ocronaa 26.1939 fliiéiii’ ' i, ' l .'i v _o " Brooklyn Dodgers Manager-Getliffe And Maple Leafs Banking OnTCanzoneri ' Suggests Tu Series lnio rn ing World Free - for - all By Gayle Talbot Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Oct. zfw-lAPi-Never at a loss for an idea, Gengrgl Manager Larry MucPhsil of Brooklyn Dodgers came out today in fawn- n! turning the World baseball clubs. Series into a f ree-for-all between the l6 big league specifically MocPhsil said he would suggest st the mlmwlngfl- meeting in Cincinnati that there be of the customary one. thus settling the National and American Leagues Under the MgcPhail plan the World Series between the flag win- ning clubs would be played cxactly as at present. Then there also would be a playoff between the second place teams, the third placcrs, and so on down to a fierce inter-league struggle between, soy, the Phiilies and St. Louis Browns "Each game ln the filter-league series would count equally,” Larry proposes, “and the league ‘winning the greater number of games would hold fo one year a tropny emblem- atic of eague supremacy. Dalhousie ,Wins Halifax Rugb)’, Title WOLFVIILE, N. 8., Oct. 25 —(C- P)-—Dai.housie University won the Halifax City Rugby League today when Acadia swamped the Wander- ers. 26-6. The smooth-passing cOlleg_ filo backfield broke through the rmderers continually to score, Defeat of the Wanderers today made it impossible for any of the lqllllds 1n the four-team circuit to Qllht playoffs next f‘ ‘ ‘ _ Ingtgpd the question or supremacy between with a vengeance. Whites Hold Reds T0 Tie In Second Tilt KIRKLAND LAKE. Ont. Oct, 125—(CP)-—Led by young Billy Tsy. or and Red Heron. the Whites partially avenged a. Tuesday drub- bl-"K by holding the Blues to a 3-3 tie here tonight in the second game of a northern Ontario hockey tour ggtgggillnlfgaglugllle leafs of the The Blues lid $352 i2fl.#§.'$’.;i“§$l° macher. g n Schu- Gordie Drillon, who ed h goals in the first gamséoishonte r: gain tonight with two goals. bcth zYIldHSSlStS by big Bucfao McDon- MECHANICAL MAIDS VANCOUVER -rCPl -- Mom;- Cycles and their maintenance are being Studied by 100 Pacific Coast match the total of m '1 a by the Dal fifteen ii/oliicli phimpfi through t-he schedule without drop- ping a. game. women under the Canadian Wo- orgzi nixed preparation for men's Training coy-pg six weeks ago in war work. 6 Ch um up wif/i There's no decoy bout tllis tobacco Old Churn is the genuine thing-a Ycal tobacco with o coming, alluring fragrance in every pull‘ of it. No mutter how you take it~cut coorso for the pipe or cut fine for rolling your own-you'll agree that there's no other tobaocojust like Old Chum. Now, with more tobacco in every package at no extra cost, with lhs $4 lb. tin Ivduud In 80¢ and a handy pocket pouch a! 15¢, Old Chum gives you plus value every time. OLD CHUM THE TOBACCO OF QUALITY Z QUT OUR WAY — SHOOT TH’ LIGHT QUICK .' QUICK! THIS -- NO, HE WENT THIS WAY- BIOCJEST MOUNTAIN LION 1 avsw. 65E" QUi§K-' 1H’ LIGHTS .' Tn LIGHTS .'.’ RUNNING MATES trimmed the Vlhites‘ _.il)l£' part of the Royal Navy busy Robinson Sign With Canadians MONTREAL. Oct. 25 —(CP) — Ray Getliffe and Earl Robinson, two newcomers to Montreal Canad- iens of the National Hockey League this year slawd their contracts to- day. Getllffe wlm with Boston Bruins last. season and Robinson with Chi- cago. Manager Jules Dugal announced tonight that he had reduced his squad, sending all amateur candi- dates with the exception of Joe Ben. olt back to their teams and Shipping four men down to New Haven of the International-American League. Sent down to the minor league club were Allan shields, rugged de- fence veteran who had bcen Expect- ed to gain n berth with the Canad- iens. Gus Mancuso, Rhys Thomp5on and Armand Raymond. B9110“. formerly with Trail Smoke Eatrrs won an extended trial with the Hnbitants on the strength o; m5 brilliant showing in practicg Remember When (By The Eflllflfllflll Press) Charles A Comislcey, the only man li’l baseball ‘.0 rise from a playing position to be sole owner of a major-league team, Chicago eight ycars ago