files mo‘ SEA CADETS p, ‘All Sea Cadets are requested to report, in uniform, at H. M. C. S. Queen Charlotte at 12:30 today. ‘rm: C_HARLOI‘TETOWN_ GUARDIAN isvoiir siioiirs YE O inrsinrs 05M. Cyril Holmes. fastest sprinter. has d retire from the season. When he is the army he ,'will devote his time to running the family oil business It Bolton in Lahcashlre Holmes robably would have been an lylnpic sprints winner if the war hold not intervened. w in e games. Australia, during the B it pire Games of 1938, he won both sprint championships _ the 100 yards in 9.’! seconds and the 220 in ll seconds. . The 8-year-old rellw fireman iii ‘h, m, m, mm. hi, m, n- imasoan. Ont. May v-(oei- tmr middle-we m, clump- W. Garfield Case. Progressive Con- servative member of the last House for Grey North. Saturday was nom- inated candidate for the riding in the June ll Federal election. Mr. Case defeated Defence Min- datg‘ and Pliils’ Rookie Sporting "High Batting Average. Inl First Three Weeks OfPlqy", (B "rm ‘Assoola rnovi llliITAill ' y ALLAN NICKLISON Canadian Iremlteff Writer LONDON, May 4—(CP)—Vince Hawkins won his 71st professional fight without defeatagainsta ring- master l6 ears his senior. lie also did a coup e of things he never had e before. w. LT. ‘N. SAUNDERS, Commanding Officer, R. C. S. C. Kent. Canadian Legion lI-E-liay Parade Veterans of all wars are to meet at the Arni- ouries this afternoon at 1.15 to join the mass par- ade in celebration of victory. Medals will be worn. I. M. BROWN, Sec’y. Charlottetown Branch _ie._>i like uiir latest story resin. "i-inza. m‘; Yosgmg-‘iggmfi g; . iflllll“3'du"xl 2,11‘ Aggy-q- kfgrino Peretti of Washington and. m“ es of 121s hum‘ flue: and a great rucoziteiu‘. 0pm.,“ u, m“. ‘ f8 lt- - iee w“ . “lb... it stirsgddffiehflrlt digs y . s iirstiulli season‘ with’ New York Giants, al- zuboest commendable 2-1 aver- Cetdier Bill sauna of Pi buiah m- p . Haw , ed boy. never had been k ed down before. Neither had he — t LAID” C“EGAR ‘civil. been known to smile in the ‘ma; 15 ma“ h" i“ W‘ m" ' ' boxing master who, but for rarity»: o» £03m: ."£‘ii..'i€'{§. recriii‘: n'r'.°m"°sl°'“r"i§nis MERLE cannon t" "d" """"°'*P "l h“ 3" YMi m o o “game gave sllof the teams has been sharing th receiving -—- ,,,_ " h,“ m, gm, o, u, - A Real Thriller mkht have taken the verdict was Glen Moody, Welsh light-heavy- Pressing close be the tfleld shorhfpp nag - -—"'-'——'-"—-—" “:- of ‘is’; Braves, a staniggdt ell their p ~ Sourle Thur. 8:80 Go rey, 0.0:. in e. by-election mt Feb . lent ch i . Th a isi :10”: ‘huh-HID Oil B 0C 0h. ialgelder. and second baseman Is fs LOSS OF- rounds was booed y Albert Hall crowd but it was lner of Boston Red Box, with marks of .328 ' (Co tin ed Fr l) of sympathy ‘for the‘ n u 0m P“. 185 p0 had - __ d Prlsedreshmin hurlcr at the Jurl hittin _ . , l mly a oeso -—-i——————i— fider man who, at unds, live from the disaster, as Esqui- a weight advantage of 4 l2 pounds. malt filled and sank within three Hawkins was a clear winner minutes after the torpedo struck mokment i?” Dave Forges, the ex- m “mush m” m er. tossed t ' " N ti so... A .... t. ..:.:. r... ..'...:...::"..::.:'".i i.“‘.i.i“‘.§.€.'." i. Jersey Gity showed his unseen from the surrounding sea weaknesses as have none of his while most of the crew were asleep I . Wins Extra. I Inning Game others, and the displa probably in their bunks. will make him underifligiln the When Esqulmalt left port on her betting for the middlew ht title (By The Canadian Prose) City Giants won out in last voyage she canted 10 officers fight with the veteran Ems Rcd- and men. When the rescue ship, erlck of Liverpool. H. M.C.S. Samla, _reache_ci the Hawkins always carried the fight heavy-laden rafts with their piti- but revealed that his defence Ls} ful cargo, there were only 26 near- o en to a right to the chin and;dead men waiting for them. A- t at he has vet to learn how tn round them slumped the bodies oi act in a crisis. He went down for ’ i. the 10 inning of a see-saw strug- gle with the Rvoyals at Montreal yestercnyflpushing across s run in the extra rame to snatch the ball ame 5-4. Jack Bantu, on the mound for the Royals, walked Mike Sithemer » iii ' lks Dil with I INN“ 0! - finmwgf a couple of safety pins. "r him the pins and he loo .mu,,d the placeéé /_ v "~i,,:.