(H115 uiiakaoi lit .0 LaU/UHHAN. BASE BALL WRESTLING BOWLING .SPORT BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT iiiiliviiii IN liXIli Pilci HOLDINVIIiI-E, Okla., May '1_ hiiilp Granville. oi Hamilton, Ont, ‘ sixth today in the thirty-seventh p oi C. C. Pyle's derby, running the l) miles iroin Okmulgee, Okla., to ioldenville, Okia., in 10.05.00. Gran- ille, Canada's lone hope in the foot- lce, is sixth in elapsed time, with l total oi 277.4420 hours. He was iwest today because oi a. sore ankle. The lap was captured by John bio", policeman oi Passaic, n. J., iiisi iIAiiliiBiE Piilii N01 CLEVELAND. 0.. May ‘l-Mag- nstes oi the various clubs oi the Amellwll Ill-Elle baseball, in session he" MGHdQYVVDtQO to discontinue the custom oi naming annually a "mNt valuable player" in the League, The Iessuelprasident, E. S. Barn- ard, presided at the session and negro the masbates decide that attempting to dioose a most valuable player was IIIQ is second in elapsed time. demoralizing sometimes and apt to be unfair. I Successful Year lForThe KM. cs4; Splendid Reports Received F romA ll Committees-ExcellentFinancial Statement. ‘ {no twenty-third annual meeting .9! the Young Men's Christian Asso- ciation was held in their building last evening and was largely attended. Mr. J. A. Clark, President of the As- sociation, presided. Previous 'to the opening oi the ‘meeting. ‘a dainty supper was served by members oi the Ladies Auxiliary of the Y. M. C._A. The minutes oi the last annual meeting were read by theSecretary Mr. Lester J. Douglas. On motion the report was adopted as read. Mr. B. W. LePage opened the meeting with prayer. in. s. s. Clark on behalf of the Board oi Directors then submitted a report oi the year's activities. deal- ing with the various activities c! the Association ior the past year in" a comprehensive and interesting man- ner. He referred to, the many dc! partments, such as Educational Work, Peilgious Work, The Building, Phy- sical Department, Boys Work, For- eign Work, the various banquets. conferences and conventions, etc. it was noticed that in each and every department encouraging and very successful work is going on. He laid particular stress on Finance, saying that, the report would not be com- plete i_i' it did not mention the very exicellant work done by the Finance Committee, Mr. W. A. Stewart and Mr. P. W. ‘riirner. The iact that outstanding liabilities amounting to $4,100 have been about cleared oil during the past year speaks ior 15' sell. Mr. Clark in concluding asked for God's divine leadership and bless- ing, for without Him we can do nothing. "We pray that the influ- ence oi thesChai-lottetown Y. M. C. A. may be tar-reaching and they, it may lead many young men and b0?! to know and acknowledge Jesus Christ as their Lord and Saviour." nev. Mr. Muir in movins the adoption oi the report, paid a hilh tribute to the ‘Association. Mr- In" Carter seconded the motion which was adopted. the. W. E. Fletcher iavored those fluent with a dellghtiul vocal eolo "Genevieve." She was heartily ap- piauded. The following directors ior the ensuing year were elected: Messrs J. A. Clark, J. A. McMillan, Oeorls Defllois, E. E. Clawson, victor Pur- die. Mr. '1‘. W. Bentley rendered a vocal solo, “Wedding Bells Are Breakins Up That Old Gang oi Mine." H! was enthusiastically received- m. w. a. Stewart. chairman l" the finance Committee then read aioroditeble report, which lbowed a n): debit oi more against 04.41160 oi iaat year. This report was recelv- cd with gloat applause. It was announced that the finan- ciaLolmPllm which ovens W"! F‘ m usoowhicb u.» cam we M- sociatioai until any 1st. 1°"- m. James Macmillan, chairman o! tiie- Physical nopertmeut. mil ' oillfndid reportcovsring the dolndl o: bu "cope-smear m me rm ow- ltiloion in n: this "W" ‘m ““' salami-sly adopted. u was the =1’ port ‘ct w. W. I. Bentley. chllllll" oi tee mlicioiusiioric committee- report as chairman oi the Boys’ Work Committee. Cleaver isan ent las- tic worker where boys are concerned and judging by the reception ‘oi the report, he is the right man in tho right place. 