' [prising that enabled the Macks to - Buddy Rcsar and a triple by Hank i Majcski produced ihe first run. A REABII FOR IIIIBKEWS ‘Ike fall-flavored Tobacco which never flsoppohll. 20s Per I'll leld The Island Oval illckey I. lilcbolsos TOBACCO C0" LTD. Charlottetown Cleveland Right Hander Turns Back Detroit 1 (By The Game... Press) Charles lRcrll ‘lilllllTP, determ- ined lint» (‘lev d rghiluintier. iurnrri rim in!“ 1 the Amcrican Leaguv-iviiriiij; .. . .i ‘Fvscrs ves- terday with n four-flit iui) that gave the Indiars a 4-1 \'lCl.0l'} and out Detroit's lcnd tn 2 l—.'.2 games: over New York Yankees who con-i tlnmd their winning spree byl Mtlppin-g Vhshlnginn 5-2. Cleveland rriril-rl l0 safcilcs nff, Paul (Dizqvi ‘Trout in Wore twice‘ in the second inning and twvice. more in the fifth. ‘ Embroc, pltching, in fill-degree‘ temperature. walkvri only uvn. struck out lnur- -- ".11 in euctessioil —an(l lct ihc ‘ligcrs gcf only oncl man as farm §Pl‘l)il(‘i ‘sass until.‘ Dick Wakcfieldgq homer ruined his,‘ shutout alter two were ntit in thei ninth. - "Ihird baseman Bill Johnson con- tinued hi5 hitting jig. collecting a three-run liomcr and two singles today Ln Yankccs 5-2 win over Washington, time’? seventh victory 1n their last cight starts. The Yanks exploded five runs to breakup a, scnrniess duel between zany wyirm and Frank Shea in the sixth. < Tommy l-fenrich‘; triple follow- Lng a walk to George Btirnweiss scored one and. after George Mc- Quinn we; intentionally passed. Johnson hi: a homer. tarry Berra lnsshcd another home run to complete th‘ scoring. Shea was credited with his fifth straight win. although Joe Page finished the last three innings. Relic: pitcher Russ Christopher mmcked a single to lcft that scored the deciding run in the ninth as Philadelphia Athletics prepped a four-game losing streak by nosing out Boston Red Box 8-2 The hit culminated I two-run overcome a i-2 deficit. a single by i walk and a double by Eddie Joost i in the fifth accounted for the only i other run. Starting pitcher Bob lavage yielded nnly fly, safeties, but two Q1 flhgge were stifficicvii for the Red 50x to notch two runs. One was a fifth-inning home-r by Don Gutteridga. .. 8t. Louis Browns dofeatcdfiitlmm. white Sox 4-2 in a night some b» fora 10.242 \\'indy City fans. Ellis Kinder pitched a seven hitter to in his second victory as the cums chibbed imee wnm 8m: pitchers for 11 blows. Allen Thinks Swain Should Be Titlcholder ‘TORONTO. May I. — f0?) — Montreal's Hubert Gngnier may be rated 4s Dnminlmi featherweight champion by the Canadian Box- ing Federation. but Jack (Deacon) Alien thinks that crown =hould be wnm by his TYTOfEQc, Teddy Swain. swain, a gravitate of’ Allen's um- stcur boxing cirrus at Massey Hall here. nppcniw in he scmivwindup of a boxing vrird here June 2. with a Canadian-born Japanese, Kai- sumi liiorlnkn. as an opponent and Allen has Writ/wt 2o Frank Hogan, _pl"E‘Slri(‘:'.f cf the (LEA. in Mon- tToRl, zvskirg ilzni. Swain br- recog- nizr-d ns (illlllll ly-lrvrc the bout. Fcnlurc prrfnrmr-rs on the card will iuclurlc annliiflr of the Dea- cnn's chattels. Dave Castilloux of Montreal, w)". mrrls Li‘l Arthur Twit-unit. Nwvn ligittvirclght, \ Tigers 4-1 Girls Softball League Meeting All girls interested in the form- ing of a Girls‘ Softball League are asked to meet at the Knights nf Columbus Home this ail at 7.30. i Ask llsley To Pitch First Ball At Festival KENTWIDLE. N.S.. May 29 ~ (C?) - Members df the Annapolis Valley apple blossom festival com- mittee planned tonight to lsk Jus- tice Minister Ilsiey to throw the first ball in tomorrow's game be- tween lvlliddletan and Halifax Ship- a .vvere able to win the 7 season. We Offer: FOR KITCHEN Not phased a bit by the mig- ration to other squads of several. nf last ycar‘s players Charlie‘ Ryan and Ifrcdciy McCubc. conch; and manager of the Anchors base-i ball team have been rebuilding‘ ibc past few days and yesterday slated they were quite confidenz| of having Just ns strong a team on the