Livingston; Wilks, glgrley, Dockins, Partenheimer d: ' en. - Cincinnati at Pitt-burgh, post- poned, rain. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE a- 5 straight Chicago PVhite Sox Hold t Top Spot With Double, Victory Over Indians 1-0. Harold Newho blanked the Browns t in the opener. while Al Benton won the second game, giving nine hits. One of the season's biggest ma- jor league crowds-MAM paid- saw Cullenbine break up the nlghlcan by slamming the first pitch o! the ninth inning into the upper deck in right field. Until Cullenbine's game-winning clout, Newman Shirley had rationed the Tigers to but three hits. Even Break Philadelphia and Washington split their doubleheader, the Ath- letics winning the first 3-2, and the Senators. behind the three-hit pitchink of Dutch Izonard, scar- ing a 2-0 shutout 1n the second. Russ Christopher and Mickey Haefner raced each other in the opener. Haefner giving way to a pinch hitter. Alec Carrasnuel was on the mound when the Senators tied the score. Dick Siebert opened the eighth with a double and after reaching third on Irving Hall's sacrifice, scored the winnind rim when Met- ro singled to centre. In Bos‘on Saturday the New York Yankees. scoring five runs in the first inning climaxed by Ossic Grirves‘ three-run homer. defeated the Hod Soy 7-3. Chicano ‘Vllll’? Sex. in ll tight came with Cievn- 11nd overcame four Indian". pli- chers and won 3-2. At Detroit, St. Louis Broums won hands down over Tigers and Paul ¢Dizzyl Trout bv a 5-0 margin. while at the nation's Capital Senators de- feated Philadelphia 7-3. (By The Aaeociaied Press) Chicago White Box. relegated to the second division in ‘Ere-season nsoaticationa, held eir -e in the American League yes- ay as they won both ends o: a bleheader from the‘ Cleveland I ans 3-2 and 6-4, before 22.837 ans. Tony Cuocineilob three-run hom- er over the leit field scoreooard gave the Box their e in the second game, and in t Beckett's single in enth scored Wally Moses, who he'd doubled, with the deciding run. USE!‘ S s§§§§ Yanks and Bolton Spll Bank Borowy won his fo tb anle as New York Yan- kees shu out Boston Red Sox in the second garn" of a doublehead- er. The Red Sox won the first game. 5-0 the second successive shutout pitched by rookie Dave Ferries. Sn Btirnweiss, Yank short- stop, gave Borowy a one run lead when he hit a home run his first trip to, the plate. The Yanks‘ other run came in the seventh on two singles with a walk sandwich- ed between them. Borowy gave the Sox only five hits. The Yanks were in a similar fix with Dave Ferries who now has matched two major league games, th shutouts. Brownies Lose Twice At Detroit. Roy Cullenbine's ninth inning home run in the sec- ond game of a doubleheader gave Detroit Tigers o. double shutout win over St. Louis Browns, 3-0 and llellcats “I events seven Phil , ooo . e w wo on an a crac - - . - ormslihor" y. °e.