Maurice) Richard (left) Jean Beliveau of the Montreal and CANADIE-NS WITH STALEY "CUP Canadiens smile happily In the dressing room with the Stanley Cup after the final game in Bos- ton Sunday night when Montreal beat the Bruins 5-3. Lots Of Surprises Seen In Maiorleague So For By JOE REICHLER NEW YORK (AP)-Ten days of major league surprises and disappointments. Probably the biggest surprise has been the splendid showing of three San Francisco rookies Or- lando Cepeda, Jim Davenport and Willie Kirkland. The early season hitting and fielding of this trio has improved the Giants by some 50 per cent. ' The biggest disappointment could be the inefficiency of the Chicago White Sox pitching staff, generally conceded to be the best in the majors. SURPRISES Among the happy surprises are Harvey Kuenn's switch from shortstop to centre field for De- troit; Herb Score’s resurgence from his eye injury of a year ago; Bob Cerv’s hitting for Kan- sas City and the development of the Athletics’ Ralph Terry and Jack Urb an into dlependaible pitchers; Ted Kluszewski’s abil- ity to play every day for Pitts- burgh without any, back pains; Bob Purkey’s rise to No. 1 status on Cincinnati's refurbished pitch- ing staff; Robin Roberts return to topflight pitching and rookie Dick Gray's work at third base for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Among the disappointments are the futile attempt by St. Louis to switch Alvin Dark to third and Eddie Kasko to shortstop; the home runs »hit over _the Los Angeles Coliseum 250-foot left field wall, certain to add gray hairs to the heads of Dodger southpaws Johnny Podres, Danny M«cDevitt and Sandy Koufax; the Boston Red Sox’ poor start and their continued failure to get a dependable lef-thanded pitcher; Bob Lemon’s inability to recover from an arm operation; and _ Chicago squad was sporting a fanastic .714 percentage — something bowsky and their hitting power hasn’t been too bad at all. In the‘ °f What is left’ 01' $95/750 fmm Philadelphia’s lack of power. RACE A FLOP The lack of opposition to the New York Yankees in the Amer- ican League may turn out to be -the biggest disappointment of all. Early filops by the White Sox and Red Sox auger ill for the league. On the other hand, the Na- tional League race shapes up as a "close struggle. ‘The Milwaukee Braves, handicapped by injuries to outfielders Bill Bruton and Wes Covington, have started slowly. Even with the early rough going for the Cardinals, the pennant race has all the ap- pearances of another tight stru - gle because of improvement in the Redlegs, Cubs and Giants. There's one normal note—Stan Musial and Ted Williams, last year's batting champions, are still at it. Stan is hitting .467, with four home runs and nine runs batted in. Ted, after miss- ! t II 1 1 Y . ' . . ing action because of illness. has When Johnny Logan hit one of Jack Sanfords pitches for a, collected four hits, four walks, firtaiid slam home run last week, he was “just going for the base] driven in three runs and Smashed I . . . . Sanford. the victim of Logan’s villainy, felt especially abused- h°me’ N0‘ 457 °f ms career 1" ".He swung with one hand" Sanfo lamented. But this was nothing] the last three games‘ new for Logan who often follows t rough with only one hand. # 1 II: It # Henry ‘Hank’ Aaron is 1. man of few but generally well chosen words. Asked if he knew that his fourth inning single was the first hit be ever made off Sanford, he replied, “Yeah, but it won’t be the last." ‘That sounds like a fairly safe statement. . i I! O 3 -5! SPORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN The opening of the baseball season in Los Angeles