rm: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE SEYE}! APRIL 2s. 1940. ONTO. April 24 -(CP)-'I‘l1e Kflillllil lzikn when the B lie l’ 1 Cnluziry stampeders - llssiiiihwml tl l eep 0i’ finals “fill. (Iiiilindlalle r S3110!‘ hockey ‘ hip. It was th ml"! e nrv m the flashy Min" only one game -—im 1 0 ~=ni to Svzlnev Mifliiahflifes- - . _ owns. w!" ’D“,fl.,’,',‘.°ll§lllllil§ grisly Stam- 84 qyfll 9-1 in the first two “W” t ‘rnolster one of the 9559"‘ p.79,- recorded in Allan F“ ""‘"""-ti Bu ke of Calvary viis*.:.1“r1.r....- .l~i.. it Rice- "“"‘ .,, ‘ p0,‘...- of Jim McNamara Qfflllfnn...‘ “Md iin manfullv lind- Q, W. B»... Dnvlls’ bombardment. dc crwn up.” 931mm players ma it. Mike Patrick re- vs...” n... inlurctl Les iiiirlwtll < - . ‘ . ess- Wl " l‘ v Tamil.“ gglllgoul” the rl\ Patrick Rot the n‘ (llllV goal. A n a; lllf‘ Kirkland players. V. .- iii-Goody and Dick Kow- c '.,_ p was tlic second Allan Cup V n“... 5., {twee years. Both played 1,, T-il niicn the Smoke Eaters ,...,, H19 iiwiliv in 1938. McCreedy ppm, iii-co tallies tonight to Md pa» nlflflfilllflli. Jo-Jo Graboski. Bldg... w ‘ion. Joe Brown and Stu got a goal to complete ml Lake lOlBl. '= tn'lv was the "My 50F"? dPbl Pf‘ sinn. o [Zirklanclu Lake Blue Devils Win ‘Allan Cup; Beat Stampeders 7-1 tre ice flash circled his net and swooped through the Calgary ranks to plant the puck behind -Mc- Namara from close in. '1‘iie crowd of 8,836 was a big drop from the previous attendances. More than 13.000 turned out for the first game and more than 9,000 for the second. a SUMMARY First Period i-Kirfland Lake. Mcvreodv (Cvrabosld. Duff) 11233 Z-Klrkland Lake, lvilcCreedy 16:10 Penalty-Boston. Second Period fi-Klrkland Lake. McCreedN (Cooper. Kowcinak) 6:59 d-Kirkland Lake, Grabcski ‘I12’! G-Kirkiaaid Lake, Walton (Brown) 16:57 B-Klrklarid Lake, Brown (WM- ton, Smith) 17:21 Penalties-Howie. Hill. Burke. Third Period ‘l-Oalgary. Patrick (Jemlpson. Desmaris) 4:08 B-Kirkland Lake, Smith (Brown) i:il of the night. The cen- Penalties-None If’ s puilcd flChP-ztlllli ltzdziy at Philadel- ..l nicr sccond straight ‘tqn ill" Fiiilles 5-2 azid 1» lllt‘ Niticnal Baseball l 0 fourth uiit at tvVO-all in ,. the stage for ‘fcunw of the Giants. : jvh wth a home .i 1T0 llltilfS aboard in the inning ‘ 'illl"'ll. lflfl Bill Leo stsered m a 9-4 vlctory over the ttie first rrts started for Pits- [Vlliidttl for thiee " iw riiiis. NcwlYolrk Giants Take Second Straight Victory From Phillies By 5-2 "p" YC} K April Z-i-(APJ- - - and yielded two l‘\l‘l‘.S. Oaais Swi- gart was reached for two mole. an 8-6 triumph over Boston Bees ‘nvi ion. at _Brcckiyri. _- \';1',l{l9iib91g par- tvliitlow Wyatt started for - me i. t5 the Phil-S Brooklyn but gave up seven nits and five runs in the first three in- Johnny Lanniiig relieved Butcher Lee yielded l.l scattered nits. Bmoklyn Dodgers Scrambled w nings. Dodgers held a temporary lead in the first when tbs-y exploded a four-run firecracker fused by Roy Cultenibwnes homer Wit-ll two on. but they didn't scorc again unt"l the fourth when a wa-lk and two singles pushed one counter acro s. In the eigipth. Dolph Camiili singled one ruii home and stole second. Cullen-blue was walked to fill the bases and pinch hitter Dixie walker waliopctl a single to score the winning runs. 9-4 Despite Kirkland Lake Dressing Room ls Mad - house lily William H. Dumsdayl (rlllliitlliiil Press Staff Writer) TORONTO. April 24 -—(CP) - From the (in in a hockey dressing room turned mad-house emerged il man tonight who modestly called hlnvrll "llle proudest father in Camilla." He. is Harry Cook, f8- ilici" of coach Lek Cook who hid just hclpcd his Kirkland Lake Blur Devils win the Canadian Sen- ior llockcv Championship. Standing beside his giant son as lnx lirltl