to ON WAY TO CHAMPIONSHIPS l Skips on way to Canadian Curl- 'int C impion.ship at Kingston. On- turio, as seen boarding train in Montreal. L. to R. Back Row- Jiggs Mac- Donald. Charlottetown. P. E. I. Simmy Simmons, Bridgewater. N. S.. Ken Weldon. Caldonla Curling. Montreal, Que. Ken Everett Carl- ton West St. John N.B. SPORTS TRAIL i.BasebalI Players Pampered Says Can. Hockey Player By WHITNEY MARTIN NEW YORK (AP!-Jim Thom- son, who plays hockey for Toronto llllaple Leafs, has written a maga- nne piece which is going to make baseball players burn like a hero- sene torch. Writing for the current issue of Parade, the veteran defencemsn says American major league ball players are pampered like sick cliilrlren. and that "whenever they suizer the sliglitsst injury, out of the -.:nmo they come. to be clucked on-r by trainers as though they wtirc glass dolls." lie gives examples of such frag- ility and living care, comparing their treatment with "the show must no on" attitude of hockey players who, ytnt gather. will ('l'.'llill out on the ice with both legs broken and blood outing irom evri','y' Phre and insist they are able to curry on. The Winnipeg native cites Ted Williams' bruised instep as an ex- ample of how little it takes to get a bull play-er out of action. and C0mliares the injury to a stick wound on the face suffered by Jack Stewart of Detroit Red Wings that required 33 stitches, yet which head cuts irom the sharp edges of sticks. They are painful and gory, but don't interfere with ambula- tlon. When a hockey player can't skate. he can't play. and when a ball player can't run or throw or hit. he can't play. U.K.'s JOBLESS UP LONI)()N incutersi e UllClll- ployment in Britain rose last year some stores and commercial pro- above 1955 figures but was still lower than the average for any other post-war year except 1951. the ministry of labor Gazette an- nounced Wednesday. The Gasette said that the three years preced- ing 1956 had been marked by an expanding working population. an increasing demand for labor and Ialllng unemployment. But last year the demand for labor slack- ened. SPORT FROM BRITAIN Promoter Jack Solomons A Promising By ED SIMON Canadian Press Steal Writer LONDON (CF)-Even die-haril boxing enthusiasts are reluctantly concluding that the most promis- ing heavyweight prospect in Brit- ain is promoter Jack Solomons The destruction of British cham- pion Joa Erskine by Nina Valdes in the first round, latest in a ser- ies of disuters suffered in inter- national compstition. can scarcely be considered an upset. But the behavior of London boxing writers on the eve of the battle was a tribute to 8oIornons' promotional loileri to prevent him from flnlah- M" lng the name. The comparison was a little on- iiiir. as Stewart didn't skate on his '3”. One injury was incapacitat- llill. the other painful. Another case cited involves Dick Grout. Pirate infielder who was out for seven days last summer with is sore thumb. His idleness ta '0iiilisred unfnvornbly with the hicrlormance of Red Wings' Red Mjiy. who played through the 19-)2 Slant?! Cup plsyoiis with a broken wrist. Again it is an unjust compari- son. We would like to have seen iu-Ily throw a baseball from deep short to first base with a broken urist. It all comes down to the fact that baseball and hockey are two ill-'f0i'L'"i Ramos. requiring differ- ent skills. and injuries which might .