may be remembered chiefly not for the 78,672 fans that were on hand but for a boner by San Francisco rookie Jim Davenport which prevented the visiting Giants from tying the score in the ninth. ' With the Giants trailing 6-4, Davenport led off the ninth with a double off_the screen in the Coliseum’s short left field. Anoth_er rookie, Willie Kirkland, pounded a drive to deep center and Gino Cimoli got his glove on the ball before dropping it as he hit the fence. ' Davenport, watching the play over his shoulder as he rounded third, missed the bag; He turned back to third but Kirkland was already coming on for a triple, so he continued on toward home and crossed the plate. Third baseman Dick Gray of Los ‘Angeles, who_ saw Davenport miss the bag, called for the ball to ‘inake the putout.l Kirkland scored a little later when Willie Mays was safe on Pee Wee i Reese's wild throw. . \ Poor Davenport. He will long remember that o pening day in Los Angeles. ‘ Allan Cup Series Now Tied I -I KELOWNA, B.C. (CP)-Jaunty Ike Hildebrand didn’t expect his Belleville McFarlrands to win the All-an Cup in four games. His winnings were held at one game Wednesday night when Ke- lowna Packers pounced the‘ Mc- Farland’s 6-0 to tie the best-of- seven series 1-1. Mike Durban, shot with nove- caine and taped around the hips, was easily the best roan on the ice. Gangling Durban smashed a hip muscle in the first game Mon- day when McFar1>ands won 6-1. Doctors said: “Go ahead and \ They came from near and far for the opener at Los Angeles but this story takes the cake. ' One business man who flew his own plane from Phoenix, Arizona. to see the game had to walk 24 blocks afterward to find; a taxicab. He figured out it took him less time to fly to Los finimleles from Arizona than it did to get from the ball park to his 0 ,e . Makes a good yarn, anyway. ' it ‘II 1! III 9| Here’s a University of Wisconsin pitcher that has certainly at- tracted the attention of baseball scouts. George Schmid pitched a perfect game for his college last week as his teammates walloped opposition pitching to win 16-0. The young hurler struck out 18 as he retired 27 straight batters. In’ the fourth inning he struck out one and in the ninth three; in all Lee Walls belted three homers and drove in eight runs Thursday Angeles Dodgers 15-2 befoer 10,- 194 shocked fans at Los Angeles Coliseum. Walls hit all his homers over the 40-foot-high left -field screen 250 feet from home plate. In the American League Kan- sas City took over second place from Detroit on an easy 7-2 vic- tory over the Tigers at Kansas City. First-place New York was rained out at Washington. Chicago White Sox suffeed their fifth straight loss, 6 - 4, at the hands of Cleveland Indians and the Red Sox defeated Balti- more Orioles 4-3 in 10 innings at Boston. SPENCER HITS AGAIN day game Daryl Spencer batted in the winning run in the last of the ninth for the second straight day as the Giants nipped St. Louis Cardinals 6-5 at San Fran- cisco. _ In two NL night games Mil- waukee was at Cincinnati and In the other National League’ seven. Gene Fodge went the dis- 1 I Pittsburgh at Philadelphia. I _ Walls got his first homer off, as Chicago Cubs stomped on Losl loser Don Drysdale in the first. another off Roger Craig in the fifth and the third off Ron Ne-3 gray in the seventh. The last N a t i on al League player to drive‘ in eight runs in l a game was Mllwauke-,e’s Joe Ad-i cock, who did it against the‘ Giants July 19, 1956. The major league record is 12, set by Jim .Bottomley of St. Louis in 1929. ‘THREE OTHER I-IOMERS There were three other homers: in the game: Bobby Thomson got .another for Cubs and Charlie Neal and Don Zim.