='-;,,Y.°“r3i§ ‘ill? 1.2. “h . . . l“. PM; this afternoon. so I gilt f‘ well sit in and give your gang rum rdvlce.’ I 5 ‘k 2WF$3m in? gto gall the way down the ’iirie. if} tells every Player on my e1 "m his betting weakness is and In“ he's going t; to . r ' \ i chlng at third base and '““...°.‘,”oi= is doing lust what y; said he was going to do. He's ‘o, Qygfybody on the team hand- "fled, and every time he gels rid g a batter he looks over at me lllli liusht- m 5K ii‘. '7 "I don't think he was trying to Whigs psychology on us. but w/9"§\ down with the ship, or died in the bitter waters, chilled to 35 or 36 degrees above zero by the great green icebergs that float down from Greenland in the spring. Sub Lieut. Kazakofl‘ had gone to his bunk before the torpedoing, and had been relieved by Silh- ' . Bruce Whitehead of Van- couver. Whitehead escaped the sinking, but died two hours later on the float, from cold and expo- sure like so many others. Escaped By Miracle Knznkofi escaped only by a mir. aclc, clawing his way from the ship through a Jagged hole in Es- qulmaltfis side left by the bursting torpedo. Those of her crew-who could ‘make their way from the engine room or from their quarters for- ward, scrambled to the deck, which already ‘was canted at an alarm- ing angle as Esquinialt settled rapidly on her torn starboard side. Only seconds elapsed from the struck until MONTAGUI, SATURDAY 7:45 - 9:15 P-M. Marissa s r. as. -rerrr~i ARMY BAIIETS All Army Cadets are to assemble at the Arm- ouries at l P. M. today. Tale 0f A Shirt (By The Canadian Press; HALIFAX, May ‘l-‘Ilhis is a tale of a shirt. Ideut. Robert MacMillan of Charlottetown, captain of th minesweeper Esqulmslt that w lost. by enemy action of! the Nova Scotia. coast last month. was the owner of the shirt. He had become attached to the shirt, and it went with him through’ llarold Boyle Wine Pulitzer Prize ' .~ -.l\ Dir. dot-sir‘: slilrt batting order l6 of their dead shipmates Survivors‘ Stories The dead were taken ashore for burial, and the living were brought to the big Royal Canadian Naval hos ital here, where survivors told ther stories after the shock had become a memory. Disaster struck suddenl for uimalt, as she and H. .C.S. s. second or two in the seventh round from a right-hander that made him shiver from head to toes. A more experienced fighter would have stopped down longer but Hawkins rosi- quickly Further roof oi inexperience came in the round when Moody again caught Hawkins with a flurry oi Esq I “M” l“ viii“ ‘°"“°“ ‘° h“ sill“EH33ii2§§".r“'iif.“.il' orner or u ance. ro ng -~ c g -_--- lantic in search oi subs. One U- boat was lying in wait just bencziih the surface. and lashed out with a torpedo that struck Esqulmalt in her starboard engine room, just aft i —_;—._—:____ _..-.»