Olen! PAGE SIX O s£N8Ar1o NA L-- 7 15p WRD ‘TQ-Bil iTEA Lara 7- k‘ r V Vivid ma Thrillingflonccpticm .3, y‘ n] of Man's Fight for furs .-. ?-. . in the Siamese Junflem. THOUSANDS OF WILD AN A c T U A L L Y PHOTOGRJAHIWIQED. IN THE SIAMESE J. U N G1. ES AT GREAT lusx or‘ urn.- llNSEEN-DANOlIliS-w-fl ' UNKNOWN rams - NATURE AT_ rrs WORST ALSO COMEDY AND SERIAL» JOE Bro 1s A WARDED _ "DECISION SYDNEY, Oct.i3§—Joe.Brown, of Detroit, was awardcdtha decision ’.l\'L".' Louis Nemis, of New Water- . of the "end often rounds oi z-ions boxing held at the curling nnk here last ‘night. 'I‘wo judges, Cecil Sutherland, oi North Sydney, and Frank Gillis, of Sydney, disag- rm-rl as to the proper verdict, one (‘lillllllllg for Brown and the other 1m‘ n draw, so Tommy Casey, the referee. had to give the decision which was for Brown. The fight was attended by a fair crowd who, cnjoycd the card of boxing. Clin- he have the Detroit battler worried. The bout. was featured by heavy slugging from both boxers and the fans enjoyed the evening's fun. Archie Young, of New Waterford, won from Young Dalton by a tech- nical knockout in the third oi’ the semi-final. The referee in all bouts was Tom- my Casey, of Glace Bay, whose de- cision at the end of the main bout was questioned by the fans, and his verdict awarding the fight » to Brown was greeted with "rotten" by the fans. ‘ Tests by thc United States Bureau of Standards have indicated that corrosion of oil pipe lines is caused by electric currents due to condi- tions of soil through which the pipes run. , "'11" wo1v?r , 351.01g NOW” French engineers will build a dam r-‘zlillg and cries of “iight" from the cvnsiailns 0i iive thin iiiiiiiomeii inns present were the order of the 601101134! Curved Walls each 1W?‘ night. and it was a case of a boxer than the one back of it. Willie!‘ i" zlgainst a fighter. Nemis kept pour- the intervenin8 SPICE?! 119191118 m inf! into Brown, but at no time did support them. "I recently dropped in at my - dealers to buy some Marl guerite cigars. When he handed them out I found they were wrdpped in tin-foil. I got quite a shock because this is the first change in packing Margucriiea for 40 years. It's a fine idea though. It protects from breakage and it preserve: the original flavor and aroma of the cigar. And the best part of it is the price is the same as before." The motorist's favorite cigar- the Nhrguerite-a splendidly made, full-flavored cigar that pays you dividends. The bands are valuable-keep them. Ask your dealer (or write ‘Puckett: Hamilton) for lint of useful pre- miums you can get for these bands. TUCKETTS These boys "strutting their stuff“ in what promises to be one of the _big- gest years in the scintillating Canadian pastime. BROADBENT SIGNS WITH AM_l_-:_1_21¢A1vs NEW YORK, Oct. 25. — Tommy Gorman, manager oi the New York Americans oi the Notional Hockey League. today announced that _he had signed “Punch" Broadbent. ve- teran wing player recently purchas- cd from Ottawa Senators. and Vier- non" Forbes, veteran goalkeeper. Forbes had been a holdout for some time. --l ~ - ' Cecil “Babe"‘Dye, secured from Chicago, and Johnny". Sheppard. purchased from Detroit. are still holdouts. ‘ - Billy Burch. centre; LioneLOo a- cher, Jess spring and Reise, e- ience nien; Joe Miller, goalkeeper; Norman Himes, Connors. Bouchard and cVeigh, utility forwards, have all n signed and tbe team will leave here next week for New Hav- en, where training preparations will commence. German denied reports from ARGUERITE Still 10 cents Montreal that his club was making attempts to sign Roy Worters, diminutive goalkeepe of the Pitts- burgh Pirates. Buy Marlaoritco in tho handy t plckl o! cillrl ..BRADX.FOOTW alanine-loos rofnmc‘: anvuno retard» _ m, “ca,” EAR THE CHARDOTTETOWN GUARDIAN I» omen" rnlm-l. . SHOW p, PRINCE-l E1) WARD MONDAY-Hi DAYS From out the pages of romance-Ramona. lovable; and Felipe, her brother! GIN s \ PROLOGUE ., . j \\SPECIAL MUSIC il’ *?