-nlleline an athlete in one game might not interfere too much with his performance in another. Most oi the hockey injurieg are In defiance of the 3-to-1 odds and all consldsrntlona oi logic. almost every writer in town picked Er- skine to daisst his Cuban foe. With startling unanimity they sud- denly discovered the unimpres- slve record of Valdes against ton- ntod opposition, losing sight of the fact that Ersktne's unblem- ished record against rnllor ODD”- ents was entirely due to the fact that he but never met any. In previous weeks. evcfyiiiir had been bullish on the Cuban, who emerged from the sp0i'1l pages as a combination of Joe Louis. Rocky Marciano and Sup- erman. HAD REVIEW After the fight. the irrepressible Solomons announced plans to treat London to a tiue bout between Valdes and Floyd Patterson. lim- icssing to see the Cuban as the logical contender. But. for the moment. the crest fallen London writers an more interested in the SHOWS WARES Haze - - 'IyAlanMW0i ””mtmz, 0.5. NA 77tM'IL SW61 5! (MM? , w-mg--so-,. .,. -e-4u..n.....A TI! W069 A0951: s NIZL GIVE dick: 0! AAIRIM Heavyweight dearth of native heavyweights. Most of them tried to be as kind to I-Irskin as is possible when a fighter spends till seconds in the ring before the referee comes to his rescue. The referee. Jack Ilart was less friendly. "I was disgusted with our cham- pion," liart said. "I don't think he gave us any value. I thought he was too soft. He wasn't tough enough." The writers sadly agreed. Solomons felt Erskine and other Britons don't do enough tfillnlnit J. Onslow Fnne. president of the British Boxing Board of Control. thought they train enough but don't do enough fighting. Bobby Neill. a Scottish leather- wcight. said it's all mental-"tire Americans come with the idea they are better than us." lngemsr Johansson. the Swede who holds the European title. said the 29-year-old Erskine was "too young" to meet Valdes. Jo- hansson. who wotild like a shot at the Cuban himself. is 24. Remember When Matt Baldwin. at 27 the youngest skip over to win the Canadian cur- ling LIiuiuDl0IlSlIlp, led Alberta to its lifth title in the bonspiel at Edmonton three years ago today- Alberta had nine victories against one detest. edging out Saskatche- wan which had an 8-2 record. .6001) FOR PARTIES PARIS (AP)-Two mannequins stood at a bar Wednesday nilhl and throw champagne over each other's latest Paris towns. Willi! cameramen exploded flashbulbs. someone stepped up to wipe them off with a handkerchief-and their dresses look as good as new. It was the introduction of s new Pith cess. a silicone treatment. called "also." that makes fabrics resili- asst to dirt. food and liquid stains. N.H.L. Delended Sports Writer Andy 0'Bil"' .0.” up gyms Q spirited JC- Iensa against the ehsrlt ill" big longs: upon-onliiv ii iii"- log ianior boehV- in TN A Standard this unit he revell- tiso huge sums IIW" ” "" "mg. the junior slnbs Oat -la: otherwise fall -out A new us-ms: -n - --ii 0"- nosed oopio. Guns stander! -on sols now. GOMDIO" "W srscnina I2-rm -0"i "” 3 gap. at ethics. Onlv "9 oimuiua ONIALINOW m 5 Ir GIORGE riuuxon Caaadiar Press hull Writer MONTREAL i('Pi .. Quelxmu, CUM Wlrdens do some hunting themselves in the winter time. for department's campaign lnainsi timber wol (-5. who prey an (inn- Oecasionally attack furmers' ine- stock. has been going on for three winters. Started by -upcrinteiident 'J. Fir- snln Bourque of the department's when 500 wolves were ""94. tripped or poisoned. This winter 100 wolves had been txtermlnated by the end of Jan- uary. and the pace CllliCI(('flS ill sliot. ' Quebec's Game Wardens Hunt To Protect Game spot uhtle ItPl',tllIl the wolf pack; froln wandering loo lnr. F t i e timber uolvrs II p r (- .knus-keti off in one week in the St. (i u- do Juliette district dur the purpose of protecting Kayne. i '.January one of them an over mum of mm The 900590 llme and fisheries led V specimen weighing 94 poundg, FINDS TIIAPS SAI-'l-JR The dc-p..rtlm-nt's uork is done -and wardens --- and by tarmcrs "Bl-ilirrs and a few professions. lwolfkillers