Baset-all Results —‘ (By The Canadian Press‘ ‘SATURDAY American League First= Baltimore 100 001 000-2 9 I sew York 000 000 001-1 6 0 Turley and Courtney; Byrd. Mor- ‘an (9) and Berra. L-Byrd. Hr: Bat-Waitkus. d: lsleaiclfilfnnre 010 000 000-1 5 1 NM. York . .. 300 000 00x-3 7 Piletta and Courtney; Donald and Berra. 1 t: lgertsrnit . . . . . .. 010 100 130-0 13 0 Boston . . . . . H000000000-0 31 Zuvgrlflk and Wilson: Henry. Kin- rlrr 15) Werle (9) and Owen. L- Henry. Hrs: Det-Dropo. second: Dr-trnit . . . . . . .. 010 030 000-4 11 0 Eivitnn .. 200 102 00x-5 9 1 T\l:ii-lowe. Aber (6) Welk (7) and )liIllSC. Kiley and White. L-Mar- 1...‘-r-, Hrs: Bos-Agganis. Lepicio. .l(‘flSI‘n. (‘liicazn 300 000 000 2-5 I 0 Washirigtrin 200 000 100 0-3 '1 3 Johnson. Trucks (9) and Baits; ~'..-iimitz and Fitzgerald. W-Trucks. lirs. Wash-Vernon. flrwrilzind .. 000 000 ‘I00 03-4 9 0 Philsiriclph. 000100 000 00-1 2 2 uni-cia and Hagan: Kellnei‘ and Hrs: Cle-Philley. Sliantz. National League First: pr....kl_\'n . . 001 500 200-8 11 riiimgn . 000 200 201-5 6 3 f\lc_vm' and Campanella: Klipp- -.‘i‘lil. Brosnan Q4) Lown (7! Willis .7» Davis if)» and Garagiola. L- Kliivp.<il"lfl. Hrsfiichl-Sauer (2). Second: J.‘ llm.»kl_\'n 7;.-...g.. (mo 000120--3 5 0 Pru'li'P§. lluglics (Bi and Camp- avirlla: Hacker. Davis '7) Lawn (9) and Cooper. W-Padres. L-Hacker. lil>Z Bkn-Furilla. ,‘\'ou- York 200 050 000-7 11 0 Ciiiririnnii 000 000 000-0 8 I »\niun(-lli and Knit. Perknwski. .Iml.<r.n (ii and Scminick. L-Per- kN\'<l(i. Hrs: NY~'I‘hompsnn.' Pliiladclphia 301 001 400‘9 13 0 SI lmliis . 002 000 020-4 9 1 Dickson and Burgess: Raschl, l'li’:i7lo <71 Lint (83 and Rice. L- R.i~(‘l1|. Hrs: Pha-Ennis. St. Louis- lll ‘ . l. . Pl‘lll\.\¥l‘)lll‘Eh . . 000 000 000-0 8 I l\lil\\'."iiikee 100 300 30x—7 15 0 ()'Iionnell. Llttlcfic-ld (4\ Purkey isi lic-tki ill» and Shepard; Spahn and \\'liile. L-O'Donnell. International League (iilmia . 000100002-3 5 2 Havana 220 010 02x-7 ll 0 Robinson, Haag (5) Mackinson Ifir and Plumbo; Moreno. Harris till and Guerra. til.-nu-r-.-il . 090 030 000-12 17 2 Rivlininrirl 000 210 301- 7 10 (‘or and Howell: Fanovic. Zeiser «Zr Ep;‘iei‘ly ill) and Tabacheck. Tnrnnln 000 004 000-4 7 I Rnclirster 000 000 41x-5 10 1 l-‘rnals. Jordan (7) Hudson ('1) and Lakern.-in; Boyer. Jacobs (8) and Burhrink. Svrai-rise at Toronto postponed, rain. Air Transport With Cargo Of Pigs Fired On liy RICHARD 0'REGAN Vll-JNNA IAP)-A Belgian trans- port plane carrying purebred pigs was fired upon over Yugoslavia near the Hungarian frontier Thurs- day. crew members said a Soviet triads MiG raked the transport with cannon fire, killing the radio eflirer and wounding the pilot and riechsniic. The crew said the MiG, bearing yeti star insignia. dived at the Sa- bena. Airlines DO-8 uld tried to force the two-engine transport to- ward the Hungarian frontier. They laid the Jet opened fire when the Belgian pilot ignored the manoeu- Vl'l1’1R8. The cannon firs killed Joseph Clauswet-s. 42, the radio operator. and wounded Arse-no Devreese, the pilnt. and Victor Sluyts, the me- Cllltnlc. All are Belgians. EMERGENCY LANDING lievreese, viith two shell frag- ments in his shoulder. could not wry on. Douglas Wilson. British Nwzlol. took over and made an ['lll"l‘s:cncy landing at oral, Aus- 122. There was no official announce- ment naming the nationality of the alinrking plane. A British embassy siniemi-nt in Austria referred to an "unidentified plane." Ssbena .Al1l|T1Pl said the attack was by """" lillhter planes of unknown ""‘l°!1i1lby-" Crew members at Griz said only one plane was in- vnlverl. The attack occurred as the trans- iiort was flying about 6.000 feet Over Miirska Sobota, a town 10 milrs from the Hungarian fron- llrr and the Soviet occupation zone at Alulria. The Incident recalled the exper- lenre of four American fliers who El’ W! on a flight from Erding, t*"‘"llMl.V. to Belgrade Nov. 19. 