\ OCTOBER 26, 1928 me And Abroa s...‘ i amino-i and o. slim lieu-l; cool headed cool-ore and whit». hot love-This is the. blend in a picture of strangely min- -u...1 ..,.,n¢v,,“¢v ‘i ALE!) “SMITH - FA M I L Y" COMEDY AND‘ ~ GEEIAL "TERRIBLI; PEORLE" Alessan‘ u, her husband; on sraos f USUAL PRIOES ' "Mikeggzellla the Yankees Has. Beenl"Pqid¢,xllvearly $50,000 for Sitting in Diigout. Late in the season, on one of the western stops by the New York Yankees the announcer in the bor- ed fashion of his profession, let a few ‘linserins Cllstome . know that from that moment‘ until further notice, Mike Gazelle was playing third base for New York. “Who?" an elderly gentleman in the stands asked of his neighbor. "He said Gazelle. He's No. 8B on the scorecard. "He must be new. I never saw him~beiore." said the e. g. "He's been around a but no one sees him much neighbor explalnedfand to his musings. is That's the real tip off g $Mil<B Gazelle. world champion‘ benbn warmer. and one oi the luckiest young men in baseball. There have been other young men who sat on the bench as long and as industriously as Gazelle. has occupied his post in the Yankee dugout but no young man ever got the dough that Mike hasrecelvcd ior his patient sitting. If Joe Dugan had been younger or had been an Everett Scott or a Joe Swell. Gazelle might never have gotten into a ball gamo but the trick knee of Dugan's forced him to get off his cushion now and then. But the nowand thens were so infrequent at Gasella was totally forgotten bythe gentlemen who make up the baseball records. Ho even ‘isn't in baseball's “Who's Who." And his record as a bench warmer isn't dignified enough to get into. the red books oi the ‘iamond. Gazella was a distinguished foot- ball player at Lafayette and agood baseball player. It was, of course, football player on the Yankee team at that time. but there was a place on the bench. Miller Huggins told him to sit down and he has been sitting large, for the most of the time, since then. The salary that Mike draws did not run the Yankee payroll up to that $800,000 a. year, but he got enough to make hlrn satisfied with his ‘job and about five grand a year would make n lot of fellows feel satisfied. But during his service with the Yankees he had been in on four cuts oi world series money and his share asa player amounted to better than $20,000. Mike draws a share as a player and therein lies a little story. After the 1923 series, the lin- portant fellows on the club had a session to decide how the money was to be split up. There were some very thrifty players among the head men and they decided to make the split in ratio with the labor that had been expended. The list was finally agreed upon and the decision of the head mcn was announced to the less distin- guished members of the squad. when the list came down to the G's Gaoelllfs name was called for 500 bucks. M e had a few words to say the . - "That's nice of you big-hearted guys," he said. "And it may be all right with you. But it ain't so with me. I'm no step child on this ball club and I get a full share. Some oi the head men wanted to give him an argument (he's a hus- ky young fellow and can go with his dukes), but the big Babe settled it by declaring Mike was a player and deserved a share. And he got i that this ‘would be his last year Will Reltire From Came Blonde Belgian‘ Batters Way iTo1T__i_fle Sh?! NEW YORK. Oct. 21-1! artraw vote were taken todetcrmlne the outstanding contender ior