.3PORTlNG urws Navy_Ancl__Airmen We. Qpenzng Encounters Of C1D’ Softball League cit amorous... we. fiyiig apart yeeterde :1 . t from played. “ nd Airmen chalked up iiiiilil-vlnitial victories but only after ' kind of encounters. ' nrly was this true of the ‘Navy and Officers’ struggle with ‘m. "Tnrs" coming through with some 1111191)’ hitting at their last hum M ihc plate to pull out with i their victvll‘. 5K iii Airmen and Sergeants both 1.91am sarong squads in every de- pment with the former bunohixig and full advantage of Wpoiimivs ermrs to build up a mil that the Sergeanats could not | p0. i, overcome, particularly sgllllSl the speedball offerings of oconnor 0n the hill for the win- i rers uiio limited his opposing team lg}, one solitary single, that one wmjpg with one out in the first m]; 0i p” third“ inning. -. + i Battling Nelson, who celebrated . hi; 63rd birthday June 5th, is ready 1 iosiarl all over again in the flstiu lame-flint gave him fame, if not forlllnc H, l t ' . r we i Trim, Sillifll-Pyfid and plenty quick on ihc rlrnlv for all of his bloody l baring battles just after the turn of 5 the century, the former lightweight f champion said he planned to "BT83! of fair fighters miter" the c couple try my hand at managing ivrr and ilxm “ U.‘ l}; ' lit I "Some scrnpizers are bound m ooms out of the war and I think 1nd (iii than solmfiugood bi! ‘they “ll tak llS f g rig usness 22:10:19,051 Jeclnrcd Nelson, who ibiighl ihrcc historic bouts writh Joe Grins, from whom he won the llirliiivciahi. crown at Golma, Calif. lunly l, 1908“, :.- 4c at Tile Bat. whose full name is Oscar Battling Mathew Nelson. took the day oft from his post office job “to sec the sights" by way of r birthday celebration. + =1» it? "I'll lust mosey around and enjoy tho holiday," he smiled. "I'm still in training, calisihenics each morn- ing and evening. I still weigh arviinzl i528. about the same as I illfl imlirr I used to trim down for I light. " iié l Nelson has c pair of bu. Jflls, a slightly flattened nose and i a disjointed hand. but very little else lo show for his bitter battles i will such immortal lightweights as Gcns, Terry McGovern, Young .Coi"beti, Abe Attell, Jimmy Britt ‘and Ad Wolgast, to whom he lost his title nt Port Richmond, Calif, _ on February 22, 1910, in a scorch- ing ill-rounder. ‘é “Theoretically, I made I. lot of money, but actually I saw very little oi ll." he recounted with little trace of bitterness. "I certainly got a lot oi experience on money matters in . I hope it isn't too - Nelson ncgazds the present prac- Htice of scoring technical knockouts liter "three or four" knockdowni as .4 sign of decadence in the rng. ‘ ."\'i'hy. ivhon I fought Ghristy Will- Vhms back in 1902, he knocked me "down 42 iinics. but I knocked him out in the rich," Bot recall-ed. The nelson‘ l have to stop fights ‘how is l; so the fighters don't Whirl Dmpcrly." Nelson kayoed Gans {gin l’! and 20 rounds and lost on a ‘foul to the great Negro fighter in fl rounds 4-‘ us 9K Nelson thinks Joe Louis will be lble to retire as the heavyweight Jhflflrlon. “He's very good and I -,; don't know who there is around who can boat hlm," he said. "Jack Barlow? Well. they're two of the l, 5E8! hlravywclght punchers ever, ‘I Dflllllscy ivas tough as whale- bone. l/Jllis ls tough. but I don't lhillk he can take a punch on the i jlw like Dempsey could. Jack prob- it 01y would have stopped him." i’! - .. 