.9 n >- 1 I 1 .Ie '~ v1 l ocrosan 3. 'm4 _ _ ,_; f 1.-_=‘ ee _ p , _ 7 _ lHh Ll~lARDO’l IETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE SEVEN . \ I ' I 4 aowl.lNo aoxuvc “WK” BASKETBALL NEWS MSPORTW I QI ORID . if ha l e in i W- V ¢ ' 1' - ' 'W I ' I VT' `i ’*w If W' i“ II I Stage .Set For World Series _ IIIITSIIJE $TAIIS’Capac1ty Crowdil EIIMINATEII is Expected Ati IN GULF PIAY Baseball Classic’ Diziy Dean In Preliminary Appearance At Detroit York Rifle Club Prize Shoot The closing shoot of the Club known as the Prize shoot was held on Wednesday and though not as 111101? lfiended as expected was nevertheless e most enjoyable time throughout. 'rbs weather was ex- cellent and splendid scores were inode- Firim began at s a. ni. and continued till 5.30; the closeness of the scores necessitated two shoot- oifs, the first between W. L. Croc- kett and W. Walsh_when Crockett won out and the second between P. J. Landrlgan and W. D. Cooke for the Trophy in the Ladies Chal- lenge and in which W. D. Cooke was winner. From the range the sportsmen all gathered in the York Hail when their wives and best girls had ple- pased a most sumptuous supper in quality and abundance previously unequalled after which with a short interval for rest. the Secre- earyIM.Brownssslstedbythe Capt. H. T. Vesey proceeded with s short program and the distribu- tion of prizes. Brief congratulatory remarks were made by P. Hooper. H. H. I-Iome, A. Gormley, P. Landrigan and P. Brodie who gave a short stretch of Islanders in the Riel Re- bellion. The Secretary thanked all those who had contributed prizes and recommended patronizing them when occasion arose; the list of contributors were read as follows: C. W. Patterson, J. W. Johnston, Prowsc Bros. Lid., Moore dz Mc- Leod Ltd., A. Horne & Co., Stanley, Shaw and Peardon, A. J. McCabe, IW. H. vesey. J. H. Judson, Col. I". I. Andrew and the Markers Croc- llett and Watts. The prizes were displayed on two tables in all 58 including four cups or trophies. Mr. H. H. Home, City. the win- ner of the D. C. R. A. Silver Balver with the fine score of 312 was first called amid a good cheer and pre- sented with his winners acknow- ledgement as the Solver had not yet arrived from Ottawa: the other prizes in the Salver Series were awarded to W. L. Crockett, W. Walsh and W. Button in order of score. The Five-day Aggregate Cup 'was won by E. T. Brown on the high score of the season of 46'! fol- 'lowcd by W. D. Cooke and H. T. Nesey. The Four-day Cup was won by W. H. Vesey followed by W. E. Hardy and I. M. Brown. Five special aggregate prizes were awarded to Juniors in order oi score as follows: E. H. Vesey, I. McDonald, G. Jackson, W. McCal- lum and L. Bryenton. In the Ladies Challenge, the two- 'win Trophy, went to W. D. Cooke after the shoot off and the first lady took the Ladies Cup for the year; the drawing in order of score resulted as follows: W. D. Cooke-as-.Miss Dorothy Mwallum. P. Hooper-33-Mrs. W. E. Hardy. P. J. Landrlgan-38-Miss Anna Love. E. T. Brown-32-Miss Beulah Vescy. A. Gormley-32-Mrs. P. Brodie. G. M. Moore-31-Miss Mary Ferguson. H. H. Home--31-Mrs. Herb Ves- ¢Y H. T. Vesey-31-|Mlrs. F. I. An- drew. R.. A. Vesoy-31-Mrs . H. H. Home. W. Button-30-Mrs. I. Thompson W. L. Crockett-30--lvifs. E.` J. Nesey. ' W. Walsh-do-Mrs. Archie vesey In the Main Match Gormley led 'with 101 and E. T. Brown arrived at the century mark for the first time both receiving congratulations. lin this match every entrant -il awarded c prius, which they choose of score. ........¢...... 101 2, 5, sndeooyards- .100 *_* - I Steals Show .Ball Park \ 011. Associated Press Hporis Writer Dli.'1‘ROIT, Mich.. Oct. 2.-Detroit lot its first eyeful ot the celebrated Dean boy! today, Jerome Dizzy and Paul Dany, and the hilarious twirl- ing twins positively stole ths_ show in the preliminary guest perform- ance of the invading Bt. Louis Car- dinals. .. POD-eyed crowds waited for hours for s glimpse of them st their notei, brushing aside such momentarily forgotten heroes as John "Pepper" Martin, 1931 wild horse of the usage; I thin thatched Frankie Frisch, with' his record of seveln previous world series: “Ducky Wucky" Medwick, the clouting youngster, and even Lefty "Wild Bill" Haliahau, the red-hot tip about town to pitch the first game Wednesday. Dizzy was good in all his appear- ances, with brother Paul trailing him silently like s. faithful stooge, but be gave his absolute best at the ball park whenthc Cardinals, fresh from their overnight ride here from Bt. Louis, came trudging in as thc Tig- ers wound up their last practice. Bchoolboy Rowe, the six four. four inch youngstcr who carries z *ost of Mickey 0ochra.ne’s pitching hopes, was finishing up his chore for the cameras on one side and Hank Greenberg, equally young and gigan- tic first baseman was giving a sedate demonstration for the motion plc- tures of how a. ball