fimamllill nowmuc wnasruuo BASEBALL - runsaovs lluinwun KENTTEAM mqding the challenge 0f the Tuxlfl team. West Kent School ‘gushed their wishes by ‘ 1231a were 12-0 at the Abogweit gr ds yesterday afternoon. The game WM me scene of some hard-hitting, gimpson hitting a. isomer, and two mrea buggers. Bun Rettenbirry. H. Mulnnla, J. Campbell, Price and r. Robertson also settins Ions drives for wcst Kent. Fcr the Tuxls, Ramsay, John- wr, and Archer made some nappy playg and mu: Merriwell upheld the reputation which he has made for hinvclfplt may be interesting go note that Price pitihed a no hit, no run game. This game is just what was needed to give coach CamPbell a. chance to pld: out a team for the game with Bummerside High $011001 this Sat- urdlff- w. K. S. TUXIS Unaupsh- ' Omtdur L Simpson l, Darraoh Pitcher N. Price C. Johnson 1st Base l. Suundor: W. Pickard 81d Dace I. mttenbmy L. Mathiecon are Base I. Campbell D. Ramsay l. Stop I. Miaohnh o. Stewart n. Held 1. Cudmore L. Archer . C‘. Field l. O0‘: W. Olmndler If. Robertson R. Sinclair HIGH LIGHTS Dug Ramsay who hit a home am in Summerside although not Wins. pin-M I 81181991 cam- Bill Granola:- showed speed in \ll0 outfield. , , 0. Johnson pitched good ball, ht poor support let him down. l. Sa/undera on first base medic ureat pickup on one that was Dated for a hit. ::Persian Balm creates lovely lomplexions. velvety smooth, Cools and relieve: the akin. Makes it de- lightfully soft-textured. Alluringiy Ihgrant. Delightful to use. Swiftly absorbed by the tissues, imparting that elusive charm so distinctive of ihe dainty woman. Persian Balm mtcot: tho delicate skin. Preserves and enhances the loveliest complex- ion . Every discriminating woman Ihouid use this silvery lotion. It is unrivalled as a flawless aid to ~and economical too. Every ip Top suit or top coat is worth more than you pay for it becausc— 1. Only the finest of British woollcns are used. Z. Every garment is hand cur to your personal measurements. _ 3Q The latest style trends arc followed. '4. Fir and satisfaction 1| guaranteed. _ 5- The price is only $19.50 TIP TOP Clothes Exclusive Dealer m tor ‘stone 115 GRAFTON ST. Timely Tips On _S_port RENEWAL 0F FUED Providing the weather man is on 800d behaviour, the All-Stars and Abblcs renew their baseball feud at the Abegweit grounds tonight at 5 D-m. sharp. murmurs r01: romcurs TILT Following are the player‘ who Wmbrise the two nines tonight: Ail-Star-a-Simpaon‘, Ayers and, McFarlane, Blanchard, K. Acorn, Beaton, Squarebriggs, Whitlock, mirley, Saunders, Pat Power, T. Williams, Stewart. Abbiea-Erancla, Connors, Goes and Price, McInnis, Jemmett, Brad- ley, Whelen, McEachem, Bolger, Doyle McNeil. Umpires-At the plate, Dr. I‘. C. Dougan; on the bases Barry H. Craswell. IIGIITH IATTEIIY WIN FROM NAVY Scorink five run: in their last time at bat, the eighth battery soft ball aquad won from the latter by staging a whirlwind finish. FIGHT TONIGHT In flu main bout at tho boxing sbow tonight at the Armourles. Earle MsoLeod will meet, “Kid” Oseie Meiklc of Halifax. Local fans were much imprassed by MacLeodb boxing at the last meet and are looking forward to a bang up scrap tonight. - BASEBALL RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE 11.11.15. New York ... 5 ‘I 0 Boston . .. i111 2 Maclfadyen, Van Atta and Dick- ey; Brown and Ferrell. st. Louis 1 1 1 Chicago .. e 14 o McDonald. Gray. Stiles and Shea; Wyatt and Grubs. ... ... ... ~00 Cleveland l 7 0 Detroit .. 0 f 0 Hildebrand and Pytlak; Bridges and Hayworth. Philadelphia. .... 