THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN M} luh for Year! th-Opening DIY- ‘lfijlfffie ignr-Two Ball Four- “" nth-sweepstakes. Lynne 201h.—QualiIylng Round a Championship. ¢ June 24m. mnbés scores. . “ will" P- uma“; "B" Ilvision Joan- lfiune 27th.‘ Four Bali Four- tdi July mn-Sweepstakcs. at‘ ‘my ‘HL-‘owéld $355»; wt July 8lh.—M1X m a u!“ u, July 11m. — rst 0 ., .. lomhip w b" 91"" "Y “l? I Second ncund to be _ ‘ 29m, Third Round to De 17-91’- by July 30ih. ' wad, July 15th.-—Open Dan m July i8th.—Pr0vinciai Meet gJjuly sand-Two Boil. Four- yu1g)“:l5§h.-Provincisi Meet ,5 31in 29th.—Fll‘St2 Round Club 158p ‘Championship for Sm- , 5nd srewnrt Cup-final round “played by Septulst. u; Aug. ISF-Méhfl tWO bill ... {or Whitney Memorial y-liunl round to be Played , ll. ygiftmig? Slim-Open Date. w. Aug. BLlL-Monkey Competi- ,A . nth-Open Date. l? Au‘: Mthl-FOUJ‘ mu Four- wa, Aux. rem-mm Day. at. Aug. (land-Sweepstakes. w, Aug, ‘Jump-Open Date. Bit. Aug. ZQtiL-Open Date. m, Sept. 2nd.-Mixed Four- p; Sept. BthP-Opeh Date. W; Sept. 9th. Open Date. p; Sepl. 12th.—\A1l Club Matches his finished. Wed. Sept. Nth-Mixed Four- u. "insult, mum-Open ma. yd, Sept. 23rd.-Open Date. m, Sept. Nth-Open Date. wed Sept. Nth-Closing Field m g4 Evening Celebration. REMEMBER WHEN ,1 ll: The Canadian Press) New York Yankees invaded Oo- Mh Unzversity 1B yea-rs a o to- slo sign Lou Gehrig tcher first baseman. ‘Dom-ibis. Iliarted, marking baseball his- lllqd was voted the American locks most valuable Player in M1931. 1934 and 1936. He did limbs p, scheduled game’ from hi. l, i926 Until illnrss icrccd his Ilmnent. May 3, 1939. He died on (It l, i941. irkets At A Glance (fission Press) ' to-Mlnlng groups 5nd west- Ehoils lower; industrial stocks e r. trash-Stocks closed hlghor. ' York-Stocks lower. lhnlpel-Wheo changed. In Th0 Stud i Abner r. Clegg, my, This handsome and l well-bred horse will ‘ make the season at ‘ Myron MacArthurh, Kensington, who is au- thorized to make all ar- fangemcnts. t I 5 Abner T. Clegg was "no of the greatest 3- l l l l Year-aids ever raced in _ the Eastern States. He should , Winners. FRANK ADAMS, Owner. Halifax, N, l, ‘*4 w“ sire futurity played by histo Harris’ Homer In 11th Inning Gives Tigers 4-1 . Victory Over Yankees NEW YORK. Juno 10—(AP)— Ned Harris planuned s home run into the right-field stands with two mates on base in the 11th inning today to give Detroit Tigers a 4- trlllmth over New York Yankees and steal the Ipntllght from sev- eru-l other noteworthy qflorts. Ono o! the players tram whom attention was distracted was Har- ris’ teammate, Roger (Doc) Cm,- mer, who had three singles to brinB his lifetime total 0t hits to 3.001 and enter a select. group o1 hitters that includes only lb: om. srs now motive m the major leagues. In previous major league ry 76 yers have mad; 2,000 or more hi and o1’ these the only ones still playing are Paul Waner o! Boston Braves, only tour hits from his 3,000 goal, Lloyd Waher o! the Phils. Mel Ott otl New York Giants, Jimmie Foxx, newly sc- qui-red by Chicago Cubs, Joe Cronin o! Boston Red Box and Ohsrioy Gehflfllifir. coach and pinch hitter for the Tigers All o! these players have been in service lonfler than Oramer. who is in his 14th season and came to De- trmit ‘inst. winter alter playing with Philadelphia. Athletics, the Red Sox and Washington Senators. He has made 64 hits this season. Bosox Wallop Browns At Boston the Red Box mun- tl-lned that: newly won grip on second @4100 in the American League y defeating 5t, Louis Browns 10-3 behind the eight-hit Plwhlhfivtilfltgetgii (lrfiiizll-Igiguson. 