JULY 1o. 13g)‘ GUARDIAN - W BASE BALL ~~ BOWLING ~ RESTLING = a T11r-c._11/\R1.0T_"r_1:_ir_nv.-1 ¢1w1~o~av__ SPOR s PAGE SEVEL BOXlNu BASKETBALL ' OTHER SPORT (Tom Lough ran (Stillfiampion ' YANKEE sTAnmmi New Ywk- N-tvnisht by ‘ decisively ouipointing Y., July 18—T0mmy Loughran in an Jimmy Braddock, young Jersey chal- exhlbition successfully defended hislenger ln 15 rounds, The (jhflmplgn world's llgtheavyweight championship won the unanimous decision. DEVILS ii Gilli PERFECT MILE High Class Trotter Bred By Col. J. S. Jenkins, Upton Farm, Trots Fast- est Mile On Main and N. B. Circuit This Sea- SO11. ST. STEPHEN, July 18.~Some new winners stepped into the Maine and New Brunswick racing circuit picture yesterday with the result that fav- orites were toppled over in an after- noon of especially spirited racing g1- though the fields were smaller than at any time this season. The bigger upset was by Sassle Marie a bay mare ‘by John R. Kurtz which was bought out in Ohio by John E. Kelly. of Bangor, for his brother Thomas J. Kelly, last winter, and was not be- lieved ready for such a race as she went today because of illness this spring. Sassie Marie was bought as a high class mare after Mr. Kelly saw her race at Milwaukee with the last half in 59 seconds, but as late as May the was desperately ill. Last night with Sussie Watts, the Aroostook entry the favorite, and Miss Martha Dewey, a new comer in Walter Bird's stable from Revere, Mass, as second choice pool tickets on Sassie Marie went begging. To- night the fortunate buyers were cashing them in and they were pay- lng odds of six to one and better. For Sassie Marie was a smart start- er tcday as her first heat in 2.11 showed, and- the way she stood of! all attacks in subsequent heats em- phasized. Sussle Watts could not rzach her and the daughter of John B. Kurt: looks like the best pacer that has appeared down east this season for the slow classes. ' KELLEY STABLE. The Kelley stable had another good day, Chappelle piloting two winners as he also took- the 2.15 pace, win- ning with Peter Patch 2.07 l-4 which won the junior free-for-all at Houl- ton. but failed in the 2.18 ‘class at Woodstock last, week when he met Eula. H. ‘This was another profitable win for the followers of the Kelley stable, as "Early Todd, the Houiton pacer, was favored. It looked at tim- es as if Will HJKeys, the St. Steph- en relnsman, was going to put over a surprise before his home town fol- lowers, with Iledgewood K.. the Woodstock driving club's pacer. He copped the first heat in a whipping drive after racing the full mile, the racing in the next two heats beinS confined to sprints at the finishes. The first time the sprint was short and the next time it was extended a bit, but Peter Patch had- the greater Wet o! speed and won both times although the finishes were slow. Lincoln Akworthy, a big bay trot-, ter, which looks his name, has plenty of action and is owned by Mrs; W. H. Bird, Revere, Mass. He slgnalized his advent on this circuit wlthithe stable of Norman Myer, formerly of Hali- fax, by winning the 2.20 trot and was the first two heats Lincoln Axworthy won handily and seemed able to trot around the field at almost any time. Driver Myer wanted to let him go, but it was not until ‘the third heat that Devilset, the Prince Edward Island bred trotter for which John E. Kelley, of Bangor. paid '$8,500 ten days ago, got straightened out and going right. Driver Myer did not seem to realize what would happen if Devilset gotcut in front and kept trotting. Anyway Lincoln Axworthy wasrrt sent after Devilset until it was too late. for driver John Willard had the son of Longset going in high and he trotted a. perfect mile winning the heat in 2.12, the fastest time made by trotters on this circuit thlsseason. Today's racing was the most auspic- ous opening any meeting this season has been favored with. ' The summaries: 2.22 Pilot: Purse $400- (Three Belts) Sassy Marie, b.m., by John R. Kurtz (Chappelle) . . . . . . .. 