1t was moved by Mr. Stewart and seconded by Mr. John McNair that thp above four reports be adopted. Motion carried. The report oi the Ladies‘ Auxiliary oi the Y. M. C. A. was read‘ by Mrs. J. G. Jamieson and at its conclu- sion was iavorably commented upon. A hearty vote oi thanks was moved the Auxiliary by Mr. W. Rowe and seconded by Mr. W. E. Bentley. Mrs. Jamieson made a suitable reply thanking the Association on behali of the Auxiliary. .- ' . A vote oi thanks was moved th clergy by Mr. T. W. Bentley and‘ sec- replied to by Rev. Dr. Ramsay. A vote oi thanks was tendered the retiring directors by Mr. Cleaver Mc- Lean and seconded by Mr." John Mc- Nalr, and replied to by President J. A. Clark. v A vote or thanks was moved the press by Mr. Jack McNair and sec- onded by Mr. Henry Lapthorne, and was responded to by Messrs T. E. Cor- rigan oi The Guardian and Charles Mitchell oi the rlatriot. _ A high tribute was paid lVIr- 99°F" Murray. Y, M. C. A. Physical Direct- or and Mr. Ray Pendleton, Secretary by Mr. T. W. Bentley, who in a short, but appropriate speech euloslledon the tireless work oithese gentlemen in nn-tiiei-ins the informs ofllle Y- M. C. A. Mr. Walter McNutt was the lo- companist ior the eveninl- No iurtherblislness, meetiill ~1- Journed. For Bigger And g Better Fish (By British United Prose) Lormori, May ‘it-Thirty learned men, armed with facts and figures about fish. are to devise ways and means oi maklhl W?! If“ 1"!"- Thesa men. it seems, are thorollih- 1y dissatisfied with the aide oi the herring, cod, plaice and hak which have hitherto graced the ta lee oi Europe, and have been delegated by fifteen countries to see what can be done about it. . The trouble is that little fish which are born in some parts of the ocean do not get such a quantity oi salt as they require to retain table also. The! n. not worth catching, and have hitherto remained free and happy in consequence. - Shoals of these little iiah have been “quip-lg at fishermen ior years. Mil- lions oi them havahad the exvfllill" of being netted and then thrown back in the sea as unworthy. Bo confident have they grown that the! M" "W" trawlers roi- miles. dsrins the hotl- and turn back as soon as they 1P‘ brooch salt water. , . . . But soon they will be laughing on the other side ‘ of their Iflll- m"? hqgpy hunting grounds If! goingto be so liberally supplied with salt aac other weight-builders which have be- come known to the thirty win men of the‘ sea mat mew vlll limo W, fi. Cleaver ciiaazi. who liter- my 1| m; g himself. gave his siaee unheard or even in tnavannaia ofamateur izncfv. _,__ ___..._._ 1.. ended by Mr. Cleaver McLean and - " l, inferiority Complexes o 1 Br 1 I '_ . . Inferiority complexes have figured in sports ever since "the use oi the trmhas become popularized. In al- most everygame known there are certain participants who iare much betierl in training .or practice than lnactualrcompetition. ' These‘ lfellows‘ are world-boaters when therelare no specators or no rivals" around, but put them in actual competition l beioro ‘the galleries and they must get the idea in their minds that they are no good, else they would sweep‘ everything beiore them. A lot oi these iellows. however, eventually conquer their Jinx‘ before it is toolaib. to make the headlines. Take the "case of the bashful young Kahsan. Johnny