“side: .4§*-; .193 " BOWLING HOCKEY -_--i_._ estern Champions Tam lack” Cornwall Hyers In oarth Game Of Series 3-1 BY LORNE BRUCE Canadian Press Staff Writer- CAI-GARY. April 20—(CP)—Trail Smoke Eaters returned the All“, 1 to the British Columbia Kootenays tonight, defeating Cornwall l’! 3'1 l" "l" "I'll"! lame of the three-of-flve series for the Cana- - senior hockey championship. n“ ‘bun!’ “"5 "W" P888111! of the westerners carried them tu mic K111151178! B: amite won first forthe Kootensys in 1936 and bill’! Tilers carried east last year when they whipped North Battle- 1 Beavers in the Allan Cup finals. Emoie Eaters showed a clear superiority against the hard-fighting wall team, winning the first some 6-4 in overtime at Saskatoon the second 8-2 here. The eastern champions from Ontario took third game 2-1 here Monday. N THIS ORNER ‘v-I H». to the Provincial Bad- ton ‘inmpionships to be staged the Military courts at the Arm- es next week. it is interesting ecall the history of the sport. I'-- a" was the original name the same which has made and . ill makinz tremendous strides Ill larlty on this continent. It first played in‘ India many 1 ies ago. and seems to have - confined there until the 70's Elruzlish Army officers in In- who had become converts to mime. carried the idea beck to nd while on furlough. . lié 1K 9K Eli Duke of Beaufort became -- 1n the new sport and ~ y introduced it to societyln - during e house party at his 1- named “Badminton? in . iershire. llmgland. Thegame acu its present name. original rules gov- ~- lay in England until 1887. 1- e Bath Badminton Club formed and!‘ itsemflmeinbers med some o e r a ons. ‘ 9E BK 9K 5K - i605, the new sport had i -- so many devotees that it s decided to fonn a national - , standardize the rules and -= vz- for tom-nament play. This Aaociation which became the verning for badminton roughcut the world. All-Eng- id championships for men were 1- in 1899, and a women's ~ nament was held in 1000. but ~.- not until 1904 that the all- ami matches received the - - of ofligckiaglé . -- snort was "exported" to eds-in the 90's and was also -.- in the States about this e. It “caught on" in a. big way the-Dominion, but Americans . lukewarm in their attitude about 12 yours I80. since .. til: gnsriegfiizes made rapid es p05? . ts*1a>|ik€d court e game p on a 21 feet for singles. and 30x24 dotbles matches. the net beinl feet high. The game soorins 1b points for men's contests i sets are played. and 11 or l5 esired for women. A shuttle- od a ball is used. This 1 dded with 1:8 ta) 1:5 felttiltem weighs rom Ufa ns. iié lit 5K 5K ~ e rscquet used can be of any or slum. but the entire weight not exceed six ounces. The tlecock, unlike the tennis ball. be hit while in the air. 11f it to the srround. it scores s t for the other side. The strat- o1 play places tremendous - on voueyimz and. for this . is a game of infinite ac- and far faster than tennis. >1‘ iiéili <- rts insist that it requires far - speed of hand and foot than tennis and that badminton nds triple the durability of afldltenlfiing tenrgjeéalmrsiof -' ..Vl 0.. RY... F!!!" declare that hree sets are exhausting than five Jets o! ~ to doubles play because Jnusrht singles match. it ed. drains too much energy. is iii iii 9i? all: up a moral victory for el Jake R-ullbert. Joe Di- lo. ace clouter of the Yank- took the Colonel at his word a cent over $25,000" and be- ' Y decided after all the salary "t bad and a life in the ball 1111111111 the summer was Dil- lc to serving ilsh dinners in Francisco krotto. 