MAY 25. 1937 i 7%,‘. 1 BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING m THIS CORNER The liiiliistinal Baseball League wt iiii<ii~i-i\-.iy' over the weekend nil. ‘i1 tiilillJlU bill featuring B119 0P- imiig o: iilnit should be an inter- un. ,~,tlietliilc. I5 a ti": iii - league was evidenced 3y ilie liii . turn out of Spefitfltors, tut tlie bllifb was iar from auspic- ous null rlilil fans were far from sit . And the reason for the . iioii uns not in the 8X- it liiill dished out but which the playsers can short. order themselves. 'i' ' ti‘. n‘? As it was, tlie brand of ball was r931 good ior an opener with heavy iiiiiing, good pitching and smart (ieidiiig iit various stages but where tlie riib comes in was the attitude ' i: themselves. ri- 1'1 wit tlie chatter, himtle ,;ii is really the part 0! i iiuiili tlie motions. Slow .. .. lhiL, slow inking their po- liliibil: i. tlii- lli‘l(l, the double bill .-, iii-e hours to complete it tiine mimy of the fans iilwiizvthei‘. + +1 ‘K ie of affairs keeps up, had lin". iif ball is like but once dart lagging. interest m“ r1 lllii a lengue without any interest is about as useful as a drop of water lsllklnkled in the Sahara Desert. It was virprisiiig to say the least uid thr- wiinis should set about and remedy z !‘ iaiilt right away. It is riot too the boys have a fine diamond i.» play on, there ls plenty of iiiir-i~i~;.i in the league and the olty CUilllUll are willing to do ei-énriiiiic they can for the boys- ‘rliat little-t‘ statement has been piro- vén alrerirlv. After lllliiilfig the diamond in peat siiinie ziiid providing the boys with a llflf‘ "mp. Councillor E. A. llkisier. tiiiilflllfln of the Public Prcpeitv (ioiniiiitilee showed how viliiig the Council was to help the boysoiit ivlien yesterday he let it bekiioirii ‘Wit the outfield would be skewed il\_l levelled and a score- board ilTilPllltWl for the 195E119- Coinicil-lor Foster is to be 00m- iuended nii his work on behalf of- tlie lfllillk‘, rind the boys themselves lrllreeiiiie n highly. Now it is up to thoiziseivts to get out there and they: $01111‘ pep and. fight in their;- lames. 'l"i.i-. sooner they do the bet- ter it will be for themselves and W? league and once the weaker teams lllt‘ strengthened will furnish lllr. as uiicd a brnnd of ball as was played ill iiie city League of sev- lrfll yeti r.~. ago. Rain halted the juniors’ getaway Yesterday. The game between suin- mcrsidu and Charlottetown juniors was halted by rain in the second innings iiztli the locals leading 5-0 while the iipiiiiiiig of the Junior lea- filfl l? ilic evening was also halted 'ran. It “iii; prnvcn again last night at lili‘ Fiillllll that when two Is- hllll bill's iiicet in a ring the crowd will flock l0 sec them perform. A lirqe Cl'il\\(l watched Lieslle and Johnson 11011011“ last night and al- though lili'\' failed to see much box- fiiiliiiiig either for that mat- i li‘ iii-ii. iit‘ ' ent a a utisfim‘ l ii Jorlty w W y +1 ‘- The lllllli itself was disappointing. Plltllllufll inuch during the first round but when Johnson, for some llnaccoiiiiiiihle reason started hold- talus‘ iii inc second, the bout went Irslio iriivl to nmke a fight of’ .no mistake aboiit that. For the . 5‘ "me since he started fighting "filly got wicked us liis oppon- ‘h Ponies: efforts brought results 9" lie finnlly managed to land‘ “mlllrv of punches that added- H‘ K0. to his string. ‘vi: 1i: qt w! mini-final stole the show. .Y lliflrtliifs gameness in the m‘! of Bennie Binns' punching H vihc farts cheering him madly. on hervcr stood up io it as long PM is a mystery. Ti... _ + ‘usage was no mistaking it, it “laid-ii.