0H6 0f the outstanding perform- ? ls in the National League at the 0 s Gtnrg-e (Whitey) Kurow- serving his fourth season l5 third btlsenlan for the St. Imuis fifiardinals, . . its A8 the Cards were winning three ill-light pennants, whitey didn't tilt officially opened the local sea- TCHM advantage of flfldjng 1595B bl’ the winners in elm gafly framgdo! the ame. the losers ac- fivlllllil for al their rung ii-i the rs four frames. As the game drew; towards its final innings, it appeared Wit they would be enough, but the Air Force pitcher, who had been very 8911181 with hits. With men crowd- 1118 the paths fell victim to a four, hit attack in the seveniih that was 800d enough roi- three rum rim the ball game. There was two out and the more tied at 4-all when Gus MgLend same to the Plate in the first of thv seventh and his ringing single to centre field scored two runners that meant the ball game. In the second encounter, Airmen '1‘ HE CHARLOTTETOWN Yankees 3-2 By The Associated Press i Breaking out of u. slump, Chl- cago White Box knocked Detroit Tigers out of first place in the American League yesterday by splitting a twin bill before 30.903 combining a 13-bit attack with the one hit hurling, dished Urp by their mound artist O'Connor came, through with s 9-1 vfcwry over the Bfluvmie in the second game of the double bill. Th pushed across the e first run of $18 ‘game in the first‘ half of the hi: inning. but the‘ winners finding the offerings of the 01111081118 hurler to their liking sent_ four runner; across the plate in; the last half of the fourth, addedl two more in their next time at bait and then put the game on ice in the sixth with three more tallies, an uprising that was started by Bobby Dow's four base wlallop after the first man had. been retired. SCORE BY INNINGS 1st Game. . NEW 011 010 3 Officer; mil. Game Sergeants Airmen M10000 0004231! George S. Lists $60,000 Golf Prizes In_ 1945 All-American An all - time high tournament purse of $60,233.63 in war bonds and of stamps will be the stake for which golfdom’: top-notchers will com- pete in the i945 All-American Golf Tournaments to be held July 23 to 29 at Chicago's Tam O'Shan- ter Country Club. This was announced officially today (Friday) by George S. May, whose business engineering firm, the George S. May Company, spon- sors the annual three-way golf classic consisting of the All-Amer- ican Open, the All-American Am- ateur. and the All-American Wom- en's Open. Forecasting the finest field of entries in the toumamenis’ four- year history. May revealed that the Men's Olpen would offer a total purse of $57,733.03 in war bonds and stamps with prizes scaled down to the first forty low scores. dou- bling the number of winners in previous meets. First prize in the Men's Open will have a total war bond and stamp value of $13,600; second place, $6,665.61, and will range downward as follows: $2,666.67 for fifth place; $1,133.34 for tenth lace; 9900 for fifteenth place; $406.07 for twentieth place; $333.34 each for the next ten places; and $266.0’! each for thirty-first to for- July 36 to 29. The series consists A prize of $133.34 daily for the longest drive from the first tee 1111-‘, on completion of the day's tourn- ament round; $133.34 daily for the contestant whose ball is nearest the 18th hole pin upon completion of second shot for the 18th hole", for contestants not members of the armed forces - $333.34 daily for lowest round; $200.00 daily for‘. second lowest round; $133.34 daily_ for the third lowest round; and a‘ prize of $333.34 each day for the, lowest round by a. contestant. member of the armed forces in