| N \ PAGE TWELVE THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Phillies Wallop Pirates Twice . 'Before Season's Largest Crowd Whiz-Kids Sink Bucs by MAJOR LEAGUE Scores Of 17-0 And 11-4 -- Brooks Take Two From Reds -- Tigers Take Red Sox Right In Fenway With A Southpaw! What Sunday spree Major a staged yesterday be- a total of 211,616 persons. Double figure scores, overflowing erowds, a pitcher who won a double- er «4 ' Tn a nutshell here's what hap- ed: gv Phillies sank the Pirates in a doubleheader 17-0 and 3 before the séason's largest i 8 at home -- 36,166. The Phils' Richie Ashburn collected eight hits e day. Oy routed the Reds in both ends of & doubleheader 10-3 and 14-4 before 29427 Cincinnati fans. st. Louis Cardinals rallied for five runs after the first two batters were retired in the seventh inning to come from behind and nip New York Giants 8-7 before 22,666 paid. Red Schoendienst batted in four Car- dinal runs. Toronto-born Dick Fowler won his first game in almost a year, extending Cleveland's losing streak to six with a 2-1 triumph for Phil- adelphia. The Indians, however, won the second game of a double- header 5-3. The day's smallest crowd, 10,158, saw the twin bill. Wins Double Bill on <one-; -old Emil (Du Forts yon credited with both victories as the Cubs came from behind to whip Boston's Braves twice 4-3 and 5-4 to the delight of 43,088 Chicagoans. il Undefeated Ed Lopat pitched his seventh consecutive victory for the Yankees with a 7-3 triumph over St. Louis Browns before a crowd of 20,427. He also hammered his third home run of the season. Rain forced the postponement of the scheduled second game. . Hal Newhouser became the third visiting southpaw to go the route and win in Fenway Park this sea- son as Detroit defeated the Red Sox 8-4 before 30,320. Chicago's surprising White Sox made it four in a row on their traditional tough eastern swing, shading Washington Senators 5-4 before a turnout of 11,773. When the smoke cleared, Brook- 1yn had strengthened its first place hold in the National League to one game. Chicago moved into second and Boston dropped from second to fourth. The Phillies climbed out of the cellar into fifth place and Cin- cinnati slipped into the basement. change took place in the . League race as the ¥ankees retained their two-game lead over the White Sox. : The Phils slugged 'seven Pitts- burgh pitchers for 35 hits, 20 in the first game. Russ Meyer hurled the shutout, Their 17-0 victory ranked seventh among the Major League mark against the Indians 21-0 Sept. 15, 1901. Robbie's Homer Homers by Jackie Robinson and Cal Abrams helped the Dodgers wreck Ewell Blackwell's five-game winning streak in the first game. Clyde King had a one-hit shutout until the seevnth of the second game when Ted Kluszewski and Red Stallcup homered for the Reds. _ Both of Leonard's victories came in relief. The Cubs pulled the opener out of the fire with two runs in the eighth. Chicago re- peated the stunt in the finale, scor- ing twice in the ninth on a double by Dee Fondy, a walk and singles by Bob Borkowski and Ransom Jackson. . Lopat yielded eight hits in going the route for the seventh time. His earned run average now is 1.29. Joe Dimaggio also homered, off loser Dick Starr. Bd Robinson's double with two out in the ninth scored Orestes Minoso with Chicago's winning run over Washington. Robinson also hit a two-run hmer in the fifth. Fowler spun a neat three-hitter over the Indians for his first vic- tory. The A's snapped a 1-1 tie in the opener as Gus Zernial, who had doubled, crossed when Larry Doby fumbled Wally Moses' single and presented Bob Lemon with his _ fourth loss. Eighth-inning singles by Harry Simpson and Bob Ken- nedy featured in Cleveland's two- run rally in the eighth that snap- ped 8 3-3 tie in the second game. Hoot Evers homered and high- lighted a three-run rally in the eighth with a two-run single to lead the Tigers fo their win in Boston. Newhouser scattered 11 hits for his fourth straight