6 l0 0 Washington .. ... .. .. i015 2 Walberg, Mahaffey. Grove and Majeski; Thomas. Russell and Sew- ell. NATIONAL LEAGUE 1L5. l. Chicago .. 1 8 3 Cincinnati .. 2 8 0 ,Warncke and Hartnett, Taylor; Derringer and Hemsley. Brooklyn ... -.. 410 2 Philadelphia ... 15 20 3 Beck, Clark, Ryan, Shautc and Outen; Holley and Davis. Boston .. 0 New York ... ... ... ... 7 Bette, Seibcld, Morgan and Ho- gan, l-largrave; Hubbell and Man- cuao. ... coo cl: ... Pittsburgh .. a ‘I 1 St. Louis 4 5 0 Swetonic and Grave; Dean and Wilson. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ILILE. Buffalo ..1... ... ... 4 4 1 Albany .. ... ... ... 8 7 1 Fussell and Dunning; Coleman and Legett. Toronto 1 B 0 Jersey City .. b 'I 3 Frazier and Heving; Cascareila and Renae. _‘\ .. ... e-- -- ..£ em o 411: De- Rochester .. Newark .. Ostermueller and Florence shong, Mamaux and Kies. Montreal ...‘... .... 613 0 Baltimore ... ... ... 715 0 (10 lnninll.) Pornoraki. Dietrich and Tate; ounningbun. Cantrell and Sill"- BANABA’S Buuiiilm smuiummv Sergeant P. Hooper, P. E. I. Lighthorse, Milton, Will S ail With Canadzfs Pre- mier Riflemen. (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, June Iii-Commended by Colonel R. B. Simmonds, V, 1),, of Halifax,‘ Canada's from of l4 marksman will sail from Montreal on Sunday morning, their hopes set high for returning to the Dominion that m"st covetrd, of a-ll Bislcy trophies. the King's prize. Among the l4 are nine experienced shots to whom the ranges at Bisley are quite familiar, while five have "made Blsley" for the first time this year. Analysis of the team shows no fewer than ten hailing from On- tario militia regiments; two are from New Brunswick, while Que- brc and Prince Edward Island have one each.‘ The Queen’: Own Rifles of 1'01"- ontc alone sends three of its per- aonnel, company Quartermaster Sergeant W. S. Morrish, Sergeant Major N. J. McLeod and Sergeant E. C. Stock. From the some city the 48th Highlanders contribute two- Company Sergeant Major G. M. Emslie and Sergeant J. Bm-iand. New Bnmswlcks aspirants are Licut. D. O. White, 67th Regiment Saokville: and Lieut. A. o. Gunter of Saint John. Prince Edward Island is repres- ented by Sergeant P. - Hooper, the P. E. I. Light Horse, Milton, and Quebec by Pie. G. A. Thompson, the Shorbrooks Regiment. The Bialoy team wil be inflected in the grmourles of the ViCtdfla. Rifles of Canada, Montreal, oh Saturday afternoon by Major Gen- cral A. G. L. McNaughton, C. B., chief of the General‘ Staff, and will sail on the Canadian Pacific Liner Mrntrrsc Sunday morning- unlfifnuu 8TANlINO (By/The Associated Press) Home Runs Yesterday -- Gehrig. Yankees, 1; Cooke, Red 50x, l; Gos- lin, Senatvrl. l; Suhr,’ Pirates, 1. The Modem-Ruth, Yankees. “I Foxx, Athletics, 14; Gehris. Yank- ees, 14; Berger. Braves. 1i; K761“- Philllcs, 10: l-lartnett. Cubs, 10; Lazzcrl Yankees. 10- Leogue totals-American, 2242 Nil- tional, 159; Total. 388- The Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics iudex number of retail sales rose from 72.8 in March to 83.8 in April. The numbers are based on mturng from 2.100 stores and 25 departmental stofcs- Thnre were increased sales by boot and shoe stores. clothing. fill’- niturc. hardware. dvera and clem- ers, general and departmental and candy. Drilzs. groceries, meats. music. radio and restaurant W65 declined. TENNIS GOODS We have a splendid stock of TENNIS BATS TENNIS BALLS BASE BALL GOODS IIAMMOCKS RUBBER BALLS GOLF BALLS FOOT BALLS BASE BALLS BATS. GLOVES. ETC. Agents for the A. J. RI-IACII—SI'AULDING SPORTING