the Allan Cup Just pre- scnlorl to him. the father, a To- rl.ll'll linslncss man, thanked the Kukiniicl Lake players for "mak- inz my fondcst. dream come true- l ivll never forget this night." As the Bluo Devils skated easily h» n 7-l victory over Calgary Shvnnt-tlcrs for their third straight victory tn lhc cup series, Mr. Cook mid lie "walled confidently ‘but first!!!» the one-sided score it was a rcllcf to hear the final whistle." A former trotting horse breeder but "rliu n hockey player. Mr. Cook has followed the progress of his ion in the sport for 2i years. Air Gunners Most Needed In ii. G. F. OTTAWA. April 2l—(OP) -Best b“ W‘ a young Canadian seeking 9llllF"'lf‘flt tn the Royal Canadian Air l-‘crro is to apply for service "'1 "i" dunner. it was suggest- "l 7'"'llf7“ll'!ll\'€ly tonight Whit mrst. young Canadians ltiizclis to flv a plane or be an "l" ""<rrvsr. it was said there was 9""? of fWnllral-lnh! to meet nilo‘ "it Cbsarvor nuotln and that no """‘"“"' d-slrlnz in serve as a lYanlzecs Swamp Athletics HittingMarginForC/zamps i Narrow NEW YORK, April 24-(AP)- The Yankees demonstrated their home fun artistry to four Phila- delphia pitchers today to swamp the Athletics 9-4. although they outhlt their foe only 11-10 in an American League Baseball game. Red Rolfe hit two of the world champions‘ round-tri per-s, one with a man on base. an Tom Hen- rlch and Joe Gordon provided two others. Henrich‘; also coming with a man on base. In the second. Rufflng and Her- man Besse, Connie Mack's rookie lefthander. settled down to itch scoreless ball until Rolfe led of the fifth with his first circuit blow and Beme blew the lid. even though Ruffiniz weakened to At Boston the battered Wash- éhglr first, victory of the season, Grove in the sixt. etrott Tigers moved into a aeo- cago. Tommy Bridges pitched five- Bridges shut out the BOX in hi8 At 5t. Lou s. Cleveland took ad- Atding the Cleveland cause was a - iio Negotiations BTOCKHOLM. April 24-tAP)— quarters tonight that “there is no Germany. coilnczl set up ln German-held Oslo rresiderit of the Norwegian Su- German-occurierl dstrict. 1t was llinrcr iiitcli- Wonk,» b. lccepyed '°°"<‘r than the others. Newark Bears Down Montreal In Close Game MONTREAL, April 24 -(AP) - Newark Bears eked out a 5-4 de- cision over Montreal Royals today in an International League base- ball game at Newark. The Bears fashioned their winn- ing margin off Ira Hutchinson in the seventh on one hit. a sacrifice, thre walks and a force-out. Hutch- inson yielded all of Newarkk nine blows before retiring in favor of Steve Rachunok in the eighth. George Washburn was credited with the victory although he work- ed only seven frames during which he gave up seven hits. He was replaced in the eighth by Norman Branch. Jersey City made a clean sweep of its two-game series with To- ronto Maple Leafs, taking the sec- ond game by 5-4. Glenn Stewart's ninth-inning single scored Johnny Dlckshot with the winning run. The game was at Jersey City. John Wittig staggered through the distance for the little Giants although he was touched for i0 hits. Jim Rcnninger, third Toronto pitcher, was charged with the de- feat. ' Though outhit 1'7-l0 the Chiefs earned their first victory of the campaign by shading Buffalo BLsons 9-7 at Syracuse. Jack Tislng started for Syracuse and was in hot water all the way. finally being removed for Les Hinckle Art Jones however stopp- ed the hard, and the Chiefs got their ninth and clinching run in the eighth. At Baltimore. Dick Midklffs four- hit hurling in the nightcalp gave the Orioles n. 9-2 victory over Rochester Red Wines and a sweep of today's doubleheader. The Crimes won the first game 9-‘1. While ivlidl-"f was dolmc out the hits -‘wo t‘ thorn homers by Ktirowski and Heal —Bnltimoi'e nicked Francis Riel for l2 Wows. including four-buggers by Corbett and R-irlmond. ' Tho Wings out hit the Birds bv one safety in the first izamo but t?" Orioles bunched their hits to better advantage. Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia. 200 000 011-410 4 Now York 020 020 50X—9li l) Bcsse" McLaughlin, Heuser. Bcckman. Hayes -and Wagner; Ruffizuz and Dickey. Detroit 010 001 000-2 8 2 Chicago 000 000 010-l 5 ii Bridges and Tebbetts; Rignsy, Brown and TreLm. Washington 000 041 040-012 l Boston 000 330 000-6 8 2 Hayes, Hudson. Mlastersnn, Ev- ans and Early’; Grove. Hash. Hov- lng, Ostermueller and Ddsautels. Cleveland 111 000 030-812 3 St. Louis 000 000 130-412 0 Milnar, Dobson, Smith and Hemsley; Kennedy, Bildlilli, Mills, and Swift NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago 000 0G0 002-010 l Pittsburgh 200 010 001-411 2 Leo and Todid; Liannirig, Smell and Berries. New York 000 020 030-5 7 0 Philadelphia 000 101 000-Z 5 i Vandenberg and Dunning; Mull- cam and warren. Boston 122 010 000-d 9 3 Brooklyn 400 100 030-810 3 Sullivan, Coffman, swift, Masi and Lopez; Kimball. Mungo, Wyatt. Pressnell and Manon-so, Phelps. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE 010 030 010-—4 l0 2 Jersey City 009 000 l01—5 B 0 Pezzullo. Boriv. Renninifl‘ BM Gray; Wittlg and Blaemiro Montreal 001 000 120-4 8 0 flower-k 800 000 200-} I 0 Hutchinson and Rsidhunok; Wasnburn, Branohi and Bean. Buffalo 000 030 400-1 1'1 3 Syracuse 010 043 010-9 9 2 Lee. M-aglie, Trexler and Zubik: Tiaing. Hinckle, Jones and Warren. Toronto First G : Rochester-mm 20B 001 001-1 i0 0 Bgltimpm 040 003 20x-9 9 2 t Seinwortii. Roe. Gorntckiwsnd Sdheffing: Hughes, Trinkle. 0°1- lier and Kraoher. Rxghecgsllgr Gum 01o ioo o-a 4 a Baltimore 210 313 x-O l2 1 Rfel and Heal; Midkifl.’ and Red- mond. " Baseball Dootmhflflmflli “M” 5.1 league-st. Louis at c" cmnatl (floods), four scheduled. American League-None, four scheduled. 1n- ternational Lennie-NOW. n" scheduled including one double- header. American Association- None, three scheduled. l-loldout Joe DiMaggio ails-render- ed unconditionally to the late Col. Jgcgb Ruppert. ovmer of the Ne? York Yankres. two years 1R0 Wm‘- - signing a $251100 ogntmt ""93 Ruppert mu him m so Iheld l" sign it." None of one wow R119- pert fanfare attended the sigrllnl. and the belligerent. DfiMlCUO V” almost meek as he confessed he Joe ‘Jacobs Dies After Unexpected Heart Attack l NEW YORK. Alirll 24 —(AP) _ 1 Joe Jacobs. manager of heavywevht I Tonv GB1€nw._and a legendary ig- ure in boxing circles for many ldied toni ht. from a heart a tack. go wgul have been 44 year; cld ' iiv . i ‘Death occurred in a doctor‘; of. fice whore Jacobs. laughing 3155M“. ""' “"““ ' lfully at n "slight pain." had gone to . taCrlifi liil fe‘ adl las t, OWLING RESULTS d i i» = it B T011)’ Galento but did not regs-rd) hgshillnbesslghas w ‘ill.’ -ii;i \‘.'_‘ii[ a ou is usness Ho“ M“ “mm Tom-im- Is Stunned By till. .ll..*:~';ti.tii:"::*arias; ‘i f. Mixed Bowling Semi-finals Palm-b m 23.0 m ’ Jfia)ll§:_s}(igf,§,.§r {Cgggfiilflal-Iflfy mo“ G Toom S i0 fight mnl) a5 "Yusselfl mflng, g Alcrtsz- F McCarvillo Z33 138 203 Manage?‘ s lMax Schmellng of Germ/any to lhe V. 1e 221 195 1'10 E. Connors 122 109 128 mvorltls heavyweight championship. J- Hlllhfio 144 123 233 I. Curley 150 118 133 .!n 1930 Jack Sharkey struck E. McGrath 12B 133 155 E Marlin 195 115 162 _ _ Schmeling low in the fourth round E. Hessian 210 101 128 D_ coyie 173 134 134 ORANGE’ N‘ J" Apr“ 24__(AP, '8l"id Jacobs rushed into the ring. yel- M, Aylward 155 204 118 TQtd]__2854_ __Heavywe;ght boxer Tony Galem ling (fioul $0 voclfsi-cusllv tl"e referee G- Mwlfdle 33 b3 m‘ Ladies hikh single M. Walsh 223- to was stunned tonight when noti- ia“v’]5a\€!neq0t}l?el%er-Qlan file. ‘Plea m Total—2'1’l7. Ladies high three a. Mitchell ass. fled of the death of his manager‘ ‘ “ 5 a “‘ “M °‘ g?