1 . ‘li Avail. 25. 19.47 uw _ V __ 2 oi-iAi.' °° Kether in order to ascertain the C rights of Braddock and the car- M den in the Schmeling bout.” 5 Under the April 10, 1935 contract, Braddock agreed to fight his first m b0Xi11g contest after winning the tiniied its legal Fi r rcpii ia ng Se Max Sclimel- a June 3- with one out dge Guy Fake W eld in Chicago today Each team made 10 hits-but uins and was effective in the 1' mins Ergefitia-S pinches, halting a Cub rally inthe venth inning a.fter the Chicago had put three men on base -1°" I-01115 bout the Pirate iefthimaer fannedeigiit 115 Al Todd led the Pirate attack ith a single and a triple, the a in formal' CB.rdl.nal, to the showers the third. The Reds came back in the fourth to score nina runson seven hits. St. Louis scored four runs in the sixth when Joe Medwick doubled to drive in three and then scored on an error. Cincinnati tied the count at 11-all in the sixth. St. Louis tallied its final three runsin the eighth. BT. LOUIS, April 32-(A.P)- Zeke Bonura and Monte Stratton were thoms in the flesh of St. l at the chief l what contract lst effect between fo ree bagger accounting for t/wo ns in the sixth frame Bill Lee, arting Cub hurler, was touched S r nine safeties. The Cardinals made it two raight over the Cincinnati Reds B Lo White Sox evened the two-game er _ uis Browns today as Chicago ies with a 8-1 victory Five hits, only one for extra buses. were all the heavy hitting rcwns of yesterday could garner day by taking a wild scoring ontest in the Reds’ lair 14-11. imager Charley Dressen used 18 ayers and St. Inuls 13. Each am sent four pitchers to the ound. The Cards sent Paul Derringer. e Reds' leading righthander and off the delivery of Stratton. Bo- nura, husky Sox first baseman, drove in four rims. One of Bonui-a.'s two hits was a home run into the left field bleach- ers in the third irinlng with no one on base. heavyweight title for the Garden th and "not to Engflge ln any boxing contest other than four round ex- hibition boiits without the written consent of tii~ Garde before dc- The Dec. 12, 1936 contract says V nless he fulfilled hi: contract to eet Sehmeling. Judge Fake reserved decision nd asked the Garden to file iid- F' tional briefs today. Br:iddock’s unsel will be given another week wit* \ to answer these briefs. udp-in PM einstatement TORONTO April 21-The Can- dian Amateur Hockey Association ided today on a plan to deal ly one yenr professionally and eur ranks. 3 ‘F A. H. Coo, Winnipeg, president the Manitoba branch of the; lation suggested forms be R concerning information on their be in by Oct. 1 and would be alt with by the registration com- ttee. The matter was brought up by E F. ke Asroclatioii who queried H G ossible reinstatement oi’ Bill Gill nd Diid James. i'oi'niei' Moncton itwlcs who dropped from profess- iil hockey not long after de- Ordinarily professionals have to ble but under this compafsioiuite No matter how much you Corner Fitzroy and Great (icorgc lXtl’8 V8|U€S 81 . NI] EXTRA IIST give in to your local Firestone Dealer and let him l, ' ou , _ mor:iy?