-mer for Dod- ' gers. The Cubs scored seven of their runs in a wild fifth inning and ,held a 14-0 lead at he end of tance for Cubs. Duke Snider was back with Dodgers after losing a day’s pay, $275, for hurting his arm while he! and Zimmer were trying to pitch balls over the rim of the Colis- eum Wednesday. The Athletics backed up the- Three Homers By Walls Cause Of Dodgers Upset ; T seven—l1it pitching of kiiucklebal- ler Wally Burnette and reliefer Tom Gorman with a 12 - hit at- tack against loser Bob Shaw and: two other Detorit pitchers. Vic Powers broke out of a slump; with a double and a single forji three runs for the As. Chicago ‘got four r-uns in the fifth inning at Cleveland then were halted by winner Don Mos- sie. Russ Nixon and Minnie Min-i oso hit home runs and Chico Car-; rasquel a two — run double for} Cleveland. Jim Wilson was the? loser. At Boston Dick Gernert singled with the bases loaded in the 10th and Gene Stephens, running for Ted Williams, beat by a stride Gene Woodling’s throw to the plate. Mike Fornieles went the distance for a seven-‘hit victory. Billy O’Del-l, third Orioles hurler, was the loser. Hank Sauer hit a two run homer in the fourth for San Fran- cisco and a solo shot in the sixth. Billy Muffet, brought in in the eighth, was charged with the loss. Ray Crone was the winner. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Duke Snider got in and out of the Dodger doglhioulse in just 24 hours. After he hurt his right elbow -in some horise«plIay'Wednesiday, he was ordered off the payroll until VIII! condition to play aga-.i-n. But he lost only one day’s pay -«for Wednesday night's game- beeause he wa-s back in the start- ing lineup Tlhursdlay. Manager Walt Alston s a i d Sinider told him Tlhursday his arm hurt somewhat but he felt he was in condition to play, “so I’m going to let him play.” Snider got the elbow injury when he and infielder ‘Don Zim- mer engaged in a pre-game con- test to see whether they could throw a baseball over the Coli- seum rizm. HIT THE ROOF Snider Off And On Payroll As Result Of Horseplciy Aslston and general manager E. J. (Buzzy) Bavasd went into a tizzy when they heard albvou-t it. Then came the order that he was off pay until in condition to play. Jim Gilliam played left field Wednesday night when the Chic- ago Cubs beat the Dodgers 7-6. At a reported $42,500 a year salary, the one-game stay in the doghouse figures out to a penalty Of aJIJO(l.l)II $275. “'I‘hey’re making an example of me," Snider said. “'I)ha.t’s okay, t-hey’re justified.” He conceded it was “a stupid stunt,” but he was miffed at the no-pay-until-play order. “Maybe it would [have been dif- ferent if we hadn’t lost. I hate to lose, too,” he said. Said Alston: “If somebody gets hurt in a game, that’s something else. But to get hurt fool-ing around like this . . . " By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer Every morning at 7:30 a jockey in outlandish civilian clothes ap- pears for work at the Fort Erie race track, a bettors‘ playground in Southwestern Ontario near the‘ American border. He’s been part of the track scene for 28 of his 48 years and now he's learning why horses r-un-from an office desk. Herbie Lindberg- has known only one thing about the track during his well-paid 1930-57 career as a jockey: Climb aboard -a steed and head it home over the shortest possible route in the fast- est possible time. He did well in his ‘day, too, averaging more than $10,000 a year around tracks in Canada, the United States and Cuba and the switch from jockey to cler=k- “just call me an office boy,” he says-came a bit hard, but he’s far from