11;; Anchors . and A night/S City Baseball e fume at the Pazkdlsmond with M w toxins the field determined to halt the onward men of the mthendem who have “ready we their two starts and 1,, so doing have displayed loads ma loads of. power. . Both vlctcriu. taken at the ex- m of the Stars have been by w;¢.2 margins, and a. halt will soon mg to be called if the Rovers are to be stopped frdm walking away yith the ennant. Anchors feel that they avetlie team to stop them and ton.'g:t w‘ll ne'r' thu-‘r ,m,ng.g.:,t squ in an effort to mate a tie .o:.f_il;5t -_:\lsce. . lug‘ selections have not beenmiI..k!iUWubllbltisp1'0b-, able that Archie Mclarlane will go to the bill for the Anchors with gmntett Murpli"_sisjtc.'i for slab work for tho "‘ "ern-managed . Jam‘ 0 V 0 U goth hur. ':1‘~t handers but in this case the odds should mo; McFarl.ane to come through with a win. Not by any more mlllty but by the fact that the Anchors’ hurlet will be facing eight r‘gh:t. hand hitters while Murphy will be faced with the not goo pleasant task of hurling them in to seven batters who hit them from the port side. of. the plate. speaking of ht handed hit- of them in the City League. In luenday n'ght'.s game with two left handers working on the mound there was no less than 16 out of the 18 in action batting from the left side. Rovers are the only team who can show s.- balance hittinr: from the ri,ht with eight of the nine r.=gl“"‘.‘s performing at the third base side‘. . But then on the other hand Rover hurlers has-e,,a. tough time of it. there not be2nrc_ I left. hand- eron the rcsterwhiletl_1sramsin- lng teams have ‘two southpaws each. The league will yet be mighty interesting and the trans- fers that were a.n.r_iounced~yester- day benefittlng the Anchors and stars will so a long way in mak- ingthctlwosqusdscnspar win: their Ncrthend .riv.als.. ' It. looks as if the ilgures "do". which in newspaper circles signi- fies the finish, is about to be writ- Hoss" of the New York Yankees vim the dispatches yesterday sist- lng that Lou Gelzria was suffering from chronic. infantile paralyms. Benched at his own request af- ter an all-time record in 2,100 consecu- tbe. time he as- a his first base duties for the Yankees in ms. ‘Gen diurine that remarkable stretch been one of the guest stars of the big ues. O O I O ' Holder today of numerous rec- ords, he was one of the most fear- ed batters in the league. During the first port of his career his feats. were overshadowed b the il- lus;r:ous “Bafbe" Ruth an Gehrig was forced to take a back seat in the public eye. I Q_ 0 0 Then with Ruth's career finish- ed Ion came into his own but he was destined not tn have the spot- light long. Last year he was far helow his real form. as he enjoyed one cf his seasons. This year in training camp sport ‘writ- ers started singing his "swan 50118" and although many thought he would snap out of it once the hot weailww rolled around, it WBrn't to be so. I 0 0 . After voluntarllv '-iving up his Est to Babe Dahjgzen, Gehrig "lime srouchy and disconsolate which was far t:om the flormer “T81” nlayer. A display _of tem- °‘3" “Gently in Toronto when he “'35 b 1“-8 asked for autographs by YOUHE-W916 brought the writers down on his neck. but now it can Easily be seen why this happened. U Result of Gchrl'~’s examination places the hIar*‘rw."~ii'r~.«_z on thaws" ‘°“ "16 Erect first baseman but it will be a long while b:fo:c base- ball fars and playws will forest Elle brilliant perfonnanoes of the ‘Iron l-loss" in his I4-veer stretch. .=”:i°£J.~l‘_.°t he .