THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN H Moore Products, this delightful novel baltelite bovvl—is quite as refined in quelit Rich in lather, deligh is individual in a pearance. erlumed with t e original Potter 8: Moore's Price, SLOO: refills. 50c. Alla shaving rtlch. In patent Bakelite Economy holder. Price, 50c. by POTTER 6 MOORE, LTD. Liquid ace Creams end Powde Bath POTTER I MOORE. LIMITED - Lavender House. LO evender. end economical to use. HITCHAM LAVENDER PRODUCTS Talcum and Dustin Pewde , Complexion Soaps, Bash Soaps, . ,_ fotteréflooreis‘ MlTCHAM LAVENDER SHAVTNG BOWL AND STTCK ERE is Shaving Soap that finds men who like fine things. An BOWLING wnasrtruo l BASEBALL OF Tl-IE SPORT WORLD BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT BITTER TlTlE B ll ll T I S EXPECTED Lightweight Title 'At Stake -In Chicago Stadium Tonight. (B7 Charles Dunkley Associated Press Sports Writer) CHICAGO, JuneHn-Wlthin 24 hours Bernard Rossofsky may be able to sign his name as light- weight boxing champion of the world. Rossofskgv, as plain Barney Ross who fought h's way from the lowly ranks of the amateurs to‘ become ranking lightweight within three years. will attempt to win the 135-pound crown Friday night when he engages Tony Can- zoneri, the title-holder in a 10- round battle under the ring lights of Chicago Stadium. The contest promises to be the bitterest championship duel among llshtwcfghts in years, with Can- zonerl risking his pugllistlc future against the most dangerous chal- lenger he has been called upon to face since he wcn the title three years ago by knocking out Al Singer 1n one round. sfeciel favour with like all Potter l: Shaving Soap-in e as it ttully Mitcham Bath Salts, Perfumes, Barbell- NDON nale, challenger ' Ross Somerville of London. Ont. in the British Amateur Championship-Jar this year least. It was pulled off by slim, fair- haired, youthful George T. Dun- lap. Jr., of New York, American Collegiate Champion and Walker Cup player. who defeated Canada's ‘holder of the United States Am- .ateur Golf Title by 2 a.r1d 1 in thc i sixth round. Not long afterwards Canada's rc- maining contender for the elusive British Title was put out of thc ‘running. Jack Nash, "Silent Sandy's” clubmate. blowing up on the 19th hole to be eliminated by H. L. Holden of Bowdon. S0 when the quarter-finals gcl. at WonderfulNiblick Shot Ends Canack Hopes For Title‘ Somerville BeuTEITAr 17th Hole B; Dunlap, American Entry——N ash Loses In Extra - Hole Battle. HOYLAICE, England, June zz-Iwethered, former British champ- (C. P. Cablel-A wonderful nib- llck shot that carried a. stymledland Dr. W. Tweddell of Stour- ball 18 feet and into the oup this bridge. another former aftemoon ended the hopes of C. was eliminated in the same round key is worklhgldowh m the close .4 as Sandy Somerville. Golfl under way over Hoylakes sandy.‘ lBllSillNlillB IN mu: lillNlilllliN Jack Sharkey, World’s Champion, Expects to Win By a Knock- out. ORANGEBURG. N. Y., J1me 22- l0n, was beaten 1h the mm round ' , I with but one idea in his mind, a champion of the training grind for his 15- round title defence against Primo The quarter-finalists are an odd- _ Camera June 29. as keen, fit and ly assorted group. Hon. Michael p _ ‘Scott. one of the front-ranking "wacwus as he hi" h” beeh lBritlsh amateurs, meets the littie- l“ m‘ ‘lghimg ‘my’- ' Under a broiling sun the Boston known M. Schunck oi’ Sandiway. _ George Dunlap