‘rt-m CHARLQJIIEIQWN GUARDIAN ‘Habbell 0.. Giants Drub 11.9 Giants shot out of the hitting saith-unis today with their heaviest .making asault of the season w u-gmple Pittsburgh Pirates 18-2 ‘no end their four-game losing k. mfing Carl I-Iubbell, niu-i- giving two runs in the first inning. pmhed shutout ball the rest of the my for his fifth win of the sea30n mum, one defeat to the enter- pniment of a crowd of 30,343. The Giants, who have scored ex- “fly three runs in their last four “mes, were sparked fl’ a 15-bit gttack that buried Dutch Brandt. 311i Swift and rookie Truett Sew- . Harry Danning contributed a homer with the bases loaded and a mp1s to drive in six rims. Jo Jo more hit a homer with two a- board. y Philadelphia drove in two runs in me last half of the ninth inning to snatch a 2-1 victory from St. [puts Cardinals. The Cardinals goored their run in tlie first half d the ninth. Ival Goodman hit his 10th homer d the season. Harry Craft wall0p~ td his second and big Jim Weaver iiid a handy job of pitching as oincinnat Reds stretched their winning streak to three straight with an 8-3 victory over the Dod- rs. "In Boston, the Bem forged link No. 7 in their victory chain as Milburn Shoffner, their 31-year-old gouohpaw rookie. won his own ball game by Slnilllng home the win- ping run in the llih inning of the nrios with Chicago Cubs. The game was 2-1. The winning streak is now the longest the Boston club has enjoy- od since it was named the Bees two years ago. Shoffner hurled In entire distance for the victors. who. by winning their third extra- Iinlhfl contest in four days. ad.»- yuiced to within one game of sec- ond place in the National League. Giants dropped a 4-1 decision 10 Qhcinnatl Saturday. The Giants 1n blanked before Mel Ott belted cot a homer in the ninth. Mean- flqio the Rods collected two home by Goodman and four more its for two runs. The Bees gained a H win over St. Louis. Rookie Max West hammered out two home film“. belted Philadelphia all 1111 l! $0 P62151411‘ p 10-1 :1‘. I? grooklyfl. Pitt-yum <1»- fclfbd the Dodgers 5-4. Baseball's Big Six- 1‘. x Gui-Mani Special Wire) ) me and ties in each GABRHRt. Q14; 22 79 l4 33 .445 ‘W... 1n liaagifs 2a 9'1 2c as 292 Chapman. ed 80x 24 8'1 l2 34 .391 m“; y... 15 so l3 as s90 Cards 20 80 12 30 .375 i; Keltner, Indians. 25; Averill. 311110.115, Z5; MOCBIIIIY, Giants, 25. Training For Halifax Race i» l Johnny Bhappheid. well-known Charlottetown runner, has beon Mining vigorously during the last Wo weeks for the io-mile road race are held in Halifax neg month. ouriq runner plans cover a lfi-mllc course here this week as grrt cf his training before leaving the Nova Scotla capital o. Wok £10m next Thursday. fore May 24'. The 000E118 Phone 106 WRESILINC BOWLING HOLKEY Mound As Pirates 18-2 To End Losing Streak YORK. MBY 22——(AP)-— S u m m e rs id e Baseball Loop Opens Friday At a lagely attended meeting of the Summerside Baseball League held on Friday evening the follow- ing schedule of games for the sea- son was drawn up. thirty games in all. Mr. Edward Gallant was apoint- ed to have charge of the score board and local advertising, The first game of the League will be on May 27th at the Summer- sidc diamond. On May 24th the-re will be two exhbition games, the first one at 2 o'clock in the after- noon between thc Pioneers and Kensington. At six o'clock the Red Sox and Vitamancnas. The diamond has been lrut into Perfect shape and the boys have been practising for some days now glzgtgig ready for the opening day. 2'l—Pioneea's vs Viismannas 30—Kensington