GOODS. Sold only It CATALOGUE PRICES. See our display of SPORT- ING GOODS in TOY DEPARTMENT. Barter 8100. Limited CJF . lflli THE "CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Prince Edward Island AERO CLUB General Meeting GITY HALL THURSDAY JUNE 15th 8 P. M. Everybody Welcome 101-6-13-31. zllN 1.00? S RElISEU The Eastern Loop of the Indus- trial League known as the "Bird League" comprising three teams viz, Hawks, Sea Gulls and Ravens has been revised and the schedule changed around. Following are the offioerm- Hon. Prvsident-—Mr. Alf Kclb. Presidents-Afr. Glen Partridge. Eirocutivwl-Iurrlcs-J. Michael. Sea Gulls-J. Ooughlin. Ravens- J. Monileth. ' Referees-Dr. Dougan, Wm. In- nis, and W. Craswell. S CIIEDULE —-First Section- June l6 Ravens vs. Sen Gulls. June 19 Hawks v5. Ravens. June 2i Sea. Gulls vs. Hawks. June 23 Sea Gulls vs. Ravens. J1me 26 Ravens vs. Hawks. June 28 Hawks vs. Sea. Gulls. June 30 Ravens vs. Sea Gulls. July 8 Hawks vs. Ravens. July 5 Sea. Gulls va. Havflm. SECOND SECTION fii, July 7 Ravens vs. Sra Gulls. dub 10 Hawks va. Ravens. July l2 Sea Gulls vs Hawks. July l4 Sea Gulls vs. Ravens. July 17 Ravens vs. Hawks. July l0 Hawks. vs. S01 Gulls. July 21 Ravens vs. Sea. Gulls. July 24 Hauika vc. Ravens. July 2B Sea Gulls vs. Hawks. The winner of first section meets winner of second soriirm. if same team wins both stations their will be no play-offs. cn1oi11 The following men. whose names were passed in at Monday night's meeting, and any others who are desirous of playing or learning to play cricket arc asked t-i attend a practice tonight at 0.15 p. m. at Victoria Park. Following the practice a. meeting will hr: held at th“ Y. in organize a. club and to choose a team to play against the H. M. S. Scar- borough. Albcrt Adair. Carl Boehner, E. V. Bell, Niall Burncit. Earl Burkv. Mickey Crkcr, H, Callback, H. Craswell, S. Dickson, E. Aglan. J. Hunter, L. Hadley, J. Hear-n. W. Henry, A, Henry. G. Iflflm, K. Johnston, J. Krnslorv. M. Owen. r1. Smith, W. Thornton. T. T- Thcmpson, H. Thornton. '1‘. Tcrs, F. Wright. G. Young. E. Morrison, R. Garnhum. Baseball In the ball game at Victoria Park last evening between the Anchors and Trojans the Anchors were de- feated by the score of 10-7. The Trojans heavy batting was the downfall of the Anchors. Anchors-Catcher, H. Hennesscyi pitcher, Ty Connors: lst base, C. Ryan; 2nd base, J. Francis; short stop, J. Roach; 3rd base, J. Wil- llams; left field, R. Dunn; 06111519 field, C. O'Brien; right field, J. McCormick. Trojans-Catcher. J. Sheppcrd; pitcher, B. Shcrigv; lot. basc, P. Murngghun; 2nd llflfif‘. J. McTaguc, V. Roach; short slop. J. Sherry; 3rd base,’ J. MacAlccr; lcft field, I. Murnaghan; ccnirc field A. Mc- Donald; right fir-id, F. Henncssey. Orator-l hope you are not un- mindful of the fnct that we all have a. duty to perform. Wr must combat the unrest which exists in the world today. Listener-I'm doini mi’ V"? N“- orator-How? Listener-d manufacture mattrcfll- §PORT 1 next few days, RENEWED - (Continued from Page 1) .1- Ferrera commented, "that free cir- culation of gold without free circu. lotion of goods would merely de- stroy currency reserves of numer- ous countries, or at any rate make them unstable." Russian Plan And while delegates muse over Cuba's modest plan Maxim Litvm. “"- Peviileh Commiaar for Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union, prom- ises another. lidr. Litvlnoff submits it to the conference tomorrow. He prepared the way tonight with a. barrage of documents. Booklets de- scribe how the Soviet