battles “other sailor battered three-sparring part- . dark horse’ H L Haydn,“ o, 11ers yesterday, Hans Biz-ice, Ches- Birkdnlc. The brlliant but erratic ‘ ‘f’? Mm" “d Yml" Sim“ “d 1.01163, fights NBS,“ wnquemry, finished off with five more rounds Holden. while the steady-going‘ Dhhghl‘ hag launching and boih Boum of sunmngdalev long a 00m exercises. Perspiration poured from tender, takes on Douglas Grant. hhh’ yet at’ the ehd of the dhh he native of California who has been in England for some years. | Somerville had quite a battle‘ vith Edward P. Kyle before getting into the sixth round. He finally wn_3 and2,Kl' d" b‘ . lcgribly off but llisersippilclialhlges | Spectators hhh seals wired with I Dutts deadly accurate. Nash wontlfitlletgirltfgly aigatwizt fizehtimiégzémi 9 Max Schmeling in which he won his title a year ago. He carried hmself meanly, sul- lenly, about the camp. luring his way into the sixth round with; V Established I 749 windswept championship course to-j morrow not one of Canada's sevgn a brilliant victory over Rex Hart- entrang will have any more than j icy, noted British amateur. whom button. Carefully he wired the ignition of automobiles lined out- snfililu Baseball Msklng it two in a row, the Mic Macs forced the Trall Rangers to a 13-8 defeat at the P. W. C. grounds last evening. A very good brand of ball was put up consider- ing the wet grounds and disagree- able evening. MacKenzie, pitching for the Mic Macs was never in better form and backed up by an air-tight team, " and by the heavy batfng of George McLeod deserved their win. The losers, nevertheless, put up a good game and deserved a better fate.- they 1 and as the scason goes on should give plenty of opposition to opposing teams. Lineups:- Mic Macs<Catcher, A. MacDon aid; Pitcher, A. MacKenzie; 1st Base, G. MaoLeod: 2nd Base. V. MacDonald; 3rd Base. M. Drllvllllgi Short Stop. J. MacDonald; Field, W. Mahar; D. Dawn, B. Steele. Trail Rangers-Catcher, P. Wood: Pitcher, I. Harper; 1st Base. l". Matheson: 2nd Base, D. McLeod: 81d Base, H. Matheson; Short Stop B. Stewart: Field. J. Darrach, L. (bombs, Matheson. Umpire-Aloysius McNeill. Base Judge-C. Cantwell. (Patriot Please Copy) ILUG GEES 13 KENSINGTON l0 ‘The second game of the Eastern Section of the McLean League was played in Kenslngioar on Wednes- day evening between the Kensing- -' ton boys and the Harris Sluggers ' of Summe lde. There was a largeicrowd in at- T lendance and the game was one of the best played this season. Ken- HOW THEY STAND RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE ruraruvarronar. Laaoua Won Lost P.C. . m m p; Rochester ..... 42 2B .600 Philadelphia ... .11 16 1 Newark 41 ' 2B .594 Cleveland e13 2 Toronto 40 30 .571 Cain, Grove and Cochrane; ,B"m‘l° p31 39 443 Hildebrand, Connally, Bean, Hud- Baltlmore 38 34 .528 lln and Spencer. Myatt. Jersey City . . 29 as .426 lllmlmal 30 41 .423 Washington .. 1112 1 Albany 29 41 .414 Chicago __ 410 4 - ‘ ' Crowder. Russell and Sewell; l AMERICAN LEAGUE Miler, Hevlng, Faber, Gregroy and i Grube. i Won Lost RC. N” W“ 3'7 93 1517 Boston .. 910 5 Washington 37 23 .617 Damn __ 7 19 3 Cleveland 33 29 ~53? Brown. Rhodes and Ferrell; Sor- Philadelphia 29 28 .509 rell, Herring, Hogsctt, Marberry Chicago . . . . . . .. 31 30 .508 and Hgywoyth, Detroit . . . . . . . 30 32 .484 “Mimi ' 24 35 337 New York ... 