BOXING BAbklzl bALL O] HER SPURI wwvswwwvvvnn wwnamwvuuevwnpwewnwm o-mavn-vfilhrrzr.‘ rnr: (JHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NEWS “m. SPORT WORLD ' 5.4315001?" TRIUMPHS 0 VER .WAR ADMIA BOWLING HULKEY Graham Displays Plenty Welterweight Addie MacDonald Gets Lone Adams Sells v Try As P.W.C. Ruggers Blank Ron Hudson Courage In Losing To i Title Bout WRESTLING NOVEMlBER 2. 193a Sets New Track Record At Pimlico In Finishing Sparks By Technical K_()_»ls Postponed Summersicle Academy 3-D ToProvidence Three Lengths T0 Good Bubjeotfng hi: opponent to n terrific punishment around the body in evl-ry round, Bill Sparks of Amher~t 14m. night “on a technical eight " ‘I-ul kdvu victory over (icorgc- (‘rrulunn in tlm fmlurc event of the lwamg card singed at the (‘hurluiteilniu Sgxrrting (lull. Winnliig every round the Amhvnl fighter mus only kept from “inning earlier flue to the RXIIIWHPQ; exllil-iuul by the Island mitt- »-l l|'1"l'. Living up to his promiu- of <-.ur\i|~.~_ lhl‘ fight to his opponent ; f-~ \l..nr. uiin-urpln-rl in do just that bu! ll." \\.f-- Iul um lllllUh lmvinl; ability. uw-i by a boy thut had ncsa. was _ no Bostonian. m in n locul .\ e scrap Rot Y u. uon the round by a aga in begs n his seconds txnvel lo mo .\ m the lltl . threw ..‘lf‘ l5 loan round decision Burns in one of the .\~. The fight while not B S11!‘- m. ‘ up no expectations was close lin- wav through with this _ ‘ ' Y- : .~ su u; .~.l:c="t showing a draw. i rt us If»... m 'l 11'". nvo l'(\‘.lll(l.~ ulre even, ' l as llr tunnel: . A‘: fr.“ WAY H,» m-‘flllor seventh and .".\.1ll n punch. In the came .- in the . .:.'.\\‘i‘ ' or “Ls nppon-l Kid Curr. ‘ . n: vll’ slam- l * w opcnlug I I c "oilr The 1' ~ ~, n1 . i. ralhcrl 1 ' \r\‘ mu mull _ . ' . lkvirbrll/illg for Jae-k “~35 one J» ‘"0 cculd not make l-lli bl», ' —- ---~ - ._ l I fonucks Should IDfOdlZCB, Fiais Year Hart Believes Viv ROBERT (‘LKRKEI _l".:v: ‘um Fri-rs Staff Writrr) c xtres one rankq wing and Toe . . l1. Nov. l —lCl-’> —- her lino has the‘, l: will try of the '.l..~ur- the league's u to which Nlanngvr Cain at left‘ l\l\ i . Gnfnou, a tram ' thr- other flank. The » ls (‘z—l‘.’l‘(‘fl by Poliv ‘ Lori-din at right : cf the lengur-‘s George Afantha, at llll? W. (‘ll 3- rvvldend” Hart wants-- ‘. i028 Kid the Stan. f v man Hart will carry c‘ who has sh ‘ivn u? ‘oll tn practice. or vrlcrnn o! 10 Death Saturday Sudden G017} 8 ' tiw- 01W‘.- Champion- “st. an- l —fCPr uuthorlties 1' wiwvo": are mlssln? from ' bv defeating St. xvlule Mount Al- i‘ - wry l» lll.-lll‘fl m r ’ the (‘nnnliinn A1 ~. ‘ e I \vll-'~n_ Yllslflh ‘ N l. . 8., for the ' " “~ ‘ -""'*"-~ 3"‘ , > lllllll“lfll.€ English " wuwtdi. 17km» arc lv- ,1 C-Hamnlgnsnip u l.z\ , who Troll 16 sntilrday u. Tmro. = x ' sort-ops with ("auglt‘lcn.=, [hp Nova scum; l‘ ‘ lwntf‘? ho olnvrd Wind's! m t . ‘v now. 1".» ‘llrM ‘ ' '7“? (“~‘-"'l'~'ll7 '1 " Ilriinsuick-Prinnce ' ‘ s W“ - If‘ "fl" “~ Champions. ' P»- "W mus trofic" to l"‘.w".'. lhwks for lmlls " ‘to moi-r» than fill ','!'1 ""- ‘ Burke's r1 .,, lily ‘llu- (Iumrliziri Press) ..‘. ‘lull 1.. ,‘l.<>l\'.\'.<.(7lllil hockey fur mm your ago t0- Fllllllfvlll to honor the mum ull Howie '.