APRIL 19. 195/ w} Wenlbley Lion 0f Ch a m pio BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING S Win Opener nshi p Series From 'Hershey Bears 6-3 fie To Break Glasgow's Grip On Cup Honors 1-?‘ (GP. B] GllIIiIIl-lfg 51nd“ wire) TORONTO Apr-l‘ 13 wemble ’ . I _ Y g-gmlfi l"! aggregation of hockey are that flashed across the Can- adian iirmament three days o were we Game up tonight mafia‘ bdtu i “Asoow. April 16—Aberdeen’s “amok? gfljgnfjifgjr l“ "f; 1m"- dhflnms °1 brew“? GIB-‘ZWW? the world's amateur chvghilpiosilsinéor shawls-hold on the Scottish Foot- ball cup are being subjected to minute examinations as the Dons pfgpmfi to meet Celtic in the final o! the historic competition at gmpden Park. April 24. since i929 the trophy has nave;- leit Glasgow. “The Old Firm" of Rahgeffi and Celtic have monopol- gpd it ainu that year, the Light .Blues being succesful five times mu the Celts twice. Outside oi this My, all Scotland is pulling for Ab- fldeen to break the formidable rec- 9rd in its first appearance in the lnnl. ‘while Celtic has won 14 cups lime the competition started in ma, the Aberdonlans‘ best per- gmllanee until this season was in i935 uhen the northern squad was defeated 2-1 by Hamilton Acttdmni- p315 in the send-finals. Aberdeeffs advance among Scot- land's frat-ranking soccer clubs lies been consistent in recent years. Qinco 1930 the Dons have been among league championship con- tenders, last year finishing in third itlon. During the present season die Pltiodrie Park team was top flog until a few weeks when Rang- u: assumed command. Only a bad reversal oi form can keep the Dons out oi the runner-up position. Celtic has failed to reach the form that carried the eleven to the league. champonship last year, t, led by Jimmie McGcry, world's most prolific goelgetter, it has ev- gy prospect of finishing in third doe. wBaeed on the meetings oi the lsts in league play this year, thousands who will throng denParkatthoendoftho mnihwill findithardtopicka. winner. ilbrly in the campaign Ab- erdeen lost at Celtic Park 2-2 but mrrlebackinthe New Year to more the only goal of the tilt at per-dean. The Celts’ experience in w-ilnal play may be a deciding, Dior. Chief of Aberdeen l! second-period _Lfons on their victory march. They scored three times than threemmutes to start off the third before the B'Ars got their passing attack working to beat the beipectacled Mlisgrove with a trio of goals through Jerry Cormier and Harry IProst, who registered a The English National League iiittlisltls packed 111018 Punch than ers ey Bear-g m a third period drive that netted five goals and won the "m? Slime of the round-robin scrim here last night 3.3, Th _ itial match attrac e l“ tans mm Mable Leaf Gardens. ted some 3,500 Sponsored by the Canadian Am- ateur Hockey Association the ser. ies will bring into u ’ Tigers. ac on Sudbury the Winnipeg Mo m, the Canadian mm ' who Wm the Epjars, m Idizltfillioxlfistates amateur league. IIOQKBY. Lions and Monarchs clash in the second game tomorrow night. 1937 Allan. pup winners; ill-Tor title yesterday; champions of the East- rulers of English ice The scoring punch of Jo Jo Gra- bofikl. the RMAY brothers, Tony and Albert. Edgar Murphy and others who starred in Canadian 1109“? in the past years. by the great goal-tending of Roy MlI-‘lsrovc. proved too much for the chocolate soldiers Two of Hershey's goals were scored while Lions were short-handed. backed up from Hershey. After a. dull first period, Jo Jo's goal started the in little more SERIES SCHEDULE TORONTO. Apr. 18—(CP)-I'bl- 101111118 is the schedule of the round-robin series for the world's amateur hockey championship, re- lszsed by W. A. Hewett. registrar. iation. .n Amateur Hockey Assoc- The two teams with the highest number of points after the six- gume schedule will meet in abest- ol-three-game series for the title. ‘The final games will be played maul, s Alxil 26 and 2'1, with the date for ilreeoulceful attack led by u. a" m"! Wm» *1 "Wemrl" Y“ ‘Rio schedule: bong, hustling centre-forward. ~, t” b“ ‘mmunwd- M111 retainsall s 9 l Mlle-left but ‘the thblkflla April 1'1: Wembley Lions vsHer- m. 510m, by D_ gu-wgg, 3mm; ‘ alley Bears (won by WembleyJf-ll.) African right winger, in his yearWfihthQDonASh-aussisme vthefowwingemwirocanberc- d upon to get goals consistently IKIYIIIS namoappearscnflle score lleetinmootgfluiee. . Yetonnohboltl All-roluld dependability has kept the Celts in. the forefront. J. Ken- newey is one of. the 89-1118’! 