'1 blessed to victory in the Willing- . Q1 51g over as holes of medal play, N, my 1s. 194s. By FEASIB- MacDOUGAIiL -1_(°lllldllh Press Staff Writer) nasmrroh, Ont, July 12 -- ,(Qp) ..- British Columbia golfers who” stroked their way to two national titles and broke three records in the process. Th; province's four-man teem do“ cup interprovincial champ- ionship with an aggregate score dive strokes less than the previous record set by an Ontario team at Mona-cal’: Mount Bruno course in 193e, Mount Bruno, like Ancaster more. is a Pol-Til ¢°“Y"- - Jim Robertwn, as. new! the mltlsh Oolumbians to victory with g two-under-par 1S8- l-lo W‘ W‘ gather two rounds of N. 08°11 0"! stroke under p81’. t9 NW" "l" previous individual willlnsdvn cup record of 139 set in 1931 b? Maurice Hodgson oi Montreal pver the same Anoelter 1101""- Biil Mawhlnney of‘ Vancouvl’ -captured the Canadian junior title with a aithome score of 147, 0M stroke less than the record set by‘ Gerry Kesselring of Kitchener, out, in winning the title a year ‘g9, Mawihinney had a one-stroke margin over Bobby Fair of’ Tor- onto, his nearest rival. , Clflhlp Starts Today Today was an auflllrY °Y keen “mpetltion in the five days .0! match play for the Canadian am" ateur championship, starting to- morrow with 108 matches - 4i in p, preliminary round and 6i in the sirst round — to cut the starting slam of upwards of 170 t0 64 101' -;..i~ ~.~\ morning. Two le-hole roun bilbd for Wednesday and , Thursday with the semi-fins day and tbpfflnal Saturday the so-holeiteuh. In the Wiliingdon Columbia l ’ settled down to a dwlina ~ up on the ‘second 1a where Vi Three Records Brok - n By B. C. Golfers In {Winning Two Title Lia- lviclllroyv joined Robertson sub-par round of 60. Ontario's total a year ago when Gritlsh Co bia ranked second with 620. 3.0. teem today was the sun . J in 1947. ‘ Manitoba, . Allan Boes. ranked third with . and Quebec stood fourth with ‘,4 , Alberta carded a 014, the - billed New Brunswick-Prince ward Island teem s 6M, , Scotis. 629 and Saskatchewan Following are the scores - ' Maritime teams: .1‘ ‘New Brunswick-Prince Island: . Cecil Dowling, Charlotte own '.'8-'i&--l-54. Lew Beatty, Wbodstockl 0 "ll- 158. ~ R. Harley, Moncton 79-70-155. B. Isner, Moncton 32-33-106. Nova Scotla: ‘ EJ-L Crawell, Halifax 71-17-148. A.W. Carter, Dartmouth 83-75- 158. Rex Joudrey, Dartmouth, 71-77- eecond round rplsy Wednesday —-'s-- ~ By JACK HAND er. more. July u — (A?) - Injuriee and hot words seared the: Amgflggn League's chances again! the National League in m!” league baseball's annual ail-Hill’ game here Tueodly- Tgd Williams of the Boston Red 50x, hhe junior clrcultfs toll ihitter, est out Saturday's Blmfl gctween Boston and Philadelphia Athletics beoausa or rulitd wt‘ m" in his side. no may not be able to play- At Washington Joe Dimsggio oi New York Yankees, also was on the bench, hoping that his tender heels would permit hun. to P181!- Thoel two last minute develop- inents were nothing compared to ell; blast of manager Stanley (Bub) Harris of the Yankees. my", ‘will pilot the American ugguers, when informed that Qlgvslsnd gpeed baller Bobbyi Fel- ler bad withdrawn from the quad. I-Iarrisanid tbatsslong sshe Iwas connected with the All-Star gclectiens IFeller never would re- eelve another bid. A Cleveland club spoloelnm said leller lied suggested he be re- placed because he would pitch for the Indians tomorrow and would not be of any use to the All-Stars iluesday. Harris lid Joe Dobson of the led eon, would replace roller- Both Williams and Dllnalllo More pidred for the team by the Iona. Feller, however, was jnamed to the team by Harris. y The injury to wllllama,.suiffered Thursday night, may rob the 16th annual game of its main attrac- tion - the bat duel between Wil- liams and Stan ‘Muslal of St. Louis ‘(hrdinals and the National Leagues molt expert hitters‘ ‘ Japan has on the average about H.800 earthquakes annually, or about four shocks s day. 5-DORY RACE. Minnelli Dance in Legion BETTA —AND— TEA PARTY si. rear’; Bay —.Iuly 14th IOAT RACING — 5 CLASSE! l-CAR ENGINE BOATS 2-6 H.P. HARIOR BOATS ‘ V . 