Eva.- A five and pus.”-....,. a six team Island Baseball League was form- ed here last night at an organiza- tional meeting held in the offices of the Workincn's Compensation Bo.-.rrl and atteridcc by represent- atives of the. various clubs. Five of last year's six teams sig- nified their intentions of operat- ing in the Island League once more. The sixth team, Holmanls liiiermedinies from Suninierside. lH'lV enter and have been given imiil 'l'hiirsday. May 14 to reach a definite derision. Tennis who will definitely prirticipate are the In- tr-rinecliate and Junior Abbitis, M. CA.. RC AF. and the Sumnierside Ciirraii and Briggs Juniors. i Joe llunter of the R.C.A,l7'. wasi elected Lcagiic President to siic-- reed the retiring Presi(lent,George Francis. Russell St. John of Char- lottetown was elected vice presi- dent and Norman MacDonald of Siiniiiicisitie was elected secretary. The executive inenibers iiirludei Rob Scliurniaii front the Curranl and Briggs Juniors: Gerard Ber-l hard from Holmarrii Intermediat-i es. Tom MacF'arlane from thel Junior Abliies: Danny Mrcormackl from the lntrrinediate Abbies: Roi" hfrcahe from M. (YA. and F0: Ross Burns from the R.C.A F. l Many of last years Island Lea-l gue regulations were again adopt-. ed by the meeting along with scr- prsil new rules. , One of the new rules will steel the Island IiP?iS;ilt' iiffiliating with the Friiice Eduard Island Buse- hall Branch of the A.A.U, of C. .inotlier rule was passed prevent juvii-ir iilayeis from play-' in: wiiii an iiiloriiivdiate tetiiii. The motion slaletl in effect llllIl0 nu plnxm: eli.;ll)lP to play junior; to- I Island Baseball League Organized Last Night cepted from this ruling. A tiiird motion rniit'ei'iiiiiir Char- lottetown ball players tend to the effect that. any plaier not requir- ed by the intermediate Ahbies would he released to .Vl.tl.A. Mari- linie ('enii'al Airways were given until June 20 to iegisinr their players, lit? days later than the. other rlutis. 0 E Jimmy Mavboiisilti, representing; M.(.'.A. at the lllPNllltii. strongly; obiecled to both the ruling f'0Il-I rerning juiiior pi.i,wi-s and tiiei regulation giiiiip the Aliliiiis prior-l ity on tliiy hull pl.i).eis other than those einpltiii-il with M.('..-i. Another rngiiliiiiun was passeil. whereby a player must hiiiii ii card before lIt' ran i'IIlliIl('l9 iiil llit-' l.Er'l;.'llP. Tliii riil.ni: stated! that .1 plzriiir in iiriivr to playl ill the l.cagtie iiiiisi . 'll a rrirrl! and that void llltlsl he hllflfledf into the SPtTf'lfll)' hi June 13. The League is expetteil to open around June 1. Mai l-I has heeiii: set as the final ilittz on billlt'lli tennis may lw miiezt-ti irizii-ii train, will he alloiietl il ni;ixiinuni of llii men and the entry fee for out-ii. team will ha 530. 'l'-uiiiis iiho faili to appear for a srhetliiled gzintel iiill he silbjeci to .i 325 fine all the rliseretion of llir :-set-iiiivo. i Mi lllrl)Pl'S reuistviml hy ti ll'Hl1il must he living or iitiiking in ill” town or nrgani'I.oiioii hy June IS. The R.('.A.F. uill he allowed re- placements for any transfers pro- iirleri that satisfaotnigi proof of the transfer is gixen. Written protests of ginmu lllllsl he iian League within twenty-.'niir hours Willi regard to iiifi'ai-ttoiis of t 9 rules by players Ilie i'efei'ee-in- yrliit-f will loiiiiiiiil .'I ivptiil iii iiiitiiig to the llezigue. FY JOE REICHLER NEW YORK. iAPi-AlvaIBobo) I-tollomanii spectacular no-hit, no- riin performance in his first major league start Wednesday night prompted I. search in ancient. musty most that brought to light some eye-opening pitching feats by first time starters. To begin with, I-Iolloman is not the second pitcher. as previously reported. but the third to hurl s no-hitter in his first starting as- signment. In