§AGE six Dean Rejects BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING Demand By Frick And Counters With Threatened Damage Suit IN THIS S W1 tint \ c-ienings wrestling card z ~hed a lot of excitement but there :~ a boxing curd sched- uled for the 91h of Junc that from a poznt. o: interest and the uncer- er Land:.. that doesn't get ill.‘ ui1_\ sue Frick and the Nuiiuuai League BY ALAN GOULD Associated Press sports Ed tor NEW YORK. June 3—(APJ— till under indefinite suspension, as a. result of his refusal to sign a 4 disavowuril of alleged National League President Ffltii and tnnpire Dizzy Dean late today ll tateiied to sue Prick and the league for $250,000 "ciamages." attacks on Ford Geoixie Barr, "I'll appeal.‘ first to Comnrssion- '.\3ll(l D~"' "and i.’ hcie. I'll t.;1lll\ of the outcome should out- ll.) .11: former attractions held at fer Plenty-at least a quarter 01a m6 Ivor-m, so 1m- Lms seasmh million~for deprivhg me of my ¥< w" 1k iii On that date Leo Kelly of Char- 11 veteran of the ii: the person of to ‘ hit-Neill of Halifax. r0 lighting in and around \- fur yirtlfi has built up an on zis a two-listed i’ "' alt i.wn rears. however. cert considerably and . )i'i1l‘filli‘i'5 in the ring ed the customers greatly. tet‘ he spew in the United s ulierc he had a great carn- TfitliLV he is a ntuch im- d ringster. the experience and in‘ lid‘. \\ 1.1m (‘It .- done him a world 111i it will be a new and Kr \ who will crawl the ropes on the night of "explanation" pledge much less an 3901011)‘. Automatically off the payroll banishment. Dean now faces job." ‘Infill! Dean. “popping off‘ at intervals llf'\\'.~l)lil)t3l'm€ll, rc>is.. all ci- ris to hzive him s‘gii a modified and "'1 o_\' :11 ty" H‘, b one or U“, ‘The deadlock between the star Alarming, nghuws right-hander pitcher of St. Louis m“ be Cardinals and Prick, who ban"- ed Dean yesterday “for condi t detrimental to the best intcrtisis l L MI m? be“ of of baseball,“ remained unbroken m,“ b ‘H3O’ smug’: after a heated two-hone confet- .. 111w u: the Icastknown enFe‘ attended ‘L50 b5 Flank v , Frlwll. manager. and Clarence ' "“j“if‘\““-‘[ {if .lovd. Secretary. of t-hc St. Louis asut- 0 its club‘ Ilt.1l'il ii-gtllaiit Cardinal of his the his for the duration ernative (if r11 changing mind and sgning a formal tiisa- vowxtl of it's allPiltfid "popoffs" OI‘ appealing to Commissioner Landls for a hearing, after a 10- day interval. Prick mach- it clear that the next Dizzy. move was up to Blanket Denial Although Dean nude a blanket denial. verbally. that he delivered any statements reflecting upon the T '1' + "F l1onesty or integrity oi leauue ni- fl" m" F‘ 1m“ “I {Onowers who‘ ficials. he steadfastly refused to m1‘ i)“ l" ~ “mmgly for him as affix his Vsigilaturc t.) 11m’ itirm of 11c faces \\.1.i. should be the stiftl- reffimtion. ‘ 9,; .1.»- uf his (‘HYPPIY MCNNH Not even when urged to do so k“ "" “H m’) “""‘"‘"“"'“.: his record bv Secretarv Llovd. on beltalf of 1'1“ ‘-‘ ‘Y- M" 1"“ m" Same he President Sam Brendon of the ivi‘. he faced by 11 10"“ ‘my ‘m0 st. Louis Club would Dean can- ‘5 53m“? his w“ "p through the sent tn sirzn 11 fourth and final ranks and SlKNVlIIII the courage and zletermination tn succeed that will stand h~m in irnnd stead when he compromise statement from which the word "apology" ated. was elimin- in the last-minute con- hf“ "l" N“? 