W, Second Successive WinFor Aga Khan In Turf Classic; Taj Akbar Places Second (0. P. Cable. By GInrdls.n’s Special Wire) EPSOM DOWNS. Ellllllldi M-I! 2'1—Mnhnmnd proved himself I. "rm, son of a great site as he raced to a record-time victory today in u,. Derby. Enslmds clinic» «Irwin: to the mm. the silks .or the an Khan. u was a great dly for the Indian Prince. He won the Derby for the wand year in succession and his Ta] Akbar ran second. three lengths uhind Mahmoud and 8-4 lengths flunkexlon, who was third. The A‘: Khan, multl-millionaire. spiritual head of a use number ‘; Moslems and owned of one of England’: largest racing stables, won me Derby with Blenheim in 1930. Mahmoud is a son of Blenheim. ills ‘inning candidate last year—BahraIn—rnn off with the three-year-ltd 4..-1 honors by annexing the two ‘bousnnd guineas and the St. Leger ‘yon, with the Derby. Upsets Feature Play In Golf Tourn ame.nt ,ANDREWS, Scotland, May 2'7. ._grector Thomson, deadly shooting favorite for the British amateur golf cmm, advanced to the round of 32 ms nusnery day, but a half dozen internationally known stars met el- imination in the 18-hole knockout %ls Thomson was advancing with a 3 and 2 triumph over I. 0. Mitchell after firing a four-under- W 32 for the out-nine, such British greats Al N. William Tweddell Leonard Crawley, Tony Torrance, pry; Fiddian, Rex Hartley and Jock McLean were being toppled by Ice- ser lights. The defeat of Mob.-an, at the hands of Robert sweeny, a young New Yorker lung resident in Eng- land, one up at the 20th, was the most startling upset. Tomorrow Sweeney will face Ed- lard F. Storey, three-times a. mem- ber of the British Walker Cup team. Storey sprang an upset of his own when he defeated Crowley one up in his fourth round test. Injuries Ha u nt Big Leagues NEW YORK. May 27-The major league baseball races were being run on crutches today as five of the six leaders in both leagum hobbled along without at. least one key player. only the Giants among the lead- ers have their full strength on the field. A wheel of theirs, here and there, is creaking but they have the whole machine going. which is mom than the Cards. Cubs, Yank- sea. R/sci Sox or Tigers can say. Both leaders in the American, the Yankees and the Red Sox, are without their catchers. while the Cards are getting along without Bill Dclanccy, out all spring recov- ering from an attack of pneu- monia. Rick Ferrell will be lost to the Red Sox for a week and Bill Dickey probably will not be back in the New York lineup for at least a month. The other key men on the side- lines are Bill Jurges, Cubs‘ short- “OD; Lofty Gomez and Johnny Murphy. Yankees‘ pitchers: Lefty Clrovc, Red Sox‘ pitcher. and Bruce Campbell. Cleveland outfielder. BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING in front of Mrs. James Shana’: till/T“. ll/Iahmoud Sets New Record In Derby Victor —-—:—.._—. T HE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Leroy Haynes Stops Camera In The Ninth (By Eddie nrietz. Associated Press Sports Writer) (A. I’. By Guardian's special Wire) NEW YORK, May 2’l—Leroy Haynes, Philadelphia's negro how- itzer scored a. technical knockout over Prlmo Camera. veteran Ital- ian heavyweight in the ninth round of their 10 round bout at Ebbets Field. Brooklyn, tonight. Camera weighed 265 and Haynes 200 1-2. Seized with an attack of tem- MAJOI TRIUMPH While it was a major triumph for the Aga Khan, there were