i l» THE CHAR LOTTETOWN GUARDIAN CliwSNAPSHOT GUILD WATCH THOSE SUMMER SHADOWS Bss that the shadows are pro perly illuminated in your summer snapshots g1 people. Here, s bright, sunllt sidewalk reflects light up under the hat is brim, and helps give shadow detail. S SUMMER approaches, outdoor lighting on sunny days becomes more and more contrasty. Tile siin- shiiie is brighter, the blue sky does not i'(‘lll‘l'i. as mucli light as a gray winter Slt_V—-lilliI ln consequence, siniiloii-s tend to appear stronger and lilxu-kcr in your pictures. Of course, in some pictures you want strong black shadows to cre- ate a iii-sired plctoriiil effect. But iii most pictures-and especially snapshots of people-you want ile- tail iii llll tiie features. Certainly you ill) not desire deep shniloivs around the eyes, nose, and lower lilo-for tlieso make a person ai- iiiost unrecognizable. To avoid such shadows, or get detail in them, there are several IliPllllillS. The simplest is to place your subject in open shade——not unilor iroos-facing tiio clear sky. Then giro about double the avertiizi: "sunshine" expositre-say 1/25 sec- oiid at f/S ions opening, on average lpeoil llllll on n bright sunny (lay. A stit-oiiil method is to use reflec- tors, or place your subject ivhore there are natural reflecting objects. For example, in the picture above, s light-colored concrete sidewalk =1 ~- ¢.——.;——— IDNDON- tCPi- Members of Parliament were alarmed when a woman they hadn't seen before wa lied into the chamber at question time. Shv was not an M. P. -she 12's K'|l.ll'i‘li Midwintetj first woin- urccminittce clerk ever appointed reflects quite a bit of light up under the subject's bat brim. Excellent reflectors can be made rentiily. A white cnril. or one cov- ered Willi criimpioil tinfoil, servos nicely for small areas. A white sheet also will do. Backliglitlng is another device— really a variation of tho. "open shade" method. The subject is placed with his hark to the sun, so that his flit-e is in fillllfliilV, anti ex- posure is about the sumo. its for an “open sliuilc” shot. In the pirtiire above, if the subject. IilI‘t‘tl to tho left, you would l\li\’t! baiclilitililiiic. The (lurk liil('l(.i-{l'0lllltl woiiiii llli‘ll be even tniiro iinpcrtuiit-fiii- in tho print the subject's fut-o siiiiuiii ap- pear lighter than tho liilvlillffilliltl. ln taking l)li('lill_lllll‘tl pli-tiiri-s, do not let siitisliinc strike the ions. Ilse n. ions iioiiil. or have stiinvone siiiiiio the lens without tibstructing its view. Watch the siiatioivs wlion you aro taking pictures this siiiiinior. Sou that they are properly illiiuiitilitrii —iiiake sure tho contrast isn't too great-and yoii‘ll get a better ef- fect in your prints. ZS-t John van Guilder ACCOMPLIFE AT SIX LONDON —-iC-Pi - with ti i0- year-od girl charged with ihclt the .i.ii'.t \\ 15 id her §l1‘(‘0l1l]lll('i‘, who _=inash'ed n (ioor with an axi- tv make ltn (‘lllf ras not |1I‘t“i‘lii e ivas ‘cnly .~lX lwnirs old. b03111!!!‘ Bees Beat Philadelphia On Five-hit Performance; Four-hit Ball As Wins Number 8 Walters BASEBALLS INGIHX (By m. Associated Press) Batting (three leaders 1n each league.) G AB R II PUT Player, Club Danulzig. Giants Hayes. Athletics Urainer. Red 50x itrltlclilt, Browns Walker. Dodgers Lombardi. Red 29 112 iii 44 .393 28 9'! 15 38 .392 3013:! 