\l1~\ mml March 8. i037. :4 rum fans a National - ll:-~llll' team de- . wll Nlruvrrnl Can- wfllllil G- . Proceeds mrc plnced widow and .. l N»? l: f. In“ Th» f‘.'l'~1":"i‘l tram for the tin.’ willie PTflllF ha“ "con lth ‘ho .<tvnrlv' Walt r .\l ~ rnz‘ sull-l nrs rice. etc, ed overnight in cold ~r the ncxt day's conklng. wfll more easily and to rook and to di- llnv“ lml! '1 l» cn ll be sunk thrcu l‘ lr- r . f. ~~n~ "- n ‘ ' nlul s‘rr\t‘.".‘ H!" also (‘.""!“.‘ (V's-i. “$0 IUIIY candles are embarrassing.” “You wovkifl mind ll they were Sweet Cops.” SWEET CAPORAL CIGAR ETTES "The n"; fan: in which tobacco can be rmalcd." ever a mitt-' med ainlost at , ment as the I by being = fighter" l lead as he; 'i vounter ‘guess T didn't. have enough rosin ‘rm my slmcsbecausc thrv wouldn't BY BID FEDER - Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Nov 1 -\AP)— lI-Iammerln’ Henry Armstrong de- = cldcd to hold a fmal light limber- ling up workout. today, feltsome- ‘ thing ‘pop’ ‘as he slipped to the 7 CiiXlVflS-—B.Hd b11811? WCXIL IOIDDITOW . night's welterweight champion- ship fight with Cufcliuo (lurilja. The accidental falls, coming from a COIlXDIIlHLlOll of too little IOSlll on his shoes and a tempor- ‘ary ring canvas which was not lsecured tightly enough, caused an injury to Henry's sncro-Iliacjoint which nrill prevent the fight from going on tor more than three we-cks, u‘, last Pronu/un Mikc Jacobs hadbeerl beuuling (tar ihv possibilitlcs of a sellout gate of $100000 for time15- ,ruunrl bout Garden, announced he would dc- ; ridc wmorrmv on u new date. but l he set Nov. 25 tentatively, sirbjcct . l ,t0 the approval of the Boxing Czunurlsslon mid the fighter‘ explnhud he WOUlCl have m wait until TlPlllT visits his physician again tonrorrow before making a final (lerislon. He was advised by Dr. George Washington Riley. who treated Armslront: twice after the acci- dvm. that the little Los Angelcs‘ negro champion would be unable to return to even light training for one wcek and could do no hcnvy duty fighting before three vwkw In that event. the hnuf wink‘: have l0 be currir-d over un- l De-VPIIIDOI‘. “I sllpprd backward and tn the right just “hen I was finishing i1p."l-Icnr_v cxplalned. "bfy lyuck first I when l tried the foil. something ‘popi At (llUlfYf frolic" it. but to exercise. I was bnsr- of‘ the spill “That. lcutpor: v riu: canvas sccmcd to bc a lmlc lnruc. And I SUTL‘ ncnr grab ns I moved around. Anyway‘. I slipped nff the canvas and fell hack onto the ccmcnt flooor, laud- inr: on mv right. urm." l Dr. Riley and Dr. Alexander Schilf. New York State Athleflci, Commission physician. both hur- . rled to the Hippodrome. scene ofl Armstrong's training. Aftertreat- imz Henry a second time. Dr. Riley explained that he had “slipped his right sacrpdllnc nrticirlatlon." This articulation is the joint joining the has» of the spine to the side of the hip bone nnrl tho pelvic bone. Henry Hook Wins Decision TORONTO. Nov. l—(CP)~Hcnry Hook of Imlianapolls wok a 10- round decision from the world's bantmnwcight boxing, champion, Slxw Escobar of Pucrto Rico, in a non-ti lobout nt Maple Leaf Gnr- dom liOnlgllt. The Hoosier hilrrlcanc. ivcighlngl 119 1-2 pounds m Flscobnrls 121 1-2, piled up points early on o round- house attack. The Puerto Rlczm ral- lied to