.2’ MAY 2s, 193a ter Struggle- u P. club may PW;- from Gilbert on forces, 6-4, 8-2, 6-3. W mu measure if u New Yorker encountered. liiullll lave ‘my the next five games. May's matches. played i: “m; Canadian pair, Walter Mar- ti in the doubles. m. victories gavs the United bun from Mexico n Baltmofis this nek. lott and Van Ryh gave a convinc- hyexliibltion of doubles as a team rhlch left very little t0 be desired. ‘they had a slashing attack which befuddled their Canadian rivals st times, ‘ihey played the corners, slipped luball down the side lines, smashed through points between their two opponents or right down the middle I the couri. ’l*heir volleying was recite, the lobbing was fairly well pilyed, the only fault being found Ilihthe variable winds, which swept lcrosi the court and played hob with hball. llainville and Martin seemed to liiuiable to penetrate the guard of lott and Van Ryn with the pair sliding back slashing drives from ittlieck court. Occasionally bhe Canadians did ully but only in the second set Iheii they carried off four games In they successful. illBS PRACTICE l0 N I ii Ii T Pnctico for tho Cubs baseball him i1 called for this evening at EWMJEKVJQIL Grounds st 6 p. m. BERT COOPER, . . BOWLING iiiin siiiiis iiiiiiiiiiis iiiiigiiiii i di ns Eliminated my)‘: 08in Davis Cup Play .- Put Up Bet- Guardian's Special Wire) “horrors. hellish/lay 2Z- - st tes Dav up cam “iuufilil... slveep of its American u tie with Canada by wlnnlns ugmal two singles matches on the m‘ courts of the Wilmington Coun- w . h first match, Lester R. Stoc- mtgignt number three ranking L05 Angeles, defeated Niinns, captain of the Do- mini 1,; X, Shields oi New York. m“ of Laird its. tVl/‘thhtt t 1' 6-1, 6-3, 6-4, u e millsollderfot indicate the battle the the Californian s i in the first set, ths only fiiggoming in the fifth game Ilieii Stoefen cracked his service st. bvgehjelds after taking a two-set m, was given plenty of trouble by m, the Canadian intercollegiate mmplon, in the third set, the Do- niuioh player taking a 4-1 lesd be- m shields regained his stride to the nce of Dwight F. Davis, donor oiths coveted trophy, had no bear- mp1] the outcome of the series as {he Americans gained the deciding int yesterday 11111911 (390119 M. with, and John Van Ryn defea- ih and Marcel Ralnville, 6-0, 6-; Mes team the right to meet the and Gussis Blamuiro. HOCKEY WRESTLING Records 000 Scots On (By Glylo Talbot Associated illorts Writer) The British amateur ed Jimmy Wallace, in; Scottish carpenter, with scoring ever shot lolwhlr. to win by 14 and l3, the historic tourney. States to take the lorofls the Atlantic. which swarmed after the watched ths long-hitting Little remember the invaders red-hot. mvmlns round and his in; five holes. WB-llloe didn't win a hole. Wallace returned from the ended a solid lane of Scots NfW As Golfing Title Goes To Little Winner _Of 557E181. Amateur Championship Receives Great Ovation From Crowd Of 12,- Play of Qginpetitive Golf. Press trophy. PRESWICK, Scotland, May z1._ golf crown "mil firmly on the head of Law- son Liiils today after the 23-year old American had literally blind. shsrp-shoug. the greatest exhibition of competitive in the champ- Tho hllllly youngster fired a as "1 *1" momlnr round of the final Sllordu to unmi- all irlecoads for t third native son oi the’ Unifrs championship Lawson Receives Great Ovation The seller! or llpwflrds of 12,000, match new all-time record for the classic 511m 11D this trickey seaside course terod the professional course under most trying conditions. will cord for 69 hung up by MacDonald Smith and smashed the standard oi '71 set by E. Blackwell. That sizzling round also created a new low for championship rounds. ‘*6 l0 be 1! up iit the end of the three under par score for the conclud. been s. 35 hole match did