addition to Charley Rumpus Jones, the Cincinnati righthsncicr who defeated Pitts- burgh '7-1 with no hits, Oct. 15, 1892, Ted Breitenstein, I St. Louis Brown left-hander,shut out Louis- ville, 8-0, without a. hit Oct. 4, I091. The Browns were then in the American Association, considered A big league sit. the. time. I-folioman. of rourse. is the first modern pitcher to hurl 1 no-hitter BiEEB8II”SEIi”e?iiiIe: Probable Pitchers i NEW YORK, IAPI - Probable pitcher: for l”rida,i”s major lea- gue games Won and lost records - in pzirenthesest National League Plulatlclpliia It Bl'0Okl)'li'll1lglI5 Sltillllolli ii-Ii rs. Loes I3-Ii. Pittrliurgli at New York tnighti l.a-pnlnir tl-C11 vs Connelly t0-0i. Cltzcago at Milwaukee inigliti Hacker ti-3i vs. Antonelli tl-li. Si. Louis at Cincinnati tnighti Stnli-y :2-ii vs. Pcrkowski tl-It American League New York Lt Boston tnighti Sain 12-1! vs. Brown ti-1i. Washington at. Philadelphia flll;1l"ilI Shea t1-0) vs. Shantz iii-'1'. Clevelaiid at St. Loiiis inigliti Wynn 13-0) vs Larsen I0-li or Bi-echeen t0-3'. Detroit. at. Chicago might) Gray I0-Ti vs Dnbsern :2-2i. ....4 tirlsman pVxrymr 0'y.m27?a' Rolled with. ;. 'AI.lWEATHER' Waterproof Paper I . hm mild . . . for extra onioynicnt. Ifollomanis N0-Hitter Recalls Pitching F cats in his big league starting dehiit. Two others, Addie .loss of Clerc-. land and Mike Fnrnieles of Wash- ington. missed the distinction by one lone hit. A total of 80 pitchers turned in shutouts in their first. start, 34 American Leaguers and 26 Na- tional Leagiiers. Seven permitted only two hits. Six others hurled shutouts in their first two bigl league starts. They were Slow Joe Doyle,New York Highlanders, 1906; George Dumon" washmgmn'1915; the goaltender: lloyd liinclibergerlpower of the CAHA be Johnny Marcum, Athletics, 1933: Tim McNamara. Boston Braves. I922; Dave Ferriss, Boston Red Sox, 1945; and T. Sanford,Browns, 1946. Ferriss holds the listed major league record of 22 1-3 scorelessl innings at the start of his career. An unlisted record is that of George McQuill:in,who started his,A0 may (mm 0 pasmm he pep, . big league career with the PlillllBSiu1.ed rm. mmsm by hmdmg ,1,ei?)':rc'(1bl;P':?es in me mayor”. past season. And almost as usually I PAGE King We have just received a copy of the Maritime lioi-key Yearbook throiigh the ('tillllllllIlt'lllS of the editor and Dlll)llSll0l' St:-wart.”Stu” Foster. As usual the attractively covered book coiitaiiis a complete and iiitcrestiiig ncroiint of the liocko; highliglits ill the Mnritimes and NEWl(lllllClltillf1 throughout thel too it has a picture of Charlotte- townsl Roy "Buck" Whitlock on the cover, The cover picture this, year was rate the orriision of ing R liockey crown while behind him stands ii iniiltitude of cheer-l ing fnns. During the past live i Hockey Yearbook rover four l,llliES,0 Team”. 'l'liis writer will pretty well. nets behind :1 defense of Carroll Bloom fmni Halifax and the lslanders' George Mel..agan. ”Buck" lwhitlork won centre ice lIl')ll0l'Si flaiiked hv Bob Gray on rigiitwingl and Billy Ford on left. wing. l can be seen the Islanders place men and the Atlantics two. . . . l 4 l d: 1 four i l Carroll Bloom, the Halifax tie-, fenseniaii was the only imaminoiisi, lehoice of the voters. "Biie,k” Whit-i, ilork and Al Miller vicre next in ;line with an identical number of; ifirsts and seconds. The seeondy plare team had three Glace BB.V players, two Islanders and one Halifax perforiner on its llneiip.i Don Lockhari of the Miners was i inf tllace Bay and Steve Hl'l(l'(l(,'lClI of the Islanders were selected on defeiisc; Billy Watson of Halifax was picked fni' centre-ice with Bill Mccracken on right wing and i Marcel Clements on left. ' . -- . i 25'.VF""'0m Dll'-ill” M3CNFm W55 clubs-from junior up-throiighouti . . . .. - . . rm. me Canada The most me CAHA CV",0:1egingfiliEi:ii:Ll:ii:iuf.i:;gdii”'l;ti;i,be New Waterford, Sydney Com. ' r , ' n' ' . g v nnwmk mo” tr”: W" 1 I ! ,mercinl. Sidney Post Record, New l ' - c 0 "WW1 ":Gltisgow. Tri.iro. Yarmouth. Bed- Charlottetown, ithe choice of the votrrs ciatioii opens its annual sessions Monday at Niagara Falls it will face questions that can shape the future of hockey in this country. from the, suspension by the CAHA last branch, a situation which left rec- ,ogni7.ed Quebec champions out of fall tiirec Dominion playoff series. tnonient : drniiii by cartoonist Viciw Runtz last, .lanu:iry to conimenio-iim, Hockey League R 51000000 or, Whitlocl: .- ' ' , ,, i , V ganizatioii with a paid attendance 5194 '0 iii? Srililrilb Oi iliftkscoring his 03tJ0tli goal. Fans iiill Ur more than 1000.000 um season, lremn mm ” snmwd Bmk we”'iwill turn out-and-out professional. that the agrccnicnt between pro- l,.,.,'Kl.) of H , W 0 w ' tcssioiial ll i ' ” )('.iIs Whitloti. has betii on the M” be ”,l,mmMed0 THE G-'U0ARDIAN. cHARLoTTi3"r0wixt Serious Problems Will Face C.A.H.A.-At Annual , Meeting Opening Mondayp Canadiiiii Press Staff Writer By W. R. WI-IEATLEY MONTREAL, tCP)-When the Canadian Amateur Hockey Asso- The most serious problems stem winter of its big Quebec Current. Situation Here ll the situation at the I. There. is far better than an en chance that the Quebec Sen- 2. There is a distinct possibility leagues the CAHA it. There is R more remote pos- playing rules; recognition of pro- tessional playing lists re-serve clauses, etc; noii-jeopardy in oil- eration of sipo-nsored clubs: recoil- nition of age limits. conditions for turning players pro. three-game tryouts by amateurs with pro clubs. It is considered a certaiiity that the Junior Amateur llockev As- sociation, a league in the Quebec branch, could operate profitably as a pro league as well as the QSHL, It is also known that jun- ior clizfos in Ontario liave, been in- terested in a possible pro set-up. What may be more to the poinir - 3 &5'11t SCOT?" 15 4 i e o ier wo games were - and 15-5. junior and senior amateur play-I ere now get their salary cheques. the same as the pros do. Braiiow Wins ci.r:vi:i.AND, nae: O Sleekl Johnny Bratton, gunning welterweight title bout won a un-! siiimous decision f)i'f'l' elusive l.lVlOi Minelli of Italy Tliiizsdiiy night in F1-ow, Cl?V9li”i1ld:Holt. Clianibcrs, Myring, Bibeault. . B.Y.C.: W, Gillis, A. Coady, R. Mccloskey, W. Murphy, J. Coady, D. Burge. a I0-round bout lll Arena. The hard-piincliing limit-an, who had considerable difficulty in find-; ing his target, weighed I50 1-2 to rail would he allowed to play The next inei-iiiig of the Lezigiin . - - . I. - v.0 iiiih an iiiberniedlatc teem with-iwill be held on Wtitiiitistltiy iiiglit,l:C:l1.(:: Isngllllllxn "lbme 10 Bucks i3”-llll'v.V Oi 1111110? CNN ill QUEDEC out the consent. of the juniorliilay 13 at the Siininierside Radiol K Ab u o amid Omm'10 miikllsll ilmmedgaie turn in the area with the excep-lstatioii at seven o'i'lotk. ., v . , WIWVF3 '0 lurm 3- un 97 Pm 950 t-mu of those who played wiinl ldaily in last iii;:Iit's meeting a fwr ,s,pK(':Jl1l1 13:91:15; fl Rlgoilkegisiotial L'll'CIllf. an iiitriinirzliate team last yeninlieotc of tliiinlts ii.-is lPlli'lCl'!'fl to A0”0:lfl.5,,,l F0. h H,,”.l1'Vh.l!.