€%5-°‘l"l‘- 513%’ i’? 31* we‘ l? l Move Towards Big Six o I .'::..'"..:*::..°.r":.:. as‘ olarm- 6511*? l The Dadgelr flange nflldlgiilfected ,,..’.‘.;"oi'.‘§.“§."?’°‘-"°”.‘°"‘ “m” (By The ARI-Elsa Press) or our nges c a game and i home “m. We doubm and geylraaelcyusalta; Bélflilolz-gmelrtmm. 1 Betting (three leaders in each a. single in the nightcap. _ ‘flllfyflei- G AB R R P" SUNDAY'GAMES o,“ ‘Dd _ ,3 4, -, ,8 I453‘. 5"” h 5'1 V'°°"'Y .—— ‘M? ogll,iz,§f'“,fd'y;“sfliflfrlr,ton N132’... oBlgggs 15 so 15 2o .400: M Plltfibllrflh. R11! 39W?“ Ill-med‘ AMEMCAN LEAGUE Hayes Hellcatsnnoved within one, gggfigg°'Bgwsss ,1‘, ‘diam? 15.3.1? $1.0‘? $55 °§§| woven“! W" W 100-" B 2 1K1?’ Z§§m‘?.l“.l%l“ slim“ ti”? °'B"°“~ 'P‘¥"*°' 1‘ 53 ‘l 2° All” even lit 1n a double feature The! cm"? 001 m” wx-‘S 7 1 night when thee d‘ i: tedelle as Maw‘ “Se” u 54 1° 19 352‘ Reds ook the first game 3-l l B" Y “d Rmmowsk‘; m?“ 5‘ ver Lauries wegte e 6 d ahcou- Runs Baum In-Amerlcan 1'93" Be ,, "mum u, Red w‘ 1x ‘Fresh. ' m an“ ac am" gue: Derry. Yankees. 15. National. we e s s l pions. 58-47, 1n the second game of Lea“, mmbam, ma,“ o, . hits in noiching his second win of, a best-of-flve series before more " ‘ ‘ ‘ " ‘ the season. The first game was a pitchers‘ battle between Ed Heusser of the Reds and big Max Butcher. Trle score was tied at l-l and the h at 7-7 up to the ninth inning when the Reds scored two runs. I-leusser won his own game with a long double to centre that scored Kennit Wahl from second with what proved to be the winning run. In Saturday's games, Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants emerged top teams, both winning their respective doubleheaders by decisive scores. At Philadelphia. Dodgers laced the Phils 10-1 and 12-8, while at the Polo Grounds the Giants had a field day wlll Boston Braves to the tunes ofrl5-5 and 6-4. In the only other game played, Chicago bested St. Louis Cardinals 5-1. The Cincinnati at Pittsburgh contest was rained out. 15 Teams Entered In Tourney FREDEBJCTON. MB? 6-(CP)— Fifteen teams will compete in the New Brunswick and Northern Maine candlepin bowling tourna- ment here lrom tomorrow t0 Thursday. The entries includg Moncton Knights of IPYl-hlasd all Moncton St. Bernard s. Fre er c- ton Brunswiclcs won the champ- ionship last year. Leafs Take Double Win Over Chiefs (By The Canadian Pres!) Frankie Skaff. aided by his bro- ther Mike. enabled Baltimore Ori- olfs to gain a double International League triumph over the Blsons. 