3-15 H,P. SHORE BOATS 4-4 H.P. SHORE IOATS , ~ TUG-Of-WAI‘ . srogrs "- omss - _- mussmsursl ' i —Mssis iervsd All Ami-m m IVIIIIQ- ‘ Sand ‘your Entries ea er before July-Jolt ‘to 3- l» , son, lsemery _Ne. l2 lreacli Ccnediejw-Lbllol l: sxésiism mzis - ENTERTAINMENT roe Aug ‘ its» rm, lint n» Bey. gas-mo. American Chances In All v- Star Game Dim Arrnglgmis Continued from page 1 _.._____.___ had been that they were separated by s. gap of 18 cents an hour. That represented the difference between the 28 cents sought by the men and the l0 cents offered by the railways, at thepoint where they broke off negotiations last week. In The Ml-rltlnfis HALIFAX, July l2 —- (OP) —- Perlshable goods will not be car- ried on railways serving the Mar- liimes except under special penrnit on short hauls, railway officials said today. _ shipments o! perlshables was suspended effective aL midnight last night because of the strike of railwaymcn scheduled for July 15. Both Canadian National Rail- ways and the Qanadian Pacific Railway Company took the step. A C.P.R. official said only per- ishable foods which could be de- livered before Wednesday i. i would be taken. National Sea Products officials here said no more shipments of fish could be sent today for points lveyond Montreal and by tomor- row only Maritime destinations could be served. Wholesalers said supplies that will be on hand in Halifax wez" nssday will be sufficient to last only a week. By that time iarr produce ircm the Annapolis Val- ley would probably be arriving by truck and would offset the short- age somewhat. - BROKEN ENGLISH Pidgin English is a mixed jar- gon consisting of English, with Chinese, Malay, and Portuguese words constructed according to Chinese idioms. 1 ;,;_‘.,~;.. _ Halt - Clifford's Orciies Send is; 154. John Clewortil. Dartmouth. 94" ' Leaders in the professional division of the recent N.B.-P.E.I. golf ‘ tournament are shown above and include from left to right: Walker, Belvedere pro who finished second; Kas Zabowski, Halifax Ashburn pro, who led the iield and Archie Skinner of St Andrew's Algonquin Club, who was third. Skinner was the defending champ- B. ‘ -Ihlb I ism S'side Red Sex In . 7-1 Victory Over The R.C.A.F. Last Night Junioriihampion Bill Thompson, classy young shotsmith of Saint John's River- side Club pictured just alter he had won the junior championship of the N.B.-P.E.I. Golf Associa- tion. Thompson will take part in tho Dominion junior tournament which gets underway at Hamilton, Ont., today. -Photo by Garnhum Sfllllillliids NEXT SKATING CHAMPION KFPCHENER, Ont, July ll, - (CP) —— The answer to the $64 question, who will be the next women's figure skating champion of Canada, may be found in Kit- chener this summer. Olympic and world figure Skfllr ing champion; Barbara Ann Scott, in jumping to professional ranks, has left the Canadian title race vcide open. The majority of contenders for the crown nc-w are skating under direction of Otto Gold at Kltch. ener‘s Granite Club. T0 ICE CONGRESS IDNDON, Jilly 11 — (UP) —Al Pickard of Regina, president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Assoc- iation, and Prof. W.G.Hardy of Edmonton arrived ln London sat- urday, en routs to the Interns- tional Ice Hockey Federation's congress in Zurich, Switzerland, July 23-26. 