i- I m ' A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) m. J. the» Prince Edward Island Lawn Tennis Association, inst ni ht an- nounced a revised schedule tennis tournaments in the itlme Pmvmces this year. The Quebec and New Brunswick vinclal tournaments will be held e week of A . 8-13; the Eastern Champ onships at Char- -20 and the NOW‘ s as been Favored In By PAUL MICKELSON Anooisted Press Sports Writer ICIIW YORK, June 27—A check the opposing all-star line-ups to offer much more than t optimism over the chances National League victory over ericansin the all-star base- olanio at Cincinnati. July 6. Nationals have recruted -~ stars who will tab tbs ssiously but you cant vs -|. ’, p - the game. Last your. the a ~ was dominated by the Yank- ’ who went right on from there win the American League race. fix Yankees have been named the 1988 American Leaguesquad Americans win again anks, you can look for , wagers Hornsby. who has every diamond role from to villain to forgotten man. s fresh chance as manager of lingelb (‘nrattanooga Look- ero sport d g0 to Ralph Guldahl. the .. -a-row United States open . After winning the ... ldieadvioeofhispropals. _» now. he diallenges Denny 1 of Boston. PGA. Chflffiip. for undisputed golf championship jthe United States. Shute has and the matches are to ..- .- ‘ contract of the only fighter in ' world who has an outside - with Joe Louis. ‘Phat fight- two-ton 'I‘ony Colonic. Tony, I guzzling baron. is s funny nxsthe can hit and heesn ockiey Scout o Discovered hore Passes I ’ - The Canadian Press) ilJl u , Sask. June Tl-Gol- Smith. 50, Melville's postmaster ,'-- started Eddie Shore on the - . to hockey greatness and han- .- downs of other stars. died to- _ from a spinal hemmorhoge. He ' d been unconscious for five days the home of s. friend. Dr. P. C. I _'l Jflmith wag perhaps the first to " - in the youthful shore many of . possibilities. He went over to 1 'A.ppe1le, Saslc, and brought l- g Eddie to Melville in 1928. ore played a season underSmith o then took him to Regina " ere Shore signed his first W0- ional contract with R6811“ pitals of the old Western Can- ~ -- League. ' Ibi- many years a scout for Nat- . 1 Hockey League teams, Smith ays considered Shore his 818M- find. But in recent years he Detroit Red wings seven-l . players. notably Modere runeteau. Wllf Cude, Montreal nadiens’ goaltender. and Alex otter. Boston forward. were oth- . who came under Goldle's wing- B0—UTS rosrrousp l I . I I l i i . 1 int NEW YORK, June Z'I—RBII'I t0- “ gauged gostponement until to- orrow of t e Jackie (Kid) Berg- ohnny Horstman welterweig t nd the Baby salvy Saban-Bobby Eastern Canada Championships Scheduled Here Week Of Aug. 15-20 A. Bentley. President of American League Squad All Star Tilt BOWLI G HOCKEY WRESTLING Tennis in communication with C. L. T. A. officials in Montreal. The Davis Cup elimination lay between Canada and Japan W11? be played in Montreal the last week in July and the Canadian champnn- ships will .ollow in Toronto the first week in August. — The revised schedule will enable mem of the Canadian Davis cub teem as well as s numbe of central Canadian stars to compete in Maritime tournaments. AwaitingStarting Line - ups For All Star Came YORK. June 1!—-(A.P.)