1 s: at. 1924*’ The s iiHY llisiri"|lii1|>sil MET THE “illicit PANTHER?” For Five Years The Champion. Has Dodged Harry Wills - Why? _..L.__Q._.._..-_. B, ozone: a. unosawpon THEY call the boxlnB "'11.! 1-118 "squared circle." The 51111111911 C11" cie silould be the place for the mum's (15111. Yet in no sport We know of, anti m, have known" many sports inside mu ailtslde for many $911111. is tbs ‘quilt-o deal so pftien missing as ill buying, But in credit to the tilalily m, or rather the commercialized branch of the manly art, let it be said that the game is steadily grow- ing cleaner and more ritspsctablti and (it-spite its occasional slips backward it still progrcsess slowly ulel . buEVElls lg on of those who the squared circle has failed to give a sqliflle deal. lie ionghais been unjustly de prived of the opportunity to ills ring talents so ricilly entitled him. Knowing he was worthy of the chance to contest for the tilost coveried prize of all, the world's heavyweight cllaulpioilsliip, ili1t| that the public ununiuloilsly agreed he was wortlly oi‘ tllis cbnntce, ho was, lllrougil the juggling und lilac. hlnatlous of Tex Rickard, tho pro- luoior, and Jack Kcarns, lllanngar oi Delllpsey, forced to sit idly by and see the golden apple which rightly was his given to ,boxers wito didn't stand the chance of ' the proverbial snowball in Ecuador against llitnscli or UclnpBHY- ‘ but always Rickard aiid Kearns foulld some way or other to side truck Wills and furnish Denlpsey witll all opponent who llcnlpstey could meet with little 'or no risk to his title. ' mp9 years have t-lapsctl since Wills first was iluiled its lJcmps-eyht rcal rival. During that five years ‘vflh; anti ills lllanltgter, Paddy . Mullins, excl-ted every effort to gut ' Di-nlpsey into a mntcli. Wililt- tlxi-rtlllg ovory effort Wills never illts failed to oct tho sports- ; niitu and the gcntielnitlt. Never by uord or dt-eii hits he offended the sensibilities oi the funs. Always has ilc conducted illmsclf its a thorough sportsmolt, a credit to his race lllld the sport of boxing. _ tilt-uli and telllperatc ill ills habits sit-ally livillg, a rosptictnblc. illitiily titan itild church goer, with never a breath of scandal attitclled to bis ed t0 give Renault a chance chastise him‘! itcnnult was forced to publicly acknowledge he "was not 1mm, rcudy for Wills" ilud tit-parted right pronto on n hunting trip. Yct most unjustly and uni-sports- "lllllly. ltlckurds poll ilnrrots and Delllpsey's licro-woruitlpilers keep to rw THE caantomrown GUARDIAN A port Page Everybody Re PAGE SEVEN’ ‘ *5". ad ISUENI] HEIEISES WIN MilNEY ii NEW EEiiEEEIW Tile horse races at New Glasgow yesterday drew a large crowd. '1‘he 2.18 class ‘was won by Keenlah Aubrey owfied and driven by Mr. E. Stewart, French River, P E- 1- T1111! race went to five heats the Aubrey mare whining the last three. It was a, great contest be- tween Kccnlnh Aubrey. Lake Be Sure andPeter Verde. Caryl-let formerly owned by ex- inniutlug. "Who hits Wills whipp ell. wily ollly poor old ‘ Fred i-‘uiton. it'll-d Fulton, linw! iiQv! flaw!" What is the truth of the Fulton tlluitttr‘! Wills knocked out Fred Fulton wiltil ll‘rcd Filitiln was cock of tile walk onlolig the ltcttvywcigltts. 