field on opening day ss title last‘ 4' -l- + Il- “What we have lost in exper- icnce. We have gained in youth", was the terse statement emanat-i ing from the Anchor's‘ lcadersi The action of the players may have had them ivorried but ihcrei was little sign of it in the brlcfi conversation and it is now evi-i dent the west end crew will bcl ready when the umpires “battcrl up" sounds on June 8th. 1 + 1' + Their action is a commendable yards of the Halifax and District Baseball lccgfle at. nearby Mid‘! dleion. ‘ The game will open the round cf events which will make up the three-day festival. Mr. Ilsley was expected to arrive here from Ottawa by plane an s visit to hi: constituncy o! Digby- Annapolis-Kings. Says Racing‘ ilas Number 0f llntidy Spots By JIM KEARNEY Canadian Press staff Writer TORONTO. May 20—With the recent suspension of six jockeys by Vancouver's B. O. Turf and Country Club providing a suitable starting gate. Andy (Toronto Star) Lytie is off to s driving start. on Canadian racing! attitude toward the little men whose job it is to sit atop the thoroughbred: and always go their best lick. I Rounding the quarter pols Andy nbtcs the B. C. Turf and Coun- try-Clubs managing director, Al Hardy, is alleged to have told the press: "We are lust dunging our floor show. Any promote is entitled to that, isn't he?" Going into the backstretch. Andy moves up with: , "Racing in Canada is a fine ‘ business, but it has a number of untidy spots. These show most clearly in the public eye when the riders, whom you could term the have-note, collided with the voices that represent the haves. or the operators. What form of justice, British _or what have you. is it when the right to take away a man's livelihood arbitrarily and without explanation is srrogated tc men today who yesterday oc- cupied sflots similar to the de- prived men a year or two ear- lier?" At the head of the stretch Andy goes to the bat-for the Jockeys. “Unfortunately for them, jock- eys are the proverbial whipping boys, the always eligible guinea pigs for this great rscket...as it is hopeless, apparently, to expect decent treatment when riders can be dismissed from work at the whim of an official. and equally vacuous to expect unity in dis- tantly-placed operating set-ups. or helpful action from governments to remedy cruelties to riders and other non-influential oafs. the only avenue left to riders and f irack ginneys is to unite and af- filiatvwith horsemcnb associat- ions for s. measure of protection they otherwise must do withelt." I in an Pill ilr. Until 1e 1,. featherweight wills was vacant. and Allen figures ‘Iain m; done mwrr- to I8! ilc laurel: llinu (P nlrr The Kiwr-Ousnilniix swap which ~p|‘llllll.\f‘_- 1-. I», a ennui. beiweeni hi; gporLg page, Andy's gm] the l‘l'liiiilif‘~.< nf fiw- vincwvisc Cafi-i word; “c; iiiicux nvd lien . ‘Mfhgt hgppgng ‘in jqgkgyg in 01 thc 11"‘-\'l"‘"1\"-~1'f1 .' their racing lives shouldn't occur N621". "my 11m" 111" ""51 hm“ to vagrant canines. But it does office fight nii‘.n"‘inn here in s docadc. Ono your new uiun King turned profcxsinnnl iblii-vvi-e promtfcrs would havc ouccrozi if zvnyone sug- gesled that the lnz-uiaie dropper" tackle the 32-\ca:-cl<l frmcr (‘mi- nrlian lillilll.\"l_ :1 and welterweight fillflllipiun. But. in l2 months of battling Yul‘ taxi‘. Ill Arthur has earned the chance. Oasiy may have slipped but he's ltlll capable of giving a boxing los- eon to some of the best light- weights. in the business. YEO THEATRE .. _.... ___._ "BAN ANTONIO" Technicolor ERROL FLYNN ALEXIS SMITH A1 ‘ nuns! - m...