4 rimce Kuperi Uuily lewi WeaneMla, April 2i, 1164 National Sluggers Ahead Of Hitless American Pals Oilmen Trounce Fort William; Lead Series 3-1 EDMONTON - Enmoi,J Od Kings made, a strong bidl Tuesday night to become the' ' nil r!4ljitn)' firvt yy- ... ...... .... v. ,Ja wn,. th outclassed Fort William can (hens B-l to take a 3-1 lead in! the best-of-seven wesUtrn final Caiiadiens, a stumbling block in what would have been a lone iht tr ci.i,sc;ulive Kdmonton victories, iniw have been out scored 23-3 'in the series, with the fifth game scheduled here Fireballing Virgil Trucks pieced up his first 1954 victory for the White Sox as he checked Detroit on six hits. The 12-liit Chicago attack included Minnie Minoso's second home run cf the season and three safeties by Nellie Fox. Wally Post, Gus Bell and Andy Semlnick homered f ,r the Re 1-legs. Semlnick added two siiv;!es in four times up, driving in two runs. Venerable Preacher Roe made his first appearance of the season for the Dodgers, but the Phillies were ready for him and sent him to the showers in less than five innings. The deciding blait was a mighty home run by Del Ennis with a man aboard. Little Murry Dickson picked up his second straight victory since joining the Phils. i iimisuuy nigru. i Oil Kirgs had 35 games with- ' out ill feat before falling to Can- ""ll'lK adieus 2-1 in the second game ol ' "it- the series at Fort William. ! ' , Tuesday, night, before Sinn! -1 fans, they lived up to expects- Ov.' I j -i"".i.'-u Lunuuiens an early fust-period goal, then romped freely to victory with a series of close-In Dassinv at tacks while Canartlens were held : VVi to long range, testing goalie Al 1 AS Jacobsmt only 26 times against ; An i .11... I ... .l.. ... VI THE GOLFING GARB which Marlene Bauer wears ( Wtt is a far cry from the green getup worn by Glenna Collet trUrhU In 1U21. While the U.S. Golf Association has rcjcinded its bnn on shnits and slacks for women golfers, the gals still Jiave to worry about paraphernalia as well as par. Many clubs have ruled that pai.ts. long or short, are not proper tournament attire 8o, ladies, better pack some skirts in your golf bags, just in case.' OUTDOORS 'Wd VUj- . 'r . V1-" & yfr-" W' - - - -IH r. J ONE OF ItACINO'S RARITIES occurred recently at the Laurel, Md., track when three horses finished in a dead heat for third place. From top to bottom, the show-ers and the fourth-place winner are: Happy Bull (6), jockey J. Regalbutto up; Milldale (7, with jockey Hartack finishing fourth; Noble Idea (3), with Leo Asea up; and Weird Music (4), ridden by Alfred Brown. Warwick Family Likely Target Of Winnipeg Maroons Tonight U.S. Runners Tod Soft Says Briton By WILL GR1MSLEY ' NEW YORK (Ji The reason j Americans don't hold their own ; In track endurance tests, says ! Britain s wiry Jim Peters, is that they have too many automo-: b.les and eat too much." Jim prescribes austerity over ; plush living for distance-race champions, and he practices it. j The lean, 35-year-old Briton, , wno ran second to Veikko Kar- j vonen of Finland In Monday's nosioii marainon, sioppea over in New York and discussed train ing mciiiuus lucsuay oeiore ny- ; nig iiome. me dcsi American showing at Boston was seventh. "I have n varni hut. no n,.t. mobile," Peters said. "Furthermore, I wouldn't have an automobile untl I am through running. "You Americans have too many automobiles and much too much to eat. You'll never develop men of stamina and endurance that way. There is only one way to train that is by running. If you can't run. walk." RAN FASTEST MARATHON Perhaps you came hre from j of Canada, in such case Vou may be of u h w ave re-1 marked a scarcity rxUts of smaler birds and animals thalj are usuany s0(,n in numbers at tnis time ot ypar If thts condi-, tion ls uctUally true, then an I 0VPrheard diatribe against the I nmmi.