9K Bl‘ éié lit ting Joe. who is mooted to ed Gehrinlrer as American - bsttlnu champion, will set competition Saturday. but un- i! Droves that he is in shape continue to drop $182 of his ‘ per dav. lit éié 1K iii ~- usin the West dominates key. The Si. Boniface Seals the Memorial Cup which has rt of th took possession of the Allen last night by defeating Com- Flvers in the fourth ram-e of series. Th the bottom up and s glance ' ‘ professional ranks will , that. they hnvo contributed . - providing the bulk of ms- ‘ for the N monk! [ FIRE COUNTERS age} Srtilovgortiim Joe Benoit: stand Ab ll B l’ 8061s a gave Trail victory torught cheering crowd of 5,000. Snowdows goal came in the first period and. after the second was scoreless. Benoit and Cronie made it 3-0 in the third period before Ab Mac- Donald crashed through for the orily Flyer counter in the last min- u e The victory marked the 14th year Western Canada has taken the historic trophy first won in 1908 by Ottawa Cliflsides. The east has held the cup 17 years. FURIO US THIRD PERIOD Twelve penalties marked tonight's some. nine of them coming in the fast and furious third period when Flyers pressed desperately for the Heals that would have forced an- io the creation of the Badmin- L other game. The teams bottled on fairly even terms in the first period until Snowdon. Benoit and Cronie broke away with only Ebrrand Gillie. Cornwall defencemon. between them and goalie Perms. Gillie, attempt- ing to watch three men at once. fell flat on his book and Benoit the rubber to Bnowdon for the first goal s/t 17:83. Perms was sensational in swo- ping Trail shots tn the second per- iod. De-rticularly toward the ses- siorfs end when Smoke-Eater for- wards rained drives at him from all angles. - The lineups: Tull-Goal. Soodellaro: defence, Snowdon. Johnston; forwards. Cro- nle. Dame. Benoit; subs. Duchak. Kowcinak. eedy. B r e n n e n, Morris. Comwell-Goal, z defence, MoClelland. Utnaan. onieiaisfn. w. Armstrong. Osh- a/wa. Ont, and Pete Sande. Osl- 3M1. stimuli! lint POHOC 1—-'I‘raii. Bnowdon (Benoit) 17.83 Penalty: Kowcinak. ’ sebum: mm gfilceivlahon. snowdon. Thkd Period Z-Jrrail. Benoit (Demo) 8.39 il-frrail. 0r . kgrnwsllfnbiawoneld (Gillie) .16 ti z Gilli . K0 inak. 1on- £331 fiflMl-YIO; 8. Ylghnston 2, Baseball Results NATIONAL IIAGUE Boston 010 010 040-8 6 2 New York 000 310 000-4 6 2 Turner and Mueller; Schumach- er. Brown and Dunning. Brooklyn (B1000 001-6 8 0 Philadelphia 110000004-6 9 2 Pitmlmmons. Bueher and Cher- vinko: Walters and Atwood. ChicaRO 090 000 001-10 16 1 Cincinnati 001 010 100- 4 18 3 Dean, Russell and ilartnett; Grlasom. Barrett. Kleinhans and git3§mh 4oz mo coo-s 2o 1 St. » “m 101 14 0 1»..'?.?#"...¢ Todd: Johnson. Len- ier. McGee. Harrell. Shoun and Owen. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia 000 000 000—0 7 1 Washington 000 000 30x4 7 1 Ross, Smith and Hayes: Leonard and R. Ferrell. t Louis 0 ' 83'.’ 6'8? % 11 o 1 x 0112111211229. Von Atta and Sullivan: Fell nd Hemslezv. Detail-it’ 000003 100-4 8 2 Chicago 00100011x—6 6 Kennedy. Ooffman and York. Cain. Risrney. Brown and Reuse. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas City 5. Toledo 4. Milwaukee 4. Columbus 1. 8t. Paul 3. Indianapolis 0. Mlnneopdis i3. Louisville 6. Canadian C I u b Meeting T011581" I ih C dish Am- at: Wulxgicoclug willmbe held in u" Roi-am ufeéllltilnmty Blind- ev . man's.’ qggesldeiit. Counciiinr Dr. Charles Douasn will 111181119- All junior baseball players of last veer as well as ihose wish W to try out this season rare” m club’ “Qxf “my! um 3100.000. would have ‘a a were ‘lllifit-"tm: The difference si- flgure and the Sun between 1th Beau reofard would be dull-c W!