‘ And coming under the wire in a dead heat with the bottom of happen. and it will continue to do so under a continuing feudal system of turf regulation." [Favored To Win The Epsom Derby one to say the least. Many an- other manager or coach would have thrown up the sponge im-l mediately with a "whats ihe use"! ztttitude, but nnt these twn. Thcl players in question, we are told.’ left of their own free will and not because pressure of any kind was brougM: to bear. so immedi- oteiy the gaps were filled by Jun- icrs. 4 It 0 4 That was the first step. Now it becomes necessary to place the players in the positions best suit- ed to them. Practice sessions at, every opportunity will solve this,‘ problem and although AIcCabu. and Ryan aren't expecting any‘ wonders right off the bat they, have high hopes that once thci younger members of thr- team‘ have tasted competition they will fit into the Anchors‘ team like cogs in a smooth running mach-i ine. v i 0 -l- Il- 4- l Speculation on ihe outcome oil ihe lifcCloskey-Mcdley ten-round 50TH!) at ihe Forum Saturday night was rife around the Cit." yesterday and with tlu- advance sale of tickets being eaten up it‘ looks as if a very large crowd will‘ be on hand for the opening shot.‘ in the Archer-Mclscilnn program" —-—-- fl-d- 4- + -f- Conversion from an ice forum into a fight arena has now taken place at the Forum with the big site in readiness for the equally big crowd that is expected to at. fend. Oui-of-town fighters ar. rived on the scene last night in addition to cn-promnicr McLellan Ind 1t is likely um Medley and 95301051163’ will complete their raining with light workouts some time today although at the um.» nf writing nothing definite coitld. be ascertained on this mattep + 4- -l- + Meanwhile the semi-finalists and preliminary boys werg said to be all ready for their scraps. Fighters from New Haven and Clyde River. boys who ave mak-, ing their debut in ring warfare, are expected to furnish hard-hit- ting, frce swinging action all the WHY. while the semi-final go be- twfiefl Huffy Pnultcn and Camp- bell from Pictou. N.S., may turn, out to be a spotlight stealer from. the main cventcrs as Campbell 15 sagd to be a willing, two-figted scrapper who will give the Island "BMW/eight champion ihe tough- est test of his ring career. + + + ‘l- Likelihood of the forming of fi Maritime horsemenls protective association in the near future. is Certainly a step in the right direc- tWn. At the annual meeting of the P. E. I. Harness Racing club on Wednesday night ihe matter was explained thoroughly by Mr David Neimn. supervisor of the movement, and Judging by the enthusiasm with which the sub- ject was received it appears as if in the future drivers. caretakers‘ nnd grooms will be looked after in the event of sickness or acct-l dents. i» 4- 4- + , As was pointed out these boys are continually risking permanent injury and sometimes death it- self as they g0 about their duties of giving fans the thrills that harness racing produces. Many times. perhaps. the parts they play have been overlooked bur with the success of the venture practically assured they can now be assured of the best of treat- ment and care should they have the misfortune to run up against LONDON, May ZO-John A. Dewsrs‘ unbeaten thrcs-year-old ‘Tudor Minstrel, is an odds-on- favorits for the Epsom Derby scheduled for Epsom Downs, June 1 ill fate which occurs on racing strips all over the continent. 0 ~0- 1- Il- Here is how Bcz 0'Mesra views ‘In the latest call over at 1on- don's Victoria Club, home of bookmakers, betting was fl-to-fo on Tudor Minstrel. The Mahsrcja of Baroda! Say- sjino was listed as second fav- orite st 4-1: the King's Blue Train was third favorite at 100-5; end the Irish horse. Grand Wee- ther. owned by Y. L. Kirkpatrick. was fourth favorite at 22-1. At Wednesday's final accept- ance siege 23 horses were left in the Its-mile classic. Maurice Rlchs 's selection as winner of the rt ‘Trophy; O O O + Maurice Richard came home just in time to get himself sn- cther thousand dollars. f-fe won the Hart Trophy and he richly deserved it. Richard has in a few short years become one of the authentic greets of hockey. f-fil scoring feats need no repetition. O O O 0 Let it suffice to say of him what Bill Cowley said at the end of the season that many who eg- THE CHARLOTTETOWN iBn-itish Golf Tourney Strain u s...» In Quarter-final Stagefo Make fllvmnics 'Thc