uniform. Postpone World Championship The World Championship play- off which was a feature of the Ali- American tournament last year has been cancelled until after the war at which time Tam 0'Sha.nter and the George S. May Company will stage an International Open Golf Tournament in which players from‘ all over the world will com- pete for the world championship and prizes in excem of those ever offered in ally golf tournament. May stated. Holding the record not only for the highest stakes in golfing but I for the largest number of entries. tieth place. Richest Golf Tournament The total purse for this tourn- ament is two and a fourth times a-i gain as large u the next highest‘ money toumament announced in. the Professional Golfer's Associat- ion schedule of tournaments for the 1945 season, May said. The Women's Open will present a total of $1,950.00 in war bonds and stamp prizes. including $500. $400. $300. $300. and $100 to the first five winners and ranging downward I I i" his ham-e in the headlines so‘ ltillleulll‘ as Marty Marion, Stan Muslal cf the Coc er brothers, Mort . 0nd walker, but e always was an l "ndmi Performer. i, ‘This year Kurowski answers to ,. it? 0850100011 of a good ball player l Who has taken on chrtna. class. Al- Vll‘: u dependable fielder, he is Well"! his position in spectacular . ‘which. according w _N-1tiona1 lflgue observers. and making “Y! that he didn't execute in pre- i "S luars. * ‘F >1‘ N‘ . Ililflllicvls bcst year as a National = i‘ file batsman was in i943 when l‘ ‘MP1 through 13in games and ' ‘fmililwl the creditable percentage ° 337- 111st season his average dc- mny have difficulty him off. FIRST GENERATOR W0 Von Guericke, a German iclst, invented th t h-' i° Benerate eiecttrifciitsy ‘fight: it" 81m. m snout W?!“ -|u|-y¢|“ Nomi wnmuo m _ ‘lvll-Afl-lill. idem. iiiilllultlll RRIUSH Nfiliillhifvliifil GHT BINDIN‘ to $10 for fourteenth place. The Amateur event offers $550 in prizes sled for the first ten players. All three tournaments will be '72 holes. medal play under USO. A. rules and amateurs will be lim- ited to $100 prizes in war stamps. In addition. the George S. May Company will feature a daily ser- la of six special prizes for men professionals entered in the Open. A total of $5200.14 in war bonds and stamp prizes will be distributed Thursday. Saturday. and Sunday. fbeen streamlined this year the All-American tournaments hinge, w the addition of separate qualifying rounds for entrants from Illinois,‘ Michigan, Wisconsin, and Indiana. These qualifying rounds will be held on Monday. June 18. for am-, ateurs, and Monday. June 25, for professionals. Entrants from o-l ther states will qualify the week of the tournament. In line with its policy of popul- arizing big-time golf on s par with other sports. the tournaments will again be open to the public at a daily admission price of 91.00 plus tax as in previous years. Last year's tournaments drew a crowd of nearly 85.000 persons to Tam O'Shaiiter Country Club to see Byron Nelson win the open with a 280 card-a under the par for four rounds of the 6.700 yard course, Ed Ffiirgol. Earl Christian- son. and Ken Hellemann played off a three-way tie in the Amateur event with Furgol Winning the play-off. Betty Hicks, playing on her home course. won the Women's Open with a 316 score. Hoop Jr. Wins Kentucky Derby Ddrocher |ll ‘Hands 0f Law i fifth place fans at Detroit. ./ I Detroit won its fifth straight game 3-2 in the opener but the So: clocked a five-, losing streak by winning the night cap