- illl the way. For five y‘ 5 lu- swung all he had at his . fiiiiioiit-nt. stul Martin kept h‘ it niid fit times he actually - lvtiiri- \\'01'l'l(.‘d as he fought flfiaiiizily. It is quite probable “m” ;\ould_ have stayed in 1on8- nu} l1‘ mil but Billie Holin, m") ‘\~i'0-l\l, uilwllliiig to see his w“ further punishment e smlghwrhn the towel m stop “t ‘i: ti: biz/infill??? tlie fans were of the op- mn 1N.he punch that sent me mntliiiwir for the first count in 478x10 ‘llhlb low, but from the y, n ff‘ hunch was perfectly ‘x me c 3'10“. that landed just vim on?“ l‘ ‘Kus and left Martin s whistlh’) all" R Derfeet target for Dunc: right cross to the heart. mat really did u. Q“- kflti. ilp his holding tactics and \ Knockout 318 George Leslie, 205- d fighter from Sourls last earned a crack at Jim Evans’ heavy mile by knmkilli; out Ches- ter Johnston of Cardigan in the $860M round of what was sched- uled tovbe a. 10-round bout. It was the’ main event of Joey Mcnon- fllds boxing card. a card that saw three of the four bouts end in knockouts with Dan McCormick of 501"“. kflyomii Warren Farrel‘ of Victoria in the second and Bennie Birins winning in the same way from Sammy Martin of Sprlnghlll in the fifth round. The ending o1’ the main bout came unexpectedly. Coming m“, for the first round Johnson, aim- 1118 for a quick kayo, won the round handily as he continually gushed his big opponent. But his Bunches failed to do any harm. SWINE! the second Leslie came out fast to take the offensive. Johnson immediately started hang- ing on and for over a minute the fighters wrestled around the ring with Referee Billy Holm having a tough time of it. As they wrestled around the ropes Leslie caught his opponent with a flurry of punches to the head and the Cardigan boy went down for the full count. The semi-final between Binns and Martin was the highlight of the card. Martin, as game a boy as ever donned a pair of gloves took a bad beating from his heavier opponent. For five rounds he stood up to the punishment, oc- casionally striking back with a rally of his own. In the fifth how- ever, Birflis landed a hard left to the stomach and immediately crowed his right to the heart. Mar- tin went down for a slx count. He rose and tried to mlx it but Binns‘ right hand flashed out fast again. It caught the Springhill boy under the heart again and as he gamely covered up in a neutral corner his seconds threw in the towel to save him from further punishment. In the opening preliminary young McLeod and young Gal- braith put up a nifty little scrap that saw both boys draw big hands from the crowd at the end. Gal- braith. always on the offensive won the judges unanimous decis- ion. Warren Farror of Victoria. just lasted to the first minute of the second round in his scrap with Dari McCoi-mack of Bourls, Island' light-heavyweight champ. McCor- mick, leading all the way had Farrer on the floor four times in the first round. In the first ten seconds of the second Fan-er ag- ain met the canvas for a six count and he had just regained his feet when McCormick caught himi with a right to the jaw. It was curtains for the Victoria boy. Mc- Oormriclfs title was not at stake. Three Classes Run Off In Sydney Races SYDNEY. N. S., May 24—(CP)— Joe the Great, Calumet Bntoria. and Teddy B01! Grattan were winners of the three classes pre- sented at the Trotting Park here today. Ilburteen horses went to the wire as the newly-formed Cooper- ative Racing Association ushered in a revival of horse-racing inthis district. more than 1,200 fans saw nine heats. Principal contenders in the free- for-all were Joe the Great. 