Kuck. Johnny may have had to go abroad io turn the trick but he-most certainly turned it. _ Forlagood many months prior to Pthe Olympicgames at Amsterdam last Bummer; the critics had been saying that young Kuck usually did his best work in practice. His special- ty.ias. you know, is ‘ossing the shot and, even when the iinal tryouts for the team-were held at the Harvard Stadium, the bashful star, who was hurling iron under the colors oi the boa Angelcs‘ Athleiic Club, had an attack o! stage-fright, or “buck fev- er," or inferiority complex and barely QUIN HALL 9 "E “"1 "5""! 9W3!"- loc-iorul Rrlsaaaniad. \‘\’\-\ A @1511 I succeeded in making the grade. In view oi his showing at Cambridge. little was expected oi Johnny at the Olympics, despite the fact that he rat- ed as one oi.’ our most promising athletes. Prior to the Cambridge meeting. Kuck had "gone through a tough ex- perience at the sesquicentenriial games at Philadelphia. He lost re- peatedly to Herb Schwarze, but after the crowd had leit the ground, Johnny threw the shot further than; anyone had during the games. As s result oi Kuck's "buck fever" per- formances in actual competition, “Hard" Brix, of the University oi Washington, was looked upon as the point gainer for the U. S. in the shot put at Amsterdam, with Kuck a possible second or third placer. While Kuck had cast the iron much farth- er than Brix, Johnny's best mark had been made in practice. But what happened at Amster- dam? The bashful Kansan kicked his jinx for a loop and outdistanced hid world's rivals in the Olympic games. Now he is being hailed as the world's greatest and ls the holder of the accepted world's record of 52 ieet 11-16 inches. Not only this, but it is figured that, having mastered his inferiority complex and realising that afier all he is a pretty iair shot- putter. it is not unlikely that he will l won Last no. Philadelphia. i0 4 .114 NEW YOTk -- 1 £92 st. Louis 5 ms Detriot a .525 Cleveland . '1 10 .412 Chicago ............ 8 i0 .375 Washington . . . .. . . . 4 a .300 Boston .... 4 i0 .200 NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost P.C. Boston 0 4 .607 Glucose . o a coo st. Louis a e .000 l“ “i ol-Ytiplc5 Pittsburgh c '1 as: V “AD DlFFlfl-NIV grew York . 5 c .455 cmmmw“ rooklyn .. . a a .429 mm!“ AWEE i‘: Cincinnati . ‘ 5 9 40o LEFT T“: Philadelphia .. .... .. 5 a .305 WW5) $1195 INTERNATIONAL amour: Won Lost no. Rochester 9 4 .692 Baltimore ." 11 5 sea Toronto s, 7 .553 Montreal "i" r .500 Reading .- a a .500 Buffalo 5 '1 .417 Jersey City 5 9 .357 T055 o: Newark . 3 9 .250 5/1- s1. ' a do fifty-eight or sixty iectln actual competition, and that his name will go down in the books along with that oi Ralph Rose, whose mark oi flity- one feet stood for some twenty years. Only a. few weeks ago, Eric Krenz, Stanford's star weight man broke the world's record in the discus throw by hurling the saucer»103 ieet 8 3-4 inches. In view oi the fact that Krenz failed to qualify as a discus thrower on the U. S. Olympic‘ team last Sum- mer, this seems a. remarkable per- iormance. Eric made the trip to Am- sterdam as a shot-putter and not a discus thrower. Here is another case where the inferiority complex may have entered into the matter. One must either blame it onto that or the fact that star athletes may be stars one day and merely mediocre the next. Whatever the reason, Krenz broke the record oi 158 feet 1 3-4 inches formerly held by Clarence (Bud) l-louser, erstwhile University oi South- ern California. star, and turned the trick in the same stadium at Palo Alto. Cal, where Bud had set his mark three years ago. l-Iouserhby the way, is still in a competitive mood, and the rivalry between iheso two Westerners may yet lead to