Mickey Walker's middleweight title Rene pe Vos, the bull-necked’ Belgian. would win in a landslide if the poll was restricted to the fistic experts of New York and Philadelphia. De Vos, who has come from no- where to the top of the contenders‘ l list in the past year. has that one great requisite that the other title ' hunters lack-the almighty wallcp. And, as forcibly demonstrated in . his recent fight with K. 0. Phil Koplan, this lad from across the water is not a one-punch fighter but a punishing, two-handed hitter. The Belgians progress» in the manly art ofbusted beezers is an- other boost for higher education. His Manager, Lew Burston, who is quite 'a globe-girdler, claims his protege can speak eight different languages fluently and on occa- sions, nine, if you get what we mean. MONTREAL. Oct. 25.—'l‘he Montreal Herald today says: “Dunc Munro, sturdy defence star of the Maroons, announced . in hockey._ lie plans to g0 into on“ Ben Mood,“ the brokerage business." Traded to L/gw York He has licked the champion of every European country and has legitimate claim to the 160 pound title of the Old World sworn to and attested by the secretary 0T the International Boxing federa- tion. His most notable victory on the other side was scored over Frank Moody, for many years .the ' best middleweight in Great Britain. Since he came to America two years ago he has gone up the line, removing one middleight con- tender after another. He licked Cowboy Willis, Georgie Courtney- who. through unexplainable cir- cumstances is still regarded by the New York state athletic commis- sion as leading contender-Dave Shade and. recently. Kaplan. He has also a popular decision ov- er Eddie Mead's dynamo, Jack Mc- Kenna of Cleveland. considered by many in the western States as one of the hardest hitting middle- weights in the world today. Even at that he held McKermH 05 10118 enough to gain the verdict. In other words, he has cleaned uP the field so there is really nobody left for him to meet but Walker and Ace Hudkins, if the Nebraska Wildcat decided to carry on in the lilO-pcund class. It took a long while for De Vos to crash into New York fistic so- ciety, but no longer than it does the average fighter who confines his activities to the so-called sticks. Gotham fans took no interest in j _ 6 John Ross Roach, one {the greatest goalkeepers in Canad- ian hockey history who has been traded to New York Rangers by the Toronto Maple Leafs. Prior to turning professional he was . a member oi the ‘amous Gran- ite amateur team. —-< Fredericton Loses. to Mt. A. SACKVILLE, N. B., Oct. 25. a. FlEhilIiB hard in a ceaseless attack from the opening whistle. Mount Allison University annihilated the red and black from the University of New Brunswick, and won the on. this blond battler until_ he was matched with Kaplan. and very little then. He came into the me- tropolis without a steam CRIIIOPe and comparatively little bullyhoo. But. he's on top now and he is 80- lng to be a ~ hard man to knock (lOWll. Few and Far Between. When he is knocked down it will be a fighter endowed with more ability than most of the lads who have been barking at the heels of the pug-nosed terrier from Rum- son. Fighters of the De Vos type are few and far between at this writing. The trouble, from a New Y°Tk standpoint at least, is that the loc- nl mart is cluttered with- a lot oi hit-and-run-away battlers who couldn't knock your hat off with n full swing. And while it may seem strange, it is hard to ream-B lil5i how bad they are until a fellow like the Belgian comes along and shows them up. MCDONALD/S WIFE nnaalvls llE cannon on scorrlsll IS- LAND LONDON, October 24.