vs Red Sox JUNE 3—Pioxieers vs Kensington 6-—-Vitama.nna-s vs Red Sox ti-Ploneers vs Rod Sox lo-Vitamannas vs Kensingwn 13—Pioneers»vs Vitamannas IS-Jiiensington vs Red Sox l7—iP'ioneei-s vs Kensington 20—Vitamannas vs Red Sox ZIZ-—— Pioneers vs Red Sox 24—Vita,mannas vs Kensiiigtun 2‘1—iPioneers vs Vii-amannas 20—Kensingtcn vs Red Sox JULY 4——Pioneeis vs Kierisington 6~Vitamannas vs Red Sax iP-Ploneers vs Red SoX lil-Vitamannas vs Keiisinizion lii-Honeers ivs Vitamannas ls-Jmnsiingion vs Red sax iii-Pioneers vs Kensinmon 20—Vlta.mimnas vs Red Sox 22—-Ploneers vs Red Sox 25—Vitanmrinas vs Kensingtorn ‘liq-Pioneers vs Vitamannas 20—Kensin.gton vs Red Sox AUGUSI‘ l—Ploineers vs Kensinglon 3—Vita.mannas vii Red Sox 5—Poneers vs Rod Sox 8—-Vita.mannas vs Kensington New Glasgow High Win s Acadia Relays WWII-Ev N. 6., May fl—- (@)—-Now Glasgow High School collected 36 points. nine more than their nearest rival, Horton Academy to win the Maritime Interscholastic tmck and field meet. popularly the Acadia Relays, here Se. Moiim Allison Academy wltih 1G points was third. followed by Kent- ville. Amherst. Middleton. Bridge- wator. Bloomfield. Bridgetown, Syd- in that order. Vernon IiudDona d, brilliant New Glasgow athlete won individual honors with 18 minus. Ross. Mount Allison was second with 1i. Grads Softball Team To Play At Montague ‘mmorroiw the I'll-Y Grads soft- ball team journey to Montague ‘when they will play a doublehead- er aminst two teams from tho town loavue. The es are slated for 2.30 and 5 p.m., and this will prove a. good lost as to the strength of The largest Fish inter-ed in the content for the fislilnl P0“ 1° date is n 4 lb. 9 on. beauty. ENTER TODAY ! All you have to do ll present a sales aliP 1°!‘ $1.00 worth of fishing supplies 00118111 l1 91"’ store, with your largest fish null"- "li "1' he‘ Company Limited the brand of ball played in the Mon e Lea e. llIlllWAllE Charlottetown NEWS“. Bunty Lawless ls Winner Of Ki ng’s Plate -i___. (By FOSTER BARCLAY Canadian Press Stiff Writer) mnomio. May z2-(CP>_ Name of a. gallant colt, Bunty 15w. 1985. branded the best since Inferno, Wfl-s engraved today in Canadian turf history-winner of the 79th running of the King's Plate, Before a crowd estimated at more than 26.000 persons. greatest ever to vieiw a. renewal if the historic race, Bunty Lawless galloped to a handy mile-and-a-fui-long victory Saturday at pcturesque Woodbine Park- home of the plate since 1887. He covered the distance in 1:54 2-5, one-fifth of a. second off the plate record set by Horomefcr in 1934. The undersized colt. barely ex- {tended in the stretch drive, reward- ‘ed owner Willie Morrlsseys 0on- iIlClEHCC and enthusimn ‘by a llength-and-a-hulf) tri over ill/IBM B611. carrying the colors of the Costrage stable of Toronto. Cabin Gal. owned by Harry Gid- dings of Oakvllle. was third. four lengths further in the rear. Grand ‘Dame. owned biv G. M. Hendrie of Hamilton, was fourth and H. C. l-iatoh’s Caracole fifth. Victory f0,- the Son of Ladder- Mi-niiwina was never in doubt after the field of i4 rounded the turn to the stretch drive. Jockey Jackie Bailey rated Bunty In-iwlass behind the sizzling pace set by Mona Bell and then made his winning bid at the home tum. He took Bunty Laiwless to the outside, wore down Mona Bcll and then drew clear near the end. After the nice Bunty Lawless was taken to the winner's paddock where Lord Tweedsmuir. Governor Gen- eral. presented Moirisscv with 50 addition Morrlssey drew $6,780 first prime. The total purse. after nom- ination and starting fees