Union has made trade treaties and negotiated credits with this atatsmd 0mm‘ A great album with innumerable diagrams illustrates the mounting success of the five-year plan. And "w Lltviflvfl Dian is unofficially heralded as something which wu] _____..i_____ "We have to recognize," Senator WORLD Among the American delegates some suggestions that their repre- sentation might quit the conference were hoard today when the demand for immediate settlement of war debts was renewed in the plenary session by pokesmer for Italy and South Africa. 771696 Illflifldtiorls were couched in jocular fornrbut made an im- presslon upon persons who recalled ‘the old adage that “many u truth is spoken in jest." U. a. “elcgflca Ruffled “M American feelings were ruffled‘ also by renewed insistence from French quarters. echoed by Itaiiani and Polish speakers, that the dol- lar and the pound must be stabil- ized before the conference can proceed to deal with any other question on the agenda. l The German demand for early, solution of credit and financiall problems, now keenly distressing‘ the Government of the Reich, was‘ brought before the world gathering‘ brink the conference face to rm, with realities. Its exact naturg the Sill-W delegation does not disclose. lt is expected to be, in effect, a, Duct of economic non-aggression. " General Debate In general debate this afternoon the German and Polish delegates succeeded each other without dis- ilute over the famous corridor, Adam Koo, Polish Undersecretary of Finance, urged that fundament- al solutions lay in stabilization o; currencies, rearrangement of debts and ro-atablishment of comma - cial free trade. “V0195! great pending political Dmhlrms are solved." said Baron Konstantin Von Neurath. German FOYelBD Mini-Ital’. "the deliberations of this conference can eel-dove m, satisfactory result." ~ Pedro Cosio, Uruguay, held the Ottawa agreements paved the way to reduction of tariffs by other countries. ‘mmorrow Dr. Enslebert Dolfuas, Austria's Chancellor, resumes dc- bate. Afterwards he flies back to Vienna. thereto take a hand ‘in suppression of riotous Nazis. Dr. Doifuss darkly urged press inter. viewers not to be unduly disturbed if certain things happened in the A11 W011“ b9 quiet again when the tourist season opened’ Hull Absent Cordell Hull, American Secretary of State, failed to appear at the plenary sessions of the conference today, despite the fact he was list- ed as the first speaker, and thus tossed the first surprise into a day throbbing with feverish activity and uncertainty. Mr. Hull was understood to have been delayed in addressing the conference by communications with Wflshinston dealing with the vital problems facing the conference. Negotiations with Washington, seeking a solution of the Anglo- American debt-payment puzzle were believed also to have delayed the clarifying statement by Mr. Chamberlain which first was set down for delivery ct a much earlier houn Driven by the necessity for an immediate decision upon debt p01- icy, the British Cabinet convened in a special session at nine dclock this morning, the second emergency meeting of govemmcnt leaders within l0 hours. As in the case of the extraordin- ary session last midnight, Ministers at the close of today's cabinet do. libcrations declined to reveal the results. Move Blocked Secretary Hull, attempting today at a meeting of the bureau of the Economic Conference, to obtain the post of chairman of the monetary commission for a member of his delegation, James M. Cox. was blocked by opposition from Premier Edouard Dnladier of France and supporting groups. M. Daladier demanded that this D055 go to the representative of a country which still maintains the gold standard-presumably France itself-and joined in urging the American Secretary of State to ac- cept tho chairmanship of the Ec- ' onomlc Commission. the other mo.