should be hit. » Into that gentle scene drooped Dizzy, in street clothes, leading the Cardinal pack. He grabbed s bat and pushed Greenberg from the plate. “Heave me a few, fella.” he yelled to Del Baker, Tiger coach who was helping the situation along by pitch- ing to Greenberg. The startled Bak- er could do nothing else. Dean slashed a half dozen balls to left field. Then there was a sharp crack. "I dons broke this all to pieces," grinned Dizzy, looking ai; the club. "Why you great big stiff", roared Baker from the mound, "t.hat’s my best fungo stick." Deen wouldn’t take s practice swing, just for the benefit of the lsnsemen. “I sin't hittin’ at no wind this series," he insisted. "Throw me a bali." Dizzy has been sitting in Mani-801' Frisch's lap, figuratively, ever since he clinched the pennant for the Cards Bundaywith his second shut- out of Cincinnati Reds in three dayi. pleading for the right to start the opening series game tomorrow. Frisch won’t tell him yes, definitely. Meanwhile he‘s dying several slow deaths in his anxiety for the word. "I went at 'em." he Dali "film `away. That Rowe is taller than mc. I1 guegg but rm the best pitcher." __ r 98 Cooke I-1.1-Iornc T. Vesey .............. Sutton ........ ...... H. Judson .............. J. Landrigan L. Crookett E. Jenkins ... H, VQSGY ..¢».~.»4....» 1, _Andrew H. vesey .. M. Moore 1°. Hardy Taylor _................ W. Johvston Jackson Mayne ............ ... I. M. Brown ... A. McLean W. McCallum I. Thompson .............. Lloyd vesey I. McDonald ... _ EP. Brodie ....... ........ L. Bryenton .............. -A E, 0,- Love This completed the Prim before closing Mir. P. Hooper mov- ed the hearty vote of thank! ID the ladies for the excellent supper which' was replied ic by Mrs- P~ Brodie. Votes of thanks were also tendered to W. D. Cooke ss Rondo officer for the dev and the Merk- crs for careful service. After sins- ing the Nstionsi Anthem 4 the happy gathering dispersed unid cheers and good wishes for the Club' -5’ E E Q .=-_cis-E=_2?'€~‘.€.€!=1r‘i”§:v.=~_g;ii;c;!v as 95 94 94 91 91 91 91 I so 89. 8283835 81 '10 '79 _ 'IB '78 'IB '18 'I6 '14 'I2 65 61 but thermometer. (Also. llilvla clcsnmlas "non: You w|louc"'i “. I Been hitting the dgarettes pretty hard? And having trouble with tongue-bite. l1\15l¢y° voice, and after-taste? Maybe the fault lie! in how you smoke. Keep smoke cool . . . by pulling lightly in lighting up. by sm0l¢il18 slowly, and not too far down. Make doubly sure of cool, comfortable smoke by smoking . menthol-cooled Spuds. 10% cooler by the co for rolling your own. l5c the po<=h8¢-l T . -l"l'l _:.9 ___ REAIJYTII IIETIR Canadiens’ Goal-get I, ter~ Reported l Tired I Of Being Tossed` Around In Deal. FULIETIN MONTREAL. Oct, z_(C_p_) -Howie Morenz, peerless centre of Montreal Canadiens, tonight reiterated his intention of re. ‘mm ‘Wm 3101952! because he hed Wh "favored" in the sis. °'B¢l|0u of trades. His restaur- Nl lauslness would keep mm xalzlffili the Stratford ge;-gk MONTREAL. oct. 2.-Excitement W" “U-Sed in Sports circles hem to- day by a published statement that Howard Morenz. the restaurateur had decided he would no longer conf tinue his brilliant calling ag Home M°renz. the seal-setter. 1 But tonight Leo Dandlirand, How. cs leader and close friend during the centrema.n’s meteoric career in the National Hockey Lgngue exp,-es. Sed Skepticism that Howie had actu- ally reached such a decision. Howie has not even mentioned it tomeandlamsureifhehad any intentions of retiring from the game I would be one of the first to whom he would come for consultation," stated Dandurand, managing-dlrec- tor of Montreal Canadiens with, which team Morenz has played dur. 1118 his entire professional hockey life, a period oi’ 11 years. I-Iowie’s statement, as published. was categorical enough. “rm through." he was quotes. ‘I feel that I've meant 9. lot to the game and to the National Hockey League. I'vo Given. my best for ll years, ever since I came up to the major league as a. recruit out of Stratford. Now I’m ready to quit. "I'm tiled Of being tossed around in this deal and that without being consulted. They never seem to think that I'might have something to say about where I should play or whether I’m even ready to play again." Dandurand commented: “He has played for me ll years and all this talk of him being ‘tossed about’ is rather silly. I know, Howie well enough to state that if he had any thoughts of retiring that we would talk it over together first. I was in my office all day today and I nm sure that before coming to such an important decision he would have at least visited me." Morenz could not-be reached to- night for his next word on the sub- ject. His name has been mentioned frequently oi’ late in a possible trade to Chicago Black Hawks, the same deal which sent goalie Lorne Chabot , to the Stanley Cup holders. INTERMEDIATE P I A Y II F F