( ’\ KD_&)_'ild_ in con- . (B! WHITNEY MARTIN Ala-minted I’I'cI3 sports wmu) " Nrzw YOI1-K. June 3l—(AP)—Tl‘le Iron Horse was consigned to me baseball roundhcuse tooay—to stay, lmantlls paralysis, slowly uncer- mining the marvellous physique wh.ch had carried Lou uehng through 2,130 consecutive games as New Yon: Yankee first oa.eman, has penned a dramatic ending to ins playing career Gehrig returned last night from Rochester. .M1nn., where for a week d00i.0I'8 at the Mayo Clinic cnecxed and re-checked to discover the rea- son for an unexplained slowin. GOWII. a slowing down which promp- ted Lou to remove himself from me lineup May it after compllng his phenomenal consecutive games re- cord. He appeared cheerful, but was mum as to the finding. Tense statement Today Ed Barrows, Yankee Pres- ident, after conferring with Gehrig. read a lame statement from 2 Mayo Phyniclan. a statement which mark- ed the end of one of baseball's most brilliant careers. Gehrig will be unable to contmue his active participation as a. baseball player inasmuch as it is advisable that he conserve his mus- oulegr energy." the statement read in par . It discldsed.t.he 3ti-year-old Geh- I'll! was suffering from amyolhroph- to lateral sclerosis a. type of illness involving the motor pathways and cells of the central nervous sys- tem. known in lay terms as chronic pollomyelitis (infantile paralysis). Barrow added that he believed Gehrig had been afflicted for about two years, but he hastened to assure eve one that the disease will be choc ed. Gehrig himself said he would start treatments immediately under the direction of his personal ph_i‘y%lcinn. a few who went to the Yankee Stadium this noon to get Barrows report on Gehrig's condition little dreamed of the coming drama as ghey izptcrhed the “Iron Horse? amil ure trudge across a deserted 125:1 toward the clubhouse. They did not realize the envelope tucked in his belt and_gleammg , .. ___ _ binually as he saw the rise and fall of scores of stars of the game. . . . . Controversy still rages over the result of the heralded ‘iM:ile of the -Century’ at Princeton Saturday when Sydney woggierson, world record holder, flnisntd fifth in a field of five after loading to the Ind. 800 yards. . Here is how Walter Gilhooly views the “aocid "’ that knocked the English :'un.nez.' off stride: . “In the parlance of the sports world. Sydney Wcoderson was giv- en ‘the works’ at Princeton on Saturday in a way that wouldraise the envy of people in more dubious athletic pursuits than those who are commonly interested in such cleanly conducted rivalries astraclc performances. Wooderson came to the United States a little more than a week 880. holding the world recordcfsmileinthetimsof 4:00.04. . . . . "On the fastest track that men have run upon he finished the mile trailing four rivals on Satur- day in the time of 4.13. That was more than six seconds slower than he had run the distance on astrip admlttedlzzv duller than the cinder path at Pl|lal12€J'.S1:idlllm. "The slender stick of '1‘.N.T.'. who had been heralded as, and iimedly is, one of the finest running machines of all time, vr. pushed into the—disca_rd by men who. in the record book, did not belong on the ss;;-3 track with m. 0 O O 0 "rhey did succeed in overcoming him, but through gangster meth- ods whose efficiencv mfg/ht have aroused the envy of Al Capone. When those four Yarkee runners throw the hooks into W0O"".if'SOl'1 they left. him gasping so far in the ruck that he not only was sunk in his ambitions to set up a record, but he wasn't even able to get up to collect place or show money." l YOURSELF! Finis Written. To Career -0f.