2.10 and Dennat, 2.04 3-4. The forrrier was too steady for Dermat and took two firsts and a. second to win the race with times clocked at 1.08. 1.12 1-2 and 1.121-2 on the half mile oval. Calumet Baioria, owned b!’ R- MaoIntosh. Port Morten, N. 5.. and driven by Nellie MHCNPU won the 2.24 trot and pace in straight heats. The Port Morien- horse was trailed in each heat by Wonder Bar. Teddy Boy Grattan winningthe green class for horses without previous money winnings WM difven by its owner. D. Campbell Lirigan. m this race Stanley L- Bgbda K, and Ruth McKinney fight?‘ stiff flight for second ongy crethelast heat was imam-villi PRACTICE N)“ GQADIENS i—-o- Practice for the Junior Canad- ieiis baseball team this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Victoria Park. All players are urged to be on hand. age. 3K 9K 9K 9K The hand that vms given Binns as he left the ring paled into in- smnificance at the ovation that was given the game little Springhlll fighter and Martin, as he ivas dressing. threw out a challenge to any lightweight or welterweight on the Island. iK PK 9K 9K Martin would prove a formidable opponent for any man his size. The colored Bpringhill boy u H0 pounds of real fighting heart. Pete Kelly. accompanied by Mrs. Kelly arrived in the city on Satur- day night where he will lpenrl the sununer months. Completing his third wccessful season in the big- time Pew was tickled to den”- the Red Wings had retained the title. "Both series were tough," raid Pete, "but that made the victory Ill the better." Young South African Golfer In Spotlight sauna/Ion? Eng, May 24 _.. (CH-The spotlight swung on the spectacular exploits of Arthur African phenomenon, as the first round of the British amateur golf championship was contested here today. Locke, picked in advance as a probable finalist for the crovm re- linquished by Scot Hector Thom- son due to ill health, burned up the Royal St. George's layout to defeat C. C. Trautner of Silver Spring, Md., 7 and 5. The young South African. hold- er of the amateur and open titles of his native dominion, went out in 33 to tum seven up. Trautner ,could not face that kind of sharp- shooting and used up 49 strokes on the first nine holes. Most of the British favorites ad- vanced easily into the next round although there was some eye- brow lifting over the defeat of Francis Francis by the veteran E‘. B. Tipping at the 19th hole, and of Leonard Crowley. former Wal- ker Cup player, by Jocelyn Wal- ker, one up. Cyril Tolley. long-hitting English- man who held the title in 1920 and 1929, ousted J. F. MacDonncll 4 and 3 and Dr. William Twcddell. champion in 1927 and finalist against Lawson Little in 1935 beat Harry Bentley, 3 and 2. Cecil Ewing, Gordon Peters and Alec Hill. all members of the last BritLsh Walker Cup team, turiir-d in opening round victories. Him. Michael Scott, surprise winner of the championship in 1933. over- come S. W. Jacobs, 2 up. and Prank Pennick, current English titleholder, downed .the veteran John Beck, 4 and 8. Lister Hart- ley, fomier Walker Cup star. eli- minated Fredi Gutmann of Ber- lin, 5 and 4. Pair Tied With Par-shattering Performance PITTSBURGH, May ill-Paul Runyan and Byron Nelson pulled a. couple of 68's out of the steep fairways of the Field Club course today to lead by two strokes at the half-way point in the 36 hole qual- ifying test for ' the Profesic/nal Golfers Association championship. Bunyan stood on the 17th tee needing two birdies to break the course record and got them. His 88 was four under par. Nelson. 