0X ' a3: glnggeiahigo the Armchair fir: X IWBIIPOd 9Q ggsitions, the A's going back to m; ..:.*.er.t*lt'sr=.“ru=~=e' "Y - um . Just six percentage point? up. arate the cubs. Y Team Meets Army Squad In Softball Game ‘I115 fast-stepping Y softball team tangle with the Army sqrad 1h s. Citgulxague encounter ton sht at tho k diamond in s I!!!" ohst is scheduled to get underway at 6.30 sharp. Undefeated in three straight sn- counters the Y team nevertheless have had close calls on every ap- pearance. A hard-hitting squad they have been coming through in the pinches with timely blows that have s 1t victory tor them. However ey face opponents tonight who have the ability to take their meas- ure. The Army beam, winning one and losing one, has shown plenty and there is confidence in the camp that tonight they will stop the march of the Y squad. The game may turn out to be s huriers battle. The army pitcher gay the boys, is plenty fast and with Stull on the mound for the Y it looks as it the batter; will be look- ing at tho fastest pitching o! the season in tonight's gums. Pirates rel/ease Jungels to Jersey City P . June 10-(AP)-— Pittsburgh Pirates qnnounoed to- day tho outright releass or right.- hnnded itther Kenneth Jungels to Jersey ity oi the International League, s. farm club o! New York Giants. Jungels’ release brings the Pirate roster down to 24. one bellow the limit. He was dratted lrcm Wilkes- Burre c! the Eastern League last year and this season has made live mile! appearances for the Pirates. He was credited with no victories and no losses. OLD GREEK VICTORY The Ancient Persians’ west invasion thrust was ended by Greeks at the nsvai bottle o! s1- anus. Moutroll Ncwsrk Baseball Results INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE First game: Krause and Dwim‘; Gerheauser. Gumpert. (6). Page (6) and Pad- Cubs Hflzip Phils 5-2 GO. io-(Am- Usual! a. Cub nemesis, Johnny Podga ny was just that. tor six innings While he pitched no-hit baseball today, but scmeihing hap- pened in the sevenlh and before the smoke cleared Qhicsgo live runs-enough to best Phils 5-2. During the seventh-inning up- risinB the Cubs bunched tour tilts, three oif Podgajny and sn- other oft Ike Pearson. who came in to clean up the mess. But it was durina Pearson's ro- Elsie that Stanley Hack delivered blow that cleaned the bases and govc the Cubs their margin o! ‘Mun New York victory, By pitching an height-hit. per- formance, Bill Lee managed to win his el hth victory o! the season. Podga ny allowed only four men to reach first. base during the first six innings. Two got there ‘on a. tvalk. another as a hit batsman and gar fourth on an error by Nick en. Four - Ball‘ Golf tourney Starts today _'IlOCL|EDO. _O.. June 10—(AP)—- Sixteen leading goli professionals had their last tree ride around In- verness