today. President and owner of the White Sox of the American League from 1900 until his death Cnmislccv saw the Sox win two llvorld seliaxs, in 1903 and i017. only War Survey (By The Canadian Press) Thcprcscucc of German surface WBFSlIlPS on lite high seas as evid- enced by the sflzurc of the Am- erican freighter (Jib; of Flint im- poses a heavy task on the Royal N. _, the task of hunting fast well-armed vessels over tile seas of the world. Dastructlvc as thcv are, sub- marines present loss of a worry than surface vcsseis. They can not travel so fast nor so far. When local-ed they can be attacked with impunity by destroyers. The pocket battleship Deutsch- lnlld, however, might do a lot of da. "e bcfore being located and ‘iiilli. It might keep a consider- chnsinrz it for weeks. While t-h-e City of Flint was seiz- ( in the North Atlantic further operations of the Deuischland and other surface ships .of the ‘(Ever-man navy may be expected in other quartcrs. Despite its armament and spcod it. will not, be healthy for the Deutsolilzlnd to strike more than once in the some area. In the first great war Ger- man raiders. notably the Emden, put the Royal Navy to consider- able effort and cost before they were destroyed. At that time the German authorities valued their operations loss for the acual dam- age they inflicted than for the fact that they kept British ships busv hunting them which would otherwise have been concentrated in the north sea and for their ter- rorlstlc effect. A blew here and a blow there was corsidord helpful in under- mining the prestige of Britain's naval power and for every ship act "v destroyed while the raid- ers were afloat a number were frightened into remaining in port. FROM HORSES TO GUNS NEWMARKEI‘ England —(UP)— J. W. Sidebottom, racehorse trainor, has been appointed Battery Ser- gennt-Major i-n the anti -al.rcraft section of the Royal Artillery. BACK T0 son. ASHRJDGE. England -(CP) — Henry Cotton, British golfer, has been closer lo the soil than ever re- cently. He has been doing national service work as a ploughboy on a farm nenrliere. By J. R. Williams SAY, WHUT ‘TH’ HECK DO ‘IOU THlNK THIS IS"A FLASHLICJHT 3’ JFtwlluaA/l; l0 ~14. died at - Youth In Make-up Of This Year's National League Team By JACK CALDER Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO. Oct. 25 —(GP) ._ Youth has been served almost to the limit in‘ the make-up of Toronto Maple Leafs for the new Nationrl Hockey League season. No matter w h a t players compose t h e 1939-40 c l u b. the Leafs will have only o n e who was in the lineup of their l a s t Second old- {est player in HORNER n” l?‘ °‘ eve or not ~——* > - '~' ——R.egis (Pep) Kelly, who came directly to the Leafs from junior hockey for the 1934- 34 season. Reg Hamilton and Nick Metz left St. Michael's College ‘Vlm Kelly but they saw service with Fcrontos old farm team at Syracuse before ccmln to the Leafs to stay. It semis ll e only yesterday that K811i’ was signing up," Manager Cflmly Smythe mused as he watch- ed the Leafs in training at st, Catherlnes. Ont. “In fact, it doesn't Seem much longer since Homer was a green. awkward youngster on our defence and Charlie Conacher, Har- vey Jackson and Joe Primeau were our famous ‘kid line)" Nazi Warship Split By ' British Bombs OSLO. Oct. 25 -(CP —Havas) — Norwegian newspapers tonight re- ported the destruction of Germany's ultra-modern ZGJXTrO-ton battleship Gneisenau by British planes during their Wlilhelmshaven air raid Sept. .1. and claimed the recent sinking of a Ncrwe freighter was accomp- lished by the German pocket battle- shrlllglDeutschland. e new Uaper Altenposten re- ported that. the Norwegian freighvr Lorentz Hansen, previously report- ed to have zone down after striking a mine. actually had been sunk by the 10,000-ton pocket b attleship Deutschlnnd. newness Terms mmse AYLIESBURY — (OP) — From footligiits to surgery is the career of Marie Lohr, who left the stage when war broke out to help as a nurse at a hospital supplies depot near here SWEDES DO BIT STOCKHOLM -(CP) -- More than 1.500 women are attending Red Cross classes in first-aid here. Crown