5mm‘ leather ciliatorv move by Prick. Pilihkl? H __ Glancing out from Frickls offce. ‘i’ i‘ “if on the 19th floor of an oiree The l-tlfillflll league is tightening buildmsz. Dean said: up dairy and \\'l'll the playing of “I'll jump out this window be- cnch game it becomes more evi- fore l’ sign anything. I'\'e got clciu that the race for leaoue hon- nothing to apologize for. My or.» is going in be the closest ever. Last nights victory by tl1e Esquir- es over the Superiors set the stage for a possible four cornered tie providing the Artillery team can defeat the Rovers in tontghts tus- sle. 'I'ha~‘.< as close as anyone cnzild wish aid shows how wide- open the Zearzue really is. 4-’ + i? Iliilllrifllll League All-Stars re- ceiverl a jolt last night by that un- exywemd defeat by the Anchors. rm; 011011;:- Ayers certainly showed he is coin: to be tough to take. In two canvas he has allowed ex- nctlv five hit: and last, night the hi: ‘lei: hander was the dominat- 1X15! figure in his team's win as he “'€ c" picflelv wlenced the big R1105 of the heavy batting All-Stars team. >F =t--i-'-i= Suars were conceded an edle ‘e rei of the teams ever slice season opened but. fans and plajvers alike failed to consider Ayers. Ayers has transformed the Anchor. from also-mus intostrong contenders. the addition of veteran Dxixnv Dorie to the outfield has 0f tween another biz help to the de- I"l’\.\l'.(‘ swcmttlt of the squad and Th tai last night on the Alleys the score= run highest since the opening of on, only two falling thousand mark and those two cer- may the them. This completed the first half conscience is clear." Sham of references to many of the statements Dean is accused of making. on or off the ball the final draft submitted byFrlck for Dlzzyis s‘gnature publication by the Belleville (Ill). Daily Advocate of a story; quoting Dean as saving Frink field. dealt with and Barr re the "two biggest crooks" it‘. baseball. Down The Alleys HOLY NAME HALL BOWLING Mixed Doubles Holy Name the tournament. e different couples were right below the nly had hard luck, try as they breaks went against the third round. the second half continuing tonight. Following are the scores: ,. . . n o be First:- m B01 g t L. Duffy 16s 209 281 ‘ ' . .. .. G. Keenan 161 182 266-1267 i‘ 7+ 7+ a‘ Second-- l" ~"“'"‘! 3°” “n” 1° b°°°m° A Joy l 20a 26s 15o r» n.’ the most pathetic figures AGO“ 185 212 l8o_1196 tita‘ ever wood on the threshold 'Thiraz__ 1 1"‘- Yflm"? Y‘ h“ ‘° b° T“ .1. Hughes 26s 1111 211s "We W a "i" -"°'*“‘~ m‘ E. Dougan 159 144 141mm ‘hog; {qrgnttrn a»: the boy who held Fnunhi_ nzore promise than any pitcher H. FMVT 192 145 2.73 an.» ever came into the majors and My bulky 186 l,” “SW4”, ‘hen failed to fulfill it? Fnthh, ‘tr ‘F? P. Mc uaid 19s 25s 242 The Ckrclflii" mimflflfmm if“ c. Maizhleson 112 209 1174129 Ilitppcrl the Iowa farm bow away S1,m“_ my ,1 um weeks‘ rest. and its just A Show?“ 22! 194 216 Jvuicrlvahle that lif‘ WOTIT "P???" A_ 5;“), 100 153 30g__1Qg1 again rm an American League sevenm:_ 'h0\ll‘|(l. llis sensational debut. a Dr‘ McKenzie 206 164 26-1 rear Me in“ m" ‘Mk "Y "1" m?“ s. Mnllctt 141 120 151-1055 ball circuits In sprint: trainin! 3|Rh““__ this rear h" lied ihi‘ New Yfirk M. Dowling 132 iai 239 Giants hanrltuffcti several Um“ G. Young 161 1B7 145—1045 but in hi< first leacueiwrformaflce Ninth:- he iniurwi hi.- arm. y; v85 9y 202 173 195 d‘ a!‘ '7‘ '1" J. McCabe 106 153 200-1030 H» essaycti a relief role against TQnQh:_-1 thr- BOP-Knit Red Scx but walked R) Duncan 177 347 133 the first. batter and was replaced M‘ Cpl-mm 199 35 12pm” immediately. His arm has refused E|gyg||[h;-_ tn respond to treatment and it A, Qormlgy 153 134 132 may never cnme back. If it doesn't p. McKlnnon 17a 137 142-. 934 Fteve O'Neill. the Cleveland man- Twelfth:— nccr. will be accused of bringing L. Blanchard 91 238 179 the hov Rlhllq ton fast. He will F. Stnnott 130 169 165- 970 be charged with having used him ivhrn he didnt really know 11.0w Tonight's s-heduie at. 7 o'clock: to deliver a ball and the injurv LADIES GENTS ‘that has put him on the sheliwtll C. McGulgnn G. McDonald be laid at. his door. F. Martin D. McDonald Li‘ F. Sinnott L, Blanchard ABOARD COAST GUARD CUT- M. Martin J. D. Webster ter ARGO. June fL-Gerord Lam- D- Smith E- Robin bertk Yankee tndnv tic-tented Raln- 1K. O'Brien R. McGilllvray bmv, s11 ice sfu] (Ir-fender of the A. Sheri": H. McConnell Aitlcrlrifs cup m um in the sec- n. Pmuidu F- Esau and trial re-e to determine this M. Cnrrngher R. Mclellan ,-.=;.r'_¢ rte-fender. R. McIntyre V. Plneau Yankees winning margin was M. M60108“! L» D0110" lppioximately 6 l-Z minutes. J. Dillon L- CONOTIB Esquires Pin 4 - 3 Defeat On Superiors superiors softball team lzrt night lost a chance to take the league lead when Jack Cameron's E5. quires edged them out 4-3 1n the closest played game of the season. But it was only by the narrowest of margins flat superiors were kept from racing to the front of the pack. Strictly a hurling battle be. tween Earl Goss of the winners and Rice of the superiors, the los- ers last night held tenaciously to a one run lead for three innings but the next three frames proved their undoing. 111 the fourth. fifth and sixth Esquires accounted for four of their seven hits and 311 their runs to take the lead 4-1, a mar- gin that proved sufficient. Super- iors. with two out tn the seventh. rallied for two runs before the side was retired but in the eighth and ninth they went out in order, hitless and scoreless. SUMDIARY Earned runs: Esquires 1; two base hits, Murley, $111.11, Jay; base 011 b81153 Off Goes 1, off Rice 2; struck out: by Goss 1: passed balls. Hunter 2; wild pitch: Rice 1, Goss 3;‘ left on bases. Esquircs 7. Sup. criors '7; double play, Whalcn to sliiiurcbrlggs to Aft-Kenzie in sixth. Umpire: Nels Wliitlock. BOX SCORE fiuiwriors AB R uro A E Hunterc 5 1 Q 3 1 0 Jay cf 4 0 1 2 o o Ennis If 3 0 1 1 0 0 Rlcvi» 4 o 1 o i o Williams ss 4 0 O 3 2 1 Peter" 1b 4 0 113 0 1 Cox 3b 4 l 1 2 3 3 Steele 21> a o 1 2 s o Weeks rf 4 1 0 0 1 1 aWarren 1 0 0 O 0 Q Totals so a 6261a 5 a.—Batted for Steele in ninth. '—Man out for leaving base, Esquires Stewart if Rockwell c McKenzie 3b Squarcbriegs 2b Whalen Jib Murley .-.s Acorn cf McLcllun rf Goss p Stull Totals . BASEBALL SCORES ._____ luminous: LEAGUE > i I IIPOAE 1 2 gw-nwvn-sie-nsuru. IQZ$ZZF<IJ¢@~‘Z ~n-oo->->-o~—-— N >- -l\§b4@i-lb-ll¢h:idha {Qqu-ooozavvooo CJIAII@§@I-IQ§ODIIQQ New York 000 000 110 2 11 0 Cleveland 002 001 03x 6 11 1 Gomez. .