12-4 and 2-1. as 5.836 witnessed the season's first doubleheader at Buffalo yesterday. Frankie Skrfl blasted threeholne runs accounting for seven runs. two coming 1n the early stages of the opener to erect a five-run lead for Rollie Vanslatc while the third gained a finale-inning victory hr Guy Coleman and ruined a fine shutout bid by veteran Hank Oana in the nightcap. Mike also swat- ted three hits. a Toronto swept both ends of a twin bill at Syracuse by identical scores of 4-3. although the Leafs were oufhit in both games. Alex Martin bested -F'rancisco Daviia in the ooener after Davila's wildness gave the Leafs a three- run lead in the first inning and a dropped fly hall by Wally rte-zen gave the Leafs the winning tally. Tom knanirz was touched for i0 is in winning the nlghtcan. as Charley George's two-run single in the‘ sixth and Nick Castano's bases-loaded single in the seventh kept the Leafs ahead at the finish Saturday. in the only game ole man weather allowed to proceed as scheduled. Montreal Royals. be- hind the five-hit pitching of .7 hn Gabbard. downed the visiting ‘.- tirnore Orioles REMEMBER WIIEIP By The Canadian PreI E htcen yea-n ago 1- part of _ p mouth info t e English Ibotball league first ivision. Ciimaxlng a t otion fight with Man- . Portmlouth blanked th Ind 5-0 while the S-0 in 11n- fl. or- eague I-“Qr gained m th a better a I I f5. i Cleveland 010. 000 001-4 9 o.“ Home Runs-American L .. ue a :. than ‘L500 hm‘ Derry. Yankees. 4. National Lezl- oado 002 000 ISx-d 7 Fréromelsiarld McDonnell; Haynes or? ,§',“,,,§h§,$§§“,,f,fi‘§f," ‘viii: B‘!!! Lvlflbflfdl- Giflflli- 5< an ‘IN! . . _ Hush defend the titleutthey won_ s,’ mm 00000,, 0004 1 a. fin yiear. ey won e opener , Detroit ooo ooo l2 -a 1 o» ‘s ‘l’ “'49- Jackuckl» and Mancué; New- Mt houser and Swift. zzirz-Y. ___._-—--- ‘Ta?- .-_,_-_-_-_=.a John l/V. ads I Campaign In 2nd 'Week ‘Had Total Of 97 Applications; R. E. Hynzilnan Headed List With Tlfotalwfialesl ‘ .1. l‘ Charlottetown salesmen lll the R. A. lllh Vlctorv Loan were watclllngl .1. C. Cullen ihc bulletins nt llcadrluartc ill = J. A. nfarlfiinzao-xl ihc- Board of Trade 1' ". ~ . on .'. rirlyr to ' , the prize do‘ i; _ ,5. 3x1 p1nc:=—3r:l Dlvi | W, L. Prcu-se. ‘ Salesman hlrlcllzozi Lid. salosznzll l‘ lilo i0 wllo turned 1n ihc largest lluznbe of applications in the second of the caznpaign. The f \\'.'ls tho 1‘ l ' i 1 W. with E17 rlorl rltlo M. H. C rvell had s7. and l>.. E. Srrllcr noel Dr _ °‘ sllszmoo Mr. Hogan 1s a newvomcr 1n the ' ranks of salesmen. He returned‘ recently from scrvicc overseen, having been seriously injured injBRACKE army manoeuvre" ' '1 bln""oui. 1 " (nary CllCC 'lll'l‘ One more week to go! N lVfAKES- Second Game: ' ' 1m, ‘ - v St. Imlis 000 000-0 8 1 in was R. E. Hvndma fim a" . . f, . y, \, Detroit 000000001-1 4 1 with J. s. Maclsanc running in 90K," ‘will, “Paps “m ‘,‘;, ghglellétand Haywl-"th: Benton _ ._ —-—— second place and R. r1. Seller gqldxi ‘?’°.‘ °p~“,,,?f,.“3‘,“““,fie an w. - , , .lir. ‘ ‘5 '.“'..._ Philadelphia 011 000 010-3 8 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE Ml" Stewart WM‘ 5'“ ‘lb-Waive Of “Ind the inicr-llivlslonnl corullclii-l pf Llnuuflg“ Washington 000 001 100-2 l2 1 l, w L PC $34,060 1s the flrst rural ulslrlct 1:1 ion. No. 2 Division llcadcd ' 1\ .