“Iron Man .”Lou Cell rig; Hds Infantile Paralysis brightly in the sun was his baseball death warrant. Receives Cheer A Svontoneous cheer went up from his teammates already in the locker room. as he entered and pas- sed ger Joe McCarthy's Iprlvate office to confer with Bar- row and-Mocarthy. Soon Barrow came out, and in s gruff voice an- nounced to newspapermen: “I have bad news for you fellows." in dead silence he read the phys- ic an's report. Gehrig emersed from the rivate office, went to‘ his locker on start- ed to change into his uniform. For a while others were hesitant about approaching him, but his cheerful an and bubbling good nature soon pped the banner. “I have to accept the bitter with the sweet," he ss d philosophically. “If this is my finish I'll take it." He said he never dreamed what his trouble was. other than that “somethingmwas wrong.“ “Had I own I'd have quit long ago," he said. Asked if he would take along rest, he replied: “What better rest could I have than tust being with the boys every day. I tell you, I never got such a kick in my life as when I received a birthday wire from them. My eyes really filled up." Barrow said Gehri contract for the balance of the sea- son at least. The doctor's state- ment said that Lou could continue in lthe game “in some executive cap- “ y_.. Gehrig compiled an amazing record in his 16 full years in the majors. He led the American League batsmen in 1934 with an average of .363,’ he scored 100 runs or more for 13 years. and shares with Babe Ruth the record for drlving in more than 100 runs a year for a 13-year span, leading the American League in that de- partment five times. At. the and of the 1938 season Gehrig was second to Ruth in the greatest number of long hits-—-with 1,l90. He hammered out 535 two base hits, 161 three basers 494 home -runs over the 16-year span. In 1922 he homered in six con- secutive games, twice with the bases full. He was second only to Ruth in the most bases on bail in his lifetime, getting 1,505 passes to Ruth's 2.056. The records credit Gehrig with a lifetime batting average of .341 for 2.717 hits in 7,973 times at not. He drove in a total of 1.990 runs. and struck out 787 times Bunny Austin Is Favorite zit iV%nbJedbn WIM.BLlElDON, England. June 21 -(CP)—l-I. W. (Bunny) Austin of Great Britain was placed ahead of the strong American challenge to- day when the seeclinga were an- nounced for the All-England Tennis ghllrampionships which start Mon- 8 . Bobby Riggs of Chicago. the Un- lted States No. 1 was placed in the second spot and might have gone to the to over the English veteran ex- cept t at he was beaten by Don ]McNelli in the French Hard court icharnpionship final last week, ; The selectors placed McNeil), an Oklahoma City youngster in third .pl.soe, followed by Ferenc Puncec. ‘Yugoslavia: I-lenner I-ienkel. Ger- ' ml!-hi’: Elwood Cooke. Portland, Ore. Roderlch Menzel. Germany. an Ignacy Tloczynshl. Poland. They seek the by Don Budge of California w en he turned professional. '.1'he United States drew the top two positions in women's singles. Alice Marble of San Francisco. the United States titleholder, was seed- ed no. 1 and Helen Jacobs. beaten by Helen Wills Moodv in the 1938 final. no. 2. After them came Mrs. Hilda sperling, Denmark; Mme. Rene Mathieu. France; Jadwiga Jedraeiowska, Poland. and Kay Stammers and Ruth Mary Hard- wole. Great. Britm. would remain - on the payroll un er his present‘; of consecutive gamekbetwr my“ title relin ulshed ' Simmerings Around The Sport Front (By Alan Randal. C st.I.ff'Writer NEW YORK. Juno 21—One and «'1 can consider oi’ Dis Deon him- self again . .Other National Baseball League teums should take warning and pay need to Chicago Cubs. . .Becs.use when the Great Onewssinthetbroaofa Per- sonal depression he ‘t be heard with an amplifier. . .'His blast before ‘ ‘ semen in Chi- cago. thnt some of the Cubs were laying back. my be interpreted as meaning Diz's pitching arm is once more ok. The end of Lou Gehrig's playing divs because