‘ dhlthwh-IOW- NEWS TRAIL s OF l rus_ cusnwrrrroww l ‘GUARDIAN m; SPORT MOKE EA TERS CAPTURE ALLAN CUP WORLD BOXING BASKETBALl _ omen scum PAGE " Season Today (A.P. By Guardian's Special Wtre) NEW YORK. April 20-—Tl'ie Ln- ternatlonal Baseball league, boast- ing three new managers anu a well- dlstributed array o. fresh .alent, wii open its 55th season tomorrow with Lhe circuits four northern teams visiting their southern col- leagues.‘ The inaugural program will find Newark Bears. pennant winners and Little World Series champions in 1937. at home to Buffalo Bzsons; Toronto at Jersey Ci.y, Rochester at BaLimoi-e .and lunntreal at Syracuse. TWO NEW PILOTS The Newark game. expected to draw a near capacity crowd of 10,000 will present two Oi the new DliOIS. Johnny Neuu. who played first base for Newark from 1932 to 1934. has come up from Norfolk to succeed Oscar Vitt as chief of the Bears, and Steve O'Neill. who Vitt sup- planted at Cleveland. now ls man- aging Buffalo. The other newcomer to the man- azerial roster is Sunny Jim Bot- tomley. The big first baseman is handling Syracuse. the club for which he played 1n 1922 and which sold him to 8t. Louis Cardinals for $30,000. then the highest mice ever paid for an International Leaguer. DECLARES HALF-HOLIDAY l7. crowd of the clay 1s likely to turn up at Jersey City. Mayor Frank Hague has declared a half-holiday and. though the “Little Giants" wound u!) as woeful tailenders in 1937. last year's minor league at- tendance record of 31.000 may be equalled when Travis Jackson sends his men onto the field against Toronto. World‘ - wide Recognition For Champions (By The Associated Prue) HOME. April 20—Wor1d boxing champions henceforth will receive formal. world-wide recognition of their titles as a result of action taken by the World Boxing Con- ference. vmich closed today. The conference established a World championship committee. re- presenting virtually all the pro- fessional boxing Rovemirm bodies. to designate champions and chal- Handicap (CP. By Guardian's Special Wire) EPBOM. Eilxland. April 20 -— Cliff Richards wdav brought home Pigskin. Mrs. A. Chester Beattyb ghestnué slop of téhetflreatmgajp ‘u: mm w ney. e sprlnR handicab. the City and Bub- urban. , - .. H” .‘.‘°§.%.““'€' ti“ “.‘.'"?'.i.."f'l°l y a e a e en o , ~ mile race. l-l. R. Mosenthals Lady of Shalott was third. 1 1-2 lengths back. Eighteen storied. Terror and Pigskin raced it out on the home stretch with the for- mer lwvpt n champion and son of the 1923 Derby winner finishing strongly for a well deserved victory. Pigskin started at 8 at 20 to 1, and Lady 10 t0 1. Title Bout For Sydney Talked .5 . N. 8.. April 20-(0?) ~01; Brreton nport circles lmlled ton with rumors of a Canadian |"lel"atl'0"fl|iDean Makes Debut As League 0P9“ Cabs Troance Reds 10-4; Bees Setback Giants 6-4 NEW YORK, Arm-ii 30 —(AP)— Jerome Herman (Dizzy) Dean's debut as a Oh Cub was Just a six-inning arm-loosening chore for the fomier St. Louis Cardinal loud-speaker today, the Pgreat one” wasting to a 10-4 victory over the Reds in Cincinnati on the impetus o1 a nine-run splurge in the second frame. was the second straight win for Chicago over the redlegs, who finished last in the 1937 cem- Pfllen. A crowd of 8.552 turned out, most of them to watch Dean's performance, but the second- inning barrage of the Bruin bats- men stole the show. 1n that