Princess Louise and Sweden. formerly Lady Louise Mountbatten. is one of the most enthusiastic workers. HORSESHOE BOUQUET CHIPPENHAM —-(C'Pl—No con- ventional wedding bouquet for Mis Hilary Godwin, daughter of the chairman of the Chlnnenham branch of the National Farmers’ Union-she carried instead a sil- vered horseshoe from her hunter. AIRMINDED T00 NANAIMO. B, C. —(O'P) — 'I‘o be with her brother alnd her fi- ance. who are members of the Roy- al Air Force, Ivy Dingsdale has left for England to enlist for service nreferably in the R .A. F. too. n. kes in his attackers. i Counts 0n Youngsters Jackson, only o th e r m e m- oer of the class of '31 who was with the Leafs last season, was traded lo New York A- 1161108115 in the .ummer. Stars like Gordon Apps have been i raised by th e since sweeney Schri- oer, Gus Mar- K81‘ and Bucko McDonald have been obtained JACKSON in sales and trades within the last year. But Smythe is counting on a big group of youn store in hLs plans for S this season. ief among them Billy (The Kid) Taylor, centre-ice sensation of Oohawafis Canadian Junior champions last season. On the defence Smythe hopes he has a great player in Walter Stan- owski, ace of the St. Boniface team in 1938. He expects Stanowski to develop into a fine puck- carrier. As last season ended, Smythe signed Lex Chisholm of Oshawa Seniors and Don Metz of Toronto Goodyears to professional contracts. Chisholm finis ed out the campaign with Syracuse, while Metz played with the Leafs in the Stanley Cup finals against Boston. Both these forwards have the fast-skating and fast-thinking attributes Smythe The Leafs’ decision to break off affiliation with Syracuse left the N. H. L. team with a surplus of players. Among them were Red Heron and Normie Mann, who have put in con- siderable terms with Syracuse and brief periods with Toronto but still are oung enough to be classed as bi - eaguc rookies. ese players and Pete Langelle, who was signed and shipped to Sy- racuse only 111st season are front- rank fighters in the battle for posi- tions with the Leafs this year. Smythe intends to carry more than the 15 he is allowed to dress for each game, so unless he gets favor- able offers for trades or sales they will be around awhile. WALLY TOPS LIST IDNDON- (CP) _-We.lter Ham- mond has triumphantly answered sporting prophets who said his batt- Lng would sump this season. The captain of England's cricket team had an average of 63.56, better than any captain has made heretofore, and tops the batting ltst. FROM ICE TO AIR. RJUIHJOND. England —<CP) Mark Colledge, brother of Cecilia. the skating star and a hockey star in his own right, is ready to for- sake the ioe for the air, expecting to be called up for Air Force service immediately. COSTLY SNEEZE CANBERRA. —(CP) -—A tele- phone conversation with Harry Hop- man, captain of the Davis Cup team in Amer ca cost. plenty, reports pres- ident H. A. Pitt, of the Lawn Ten- nis Association. "One sneeze b Hop- man costt us fully 84c" he so d. MAIDS LOSE JOBS LONDON—(CP) - Women doc- tors, scientists and research stud- ents, numbering nearly 8,000, who as refugees from Nazi persecution found posts as domestics in Eng- land, have been thrown out. of work by the evacuation of English fam- ilios. LONDON -— (CP) - Luminous gardc ins in white or pale pink --'ldd a "shining" note tn lapels of feminine black-out ensembles Driilon and Syl 1 Says Bout To Decide Future (By Sid Peder, Associated PIGS Sports Writer) MARYBORD, N. Y.. Oct. 25- Tony Canzonerl has about decided to stop kl himself. The little guy who has been fighting since the mid-N's, acid today his bout in Madison Square Garden a week from tonight with Al Davis. a youngster from Brook- lyn, will decide his ring future. 