°`l-le hai.: cglnhsleyte stock of Firestone H185 Speed, Oldfield, Sentinel an_d Ground Gnp hrel Hiatt will give you the longest mil¢l8° lt 1-5° |°"°‘t °°' Drive in and let him serve V0"- Tom liavies Allison Macleod c tl C f: l r intmd paying for UNB moot value for your 224 Great Genrle ~ ‘I-25 annul U _ Ed (Dutch) Brandt, veteransouth. a E. B. DesR.oche M. McFarlane F. Hennessey D. Ma.cKenzie_ C. LeCLair F. sinnott J. Kirw'h-i ~` M. Clinton R. K E. Goss own The Alleys ..- . HOLY NAME BOWLING IVHXED LEAGUE PLAYOFFB Alerts :- Dougan Coyle . Crasivell Mitchell 136 124 195 171 189 181 194 242 192 213 121 178 261 203 282 112 123 113 Total-3210. Flying Frenchmen:_. 185 220 141 269 128 209 176 183 100 215 126 137 .Slooomfoe 185 23 183 182 181 13'! Total-3180. Deuccsz- . Hughes McCabe . Brown 186 180 148 185 195 203 148 -188 . Egan 191 . McDougall 164 tal-‘$133 To . Ladies high single E. Mitchell, 185 119 183 110 240 222 137 176 13. Ladies high thtel I. Mitchel, 512. Gents high single J.Hughes,2B6. Gents high three B. Deslfwche, 746 , Alerts have drawn the bye. Next a ` . . . me Tuesday night at 830 pm Commercial League Playoffs can A iss 214 -as No Names:- . Fletcher McCarvillo 164 1178 214 223 145 170 128 iw 15. ~ 175 . 209 313 Dalziel 16'! . Acom 143 Total Eagles :- 201 295 N5 311 238 150 Vessey Doucettc . Fisher 193 176 274 198 . Gillis M8 282 256 226 194 Total-3286. High single, L. Corcoran; 813. High three, L. Corcoran, 750. Tonight at 7 0’cIack Ladies: Tip Tops vs Stylemaris. Commercial playoffs: Laundry Clinkers vs Prince Grocery Jrs. At 9 p.m.: Prince Grocery vs Old Timers. Remember When (By The Canadian Press) Red Dutton, then ii. hard-hitting defenceman of New York Ameri- nns, signed a contract to manage ie National Hockey League club two years ago at Montreal. Suc- ceeding "Bullet" Joe Simpson, the nieary redhead assembled ir. _irliiing bunch of players and led ic Amerks to the playoff for the t second time in the club's history. Here & There Around The Sports Circle NEW YORK, April 22-It may not be news that Sten Suvio of Finland. 1936 Olympic champion, has turned pro. . .--but it is new that he has been guaranteed $2.000 per year. plus 66 2-3 per cent of what he earns, by his United States manager, Emil Sarbo. .. This is just about tops for an un- proved ilghter. . .Most of them sign up for $600 per year or the customary 66 2-3 per cent. . .Van Lingle Mungo. who turned in 18 wins for the Dodgers last season, thinks he'11 repeat because hisauto license adds up to 18. Lou Amlbers. the lightweight champion. and his manager, Al Wei.ll,` are in Tampa to second Louis' stablemate. Red Guggino, against Chino Alvarez, tonight. . . Connie Mack says his young Ath- letics are the best hustler! he has irected in live years. . .Latest hot baseball tip is to watch Chi- cago Cubs-reason: Phil Cavaretta is doing a swell job in the outfield and Augie Galan appears to have regained his 1936 form. . .Lester Patrick says his young New York Rangers of the National Hockey League will be Stanley Cup