If you do, then it will pay you to see your Trinsl Canada Credit Counsellor right away. Trans Canada Credit Corporation has helped thousands of Canadians to purchase a car or truck. There are several loan plans to choose from, rates are reasonable, no endorsers are required, and re- V-payment plans fit smoothly into individual budgets. For eligible borrowers loans up to H.000 are life Insured free. If you need a cash loan up to 32,500 see your Trans Canada Coun-I sellor right away. II. E. ROGERS, Branch Manager, Pickard Building lei or. Geo. St.-Charlottetown. r.a.l.-rho... ma . It pays to deal with this ALL-CANADIAN Company ''I P e;,::":Io. ' j ”” Trans THBIFTY CHILDREN to a report. of the pupil's savings activities committee. The report showed the sudents saved &i30.000 during the last school term. The commission objective was 5150.000. MONTREAL - (GP) - Students attending Montreal Catholic School commission Schools are thrlftier than their elders expect, according It Is False -to believe that tomorrow will never Icome. It will come inevitably, and with it all the uncertainties and problems of a new world. UiY ou" prepare for tomorrow when Sport Echoes From Prince county An account of a baseball game in summeraide in 1910 appeared in a summerslde paper recently and the standing of the league was below. It included wins, losses, ties and percentages. For exam- ple, the vets' standing was as fol- lows: Played 7. won 3. lost 2, tied 2. pct. .428. It took in quite a time to figure out how the percentages were worked oug. Finally it dawn- ed on us that the number of games played was divided into the wins. THE GUARDIAN. A CI-IARLOTTETOWN Alan Stewart in centrefleld know that when he threw that ball home he was throwing home the bacon. For that ball came in straight and true and smacked into Bob 8ohur- ma.n'a big mitt. tagged out. The game went ten scoreless innings. and C as B won it by two runs in the eleventh! They went on from there to win the championship. C C i Brother, those were the days! Here's hoping we have more of them. Hunters corner I (Continued from Page 6) i-meter extending approximately 16 miles outside the city, is in reality The runner was ' hm 5"" hmulh "n" W” W""'' the old P.E'.1. Fish and Game As- 10l' H11 "10 tum” D9T0em53K'-3- T”'isociation. They have done a lot ol d3i'- 31 We dl5"K”'d9d W9 W5. "W practical conservation work duringl If we counted the ties, we'd have system. e e The way the Summerside unique in the history of the game.; That way, if u tied a game, it" was exactly t e same as if you' had lost it. 0 0 O The bantam and pee-wee leagues of Prince County are still flour- ishing. In the bantam division twoi summerside teams are fighting it out for first place. In the pee-wee; bracket one summerside team andy the Konsington team are the lead-l era. 0 0 O Personally, we don't like the lop-l sided scores that are beginning to show in the Prince Edward Island Physical Fitness League. The last: two games the Curran & Briggs team played, they defeated the op- position 7 to l and 14 to S. Delin- itely not a good thing to keep up; the interest of the fans. I 0 0 0 It's funny about that. You'll think that the more of a parting, you handed the visiting team, the greater the Joy of the home fans. Not so. They want the home team" to win all right. But they want " you become a policyholder of the s II N I. l r E or cllllloll The fouowing Representatives of the Inn Life of Canada in Prince Edward Island will be glad to discuss with you any matters relating to life insurance or annuities, without obligation. CHABLOTTETOWN M38. DOROTHY B06133 - J. AETBUB CAMPBELL - J. A. M003: W. D. YOUNG, SUMMEBSIDE: 3. 0. Shoe, Kinkora; II. M. Chis bolas. Tryon; B. B. Bung, Freetown. ll. 0. BOHAKEB - Unit Supervisor Charlottetown, P. E. I. service on roan PARTS , DON'T BE HELD UP For parts. If we haven't got it we'll get it Stocliupnowwlthgenulnepartsfor all Ford Products It will pay you to have fast moving parts on hand ' We . them" to win by a thrilling "squeeze" play. or a timely basei hit or by the :pitcher's striking they last three men out to save the, game, or by a. sensational catch in. the ninth inning that cuts the via-l itors off from the. wlnnins Hm- 'I'hat's the kind of thing that sends the home fans into a frenzy of joy. Beating the tar out of the opposition leaves them cold. We remember last year the final