22 53 .381 33137 19 52 .380 22 ‘I1 11 26 .366 30107 17 3'1 .346 Home Runs:- American League - Foxx, Red 50x, 1i. National Lcague- MZE. Cardinals. 12. Runs Bstcd In:- Amerlcan League - Fbxx, Red sot. 3!). "tional League — D111- iiliig, Gt 31. 33 Or Only 32 Speed Drivers To Start In Race INDIANAPOLIS. May ‘El-IAP) —A bcmb will bruit at neon to- l1‘ii1li'G\\'——\\.'€‘(1[l1f‘l‘ pfrmiftllig-aiid 33, or prrhfps only 32, race duvet-s will roor oil, bc-loze some 125000 sqirtators, iii a l1‘ trust oi m-rn and l110l0l'S-—tl’1f3 l annual 5C0~inile race. The stake in the lvlitmcrlal Day .\fi.il'illli0ii over Iitdiananoli" 2 1-2- iiiilc brirk-rJtri-asplizlt. ..' "" 'ay will be $100,000 111 llFZP m: . L0 be (liVKlffl among ti‘ cont ‘Wilt?- Ttiv \\"l‘l‘.£‘l‘ will draw IFIIII 5J5.- 000 t3 8.3511700. (leprnfilllg 011 the nniiibu“ oi l? h? leads. i) the number of ' c-uil o!‘ tre brcrik-floivii an Italian-hurt Mo- 1 to ll‘l\'l" Men dl' VCll by Ron". no, French soidttr on leave. ll the (“Ii b“ ronntrrd rrlriro the rare starts, Lebrgue will be in the iiolrl. Assuring an ll“liE“l‘llfltlC1lfll flavor will hr Pal-l ltqeuiti oi Airrs. AYE" t- irziii (‘h urw l“: at the irlrcl of a - rzi t rti Di‘ mo-"t ‘ers a: one 0f the t to. i'tr"s in the riuriii. Two l0Ill""i‘ ivinners w ‘l be in lino rurr. ’l'he_v are Wilbur Shaw ri‘ I:‘it.:'iin"ol'.=.. soekng to ti‘ fxiiils YORK. England -- A London and North-Eastern Railway ensiio lips hauled a record train of 2’! pass-near catches, heating all h "l'.lfi'§-l‘llll1" marks. gfllfllllllg lour- ‘ , __.___. NEW YORK, May Bil-MP)- Dick Errickson, with the help ot a. batting rally by his matzs in the seventh, pitched the Bees b0 a 3-1 victory over Philadelphia Fhillles in a NBMOHBI League game at Boston. Errtckson held the Phiilies to five hits. The Bees collected tour of its six safeties and all of its three runs in the seventh off the Phil- lles starting pitcher, Walter Beck. Bucky Walters pitched, batted and tlelded his way to his eighth straight victory as Cincinnati Reds trounced the Pirates 4-0 at Pittsburgh. The 30-year-old pitcher held the Pirates to Your hits, all singles: smacked two of the Reds’ eight. hits off Joe Bowman; and started ltivo double plays in a masterful ifielding performance. 1 With Pitcher Lon Wanieke hit- Itlng a. three-run homer and his ‘battery mate, MiCKEY Owen, dry- ing in tour runs with a. palr of doubles. 5t. LCUIS Cardinals routed the CUibS 8-2 at Chicago. Larry French suffered his third straight- knockciut when Warneke homered with two on in the stxtti alter Owen had doubled in a run. Dzzzy Dealt, in his first relief role oi the year and his first ap- pearance since May 12, shut out the last. 3 2-3 innings, Games scheduled: American, four, National ‘Fl-tree, International, two night. YESTERDAYS RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 000 000 001-1 4 0 New York 110 000 00x~2 b’ 0 Leonard and Ferrell; Dmald ‘and Dickey. ,Boston 302 100 200-8 9 1 zlmllilflfifiipilllfl 090 120 000-ii 12 3 , Butlaiid and DeSautels; Potter, iBecknxan, Heuser and Hsyts. Detrczt 00f] I01 ltli—4 B 3 Clove d 330 010 OUX-JI 24 0 SPZIIE, Gfifiiffil, MrKalrt and Sullivan; Feller and Hsmsley. Chicago Eu‘. Lcus Dietrich and Aukcir and Sivlit. 0O 010 030-4 9 O D00 U11 1U(l——3 7 I Trash, Turner; the Cardinals on three singles in-J, Coyls BASEBALL RES UL TS Baseball Postponemerits: NoriemClhicago NATIONAY- Leanna st. ca». ooo 404 000-ii l0 o Atley Donald Pitches Yankees Continue Streaki B 0W L I N G l.li§wm‘.'