Saints. Reece tloop " Teams Play Tonight The chips will be down when the Saints and Reece hoop squads tangle in their second. and possibly final. Island Physical Fitness Basketball League championship playoff game at the Prince of Wales College auditorium which gets underway at 7:30 tonight. The Saints took the opening game of the best of three series by a score of 70-48 lost Wednesday night on the auditorium floor. A win tonight for the Saints will give them, the championship while on the other hand, if the Reece hoopsters come through. it will force the issue to a third and de- ciding game. Alflioukh the first game Ill dosely played in the first half, the Saints outscored their op- ponents by a wide margin in the second half to take the match handily, but whether this will be Stars As Leafs A Take. 3-1 Win Over Red Wings _'l‘0 Lead Series 2-0 . By Jack Sullivan DBIROIT, April 10 —-(C.§') - Sid (Buff) Smith, rookie left wing- er, scored all Toronto's goals to- night as the Maple Leafs defeated‘ Detroit Red Wings 3-1 to take a two-same lead in their best-of- seven Stanley Cup finals. , The chunky, 24-year-old player- up from Pittsburgh, Leaf farm club -socred two in the first period within two minutes and added his third near the end of the second to clinch the game for the defending cup holders. Pele l-Toreck. who was in the penalty box 0n Smith's first two goals. got Detroit's lone tally short- ly after start oi the third to give the Wingsa lift, but they just didn't have it‘to take the game. Ififlfg won the opener 8-2 in over- time and the teams meet again in Toronto next Wednesday and Sat- urday. ‘ The game, played before 14,925 rabid Detroit fans, went at a fast clip.‘ in contrast to the slow play in the series opener Friday. Bnitti was the whole show. He was going both ways all Ill time and proved to the Leafs it was probably their best move when they called on him lo help out in the case again tonight is hard to say, as the Reece will be coming out strong intent on forcing the series to a third encounter. Which ever way it goes, however, local hoop fans who will be attending the game can be assured oi see- ing a well-played, keenly contest- ed encounter. Halifax llarness Racing Results HALIFAX. Apr. 10—(CP)—-Sister Henley, a fast-stepping more. won a straight-heat victory in the Class "A" event of a four-event light harness racing card on the Commons here Saturday. Besides driving_Sister Henley to victory. driver Weldy Carroll brought home Nova G., a three- year-olt colt making its first ap- pearance, a winner in Class "D". Roble Kaiser's Mae Todd. reined by Jimmy Given, won Class "B" in straight locals. Owner Lloyd (Bunny) Walker drove his Doris Mercury to victory in Class "C" which took an extra heat to de- clde. ‘Ibm Volo won the first duh. Sunny C. the second. Surrmary: ' Class A. sum‘ Henley (Carroll). Previous (Tamer) Christopher Stout (Given)....:2 m. Direct (Clmie-Boutilier)! ClassB. Mae Todd (Given) Evelyn Worthy (Boutilier) Mitzi Bars (Connors) ............ .. Clue C. Doris ivnerc-ury (Walker) Sunny c. (Isner).. Torn Volo (Gay)..... Darkey Tell (Hector , ossnmorcn. iEnsli-"d 4GP)! - Mrs. Annie Turner, 73, hid £14091 ($4,400) in tins under her bed-l rocm floor 30 years agv- All 919°" trician recently found them whllel installing now wires. Mrs. Turner! ‘who moved to a new house five, yea," ago, sail: "I'd iOIZOttBn Ill. Bb0llt it." e Featuring "Y|°""'im forced i" . Finest owl“)! Comfortable elastic 10F‘ e Wide rclni‘ d my ' “mm, mg aeiounl yornti the cup playoffs. It was the second game he has clinched for Toronto. The black-haired, ITS-pound winger scored two goals and as- sisted in a third when Toronto defeated Boston Bruins 3-1 in the fourth game of their semi-final series. . The way Leafs played tonight, it wouldn't surprise Bllybodw 11 they made it four straight over. the National Hockey League champ- ions, just as they did last year. The desperate Wings drew out goalkeeper Harry Lumley with slightly morQ than a minute to play and the puck stayed in Leaf .territory except for one rink-length shot by Joe Klukay which missed the open net by about five feet. Srnith took a pass st the B250 mark oi the initial period frcm