-00.” BN0” me N”l3l”” F51” m5"'l Riliv Piiri-ell and Brian I.ewis,iIhc retiring Pursuit-nt Ali. Fi-.'in-.'er”N;:i(m;;i;"'n 'l;:;" 'Miw0H;a COL iiigs, officers of the suspended- liiyiris nf junior age who are -cit: for the niaiinvr in which he umnmg mm woncnsln; miSeleCt,Qiiebec Aniateur Hockey. Associa-l Prtiyilninrl with M.C.A. were ex-lhandled the League last year. in Mall,;HmP 05,01, Lmglm "Dream tion iiill meet with officials of thc, ' '" 5 it i CAHA in Toronto Saturday. l "We want to know beforehand, agree with the team selected foriwhat Wm be done 4 reinstate ..., mml N mdudps A1 Mmar In nwlmem and what it Wm emtmhu 5aldlfIli:ii'lottetnwn Bl'flll('ll. lt ;ishetl Lfiliith! Moss. QAI-IA. instatement and full information. we will risk to appear before the full CAHA meeting and make our position known as an outgoing braiirh." List Of Demands Conway will carry with him a list of demands by George Slater. QSHL president, that must be dealt with before the QSHL will consider returning to CAHA juris- ditztioii. QSHL president 5. said: "We can't go along as in the past. We can't agree that all the in one man's hands. Furthermore, we no inoiiry i.. the major ser- ins by playing the Maritime cham- pions for the Alexander Trophy. "We distribute much more to our clubs from our own playoffs than the. CAHA ever did to all was 8104.000 for W e 152 for Minelli. citlzeiis' cooperation I Continued train page 1 l ('i'eelni.'iii. i'li:iirrii.iii ofWthe, ' mid tMartin Conw of thei . . . t ll-"PI 9" ay ta iolunt.ii,i oig.1iuI..itinn intriest- motor Tfl('ll'lK at'i', three series in two matches. won the opener one in Summerside on Wednesday night. MAY if 1953 S'side Airmen Win Island Volleyball Title The stronx Bummerside Force volleyball th championship and The airmen took the The The B. Y. C. made their strong est showing in the opening game last night which the airmen won The scores 0 The addition of Fl.fLt.. The score was tied ll-l Air team last night won the Prince Edward Island vol- it-ybali Physical Fitness Trophy by de- Ieating the City champion Basil- ica Youth Club in three straight games. best of three games to William Dean to the airmen's team spoiled the Youth Clubbers” chance for victory. ',m the first game when Dean join- led the airmen. 0 The referee was George Andrew for n,and the scorer Jackie Turner. t WINNIPEG, (CP)-Barrie Fly- ers won the Memorial Cup Wed- nesday night and Winnipeg sports writers agree they deserved it. But the kind of hockey that was serv- ed up to the customers met with criticism almost as rough as the final guns itself. The match was described In I. back-alley brswl and A disgrace. The Flyers won three straight in the best-of-seven series before st. Boniface Canadiens came up with a win, and the easterners made no mistake about it with A 6-1 inning in the final game. Temper: were as hot as the 88- degree weather as one" of the high- lights of Canadian sport. turned into a. 12-min battle royal. Describing the game. Maurice Smith of the Winnipeg Free Press said: "It certainly wasn't hockey. It was s roughliouse, no-holds- barred brawl." Smith also blasted referees Lou Lecompte and Chlng McDonald of Ottawa. He said they lost control of the game in the second period. "The mess that passed for hockey, we don't. care to see again. Y Rap Memorial Cup Fina-lP As Back Alleyjirawl There's no enjoymeiir 13711.7; watching young men who are xu l Dosed t0 be playing an llulicst-Lg: goodness Canadian game. skatin around 1 sheet of ice trymg (3 malm one another." 0 Vince Leah of the Tribune called the and revolting. He said it would go down in Winnipeg hockey history 1,, one M the most dismal finishes. ”It was shaping up as the best game of the series until somnimm. lost his temper and the c.nmp,..,,,,', away from the referees mm. pletely.” Leah also levelled I valley at the spectators, whose conduct was almost as bad as that of the play- ers. Many of the audience didn't wait for the presentation of tin; trophy and some who did remain booed. The Tribune writer called im- more rigid rules regarding violence on the ice. "If ll man as much as rtiises his stick near an opponent's ei-o. brows, chase him for keeps," '31.. said. ”I-lard hitting hockey sun Vvilllilppg