.?.§“;...l§“l MNQQAKL; R ESU LTS as a, starter today and held Wasti- lngtmi Senators to four hits for l. 2-1 American Lieflsue victory. the fifmh straight for the world cham- plons. Suffering from sciatica all spring, the New York rithfhflllflfl‘ has made only t/wo br:el appeal‘- ances in relief. But today he was invincible. Allowing nothing but _ singles and none of them until the i fifth. The Yankws were limited to l1! hits by knuokleballer Dutch Leon- IIOLY NAME BOWLING MIXED DOUBLES D. L. Bmiwn 124 134 143 ard but. two of these were home H' corcoran 80 78 9M“. runs. Charley Keller rapped out M; Cannichael 145 103 n; his sixth and Bill Dzckey hit. an- s, Dougsn '17 9s 104-644 0m"- Bob Feller wash berlgsw hi5 ‘D1820 H. wood 73 76 130 IOHII but Bldéd y 11151355 ' hit attack. he had enough to trrn R. McFariane 109 111 IOMI Detroit Tlgers 74 at Cleveland for his seventh trzumph. g" gggglzflgld 1% i%_533 Cleveland sewed up the game by ' blasting Soutliipaw Tcm Seats for R" whttlmk B7 137 134 gguris in each of the first two M‘ Wm“ 67 88 6‘ 577 The Tums got eight hits off J MoQuaid 9o "3 14,1 Feller, including Bruce Campbell's ' homer. M‘ “m” 57 83 93-576 Faced with m» loss of ililitg J_ Tierney 116 m0 95 plaice, C-nicago White Sox ra e E. Michael as g4, 90_573 vmh three runs in tine eiginth tn- ning and defeated the Browns 4-3 all! St. Louis. Bill Dietrich held the Browns to seven hits. Wilbur Biitlarid made his major league pitching debut wit-h the first-place Boston Red 50x by whipping the Athletics 8-3 at Philadelphia. Tine rigihtnarider put the Athlet- ics down for their aixtlh straight 001 000 010-2 10 0 time. warneke and Owen; French. Dean and Todd. Collins. Philadelphia. 000 000 010-1 5 2 l Boston 000 000 30x-3 6 1 Beck, Hoerst and Atwood, Mil- lies; Errickson and Lopez, Mast. 104 13S 98 G. McCardle 63 82 72—55I Remember When (By The Canadian Press) Gene Hasson, rookie first-base- man of Montreal Royals in the In- ternational League, was rushed to Clngjnngu 00g 100 pgg_4 g 4 hospital in a critical condition alter Pn-ismirgn 000 00o ooa-o 4 o "being SWYK 0n the head ivy a Walters and Lombardi: Bowman pitched bell in Buffalo one year and Davis. ago today. Hasson recovered and is still with the Royals. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Baltimore 000 000 000-O 4 4 Syracuse 100 000 01x—2 3 2 Hughes, Trinkie and Rrdmmd; Tismg and Warren. Montreal 000 003 000-3 i2 1 Rochester 040 020 COX-G i0 0 Grissom. Hutchinson, Hoillngs- worth and Giuliani; Lyons, Berly and Mueller. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas cmity 1: Minneapolis 8 Milwaukee 6: St. Paul 4 Canadian Champ Wins At New York NEW YORK, May 29 —tCP) — Without effort, Maxie Berger of Montreal. Canadian junior weiter- weight boxing champion, thumped ltis way to an easy decision over Tony Fk-rrara of New York in an eight-round main bout here to- night. - 0- , Montabue | ___.