‘ 1’ ‘b’ 0 Ch. topher and Hayes: I-Iacf ch, O ,2 9 3 ' ' Queens County to reach its goal.‘ _l_A_ \V1_'b-.§'_\;; and ‘ml, R_E_1'-{ - . , C W, _ ner, Carraaqucl and Ferrell. New or,‘ ,5 w 55° This fine result was brought about; ma“, v, 5_ Ll,,-_._ Jghn w_ 1.1333,, . n~ if‘, {Eu-w Wrd 59"!‘ all!" ' ‘ 5 £67‘ by "mumbling work cn the Pa". 0T and T. A. MocAviml as salesmen u“ canwmgl‘ a" l‘) .lilc"-’e"“.e St. Louis 12 7 5 .583 l, ' to be confined in the ueolern _ll1C- Philadelphia 000 000 000-0 ii 0 wash,“ m“ ,7 9 a the stellar salesmen, Rev. W T were able to llold the first DOSll/‘tll ,- h,“ m , m, m“ Washington 101000 00x-2 9 0 Datum‘ H ,1 ,, {'29 Mercer and Earl Jay, with the 1111-4 fhev secured the first week. 1M1 lfmei f” t"? ,,i,dm°‘°m ' Cass-away and Hayes: Leonard Funds, m, ,6 7 9 -,. vice and ell-operation or the m: ' .1). Nvnolsolro w: n on Llll- L*?.5""”.i ,,°°~,'{3,' m e and Guerra. Boston p ,6 6 ,0 "fig trlct Chairman RC Clilrlf. Tn in’: of .1 A b R A lff“ l“ C" P. .. ‘ ' Qleyeland ,2 2 ,0 w, people of the enterprising commun- Iiliqflllfllfl. 4 l m... v ,3 v New Y9“ ooooooooo-o 7 0 ' 1t a la ed hei lifacklnnoll was 1n second illacc. - . . . f) “£311.... Inflow blfki F9315! 811d 3- Glfblfk- P w L P money IL“ m‘ with $l38.'750.00. The salesmen in I glvec§e1fi€m Gagging“ new “aafmgt sew?!‘ Gun". New York 1'7 12 5 TRENTVN. N50 May 6-fCPl— U115 Divlsif" ‘m’ 33E; 5-1”- _' will) ‘axlnounced ‘his’ mien ~ ‘I New York 100000 100-2 c 1 Brooklyn l7 o s 500 The walkout that has tied 1m the, ‘IQ,3§‘,,~“,-r1vM-T‘,§,_5D“ », forming a “llrlticnnl fl'oll‘."_ Boston ,0000|)o000-_.0 5 l, Chicago l4 g g _571 Eastern Car Works’ plant hers; -- ‘ ’ _. d ,. ‘a m -_ k , ‘,'\\.;1s ken. busy “illl crgrnlz Borowy and Crompton; O'Neill, St. Louis 14 8 d .5'lljs1rlce last Mondal; Will end iomor-, ling” gmgnuélgr1nceg “gs 322,1: work Campaign plans_ o1 the 1 I-Iausssnann, Eybaarld Walters, R. Cincinnati l3 7 6 .538 row when the plant's 1.000 em-imeyns“ ° M“ - ~,l'li‘l‘ (sdcral works mmlolcl- Garbark h g “a, ployetefflreturnt télmyvork pending ea - expecte to h1g0 vdlhssloged S001‘ . nego a on o r revanoe . - *: . ~ Philadelphia 1o a 1a .190 Executive of the Unite: Steel- slamh“? M M” w‘ ‘the Quebec branch of the Soc-ll NATIONALIJAGUE -_ workers of America 1C.I.O.) local c, -.,,~ J l, Q \-~ ~'\*\'91'-lP-‘~‘- ' Brook,” 0503a mo 7 ,2 0 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ordered the men to return. wéiaelglnce-m‘ Dun“ < ' ‘l quietly with ll inailon ma: i J r l I ' " <yv’ Philadelphia soooooooom a a l, w L NE ——-———- Salesman Subscriptions,’ 5.’,',,C§,°“,,g,‘f,.'e“ Qglfkh B H,“ Chapman, King, .Webber and P-c- w 110ml’ M"! ‘r-‘APY- n E Hvndnlm 1931150091 l‘ ‘ ' .. ' ‘ *. .. . Jersey City ll 9 g glg The 33c “m; g}, G ,._ . , former Progressive Collsclla as Sukeforth, Wyatt, Schanz, Karl s: 58mm 1, - | *1 ~ e r v. s. Lin! .. 