disap- pointments for two others. Astor, who has yet to win 9. derby, failed again this year as his Pay Up, the 5 to 1 favorite at post time. finished fourth. Gordon Richards, England's leading jockey also was slum, although he rode Ta} Akbar. Richard; has never had the mount on a derby winner and th's year he had hoped to break the ‘‘spell.'', Charles Smirke, riding lVi"."W-as '. a grey streak of speed, held as mount in check until bcyond the mile mark. Then Mahmoud forged ahead to get clear of the field on the uphill grade and register a comfortable victory. Ta] Akbar a‘so did not appear to the fore until near the finish. Then he made a gallant but futile effort to overhaul his stable-mate. porary paralysis in his left leg. Carnera was forced to stop after 40 seconds of the ninth round had el- apscd. The man mountain waved Haynes away, tattered to the ropes and called for his handlers. A physi- cian examined him and pronounced him unable to continue. A crowd estimated at between 15.- 000 nnd 30.000 saw the opening of the outdoor season in the Dodgers‘ ball park. Perry, Austin Advance To Quarter Finals (A. I’. By Guardian‘: Special Wltel PARIS, May 2'1.-——Fred Perry and New Record Mahmoud's time was 2 minutes, 33 4-5 seconds, a. new record for, the ,,ou‘.c :-i 1 1-2 miles five yards. He clipped onc-fifth of a szcsnd, of the old mark set in 1933 by Hyperion and equalled in 1934 by Windsor Lad. Twenty-two horses in all ran. Following Pay Up came His Grace. owned by Lord Carnarvon. Fearless Fox was sixth, Mendicant Friar seventh, walvls Bay eighth, Magnet ninth. Bel Aethel 10th and Mid- stream llfli. Convert was last. Bcsscll. owned by William Wood- ward of New York, who was back- ed down to a 9 to 1 shot at the Ealrt, faded in the closing stages and finished 16th. H. W. “Bunny" Austin, England‘s Davis Cup stars, moved into the quarter-finals of tile I-ranch hard courts singles tennis clmmplonsliip today as Andrew Merlin comp;etcd ills conquest of Homer I-lenkel, bril- liant young German international- st Parr)’. the defcndrg champion. hefd Andre Martin-Llcgeat under pressure except for the third set when he relaxed his place and the French player tuck the set at love. The scores were 8-2, 6-3, 0-8, 0-3. Austin experienced many anxious moments against Paul Feret, the former French professional. Fcret won the first and fourth sets and it_was Austin's experience and sup- Bnol‘ skill that led the Briton to a 3-6, 8-2. 7-5, 1-0. 6-2 victory. Continuing their third round Favorite weakens Pay Up was among the leaders until the closing sfages of the race, when be weakened. A brilliant sun shone over the Epsom course as more than 500,000 watched the 157th renewal of the great open race for three year olds. Mahmoud became the third grey horse; to capture the Derby, first run in 1780. The most recent grey to win war; the filly Tazalie, in 1912. The rangy son of Blenheim started at odds of 100 to 8. Ta) Ak- bar, who had rated among the lead- -ing cand’dates for a month, shri- cd at 8-1. Thankerton was a 511 to 1 shot. The absence of the King and other members of the Royal fam- ily, owing to court mourning, dc- prived the event of some of its customary color, Down The Alleys match postponed yesterday by rain, Merlin, France's sixth ranking play- CI‘. Completed the elimination of Henkel. At the time of the inter- ruption Merlin was leading 7-5, 6-4, 1-5. Henkei won the third set, 6-2, today but lost the fourth and the match, 8-8, as Merlin flashed form reminiscent, of a few years ago when he was regarded as the tri-color‘s brlglitmt prospect. Canadian Wins $30, 000 In Derby (C.P. By Guardian's Spcclal Wirc) MONTREAL. May 2']-—A.res‘.dent Of New Market. Ont, who signed an army and navy veterans swccpstakc dc-plunlc old Timer, won $30,000 today when Ago. Khan's Mahmoud romped to victcry in the English derby. Quebec ticket with the nom- O. A. Isslclb of Marion. 