— tliat the American and Nat- League finds have been sel- fgrd the uly d. fans have tinned their attention to speculating on the players Managers Joe McCarthy and 1121.11 Terry will name for their start- D8. Except that he intends to use Johnny Vandeer Meet, the double no-hit game star. Ernie Lom- bardi. an of the Rods. as his op- 1M7. indication of how aguera will line u and neither has arthy ventur- ed an opinion as to the American will rely New local be pl nati. H“ m w, . 10 of itgm ha participan. ed in all star games before. Moncton Urs. T0 Play Here On Jul); Ist’ Monoton . leading lim- ior ball team in Moncton are to meet the Junior Canadians here in adder tlon bill on Leading their lea- Cardlna should 1 gun up with that beinfl played across the straits. There is little dolbt but that. this YB‘!!! 01w Jimior League is far ahead of last season's and the local ymms- sters should give nne accounts 0 1,135,591“. both games of the double bill. Nibble Hanover Wi n s G ra n d Circuit Feature mmoo, Ohio. J 2'!—(AP)- Nibbls Hanover. driuyidh by W111i‘ ney. tonight won the openina event o1 this week's Grand Circuit har- nem meeting at Fort Miami track 1.11s bwo-year-old trot in s ht heats in the fast colt time My?“ 3f‘ ‘tthd 2235's prograrnof rses or e w my“; 10m mono. Outstaridin features are the merchants an mechanics stake Wednesday night and the Nth matron stake Thurs- “Nesrly 000 ts-otters and pacers were on hand for the meeting. Net lass to play the ' wif‘ ieaming ‘v M topiay the V10- piizano snd my son l ‘iwhgt are 2:11 learning?" “To suffer silence." NOT SUFFICIENT bettermarr-LQ. I'M- eho lightweight fights. schedul- _- here tonight- "IneeioII,devI¢msnwltI\eIemlI|oInodIoIi-' Wills: munbefisegshlnplngneiwesifipal" SWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTE! filupusufsmlarllslnhassesuhnoldf’ - men scarce "Ami do ygiie think that my friends would accept that M w ggplanation?" GI Rovers Bow Once More T0 Indians i; For the d Rovers fell ‘begidre ‘dining? 51.5%“; attack of the Indians and the time last night walked of! with their Zggflghigmfiltxinvlcary over the defeating them 7 to lémp m5 by Scoring a run ln the first on two successive singles and two 1111191111 outs the winners held their slim mam“! 118M 11D to the seventh mien young “Buck" Whitlockmym P011811 with a hit to centre to SCOIC B. YIIIIIIGI‘ ITO!!! third with the W111i! counter. But in the last half of the same frame the Indians 5mm‘ fl-sain. With one down two m“ “d a“ "To! lave them two runs and in their final turn at the Dlflle in the next canto loose field- lhll by the Rovers plus four singles 5111:: them four runs and the ver- Pete K l1, i best mouhdv ggeirfgrréiiiagcegneng‘ Iii: Wvtsedbg? °W°Mnt5 to seven safe u w" mflifht up to the seventh Keuv 5m °¢ hum!!! duel between "s with Art Mollins of the my- h“; I each flaming but six safe how n the seventh and eighth‘ ever.- M°11Ins was found for six fifiiwoififiihfiwh" “h” W?! and defeat. ween m‘ BOX SCORE Indians 43R,“ MoInni-s. 2b. s 1 a PaoiAii n. c. 4 0 Currie. lb. 4 1 hi’ I.’ ‘l’ Williams. so. 4 1 1 l 2 0 Saunders. if. 4 1 1 1 1 1 17,106.85. 400240 Jcsncf. 422000 Kelly»). 411240 McKinnon, r1. 4 0 1 0 0 0 Ilotals 5-. '11s 2'1 is 2 Rovers AB a n r0 A a Cudmore. 31b, 4 0 0 l 0 0 McNeikss. 401330 Powenlb. 4 0 3 8 0 1 Blflcquiere. lf. 4 0 0 Z 0 l. MdKinnon. c. 4 0 1 3 o 0 . ri’. 4 1 0 2 l 0 Molllnsl). 