Garth Boesch and whipped a. drive that Dumley didn't see. Just one minute and four seconds later he put the game on ice, slipping in the rebound on a shot by defence- man Bill Barilko. , Kennedy and Fleming Mackell were credited with assists on his third goal. He took a pass about five feet out and without chang- ing his stride, will-pond the puck foevween Lum1ey's outstretched legs. l. Lineups: ' Toronto - Goal, Broda; de- fence, Boesch. Barilko; centre. Bentley; wings. Klukay, Timgren; subs, Thomson, Mortson, Wat- son, Kennedy, Ezinicki, Lynn, Mankell, Gardner, Juzda, Dwwes, Stnith. Detroit — Goal. Lumley; de- fence, Quackenbush, Kelly; cen- tre, McNab; wings, Couture, Pod- olsky; subs, Stewart, Reise. Lind- y, Gee, Howe. Abel, McFadden, nio, Glover, Reid. Referee — Frank (King) Clancy; lineamen -- George Hayes and Sammy QBabcoek. First Period 1—Toronto, Smith (Boerch) 0:50 2—Toronto, Smith (Barilko, Kennedy) 9:50 Penalties - Klukay, Raise, Gee, Barilko, Iforeck. Dawes. Second Period Zt-Toronto. 8min (Kennedy, Maokell) 17:58 Penalties - Stewart, Lindsay, Third Period il-Detrolt, Horeck (Stewart, McFadden, Penalty -- lininiclri. Consider Detroit. Melbourne For Olympic lames LAUSANNE, Switzerland, April 10—(AP)—Either Detroit or Mel- bourne, Australia, is expected to be chosen us the site of the 1956 Olympic Games at the meeting of the International Olympic Commit- tee in Rome April 24-29. Four other cities. Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Mexico City and Buenos Aires, also are bidding for the games. Delegations from all the Qlnpeting cities will present their flee at the Rome meeting. Otto Mayer, chancellor of the in- ternational committee, recently re- ceived a formal invitation, signed by President Truman, inviting the '56 games to Detroit. - Melbourne also la pressing its candidacy, having lent each com- mittee member a decorative invita- tion printed on doeskin. ' A decision on the site of the 1956 winter games also will be made at the Rome meeting. If the games are held in the United States the winter gamea almost certainly will go to Lake Placid, N. Y. The Home meetings also will con- sider the elimination of a long lllt of events from future games. Hel- sinki, cite of the next games in 1962, is especially anxious to re- duce the program in order to keep the games within the city's limited capacity. w A report of a commission on a general revision of Olympic rules and a reorganization of the Inter- national Olympic Committee ltulf is also to be dileuucd ‘ ' the I250 - (OP) - After 101 THE GUARDIAN. UHARLO'l"l‘E'l‘()W1\' APRIL 11. With Murph Chamberlain's parture from the National Hockey League the game will be losing one de- of its "color" players. Murph, known as "the hard rock" for his hockey doings in Ontario's north- ern mining belt, announced that this season, no. 12 for him, waa his lust and he'll stay strictly to working his farm. O O O The decision moved Dink (Gaz- ette) Carroll io note that Cham- berlain wlll always be “memorable in the annals of the game." Baz. (Star) O'Meara, wrote that Murph "was a throwback and we remem- ber some years ago when grinled Alf Smith went into the dressing room to shake hands with him and said "he plays like the old timers." O O O O The following are a few odds and ends from the typewriters of Baz. Dink and Elmer (Montreal Herald) Ferguson. “Butch Bouchard-is g0- lng to have a piece of loose cartil- age removed from his knee before next hockey season. Look for changes in Canadians player per- sonnel. Remember how during the season Frank Selke said Canadiens needed a bunch of hulking six- footers who could hand out some of the bashing he suid Canadiens were receiving? ' O O O O "The prediction here is that Bruins will trade Frankie Brlmsek to Chicago. . . Bill Durnnn can pick up $150 a week playing soft ba_ll in Detroit this coming sum- mer if he wants. . . N. H. L. prexy Clarence Campbell considers Terry Reardon of Provldencea nat- ural as a hockey coach because ‘he wasn't a big star as a player and had to learn things the hard way and his experience as an army officer taught him how to handle men.’ O O O ‘O “Jack Stewart of Detroit is li ly to be traded to Chicago by D - troit which needs defensive help . . . When is King Clancy going to announce that he has given up his whistle and moved upstairs to the job of N.H.L. supervising re- feree?" "The most oft-repeated question heard by a guy who cramped the Florida baseba‘! trails this spring is ‘what was the best looking ball club you saw down there?’ quotes Bill (Ottawa Journal) Graham. The answer is easy. continues the scribe. The Red Sox. O O O O "That doesn't mean, although it could be, tha the Red Sox are the best _in the merican League this year and will win the pennant. Re- member that in his rooming this reporter did not see the Indiana and that at St. Petersburg Casey Stengel was wondering if. . .or when. . . Joe DiMaggio would te able to ploy nine innings, and meanwhile, who would play first base, to say nothing of second base, shortstop and third base, who, aside from Vic Raschi and Tommy Byrne, would pitch and who, in- cluding Larry Berra, would catch. O O O O "And that while Connie Mack was very hopeful of the Athletics and telling them that if they mind- ed their P's and Q's they could win e pennant, the young men were not too far advanced in their train- ing and, in truth, didn't seem to‘ ave so many P's and Q's al to re- quire special minding, even when they were all loosened up and rébdy for the opening of the season. (This, of course, is an opinion that one well may wish he had kept to himself, come October and a World Series at Shlbe Pork.) And that the Tigers were caught at a time when Red Rolfe still felt the shock in- duced by the iniurles to Art Hout- teman and, besides, wasn't sure who was going to play first and second and was undecided about his outfield save on the point that the recruit, John Groth, would start in centre. O O O O “So the view reflected here (the Senators were not seen at all, nor is that likely to make any differ- ence) must be narrowed down to the Red Sox approximately as they will look to you the first time they appear at the Stadium: the Ath- letics in a transitory state; the Yankees in a state of at least mild confusion. and the Tigers in the process of being made over by a manager who still was getting ac- quainted with them, In the circum- stances, the Red Sox naturally stood out." ' ‘ _._.__._'ii. _ . sgonsmsrms sass The area of the kingdom of Afghanistan is $0,000 square miles. AllllllAL nasmmlnmeluucnesammma- measuring» wllibe heldinthelownllallenfolifilrati-llpmmteanminhbtld inenteelag-Leagneareaahellto Celestial lfllent. llemberaoftlefllhrteaalareaailedtohsrnlnthairlnlhrme. assoc-immanent Maclntyre. Whalen Awarded Trophy Mscmrrnh. wrmum ANTTGONIBI-l. NS. April l0 — (OD-Duncan MacIntyre of Syd- ney. NS, and Lawrence Whalen oi Newcastle, N.B., were Jointly award- ed the Larkin Trophy at st. Fran- cis Xavier University here Satur- day. The award, presented in memory of Raymond Larkin of‘ Ottawa. kill- ed in i935 while a student, is giv- en the student who "most close- 1y measures up to the qualities of the all-round collaflfl man." » Bolnling ' SPORTING CLUB ROLLAWAY Playoffs-let. Round CNR. Cartage-—1382 CNR. Express—1351 High single J’. Peake 115 High three C. Hodgson 301 CNR. Frt. Office-—1353 CNR. Offices—1299 l-Iigh single E. Hennessey 110 High three E. Hennessey 303 CNR Frt Shed-—1382 CNR Mech. Dept—1365 High single E. MacNeill and J. Ronahan 109 High three E. Macklelll 294 i- t By The Canadian Preal Tris Speaker. one of baseball's greatest stars whose 21-year big- ieague batting average was .344 suffered a fracured skull and other injuries in a 20-foot fall in Cleve- land 12 years ago today. He fell from a window of his home and 100. stitches were required to close an eye-to-neck wound. Bowling Congress Toumey Ends (By The Associated Press) ATLANTIC CITY. NJ, April 10 —The American Bowling congress toumament-world series for the one-night-a-week athlete — ended Saturday night, with three win- ners: - Singles-Bernard Rusclle of St. Bernard, 0., with a score of ‘tilt. Doubles-Donald Van Boxel of Greenbay, Wis., and Gene Bern- hardt of Sturgeon Bay. Wi|.,1.