of infantile paraly- sis. marks one more milestone in the vanishing era of New York Yankees’ “Murderers Row". .. Those were the days when Babe Ruth and Gehrig were death to opposing pitchers. . .Now the Bathe. sathering prey hairs, is a golf enthusiast and Gehrig's streak 2.000—is brdzen. . .And the ban trade wonders what Lou might have done the past year or two if he had had his health. . . Looks as though the fight men will never set over the idea of a aback. . .Mickey Walker, one- time Rlumsden, N. J., “Toy Bull- dog." and middleweight champ and later a Broadway pub , is the latest. . seeking I "white Hope" to boat Joe Louis, Mickey is tangling with Rod Bush of cum- berland, M.d., in a four-rounder. Walkers first session to see it Mickey Walker isn't the hope he (Walker) has been look- ina for. . The machine age is threatening one of baseball's oldest institutions simply "wooshes" the dust from the home plate. . .'I‘he Doc who 1: Tony Galento ncumonta a year ago announces Tm. Dwnartng for Joe Lmxis next w .isinthebestshs.peolhl.s career. . .Ciood graciousi . . Just supnosins Joe Louis had e a fiddler, as his mother wanted him to, instead of a fighter... . Here's what they think of Maxie Beer and Lou Novel in Cowiohan, B. (1., where movies of their recent fight me being shown.. . .Thea.tre Patrons are notified fight pictures will be shown at the end of’ the program “in order that those who do not wish to sit. through this tremendous ‘scrap’ don't have to". From now on the National Boxing Asociation is going to ins t each champion defend his title at least every six months. . The reason the Jim Braddock-Tcmnry Farr ulcd B: h fight. moguls refuse to per- mit a fight between boys under the same management. . .Joe Gould. the little Broadway cigar Smokt’-I‘. is the nisller in the wood- pile in this case. ‘Duff Ousted In Tourney (By JACK CALDER Canadian Press sun Writer) w1NDsOu.. om, June 2l--(Cl:')—- Red-headed Lewis «Duff of Montreal went cut of the Canadian 'llenn.'s Championships singles in the third round today and saw his chances to make the Dorninicn's Davb cup team start to sway in the balance. Jack Schlesinger, a bespectacled student at Detroit's Wayne Univer- sity, went into quartor-finals over the boiling Duff. 8-3, Tennis Club. 'n'yi'ng to meet Schles- inger's delicate drop-shots with the same thing. Duff over-played his hand. It was a harsh blow to the cu - team hopes of the redhead. w o winters at tl-le“Universtly of Miami. Last week he was beaten in the On- tario Championships by Bruce Hall, . who only recently entered cup con- sideration. Duff was seeded fourth among Canadians in this tourna- ‘ U9 0 "“3"i on Q be championships lot’ tlhey thre ents on which ee In ‘Davis Cup selections are .tc be has- ed lie ahead. In that event Duff‘ {heretofore highly regarded. wil have to make a oombback M an all-Canadia ~ficld to raga n his ting. m-°°"‘°ll““’ °'“:3..*::. “':.:s":.::‘ um“ t me ganadians were Bill} l:gH0fhB@_H_t_gf1I Mm white ‘ t 13318. Jacobs Talks‘ Strategy With Challenger Galento ages Joe Jacobs '1\myOale:nto y decided on battle plan for next W y night, en in lee with Joe Iouis for They shaped or from in effect, land right in Louis’ cap as soon as gong sounds for the am round. of course Joe wont be sitting down. but the re- sult, if the plan works. should be the same. If Tony carries through on the scheme he explained today. he'll rush across the rlnz. his face and chin protected by his arms. and lean against Louis‘ chest. Then he'll bust the Brown mm with that fearful left book of his, and rely on that first punch to set up the champion for a Galento vic- get through Gsienws charge. “And when Tony oops that left on‘ Louis‘ chin or y," Jacobs said, “you will see a. new champ. Tony and I are supremely confl- dent he can do it." Although Tony took the day on ning grind today, of activity. Jac- our corner. Then. when I went to the coast a. couple of months ago. I saw a doctor who gave me anew tion guaranteed to stopany cut as soon as it is applied. so we're not worrying about blood spilling." BASEBALL RES UL TS AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis on 000 oco_e 12 1 000 000 000-0 10 1 Kramer and Glenn: Keying. Dlckmsn and Peacock. 