' ' 30. 1911. irther Bowling L Last Night v vir' r- Wilson Miirrpy iiml in" ... ...... ni,,. Marinee limns ivf. Winners (! .-iihiT prDvaUlflg. v.-cre played last Canadian National t. (s oi-iatlon'a Lawn , , , nc Results were as ik. 20; Jack Paul (id ft A . irri.. I) vs. n-Murray. iiiuii- A m pure. 24: r . a. uogers, j f SO SF.UOF.ANT MAJOR? Li.r r N. May 30: (CP) i smles Army the top- uin missioned officer Muster Sergeant "an lob is general A 4 m i-ve it ;iitm i,. not Dublithed ' c:?!:.d by the Liquor Control Hoard o by th Government of Britiiil Columbia. Central Hotel Central Hotel Annex 150 United Rooms "ot Water steam Baths D'nins Room in Connection C li Blark. I'roprletress 'rcsh Local Ftaw and Pasteurized Milk VALENTIN DAIRY I'llONM CS7 YES-' e KfPair Waler Pipes, Roofs, Woodwork, Stoves Connected, Etc. JJjJ Burners Cleaned $U0 thlmneys Swept $2.50 Handy man home service I'lionc BLACK 735 Make Our store Your Shopping Headquarters faction Ouaranteed 1'HONE 547 t?m Lee & Son '"HISE OF FINE FOODS" WL$T ' ' . .. .at miiiy .... T32 daily RZ77S' PAOE ITVJ WRECKAGE OF PLANE IN WHICH HESS FLED GERMANY This Is part of the wreckage of the Messerschmltt 110 in whlnh K udolf Hess No. 3 Nazi, fled from Germany to the safety of Scotland. Hess balled out of the plane when It ran short of fuel and parachut ;d to safety near the Duke of Hamilton's estate. STONE'S WIN OVER DOCK Second Softball Fixture of Season Played. Last Night to be hit in the eye while catchln? catches by A. Simonsen In centre behind the bat and had to be re- field. placed by A. Murray. : Umpires for the. evening were Simonsen, wenaeu, fciyies. bcore- , Batteries for Stones were Schroe- keeoers were D. Montesano and Workers. Flt:h and Thompson. Downey. pitchers, and catchers Jo Sato and i Murray. I INTERMEDIATE ... i.. ........ ..... ....w BASEBALL I' The same between Grotto and ii. i .1 .T-i- .rv-i v.j , Rn.rh!tn i.pa?iie nxiure so uo-ODcr- iniuniuTi. me luuucuuiws nau nu.- t .u- ' j i .uii !...ui in .ini., v,t n-mD -riiBlatlve will Dlay Watts & Nlckerson. game game last lasc night nigm Stone's &iones Clothiers ujoimers j ,score score was was 8 o to iu 3. o. The iuc winners muo out-; The Watts & - Nlckerson - line-up in- . .... . .. . ti i. ' An DnpftiV Postuk. A vr ar Gurvich riitrvinn Bill. Rill woo ucu aw an ' . ...w i o - - - . Mooter Scroll which will ac-.ompany the Torch on its way across Canada and thence .lre 7i ti for nresentotlon . to Prime Minister Winston Churchill as a symbol of Canada's i over the Auanuc faM bppn Bpsldes contalnln a message to the Brl- oyal determ natlon.w iw i the slgnaturesof Federali Provlnclal and Municipal officials. Ush leader, the bcroi i specially-constructed cylinder which has been built Into the SaTtiieirch. Addrwsed to the Right Honorable Winston Churchill and written in both Eng. lish and French, the text of the Scroll wjjj c 1Ul and thelr A1UeSi wui fight on to vic tory SmfuW i Ions IS toilsome the road. Given the tools we shall finish the job. Canada's Victory Loan 1M1. Ij Britain. Within thU Torch Is contained this Scroll. Upon -Canada ca fries J of tne Governor-General of Canada and the Prime Minister the this Scrol are e Premiers of the nine provinces and the mayors of the cities. This SSS the Pledge at the Canadian people signed, sealed and delivered, that wes ail ?1 M o5 toend And that theend shall bo Victory SPORT CHAT w i, nas w lost ltttiP unie iavor favor suite uic war v.ux Dry Dock will be unable to field and where meetings ler i- nnM In fin ifVit'. TntfirnmH ntp ' .... . . I'i r Ion