'l‘llc iilack Panther massacred Ful- tutl .it ll time wilcu Willard, tho cllnmpion, wltll the recollection of ‘a knockdown at tho illtntls oi’ Ful- ton fresh in his llli!lil()l'y, could not lit‘. tluitxieti lilto the rillg again with the Miuucsilta Pinsiercr. When Wills kllilritmi out Fulton, he knocked out lite leading while heavyweight of the time. 1Il(:l(1(‘.lli.:l1ly, Wills knocked out (luniiont Slllith, ailii knocked the (iunllter out lit :t time when Smith was good enough to get a 20 round decision over Jess \Villard. 'l‘llc only two white heavyweights of repute, who would face Wills. were Fulton alld Slllltll. Wills knocked out elicit of them. More re. celltly, inst summer, ill fact, he knocked out in pig tinle, Homer Snlith, who had lasted the lilnit ltgalllst. Firpo. I Sum Inlligfllril, the Boston Tar .iinby, was one iii’ the greatest figllt- [crs that ever‘ drew on a glove. As a young middleweight, Llillgford fought Jack Johnson, Never after- wards could Johnson be invoiglc-ti into facing tho Tar Baby. Boxers. nllinngt-rs, proiuotcrs, cXpt-rtt! and the gent-rill public unite ill declar- ing lilttt Sam Lltngiorti was one of lilc greatest fighters that liver clltnlbt-rcti into it ring. The superiority between Salli Iiltngfilrti ltnd ilarry Wills never was fittlngiy tit-lnolll-ltrlttcd. Wilon Wills was i1~ growing youngster, it must be recalled that his growth was abnormal, for in ten yearn he grow. from a skinny, scrawny colored boy, light tentitlgil to bt- employed nu a jockey, into it one hundred und seventy pflllfld or. llc twice was knocked out by nanle,'\Vilis directly and sntphntic- ally refuted those critics W110 Lungforil, once in fourteen rounds Mayor Brown, Charlottetown was second in the 2.30 tmt. int the 2.40 pace Hector owned by Dr. Mcintyre, Montague won second money ltad Mack Aubrey owned by Wellington McNeil, Sotlillport took fourth money. ' SUMMARY 2.18 Clan Keenl-llh Aubrey Luke Lie Sure Peter Verde Timc—— 2.16%, 2.20%, 2.19%, 2.30 Trot Silver Belle (Ioryset North Wallace Truro ill-lie 2 3 1 1 2 3 2-1 ‘A. |ili R5914, with Mart Deluurest ‘in: ill 1| i By W. H. Goober Thirty years have elapsed since Star Pointer, the first 811E911 marvel, started the two minute list of ligllt harness performers. The twmty-fourtb name was added to that select group when Mcrrtmnn won a heat in two minutes at the recent ‘Folcdu Grand Circuit meet lng. Over 39,000 trotters appear in tho 2:30 list. Over 30.000 pacers" have made records of 2:25 t or better. 0f that grand total of 09.000 horses only seven trotters und seventeen ilncers placed their names ill the two minute list.‘ Star Pointer started this list at lteudville in 1897. At the Grand Circuit meeting that year Dave McClary drove him in 125914. The next addition to the list was also made at ijcadviiie in 1903 when Lou Dillon. trotted the first mile in two minutes. Later in the season Millard Sanders reduced her rccord to 1:581‘; ‘at Mempltis. Alta McDonald added another name t9 tllc list at the Memphis meeting when he drove Major Delmar in- 115906. ’l‘llc saute year was also made memorable by l'rillce Alcrt [lacing lieiltlont Pttrk, Philadelphia, e sulky. Two more additions were record- ed in i905 when iiall Patch reached his linlit behind a pace maker at Lexington liy turning that fast Tilile~2.21, 2.20%, 2.21%. 