another new mark being attained. Copyright, 1929, King Features, synaicntelne." " 1ven.'c.;zicd I In London ‘(ByBritlah United Press) maroon, "my "n-no one, how- ever, eccentric‘ his or her opinions ‘may be; need‘ he lonely in London where ' there are numerous strange aocietieawhich cater for every con- ceiyabie taste. score-thin forty "brotherhoods," all proisaling occult andesoteric know- ladle. nourish in London alone. Each its coterie oi enthusiastic be- lievers,‘ because each is ready to supply iliem with something magical. ‘ M bxplorer,‘ who set out to dis- ecvtr how many societies it would be ponibidlor him toioiri. found that iitany"_ oi them are "secret" com- miinitisl, ‘ with ceremonial "initia- time." oi’ ‘, obation," terms oi feasting," "procreation" and "un- vtiliagimand final adfnission ior the Wfith] 0110' ‘U0 thl lltiidr circle. ' Inca haa a iarron once own to add to in iiiiprodivonoaaans most have alimoriobaaabywbiolionabiogiat. mlzibg with tile common throng. can recognise another member oi the elect. ‘These weird societies have existed in one form or another since the days oi Moses, but they have never flour- ished so amazingly as they do today. There are thirty thousand oi them in America, but their multiplication in England is a development oi com- paratively recent date. One oi the most interesting is the Adlerian SOCICW, who“ member; gm followers of Adler, an educitionist. son oi_t11e iamous Jewish rabbi. He founded the tenets oi the peculiar ethical education which is propound- ed by the society which bears his name. ‘ I Bun-worshippers and vegetarians abound, and one quarter of London is full of tabernacle: and meeting- houses, where two or three times a week strange revelations are made by preachers who ‘ seances and give remarkable evidence of their “second sight” in return for the pro- ceeds of a ellvercoliectlon. Then there is a society oi British Israelites, who believe most firmly, and will prove to you most convinc- ingly, that the inhabitants oi the BriuahBnpirearetlsaChoaenRace 0i the Biblfi. Nearly all the non-politicai-strange soc-ii are found to be assemblies of 900318, W110 wish either to obtain health by unorthodox-methods, or to obtain salvation by persuading them- selves that the accepted interpreta- tions of religion are wide of the mark. CHURCH LEAGUE 1.00 to cs0 "st. James” Peters". 8.30 to 10.00 ‘iZion" vs "Trinity." AIIBTIOII SALE I will sell by Public Auction at Cape Traverse on Tuesday, May 14th. VI IUHNSUN IS ISTRIBKEN CLEVELAND, Ohp ly ill from a cold that has settled in his kidneys, Walter Johnson, baseball idol for more than 20 years, and man- ager of the Washington team oi the American League, was taken from his room in the Hotel Cleveland yester- day and rushed aboard a train for Washington. He is to enter the emer- gency hospital there. How They Stand AMERICAN LEAGUE Subject to Tuesday's Games. Standard lliinning Exchange Big Leagues NATIONAL LEAGUE B. l! E (Ten innings) Pittsburgh ...... ... 8 13 2 New York ... ... ... ...! 6 1 . R I! E Chicago ... i...9 I2 1 Brooklyn ... ".4 8 1 it I! E Cincinnati ... 4 8 1 Philadelphia 6 12‘ 1 R H E St. Louis ... .... 5 13 2 Boston ... ... 8 12 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE R. H E Philadelphia . .. .. . 2 5 d Chicago .. . .. 4 12 3 R II E Boston ... ... 5 10 0 Cleveland ... ... ... l. 9 1 R H E Washington 2 6 0 Detriot 8 9 1 R H E New York 0 10 3 St. Louis .. ... ... 5 10 0 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE a Reading .. 2 B 2. Montreal 4 5 2 R. I! E Newark .. .. 4 6 l Toronto . . ... . . 2 6 3 R H E Jersey City . ... ... . ii 9 0 Rochester ... ....li 18' 2 Baltimore at Buffalo, postponed, cold weather. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Columbus 4. st. Paul i4. Toledo i, Minneapolis B. lolll-svlllo 6. Kansas City 1c. Indianapolis 5. Milwaukee c. FRilii niacin HALIFAX. N. 5., May ‘i-Vinbo Fergusioh, stellar utility man of the Wolverines Hockey Club last winter received a wire yesterday afternoon from J. H. Btrachan, prident oi the Montreal Maroons, asking him to come to Montreal within a week i0 talk over his signing a contract. Fer- guson was recommended by Joe Mat- te, and was regarded as one oi’ the outstanding hockey players in the Maritlmes last season. He is also a ball player oi more than ordinal‘! ability. and last season he received a tempting oifer from an International League team, but turned the oiier down. Last night he was undecided ii he would accept the Maroon oiier or not, but it is likely that he will. Room 40 was wholly controlled by Sir Alired Ewing._ . - Scattered up and down the east coast oi England and Scotland were wireless stations equipped with direc- tion-iinding apparatus, and a iew minutes after a German warship had sent out a message to headquarters. the message was in the hands oi the staii oi Room 40 and the position oi the ship was pricked oi! on tile map. . It was inthis waythata.‘ osewatch» *' was kept on the German‘ et, which could never §bifi how A ii‘ {Kins were getting to English eafls. ‘the day before the battle oi the Doggef tank the Aiflniraity were 1r. possession oi the whole of the plans of the German Navy, and “during thc battle they were intercepting and solving orders in code. Similarly the‘ battle oi Jutland was watched by the unseen eye oi the Admiralty. Zeppellris on their way back from borrfmig raids were verfloquaciouz and submarines used to wireless homr? their "bag." It was Room" 40 whiii decoded the message from the U2 ‘ giving iull details oi the"'ainking c. "St. Nipigsing ... .,, ... o... 825 325 Bherltt Gordon B35 835 Sylvarlite ... ... 165 170 Tack Hughes ... ... 925 930 "°""4' -- ""5375 53g (By British United Press) Pend Oreille ... 850 n LONDON, M”, ,,___whn h” been 9mm" "' "‘ " n described as "the best kept secret oi "m 7" 7‘ years after hostilities had ceased, in 5t 5mm" 4° the brain of air Alired Ewing, Prin- sudbl"? 3"“ -" '9' 37° 85° cipai and Vice-Chancellor oi Edin- the war" was locked. until ma!!! burgh University, who has just been presented with the ireedom or Edin- at 1 o'clock, my stock and farming 15mm“; ,_, ,_ no n25 burgh 11119191119”!- Tml 53.5 "T9. china 1°: Trcsdwell Yukon ... “.1350 i325 gu- A-m-ed, who i; 74' "u", m. horsemen to secure some oi the belt ‘flgomplorl Cadillac .. 101.5 l0 Qgplgmbgf, 9"" Will"! m" lo the Prelim“- Ventures 070 050 The secret is the story oi what hap- See handbllls ior terms Ind lm- Vlpond ... ... 100 10s pence in "Room 40," m, departmlm. tlculara West Dome Lake 8% of the Admiralty of London, which GORDON W. DAWSON. Windfall ... .. 5 bli dealt with the solving oi the enemy's Cape ‘traverse Wright Hargreaves ... .. 116 180 wireless mellllil in cipher intercept- INA-Iris‘ Walnwell Oil i" a (sens b! l3 ed by our secret listening etatiue. the Lusitania. Y Quotations iiirnished through" cour- ' ‘ my oi Atwell a co. cnnrioiiez-icn B03’ smut JHIIlbOfee _ , ~ »-" Oiiice. Noon Close Subscription List PTOfBSSIOIIGI Card. Abans 200 200 Aconcia. ... 9 8 “- Amity 170111101‘ - -- 34 34 In connection with the great coin- Mark R’ McGulgan’ Amulet .. 1'11 115 ing oi age International Boy Scout B. A. _" Apex ... ... ... 3 Jamboree to be held at Birkenhead, BABRSTER, SOLICITQB, ETC. Ar 15 14 Eng, lnJul , c o s uis a t be MONEY T0 5°“ n: . S0 30 .provlded iorybywthe cfgovernliai- gen- cunmm Bunk’ curmmwwu’ P1" Assoc. Oil d: Gas 525 565 ‘oral. 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