0.. won $20,000 with a ticket on the second Chuck Teaiplefon ‘o I SPOR TRA ITS In rat’ So-pnoow Acgm . I r—.__ L- ‘T ‘ ‘maoucu , Jon Du Maseru Mao Anpcntzco, RND Gcmzlah BRILLIRNCE ts £u.rPs£I> aeam! Giants And Cardinals In Tie For First Position; Yanks Boost League Lead (A. I’. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, May 2'I—Pl'tts- burglrs Buccaneers gained revenge today for the double defeat of yes- terday, slashing out 15 hits for an 11-2 victory over Cardinals at St. Louis. Pirates got to the veteran Bill I-Iallahnn early and showed no re- gard for Mike Ryba who replaced the left. hander in the fifth. Bill Swift was touched for 10 safeties but they were not clustered sufficiently well to produce more than a pair of runs. No hit. of the game was good for morc than two bases bub the Pirates got four of the six made and also bcncfittcd by four bases on balls off Ryba. The d'efcnt., plus the Giants’ vic- tory over the Dodgers, placed St. Louis and New York in a tie for first place. A pinch-hit double by Manager Jimmy Wilson with the bases load- ed in the eighth broke up the Phillics ball game with Boston Bees at Pllllndclplila, giving the Phils a 5-2 win and a sweep of the two-game scrics. Bob Reis‘ ulltiness in walking three men set the stage for Wil- son's smash, which sent Chuck Klcln, Plnky Wliilucy and Leo Nor- ris :1cro.r.s the plate. by Hack in the eighth staked him to a 2 to 0 lead. Lew Riggs’ triple, singles by Alex Kampourla, Sam Byrd and Harvey Walker, Kiki Cuyler‘s double and an error by Gene Lillard set the Reds up to their big rally. Carl Hubbell picked on his most persistent jinx. Brooklyn Dodgers. to pitch the Giants into a first place tie with a 5-4 victory in 12 innings here. The New York left-hand ace not only outlasted three Brooklyn pitchers including van Lingie Mungo, but contributed a pair of singles and as many sacrifices. The winning run was a gift from Fred Frankhouse, Dodgers’ third pitcher, who walked George Davis with the bases loaded in the 12th, forcing Dick Bartell across. AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK, May 27—New York Yankees fought off the Red Sox‘ attack on the American League lead in an 11-inning slugfest at Boston today, winning 9-8 to boost their margin to a game and a half. The Yanks collected 12 hits off three Sox hurlers, and. Boston had 13, including Jimmy Foxx' lath homer of the season, from four New York throwers. Monte Pearson City Softball League Opens Monday June I At a. meeting of the City League Softball executive in the Y. M. C. A. last night a schedule was drawn up and approved. Six tennis, Sup- eriors, Cir-ads, Battery, Stewarts, Shamrocks and Rovers will battle it out for the Pickard trophy em- blematic of the City champion- ship. Stewarts are present holders of the silver-ware. The league will get underway Monday evening June 1 when Sup- eriors and Grads clash in the 45 game schedule opener. The following is the schedule of games: June 1-‘superiors vs. Grads. June 2—Battery vs. Shamnocks. June 4—.Siewarts vs. Rovers. June 5——Su.periore vs. Battery. June 8—Grad.s vs. Rovers. June 9—Stcwarts vs Supexicrs. June l1—Shamrocks vs. Stewarts. June l2—Gruds vs. Battery. June 1.