‘ “e " t h. h m ‘e A Mccloskey Joe Jacob in .iitle with a 15-round decision and Giantm- G?‘ a l: his), gyhree], co 1e 592 “rm a! l New “m? iJacobs achieved some son. oi lmmcn .r_ MbAdam m6 171 192 23 . 9" 8 - Y ' good mg-ndll rnfmglgrull gnylgitusfl .- Itglllly bvvvéntlerinz ltlggdrlng and bel- . -, . - ' if!" ' ‘uz r0 g- hill???’ as}; Tmllghl l‘ 313°-I""m"|°"3| ually loquacious Tony murmuredl Jacobs a'so coined the crack. "l ' be 16,7 147 152. Lezigue:—- quietly after having the news re- shoukl ofstcod in bed." when one B‘ Mm“ w, Mi Cudmoics Dry Cleaners VB- Mlch- posted several times. cold morning he ventured out of a M- Walsh 126-145 1 i ael‘s Grocery vs. Tonsorlal Artists. l l1l(‘h'0 hotel with promoter Mike 1)._ Cullen 121 __1iis p120 our on; Await '\'“\ 4.’ i%/ ‘ I will‘ tilt l it \ xii i p‘. . j ’ u. , i’. d)’ - , c». , V" to make this S U I 'I' . Tip Top pioneered the idea In Canada of individually hand-out and toilorod-io-moasuzo clothes at one reasonable price. But that was only the start. Tip Top also brought a new typo of style, fit and comfort to Canadian men. Now ideas and techniques were constantly developed which added to the value leadership of Tip Top clothes. Export cloth buyers sought and bought tho finest British woolons. Our designers kept posted on the fast-changing style picture, and ovary new. sound trend was immediately offered to Tip Top customers. Our craftsmen continually improved the quality of their tailoring. The Tip Top clothes of today are the result of everything we have learned in 3O yours. Offering the finest dol- lur-Eor-dollar vdluo, Tip Top clothes for l940—as always- are Canada's‘ out- standing clothing investment. STORES AND DEALERS EVERYWHERE TIP TOP TAILDRS 99 Grafton Street, J. E. WRAN, Manager NO , WES--NO.' BRANDIN‘ NEVER HURTS A CAFF -- YUH sEE , we GRAB ‘EM BY TH‘ was THISAWAY Au‘ rr errs ‘EM -A—i.AuGHlv~i"--vuu e01 T'BE BORN IN TH‘ BUSINESS T"\'Ei.i. A BAWL FROM A LAUGH" LISTEN T THIS TONE ,NOW-- THAT'S A LAUGH "WHY, HE wotrr EVEN FEEL THE IRON! ARE ALL A5 - \ The ree rlghthanders who succeede. him had no better luck allow five nits in the last two frames. ington Sena rs turned on the Red 50x and slugged their way to The senators chased lefty Bob h inning.‘ Bobby Doei-r knocked five of the) Red Box runs. end-place tie with Boston by de- feating the Vifhite Box 2-1 at Chi- hll ball and Rudy York got his first home run of the season. duel with Johnny Rigriey until the eighth innin . vantage of every scoring oppor- tunitv and swept to .0. 8-4 victory. Ray Mack's eighth-inning home run with Rollie l-lemsley on base. With Nazis King King Haakon of Norway proclaimed from his secret hscid- buts for negoti tion" between the i-Iorwogian Government and Nazi The King likewise refused to re- cognize the new admnlstrative ills proclamation took the ioim of a letter addre sed to Paal Berg. prune Ccurt. who authorized the administrative council frr the dirtributed by the Norwigian tele- u ..._. hadnotgotlbonllwifllhtow- iiflfit __,_,4gni_-uhQ--_-i_-_- Sunnyside By J. R. Williams OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAQMeNjrHE PACKAGE FROM ' DETROIT~>- LEANDER‘S sterl- HAiZ-RUMPH/ w-I PERCEIVE YOU l-luaeav c/wuvss WITH A BONE w v|ew.'