con- tenders for the next three years. The way the Giants _are running against Brooklyn makes 'em look like the Giants oi' the John Mc- Graw days. . .Hot spots controll- ed by Jack Dempsey and Tony Canzoneri are lighting for business almost next door to eachother. _ . A block away is s. place operated by Mickey Walker and Benny Leonard is looking for a spot in tho same Broadway neighborhood. Members oi! the fair sex were first in line at three of the un- reserved gates in Brooklyn for the opener. . .Beginning in 1934. the Yankees have lost every opening game by one run. . .Before Tues- day’a inaugural. Lefty Gomez had been trimmed twice by 1-0 scores. . . .It isn't true tlmt Primo Car- nera is coming back to these shores as a wrestler . . . What did Mickey Cochrane think when he read the Washington box scum and sa/w what Aloysius simmons d d id. Van Mungo is just as "swift" as Bob Feller. so far as our eyes can detect. but Brook1yn's ace liasn't the hop on his fast one that the Cleveland youngster produces from full windup. . .And Giants ~ now are willing to admit they'd rather hit against Mungo than Feller. Mlnnrd’s Llnlment removal ltalns. ` And N ewa rk Win Openers (A.P. by G\urdlan's Special Wire) MONTREAL. April 22-Toronto irounced the Orioles 10-7 to open V the Intemational League race in iiialtimore today, the home team taking a licking although blasting out four homers. Toronto scored all their runs in the third when 14 Leaf batters stepped to the plate. Harry Mat- uzak‘s wildness and Roy Scha.lk’s error in the face of a. probable double play mainly accounted for the big tally. Nickel! for eleven btngles, Frm.. cis Nekola. improved as the game progressed and pitched the victory for the Leafs. Bchalk stoned for his error in smashing out two of the Orioles' four-ply smacks. Puc- cinelli and Wright hit one apiece, Scoring six times in the first in- Hlng. Newark Bears opened their International League campaign at home with an 8-5 victory over Montreai Royals. Overcast skies kept the crowd dovim to 8,000_ The Bears knocked Lauri Myuy- kangas out oi! the box in the in. itial frame alter reaching him for HVG h1£S.~ including a pair M doubles and a home rim by Bob Seeds that brought in five rung Marvin Duke, who pitched my Newark last year, game in fm- Myllykangas and lasted the rest of the route. Dave Hams 1>0ked a homer for Montreal with Sammy Bell on base in the nrst inning, George Mg- Quinn homered for Newark in ad- dition to Seeds. Study Effect Of Suspension B`yA.A.U.ofC. 'noRoN'1o. April 22-The major lluestion in amateur hock`ey‘s double muddle today was the ef- fect 3 S'USIP€nsion by the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada. would have on members of the Winnipeg Monarchs, Dominion junior el-mm. pions. A few hours before Monardxs were scheduled to play Hershey Bears in an Intemational series game here last night and shortly after the Canadian Amateur Hoc- key Association had concluded its f-\“'¢¢~dHY annual meeting, I. bombshell was tossed into thering by a delegate to the Associations