1 Prof. Hardy will officially take over the presidency oi the Peder. ation at the meeting. i cw-nvs rowan. nos-r vrc-ron! DETROIT. my l1 - (AP) __ Guy Iiombardo piloted his Tempo VI to an easy first-heat victory Saturday in the Henry pom M“. "ill ‘Pffllihy power boat race on the Detroit River, , Only two of the eight starters finished the 15-mile heat. Mmbflfdil. band leader formerly of London, 0nt., averaged 50,42 miles an hour as ihe came in more than a lap ahead of Ed Stair, Jr.'s Katy-Did. the only other finisher. Fur Conference Delegates Entertainer! A 1-s- A group of about fifty delegates who are attending the Internation- al Fur Breeders Conference here this week were entertained lasi evening at Government House by His Honour Lleut-Oovernor J. a. ‘Bernard and_ Mrs. Bernard. Lt.- Col. D. A. Maclllnnofi of Char- lottetown and Mr. DZ Q. Stewart of Summerside were in charge of arrangements for the evening and introduced visitors from six differ- ent countries to l-Ils Honour and Mrs. Bernard. During the visits the guests were conducted on a tour oi the building and they showed great interest in the many points o_f historical significance which are to be found within the residence. _Bourque 9b Jimmy fl Behind the four hit pitching oi Cec Powell, the cellar dwelling Red sox swapped places with the R.C.A.l='. nine, by handing them a 7 to l defeat in Summerslde last night. The Sox contributed an errorless fielding display behind Powell, the first time a team had gone the route without a miscue since the same team did it on June 4th against the Legionalres. The Sox teed off on s couple of Air Force pitchers getting a total of twelve base hits. Anderson, on third base for the ,Flyers, though getting one of the ‘errors chalked up against the Air- men, played an inspired game at the hot comer, accepting eight other chances without a bobble. Brawley and Clow in centrefield for the Air Force and Sox made some fine catches for their re- spective teams. BOX SCORE i I 5 ‘I O a~cocu~°¢»> Red Sex Landry ss .. Phaneuf 2b Williams lb Gaudet 3b . B. Scliurman c .. Clow cf .. P. Sohurrnsn llE Daley rf . Powell p . Totals 4o--¢¢HN N! 0- ~ao¢w~¢QH° It. C. A. F. Brawley cf Stumpf c Mickus es Carson if Anderson 3 Pierce rf .. Lachambre 1b Ross p Caloren p Totals ...... .. 8NO"Qwwnuaw; fiuwoammooo s-ooeocov-ooog pooocowwpqni 5H°“°N»Huu= §ooaoou~on»g asnoocowv-fpcOg, eeoouoowoooolfl oaoooocg°agq Summary Triple, Powell; doubles, Phan- euf, P. Schurman, Carson, Ander- son; runs batted in, Landry, Phan- euf, Gaudet, Anderson: stolen bases, Anderson; earned runs, Red 50x 4, R.C.A.F, l; lett on bases. Red Sex 6, RCAF s; hits, off Ross. 8 in l 2-3 innings, off Caloron 0 in 5 1-3 innings, off Powell 4 in“ ‘l innings; struck out, by Ross 1, by Calcren 5, by Powell 12; bases on balls, off Caloren 1, oii Powell 1; hit by pitcher, by Ross, Daley; losing pitcher, Ross. Umpires, plate, Deslloches, bases, Phillips and Bullis. Icore by Innings 12s min n n Bedlez .... .. ll.0.A.I‘. TO CATCH THE UNWAR! Trapping is one of the oldest known arts. The earliest traps consisted in the dillinl’ l?! l 9"‘ lty into which the unsuspecting victim fell. phne, four months, ,and Miss Bertha Felt-mate escape-l from their smoke-filled bedrooms into s heavy downpour of rain. .___._.._--—-—— .-..~i . "If things like this REPORTS PRESENTED - Continued from page 1 Christianvllie, Va.; Fred Meyer, Lansing, Mich.; Miss Sylvia Pet- erson, secretary Norwegian dele- gation. From Canada the following dele- gates are in attendance: D. O. Stewart, Summerside, Lt-Col. l). A. MacKinnou, Charlottetown; Arnold Schoch, Winnipeg; J. E. Connolly, Bathurst, N.B.