2.40 Pace John Waters ilector Miss Atlantic Muck Atlllrt-y Tinte--~2.20, 2.19%, 2.20. --—~——<o->-———— 8 HOPE RIVER 10; NORTH WIL. SHIRE 7 The second game between the liopc River Pirates and the North W itshirc Allsporta was played Jtlly 21st, in the falters dlanlond, llope lllver being again the win- tiers. \V. Hagen pitched u grout game for tho willnors,_illld wits aid otl well by T. Reid and A. ilztlger. (loud work for the Alispilris was titme by (l. S. McLean and W‘. Mc- Lt-od. Mr. Henderson umpired satisfac- torily. After the galllt- the Ail- sports troittcil the Pratt-s to ice cream. ' clue-up N. Wiltsblre Hope River Johnson Catcher W. McGuignn J. McQurtitl Pitcher W. liltgcn’ ti. C. McLean 1st J. ilugcn 1*]. Clow 2nd T. Reid E. McKinnon 3rd It. llolgar Li. Smith . S. S. E. Bolgor cotlruc ill 1.55%. lilirry llerscy ldrovc him. The other “newcomer wits Audubon ilny, Gotcolllb drove 111111 1" 1I51i‘/.i at Syracuse. Hersey placed his second representative in the extreme. speed list, at In- dianapolis ill 1910 when he market] Minor lielr lrfiililg. lll 1912 Uhlan reached his lintlt of 1:58. He was the second trotier to secure two nllnllie hollows. Charles Tanner drove him. Thomas W. Murphy nlitrked his SilME SPEEI -._j-0>.——— ttllc sonic race bilt Single (l. did not I MARVElS met in several contests. in 191d Lcc Worthy with Ben White up reduced the trotting stall- ioll record to 1:581/.. Geers won at Columbus with Napoleon Direct ill 135351 the same yc-.tr. The follow ing your McDonald won with lulss llurriu M. at Atlanta in two lllitl- utes. ‘fills mark Murphy reduced to 115815 ttt ‘Polcdo flu 1913, the do)’ that the mile track was opened at thkit city. Geers also drove Single G. two hunts below even tinle in reach ills linilte until 1023 when Ailcll won with him at Syracuse in 1:5h"/;, The ltullles of Lottie Gruttun and Prince Luree were ltddcd to the list of speed lnnrvcls at Lexington in 1920. iloth of thclll puccd in two nlintltcs. Vice Fleming gave the Grafton [loyal mare llcr record in d. race while McDevitt marked the double tgtlltcd champion ill a trip ill-millet the which. Sitilnrtlo wits the only llOPSt: to cross the itlri ltuiiictin in 1921, Murphy marked him in 1:595; at Syracuse, u figure wilicll was reduced to 125.9% by (Jeers at lndluniiilolis, the next ytrir. ill 1922 five sptcd marvels in addition to Silnllrtio were lllarkttil. Bliii NIAEBHES ii YAEIIVIEIEIEH ' YESTERDAY (Canadian Press) YAltliiOUTll, July 30,—'l‘his morlrngs play in the Maritiille Golf Championships here indicated that two New Brunswickcrs, (‘., J. Jones, Woodstock, ilild l". If. Rlstcn Fredericton, would moot lifelike brothers of llallfzix, Gerald ‘and Fritnk respectively. in the st-nli fllals to be played tomorrow. itisten and Jmles i1t"f(‘lli.L‘.(1 their Nilva Scotiu opponents handily playing consistent golf throughout. The Meilke brothers are playing ill top form nliil will undoubtedly nlcct in the finals. , YAlt3i0U'l‘li, N. S., .itliv I10.»- iGt-raltl Me lkc, ililliiax dc :ilit‘(1 A. l’. Pnitt-rsoll, Si. John. six lip und fivc to play ill the first round for lilo illllati-tlr golfing cllliulpimlshiti of the lllnrltilllc Provinces hcre ibis morning. They were the f'rst to turn in their curds. YARMOIITH, N. 3., Jilly .'