\IiIlOl‘|P and Dickey; Harder and Pytiak. Boston 200 200000 4 6 2 Chicago 0m 50014x 11 l0 0 W. Ferrell. Wll>0ll. Otermueller. Marcum and Dcsautels; Kennedy and Sewell. Washington 100010120 5 9 0 Detroit 000 211 000 4 l0 0 Deshong and Hogan; Wade. soy. rell, Russell and Tcbbetts. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 000000000 0 7 l Boston 411000110X a 9 0 Brandt. Brown. Tobin and Todd‘; Fettc and Lopez. St. Louis at Brooklyn ppd. rain. Chicago at New York ppd. min. Cincinnati at. Philadelphia ppd. rain. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal 001 010 00l—- 3 '1 1 Toronto 0G4 110 1011-13 14 4 Pattison. Lisinbee and Kles. Ste- P11011500; Mulligan and Heath. Rochester 000 000 000-o 6 0 Buffalo 030 010 OIPx-J; 10 0 Krist. Smith. Doyle and Poland; Kline and Savino. Jersey City at. Baltimore, ppd.. rain. Doubleheader tomorrow. Syracuse at. Newark to be played at la date. WILL HAVE "r0 BE some MOUNTAIN fiOATflt-l’ WAY 1 ‘FIGURE rr! YOU'LL. HAVE "so éEMD Yours MIl-Eé "r0 GET A ‘PEEK AT ‘TH’ ecuPsE! ‘FAUGH! vouw. Minus. ‘FAILTO commas HEND we 6EN1U5 ‘THAT ne- siauso ‘ll-NS CAMERA-~ umF-F-u-rs ave mu SCIEMTlSTS, MY INVE HTIOH 11.1; On Braddock (By Eddie Brlelz, Associated Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK. June 3—I-Ieavy- weight champion James J. Brad- dock was fined $1.000 and suspend- ed indefinitely by the New York State Athletic Commission today for failing to keep his heavyweight championship engagement with Max Schmeling here tonight. Brnddockis manager, Joe Gould. drew a similar suspertion and fine. About all the disappointed Schnieling got for his five trips across the ocean. a wasted training grind and an expenditure of some- thing like $25,000 was a nice. large eight ball. Louis Faces Suspension In announcing the decision in the famous "phantom fight case," Chairman John J. Phelan said he also was advising Boxing Commiss- ions in states with which New who meets Braddock before the Champ defends his Schmeltng will be suspended. This was a direct shot. at the scheduled June 22 Chicago battle [between Braddock and the brown the on our application for rcstrniniiig Braddock from fight- ing Louis." hc .aid. “When that is handed down I will have plenty to say. win or lose." .bomblng Joe Louis of Detroit for ‘ which both men are 110w in train- ing. . In Chicago, however. Joe Triner, .Chairmat1 or the Illinois State lAthletic Commission said the sus- _i pension of Braddock would not be irecognized and that it would not interefere with the bout in Com- iskey Park. A burned-up Schmeling. flanked by an equally burned-up trainer and manager. dashed from the Commission offices, looking for the ncare~t court. , Rotten Decision. Claim .' Although they 111-51 refused m make a statement until “we have seen our attorneys." Schmeling and Manager Joe Jacobs later shot of: plenty of steam in their hotel iAnchors Take All Stars For 3rd Straight Riding the crest of st victory wave the Anchors rolled up their third straight win in the Indus- trial League as they swept the All Stars aside at the Victoria Park last night 6-2. The steady pitclllilg of big George Ayers was a big factor in the vic- tory as the hefty portsider limited the All-Stars to four hits while his team-mates collected nine hits of‘! “Boo" Maccailunt. Both hur- lers were credited with