18, l9.lJ0 I ,.,m..........-..... ...... .....................-.....-- Show above is Flash Mclfugh. as it does skill. The Bill Lynch risre devil cycle rider with the diows playing at the Exhibition mien shows, as he speeds around grounds here create considerable the ”wail of death" in a perform-V interest with plenty of entertain. me that calls for as much nerve ment for old and young alike. I AT llAI.lFAx-- Arrlved Thuradw Imperial Hamilton, from St: m... John's. Nfld. Bulkarier. Montreal Manchester Commerce, Santa Cruz. sailed Thursday indies. , Manchester City. for Liverpool tailed Thursday England. Norm Bulkarier, Dingwnil. N. 5. AT SAINT JOHN-v Arrived Thursday- Canadian Cruiser. from West ' Listen to Cl-'CY ' for all Illa interesting features of the A CHARLOTTETOVIN T" OLD HOME WEEK RACES" Alternoone , Evenings AUG; I3-2.00 to 5.00 9.3010 10.00 AUO. I6-2.00 to 5.00 9.30 to l0.'.I0 THURS. AUG. I7-2.00 to 5:00 9.30 to l0.30 FRI. AUG. "ll-2.00 to 5.00 9.30 to l0.00 - i (an an mm are Alf.) Horse racing; prize winners at the Agricultural Show -oil the highlights brought to you every day of the fol rural IaoAbcAs:s arousouo IV A THE MACDONALD TOBACCO COMPANY . d . Britislifonsols CIOAIITTII. l'aCI'i;4;'4-:3-A-Z -- .4 .5. ,.-5 . '& i ow” Al ninegeer ly OIOII. Ill?! (Canadian has Ital! Writer) OONNAUOBT REL! RANGES. South March, Ont..' Aug. 17 --(0P) ,- They come both old and young to the Dominion of Canada Rifle Association shoots on this range 14 miles west of Ottawa. A TI-yeamld expert and a it- year-old girl are among the (loo marksman competing! in the 82nd annual meet ourren y in progress here for six days, They are Maj. W. L. Dymond of Toronto. mem- -ber of the Royal Regiment of can- ada. Rifle Association. and pretty Elsie strong of Newport. N. 8. Though he has not been showing up as well this year as in the past. Maj. Dyinond is carding better scores than many of the younger marksman. I He has been coming back to these ranges year after year and has only missed one meet since 1003. That wss.in 1024 when he competed In the Nova Scotla shoot- ing matches. He fought in the South African War in 1808 and was a member of the 2nd Battalion of the Royal nirkshire team in me. no also was a member of the Canadian Btsley team in 1912 and last year palri his own way to the famed English shoot. Miss strong. who at It handles a .303-calibre rifle like a veteran, has been compel: ,, in rifle shoots for the last two years. Her father, an expert shot, also is competing in this week's meet. She is classed as a tyre, a. rifle- man who hasn't ranked in the first 150 aggregate score: during the last 10 D.C. R. A. shoots. Rlllemen began noticing the youngster in the Prince Edward Is- land provincial shoot last year. she had only two scores before attend- ling that meet. but tied with two 1others for first place in the city ,of Charlottetown match with 02 out of a possible 100 points. i Friends then urged her father to take her to the D.C.R.A. met last year. He did and she not only showed up well but amazed vet- eran riflemen with her ability with the rifle. . illy The Canadian Press) Remember when... - I-Ion. R. C. Matthew.s' Canadian cricket team ended a successful English tour by playing to a draw 'with lnccgniti Cricket Club in London. l4 years ago today. The Canadian team won seven, lost one and drew seven in 15 games. BRANTPORD. Ont. Aug. 1'!- (OP)-Brltons may know him as the victorious planner of El Alam- ein. but to the six Nations indians of the Brantford district, Field Marshal sir Claude Auchinleck is Chief Big Pixie. Indian chiefs and an indlan princess in full regalia con- ferred the title on "The Auk" yest- erday. - Allll AIIGIIST 14 T01 Preparations in connection with the big entertai complete and we are ready to welcome our thousa on HOME. WEEK PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION nmeni: week are now nds of friends from home and abroad. feeling confident that we will present them with a program of entertainment that will be fully up to their expectations. Our object