401101 Gauthier. of. 8 0 o 1 1 1 whiuoclcflb. s o 112 0 ‘Ilomls 94 1 ‘I22 7 4 Summary Earned runs: Indians, S; two- base hit" McNeil: struck out: by Kelly 4..Mollins a; left on base: Rovers 6. Indians 6. IwI-Tmoh-Tiat the cblavtre. Bill Lami- 'on ebfleelh. ardan . Cairns By Inning: 123 I56 189-12. l! E RUVQH m0 000 100-1 7 A Indians 100 (W0 ZAIX-JI 12 2 Canadian Wins Boxing Bout LONDON, June 27—(OP-R.euters) —.Al Delaney. young Canadian heavyweight from Oshawa. Ont., tonight defeated Jack London of West Hartleipool in the feature box- ing bout wt New Cross Stadium. The bout was scheduled for l0 rounds but London was ed in the fourth. The (tanadian showed great im- provement over the form he dis- played in his visit here last year. Delaney weighed 194. London 232. Giants Win Midget Came Giants took the league leading Rovers into camp last night by a 23-18 score in a scheduled game of the Midget Softball League. show- ing more power at the plate the winners went ahead of the de- fending champions early and maln- talned their lead all the way through the close. hard-hitting en- counter. Senators Lose O u tfie l d e r WABI-UNOHON, June 2'1—(AP)— Jonathan T. Stone, one oi bese- ball’s best outfielders. is out of the game rm- the season. Clark C. Griffith, president of Washington Senators. said Stone had a trouble- some bronchial ailment. Stone has been a Senator for four years. ._..----->—- MONOTON DEFIATS AMHERST MMHERST. N.B-. June 27—(CP) —Moncton Cubs turned back Arn- WHLB , England, June 2'1 Don Budge of the United States, his cannon-ball service booming across the nets to perfection, to- day marched into the semi-finals of the All-England Tennis Cham- pionship with a. 6-3. 6-0, 7-5 vic- tory over the Czechoslovakian F. Cejnar. The other brackets of the semi- finals will be filled by 1-1. W. (Bunny) Austin of England, Hen- ner l-lenkel of Germany and Fer- enc Puncec of Yugoslavia. Meantime top-ranking United States stars-Helen Jacobs, Alice Marble and Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan joined Helen Wills Moody of San Francisco in the quarter finals of the women's competition. Budge broke Cejnans racquet with his first service and then won the set after the Czech had showed signs of putting un a fight. The red-headed Californian ran out the second set in nine min- utes and took the third after the first l0 games had gone with the service. Puncec gained the round of four by defeating Don MacPhall of England 6-2. 6-1, 6-1. Austin whip- ed Max Ellmer of Switzerland -2, 6-1, 6-2 and Henkel turned back Iiaxiislaus Hecht of Czecho- slovakia 7-5, 6-1, 6-2. Completely Recovered Completely recovered from the recent collapse and using her new forehand with devastating effect. Helen Jacobs defeated Peggy Scriv- en of England 7-5. B-4. Just as Miss Jacobs furnished the day's excitement in the wo- men's singles. Mrs. Fabysin and Dorothy May Bundy of Santa Monica, Calif. furnished the fun. Horn the start to the finish it was a squealing match with Dor- othy pi ing good naturedly and] tmsing er racquet in the air when long hard hitting rallies end- gdé ligrf. Fabyan finally won. 3-6. Miss Marble had trouble with her service at the start but she finally got used to the sticky turf and eliminated Ruth Mary Hard- wlclr oif England, 7-5. 6-4. Lorrrrowiv g GUARDIAN won ‘III! Don Budge In Top Formifiqllires Win Leads WayIntoSemi-finals At Wimbledon Tourney (c. r». by Guardlank Special wnof-rflei United States champion reverted to drop shots to coma from behind in the first let and then poured over her s in the second after again getting sway to a slow start. Today's Schedule The quarter-final round tomor- row will send Miss Marble against Mme. Rene Mathieu of Frar.