‘.-—Sha.rnr\ocks vs. Rovers. June 16—6uperiors vs. Shamrocks. June 18-Grads vs. Stewarts. June 10—Battery vs. Rovers. June z2—superiors vs. Rovers. June 23—Battery vs. Stewarts. June 25—Grads vs. Shamrocks. June 26—Superiors vs. Grads. June 29—.Battery vs. Shamrocks. June 30—Stewarts vs. Rovers. July 2—Superiors vs. Battery. 3—Gr'ads vs. Rovers, 6—Stewarm vs. Shamrocks. ' ’l—Superlors vs. Stewarts. 9—Griads vs. Battery. 10—8ha.lnrocks vs. Rovers. 13-superiors vs. Shamrocks - 14—Grads vs. Stewarts. 13—Battery vs. Rovers. 1'l-—«Superiors vs. Rovers. - 2'.‘—Battery vs. Stewarts. 21—Grads vs Shammclrs. %—S-zperlors vs. Grads. 24—Bat.tery vs. Shamrocks. 2'l—Stewaris vs. Rovers. 20--superiors vs. Battery. 30—Grads vs. Rovers. 31—Stewlu-Ls vs. Shamrocks. . 3—Supeniors vs. Stewarts. . 4——Gra.ds vs. Battery. . 0-Shamrocks vs. Rovers. . 'l—Superiors vs. Shamrocks. . i0—Grads vs. Stewarts. . 11—Batte1-y vs. Rovers. . l3—Superiors vs. Rovers. . 14-—-Grads -rs. Shamrocks. —'Battcry vs. Stewarts. ‘This game to be played on a nl:ht suitable to both teams. I How They Stand AMERICAN LEAGUE won Lost R0. New York 28 13 .667 Boston 25 15 .625 Detroit 22 1'7 .504 Cleveland 20 17 .541 Chicago 18 1'1 .514 Washington 20 19 .513 Philadelphia. 11 24 .314 St. Louis 9 29 .237 NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 24 12 .667 New York 24 12 .667 Pittsburgh 18 18 .500 Chicago 17 18 .486 Cincinnati 18 19 .486 Boston 17 20 .459 Philadelphia 15 24 .335 Brooklyn 14 24 .368 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT Nationals Defeat TE) Tops In Close Game Qf Industrial Ball Leagrfie 36811118 down well in the pin- ches when his mates wobbled be- hind him blg Tull Morrison last night pitched the Nationals to a 7-6 Victory. over the Tip Tops in_ an Industrial League buabgu en- counter. Hard fought and close throughout Nationalscame through with the deciding tally in the last but of the ninth after the losers had scored three times in their half of the same inning to knot the count at 6-311, McAleer un- oorking a wild pitch with Danny MoQ11a.r'ria perched on the third sack. For the first four innings last night the game was a brilliant pitching battle between Morrison and Stewart with the Nationals taking a 1-0 lead in the fourth on an error. passed ball and timely single. Starting the fifth McAleer went in to pitch for the Tip Tops but three hits and a like number of errors gave the Nats a. 4-0 lead before they were retired. Sensing defeat the Tops came back in their half of the sixth to Phil across two runs and then add another in the seventh. Mc- Aleer in the meantime was Ditch- ing superbly and holding the Nals in check. However in the eighth after the first two men had been retired. disaster struck again and it passed batter and two damaging errors paved the way for two more runs for the winners. Three hits. a passed batter and two errors gave the losers another chance bee log a. third strike two wild hcavcs and before the ..hird out had Econ _mad.: the scoreboard read 9-6. The Natl; wem‘t to be denied 1, \V- ev": and after McQua1rle ad ruled safe at first after :1 "- and 3 passed ball sent him scatnpering around the bases« to cross the plate with the xvinilrlg r ‘'1.’ “Mt BOX SCORE Nationals D. McQuarrie J. Foley 3. ‘Lyon 0. McLeod J. Bradley Monrlson Gallant T. McQuarrie J. McLeod Totals ABRHP l. 0 ghbfipwmuuu _.,O'-‘--sno--No as-o,..._.>—»-.40 fin-qfiaeoooo-o-O > :5 an-°ooo,_.oHm.-::i '1! O °aHaRpwuI!aaiiIo°9t9_Itfi'r'-cinfibrv QQQQNHQQNWM dNOo¢~¢#HaU Tip Tops F. Gallant B. Sherry L. McAleer W. Stewart Whltlock Hogan W..lsh Sherry Dunn Ward Totals 8 '25 13 8 ‘One out in nlnL.. when winning run scored. Umpircs—At the plate J. Garn- .5 uwsgmcuirulcnuuunlrs pago-ru,..oz\:--0: OQ<O>—-I-osar-«his ___hum; on the bases B. Rylul. Active Yachting Season Looms . In Prince Edward Island's first sailing vessel built to conform with regulations for Class 3 yachts laid down by the newly-formed North- umberland Straits Yacht Racing Association has been launched .in Charlottetown by Mr. Simon Paoli. Jr. The yacht will get its first taste of competition during Pictou. N. S., lobster cannival, June 6-11, when the first contest of the sea- son wili be held by the North- . umberland Strait Association. ‘ Mr. Paoli’s craft was built by Mac Irwin, local yachtsman. Oth.r boats of the same class are under construction at Summer- side, shedlac. N. B., and for a Moncton, N. B. sailor. All will see action during the coming season. Island yachts expected to race i.n the Plctou events are Ghost, owned by Dr. H. Johnson, Mont- ague; Onawa, Eric Coffin. Mont- ague; P-No, Gordon Coffin, saint John. Northumberland Strait Yacht Racing Association will stage its championship regatta at Shcdiac during the month of August. The latest addition to Charlotte- town's yacht fleet measures 22 feet over all, has a. 16 foot water line, 6 foot beam. with it hollow spar which towem ‘:8 feet above ! deck. She has a displacement of ; 1600 R3,, 600 lbs. of it being lead on a fin keel, she carries 200 fecl; of canvas. The classifications laid down by the Yacht Racing Association of the Northumberland Straits for six classes are as follows: Province sq. feet. Class 4-23 to 29 ft. 11 Ill. 350 sq. feet. Class 5--30 to 35 ft. 11 in. 450 sq. feet. Class 6—Over 36 ft. 600 sq. feet. Table 2 This table applies to all yachts bought, built or chnrtcrcd after Feb. 6, 1930, except as stated under table 1. ; Clam l—up to 13 ft. 11 in. 100 sq. feet. Class 2-l4 to 17 ft. 11 in. 150 sq. feet. Clas 3——lll to 22 ft. 200 sq. fer-t. Class 4—22 ft. 1 in. to 29 ft..1l in. 300 sq. feet. Class 5——30 to 35 foot ft. ii in. 450 sq. feet. Class 6~0vor 36 foot 600 sq. at. I Special restrictions to yncllttfln class 3 under table 2. Beam shall not be less than 6 ft. L. W. L. shall not br mow than l8 feet with crew a.<hm't-. I\l.‘.‘;t shall not excecd 26 ft. from .r_tnos::~- neck to top sllcnvc. Ailv yacht racing in class 3 shall carry :1 lC‘l.".l of not less than two pclxvolz.-. or more than three. In clam 1-2-3 spinnaker: not be used during races. Should a yacht have a sail nrca greater than allowed a yaclit of her length she may be ilSSl_’_'l‘iCil to the class next above and slmuld her sail al-ca be below the mini- mum allowcd for her class her owner may apply to the executive to be placed in the next class he- —l‘illl —— place horse, Ta) Aklbnr. and the ~ - REMEMBER WHEN — HOLY NAME HALL “LEAP YEAR" third prize of $10,000 went to O. R. Cincinnati's Reds came to life in was credited Wm», the win. Joe D) NGWETK 25 14 550 Yachts shall be classified as set low and subject to the ruling of the ‘ LEAGUE Cr-2e