eleven strikeouts. Wee McTague made no mistake when he picked up young Tex Cochrane to handle the initial sack. Cochrane justified the faith of his manager to date. coming through with timely hits in each of the three contests played to date. Dinny Doyle made his init- ial appearance of the season last night and was a. familiar figure in the field. although he had little opportunity to show his wares. Freddie Bradley 1s expected tofur- ther strengthen the Anchors. Boo MacCallum pitched "heads- up“ bnll for the losers. experienc- lng greatest difficulty in the sec- ond inning when the Anchors capitalized on a series of errors to amass flve runs. . Line-ups All Stars: I-LMcInnis. 2b; J.Gil- lis, 3b; E. McNelll, 1b; W. Whnlen, shortstop: C. Ward. ch: S. ward. c.: H. Currie. lf.; M. Carmichael, rf.; B. McCallum. pitcher. Anchors: J. Stanley, iiI.»\1\'l.L)A ll‘. l 1 Suspensions, Fines Clarnped But Der Maxie ls Real Loser a newspaper picture of a some- what chubby Champion enjoying a shower bath and hurled it to the floor exclaiming: looks. I've spent hunting him and look what I get." York is affiliated that any boxer l automaticuiliyi scheduled bout. Col. title against Kilpairick, President of Madison Fh Square Garden. would not ment. ficially weighed in at 196. three pounds more than hc scaled when he knocked out Louis last summer. graphers and iicwsreci eight. boxers scheduled to fight in tonight's preliminaries iverc weighed. physicians and fit. MocCornlaiw Bees. 2; ‘Higgins. Red Sox: Bonura. Tigers. one each. EPBELIFE w?“ .317- Pound. 3b; D. Doyle. LOOK APQJHD coRueR-s, AND SHOULD STOP-M ctouvs 21.01 "n-oe vtsiou o: omen WiLL SAIL INTO ‘IHE STRNDSPHERE AND OBTAHJ THE ONLY RECORD OF ‘THIS! MAPORTANT h m k.I\1--l{‘l-nA.‘ NEWWu. OTHER SPURT \ o..." TalksiHarder Harls Indians]; Scribes Dizzy |" "P0P 0f " Boston Bees Blank And Manager "It was a rotten decision." Schmeiing said, "they have made a joke of the heavyweight title. A suspension means nothing, bah!" Sehmeling, who says he was per- sonally assured by Chairman Pheian that the Commission would "protect" him. thinks Braddockb title should have been vacated. "I would nv- claim it.” he said. "But they should name me the leading contender and then run a. tournament todecide who will fight me." Schmeling W115 :0 upset he seized “That's how your Champion almost $30,000 m Refrains From Comment Except to say that the decision cancels tonight's John Reed com- "I am awaiting the decision of Federal Courts in Philadelphia an order "P The Commission ordered the $5,- an 000 cheque posted by Braddock as . divided between While Max posed for the photo- inen. the 1 duly Schmeling was examined by two found physically Retains Title Dan MaeCoi-mack. Soul-is‘ light heavyweight boxing cham- pion. scored a l0 round decis- ion over "Kid" Niekerson of Charlottetown at the eastern centre last night. Nickel-son was knocked through the ropes in the second and third rounds and the bell saved him in the re 16th. I). Kelly, Bear Rivenknoek- ed out Charlie MacDonald. (‘hepsotuz after one minute and 35 seconds of boxing in the third round of a scheduled six round semi-final. W. MaeLeod. North Hamp- ton, P.E.l., knocked out R. Chevcrie, Snuris.