__-.;_-_~_-_= remember. No Loss Of Discipline Even in the shock and confus- ion. there was no 1055 of dlsci line. "No one left the ship untl ille Ca tain gave the ‘abandon slzlp’ or er-about one-half minute aft- er she was hit." said AB. Fred Mlmce of Montreal. Mimee also hail been asleep. and was awakened by the shock. Es- quimalt was keeled over then, and his first thought was she had been ranuncd or had taken a bad list saw YORFIIay '1—(AP) - Hsrold V. il-lali Boyle. Associated Press war correspondent, who told the day-by-day story of the Am- erican foot soldier in the battle for Europe. toda won the Pulitzer Prise for dis lnguished correspon- dence during the 1944. Another $500 award went to Joe Rosenthal, Associated Press pho- mgrapgielicuiwiho made an epic l0. l 0 in th States flag 01.1.8515: sJiéa. e U“ ted Thi t - five - year-old Do v a ' Crowlreyi, former British light- weight champion attempting s. most oi his sea voyages. Maclvlil. ian was wearing it during the siege oi Tobruk in 104i when he was what it was. Every batter 3 CHEW SEE. l.'s a]; faiced him expectedplbcgis to . hm u on eve . {y git élé d!” j "Dis crossed 'em all right; cross- - 'em by pitching to 'em exactly way he said he would. They gulaintvbelleve he had the nerve . o _ éiélitiif I D1310 Walker. batting king of major leagues, took a lusty out E at the speeding white ball. His fl-ounce club met the pellet with scrlep crack that could be heard -|ll over llobets field. As the ball ‘suit booming over the right-field (Isl! for a three-run jliiin 16.000 wild-eyed Brooklyn exploded s joyous roar that ' ed the stands. y ‘lliere was double-benched 1 for joy in this eighth-inning E? l Wt the Dodlers aheed of ' New York Giants. 4-3 in s. re- t game, taming threatened de- eet iii-to ‘victory; and it proved the worried worshippers oi : er that their champ wasn't --liwnsh-" iii it! l! loos. lean Dixie-most po ul joifilyh outfielder since the pdag of Zach Wheat-entered that _' with U18 dWlfllBh batting f “IQ 0d’ .153. Th1! .151 in Iilfid I this seas’? was one heck I ileum for e cocking South- ‘Jhloothad hammer: out .357 *€l§ll¢l* a year. ihns. writers and even Dixie, begin 527% m‘ caught n‘ wtleh ‘tel?’ - u linear-old survivo p e ll W0 he asked ma. n: n. m" he es . tire before tlée game.‘ m‘ m.“ iii Dixie m d this . "Y- he aexeplsined rigftgiftbeiesluuie h" not Polite to ask for extra Will practice at this stage of the ltuoh when the squads are large d" wry men wants his m ota of "licks" in the batting cage. m er readily granted his re- ' ~ iii MN-renta‘ e Hansen's ltluice recovery in gglnl-inlllathigt s walk “bulb. an: nWii°°ii°rrJ§"'° l: filigree with u; "m, , mher in the eighth. That blow- ~ 311611)’ Rosen and Augie g1“ ilreldv on base - caused mega? ito be yanked from the mmediately and tagged “NW-Bill! rookie with his first of the*seeson. beau the in the fourth; iii-leg; “filth Bolt-spoken Doxle ma _t dressing mom after the y t "WDQIIIDB lslhtbl)’ before the end second in- - in the 10th and he went to second on a wild pitch. He advanced to third when Layton's blooper fell safe in short right fleld and came home on Charlie Meadh long ily. A surprising Monda crowd esti- mated st 4,000 turn up for the game. apparent because of the stores closing a r the new: from "We. Weird fielding and Frankl-lillers soft pitching combined to help Rochester score its first victory of the season at home before 53B fans, Red Wings defeating New- Beara -2 ark 8 . Bobby Rausch led the attack on Hiller and two other Newark hur- lers by collecting five strai ht wins. Glenn Gardner held the ears to six hits, qruok out three and ls- sued nnry e walk. Sports World Expects Swing Back To Normal WASHINGPIDN, Ma. ’l—(AP)~-.. Unconditional sin-rep r of Ger. miUWJOIlIIKi the American sports World DOIsed tndey for a gradual swing beck to normal conditions. Bearing in mind that Japanstlll must be beaten ,tliese ‘ * y: develormenu were consider- “"5118 onieclng Rfllilithll’! photograph, made for the wartime still picture pool was taken in February, 194-5, and gible for a i944 award, but the rule gaghgdllfillggglendpléjfor “this distin- noggced. ' w“ m‘ e Piillt P distinguishedeiiovgllzgf ‘igi-iflderiltufd John Hersey. for “A sensor Adano" “d i° Mary Chase for "Harvey" the best original American play. CELEBRATIONS- ,.