<l0—~ ill-trtlii liiit-iikc wits 39 utli 37 in, par four of "it'll! lllitktltg their records at Lexington. Oi’ this lot Murphy drove Pclcl- Manning 1:50“/4, Arioll U111’ lifiiiké ilnd Margaret liiiiilll 1151414, ltud lltirry FIPIIIIIIK retiuccil tho world's record for trotting maria lo 1150's’; wiill Ncddtt. ltlitrliter in the season (lliuse llcnll won it bent in 1150-7; with Sir ltncil at (lolumbus. As hits been started Single (l. rezlcllcti his llnllt 12.58% in 1923 while i924 starts off with Merri- nlitll 2:00 in July. it looks now its though ilihers would join illlll ill 11in select circle before the curtain drops izii this campaign. Sixlt-e-n rt-insnle-n marked the first two minute performer in 1914 when ht- won a heat at Detroit with Frank llognsh Jr. in lzfiill/a. This iiliit- gelding was the‘ first horse to bent two minutes in a~ Tl\('0.. ilirei-iunl l. and Wiillaltl, llotll of which ilont. two nlintltos in races. t\v-~nty' four nlcltthcrlrof the two minute list. Murphy loads with eight, Silflilfilfl being iilc only one in ills group that acquired a new rwortl lifter leaving his stable. ln iidtiiiion tn the San Fninciscn gelding. Murphy mnriterl Peter reltcht-tl their lilnit ill 1915. At Syracuse, Dirccium 1. made tho world's record in the open of. 155% with Murphy tip while Ilinrvln marked William in H5814, Manning, Aricn Gtly, llirectunl I. Miss ilnrrls M., Margaret lliilnn. Frank 1108mm Jr., and Morrlmnn. Harry llcrscy lilrtricctl Dill Patch and Minor lioir whilt- (it-era drovi- i iti North Randall. They were a re- markable pair of racing paccrs Ilnd Napoleon Dircct nnd Snuardo in their records. Many American Olympic Athletes ' Plan To Retire Matinee Races At -0’Leary . ___1__ There was n large crowd of poop. le to witness the mntinoe races at ‘for the course. Frank Mcilko was 37 ottt ill ills litatcll wiihdlr. (l. .1\t1i!1)l)ilt'l1(1, ltoli-lng out ilvt» holes in three and intfllg five ltp for the first n'ne 110103. i‘. M. \Vyllc, ilitll- fax dt-featt-d it. lim-ttin, Ynrmouth, four up nllii twn to go. C. J. Jones, \V(l(lt1i§li)i‘k, tit-fenll-ti J. l)olily, Hali- fax, three and two. F. ll. ltisit-n, Fri-ticrlcton liiffillltfill h}. (l. (lrulldy, Halifax, ihroc and two. Dr. J. ii. L. Jolluuitlne, Hilli- fitx deft-atoll \V. i‘. (HINT, Halifax. iltritc and two. Frank viiike, Hal'- fztx tls-fltitictl ilr. (lnrf Nillitilonaltl, Now (llilsgotv, ncvcll up and five to go. i <0»??- WASHING FEATHER PILLOWS lows and cushions. A large bath of unft latllcr as roqtiircil. and it should be illiliit‘ with l-tonp flakes boon tttidcil. the fttzltllt-rs. tlirt-cily lntn tho. tnr, hey should then be wcl ltnottdttil and stiuoozttti with the bands. Whi-n they are ihrollgbly cleansed, place them in muslin bag, rtlll tepid \'All.\i(il1’l‘ii, N. 8., Jilly 30.