All Star Armir tMm wrns an PY- a team 111 "ui"6o i..i.v.....v.. SPORTS AT I KITWANGA Skeena Hiver Village Centre of Attractions On Victoria Day , Results Of Games Anil ! Sports. KPIWANGA, May 30; . One of ihe biggeit Victoria Day celebrations ever held in Kltwanga took Llice las: Baturday. drawing a nlaces were represented by thelc teams In various sports and tntf; vldual athletes. Ihe winners In tha sport com petitions were: Eoftbalt Just, Cedarvaie, chal-ietvie iufo anil $5 lh zxrli; second Hdzeltcn, $10 in cr h; third, Kit- Cedarvale, eleven; Hazelton, eight: Kllwanga. five. i Baseball first, Cedarvaie, cuu land. $10 In cash; second, Hazelton, 1$10 cash; third, Gitanyow, $5 cash. The score of ' the deciding game was 15 toiB in lixvor oi ueuaraio I in ten innings, . Football First,' Kltwanga, chal ienge -up and $l0 ln caSh; sec- ond kltzegukte. $10, In cash; third, nitanvow. sd m casn. r.ii since the Boys-Larry wegei. howara row- are held almost every week, regu-'l ens ,uk, nace-nnuy I n,,ctu Mton" In t.hp fiftH then fourth Inning when the Clothiers 1 behind the bat. The Army also U.S. Public Health officials are cheering their dog as It chases the , ! and testing the possibilities of tannic I netted three more runs to cinch used two pitchers-Growler electric hare. the game 8 to 5 Jo Sato, playing 1 Purdy. Chats caught. Features of acid as a cure for poison Ivy In-: ( for the losers, had the misfortune this game were a coupie tu mcc .a.i.n,.. MASTER SCROLL FOR VICTORY LOAN TORCH ! Stadiums usually are well-filled before the kennelmen havp their charges ready for the first race. H Is a noisy holiday scene as people come and go, placing bets with their book-makers or making entiles on t their race card from the totalUator board. The dogs, wearing brlghtr colored numbered ,coats. are. led around the track before each race, then placed one by one ln the six-cage trap. The hare, running along I a rail ln the centre of the track,, makes one circuit and when It' 'passes through the trap the-dogs are released. These sleek; stream-j .lined animals move so quickly It, sometimes Is almost Impossible to' see them and an electric eye regis-' ters the finish of every race. Greyhounds are the only dogs which will . trun consistently merely for-the Joy, of racing. Experiments were made . .with other dogs Afghan wolfr i hounds were one breed testedbut ; invariably trainers returned to, greyhounds. Dogs, are graded for each race so that animals which can travel a certain distance In 24.5 I seconds won't compete against j those which travel the same dis-1 I tance ln 25.9 seconds. As a result of this grading competition Is . keen. ,i : , -ir, s are as weu Known in. 1115- iland as Mhn of War. Equipoise arid Sea Biscuit are known to horse rac- j l ing followers ln Canada and the United States'. Best known was Mick the Miller whom trainers say depended more on his brains than' ori his sneed ln wlnnlnc races. Born iln Ireland In 1926, he was brought ' to London by a priest who pald'$112 I for him.. He won almost every ein.win nt. least once and was the Idol of race track crowds, lie rah a "command" race for King George V., was filmed and when he died in 1936 was mounted and placed on exhibition at the National History Museum ln London. There are several classics for greyhounds, most famous of which 'is the Greyhound Derby which drew ,a crowd of 90,000 when It was run first in 1927. Other classics Include the Laurels, the St. Leger and the icesarewlch. Rationing has not af-ifected seriously feeding of grey-, hounds. In