= lcggilrmeiaqniase l) m- ____-_=-__ their Loomplete and crushing vie. d nowéiotzws." he told ie I- "Wilde, “that lifter "lié.>'i.‘é‘°'...‘” mgtldnuous warfare this force ithe e armies) has accomplished its mission with a iinalitv achieved by no other expedition in history." Victory Luncheon Mr. Churchill however, t lump on his countrymen tits“? Personal victory luncheon at 1o Do Street at noon today, the Press Association reported. Mem. bers of his War Cabinet and the Chiefs of Staff were tbs guests. The news hit Ilondon in mid-af- ternoon and the crowds swelled by normally would not have been ell- D the thousands. Buckingham Palace States tt hedt th R 1N RIrBrt-igtéffililtéfllhe o" aw m the e youthful kl , .l f r. W. J. P. lslagbglixiarfioufsoilmgr Conservative Premier and pNsent Opposition Leader in the Prince Edward island Legislature, was a. board a small Norwegian whaler when it was dive-bombed and gunk near the jetty in Tobruk harbor. He was wearing the shirt. The shirt and the skipper came through another bombing in the Mediterranean, this time ‘by high_ level enemy bombers. and the shirt was still with him when an enaelitny torpedo ripped into Erqul. m . . “I'm going to r n k thi ” iaidklleuth Macltiilfiri in t-iiepliiligz-y a ere "i1 d aiiiuipbumitl“ n m“ ‘hm’ King Leopold 0f Belgium Is Liberated WITH ‘THE 0.8. 7TH ARMY. May 8-('I‘ueeday) —(AP) — King Leopold of Belgium ,and his Queen have been liberated by the Unlred md 7th Army, it was announced BY. was f l int f h i - ‘mallgéilu Lpo or“: e Lela-bra) ll men and women of United Nations as well as mold-textile Em- pire milled around for hours. Planes roared overhead. The "aim aueeirimirstabafiamiiauaeisn of this mon . Dedication by M or Lea ue baseball of next Sun ay's doub e- headers to victory oyer Giermasiy; Announcement by the War De- t on its investigation of al- ations that 4-1!‘ professional a in have been discriminated lfieinst in the draf ' And. later, the return of some outstanding athlotu to the play- ing ranks under the army's system for dischargmg 2,000,000 was vete- nae. Government circles oontln brush ssidoall direct questions-s- bout a resumption o racing, ut officials maintained they ed b moved schedule opens. h substantial n ber players beck. Baseball Results ill t. to Willi Grenadier Guards marched bv the Palace in.resplendent formation. Flags flew from homes and bus- iness ers wore little flags of red. whie and blue rosettes in their coat lapels. But throughout the afternoon, many millions of solemn workers stayed on their jobs and some did not actually hear the news until nearly nightfall. Evening brought a new lift to lhc festival. Pubs were jammed. vic- tory champagne was brought up from this deep cellars and long- hoarded whiskey and gin came out of hiding. Beer flowed by the bar- ul . uPo% ood hdusmglicdly P wfint thro e crow orig ar n- ment Bteet explaining there would be no proclamation by m. church- Bimilinrly the news that .... spur-tear. “our t c e throngs in ccudilly, Trafalgar and Leisceeter Bmiares. WAS NOT FIRST- ‘15 _*": ._.i _ _ them. Not only because his mem- is good. but because he has come to grips with them far- ilurig places and therefore knows their ways as few Canadian Navy men know them. is not because of their establishments and London-i They were found near strobl. eight miles east of Salaburg. l ‘The Americans had been told the whereabouts of the Royal party by civilians. With the and Queen were l8 members of t eir staff ‘and four children. All were in good health. power German 8.5. troops in order to make the rescue. They now are closely guarding the Royal parity. to succumb. Neither Lieut. Mc- Millan. as commanding