bitter. Now, with little more than memories, he's one of the hundreds of behind-the-scenes racetrack workers. BORN IN SWEDEN The story of Sweden - born Herbie’s life is much the same as many jockeys or, for that mat- ter, athletes who have reached the top to the applause of fans and the big paydays and then thunmbed from the easy - come- easy-go days into obscurity. And almost broke. The sandy-haired little guy who other innings he fanned two. That's not a bad afternoon's play’ if yo)“ mmk you can stand‘ I1 * the pain.” I Durban played and it was his) hustle that got Packers back on the right foot. 22 Golfers work. ‘ an 1-\ 0 V Chicago Cubs, who shared the bottom rung in the Nationali League with Pittsburgh Pirates in 1957, certainly have not com-; menced the 1958 season true to last season's form. Tl1e_Windy_ City boys are really blowing and the rest of the league is feeling the breeze. When we wrote this column the unheard of as far as the Cubs are concerned. Last time the Cubs got home in front in their circuit was in: l I 1954 and'they lost out to the Detroit Tigers four games to three: for the world championship. We don't for a moment think the Cubs are headed for any such laurels in 1958 but they are at least, after a week’s play, serving notice that they can topple the best of . LAS VEGAS: NeV- (AP) them. They really hung it on the highly-respected St. Louis Twenty - tW0 golfers Th-ursdayi Cardinals trouncing them in the first four games. The Cards and Were 501d in th6,1Bg81 C‘a‘10u*I-tal Musial finally caught up with the Chicago gang in the fifth en- auction in the Tournament of ‘ counter and Los Angeles Dodgers and Johnny Podres made it two, Champions for a record $266,000. losses in a row for Bob Scheffing’s charges. 1 Ken Venturi of san Francisco was That looked more like it and nobody was surprised. But Chicago a the mg buy at $24,ooo_ refused to play the part of the losers anymore and- Wednesday up-, 1:11 the cayowtta, individuals or set Los Angeles with a thrilling ninth-inning rally made possible by: syndicates bid on 3 player-S Chuck Tanner’s pinch home run land Bobby 'l‘homson’s two-run‘ chance to win Ten per 'cent of-fl doutllgth Tanner and Thomson are former Milwaukee Braves and.g1:m?: 1:1 the ‘gm; goe; “ii the may have acquired a taste of the pennant fever while they were} Th’ 1 , ancer ‘un. ‘ with the champions. . , 1 e uclcy 1 tier on the winner The Cubs have a couple of great pitchers in Drott and Draw- I this year Wm C0113“ 40 P91‘ °'~’“‘t first seven games played (five with the Cards and two with the the net 05 $239300- Dodgers) the Cubs have managed a total of 38 runs. or 5.44 runs per‘. L351 yea!‘ the P001 f0!‘ this game. While they were garnering the 38 the opposition was rolling,‘ fournament Was $255.650 With 23 up a 31 total. 1 players sold. Singer Frankie Laine In comparison let’s look at the showing of the Cards andsand his associates collected $95,- Dodgers who are supposed to be the greatest threats to Milwaukee: 634 on the winner, Gene Littler. Braves. The Dodgers own a 3-5 record and the Cards standing is; 2-5. . The Dodgers in the first eight contests of theirs scored. 39 runsl llnferesfed In ggltfiggé the <1>{I>Dosing teailnslkcross home plate on 53 occasions. 44; .- . mar er - ' _ . °c3...“:.‘;:.’..:’y..ti::.:.r°.