- in the second round n! their scheduled flve rounder in one preliminary. N. Cheveric. Souris, took a. decis- ion over Dan Mullins, St. Pet- ers, after flve rounds of slug- ging while Kid Todd. Snuris, and Young ltiacConnackSour- is. fought to a three round draw. of at Home Run Sluggers Yesterday's flamers: Berger, Plet. Vhite Sox; Greenberg. The Leaders: Greenberg. Tiger's, 12.- Bartel]. Giants. 11; Selkirk. Yankeea 10; Medwlck. Cardinals. 9; Fnxx. Red Sox. 8; Walker. Tig- ers. 8; Ott. Giants. 8. league Totals: American 160. Na- Cochrane. 1b: J. Chlpman, c.: H. Gaudet, 2b.; Walsh, l.f.; N. Mum- LGEBKEEJIQIS- P- Major Hoople Mv uucte W/é ‘PEALH wem up g NA6TRATO5PHERE é ‘BALLOON once»- A ‘F06 awe up AND HE WAS cos-r vow. mass owe, l 711-11214 "rs-rev 1716- a cavemen HE HAD FCRéDTTEM -ro utms ‘ri-Vnuci-idn "nova/sup HAD seem FLOATING AROUND 1.114s A i<i-rs,Ai.i_-n-iA-r - ‘TIME! . ' and tugging cheerfully on his bright red suspenders. Dizzy Dean sat down in his hotel room today and won the Major League pop-off championship year running. hearted over the indefinite suspen- sion plastered on him by President Ford Prick of the National Lea- gue. tortcal blast that was right brutal with the King's lifnllish at timPi but free from all suspicion of a balk. nobody. no time and,no how". he reporters. F‘rick's term as President of ‘the National League expire anyway?" “At the end of the sen-son." he was told, "but you can bet your gol! clubs he'll be re-elected". "Well. I‘m not gonna help him" "All the guy wants to d0 is t0 make a heel outa me and a hero outa himself". A little fellow. who said he rep- resented a movie company- Jumped quiet. Then he P195111“ Wm‘ U“ reporters: “You fellows can't quote him or. hero out of you if you pop 0f! like this? You reporters ought to be ashamed of yourselves". kiest reporter in the room. interview you next". Dizzy agreed that such should be the proper prOCedure and popped away: _ "I always have been slow 51.511- 1“; papers as you fellows knflW. But this time I'm gonna brflik "11 gning at Dr. F. C. Dougaivs office asked to be on hand as consider- able business will be transacted tivitles. v l 6-2 Victory Over Yankees; Pirates 0f the year 6-0. The defeat cut. only a h, game from the Piratgg 1.12.19 1 a since the rest of the ciicult Bid rained out. i‘ Rovers Mee A l’ t I'| LE f) Team Tonigh BY PAUL MICKELSON Associated Press Sport! Will" NEW YORK. June Ii-Coatless NEW YORK, June Ii-The In- l dians pulled up to three games of the American League lead at Cleveland today by whipping the pace-setting New York Yankees 6-2 behind Mel Harderis effective pitching. Although touched for l1 hits, three of them by Lou Gehrig. Harder held the Yankees score- less through the first. six innings to chalk up his third victory. Lefty Gomez started for the Yanks but gave way to Blubber Malone in the eighth inning. after being lifted for a pinch-hitter. The erratic southpaw gave up three rims in his seventh-inning tour of duty and Malone allowed the In- dians the other three in ‘the eighth. The Yanks lost the services of their sluuglng right-fielder, Can- adian-born George Selkirk who pulled up with a charley-hoxse in the second inning and will be out of the lineup for a week. for the seventh Old Diz was far. from down- Instead. he let loose an ora- -____. There is plenty at stake in to night's softball encounter an“... the Rovers and Brigade m.