had been added. was $9.780. Morrissey's total winnings, ln- cluding the prize money and num- erous side bets. were estimated as high as 320.000. He won $4.000 from a syndicate backing Hotel-rs suf- fering in a horse-for-horce wager. Big I Sporting Card Arranged For Tuesday Charlottetown will have ifs 0116-" of sport activity during the holiday tomorrow-customary official ap- enlng day of nux-st sport-providing the weather is flne- Although some have ahead-y tak- en to the fairways and the courts. the Belevedere Golf club links and the Charlottetown Tennis Club it ViotoriaPamwillno dwMbol-hfi scene of many ycrs. Then there be a City BoflbB-ll Ioagde fixture in which Gordon Drillon N. H. L. leading scorer this season will hurl for the Rovers against a bin * mmerh-l-I-u- dian 5:111‘ In the even a midni- sfiwdubd game of themgity Softball League takes place when the Indianl. 1M1? year's 8th BB/‘WBYY squad meet 111° Rovers for the first time this sea- son. Rovers. with two stmlflhii 111°‘ torles to their credit will be W" seeking their third straight viewfi- Among the feature sport attract- ions of the dav W111 be 5-“ exP-lbit‘ ion baseball game at» six ooilock when the Summerside Sun-Glos will meet the Charlottetown Cah- adiens. Pom; Daly will start the hurling for t e highly-touted west- gm squad while lknmett Murphy wll toss ‘em 1m for the Conadiens. __._.______ Victorias Win North End Tilt Fro m Bears Ike Moresideb Viciorias DOunded out 18 hits off the offerings of two hurlers yesterday to score n 21-3 win over the Bean's in a regular North End Baseball League fixture at the North End diamond. While his mates were s1 the pitches of Louie McLeod an Willie McDonald all over the field. Fultie Pound. Vics hurler. held the clawing Bears to six scattered hits and retired 13 batters via. the strike-out route. J. Ellison's home run in the sixth hinting with a mate featur- edTtilhe lyics batting power. e na-ups: Boa-rs: Kennedy, cahcht; Noland and MacDonald. pitchers; MlloDou- aid and McLeod, first base; O'Neill. second base; Shea, short stop" Wisner. tau-a bass; Dillon, i l held; Phillips, right field; J. O’- Neill. centre field. Victorian: Carver. catcher; Pound pitcher; Doiron. first hue; Swal- low. second base: Gall-ant. third base; l-Iigson, short stop; Carson, left field; Chandleiqright field; O‘- Brigen. centre field. Umpires: At the plate. C. Math- MbDown-ll MERW SAW" ' NEW YORK. May 22—-(AP)—- Olevcln-nd Indians inaeased their American long-us lead to two games today by walloping ' New York Yankees 0-3 in a series-opener game in Cleveland which was costly to both sides. Bob roller retired after working three innings when he complained of the recurrence of a. back injury. and Lou Gehrig. the Yankee iron man, pulled a charley horse on a double in the sixth inning and ga/ve Wflv to Babe en in the sev- enth. It was Gehr ‘s 1.990th con- secutive game. Flor the second time in a week Rudy York hit a home run with the bases loaded ami gav: the Ti- gers a 4-3 victory over Boston Red 50x in Detroit. Manager Joe Cronin hammered out a home run for Boston in the second, but the bases were empty. In C ' o, Ted Lyons, 37-year- oid right-hander, stored his 200th American Baseball League victory ‘y’ as the White $0.. defeated Was lngton 9-2. The veteran knuckle baller yield- ed nine hits. one a homer by Jon- athan Stone in the eighth inning, out» after pi himself out of jams in each of the first three framgi he ha: “little difficilixlgy. It \.8s " secon umiph aga t no defeats 1n four starts this season. _ The Athletics