spurred by the 520.3. wolf bounty. Where territories are too big Ior far. iiurdens track them down down with snowmobiles jml planes, then set out poisoned cgr easses or lay snares and traps "in M (F b WIN" ilii'.V first began in he a court decision as an . e o e ruary iilien deeper inen-ave, the dc-pzirtmeiii tried nit pmcedent. "0" mu" WP" "Eh 985'” iii iillllliliil s mass wolf-hunt in onel -It means. the league says. thatiBi'lY- ares. says so Ienrqno luv it lsoon iound that other Kalli? anti hunters alike were sate: ullll traps than ll hundredii oi iii:.'i-I happy hunters were loose in the woods. ! Cooperation with the camp.-urn by persons not dlncilv conrernmi has been amazing. Nlr ltourquv . One logging roiiipniiy hull- doaed several roads tin-ouult ll: forests so wardens could make Ilie iraplines more easily. : One private trapper in the La belle lrea killed :l:l uolu-a IHNI bogged down in deep snow and by experts --- its own lechnu-inns winter, collecting mil only the tizu per head but also a 3450 ptlte tor the biggest total. Not long ago. a citizen won his ieourt fight to stop the toun of Dorval from dumping ss-uauc lnio Montreal branch the effort one man to handle on foot o . - ' . r a bay near in hunt . ii 4. i- reached a high mark a year ago ' where the troll pat-ks wander too i mnced in the slegai :...q.0L:, l;,:ll.;.l.. Quebec Anti-Pollution l.eai:ue, an oifshoot of the Quebec Federation in! Fish and Game Associations. Vow the le..gu.- is hailing the important any private person or hotlv can use existing mm In xlilil uaim pollution on nilliiillnoi in-um I.sh and L'aiiiv alum 'lhe light antitrust pollution um started almost four yeais ago when the Lake of Two Mountains Fish and Garlic Msririaiiun began a SIIIWPA In llnll uhi fish had at- most roimn-It-Ii iiisappeareri from its lake. The surii-V iiuiiraleri pol- lution. anti lite Quelier federation was informed. leading to estab- lishment of the Anti . Pollution Leatzi to interest not nnl'.' sports men but the general llliI)ll(' in the urublein. lot i ('Hl'RCH SELLS LAND I.ONDON 4Reutersi - The ('hurch of England has sold some Loniton properly it has owned SlIl('L' the reign of King lienry VIII. The property lamest single blue the church comniissiont-rs have eier sold. brought about Li,- 00il.000. it was learned Wednes- day. The real estate C0'NlSlPfl mostly oi resutviitial areas with sonic stores and commercial prop- Tuesday.Mnr. 5.1957 The Guardian Page 7 James Receives Football Offer Tt)Il(lNTil ii'I'- Curr .lI'illl-'. sophomore ioruarri uilh the Na- tional liorlu-3 i.(-:tgui- Tormiiu H.1- ple Leafs. Kalll today he has re- ,eeivod an otter from New York lGinnts til the National l-'on'h.-ill lzauuc lie dct-lined lu emnnivui on tho uilvr l Jami-s um a in-niliall star uiiii lWInnip(-it Hiue Bunibnx of ill?- Wesiern lnterprovincial Football Union before he SlL!nP('l a tuo-year contract with the Leafs. RO'l'TERl)AliI rlleuters l-rSPtI'll Egyptian and lit Israeli sailor. fought in front of a fiance hall here early WEdn(ix(la)'. One F.;zypi- ian was taken to hospital Milli knife wounds. The cause of thr- iight H35 reported to lie rm-r-nt iWlilia Mays Fails To Virus Attack PHOI-;?s'lX. Al'Il I.-KPI-7WlI'l" Mays. bedded until it urus iIII'lL'lt. pmbabli uiil miss the New Yuk (iiants' first inlra-squad game oi the spring today. The hard-hitting ouiin-lder spent Friday in his hotel room while his teammates went through a four and one-half hour viorkout. KILLS THE HARD WAY SAN ANTONIO. Tex. iAPi-Wil- iam Ncgiey. San Antonio oilman, has killed two elephants with bow and arrows to win is 310,000 bet, he cahled his wife. Negley. 42. had bet William K. Carpenter. Wil- mington. 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