Little yield to par. The lapse occurred at the sixth hole two puts from six feet out for c. five. Otherwise he was even with Par or under regulation figures. When the new champion and 23rd hole, where the amazing whitest cheering made a triumphant pathway Smashed Marvellous Dis- Roccioldrs of their disappoint- ifnent over Wallace's crushing de- eat. the natives of the land u; heather love a great golfer and when Little made a charming 511mb in accepting the trophy the? mterfllilted him after every srlerrlzrtence with a. booming cheer, °11Ehout the sensational re- wrll-brceklns match Little's face was a 135k of determination but he smiled when the cup was pro- sented to him by the venerable Mllfqllll Alisa. acting foi- in Prince of Wales. A5 l" B8 13.000 Boots are con- cerned Little now supplants Bobby Jones and the veteran Hany Var- don a: the world's greatest golfer. They saw him shoot 28 holes in 018M llllder par, including seven birdies and an eagle three for a Little's 66 in ths morning Shat- re- amateur Ollly oncs in what was to hon; "here he required Men's Doubles-Enock Sullivan presented with Rev. Bennett MacDonald cup. Men's Singles-Harold Gaudet Manager presented with L. B. Gallant cup. S "THE TOBACCO OF QUALITY." rHlt-l) Ell/er)’ plgc’ you till and every clfiarette you roll with UH] CHUM QiVQS you that mild, mellow, inimitable Flavour that has delighted Canadian smokers since the '70s by me CHUM-youlllikeit l . “v5 Ti-iF POKER HANDS Fl N E ,.‘.i([Y ‘_ CUT Baltimore of ottdwd Glebe in 19:0. and the 130111-111"!!! 11111101‘ 111")‘ "I 12a m" l general manager Billy Evans com- Ipleted s deal with owner Seven Meet R e c o rd s Broken (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL. May ZT-Glcbe Col- legiate Institute of Ottawa still hold tbs Glsssco Challenge Cup, emblem of tho championship of tho McGill University annual 11 tel-scholastic track and field meet. Teams from 5 schools in Quebec and Ontario went down to defeat before the Glebe boys here yesterday in the 14th annual meeting as the Ottawa school ran up a total of 44 points to take the aggregate team cham- pionship by an easy n18.18111- Threo Dominion Junior records and seven meet records fell under the pressure engendered by an en- try list of 307 competitors. Most sensational individual performance in record-breaking was Cloud Moore's three-record smash in the senior Javelin throw. The young athlete from Nepean High School, Nspean, Ont., tossed the spear 180 fest 21.4 inches. shattering his own M00111 lnterseholssilo rocord of 180 feet 7k inches. the 1301111111011 interscholsstic senior record of 173 feet He. inches set by J. Courtright 5 inches set in Vancouver last July 1 by Jim MoCammon of Burnaby.‘- B. O. Ken McAdam of Ottawa Glebc N‘, Bis-is oi Ottawa Commercial High School won the senior discus throw and sot up a 110w meet and Dominion Junior record with s toss -- w»: y.» 514 “"0...- runs proved sufficient for The Maples held through the game by the brilliant hurling of “I-Ien" Fisher, fell on his ninth for eleven hits him coming in the third and ninth. sJE LIHARIJUITEIUWN uumwmn “miSPOIIT WOII PIRATES TAKE"‘Just Won’t Be ciiisi GAME FRllMMAPlES Counter Rally By Los- ers In Ninth Falls Short of Mark - Score is 8-6 - Game Protested. Two mighty uprisings ‘in the third and ninth innings in which they scored seven of their eiglgt e north-end Pirates to beat back the Maples 8-6 in the third game of the Industrial League played over the week-end. But at that the winners barely caught the wire in just check all offerings in the last half of the four hits. one a long triple by Larter and three runs but saw their efforis go for naught as tho- Pirate hurler strike out MoFarlane steaded to with the tying rims on the sacks. Ernie Robin, southpaw ace of the Maples was also in great form and with the exception of the two dis- estrous frames had the Pirates eat- ing out of his hand, nine of the registered against hopeful of victory for their native tournament. It was a close struggle the learns X101. gave the quarc shouldered p waged and a battle that had the Egeierican a memorable ovation. Smashes Former Mark; fans highl excited all the way Ty 11111-11. woman and child who through. 