4 9 2 Sl- “"15 29 4° $55 st. Louis s11 o ' Brown, MacFayden and Dickey; _ NATIONAL LEAGUE Hadley, Blaeholder and Shes. W" M" P-C- INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE New York 36 21 .632 St. Louis ... 36 24 .600 ' ‘~‘ n, 11, E, Pittsburgh 33 28 .541 “chute;- m ___ 0 g 1 Chm“ 32 33 50° Montreal 5 8 0 Brwkly" - -- 25 31 456 Chapman and Florence; Ogden . Cincinnati 2B 34 .452 and was v Boston 28 34 .452 ‘Philadelphia a4 as .sa1 3mm, __ 1 e 1 Toronto .. . . .. 713 1 hllrllfll Blld the P151791’! 1191114!!! Bloomer, Bartulis, Lucas and ‘well. - G83’ the Sluggers pitcher hurled a clever game. but lack of support was his nemlsis. He was relieved in the 4th inning by Peters. Davis Lidstone clouted out a homer and was loudly cheered by the spectators on this rare per- formance. Grouse; Hamlin and Having. Jersey City .. B12 3 Newark.. 513 3 Hasty and Reuse: Tamulis. Mam- aux, Deshong and Kies. N -\TY"" ‘I. LEAGUE Ilngton turned in e good brand of Watson McNaught of Kensing-l R. H- E- balLMcNutt and Webster, pitchers ton umpired with Jack Burns on Cincinnati .. 0 e 1 ’ for Kenslngtcn did some excellent the bosom-S. New york 4 6 0 Lucas and Lombardi: Hubbell and Mancuso. Pittsburgh .. ... 9 4 7 Brooklyn .. 911 2' Melne. Hoyt. Chagnon and Pad- den; Henge and Lopez. st. louis s14 1 Philadelphia s14 ol Mooney. Johnson and Wilson. FOP. mean onoulome n" - O'1l‘srrell: Holley and Davis. , ,,. ,1 ‘l 1 Begum... 8111 Bush, Grimes and i-lartnett; Brandt and Spohrer. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION It. Paul S; st Milwaukee 4.. She wanted to be in the beauty chorus, so she wrote an appllcstio . 5 inclosed her photograph, and wasl asked to come for an interview. Imagine her surprise when she was told by the manager that she was loo lets. an academic interest in the out- come. Sandy and Jack Nash had the consolation of knowing this tourney will be remembered as the tourney of beaten champions. The defending champion, Johnny De Forest, was the first to go. beat- en in his first match. Brig. General A. C. Crltchiey, native of Calgary and winner last month of French Amateur Championship went out in his second match. Andre Vagilano, four times French cham- pion, had no better success. John Burke, Irish Closed Champion four times running, was put out by Nash yesterday, The Scottish champion, Jack McLean, was elim- inated by E. P. Kyle who in ‘ turn was beaten by Somerville. Roger 1933 l the’ side the training grounds. connect- ing them with a kind of skyrocket hidden under the hood that whist- les, pours forth smokes and finally explodes with a great bang when the unfortunate driver presses h‘s starter button. lire defeated at the 19th hole. In the afternoon however. "Sandy" was very erratc. He had the match squared at the 15th. jDunlap went one up at the next with a birdie four on the hole, a 53Z-yarcl affair. At the 17th Som- ,mcrvil‘.e pulled his second shot but i‘ his third brought him with'n reach "of the cup. Dunlap, stymied, pull- Pd out his niblick and sank an Ill-foot putt for the match. Nash went down fighting in his ; third consecutive extra-hole battle. I He rallied from a poor start that saw him three down at the sixth l to be all square at the 18th. Then l came the deluge, Holden getting a par four while Nash sent his drive 1M0 50ft grass 180 yards down the‘ (fairway, dug it out and sent his ‘third into a bunker. l saved for his sparring partners, all capable fighters. "You/ saw that," said the cham- pion later as he stretched on his rubbing table. "You saw me wing- ing ’em. eh? Well, you guessed what it means, all right." ASK WOMEN GOVERNORS FOR MANITOBA UNIVERSITY Stating the viewpoint of women should be considered, a representa- tive delegation from many winni- peg women's organizations has pe- titioned the Manitoba Government Timely Tips On §_p0rt SCHOOL MEET Raining almost incessantly since Saturday last the sport program for the pest week has been subjected to many changes. but it is hoped "old man weather" will change with the moon and give the In- terscholastic aspirants a. "break”. Today's meet which is to be held at the Abegwcit grounds will get underway at 2 o'clock providng track conditions permit. GAME POSTPON ED Rain forced postponement of the Clty League match between the Stars and Falcons, schcduicl for last evening. FIR ST DEFEAT When Lucky Lindy beat Heath- erbell to the wire in the third heat the first time that the McInnfs- owned horse lost e heat since com- ing to the Island and also his first loss of a race on tracks. RAVEN! AND SEA GIJLLS The Ravens meet the league leading Sea Gulls on the Hillsboro diamond tnnght in a scheduled game of the Eastern League. The tilt promises to be full of sotion from the start as the Ravens are determined to end the Gulls wln- ning streak. TITLE BOUT TONIGHT Tony Canzonerl faces a stiff task at the Chicago Stadium to- night when he mccts Barney Ross. the challenger for his lightweight title in a lb-round battle. The lchamp has been installed the fav- orite in the betting. Lovaas- LANE ' "Is the position filled then?" she asked. "No," replied the manager. "I ~el mean that you should have applied when you had your photograph taken.‘ l ..-A\ He (as they drovr- along a lonely . roadl-You look lnvcllcr to mc every ‘minute. D; you know what that's l n sign 0.’? She-Sure. Yours‘ about to w~g£IfiS.—II_ldlunfi Bored Wal I ‘cl of the Northam night races it was' Maritime . to appoint women to the new board of governors of the Manito- ba University. ‘The petition sets forth "women's undoubhted abilities and their fi- ’BATTING l clear, cold kncokout—Jack Shar- . in- weighed but 203 pounds 2 1-2 less . than he scaled for the match with i But most of his venom was Giants, 1; Fullis. Phillies. 1; Frisch. l I An exclusive interview with that noted explorer, Percival Archibald- Archibald, at present touring this continent (byjastjreight). "You ask why so many city bachelors wear spate? ThnUa eney, my boy, ra-sy. ll’a to hide the holes in llrcir heel-i . . . a fellow has to keep up his jolly old appearance i somehow. And, quite confidentially, if you ‘ wear spate you d0n’t need to wear any so! It all. “OT course. if you've got llxv 1110110} in Imy sox, you can (lodge the whole prnlrleln, and the ‘hole’ problem, t00-—-rull1r'r witty, what?—by getting Atlnntica . . . The_v’ll last you far longer. lake my jolly nlrl wnrrl for it. Never Touml mvvllrinu in brat iem." Thank you, Percival. 35c. to S] Atlantic §anet Mar/lime Mac/e fiar Mar/f/me Men. ATLANTIC UNDERWEAR LTD. —— MONCTON,N.B. --.-- HUME RUN STANDING You t‘(‘|'l.'lli1l} .-.rid u surLTul. ;5’side Taxis l f0 Play ‘Return Game (By The Associated Press) Thr- local Th; d...“ lake on tlw l-lnme Runs Yesterday: VPlflPZ--s111n1r|c1's:dc Tunis here Saturday afternoon at Ii p. m. at the C. A. A, A. Grounds in a return gamc ‘This promises to be :1 real game a9 both trams are very evenly match The Leaders: Gehrig, Yankees. Rd, Thc loch‘; h“_\‘s= W111 the ins‘. 