scored three runs in the 10th inning off Bum. New- som. who went in as relief hurler with two on. to defeat the Brownies Newsccn. the Browns ace pitcher, who went the full route to win io Bonetti had left him on the spot with one away. Spud Chandler pitched an eight- hit shutout and then valloped a homer Saturday to give the Yankees a 1-0 victory over Chicago. At Detroit, Vernon Kennedy was credited with his sixth straight pitching triumph as Detroit beat Philadelphia 7-5. St. Louis defeated Boston 5-3. Washington took 12 in- nings to eke out a 5-4 decision over Cleveland. guineas, donated by the King. In - NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 100 003100-4 6 1 New York 000 000 001-l 6 2 Derringer and LiomhardhMelton. Coffman and Banning. Ch 100 103 320-40 l4 4 Fran and Hartnet‘, Garbark; Passeau, Smith and . Pittsb 000 101 030-5 '1 2 Brooklyn 001 001 000-4 7 2 Bauer-s, Tobin and Todd; Ham- lin, Posedel and Phelps. Shea. St. Louis 000 000 010-l 7 1 Boston 200 102 OOx-fi 9 l C. Davis. Lainer and Owen; Macllbydefi and Lopez. AMERICAN LEAGUE Pfiilodelphla 010 000 040-5 8 2 Detroit 000 302 20x~7 12 0 Caster, Smith and Brucker: Ken- B01115’. 8716808 and TCOOCZG. Washington 003 000100 00l--512 1 Cleveland 1012000000004 91 Chase and R. Ferrell; Whitehill, Gatehouse and oiliemsley. Boston 0 020 000-3 6 2 8t. Louis 000 400 0lx—5 l0 2 Mnrcum. Bagby, Ostermueller and 1‘ ; Newsom and Sullivan. New York 000 000 010-1 'l 0 Chicago 000 000 000-0 3 0 Chandler and Dickey, Glenn; Lee and Seweil. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Jersey 01W 091 311 w0—-l2 11 2 Baltimore (D2 006 010- B 11 2 Forrick. Stiles and Redmond; Fletcher. Perrin, Matuzak, Jorizens and Grouse. First gums: Rochester 400 000 01.4- 9 12 1 to 306 O00 002-10 l2 2 Wilts, Raflondaerger. Judd. Sher- er and Ogrodowski; Olson; Wilson. Brennan and Reiber. Second game-six innings, by ag- reement: Rochester 0B0010L-3 0 0 Toronto 110000-12 5 0 Sharer and Narron; Meola. La.- franooni and iber. Night gamer Newark 000 100100-3 9 1 Syracuse Fallon, Strincevich, M a k o s k y. Bonham and ullough; Klein- hans and Miooro Montreal 0'11 oio 001-4 a i Buflnlo ooo 04o ooi-s a s Porter, Jwignrt. Canvwell and Campbell; Jacobs and Phillips. SUNDAY GAME AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 000 010 010 I 0 I OhicaRn 000 005 22x 9 11 1 W. ell, Kelley and R. Fer- rell; ons and Sewell. New ock 000 0000 000 8 7 2 Cleveland 003 820 00x 8 11 1 Pearson, Hulls. Andrews and Dickey; Feller, umphries. Harder and Hcmsley. Boston 010 010 001 8 10 0 Detroit 400000000 4 6 1 Wilson and Desautals; Poffen- er and Tobbetts. Ph adsliia 010 02002033124 St. Io 010 201 0100 5 14 4 Williams, Potter and Hayes; Knott. Cole. Bonctti, Newsom and Sullivan. NATIONAL LEAGUE 5t. Louis 000 000 001 l 5 0 Philadelphia 000 000 002 2 I 1 mo» and Owen; Sivass and Clark. Pittsburgh 200 000 000 2 10 1 New York 050 06x 18 l5 0 304 Brandt. Swift. Bewell and Todd; Kubbsll and Cincinnati 210 0 0 121 8 l8 l yn 001002000 3 9 8 Weaver. Bongo and Lombardi; Piiniinmons. Frankhouso and 0111mm ill) 0M 0G1 00 1. 