01115" standing goalkeepers and in front of him backs and forwards DlaY with an understanding that has the effect of wearing down teams not so favorably balanced. McGrory although approaching the veteran stage. remains a tower oi strength and a few weeks ago scored the 400th goal of his career. Aberdeen has had the harder road to the final, although lucky mough to draw a third-round bye. lilvernesie 'I‘histle went under 6-0 before the Dons at the initial hurdle and this success was fol- lowed by a 4-2 victory over the powerful Third Lanai-k team. In the fourth round the northerners mm 2-1 at Hamilton and took the measure of Morton by a 2-0 score in the semi-final at Easter Road, Edinburgh. A low-placed second-diwsion out- fit. Stenhousemuir, gave Celtic a shock in the first round. At Sten- housemuir, the Celts were forced to fight hard to draw 1-1 but won the replay at Pnrkherd 2-0. Albion Rovers and East Fife were dis- Med of in diort order by 5-2 and ‘ Wemb obey Boers from Epringhill N. 8.. meet Bill Sparks ofAmherst in the feature bout of Joey McDonald's boxing card at the Labor Union Hall Tuesday night will hold his final workout at the Hall this after- noon at 8o'clock. Holm willbe pit- ted against Kld Marsh of Spring- hill for h's final drill. April 19: Winnipeg Monarchs v! lay Lions. AD!!! 20: Sudbury Tigers vslier- April 22:'Sudbury Then vsWln- uIfiIMonar-chs. 24: Sudlfiiy ‘flgerl vs Wembley Lions. It was announced the Monarchs. 198'! Memorial Cup holders, will be bolstered by five player: selected from Toronto teams. 8-0 scores but Motherwell made thing-s hot in the fourth round. Af- ter dividing eight goals in Glas- gow the Celts emerged wlth a 2-1 verdict at Motherwell. The semi- final with Oiyde was played at Ib- rour Park, Celtic winning 2-0. Holm Winds-up Training Today nrue Holm, ‘durable light heavy who will Holm is pracltcally at the peak of his form now and is ready for {HIS UHAKLUTTTSIUWN UUA KDIAN Looking For NewRecord In Classic Run BY RAT-PH MORTON Canadian Press Stai! Writer BOSTON. AlJrll 1'l—Perhap it's the mild winter that gave stal- warts e. chance to keep supple on highways and by-ways, or perhaps it's first a hunch-but keen sports observers here are looking for a lowering of Les Pawsorrs course record oi 1933 when that band of husky hopefuls race from Hopkin- ton to Boston next Monday. It's the same long established Beaten Amateur Athletic Club 9188810. even to having veteran Clarence DeMar, seven times win- ner, there with the starters-but what always makes it enticing is the big question mark encircling lads from Canada and down coun- try, unheralded and unsung. who 1118MB their eyes on a spray oflaur- e . DoMar has even figured out his chances of winning-one chance in ‘l5, he says-but then the younger headliners are not so conservative when they estimate their own ab- llity to win. First of all there's Ellison "Tarzan" >Brown, Marran- gansett. RL, Indian. winner of the 1936 marathon. who is out to re- peat his brilliant victory oi last $88011. making a comeback after a. serious operation last winter. “Tarzan will be right there with the first 15" says Chick Anderson, his brother tribesman and trainer’. Then there is in the long list of plodders. Paul DeBruyn, the Ger- man-American rnarathoner who trained on beer and won the tell- ing grind in 1932. Dave Komonen, Canada's hope. with a long record _oi' victories, should be right there with the tape busters. He won in 1994, came sec- ond the year before and seventh in '31. " ' Whatever happens we can look for Pawson, Kelley, the favourite. Cote, Porter, Deng-ls, up at front and maybe a darkhorse like when Johnny Miles of Sydney Mines, N. 5., pulled in first in ‘zit-will make sporting dopesters rest uneasy. There have been three accepted marks for this famous race that draws men from all over the coun- try-one for 24% miles, one for 26 miles and Pawsonb for the full, exact marathon distanced! 26 mil- es, 386 yards. IPor years runners thought they were doing E miles iultll Clarence DeMar and others expressed belief it was short and remeasuring showed they were plodding a course shy Just one half mllo. Dc- Mar holds the record for that “baby marathon" run. But when the course was sup- posedly put up to the full mara- thon of 26 miles and the plus yardBGE. again the tape measur- ing boys went wrong and Johnny Miles was credited with being the fastest marathoner of all time However a re-check showed thatto meet Olympic standards he would have to run another 1'16 yards. Thus through a mos-t imfortun- ate error, the greatest of all mam- thon times became Just an "out- standing performance." Here are the full distance rec- ords to date: 2h, 81m, 01 S-ilm-Leslie Pawson, 193B. 2h, 32m. 1935. 