officeiaijicr his brother officer. Licut. Mike Kazakofl of Saskatchewan, spared themsel in doing what they could for the dying men. They cast longing eyes toward the dist- ant horizon but no ship came within their vision and the hours . A515, one by one. men l6 dead men and 36 more dead than alive. Rushed to shore and hospital the agling ihulckly recover- ed. Th , br efly, the story of the gallant litte Esqulmalt and her gallant commander, on that tragic morning out in the North Atlantic. Lieut. MacMillan wee called to the Navy in May of i940. He had been on the naval reserve since i933 so it was only natural his services should be required. He spentbut a few months in Canada before be called England and from ere he went to the Mediterranean where he was ll'l command oi a minesweeper. There he saw action involving mbing, comeback, made the card a veter- ans’ gala night.by taking a points decision from Al Phillim, recently beaten by 39-year-old Nel Tarle- ton for the British featherweight crown. The decision confirmed s recent victory on a foul and it was ob- vious there was hard feellng be- tween the two. Crowley took the gtlng from Phillips’ slvinillnl blows with a smotherins deffnitée and gained his points with e - hand gouging. especially durlns K of amidships. Her seaboat was smashed, and two oi her six carley floats were useless, so those who could scram- ble from the fast-settling vessel crowded into the four remaining floats. Lieut. MacMillan, who was in his bunk when it happened. scrambled topside and gave the “abandon ship" order when he saw his craft was doomed. He estimated about 45 men rot away from the vessel and reached the floats, the rest were flicked spurt in e fllllll_l'g~lll'_ldri_.__ s. I4 ‘\ Qilllli smnnnm v‘7“"‘v ' time she was he got topside Dempster released by th someone ivho because _i_iou_e____ membe a were fighting their way to the slippery decks. As AB. Ed- ward Dempster of Victoria put it, ' othlng flat.” dashed for the aft starboard floats and cut them loose as the water crept rapidly up the canted decks. The other floats apparently were e automatic devi [or else they were cut loose ‘by! thriv CCHVXRGQS irntclicd helplessly, e ,. “in n didn't live in a heavy Others dashed from their bunks, only half-clad and with llntliill); but their “Mac West“ lifcjriclzcis to protect them from the blncr sea. Immersed in icy water for much of the time-the four film's were so loaded that at times tllry were floating three feet beneath the surface of the water-many to died in the first two hours. WlliiG After the first two hours, few tligirvlvors could i died but all were close to death. l- iiri uv GENE c-c-u- PARTS "Boys will be boys" and in that process they often give their Bikes hard usage far beyond reasonable wear and Mill’. They soon get to know where they can have their "Bikes" "fixed", or obtain new long-wearing Dunlop tires and accessories and those all- the thelr torpedoes against th his ships and twice he has been miracu ously saved. Once in the Mediterranean. when he was in ’ of a mineswee r oper- important genuine C.C.M. spare parts. sign of the C.C.M. dealer. - There are over 2,000 such dealers in Canada for lNTEfi-‘TIONAL invariably “that place" is at the (‘My PMMBQIIPI l I. .. IIOOOIXI-I-ll 1 torpedoing, and whatever else the Germans and Italians had to throw at the Allied fleet, but he survived it all and returned to ‘drain d" n. ..'i-,,.-,,,. 