1937 Augusta Masters Tournament vtlnner from Reading, Pa" started later in the day, knew what he had to do to catch Run- ytan, and calmly proceeded to do Down The Alleys IIOLY NAM]: BOWLING MIXED DOUBLES The folowing twelve teams will start the first half of second round tonight at '1 p. m. sharp:- LADIES GENTS M. Duffy H. Fisher J. Kirwin Geo. Young R. MnFarIane F. Buote H. Corcoran F McMillan P. McKinnon A. Gormley F. Flynn W. Craswell F. Martin D McDonald B. McCabe R. Dalziel A. Howatt F‘. Tierney L. Corrtgan G- Twmbs L. McDougall V. Coyle J. Dillon L. Corcoran Omitted from the 36 surviving couples was the team of V. Pineau and R. McIntyre who finished in fourth position with a. total of 2284 this eliminated the team of Ev Jay and F‘. Mallett. ova BOADING noose ‘BALAkiC-Ew-v Hi5 M EAL§= 5-25 D'Arcy 100KB, 19-year-old South, 111E UHAKLUI'I'E'I\JWN GUARDIAN NEW YORK, May 24—A forgot- ten man came out of a bullpen to- day to write another brilliant chapter in the baseball legend that. ls Carl Owen Hubbell. 'As the great master trudged to the showers his team one run ahead but the bases loaded with two out in the ninth inning, Dick Coffman, an insignificant Giant bench warmer, rushed to tab: mound, struck out John Dickshot and gave Hubbell his 23rd straight National League victory, a 4-3 triumph over Pittsburgh Pirates in Pittsburgh. As the master cracked to allow singles by Pep Young and Woody Jansen to give the Pirates runners on first and third, Hubbell Wa= taken out. Cliff Melton rushed in to stem the tide, walked the dan- gerous Paul Waner and he, too. was sent to the showers in favor of Coffman. It was HubbelYs narrowest es- cape over his long victory string that. began on Forbes Field, Pitts- burgh. July 17, i036 with a 8-2 conquest of the Pirates. Today's victory was his seventh of the season. He was nicked for 10 hits in the 8 2-3 innings he worked and fad- ed fast in the final two innings, when the Pirates got five of those blow-i in. but Coffman and two Pirate errors saved him and stretched the string to one more. Bees Defeat Cubs Home rubs by Debs Gar-ms and Gene Moore gave Boston a 3-1 victory over the Cubs in the final of the series in Chicago. The contest was a pitchers’ battle between Lou Pette and Te‘: Carleton, ancient nemesis of thd Bees. Each pitcher allowed six hits. Gabby Hartnett made four of the six Cub him with two doub-i lea and two singles. Dodgers Blank Reds Putting together three singles for the winning run in the second inning, Brooklyn Dodgers capital- ized on a six-hit pitching job by big Max Butcher for a 1-0 shut- out of the Reds in Cincinnati. Butcher, in hanging up his sec- ond victory of the season, scatter- ed the Reds’ hits through ls many innings. He gave up only one base on balls and struck out three. YANKEES HIT STRIDE NEW YORK, May Z-f-Contln- uing their 1936 style slugging, the Yankeees won their fourth straight victory here today as Bptu-geon Chandler pitched his second shut- out and (Beveland Indians were‘ routed 14-0. The triumph, with the Athletim Local Golfing Season Gets Underway The local golfing season got underway yesterday at the Belve- dore club despite the mt that adverse weather called a halt tn the afternoon part of the holiday card. A large number participated in the sweepstakes held in the mom- ing which was won by P. N. Gull- lsori with Pete Kelly, provincial champion, rimrier-up. The mixed foursomes scheduled for the after- noon were cancelled on account of rain. Golfers pronounced the course in mid-June shape with all l8 holes in use. Pete Kelly made the round with an 8'! which with a handicap of three gave him a net score of 04. Percy ' Gullison traversed the COLITQC in 101 which with a handl- saAo, mos»! 