THE CHAR LOTTETOWN GUARDIAN g amn Keeps Friends ' _GuessingAs To Marriage r By Sid Fedcr Associated Press Sport Writer EW YORK. June l9-(AP)-- fr: Louis and his somewhat shaky heavyweight championship went m a vacation today. Billy Conn started what he hoped would turn 1pm a honeymoon and tlm rest of ma title picture became a scramble lol- the next shot at the Brown '\ r. 531$: manager, Julian Blackburn and John ltoxborough, finally were convinced after Louis almost blew his crown to Conn last nifht, that the Bomber has "stated off" from M, 391g“ months of continuous training and needs a holiday. So he wry; fight, again until Septem- b...» when Promoter Mike Jacobs will decide wltether he tangles My, ggnn again for a "Bate" within shouting distance of 81.000080 or W), mu Nova. ihe California col- leglgm who's been waiting for two yeilrjlntime. Billy the K‘d. whose qrish" cost him the champion- ship when he got his temper up, gambled and lost in the 13th round by a knockout, slip-pad out of town “imam. even telling his manager, Johnny Ray, about it. He drove to -Joe drew 5154.404 from a Brooicway. Pa. and arranged to be married tomorrow. His “ rl" is BE‘?! Louis Smith. Her father. J my Smith, former New York Giants outfllder, who had objected strenuous] to the marriage. was reported y Mary, herself, finally a have given the Darcntal bless- 8. Mary told friend's at Si. Mary's. Pa... where Conn went after the fight last night. that “all our troubles have been settled and dad- dy has given his full consent and besslng." Conn said the wedding is set for tcmorrow. ! Earlier. however. Miss Smith's mother said at her ocean City, N. J_., home that the "planned mar- riage o: our daughter to Mr, Conn has definitely been called off." While Jce and Billy were thus engaged in forgetting all about one of the most rousing title fights of all time. their managers stopped in at Promoter Jacob's office to pick up the pay envelopes for the night's work and to try to do something about the Bombers "fall showing." gross gate of $451,743 which brought his sev- en-year earnings to just ‘under the 52.000000 mark. Conn collected $77,- i HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT MINORA? lAilbkil SHUNC ECONOMY llLAUl IN INF flfllliSiiibiPlilf NOW MAD! IN CANADA "ms All coualr- rnc: RAZORS" mmoaa scams savr,’ vou Menu on rssvi GOOD-LOOKING SHAVIS! Iiut-ui ing to reports from Rio do iloore. lnrmnly the Exmoor, has been Junk by a German suln: Ir reported to have picked up one lifeboat containing ll survivors, Iilll missing. The Robin Moor was en route to Capo Town with a general cargo, including munitions, uni may have been intercepted south of the Capo Verde Islands, half-way across the South Atlantic. A tiller ship is shown here, /’ - i. - ' contributed to the $39k ‘l 202. by far his biggest purse. Will crcct Monument to Lou Gehrig NEW YORK. June 19 -(AP) — A Eranite monument honoring Lou Gehrig will be unveiled in Yankee Stadium July 4. on vrliat would have been his 37th birthday. New York Yankees announced today. The monument, identical to one erected to Miller Huggins in 1930. will bear this lnscriptlon:- Henry Louis Gehrig. A man. a gentleman and ‘a great ball player. whose amazing record of 2.130 consecutive games should stand for all time. this memorial ls a. tribute from the Yankee players to their beloved captain and teammate, A Use Minardk for dandruff. J a nelro, Canadian Victory Loan Cam. paign by William H. Summers, cartoonist of the produced great white columns of not confirmed lll hasnulgton, me U.. arlnc. The Brazilian steamihip Osorlo but 85 of the passengers and crew are Softball Practice There will be a. softball practice for the New Dome Hawks tonight at 6.30 warp. All player: are ask- ed to be on time. i MEETING CALLED (YET The meeting of the Juvenile Bolt- ball league which was called fur last nlght was called off when ft was found there were not enough members present to go ahead with the business. It was int announc- leidldwhen the meeting would be 8 . SOFTBALL TONIGHT Holmans victors are scheduled to meet the Hl- Grads in a Senior Softball league game this evening at Victoria Park. The time for the commencement of the game is 6.30. Gives detailed, Dramatic story 0f Bismarck (By Louis V. Hunter) (Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON. June 19-iCP>~—-An of- ficer who watched the sinking of the Bismarck said the “unsinkable" pride of the Nazi navy went down “like a dog that has been run over. someone had got to finish him off —because her colors were still flying at the mainmast head." The officer. who followed the act- ion from the bridge of the battle- shiu Kin! George V. told in an 1n- terview one of the most detailed and dramatic stories of the battle that brought revenge to the Royal Navy for the loss of H. M. S. Hood. the world's biggest warship. “Throughout the flight on the Admirals bridge we sat. stood leaned