- jor body which will determine the course of the par-icy. Mr. l-lull declined the Economic his delegation Chairmanship for by Baron Von Neurath who declar- i ed that "ultimately international‘ debts can be paid only in goods and services." French Policy Chairman J. Ramsay MacDonald, after a. brief delay to make sure that Mr. Hull was absent from this morning's plenary session called on Premier Daladier. The Frenchman boldly announced his government's desire for "monetary security" for commercial exchange. “The maintenance or reestablish- ment of liberty of gold movements appears lndispensible to us." M. Daladier said. “How are you going to reestablish the circulation of goods and conclude economic ac- cords if the measure of values rc- malns dependent 0n caprice or haz- ard? "What would you say of the en- glneer or architect who used an elastic yardstick?" After currency stabilisation. Prunes desires also to aec the con- clusion of economic accords and the launching of big international public works schemes to alleviate ployment andutiznulate the flow of capital, the Premier said. Invoking the conference to seek harmonized order and avoid econ- omic war, M. Daladler closed with a stern warning of the conse- quences of failure. “Dragged together toward the abyss}! he said, “the peoples of the world will find relief only in common action to restore universal confidence by free and loyal col- laboration." ' Italy Supports Britain Coming to the support of Prime Minister MacDonald who injected the war debts question yesterday although this subject is not on the agenda of the meetings, Signor Guido Jung, Italian Finance Min- ister, declarcd iihut this problem was of major importance. “The nrrnistine was signed at Lausanne," he said. “The final settlement ia now imperative." The raising cf price levels and stabilization of currencies are para- mount questions, hc told the dole- gations. “Monetary manoeuvres," he said, “are not only not the cure for this evil (he was referring to debts). but will make it worse in the end." General Jan Chi-istinan Smuis of South Africa also brought forward the question of debts, sharply criti- cizing American policy. The debt question was settled at Lausannc. he said, and this agreement will stand. "There is no going brick on it," he asserted. "The Lausannc Conference a. year ago placed the gravest responsibil- VBOXING nasxarnnr. omen SPORT NIGHT HORSE “RA cnvc AT Milligan & Morrison's Race Course NORTHAM, P Purses . $950.00 l i Starting at Wed. June 21st. . E. ISLAM Purses $950.00 8.80 p. m. ENTRIES 1N ALL CLASSES CLOSE JUNE 17th CLASSES .......... Purse $300.00 3 Seconds allowcdvfrottcrs Purse $300.00 3 Seconds allowed Trotters 1. 2.17 Trot and Pace 2. 2.28 Trot and Pace 3. lilatchcd Race Lucky Lindy vs. Heather Bell $300.00 Each side puts up $100. and the Management $100. \Vinnr:r Green Race, (to be made GENERAL (‘ONDITIONB All ram-n t» lu- raw-d nn (h! HUN- lunar plnu, rlzr 5 pr-rrr-nf of eurh llllfill‘ will III‘ nuurrlr-rl |l11~ whim-r, lln- YPIIllllIIIlPr to hn- rlaivlrrl ill llrrvr- M11111! parts, one pnrt to lu- nwrr! fur 0114-11 heat. In the event of Illerr helm: Ihvne hear winrm-u, lhry IIIIIII run-u || fourth lu-nt to determine tho wfnncp of Illa nrrllf. All purm-n dlrlrlrrl 50, 25, l.'i_ and I0 pvrrrnl. Entry for 5 porn-Ht of purir, s pun-um from first um] user-rand mon- ey rvlnnern, and 2 pr-rrent from third and fourth money vvlnncrn. Six borne: to enter, four to Ital-t. All driver: malt wear n driver’: nul- furrn that will hr entfsfnvfury tn the jullgrl 11ml munurremrvut, 11ml will m»! 