8 t- e- ..? _ “w”! i0 mt reel worried because in” . Ions llfltlmhl was off-or something. now exactly what was >¥§lfi§i€ "X illwred it was lack of . prac- mv but I wasn't sure. You see l m‘ "Ported late for s ring train- Mnléwiuu of s si ht mm “Mn ‘malldinl- And when the mwhenmmfltd. it seemed that the y, u“ we‘? Way ahead of me- I was behind them. l didn’ Wrong, ll was the worst beginning of s gen] lihad made since r start- mglww baseball. n m. 9 let-down after m I 011 last vear lt-iiown ' ' "miss was a y good It was Ii terrible when I knew the fans B0 much of me. 9K 3K iii "will! sled Leo Durocher 8:; Ithgt, extra batting n m“ more)» he lets me v ma: _:__._,______ p; REMEMBER WIIEI 51 The 65in.- Me is leafs teran iiersity of" m. for “M” a “k no w?’ "elmllfll $7. nine be,“ “may one-ragga ‘lug with e llie l . "amp ‘maiicn in his first sea. °PWlrd fleas rule an Goodwin and Mcweeney; Beats .. 1mm toe-z e s to . 308 200 001-6 10 0 Hiiler. Mschey. Ockey and Van- gofstkl, Taylor; Gardner and a . ll0 01 400008l0x—'l '1 0 Bebber, Blue (l) and Kerns; Hamlin and George. AMERICAN. AUBOCIATIDN lt. Paul at Columbus (postponed. wet grounds). Minneapolis at Toledo (postpon- ed, rain __ iiiun 11100 Percheron *—S_tallion will the lelloll 1N5. Thleiiott-"i was grand champion all Charlottetown Fair 1944. ' CECIL MILL Owner in charge; Kenslhgton, It. R~ rnoNs es-e 1 with U-boats released for publica- -sight of each other at the time as stand st owner's "stable for i ‘o ti? eirl co sting out of Tobrik, No Africa. and again rec-ently in the North Atlantic. - ‘The story of his exploits in the Medistcrranean is an old familiar to the people of .- lve Province. But only last night was last thrilling experience tion. Bo now it can be told. On e. certain morning, only a few weeks ago his ship, the Esdlui- melt, in company with asisters lp, the Bernie. was cruising of! the Nova Scotis. coast. They were not in they were covering a comparative- ly wide ares in which subs were known to be lurking. and! Iwithoutd war-trig‘! e oson an e bxrgken elm in th lves. e weather was cold in eo-O-Qeeeo i eeeeeeeeeeeenee _~ One extra among them; Canada in December. i942. For the next few months, he was on- gaged in important work boosting the morale of war plant workers. then to King's College for s "re- fresher" course in navigation. Next came a "command" course and on Feb. l 1045. he took over the Es- quimait from Lt.-Cmdr. Wilfred Mclsaac. another Oharlotistoivn man with a brilliant record in the Canadian Navy. According to Lieut. ' McMillan. there are no better, braver, or more loyal men in any Navy in the world than those aboard His Maj- esty's Canadian ships. And. nfter all, he should know. For adrift on a little raft in the North Atlantic is probably as good a place as any to learn just whet is in the heart of s man Just Arrived At my stables, Buntain &, Beil’s Wharf, 2 ears of elioicel horses, mares and geldings. matched pair also several choice mares in foal. Signed. and the temperature of the ocean dd degrees. Rt uni on Al I0 th h a ed union‘ anodunthe rmorifltmbegl: - WELLINGTON McNEILL eweee-eee-ee-oeee-eeewe-w PRE0lSl0 country-wide service for the convenience of C.C.M. Bicycle Riders. Remember these things when you go to select a bicycle-remember, ion ’ that C.C.M. Bicycles have been made in Canada for over 45 years. Bicycle rationing on a voluntary basis, as instituted by the bicycle dealers of Canada in cooperation with the manufacturers and the “W.'I'.P.B." (Wartime Prices and Trade Board), is still in effect. If you need a bicycle, and qualify as an essential user, go to your C.C.M. dealer and fill in a Bicycle Purchase Application Form and he will supply you with a new C.C.M. from stock or within a reasonable time. And should you ever need parts, service, Dunlop Tires or accessories? follow the lead of the boys-they know-and go to a C.C.M. dealer. Then you, too, can say "There's the Place I Get my Genuine C.C.M. Parts"- rhe store with the “C.C.M. Service" sign. PEACETIME MAKERS or aicvcissfiovcvcirs,‘ BlKE-WAGGONS, CYCLETS, JOY-RIDERS, JOY-TRIKES rauiii ii BICYCLES, FOR ‘nunnind