1f he wins, Tony will keep right on going; if whips hlm—weli, Tony has decided to hang ‘em up or good. “Tony doesxft need a horse to kick him in the face," was the way ns manager, Sammy Gold- man, explained it here at the Canzoncri farm and training quar- ters. “He'll be read for Davis, you can be sure of at. So everything hangs on that fight.” Of course. fighters always re- serve the right to change their minds. so maybe Tony will feel differently after he tangles with young Davis-win, lose or draw. nigh. now the little larruper, who won the world featherwei ht, lightweight and junior wel r- weight championships, has his mind made up. l For a couple of years now, ‘Tony's closest friends have been telling which won the national junior title- “m “.5 time m can a ham 3mm he lost the l35-pound crown in 1936 to h former sparring part- ner, Lou Ammrs, and followed that up by receiving a sound whipping from Jimmy McLamin. Tony's pals have been on him to get out before the “bells start to ring." Tony, however. hasn't listened to them. Ministry 0f Industry Formed in Nova Scotia HALIFAX, Oct. fi—-Creatlon of a Ministry of Industry for Nova Sootia, aimed at expansion of present industries or establishment of new- ones, was announced t0- night by Premier Angus L. Mac- donald, The Premier disclosed Gauge E. Hagen, Liberal member of e Legislature for Halifax Wat since as the new minister. Appointment of such a minister had been under consideration for some time. Mr. Macdonald said, and “the necessity of such a de- partment would seem to be greater than ever ncrw." undoubtedly, much preliminary study necessary before the depart- ment can expect to accomplish re- sults," the Premier declared. However, he added. the provin- c'al economic council, delpartm ent bodies had been wnducting in- vestilzations into the province's natural resources, and these as they related to industry would be available to the new ministry. Ducks Seek Sanctuary In National Park OTTAWA, Canada —- Now that the hunting season is in full swim in Prince Edward Island, wild ducks in increasirl numbers are finding refuge in Pr ce Edlward Island Na- tional Park, reports the k super- lntendent. Close supervis on of all waters within the park is maintain- ed by the warden service to ensure the waterfowl against being hunted or molested within the park bound- aries. The park is a wild life sanc- tuary and the wary birds soon learn they are safe within its Laundariea OUR BOARDING HOUSE With Major Hoon'e YAss, MEESTEIZ MAoAlze, GNUFFY GEEVE ME MY HEENSTEUCT! CM Poosuw-TM FOLD UP LIKE- LEETLE FLOWER IN NIGHT TIME i-VAN‘ CATCH rolzrY WEENKS-~ no .9 ls OKAY! l ,5‘ Roosu ll'ouT--- Youuze DO l5 GlVE BABBSY SEE, MAJOR, JUS’ LiKE 1'. BEEN TELLIN‘ YA ww- ALL YA GOTTA A sl-love AND l-lE- GOES powu LIKE BOURBON-w- ev rue WAY, HOW‘5 ABOUT HAVING om; ? ol2- Al-lEMwr- I MEAN THREE ? IVN IIIIVR . .4. 2 uMMF/é ALL. rule‘. Wl-HSDERWG WOULD '" BE ‘DlSTASTEFUl. WERE iT NOT FOR MY OLD SACRO-ILiAC INJURY, BUT,AH,WELL, TIS KISMET, A5 KALlDASA. THE SHAKESPEARE OF iNDlA, PROBABLY a wouto lzeMAlzlg .1 uAlz -RUMPH/§ “The field is new. and there is, , NOTICE The woolens we are now showing would Cost 10% to 20%morc to replace. in fact, i: is unlikely we will be able so replace the beautiful imported British wool- en: at any rice. We suggest to Tip Top cus- tomers that you order one or two suits and so overcoat immedistel, before present stocks ere depleted. “Blilllli BLUE” SERGE c enl- TiiiiQ =TAlLons us! think-is there any occasion into which a blue suit won't fit? You're tight- there's hardly a one! "Britannia Blue" Serge is a suberb fabric -—woven by a famous British mill for Tip Top Tailors only. You'll be amazed at the length of smart wear ‘you will receive from a “Britannia Blue" Serge suit. And you'll like the way this better fabric retains its smartness of style through the life ofthe garment. Inspect "Britannia Blue" Serge at your Tip Top store today. Select any style you wish—< —-hand-cut and tailored to your indivi- dual preference. It's the easy, inexpensive way to bring your wardrobe up-to-dato with an all-occasion blue serge suit. Ceuridulds "Quality-Controlled" Rayon linings all Ill lxiru value iealuro ll'i Tip ‘lop elolhu. $2595 HAND-CUT AND INDIVIDUALLY [AILORED TO YOUR PERSONAL MEASUREMENTS lADIES . . . you may also have your munnish Suit or root individually hand-rut and tailored io your personal measurements by Tip Top craftsmen: 99 Grafton Street sunnusldn J. E. WRAN, Manager