17; Foxx, Athletics, 15: Ruth. gfLml’ at Sununrrrurlc b": a score of Yankees, 15; Klein, Phlllies, l3;|11.5, Tm [cums will lxkcw l:ne 111;. Cardinals. 1; Burns, Browns, 1: Averill, Indians, 1; Walker. Yank- ees. 1. Lazzeri, Yankees. 12; Belg". as follows; l Braves, 12; Hartnett. Cubs. 10. Charlcxtctoxrn Tuxis-Catchcr League Totaln Amerlcfln. 2701 E. Dnrrnci: ITlclvn". R. Cox: 1s‘. National, 194; t0ta1.464. lBnse. W. Pukurd; 2nd 138$" L. Matlroyul: 3rd B250, D. Ramsay; nancial astuteness should be utiliz-i short Stop. C. Stewart; F-clrlcrs ed at this time to serve their PY°'iW. Chander, L. Archer, P. Sin- vince." More than 20 Winnivct’ alair. women's organizations “'81? TBPYC" Summersidc 'I‘u\*i= Ccivliei‘. E sented. The University board rc- ‘ McDonald: Pztciir-r, Cliff Emu-n; cently resigned following a Royal 1st Base, L. Ph'l.pp<=: 2nd Base Commission inquiry into the dcfal- A. Monkley." 3rd 13;r.~_ 1<. Jolly.’ cations of John A. Machray. its Short Stop. lifrN " Pzclrlers. K chairman. Boll. R. Acorn. E. .\l¢~Nv1l. {LEADERS Ben Chapman's two hits 1n five times at hat while A1 Simmons was connecting only once ln four trips to the plate yesterday boost- ed the Yankce outfielder into un- disputed possession of the batting leadership in the American League. The day's activities left Chapman with a percentage of .367, a gainl of one point, and Simmons with .364. a loss of two points. Randy‘ ‘Moore was the only other member of the Big Six, in addition to Chapman, to show a gain. The Braves’ outfielder got three hits in 9W0 sames to boost his average to .342. The standings: I G AB R H PC Chapman, Yankees 54 199 46 '13 .357 Simmons, White Sox 60 247 44 90 .364 Schulte, Senators 52 199 40 '71 .357 - Klein, Phillies .. 62 253 41 9O .357 Martin, Cards .. 55 233 53 83 .356 Moore. Braves .. 52 1B4 29 63 .342 CRICKET. IT’S THE BEST- PlC-NICSFESTIVALS HORSE RACES---TEAS If You Are On a Committee Be Sure to Order ICE CREAM Z “THE PEAK OF QUALITY” We make one grade only, and that is the best. bccnusc we use n R E S ll l T S ' LONDON. June 2Z.——(C.P. Cables) l — Essex defeated Kent by eight wickets, Yorkshire defeated Wail- wlckshirc by an innings and 65 runs and Sussex defeated Oxford Univer- tlty by 12B runs in first class cricket l matches ending today. Other matches will be concluded tomor- row. Nichols took seven Kent wickets at a cost of little more than seven runs apiece in the match at Chelmsford. , Biggest display of mastery by the bowlers however was in the York- shire-Warwickshire match at Leeds. There MacAulay took a total of nine Warwick wickets for 69 runs and nothing but PURE, RICH, PASTEURIZED ISLAND (fRlilAll, blended and frozen right in a clean sanitary plant. no imported prepared mixtures of doubtful contents is permitted to hc used in PERFECTION ice cream. BOOTH SERVICE- You have no troubles or worries because we deliver direct lo your booth on the grounds and furnish the necessary help to assist you in serving, together with cones. sanitary plates, spoons and equip- ment to make your gathering a success and everybody will hc harm'- SPECIAI. PRICES T0 COMMITTIES _ , WRITE OR PHONE OUR NEAREST BRANCH CENTRAL CREAMERIES Limited Verity got nine for 43. At Hove CHARLOTTETOIVN "~ Maurice Tatc, the brilliant test_ - miatrh bmvlcr. took six of thc Ox- i D c y lftlfll Mckrlsfrrr 25. The pi-rcnlilnl Jock Hobbs got llll SOURIS J runs for Furrcy against Cambridge at the Oval. , l F . dlifil’. . Ill SUMMERSIDE -. a»:-"._ .. .... ......