*:..:';“'i...ia':.:‘;:.; Fmdms Players I 9 Dodger Ditching was pounded for 6-7 ru r ' th' I but an impressive record for a itchi tufllsthpet gamell any mg! TORONTO (CF) "" Big Four had expressed as top calibre lp)on Sdal :12: ‘even’ t e Bra-Vesilf tb 11 U ' 1 b ‘ be - 7 . _ 3 d d ’, 00 a nion cus are inr 2:5 hammered all over the lot on the I:()Stha(fCCaSIE(l)I‘1SpII;‘}I1ai 1?: mJ§’§’e | ested in recruiting players from threi:D‘I:iec:atrance. Johnny Podres was able to pick up two of the, the English professional R-ulgiby St’ L£fi‘§5éard_ 1 (League to play Canadian profes- mas played seven games and collected 35 runs. sional football - especially big “with good bursts of‘ The Huddersfield Daily Exam- ‘Veyiner quotes Hamilton Tiger-Cat 35 president J. G. (Jake) Gauda-ur‘_. l956A::1eag(1)i?i ll/>I<leI‘ioVi:lkl(:ceiw}i'3ii‘gaVTi‘: ‘gIIIg0I":l;I1It lggdglzfs Iasliihdayn 03 the; fifsfesrayéllfveglinvgmeilzsegggg3:31 till llicmselves know all about losing Pennants by a hair. I: 1942 g:IlTSI Salary for 3 year of bemeeen $4“! in 1951 they went intq playoffs and lost out on both occasions ‘O00 and 35-000 “to the right man” Cardinals trimmed them two straight in 1942 and Giants ousted them I0 play football. wears bold striped suits, violent yellow and green clip - on how ties, multi - colored shirts and shiny poin-ted shoes, is singularly happy. “I wouldn’t change any- thing if I had to do it all over again,” he says. “Let’s look at it this way. I've got a wife and 20 - month - old baby and another on the way. I’m making $15 a day, six days a week, for nine months of the year. I’m doing a job I want to do at a pla-ce where I want to work—around the track. “My chances for advancement are good. Now I look up horses’ breeding, check on stable colors and do some paper work. Maybe next year I can make $25 or $30 a day as a patrol judge, or pad- dock judge or clerk of the scales. WENT FIRST CLASS “Sure, I’ve made maybe $300,- 000, but I went first class and it’s gone.” He never had a drink and never bet a horse. He spent his money on night clubs, clothes, cars. He bought a couple of homes but "everything seemed to go when my first wife divorced me.” Name a big stakes race and Lindberg has been a part of it. He had mounts in the Kentucky Derby in 1943 and 1945 and was out of the money both times. He finished fourth-“by three dirty little noses” - in the $100,000 Santa Anita handicap in 1947. All told, he has been in four $50,000 handicaps. He rode the filly Sally Fuller to victory in the 1935 Queen’s Plate. “She broke her maiden that race and never won again,” he recalls. Part Of The Track Scene For Twenty-Eight Years One of his fondest memories MacLeun & Son SALES -& SERVICE > Electrical Contractors 117 Kent St. Dial 7186 in 1951 when _Bob_by Thomson hit that historic homer. What al 'G311‘d3UT Tetllrlled last Friday couple of April wins would have meant to the Brooks on those ‘F0111 a Week—lcmg scouting trip to 0903510113 Britain. The trip was sponsored Motor Rewinding and Small Appliance Repairs Yes, getting those games In the win jointly by Hampton and Momreaip l thi t‘ ‘ is real money in the bank. co umn 3‘ ‘me of yearl Ajguegtes. I I 3,: ‘footer says. goes back to a day in 1942 at Belmont when he piloted Bo1ing- broke to a world record of 2227.3 for the 11/2 miles in the $10,000 Manhattan Handicap and beat the famed Whirlaway in the bar- gain. That afternoon he won two other $10,000 handicaps to be- come what he claims to be “the only rider to win three stakes in one day.” . RODE 10.000 HORSES He was aboard Stymie for a second-place finish in 1947, just a year before the one-time world’s greatest_mon_ey - winning horse with $909,835 in purses, was re- tired from racing. During his career, Lindberg had 10,042 mounts, 1,242 victories, 1,111 seconds, 1,175 thirds and 6,- 514 unpla-ced. His mounts earned purses ‘totalling $2,755,318. Herbie, who has never su-flfered a seirous injury as a “jock” and had no trouble weighing 101 or 102 pounds, now is up to 104. “It‘s this easy