—Dreams are playing a Dart iii biiill/lflll the hopes of Mrs. H. C. McDonald, wife’ of the British naval oiilcer who has not been heard from since harming oil from Newfoundland ior a trans- Atlantic flight last Wednesday and she still holds firm trust in her 4 9 F you're seeking the utmost in radio ' satisfaction rezd what this Burgess ulzr says: 5 "On my four-tube ‘sot I have hall tlirrt ' Ilurqcss Batteries in use for clcven monllu ' nurh perfect satisfaction. Today they can be usri {Jr stations within 2 radius of $00’ to 700 inilcu and clear results obtained." . Make nu mistake. The two Burgess "Super D" r zr-ries (N... mos and No. 22m) mar-w.’ pfiCilCllly all radio requirement» Look _1ur Burgess black :n<.l whit: striped ' barrcricr. You'll gcr longer and hcuer w. vi 1c for your lnoncy. r livllGlWq WATTERY C0,. ‘ Niagara Falls, Ont. Sim-n Offices: Tllrull[OJIOIIITPIILHLJOIIII- J IIYRGESH DIKY (TELL! LIMITED, Winnipeg, Mun. Sales Office»: (‘ulgury and Vancouver.“ "SUPER I’? ATTERIES! Stadium Will ~ ‘Be Increased as a baseball player that he went to the Yankees in 1923, just out of college. , There wasn't room fora-college cning of a two-game series for the western section Maritime intercoll- lekiate rugby championship on the college gridiron here this afternoon it. His little speech meant better than $4000 to him. Immigrants . . Maritimes (Spccill r» The Guardian) “Ami Hot For Sale.‘.’——Trottier| MONTREAL. Oct. fld-"i do not recbsnicifaiiy ‘gentlemenbi Agree- ment’ 18.1. ilwiiilwmi Hwkav ‘ut- gue. As an contour l'm not for llle to the lament bidder." vi hcttpio; foqflorly of thé Qlytzp‘ chem N. Toronto rue oo- mfuaui.’ and wily in view with the Montreal ".‘ Northern” F lshermelfs Boot This ouper- qunliiy 560i will give warmth, wear and comfort under the moot ‘severe conditions. Thoma I flflordid wiilimldtrholighwork. Ne: in Ira-mugs nndhiplengthl. mo: roll m rub: Ilia - n. '. gdirit’ Ibowith the tea thstl ‘ 0e or not at all. I am not to be dic- Hicd trrby a league before I join In. r like hockey. but I have s when ca: M i" i“: fiié’... w q ‘ ' Molifibll’ i1 flhtfiiffidoil‘ ‘trod Qua; tu a pro." 'what teem he m m‘ w “h”, w“, ndmltncruiat es adds: "Of course, the m ductloulntluttrntoomwuuld be the Montreal Maroons. amdhg wnqn he mom." ...--o_. COMPANY . ‘It’ w at‘, i‘ _ . .1 I... N.‘ l . g“ - 1 . pwfirbulqy-r -. n ..,- -- inter- s . "I have not definitely a c‘ w i’ turn professional." he bald, " i! ibe the one Iw d like; star. 11¢ way located in land. repreauiitetivd- o!’ " ‘be qnm logical one cf the bll dsllluoi- pfidith one of the Holland. and ilm J m . paper oi a newspaper syndicate. In. pa! rel de- Van Hock. is in are Ill MorlctolfOct, w-Great interest la being shown at the present time by northern Iulsopean countries in immlglltion of‘ ‘their surplus popul- atihnWS the?‘ Maritime _ the summennumberous re- ph- _ tives’ of the ysrious count- ries making up thisgroup have zthe Maritimcs looking over "limped: m the placing oi le on farm lands in this pm o Canada and they have been mucii lmprebed. Tile ltatmont in- a _ly name first the Maritime P iiices. ld seem in be better IIIIMIQ’ their countrymen. A few a ‘noted Jollnlflilt, re- tihg u. powerful ndwlpapbr a clients ih swedsn. gtrsvelled wirgdfliiqtheY-Nd-itimes in‘ lbpany g . n resentotiva d! the l: ntlon_ tof thoiplllldisn 4513mm, gram National wnysadd mymvm partli _, to-thc pummel thiimlddn "office. 0212i iilion- lYlfMIi. Today the IMIGD. - . M. f0 the Maritiml" noes. dlflcted He NEW YORK. Oct. 25.—Thc seat- i lng capacity of the Yankee Stadium .. is to be increased from 12.000 i0 " 125,000 within a year, according l0 husband's proverbial luck. Two friends. one being Sir Herbert Bar- ker, have told her that they had identical dreams that McDonald SMALL EARS AND LONG ANTENNAE STRAIN VAINLY LONDON, Oct. 26.