The Sox pounded out 15 hits off three Detroit pitchers in the night cap. Chasing Frank (Stubby) 0- vennlre during a four-run rally before Paul Richards, Tiger cat-, cher, belted a four-run homer as; the Tigers batted around in the‘ seventh. Bill Nagel drove in the last two Box runs in the ninth with Gm. home run into the lup- ch a mighty per left field stands. At New York, the sensational; winning streak of Dave Fer- ris was brought to an end as] New York Yankees squeezed out a 3-2 victory over the Red Sox's rookie rlghthander in the opener of a. doubleheader after he had, won his first eight maJor league games. A crowd of 38.114 paid. new milk-l man Jim Turner come to the ' lief of Hank Borowy, in the n inning to stamip out a last-ditch Boston rally with the tying run on first base. The second gamwwu called be- cause of rain with the Red Scx ahead 1-0 after 1 1-2 innings. It will be played Aug. 30, originally an open date. Giants Drop Doubleheader To Braves By The Associated Press By sweeping a. doubleheader from New York Giants 8-5 and 3-1 for their sixth and seventh successive‘ victories, the Braves yesterday went into sixth place in the National League. Two four-run innings in the first game, the third rind seventh, gave Mort Cooper his third victory as a Brave and his fifth of zhc season even though he gave up 13 hits, two of them home runs by Mei Ott and Danny Gardella. The second game saw Jim Tobin hold the league leaders hi’.- less until the sixth "when speedy Johnny Rucker beat out a bum. Tobin aided his own cause with a home run in the fifth. At St. Louis. home runs by Babe Dahlgren and Jimmy Russell broke up two extra-inning ball games in favor of the Pittsburgh Pirates, 8-6 and 4-1 and the Cardinals dropped from second w Elwin (Preacher) Roe who went the distance for Pittsburgh in the‘ second game held the Redbirds hltless after the sixth inning. Rip Sewell, the third pitcher relieving starter Max Butcher. was credited with the Pirates’ first victory. Brooklyn handed the Philadelplfia Phillles their 14th straight defeat in the first game of a doublehead- er 10-3 before about 12.000 fans. Rain which delayed the first con- test three times and finally halted it after seven innings of play, ffiiéced postponement of the second Hal Gregg was in charge of the Dodgers’ itching and registered his sevent victory, allowin seven hits. The Phillies made al their runs in the seventh, three coming when Jimmy Fox doubled with the bases filled. Charley Sproull op- posed Gregg. At Chicago, Bill Nicholson's eighth inning homer with two mates aboard gave the Cubs a sweep of a four-game series ivilii Cincinnati as thev won the second game of a doubleheader 7-4 af- ter taking a wild-swinging opener, lfli-‘l. Nicholson's game-winning homer, his fifth of the season. gave Claude Passeau his urth victory of the year. Nicholson's three-run smash was one of four the Cubs hammered out in the two games, during which both Clubs marked up a total of 51 hits. Big Bill's drive came when the Cubs were trailing by a run. In Saturday's games, Boston Braves blanked New York Giants LOUIS Kit, June 10 - rAPi-Showing the w-ay over prac- tically the entire 1 1-4 miles of muduy going, Hoop, Jr. won the ‘list and richest of all Kentucky Derbies Saturday so easily it ap-‘ peered his i5 rival three-year-olds were in another race. with Eddie Arcam in the saddle for his third triumph in the Derby, the son of Sir Gallahad m carried 1I.W_. Hooper‘; blue and white silks acres‘ the finish line six lengths in advance of POI; O’ Luck from War- ren Wright's Calumet farm. Dante Wins English Derby ' NIIWMARKEI‘. anew-lune 10 - (AP) - Dante, a colt Sir Eric Ohlsson couldn't sell two e94‘! ago, won the famed Englelsh erby Sfiturday airligwtrilolw is t toast 01' a race ro - to l ash d a The blown olmlgéaéirnta“ Cm" in front of Lord and vindicated the ‘l toga e button. An cstima £1 .000.