ow LOU NOVA Vs. LEE SAVOLD Tum in Station CBA—11 P. M. 1W0 WWW"! hounlodbythomolrmol * i Gillciic lilzitlcs RADIO TRANSMISSION Dnyllfllt Saving Time wsvauuvom Throushout w pm Western Canada 23 52 ' iooo n-m-l 49-" m- m“ mq U.S.A.—3l.3l m III l munsnsv, my 2i 5;.‘ ‘ '- Callus? Ill; lglxigflwomenis War.‘ ‘Front Line Family- ‘Hlzinio Children!’ ‘i m mucus-ted to Csnsds and RJLBVA ..~ A che Bond- ill m viellilra: ‘The Prom- ' 5min, t at.’ Talk by Lindley er. mooning Post.’ 1i o..~..r.."'..~:“ its '1‘ l“ g .' ‘Weber.’ en . Discussion: ‘fiwdflm Talk: ‘Women's Wor- i ‘LOIICOUI; 30.112183 . Talk - - - My Working Doyz’ Oidnonoi l. Headline News and Views. Forum‘ E? g _‘-__.-_. " 2 _ famous Brass Bands 0i E118- imdy 33c Military Band, oon- ducted by William J. Matthew! us ‘Front Lino FamilY- ‘Rs- ing 1m.- . Brlghmlso and Rosin-lot ‘Band. .16 Tnlk by J. B. Priestley. Radio News-Reel. lilo-w Woikini my.‘ ou- itllnhlk: woman's War.’ au- peat). . I30 ‘Iihe News. ’ 11.5 Close down. Lennis Sons W Taught Dad * ,- ‘Il. PASO. Tlexas. MR3’ 19-49?‘ Jnstead oif "I owe it to dad," it's ‘im 1t all in my who." in tho Us of the tennis-playing Ball in of El Peso. w. H. Bali, coach of the Texas lines netmen has been credited Iiiti tutor-ins his noted tennis- fiying sons-George and Russell. tit’; the other way around. ‘lbs elder ‘Ball learned the game in 1935 after they had income well known in national ininis. And he became a college and: two years aft-er picking up s. Itoquei. for serious study. ‘REMEMBER vTi-EN (By Tho Canadian Press‘. lMlls Clievrolec lowered Barney leld’s automobile speed record d 53 seconds for ihe mile (61.92 iii-Db.) by driving the distance in I 4-5 seconds 37 years ago today. record of 368 85 n.p.h. was set by John Cobb of lilond at Bonneville Flats, Utah, l: Aug. 23. i969. i LOOK AFTER YOUR TIRES iAY ur YOUR CAR! O And tho but way to malro lvro that your tlroo won't lot YW down l: to givo thorn Iytioinoilc, skllful and com- rltio iiro service.‘ Wo'll do it °' You z . : starting now and ‘WWW on for tho noxt twolvo zlililllll Como in now and "ll W! about iho low-cost oooo fYEAR TIRE LIFE EXTENSION i- n. loiinsroii m Grout George Street chariottetown. P. E. l. THE ETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE SEVEN up“, NOTICE The annual meeting of tho shareholders of the Char- ‘ lottetown Forum. Ltd.. will . he held in the l-‘orum, Wed- nesday. May 27th at 7.30 p. In. Cards Blank Dodgers l-O As Cooper And Wyatt Hook Up_ In Hurling Duel i mow Yonx. Ma ao-(Airi- tandi ivy def ti. minus-g. Two or the riglithandera in i-nnéh-s. Pauleaw-glet drew c W9 the National League collided today base on balls with the sacks load. ai- Bwklyn in one of the must ed in the 10th inning, toning home dazzling pitching duels of the young the winning run. season and when Mort Cooper and Credit for the victory went ta Whil- Wyatt had finished firing 5i- John Sain, who relieved starting Imus Cardinals held a 1-0 trl- hurler Tom Barley in the ninth. n Dodgers. enabling him to chalk up his lec- this year 0nd vic ory in s relief assignment the National League champions in asmany dus had been shut. out and it halted their eight-game winning streak- Pssseou Leads Cuba in New York, with Claude all in an hour and 35 minutes as a week-day throng of 15.843 Flat- Pssscau star-tins the rail with a . home run. Qifnago C cune bush fans sot spellbound rst from behind in the late innings to BIN cooper gov up only two s 1 never-filial l. gouge: pet tmgl base altogether pinned t0 beet. New York Giants 6-3. just 30 batters. Wyatt. itched four-hit. bail in Reds Paste Phil: rebuttal ut one of these blows was o. triple by catcher Vi/alker At Philadei his, Ray Lamanno, Cooper Moi-its younger brother, in the rockie ca her who is leading his flfih , and s fly to cezi- the league atmnen, considerably ire by ‘Frank brought him fattened his average with a {reflect home with the game's only run. day at the plate as Cincinnai Beds whimlfd ihe Phils 10-3. Braves Eflle Buc: His heme run with the bases At Boston, Boston Braves clung loaded in the t/liird was backed up to second place in the league with a single and o, triple. Canadian Army. E. J. White of Yarmoutb N. 5.. and J. R. Wiiimore of cnaiimn, 0nt.. complete the staff. (Jo-operation it i) Has Probs Men ,Rg Trailned m "mt" section is closely link- .. .____ 31mm ltsho Brzihttsh Aigrtitiinjllstrg By moss Muuao W" " "P °° _ into its office from most airdromes (“Mann Pnssmwar ‘Lmeamnd in the British isles, from aircraft on operations over the sea. and over enemy territory. and at times even from Canada. Weather charts are plotted and from them tho forecasts are made. Weather in Britain is probab tho most changeable and. uncerzan in the world. yet the degree of accur- acy of the forecasts is high. The usual period for which the weather is forecast is 12 hours and in ad- .” dition weather prospects usually can be provided for tho suoceedlnu 24 s ur . Forecasts are issued several times daily and distributed by the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals to a large number of Canadian units. Ad ltiomi forecasts are available immediately on request. IN ENG . May l0—(CP)—The Canadian Ov- orscas Army now has its own weath- er bureau. It is called the Cana- dian Corp Meteorological Section. RCA, at First Corps Headquart- ers. and its reports will be of vital assistance to commanders planning operations, many of which might succeed or fail by reason of the weather alone. Importance of weather as a fac or in modern warfare has been fre- quently demonstrated. as for ex- ample bad visibility which helped the escape of the German warships from Brest the interference of bud weather with operations in Libya. and the influence of climate on the war in Russia, In the case of Army Co-o ration uadrons, weather. 1n ad ition to controlling the possibility of actual flying, also affects aerial photog- raphy and visual reconnaissance from the air. Artillery units need frequent and rapid forecasts of winds and temperatures in the up- li. S. issues I War Review per atmosphere for adiustinl; firinl _ calculations. Forecasting officers are trained to vmsj-imgqon, May 17_(Ap)_ give advice on special operations A joint, army-navy communique, m. such as the use of smoke screens viewing the progrgss. o; the Wm- or of Parachute troops whose suw- since the United States entered it oasful employment is largely gov- last Dec. 7 to orned by weather conditions. day night that during o, pe For the Canadian area. frost and preparation for offensive action a 8816 Warnings are issued. and. tables "number of successful thrusts" at of sunrise, sunset. moonrlse. moon- the Japanese had worked a "lasting 59in B1111 tide limes Me will Ilwflihll’ effect upon the strategic situation." to units requesting them. Among such strokes. it listed the naval raids on the Gilbert and Mar- Officers In Charge shall islands, Wake Island, Marcus Island, and the bombing of Japan A R0 a1 Air Force officer. F“. Ll- itself. It. included the destruction of L. R. orey_ is head of the section. Japanese ships in the battles of the He was a teacher of mathematics at Coral Sea and Macassar Straits, London High School before the war. the feats of submarines in ..ne far and is one of the few Englishmen Pacific and. the numerozs raids by from the old 7th Corps-m. composite planeg used, on Austmmh Canadian-British formation which The 4.000-word communique surn- preceded Canadian corps-to ro- marized war activities in general main with Canadian headquarters- terms and for the most part re- Slnce the summer of 1940 he has med facts which had been mad, been here acting as liaison officer available to the public from time to between the Canadian Corps and time. ~ - R.A.F. Meteorological Sections. but It contained some new details of now the establishment has been in- the fighting that had taken place. creased and complete forecasting and Lonclugio. drawn 1mm 1g, section set. up. There never has Among these things, it said:— been anything equivalent. to this in During the first three weeks of the Canadian Army. the war, about . American The remainder of the persomel troops moved to ba tie stations, is Canadian. Officers are Lieut, R. many of them overseas- T. Annand of La Have, N. 8.. of Rieinforcemcnts. en route to the West Nova Scotia Regiment: Philippines when war in the Pa- Lieut. A. C. Cluff. a Royal Caria- cific broke out. were clan migineer from Maxville. Ont.‘ Australia and became the nucleus and Lieut. B- S. Taylor, a Montreal for American forces there, gunner. Midway Island is still in Ameri- Staff Sgt. J. F. McMillan of To- can hands. ronto heads the non-commissioned The defence of the Philippines officers who include Sgt. It A. Mc- “demonstrated the comparative Kay-Keenan of Winnipeg. Sgt 0. weakness of the Japanese as an H, cam .beli of New Yoik City individual fi hter." a factor which who en istcd in Monzreai, Bdi". A. "alone forbo es disaster for the en- P. Kjeldsen of Calgary and Bdr. emy Japanese in the future when CzB. Wilson of Edmonton. Gun- the battle is met ori terms au- ners H. H. Humphrey of Toronto, preaching equality." General of the Ilyllll Yount, Commanding Major General Barton If. u m‘ Training Command, was the first of the U. S. delelluim l" u“ n hero Notions Air ‘Draining Conference to arrive in Ottawa. He is shown with tho lion. s. r. mum. United sum Minllter to cznriiidhiijjgal‘ Colonel John s. (luliet, 0min Militll’! Aitlel" i‘ l :;‘Tfl‘t, ' “Fill l? l Nova Meets SavoldTonight Juniors Next Season InWashington WAEJINUMN. Ma Iii-MP)- Loo So/vold of Des Manes. IA. and Lou Nova, the Californian, warm- ed up briefly today or. the eve 0f their Navy Relief Fund show at Griffith Stadium and then took time our, w mane identical prcdic- gong-mat the bou‘. would be or . Their unanimity ended there. Said the big cit-yogi Nova:- "It ought to be over early. 1 ex- Dect to clip Savold down within six rounds." "Five 0r six Minds." was Savoldk estimate. but. he didn't mean the some thing Nova meant. He ex- to use a short. right effective- Bome of the dopesters of the IO-round-iinut affair took the view that Savoid must knock out Nova within three rounds or go down himself before the end. All seem- ed I-Iheed that frcm t records the one who gets the irst opening will come out best. Some of the pro-fight estimates were that the iuelvyweigiats would draw upto 20.000 fans who would "my runs-M." ~= . WW B0 e rc- liof kitty. BOWLING HOLY NAME BOWLING PALACE Big Four League-Finals Five-Aces:- G. McDonald 199 248 267 O. leClair 258 2l1 1'77 E. Robin 147 1B0 200 F. Doucetio 248 365 22'! G, Stewart 206 254 172 Total—3259. Corvettes:- A. Burke 215 191 161 W, MmNeill 240 211 227 H. Lnpthorn 124 239 181 A. McFariano 255 218 191 R Bradley 186 1B2 234 Total—3055 High single F‘. Doucette 265. High three F. Doucette 740. g _ Five Aces 5 points. ' “ Zi Corvettes 0 points ‘Dotal standing points on round: Five Aces-ll points. Corvettes-i! points. Tonight at 7 P. M. Sharp:- Knights of Columbus Bowling. Colonies of insects which feed on tho banyan and other oriental trees. produce the animal resin known commercially as lac, base of shellac. OUT OUR WAY ,_.. i i i eon. m: I1 nu armor. incl-v. o; no. u. l. n1. on. NOVJ I KMOVV WHV HEIQ DlF-FEUNT THAN. Li$--HE MAKES EVERYTHING THAT HE uses AM oi.’ BEJEF CASE. OF Hie- DADB.’ _ M. A. H. A. To Stress _ 20-(CP)—A siimed acerilficate, and that eight hewvier accent on unior hockey players in Nova Sootia senior hoc- ln the Maritimes d g the coming key last season did not have am. season was decided on tonight at stem- cards. uhs annual meeting of the Mar- An inquiry into the Mas-shall itime Amateur Hockey Association and Gaudet incidents was promised as the body considered the prcs- by M.A.I-I.A. officials. pect. of war-depleted senior ranks. Another complaint heard at the The Association voted to take meeting wsslhat the canamgm the junior players under itsdirsct had not. received a "fair- show" in supervision, instead of having a their Montreal series The team was separate association to govern the declared eliminated after loslri youngsters. This action was in the opening game by s lop-flde pursuance of s notice of motion margin. Several delegate; Qxpflgg- given at the last annual sesszon. ed opposition to the team's dis- The delegates heard charges qualification. from Breton delegate. The Association decided to pep. Shaun MacDonald of Sydney. of getuale the memory a! the late irregularities in last years play in udse A. D. Campbell of Sydney, the Maritimes. He charged s. seri- an MAHA. officer who died re- ioi- player Riley Marshall, was oently, by having a trophy bin. with Halifax Junior Canadians ing his name awarded annually to when they met Montreal Royals in ihe Nova Ssotia Juvenile cham- the Memorial Cup piaydown; that pzcns. Tribute was pa’d also b0 the Pius Gaudet, another Canad aii mcmory of the late Jack Liearment, player in the same series, had not Truro sportsman, Yanks Stgp Baseball Standing NATIONAL LEAGUE HALIIPKAX. May fi 4-‘ Won Lost Pct Brooklyn 25 9 .735 __.__. Boston l9 l5 .569 LOlLl-S l3 15 .545 rmw YORK, May 20—(AP)—- Pitt-thumb 1B 18 ~50" The powerful but of the Yankees‘ Cmiilnmiii 15 1'1 .469 Joe Gordon dissolved Cuxrnso NU" Ymk 16 19 457 White Sox‘ winning streak at srv- Chic-lg" 15 19 441 en games today. The New York Phllacelphla 1° 24 294 second baseman hit t o hom ru in consecutive appealvances gt. n5 AMERICAN LEAGUE itetoshowttie wayf the Lin.’ l-l victory before well fans New Y°Pk 21 9 700 in mmjskey p3rk_ Cleveland 22 l0 .688 Gordon sailed the ball into the 5S3“! f‘ 1d d5 'il b d '0“ ~ lége End stag oulvlizl {lee c syscogll. 5V 1191115 13 2° 394 innln and he homered to almost. Phnadelphil 14 22 389 the i tical spot. m lead off the Weehlngtfln 12 18 8%! Y kc fifth a ' it he iii-ices“ 12 2 B MfiiuseRusso a £10 woglgileig lllilfgillll ("Oi int-indies night some) Ne Y‘ k ikied lg. ‘l n. all’. silt’... ‘Lin films.“ irlnilrlgrl: INTERNATIONAL masons both scored by Buddy I-Iassett and botih driven in Joe DLMag 1o. "Wink 20 l H14 Hagen countedbym e gas MOHLTEM 1'7 11 .607 DiiMag hit into s. double play and B11178“ 15 12 5'71 came in in the eighth as Joe flied Jersey (‘ii-r 16 16 500 out“ Toronto l4 l6 .467 Sylllitiflil-Se 14 1g .438 ' B3 ImOTQ l2 1 .414 Athletics Clip Tigers Rpdqesmt 10 2,1 323 M Detmit’ Phnadelphm 513k (Not including night. games) ietics broke l. six-game losing streak on miman Han-is’ brilliant relief Pitching and Lou Blairts ninth-inning triple that beat De- trolt 5-3. Softball Practice _ The following players are kindly aasked to be at Victoria Park diamond at 6.4.5 tonight: oily/Es, l)” _ "l" M. Carmichael. W. Cudmore. V. lgoi-Térggte tigggpsfeuslm to the next Icck, B. Whalen. H. Hennessey, H y, . Wooiridge, J. Kane, B. Murley_ WELL, HE'S 601' w oi= us no LOOKS. TOO--HE CAN I OF- OL‘ MAGAZlNE-G LOOK LiKE HE'S THE 'EM-- WE. MAKE 'EM LOOK LlKE w i Haemsgogus m uit m" °l “m” gm" ‘WeY-“Ve Blanchard. B. Williams, q Whit- By. J. R. Wlliams THE ADVANTAGE MAKE AN ARMLOAD . one WHO'S READ i - i SHOULD READ ’EM,' \\ ‘vi/iii l cé/Q Qur Boarding House MAISOR ,\NE N Mir-l N ugifim? , ‘ GET .......................................THE iDEMN-Vi Sports Trail Gallagher Is ‘mcldMWl-lhtasvrsglglmflkr Re-Elected To‘ NEW YORK, May 20-(AP)—HeadMA.HA:' Our No. 1 and No. 10 disappoint- ments get. together tomorrow night ilgnlll bo wvxylit-hhlh l "vlmbot-ll _—_ \ ifyingg muslin in iificwiircxgllicqulc; HAI-TFAX M“ 3° — <°P> - Frank Gailagher of Moncton, NIB, ivz-is elected president of the Mar- itime Almiteur Hock-By Association at the annual meeting tonight 101i his third successive term. Other officers: ' 1st. wee-president, J. Elliott Hm}; son. Halifax; 2nd. vice-president, Charlie Campbell, Sydney: 3rd. vice-president, Douglas Mclxod, Charlottetown; secretary-registrar C. M. Dodge, Kentville, N, s, ring. at that. No. 10 is Lee Savold, whom we ~- §2&“.‘*li.l’.‘;““n..‘°..l°i.i.’?i..i‘“§§§3 l‘ W Royals Edge Rochester 7-5, York appearance, and who subse- Louis. One of them already has fallen in front cf him. The re- deeming feature of the show is thaggtgie Navy Relief Fund. will n 1 The No. l. disappointment is Lou Nova, the gent we thought could bent Louis, not knowing the big bubble was so well co-crdlziated that when he stuck his thin out he went out all over, and nearly out. quentiy went far, but in the wrong direction. Nos. 2, 3 and 4 current- 1y are Cincinnati Reds, and the others before getting down to sa- vold we won't bother to list right now. Unless Louis knodred ‘nose out of Nova than consciousness, we think Lou should out-fumble the shrivelled Iowan. Savold was in- flated to about 250 pounds during an absence from the ring, but got. backtctheitios and now is a. trim figure M’ s, fighter, Nova, if can forget. his show- ing agains Innis, something we wish we could. hasn't been so bad. No matter how tcmoncw night's fight comes out, the heavywexgtit division will be divided into two classes, namely (l) Joe Louis; (2) the rest of the crowd. MONTREAL. May 23-(CP)~. Montreal Royals uigcd out. the cel- lar-dwcllliig ROCllt‘hll3i' Rod Wings, 7-6, here today in the opener ct a. IOUI-Eamc series and. reduced Newarkls margin at tho top 0f tho International League race to three games. Royals who are becoming note- worthy foy iheir bzg inning a game, came up with another today with four runs in the fifth to eraso n. 5-2 Rochester lead and g0 ahead. Chiefs Whip Bear: At Newark. making the most of their hits and profiting on George Wzishbuirrs streak: pf wildness, Syracuse Chiefs today administer- ed a 7-3 defeat on tihe Intemation- a1 League leading Newark Bears ill the 01161161‘ of a three-game Baseball Results NATIONAL fanatic st. Louis ooo 01o ooo-i 4 l 59,... arlolcitiyé. cog 00i:v000--0 2 o ' . ooper an . Cooper; —-~ ':"":*= Wym “d 0"“- icelyakirécti-ich, Hligygnesqd ‘Elf; use» is: ":2 i" m“ n 1 o l a o Se-weli, Heintzelman to» and ffglfiflrhie g8} 33f, 8% " ' Pixel?“ Early’ Sam (9) and Lem" Krl,ott ‘Harris (2) and Hajgesl bard Wagner’ r2»; Benton, Henshaw (oi Chicago ooo ooz 301-6 i2 o and “bbws- New York zoo 01o ooo-s ll i Page“, and Mwuuough; INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE penter and Berres. Car- gtinclzester 112 010 010-6 10 i on fhl 200 040 l0. —'l 9 0 glyaiggeiih 5,1,3 ggg $5,131; 1;; no.3... Pearce. 3...‘. and, Stan. “and Lamanno, finches Naéronl ‘Kraus. Smlfti, McCrabb Pearson (3) and Warren. a ' an Hmwn‘ AMERICAN LEAGUE g-fffk” M3 g5‘; gfitz l: g 000 Nelson. Lambert (9) and Hartie; (ifiéaslibum and Paddcn. Robinson With Major Hoople New York Chicago coop Bovpcnosroneiw ’”/// // _ YOU LEARNED i-iow TO em . /,, p7,, / ‘ii-im- QUlCKERTHAN some /.-# OF THE euve iN NN / ' x7 eizncaiwniow coma on, , OLD Bo\/',%A\l Ti-lis AFTER "/ ' Me, "MAISOR,DID ‘m2 erorzm , - / GRiNG ME? ‘ \\\ \ is Z TIPPIE AND “CAP” STUBBS , _ lidivina PLAY RAYS THEN LlKE ABOUT iT “.5. WHAT? ETHEL. DOESN'T LIKE TH‘, YOU'VE WRlTTEN ?? WELL, SHE CAN'T KNOW MUCH ABOUT i lV/HAT DOESlgT SHE 'cuz IFEFIGOT ‘TO Pur HER lN , rrl WOULD YOU LIKE ME TO READ IT TO YOU NOW ??_- RéADiN‘ ILLIE THE TOILER- snow GROWTH! ; " I FOOLQ) = ' NO TOMATOES COULD GRJW I MUST fi SLlPPlblfi i! UFUALI. l ' gggrlzoie-ru-iimgil-lgi SMAR ~ m“ , - ' f -.$_ l Q ‘ruev PLAYED. * “Tl-LM’ QUlCK. lT'S A FRANK ...--.- l'L SQUELC 3x $52M WELL Ui-b-WAFI‘ TILL l FlNlSH ,. THIS ARTiCL "'- POP- - DON'T YOU THlNK n. WIMMEN ARE‘ AWFUL 3 UNREASONABLE ? 7 i r. - u‘ ....___,._. ‘b5 fir! 5 ‘v ‘Vi.