- HMP/i "open ‘FHIG sips UPm-"QOMETHING THAT MIGHT it“ nllillllllil“ “up-m. Jacobs bent on seeing a baseball game. The florid faced little man who was one of the best known charac- ter on Broadway was a native New Yorker -a product of the to h “Hell's Kitchen" on’ the west. sllge. His father was a tailor. AmOiig the fighters he managed were Benny Zalgu. featherweight champion Andre Routis, Schmeling, Galento and Mike McTigue. li t; heavyweight champion of the 192 ‘s. Jacobs stumbled on to Schmeilrig one day when thc young‘ German first came to the United states look- ing for figlzts. "Come with me bov, and we'll get the fights." he said. Schmeling was an unpopular champion. but was constantly in the public eye. thanks to Jacobs’ shrewdness as a public- ist. Jacobs often wrote stories for the papers when lie was mana lrig a, fighter and had a definite lair for newswritiiig. Jacobs even dared to visit Ger- many when the Jewish persecution was beginning- and so audacious was 1|: tlat he carried through the trip in the grand manner. Possibly the second greatest n! lit in his life was the riiulit. t at Schmeling knocked out Jce Louis in the 12th round at Yankee stadium. The other was when he howled Max into the title with his cry of “foul” that was so insistent and perfectly timed thatit caused thelate Arthur ' Brisbane. who was sitting nearby. to yell at the referee: "You call this a foul or I'll run boxing clear out of the state of New York." Jacobs was under suspension in New York both as boxing manager and as afiecond. l-le originally invoked the ire of the State Athletic Commission in 1932 by his complaints against tlie Judges who sheared Schniellng of his title by a Z-to-l verdict, Although no was barred from Germany in 1933 as an American Jew, Jacobs continued to handle Schmelingfis affairs for several years after. Circumstances eventually parted them, however. The German press persistently demanded that schmeling drop his manager and in the spring of i933 the New York Athletic Commis- sion notified him hls manager's and seconds licences could not be re- newed. As a result he was not able to be in Sohmelingk corner when the German made his second appearance against Joe Louis. In 1939 Jacobs made a sensation- al charge that Louis had had a "gimmick" inside his glove when he knocked out Schmeling and even though Jacobs publicly re- tracted this charge, the ooxing commissioners nevcr forgave liini and repeatedly refused to allow him to act officially: for Galntto in this State. Some of Galcntds bouts were sidetracked to other cit- ies. Jacobs, who never marricd. is survived by a, brother, Cziswell. a member of the City Detective Force and two sistcts, Rose and Mary. Two hours after he died the body was still at the physician's office. awaiting the arrival from Newark of Gale-mo. Funiral arrangements have not been made. Promoter Mike Jacobs. grieved at the sudden death of the amazing little character, issued this state- mentz- “I am deeply sliockrrl. Joe Jacobs was the most <'_i:ful box- ing manager who ever Lltld. I ad- mired him not only for his busi- ness talents but also as s friend. Boxing will miss him." Death Toll In Highway Brash Raised To Three SYDNEY, N. s.. April ci-lcm -Dea.th toil of a lcvci czossmg crash iicai" here rose to time wdttv when Aircraft-small '1‘2icniris Mc- Lean of Ottawa, member of the Royal Canadian Arr Force. cued in hospital two days aftcr the ac- oideiii. All llircr of i-llc timid wmo O'- tliwans. CCiFDOllLi Hugh Pcwcrs and Corporal Cecile Hzilc, both oi the R- C. A. F., died Monday stiOrtly otter their automobile had been struck by a freight train three miles from here in a snowstorm. McLean, 30. i‘; survived by 51:5 wife and widolvod inollier, boin living in the Dcmincn czipltal. He. and the other two victims came to Cape Brclmi last fail. l éAucl-zlz-Evlzv AS The driver of the automobile in- voivcd in the collision, Harold Mus- grave of North Sjvdncy. vms ser- iously injured but his conditLon was reported as improved tonight. — Major Hoopil. DON'T KEEP us "V/ . m QUSPENSE/ ' YOU'RE SLOWER TO Paooucs RESULTS THAN HAIR TONIC on A was.’ - "-1