ser- ies the C as B boys had with the Chatham team. The first Elm” was played in Chstham. We won that game 10 to 9 after it had looked for two or three innings as if we were going to be trimmed. The game was in doubt until the last Chatllam batter was out. The -words are not in the dictionary that would describe to you the kick we got out of that victory- We were walking on clouds long before we boarded the plane to come home l'o.3llffil.n0flld0l Then the second game in Bum- merside. we won it by a score of la. in 1. well, like all other sum- merside rooters we were glad to see the C as B lads win the Mar- itime crown for the second year in a row. But there wasn't the same thrill as was generated by that nip and tuck battle in Chathsm. O 0 C To sip the last delicious dress of victory you've got to fear defeat. You've got to be snatched from the brink of disaster to get all the thrill there is in winning. You've got to have butterflies in Y0"? stomach. and then when you win. those butterflies fly away to the clouds and takos you.with them. our very biggest baseball thrill was in Woodsida. ltl. Just when it began to look as if Woodaide were going to prove too strong 101' us. we loaded the bases and IA! Claudet came through with that daddy of all home, runs that won us the ball a. That was the biggest; bu Bilmmsrside and uharlottotown in their battles for lsland supremacy have furnished Ii few almost as good. What nlilhlry struggles these tlro teams have put. up, with victory often depend- on one play! Remember nuns rhaneufr He caught that fiyi lu- lernard? He struck 5 :3. -2 let arnl.wiunaboutfifteenfset :2; ii: :55 its Vets would have 9. .000 percentage; to reckon the standing on a polfltlait, timers figured it out was. perhaps,iing in L' 'ken were placed under a setting -hen and by morning five chicks :CifileAiId,Vlool the past 25 or 30 years for '.V-hlcll they have received very little cre-l However. their initiative in) introducing and establishing new; species of upland game birds, out- old standing successes in this lino be- cgmured um” put" whne ecticn with Hungarian partridge and Ring-necked pheas- ants. has drawn sportsmen to this province from all sections of the North American continent. To successfully carry out a corr- test like the one recently ” t ed requires planning. enthusiasm and hard work and the old cam- paigners proved conclusively that they have what it takes. Reports of Pheasant and Hung- arian partridge nests destroyed by hay mowers are still coming in to game officials. Tile latest being a. over at Milton that were chipped and would have hatched in a mat- ter of hours. They were left until evening but as the mother did not return the eggs that were not bro- had hatched with more expected. To off set thbse losses large cov- eys of both pheasants and Hum are reported from all sections of the countryside and two nests of Chu-kker partridge have been loc- ated that hatched successfully al- though the coveys were not spot- ted. I 0 C see trput. in some streams at least. are unpredictable in their be- haviour this summer. some schools will remain in an headwater pool for a day or night and them drift- away with an out-going tide. They appear to prefer the deeper water around the seaward bridges. Whit- iock's has been paying good divid- ends for bait fishermen but fly casters are not getting much more than exercise. Regardless of reports to the contrary this anglers mecca still holds large numbers of lulli fed. fat and flavoursome trout. More will be written about Whit- lock's at a later date when more space is avs.ila.ble; Numerous complaints are reach- ing game headquarters in r t to the nefarious practice of net ing trout. Whether or not the 'twino dippera' are more active this sea- son or the general run of fisher- men are beginning to wake up and report what they see on their rounds remains to be seen. lets hope that the honest bait fisher- man or fly center will soon come out of his shell and give enforce- ment officers active co-operation. crcp Prospects In that Improving era occurred in many sections of the three Prairie Provinces. during the past week. weather has been warmer and crop prospects con- tinue to improve generally. There are areas which report excessive moist- ure conditions with water lying in the fields and some crops turning yellow as a result. Wheat heading varies from I per cent to complete. being delayed in areas of latest seeding. G s are very plentiful in some localities but dctive control measures have kept damage to date to a mum. according to the week- ly crop report of the Department of Agriculture of the Canadian Nat- ional Railways. v In the okanagen Valley the weather has been extremely hot with only one shower a week ago. The cherry lnovesilent is completed and both vegetables and early ap- ples are now moving to market. No damage from any source is NH - I ;o.o...m.