- 33g, . All-evenis-John @111 of @1- cago, 1.041. Team-Jimmie Smith's of South Bend, 1nd,, 8,027. Rusctlo won $500. Bernhardt and Small each $1.000. ' John A. Neaneth. Harold Kelly. Harley I/uckey. Joe Ollie!!! "l5 Pete ntman of the Jimmie Smith's team shtred “.500 in prise money. The tournament ran for l’! days. It attracted some H.000 bo ler~s_ in luding several Canad- 11$. nave shared about 0875.000 in prise money. ‘ IUIDPIAN VOIDANO Vesuvius la the o!!! Nu“ csno on the continent of nestle 1 sunwmmumnnaaou IOIINW.IIeRlILL ’ secretary-dreamer. vol- - iunners-Up at S’S"i&e Bonspiel‘ , BIRMINGHAM, Ala., April 10- (AP)--Dick Fowler is convinced that an injury sometimes can be a blessing in disguise. - The 27-year-old Philadelphia Ath- letics’ pitcher believes that a lore arm last year made him a better hurler‘. ' C f ta anfl ‘ Whit have watched the Toronto-born right-handler work this spring claim his misfortune has made Fowler a "great" moundsman. Both manager Connie Mack and pitching coach Earl Bruckerrexpect him to win 20 games this year. Fowler won_15 ball games with the A's in 1948 with a bursitus con- dition of the right shoulder. How didlall this make him a bet- ter pitcher? The injury forced him to give up his blazing fast ball. He had to depend on control and slow stuff. He became a master with the change-up pitch. "After winning three straight.” said Fowler, "I asked myself, ‘how long can this keep up'." It lasted long enough to give him a 15-and-8‘record.for the sea- son, best among a better than aver- age group of pitchers working for the A's. This spring _ Fowler's arm has stopped aching. Now he not only has that slow, tantalizing stuff but also his natural speed. Montreal Hoopsters Defect Moncfon MONTREAL, April 10 - (GP)- Montreai Young Men's Hebrew Associatlon- juvenile basketball team took a commaruiing 22-point lead in the first game of a two- game total point series against Moncton Redskins by trcuncing the Maritime champions 58-83 here Saturday. . Winner will meet Peter-borough for the Eastern Canada title. The plucky Moncton crew never tailed their much taller n- entl by more than four points un-l til the closing minutes of (the gamq when the Y sharpshooter: suddenly began to click. Play was about even during the game with both teams missing rniany scoring opportunities by careless shooting. Hockey Results By The Canadian Press Allan Cup Eastern Carl-ads. semi-final Shcrbrooke 5 Ottawa 2 (Ottawa leads ‘best-of-seven ser- ies 3-2, one game tied). Meanualal Cup Eastern Canada final Montreal 3 Barrie 1 (Montreal leads best-of-seven series 1-0). ‘ i ~ ‘k y u, ‘g n; side Curling Club bonspiel J. A. Clark rink from .5e p, x; with 16 points. while Earl l’.‘.'i.‘.‘.‘..'2f..S‘.’°'.°...‘i'-‘2.“.‘-°.l.'“““. airline... B..“3'.Z‘i. ........., .. A. a... w. M; atom-n. Fowler Convinced 1 He’s Better Because Of Injury Basketball ‘Galnes VANCOUVER. April 10,- (OP) — Vancouver Clover Leafs went into the Western Canada senior men's basketball finals for the third straight year as they squeez- éd past Victoria Y. M. C. A.-.40-84 Saturday night. ‘ / VANCOUVER, April 10 -~ OP) — Vancouver Y. M.-C.,A. Satur- day night defeated Kanlloops 79-41 to win the British Columbia junior ‘ “ “ " championship and a crack at the Canadian title. , Ihe game was a sudden-death final. Vancouver now will meet the Raymond. Alta, squad in the first round of the Canadian finals. They will play a best-of-three match. WINDSOR, Ont., April 10 — (CP) -- Toronto Central Y Juniors won the Ontario Amateur Basketball Association Junior A crown Satur- day by defeating Windsor A. K. O. Juniors 47-44 in the second game of a two-game, total-point series. Toronto rwon the round, 100-94. Toronto Central Y now meets Montreal Y. M. H. A. in the East- ern Canada final. WINDSOR. Ont. April 10. -(CP) -'~ Aifilmlition College Purple Raid- ers .won a berth in the Eastern Canadian senior basketball final Saturday night when they pranced over Toronto Central Y sailors, 90-50, to wrap up the Ontario Amateur‘ Basketball, Association senior A fltle in straight games. - The raiders won the first eon- test of the best-of-three series in overtime at Toronto a week ago, BT-fi. It was their third such title in four Wars. amnrurmr, Channel Islande - (OP) — ‘This island, most north- erly of the Channel Islands, has only one telephone to the