0 02 M0 200-8 13 1 000 061 301-8 18 1 Lee. Brown, Rigney and Trail: Dickey. Dctrglit at Philadelphia, postpon- , ra . NATIONAL LEAGUE '- Boston 00000000-070 Chicago aoo1oooo—als1 Posedeland Lopez: Whitehill and I-lsstnett. (Game called account rain after ell, Bowman and Mueller. Philadelphia one 000 000- 2 9 0 St. Louis 010 512 ldx—14 18 2 Mulcahy, Pearson, Ker-sleek and Millies. cools; C. Davis as Owen. IN'I'ERNA'I'ZONAI. LEAGUE Baltimore 000 000 2)1—-8 5 1 Jerflt City 000 000. 000-0 7 0 N exits and Warren‘. Joiner, Pence and Atwood. (Four night lame!)- Montreal 003 000 600 8 15 3 Buffalo 001 200031 7 8 0 Crouch and Becker. Iiar-tie; Ash, Roche. Mnglle and Savino. Newark 3: Syracuse 17. Haley, I Barley, Bcddingfield, Btrinoevich and Georae: Klfilllhflfl-5 and Bottsrini. Newuk Syracuse ‘ Branch and 1-11orn: T151n8 Ind Warren AMERICAN AS80CI_A'I'ION st. Paul-Kansas City (ppd.. rain. Doubleheader tomorrow nite). Cleveland 000 080 003 9 7 3 Washington 010 130 301 8 17 4 Bauer. Broca. Feller. Zuber. 1-Iudlin and Hensley; Haynes. It ‘ . leton and Early. Ferrell. of Toronto. ranked no. 1 and no. 3 at the University of Toronto. and an urprising lit is Dr. oeorses 11-’- cl;': of Montreal. The Am m°“¢ th gram ton isrmglpechd t0 HE 3.-.-:-,.~e....=°» Ma... ' and Carl Fischer and Bob Madden of 1- meet‘ Dr. Leolerc and Schlesinger meets lowis. The first four are an ‘o br‘°k°“ .:———-———-=-_,.—‘r_-=_.-:"—- I ' Ifovlewed s I I proved by Dominion lfesdflillflfll fiB2RG~ WE TLLTNCE serooeirmcaaemmwien Hubbell In As Giants Yanks Nose NEW YORK. June 2i—Ca.rl Hub- the Pirates again in.a relief ID- peannoe and another man got. credit for New York Giants‘ -4 National baseball victory. Cliff Melton, benefittlng by the four runs the Giants amassed in the first two innings, earned his fourth victory. He himself singled two runs home in the second inn- ingtodriveJimTohinfrom the mound to his sevantiltl defeat. The Pirates forced Melton out in the eighth and scored two runs of‘! Walter Brown before Hubbeil took over and retired the side with the bases loaded. The work horse of Bt. Louis Ca.rdina.ls. Curt Davis, made his 21st appearance of the season on the mound and participated in a batting holiday that netted a 14-2 victory over Philadelphia. Davis got three hits. including a home run. to help win his ninth game against six defects. The Cardinals’ total of 14 runs was their largest thg year. They scor- ed eight times in the fourth inn- mg on four singles. three doubles, Don Gutterldge’s homer. 2, walk and a scsrifice fly. Chicago Cubs and the Boston Bees had to suspend play at the end of 8 1-3 innings on account of rain, but not before Chicago had scored a 3-0 victory for its fourth straight triumph. Bill Posedel was the losing pitcher. although he gave up only five hits lV""“ “"' Bees made seven of Earl Whitebill. Home runs bv Tuck and Doli’ Camilli gave Brooklyn Dodgers a 2-1 victory over Cin- cinnati Reds despite the four-hit pitching of Johnny Vander Meet. ““, GLACE :BAY:WINN‘E GLACE BAY. N. 5.. June 2l—A last minute batting rally by Sydney fell short today and the steel city squad yielded a. 4-3 victory to Glace Bay in a Cape Breton Col- liery Baseball League game. Syd- ney scored their runs in the eighth a_r;4_1 