Same riisiiisl can be clerin hockey.” I Over Pitcher 1 to me that hes just about as good as he thinks he is." That's manager Marty Marion of St. Louis Browns talking. Once I.iiieups'- . , skeptical about rookie Alva tBobo) RtC'Air” ipommd KC,”P”- D”n' Holloman after unimpressive re- Boulgeom B-”"es' Sm"e' lief appearances. Marlon has British iiicintf Ace Injured Nf'ii4lTlilAlVlP'llON, iAl”'i Stir Britzitiils 25-,i car-old . - mhed at 90 iL ckin assurance of re-l - - , . . . N” . R 3 Hi In the Sllltivtt lmllfl ii? 0i 85- miles an hour during fl trial run changed his mind about the eager, 27-year-old right hander. After weeks of pestering for :1 starting job, Bobo finally got his chance and curved his way to a no-hit, no-run game against Philadelphia Athletics Wednesday night. I-lollomaii's achievement still held the baseball spotlight Thurs- .L..L...mm.LL.L...m. Baseball Results lSI5i1l"F9 l0 ill” U0lII1I'il- iTiiiirsd;iv and siiffr-red reported v i Althougli no 1lOl'ltl)t,ll niotiuii ii'asl(.0m.0ss;'0n and Mm injm.”,s. (By The Cmmdm" Pre”l mm" ii iii” .0l"'.V (lN'lfli"ti '0 Moss was iirii-tirin' at lie ili;”'"'l". fl") "d”('7'll”"iil” l"'0il'Vl"llf;iiiioiis Slli'Pl'Sl(Il('iPL tiiirili, iiceir American Lclnle "WUHI ll? WMS '" "" ll” ll"'"' Northumptoii. for )1 meeting Sa!- . d llllf Oi ill? i'll.V HOW llW.V l"'"llllt'flil,l2L llis .l:ir:uar nyertiirned as N" Rum” sChedulp' ;llPil9T PFPD3l'9 r'illll0-'Il'iil1Ul fll ill” he whipped around a curve at it-ity0fnr the export:-cl influx of:5)(i,('. milns per hour. Nnlim” I-"ll" llo"r'5”' i l.:iter it was st'iled at the has- I An iinpnrtaiit item T1lf'lIllOllFfl print that fyfosgjg ('(jndHi()n 150 An mime! postponed" iliy seycriil spe.'iltei's lllY(tli'Pfl tho ”np"(-)'”HV W.” gnndgi t liii('reaseti t.ix:itinii rxiwi-tori hi .',,,, ,2 g Intunuuonu Leah" 'home owners ulien they piinted . - . , - . 1 . . i Springfield at Buffalo postponed ff”, l"””,".'.”"”' ”" ”ll)."liB0wlIng Montreal oioooooio 0-2 12 o E oins (one, eii'.iirniaiti lat the liiii-i Town” . 010 001 000 L4; 12 0 .l.'"””'l:"'""' M1. ,0 g-”": ll'""l': Lasordn, Lee Hi and Yelen: villi la l.lP (.il,i Asstisstii hntl0 a Past. Show (0, FM". .10, and iaiitltorized the piihlisliini: or :i Ken” lISlal0l'tl0l'il to the effort that llt'l - w.Fah1.. 0011” had iievr-r rriisetl the tissessetl HALIFAX, iCPi- The annual HR. '1-'0r0u'm.G'01i0y value of R property iieruiisr the Nova Scotiri-Prince Edward Island nachhger Mg 000 013.4 3 1 lowner hail cleaned it up or paint-jlpowling tournament opens here 0.4.3," 202 190 10,...g 14 1 ed it "nor does he intend to." Monday. K,-3,0513 C101,, .4. Merlin; .5i lMl. Waltoi ll,i'ntlniiiii statert slxtcen teams; nrg pxpggted in and Ramp: Harrmmon and WM, .tiat the work of the gioiip was0the folnuday D1033 Takmg pm-Lwm nngtom L-Krieger. :offset. the. iitilitrirlzin aspect of'0 SHIV 32- 1907- b-V 9”K"3l"g m ”,I.eague during the regular scliediileidiH,.ihu”,d 3135000 mil Veal. mp W ? H. I .H, L ' ' - H ' rnft O l('l' llll ( HIE. i nine-inning 0-0 tie with St. Louis. pitched a six-inning 6-0 shutout against the Cubs in his second istart. Sept. 25, and followed ii'itlilJ-ml), 5,.i,.(.1m,, ll. regulation I-0 triumph over the Reds in his third start, Sept. 29. New Twist in Catcher lo Pitcher Mystery OSHKOSH, Wis. 'APi The on- cient. question in bascball- what does the catcher say to the pitcher out on the mound?--has taken a ,new tlwi.-:t here this year i Jose Barrio. a Cuban. is the first- He trots out freqiieiitly to confer with his pitcher, but is unable to speak it word of English Communication is by sign lan- guage most. of the time At critical moments, though, Barrio summons manager Dave Garcia to interpret. Both speak Snaiiish. Glasgow Rangers Win Scottish Soccer League Championship GLASGOW. ikeuternl - Glasgow Rangers won the Scottish Soccer League championship Thiirsrlay night when they drew i-l with Queen of the South in the final match of the season. The Rangers took the title on goal average. since they finished with the same number of points as Hibernian. the runner-up. Each had 43 points from 30 games but Rangers scored 80 goals with 39 scored against them whils- Hiberriian hltl 9.1 goals for with 51 against. The Rangers also won the Scot- tlsh Cup this season and this is the seventh time, they have It'- enmplished the "double". The last time was in 1950. The cockntoo. of the Pacific regions, is closely related to the true parrot. SHIP SIIOT FINISHING Rolls of Film developed and printed. 24 hour service, Double Ills prints. Any roll of 8 ex- PNW0 N"! 40 cents. Reprints 4 some on-.11. Mall Illtn lervln. P. 0. lo: 11, Charlottetown. i . , , Mt:I:9lVm::): Nlllfllylil Sis club.-:.... V I . C0llnf'lllf)l' Johiistoiir thoiighi ithe iiocl as the alternate contli dug "'3". mm" nlonm m H", ""”'-V Sm" Smls "1 s””' ”l' 5 should be mm Mm (halted players. It. now is 83,000 ,,.,.5,.,.,,0M. Should 0,. 5,,,.,.i,,H,. 'npp,.0Wl? 0M,AE,”l did 3 good jobilmm lllllli-ll D10 CiUb3 and 55.000 iitarkcri with '51-nli-'li l.iglil' . Hum H gund Nam wh-Ill, wm,Pvill'0ill Ni"-101181 HOCREY Leiillufillieypiioiild be readily dist-erniiilc i icliibs. If we turn pro we get S10,-tat night. lhiiili his club from almost iiutliin .tn ii strong chainpiciiiship con tender. K i . Following last. liil1llf's long meet- I . ing oflthe island Baseball l.eagiie,i Bl'lRiit"llei' w. w. Reid invited thel it-ti Mtmoriiil Field for a iirw ofi lthe iiriily eri-i-ted ligliting plant. The sys'rni tlliimintitcs the hull, fl”ltl in a splendid fashion and; ,in Slli'll a way that there will in-l inn shadows to interfere with the fielding of the hall in any lneatioirl tit. is not expected that players willl hair aiiv rilfficiilty in adjiisling 0ii'lll be held at night before thel players get the go ahead sign tol pcrforni iiiitier the arcs in R FOR. uiar Raine. l 0 (lffit-ials lzi.-i night used an old mud covered hall and could easily, ifollow its flight in any part of mo tdiainond. iiith a "mu mm ,m,n,i lshoiild not he the least. trouble inl '01-I TFilarr1. The lights thmw iii .:larP.niito the area siirrounclingl 0the field an lhnt. longua ofntms :should not have to worry about lon- ilng many baseballs. The diamond "-19" '3 in R000 5001!! and it must be said that the boys really have the facilities this year to plnysnmg '00-notch ball. Famousdlhoifai Hockey Player Of Early 1900's Dies OTTAWA, (CP)- Ifiirry Smith H9.Ia member of Ottawa's famous "Silver Seven" hor-key tum n( 1),. '"l.V 1900!. died in hospital Wed. nesday. A7" -ll" 190.5-00 National Hockey ssocintion smith pinym on ,0, o a forward line with Harry W4-gr. ;'ltk.klilf Smith and the info ran McGee. On defence were HHTVEY Pulford and Arthur Moore, both deceased, and Billy Haiti: played In the nets. Old-timers I5Ilk'0f Harry smith '”' ""f "f t'0"kP.VI ltfriitest shots. rm-ailing it 1906 Stanley Cup mm: which Ottawa lost. Ottawa wu trying for its fourth straight Sl”"'9Y CHP and lost. the first Kaml of ii home-and-home total. Point. series with Montreal Wan- der!-rs 9-1. When the 3;-rir-,1 rpiurnril to of. tsws, Harry scored six goals to l.e.'igiic officials and the press oiit,ge 000 from any pro club for rt draft- ed plnyer. ”II with the American Hockey League or the Western Hockey League. we would have to pay nobody HON what we made. Now the CAI-IA . all." Slater also said the QSHL wants "fair time" to complete its own playoffs before the CAllA playoffs. If the league rettirned to the CAHA it would also have to have assurance that its representative winner "would profit financially." The QSHL would want a negoti- ation list, allowing two young play- ers to be placed on it for each string catcher for Oshkosh of the theinseives to play under the lights 1 0. 0v 0,. ll ' , o . 'cteam, the rights to the players to c as D Wisconsin s ate League ,but to make sine several practisrsi he Pxemm,d A4wxlyhi0n mmted um”. The incident that set off the QAllA's suspension late last Feb- iiirtry arose over a junior player, Ron Atiwell. The. CAHA maili- lRlItN1 Attwell lacked a proper traiirler from the Ontario branch and was wrongfully issued it play- ing rertiflcale by the QAILA to play with Montreal Canadian Jun- tors. The QAHA maintained it. right- fully issued the certificate and offered to have 1 neutral suthority settle the dispute. The QAHA then was suspended for flouting the CAHA's authority. Lotor all leagues. clubs and players within the Quebec branch were :umend- ed by the CAHA. Just before that happened the Q81-IL reigned from the QAHA in order to "protect rights and players." The NHL snd other pro les- gues then extended to the QGHL protection of plsyers' flow. This action displeased the CAHA, which considered the pros' procedure in breach of the pro- CAHA agreement. Ans ' tion the agreement out be effected immediately by either side on I two-year notice. The agreement. has been in op- eration since 194'! and runs for 10 years unless terminated. It pro- video for payment by the pros to the CAHA of mm: to support om- atettr orgsniutioris. The amount varied. It was 827,000 this year and has reached 040,011). Since the agreement bacon in 1047 the amateurs have received 3250.000. 'I'he' ent also makes such provisions as: mutual acknowledge- ment of jurisdiction and suspen- IIOM: nnublishment. of uniform help tie the series, tiut..PI.est-r Patrick broke the deadlock and then clinched the cup with sn- other. A bachelor, his survivors In- rliirle s hrother, Tom Smith, old- time leading goal-getter in the Nstlonsl League. t we had playoffs i Beiitillfl:-:ifhin bV:-i-k llis Wiirsliip Mayor J. ll. Simi- 'ari agreed with the (loiiiniittr-e itlist a Beautification XVeel( would he in good idea and stated that 0 he ivoiild pl'Cl('iflllll the week lw- This W33 E 593531 Of mlldllP8.'i in -"-OT ginning pray 17 us 50,-), 1,, thjsilllk general storm that concerned 0 . lrity. iii izr-nvral it is iiupml tli.'it,1llC t'('p0I'l of the Liberal majority m :c:0l2;' agegl::.od:;gndr3;:r home owners will freshen up or the defence committee which . their places. . found that the public got value for 9-mp.3n1'-'f7o""d 20 mu" "" Mu" Miss Lillian l)ll('llPmllI. rap. its money in defence construction resenting the. Professional aniliand that the frailtles reported in Business Women": f'liih, nlsmllie Currie. report are being fixed spoke of the need of an l'f1ll- tip catinnnl program anti mitt:-it that. The Coiisrrvatlve.-i cited c-liapteri it would he aided by the Chi and verse from the evidence 10 Guides, Also speaking lVl'l0ll,i'lal'gllC that there has been gross were Mr. John F. Connolly, i-iiiilr-lwaste and carelessness. that the man of the Traffic tioniniittt-e,l1,t.be1-315 used mar majmny to my and Miss Katherine Marl.eiiniiii,lfu5e key evidence mm to bring in Supervisor of Nurses at llti' Pro-0 R repoh that W” can complete Viiieinl Snnaiei”iiini.0 ivlin riimiss-,camoiiflnge of'the facts.” They ed the traffic parking pinlileiiip.,C,.05(,d the Llbemh of making P W" P”"”f S"”'”l" political speeches and of deliber- Cumdhn L00-yon softball tram E ' ”” " ntcly distorting the facts about tr out for h" team a ' (it u d 0 Elactlon Penhold, about the Ourrle'report y ' re urge 0 5 en - Continued from page i or anyone else snd said he has, had no connection with the firm; since selling it before Kori-ti be-i gun. . 3. Howard Green (PC-vSl'0OiIV-l er-Qusdrs) questioned Pr0duc.t.Irm' Minister Howefs suggestion thnti the government might help lu-rpi key defence production facilities in shape by giving their products. to European stiles. He doubtedl that Canadians should be put. to the expense of giving such giftsl indefinitely and said it would boi better if the facilities could he kept rssdy without actually pro- ducing. 1 4. Mu Howe said there are cert.-, sin lines. such as exptoslveawhernl experience indicates the best ideal is to keep operating at A. minimum pace even if the products must bel given away. There were limita- tions to stockpiling because some items didn't. stockpile well and his, department must. be ready for im- mediate mobilisation. H. W. Herrtdge (CCF-Kootensy West.) who said he couldn't agree either with the Liberal View that all is well in defence construction or with the Conservative view that the situation is rife with ineffic- iency snd extravagance. Wants Careful Check There had been waste and Inef- ficiency but it arose largelv from circumstances beyond official eon- tml. What his party wanted wsa ford, Dartmouth, and seven Halifax entries. The cliat, will teriniiied on a point basis. Witeaiiis of auclitors under the con- Watson iseller to keep an eye on the armed ,forces' stockpiling and records and trol of Auditor-General the condition or their stores, Mr. Howe said he'd like best he was for it. land Camp Petawriwn. and other as- be. de- lO 899 .Mig Sellar make the best possible lcheck and if the CCF way was the pects of construction. The Liberals accused the opposi- tion of making the defence depart- ment ai playground with the Currie report for a football. They quoted chapter and verse from the evi- dence to show that the constriictlon program was satisfactorily con- ducted. They accused the Conser- vatives of wanting to use a meat- axe on defence officials and of wet - lug in frustration because they sought scandal and couldn't find any. ST. LOUIS. (AP)--”I-lo. proved d Marion Is Enthusiastic Holloman ay as rain washed nut the cf. tire. National League st-lie-du;;, The American League had no games scheduled. Only Small Crowd Oiiiy a weather-thiiiiied cloud of 2,473 fans sat in on Holloniairi magnificent 6-0 victory. And they saw the show for free. Oiwiier Bil. Veeek announced their ruin t-iierks would be honored any time in the future to show his appreclatimi for their attendance on a iam- threntencd night. Hollcman, who piiclied R um. hitter for Syracuse in the llllFl- national League lost season, was the talk of the Browns' office dur- ing the winter after a splendid sea- son in Cuba. But after arming late for spring training, hr: be- came just another rookie pitcher. Only Holloman himsclf appoi- eiitly thought Holioman had ii. "He's been asking me every night, 'am I going to start. in- nioriiow's game?'," says Marion. "HES been pestering and poster- ing. I guess some folks iiniild coil him a screwball." "But you know what. he did arri wolre happy he's eccentric enough t.n pester the manager. He iiiin made a bum out of me." Holloman Confident Despite uiilmpressive reiir-f showings (tune hits and five earn- ed runs in 4 1-3 innings), Hollo- man was eager and confident The husky 207-pounder says. "I'm not ii bullpen pitcher. I'd rather be in the minors than in the bullpen." It. was the first winning no-hit performance. by a Brownie since 1017 when Eiinie Koch and Bob Groom did it on consecutive days. It was (iii years to the day after Groom stopped Chicago 3-0 Bcbo Newsoni, for whom Hollo- mini is nicknamed-pitched no-hit ball for nine innings for Lin BFDWHS lll 1934. but lost 2-l to Boston in the 10th. m KINSMEN GARNIVAL Cliiirlotli-towii Fnriiiii i l JUNE 4th, 5th and 6th l l SOFTBALL ' PRACTICE There will he Practice tonight. 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