like a_covey of disembodied spirits." he said after describing the earlv part of the engagement. "None of us will ever know if it was cold. "At last daylight. ‘Enemy in sight,’ and then. veiled in distant rainfall is a thick squat ghost of a sh very broad in the beam. coming straight toward us. end on. “The commander in chief. Admiral Tovey. saw it first. "There is a sort of cracking roar Q '1 fire with her 16-inch guns. and an instant later the King George V lets flv with her 14-inch. The com- pass bounds out of its binnacle: My battle bowler tips over my nose and clatters down to the deck. and a pile of signal papers shoots up like a fountain 1n the draft made by the guns. “I just keep my binoculars glued to Bismarck. Rodney's first salvo sic imShp noun lP- the . guns. to port-the Rodney has opened- {Gehringer not ' ‘Up t0 form 0f Other years NEW YORK. Juno 19-411?)- One of our favorite baseball play- ers isn’t doing so well. He isn't hav- ing “that good year." as Del Bak- er woul say, and as a consequence the fans are brought to a fuller realization of Just how much Charley Gehringer has meant to Detroit down through the years. He never was a fellow to beat the drums for himself. He's a ball player out there doing a. day's work. He’s done it with such ease and ryihm that he has been taken more or less for granted. and the fans abruptly realize something is miss- ing when Charley's bat stops blast- ing. Most ball players. particularly in- fields-rs, are long since through at 38. so expecting a man at that age to stage a comeback perhaps is asking for loo much. It uias predicted the Tigers would slip when Hank Greenbcrg left the lineup, and his absence unquestion- ably has much to do with the club's present fifth-place spot in the Am- erican league. But there 1S a doubt as to wheth- er Greenberqls absence rr Gehring- the team. water 120 feet high that would break the back of a destroyer and ,slnk her like a stone if she steamed" ' through one of them. I "The second splash I missed. all except one shot which seemed to belong to King George V and was a little ahead of Bismarck. Then I watched Rodney to see if she was being hit but she just sat there like a great slab of rock blocking the northern horizon and suddenly belched" a full salvo. 1 actually saw these projectiles flying through the air for some seconds after they left like little diminishing footballs curving up and into the s y. "Now. I am sure that four or five hit. There was only one great splash and a sort of tlurrv of spray and splash which might have been a. waterline hit. The others had bored their way through the Krupp armor belt like cheese and pray God I may never know what they did. as they exploded inside the hull. "Bismarck turned north. steaming about 12 or 14 knots. We kept tum- ing in arid cut to confuse the en- emy rangefinclers. all the willie closing the range rapidly. "The Admiral kept saying: ‘Close the range; get closer, get closer. I can't see enough hits.’ “And so we closed the range—" From then on. the officer con- tinued. there was no escape for the Bismarck. He said that after 20 minutes. “when the glow of great fires was incinerating men inside the German ship," although some of the sec- ondary armament still was firing a little wildly. he saw a. steady trickle of little human figures racing across the deck and jumping into the sea. “We lust shot the guns out of her and left a smoking. lurching black ruin. It made one feel a little sick to see such a mighty powerful ves- sel brought to the state of an 1m- potent hulk. "Our battleships turned away and (the cruiser) Dorsetshire closed. in and. finished her off." Use Minardh for dandruff. l er‘s slump has the most effect 0n \ P. W. C. beat Hawks l2-ll In an exhibition game of softball which was played last night- at the Park diamond‘ I'm P.W. College team edged the New Dome Hawks by one run. There was lzard hitting by both teams and fine catching by Jim- mie Tawell for the Hawks ivhjlo there was good pitching by Auld for the college team and McCourt for the Hawks. Two home runs were hit during the game. one by Glllls for the col- lege team and one by McCourt for the Hawks. REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press) Charlie Grim was released by St. Louis Cardinals oi’ the Na- tional Baseball League to Little ma]; of the southem Association 23 years ago tcfiay. He was snid tn Pittsburgh in 1919 and nitrr six years there was traded to Chicago. becoming manager of‘ the Cubsi Aug. 2. i932 succeeding Rogers Hornsby, He was released as man- ager a few years later but this year he returned as a coach. Use Mlnanfs for dandruff. MARITIME MEN q AND THEIR SHIP Phillies edged By Cards 7-6 NEW YORK, June l9—(AP)— Prank Crespits lith-inning single ivith the bases ruled. drove i" Johnny Hopp to give Cardznalya 7-6 victory over Philadelphia Pluls icday at St. Louis. At chlcaco. the Bfwklyn Dods- ers