‘ Rovers by winning would takeoKt-Q the league lead while should u. Army boys capture the 113mg league will then result ii: all fou teams being tied for thr- [Op 5m. JUNIOR GADIIZ ' In a regular junior, truffle i.“ night played at the Holy ittdeeiil er diamond the Dndcers final: snapped out of their lflsint! gym" bY taking the league lflfllijng p’. quires into camp by a 111 0 3cm 'I‘hc game was a free hii'1ii1.q;r3i throughout with the ii-aiut ha. fling closely the entire d1. auce. I "1 ain't gonna sign no papers for ared to a room full of newspaper “Say. when does this Chisox Topple Bodon outed Dizzy. Homers by Zeke Bonus-a and Tony Piet and the wildnms of four Boston pitchers enabled Chicago Wliltc sox to score an 11-4 win at home today. Vern Kennedy went the route for his season's fifth victory. yield- ing only six hits. Plnky Higgins. Boston third baseman. drove in three of the four runs with a first- inning single and a fourth-inning to Diz and advised him to keep Mediums I Onarhinqlhnxhnlpaium this stuff. It'll ruin him." ‘Ruin me. hell’, said D12. “I E19‘- a forfeit to be - l schmmng and the Garden‘ 11:11}: gdfstiiebteillle brlgizioixizt giggle hotly/lg. Ferrell W11‘ cho=ed b tl m’? Thar; mg‘ i Prior m the actual reading o‘ ers" ‘ Chicagoans in a five- tin fy thm "“""i“"' u ' Imam u“ “°°'S'°“' °"“’Y“""g “m” M‘ “i113? Dizi’ pleaded the movie inning a't'ick “rum iricludedouBron: Pain cues otff as per Schedum schmenng was M‘ man, "how can I make a movie urzfs seventh homer of the sea- a SOIL Senators Defeat Tigers ‘Hey. pipe down". said the hus- “Wtfll Washington Senators at Detroit took advantag~ of the wildness of Jake Wade and Vic Sorrell, De- troit pitchers, today to score a. 5-4 victory. A pass to Buddy Lewis by Sorrel! in the eighth forced Joe Kuhel home with the‘ winning run. I-lnnk Greenberg. Detroit first “KING 0F PAIN" IE records for not signing. Why should baseman. tmrrhed his‘ 12th home MCEWEN 1 t yself on the spot for Prick. run of the season in the fourth. ' y - Tllluqllll? baseball and settle down The Tigers filled the bases with “flea/Ice Slaptlmnnu on a farm first". none out in their half of the 19 Y" ‘"1 ' "m" _j___._ eighth but could not score. The 33%: KG 1 d a p t '1 w 1 m - 5 ' INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE p33... roppe e {o} our EXPERT REPAIR sica ice Open from 7 A. M. until midnight daily. Emergency calls wlll gladly be taken care of at all hours. Phone 110. We handle Irving Oil pro- ducts exclusively. CLAUDE McEWEN Manager MEETING THIS EVENING There will be a special meeting the Industrial League this ev- BEES BLANK PIRATES NEW YORK. June 3-1011 Fbtte, Boston Bees 30-year-old right- hander. stretched his personal winning streak to four straight at Boston today a: he handed Pitts- burgh Pirates their first shutout 7.30. Team representatives are garding the league's future ac- You Are Not Gambling WHEN YOU BUY THE OLD PRODUCT, FAVORED BY GEN- " ERATIONS OF ISLANDERS OUR BLACK TWIST CHEWING TOBACCO IT HAS THE SAME LIVELY FLAVOR WHICH FIRST MADE IT POPULAR Hickey & Nicholson CHARLOTTETOWN I B. WILLIAMS _ _ _. . » '7 $'.S-$T~ ONE OF YOU snv HERE, AND wuss; 1 atowmv WHISTLE, ctoss m on ‘EM! was macaw uses/am. HA5 eo-r 1o 5T0?! , V; I] x c? ‘ - 502M ‘THIRTY vEAQs ‘TOO soon. \