game- ciinching stanza two errors. a we‘): and 10 barehits. induding doubles by Demaree. Jurges and Hartnett. put the game on ice for the windy city crew. Dean was taken out at the end of the sixth. Manager Charley Grimm said he did it to give "Old Diz" a much-needed rest. During his six inning sojourn on the hill. Dean did not issue a walk. struck out three, and allow- ed eight hits. In Philadelphia. fat Freddy lfltzslmmons fell a/part in the ninth inning after pitching near- perfect ball for four frames, and the Phillies put on a four-run imree to beat out Brooklyn Dod- In One - kit NEW YORK, April 20—(AP)- BobFellenbs-rkintheform that American league's strikeout champion shut out Si. Louis Browns th a single hit io- day while Cleveland's artillery swunglnrtoactiozrtowln 9-0a/t The 19-year-old pride of Van Meter, 1a., struck out six, Browns, walked an equal number, made two of the Indians‘ 11 hits and drove in flwo nms. ‘Ilhe only hit on! Feller came in the sixth. when catcher Billy Sul- livanbmtoiotatarpiotheboxon a close decision. The Indians mean- while clubbed big Jim Weaver and his successor. Russ Van Altta, and received 1o walks, nine of them from Weaver. Fleiller has not displayed his daz- rlingspeedoflastyeasgwhenhe won nine and lost seven, but has been pinching smarter baseball to 1. Terror of Bhalott at l" l heavyweight boxing tiiia s“ on Jet...‘ “can. ... err . . . ., Eddie wens Edmonton. Four Bydney businessmen their identity remain unknown were hacking t fight, reports said and h=d given -an agreeable reception by manav Qlra c! the 1w booms. and holding runners close their bases_ Not a man stole 0n him to- to nd lagged him f on] glitbtlhgeléger. But in theolrast w e is ending Mart , Chuck Klein Herschel. and Earl Browne singled in suc- Butcher cession. and when Max relieved him, drew a walk. Plnky Whitney tied it up with a two-run simle. and Arnovich brought home the win- ning run on s. wild pitch. Paced by Arky Vaughan and Al Todd, each with three hits in five (imes at but, Pittsburgh Pirates smothered St. Louis Car- dinais 9-4. Five St. Louis tchers tried lneffectiveiy to stop e 30- hit attack. Fourteen safeties rattled off the Cardinal bats. including thegamek Don only home runs Gut- teridge and the roolde, mos Shaughier. _ In New York. Boston Bees came up with a slu "stinger" and trounced the Gian s4 on Gene loaded in the eight inning’ Jim Turner, last year's old-man rookie sensation. led the chomp! with six his to oven the series. He was in serious trouble in the fourth frame when he gave Johnny Moixrthy e home-run bell with two . Feller Blanks Browns 9-0 Performance Vern Kennedy. ntalnlng his debut against the team for he won 46 gonna the past there years, was opened the eighth by walking Owemwhomsdetilaemlndsona sacrifice. Babe Ruth 8L Colonel Jake Bury Hatchet B! ALAN RANDAL CImllll-n Press Stall’ Writer NEW YORK. April M-Nowglmg Babe R/uth and Colonel Jake Bus» ferenoes mkftcfig we“ - we that the Basnbino may yet come back to ...it would be in a. mum!‘ 101411111 soot. oi course. with achsncetoworkuptosbigl . true manazcrship. yesterday to It was a rer sight see the Babe and his former em- ployer together at the Giants op- ener. . "and the Bebe recently tickled the Yankees boa by on. nounclrur he thought Joe Dilwsg. I10 was erring in his holdout cam- Dfllllhqittallge WOIdS from one who was once the greatest holdout of them all. "Rubber" Match erry W inglo. frorxrlwerpoolfrta. W111 errera Willi/t champion of West Indies. in a. "ruhbe at n. Jamaica. May 14.... 