today-one last chance to {ind the answers to the questi s the course WLll ask the next tour days in the eighth. annual $7,650 round-robin best-bail matzhes. Lawson Little, winner o! [he United States and British ama- teur tournaments in 1934 and i935 and the 1940 National Open king, and his partner Lloyd Mangrum appeared to have the most. of the answers in today's practice round. They fipped nine strokes oti’ par -with a. brilliant 33-29-62 étiort, although both had bogies on the openin hole. All 1 entrant; toured the layout today but most. played more than One ball and did not keep s medal score. Tomorrow's cpenlrg round in the 126-11012 best ball event will be Drecedcd by a cinic in which each o! the roiessionai; will demon- strate h lavorite stact {or the gallery, Royals split’ Doubleheader With Newark’ n.1, Juno lo-(AP) -Ne'wa.xk Bears maintained l, lead o! 2 1-2 games over Montreal today by dividing a dcub cheader. The International League lenders were soundly thrashed in the Jp- ener, 15-2, but came back w.th s 8-2 decision in the nightcaz, which went into an overtme eig u; 1:111- g. A walk to frank Koiieher by Chet. Klshn Willi the bases loaded furl-fed in Bill Johnson with tho deciding run tor Newark. Johnson had opened the trams with n. two- passer M! Les Mzmsbh snd alter l deliberatc pass to George Btirn- weiss. there was s. sacrifice by Gene Corbett. Kenn came on the scene at this pant and got Russ Dr on a, rcul for the second out but e arsed Hank Majeski in- tentionaly and couldn't recover his control pitching to Kelleher. The victory was the sixth o! the your for Tommy Byrne, who yield- ed onlfya two hits. one a scratch by tum in the first inning and the other a run-scoring doube by Ralph Ilhiriilo in the sixth. The Bears had six blows. MALES PREDOMINATE Males still outnumber (uncles s- mong foreign-born white pecpie in the United States, o" °' "I! successes o! Bay Scout training hll been Its Interest and ulna to hsndlcslllifll boy! III vii‘!- mvlmillilflls. It discovers to them the ability to do many thing; that sound boys csn do. ‘lhln gives lrrlllllltd hoy n new outlook on lilo. Above, g proud “any mpdg member o! the Scout troop at the Rd Cross Ilosplish Calgary, ,..A “i: gill-ill’: nu K‘§%’€."s’i§i$‘<i§.’ ‘dish? P1 rates blank fill‘; (B) and Ferrell: H111 IOY. . den Rcches " ' ' a Z14 d u the an ED G u: as: -.._: z 2 t» as. u iwulalhg. MoOrabb m. Kehn (a: and Dunner: Bmw 1nd 114*- inson. Ni ht me: Syn-chums“ 120 030 1-7 9 2 Rochester 300 0G0 0-7 ‘I 3 (5) and Bottarim; Wlsanan. Pearce ('7) and Robinson. AMERICAN LEAGUE 002 020 000-4 10 0 000 000 100-1 l 2 Hum don (9) Mid Swift, Oastiglis (7). St. Louis Boston 100 215 01x40 l0 0 Niggeiing, Banning“ (6), Ferens on snd Gon- Benton and Tebhetts; Murphy (9) and Rcsar. NATIONAL LEAGUE es for N. PITTSBURGH. tfflith fiipl Seweii H b 3 4 our s ges and 1e ng ut 3g? go_1 l: g man Rel: as for as second base. Emu" Pittsburgh Pirate= ‘ their sixth strzfight triumph by was bentlno Boston . It ght set-hack. Wings and Chiefs 32o: $333; 1g; Battle to draw , June i0-(AP)— tcr and Syracuse battled to tie in seven innings tCnight ame by agreement r to e/atch s trsin Both tau-ms made good their hits. The wings knocked Les Hinokie out o! the box in the Ilith when they scored tour runs to take a one-run _ ufitzhrileilfi gifdmlt up atglain in m, me s a e seven ,Wh€l’l (mm max?