imeeting. Leo Burns of Montreal. Quebec Amateur Hockey Association rap- resentative and first vice president of the A.A.U. of C. issued a state- ment on behalf of the latter body that meant automatic suspension from any sports controlled by the A.A. U. of C. for players of any team playing Hershey. Bums said the AAU. of C. had been notined by th eAA.U. of the United States all teams in the Eastern United States amateur hockey league, of which Hershey was one, had been suspended in March, 1937. Burns said the Can- adian body had no choice except to uphold its alliance with the United States Union and serve waming to Canadian teams. After defeating Hershey B-1, players and club officials of Mon- archs hustled to the train. home- ward bound. No statement was made on behalf of the players or the club but lt was indicated they were not worrying about the situ- ation. It was believed few if any of the boys compete in sports un- der A.A.U. of C. jurisdictiofi. The A.A.U. of C. directly con- trols track and field, boxing and wrestling, and gymnastics and handball. Most. important of its amllated bodies are the basketball. ski and lacrosse associations. Following the statement issued o-ua noiimnc Housn Y with Major Hoople HEY, iz/xerus! is f,57€;».; 'ri-i' i=i=.oPRiE-roi=. /¢/"¢ Aizouuo? we'i2.E Home ~rowi~i! _ 24.72 ciusr 'fei_i. us 1 i-ie'ii_ c-rev -ri-i' euizviziee on we i_ii=E I ' 1 \\\\\\\\\>\\i \\\\\<\\~ "‘“‘°"=--A lil'»§ I* \ -_ \\ ' i\ "W 1 \:`k\\\ \\\\‘~.\§_§§` -- - -~ 'i a-' §:`~:'* 5;- -t“` 2:-S, -.'.'.f. - - ‘- ' -5' '.','.' if L f _§“__`-‘L-_..-: °°7.'._=J' ' 5%-_i 3 _ 215 EEE 4%; ¢ i ‘ ' I 1 _ Z i ulill. g //,' FROM H15 OLD AT NIGHT, '/ \\ ARE You i-us i=i=.oi~i'r 2 Does i-is 1=‘i.u_i. -sr/.mes `W\ "_-_ \@ _1 ' 'ii 1 ` f A-5 1: \;:.`\.. |:'l. ” \ ‘:. 3. *s;;.;1. |!"' _iii ._ -. . ' i..ii“/"' _ > L 'www ow. Does me PAY i-us Bii_u.~a;> Q WHERE WE @N WE DUST `F\I~.lD FHM; AND VVANT ‘YO \\ ii/ll ///, ’ ` _ Y / 1 \ lla is _r\\\‘ ;\\ f/Qé/,\;/' f ff A ` ‘V `“.<3T`1 ~ 7'" (MQ/'” ie.”/."#' \\ *__ "‘lili1ili-.'»iiii lil- ii' il “BEER .Q \ a, \ \\ ' i-ie voice -5rAiz'r 1=o ve 1=.iBBEi=. 1 non' :ive Miiuures P~6O°°~ HE GOT DE BLUES SO B/-xv, ii='i~i i-ie NAMED "r'i.ooi-< _ A sumilie au De; i-iiuovv, so Fees, Heli: Have we can me -vo emma A 5-rei> HIM A //f I Lnavniiii-|~.....ve5,5u»-l i.i-mme! 'ff someone vane QQ sirocis Au. His '/,//_'Z _ 1>Ei2i=oi=.~ui=i' / ‘_ » if.-ei / _ x .' A E".""\§\f _ 1=eEAs I .'.»" '__; . ,f` ’°'._ ff. \ ‘T “‘ \\\\`\\\_\ ~/ "Q\§=`\`\\\ _ __ .\\\\\;\`_\§\ ._ ` _ / ` , L- \ , -A -nf; r U "Z ‘_ ` /‘ V-U` “`/~`\..\ \\ g \\\i’f¢ ‘__ \ .-/:E \\,;/~», ~"' 3-” `F HE \ §\“\ AT- l: EET ;2i.i.-eio A sici< si-iow=.