-, Chris Lang, Winnipeg; l-l. J. Montgom- ery, tVetaskwin, Altas, Chuck Ash- well, Thistietown, Ont; Basil Madi- gan, Ottawa; George A, Callback, Summerside; W. M. Ritchie, chief fur inspector, Ottawa. ' The following also were in at- tendance: C. Johnston, H.B.G, Montreal; Lowell W. Hancock, Summerside, W. R. Shaw, Char- lottetown; J. K. Finlayson, Domin- ion statlstlcian, Ottawa; P. G. Clark, P.E.I. Fur Pool, Summer- sldc; Thomas Carruthers, summer- side; Vernon Matthews, Stunner- side; Douglas Bell, Carleton, Rob- ert Clark, Summersidc; Hon. W.F. A. Stewart, Strathgartney. l Delegates Welcomed D. 0. Stewart welcomed the delegates on behalf of the Provinc- lal fox breeders and suggested that the chairman and secretary should ‘be appointed, also other comrrut- tees. The following slate was decided on: D. O. Stewart, chairman and Joseph Francis, secretary. Public- lty Committee O. Brager-Larsen, chairman, Paul Reinliart, Victor Clouston, Chris Lang. Rules and procedure committee, l-Yed Meyer. Jhan Llndstrom, W. O. Douglas, Harold Reid. with J. E. Connolly chairman. Chairman W. O. Stewart then called on Premier J. Walter Jones to address the meeting and referred to Mr. Jones’ book "Fur Farming in Canada." published in 1913 which was still a great source of information. Premier Jones Premier Jones on behalf of his government and the people of the Province welcomed the delegates and hoped they would have amost enjoyable visit and find a solution that would overcome the fur breeders‘ difficulties. He told stor- ies of his trips around the country gathering information for his book and of his chats with the fathers of fur farming, Dalton, Oulton. James Gordon, Robert Tuplln and many others. l-la spoke of the dif- ficulties that faced Dalton and Oulton and how by their study planning and ingenuity these were overcome. He mentioned the per- slstence of Robert Tuplln who knew about Dalton and Cullen's fur breeding experiments on Cherry Island and finally prevail- ed on them to sell him a pair of foxes for $340. The pair had not raised any pups but the following year gave the new owners four and this eventually led to the breaking of the monopoly. The Premier said that his book had been translated into several languages and he tabled s copy that no one present could tell in what language it was printed. It proved to be Russian and it was written by an eminent Russian scientist Generesoff who visited this Province in 1915 and became one of the greatest enthusiasts on fur farming. The book was largely a translation of the Premier's "Fur Farming In Canada" with the same illustrations appearing in it. The Premier's concluding re- keefp happenin everyone would go away pleased -with their visit and come back again to see us." Reports submitted Chairman Stewart then called for reports from fur farming or- ganlzatlons. Victor Clouston reported for Nf1d., W. 0. Douglas for England, Paul Reinhart and J. E. Francis for the U.S.A. Mr. Francis stated that 90 per cent of the fur farmers in the United States were members oi the National Board of Fur Farm Organizations. J. E. Connolly, Bathurst reported for the Canad- ian Mink Breeders’ Association, Jan Mesusalensson, for Iceland. Jhan Lindstrom for Norway and Col. D. A. MacKinnon for Canada. The information given by these parties was very interesting and showed a. lot of care had been taken in its compilation. For in- stance, the lmlnk breeders of Ice- land had pretty well gone out of business during the war but in 1946 had imported '65 mutation mink from Canada and some silver foxes from Norway. Mr. Llndstrom of Norway said that in 1939 there were 192,000 breeding foxes and in 1945 these had been reduced to 100,000. He said that Norway was an