0m the. fifth to the ninth the score reamlned deadlock- sd at 4 to 3 for the Pirates, both hurlers l'll.nl§‘S worked into scoring posit- bearing down hard as ions. The Pirates deserved their win. they played the steadier ball afield as their three errors to the seven Maple misses will attest. Maples however are protesting the game, their manager claiming interference by the base judge in the sixth inning on a ground ball that had eluded the Pirate pitcher. to the clubhouse for the vic _ BOX SCORE the vanquished. There the tgsprecllard? regs“??? mgr higpofilliiilgungspitlt 7mm” M’ R’ H Tb Pr’ A E w" Ttimflllled Dfltlfilltly for anoth- "Little" Wallace said afterward. F‘ Cmmms‘ s5 ‘ 5 0 2 2 1 0 1 91' 100k at Little. who ducked in_ “I8 the’ greatest 80H," I ever’ E. Toombs,1b. 5 1 0 0 6 1 0 to bhg clubhouse w change his wawhedy. F. Gallant, cf . 4 1 2 4 2 0 0 CIOHWH. 1'01‘ Presentation of the J-Uuenim’ 5 1 0 0 0 1 o G,Connors,1f.511 1 1 g0 H.Fisher,p...5 l 2 3 0 1 I E.Larter,3b..5 oo o o o1 V.Williams,ri.4 1 2 3 a o o ———- A. Chiprnan, c . 4 2 2 4 13 0 0 s ' NATIONAL LEAGUE E. Blanchard, lbl 0 0 0 1 0 0 43811172773 E. Blanchard batted for Toombs in Pittsburgh ninth. 3t. 101118 Maples AbRHTbPoAE Chicago B. Don-oh, 1b .. s 2 2 z 11 0 0 New York . J. Stanley, 3b . 4 2 2 2 0 0 3 Boston .. E, Larter, c 8c r15 2 1 3 8 4 0 Brooklyn .. E. Robin, . .. 5 0 1 1 0 4 1 The C. Y. M. L. Badminton Club philadeuphia _ 9 20 J55 c“ Stanley‘? 5S n 4 o 0 o 1 3 O "01""! “P the" l°°=°11 Flldill’ even" Cincinnati '1 24 .226 B, McInnls, 2b . 5 o 2 2 2 1 a ing with the presentation of cups h MCu-aflane‘ 1; 3 u 1 1 u o 0 W 111° Wlllllm °1 the club tlllm- AMERICAN LEAGUE L.DOll'Ol1,1'f&C 4 o o o a 1 o mellt- D. Stanley, u . 4 o o 0 0 o 0 Rev. Bennett MacDonald presid- _ M_ Gurmiey. 55 1 0 0 9 n 9 0 o4 and presented the trophies. Clevehnd 3g s 9 11 21 13 '7 Wlwwm of i=1“ lmPhles WW1 New York M. Gormley batted for c. Stanley Ladies Doubles-Miss Mary Mac- Den-oi; __ _ in ninth, 91111011!!! 811d 119110 91111491. Ple- wgshington . L, Doiron replaced Lartcr catching sontcd with Rev. Urban G-lllis cup. 9t. Louis . in sixth. Mind Doubles-Miss O11 Arscn- Boston 15 19 .441 E. Lartei- replaced DOlrOn in right ault and Larry Gallant, presented Philadelphia l5 l9 .441 field in 6th. with Harold Gaudet cup. Chicago . . . . . . . . .. 12 2o .375 Sllmma y --Efll‘ill‘d Hill-st P1111165. 5; Maples, 3. Runs batted in: Fyobin, 3: Williams, Chipmzm, F. Connors, Gallant, O'Neil, Fisher, Elmer Lar- , ter J. Stanley, E, Larter McInnls; three base hits, Cliipman, E. Latter; 2 base hits, F. Gallant. (2), Fisher, Williams, Mclnnis: hits: off Fisher. 9; off Robin, 11; vzalks: by Fisher, 3. (Doiron, J. Stanley. FacFsrlane); by l-‘tobin. 1 (Toombs): hit by pitcher, Fisher 2, (Doiron, McFar- lane); wild pitch, Robin, 2: strike- outs by Fisher, 11, (J. Stanley, Rob- in, G. Stanley (3), MacFarlnne, L. Dolron (3), D. Stanley (2); by Rob- in, ll (F. Connors (2), E, Toombs (3), J. O'Neil, G. Connors, H. Fisher, Elmer Latter (2), Chipnlfill. Umpires—At the plate. F. McCubc; on the bases. G. Francis. Score by Inning s 89 04 03 along wfi: 4:47.11 1234587 Pirates...00l3000 Maples...1000200 Fe;c—ll Goes To Red Sox (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) CLEVELAND, May 2'l—“The batteries for todays game: For Boston-Ferrell nnd Fbrrell." The umps call, significant the first brother battery; t-hc Ma- jor Leagues have soon in may soon