“ by a mm and mehlcggfdncmr nnm h‘t of tn ' er. n y a s . c Hinckie, Lambert (5). Deiacruz night sowed Adams’ who had got cbanlnbase on Davis’ error, xvit-h the Y lead issman to oos ooo ooo-s s 1 Braves 3-01 Philadelphia ooo 10o 100-2 s 2 5mm’ "m"! "Pa! o Chicago 00 0041 50x-5 4 1 Pcdgajny, Pearson (7% and Liv- ingstcn; Lee and Mccullcuzh. Night game: New York Clnclnnltl 000 000 010-4. 10 2 schummher, Adsms (9) and Dunning: Vendermeer. Starr (B), Helms (8) and Lamar-mo. OUT OUR WAY OINOINNATT, New York Giants heat Cicchnnti tic in league with the losers. 3-0 June June 10—(A.'P)- emitting but. tonight tcrtk Giants whip 01110110304 v 1 Cincinnati 6-1 the National “Egg? game: m0 0M 0m__n 4 o Reds for the fifth straight. Pntsburgh 10o Mo ozx___-; 9 0 tonight, 6-1, to draw up Tobin and Iflmbflrdi; Seweil and third-Place l0—(AP)— Baseballs Big Six (By The Associated Press) Batting (three leaders in each l ague :- lflsycr, Club o- sn n u m. Doerr, Red 5011.. . 44 175 23 68 .389 Gordon. Yankees. 48186 7 '11 3 Raiser, Dodgers... 42 167 Dickey, Yankees" 31 113 37 12a s: Lamnnno, Reds .. Medwick. Dodgers 46 i7 BOMB RUNS Amorloln Leanne: Williams. Red Box 15. ‘National League: F. McCormick. Reds 9. 38 11 16 21. RUNS BATTED 1N American League: Williams. Red 30x 59. National League: Mize, Giants 41. Yanks arrange Doubleheader NEW YORK, June 10—(AP)—- New York Yankees announced to- night. they had arranged s double- header with st. Louis Browns here Sunday by moving up the game oriuixrolly scheduled for Sept 3. War"25 YtiarS Ago Today JUNE i1. i917~Prime Mlnistsr Sir Robert. Borden introduced the Military Service Ac: in the Can- sciian House oi Commons. Lord Ncrthciifle arrived in the, United States to hood n permanent Brit- ish war mission. 'I‘\\'o German sen- Dianes destroycd in English Chan- nel. By. J. R. Wiliams WHY, THAT‘ ‘TERRIBLE ‘TU Y A THEE NEEDS RE was wmzme vouwze B WRONG FER one .' E's so E AT mono THAT o LD PR VE PATRIOT 1C, PESSIMtSTIC AWFUL SLAVERY AND ' UNDER ‘EM .' AMERICAN! EGAD, JAEON! we MUGT HURRV ALONG AND MAKE DREADNAUGHT _ COMFORTABLE 1N we GARAGE BEFORE MARTHA la uPl-w/QHE Ivuetu Mleconsrtzoe we MEAN- me o: MY ARRNING name AT ‘DAWN LEADING A Hansel-l»- 1p cow; ON,DREP~'DNAD6l-FF, . " - OLD FELLOW! l ARREST MADE (Continued from page i) [$111M village last Sunday oven»- E. Most of the clothing had been strlppcd from he; body, the head was battered and the body W85 partly hidden tinder moss. Police revealed that t. Hutch- ings, ltltloned at Pe ield, N.B., had been on this side o! the At- ianlic to: about two months. The information charging mur- der was laid by Detective Stuii sergeant Davis of {loyal Canadian Mounted POlICC Dwiszonal Head- quarters at Fredericton. He had led tho investigation almost un- gogssaingiy since discovery o! the RYCMP. Corporal Tudor msdo the arrest. _ Miss Connors, attractive brun- ette daughter o! Mr, and Mrs. Ecl- Oolnmus, was a granddaughter PAGE SEVEN W00! a life! As a fiyer, Tommy’s tops. Comes romance, then Tommy stops. 