951. and were forced down by “"1"? flfihters in Hungary. The lniir were released after the United SW0- raid si2o,ooo in fines. A second Belgian plans also car- ”'”‘\' NR8 from London to Del- irnrie reached its destination with- out incident. mxivon namaos I llvilson and Devreese said the “"0 blast of cannon fire killed Hy’ rnriio,offlcer and knocked out ' "filo ecu t. subsequent "WI lniurac Devreeee and the :'.’:h:!.1lc..':‘IlIb‘llitdI olf the plans "1 n l I we killed‘. ° y M’ " ‘Wilson immediately turned the (Em. around. its made it to the “:37: Thalerhof airport in 90 min- .“ ‘ "ml" the plane mind crash- ‘ ‘M0 I wooded area. ' mfflvtfeeu was taken to a one m-dptnl. The injured mechanic "_ ‘hr body of the radio-operator ‘manner! in care of British air ‘"lW'ltlcs at arse. mfifltllh military police sealed off 0 area and confisca five ea- : meru from pl-mtg‘;-. ’ "'0 Dabene were 1 "Nil ferry". started May dmm Blackbuah ttfpttt n'ear mM'il"i.i It involved lawn! thou- ! A . u“ “S. ‘l;|lI:.t“l;I:ed _s Yugo 1 at Picton. 00l:00l 420-314 0 > Anny Appointments Are Announced OTTAWA (CF)-Lt.-Col. G. R. A. Coffin. the army‘: assistant ad- Jutant-genei-gl. Us switching from administration to field opdratiom. I The 35-year-old Gaspe. Que., of- ficer who was attached with the British army overseas during the Second World War, will take com- mand oflthe in Light Anti-alr- craft Regiment with headquarters 0nt.. the army an- nounced Thursday. He will be succeeded here by Lt.—Co1. D. H. Rochester. 38-year- old Toronto iofficer now on the di- recting staff of the army‘: Ital! college at Kingston. Col. Rocheste served with the engineers in the Aleutian islands and northwest Eu- rope during the war. The army also announced that Lt.-Col. Henry E. C. Price, 37, of Ottawa will join the army council secretariat in August. Col. Price, who was wit.ti the Royal Canadian Regiment in Italy in 1943, is serv- ing as secretary to the Canadian joint staff in London. Slow Progress At - Geneva Talks By STANLEY PBIDDLE GENEVA, (Reuters)-Six of the Korean allies Friday narrowed the question of a Korean settlement to the showdown issue- whether the Communists will accept United Na- tions supervision oi Korean elec- tlons. The United States. Australia. Thaiianri, Colombia. Turkey and Greece tlirew their support behind the South Korean proposal for uni- flcation of the divided peninsula by elections under UN supervision. At the same time experts of the nine nations trying to advance the wobbly Indc - China negotiations ran into a blank wall at their meeting. They met with no suc- cess in trying to compile a full list of cease - fire principles on which both sides are in agreement. As a result. the experts will meeet again this morning in an ef- fort in complete the list for a scheduled afternoon session of the regular nine-nation Indo - China talks. one source said that it the experts are still unable to agree, the afternoon session may be post- poned pending further behind-the- scenes consultations. Hope New Banli ’ Note Issue Will Fool forgers OTTAWA. (CP)—Bank experts are out to fool the forgers in the new issue of paper currency to be dislribuisd next September. By using new printing processes. new color shades and stripping the bills of all ornamentation, the Bank of Cansde. hopes counter- feitere will find it too tough to fake the new money supply. "Elimination of ornamentation contributed to security," the bank said as it unveiled the new bills be- fore a press conference, The bank ruled that specimen. of the bills cannot be published. In the olden days. the dollars were reproduced by hand engrav- ing and the more elaborah the de- sign, the greater the reproduction problem for the forger. But today the forge: uses photo- graphy and heavy, elaborate design. instead of providing protection. "is inclined to work in reverse," the bunk acid "It is easier for even 1 casual user to detect slight differences or defect) in large. simple areas of pattern or tint than it is to detest differences in a mass of involved design and ornamentation." NEW “FEEI." FOE NOTE! Through the use of dry. instead of wet printing. the bills will have a new characteristic ."fee1" impos- sible to duplicate without access to large expensive custom-built print- ing presses. This also is another security against the forget, the bank said. Then, again. the bills will have a background of two color shades “This carefully registered intri- mixture presents great difficulty it) photographic forgery methods as well as to all subsequent steps in any attempt to counterfeit.’ 4 But while taking these steps to protect the public against fake bills, the bank warned that the best test of genuinenesa is compar- n. "The best test, as always. is the compcrieon of a suspected note with another of the same denom- ination whioh is known to be gen- ulne." Copies of the bills will be taken by bank officials on a country- wide tour within the next few days to give local editors and writers a chance to get acquainted with the new product. This is the first bank note design change in 1'7 years and the first notes to bear the portrait of the Queen. The Queen appears un- crowned and rather sombre. The steel engraving is from a pho- tograph by Yousuf Ksrsh of Ot- tawa. taken several years ago. The negative and all prints of that particular photo new are in, the hands of the Bank of Canada. The notes are the same length as those now in circulation but are one-eighth of an inch shorter in width. An economy feature which‘-will aid in increased produc- tion at lower cost. At a cost of less than |100.0M. some iso.ooo.ooo of the bills have been printed. bearing is redeem- able value of about 8700.000000- sufficlent to replace a year‘: wom- out bills. only enough will be Put into circulation next September to replace bills brought into the bank for destruction. The rural scenes depicted on the back of the bills were selected from some l.000 photographs. None of the regions was specifically identified. though they appeared to represent regions from coast coast. ' The green-gray 0| bill. shows I typical prairie grain field; the peach-orange 0! bill. I-tirmvlllllo in what appears central Canada: Hockey Players At Blood Members of last seasons Sum- merside Aces hockey team. Marl- time intermediate “B" champions. are seen above at the recent Sum- merside blood donor clinic where they were among the first of more than three hundred whoregistered at the clinic to make it. the most successful yet held at Summerside. Members of the team. from left to Donors Clinic 22.. right are: Maurice Cannon. Schurman. Carl Woodside, Paul Leo Shields. Maynard Schurman, Stan- ley Gallant Vance Harris. iPhoto by D. W. Sesrsi. northern scene of pine and rush- ing rapids: the salmon-purple $10. a Rocky Mountain pcak; the olive- RI'_ey $20. a simple Laurcniian winter scene; the orange-grey 550. Atlantic Ocean breakers; the sepia- grey $100, a placid lake and gentle hills; the rose-grey $1.000, an old cogered bridge and rolling country- si e. Report Matrimony Move Popular OTTAWA. (CF)-Mai.i‘lmon_v has become more popular among Ca- nadians during the last 10 years. only one out of every four re. males and one out of every three males over 15 years of age were single in 1952 as compared with one out of every three women and two out of every five men a decade earlier. The bureau of statistics reported this in its first breakdown of pop- ulation estimates by marital status aize. and sex. In the 10 years the number of married Canadians iri- creased by one-third. While the percentage of married people went. up and that of single people down. the percentage of those widowed and divorced re- mained about the same over the 10 year period. For men it was four per cent. and for women it rose from nine per cent to 10 per cent. The marriage prospect outlook for women should be fairly bright: Men outnumber women by 196,000, even though the female population increased by a greater percentage open,“ Locke said. "If the tourna- ment had been in Toronto or Mon» treat I would probably hay. M. cepted." The British open is July 5-9. The South African ace is to play for Canada next week in matches against the United States at the Mississaugua Club at Port Credit, Ont. From there he goes to Spring. field, N.J., to compete in the us ooeii June 17-19. Commissioner In - “Agreed Charge" Probe Named OTTAWA. (CP)— An expert on rsilway freight rates has been named royal commissioner to in- vestigate the operation of "agreed charge" contracts between_ the railways and shippers. Prime Minister St. Laurent in- formed the Commons Tuesday that Hon. W. F. A. Turgeon. 76, a vet- arm of several royal commissions. will undertake the inquiry. He is Canada's ambanador to Ireland and minister to Portugal. The main question probably will be whether agreed charge rates should come under the terms of the "one-and-third rule" on trims- continental shipments. The one-and-one-third rule pro- vides ihat rates on rail traffic be- tween eastern Canada and the prairies should not be more than 1 1-! of the low. competitive trans- continental ratea between eastern Canada and the West coast which are set by the railways to meet competition from ocean shipping between East and west coasts. ALBERTA BENEFIT! Mondsy. June 1, 1954 no points was much higher than the low transcontinental rate to the west coast. Alberta. argued for a change before the Turgeori rom- mission on transportation, which met for three years before making its report in February. 1951. Mr. st. Laurent noted that the oominl_asion report made no recom- The Guardian Dog. I lamotta Quits Comeback Effort MIAMI. 1713.. (AP) Former mendation. however. on whether middleweight champion Jake 1.4- the rule -hould apply to -creed mniia alnindoiied his comeback °h‘"‘°“ vffnri and « ‘ th ' That was a question which n-- , '“m_ e.n"‘ w'd""' quired t'lPf.8lled inquiry before iis '15” ”""""“‘ “I” “led ‘"5 1"" me;-its gourd be gg5eg.ad_ H m. ihrough making excuses to my- volved the interests of producers. srlf." purchasers, railways and the pub- Lamntta had been scheduled to lie generally. The railway/s_ have made a iiiini- ber_ of agreed charge cniitracts, in “’ll1Ch -Bhlppeljs have agreed to giw In his inst fight here April 1‘. them a certain percentage of lh‘_‘il l.nmniin dropped a split. decision cflrrvliiiz business. in Billy lcilgurn. nzer-t Ernie Durando next Wed- nI=.<rlfl_\' night at the Miami Beach .iuriiiiiiium. The rule benefits chiefly points, in Alberta. and was put into 18gl5lh-‘ tion in 1951 following the reoom~J me-ndation of a royal commission on transportation. of which Mr.