ring through the Stadla of the American League. Wes Ferrell, Cleveland's boy "hero" of '29 who in his first four years of major league experience established himself as the first pitcher in history in win 3n or more games ear-h season. has bo- come the property of Boston Red Sox, where his brother, Rick, does the back-stopping, - A holdout, as usual this Wes Ferrell went on the volun- tary retired list rather (‘nan arrepi. a contract offered by the lllfllilllS. l-lls suspension was listed when Tliomns Yawkey of Boston for a trade of Ferrell and outfielder Dick Porter; for pitcher Bob Welland and oiit- lweved the lll-noilnd shot 45 feet ‘ll fielder Bob Seeds of Boston nnd a inches in tho morning field trials to set a new meet and Dominion 11111- ior record. cash sum said to be in excess $26,000. of __i____ To reduce flin hazards on alr- planes an elcctromamieiic valve drama born from the works o! the erweiglii. champions of the world- was ready for the staging tomor- row night in Madison Square Gar- den's Bowl on Long Island with the only worrisome factor in sight in front. l king from Vancouver whose is challenged for only the second time in ring history by a ruling lightweight champion, Barney Ross joined his rival in the City today as the fellow in charge of he did most oi’ last week. switching from and cloudiness. would all but cer- tify a. crowd of fully 65,000 and ze- oeipts booming up around the $300,000 mark Ior and lightweight rulers since Benny Britton in the old Velodrome failed to halt the rush for tickets, and if postponement for one ‘disy should be necessitated by unsettled seats, the duel figures ‘ed its climax when Campbell got a oflhomer with the bases loaded after y-en rs. XPRT.‘ Chicago, one on for the Senators. periodically penetrating his defence I hiinohi-d hitting by Detroit enabled has been invented that shuts off the Tigers to defeat the Red Sox Licked” Says Ross On Eve Of Fight Receipts For 1m Bout Tonight Expected To Be $300,000— Will Make Fi Larnin Avers. ght Of It, Mc- [By Eduard J. Neil Associated PrBSs Sports Writer) NEW YORK. May 27-31:!‘ master-Tex Rickardi-a. $25,000 duel of the lightweight and welL the fear that the might miss his cues, Jimmy ltlcliarnin, weatherman welterweight title _ rain and sunshine tl-rsatcned in con- tinue pushin, the wrong button as Weather Uncertain Bright sunshine tomorrow. sprinkles of rain the first 15 round match between the welter- Leonard lost on s. foul to Jack in 1920. Rain starting the week-end conditions, the match is expected to reach those same figures on Tuesday night, The battle of ah Irishman sndl s Jew, when both are outstanding warriors, always was an old Rick-, comes to me, I'll be meeting him ard prescription for packed houses, more than half way and the ex- and whirling turnstiles, and piirently the situation true today in New York with its tremendous citizenry amiong both,l were perfectly confident that Ross as it was in the diays when "Tex" built the tradition of the 000 gate. ap- \ holds as $100,] top prim for ringsldel to attract larger gate receipts than did the last two heavyweight champion- ship matches combined. Only At $10 Benny Leonard's two matches with Low Tendler, one drawing almost $500,000; the other close to $410,- 000 exceeded the prospects of to- monow night's turnout. Ticket speculators had no trouble ped- dling choice ringside seats for $20 each. Will Hsvs Weight Advantage With McLamln close to the 145 pounds he has agreed to make at noon tomorrow or forfeit $10,000 and apparently strong and in per- fect condition at that figure, the odds shifted 1n his favor. He was s. 7 to l) choice i. wig; the courag- eous little Chicago warrior who will weigh around 137 pounds and concede him at least 17 pounds due to the heavier man's natural accumulation of weight by the