1n two recent matches each has mined a decision on points... Warrlngtonb New York manager. Bobby North. also annou ‘ the ‘liner will tear into Goyito Rico, heavy tltlehgder of cum. at King- mixali M11: o M nee . . omen def ‘ 51x10 llisoober in Detroit lest nlsht. the Michigan Athletic Oom- mtssion would like the National Boxing Aaociaiblon to recognise Mbrgan so the "outstanding chai- lenger" g,‘ silgrtfs bani ,, crown... e rom . son than P. K. bgtTl. statements WS$° arm "is still s. winner." s Something Wrong‘! 11mm l-wearanoe of boar scores in yesizathy‘! comers- where the Nationals whamsncd out 90 safe hits and the American leaouers BS-it looks baseball factories stripper?“ the so- Louls Cards, New York Yankees. Detroit Tigers and Boston Red 80x would like tohook 1m _ (Rancher) Roe but time-gm in: doing....the big-y year Bearcy. Min-mas. . fanned 21 men in a 10 inning. 8-1 victory ibr Harding College over Arkansas College yesterday.» “t. Roops vs. Ted's Taxi. I '1‘ nght at 8:30: Mixed Doub- e HOLY NAME BOWLING Commercial league Semi Finals Basques Eliminate Guardian Angels Basques:- T. Creighan 166 237 217 L. Corcoran 162 1B5 253 F. McMillan 173 192 162 L. Doiron $7 105 233 P. htcQusid 208 234 197 Total-Mill. nardlan Angels:- A. Bherren 286 202 196 Ofllllnt 160 152 226 L Brown 184 191 214 J Peterson 102 166 180 E. GOA! 1B7 227 1B0 ‘Total-MM. High single L. Doiron 287. High three A. Bherren 084. Friday night at 7 o'clock Bas- ques vs. Imperial Biscuit Co, first gsfine in finals best three in five se es. Bil Four League Selnl Finals All Stars:- E. Doucette 273 277 l6! W. Murley 16B ‘.07 253 Dr. 1. Duffy 196 20o m o. lllflfy 2'10 m lss Rev. Dr. McMahon 259 105 000 Total-dflll. Old Timon:- lt. Duncan so: m 1B0 iencers. Chief pmpose of the day. Leonard flu his knuckle ball committee is to end the pruent In 01110860. the whim 80x nosed past the recognition of one set oi’ cham- Datum 5-4 same,- soop- Tlae e was a. scoreless pltds- out Tigers rim k . m an . ma“; léihtlill°ffkihiflt t.'.“’s'.i‘.° ha?“ m “":.‘.‘,;‘.-:.‘?..”‘i...“’...“..i smfswmm“ ....... t... .. .... gpei 11y the International Boxing muqwt the benefit, at’ n hose hit; nlngmnwllénkthe Senators drvv. ac- non. ‘Iih filled th be e runs. The committee may ‘ ‘ a —-9l3'mrs e Ses n“ world championship vacant when a. chamgioni fa-ialisx to mettle‘: a chgtllauen- gar n rnon or er- "r S 1t; 1 i. s W. ma. fpowm - HE ALLEY 1 ’ . - v. Col 251 152 21a Jamar champs cnrown nowuno smnys W Hylgemy g a? £2 MIXED LEAGUE J. Hughes Finals J. A. Bentley 181 231 177 L8 U8 F01‘ HD1118 'r tal-{i-‘iilfl. a ;._. High single it. Duncan 20B. n. J. 010w 1ao 1m so’: High three J. flushes 714- ~ , 219 15B 227 Boignflmos‘ JA“’“w§g“(fQ“§f; gr. Mgkaensie sea 252 11a moms“ ogwpmo Memorial Cup l}. Western Canada § ‘feign, *2“: g3; m '“ by defeating Oshawa Generals in B" “w”, B8 m; m8 Non-d‘, e “if! 5°11“?- "1" "l" ‘m’ m“ ' 120a 111121229 u. Clinton or 104 1 011D. W011 by Bildbllry TIRCIS 18515 “@4639 n Higgins 15g 139 1“ year. returned to the west. ‘ M_ Aylward 131 134 395 Before leaving Toronto for home Tum___ R Harper 173 134 179 tonight. the Canadian Junior hoc- B Mcném 16o m; m6 A 5°33 1g 144 key champions sent a good-luck P‘ Maximo“ 195 181 131 T°w1__3uo_ telegram to ‘Trail Smoke Eaters in J‘ Law.” m9 m9 m5 Calgary who met Comwall Myers. M'_ Muwh m. 125 147 seumm,_ §?"€€Z‘n..."“'i‘fiz..i“.$§§..’°s“m‘nn “m” J- PWM 153 W‘ 1°” K- °“"°" ill it’; f2," '" 13%’ "k715i? 31 ‘i353?’ 