take the inst two rounds but Hook was-grill well ahead at the finish. Down The Alleys CIPTOWN BOWLING ALLEYS Mixed Doubles N. McKay 82 B. Cux—-1256. J. McAlecr d: H. Mclnnis-lllfl. M. McLcllan d: F COX-UH P Cooper & J. 0'Huulcy-l075. P. McKinnru A: C. Pu-tlvrson-AOTL! M. Stull 8a C. McKcnna—-l03ll. Tonight at 'l o'clock:- Holmads vs Pattcrsons. At 8:30 the following couples will bowl:- LADIES GENTS, E, Dcuunn D. Purcell Clrcuury‘ J. Power P. Harper K Acorn Mrs. Nelson G. Nelson H. iVhlte P. Clark E. McCube J. D. ivebstm- F. Mallctt J. Lawlor Red Indians-TIM. Sea Gulls-~3l74. High single R. Bradley 265. v High three S. Moore 717. OLY NAME lKHVLlNG l ‘ Duck Pln Mixed Doubles , _____._ C. Pineau 96 14B 14G P‘. Ma-llett 112 106 98-701 ‘r. MoCa-rvllle as m m I A. Goo; 104 115 111-07‘! n. Dolron '122 m4 12o M. Duffy '70 67 125-668 .101-.. . .154. 115.. so... .. , A. clmum s1 as 102-056 I ‘c. O'Neill e2 15o 12a P. mwlor 83 86 72-609 , G. lalfert-y 102 104 9’! . Moll": 93 8'7 77-600 1 W. Bahama; 94 I30 101 S. Mullen fl 66 91-648 Tonight Lt ‘I o'clock:- v LADIES GENTS . P. Harper J. Ford D. McKenzie L. Corcoran M. Walsh R. Mclxllan , .vl. Carmzher V. Plneau M. Brown l". Tierney ; R. Mclihrlune G. Lafferty 1 N. Klrwln G. Toombs l G. Hughes A. Martin "l"! "l! "I FPJWIN d"! u‘. hlndiron Square I was wrenched Just as I full. and l l l I i‘ B! .\l..-\.\' RANDAL l l 1 Mike Prince of Wales Gollefiekept its record of having never n beat- en or tled this season as ,lod rally to score the only touch- tdowu of the game and beat Sum- .merside Academy 3-0.'I‘h'e Academy held a vdde margin in the first period and came within a hairs- brrath of scoring on several 0c- casions. Rxrv, James Wilson hand- .lco‘ the whistle and kept a close ‘chock on the squads. 1 With the openm: whistle P. W. .0. forced the plnv- and held a slight edzu- in territory but by the fivc mluutc zilrirl: thr‘ Academy had begun their drive. With the Sum- ln dc scrum working perfectly ih cstcrncrs cnvlvflllcfl tho ball and stcndil_v' aclvryccd the plavto the college mmrs 5 yard line. ,I~Iere they pounded the P. W. C. ldefensvs with several smashing plays. Hogan was brought down a bare fool from the line 0n one of these. At llu- fourteen minulc imnrk the Clllll‘l<)ll(’l(\\\'ll squad was Jorccd to touch for sfiffily- HOD‘ good. speedy backfield man. snakcd ptwcnfv yards before bring tackled 'on the P. W. C. l0 vurd line; a- gain the play moved inside the ,collc:'c five yhrd line. The period ‘ended with the Az-nncmy vainly [trying to 0mg; the line. <11 _?__ . fSimmerings i Around The Sport Front, Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK, Nov. 1—\CP)~ With the Armstrong-Garcia bout. iiulcfimtcly postponed, the sorrl- 3.1L fellow lil‘0\lll(l town is Promoter Jncobs...nut that Mike cares much u" o wins and W110 doesn't but he was all set to take in something like $100,000 on the flghtm. Mnxle Ilcrger, Canadian light.