- sbout 8409110000) Chm" e k n the hugte Jockey Went ggllniggichaed the wire in 2:26 for the millfimalgd akhalf on the im- hnflzimtor’: ‘shirt Martini was in the stands we" 30-" third. 7?, ggmriirig on the “"9"” including the xiniz ueen and Princess Ellmbfgglé hold onll 10.000 C°IN°"' 000 s cctators. zi-‘iswded into accommodations would h“ "m" 'h'°““~'§l sum- JOHN, N. a. aims lo - track was in: PM!" NEW YORK, June 10 - (AP)- .,Leo (The Lip) Durocher, peppery manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, "and Jose h Moore. 50-year-old 5P9- cial pol coman employed at Eb- beis Field. were arrested today on ,a charge of felonlously assaulting Fa fan who attended the Brooklyn- "Phiiadelphia baseball game last ni ht. '| Ilouis Andi-tad, Kings County Assistant District Attorney said he ordered the arrests after John Christian, 21, of Brooklyn. a Unil- ed 3mm; custom guard, identified Durocher and Moore as the two men who. Christian said, beat him because he had heckled 13111001101‘ during the game. Police id Durocher and Moore ey had hit anyone last night. They were booked at e. Brooklyn police station and later released irf $1,000 bail each. They will be arraigned in Brooklyn FC- lony Court tomorrow. Christian, an honorably discharg- ed army veteran, is in Kings County hospital with a fractured jaw and other injuries. All Grattau Wins Feature At St. John’ _i_. ‘(on - All Grattan. Owned by Kirkpatrick Bros. Baint John, pro- ved the beet ‘of free-for-allers in the feature event of a harness rac- m at Moosepcith rk Saturday. Albert E. Grattan and Archie Lee. both of Saint John. took the no. l and no.'2 classified events. respectively. All entrants were from Saint John except three mu 9t. wan. 4-0 in a game that saw five er- rors marked up. three of which were made by the winners. Chicago Cubs bunched their seven hits against Cincinnati's 11, to win out [5-2. Brooklyn Dodgers stopped a .Phillldel.phlfl ninth inning rally iitl _four runs to down the Phiilles 8-7.‘ .whlle in another night game Plits- ‘burgh Pirates had an easy time ‘with St. Louis Cardinals to win 5-1. Yanks llad Air’ IBase In Sweden i NEW YORK, June 10-A Mutnml |Network correspondent in Stockholm ireported that an American all‘ base, used in the transport of sup- iplies to the Russians in Northern Norway and Finland, has been in operation in Northern Sweden since ‘the latter part of January. The correspondent said a group of American airmen and ground crew maintained the ferry service for fcur months before the end of "the war. By The O-‘anfad-lsn Preel Declsivelrv oubplaying its rivals in the closing chukken. the Uni- ted States won the Westchester 0 aitlonai polo series six ears ago today by defeat-in! Gm“ rltain 9-4. ft was the second ‘straight victory for the Annericnn team and reduced the tilird game to the status of an exhibition. AN om SUPERSTITION In the 16th century. super- stitious pcrsans believed comets '0 be heralds of evil. portending flood. Victory Brings A Halt To Red So-x Hurlers String__(,)f Wins Baseball Results SATURDAY’! AMERICAN LEAGUE 010 0O! MO-l ll l 090 000 03-1 10 I Haynes; Caldwell and. Tmdi; Mueller, lston and Swift. Washington 010 010 010-l I 1 Philadelphia 011 090 000-Z 11 3 Wolff and Ferrell; Newsom and Chicago Detroit tin the rum and iiuririg a 7-0 lead: M," Boston Ml OOO-‘Llw New York O'Neill, Woods, Heflin and R. bark; Bevans, Page and Dres- er. . St. Lonh Cleveland 100 000 091-2 1O 1 Hollingsworth and Mancueo; Klleman and Hayes. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 101 000 000-t 11 1 Chicm zoo ooo Mx-B '1 o B0011. Bosser and Unm, Wyise and Livingston. New York 000 000 009-0 7 2 mi. 000 009 l3x-4 9 3 Fleldman, Adams and lumbar-M; Logan and Mad. Philadelphia 009 101 014-‘! 1p s Brooklyn 1M 000 30x—8 l! 0 Karl. Judd and Peacock, Man- 01150; Chapman, Lombardi and Dantonio. Pittsbnrei 409 010 000-I 10 0 St. Louis 000 000 001-1 9 1 Strlncevich and Salkeld; Bar- refl. Dockins. Jurlsch and 0’Deo.. .. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Toronto 300 100 000-A 1 1 Jersey City 006 020 00x—8 9 2 Martin, Cronin, Johnson, Jog-n gun and Pruett; Rosso and Clau- en. Syracuse 001 006 101-4! 14 0 Rochester 001 000 000-l 6 3 Katz and Just; Radler, sakas, ghramuyen. Koch and McWeeney, ra . Buffalo 000 200 000-f I 3 Newark 300 023 Mir-B 11 0 Oana and Radakovich; McKay and Taylor. Montreal Bwirnom ebber and Tdd; c _ Rachel/of. ‘Smith arlld Loilrirfflmb 10000830543! I SUNDAY NATIONAL Philadelphia. ooo ooo 4_ 4 1 4 Brooklyn cos 04o 1-10 a 1 sllroull and Peacoclg. Mancuso; Gram; and Dahtonio, New York 10o zoo 110-5 l: 1 Boston 004 000 Mix-l 9 2 Voiselle, Emmerich and Loni. bardi; Cooper and Kluttz, Masi. Second New York 000 001 000-l 5 9 Boston 10o on 00x—3 '1 z Hansen, Fischer and Lombardr Tobin and Mast. ' Cincinnati 200 100 190_ 1 1; 2 Chicago s00 01o Zlx-lo 11 o Heusser. Fox. Bowman, Libke and Unser; Prim, Stewart, Chip_ mim- ENCKSCH. Derringer and Rice. Second Cincinnati 110 Ml 010-l 12 9 Chivas» zoo ooo 141-1 a o Dasso and Unser; Pssseau and Livingston. Pittsburgh loo 0oz 21o z-s 11 s St. Louis 0000 2-10 00 0-6 9 0 Butcher, Cuccurullo, Resclgno. Sewell and Salkeld; Creel, Bre- chcen and O'Dea, Rice. Second 000 000 100 3-4 ll 1 Pittsburgh St. Louis 100 000 000 0-1 5 2 Wilks, Roe and Lopez. Salkeld; §llPliLl§f9ir Bverlufld Ricc- . gi\‘A More than 1.000 er prisoners, reached Halifax iliursday (June 7). throng as they gathered nil tllc famine. earthquake, war or pestil- once. no 1n mo 301-1! 1s z hl moorooo-l c o‘ 201000001-4 6 5‘ The picture shows part 0i 10C V i'll in .\il' \ ice. privaiioil. hut aniiciilatlrvil H7 Marshal A. L. Moi-fee, CBE, Commalider-iil-(liicf, Eastern All‘ from their nviruls tompiiitirifjv lif lcasL-(RKAF PllMo). Conumidbidfhanwoloomtefluudn. fThgAlrfi/Mlllméi.‘ . GUARDIAN Nelson Creates New Mark In P. G. A. Tourney . JILISMIII GOII‘ AND COUN- TRY CLUB, Que, June 10 - OP) —Bl'l'0n Nelson the golfing mg. “fl” ‘"1" 1101930. Ohio. tucked en.- o er m to m, bdzisyrwhgynltlmt under baa: wciln c rgirmagrufplesl- 6'3? “a iu -= - ~ 9° four day was the lowest score ever record. discus. ram-n W» in mm“ the My. beatlnl bv three mack set Iiawson Little over flag Toronto s; Am fir“: lay-out n loan. ' 11ml! (Jun) McBpsA closest rival, ended m fter five under part a7 coda lowest m] vgltlfiadahm finis wiiii, , money of $1.400. 8cm“! m" M“ "W! wt rm for r peck! ail")? rounds. Joe Zni-harcit sensatl 1 1) game lijdllile inetwrliitforunfiglbl-erltllri fir? kqbligizgd “bylaw. mum" mo“! , J71, mg}! _ ° W" rs: with "'1"? Hines. the Chicago iron. islzgzltsr. Wound up in fifth place bv F18 two rounds in paf and ui‘: adding I. B9 and a 74 to give him. a total of M. 800d f Kimwfl- the Auebralfni ick- shot artist, showed he can segue do“ '50 Play a. serious game when he Win11“! 