is. and has been, to make this the one BIG WEEK of the year, for all our people, and also to make it an educational week in that we will Present for display the finest Livestock in the Garden of the Gulf. runs is ova pnooiuisi 5 FRIDAY, AUuUM' 18th. AFTERNOON At 1.45 p.m. racing and Vaudeville program. i QUEEN. Ana. 1'! -(O?) -The favorites won the matches and the plaudits of smtatora but a one- man brawl with police stole the show today at the Canadian tbnnin championships. The unprecedented uproar at a tennis tournament came during the quarter-finale of men's single! late in the day and held up play for fully, 16 minutes. After the rough-and-tunlile scrap. in which the belligerent spectator-heolfler and two police- men rolled down an embankment to the court. he was dragged off and taken to the police station The finish of two matches play- ed at the time before 1.000 or more spectators was an anti-climax. Bul 'mlly of Bronxvllle, N. Y., already had his match with Jean Paul Turgeon of Quebec well in hand. oi Montreal was putting the final touches to his three-set win over Jean MarolsodQuebec. Thatmateh was held up also. lhrller in the day. Brendan Macken of Montreal took three straight sets from Jean Ducos do la Hallie of France. and the lone Frenchman now left is Robert Albdesselam. who polished off Dick Mouledous of New Orleans with ease. ' The Macken-do la Hallie match -Maciten taking it s-4. 6-4, 6-1- pscked the most color. Itlalso drew loud comments from the spectat- ors who insisted on calling out their rulings before linesmen or umpires could give the slightest indication of a decision. The display bothered both Mac- ken and de la Hallie at times. some of the official rulings appeared off-color and one linesinan was changed during the second ae'. . In the semi-finals Macken will meet Abdesselam and Rochon will face Tully. The second round of the mixed doubles was run off in two sect- ions and completed late in the day. The third round was started after the late-finishing men's cl T . Quarter-final play in the mixed doubles left two all-American combinations against two of inter- national rnarke-up. i The final match. the only one going to three "sets, was nnished under lights. It went to Gladys Heldman of Houston. Texas, and her partner Dick Mouldedous. Twenty games were played before the first set was decided and the. comlrlnation of Francoise Lacasse and Edgar Lanthier of Montreal proved a tough one to beat. Pat Mackon of Montreal and de la I-lailie,advanclng easily through the two rounds, will next meet Dorothy Knapp of England and Lorne Main of Vancouver. The English-Canadian team lost only three games in two matches play- ed today. They will meet Dons Popple of Spokane. Wash... and Morton Stern of Philadelphia. in all-American semi-final. Express companies Announce Embargo MONTREAL, Aug. 17-The Can- adian National and Canadian Pa- ciilc ,Ex.press Companies have ad- vised all agents to place an im- mediate embargo on all carload and less-carload shipments of live- stock. live poultry and- other per- ishables. as well as gold and sil- ver bullion and currency which cannot with reasonable certainty reach destination in Canada or be transferred to connecting U.S. ear- riers by Monday nbou, August 21st. - The express companies also stated that because of the possible work stoppage on the railways at six am. August 22nd, other ship- ments are being and will be ac- cepted "subject to delay.” m.&.A.:..-....t. Bridge Engineer En Route Here BAILNT Jm-IN. N. 3.. Aug. 17 - (OP)-.Dr. 2. L. Pratley. Montreal consulting engineer who is prepar- bs-idae. said here tonight he did not expect to visit. Halifax before fall On the next court. Henri ltoohoni in; plans for the proposed Ganso i 1 5 w-itentennlai Stamps To Be Issued The Postmaster General an- nounces that the Post Office De- partment is designing postage stamps to be issued in September. 