- weight chlunplon from Montreal has been spoiling for a bout with Lou Ambels, fbrlner world light- weight champ and may get it yet...Prornoter Jules Racicot of Montreal is interested in such a show... horse, owners, trainers, race 01'- ficlnls and fzins will meet at In- dlnnapnlis Nov. ll to 13 for the first mass diagnosis of the trot- ting situation... thcy will defer- mulo what ailments the harness sport has and what treatment should be prescribed. The United States defends the International Polo Cup against Great Britain next. June And for the first time since 1925 vwlll have four IO-gonl players...Micl1ael Phipps. formerly a. nine-goal man. was raised to IO-goal <lny'...He inins Tummy l-Iltchconk, other intcrnntlgnal team nu}.- hers... Wonder how Bill McKcchnlc feels those days when he remem- . bers that soon after being ap- pointed manager of Cincinnati Reds he tries to trade Eimle Lom- bardi, named yesterday as the National league's most valuable pla_ver...Leo Duroclicr, Brooklyn Dodger manager, is hanging n- round St. Louis Cardinal office looking for an outfielder... Tony Gnlento, National Boxing Association's N0. i challenger for Joe Louis’ heavyweight title plans to post a $5.000 challenge cheque with the Boxing Commission mcrrow... he hopes it will force a bout with the Brown Bomber... Luis Vlncentlnl. former South Amcrirnn lightweight champion and One-Linn‘, world title contender dicd last nulhtHl-Io fought hero- abouts from 1923 to 1925 and died in Santiago, Chile. Eddie Shore Is “Holdout” .1 BOSTON, NOV. b-KAPJ-Eddle ShUYu, Boston Bruirfs star defence- man. ups described as a. “holdouW by Nldllilglll‘ Arr. Ross tonight when the vL-tman failed to report at the train carrying the team b0 Toronto for Thursday's Nat-tonal Hockey League opening. RUSS said the President Weston Adzmu of the Bruins would refer the case to Frank Calder. the Nat- ionul Hockuy League hond. Shore, who rc‘urned here with the team from its Hers-hey. Pa" training camp. explained that his request for the restoration 0f his 1937-38 salary cut had been refus- Kccp Minnrds ln the home ‘Ear powers; mu their second team staged a second pct- Bctwecn 400 and 500 trotting . i rating to- . Stewart Iuglc-hnrt and Cecil Smith - In the opening five nflnutee of the second half the Summer-side squad kept the play well into P. DEIRDYI‘. Nov. Hudson. former Charlottetown am- _ _ t _ ateur, has been sold w C m“ My After B’ time out Wings to Providence of I—($)—‘ROII Detroit the by (h OBLO ROBERTS/ON Associated Pren Sport: Writer) nrcar centre field E. MacLecd of Buryn" _ the 1111K’ and red reeled v1‘! 20 mtm““°““'k‘ Amrm“ 1'°°8“"' wrote the mglkfitfliifetfiifisfiilffifiull? silk-mafia h°"°' yards before owing in a play that {gmmmrrfafi “all”? "1 “"3 gall‘? m m: the Great War A | struggling m behind vvi h "y “m” was only halted on the westerners‘ tmaggm w ey u announc ',1sma¢shing 0e In their loll! awaited matvh race at Piinlflifcord ten yard line. The college men! gluason who played right “n8 ‘ The one-time gelling platen", carrying the red and whip. silks‘ o’ trok tile Play in hand and for the l for the wings and their farm club Lllflrlvs M lllYWflrd 0f Sun FYI-MIMI). matched the Admirul's fumed Uri»: of the gamc made lt mlghtyl uncomfortable for their opponents. joi“ We other Concrding the ball tn the powcr- , vidence Doggie ful Summcrslcle sCflllfl the P. W. C. backfield movcri up close and Isuieared the local three-quarter tithe before they could get uolnu. ;Mnr‘f)wilnlrl \v."'