time they enter the ring around 8:45 p. m. E. S. '1‘. McLarnln drove here from his training camp at Atlantic City after doing his usual road work and exercises. Ross kept his musc- les in tune with a little shadow boxing. The lightweight champion counting on the swiftness of his left hand attack, and his aggres- siveness. to muffle the Canadian Celts terrific punching power, came down from his training camp at Femdale, N. Y., Friday. Will Not Bo Broadcast “You will see a fight from the start," said Jimmy as he rested quietly. "I'm going to make a. fight of it from the first bell, I don't intend to be outclassed. If Ross plosions should be something to Both Ross and his managers would smother McLarnin with his tireless attack and win the decis- ion “I cant lose this one." Barney said. "I just won't be licked." There will be no broadcast of the bout. St. Louis Hands Yankees I6 To 7Beating; Cleveland Now Leading SATURDAY GAMES (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, May 27—Tho four first division clubs of the American League defeated the four tailenders in Saturday's games. New York Yankees held on to their precarious lead by turning back St. Louis Browns 4-1 behind the five hit pitching of Johnny Murphy ivho won his first M8101‘ League gairie. Cleveland, keeping close on the trail of the Yanks, scored an impressive 7-0 victory over Philadelphia Athletics. Willis Hudlin got the shut-out, holding the Msekmen to six hits. SENATORS BEAT OFF CHICAGO CHALLENGE Washington Senators stayed off a late challenge by Chicago White Sox to Win 9-7. General Alvin Crowder, in trouble after a fine start, fanned Evai" Swanson with the tying run on base for the final out in the ninth, Tommy Bridges was a. trifle wobbly at Detroit but managed to win a 6-4 victory from, Boston Redjox. He walked five men. SUNDAY GADIEQ. NEW YORK, May 27-After trailing the first three innings, St. Louis Browns at homo unleashed a fourth inning batting attack that netted eight rims, then hurtled on for a. 16-7 victory ovcr NQW YOYK Yankees wday. The fourth liming festival reach- four runners already had crossed the plate. West also hit one for the round trip. Three Yankees pitchers fell before the heavy batting bar- rage. while Nelson was going the route for the Browns. 3 STRAIGHT FOR SENATORS Led by Buddy Myer, who includ- ed a two-run homer and a double among his four hits, Washington drilled Sam Jones and Les Tietjs for 14 blows and s. 9-6 victory over the. White Sox in the second game of the series before 18,500 fans at It was the defenclinfl champions‘ third straight victory. Joe Kuhel also got a. homer with The Chicagoan; got to Montc- Weaver for 11 hits in eight innings] and finally necessitating his re- moval with one run in, two on and none out in the ninth. TIGERS DEFEAT BOSTON 9-2 Errors by Boston plus nicely the swoline lwpiy when s puoti 9-: before s Sunday crowd or 14,000, him ll Dutch owns off l‘ Arn. League Three of Boston's four errors helped Detroit's scoring ir1 the fourth and fifth innings. The Tigers collected nine hits off Rhodes for a total of six runs in the half-dozen innings he worked. Pennock finished the game but cams to grief in the seventh when he walked three men, loaded the bases twice and allowed two hits for three more Detroit rims. CLEVELAND IN FIRST PLACE The Indians went into first place in the American League standings by defeating Philadelphia 7-6 at Cleveland while New York Yankees were being drubbed thoroughly by St. Louis. A home run by Hale in the fifth inning, followed by Troskys triple in the same frame, gave the Tribe s two-game edge with the Athletics. Philadelphia bombarded Brown for five runs in the first inning with Foxx and Miller leading the attack with doubles and Berry clouting a triple. Philadelphia went ahead in the fourth inning on singles by Crsmer and Johnson. Hale's home run in the fifth found the bases empty but. Trosky tripled and scored on Pytlaks fly. NATIONAL LEAGUE SATURDAY GAMES NEW YORK, Niny 27-11mm caus- iiiiiiiiiii cuiiyiiii championship at stake at Long Island City tonight: MCLARNIN A 11°85 2s . . . . . . . . . , . . 