or Pampa T':xl15.F‘:ul‘ll1 prize the ninth inning at Chicago after Maggie Yank rookie star also hit Bu“”‘l° 25 14' M1 011'? bl‘-‘l°W but fill“ °l355m°5“°“ °"°°“ll"°- . d°-::3l;n“l’?)cnFl:;;cst.B351-t};!t:1n;r-oA1‘i':lnItA;n- ———‘ 302 262 1“ of $5,000 was ‘won by W. J. Cun- l::ing held scoreless by southpaw for gmfciy-cult. ' £33 may be Cg"lfltIr1!gC(As:t1 tlim annual on the mm day of the :-mn\m_} -. . e r a. ur J_ Cameron m h of Louisville, Ky. Larry French up to that point, to T 8 - ,meeting 0 e oc a on. meet, the 91355 1-Mes Me to be um 00" Ch“mpl°"5hlp 3'' M“u'fl°ld- E. Mllachcu 139 1“ 161 [I].lgl‘l]$lll]C(.‘(l starier tickets which score all their runs in it 5-3 victory Qolfklae wllen Red Bammom 20 2° -500 off. All heats to be as near as p.~.=- l mgand. That was four Years Bio Total—117i. won $11,600 each included Snooky over the Cubs. lifter tfheglflew ilork shogftlsthogchosdf Toronto 16 24 Am T'l’l° 1 “lb” ‘mm 3 l'° 6 l‘“°l'5 “mg ‘'‘’‘‘l y°uu3‘l;'1‘V'Sl;;3u;lb°fl°“t°d E119 Flddl“‘- H.Craswell 1:49 of Kent County. N. B, Fisherman 1"‘rcnr:h allowed only six hits in walked and stole“ second. 315911!’ 13 _ three heats raced. Winner in be m the 3641015 3:3’ "izgia “writ A-shelf!’ 112° 2 of Montreal. Rag; of Mcnireal and eight innings. His single and an- -1-mmny Brlqes and Ted Lyons YTMUBO « This table applies mgacgietls ov;'n yacht getting grratr-st mnnbcr of elm “$0.5. . T.‘l*:..:.. " we me an °' .".§".‘.f..”.".i.‘.““.l.‘:‘.°’f..‘?i;°‘3.“§i.13 :3: W“ **"°m- :3 :;x;i:;:::;:..::: :l;:...:“.:."..“. 2213.‘: ‘....*::‘."‘ .339 34:1: ovara heavy course. E.TD€u1g:§65 98 107 120 :__. - ——- V 4- }‘::n°‘€’;r wig’ I;1lt°mthesu'I‘;icge:1;mx'1lsh’tI; before Feb. 0. 1930. D;l‘p1ica(ties of yacht-deieaced plus 14 pom) lair I . ° 3 - «~ these Yflchlfl ml)’ bf! bu 8“ TM‘ finishing first, A cup to hn ~. ~--~- O. Purcell 1'13 175 148 ',"J"'ermg them and Tigers lie" ed in some classes as o‘.d ones pro- scnged to gm. ‘vlnr‘(\r§ to yum r.,. ‘ B. Mccabe 209 124 132 f‘“°°‘l cm°“‘° 3‘2 ’“ D°‘’°"‘' IN MORs0N'S POND vldln er-mission is obtaincd - .' .' . ‘ 1 3 The Tigers bunched ha” men. ll P one your 0. until no cm... ,. 2. T0tB1—971- . frqi the executive and no changes decmrcd ‘ R. Bradley 365 353 303. W" 1" ‘he ‘hm’ ‘° W’ S""1°“‘ by Trespassers will be are made that are not approved Race: ‘on sccoud rlnv m . E‘ Mmm 103 1“ 105‘ Goslin, Simmons and Rogell. a 1 b th "mm C ‘ ‘ - , d 0 Y 6 0 V. mine Association CllflIli])l<... I .1 ,1.ouu__“o2 walk to Owen and two infield outs Dl‘0S€Clll9 . mm I_]engm over a“ u M ls i t b h V _, I Y . F Tierney 30° 9'“ “9 milllltlazgl li}r‘rIbe[r):ielll°llr mils" w- 13- BENTLEY. ft. 11 in. Soil area not to pexceed SIHSQOIOGIIIIIIl{l[lll]\:‘ll1(lf(ln\llI‘ll‘.:l:'Il" ..-.--‘ H McMillan 274 173 139 Wm by dgfmmg s‘;‘m‘;‘u°]3’::;§; Attorney for Club. (Universal Rule», 100 sq. ft. Wave 0,, pm, .’1,.....,.... .l...,,,.. —125a . ‘ .‘ on P.T;g:ler 286 248 138 124 at Cleveland whue Chicago “Gigs; 2—l4_,to 17 ft. 11 in. 190 gigreclnisclrisccfil Sq':1"“.'ll((lhl~Q (Y: M. mfly 143 313 159 b was losing to Detroit. 5.5019 ' ' .. , -“ 1.: K “A55 BM-l Y rec-I-11» 5 The W vmd on row °‘”” “’ ‘° ” “' :.;:“:°.'1..-::'.*:.°."..‘:'..‘.'.V .'."..'::. ‘J. Emu» as. b n J‘ ”' ""°"“"' 2152" 177" la”? l3‘l’.‘l."‘.§’.‘.’x°y"‘.3a'.?lll3§...“l'..-‘;.‘alf“..°’.l.‘ ml‘ - a saw nvlvmrri '° ''W’’‘‘"‘’- . e a - ‘ .. - ~- will wlnytlttlllll ulvtt:-df:t': H'r?:lu£llm ' tack with two doubles Bgld three A MAZl N G FAC 5 . . . 