-' fnrvcrl to thrcc safely fOlIPlIPS as liv- visi- tors advanced down the field with ‘ jOr Leaguers Ins ion: kicks, Allison MacDonald. fast three quarter man, bargcd 25 yards be- fore beinfl hnltcd on his opponents 12 yard line. But the aggressive P. ‘W. C. mrm Wm not to be denied and a fcw nlhnzics lwler he charg- ed 25 yards to cross the line make- flng the score 3~0. 'I'hc attempt at lconvert was spoiled when the ball accidentally touched lhv ground. The Acadcnrv forced the nlav elphla last pery. G. Afllrr" . A. T. lilncNclll. ‘continued. Pitts-burg Hornets last season tvili ‘end Jackie Keafing 0f Saint John. By selling Hudson. Adams made room ln the lineup for Charlie Mn- son, righf-tvlnszer, sold mnkc by the New York spcciflcntlonghc play with the Ma- ‘ ed out. Mason played with Philad- seuson as Ranger pro- llival Skippers Bury The Past Xvi-loaf K. Vvalter. texpressed hope the series would be Mnritlmers at Prc - Kuhn . of 1-11". v tn n. new track record for l The Biscuit, held at allgh sent the odds on Samuel D. the distance In 1:56 3-5. 'Regains Track Record The time clipped one-fifth sec- nnd off the track mark created by Pompoon lost spring after seablscult himself had hung up a new record of 1:57 2-5 last. fall In the mutuels, seablscult pnld $6.40 for $2. In less than two minutes, Sea- biscilil. settled u year-old argu- ment, vwon $15,000 and skyrocket- ed into second place among the world's leading money winning horses. The clean-cut triumph to Detroit Rangers wit h lead of being farin- flown to their opponents 25 yard boosted the ‘Biscuit's earhTngs to “m. but (mm; m, ppmqmpe far- BQSTON. Nov. 1 ~(CP) -Likc $340480. only some. $36,030 short ther. Play thcn moved 11p and a trio of old-tune dorymnles, the of Sun Bean's world mark of $376, down the ccnlrc our’ of the field WWW 590mb’ 999F915 0f U19 1M9!”- wlfh the game mvvnq on the national flshermenh race —Capt- For War Admiral, the defeat Avndrmvs 25 yaw‘ ‘"141. ' Angus Walters of the victorious meant the loss of a chance to be P. W. f‘. -F‘~‘l Pool: L. Horv- Defender Bluemser Capt. Ben acclaimed again as the horse of all: Tin-r" Que ‘ur I. W. ._ G. Pine of the American Challongvl‘ the year as he was in 1937, when DrBl-ds. I? I. A ‘\f.".:-D'nxairl: Gertrude I... Thcbnud, and Capt. he nosed out Seablscult in a nat- l'llll\~"$' ‘.\I. mo‘ ll Wfuuurl. Charles M. Lyflllb. Chairman of the ion_widc p011 o; Sport writers‘ It O. Shnrl : l~'oi-\\-u1~'. r‘. j\.rn»n'\p._ j race commuter — nspcd hands was on“, the second Mme m two aid. D. Kfflfivnlo. 1k MacDonald her." lonLht and nmxvi l» I=r ljv- years ma; the {ourqem- 01d ‘on J. l)(l\\'llllll "l". Kcefc. G. Donnell. gQllPs bl‘ blflflll“ “if Mon OW“ had bowed hlshead Andrpn’ l_\’[q<*'f)nn:11d_ With Angms’ silver trophy safely m defeat. Summr-rsldv: -- Fullback U. at the head table at u in ... i .;, , Morrison; Tine» Quarter Fl. Gnl- vlubt dinner.‘ safcly‘ link llll" it i 315m,“ To“ Gum! lmlt. ‘.\l. Wilht. l.. Yvfonrv. C. "W5 ‘P110115 .0l""9.\' 9 3*’ “FYI-l , Dolzinr: lfwllr“ (‘_ Ilognu. II. thoy jnlllcd onc another about |O,$?