25 Height srtcin. . . . . . . . . . . ..sits1-2ui. Weight 145 pound; . , . . , . . . , .. 138 P01111415 each g3 inches _ , . . , . . . . . . . . .. 67 inches est 36 inches . . . . . . . . .. 36 1-2 inches Chest (ESP) 40 inane; . . , . . . . . . .. 38 3-4 lnchesl Waist , 31 inches . . , . . . . . Z8 1-2 inches‘ 8 19 inches . . . , . . . , . . . . . .. 18 inches a1! 14 1.; Inches ,. 18 l-2 inches B 9 inches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. i! inches Biceps 13 1-2 inches . . . . . . 12 inches Forearm ‘ 1o 1-2 inches . 11 inches I ‘i inches 6 3-4 inches Fist 12 inches . . . . . .. . 11 inches BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT WEDNESDAY, Come and select that New Suit or Top Coat you have been thinking about. British Woollens of the Finest Quality. Trimmings that are No. 1. workmanship that ls “Royal York” And Remember An Export to Fit You. Make “Royal York” Clothes Your Clothes. HARRY A. MacDOIIGALL BETTER MEN'S WEAR 145 Great George Street 14-5310. new YORK, zvfby 27—Meas'u.ro- ments of Jimmy MCI-limin- and Barney Ross. W310 meet m a‘ 15 ‘ round bout with the welterwemm S ’side Baseball League Schedule i The Sinnmerside Baseball Leo-Bile which gets underway tonight have arranged their schedule for the sea- son as follows: First Section Pioneers vs. Red Wings, May 2B. c.Y.M.L. vs. Red Wings, May 81. Pioneers vs. C.Y.M.L., June 5. Red Wings vs. Pioneers. J1me "~ C.Y.M.L. vs. Pioneers, Juno 11. Red Wings vs. O.Y.M.L.. June 14. Second Suction Red Wings vs. Pioneers. June 18. C.Y.M.L. vs. Red Wings, June 21. Pioneers vs. C.Y.M.L., June 25. C.Y.M.L- vs Red Win89. Jilly 3- Pionoers vs. O.Y.M.L.. July 5- Third Section Pioneers vs. Red Win38. July 9. O.Y.M.L. vs. Rtd Wlflfi- July 19- Pl0llE€f5 vs. C.Y.M.L., July l6. Red Wings vs. Pioneers, July 18. C.Y.M.L. vs. Pioneers, July 23. ROYAL YORK IlLOTIIES None Better ‘At Tho Price Will be sf. Our Store - HUB DILVISIN uocni: HAY 30th. d ri iNoécrilces, Following the success annual entertainment the scouts. 3,5 h, body u-isli to extend their thanks and appreciation to Mrs, Allan Cosh, Miss Jean Fraser and of thel! all others who aided in the cause; Mrs. Cosh, in particular. who had- _ devoted much time in practices‘ and who is always willing to give her services for the advancement of the work of the association is deserving of COiflmfllldilllOll from the officers of the local association. and the scouts of the city troops. The sum realized, together with that raised by other means during the year, will aid maiei-inlly in the sponsoring of the camp ivhicli is Brudenell, site oi last year's camp, will again, it is expected, be the background for the summer activ- ities of the Scouts and Cubs. with the approach of the sum- mer, hikes and other forms of out- of-door sport will be engaged in by the troops. Many are expected to complete tests leading to the "First Class badge" by the time the Provincial camip opens, In connection with the prepara- tions going forward for the camp Scouts should now commence sav- ing money for this purpose, and for the rest of their uniforms. Shorts are absolutely necessary as also is the neckerchief. All scouts at camp amount of cooking. In addition to the information given in the First Class Scout book. scouts ask their moihers assistance in learning how to do the following:- moke tea, coffee, cocoa, cook por- ridge. fry bacon, eggs, make stew, etc. An effort is being made to have a. number of Rovers attend tend the camp this year to aid in instruction and