(.llnl,. ,, nf nn ,, anrt w ritu. ,.nA ho wmnihinn more than a mere 'letting off 0j stPam . , . ., . , , . " a JM t th.at, "'P1''1"14 ar -odged in official quarters anent the use of these weapons, but it is not known how mucn longer lenient measures and 'talkings to' will be employed. A portion of the natural desire to shoot rifles is taken care of under instructors nt the Civic By BEN PHI.EGAR Asaorhitrrt Press Sports Writer What did the National League sluggers learn in spring training that their American League friends apparently overlooked? Thus is becoming a vital question after Tuesday's second straight one-hitter in the junior circuit while the National League was going its .lu?-happy way with another 26-hlt donnybrook. Lefty Alex Kellncr of Philadelphia Atine'tics tamed Washington Senators on one safety Wayne Terwilliaer's single with two out In the eighth Inning as the A s won 7-0. On Monday, Jim McDonald of New York Yankee?;, a righthander, subdued Boston with one hit. SHELLAC CARDS A big share of the National , League fireworks has involved j St. Louis Cardinals. The Red-! birds absorbed a 13-8 shellack- j ing at the hands or Cincinnati j Redlegs Tuesday night and now j have been battered for 60 runs in j .six games. j The battering hasn't been all one-sided. The Cardinals have averaged almost seven runs for each of the same hair-dozen, contests. The two contrasting contests Tuesday were part of a curtailed five-same schedule. Philadel- phia Phillies whipped Brookiyal G-3 and New York Giants de feated Pittsburgh 6-2 In the National League and Chicago White Sox beat Detroit 7-2 in the American. Milwaukee and Chicago Cubs in the National were rained out. Kellncr was breezing along toward the first no-hitter i.i Washington's Griffith Stadium .since 1931 when Terwilllgcr, a .235 hitter, rapned one back through the middle. NOT THAT Ll'CKY "I didn't feel too bad," Kellncr said. "You figure a feller is lucky ta pitch a no-hltter." SPORTSMAN'S HOW DOES A FISH BREATHE ? HEART ... LIVER AND 6 ALL BLADDER SPLEEN STOMACH INTESTINE SEX ORGANS ANUS '-Sim UROGENITAL VENT BLADDER --v:- V BLADDER t-tt OILLS FILTER OXYGEN INTO . THEIR BLOOD WHILE EXPELLING A MOUTHFUL. OP WATER. HEART THEN PUMPS OXYGENIZED SLOOO PROM ILLS TO BODY TISSUES. SILLS EXPELL CARBON DIOXIDE FROM THE ' RETURNED BLOOD. THE AIR BLADDER DOES NOT BREATHE. IT IS FILLED WITH 6AS FOR EQUILIBRIUM IN SWIMMING, jfi ini iitinuieu uy wie LUKenead club's Lynn Davis. t Walt Bradley scored Cuna-! diens' only goal. Johnny Bucyk paced Edition-' ton with three goals while rookie Hon lookey added a pair. Others' came from Ray Kinasewich, Jerry Kelnyk and Jackie Moore! i Kings went ahead 4-1 In the second period while the hockey i was still clean and fast. 1 Iri the final session, tempers! flared. Ten major penalties for ; fighting, five to earh club, were! h:inde.d out by officials Pete' tj'llman of Winnipeg and Andy ourba of Brnndon In th final! .i. i..unt. . .:. , j.'aio . I tn a,t rrmvrilcfH I ml pwblnhei of 'I'lrljvut ( t,r Liijuor timrul Kuird STT K -T' ,- 77 if Centre, and persons above the artificial hatch of flies. All lie juvenile age would do well to j does is 'whip the water', which confine their "plinking" to tar-' means he casts and permits Mi; gets of an Inanimate nature. j fly to land but moment.irily. I then quickly ca.sts a"uin arid With the excellent run ofi"K"in. This works well with diy Peters has run the fastest i sPrlnSS "l)w 111 lne naroor, ques-marathon record, tions are bf ln nsked as to wnpn on covering ; the fixed distance of 26 miles, 1 tne Salmon Derby is to com-shs vnrris in iwn hnnr is mtn. ; nience? Not less than a dozen r -' if r- "b..';' t , t I j ; j ! that empty into tin1 Imrhoi . that such excell, nt spurt mu ,t ' he available for those who .wk . lt. A usual way of attract in", fish in salt water is the old stunt of 'chumming;' generally this means to cut up fish and Ihri.w it on the water, or nerhaos to hrnnrirnst shrlmr. or nossih v to' place a quantity of oily fishi 1 (oollchan. shielt, salmon or what have you? In a bran sack and allow It to 'ripen.' This is towed astern or allowed to hang in 'he ; water and