§HTTKH"‘FJ1LLPOQtgefllmgggecgg’; Emu I‘, V.’ 7"» r>\;-\-;;.ra=_ T F, ;"thr bad feeling" during thc races m“ ‘he WW Wm,‘ Charley Kurt” Mnpndunld. F. Fénllnnl. C.,l{cllv. between the two schooners and ‘ linger sending War Admiral away Si? Greet: Is CaugihtwBetween “Arab “Devil” and Jewish “Deep Blue Sea” iWARTIIIVllllM PROMISES TO ANTAGllNISTIG POPLE COME BACK TO HAUNT ENGLAND'S DIPLOMATS S Under the watchful eye of l British soldier in the backIml-lnd. Arabs of the village of Hebron, in Palestine, are forced to remove a rook barrier revolting countrymen. General harassment of this sort plus a rapidly violent Arab raids has forced Britain to put a. major BY MILTON BRONNER. or Hitler. Engla NEA Service Staff Correspondent LONDON, The dilemma of the gardless of the cost. the meantime, lt ls em lng 18,000 troops, 6000 police and increasing numbers of fighter and placed across the road by n guerrilla band of their mounting casualty llst from punitive force in Palestine. nd will stick, re- sin its promise to us about Pales- ne. The Jews: ‘England as n state, made the promise to the Jews. D103?‘ man in the classic story who stood b 1b,“ lanes ut d - the o 1. Del-wee“ ‘he Dem . “ml m‘? (1991, Atigb terrgr. p OM‘ btibklrgnncofarwilelsxucztifvexttrlgxt bllll? 50¢ 15 "S "lllhlnl-l lfllw Cam‘ At one time the English thought made the romlse to the Arabs.’ Dflrvd “m1 Ellillmlds taslg-nsguglrtgg they had found a solution in The war, which broke Turkey, has between Zionist Jews terrorists lh its mandated territory of Palestine. Whichever way the British cab- inet decides to jump, it will be in trouble. _ Englishmen proxmscrl ihc Jews a homo lll their land of rvlgui. But Engllsluucn also promlsvd much to the Arabs. Now those two promises are clmhlng. The easier path for Fnglnnd would be to huud the mandate for Palestine back to the Dengue of Nafolzis. But that will never (lo Palestine menus n lot lri the British scheme of things. Pales- tine has t-xccllcxit hurbors for the British enst Mcxlllcrrnncan fleet. The oll tnnk lines which pipe rich oil from fields of Irnk end up .ln Palestine, ViliPFG the oll is ‘pumped into ships hcndlng for iEnglanrl. Palestine, too. ls n slop- tlvely small bigger all-Arab English holding sea . Neither Arabs were that the British in favor of the lcan government States ls a sort party to the Zionist: Jews the report of the Peel commission which recommended a comprum- the holy cities of Jerusnlcxu nnd Bethlehem and n corridor the Jews nor satisfied rwlth this scheme. 'I‘hcre have been rumors considering rm even more drastic solution which would be very much rumor of lt has aroused the Amer- 1 inquiries to Brltai mandate. Bcsldes. American mom-y hns poured into Palestine to help the Zionists. on the Balfour promise. They sny they need Palestine more than given the Arabs Irak, Arabia and Transjordarl - lands enormously nil-Jewish state. a larger and richer in resources slate, with the than little Palestine." the mandate for The Arabs: “The Jews. with their money, are buying the to the u choice lands and making Arabs 1e poor and landless.” The Jews: “Fifty-three per cent of the 320.000 acres we hold have been bought from absentee land- lords and 25 per cent from rich Arab lundlorders. Much of the land we got was barren and was : “Ewen with lmmig lion of Jews restricted partially, the Arab majority ls apt. to be swamped and become s. minority." The Jews: "In 1918 them were in Palestine 55.000 Jews and 500,- 000 Arabs. Today there are 400.