living. Guess 'it’s catching up with me,” the five- Durelle Orclered To Meet Holt For Title Bout LONDON (AP)-South African Mike Holt Thursday was named the outstanding contender for Canad-ian Yvon Durelle’s British Empire light heavyweight boxing title. The British Empire and Com- monwealth ch-am-pionsl1i:p commit- tee also ordered Drurelle to meet Holt within three months. SOCCER RESULTS LONDON (Reuters) - Results of soccer matches played Thurs- day night in the United King- dom: English League Division III Southern Northampton 1 Torquay 0 Walsall 3 Bournemouth 1 Division III Northern Accirngton 3 Barrow 2 Bradford 2 Scunthorpe 3 . OF ’ci-(Am_o'r_TeTovvr~_i ./EWP/[GIT .€0€(’lc?llS‘tS‘ 113 Kent St. Near Queen SPRED SATIN " ROGERS HARDWARE G0. LTII. pitchers for today's major league ——Roberts (1-0) vs. Bulil (1-0) -Bmsnan (1-1) vs Monzant (1-1) Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) - PiI‘O(b!alblIle games (‘won-lost records in par- enltheses): I American League Kansas City at vOh.ica.go——-Uiiban (1-0) vs Wynn (1-1) Washington at Boston-Ramos (1-0) vs Bauma-nn (00) Detroit at Cleveland (N )-Bun- ning (1-1) us Narleski (ll-1 New York at Baltimore (N- Ford (1-0) vs Johnson (0-1) National League Pittsburgh a.t Cincinntai (N)- Kline (0-1) vs Haddix (1-0) Philadelphia at lVI1i'1wa-ukee (N) St. Louis at Los Angeles (N- Brosnan (1-1) vs Monzant (1-1) St. Louis at Los Angeles (N)- Wehmeier (0-0) vs MoDevitt (0-1) Clhicago at San Francisco (N) Casper Leads ‘In First Round Of Champ Tourney LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-Billy Casper knocked seven strokes off par for ya 65 Thuvnsday and three- time winner Gene Littler lodged a threat to make it four in a row in the first round of the $40,000 '1‘.o‘urn>amen-t of Champions. Can- ada’s Stan Leonard was right in the midst of the fight for the $10,- 000 first prize. , «Casper toured the par 36-36, 7,048—yard Desert Inn Country Club course in 33-32-65, and Lit- tler did it in 35-33-68. Stan Leonard of Vancouver came in with 35-34-69. BASEALL ROUNDUP American League 1 Balti 000 020 010 0—- 3 7 Boston 100 010 010 1- 4 .9 1‘ Pappas. Zuverink (7) 0 D91)‘ (8) and T1”i,andos..Gif1Sb91'g, 18)?‘ Fornieles and White. L-ODe11- HRS: Ba1—Gai‘dner; BOS~—Pl(3I‘- sall. ; Detroit 000 010 100- 2 7 2 Kansas Cy 200 021 11x- 7 12 li Shaw, Val-enntineti (5) PI'€5‘k0l (7) and Hegan; B~urnet~te. Gor-‘ man (7) and House. W — BUI‘-i nete. L-Shaw. Chicago 000 040 000- 4 8 1‘ Cleveland _ Wilson, Rudolph (3) Fischeri (4) staley (5) Moore (7) and Bat- tey, Lollar (7); Tomanek, Mos_s1. (5) and Nixon. W-Mossi. L—WlI-‘ son. I-IRS: Cle-Nixon. M11105‘)- New York at Washington. Pdds rain. National League _ Chicago 202 070 310-15 9 1 Los Angeles 000 000 110- 2 10 0; Fodge and TapP€$ Drysdale.’ Craig (3), Negray I6). Koufax (9) and Roseboro. Drylsdale. Hrs /Chi Walls (3). Thomson. LA—-Neal, Zi.-mlmer. » St. Louis 101 110 001-5 13 2 S. Francisco 000 301 002-6 11 3 Mizell, Muffett (8) and Katt; Burnside, Wotrhington (3), Crone (6) and Schmidt, Thomas (9). W-Crone. L-Muffett. I-I'Rs: SF- Sauer (2). St.L—Katt. Milwaukee 111010101- 6 8 0 Cincinnati 000 000 200- 2 7 0 Spaihn and Crandall; Lawrence, Babe (4), Freeman (6). Km)?- stelin (8) and Biaiuley. L — Law- rence. HRS: Mil-Anaron (2). Pittsburgh 114 001 000- 7 12 0 Phila 000 000 004- 4 13 3 Friend, Face (9) and Foiiles; Simmons, Gray (3), Miller (4), Qualtens (6), Lipetni (8) and Lop- ata. W — Friend. L - Simmons. HRS: Phi’-la-Bowman. International League Montreal 310 310 120-11 21 3 Miami 000 000 000- 0 1 1 Lasorda‘ and Teed; Hirst, J. Anderson (2) Stewart (5) Fred- eriok (8) and Bucha, Coker (5). L-Hirst. National League W L Pct. GBL Chicago 6 2 750 - San Francisco 6 3 .66} 1/5 Milwaukee 5 3 .625 1 Cincinnati 4 3 .571 11/2 Philadelphia 3 4 .429 2% Pittsburgh 3 5 .375 3 , Los Angeles 3 6 .333 31/2 St. Louis 2 6 .250 4 American League ' W L Pct. GBL New York 7 2 .778 - Kansas City 6 3 .667 1 Detroit ' 6 4 .600 11/2 Washington 4 3 . 