the oily .slick tifteni attracts fish to the boat. Thive ! methods are not considered sporting by freh water anglers, but the fly fisherman achieves a similar result by creating u. i fly on Oliver Lake unn elsewhere, for the trou', qulekly.si.ot the disturbed surface and g'ttlvr around to scie the fly as so n as as It It lights lights mil suifieie'itly iirient.lv Iwt" 'do so! Big Big bunch bunch of of pin;;, pinuJls and Canada gece on th mud fir.ts along the Skeena. a big ( utven- iraunn uriiunu me m.iuui ui iiie Next week, your rolurnnlit ex- pe cts to give his report on what appears to bp about the .ili.kest plastic devire for holding a h"r- ring strip .i th 11 it w,!m;1, ductlvely, yet. shown in tin locality. Bombers Sign Ray Pelfrey WINNIPEG if - Ralph MLsener, president of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, today announced the signing of end Ray Pelfrey. 24, formerly with New York Cti.inU and Green Bay Packers of the NatiriD!tl .fuotlmt! Jj'niruo. IV'IfrfcjO' who can (il'o double at halfback, scored five touchdowns with the Giants last year He played with Green Hav In 1951:52 after leaving East Kentucky State College. Romberg now have siened 12 imports for the 1!)V Western Inter-provincial I-T.otuull Union season. this Easter I f .1 onoes or tne; I: j 1 f I . iaij 1 ides tppili' VERNON, B.C. (CP) The three Warwick brothers who combined to sink Winnipeg Maroons 7-1 ; in an Allan Cup final Monday I should find the hockey arena ; here a very interesting place tonight. j . i Because someone was unable ' or unwilling to check the trio, ' Grant, Bill, and Dick combined to score five goals and 13 points as Penticton V's squared the best-of-.seven series 1-1 with one j j game tied. Maroon playingV'oach Odie ! Lowe has s",id, "we ju.t weren't skating and expected It to be a little too easy." Maroons ti?d the Okanagan club 4-4 in the opening p-irrbit and took a bone- ! j 3 i ' GENERAL .. i . i i,...i June It was 10 8 seconds faster than Czechoslovakia's m i w h t v Emil Zatopck had run the dis - tance. "I run 10 miles a week for 51 ! optician's helper explained. "The i other week I take off my wife insists on it. I do it at 11 miles an hour. I have 12 workouts a week . . . But I'm really a piker. My fellow countryman, Gordon Pirie, runs 200 miles a week and that Emil Zatopek never stops." Remember When By Tlic Cflnnrlliin Pre' : W. A. (Bill) Fry, one of Canada's best known sports executives, died 10 years ago today at nirp 71 ITriitnr nf the nnnnuille Ont. Chronicle, he was a former president of the Amateur Ath- letic Union of Canada, the Can - adian Amateur Hockey Assocla - tion and the Ontario Hokey Association. i I'lmd F.nrln"s were taken from I barges and the wrecked float near the Atlin Fisheries over the I ' holidays, all but one well over! i 12 pounds. Two junior anglers i ' v"" tnp simple expedient of 1 lying a ueoie HOOK io I-ne end , of tnolr llnrs' k,wwln " about i ten feet, then smartly snatching upwards. These efforts brought ! s.n nmolo bag of t ight-Inch : smelts and a few 12-Inch her- ring, and also supplied live bait to tonic fortunate, salmon anglers. A run of nice grey-cod from five pounds to fifteen or so. and some good rockfish rewarded th? many hand-liners and rodsters who deep-fished with bait. Jack Dyson back from the Ki.spiox with steelheads of 12 lb and 15 lb. and Marty has a t,lo'ole our "m ' connrmen report on a 29 lb steelie from this ! fan,e marvellous water, (more 'on tjiis anon), Bill Bailey landed an eighteen pounder from the Copper River on a spinncT-and-egg combination, while Jack. n:;ed the deadly Tee spinner for his success. La rr Stan wood and Earl Becker failed to get past the Kalum, but had top sport with oversize dollies, and Dave itnd lone Strne Cloyah almost the year around, should this be so then our Rod & Gun Clubsters can do a fine thing by arranging to transfer these same eggs to the creeks crusher 3-2 befc re Monday's fiasco. It seems improbable that such players as Winnipeger Bill Juz- da, ex-Toronto Maple Leaf who I hit two of the Warwick.1! 