- 000 Jews and 900.000 Arabs. By our labor and by our modern cabinet ls now Arabs. The very to make pointed n. as the Ilnltcd of disinterested are standing pat ping place for commercial alr- ever, because of the persecution methods we have shown how inlans-s cnroute to India and the of their cn-rellglonlsts in (Jer- things can be done. In spite of Far East and an important base many and Italy, with only a lesser the vast areas in other Arab [for military plnnr-s. England persecution ln other Eurupcnn lnnds. Arabs have moved into therefore has no intention of see- state Palestine in swarms. having little country l tll l ortant n“ m mp of Mussolini fall, lnto‘__the_hnnds $1105! -' Reviewed I Hawk: You Bow: IVII. Gus-r "ms Scnoousw. file»: TooK see Yea PARolvgsu-qBur Mom: chum’ p Munuesnskuows Auvnuumsour NAVI ovum-lawn ‘MNK mew KNGW Tums mo WEJUST ‘llama sorr- s. The rest of the argument runs learned their agricultural and in- dustrlal lessons from us. In 191B mi unnrovefl by Dnmlnlon The Boy Scouts Assoc-lotion. Headquarter: f’ MEANIWI/LIILESB mm m A MILE AWAY i‘ curly speed with more speed, stuck to his rival like a |P4' iw- backsfrelch and then pulled awav to a finish three d ' 3-1 ' morethnn2to1uthecrowd dldaptartmnblingtal ch mld-ivny elllfths in front o! 40.000 to 4 reeled oft s miles. in front and George whim Cardston, Altn.. trying to (‘fllrfli him with Seabiscuit in the {um drive. But actual! it was a duel for three cllghts of n rm]: That was on the backsircmj when the Admiral moved up and took a head advantage. For n 19w strides lt looked as if War Admiral was going to pull away hm, the son of Hard Tack refused to give ground. Coming to the mile pggt Kurtslnger sensed the Admgmf was weakening and went m {he whip. one of the fmv times in the colt‘s career that it was ilccvssury to use ft persundcr. But the Ad. miral didn't have it. \Vllh0ut once raising his but. Woolf had. rode Seabiscillt into a length nd. vantage and with every Slfldg h, widened the margin until at the finish he had his rival landly beaten. "I have no excuse," said Kllfll. lnger. “War Admiral simply didn't have it today." Woolf shouted Seablscult wan the__':best horse in the world" n; grooms and stable lnckeys nearly tore his clothes off vvhcn hr re. fumed to the stable The Arabs: "England has brok- f Keep Mkusrds in the homo. mwvwfigufw-"wv-W ‘Anal “no I'\‘Ll'l\ ziu- no l: ers of persons ls evidenced I merous nttacks on llrltish ufh s- So the Gnvcrnfius l'(‘Sl(ll'll(‘f‘ at llebron, rulesnno, is, as shuun above, hrnvlly fortlflcd nvllh sand- bags. there were 6000 acres of orange grovss. Now there are over 32.000 acres. In 1920 Pnlcslinc l‘Xf)0l'l.(‘-'l 1,000,000 cuscs of uruugcs and grapefruit. In 1036-7 is exported 1l.000.000 cases." In the meantime, tho Arabs openly admit flu-y nrc cruplryvlut! terror "because that is the \v:\_v to win things from England." ll 1S stron ly suspected that Gcruuni and tallan money has its pnrt ill financing the uprisings. Hltlvr r)‘- cently liflfiPfefl at Enlzlfllfllf‘ 13'1"‘ ure to settle the Pnlcstlno trouble- Englnnd has been slow to tnkc foo drastic action. becnusc of the mil- lions of Moslem subjects in ii‘ em ire.