0 A“ Y“”‘'*‘ i” ““”” “’“"’“"' {.l,""§ :!0olrL"BsIebali--and How a: Doucette 182 275 193 singles in six trips to the plate. Hal $3? “,“‘;f,""‘,’,’,‘,'“,',,‘,‘::',}’ ,,3,,,,,,. ..,' 0!’ it''b . 166‘ Tmslr hih 05"“ ' ’, 3.‘ (§hIg)’Sh.u"]“¥.:ry"i:.:. G,II.§g]n"l‘uo no "8 I the aeyuonlz 15 10”‘ h°m¢ “"1 01 JAPAN.-oTl'lE “TRML EV FIRE. 2% be scored as in class races. (‘on .n s or of “I. m} ‘lb “ 250 173 1“ IS A TEST OF NOLINESS. . . BARE‘ E“ be prcscntr-cl to wlnncr to hm‘ W’ gk-;§hn.l‘on;-.-‘.1 Royals. 3‘ ,§‘,,°,?§‘“‘ 1... 194 as root PRIESTS WALK UNI-IARMED 3.15%“ 0. until new .............. ha ' QC . l m,,,,m_'.mh.._.wm_ Total—ll06 m m m OVER A BED OF FIRE . . . . The em,,,,,,. may ,,....,C,. p... 01 the no In clolr A' Joy 90 134 112 "o1o"s1s "‘vEuTED THIS mrra O" t d - number of heats mccrl on cithnr gvllln ugfl mggu-. _ ' ” T T y S e day duo to weather conrllimir. or in‘! IIGWD CIR. Shh - 141 Q Es ' oth‘r caualm. ..m“n‘°“.h. ‘M? 0. 14001111‘ 1” nu ‘ A" Winning yachts to be rm ?‘zfi"‘$ll0WN n|{AN|)' n~,x1,:;’:_“2 I A FAR MORE "‘ \ ' measured before cups are awarded. °' WHITI" Corn ' Thousands f ' -. d th‘ discov- ‘ ' , . amp lehsl mi. r 1"‘ “''‘'‘'' """ 9”", ,, ..y:m.i...?..l'.'‘§§‘?'l;ll..Tir§y rsliilledthe GRUELLiNG“TRlAL av FlRE"lN SPECIAL l‘.‘...."","'.'.‘ "4""-u ti-_o, ronowlns are the .lxe;".f}?...s crankcase of their C... with Quaker st... _ ELECTRIC FURNACES TESTS ms ouaurv ‘WW 5°03 ‘"10 '1" 1° "“° "‘° “ ‘I h 1. i th hndto <°- P- 3! °--N'-=- SW‘-' 1"") G 3 DE STEEL ’ ' nullity -mm on on which use pllco comm at, s p. m. omhey wen: I-.m_cr c are or or Blue ILLETTE LA Stars practlcp I‘.k—|nd your N" 7"] “mm The three wmng;-3 tonight add I quart. This simple test proves that pAR]§-, uuy 3-,_(c_ p__HM,u)_ . ’ Illlllod to you MOI!‘ will battle it out Friday night with ‘ Quaker State stands up longer. But it Bog, Mu;-my of “mu”; bow” out l”_‘.l,,l,‘b‘W"_Manat .t°e“M'u_” mnh‘ . . "'11- tn highest -3- proves even more...becausc the oil that of the French herd-court tennis Eur; n um um hum‘ 1-! 1° Name Hall r us! i ‘ ‘n our motor the best championships tilts when Ko Sin ‘Honk 3"‘ mun" '““d'“u'"'°'-kid “in is “n! g r|)w,-m'b\sm,p, INC!" d9°l'-“°d °y .. B l_ '5‘ ‘"5’ ' 3"" “Y ,, Ki chm, 7 samplesi’romeverybotchere"trledbyfln insn . [R u R? . . mu“ “"_pm ..Leap Year ow 1ubri¢=uon, Try the Quaker Static gin‘: due‘. hlglsolznj-53 captain. ¢1,¢u-iscubon-smlydsmmnalstnprecsudmsuhs . :. - . ... - ' , on “W ' . . - . _ 1"“ W" 5, H, McMil'Ln. 0‘ .m"S:,c,;§dy‘1,,':}°:,°m,d,, lltirrsy and Laud watt, gnome: u'l"‘P"l“"‘73l"°°m"“l’l“l"‘l"’°“"“hP°' Practice for All Star baseball CO H N SY R U P mi" ' I f,°m,L dd‘ 3"? -"’,‘,’1d‘,‘,’,°n_ Qum, Sm, Monti-eater who 1... gum in the Feet -II-vet Bus - r-ciao MI MI‘ 4”“ ¢°‘IV- team this evening at 5.45. Viptoris , v . . , . ' if 1186. ' ""'““ ‘ first round of sin lee N Park diamond. Following players .a.«.. .< am it y low. 2.4- PoWer&M- Du v- on Ronni c ofcannds Llrn- I - P WM *0 . . ‘ ll . .c‘m."m &E' Mncheul ll-"_ "8 _ 1 “I C- d }e‘v. for mwknd ‘hen they win G I L L E T T E I F are requested attend: n . Mess; I? °°' '"""""" ‘"3, °“"'°u 5‘ A’ Shem’ um iood.'i'gc_onto,onuno. Me n on: n comm“ in ‘M EL 0,0,‘... mm ll. 1 It l B .1/\ [l r .» Gallant. McQuatl, Mcxinnoxgu Q. mm "°'""‘“'- 3 em. as. Keenlen.1l(l'10. Queen's Club and Wimbledon tour- “ “ ' ‘ “" ‘“ '“” ‘“ gormgckél Erna. kfloynmé _ e . ne}s. one . rim, ‘.7 CH5 . , s-o. isluqaua as 0 Do! . 1:3