victory. ARGOS FINISH STH Boston, May 21--(CP)--Harvard's third Varsity crew won the Ameri- can Henley Regatta's first eight honors Saturday by out-rowing La- Salle University of Philadelphia by a half-length in a six-crew event on the Charles River. | Park And, LEADERS The Associated Press American League Batting--Kryhoski, Detroit, .403. Runs--Mantle, New York, 25. Runs batted in--Rosen, Cleveland, By Hits--Fain, Philadelphia, 44. Doubles--Fain, Philadelphia, 14. Triples--Minoso, Chicago and Coan, Washington, 5. Home runs--Williams, Boston and Zernial, Philadelphia, 7. Stolen bases--Busby, Chicago, 10. Strikeouts--Raschi, New York, 32. Pitching--Lopat, New York, 7-0, 1.000. National League Batting--Abrams, Brooklyn, Runs--Dark, New York, 29. Runs batted in--Snider, Brooklyn. 431. 1, . Hits--Ashburn, Philadelphia, 47. Doubles--Elliott, Boston; Wyros- tek and Kluszewski, Cincinnati; Cox, Brooklyn; Metkevich, Pittsburgh; Lowrey, St. Louis, 9. Triples--Baumholtz, Chicago, 4. Home runs--Westlake, Pittsburgh and Hodges, Brooklyn, 11. Stolen bases--Jethroe, Boston, 6. Strikeouts--Jansen, New York and Spahn, Boston, 34. Pitching--Roe, Brooklyn, 5-0. Canada's Forests Only Small Problem For Three Centuries How long Canada's forests will last is a question that can be post- poned for at least three centuries, according to Dr. John 8. Bates, Chairman of the Board of the Canadian Forestry Association. In a statement opening National For- est Conservation Week, May 19-- 26, Dr. Bates said: "There need be no such thing as exhaustion in any self-renew- ing resource. We have a "forest estate more than six times that of Norway, Sweden and Finland com- bined, who cut as much wood each year as the whole of Canada, We can take reasonable steps to produce enough wood material to double or treble our already vast forest in- dustry. By far the greater part of our acreage is made for wood har- vests and for nothing else. Modern arts of forest engineering can keep a timber tract continuously repeating its crops without reduc- ing the capital stock. This can go on indefinitely and actually has done so in many European coun- tries. Similar techniques of for- est managemment are taking hold in Canada and give excellent promise. "After all, Nature built Canada as a wood economy. Being a wood economy implies that skilled for- est management takes priority in public policy and has top rank in public expenditure. Keeping for- ests in high production does cost money, but such a course is highly profitable, and since the forest lands. are mostly public-owned the government landlord cannot shift responsibility. It is utterly impos- sible to keep on extracting thou- sands of millions from an exhaus- tible natural resource unless we re- invest sufficient money to keep that resource generating fresh vitality and wealth. Every forest country in the world has reached th~ same conclusion." Dr. Bates said every province in Canada was sponsoring local events during Forest Conservation Week, to impress .every citizen with the importance of forests to the individ- ual and the nation. Baseball's Big Six By The Associated Press Batsmen . G AB R 23 98 31 114 17 62 Leading Player and Club Abrams, Dodgers Robinson, Dodg. Kryhoski, Tigers Fain, Athletics . 30 109 Reese, Dodgers , 32 115 43 Coan, Senators . 19 75 27 .360 Runs batted in: American, Rosen, Indians, 27; National, Snider, Dodg- ers, 31. Home runs: American, Zernial, Athletics, Williams, Red Sox, 7; Na- tional, Westlake, Pirates, Hodges, Dodgers, 11. OLD COUNTRY CRICKET . PG London, May 21 (Reuters)--Close- of-play scores Saturday night in English first-class cricket: South Africans first innings all out 190. M.C.C. first innings 37 for two non-county. Scotland first innings all out 359. Warwickshire first innings 18 for none. Non-county. Worcestershire first innings all out 225. Oxford University 19 for two. Non-county. Cambridge University first innings 300 for eight declared. Sussex first innings 54 for three. Non-county. Derbyshire