—- ‘ Tilke tho opportunity wilt-n tbc sun slrnzis ivlt-ilnsiltl: feather pil- or soap jelly, to which borax has his will ‘ stiftnn tho wnicr and remove any grease from When emptying tho pillow, do it hath, getting a socmtd pair of hands tn push the feathers inlmctiintoly llndcr the wa a thin W816i‘ hull Riliiiiiil ill atlnnwil YESTERDAY 'i‘llt- following is the l-ltlnlmnryof illt- rlicti lllcot lit-id at (ltorgetown yi-slterdlty alteration: Class A AHEIIES EUSE iii iii . iiiflfi Last Nigllt_ at Sum- merside by a Score 0f 14 to 9 \\'iill ilic scoie-iloztrti lc-zislering 9 _ioilts to 6 with the Abcgweiis on ills 1on4 end, the Sullliltcrsiile All SL111; llll‘lli‘ii titeieat iriio victory ill [110 t-Egilili inning inst lligill on ilio home diamond ill a game punctuat- t-d for iilc tiiost pltri with lrl'cj'.uiitr :icitllug. and poor judgment on thi- bitsi-s. 1»\lll1£llL’.*'ti [it-lllllps lnvorcti tlit- Wilillvlli lost night its tilt-y gar llvred eight luns bi-iort- ileiltg rt-lir ed and the game culled or; it colt- sequent-c. ‘lilo lint-tips were: All Stars lack 'l‘olld (Aicfitbiz) ibt- Atlbri-y tMcllltyrt-i Northern Lady (Mc- (lrtigilrj 'l‘tiiltl 1G,, Mililili- ' - 'i‘illlt-.---2.2."i, 2.23, 2.22, 2.25, 2.25. (fill-Lariat) Class B. Ahegwelts Mlljili‘ S tMcKellzlt-i Nitiinltiil if. tMorrisi linrry .it-m iMi-(fnili-l Albert Pnlcbiil itlzlyl (Jul-enh- Jolly Polly 'l‘lllte-— 2.22, 2.25, Cali cilcr Wright Franz-is Noonall __ ___ (Jntltilbt-ll Peters lvlcCartey/ 22L __, liiltlliilllti ‘clan c Graves Amy Aubrey (‘Yiliwdi |)i‘('I-1\'1‘f‘ (Prauglii) Maud F. (Fiiztzvrltitl) linrvttst Iliiw lltlit-y) Lildy ituiiy, lfvx lienring. ()i'\\'v11, iit- -ll J. lllrll) started. ‘Filno- l, 2 H, 2.35 Jtltlgt-s- . Knight, it}, 1*‘. Acilrll. ’l‘llltt-ls~ Jils. 116111. Starter-JG. F. Acorn. Siluri Slop _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ . . _ __ Jiillfizicllttrll Ut-ilil Field Siiiiphzinl __.- .___..._. Siitliltlcrs lllgili. Ficlii Pcrrin ____________ _; _____ -_ llyltn 1101'; Field Phillips ________________ _. Slléwilfi l5. A. Scuily, Cronin Shaw, Mr McCon- GAME TOMORROW NIGHT A return i-"iiltle is rtrrilngcd for tomorrow ni. starlillg at 0.15. Tile AiiPl-{Wilils tr» t-olliitii-ni oi lflil king ii. ciimc-bltt-k ill this gztlno and considering the brand oi’ bzill tili- All-Stars are playing :t lfftéiii. gillllt- lst-xpt-retctl. 'i‘ili- ittietldnncn :ti pro vious values has lillPll zlnyiitilig but encouraging and it is inert-fort: lin- pt-d that a litrgc. crowd will iuril lit-at. 'l‘ilotll-,h he cattle of a raciflil sire, Sylvvstv-l‘ J., nclihitr hill B9‘ pearnttci- nor his Knit had Kivfln any Fndiirlttiilu that be might be a ltlnncy winner 0n i118 itili-‘k- ’l‘his spring, however, the horse was given ltis trllnllce and trained "m" for six wot-ks. The first hopeful sign was wilt-ll he wnxcd tt-lnpera- mt-ntitl, a sure indication of a stat‘. i-‘iltt-l" on llli- track, still!" 01‘ bflflé‘ ‘ball iiiittnnntl. ills debut did not ,.i 1 vt-ry nusplteiilllsly, for he iritilt-rf lindiy lit-bind ill the first two boats of tht- event in which he Ttvrts villi-red. ills racing blood. REGINA, Situk. July 2Fl.-—A yfifll‘ howctw-r, began to tell and ony “m; plugging in ~.ii]I])1y lilcnnlot‘oirronlpnd home in the lend for the to n Regina Ill-och lliiik wagon; io- lhroc final heats. lie duplicated day one iii’ Saskatchewan's llilbflili- his success ill his llPXl performance on rnrw- horscs. That, ill brit-i", is and since illcll has continued his the ustotllltling record of Tony Sil-fudtilling wilys, , roster, 111i‘ st-vtzn-yi-nr-oltl silor-tivrl ii ‘s said that Tony is taking oil irolli the Vassar and 'l‘lt'yltlr stables nil i111‘ ziil-s oi‘ it rcal champion, and, bore, who has already hung tip a actually iiiis his equine nose when- llrilliztnt record on wcsit-rn ir1t<'k-‘=.<=\'cl‘ n l"1lt wagon Dfflflllmflfl i" l (Associated Press) l 'O’Leory, Tuesday, July 22nd. The rttct- consisted of two closes. A NEW YORK, July 29—Aimost freeior-nll nllxcd anil a green race ill. acorc nf Amcrieifs star ‘track and mixed. (‘olcnol Aubry, owned "and sought to excuse Dempsey from aiid again in nineteen rounds. (Agqodag J pm") nlectiilg wills "for the good ~ of Lougiord was at his fisittins the gllllle." crest then, Wills but mounting tho 'i'lii-ir attempts to ptlt Wills ill ascent. Yct never was Lanslortl through ihom in rinse, and then put the bag through the wringer. llnug tho ling containing the foa- thcrs out to dry, constantly Silllk- Ficlders ‘ Last summer illo llonlt-ly JOHVVPPOHS his path. spmii ilrngging the ntorlliniz m lk to, eoai- flllnilit-s that had movd io ihmMinar-ifs Liniment for Rheumatism W. Clark N. MCLOOd D. S. McLean J. OCnnnorsi D. McGuigan R. McDonald Elnlsdnie y)“. ing category as Jack the siinic iliillxtl and trouble nlak-. Johnston. who u-us a disgrace to ills race, fell ' fliit. . 'i‘llc trouble Johnson brought up- oll boxing was occasioned by his doings outside of the ring, not in- - side of it. Wills docs not do the filings tlutslde the ring Johnson wits guilty of. ills wife, his pastor aiid scores of honest respectable God fearing friends, botlt black altd white, will vouch for the character aiid tnoriils of Wills _ ' itecently the hero flurry, ‘forced to fight harder to win. in between those two knockout victories of Langfortl, tbc pair fought several ten round no decis- ion coutests. All of them were sav- age, gruelling affairs. All the time Wills wits developing slowly but surely. iiangford reached his zenith and his fistic sun started down tho Western descent. I Vvllls improved faster than Lang- Eiord retrograded. Evclililllny l1"? Black Panther turned the tables on tho Tar llaiy. Wills wipcd out those two earlier knockouts by WQrghIppQfQEKHOUKIIIg ottt Lallgforil twice and running besides i)elnpsoy's chariot, 801-11118’ W") P01910153 11361510115 “yer or tlioseoftilut innumerable cdrps 0i prupugundists- Tex Rickard has hilt to wave ills magic wand ever _ and they obey, have attenlpted to shake tho cause of Wills by de» ' ulnudlng: "Who has Wills whipped? llas he beaten ilili Brennan, Jess Will- ard, ililiy Mlske, Georges Carpen- Tlier. Toni Gibbons, Battling Levin- liiy. all of wilolu are victims of Denlpscy?" v Oi (EOIITSG he hasn't‘ beaten Brennan, Willard, Miskc, Carpen- Qler, (libilons und Luvlnsky. liow ‘could he bent hem when a regi- ment of cavitiry- couldn't drive them or the fortune of Midas entice them into the saute ring with the Black Panther. lt is Wills’ fault that none 3""1,li11fiy's victims would m’. 