Biggest Ever liccn competition Features Events At Horseshoe Sluh > A good altondance, keen compet- H1011 and plenty of excitement featured last. nigli|'s pro-season cvcnis at the Brighton Horseshoe Club, Two challenge matches and three special competitions were entered into with 70st and watched with keen enjoyment by the spectators. D. Shepherd won the total points contest. with R. Larter taking sec- ond place and Andy Martin third. In the total ringers contest W. Evans won a special prize donated by McCourt Bros. Three contest- anis-Andy Martin. ll. Slhcphcrd and R. Larior-all tied for second place. Len Phillips won the Vets Groc- ery prize in the obstacle contest with D. Shepherd second. Earl Mc- Court and Andy Martin shared honors in the uhird spot. A challenge match between Jack McCourt and Andy Martin was wcn by Mr. Martin. With his victory wcnl a prize donated by the Vets Grocery. The second challenge match-lac- iwvcen J. Bupie and W, Evans-was won by Mr. Evans. I Baseball s a a Big Six (Three leaders in each league). G AB R H Pct. Walker, Phillics 3;’. 114 l7 43 .377 Mi-Qurnn, Yanks 3i 109 l5 41 .376 Mizc. Cvianis 32 114 3B 41 .360 Muliin, Tigers 32 117 26 4i .350 Ellicti_ Braves 34 123 21 43 .350 Dillinger, Browns 32 138 l9 48 .348 Runs ilatted in: National Lea- gue, Tnrgcson. Braves 36; Ameri- can Lccttguc. Williams, Rod Sex 28. Home runs: National League, Milt‘, Giants 13: American Lcaguc, Williams, Red Sox ll. Aussie Ring Star New Ruby Robert? svn-Njrruuoymqi. iCP) excise... sun's urmnooL-s since tile d n!’ the great Ruby Robert Fins‘ .0219 has Australia seen a fighter like Dave Sands of Newcastle, New South Wales, hold- er of the Australian middleweight and light-weight. titles. A qunrtev-casle aboriginr. Dave ccmcs from a. fighting family. His dad was the Eight and welterweight king of the New South Wales North Coast 1n his day. Dave was brought up in ihe town of Kcmpsc-y, 200 milcs north 0f Sydney, in the tim- ber country, and is an expert exe- man. He docs his training while at nvork cutting girders sud railway sleepers. Dave is s terrific puncher and a clcvcr bcxa: At 159 3-4 pounds lic has whipped cveryitiing in Aus- tralia at that weight and ibove. gravated Richard, who tormented him continually, who tried to be- set him with illegal difficulties. couldn't. carry his stick. -l- -l- + If- Riclmrd did well for himself in a financial way this year. Which is only right. as he was a fan magnet. who kept the turnstiles on the spin. 4- l- i- 4' Most. everybody knows the Rich- ard cf the ice. Few know the lzome loving Rocket who is so de- voted to his wife and children. He is a quiet. unostentatious per- son, almost to the point of shy- ness. There is nobody more agree- able. more painstaking in trying ‘n please. or more appreciative of public acclaim. O It 1|- 0- Richard is patient with photo- graphcrs and goes to any length to please them. There isn't any- thing big-headcd or blustery a- bout Richard. His selection as Hart 'f‘rophy winner will be pop- ular and while it was almost a foregone conclusion. there is sometimes n slip in these things but the selectors picked well and showed soundness and sense in taking Milt Schmidt as the run~ ner-up. ADVANCE SALE OF FIGHT TICKETS From 11 mm. Today and Saturday GET YOURS EARLY p G UARDIAN CARNOUSTIE. Angus. Scotland; May I) - (C?) — The United states’ invading field was himmed tn three today while all the high- Lv-tcuiod English and Scottish competitors were knocked out of the running ms the British amateur-i golf championship reached the quarter-final stage. The fllliife of cm draw oustcd1 more of the Americans than did the homo links forces. Ted Bish- op, Uniicd States amateur chum-i pion. bowed nut at the 20th green to fellow countryman ‘Bud Ward while Willie Tumesa similarly ousted "Strong Boy" Prank Sitsn- ahan 3 and l. 