first innings all out 14. Yorkshire first innings 132 for six. Lancashire first innings all out 233. Kent first innings 57 for two. Northamptonshire first innings 360 for eight. Essex to bat. Gloucestershire first innings 428 for seven. Leicestershire to bat. Nottinghamshire first innings 319 for four. Somerset to bat. Surrey first innings al out 130. Glamorgan first innings 146 for five. H 25 43 3 ways to Get Cash it's "yes" to 4 out of 5! Loans $50 te $1200 on Signature, Furniture or Avte "TNE is | Even § Poyments lor in: hn in ion, EY OL Se Co Regulations.' THAT LIKES TO SAY VIS" FINANCE CO. 2nd Fi, 117, SIMCOE ST., NORTH (Over Bank of Nova Scotia) Dial 3-4687 © Chorles D. Ayers, YES MANeger - Rouns mode to. sosidents of all wwrrounding towns © Porsoncl Finance Company of (anode Pr \ Waterloo Tigers Now Atop Loop; Defeat Sox 5-4 | By The Canadian Press' | Unbeaten Waterloo Tigers took! over undisputed possession of first place in the Intercounty Senior | Baseball League during the week- | end. i The Tigers, last year's cham- | pions, handed Brantford Red Sox | their first setback, a 5-4 beating, | before 2,500 fans at Waterloo. In other intercounty games, Lon- don Majors scored their first vic- tory by blanking the still winless St. Thomas Legion 8-0; and at Galt, the Terriers scored their sec- ond win, a 6-4 victory, over Guelph Maple Leafs. In Northern Ontario the Nickel Belt Baseball League got under- way with a crowd of 5,000 at Sud- bury watching Copper Cliff Red- men edge Creighton Indians 7-6. The Niagara District League opening was marked by victories for Welland Stokes 5-4 at Niagara Falls Fords; and St. Catharines' Stags beating Tonawanda Dodgers 7-4 at home. At Waterloo, neither of the start- ing pitchers, Cy Bricker of Tigers or Billy Gibbs of Brantford, lasted one inning. Both were wild and gave up three apiece on no hits. Edgar (Special Delivery) Jones, Hamilton football star, took the mound for Brantford and waged a tight duel with Red Tavellevi, who was credited with the win for Waterloo. At London, it was one-sided from the start. Ted Alexander gave St. Thomas only five hits in the six innings he pitched to gain credit for the win. Russ Evon of London with a single, double and triple in five trips was top hitter. At Galt, Auggie Mormino went the route for the homesters, scat- tering nine Guelph hits. Leafs out- hit the winners nine to six but Terriers were aided by wildness on the part of all four Guelph pitch- ers. Mormino, making his first start of the season, had only one bad inning, the seventh when he gave up four runs on a walk and four hits. In the Nickel Belt opener, a 10th inning single by Billy Brown drove in the winning run. Lanky Jack Duyvestyn went the route for Cop- per Cliff, giving up 10 hits and striking out six. Earl Brandy | pitched nine innings for Creighton | but the loser turned out to be | Lefty Johnny Barbeau who hurled | the 10th inning. At St. Catharines, the Stags, | champions of the Niagara District League last year, picked up nine | hits off three pitchers for Tona- | wanda, a Brooklyn Dodgers farm | team. Coates went the route for | In Niagara Falls it was close all the way, Welland picking up its vitcory margin in a three-run eighth. Jiggs Runfrano gave Wel- land only four hits but four errors by Niagara Falls helped the visi- tors. Buntrock was the winning pitcher. OPBN 12TH SEASON Westbury, N.Y, May 21 (AP)-- Roosevelt Raceway opens its 12th campaign of harness racing tonight | with more than $1,500,000 in purses awaiting im the 108-night session. | "i [ BASEBALL i STANDINGS EEN dno By The Canadian Press AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost Pct. G.B. g 9 FON g J New York Chi # go Detroit Wasinington Boston vie Cleveland Philadelphia ,.. St. Louis I Sunday's Results St. Louis . ... 3 New York 2nd game postponed, rain. Detroit Boston ........ Chicago 5 Washington .. Cleveland ... 