0f m cet Wills had challenged them often anti pt-rsistorltly. He has culled "m" "t"! bluff. Do you recall last winter when Jack Renault, defeat- “1 F101"! Johnson, bowled from the llousetops his willingness to meet tho Tar llaby. That Wills's turning of the table! on Llttlgiortl was due more to his own progress tilitll to Longfortfs rctrograsslon, is shown by the fact that Wills turned title on J06 Jeanette and Salli McVey in a like manner. Wills undoubtedly was a greater fighter than Jeanette or McVcY and as great a fighter as Langford. Which of the. two ‘at his best fiillll‘ lug edge was the greater always will be a nlutier of conjecture- \v1ll!f\ Litngforti wlilurvtl Wills. Harry was a growim; 1101" W110" Wills willppeil liitllgford, Sum hail passed his ilugillstic peak. The)’ never met wiion ouch was at his ring crest. Wills knocked nut the only two laeding wilitu lluvuyweights W110 would face him. Fulton ulld Guil- boltt Smith, and boih at their 1111811 istlc pottks. Wills beat Joe Jeanette and knocked otlt botll Snnt Lang- ford and Sam MCVBY- (tan anyone numc five fighters among tho victims of Jack Deni- Blly mun, block or white? What llapplled when Wills offer- >-~__g l ' n intermi hen G W‘ I'll cricket match was irton College ladies bovo phogqnph pscy tho equal of the five mcn beaten by Harry Wills? played at CGIHBIHIQ f°°°mlY Team opposed the Barlow Q0118” shows the cgptlln of the ladies tent-a l-nfllni "Who has Wills whipped?" Even the Record Hook, which! fails to chronicle the why and wherefore of Wills’ failure to meat some oi‘ tllo men beaten by DUMP psey, shows that despite all buildi- cups, drawbacks and iujustlce,' Harry Wills has beaten more and better men than has Jack Deni- psey. if Dempsey was a real pioll, be long since would given iiurry Wills his chance. Public opinion was the fact that the astute Jack Kearns, illanagcr of Dempsey, believes idleness, lack of conlpetition and Nature itself had slapped Wills‘ fighting powers, appears to be bringing about a meeting between Dempsey and his dusky Nellie-sis. Wills may be beaten, bllt he at last will receive his chance. it is up to all of us who believe in fair play and sportsmanship to see that he gets that chance. if the squared circle will ilot square itself, nlaybe some of us can luuke it. Hatched By Heat (By Dominion New; Service) LONDON, July 30.—A fire brig- ade superintendent. looking through a chink in the wail of a burning thatched cottage in the vil- lage of Newton. St. Cyres, Devon lately saw two duck-Hugs floating ill sixteen inches of water warmed by the flames. They lrad been hatched during the fire and coloured coal-black. Aftor their rescue they soon re- gained their natural colour. At the moment they are the pets of iilxeter Fire Station. The mother duck, which had item taken Into the hotlse tho nigh! before. and one duckling was cham- have field athletes wore the United driven by Jits. O'Brien, States shield in Olympic competii Won the free for-all ill straight tlon for the inst time at Paris. IIBBi-S- 'l‘1ii'ii 110F110 1111s 11 111i 01 \Viih‘n a few months fully alto-half HD0011 $11111 “W111 011811! T110 810911 of 11161.90 athletes will have roilmuirttce was won by Billy C. owned by from tho scenes they have dnmin- 31191591 11811188)’ P01111111". driven nted so long by virtlri of a flnc 1W U00. Cilmiilirlgs. 0110M?- B1111’ (Eil-Ofdilliliifill o! brawn and brains. C- 1! a 51191 P110111‘ ""11 “"1" 9115111’- Of tho sprinters Charlie Pnd- The Eulwwing 15 the "P111517- dock, Jackson V. Scholz, J. Alfred 00101191 AubnY- U“ 0151M" l1 1 Leconey and possibly Loren Mur- Um‘ Ailbfy. tiD. McCilrtiy .. 