general running of affairs. Red Wings vs. O.Y.M.L., July 28. a; far as second base. SECOND SIIUTOUT FOR CUBS For this second time this your IELIlIlI-lllllifii Chicago Cubs were shut out when Huck Betts of Boston pitched the Braves to a 5-0 victory at Boston. Boston only outhit the Cubs by ed postponemcnts of three iixiurcsl ‘um; most, effective with men on in the National League leaving Chicago to play at Boston. Chicago downed the Braves 6-4 ab‘ ter a late rally, coming from be» hind after they had been l1clrl' scoreless until the sixth. The effectiveness of the Cubs‘ pinch hitters proved the deciding factor in the game. The Cubs got two runs in the sixth when Babe Herman, hitting for Cuylcl", smack- ed a double following a two-badger by Augie Gnlau and a. single by Chuck Klein. In the eighth Gordon Phelps, batting for Tut Steinbeck, drove a single. 111st ended Ben Cantwellls stay on the mound. SUNDAY GAMES NEW YORK, May 27-11110 league-leading Pittsburgh Pirates subdued the Giants 7-3 today in the delayed opener of their three- gamo series. _ The veteran right lidndcr. Red Lucas. pitched five-hit ball for his second triumph over the Giants and just missed a shutout when Lefty O'D0u1 smashed a pinch home rim with two aboard in the eighth. Ln the first seven innings Lucas granted only three hits and only 011s runner. Hughoy crtis. got h. nllh d I in l Bu. but noted DEAN WINS OWN GAME St. Louis Cardinals grabbed a‘ game from the Phillles 5-2 after it had almost, been marked down in the win column for the Quakers a-tl Philadelphia. ' The ninth inning rally enabled. the Cards to tie up the score Z-all: and Dizzy Dean's homer into the. left field bleachers actually won‘ the game in the 10th BROOKLYN IIURLER’! STRAIGHT WIN Van Mungds fourth straight vic- t.ory was u. six-hit shutout over the hapless Cincinnati Reds today. Timely hitting against Derringer and Kleinhsns gave the Brooklyn Dodgers the ball [E1116 by 5-0. Derringer became two down in the first inning when Koenickeb] home run followed Boyle's double. Successive singles by Koonecke. Tailor and Leslie added mother in the sixth. Kleinhans was victimized? for two runs in the seventh whenl Lopez hit a home-run and Jordan,‘ who singled. completed the journey" gays“ infield out and a single by “the Indian giving Crawford only iivo 4TH l |J.S. RIVAE ‘(A- l". By Guardian's Special Wire)‘ PARIS, May 27. - Margaret (Peggy) Scrivcii, irim left-hander from England, today obtained sweet Saturday-l bases. Two double plays helped him. revenge for her Wightman Cup de- feat at the hands of Sarah Palfrey last year by ellminutillf! the Boston girl. 6-4, 6-4 in the second round of the French Harri Court tennis championships. Miss Scrivcus victory put her in- to the quarter-final round of wo- men's singles where she is the de- fending Cllflmpion ivliilo Miss Pal- ‘freys elimination loft Helen Jacobs, United Stairs (‘llflll1)’)li‘lll, as the 501a American survivor, Joining bliss S(‘l'l\'£‘il in the quar- ter-flnals were Mine. Rene Mathieu of France, Lucia Vrilerlo of Italy and Cilli Aussem nf Germany. Signor-its Valeria sprain: the blip- gest upset of the tournament. when she put. out the English star, Betty Nuthnll. 8-6, 6-4, Play in men's singles was marked by the advance liiio the quarter- finals of Jack Crawford, deffnding champion from Australia, and tho three Britons. F‘rrxi Perry, H, l)’, (Bunny) Austin and George Patrick Hughes. Crawford met with surprisingly stubborn resistance from hfohnm- med Sleeni, Davis Cup pliiyni‘ from ‘India, but won 0-6, 6-1, 7-5, ri-n, Sleeiifs lobhiniz game annoyed the champion no end in the first sot, points in winning at love, l’ l ear. -._~§k&=‘z-y s. Puflfit» 1y- nuns-r l M 1 \ .>-: -€}‘+¢u"1.¢i. 51.11"“): already being mooted for this year.- sro required to do a. certain.- slioulzi i il-l