peacetime they recelv-ed boiled sheep's head or beef; now thev eat cooked horseflesh or other meat unfit for human consumption. VITAL HOME RUNS NEW YORK, May 30: (CP) Home runs are damaging Items when the opposition's hitting them. tin the Yankee's first 28 games ,New York pitchers served up 21 jhome run balls ln 12 games arid lost nine of them. Der- 1 crowd of ,300 visitors from various jor places including uien voweu, Max elton. Kitzegukla Kltwanga, Gil- the day cu.ij oi M. II. Bright, president.. Joe Williams, anyow and Cedarvaie all. of whfch manager; James Fowler, assistant manager; Harold Sinclair, secret ary. Harold Sinclair was master of ceremonies both on the field and in the dance hall. Music was by Stanley Williams and Sterling Johnson oiyhestras. In r-Yinmo nf th rt'.tnensarv Of wanga. V) Ml. easa. iota, rim.v refreshments on on the the field field were Mrs. M, II. Bright, Mrs. Joe wll-wu..w xeiisun and Mrs. iujX Sinclair. The eelebration extencfccJ over two days and the ioiai admissions and other rcvenu; amounted ;to $391.03 with expenditure of $339.80, leaving a surplus of $51.83 for the sports committee . Among the prominent Individual visitors for the celebration were iiiuu, vj.v-.ijv", v" v... jr ang M.rS. AUSlm iviuniicwa, wanga defeated Kitzegukla two to Tommy Muldoe, Joshua. Campbell nothing 'In, the deciding game. and Dick of Hazelton; Ar- Rt:u!t's of the field sports were thur sampare, Bert. Russell and as follows: ' nat wtiiinm nf KUwanea: Wal- i Greyhound racing, always popu-' Girls, fiva .years and under- ter and Arthur DoUse of' Kltwan-'lar with the British working man, Norma Wale, Beatrlce.Benson cooL RAIDED VICARAOE EiHISlCL, May 30: -CP) It larly draw large ; crowds Won iiw - Yard Dashljoe Daniels, Per- would not be in the public Interest war there were 14 tracks In Lon- ; t0 mak a further statement said iaon oo m hA-intifnl siinnv dav the government spoKesman ques- defeated Dry Dock Steel Workers jhlt the losers 8 to 1. Kellet. pitch- c uctes Arney. , most of tneSe are still operating ' U"n"oym"n? of ' aU 1 Uoned regarding a police raid 6n by a score of 8 to 5 In an Interest- Ing for the winners, was replaced , Vuckovlch, Pavllkls, H. Montesano, J Men and women from stories apkJ" "f"10 the premises of Rev: G. H. Dymock, tat encounter. Hits In this game In the third Inning by young B 'Long and Killas. ie with soldiers, sailors and 'L llttee ln charse vicar of St. Bede. here. . n .v.n f(a iinftl th lfnr(mn was in his USUal DOSltiOn I UlaUN IVY lUhb 1 o Id, mini GIVES CANADA JVJNGS What ran you do to provide thfl planes, to trnin nml -piip our airmen 'for'.lmttle?' Ypu 'can provide tli money, by watching every penny you spend, .by': tutting all you can. Personnl thrift in utidly iimMbiarv now.- Kverv dollar von ,cart siwrn i needed" -for. Canada's: WftrXTorU.. iBily'"". Victory. Bond and War Savings Jlfi-' fT 7.1u J '-"P. Vp"!'! li!'JA'i'.ni. Set asid some ! ' , money pacn mom n ,u meei ine n nij-.n r-( 1111 n iiii.k "7, "("' Infer! ViiaP.I, aVjidi'on our hHiMlsV lVj'srllnisliiitT. .'.. Thl book will htlp you tv. Ilia lloyal Hni.k Family lluitcrt tiiNik'Httaws yuu luiw to ltiilKft yiNir liHniH, Ikiw to M ty Uiilml iM.uitihir. Auk Utr m fmt uiy at your. iHwrral llruiM'h. ifSiaitoAKorCanada rrlnce Rupert tea ICE 1 Just Completed! New Ice Storage Method Ensuring only low temperature ice throughout the fishing season Fishermen are Invited to Inspect Our Reconstructed Ice Storage Low Temperature Dry Ice Now on Sale by Canadian Fish.& Cold Storage Co. Ltd. British Columbia lit ft'