\~. Miss Jacobs will meet Jsdwlga Jedrzeiowska, Poland's defending champion while Mrs. Fabyan will tangle with Hilda Krahwinkel Sperling of Denmark. Mrs. Moody, who was a round ahead of the field and did not lay today, will match strokes with the English south aw, Kay stammers. Pro ably never in the history of Wimbledon have such one-sided quarter-final matches been played as in the men's competition. 1-lecht gave Henkel a iii-minute battle and that's all. Austin didn't even get a good workout against Ell- mer nor drd Puncec against Mac- Phail while Budge Just galloped in. In addition to the Mrs. Fabyan- Miss Bundy match. Mme. Rene MflthlBJ and Nancy W nne of Australia produced the ony other three-set match in the women's competition. The French veteran lost the first set but came back to win, 1-6, 6-2. il-2. Miss Jedrzejow- ska trounced Miss M. Morphew of South Africa. 6-2, 6-2; Frau Sper- ling disposed of Margot Lurnb of England, 7-5. 6-2, and Miss Stam- mers took the measure of Betty Nufhall, 6-3. 6-0. Budge and Miss Marble. defend- ing champions. won their fourth round match in the mixed doub- les. defeating Franz Kukuljevic of Yugoslavia and Oorothy Andrus of New York. 7-5. 6-3. Mrs. Andrus had better luck in the women's doubles, pairing with Sylvia Hen- rotin 0f France. to beat the Eng- lish combination of Evelyn Dear- Sign and John Ingram, 3-6, 8-1, In a third round match Joan Saunders, formerly of Calgary and Ronald Shayes, England, defeated Mme. Sylvia I-Ienrotlri and M. Bolelli of France 6-3. 6-2. Howley Retires As Manager Of Toronto Leafs ‘TORONTO. June 27 —-(C P)- Voluntary retirement of Dan Howley as manager of Toronto Leafs and appointment of Irving Jack Burns, veteran first baseman to succeed him was announced tonight by Donald C. Ross. club president, before the Leafs began their International Baseball League game with Buffalo here. Howley will retain active as- sociation with the club, Ross said, taking charge of player deals and acting in an advisory capacity. Bums. who will be 31 in August. is a native of Cambridge, Mass. and spent most of his major league career with St. Louis Browns. Baseball's Big Six— (Dy The Associated Pres!) (mi-st three and ties league)- c AB n n rag; A. rill, Indians 59 220 51 as . 131.com. Reds 41 1w 65 Ti-oslcy. Indians a’; g f; g gg; Travis. Se tors - Phiailies 54 no as 1a .355 Medlwidk. Cards Home Rurés‘: Foxgi.) Régrkfijliiggié Greenfberg, gers. I . 2o; Goodman. Reds. 16: Ottfiianis 18- Lombardi. Reds. 10. iuuu Bstted In: Pioxx. Red Bus. 7a; York, Tigers. 60; Ott. Giants. oi; Averill. Indians. 57; Goodman. pads 51; Medwick, Cardinals, 49. _____._._.____ HAZELBROOK woman-s m- srrru-rc The June meeting of the Hazel- brook W. I, met at the home of Mrs. Vernon Wood on Tuesday the 15th with an attendance of thir- teen members and one visitor. Meeting opened in usual way. Min- utes were read and approved. New Committees were ap olnted for six months. Sick comm ttee for West End of district —Mi.ss Pearle Jones and Mary Coady. East end. Mrs- Halden Wood. Mrs. Vernon Wood. Program. Mrs. Kent Jones, Mrs. Harold Lawton, Miss Pearle Jones and Mary Coady. Delegates fares to the Annual Convention were paid. Bill for gift was presented and paid. Mira. v Myers invited July meeting, roll call to be answered ‘(DU COULD PUT A BATHR%\4 RIGHT AOQORIN 1T? HOW WOULD YOU GET For... Hull} Tribe T0 Win Over Red Sox NEW YORK, June 27 --(AP)— The Indians backed up Bobby Feller‘s seven-hit pitching today with a 15-hit attack