___ i The Empire Day service of pray- er as held in the Presbyterian . h cu Sunday evening, all the ‘min let's tftkltlg part. Hymns ap- Pl We to the occasion were - 41nd members of the differ- cnt congregations led in prayer. Mrs. (Cola Weatherbie under- went an cperatlon in the King's coiiliity Hospital during the past W00 , - 9. l ____. l Mr. Vincent. Grant of silni. Diin- sianis Unirersiiv is spending the no days with his parents Dr. T. V. Grant and Airs. Grant. lliglgian Collapse 'Serious But Not Beraer held the upperhand after the first round with a SWIII- left lab and the occasional use of a hard right that had Ferriira in trouble in the second. third and fourth rounds. The"; were no knockdowns. The Canadian. at 141. gave sway 5 1-2 pounds to the New Yorker but the difference in weight didn't bother Maxie a bit. New York Times Fatal To Allies NEW YORK, May 28 —(CP) — Collapse of Belgian resistance t: a ‘Stunning bllgfllfii necessarily fatal‘ I ow to t.l.e . nuse," the New York Sun said cdilgrially today. Only afternoon’: paperdiinm] Now igllili ifiotiflhllnencaéllllfiiitiit, y villi PHILADELPHIA. May zit-Aime Sun said that presumably he hopcd I 0f i119 F- Wflyllmd AYE!‘ 611p f0!‘ tX- l , ___ l Mr. Ralph Beck of P.W.c, is I I bi ‘ _ _ fspeiidioz the summer holidays nvci uu e assistance is given lo >l\\'iil1 his nztrtfttls, Ml‘. R. W. and Maritime shipping by the men who ,1 A i Mrs. Beck. service the buoys which moik the “l channels. ln ilie illusiiulion the l men are fixing a cylinder oigos in n d light-buoy which lids been hauled “ up for inspection by c tender. Mrs. tDr.) Harold Melllsh and young son. who have spcnt the ‘tpast two iveeks with Mr. and Mrs. L. B. ltfellish, left Sunday for their home in Haveleck, N, B, Mrs. Duncan Balderson oi’ Mei- ville is visiting her mother, Mrs. Mabel Fraser. ¢Weather Favors 4 it to spare his country further ravage. It added: “Yet cldcd upon surrender his tfOOpg irere izsllantlv standing off attacks cl the utmost violence. Serious as the: lcaseuras. it was by no means hope-l ess.’ FINANCE hopeful view of business prospects today and loading stacks rose as nvudh as tlhriee points. Among Canadian issues Dome advanced one lgari fell back 1 1-4 points. Prac- ttonal improvements were shown in \ J ~ ti”? llfirain Crop In w |West Provinces l O'I'I‘AWA. May 28 -(CP) — Fav- P" jorable conditions for the start o1 the 1940 irrsln crow prevailed this 's'lfl‘in¢ 1n central and southem Man- ‘ltoba and west central Saskatche- wan and over most of Aberta, the Dominion bureau of statistics said today in the first of 16 weekly tele- graph reports on crop conditions in the prairie provinces. Rainy weather in Alberta in early sprint: delayed seedln but recent lwarmer weather and l cal moisture conditions brought the crop alon . "*1"- ' _ n. M it be an i 1- i iiriiiiriirtiiitirti. an asma D01‘ l1 i e Package Al rta. moisture condlt one or vegextgrhlill. rains will be needed dur- iruz the slimmer to ensure cIOPS i" these sections. While some sillm domiuze from soil drifting was‘ re- ported from several districts. mere has been little damflm? "m" 1mm" thus for. Handy Humidor Pouch, f 1h lb. tin 6°15 the course to better smoking. Roseauo Cut smoking tobacco BODY FOUND IN HARBOR HALIFAX, May N-(CPF-BOQY of Robert Bshop, m:dd‘e-fl89d Halifax grocer. was fornd in the harbor here today. There was no evidence of foul play and it. was undecided vtthetiher an iuouest would be held. MAY PBODllCI-TTEA FROM NEW GUINEA RABAUL, New Guinea —- (OP) -'l‘ne war has cast attenton on New Guinea. which Ii Australian mandate territory, as a pnsifiie t l- producing territory to supply leaves new imported irto Australia from China, Indra. Java and C y- ion. Preliminary experrments sl- l ready carried out. show that the tea t groom well in manv oiirts of. Distillers, rriterna-t onal Nickel. Walkers, Marconi. Floird. Lake Snore and Holllnger. Imperial Oil was “ti... Associated a... ....