scored a 15-bit, 9-4 triumph over Cubs for Kirby Higher. eighth victory of the season. Peewee Reese. who has been benched a couple cf times this year for weak hitting. led the Dodger- attack ivith four hits ln six trips and his teammates followed suit. At Pittsburgh. Harry Dflnnm! hit two doubles and a triple to lead a lZ-liit a=sault as New York Giants overpt-xrered Pirates 9-6. The Pirates made ll hits and each. team used three pitchers in the wild and lonfe affair. which came up to the eighth inning with the score tied at six-all. Then Bill Jill-gas, returning ‘to the Giants’ lineup after a four-day rest singled 1n the eighth to score Babe Young and break the dead‘- lcck and in the ninth added two more on two singles. an intention- al walk and Vince Dimaggids sec- ond error of tlle_game. S Package 15¢ Handy Humidor Pouch 15¢ % lb. fin 70f Indians Blas -For- TYzir - PAGE savan_ t Athletics j I NEW YORK. J1me l9—(A.P)—- Cleveland's AmerLcan leading Indians blasted three pnch- erg for l9 hits_ including three home runs. to swamp the Athletics 12-1 at Philadelphia today fcr a clean sweep of their three-game wnes. Outfielder Jeff Heath pounded out a home run. two doubles and a single to pace a Cleveland attack that saw avery Indian except Rollie Homsley get at least one safety. Heath's home run came in the Lfih inning with Gee Walkers on base. while Ken Keltner homered with. none on in the sixth and Lou Boud- reau with Ray Mack and Jim Bag- by aboard in the seventh. At New York. Yankees found their way back to the victory trail with a 7-2 assault on Chciagn White Sox. who had whipped them by one run in the first two games of the American League series. Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland .. 100 321 4l0—l2 i9 2 Philadelphia . 000 001 000- 1 6 1 Bagby and Hemsley: Beckman. Hodley. Harris and Hayes, Wagner. St.l.ouis....000000000-0 3 3 Washington . 302 123 l0x-l2 17 0 Gatehouse. Caster. Trotter and‘ Ferrell. Swift; Leonard and Early. Detroit lll 000001-411 l Boston . . 220 110 00x-—6 i0 O, Bridges, Thomas. Giebell. Gnrs1ca_; and Tebbets: Newsorino?) and Pvtlak Chicago 000 100-2 s '1; New York .. 000 51o 01x—-7 e 1. Smith. Ros and G. DlckeyH Breuer and Rosar. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 101 100 312-4) l2 1‘ Pittsburgh 200 103 000-6 ll 3 , a softball practice session at Charley Keller hit a home m» with the bases loaded in the iourtl inning for the big spark in tho Yankee onslaught. At Bostzn, Heber Newsome, a first-year man, became Red Sox leading pitcher as he scored hi! sixth victory. a 6-4 tflumlph over Detroit Tigers. The young rzght-hander. who hu lost three games, was touched for ll hits, including homers by Paddy Mullin and Pinky Higgins, but ho kept the Tigers in check while the Rled Sox bunched their l0 hits 0M four Detroit pitchers. At Washington. Dutch Leonard was in form and Senators came up with all kinds of hitting to defeat St. Louis Browns 12-0. The portly knucklcbalZc-r allowed just three hits and pitched to only 23 mCIl. Klinlzer and Lopez, Davis. Dannlng; banning. Heinizelmaw Brooklyn . (>02 020 20Zi—9 15 Chicago 100 011 010-4 J I Higbe and Franks. Owen; Pas- neau, Page and McCullough. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Newark 000 000 320-5 5 O Montreal 000 000 015-6 8 l. Byrne, wgsbburn, Fmnkhouse and Scras; Head, Rachunok and Becker. First game: Jer'y City 000 030 000 000 0-3 l2 I Buffaln 010 101 000 000 1-4 18 1 Felriman zlitrl Atwood; White and. Haneken. Pnrsonsg Juvenile Softball 'I'l'le New Dome Hawks will gold c. tcria Park this evening at 6.30. A players are requested to be on hrm __S_ghfumacher,_l3owman. Brown and fo_r_ this practice. A STORY OI‘ THE "MARC O POLO" The "Marco Polo", i625 ions, most famous of Canadian soiling ships, was built at Si. John, N.B. In 185i. Many tales are fold of the "Marco Polo". In ‘I874, when her glory hud deported and she was carrying cargo down the Chilean coast, u seamen noticed a large shark following and decided fo colch if. The shark, c 16-foot monster, gave fight when it was hauled on deck. After smashing the cabin skylight with ifs foil, if fell bodily through, splinfering the fable, panelling and furniture. After a long struggle, the ship's carpenter managed to kill it with on axe 0nd the body was dragged out through the forecubin. ose bud PIPE TOBACCO CAN'T g F FIPPIE imp “CAP” STUBBS‘ POPEHE i5 M5’ éV/EETIE- THE BEA-GOING BLONDE ROMME TAKE HIM AWAV i ivhb SO HE THINKS THIS FAMBLY IRRESPONSIBLE! HUMPH! . WELLAX/E DON'T THINK OF ' MONEY; RNIN’; NOON'N NIGHT "-- TO HELP WOU PERFEC T ‘MIR. luvetmom t \'L\- PERFECT n‘: MYSELF - -ANI GET HOLD . MONEY! HUMPH! SHORT WORK CLARA BUDGE SWINKLE IS JUST WAlTiN" TILL SHE CA L TILLIE THE TOILER - AN EYEFUL 0F PROOF. mm, u: cAliLeo IN A CHEMIST M\6HT STEAL MY SECRET OH, WHY, UH - -YES! I'D JUST LOVE TO TO A WELL, MY LAITi-a we maven Him-to stem. 1 KNOW oats 6M V\IEL.L AND KNOWN _ 4F