1-5 Philadelphia Future Games Monday -- Chicago at Washington (N); St. Louis at New York (N); Detroit at Boston; only games. Tuesday -- Chicago at Washington (N); Cleveland at Philadelphia (N); Detroit at Boston; only games. 4 4 2-3 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pct. G.B. ( Syracuse ... Ottawa. ..vviiaa Baltimore' .... Buffalo Toronto Springfield 2 . Sunday's Results 2 Springfield .... Syracuse 0 Rochester .. Ottawa 6 Toronto 2nd game called end of 4th, curfew. 6-3 Montreal .... 2-4 Future Games Monday -- Syracuse at Montreal (N); Baltimore at Ottawa (N); Springfield at Toronto (N); Buffalo at Rochester (N). Tuesday -- Syracuse at Montreal; Baltimare at Ottawa; Springfield at Toronto; Buffalo at Rochester. 3% 4 Baltimore NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pct. G.B. 18 981 548 517 515 485 471 452 438 Su Philadelphia 17-12 Pittsburgh .. New York 7 St. Louis Boston 3-4 Chicago Brooklyn .. 10-14 Cincinnati ,. Future Games Monday -- New York at St, Louis; only game. Tuesday -- Brooklyn at Pittsburgh (N) ; "Philadelphia at Cincinnati (N); New York at Chicago; Boston at St. Louis (N). Brooklyn Chicago .... St. Louis Boston Philadelphia New York Pittsburgh Cincinnati BORDER LEAGUE Won Lost Pct. G.B. Cornwall 9 4 .692 Auburn Geneva Watertown . Ogdensburg Kingston Bev Baker Wins Priory Club Test| Birmingham, England, May 21 -- | St. Catharines, giving up nine hits. | (AP)--Beverly Baker, fourth-rank- | ing American woman tennis play- er, won'the women's singles title in the Priory Club tournament Saturday. The Santa Monica, Calif.,, miss defeated Australian champion, Mrs, Nancy Bolton, 4-6, 6-4, 6-2. Meantime, Jaroslav Drobny, who now plays big time tennis out of Egypt, won the men's singles title! in the Guildford, Surrey, tourney. | Drobny defeated Vladimir Cernik, | his old Czech Davis Cup partner who went into exile with him, 2-6, | 6-2, 6-1, | Ssanesensnnns Rochester Wings Whip Syracuse By 9-0 Count By The Associated Press | 'One of the big reasons in Roch- , ester Red Wings' drive to a con- | tending spot in the International | League Pennant race has been the pitching of Jack Faszholz, 24-year- old righthander of St. Louis, Faszholz turned in his fifth vic- tory without a loss yesterday as 'he pitched the wings to a four- hit 9-0 victory over Syracuse Chiefs. y The triumph moved the Wings from fourth to second place and dropped the Chiefs from second to third spot, a half-game ahead of fourth-place Ottawa. Rochester supported Faszholz' classy hurling with a 12-hit bar- rage that Jay Van Noy, Charley Kress and Don Richmond spear- headed with home runs. The Giants dropped an 8-6 10- inning decision to Toronto Maple Leafs in the first half of a doubleheader. Lew Morton broke up the game with a two-run homer. The nightcap was called in the last of the fourth with Toronto 9 | leading 5-0 because of the Toronto Sunday curfew law. It will be re- sumed at a later date. - Montreal split a twin bill with Buffalo Bisons. The Bisons won the opener 6-2 behind the seven- hit pitching of Ernie Silverman. Hank Biasatti paced the drive with a two-run circuit blast. The Roy- als bounced back to take the nightcap 4-3. Al Gionfriddo drove in a pair of runs with a triple. Springfield cuts defeated Balti- more Orioles 4-2 in a single game. Walt Dubiel stopped the Orioles on eight hits. EDITOR CHANGES JOBS Vancouver, May 21 -- (CP) -- Er- win Swangard will take over today g |as sports editor of the Vancouver Sun. Since November, 1949, Swan- Vancouver Daily Province. Believe Second Korea Possible In By HUBERT HARRISON Vienna, May 20 -- (Reuters) -- Will the Balkan peninsula become a second Korea? The Communist Press in Aus- tria says the Yugoslavs are to be induced to attack their Cominform neighbors, and that the United States and other United Nations countries will intervene on their be- half. The similarities between the situ- ation in the Balkans and in pre- war Korea are: 1. Both are peninsulas, one on the extreme east and the other to the extreme west of the Cominform block of countries. 