agri- cultural country, with the climate much like Alaska, and that fish offal and potatoes formed a large part of the fox's diet. l-le said that the farmer there was also a fur farmer, having a. cow, s. couple of pigs, a horse, 10 to 20 foxes, and 5 or 10 mink. In 1929 the fox Norway was 800 silvers. there were 370,000 silvers, 20,000 blue foxes, 12,000 platinums. Up to population of lion dollops worth of furs, and the amount invested had only been five million dollars. From 1940 to 1945 it had been a struggle for life for the industry. Mr. Lind- strum concluded by saying the Norwegian fur farmer was a hardy individual who had s. deep liking for fur farming and would no doubt overcome present troubles. 0.8. Authority Speaks A most interesting speaker was Paul Relnhart, one of the leading authorities in the United States on fox farming who was called upon to describe the origin of fur farming in his country. Ari _hour previously he had addressed the Rotarlans from whom he had re- ceived a very hearty welcome. Mr. Rclnhart traced the origin of fox farming from 1914 until it hit the depression years of 1929-1930. Then it came back, he said, and ex- panded tremendously. Two ranch- es had a total production of 70,000 when another bomb exploded in 1939. It was an address given in Chicago in which prediction of war with Japan was made. That set off the fireworks. An auction sale was being held in New York and the first two days the prices were good. Then the newspapers with the prophecy appeared and prices slumped as much as 40 per cent. In 1939 » 1038 Norway had exported 90 mll- c » Both real horses arc Punch, the giant Percheron weighing over ton and the little chap between his legs, a ll-day-old Shetland pony. Both live on a. farm at London Colney. W \ 3 "is: r 'I‘here had been some improvement during the war years, only to have. a return last season and this sec-i son to worse conditions than in 1939. There had been a great cut down of breedlngstock, he said and an improvement in quality would naturally. follow. l-lc said he was an optimist and would by no means give up to despair. At Government House marks were he hoped each and. Last evening at 9 o'clock dele- STQTE QXPRESS 3i 3 Government House by His Honor Lieutenant-Governor J. A. Bcrmrc! and given a wan-n welcome. Each signed the visitors book. Today‘: Meeting; will Ufl This morning meetings commence at 9.30. First ' item the agenda is the submission of statistical inventory of the in- dustry by countries for n 10-year period, 1938 to. 1947. For instance, silver fox and various mutation: of silver fox will be shown as: (l), number of fox film-is; (n, average number of females per farm over above period; r3) average produc- tion of pups per female over above Period: (4), percentage/of brooding females at latest report dale. Similar data will be sulmiiiorl on Check Wheel Bearings Worn wheel bearings con ceuse nosiy accidents and costly repairs. Why hike chances when our mechanics will check and repock your bearings in d iifiy. KNOWING your bearings will not foil. nonnsgmorons ‘I68 Kent Strzzi gatefwere received informally atimlnk and blue foxes. The after- lnomi session will be devoted to § Drive in tomorrow . production study by countries, cost of production per pelt, in 194G and 1947 or either year; also type anrl source of feed supply and cost of lllglftlgllilllml by years from 1938 to Tonight a dinner will be tendered by the Government of Prince Ed- ward Island to the fur farmers at the Charlottcgovm Hotel. llotic-e To Horsemen A meeiln of horsemen will be" held at Walker's Barn at 8:30 to. night when positions of horses will be drawn for Covehcad races. TR . Drive owoy Phone 678-1707