1 WAS .3051‘ . COMPOSIHG A POSSlBLE MENU torsional-ire , _ FEA§T~A&QMACK§ 5MACI4§ HEAR wismcAuusv sow! . CANNED sAnoiaiizé-Qcelaiaieo l coizusqaeeF iii-Asia. WFTH QAMHED BEAsrslowTIi-ie, _ cove! ‘men CALIHEDFPGAWS, ' now COFFEE wm-i CANNED MH-Kvw-AG AM EXPERT oie-riciAu. ‘L s»! THE MEAL HA6 vsnveaw cap of 25 gave himmawxiet '76. with // z [defeated by the Browns, ‘the New Yorkers into first place fly the margin of a. fun game. ‘ The fourth was the winners’ big ‘inning when they scored eight lruns on nine hits, six of them in succession. Lou Gehrig, big fof the afternoon with three sing- , les and a double bagged two of his l ‘msles in that merry-go-round. i ‘which drove Ivy Paul Andrews to cover. i Lusty Red Box battling, led by j Jimmy Foxx with a homer and two 'doubles, enabled "Rube" Walberg ‘P0 defeat Chicago White 80x 9-5 in Boston. Walberg. given brilliant support. in trouble only in the third .nning when singles by Krezvich, Walker and Bonura and a double '71’ Hayes PUShBd across three runs. St. Louis Browns divided a two- gnme series with the Athletics by taking the concluding contest in Philadelphia 8-6. Tim defeat halted the Athletics’ winning streak of three in a row and dropped the Mackmen into second place as New York took over the top rung. Hitting a home run with one on base. Harlan Clift wound up a l three-run rally in the seventh that g wiped out the Mack lead of 6-4. ; A wild throw by Cecil Travis handed Detroit Tigers two runs, enough to give them their second victory in two days over Wash- ington 8-1. ‘Travis heaved wide to first base- man Kuhel in the second inning “W? Dicklng up an easy grounder, letting Walker and Biglish score BASEBALL SCORES AMERICAN LEAGUE i Chwaao 00a 01o too-s s 3 Boston 202 140 00x—9 14 0 31811611. Dietrich and Sewell; Walberg and Desaufels. Sli- 101115 011 002 301-8 14 2 Philadelphia. 211 020 000-G 12 0 A. Thomas. Knott and Hemsley; Nelson, Caster and Hayes, Brucker. I Cleveland 000 000 000- 0 6 0 New york 000 840 20x-l4 16 1 Andrews, I-Iudlin, Heving, Brown and Pytlak, Sullivan; Chandler and Glenn. Detroit Washington 020000100-310 1 100000000-1 7 1 and Millles. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 100 000 101-3 6 Z Chicago 010 000 000-l 6 0 Lawson and Cochrane; Newsoml- NEWS "in SPORT WORLQ Main Event Ends I1 Second Round With Leslie Willlling By Yankees Rout Tribe 14-0 perm“ DOW" lmed WNEWMARIQET, Suffolk, May 24-- llllflm Woodwards colt Periiox, second favorite for the Derby to be run at Epsm a week from Wic- iicstlay, wday suiiered a Jar-ii.‘ Joint which caused coinsiderube anxiety among his thousands ni gun backers. In tlie last callover of odds tilt American-bred son of Gallant For was back at 13-2. Evremond de Si. ‘ Alaryb two thousand Guineas win- Iiieg Le Ksai‘ is tlie favorite at ll o . Wearing a bandage on the near IOIYIBE Periiox was on the "easy" list and confined to walking exer- cise with Marshall Field's Eiiiield, a sablemate at Captain C. C. Boyd- lioclifori/s traning establishment here. 'l‘\v0 other derby candidates, the Ago. Khans Le Grand Duo and MaJoi J. S. Coiiriauicls Solo, huvc gilt heel trouble but their hand- . said they were little tlie tvorsc for it. Le Grand Duc went six fur- loiigs today and Solfo five, both at half speed. WILL ATTEND DERBY LONDON, May 24-The King and Queen will attend the Derby June 2, it was announced tonight. The King will revive his father's custom of entertaining members of the Joc- key Club at dinner at Buckingham Palace on Derby night. In a ClillOl/OI‘ of odds at tlie Vic- toria Club tonight Wllliilll Wood- ho was suffering from a jarred 0nd favorite. M. de St. Mary's Le Ksar still ruled favorite at 5-1 followed by Cashboo 15-2 and Perifox. Other odds; Goya II 21-2: Solfo. Mid-Day Sun and Fairford, 100-6: Le Grand Dis, 20-1; Rienardo, 22-1; The Hour Pascal and Gainsboroush D555. 