2. Each has territory controlled by Russia and territory not con- trolled by them. Like Korea, the Russians control, arm and train the troops of the territory on their side of the Balkan dividing line. 3. And there was always trouble between the populations of North and South Korea, so therethas been trouble between the peoples of Yugoslavia and Greece on the one side and those of Bulgaria, Hungary and Albania 'on the other, since Premier Tito broke with the Comin- form. Recently this trolible seems more threatening. Notes fly back and forth, each accusing the other of maintaining "a state of continual petty warfare" and. protesting against "constant .violation of ter- ritory through frontier incidents." While such diplomatic tension isn't rare in post-war Europe it is closely watched by diplomatic ob- servers in Vienna, one of the few remaining windows where one can look both east and west. There are certain signs suggest- ing the Russians will do nothing likely to precipitate a general war at present. These include reports gard has been sports editor of the | saying satellite forces in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Bul- Balkans | garia are not trained and equipped for war. And the political and economic situation in several satellite states is not yet sufficiently stable to risk war. There are many reports of in- creasing Russian activity in the satellite countries. It is difficult to verify these re- ports, especially now that the Rus- .sians were largely through offi- cials who wear po uniform and who are bilingual. But reports of the strengthening of Russian forces are discounted somewhat by the (fact that these recur almost every year and are usually the result of nor- mal Russian spring manoeuvres. Catholic Teachers Getting OTF Salary Toronto, May 21--(CP) -- The basic minimum salary set by the Ontario Teachers' Federation has been adopted for lay teachers in greater Toronto. The Ontario English Catholic Teachers' Association announced Saturday that the Toronto and Suburban Separate School Board agreed' to implement the O.T.F. basic salary schedule in 1952. The teachers' executive met with the board Saturday and it was agreed that in addition to increases granted earlier, separate school teachers would receive a $100 boost retroactive to Jan. 1, 1951. FESTIVAL NETS $10,000 London, Ont., May 21--(CP) The 12th Dominion Drama Festival brought in $10,000 in box office re- | ¢ ceipts, Honorary Chairman Park Jamieson said Sunday night. He said the amout was "in excess of re- ceipts for the 1947 festival" The festival was $2,000 in the red at the end of the last fiscal year. U.S. Navy Keeping Close Sub Guard | New York, May 21--(CP) -- Th New York Daily News says tode the United States Navy has fc months mounted "on a wartim basis" a round-the-clock anti-su watch in the Atlantic that is in creasing steadily in scope and in tensity. This has been done, the New says, for fear of the possibility th Atlantic once more may becom infested by enemy submarine pack --this time Russian. MONDAY, MAY 21, " H : SEVEN ORDAINED Edmonton, May 21--(CP)--Seve! men Sunday were ordained Angli can ministers by Rt. Rev. W. F Barfoot, Bishop of Edmonton, i was a record number of candidate for one ordination in the diocese Those ordained included: David J Woeller, Kitchener; Alan G. Hoop er, Peterborough, and Kells A. Min chin, Powasson. ROTARIANS MEET Lake Placid, N.Y., May 21--(AP --S8ix hundred Rotary leaders fron countries of the free world gathere: here Saturday. for a week-long plan ned session on the yera's activities They were headed by the presiden of Rotary International, Arthur La guex of Quebec City. SING BACKACHE BLUES Away 'Thousands once biue and depressed fel like singing when they discovered hov quickly wonder-soothing C usuall Backache, Strong Cloudy Urine Frequent, Burn Passages, t Uj Nights, pains in hips, groin and Jowe abdomen, due to simple Kidney and Bladde. troubles. 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