on their own to trounce Boston Red Sox 7-3 and boost their American League baseball lead to four games. Feller, gaining his ninth victory against two defeats for the year. bested the veteran Lefty Grove. who was handed his third setback of the sew"- Young Bobby got himself int- several tig... opt... u... _....ed out of all of them. In the fifth it looked bad when Jimmy Foxx clouted his 21st hom- er of the year and Joe Cronin followed with a. two-bugger. but Bobby struck out Plnky Higgins to pull through. Altogether, he fanned l0 Boston batters. St. Louis. the Browns slipped further into the cellar, bowingto the seventh-place Chicago White Sox 9-4 in the first of a. four- game series. Veteran Ted Lyons allowed the Browns only six hits until the eighth inning and th eased up as his mates had bull up s. com- fortable lead. lmperials And Bees To Play This Evening Buzzing sting still left in them. Bees the Imperials in tonight's City Softball League encounter. Win- ners of only one game so far this season Bees nevertheless still have lots of chances of catching the third-place Imiperials’ squad and are going out tonight determined to take the first step towards their objectivtga place in the playoffs. Game is called for 8.15 sharp at the Park diamond. ‘Ihat when a motorist looks and listens, there is thing wrong with his engine. “A better finish to your car.” reads an advertisement. What's wrong with the old-fash- ioned. brick wall? "Biddv, darling," said Pat. arrivin home one pay day, "'tis your-eel. isn't it. that's glladkto hear of a u around with plenty of tackle Mas. l- Game In First From Canucks Scoring slx times in the first in- hing and adding another in the second, hquires last night held of! a late batting attack of the Can- adiens to win their seventh victory in the Junior Baseball League and practically clinch the championship gfsthc first section. The score was With the first batter safely out of the way in the first half of the first inning Canadiens began com- mitting errors afield and the Es- lluires again pounding the apple hard with men riding the sacks pushed across a half dozen tallies before being retired. 1n the second with a better being passed Perry came through with a blow to score the runner and put his mates sev. en runs up. It looked like an easy victory for the inquires at this point but here Emmett Murphy abruDtly halted the run-making to blank the Eisqulres for the balance of the game. But the lead they had gained was too big for Oanadiens to over- come. In the second and third in- nings they left five runners strand- ed on the paths as a result of in- eflectual stickwork, their big trou-. ble all season. In the fourth they broke the spell Bill Sherry held over them by scorn: once but through the 5th. h and 7th BOXING BASKETBALL OTH ER SPORT FORMAL OPENING O Bu 0H FRIDAY, JULY 1, to inspect the Camp and Down The Alleys HOLY NAME BOWLING Association SCOUT JAMBOREE AND ROVER M001‘ and ' POINT PRIM - His Honour THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR The public are cordially invited to attend, anal Saturday and Sunday. No charge for admission. r CAMP BUCHAN,‘ AT 2.30 SHARP Scout activities Friday, n n Nelson Well F 0 r Athletics L)’ Hurling tention....Lynn N ching star of Connie Black's Ath- letics. has hung up eight wins W one loss. . .More than that. he has finished every game he and with a sixth place team he- hind him. the pitching III-l‘ W110 once toured the northwest