11c ullouvnl 1o drive wiilmut unlfnrnr. In even! of light; going uut_ or other cause: shut ehuuhl hinder the Offlnlnll from seeing heat, right rc- aervcd to have heat rarml over anun. Right reserved to clumps program. reject any entry, bur any driver, and to declare riser- off 0n account of burl takes all. up of local horses) $50.00 factory nnmbur of entries or starters, to transfer horn-s m another clan: to “mm Hwy are rlinihleg reopen or uh- nllrllllrl’ chum ulilmrrf ra- sing, 11ml ulm- nr r-uv-url racing Additional cuirlva of on individual nwnrrnhlp may ha mrufe in any clue: by the payment or one percent on rinsing vlutn. hut nitric-n nf nr-pnrnfc ownership, although in Ilia mums liable muwt pay instalment! In full. Two elnlrln-I n! Lllr- nmnu- ulrnerahlpv mny mm m flu- Iuuno ruro, providing the full 5 pn-rcent 1| puhl ou each Ilufer, tho driver: having the oppro. n1 of the Judl-el. Eligibility bllod OI I. T. A. D0501 winning classification. Th» munugrmerlt nsiumo no yrlpfili- Illbllily fur any 110N110!!! or llfamngn to any par-on or prouvrfy, during this mrellui: unrl this unrleraiumiing 1a lvart qf thin contract. Hay_ straw 5nd nailing fno. N. '1‘. A. rules to govern onaopc where they conflict with these condi- Illlfll. weather, or failing to obtain n nails- ENTRIES CLOSE JUNE 17TH Milligan and Morrison have installed a new lighting system throughout and have no hesitation in saying that 1t will be satisfactory both from racing A new Dance Hall has h and spectators standpoint. een built which is one of the finest. in the Province and dancing will be free, also free parking of cars. There will be music and other entertainment which should make this horse race one of the outstanding features of the season. Admission is 50c at the gate and 25c to Grand Stand. We would ask everyone i0 bung heavy wraps regard- leaa of weather. r 11 1 r c1 1 w ' For u Mitgiigliiusaliiiiirnrsoii. Northern. P- Ii- Island Their leaders pointed MR. 110w- ever, a collapse of the conference was almost unthinkable in view of the emphatic statements of Pres- ident Roosevelt and other world statesmen that it must not fail. Although Premier Daladier sur- prised some delegatas by avoiding reference to the war debt qllfstlofl. c, member of his delegation said later the debt situation had made a. profound impression on the con- ference and threatened to change its entire complexion. Late today it appeared the first tangible action by the conference might b5 adoption of a resolution continuing the tariff‘ truce. Mr. MacDonald was understood to be prepared to introduce such a re- solution to which l5 countries have already pledged support -whllc oth- er advocates are 6x00511811- How THEY STAND INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ity where it belonged-on the, shoulders of 1m United slates,“ tho South African statesman os- serted. "The United States failed to fall in line." Gonrrnl Smuts, who is Deputy Prime Minister of South Africa, was the only OilC of night speakers today to he chrcwd as he went to the rostrum. Thcrc was no Amrrican delegate present again at 1hr opening n1 the afternoon session hut Ralph W. Morrison Look his seat while Baron VonNeurath, Fnroian