`, `- .' le _`$~ 1 ,__ RUSEBUD is righl' up my alley Rosebud is a prime fcivourile with pipe smokers and il should be For Rosebud l i should be. BASEBALL SCORES AMERICAN LIAIYUI Chicago 001100110-6 1 0 St. Louis 000 000 001-1 5 7 Stratton and Sewell; Knott, Bonetti and Hemsley. Washington at New York, Bos- ton at Philadelphia and Cleveland at Detroit (postponed-rain). NATIONAL LEAGUE ‘ st. Louis uis oo4 oso-14 14 0 Cincinnati 100 901 000-11 14 3 Sl Johnson, Ryha. McGee. Win- ford and Ogrodowski: Derrinser. Brennan, Hollingsworth, Schott and Lombardi. Pittsburgh 101 002 000-4 10 1 Chicago 000 100 100-2 10 0 Brandt and Todd; Lee, Bryant and O'Dea. Bottarinl. Phila at Boston and New York at Brooklyn (postponed-rain). INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Toronto 000 (10) 000 000--10 9 0 Baltimore 13 1 010 010- 7 11 2 Nekola. and Heath; Matuzak and Gray. ' Montreal 200 111 000-5 14 0 Newark 610 010 000-8 14 1 Myllykangas, Duke and Kies; Tamulis and Hershberger. Buffalo at Syracuse and .Roches- ter at Jersey City (postponed- rain). Una llllnnrilhi |£r__l1|ii|. _*___ by Bums, another was released by Cecil Duncan of Ottawa, president of the C.A.1-l.A.1nwhich lie brand- ed the affair an attempt "at a late hour to enibiirrass the Asso- ciation in the conduct of thc in- temationnl series games now in progress." and you'|| soy there IS |~~'»n in town a week fv<~*'*rr; into *tri-*fin shape. The rain. lr ‘.i- ir- P * po.=sil>ii'_i-_- of :i - - ly' 3.000 .\r‘l‘.f~f- _ " e gathered for " ‘ i TOITi0rl'0'.‘.".: ` 'if 1i'f‘Z lie- txr- en over mei iw » r.':‘» ners alllioiiili i . ‘ ' " "i hurdle ‘rig _ 'vt the Offziigrv ( 9 -' To\\'n.<, of r;f.f»;~ fi ' f di=iy's bil lil "iw _ Y()l' (` \.`-§‘i.'.-" 2 -'iii f ,, i ..._. . .._... so _. B "The game needs a ezar-a Judge Landis of boxing:-.someone \\»li'> can - supervise the \\'a.~- -‘J .._i _ l-iiiw here today but J. R. Coi'in~_iii;<, 1|! i.;_,~ coach of the Hainiltoii, Out. Cvii ' l’li.'i;i'_‘ ' tral Collegiate Institute train. said his men iifcdeil no more tiniiiiiiic _and were -"»Ll}_9_p§11<__9Lt§f‘}\”_,f01‘m_iis'5E;;`”f1';;t;'r..:_,;fa:\_ OUT OUR WAY iii- \.f.'ii.i.i mis BITS 'ID A DOLLAR FN 2 -`-i\ `\$(=.1'=‘ -"BQ t. .ii-i\\ ` =5"f';'\\ ‘;¥_ .s \\ _ 'JJ \ A" / §`:" ~.\\\‘ »=> `\' _` .I\\\ F\ ;.,\ \\\\~ lj "\ ..-kv! ` A. , J/,.1 I "-u~ __/ ~'l ’ ‘ "i\.1»\iv_,.. ‘fi/l _, _ -_ ~ ii, »~;.a;>a..=; #T :A /' f , _a i_-’.~’_-'=i'.'§€_-‘.'.?=i\_ i _ f -,,'E'¢_f ` fmimli he M] 4:1 ` I ' V ' i ' cf: ,..=~;- \.\,_\“\*"`%?iw~_ =;1 ‘ _. . ..-TTT;-2. .1 i' ' ~~= ` ‘ \~ A, c f /' -'--“-'---:..: -If ‘ ' ' ' .‘-_ -‘V ' ,I/"Jil, ;_%_ /E' \ L' ;:`//&(/ ' i . , , -. _ » -* _ _ L if .if j>f» = ° Wg e 2 =:i::: 9 f *_-'31 __ _ iNi>us-rizi usaosre _Mg 1 » ' l _ * “ _ Ai>iece!o+i,so~Q = Pi- I# » ` l _g`\:»y».» _ K / \ \ 6 \ A 7 V " 'T/4ff._., ~ "”’ "` fn ` » ki ./._ ` ~L.... » Q 0 oi3C>. 2\ "3 _/‘-‘~.é;`i§` ,,-_ l)`“w _ _ *qi-3-` m _\.\ ,P--.il ‘ I ' A \," ` I \ 2 ’ - ~`;"_ i I `. 5 __i:.,_._;v'_'_;’»i»».. W W sow. oi-i eovi A Foiarune W owooi-i-- f\rvei_i., i.ET'5 E i » f 1 `\ raic-,i-ir aesoae ours Eyes! Ai.i. Aiuorueie GET AT rr, eirr \~. ~ , . WED i-iave To oo is Move woivoeracui., 1 eor A Novice i ~ mesa BEAuTii=ui_ §roi~ii;s_ Sunny To Puiucil r i. __ i . Down Bv TH' ROAD, ANU pf UAV fau\NED!,,, Hou. 1 , sein. THEM Fora i2oci<': _» `-°` i~;;i’i' 1 - _ eixizoens---i=rzoM 'rvvo 4 fl t . _ it no/ il, f Q `, . ‘ \ M/ _» '_' ` _ \ ~'.’ > 5.: I. all tif 4,0 _*_ _ 7::'.i ` l