1.2". o: ill B . ‘way m" “’°*"°'°‘““ m” “mews 11.221811“ 111225 single o Doyle 21s 11; lll/lmcggnsld 1W 145 171 7-l last. night in the fifth and final Ladies high m," G: Doyle 602: Totn|_35e3_ "Y" °‘ m“ 1“"‘°' 5"“ eel-us high single Dr. McKenzie High uncle 0. Hush» w. ' _ _ 3w High thrgte Gullfounghoili. M“ P_ kin Wins 773cm high three Dr. McKenzie edligféilsgiriute anzkgvacalgelgs egg-Sm: lg5 Tonight at 1 o‘clock:- ers- Aussies Arrive In England For Cricket Matches LONDON. Am‘. fil-(CP Cable»- Thousands greeted Amtrslinls crie- keicrs when they arrived here this evening from Southampton where they landed from the liner Crontes earlier in the day. Walter tlon was surrounded by ounted police were called to ire 0rd . B}... lgifadsnen, Australian skip- of Maryiebone Cricket Club. The all flt excerpt Sidney South Wales hattinl $0511‘; who injured a wrist durinl I ec game. The Antipodeans will practice at lords tomorrow. Their game is “ ul llld other u Se.‘ Apr-floral)": e sem-ann m tins Maritime Provinces Branch of the Amateur Athletic Union oi Can- ada will he held here llsy 4 l9 WM announced today. A new slate of officers will Paul Thompson Appointed To Coaching Berth (C. P. by Guardian's Kecla-l Wire) OHIOAGO, April 30—Major Fred Momuglzlin, owner of Chicago Black Hawks, world professional hockey champions, nounced that Paul Thompson, ace left winger, had been appointed assis t manager for the 1938-39 season. He will also set as coach, assisting Bill ‘Thompson who led the scorers American division and aalned the, left wing Dildition of the 1997-38 Canadian Press all-star team will continue as a player. and re- ceive 7% league's maximum sal- "ifajor McLauchlln also announ- eed that Johnny Gottselig, Mush March, Bill McKenzie. Alex Le- vinsky and Roger Jenkins have signed contracts for next winter. MANN WINS BOUT NEW YORK. April 20—(AP) Natie Mann came back to N York tonight for the first 8W time since Joe Louis dynamited m. and stormed Hans Haverlick. the Austrian champion. in the third round of a l0-round bout. Mann 1e,i:h_ed__1£3_fo_hls,rlya1js_!l4 1-1 y Draw Middleton) (Anootged Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK. April Bil-Back t0 New York Yankees when they Mod him most (tomes lnltinz Joe Di- Msggio. the San Francisco out- fielder who accepied zoday the club's salary offer of $25,000 after a holdout iiiege that would have lasted three months tomorrow. glo ended his holdout with a terse telegram to Business Man- ager Edward G. Barrow an to- night was speeding to loin the club he sparked to American League pennants and world championships in 1936 and 1037. The susggermg Yankees need him. They have won only one of three games and their 11min: has been puny. NO BONUS OFFERED DiMaggio capituiaied at the terms ofzered by the Yankees with of s bonus for a ood season. th and Coonel Jacob Ruppert. owner m’ the club, were insistent on this point. “His . is $5,000. no more, no less." said Ruppcrt. who added he was “very glad that the young man has signed.“ glo. id's-veiling by train. arrive in New York Saturday morning and will be in uniform for the Yankees’ game with Washing- ton Senators. No one knows wheth- erheisinshapefonlay andMan- ager Joe arthy will be sole Judge of that” according to Rubllert. The club will dock him ggkadayuntilboisinslzspew y. “KLEIN TO GO" Acocrding to reports from the worked there and ra/oping that ball again." The move which ended the hold- out was entirely DiMagsids. The club's offer wofmgflfiflw. DiMaggio asked 885.000 later up d nis price to 840.000. Colonel p rt was firm and both sides set led down for a "freereout" campaign. The club made no second of er. llMv-Rulo predicted the Yankees would win their third American League pennant in three years this season. His presence will help. IXPIDSSIS BEIJEF BAN FRANCISCO. April 2i) Gyvlously relieved by tcrmlnatio of his holdout campaign, Joe Di- today he was "all ex.