'l‘lic only invader stopped by the defenders was Skee Rlegcl who lost one up to Robert lRobini Ruther- ford. a litilc-lzuowi. Scottish play- er. Rlegcl, carlicr ir. the day, had eliminated the American Walker’ Cup team captain. Francis Ouimet. Tllr third United States survivor was Dick Chapman who entered the quarter-finals alter handing a fearsome H-and-G drubbing lo an- other Scotsman. Man Stevenson. Britain's Chief hope in fl‘e round of l6 was Alec Kyle, 19.19 litlist, ‘out he fell before Sam McKinley 50f Glasgow. Thus five relatively ‘dark horses — McKinley, Ruther- lmu, m... Campbell and w. Wil- .son. all Scots. and ihe snic- Eng- i lisliman. WS. W'se — were left to 1 face ill‘! Americans‘ thrmt i0 carry off the championship. Rutherford, 45-year-old mechan- ical engineer with n bush; mous- tache. held a peeve against the, British Wnlkcr Cup selectors fori not ewzn inviting him to thclr‘ trials earlier in the month. and hc took it out on Riegcl. Not alone did the Lrdignant Scotsman crack down on ihe in- rz-occnt Ricgci. Ebriier in the day he ousted Loflnfird Crowley, lead- ing singles playcrs cu the British cup tram, on ihc 19th hole. Rutherford. who strained a-lig- ameut Wcdncsday. leaned "in a cane as he confided sombreiy: "I just wanted i0 proved to thei selectors 0f our Wllkcr Cup team‘ that I should at least itnvc becn vvnriivv of gctiing invited‘ to their trials." Ruthcrfnrds triumph over Rie- golfpioked by many to win the big cup. brought a needed boost in Scottish morale after Chapman had irzi-mplcd down two highland- cvs during the day like so much hcathcv in the path cf u flank. In the morning the Wnehurstw. N.C., ace shunted aside Vic Fin-, laysnn o: Carnousiic 6 and 5. and‘ uztd. lie. virt-T lllflily ripped the 1am, ruggcd course apnx-l as he trounced Stevenson. Baseball Results AMERICAN New York .. 000 005 000 5 0 0 Washington 000 002 000 2 6 0 Shea, Page. <7) and Berra, Houk r6); Wynn and Evans. Boston . 0l0 0I0 000 2 5 2 Philadelphia .. 000 010 002 3 l 4 Dorisii and Tcbbctis; Savage, Christopher (81 and Rosar. Cleveland 020 000 002 4 I0 0 ,Dctro|t . 000 000 001 1 4 1 ‘ Embree and Hogan; Trout and Wagner. St. Louis .. 000 (722 000 {If Z Chicago . .... 200 000 2 ‘l l Kinder and Early; Grove_ Cald- well. Papish and Tresh. NATIONAL Brooklyn .. 000 100 02.1 4 l0 0 New York .. 00f 040 00x 5 II 1 flatten. Chandler (5). Gregg (8) and Edwards; Hartung_'1‘rinklc (Bl and Lombardi. Giticago at Pittsburgh, poned. (Only games scheduled). K. of 0. Practice post- Practice for K. of C. JunQm-s this evening at K.C. diamond at 5.30. Legion Practice At 6.30 on Park diamond. Inr pox-tam practice ell players please attend. i AT FORUM MAY 30, 1247 Qloeawe-“Q-e Ily JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, May Ell-The organ- izing committee of the Olympic Games, housed in pert of a store in London, is racking its collect- ivs brains to ensure that every- thing is in place—~down to the last nail-when the gamcs open in July, 1948. The executive committee meets about once a week. st least one c! the various sub-committees gets together every day. and talk toes on about wood to be used in building a certain type cf boat. program printing and accommo- dation for the 5,000 athletes and officials. Press Officer Ron Church says: "we have started none too soon" and the multitudinous details to be looked after bear him out, One of the stickier jobs is to devise a foolproof system of prim. mg and issuing tickets. The com- mittee has already thousands of applications-many asking for blocks of hundreds-and members nre determined there will be no "racket" in these. Twkel-Pfinllfl! experts have been "$11M l’ 1191i! out; schemes have 159511 Dut to the committee, but the technical difficulties in print- lng season tickets, day tickcgg tickets for individual events, are "B1151"! many wrinkles, (lid Satchclfoot Ticket Distribution I I No tickets for the games 3111i available to date. They won't be i‘li...i§.i.“i..'."°.§‘.‘§§ lii’...iiiiih."liij "B15 T119 M90131! [By The Csnadlsn Frau) New York Giant rookie who fail- ed u .... outfielder. hurled his mates back to the top of the Na- tional League yesterday by stop- ping Brooklyn 5-4. although he couldn't last. the nine innings. Hariung. who didn't wvalk a bat- ter, pulled out of his most serious jam in the eighth by grabbing Daxle Walker's smash and starting a double play after two men al- ready had scored. When Gene He:- manski grcetcd him with a hcmer 1o open the ninth he was replaced by Ken Trlnkle. It was the fourth straight pitch- ing triumph for the Rondo. TeX-- hurricane. who added a single and a triple to the Giant attack. Bill Rigney rapped out n pair of doub- les in his two official trips to the plate. The defeat dropped Dodgers in- to a tie for second with the Chi- cago‘ Cubs. The Giants vaulted in- to the lead by a four-point mar- gm. It was the Only National League game played yesterday, with Chi- cago rained out at Pittsburgh in the only other fixture scheduled. ellillrrlpgmcemcilaitbvlvlll be made. The, i er ova a e will depend n —“-’ acceptances from countries liar-i MONTREAL- MRS‘ 29 — (C?) -' vited to Lake part in the games It tcok former heavyweight box- and when distribution is started .1111‘; “11"""1""“ Prim‘) came“ 1'0 in Britain, ygufl] ofgflmznflons,ict a wrestling crmvd record in hottest and schools will be considcrctifMvllllf-Il —— 0m‘ 01 111E first. igi-unt and 3706p towns 0n the g Application before actual prlnt-1‘~'°"11""""1- xngls completed will be useless. “MWHPQY-l gmppu“? "xmmnta n, n major prob I visually llock 10.000 1o 13.000 strong solved. to see WITSUHIZ notables such as Lou Thcsz, Hobby Manageff, Yvon Rnbvrt, Felix Miqu-u and a host of other husky muulcrs show their wares, But when Da Prccm, now touring North America as wrestler and fcicrcc, entered the Forum ring to meet ruggcd Brill Dusek, 14,500 rabid fans — all ages crammed the arena. That nxntch alone brought down Accommcdatio lent. has ‘been partially ‘ with selection of miliiarga camps; in various. spots around Lnndoni nnd Torquay, on thc south coast,| 101‘ 3-990 Dcrsons. The commit-l tee now is confident housing fori the other 1.100 will be clgafgdi 1011K before the games start. _ Of course. the question of feed- 111g the athletes. officials and vis-f ltors has crapped up from varimisi quarters and the way things arc now in thisbcit-tlglttcnilic lslund.’ it would be a pretty good ldca if, $119 fvreiun teams brought their,‘ own supplies. Rain or shine. win or lose. the games remain the greatest sports show on earth even if the couu-, try strains at the scams to org. anize it. .1 ropuluiion n1 ucvcr making mclay Whilc u boxer. Curncru doesn't believe in bring too explicit about anything and generally prefers to have a ques- tion repeated before answering. us- ually in monusyiliblrs. Hc said ha was glad to be fin- lShlIl \\.th boxinfl- "Forly too old for tlisi. racket," grunicd the man who lost his '.vorld's heavyweight boxing crown fo Max Bflcl‘ in 193.3. after Piling it from Jack Sharkcy three years prcvioitsly. a The huge boxer-wrestle:- drew a chuckle during his Montreal slay when someone uskcd him where he was going next. Less Betting 0n . Ponies In Ontario "Oh — ah — some lace — all! TORONTO‘ May 29 __(CP)__M‘M_ cling!‘ rclllicd Da Pr m. pointing though ilhe largest or -d - m“ ‘- , witness a sporting e891‘... ozfirull: "Ottawa? someone suggested. Domin1°n_45,w0 persons __ be! "Ottawa. thcts right,‘ agreed more than 5700.000 at Woodbine C‘"'“°m" When asked what he did durlnfl the was. the Italian giant. born in a village near Venice. replied: "Pickcushovc-l. Pickenshovel for the Germans. Movies too. movies and fights." ' He arrived in they United States about eight months ago and ex- pecis to return to his native Italy in bctlcr financial shape than he did followirg his defeat bl’ 33¢!