as the "masked marvel" boner. is the dif- ference between that mot and sighth....yet he was passed for the all-star game....Inciden y. there is many s fan around the circuit who believes veteran Con- nie has a real team coming up. about a year or two away. There is talk about town that Buddy Knox.a big and rapidly ad- vancing youngster out of Dayton‘ Ohio, is a white hope heavywei worth watching . . .. Tommy rr says next fall will see him mar- ried to movie actress Eileen Wen- zell ....'I‘ogether they saw the Louis-Schmelina fight that Farr decided made him look not too bad st all considering he sta i6 LSgierry tisgairiithhelclf thlemnawayérom ‘Imidfil’ B DB. E W l'l C0 {,5 in the pinches. ur n“ e or E- mmi‘ 7335 21% ?é_nfl thin the again Canadiens found A- Cmpbe“ 9 111K186 two down and three m, plus two u, n. Michael 24a ias 1'10 i3]...- nms ,.,.,,,,F“gh,"p,gf.g°*g,~ggg o. McDonald 159 104 110-1100 em within striking distance. ma 1w can d1 t 1 M. Dowling 1'14 i..d.‘i‘..°..“i‘..o‘i“..i€i. '.“..‘.‘J‘°..'...°tu§“.‘i‘.§i D- ‘We 19° 1°’ "Mm si e was retired as the baserunner 204 15o 15.5 attempt u to st i h wi E- v°"°“°" 5.3km f,“ the §flber°g°theiglgxfl 1 A. Coyle 142 201 148-1009 urnhy once again pitched good l m 193 117 19g enough to wi h h ld - E‘ B‘“‘“h“ quires w nwfhfi vfhmf hismgalfés v A. Higgins 1'15 l3’! iaz-iooi were collecting 10 off Sherry but be“ 11 1113 246 the rsqui - 1.115 T- Cami’ 68 mntlflflg) mg: while cdtldnneadvlvglnesnciakiielid: G‘ Keenan 2oz H7 1 996 0 y unch thi ' ' m-w-w» ti?“ "m “i s- mo“ is =2: til’. sea 50x "mm s. McLnnis 21c l3! ha; m Ooykd ‘fnHPoAElLAylwai-d 10B B51 - 1°$00vcoie 150mm» Whitlook. - Y _ - gal an i‘ 21121311 Hennessey 91185187 as“: BITS’. P. 3 2 ' Pefi; c ‘ 1 g g g g 1 ., a Schedule Al 7 GOIUQ W. SIOIOOLADS cams 6011mm. 2b 4 o 0 o 0 a p. McKinnon n. Toombs Trainer. r! 4 o o 1 o o 1.. Larkln o. Stewart McAleer, lb. 3 0 0 8 0 1 A. Clinton GhMggiuonald ‘Pvt-Ills s4 '1 s21 '2 s 16". fieiiiamt s. fig Ouisdleus an 1t r1 P0 A s d’ fiiiiiat lfznCrdllaghan J.Roach.lf so2o0o' V. Roach, cf 4 1 0 1 0 0 Candle Pin Mixed League Gallant, rf 3110 0 0 Howatt, ss 4 0 2 3 4 2 Trundlers- Murphy. p s o 0 z i 3 11' Tierney so 1a 84-251 mer. 511021 Bell sasas0_2o0 Elfin. c. 5 1 l 9 0 1 G. Keenan 69 63 70-202 Kennedy. 2b. s o 2 1 z 0 R. Doiron '12 a1 51-210 Saunders. lb. a 1 1 a 0 i l". rlyhn s0 ea 50-111 - Total—1041. ‘Ilotals 3051024911 SAM” X 1— Sllnmary Elvniltgachern g . II 8‘— Earned runs: . H. Coyl 4i 1s m-iai lens 1: two 531.2%‘, R. Ellisdn ‘l2 67 59-198 hit: Saunders; stolen base: Ken_ H. Oorcoran 53 69 83-405 "ed? J- GIT-Milt; base on balls: off Sherry 1, off Murphy 4- double East Endersz- liéity: Howatt to Saunders’ in 2nd; g glnfllhfl" 71g "g gf-gég on b53951 _ . oye — m ~- °“'“““°“‘ F‘ a was‘ .. ‘i’. i? Um@r§_-At the but, Franc“. D. M na — u. 1m , _ ' ' c. Gillis as 11 vs-m on ° a 3°18" A. Birch 51 51 62-110 13y 1mm," Total—l255. 12s us was-n r1 c 51m"- Oanldhnl ooo 100040410 a V 0°?“ 9" 73 "-24" M“ ‘“°¢°°&--:L&°°* ' if" 3.13.3.3... 33 32 hi2 I.