25-1; Le Bambino, 33-1. New Record In Marathon Race ST. CATHARJNES, 0rd» May 24 —tCP) - Milton Wal- lace of Toronto clipped 22 1-2 seconds off the Canadian l0- mile record that has stood for 14 years at the annual Miller road race here today. Wallace passed Bobby Rankine of Pres- 1. Fette and Lopez; Carleton and Hartnett. Brooklyn Cincinnati Butcher and Phelps; Derringer and V. Davis. _New York 000 020 200-4 '1 1 Pittsburgh oio ooo 020-s 1o at Hubbel, Melton, Coffman and Manciiso; Brandt, Bowman and ‘redid. Philadelphia at St. Louis to be played later. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Newark 312 020 101-lb 16 0i Jersey City 013 000 000.— 4 9 3 Brown, Tamulis and I-Iershberger; Babich, De la Cruz and Redmtbnd- First Game Buffalo Montreal Sewell and Phillips; 010 000 000-l 7 0 000 000 000-O 6 1 L. Moore, Duke and- es. Second Game Bullalo 001 000 0-1 3 0 Montreal 000 102 r—3 6 1 Ash and Savino; Smytlie and Stephenson. First Game Rochester 000 000 014-5 8 3 Toronto 000 304 11x—9 l6 l Krist. Walker, Doyle and O'Far- rell; Pattison. Berly and Heath. Second Game Rochester 000 000 000-O 5 2 Toronto 200 000 00x—Z 4 0 Judd and O‘F‘arrell; Meola and Heath. ton about 200 yards from the finish line to go the distance in 52 minutes and 22 seconds. Stuart Allan. Vice-President of the Miller Race who set the original mark. presented the vic- tor’s cup to Wallace. Fifty-three road racers from a field of 61 finished the grind after “lallace and the Preston Sent. Ward's colt Perifoit slumped to ‘J toi 1 in the betting following disclosure , joint. Previously he had been sec-l BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT Hubbellisent To Sl10wer5ijarr€d Joint All istars Andi Anchors But Wins 23rd Straight; SEHdSUddSOH iC/zalk Up Opening Wins/l‘ 'Of Industrial League Pounding out eighiecii llllS and‘ including iii the barrage at brace oi iiuincrs, d. triple and two doubles, wvhiwy" Liillis‘ All-Stars sturtid llll the iiiuzistrial Ltfiilllll: season iii iili l1llbl)l('l<J‘»l., 11121111101‘ OYCI weekend by ‘duiiUplllg the Cubs 13 to i} in the li-ague opener. Composed for the most part. of former Ciiv lleaguers, the Stars fielded a formidable lineup with bat- ting strength evident through the entire lineup. But their fielding prowess is as yet an unknown qllfllltlty. ' Stealing the show in the opener was their hurler "B00" McCaliiim. Displaying exceptional form arid condition McCallum stnick out 22 batters. to come within ‘M0 01 the Island record. lie yielded nine lllts superb as he mixed a blazing fast. ball with a wide sweep ng curve to pull himself out oi doificulties on more tliiiii one occasion. Thr- \\'lllll£‘l'S got. away to a coni- manding lead ui the first inning. With two down they counted six times before being retired, added another in the second, and then af- ter being held scoreless through the third, fourth and ifih (X11118 back in their last three times at bat to aid of some hefty szickvvork. Cubs didn't score until the iiflli. Then a biilk by Mvffiillum w.th ii riiti; l,lli‘_\' scori-il zigiiiii iii the sixth uiiri iii tlie seveiiili added lllTPl‘ more liilllUS, ilic only tine iii t-lii- game ‘they showed any concentrated batting power, McNeil and Whalen of the Stars were the home niri hitters, McNeits. coming in the second with none on. while Wlialen duplicated his mate's I Evans And Leslie In Title Bout Bi; George Leslie is to receive a chance to regain his island heavy