40.310110; House Made, ,0,,, a Yams, _ peacock .4 0 e 13 8 5 .615 man - controlled Scandinavian John w‘ Hog“, _ 3259359 r. . 5 -. Montreal 12 7 5 .583 Telegraph Agency as reporting T A M A~l~ 09 [bury ‘wmmallng mesh"? m“ ° n mlrlyn oo 200402-10 l0 l Wm» ll a c .455 today that Gen rm: noon-lo ‘ ' “C ‘ ‘m ‘o. w“ "Elm"? "m" lmmlcs- L“ Y9° 1 - Newark l1 s a 44s m a -l - in " ' —:——. Gen. n. w. Sansom of Nelson. e. PhllldelPml ooo 7M 13o“ 7 9 4 “u; ‘ co ma“ u n c e‘ M a" 6"‘ $201409 09‘ C retired ins c"ior elleral of ea N, 013s and ow-en: 1188 10 4 B .400 man armed forces 1n Norway, 2nd r. _1., Dwg E D; " ‘p “ - g . Sol-cull: Clletovioll. Karl so Man- 3"!“ 13 4 8 had "offered to surrender Im- N‘"llol<g>)n“cc V “Mom ' ‘ladkmi Btrfilnyt reullfowilmcnll/ll?’ c,,_,,__ » _. =__________ lo s___l_ .300 conditionally." _ smsman; _ ___,S_ub§'c_r,p,,ons.322502?“ “H ° 5 m" f Chicago . 001 i‘? 100-2 7 2 5t. DOillS 1103. BOX-d 8 0 Chipman. Paaleatl. Vandenborg as Livingston; Lanier a Price. Second Garner .1 Chicago 100. 000-l 7 o t. 1 NX-G l.‘ 3 Wyse, Stewart a Gillespie; Coo- per dt O'Dea v -~ 3303""? ‘fifiltlfifi 3 8 ' u Hcusgr d: Lakeman; Butche a: . Salkeld. Second Game: ' Cincinnati 000 100 000-l c 1 Pittsburgh 100 O18 003-5 8 Waiters. Lisenbee. Beck d: Lake- man: Sewell and Ilonez. I ' Boston 000 200 001-3 6 i New York ooo col 100-4 a o /, Andrews d: xlutm- Voiaelle d: l é I v . Lombardi. . l, I I Second Game: u I1 W 010 0-1 2 0 ‘ ' F I New York 000 001 0-1 ll 0 ('1 lrlninirs) Jsvery andMasi: Hansen and lmnbardi. rN-rltananonar. all/four: Toronto 8 0 Syracuse - 012 000 ooo-s a 2 Martin and George; Daviia and ‘Secomtud Game- " I Toronto 100 00.0 I-d 6 ,1 Syracuse 100 00! 1-3 i0 0 Anaics d: Gcorkti Kill. 39111108! At Kerns. ~ ' Baltimore 032 000 100-12 16 1 Buffalo 010 000 201- 4 9 2 Vanslate dz Kuhn: Parkhursf. Bowman. Callan d: Modarski. Second Game: . Baltimore 000. 000. 2-2 0 Bliflalo 010 .000 0-1 8 2 Coleman and Devlin; Oana and Radakovich. _..._-r_~ o-o-QQQ-oo-A-oooooooob-oo-ooooo ' . ' ~ l I -l- . Jilst llrrlvell At my stables, Buniain d: Boll’; Wharf, IICITSJDI choice horses. mares and 8114103!- One extra » matched pair among "will. also several clfoice marca- in, foal. Signed, WELLINGTON ‘McNElLL ' when I use LIFEBUOY Shaving Cream It's good-bye razor scrape-and-puli when Lifebuoy’: c-o-o-l, soothing MOIST and MILD lather goes to work. Tough-as-nails whiskers wilt in a jiffy. Your razor glides over your face like a breeze. Result: a clean, close, gloriously comfortable shave every time. And even tender skins need no after-shave lotiom-thanks to Lii'ebuoy'a special protective ingredient. Start tomorrow to brighten up your morning shave the Lifebuoy way. KfiPS WI/lS/(ERS WEUIR MAKES SHAV/NG BETTER a LEVER raobou