‘- Carnern ‘ms reputed to have 'gonc home broke. losing mull 0! his money to unscrupulous amne- Park on King's Plate day last, sag. urday it's a fact that mutual play has plummeted in Ontario this YEEI‘. Officials of the On-tairio Jockey Club revealed yesterday that during the seven days of their meeting thu-e was s decline of $320,020 in betting over the corresponding seven days of tihe spring of 1946. And it was learned that the O..f. C. was down $45,000 from a your ago in receipts, meaning a drop in mutual take and attendance. These figures life regarded by horsemen es a forecast of a gener- al d-rop in muiuel play in Ontario this year. (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX, May 29 - Halifax Arrows took over undisputed lead- ership in the Halifax and District Baseball league tonight by de- feating l-Ialifax Shipyards 7-4. Louis Moulaison. Yarmouth County hurler, went the routs for Arrows but Paul Olinick, former Windsor, Ont.. star was batted out of the box in the fourth in- ning and Shipyards sent in wiif Huslcilson. Lockeport, NA. pitch- er. to relieve him. friends. They stowed ncy. When the ship's clothes until the freilhm docked COAL 1 mmcm son- slsfeo DELIVERED ' COAL CO. mow: 249a ARNFASlf n. Y. Giants Back F. Top By Slim Margin I-Iartung Wins Fourth Clint Has-lung. highly publicizedl iAutomobilc Race $3.666 for old Safchelfoot who had‘ AND FURNACE mmgmm m r... I-‘or 500-milo Thrown Wide Open JINDIANAPOLJS Ms arm field m» the ‘f’ at the Indianapolis motor "m: way tomorrow was tin-nun ma. open on the eve o! ti.» claisl¢ when_ the American Automobile Association contest board late to. dag granted s request nf 4.1,.“ an car owners to rmi qualifications. m l rum‘, The late reopening of qualifier. lions was made conditional m} i)‘ granting of waivers by the owners of the 28 cars which already lug qualified when the regular deed- line was passed last night. There was an immediate scurry. ing about to obtain walvm fro... the qualified car owners. Leaders Pn the movement in another qualification scssion “or, Joe Lcncki and Ralph Hepburn e! ~Chlcago and Joe Thorpe, Holly- wnod sportsman. Tliorne is the owner n! file m which the late George not...“ drove to victory in last year's rm. Tony Bettenhausen made sn un. successful attempt to qualify m. car late yesterday, then qualified in another car. Lenckl also is a car owner and Hepburn is president of the Al... erlcan Society of Professional Automobile Racers, the group that held out for more pri7o money but finally reached an agi-eeiucnt under which A.S.P.A.R mflntilffl were allowed lo luflko lute cnivics, The weather bureau predicted sunshine, but continued cool ivcathcr. which will favnr high speeds. The race has liccn posi- pohed only once-En IFIIS-ni- tough the i926 event was Slflpptd at AOO-milcs by rain. Thr- specdavay said 65.000 n- scrved seats had been sold and it was prepared lo handle r. crowd of more than 100.000. In the polo position will ho Ttrl Horn 0f Paterson, N.J., no worst‘ than fourth in the lust seven races. Beside him will hc Cliff Beraere win. and Mauri Rose of Chicago. co-wiilncr in 104.1. , Down the line are such peren- nial contenders as Bill Osntlon of Indianapolis, Russ Snowberger cf Detroit. George Conor of Los Ang- eles. Duke Nalon of Los Aiizclu and Al Miller of Standish, Mich. Rex Mays of Glendale. Calif, who won second money mi two occasions, will be back h‘, the .m|ddle of the seventh row be- cause of his last-minute qualifi- cation. Experienced hnlids prcdlvlcfi the crowd would have a nmv hm after this year's race. 'I‘iic.\' W!" sold on Bill Holland. the roller- skater from Bridgeport, Conn. who topped all qualifiers with l speed of 128.756 miles an hour- REMEMBER WHEN Floyd Roberts, 38-year-old M!‘ tion cnigncci- of Van Ntl."~‘- 551-- Won the 2cm. running of me 5W mile annual Indianapolis Mow? speedway classic nine years n80 '°' dey. Roberts averaged 1.17.2 mile! an hour breaking the PYPWW’ record of 13.58 sct in 1037. Bers and various c:edilcr5-_ m“: reports say he sailed Willi in" W1 These three summon mamas:- m. vmm Norms Hughes (left to right), were lonesome for their way. on the fgplghhr Iphrim Braver ptein found than} be wt them W 1”" and 80 pairs of shoes- ‘seuauian l" American W a n. Bid- um: If. "II QIIQIIII. ei‘