0‘ V" 141° LBW C°“n°"‘~ W: Perspiring surely is no lin- loundod the widely lmown 1i conning industry here. She had been employed at the plant, Police made no sltaument re- garding their investigation leading to the arrest. An autopsy was per- formed by Dr. Arnold Branch, Saint John, provincial pathologist, and the result of this will be in- cluded among evidence to be pre- sented at an inquest here next Tuesday night. The young woman had been mlsing since she left the regular weekly dance at the community hall here Friday night. At. her home it was believed she was slaying with lriends whom she frequently visited and the latter, in tum, believed she was at inrme. Consequently, it was not until sundoy niggt that she was actually known to missing. Discovery of the bcdy was made by B. searching urtv led by D. P. GuptflLchlefo police here. H: first found one oi her 51cc" near the field, oil Dead blank‘ Harbor Rood. A few minutes later he located the body. The spot was a COIiSld6l8-bl6 du- tsnce from bfllh the dance hall and her home and in the opposite direction from her honxe, in rela- tion to the dzmco llllil. Police maintained reticencc dur- ing the investigatzon, particularly at the outset, and it was not until Monday that it became publicly known, outside oi’ Black‘; Harbor, that e. body had betn fcunrl, ' Much of the police vcork cem- rlsezl questioning c-f persnxis in he Black's Harbor and Penulield districts. v. 1. m. u. s. In. on. wum" vu-ruae vou eoT- m MIND F0‘ Die YERE eRAwPAPPv RACE Hose, MleTAl-l MAuoR? -~\5\1ou FltUN‘ TO MONOPOLY_Tl-l' pLoluln‘ lnouemv, on .- ~ MEBBE BUlLD A Bose- BALL. ‘FACTORY 2 Offending puts him in l spin! Bath tonight with LIFEBUOY M” ”""”Z;§-'rv1>: £0. ',________ Nazis Wipe Out Bzech Village LONDON, June 10—(CP)—Ge_!~ man vengeance squads utterly wip- ed out. Lidice, a Czech village u! 1,200 persons today, killing sii tho men and deportmg the women and children on the ground that. the pupulzltion harbored the two assass- ins oi‘ Rleumurd Hc-fydrich, the lute uu-nlun ruler o1" Bohemia-Mor- iLVlfl. Completing this most. savage single act. oi repression in the his- tory oi German occupation 0t con- tinental Europe, Gestapo and Ger- man solcliory razed the village, leav- ing nothing but. rubble, the Ger- man-controiled radio announced from Prague, Iiidice is-or was-s. village o! coal-miners and woodworkers s few miles nest oi’ the Czech capital and not fur from where I-Ieydrich “the lmxigman" was fatally wounded by two patriots while filriving along 8 winding road two weeks ago. MR. JIGGG “YOUR WIFE 'PHOkEDME AND INVITED ME PARTY AT VOU I WISH @U'D KE K?! 5 COVERED ‘Til. IIPPIE AND “CAP” STUBBS I Kholavv ti‘ I CAN BE A GENERAL-L AND GARDEN % WHEN 15mm’ TO m R Tguééfofiéflf? 5"“‘°" “IISFORH *9." H - aw Ti-:E Aglmo slkw n-wrewowf Bra-wean S- IéES-SARY/ t5 A6 | HANE A LING AT MY r0 1414s "r0 KEEP PROGRAM - ‘EM cavemen AFTER sou , ca’; v- ff. U HOUSE "rt-vs EVENING.’ _ .. . . _. ;_;.‘_i By Edwina t oqMnDlbf I‘LL TELL YOJ, WELL, t w/owT TELL, A\Yl-- m a cow? BE. A u oowr L- GENERAL. e HOW WOULD YOU LlKE TO BE A - - A CORPORAL? YOU'LL BE SORRY, IF YOU DON'T LEMME BE A GENERAL. A\X/- - HOW CGJLD A GURL BE A GfiNEliALli’? T0 KEEP MY HENS DOGOUTOF ' ‘ NO, BUT YOUR A$KiNfi SUCH A DUMB QuE-SHON 1S A BAD SEN