ninth innings. Stainback more, you get this sensation for 25¢’ Ask your dealer for Ted: Razor today. Shave with 813577 E i/[R Relief Role Beat Bucs; Out Chisox It was Ccrnillrs 13th homer of the year. The Victory was Whit- low Wyatt‘: sewnth against no defeats. AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK. June 21-Solving southpaw Thornton Lee's slants for five runs in the fifth, New York Yankees bunched all their runs into three consecu ve innings to- day to come from behind and nose out White Sox 9-3 in an American Baseball League game. The clincher was Bill Dickey‘s seventh homer of the season with Joe DiMaggio on base in the seventh, DiMaggio hw singled to score Tom I-Ienrich. who had doubled. Rookie Jack Kramer kept 10 hits and four bases on balls well mat- tered while pitching St. Louis Browns to a 6-0 shutout over the Red Sox. The Browns chased Joe Heving, nrakiné his first start of the sea- son outing him for eight hits and half of their runs. George Mc- Quinn and Joe Gallagher led the double and a. single. In a game which featured most everything except baseball, Cleve- land Indians nosed out Washington Senators 9-8. Hamilton. Ont, to Cleveland‘s Ken to Julius Solters, threw wrong base and balked in a run. In Washington's half of duty'——inc.‘:dir.g . Bob fore they stopped the with three runs. ‘=xr6T’vv'TmmmT“'““ wrNs‘a‘sMI.=: SYDNEY MDXES. N.S.. June 21 (OP)—New Waterford Dodgers won a 12-7 decision from Sydney Mines cl mound. The two teams combined for a. total of 2'! hits. OW the new Gillette Tech Razor gives you four maior improvements that make shaving quicker and far .n:re ::>mfortable than ever before! What's al razor at the rock- bottom “barzr,ain" price of only 49¢—comp1ete with five Blue Gillette Blades, .‘rr'pIe-sf arpenod on steel. hard enough to cut glass. The blades alone sell a new Gillette it. If you d0;ft. get the best shay. ; of your life . . . return the set to your dealer and he'll refund every cent you paid, right on the apotl Hurry — Get yours today! '/0!/Zl GE T THE 5}/A V55 V01! HAD 0/? /21. GIVE BACK EVERY ‘Flu y scouts Auociatloh. St. Louis attack. each getting a',H- °°P°°’8n Enjoying a one—run lead in the ninth inning. Joe Krakauskas of gave up a triple Keltner, a double to Bruce Campbell, a single to the the seventh Cleveland's pitchers look- ed almost. as bad Four of them saw Senators now run: nowuslafv, 5 High single—I*'. '1‘ie , 163. High three-—Joe Bug 3136. Tonight’s schedule at 9 obiock 5harp.—six couples: £8 The twelve remaining couples who survived the last round have been averaged for the round and made up according to their scores for this round. which brings to- gether some couples who played together in the last round. REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press)‘ C Ross Scmerville, and Jack Nash. Sandy's London, Ont., club- mate, were eliminated from the British amateur golf champion- ship six years ago tcday. Last ol Canada's seven standard-bearers, somerville and Nash dropped out in the sixth round. Somervllle has held the Canadian amateur cham- pionship five times. Use Mlnard's for bites. §} ‘\' '8/ue G///e/fa B/ado; Y Duck Pins Last night on the Nun; Alleys the Old Timers udod tn challenge when they 1.534 9 maiority of 11 u was 3115;’ ‘:11: bo ‘ that 2’.°.."“z.’.Y“.'.‘ sembl ether. Following are the scores: llunblars 113 iii‘ If- !‘ Tierney 108 '18 II’ J Peterson 130 119 IN C O'Neill 107 lfl 110 R Ellison N W 100 Total-1&1. Oid Tina’! B Duncan 105 19 Bi V Ooyle 150 118 lfl W. Halpenny 10!! 123 119 .1 Hughes 147 1:10 123 G Exsery ms 106 ll '.Pota.l.-—-IBM. Larii Gent: , A. sherry 1". '1‘le:rnsy ‘ E Dougan . Leolsir I Dousan R. Duncan F Sinnott V. Doyle E. Toomha L. McDou0a1l F. Gallant l l , . n