11p with u neat 29o m ' finish in i th- l v , inere's 3:51)‘ 1101121036.‘? till: iflléifillegé dunking Oagfiifan. ‘all; M! 0C0 the U. loadveexfse. Hum $17M?! Toronto and Jules ontreal Laval-sur-Le_ Lac shared seventh place by card- ing mtg-is 0i 392. ust four strokes over ar for the holes. Diamond Gaut ier of Montreal municipal léanked next with 29'! and Kas abowski of Halifax finished isi 10th spot with 298- 391T)’ Proulx of St. Johns, Que, and Len Ham rggn of Knowlton, Que, fled with It w Ni - w"... in Cilllagdii, 81:3? siitflmt ear-ed “£22,332 able it would not be last Ho said following the niiiiil round is. day that he hoped to Comps in ‘the $10,000 Canadian Open which s to be held over a. Toronto course A118 2-9-4. The actual course has $71 been decided upon yet, Bu; 9 (lites were announced official- ly here Sabin-day. u rm: or roncco one-dollar bilil and business engheor _ .13.?! Golf’ Tournamenfi bi; t Ghlcngo’! Tam 0'51} nfer (Country Club. S uient 0'0 marine 1.1 dollar bills finality-five feet high, the mane reprments eh; ‘ p of the war bend and slam prizes oflcre b flje Gem- ia this year's 3-wxy golf c nsslc-tbg riclsfliz ‘f8 . ~emeneyisoadopositntffhieageis ‘rlumihclisiflfvnr. 01o 01o tux-o lo 2 and Taylor. yncue Rochester Bebber and Just; Neuberger, Sa- kas and Grabowski and Pratt. Montreal Baltimore 1180000454 Ill I i Baoklfgr-n three years i111 a Ger- 0l0 000 109-2 8 l Lnlllilflt prisoner-of-lvar camp cu , Gillespie and Mordamki; Drews Yorkshire, cricket bowler, who SX-i argued eagslorne: to get beck into genie 1e ain't played since 300 223 00x—l0 ll 4 longlmgefore his capture at Tobruk 1n . 200 000 031-6 1i 1 . - . .. - r ooo o” 5 8 2 shire on six weeks leave, Bouts 501d,‘ . _ _ ..=..—~.-.-;-_-_\ he 10st ‘F2 pounds in captivity and acicizzl, lCYSfflYZ "Very short of food. you know " Bowen, 36 yea-n old and st/anrrlin more idlan sax fm, we 16 when he we; released by Allied advances. Cfllllfii Bill Bowee, Elngla-nid and. The fort-yard speed of a tornado At his home in Mansion. York-i ranges from a few miles to nearly 15 Gflbbflfd. Davis, Colentino, Hath- ' —-= Crf- - - away and Todd Iollar. Second Montreal Podgajny and 000 000 0-0 5 1 Baltimore 030 210 x_5 3 1 Hathaway Oolentino and Brit- ln: Boo s and Lollar. AMERICAN Btlllol ooo 001 001-: 1 c New York 101 001 Mix-l 7 1 Ferriss and R. Garbark; Borowy, Turner and Crompton. - Chivas» ooo ooo 002-2 '1 1 Detroit 100 101 0011-3 4 1 Hum hries. Ross and Trash; 'I‘rou , Newhomer and Swift, Second Chicago 02o 04o roe-o 1o 1 Detroit 000 000 409-4 9 0 Grove, Lopat and Tresh; over. mire, WllSOII, Pierce and Richards 100 000 . Louis Cleveland 101 000 010 100 200-4 9 1 000 000 100-l 4 4 and Hayworth: Center and Hayes West, Kramer Reynol Ciel-man prison camps. the largest liomeward movement of form- on the troopsliip Louis Pasteur on cheerful! sports (leek in list ilfhlllllifi bfclilsihliiid Wffliiiifiil-EE SGURIS Wednesday, Juno 13th. DANCING 9-1 A Dance Will Be Held Every Following Wed. Proceeds For are Q’ " Souris H 0s RCAF officers and airmen released‘ from| got his biggest cheer when he told tlic iiicii that everything poo- siblc would be (lone to gel them to their ironies as quickly as pel- slblr. Many of the men-some of lhem spent as much ac three years in prison camps ~—ilarl stories tn toll of their suffering and arrival illllllf‘ blotted llizlv memoliei _._._ --_. a... _..r..::.-_.~ s‘