—Small ears and long antennae in England strained in vain today to catch a return message from the big-cared folk of Mars. to whom a wireless message was daspatched early this morning. Dr. Mansfield Robinson, ‘author of the message. who professes ac- quaintan with the Martians through inlepnthio means, clings stoutly to his faith in the possibil- ity of iniorplantinry conversations. Ho ‘admits that no response was received. but insists that his us remain! a mystery. The pos-i. l ‘luthdritles-loolieofcd‘ their one‘ shilling and slxpence per word. It is. ‘ ly i mnticomfbuliilcas to a. Ind they are not at libert to moms e contents the‘ r lo- .-'--" want on e 10,700 m - tre wave length and not a soil came back. * m‘ mpl mtuvlil aliimnatically m- after it hid been swept- ‘unanimi- " l Wltifllpblit It Podgill f gglaldlilwoodm manna - from than.’ Itlnfitildconln-l by a l2 to i] score. Captain Eddie Bartlett's" brilliant running drop kick irl the early stages oi M. P. B. Will Hold paratlons have been completed rm- coins of the thirteenth century, each the ‘ahntlol meeting oi the lhiltime ‘bearing the effiIY M IX Branch o! the A. A. U. of 0.", to bmfiicflii-W ""1114 b? W0!‘ ‘ held hare tomorrow in the rooms oi demolishing. an ~ j‘ _ the Canadian League. A few scnt- “FYI-Jinn {bred delegates arrived in to‘: thls| evening. but tho majority w noi be in until the noon train on thr morrow. ' ~ tin’ there, was no I though they expected‘ t at mam had been cast on a rocky island. Swayed by this coincidence, she the fixed her mind on Rockall. a lonely lowing up a loose ball kicked over the line about midway through "the final session, cllmaxcd byalong run by Lister which ended in mofe loose play and a try by Bartlett which was easily converted by Mill- er, constituted the scoring by Mount Allison. Bartlett, captain oi the garnet and gold fifteen. did all the scoring except the two points added to his total by his teammate in converting the last try near the end oi play; the admiralty to ask if anything could be done. Admiralty oiflcielsl were extremely sympathetic butl had to inform her that Rockalliwas nothing but a small, ‘nigh r001!- qulte inaccessible to boat! this stormy weather and so cold and- exposecl that nobody could survive there very long. At Croydon where she next call- ed an aeroplane to Rwkflll- Hm received the some disappointing but .,, r ‘k ‘ic answer. €--¢-o>——-——~ A strange fish nearly six feet‘ long and havinl small eyes with lids, was recently caught near the‘ Forge Islands off the coast of Eng- lan . Annual. Meeting AMHERST. N. 5., Oct. flfir-Pre- An earthenware jar containing was hlle w“. old. hqusegt 9"- - t. Jake Ruppert, owner of the Yank- ees. have been made, Ruppert hopes ev- game. together with a try by fol- islet 200 miles ofi’ the west coast of entuglly to have the field complete- Scotland ‘and streirhwwnl visited ly circled by a covered stand. Although no definite PM“ FOOTBALL This evening at 4.45 the Abc- ‘ gweits will have their final work- out prior to the big game tomorrow I which ‘the place at 3:99 when they meet Saint Funstan’! iii the second championship tussle for i the Island football title. ' s The appearance oi "Whackef ‘ Mclliachern and Fred Moon-o! °" , the local half line in this comm! game will not only mid w creek Creator interest from a fcndoril point oi view, but .will go s 10M ‘ team. m‘ U way in strengthening the Nothing but a victory over Saints will pacify tile rod In“ black clan as ‘that ten in nil deieli u still mo: m m minds oi ti" . rank and ille of the squad. I Both President Fraser and Secre- Bhiplpy stated tonight that p of a momentum port nature upon their min. ll- I‘