- (or). oettletiutlsrswboilars wnm-llIno.Man.. July as-iahow -1-. 3. "h made It hot KIER, Athletics In P. E. I. By F. ll. MacArthur; (By F. H. MacArthur) PART II , The Maritime Championships. .for the first time in their history. were held in P. E. 1. on the grounds of the city A. A. A., and Iagain the Island boys made a fine showing: MacKinnon for the sec- on successive season captured the "mile". and C. J. MacMillan the "quarter". L. B. Mac.Millan and W. H. Ritchie each got two seconds. J. R. Drake won second place in the "shot". while the three mile bicycle championship went to Lorne Unsworth. In 1399 the Maritime Champion- ships were held at Moncton and the Abegweits again entered the meet and won high honors. four championships coming to Char- Iiottetown. D. A. MacKinnon for the third successive season, won his specialty. the mile run and second in the "half" which was run in 2.02. Unsworth won the half mile bicycle race; J. R. Drake the high jump went to R. A. Donslioe, a novice. Donnhoe captured second place in the broad jump. and Ritchie won second place in the hundred yard dash. Two days after the Maritime Championships at Moncton, the C. W. A. Champ- ionship was held at the same place and the boys from the Mll- lion Acre Farm won every event in which they competed. - 0 O 0 By 1900 sports had aroused gen- eral interest with the military and athletic "meets" joining Inest holding 11 pheasant esss cuti hands. On July 2nd of that year the Maritime Championships were held in Halifax. Again the boys from P. E. I. came through with flying colors. . The military sports in which a valuable trophy was offered by "18 City to the company scoring the most points. had the largest Hit Of compeiltors ever seen at an Island meet up to this time. No. one company of Charlottetown Clbtured the trophy. after an ex- citing game with No. 2 company of the city. - The Abegweit team which play- ed in Halifax' on September 1. 1900 was made up of: D. A. Mac- Kinnon. captain and manager; C. J. M.acMiliarl, W. H. Ritchie, J. R. Drake. A. G. Cameron, W. Jones. E. Brown, P. A. Duffy. K. C. Mac-Pherson. R. A. Donahoe, Les Adams. They left the Island on Friday, August 31. wearing in. blue and black colors of the Abogweit Ath- letic Club. The next day they slussed it out with the Halifax Wanderers. the flower of Maritime athletes. The blue and black acor- ed 51 points to rthe Wanderers 45. while other clubs--New Glasgow. Moncton, etc. had to be content with smaller scores. When news of their victory reached Charlottetown that night everybody shouted with joy, Tm Pllllns of time has seen the rise and fall of such clubs as the Charlottetown, Phoenix. Crescent. Part and Cabot. but sports in one form or mother still go on. It is Interesting to note that the Charlottetown club played one of their best games in Mom", 34 ward Road, then known as For. gan's Field. From there the play- ers switched their stumps on a field owned by the Beegley Es- tate. on St. Peter's Road between the railroad crossing and Kenning. ton Tannery, and finally at Via toria Park. - I O 0 it was a common sight in um. dlyl to see the players with spade and pounder in hand nodding their grounds. Among the lggdlng fans of the time won Mun-., 000110 and Walter Atkinson. Dr. Jenkins, Sir Louis Davie R. Hodgaon. Frank I g ; Ben Davies, .lr.. Judge it. 3. Eng. Gerald and others. St. Dunatan'a and P. W. C. hire- wise had their clubs. the former at,one time boasting eleven. The principal opponents of the local players have been the Garrison and Wanderers Clubs of Halifax. the Moncton Club and others Whose names have passed with the years. In thou days lacrou and our- ling had their diamonds laid out on Pownsi and Roehford Squares where they practiced .for the an- nual match on Dominion Day. La- cron was introduced by the stu- dents of St. Dunstan'a doling. In 1 . Tennis was played under the pr toctlng win of the Charlotte- town Lanrn nnis club. The pioneer clubs at tile game were the "llicl-noes" and the Fitarap. both organised in IS. and each retained its individuality until 15 when they amalgamated. Rugby football was played the two colegea. as well as by several cit clubs. There were also some boating clubs. but time never became very popular. How- ever. those appear to have been been days for revnng. negsttes were then an annual event. borne of our old time residents may still recall when Wlllian Clan in a sin a. and the same oer man. with is brother Frank. nie Davies and Dr. Robins in a four. Qqsithei but Jlaritilnes l giegier. g. , .iF' E l .2 tell! gents ( . y W Alma and Vicinity Mrs. James A. Gordon is visit- ing in Charlottetown guest of her cousin. Mrs. William C. Doyle. Miss Eleanor Conroy of .New. York is visiting in Alma. guest of, her aunt Mrs. C. O'Brien. The Misses Lois and Alida Dun-l bar are guests of Miss Florence Dunbar,,Alma. Miss Catherine Wallace who has been visiting her friends in Charlottetown and Norboro return-g ed to her home on Monday. ! Mrs. olive Waite. Mrs. Alviel Mountain and Mr. Frank Moun-i tain motored to Sea View on Mon-. day. Mrs. Euda Mountain and Mrs. Myra Gard are vacationing in Alma, where they are tho guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Mountain. Mrs. Margaret Whitman and daughter Patsy of North wey- mouth, Mass. are vacationing in Montrose guests of Mrs. Whit- man's mother Mrs. R. T. Bowness. The many friends regret to learn of the death on Sunday. of Mrs. Charles Pridham in her ninety- second year. Mrs. Erskine Heywood of Char- sized trees for sticks and an un- limited number of players to Is side. The more scientific method of playing in rinks did not come until the winter of 1891, when the Charlottetown Hockey Club was formed. Leading lights of the new era were Messrs. George Rogers. J. B. Dawson. F. W. Moore, H. Mc- Neil. L. G. Whear, S. C. Moore and Dr. H. D. Johnson Islanders today thoroughly ap- preciate the worth of sports. They are good in their place and when played "fair and clean" they contribute to the manliness of any generation. OUT OUR WAY iher cottage in Montrose. -Photo by Burke iottetown is spending some time at Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hutton and son Lincoln of ottsma are spend- ing their holidays on the Island. They are the guests of Mrs. Hut- ton's parents Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bowness, Alberton. Mr. and Mrs. Walters and fam- ily of Newburyport. Mass.. are visitors to the Island. At present they are guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. O'Brien. Alma. Mr. and Mrs. George ahelfoon and Peggy Ann of Charlottetown spent the week-end in Montrose guests of Mr. and Mrs. Neil E. Barbour. Mrs, Preston Clarke and family . ;-...l . V-lULYl i2i).g 19” more uses lL19so CITAWA. 3 ; The Bureau olugtatistica lea), today the estimated labor mm, :1; thus” four months ending . . . rose to e1,5ao,ooomo g::.000.00iHn the same p....,'.f” ” For April aim in l total was seaooofloo, , of tD.ooo.ooo over March um 000.000 above April, low. The Bureau said seasonal inn ancoa affected therise Am over March. mm guests of Mr. and .J. Allai Clarke and Mr. Watson hardy. The Misses Rae and I'aabal"Do:. night and spent the week end will their parents. Mr. and Mrs. w. 51 Donald. and family of Coleman were visl. tors to Alma on Sunday. '1-h.., were that guests of Mr. and Mg, Harry Barbour. . y a The sympathyi of the com- munity goes out to the family 0: the late, Mrs. John Murphy who DEW! U-My on Monday evening at the Charlottetown Hospital following a serious operation. Mr. David A. Barbour who has been visiting his old home in Almg returned to Winnipeg on Saturday morning. are vacationing here. Tiley are But it works overtime for you here at Home Motors. Moderate prices I 0 1&1 Ia Mouav I9 EJTHEZ VANT YOU2 GEE OR YOUR MAGTEZ ' ; for top quality means fuller value. IINE casrmrrilozwuwzs In I .s-..? ..g"'.,....s.. I 108 KENT St I CIIARLOTTETOWH I 4' in J. in WILLIAMS -- .. ........... ve e'.oDs."'i-He Hoizes YOU WERE A BETTER RIDER WELL AND 50.! y 50 THE ALIBI I BETTER. 5TAY UP WHICH WAY THAT i . I'UH--I THOUGHT I. COULD SEE THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW .. some -c-an-..-u.i.. 1 l I 1 .4 s aid motored to Alma on Frldgif Mr. end Mrs. Sterling Barbour .. ;;.-our--.