main- land. but it soon will have its om internal system. In addition to private telephones, fdur public call-boxes will be erected. Trunk lines also ‘will be installed. no YOU know rou can n! ro AMHERST 0B TBUBO ‘ For 110.15 _ (a passengers 88.15 each) OTHER POINTS JUST A5 REASONABLE m... nvmo sllavws carrot... Airport. Phone not I. . .._ ANTTOONBH. N. 8., Ahril 1i)- ‘ (CH-file power-parted St. Fran- cis Xavier University cagers eater- ed the Canadian intermediate bu- ketbcll final; hero Saturday night by ‘walloping Sllmmcteldl R.C.A.i". Fiyera 08-45 in the second of a two- game, total-point semi-final aer- ial. , . ‘ - Xaverians won the opener here Friday ‘night 84-34 and took the round 152-79. new. new meet the winner of thvssries between Mount Allison University of Ssckville. N. B, and Beult 8t. lllaric.‘ Ont. in a total-point series here. Dates have not been announced yet. It will be the first time the ool- legians have competed inthe Dom- inion final. The team, rated as the strongest produced by the univers- ity, has won the Nova Scotia and Imarltlme interoplkgiate hoop championship the last two years. Flyers displayed a reversal ,0! form and a tight acne defence kept 5t. F. X. sharp-shooters off’ bal- ance until the last eight minutes of play. Xavmiam rested their ace. Lorne whaien of Newcastle, N. 13., and phyed it safe with a man-to- len defence.- St. 1i‘. X. led 30-24 at halftime and Flyels stayed with them un- til the 12.00 mark of the final half} with the score 42-39. St. FX. open- ed up to utscore Flyers 20-8. Hank Propper of New York led Smith of Charlottetown was Fly- ers’ top man with 12. ‘ Twenty-six fouls were called, 1b Ski-inst St. FX. Flyera made 1i out of 17 flee tosses and fi. FX. eight out 0f 12. Lineups: . Summerside — Anderson 2. Oar- son 9. Smith 12. Mickus 8. Foy 2. Idnkletter 8, Bayne 6. 5t. F. X. — Pace 12. Melcbean B. Flaherty 12. Hsnusiak 12, Kehoe, Mac-Neil, Propper 18, Conley 8. St. Stephen Wins NJ. Junior Hoop Title’ SAINT JOHN. N.B., April 10 — (GPJ-St. Stephen Legionaires won the New Brunswick junior basket- ball ohampio ‘b’ Saturday night. Although defeated 44-42 by‘ Saint Johns, 8t. Stephen took the two- game round itl-tfi. A tOtaL-of 49 Flyers: iEnter Eino1s For l, Intermediate Hoop ' Title Jenkins loses Decision To Warringhll KBNTVMJE. NS. April 10 _ (OH-Terry (Tiger) of Liverpool, N.S., claimant of tlie Canadian light-heavyweight champ. ionship, gained a unanimous decis- ion over Ralph fJlnxtJenkina of Charlottetown and Acadia Univen. ary Saturday in an eight-round non-title bout here. Warrington. 36. weighed in at rn. renlrlnssflfl. weighed 115. n was Wrlrrlngton’: first fight in nearly two years and he is reported to be on tire comeback tmok. The Liverpool boxer scored four hnookdowns. Jenkins was down twice for a nine-count in the fifth, once in the seventh for seven and in the final round for the nine. Allan. lMemorial Cup Schedule None. WEST: g Western Canada semi-flnafi-M Moose Jaw: Calgary Buffaloes n. Moose Jaw Canuoks. (Calgary leads 3-2 in best-od-seven series). Allan Cup No games Monday niglbt ta Allan Olrp playoffs. Exhibitio_n_ Baseball At New. Orleans: New York (N) .. Pitt-thrift (N) the deciding contest. . St. Stephen will next play the survivor of the Windsor-Montreal series, with the winners advancing to the Dominion finals at Halifax. The eecni-flnsls may be played on a fouls indicated the type of play in Maine floor. probably at Calais. ‘ *6 ve your flfinlfln constant whoiayon er them . . nmrdyan Available or Dodge-DeSooo dgaler.‘ CHRYSLER i0l_0RIilEPEID on . ‘even under the-roll but conditgna with Cbryu Peamlinc Daimler. Til ' ed gag-lasting. III your (Ihryeier-Plymourll-Fargo I eee Ilefpe) CORPORATlON o... rioclrts large Olld BAIT LINES smxzlls rtoxrs llitis ~ RODS a .-,' \ We hove c tolr amount oi English eq for the opening Bey — BAIT HOOKS-We I l iBUMPANY of greet vorielyWo select horn. nf. One item wll kc "la-m... y” NW’ ensue-rs FLYLINES _ ‘ av _ s; CASTS". a rtv toll , 1 srxemm _ I ,, we otjessluo . SPlNtlilS p» ~ t» rat magmatic-sen email. tn... 1'...» downjeye-l-lellovz itlils lullollr "'1'" 711W l5“ TllE ROGER$ HARDWARE ca. 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