title. Last night arrangements were completed for the title bout. and Leslie is to meet champion Jim Evans in Kcnsington Rink on the night of Juno 16th in a. title affair. If ever a bnut was a. natural the impen" ,, championship struggle is one. Ever since Evans lifted the oruwn the fans have been anxious to see the prilr matched again. Now , that it has become a reality there is lillle iioulii but that Kenslnglon rliik will be packed in the rafkrs Syracuse at Baltimore played at , ‘DON'T s51’ A / PLACE 1:011. Ms! , gru. as ‘BALAKKILIG ANOTHER MEAL our OF CAN6, 1’i_i. HAVE "nu fbrmer date. Major Hoopla I A Boswlqivim." grmfioowili, mow/ED RAWLE LIKE’ A DEYOURED FLIVVER ‘FULL OF ‘Tin CANS on thgnlghtaof the 16th. OUT OUR WAY ‘l; Who /,-’/’2;:?L: T1‘ tkfifttv“ t/fl/ // fi/Ié. §_ _ f"" WM‘ '7'- q t tile ‘ but with nien on the bases he was - ssore l1 additional runs through the i ‘ l h... ball: ' csiizziuoi TOtZiio 38 5 iii/l u Ii ninii iiii ‘illi'(l gave tilt-in lll(‘l1‘ llliwt i ‘ ~I 1i; H Stewart 1; performance in the sixth with I’ will llllfll 3 :t by mam aboard Hiliilei‘ 4; l)Ol10\'rl i es" Cubs lii; A‘! Box 500;“; bases: Mcliiiits, W. Umpires: Ar. the ; .._ ALL-FIARS AB B» H P0 AF- Cabe; on the buses. liiiix. Mcliinis, ss 4 2 2 0 2 1 Ward, cf 5 3 3 1 0 0 BY INNINKN McNeil, lb 6 J 3 6 0 l - Whalen, 2b 5 2 1 0 0 0 Cubs 000 oil Zion - ’l q Hunter, c 5 1 2 20 2 0 All-Stars 610 004 NW: . . .2 Gillis, 3b 5 1 2 0 0 0 l ' Carmichael, 1'! 4 2 0 D O O ANFIIORR WIN QEFOVT) GNVH. CUITlL‘, if 5 3 If 0 0 0 1 y McCalluin, p 4 i 2 0 2 0 , Iii the Qvliiliki L. Totals 43 l8 l8 2"! 6 2 ‘ CUBS AB B- K PO AE . , Carmody. ss 5 1 1. 3 2 l. Tra‘ Mahar, 3b 5 1 2 2 0 1i chore. started their P. Bolger, 1b 4 1 3 11 1 1 l in the i0l.ll"i‘l by cm A. Doyle. 2b 4 0 0 0 2 0 in trike a t I rill: A i - M. Bolger, rf 4 2 2 0 0 0i on’ zhe hiilzinr-e o". ‘l i ' i - Stewart, p 5 0 l 0 3 0, tested izariie liivfi llliili l Gillls, 1f 4 0 0 0 0 0 ,' ori to the" 61in loud. Donovan, c 4 0 0 8 1 0, Bill 1T3. . vrns uiiiniz'e~i..-. I Murphy, cf 3 0 0 0 0 0, for the game _v ______ O n T 0 n ig hi Seeking their second straight victory All-Stars meet the Bow- ery Bees at the Park Diamond to- night in the second game of the Industrial Baseball League. An unknown quantity on the league the Bees may carry enough sting to take the Stars info camp. If they do it will certainly put an altogether different outlook on the schedule. Game starts at 6:15 sharp. SWANSEA, England. May 24- Buddy BTiPI‘, California heavy- weight and younger brother of former champion Max Baer, out- pointed Jack London in a fight tonight. rams. May 24—-iCPl—H. w. (Bunnyi Austin, top-heavy favor- ite to take the sitigles title, today easily disposed of B. Maness of Switzerland. 7-5. 6-1. 6-2 1n thf‘ third round of the court tennis champion; m. '60 on wrm vouiz \ ‘fl-IQOW-IN’ ‘stones IN r ‘TH’ CREEK. FELLOW$. r vow-r NEED ANV HELP! rLLTIAi-zs IT HOME TO oven rr. i mew BQAIN$ AND INDUSTRY wouw cs1 ‘IHEIR izizwsizv, some DAY-— s0 Lowb- 4 I l , New’ l Philadelphia ‘i I Detroit i Cleveland l Boston ’ 1 Washington 1 Chicago l St. Louis ‘7 Pittsburgh St. Louis iii 1.! New Chicano ' 1w I t Brook-ii ii 1 1 i Boston li‘ ~. Pliiln Clnci I nitl us trial How Thea/Siam! League Game, AMERICAN LEN] l 'lI York l i‘ !i X ‘it lrl l ‘ 1.i xi’: NATIONAL LElfil-l. ‘..'i it York 1T dolphin 1 l nnati l" Oliver Wins NEW caast-ioti/ZFK . -Ro_v Oliver. New thorn -r who perform ‘ in lllf‘ 1914 B French hard , Wflfl mile the all rizii ‘iicrti today li-r conseciiiive time “Willl.l_\.\lS i ,-;-€~_ />-_ - me immsns. w/ltliaw-‘w I 2'54»- "éfi/Zr-‘yfiw -' Jaw-Lem“? u. 5-at , -. RLGQfiW". 1-