lvfinistcr of Germany, was speaking. The PolLsh dvlcgair, Adam Koc, speaking next. rapprrllcd for the stabilization of rm-rrnrics-lliirs supporting Fmnrh pol1c_v~nnri urg- ed a "rc-arrangcmcilt of ihc debts." Some Americans as woli as other l and the question of direction of the two commiliccs was postponed delegates were gloomy at i111: 11n- expectcd dcvrivillflflllfi l" m“ until tomorrow when further de-“Sbeffihmfikilul- Film" "ski"? lmil‘ velopmenta are looked for. ~ arly, “when do we go home." or JOHN O. COBB, Summerside. Regular Race Meet on July 19. WILL PROBE __- (Continued from ease h. Oemmivtinewbichwercaassendliflll ‘aomercwflfilmflhflmllu’ lows: i-Tbe action of the 1932 mem- 'bly in denoting Pruicuwfl EH11 and dismising Prof. B Ir- MWWW to "stand undefined meantdmn." This had the effect of the rmwt assembly neither revlldifliink, 01' Qonfirmlng the action of tho 115$ church court. 2-'1'hc Judicial Committee c! in- vestigation will have now! t0 ll records and ct-idcrxse c! fi Wm‘ mittccs that have reviewed the Knox College case, bftClC to the day 1; 1931, when five students start- ed it. all by lodging a wmvisini against Prof. Morrow. (i-Thc Moderator, Rev. H. R. Grant will be acting principal this year and Mr. Barclay will be dep- uty acting principal. 4--Offending passages in the re- port of the management board of Knox College were ordered deleted. 5—A1l interested in the church controversy were urged to withh014 judgment until the investigation has been completed, and 1019"“! on (at the i934 Assembly in TO- ronio and the essential facts made known). Rev. W. F. McConnell, Paris. On- tario, struck the one discordant note of the day's debate when he pressed for inclusion of Prof. Mor- row's name in the committee clause divorcing Prof. Eakin from any suspicion of moral or theolofllfll transgressions. The Moderator rul- ed this subcct out or order and apparently had the backing of the Assembly, because Mr. lilcConnell ieould not continue due to the stamping of feet and 111101111“!- Loses In Mt’l. Won L060 P-C. Ilochesici" . . . . . 36 23 .610 Newark . - 35 34 5'93 Toronto . - 3* . 25 576 Baltimore . a4 2s moi Jcrscv Czty 35 33 431 Buffalo 25 83 A31 Montreal .. . . . . . 25 34 .424 Albany 22 36 .379 .-\§TITR.IO\N LEAGUE v Won [mt I‘.C. New York ea 1o .641 wgghlngfinn . c 32 Z2 .593 Chicago - 79 34 e547 ‘Cleveland .. 2s 2s .537 Philadelphia .. . 26 ‘l3 531 Detroit . . . . . 33 472 I Boston .. ... 1'1 34 .333 st. mus 1o as .145 .\' YTIONAI. LEAGUE ‘ Wnn Iinst IKC. Nmr 1'01"}; so 1e .025 St. Louis . . . 31 31 595 i Pittsburgh 2n 22 .500 lChica-go . . . 28 2'1 .500‘ gCml znnrtti . ...... 37 3'3 509 iBosfnn 22 an .42.: l Brooklyn 2o 2a .411 | Philadelphia. .. 1a 34 .358 A tourist going through the U. S. Norlhursr, suffr-rcd a slight. accid- cnt. lie went to a farmhouse and inquired of the SWCCO owner: "Have you a lll0llkCfv‘-\\'l'f.‘llf‘ll hero?" “Nmv," rcpiicd the Swede, ‘my brother bane got 11 cattle rcnch ovrr thorc: my cousin got a sheep rcnch down there; but too cold it-"r". i0!‘ monkey reach." l Stock Exchange (Canadian Press) i x101v1‘a1a1\r., Junc io-Aithough loses predominated at the closi‘. ,prices on the lifontreul Stock Pk- chnngc cxhilvitrd strong rcsistflnw to soiling prCSSllTG throughout to- .day‘s mssiou. Turnovor was fair]? i . jhcnvy; sales approximating 67.000 shares. as successive waves of Isirmztir and profit-taking swept lover the market. i Stocks closely followed tho New .Yfrk frond being firm "t the 91990‘ ‘m: with l0 issues estabiiahin! new ipcaks for the yea-r. -