1 Susie Watts. br.m., (Willard) 2 Miss Martha Dewey, b.m., (Myer) Peter Kris, b.g., (Keys) Time-ill, 2.12, 2.13 1-4. 1 i 2 2 4 3 8 4 dr 2.15 Mixed; Purse $400 (Three Heats) Peter Patch. b.g., ‘by Power Patch Chappelle) .1 2 1 i Hedgewood k., ch. 'g.,-by Hedgewood Boy (Keyes) .. 1 2 2 Early Todd, 11-3.. (Dewey) 8 8 3 - Time-ail 1-4; 2.14 1-‘2; 2.1a. 2.20 Trot; Purse $400 (Three Heats) Lincoln Axworthy. b.s., by axwortn (Myer) .. ...... .. 1 1 a. Devilset, b.g., by Longest (Willard) 1 Edna. Klyo, b.m., (Keyes) 3 4 41 2 2 Peter Dawes, ch.g., (Gerow) 3 3 Time—2.l4; 2.13; 2.12. To beat 2.25 pacing, Single Todd. 0.1., by Twinklin Dan Todd, lost.‘ Time 2.26 3-4. ' Soviet Russia in Europe bought more than $1,000,000 worth of Amer- ican industrial machinery last year. which was twice that o! 192"! and l0 times that of 1925. - if The Isle of Man Tynwaid Court. which deals with the financial side of the government, has refused to reimpose the gasoline tax of eight cents a gallon introduced lastiyear. Athlone,‘ Ireland. has a hawk plague. l l t's right full oi it and you can't chew it out because it's grown in the leaf and kept there by the cure. _ ~- Always l 1111: new. _ Nicholson ‘black twist cs1 cw 1.51s. O ' ‘If the only favorite to mme through. In . Oisrnusvsz ocwum 9/31: 112132 was sAu Hzmuso 1e. MAWN‘ OLENELAND mustozocr -‘fl-\‘ GREY 5461.24. L: m,‘ n" "m" he. 0m: hum mm "KIWI!!- EEFTER UJiTH EiFEfilE-LUE - . By QUIN HALL There may be some lnportant civic questions to be decided in Cleveland. Ohio, but wherever men gather in the evenings the conversation usual- ly starts off with “This fellow Aver- ill" and is bolted down there securely for a considerable part of the evening. Almost every ball club has at least one rookie who posseses great possi- bilities. The New York Yankees have Sam Byrd, Detroit has Alexan- der and Johnson. the St. Louis Car- dinals have Gilbert and- Clevelsnd has Earl Averill! Averill is the expensive outfieldfl‘ purchased from the San Francisco How They Stand AMERICAN LEAGUE 4 1 mrannarronax. Litmus , ' 1 " i i Won Lost . . as ._.01'1 45 .581 46 .521- _ . , 4e .005 Baltimore ............46 . 45 .505 Reading‘ 44 .404 buffalo .§6_ 40 .484 Jersey c1cy_.,........a1 s1 Seals. He looks like “the prize rookie o! 1929" to alot of fans who tae their baseball seriously, and his purchase nicked ihe Tribe bankroll for a repor- ted $00,000. ‘ ' Averill is noted chiefly as a hit- ter and has a record, which ihdl-i cates he is not only good with the: willow but that he is also consist- ent. He hit .353 in 192B, after sock- ing the apple for marks of .324, in '27» and .384 ln-‘26, He smashed out thirty-seven -four-ply waliops in San Francisco last year and scored 180 runs. This prize rookie stands five-foot ten, weights 175 pounds; he's left- EN G [All D lifiil (MABKINNUN Bil? vice rifles at 300 and 600 yards. THE MARKETS , .1111. handed when he comes to the plate and right-handed when he throws. The Cleveland fans are already beginning to forget the loss of ‘Iris Speaker, the great old Gray Eagle. They figure that. before the year is over, Averill will have done things around the American League whfchl will be worth rehearsing during the] long Winter evenings when they sit] around munching apples and eating pop corr1_ ' ‘ -Averiil is only 24 years of age. Base runners have already discov- ered that he has an excellent throw- ing wing; he himself is nimble on the- paths. ' - '59.. Louis ... i srrcmcmnb, July is-Tne‘ 01o, rivals, Westvllle and Springhlll} divided a; double-header today, the: visitors taking first game 5 to 4," whilethe home team scored 1'1 to 9 victory in the night cap. The first game was productive of good base-l ball. The visitors sent Brown to thel mound and he made favorable im- pression with the fans with his! pitching and hitting. ‘ Ten o! the Maritime championsi went out by the strike-out rout/e. Brown had a home run, double and single to his credit out of four times at} bat. Welton pitched good game for ‘the miners. he only being in‘ trouble inf-the third innings.’ Thei second game was a free hitting con- test. Marshali started for Westville and pitched six and two-third in- nlngs when he was replaced by Wil- liams. The miners collected a total of 20 hits and the Pictou county team eleven, Parazza. O'Rourke, Wil- son ‘and O‘Brien securing home runs. The Maritime champions will play a doubleheader in Westville on Sat- urday and‘ next Wednesday will en- tertain the Attleboro All Stars. m 1121005 i,ii1 nrsu l1s NETIONAL - LEAGUE Pittsburgh New York Chicago . Brooklyn Cincinnati Philadelphia. ... use ... Boston .. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE R. H. E.| 20-22. MONTREAL:—Prices here are un-_ gush,‘ 1 9 3| chanced with L- C- L- ‘shipments Toronto ...1s1s 0i cleaning up well. There is a good de- mand for extras and with cooler ivcathcr conditions, consumption will Newark-Buffalo, rain. Jersey City-Montreal, called, wet cases for the same clay n. week ago. Increased imports of new potatoes re- sulted in lower prices today. New petaiees selling at $1.75 to $2.00 per OTTAWA, Ont" July 13__(Egg5)__ bag of 80 pounds. for No. one quality Very lltle change is reported on Con-l While NQ- ‘ll-qualify 501d at $125. On- adian egg markets today, TORONTQ-There ls practically no change on this egg market. Deal- tarlo potatoes were offered at ‘$2.50 per 90 pounds l". O. B. Ontario points. No further receipts of potatoes ers are ‘paying country shippers for from the southern states were report- ungradéd eggs, delivered. cases re- ,331| turned extras 20-29; firsts 25; seconds prices unchanged. ed. Poultry was selling steadily with JRINGINC UP FATHF‘? phmdelphla we’; Li? undoubtedly revive. ‘fqunfl; ' ' ' ' ' ' ‘ " (spawn m n“ Gun-mun) MONTR-EAL- Q1111. Juli! ll-Wm‘ Baltimore-Rochester, rain. New York 30 .630 BISLEY CAMP England Jmy m anew-Prices on the local grain mar- sh‘ mu“ 36 '51s __ The Macmnno; Cup “sag won by ket here today were unchanged. But- AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit u ‘5-23 hgjandflfls ‘afternoon by a mars", tor prices were firmer today with clevflmd n’ "506 o; m, pom“ m.“ Canada the rum eastern townships No. l selling at New York-Cleveland, rain. wghlnimn - 49} '3” nerqm The Cup had be“; captured 371i cents per lb. Retail prices were ' . i Chicllo 5B .358 by Australia last yea‘: 39 cents per ib., for solids and 40 R. B. E. ' Boston . . . . . . 59 .306 BISLEY CAMP‘ England, July mficnts per pound for prints. Receiptsiwashlngfqn “.10 1s 1i -With e1 out o! '10, three Canadians‘ We" 11°92 bu“ “mpared Wiihfit- Mule 3 1° 6 NATIONAL LEAGUE tied with an English marksman forl 11°05 bmics» m" ‘he "me d“? last‘ ;, ' . , ms,’- place m the Prince o: wales week. There was an easier feeling on, R. H. E. W011 M" P-Q m,“ at msley Cflmpitodfly’ Lien the cheese market with prices for Boston ,,. ... ... 1 5 l Pmdburlh "53 2B tilhnésmond Burke. Ottawa“ Pam M_ Ontario cheese ti cent lower beinglchieggo ,,, ,,, 2 9 1. Chm” "50 n ‘Q33 Qgllings. g-squimaum mum D_ reduced to l8 ccnts for white andi l’ New Ymk 33 ‘Q63 Lpyvle‘ o’ victor“. and mum A_ l1 1B‘; cents for colored. Receipts were R. H. E. si- m" -- *3 .§0olAndrews o, m, m“, London R,_._!s,'1ss boxes compared with 5.514 Philadelphia s 11 z 370053711 44 "153 lglmem" Wm shoot o“ for me m“ boxes on the same day a week agoADetroit. .. ... 4 9 6 Philadelphia . 