1961. The year 1961 marks the centennial of the transfer of the administration of t'he.postsl ser- vices from the Imperial Govern- ment of Great Britain to the Colonial Governments of Bntish North America. and also the centennial of the first postage stamp lssuefof the latter guvem- ments. The Postmaster General states that the postage stamps will be released during the International Philatelic Exhibition to be he'd in Toronto in September. 1951. This exhibition will be held under the auspices of the Canadian Associ- ation for Philatelic llxhilbitions, a non-profit organisation of stamp collectors from all across Canada. The Governor General. His Excel- lency Viscount Alexander, and the Lieutenant Governors of the ten Provinces are patronss First day covers prepaid with these special stamps will be cancelled at the exhibition on the first day of is- sue of the stamps and despatched from Toronto. The first day- of is- sue will coincide wlththe opening date of the exhibition, the zist of September, 1951.. The Post Office Department is preparing special philatelic dis- plays to be shown at the exhibit- ion. Many stamp rarities will be exhibited by collectors from .'.'an- ada. the United States. Great Britain and many other countries. RICH LAND In Denmark. 90 per cent of the land is productive and '77 'per cent is actually farmed. "Alter misch- ing to B.F.G's. Poe driven 29.450 miles without a flal. These tires are still in oer good condition. 0. M. Mellonali, Calgary. Alta. B.F. Goodrich tire buyers some other brand. I Why did they switch? it A nation-wide survey of the tire custom.-1 era of B.F. Goodrich dealers from coast to coast shows - that 3 out of every 5 salesmen can tell y6uEwliS"""rIhej' switched. They wanted to get trouble-free motoring . . . wanted to make their calls ;;1'l-lE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN Steals Show . At A A Good Time Sels Tennis Tournament 0 Record In Winning Yonkers Derby YONKERS. N. Y. Aux. .17 - (AP)mGood Time. from the stable of William H. cane of Goshtn. N. Y.. set a world record for pacere over the mile and one-half on a half-mile track tonight in win- ning the 925.000 Yonkers Derby. The time of 3:00 flat battered the mark of 3:09 set by Jimmy Creed at Roosevelt Raceway. West- bury, N. Y.. in 194 In a see-saw battle with 11 riv- als before a crowd of 16,945 at Yonkers Raceway. the stout little four-year-old son of Hal Dale-On Time by Volc-mite scorched down the stretch in a tight duel with V . ram: SEVEN T i 3 The, outdoor garment!' Unsurpassed wearing. qualities; -. J. is; M. MURPHY LIMITED HALIFAX Sydney izimiomzow-s" Hayes Hanover to win by about a length. Hayes Hanover. owned by W 0. Wright of Federaloburg.,Md. took second with Grattan Mcliylo. an entry of Ben 1''. Owen. Omaha. ' Neb., third. The winner. second choice in the gowns. returned 51.30. 35.00 and Unsold Wheat Surplus Increases OITAWA, Aug. 1'1-(CP)mAn unsold wheat suriplus of 113,200,000 bushels-biggest in four years- was announced today by the Bur- eau of Statistics. This figure represents the carry- over ai July ill from 1949 stocks and wiicn added to the 1950 fore- cast of a 544,000,000-bushel harvest makes for total possible Canadian stocks of 657,200,000 bushels. The carry-over of wheat, all of it held in Canada. is greater by li.000.000 bushels than last year's 102,200,000, but it is considerably below the average carry-over eith- er in the preceding 10 or 20 years. switched from BE FROM some omen eitmo ontirne ."f. to cover routes on schedule, in safety, and at low cost per mile. Mileage, safety, comfort, economy -K. ,lIr('ll'l these what you want, too? You can” have them! You can get the superior per- iformance made possible by B.F. Goodrich I , manufacturing and engineering skill. You can enjoy the benelits of B.F.G. research- cooler-running, longer-lasting rubber compounds. improved trend and body design and the advanced tire building methods. When you switch to B.F.G.. they are all yours! There's a friendly B.F.G. tire dealer, near you. Hols one of the B.F.. Goodrich family of 5.000 trained tire specialists and service exports. Hel-ll help keep your tires in first class condition. the year 'roundl R oin HOME WEEK SPECIALS For Sale the following good used Automobiles at. greatly reduced prices- . V . ONE 1938 DODGE COUPE ONE 1940 6-Passenger PLYMOUTH COUPE 0. ONE 1946 PLYMOUTH SEDAN ' ONE 1946 1-2 Ton FARGO PANEL ONE 1946 1-2 Ton FARGO EXPRESS ' Easy terms can be arranged on any bf the above vehicles. ' F. n. McLAiiiE uumsn 169 GRAFION ST. PHONE 860 swucueo roi I no to shrink to ..0aedricli end aaley aaen rataniaa thanks in ages sidewall unmea- t leli ' P. w. ael1,'iIi:oesie'."I'.'?m W i" so i'l'v7o'.t:l nT.s."o".:'.i! vlven 20 N0 lilllos HIGH. I wish. l'va I” y es a many snore." I. ll. 1.'a.n.ilan. Ian Iauge, Man. "I (head. a CLASSES NO. 19 FREE-FOR-ALL TROT. Victoria Driving Club NO. 20 CLASSIFIED PACE, S. R. Johnston Ltd. N0. 21 CLASSIFIED EVENT, Old Spain NIGHT SHOW Full t audeville program. Racing starts at, 8.30 p.lll. ,. CLASSES , NO. 22 CLASSIFIED PACE, Rogers Hardware Ltd. No.23 CLASSIFIED PACE, Henderson & Cudmore NO. 24 CLASSIFIED PACE, Moore 82 McLeod Ltd. - ' mu. LYNOIPS mo nmwar :1" be in full operation on main grounds afternoons and evening. Thrills a' plenty will is there-all the rides and devices which please the kiddies so much. The very latest vnmamuaemenu. This big Midway with ita new side-shows. multi-colored lights. Ferris w "1'- 9504 ll I lllht Worth coinlna to see. It's one of the biggest Midway shows urliia Canada today. Our starting Gate and Godfrey Photo Finish will be used in all races after- noon and nllhta and our up-to-date ..arl-mutual system will be in operation for all flclaand will be aupervlud by representatives of the Provincial Government. of great”: .'ii2sE'li9i?.l”Ji”f.'.'3 ii?.'.".'.1il'.f.3."if:.'.'.l'i'i2ii;13iiil.?'i2Hl”it”t.if7;.ii: S31 . "flat b the l'..adiae'of the Cornwall and Meadowiianlr Won-ien'a lnalituiu. who have Qftliutat on for serving delicious and satisfying food. D01” ll" to visit the Women's Institute display in our Show Building. it Ocduxiaa the whole pruning and it one of the finest displays ever brought together "I 0 Int-him Provinces. You should pay particular attention to the exhibits at h.l'"ll0l',IftI andjtienie-inada baking. and don't fall to sea a special dlsplayof flowers. Ind Ilia Iliraativa illagtay loathe. ' . A ,ia”iwima;.,,or FUN maavnarona - 9 V lair; .. At that time he thought there might be conferences concerning the Halifax-Dartmouth midst plan. but nothing further could be done on the come project un- til the Pro incial Government and the Oanadi n National Railways. now studying complete plans had reached an agreement. His own crew doing preparatory surveys at the site would "run out of work by fall.” While here Dr. Pratley conferred with civic officials on progress with Saint John's viaduct and pro- posals for a harbor bridge to west saint John. He leaves tomorrow for Prince Edward Island and will return to Montreal from there. OIL SALES Revenue from sales of oil and gas in Alberta for the first five months of use averaged Il9e,e4ll daily. up from daily average of 0.13.710 in the same period in IIIUISES ' aauuuaiuu--u-is an-en. a--u-um A Auuqagnsnlaaaurbr 'OlV!IIUIiNF"l Eiiwi.o.rei:”l'”f;'i W 0, lliclilyneon Supplies Ltd, late Pam mo zen Wlellaale l Ask him to show you the new B.F.G. Silvertowns and the famous Seal-o-matic safety. tubes that seal punctures in- stantly . permanently, as you ride! Sce him today! ' A l.OOl( FOI ) THE PINTAGONAI. 5lGNt lllll ldomlnea yanr lrlanlly I.I.OoodrielI Dealer Ineladann, lea; Cheese I. F. Geedrklo If your new car. truck or trader, is equipped with B.F.Goodrirli tires. take advantage of ,yonr dealer-'a lree lire lnlpecl on serv- ice lor long. trouble-lree mileage that is bnlit into all BI. Goodrich tires. . , . Matenelllm ' E still in dependable i l.l.0. tins. switched to 0.1. . completely trouble-lrea drlvlnl." l. L. Brawn, Ottawa. Ont. ”I III diicbsln o9 rarasl mileage lien any Int Cl IP. Get K I I cl! as mm- in." D7. lIendenaa,VIin ICU. an. "teal-a-notice bought in ll: In 00 CV I ' Ivbhr .' Industrial Rubber Madame and ltosouai new Brace, Mellay & Co. Ltd. Saaamlle mi.