- Mamlo said cited about netting lislcl: there and mop the ball 888-111.‘ he had signed at the ankees’ terms, Joe de- dhewasaoinztotrywget in such a good season that "there won’t be any chance pf an argu- ment over salary next; year. Natur- ally I thought I was worth more this year. But I'd rather play ball than hold out. I can't get back quick enouxh and I'm rarin’ to go." Baseball Standing AIERJCAN LEAGUE tgon L051. 1P.C. Washington 000 Chicano 2 0 1.000 Boston 2 1 .667] St. Louis 1 1 500v Cleveland 1 1 500i New York 1 2 333' Detroit 0 2 .000 Philadelphia 0 3 .000 NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago 2 0 1.000 Pittsburgh 2 0 1.000 New York 1 1 .500‘ Brooklyn 1 1 .500 ton 1 1 500 Philadelbhla 1 1 .500 Cincinnati o 2 000i Home Run Standing i Guardian's Special Wire) (LP. By Yesterday's Homers: G. Moore. west. McCarthy. Giants; insett. Dodgers; Gutter-loge. slaughter, Cards; Goodman. Reds. McCarthy, Giants. i? “Em. Totals: National l9. Am-l erican 8. total 27. ET rid of that tired, sleepy look- Put your best face forward- with a Gillette wake-up shovel Gillette Blades skim oft‘ the toughest stubble, refresh and invigorate your face as nothing else does! That's because they're precision-med to fit your-Gillette Razor accurately-give you the world's cleanest, closest, longest-lasting shaves. Insist on Blue Gillette Blades. ,5 for 25c, 10 for 50c. DiMaggio Ends Holdout Siege Accepting Yankee‘ p, Contract For $25,000 ‘Diz’ Recovers Old Form In Cub Uniform (A. P. by Guardian's Special CINCINNATI. April 20—-1.t i as if Jerome Herman (Dizzy Dean didn't change anything on cept his uniform, after leaping from St. Louis Cards in Chi Cubs 1n exchange for siaspoom three layers. In t e Cubs dressing mom today alter paying the Cubs the firs‘ dividend on the purchase griuea pitching his mates to a -2 l ' oveiéhsCinclinnati Reds in six fram- es, e set-styled “ at one" mada these startling statfients: “Well, that's one game h; the bag, and now 1 need Z9 more. I'm going to win 30 this year, just to show some of those guys who said I was through. “Charley Grimm is the “w manager in baseball who have taken me out. of a 3am! like that to give me a rest. He's the g-reatist manager in the game. (Monda . at a luncheon for tbs Reds, ill McKechnle of Clnflln- natl was Dean's "greatest man- ager" nominee.) tostnrtsunday I "I'll beready 01110860. and will 1 show 'em some- thing there? I only used my fad one twice today, and each time the catcher had it before the bat- r swung “What a hall club these Cuba are! I do ‘t. h 1 if o... n’; 1.5.22.3." .l.°‘is.'i°“ °" Billiards bv 106' 90in: the score reading McGee 300, pl eagblfiht F Ranahan n ll - plays Haynes. The entries for the M05411‘ cial Snooker tournament close take place first maize nlkht. th dra/w Friday nlkzht witlvlmtltie on Monday night i. _nlso Fine Cut CIGARETTE TOBACCO lso in Lock-top Tins Everyone Else Does. A new Hat gives you that well dressed feel- ing of satisfaction. Here you will find your favorite style lll just the shade in match your new suit. 3.95 other hats 1.75 to 7.50 all sizes all colors PROWSE BROS. Limited “MY HA TTER" .._.4_-':r5-\{v;. ‘ w . 4 ‘we .1» ‘is: _ s“; f,,_._s. _........ .. -" ‘* -:-:r._.- A ‘s. _- ‘ a, vEJ-vli“. _