4 with I tooth-rattling checks in the second game, will allow them to go unmolested in the fourth j game tonight, I The Penticton club, reduced to 11 men in the last game through injuries to four forwards, have been refused two i pleas for assistance. The Cana dian Amateur Hockey Association refused them permission to obtain replacement;; Monday. Playing-coach Grant Warwick then asked the CAHA to postpone the series a day and of- I fered to foot the bill for the 'Maroon's extra expenses, about $180. The association turned this down also. Lowe scoffed at u suggestion his team was pulling punches Monday night so Penticton would be denied replacements, "No sir, we weren't giving anything away to the V's," he jeaid. "We're out to win them all." Lowe said both teams were probably leg-weary but for different reasons. He suggested Penticton had played too much hockey, they jast completed a tough eight-game series with Nelson, while the Prairie club were suffering from too little. Maroons have come through the series without an injury and Lowe expects to Ice his original line-up. Possible changes may be made for the fifth game if forwards Laurie Mitchell and Kenny McKenzie arrive from Winnipeg ,Friday. ' ANCIENT CITY Dublin was captured by the Danes in the ninth century. i MEETING 180 OCCASION 10 POPULAR SHADES-Woterprwfs-Protej Winnipeg Youngster Sparks Bantams To 10-4 Victory Over Toronto Ki-Y 5t But the boy who Is drawing all ' tl,ok four t"'iht tfelheads out the attention in Toronto is the jof a n''w r,,n UD lhl" t-'loyah. centre on the line with Fdund,' This Cloyah i.s a wonderful Blair McLcod. MeLeod scored thing to have in one's dooryard five goals last night to help whip but it must be used cohserva-a Toronto Ki-Y Bantam league tlvely so that this splendid run team 10-4. ; may be preserved and not de- The five goals' brought Mc- : pitted in our time. It would ap-Leod's total in Toronto to 11. He pear that steclhcad run the UNITED ASSOCIATION Plumbers &'Steamf itters Local TORONTO 0" Vince Leah, who has sent such outstanding players as Jim Thomson, Don Raleigh, Wally Hergeshelmer, Cal Gardner and Nick Mickoskl to the National Hockey League, considers Ken Found of his Winnipeg Minor-Bantam All-Stars a better skater than any he has seen so far at a corresponding age of 13. j LAST NIGHT'S FIGHTS Bv The Associated Press ! , LOS ANGELES Kchjiy Tlkvis, 125, Clarendon, Tex., outpointed ! Al Cm 124. Los Angeles, 12 ' ! 'MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Brian : Kelly, 140, Ntegura Falls, Ort ! stopped Libby Mafizo, 134 New i York, 4. ir ! ! ST. LOUIS Davey Moore, 129, Springfield, Ohio, outpointed ; Charley Riley, 130, St. Louis. 10. ! GALVESTON, Tex. El Con-; scripto, 145, Mexico, outpointed ! Sauveur Chiocca, 150, France, 10. fWAVWAVW'WAViVAvVA'MV.V.'.WAV, THURSDAY, APRL 22 8 p.m. CIVIC CENTRE tSk t if- Latest Fashion:; scored two Saturday when Winnipeg was defeated 8-4 by Toronto Marlboros and added another four Monday when his team defeated East York All-Stars 5-1. Terry Clark with three and Frenchy Rheault and Pete Carnegie with singles were the other Winnipeg snipers. Fred Kemp-ffer notched a pair for Toronto and George Freeman and Harvey Turnbull scored the others. Today the Winnipeg team leaves for Goderlch, about 150 miles west of Toronto. Williams Set For Practice 1 BOSTON m Ted William. broken collar bone continues its rapid healing, starts regular batting practice tomorrow after J finding he can belt, the ball out f of the park. , j Tile Buston uca tux aiucr started hittliifr a little Tuesday 5 at Fenway Fark, and before he i was through he had deposited a , 5; plLCn some ,ioj n f t uic iifilll I Step I ive y r in r u i ? New arrivals of White Pumps, Dorseys .... I; Open and closed toe, J Cuban and high heels .... also in !fc Red, Blue and 'k Brown. S ih )!'.( BIS FASHION FOOTWEAR I THI FAVOURITE CIOA FO fVY WOOtiltD PNCf Mr. M t Mr. f'ton lieja Dimprn.