2h. 32m, 53 4-5s,--Dave Komcn- en. 1934. 08s,-—Johnny Miles. 1929. 2h, 33m, 2h. 33m, 96 2-l5s,-Paul DeBruyn, 1982. 2h. 38m. fits-Ellison Brow-n, 1990. 0'! Z-iim-Johnny Kelley a tough, gruelling battle. He is very anxious to win this fight and promises to be throwing leather every minute he is on the inside of the ropes. The public are cordially invited to attend the workout this after- noon. N[W$°"1ui$PQRT WORLD Copper Cliff (By Willis-m H. Dumsday) (Canadian Press Staff Writer) (CI. By Guardian's Special Wire) TOR/ONTO. April 18-—Winnipeg Monarchs, newly crowned rulers oi Dominion junior hockey, today looked for new fields to conquer. After retrieving the Memorial Cup for the West here Saturday after- noon, the flying purple squad were ready to pit their forces against the world's best in senior ‘hockey. Cfimaxing one oi the most spec- tacular junior series in history the Winnipegers whitewashed Copper Cliff Redmen 7-0. The most popu- lar amateur club to perform here in years, Monarchs w have a bg following in the inte atlonal ser- lee-they make their start tomor- row night against Wembley Lions, English champions. Not one oi the 11,455 cash cus- tomers at Maple Leaf Gardens ex- pected to see a. lopsfded contest either way. Each of the first three games in the best-of-five series was decided by a lone goal, Riedmen taking the first 4-3 and the West- erners the next pair, 6-5, and 2-1. The first two fixtures were decid- ed in overtime. Breaks played a big part in the Nickel Belter's finish, Roy Heirl- mer. their star forward performer of the seres, passed up two golden opportunities to count in the score- less first period when Redmen held a distinct edge. Had those goals been scored, these two great teams might have still been battling for Junior hockey's highest award. 1t was the last junior game for Colf And t Tennis Championships Open Same Date Two of the biggest sporting cvenie this summ in Eastern Canada andthe Maritime: will open here the same date. It was announced Saturday that the Maritime golf champion- ships will be staged at the Bel- vedere Club during the week of August 9. The local club had previous- ly suggested a date in July, but the Assoclallon considered the date in July too early and the change was accepted at a meeting of the club Friday night. The Eutem Canadian ten- nis chamlflpnshbs also Ollfll August 9. WindsorFords Adva n c e .To Hoop Finals WHTDGOIR, April 18 — (C.P.) - Windsor rordsesbtured the Eas- tern Canada ’ senior basketball championship and entered tho fin- al slot for Dominion honors last night by defeating a fighting Montreal MoGill grads machine for the second 1118M in WW5‘ sion. The score was 39-29 and the lead see-sawed most of the way. So fiercely did Grads check the ieae Canadian cira-mplvhl that the slim crowd present found it hard to ‘ " Grads were the same team that was trounced by Fords 57-17 in the first game of the best oi-three series. Fords led 20-11 at half-time but had a hard fight all through the battle. The winners will travel to the coast to meet Vancouver in an attempt to retain their Dominion title. W innipegMonarchsSwamp To Capture Junior Crown Jne lotus of the ltlarltinles" meet! Labor Union Hall Tuesday night hi; final workout at the Labor Union Hall tonight at 8 o'clock. Austin Will Carry English Tennis Hopes Redmen 7-0 B! GAYLE TALBOT Associated Press Sports Writer LONDON, April 18—_(AP)_13e. fore dividing up the summer's Davis Cup laurels between Aus- tralia. Germany and the United States, as the majority oi tennis critim seem to have been doing since Fred Perry turned pm, it might possibly be a good idea to remember that England still hag a pretty useful player in H. W. (Bunny) Austin. Having watched Austin make a monkey out of various persons in the last three Davis cup campaigns this critic, for one, is not going to transfer the big silver bowl from the clubhouse of the( All-Erlgland Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club un- til Austin has had his say in the matter. In other words, there ha; been a lot of loose talk the last three years about trimming poor, weak- looking little ‘Bunny’ in the Davis Cup, but very little has been Gone about it. In six challenge round matches during that period he has blasted in sickening succession such net figures as Frank shields, Sid- ney Wood, Donald Budge, Wilmer Allison and Jack Crawford. His on! loss since England took posses- sion of the Cup in 1933' was to