7 0 Baton 000100 000 01 2 0 0 Bryant and Hartnett; Bhoiffner and Mueller. mTIB-NATIONAL LEAGUE Fblt Guns:- Toronto 101 000 111 I l1 3 K001105101‘ 100 202 001 6 7 l leeoaueuthabasesu - _-_ ~<I:_Ai>"g STUBBSWANDlIPPIE i WANNA 100108 540C Sullivan, Mulligan, Bronnng A HOJSE. -BASEBALL RESULTS- WELL, we're Mess: GONNA BUILD YQFRL NOT GONNA BUILD mrotmsstr? i i l and Roiber; Bowman. Krist and Narron. Second Game:- Toronto 102 000 0 3 5 1 Rochester 411 100 x 7 l0 1. Davis and Harshany; Wilks and Narron. First Gama- Jersey City 000 1.00 020 8 10 4 Newark 300 020 10x 6 ‘I 0 Joiner and Redmond; Donald and Holm. Second Game:— Jersey City 300 025 0 10 12 2 Newark 204 340 x l3 15 1 Carpenter, De La Cruz, Ferrick, Stiles and Padden- Russo, Mak- osky, Page and Ho . First Game:— Syracuse 000 000 0201 3 l0 l) Baltimore 0001010000 2 B l Mooty. Barrett and Moore; Ma- lone and Crouse. Second Game:- syracuse 0001010 2 5 l Baltimore 300 300x 6 6 Brown. Barrett and Richards. Wittig and Huffman. First Game:- Montreal - 203 000 112 9 l2 1. Buffalo 002 003 100 6 8 0 Chapman. Wetherell and K1882 Archer, Fink, Jacobs and Tresh. Second Game:- Montreal 110 4200 8 11 2 Buffalo 400 0000 4 6 2 Duke and Campbell; Harris, Fer- ris, Kline and Phillips. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION 1st. Columbus 7 Indianapolis 0. 2nd. Columbus d; Indianapolis 4- lst. Toledo 5; Louisville 7. ' 2nd. Toledo 11; Louisville 2. 1st. Milwaukee 11. St. Paul 0- 2nd. Milwaukee 11; 5t. P0111 13- 1st. Kansas City 9; Minneapolis - 2nd. Kansas city 4. Minneapolis 5- Milwaukee 6, St. Paul 12. Kansas City 18; Minneapolis 11. Columbus 1, Indianapolis 12. Toledo-Iouisville ppd rain. Baseball Standing (A. P. by Guardian's Bfvcohl Wire) ENTER-NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pct 1.8 . N wark 9 55" Baltimore 1.5 18 .536 Rochester l6 14 .533 Buffalo 13 12 .520 ‘Ibronto l3 l4 .481 Jersey City 14 16 $57 Montreal 13 11 .433 Syracuse 0 16 .300 AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 20 l0 .867 New York l6 10 .015 Boston 17 II .807 Wash 18 is .646 Den-oi; I3 15 .464 El. ‘in... '2 ii "332 a c ~ st. Louis 8 20 1% NATIONAL LEAGUE ' no a .114 gglgfi" 1a l3 .581 305m“ 14 11. .550 Cincinnati 16 l4 ca: Pittsburgh 14 14 50° BL Louis 12 15 .4“ Brooklyn l2 20 .375 Philadelphia '1 18 18° iii SWISS BEAT $61.15!! (or. Cable. n: Gunrdlln’! ED041111 ZURICH. Switzerland, May 22- Dis laying marked; supcrlvfliy. 5w tzerland humbiecl England 2-1 Soturcia in an international foot- loh before a crotvgcel of 351.330 A tutors. A W063 I80 Eng] ' iiigrnim defeatod Germany 0- Lt SCOTS DEFEAT DUTCH (C-P. Cable, By Gnu-flan‘- Bpoclsl fl-BCOUMRI t. SPORT WORLD Indians Increase League lRovers Defeat Lead Defeating Yanks 8-3 lmperials In Close Game The Rovers. last year's Prince Edward Island Softball Champions. ton their second straight City P018116 victory of the season yes- terday 11y degeatuig the Imperiais in a dose-y wed-plates contest, 5-4. ‘ The Rovers went into an early fad and were never headed al- lwllgh the Imperials deadlocked the store in the eighth inning. The Rovers. however, held their 0p- Dflnents scoreless in the first of tho ninth and in their 1n shoved u"? Wlnnlllk run across th none out to end the ame. Ii- was a huring iiuei between the Leagues two leading ‘pitcher; with Art, Mollins tossing t em up for the Rovers and Ray stun doinz duty f0.- t-he Ixnperials. Mol- llns was found for l3 hits while Stull gave up 10 safe blows. The lure-ups: Rmiw" Cflwher. MacKinnon; P1101191 111101111152 first base, Bulger; second base, Gallant; third ase. Jfly; short stop, McNeil; fielders MacNevin. Stewart and Blaoqulere. Imperials: catcher, Ward; pitcher 31-11112 first base. Saunders; secon base. Squarebriggs; third base, Amml 311°11'- SWD- Whalen; ers Carmichael, H. Saunders and nis. Umrpiros: At the m. Bill Iow- els Whitlock. lor; on the bases, Down The Alleys IIOLY NAME BOWLING Tonight's Schedule at 7 and 9 O'clock Sharp On account of Tuesday being a holiday we will run a double header tonight. ‘Puesda. ayers