‘ Turgeon was chairman. l It dou not apply, however, to agreed charges-the rates set by! contract between railways and ship- pers in return for a guarantee of s mliiimum percentage of the ship-l per’s business. ' The province of Alberta claims that the one—and-one third rule; should apply to agreed charge ratesl on shipments between the east end: prairie provinces. Alberta protested a decision oil the board of transport commission» . ers in January allowing the rail- Wlys to set an agreed charge for Slllimlng iron pipe from eastern’ Canada to the west coast. It said the railways were trying to nullify the one-and-one-third rule. N0 RECOMMENDATION Before the rule was put into ef-‘ feet, the coat of shipping certain commodities from the eavt to "ral-‘ than the male since 1942_ Locke Tums Down Golf Invitation . LONDON. (CF! —-Bobby Locke.‘ ace South African golfer. said Thursday he has decided to turn down an invitation to play in this year's Canadian open, scheduled for Vancouver July 14-17. "I would have loved to have played, but it's not convenient for me. coming right after the British $500 5500 dollars down and $50 a month takes home a brand new car. Don't miss out on this great offer. contact MacKAY MOTORS. Your Morris, Henry J., and Willis car dealers. B.S.A. motor cycles. 1 ‘//M7 5'a7/5 /Ves _ E o ‘>- F. R. McLAlNE’S~ MALPEQUE ROAD DRIVE IN FOR YOUR GAS-0lL or GREASE JOB STATION HOURS: 7:30 a.m. to 9:80 p.m. LO0K 0VER 0UR USED CARS & TRUCKS We're. sure you'll agree there are some real bargains in our lot. Drop along any evening: we are open for your conven- lenco and invite your inspection. FOR SERVICE THAT SATISFIES TRY F. R. McLAINE’S MALPEOUE ROAD rorsssiasacau-isg ' fr ll (".6 FIG IAIIV PAIAKIN, 2!. of leadlsbnei. Ahab: oaA" NIvtgItv.|II\vonNasvtnge.hsneIOl0,eadthetyeov neIDoIHcMeh0I.7MtweeeIetIQafIItNlethIuyvsN|c ealdepwviilolalbveeaonddesidodhffvblttbes. tltiisidyuswssssssssacaeca-Ieepuss-ssvrgsosu veanpnqaeflspssssdtsdnal-wssitisrlqssdnis wbubtbqbpueeseebpuutieee. clot oadevocsetestodes‘ FRIEDOM An unidentified plane has been reported over Canada’: nortliland. A CF-lOO Conuck ief fighter is ing in for identification. Navigator Larry Parcikin is telling Pilot Don McNicfiol that they will intercept tfieunltnown aircraft by angling their course upward by l0 degree: and to the right by 20 degrees . . . that the unknown is _ l8,000'yords away . . . and that they are closing the gap of over I20 miles an hour. This kind of flying exercise and training goes on day and night by Aircrew teams, flying in defence of freedom. Preparedness is the watchword of the RCAF.‘ "Bogey. . . 10° above and 20° portsidemrange at l8,000.'.. overtaking over 100 knots...” .-«.s.’--““‘W“ .There are immediafe openings for more men to train" and fly as Air Crew Officers in the RCAF I0! UUIVIOII INIOIMAIIOII III TIII near cause couusettoa-as IOIIIWII VIII. The Journal landing. a lunsmenlda. P. I I. ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE Phone us: 0/1 DON MrN|CNOL ll, of Nlgll Ilvev, Alberto. Inc a civil ewgteecvleg degree from the University of Albee-tmwhlleihen he enrolled in the University‘: ICAI leuvvs Squadron and after tlwee suwnneu of flying Mining won his Pilot's Wine. on graduating hows University In I950. be [slowed the ICAF ngulcv been-vwdhosnvenbaiedenueoncrln evtettea. (‘AI-.9540 the blue-mauve es bill. a nisstd Location: Vblta AN R. C. A. F. MOBILE RECRUITING UNIT Cl-IARLOTTETOWN Every Tuesday — 9:00 am. to 9:00 p.m. and Wediiesdcy — 9:00 can. to 5:00 pm. lt.C.A.l'.Anoobtlon ClubRooms- 3|-rl Floor of flank of Commerce Bldg. Phone 9855 THE II. C. A. F. Will Also Visit MONTAGUE AT THE CANADIAN LEGION HALL On JUNE 17th and 18th — Office Hours: 1:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.i Visit the Mobile Unit for full details of Aircrew O Grnundcrsw Openings In the RCA? MORll.I'J Rl'}(7RllITlN(i‘i UNIT ....-..u,... -..-....p- . .-