A. K. Quist last year after he had worn himself down beating Craw- ford on the first day. In the face of that record. it is a little difficult to understand why everybody has started shedding ad- vance tears for limgland, Austin is as likely as not to win two singles victories against any country that reaches the challenge round. and England has two doubles teams that were good enough to meet in the finals at Wimbledon last sum- mer. She also has a couple of young singles players. Frank Wilde and Charles Hare, and neither is a soft touch if he appears to be on hi5 game. which is to say that there are goling to be four countries in the running for the Davis Cup- not three. Asked. what he thought of Eng- land’, chances right after Perry turrfed pro. Austin gave answer: "It does look hopeless, doesn't it- he. ha." That pretty well sums up the British attitude, only there will be a great many more hearty chuckles than that if the Bunny and his helpers bring it off. Badminton Play ~ForL”ewis Trophy O p e n s We d. The inter-town‘ badminton matches (beilvreen lsummersidaaxld Charlottetown for the L. G. Lewis 'I‘rophy get underway at the Arm- ourles Wednesday night next at 7 o'clock. .» Charlottetown, [present ludldecrs of the irroplw willfaoe a stiff chal- lenge from the westemers as tho Summerslde delegation will con- sist of l2 teams, all capable orf playing brilliant badminton after a. highly successful season on " nlersld courts. Charlottetown foams willbe made upof tho finalists and semi-fizialists of the recent City championship series. The date of the match in the series to be played at Surmner- side has not yetbeen definitely set. Curlers Attention All curlers, subscribers and all those interested in curling are re- quested to attend a meeting to be held in the Board Room of the City Building on Monday evening, April l9. This meeting is called for the purpose oi discus=ing a. pro- posed artificial ice rink and mod- ern club rooms. L-l746-4-l7-2i. 20 year old Johnny McCreedy and he made it his greatest. The bushy- thatched right wnger, a. standout during the round, fired four of his team's seven goals, including the first marker which spelled victory. Although only 138 pounds, his hoc- key future seems assured. But it was not all Mctireedy- the entire Monarch machine was clicking-and only brilliant goal- tending by Mel Albright kept the count as low as it was. Remi Vandaele. big defencernan with the swivel hips. scored Mon-F archs’ third goal and his first of the series. His mates almost mobbed him after the shot. The other markers, both scored during Mon- archs lust-period stand. came from the sticks of Lucien Martel and Paul Rheault, second-string, wing- ers. Although on the offensive after Monarchs went in front, Rodmen failed to command the play. Little Mel Ferley. Wirlrrpeg goalie who carried a. rabbit's foot for hick. had to kick out only 25 shots while at the other end Albrlght stopped 28. The two goalies hilgged each other at the close. Pnffing a cigarette alone in the corner as he watched his boys pack the last of their togs into a big wooden box, Maxie silverman grin- ned through a circle of smoke. "They can have any of our kids they want," said Redmens coach. when asked if some of his team would play with Monarchs in the international series. "But I don't thlnk_that_ outfituneeiis much help." Arrives Tonight BILL SPARKS Clever Amherst light heavyweight and oftimes referred to as "T m"? Helm of Sprlnghill at the in _a IO-round fight. Sparks, who arrives In the city tonight, will hold C. C. M. BIKES First Shipment of I937, models just arrived l SALE ENDS SAT. Apl. 24 Bikes with (LC. M. Coaster Brakes SPECIAL PRICE $2995 Qne Week ONLY Balance LOO Weekly NO INTEREST NO EXTRA CHARGES BOTH STORES suuurnslnr-cnllninnrrowu ' PAGE SEVEN aoruuo BASKETBALL orunn sroar Yankees And Teams BY ALAN GOULD Associated Press Sports Editor NEW YORK, April l8—-F'amilil1r sound of drum beats and base hits, the old war-cry of the clans and the crowd, draw closer for i937 in the major panorama of United States sports. Baseball's big leagues start the championship season this week. President Roosevelt will throw ; out the first ball tomorrow for the l American League's solo opener in j Washington against Philadelphia. Meantime, Boston Bees and Phil- 1 adelphla Nationals will celebrate i Patriots’ Day by playrlng two gam- es in Boston. This novelty will be followed on Tuesday by a seven- garno program, rounding out the getaway festivities. Marking ofl the customary per- centage for "breaks" or form