will roll at. 9 o'c ock. Fol- owing are the schedules. At '1 0‘Clock Sharp LADIES GENTS K. Hennosso V. Coyle L McDoug T. Peters M. Walsh C. Pineau E. Connors R. Lawlor V. McInnis J. Kenny M. Connolly C. LeClalr N. Kirwin G. Young . Goes I. McQuaid J. Klrwin R. Trainer P. McKinnon E. Toombs I. Bradley U. Blanchard N. MacKoy A. McEachern At I 0‘Clook LADIES GENTS P. H r I. Berriglan M. Hi1 ier G. G 11s D. MaoKenzie E. Callaghan Dot n E. Michael H. Hughes E. Goss B. Walsh R. Cameron A. Birch R McCarville H. Praught P. Hillier M. Aylward E. Mclnnis l". Martin M. Arsenault GERMAN DAVIS OUPPERS ADVANCE BERLIN. May 22—(AP)—Ge01‘g Von Metaxa. Viennese tennis star drafted for the Geri-nan Davis oup team. teamed with Tanner Henkel in doubles Saturday to defeat the Norweigian pair of Johan l-Iaanes and. Fritz Jerissen, 6-1. 6-3. for the clinching victory in their second- yoiuid Eiuopean zone series. MAKES DEBUT AS PRO J URG -— In his first start as a paid pla. er, Bobby Locke, South African gol lng star. defeat- ed Sid Brews. hitherto accepted professional leader. four and two over_the, Houghtonioyse. BLACK . 10¢ PER ALBTERDAM. Mfl-I defeated Holland 3-1 in on inter- national soccer match here Satur- day. Sixty thousand spectators saw n. keen we with the Bootsmen ob- viously e cleveicr team but lack- unch in front of . llllillEY and Au’- v ‘w. WILLIE—- THU. HIM WE'RE NOT WITH THEM YET- BOXING BASKETBALL O I HER SPUR I ‘Garden Bowl Jinx Not Worrying Ross lVho 'Will lulieft Armstrong Thursday MatchRace To Settle Turf Sup remacyl (By OELO ROBERTSON Associated Pres; Sports WriterH NEW YORK, May _ year-old argument comes down toi Belmont Park's 1 1-4 mile racing,» strip on the Decoration Day holi- day. May 30 with War Admiral arid Seaibiscuit testing speed and stami- na in North Africa's first important match race in 15 years. There's a $100.01) winner-take- all [use attsfluzd to the race but that will mean little to the 50,000 or more fans excected to pack the picturesque Long Island course. They will be there t; find out which is the better of the two turf titans. Not since Zev, the 1923 Kentucky Derby winner. whipped Papyrus, the Epsom Derby victor, in ther famous international race ave.- the same course has the turf seen such a natural. Both trace their lLneage back to the great Man O’War. him- self oo uecror of the Canadian- owned Barton in another of the continent's famous match races. We, Admiral is a son of "Old RedM-probalilv the eatost off- spring of the horse t swept all before him in 1010-20. Sealbiscuit is a grandson being by Hard Tack. A victory for either would threaten Sun Bean's money whining record of $376,744. The Biscuit has won 3251.155 in four years; the Admiral $231,625 1n three. The 'r have never met under silks. _ have travelled far d11- ferent paths in their climbs to re- cognition as the outstanding thor- oughbreds of the United States. War Admiral, owned Samuel D. Riddle. wealthy Philadelphian. has had an aristocratic up. only in the best company, . never finished out of the money in Biv contrast. Ecabiscuit has trav- elled the hard. heavy road of the self made. He was bred by the weal/thy Wheatly Stable but was sold to Charles s. Howard. San Francisco a/utomdoile dealer. in 1936 for less than $8.000 As a two- -o!d. he was a work horse. start rig 35 times and win- ning five. Lost season he raced 15 times and with four appearances to date in 1968 he has paraded a. total of 7'7 times. ‘FRIES CHANNEL SWIM CAICUTTA — P. K. Ghoslm. In- dias champion swimme and holder ‘ to the hoodoo talk but some of tho . convince. Ross. despi ' 05118111880. only rules '1 to 5 favorite of the world endurance record. eaviziz for London by motor car in June to attempt to swim the Eng- ish Channel. Island Railwayman H e a d s Waymen TRUIRD. N. 8.. Mflv Z-(OP)— M. s. Lee, vemon River. . 