2 chison are about to desert the n“; (Wm Id-"mlmn 3 c llder path. Golf has usurped the Tmlif 3516'/1-%513'/*~ place once occupied by running in “my c" (Due (mmmmgs - 1 tho affections of Paddock. Schulz. “m” 5- ‘C- 9mm“ who single-handed upheld Amcri- Denlllllfk. (Roy McMillan .. I . i , . ' lnlc—2:27‘/g" 2:204. can prestige ill the sprints a. Paris r _ ' _ , m,“ who h“ devoted 10 years of The officials were. Starter, Wm. , _ McAurthur, Alberton Jildgos. m“ me m racing’ ‘a mad) _m yum James Lidstone and D. Sullivult, M“ “Wren! m a younger nun‘ O‘Leor Tililcr l! Ro crs Colman Lcconey came ollt of retirement y‘ ' g ' ' to represent his country ill the Aioo-‘jleflb Dr" mylor 0 umry‘ moire rolay for the last timc uudIt T?” gwwllafier Mum” tréfk, ti,“ probably will withdraw before ho 0m“ “Em,” “no ‘er mu‘ n w bl-conlea a has-been. Ml1fC1lii-lllfl.‘"“nr hump’ tlibill|lp0ililtitl over his fniltlre to, will at least. one of the sprints at' Paris, may try t0 stage a come- back, blit business is taking more and more of his tine aiid soon may compel hinl to abandon the spikcdi shoe. Another track athlete who is ltt|liti|y approaching the end of his career is Jole Ray, one of the [116111051 of American loug-ilistance lilfill. 3 issued from this tlllion five power- ful branches, which in their ttlrn increased the family tree. 'l‘o-iluy |iilc direct dcsculilattts of Dt-rllnrtl illtgochc number 951, null will ex- cotsd 1,000 before tho end of tilt‘ ilrescnt your. it was around the eldest branch tilot tllc descendants of the fitnlily gathered. After a Special Mass in Sonics Parish Church, a coulmculoratlve illaquo was inaugurated, on which are cn- grilved the names of twenty-one nlelnbttrs of the falliiiy who ilit-d for France. Great grandparents, grandparents, parents, and cilililrut then nsscnlbleil at the hotlse of M. and Madame Bernard Vcrley, who have s family of seventeen child ren, itlld all opal-air feast was or- gnilillcti, tho guosts nuberlng 317. —-———<Q>--i—— Family Party, 400 (By Dominion News Service) ~ PARIS, Jilly 30.——At a lime when so much il written about the de- poptliation of Franco it is interest- ing to indicate a fanlily record which has just been commemorat- cil at a unique gathering at Santos nonr Lille. At this gathering wen 400 members of the slime family. whose descendants now number nt-ariy 1,000. The marriage of M. EMERALD b“ KINKORA i6 Another game pill-yeti in. Emerald Wednesday iliglit between Emerald and Kinkora. it was bllt the first in Enleritld for this Bl!lSDf1,_ The found drowned in the burned house. BRINGING UP FREE-l?“ Kinkora boys won. witlna score of 1o to 5. and Madame Bernard Lagaciltt took place 239. years ago, and there WU\t\ 0L) D DQNT G0 HON! THEN Ii’ 001-0051’ PHONE AN‘ R wire vdu Am! WL-Q tu. qo in 1m‘: mama snap ing it to separate tho contents Bi ‘r47 21.51). > f/rsjl‘! 1.51:." [tut '. 12 {(51152 a 20fir25¢ OH: ER - A- HELLO- ‘l’ Al? Bu?! n Ivor-i. Futunu 51mm: Gran Hill-m rlgfllllrurlvrd s. In; itlsii Collsois 501.5 turf-ski? con ' a PM FOR THtb mo beach to escape (l]l]ll‘<'SS1VC arettes and bacco Cig To 1Q) out»? 1N ~flME TO A“ Qgqu-Q ‘p’ ou‘. _ AN- FVEN tr tCOUl-D -t 0*“ "'3 “U”? HAVEN“? GOT CAR-FARE.