‘ Dougsn so 4s 62-171 r .. ll s; $.23" .Mc uga 5 England LCGdS Toial-1285. In Second Test’ Cricket Match (O. P. h Gila-disc's Special Wire! LONDON. June 2'1—Losing two seoondJ ‘ wickets for 39 runs in a brief batting session before stumps were drawn today, England carried a lead oi’ lll runs into the final day of the second cricket test match with Australia. Rain curtailed the third day's play at Lord's but the Antipodeans completed their first innings for 422 runs. 72 behind England's in- itial total. There were three de- lays. the longest stoppage keep- ing the players in the pavilion from ius before lunch until 4.15 p. m. A double-century by W. A. Brown, 25-year-old Queensland Captain, featured the Australians‘ innings. Going in Saturday for the first wicket with J. H. Hngleton. Brown mastered strong English bowling to carry his bat for 206. It was his highest score in in- ternational matches against Eng- land and brought his total to 387 for the two tests this summer. At V/ELL -" I LIKE A BATHlliM STAIN-S — THAT KITCHEN ISN'T HALF BIG ENOUGH. a MILT — Tonight at 8.80 sharp:- Stars vs. Shamrocks. Eagles vs. Pacers. Tom MicClosIeey To Fight Leslie Tom (one man) McCloskey, well-known Island boxer of for- mer years who has had numerous engagements in United States rings during the hey-day of fis- tic career will stage a comeback in the local ring July 5. McCloskey has been t. meet George Leslie in a to be staged next week at Sporting Club. _______.__i__ REMEMBER. WHEN lBy The Canadian Press) Primo Carnera won the world heavyweight boxing championship in Long Island bowl five years ago today. The huge Italian took a terrific beating from Champion Jack Sharkey for five rounds and in the sixth knocked out the Bas- matched bout "l? rounds with the dusky destroyer. Headed by Lawrin, Dauber and Seebisc it. 33 thoroughbreds have been nominated for the ina running of the Hollywood Turf Club's gold cup handicap July l6 ...Definite decision whether Sea- biscuit will run will not be made for a. while. . ..the two other noted horses already are training in Cal- ifornia. Out in Cleveland they say Man- ager Oscar Vitt thinks a lot 0h Geoffrey Heath, outfielder product of Fort William, Ont.....A hitter and only 22, Heath started slowly this year through ill heelt ....but he has batted .301 in 3 games. Baseball Results (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) AMERICAN LEAGUE 100 010 010 3 '7 l Cleveland 002 Oll 21x 7 15 0 Grove, Ostermuellcr and De- sautels, Peacock: Feller and l-Iems- Y. 101100 303 91.’! ll St. Louis 100 001020 4 9 1 Lyons and Rcnra: Cox. Cole and Sullivan. ROYALS ncFnAr nan-Wises Boston MONTREAL. Juno 27-- lCPl —- Montreal Royals stncrd a throc- run rallv in the third inninv i"- nightanrl it gave them Pll"‘l’2l‘1 0f a lead to soils-Me out a 4-3 Into-—- national Loam» victorv over R"- |chester Red Wins". Rochester Mn mo mp7s R l Monti-cs‘ ‘"1 1W1 (v9-4 l3 7 Krist and 0-" " Chapntnn .V_iIg@g§ell and Campbell. _7 .-FOK SALE Silk Girl 9.09‘. g-r-i‘ n1 " 4 years old. Srcfl hv 0h Boy. Ilrm ‘ 1 Bingc- Silk. Sc-onrl dam lw "Mu The Great. 3 clam lw (‘nrlvr n. Should make valuahlr- lx-ncvl Further particulars imply i1 F. J. MURPHY. l h i‘ fl li . Ool- v herst so. Pats s-r at Community lheyctificaliiiiifiltgd woiiieroeiiisiismoet- "‘-"-}'..§‘:.‘,’.‘.“o. m 13.1 who would Nottingham Brown made 4a and w“ 3W0‘- The We chaflwli 4 Pfiflc" Arthur R - Field here tonight to strengthen ing adjourned. Pearle Jones put be?" ' ' 133. In the current match he held hands '- 3'"? In" when M“ "Bimb- their hold on first in the on s very interestin contest. A " "r15 Bgfney, 1w; won g1] me out for 31x hour; md ggve only Baer scored an llth-round tech- m m 1 _leagua.was__thsgi:served.___ 3335," two chances. nical knockout over Garner-i L-1940-6-27-3i. V _ _V QICAP" STUBBS AND TIIJDIE By EDWINA START BUILDIN’ ‘i’ AW-WHY oowr THEY QUIT FQQuNuiw ca- ‘E ...i_f'