49 .402 iplaces‘ ‘The first prize 1s 350m given The egg market was steady with‘ ' BMW 51 -. m. m; Royal H,g,,,,css_ The lame prices unchanged. Receipts weref AMERICAN assocmnon Cmcmn!“ ' - - ' r 5° "sigma; wales match was 51,05 Wm, Se,“ 2,755 cases as compared with‘1,400§ ' Louisville 2, Minneapolis 5. Columbus l3, Milwaukee 2. Indiananopis 7, St. Paul 5. Toledo ll, Kansas City 4. Col. Walter Lindsay. former Gen-, tleman-isi-Waltlng to the Lord Lieu- tenant of Ireland, recently dropped dead after playing a game of polo near Jetburg, England. London has a Russian-music vogue. 1‘ awn MI wart A Aurora-wr- H’ 194*‘ Pam. ‘re Aécun-YHAWRI‘ PGOLYOUR e-ns n: ca»? win 1.0a THAT- hgHé\°\=:°NIe¢:r'-'°M5 NIGH Adi a us no . ' arr ‘r agyr%noul"rw 1T6 ‘foo LATE- I'M 01.0 ‘h: Mil-r 41a \P_\ HAD M“! ALL. Auouz- 1'0 A-r 91M can Lari-re L-wi. GNE 1's»; ‘(sans 0F 90PM ~ Aamwu M~r LJPB. Jun-r To HAVE Au. 511"- - . -\AI¢\JLUN'T A HAPPY HoMB. TOQQTQ IT‘ YDU owe. 11' TO Your: ecu-- Reesrscr To err/w Home/w sumac YOUR us: wrru um- A NQT CAOWJCA OD GAIRI‘ l i v (Canadian Press) MONCOTN. N. 8., July l8. — The Moncton firemen made almost aclean sweep in the firemen: sports feat- ure event of the Maritime firemen's tournament, staged this afternoon. The local firemen won the hose peel race, replacement race. hose coupling race, one mile relay and the salvage corps duty race. Glace Bay made a fine showing in all the events, fln- ishing second in the the day's sum- mary, winning the duty race and the veterans ‘race. Amherst capturedi the ladder race in the fast time of} 12 2-5 seconds. " l-lose Reel Race lst-Moncton, 1.15 1-5. 2nd-Glace Bay, 1.15 3-5. Sink-Charlottetown, C.N.R. 1.26 8-5- One Mlle Relay Race 1st—Moncton. 3 minutes. 39 3-5 seconds. 2nd-Glabe Bay, 3.41. {ltd-Charlottetown 3.53. Hose Coupling Contest lst-Moncton. l0 4-5 secs. ‘And-Glace Bay, ll. (ltd-Glace BBS’. 11. 1'5- Ladder Race ist-Arnherst. 12 3-5- Znd-Moncton,’ i3 2-5. i-i- ALL ROCK CITY TACCO CO. COUPONS ARE OF EQUAL VALUE Save the valuable Premium Coupons now enclosed in the poclsatflrclsn of Check Cigsrc. All Rock City Tobacco Co. coupons nmv In Jr lion are of equal value in securing premiums, notwithstlnclln condition printed thereon. Alk srnméulilmonctr... Firemenhr SPLITS llllTllfMake Clearr-Up i WESHHU-EJn Tournament 3rd-Charlottetown. 1a s-s. Replacement. Race lsv-Mmacton. 1e 2-5. dud-Glace Bay, 1'1 seconds. and-Amherst, 17 2-5 seconds. I Duty m. lat-Glace Bu. 4B secs.- md-Amheret, 5i 2-6. Ind-Amherst, s: 2-5.’ _ Salvage Corps Duty Race ist-Moncton, s2 2-5., znd-Amherst. 1 minute i2 secs. Vewrlns Bus ist-Clace Bay, 0 ‘2-5. llnd-Charlottetown. 6 3-5. Officials: Starter-Jack Learmm ‘Truro. Tuners-J. Hearn, Charlottetown? K.J. MacRse, St John: Frank Brows Moncton. Judges-Geo. Ackmen, Moncton; H. H. McLellan, St. John; G. P. Ryder- St. Stephen. Referee-LB. Hutchinson. Menc- ton. ' Announcer —- Henry MacPl-lerson. Moncton. 1 Scorer-C. Lair Ganong, Moncton. This morning the visiting firemen took in the various places of inter- est, a. large number visiting the new C.N.R. shops as well‘ as the fire atle tions and other points in the city. Others motored to attractive plloel in this section country. Prizes won lat the tournament were presented a0 ‘the winners by Mayor Blakeney this [evening at the City Hall. any your merchant for a list o Rock City Tobacco Co’: Quality Premiums. ‘l PICNIC SUPPLIES ‘ Guardian Subscribers may have = their Picnic plates, spoons and forks at less than manufacturers prices. i l‘ Figure out how many you require and send in your order at once. Special price to paidin-advance subscribers. 1 doz. Kleen 6 inch plates for . . . . 5c i 1doz.Kleenforksfor .. .. 5c '1 1 doz. Kleen teaspoons for . . . .. . 5o Charlottetown Guardian Subscription Department u g 4 ‘J —By George McManus p‘ i0 Mtrr . M: AT 11am- AN' . H's ma: