l. . cave-carer.“ nuns vnaxu Sport Briefs 4 THERE'S y ' A Behind a Dish A of Perfection PERFECTION NEAR YOU. WRITE - PRONE OR CALL y FOR WHOLESALE PRICES. CENTRAL GREAMERIES LTD. CHARLOTTETOWN — SUMIMERSIDE § i‘? aowuivc waasrmvc nocaar i i I THF. INEST 0F, RESH RUIT LAVORS Only pure rich cream. Real cane sugar and natural fresh flavors, skill- fully blended and frozen could produce the smoothness’ of our Ice Cream. Try it-and you'll, be convinced. DEALER r Islanders will a: interested to know that Rog Daag who did part of the announcing fromflancouver during the Hawks-Quaker playoffs and had such a- pleasing voice and manner, is a. grandson of the late Laughlin McMillan, Err-M. P. P-, of Covehead, P. E. 1., his mother be- . lug Annie McMillan Daag. We are indebted to Mr. George Abbott of Union Road, for the above infor- mation. It is a long way of! but , some- thing to look forward to. Jimmie Wry, President of the Maritime Hockey Association, states that he feels confident the Allan Cup fin- als of 1036 vrfl "be awarded to the Mariitmcs. 1934 will go to Toronto and 1935 to Western Canada. The good old system of yards will be replaced at some of the ath- letic meetings in the U- S. A. Some of the large universities lke Ha:- vard, Prnceton and Yale will use the metric system. we presume this is to bring the timing more in conformity with O'ympic times and records. Bill Cook, the hero of the New York Rangers-Maple Leafs play- offs, scorer of the winning and only goal in the last game, sewed during the War in the Canadian Field Artillery. His buddy was on -lland at the conclusion. of the , 8/ game to receive Bill's hockey sweater. cook, according t1 Shaw. is over thirty-eight years of age Percy Nicklln in an interview kTven in Vancouver says: "We have faced stiffer competition in our three team league than in any of A struck 653 home runs. That was up at high class hockey but now we are surc of it. U. S. A. teams have made a bet- ter shcwing in hockey in 1933 than any previous year we remember of. Thc New York Rangers won the Stanley Cup, world's professional hockey championship, Boston Cubs the Canadian-American league Champonship. The three most valuable players in the National League are Eddie Share, defence- man of Boston Bruins, Frank Boucher, centre of New York Rangers and Tiny Thompson the Bruins goalie. Manager Gilbert and associates oi the Saint John Forum are mak- ing a drive to secure funds to in- stall an artificial lcc plant in the Saint John- Forum. In order for Saint John to compete success- fully ill the hockey circuit with Morctozl, Halifax and Charlotte- town, tll = would be almost a nec- essity. u In Babe Ruth's colorful 081861‘ on the baseball diamond he has to and including last Saturday. Toronto and Hamilton runners rm: CHARLUFFETOWN GUARDIAN EW OFTIIESPQ Moncton Hawks AreEx tended {Great Welcome ,Yestetday 65c Long To Be Remembered In The “Hub” Ci (Special to The Guardian) MONGTON, April ZL-Moncton turned out todayto ‘ home the Hawks, winners of the Al- lan Cup and Senior Amateur Hoc- key Champions of Canada. The weatherman, in common with the people of Moncton and of visitors from all sections of the Maritime Provinces, was at his best and a bright April sun beamed down from a cloudless sky as fully fifteen thou- ysand people acclaimed the home- coming of the ‘hockey conquerors. The depot of the Canadian National Railways was jammed with people while‘ two bands turned out to blare a welcome. The gallant young ath- letes were escorted to a. big ladder truck of the city's Fire Department and headed a parade through the more principle business streets of Moncton, lined with thousands of people while‘ the main decorations composed of patriotic flags and bunting, the black and white colors of the Hawks Club, and other forms of decorative display made a bril- liant setting for the unique even; It was the first time that Moncton -or the Maritimes-have ever wel- comed home an Allan Cup team. As the long parade composed of floats ' of all descriptions, passed the city hall, a halt was made and the mem- bers of the victorious team assemb- led on the steps while Mayor C. H. Blakeney extended to them the of- ficial congratulations of the corpor- ation and citizens of Moncton. Following the parade more than half a mile long the champions, their wives and friends, were guests of honor at a. civic dinner in a lo- HiiMERiN sllllllllla (By The Associated Press) Home rims yesterday-Ruth, Yan- kees, 1; Myer, Senators, 1; Cissel, Indians, 1; Bottomley, Reds, 1. The leaders-Gehrig, Yankees, 3; Foxx, Athletics, 2; Ruth, Yankees, 2. League totals-American, 23; Na- tional, 6. Total, 29. HOW THEY STAND AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost RC. made a wonderful showing in the New York __________ 6 0 moo Boston Marathon of last Wednes- Cleveland __ 5 2 3114 day when Dove Komonen and, Chicago 5 3 m5 D‘ck Nildlng of Toronto and l-lar- Washington .. 3 5 .375 old Webster of Hamilton, finished 5g, Louis .. 3 5 .375 second. third M"! "will YWPW Philadelphia . a 5 .875 tively, to Lester Pawson, who broke Boston .. 2 4 333 all existlng records by covering the Detroit .. .. 2 6 235 twenty-six miles 385 yards in two hours, thirty-one minutes, one and three-fifth seconds. The former re- cord was made by Johnny Miles .\'.\'l'l1\.\' IL LEAGUE Won Lost PC. the playoffs since we left Mon: ton." We felt that we were looking Great George Street ' H“ lgll . . . . . 4 1 .800 (continued m, pm, 9, iNew York 2 1 .667 Brooklyn .. .. 3 2 $00 Chicago ...... . 3 3 .500 Philadelphia . a ii W! St. Louis ..." . 2 3 $09 Cincinnati . 1 3 150 Boston 1 3 350 THE BIKE SHOP Operating the ONLY Fully Equipi: Bicycle Iiepairiiept on P. E. I. Let Us Give Your A BWYQLE a Spring Cleaning USEDBICYCLE BARGAINS .We Have a Number of Reconditioned Bicycles ..For, Sale 8i Atilflc-five Prices - INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Charlottetown Won mu; Po. Baltimore 8 0 1.000 Rochester .. 5 1 833 Newark 5 2 -'i14 Jersey city 3 3 50° Albany .. I 3 40° Montreal 1 4 30° Buffalo .. 1 4 1°" Toronto ............ 1 9 4°" ty As The Victorious Hawks Arr Welcomed H212. cal hotel at which the Red Indians, Maritime junior champions and chal‘ a for the ‘in! Clip. were invited guests. DistiriZlliflhed representatives of the New Bruns- wick Government, the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association, the ation, prominent hockey clubs in the Maritlmes, civic and fraternal organizations were also present. At this complimentary dinner Hi5 Worship the Mayor extended the hockey players the official welcome home. Tonight at a monstrous rc- ceptlon held in the Stadium, scene of many of the Hawks conquests. and attended by over four thousand people, Frank Greenleaf, Moncton, President of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association, officially pre- sented the Allan Cup, emblematic of the amateur hockey champion- ship of the world to Captain Jimmy Foster of the Hawks. Other presen- tations made to the victorious team included the C. A. H. A. medals, special made medals donated to the Allan Cup champions by His Honor General H. H. MacLean, Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick; gold wrist watches from the citizens of Moncton, and many other gifts of private firms and in- dustrles. Following the presenta- tatldns, brief addresses were made by several prominent sport officials and the civic welcome to the victor- ious hockey team was brought to a. close with a. programme of enter- tainment and dancing in the Stadi- ium, BUSINESS lContinuecifrom Page l) cent. The cotton market failed to hold and upswing in the early deal- ings of 75 to 90 cents a. bale, but compared to yesterday's final prices, finished unchanged to 25 cents high- er. The textile markets were strong. Despite the subslding of some of the markets, buslnes news was cheerful. The weekly Mercantile Review of Dun dz Bradstreet said the usual let down in retail trade after Easter had failed to material- ize, and that volume was holding close to the levels of the Easter shopping period of the past fort- night. The wave of public buying, it said, appeared “to be far from having reached its crest." The rebound in the United States dollar was attributed chiefly to short covering by European bear specula- tors, but may also have reflected transfer of funds to pay for com- mitments made in speculative mar- kets from other countries in the past day or two. Wall Street comment on the $3.- 000,000,000 credit or currency expan- sion proposal of President Roosevelt was mixed, and some bankers op- posed certain aspects of it, but some leading banking quarters said the measures hould be effective in stim- ulating prices and business, and should not be regarded as danger- ously inflatlonary. The provision for credit expansion throllgh open market purchases of Government securities by the Federal reserve system found strong support in some banking circles. The United States dollar, which had had an indicated depreciation of around l3 percent at recent high levels for such gold currencies as the French franc and the Dutch guilder, was only down about seven or eight percent on the basis of to- day's final prices for those curren- cies. Maritime Amateur Hockey Associ- ~ i i l .. QQL/ BASEBA-ii lllsllls NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago . 0 5 2 St. Louis .. . . . . . . . . . .. 4 l4 1 Bush, Richmond, Tinning and Hartnett; Hallallan and J. Wilson. Cincinnati 1 3 0 Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 5 8 0 Johnson, Benton and Hemsley; Swift, Harris and Grace. New York . . . . . . 1 8 0 Seibold, Cantwelt and Hogan; Schumachcr, Spencer, Luque and Manciiso. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York . . . . . . 7 18 l Boston .. 5 8 1 Rliffing and Dickey; Welland, Welch, McLaughlin and Shea. Detroit.............. 0 50 Cleveland 5 9 1 Rowe and l-iayworth; Hildebrand and Spencer. St. Louis ... 4 7 1 Chicago .. 0 2 1 Hadley and Ferrell: Gregory, Kimsey and Grubc. Washington .. 1 8 0 Philadelphia 3 7 3 Crowder, Burke and Sewoll; Cain and Cochrane. ...- INTERNATIONAL LEAGUL R. H. E. Montreal 3 6 1 Baltimore 4 3 l Michaels, Lamaster and Tate; Prudholnme and Gaston. Toronto .. 3 i) 2 JcrseyCity 6 8 3 Collier, Barnes and l-leving; Cas- CJI lla and Rcnsa. Buffalo . .. 4 4 0 Albany...... ....11170 Bloomer, Brewer, Ulsenbec, Galli- van and Crouse, Dunning; Shealy, Masters and Phelps. Rochester 8 7 0 iNewark 311 1 Kaufmann and Florence, l-Iinkle; Devens, Tamulls and Hargreaves. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul 2, at Louisville 3. Minneapolis 2, at Indianapolis 3. Kansas City 0, at Toledo 1. Milwaukee 8, at Columbus 3. BUT JUDGE - iF YOU COULD ONLY SMELL THE AWFUL roeAcco u: SMOKE$ l MANY (Continued from Page l) work on the building, Mr. Byers said: “It is thoroughly well built; we have done a good job." I-Ic fell. the Board should be congratulated upon having such a splendid new ' hospital which will be of so much ‘ benefit to the community. He con- i sidered the Board had been wise in spreading the building over the ground space, particularly when they had such a fine site, which witll planting and landscaping, will makc of the hospital one of the many beauty spots of the city. To build a high building on such n site would not be so satisfying. Mr. Byers told the Board that the lire resistance of the building ls un- questlonably high grade. Also that the new Prince Edward Island Hos- pital had set a precedent for low cost per hospital bed, namely $2,000 to $2,200. He compared this with other hospitals where bccl costs have run from $2,800, $3,000, $3,200, $3,- 300 up to $4,000 per bed. Colt Racing Sir,-Havlng read a great deal about colt racing, and especially the articles of the esteemed horsemen, Capt. John L. Read and Dr. Chris- topher, and knowing of a lot of well bred colts foaled in 1932 on P. E. Island, the undersigned in order to encourage the farmers and horse breeders of this province to develop and sell colts at all early age, as they do in other places, and not RT WORLD YOUNG MAN 1 HAD THE SAMETROLIBLE so Now 1 SMOKE ROSEBUD AND EVERYTHING BOXING lS FORGIVEN r’ .2 11F iii} ifliiii" Extra large 15c BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT /" Query/looming Best All the evidence is in iavou! of Rosebud. Judges oi good tobacco agree that ii is sweet and mellow and Fragrant, that ii does satisfy the need For a really better and more enjoyable smoke. And why shouldn't it? it's blended to suit the exacting Maritime taste. BUD IF YOU PR EFER PLUG TOBACCO SMOKE ROSEIUD - 10c BiG PLUG DOWN TiIE BACK STRETCH Thc Charlottetown Driving Pal-k ‘ tzack is drying up fast and w.ll be - in appie pic older by’ May 1st. 1t ~ is being used cvcry day by local i horsemen, and while a alt heavy ls l xleal for spring training. Among the horses bong exercis- ed dafly over the above track are Volo Rico 2.04, Heathel-beli 200 1-2, Orola. 2.21. Johnny Miles 2.17 l-4, Golden 212, Hush 2.10 and a lot of new prospects. Onc of tllc best green pncclzs that has showed up for roars in lllIlS vicinity is Frisco Cilenauir, ‘ which last winter won a. race in 34 seconds over the ice. He. is four , years old by Frisco Drect 2.17 1-4, i clam Chal-Toitc Simpson 2.16 l-4 by Peter Chcnzluit 2.04 1-2. He is a very strongly built horse and paces very smooth and very fast. We look to see, him take a, record of 2.14 or better this year. This colt is owreci by Power Bros, City. Volo Rico 2.04 is stronger and ‘heavier than at any time since he jcame to P. E. Island. The heavy ifooting at tilc track does not dis- ’ turb llim in tllc least and he seems to have all kinds of strength alld vim. Watch for him this season over the twice arounds. The many friends of the game little pacer Billy Cope 2.10 3-4. have our buyers going to the 01d; the “track record buster", will be G101,’ sale to pay big prices for i sorry to ieam that he has suffered colts which can be raised in our} a“ own province as well as any placc i injury through cutting his qullricr some weeks ago and has 1n the world’ we offer the fouowmg= been more or less on the shell cver suggestion as the most practical method. That is to say, we have de- cided to organize the P. E. Island Futurity Colt Raceto take place in 1934 for coils fouled in i932. En- trance fees to bc as follows: May 15, 1933, $2.00; Aug. 15, 1933, $2.00; Nov. l5, 1933, $2.00; Feb. 15, i934, $2.00; May 15, 1934, $2.00: Aug. 1, i034, $5.00; final payment. All colts to be named by May l5, 1934 to be raced in Summersidc or any track offering the best inducement. All entries to be made to John 0. Cobb, Secretary. Box 512, Sulnmersicic. W. B. McARTliUR, GORDON W. DAWSON. DEATHS JAY-At Pisquid West, April 22, i933, John Jay, aged 68 years. Funeral Sunday at 2.30. s'nce, but wc understand will bc 0- K. lnthe course of a weck or two. The coming season bids fair to bc of exceptional interest ill liar- ncss racing locally, as more horses arc being trained than ever before in this Province and newones arc spzken of to come here almost dlilly. W0 have it on ffllrii‘ good authority that the Henry Cillkey stable of Maine will domicile here.- If so they will furnish good corn- peiitlon for Lucky Lindy, Billy l Ccpc and our other fast class pac- ers and fast record trottcrs. Local horsemen freed not. how- cvcl", become too apprehensive ovcr Maine horses who race here. Wu have been visited by the best o! Maine and New Brunswick circuit for years without their taking n- way more than their share of the purse money. The many friends of “Rcd" Han- afin who was with us last summer! are looking forward to’ another visit here with his string. “Red“ has written to a party in Charlot- tetown stating that he is anxioul i0 come and it is up to the owner. We hope he says Yes. James Arblng, familiarly known as “Jiggy", who has had a. lot of experience covering a number oi years training and driving race horses, will this spring and sum- mer, we understand, delbte his attention entirely to training and racing horses. "Jiggy" is a great feeder and his horses always 100k wz-‘l. l-le is also a. good balanccr and [JDSSSESEQS a light hand and good driving skill. so should make his presence felt with the best of them at the races. Among the horses which will be campaigned by "Jiggy" is Frank J. Ortolan 2.13, owned by SamPSOTI Grady of Sllmmersdc. This is one of thc best trciters in Canada. (Continued on page 9) Roy A. Prowse At Boomerang Scrvlce Q s o § I I 9 O 0 i E 4 o 4 Q + 046006-64 8966-4-19-wfs-3i. A NEW TAXI SERVICE 1 3 0 CENTRAL TAXI (‘arciul Driving at all Times. OPEN FOR BUSINESS oocouwo-c u-ooo¢+cw44»4+c-o+4+c++4>c4 04 O4 O 6 QQQOOQO~O#O§§QOO-O-OO§OOOO4+§OOOQ&OOOQQ 6O QOQOO Geo. T. Binns Station, Prince Street. a vfQOOV-ffifffiiilfififyififi? 4 By George Mcn-"s-w» us BRINGING UP FATHER OH‘. I'M JU5T "raATS suoucu rrh Too aAo-wl-rl-i Au. THE coco Music ONTHE RAolo, MAcGla lNfifiTfi 6N |_\5TE.NIN' ‘ro ‘ryism HlGH-r-‘Aaocrln Tunab- r y 1\ y ‘ \ ~ \ . y (I)? \ BY Gounr- ; Q1‘ 4R’ "’ THAT RADIO 1 , n FER THE, - f g- coon- i. i 41.2w!“ nTFnESya-fiuu. Ilnfllfiflnuiipn” manna,