re- versals. which have become the rule rather than the exception in baseball in recent years, eagle-eyed experts look forward to five-club races in each league. There is one striking difference to be noted however. The news- paper railblrds believe the Nat- ional league's dog-fight will. as formerly. involve the champion. They figure the super-hunted struggle in the American League will be strictly confined to second place. Baseball writers agree with bet- ting men that the world champion Yankees are odds-on choices. Yankees are favored by 87 out oi 106 experts to repeat their pen- are rated the best of five poten- tial challengers. Louis Cardinals top the champion Giants by a substantial margin in installed Favorites Poised At Cardinals Are With Barrier for a hitting comeback in the rol- ni regufnr centreflelder, am "Prince Hal" Schumaclier giva llll(]lll'.‘=l.lfillf‘tl evidence oi a returi to pi ling form, after an erratll 1936 SFZPOI]. Thus fortified in the most vita department of baseball strategy- pitching-Ache Giants appear i4 have fewer “lis" in their lineup than either the Cardinals or any other National League contender. From this corner, they look like "the imlm to beat." I Mt. Allison Hoop Team In T I Reta ' s it e SACKVILLE, N. 13., April I8 - (CPp-ln n rough, hard fight here srliurdny- Ivtount Allison University piled up enough points to retain the hillritinle. intermediate basket- ball title with u two-game score of 50-56 over (since Bay Crusaders. In qnuiiflvilug to meet Ottawl GFLHIS hr-re tomorrow and 'I‘ucsda; nights, the Collegians lost the sec- ond contost 26-19 but u ten-point lead pained in the first game wal sufficient for the narrow margin of victory ‘ The series with Grads will bu Dominion semi-finals if Toronto YMCA. seeks the Dominion ti lumi- Pamde- Tigers. in the p011. , hut it’ Toronto drops out the he . l On the National League side st. l two games here will be for thl Dominion championship. Reflecting the fouls were culled-d’! on the Nova Sections. Art Stone and Chas-liq first-place votes in the Associated Press poll-oz to 28. As was the case a year ago, the Cardinals also are the choice of so-called "wise money" to finish on top. There's no doubt addition of Ionnie Warneke, erstwhile right- handed are of Chicago Cubs, has firing line but they will need an- along with a. comeback by brother Paul Dean, to show the strength they need in the box. Analysis of all the evidence fails for the celebrated 83W!- Many baseball men minimize the Giants’ prospects on the ground that the club achieved a. baseball "miracle" last year. 'I‘hese critics do not see how the New Yorkers can repeat, especially with a. prob- tirement oi Manager Bill Terry. It may prove John McCarthy and Sembo Leslie combined can- not fill the big shoes left by Ten-y. Lou Chiozza looks like a capable replacement at third for Travis Jackson, Hank Leiber appears due BILLIE HOLM, Fighting fortified Cardinals on the main‘. other big year by Dizzy Dean.- to indicate any pronounced edge i “Gas House“ ~ lem at first base created by re- rlefenslve area. BOXINNG at L. P. U. HALL TUESDAY. APRIL 20th at 8.30. Doors Open at 7.30 ' Maritime Light Heavyweight Championships BILL SPARKS. 175 lbs, Amherst 10 three minute rounds Johnston. Mount Allison, and Bot Murrnnl, Glace Bay, were banish- ed for incurring the limit of iour ‘personal fouls. Ogllvle, Sheppari and lJlly, of the visiting team, and Bill Crawford, had three personals each. - . Crawford. star Saokville centre. and lVllke Lighter, husky Crusader l gilard, tied for scoring honors wiffl lllIlC points each. Others promin- .ent in the moring column were Leyvis, oi Glace Bay, with. 81X flmints. and Adair, Mounties cap- ! thin. with four. Both tealrm full- nd to take good advantage 0i the foul shots. Only l3 tries for the basket were successful out of 39 free throws. The half time score was 13-9 for Crusaders. Five minute! before the game ended they nagedaraily bringing them within four points of victory. The Collcgians had difficulty in getting control of the ball around tlla baskets, and Cru- sadcrs took shot after shot only to have the bull bounce off the back- board and roll around the hoop The lilml whistle saw the minin: town boys still keeping the mllega squad bottled up inside their owl.‘ Dunc, 170 lbs., Springhill 6 three min Ringside 75c Taxes Alrea SEMI-FINALS KID NICKERSON, Charlottetown VS. HARRY LIVINGSTONE, Springhill With other preliminaries Reserve 60c Advance Sale Opens Saturday at WORTHYS DRUG STORE ute Rounds Rush 50c dy Included rough play. 8i,