-..... .. ‘Aircraft Minister 60 selected stocks rose .4 of a point. at 36.4. The turnover was 657,082 shares compared with 1,- 263,510 the day before. Among the best performers were U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Youngstown U. S. Rubber, Montgomery ward, Harvester, Caterpillar, Sperry, Lockheed American Tt-‘ephone, Kennecott. Phelps Dodge, DuPont, ggéiflnncilgllig. rionns-Manville, V I1 and G Pi_0i’_‘l~i1€fn_ weferred. m“ grlzdmfl. Producing a h1g1!- - . BOX SPORTING CLUB / MONDAY, JUNE 3, 9 MAIN BOUT-IO ROUNDS “Pf ror Lightheavywelght Ch'shlp P. E. I. Tom Ciaybourne vs. Ch'town (Champ) IIBVEFi-hvlvifi, for 1940 to the New York Times ivas trite that at the time when he dc- ' ammuncrd regently by N, w, Aye)- leiidine daily newspapers competed. i‘ Portland, Or.; The Philadelphia Br Frederick Gerda" Inquirier, The Christian Science Associated Pres! Financial Writer Monitor, The New York Herald- Tribune. ‘The Cleveland Plain Deal- NEW-YOHK. NIB-Y 39—-(AP)—‘ ‘ A l’ T ‘ 1 _ w; -_ Well Sam's trad“ w“ s m“ "Fléilgil fifties? Nltw1e§£i?]€’h=t.cgl: Paul Pioneer Press and Richmond ,NCW5 Leader, The Inquirer, Monitor ,and Herald 'I‘rlbune received hon- pmm “hm Shawn” ‘Ofilblé mentions. Cardigan (Challenger) With four other good bouts Admission: Ladies 25c; Gents 50c. ‘ rciierice in newspaper typography & Son, Inc. The award, made annually since 193i. was based on work. without record to editorial content. More than 1000 of the country's Twelve of these survived prelim- inary climinations to reach the final judging. ‘These 12 were The Oregonian of Naval Nero Made LONDON, May 28—fCP)-—Ad- niiral Sir Edward Evans, naval hero, was appointed today by Lord Beaverbrodt, aircraft production minister, to take charge of the "local protection and security" of aircraft factories and airdromes. Admiral Duns is known widely as "Evans of the Broke" for his accomplishments as commander of the destroyer Broke in the last war. In 1912 he was second in oom- mand of the scott expedition into the Antarctic. ING 0'CLOCK tnsxr.) ' Bomber Shepliard I TAGE SEVEN .._._..._.. "w, ,. In the huge Tip Top Tailors plant a testing laboratory guards the quality of every inch of Tip T0p's yixoolens. In this laboratory, staffed by experienced textile technicians. every material receives exhaustive tests arid inspections before it is declared "good enough" for Tip Top Tail0rs.- All fabrics are pro-shrunk by the world's most modern shrinking process. Tlicy receive a light test to determine their resistance to fading. Strict tests for tensile strength are made, which tell whether a fabric can "take it." And many additional tests put these British woolens through their paces. When inspecting the many new patterns now showing at your Tip Top store, you can be sure, whatever your choice is. that it has passed eyery high Tip Top test with banners flyirng. Remember-our inspection is your protection. HAND-CUT AND INDIVIDUALLY TAILORED 1o YOUR PERSONAL MEASUREMENTS $2750 LADIES . . . you may also have your monnisii suit or cool L-Jividuuily iiond-cui and tailored to your ; personal meos remsni» by Tip Top craftsmen. I3 Grafton Street Sunnpsidq’ ‘ J. E. WRAN, Manager "I Ir782-5-27-2i.