1., newly-apopintod chairman of the brotherhood of waymen for the Canadian National Railways’ At- lantic Rog-ion, addressed a meeting of members of the brotherhood hero yesterday. Among subjects he dis- cussed was the new wage agreement aiitplylng to members of the broth- erhood. Mr. Ioeleaves forMonti-eal shortly to attend a conference of the oc- ganization‘; prof/active board. after with (By WILLIAM B. DUMSIJAY Canadlln Pros: Staff Writs: champions was pulled out of the moth-nails today with the approach of Bamey Ross’ defence of his welterweight title against Henry Armstrong. wearer oi the feather crown. No cna-n 10n has ever success- fulliy defen d his laurels in the sprawling 1on1 Island Citv scum: Barney hasn't given much thought boys who have wasted their money on champs in the bowl are hard to to his weight to withstand the leather fists of 111$ Iwlro challenger ‘Ihursdav ht. Ross himself is among the tt- rnen who have taken advantage of the jinx and also felt its sting. In 1934 he gained the welter tir" by, Lcklng Vancouver's Jimmy Mc- Larnin, and then lost. it back to tho ciouting Celt in the same arena. Promoter Mike Jacobs ho customers will fill at least 43.000 o the Bowls 70.000 seats to see whm happens when a good big man a good little man meet. It W111 bl the first time the lights have been turned on in the bowl for icnce Jim Braddock wallopcd Baci- to win the heavy title in 193 Never knocked ca’! 111.5 feet in amateur and professional con- tests. homicide Hank isn't worrying about the five or six pounds ad- vantage his Jewis M boy will add Ross to the K. O. 11st late in the 15-rounci tussle. Summerside Golf Cou rse Opens Tomorrow It is anticipated that the Sum- msrside Golf Course will be n for playing on the 24th. to reports there h more trees planted, etc.- until very shortly it is felt it will be c, Course that one 0nd n11 will feel very pmud of. Itistobe ihatcmumclw 1c than las year will 50in the classed as Insurance against mas for it affords excellent; ecmohc i, lntho open air and a. rebmtim fromwoniesofallkiitids. At the rates charged by flu Bun- morslde Clubitisprcibablytlaocboapu est form of pleasure you can so- cure. Visitors are always The new Pro. Mr. William mu- ligan, will arrive June 1st, Blandstar Wins i Derby Trial Race LIJNGIFIEILD. lkigland. May 22- (CP Cablei-Jllhe Mahara c-hofRAi- pipia/s Blandstar. a colt Blund- ord from Musical Star. won tho by trial we!‘ 1 l-z miles, the Epsom dnitonce. de- feating a number of prominenl candidates for the big race Juno 1. The colt; finished a neck in fronl of William Woodward's Mm. G. A. Monicbousek Hal- vmich he will make a general tour cyan Gift, half n. length behind of the Ai-lnni-lc region, 01 third in the field of l3. AND THE PROCESS OF MANUFACTURING HIGH, CLASS TOBACCO CALLS FOR EX- PERIENCED SKILLFUL MEN. THERE IS NOTHING HIT 0R MISS FOR INSTANCE ABOUT THE CONSISTENT GOODNESS AND FINE FLAVOR OF HICKEY’S TWIST CHEWING THE MEN WHO MAKE IT HAVE BEEN ON OUR STAFF FOR AN AVERAGE OF MORE THAN TWENTY-FIVE YEARS. FIG iiiciiotsoii THEY WON'T i l'i\l|rh YET. 'EM BACK TO US NOW, 'CUZ THEY'RE THROUGH WITH COMFORTABLE HOMES ARE BUILT BY HONEST WORKMEN By EEC/liq: LENO NOT 1M nevus-v‘ w. _,.4'.:._. ._._.;._;_¢_._._._._.. .,-.._ .... . . . wr-IJSI IhQz-Q... $2M -. i - .4