571 2 Cleveland 5 5 .500 214 Baltimore 3 5 .375 31/2 Boston 3 7 .300 4V2 Chicago 2 7 .222 5 Bill Quac-kenlbush of Detroit Red Wings became the first de- fenceman to win the Lady Byng trophy nine years ago today, in the 24th year the trophy had been awarded. Quackenbush played a full 60-game schedule without get- ting a single penalty to win the trophy for the player best com- bining gentlemanly conduct with a high standard of playing abil- ity. Page Gonzales Ancl Trabert Win NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -i For Title SC|‘O: Pancho Gonzales and Tony TF3’. bert won singles matches Wed-I nesday night as a touring profes- sional tennis contingent continued its North American tour. The’ prgs play in Montreal today. Gonzales defeated Lew Head of Australia to stretch his lead over Head to 35-29 in a 100-Same 59' 113 000 0lx— 6 9 0, “es Trabert defeated Pancho Se- gura. 1 Moore Signs For May Scrap SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Light hea,vywe1.g.ht c ham pion Archie Moore signed Tl1u=I'5d'ay 501‘ 3 May 26 non-title 10-rounder here with Ohanley Norkns, an un- 1-,anke;d heavyweight. Moore meets Willie Besmanoff May 2 in Louisville, Ky. Wants Giants To Go Home SAN F'RANC‘.I'SCO (ASP)-True to its trad-ition _as home base for the free-wheeling thinker, S_an Francisco Monday came up Wlth an anti-Giant crusader on the very day the transplanted major leagu-ers from New York were being welcomed here with parades, sp e e_ c h e s and other glorifying heroics. Michael Grieg, a poet and play- wright of sorts, said in a letter to Mayor Cliristop-her he might stand on the sidelines during the parade and shout “Giants, go home." Grief branded the Giants. “a band of strangers who have noth- ing (better to do than to hit a little ball around land that could be used for far better purpose." The $15,000,000 San ‘Francisco proposes to spend building the Giants a new stadium, said Greig, could better be used for schools, library books, higher teacher salaries and maybe even (helping out a poet now and then. A -1. . Happy Fisherman SEE US AND CHOOSE‘ SCOTT-ATTWATER 11 Models to Choose From Easy Terms. —Also- McCulIoch Chain Saws Keith Carmichael Ltd. B1-ackley Pt. Rd Dial 6423 “If we sell it, we service it” The GllaY ‘ for the world welterweight title m A‘ Fri., April 25, 1953 ___.__,____X\ ‘ Akins, Martinez Meet In June P NEW YORK (AP) - Vingfl tkins of St. Louis, and Vince Martinez of Paterson, N_J,, meet. I « I I the St. Louis Arena Friday, June 6, the International Boxing club said Thursday. The two are the finalists of “Ill elimination tournament arranged : after Carmen Basilio of g_ racuse, N.Y., a;bdic:ated am, If‘ winning the would rniddlewejgm crown. V The 15-round bout will ‘be shown on home TV. "—‘———"‘“'$-’ Halfback Signs 9‘ Fourth Time With _ Bombers 9*‘ ca‘ WINNI-PEG (CP) - Halfba Buddy Leake has signed for his fourth season with‘ Winnipeg 3]“. Bombers of the Western 1m provinical Football Union, it announced Tuesday. .1“ Wag Fly and Tackle Boxes From 49c FIRESTONE _ $115 HOME & AUTO’ ,,,,“;“§ CO.LTD. . F 137 Great George St: . nusw gm’; lib _It’s the newest development in Interior paint-perfect for walls, ceilings and woodwork! JELLED MAGIC IS NOW” AVAILABLE AT... MOORE & MclEOD LTD.) “SHARE mun GOOD HEAL TH _ BE A BLOOD nouon" ARE YOU“ I Egon HEALTH BE A