YURE OLD SYDNEY We ore proud of being ARNFAST PHONE 2498 coAL INVERNESS and SCREENED able to offer you these two famous. cools. coax. c0. Island Rifle Team Wins Cup At Ottawa Iy FOSTER BARCLAY OONNAUGBT RIIFLE RANGES. South March, Ont., Aug. 14 — (C?) — Paced by six raglc-eyed marksmeh — t-wo Maritimers and: foI from Outtario ‘ shots Saturday in the Dominion‘ of Canada Rifle ltasociationls fca-i ture event, the Governor Generals‘ prize. Battling first 0' shimmering‘ heat mirage and latcr n. swiftly-- shifting east ivinil. the six eneh Ctmpilfifl t1 total of 102 pvints over 300. 500. and 600 yards, trree short of a possible, to tie for first. place Ind head into 15h‘; final test as favorites They will shoot off tc- morrow for the GoverncW-Gencral’: silver medal. llWBR-Pd the winner of the oualifvzng stage, g The pace-setters were N01. CS,‘ Glaciwir. and Capt. A.D Fetterl_v-l l tyro — both of Halifax; C.S..Vi. N.L. Beckett and Sgt. RS. Pot-‘ ter, b0'ti of Hamilton; Lent G.N. Colvllle of ‘fOffmfu and Lt..-Col.‘; lack steele of Guelph, Ont. l Capt Fettcrly, 25-ye1r-old son o! eJ-Ialifex manuaactui-er. was a3 excited es a school boy ivhen he law his name posted among the leaders. "It wee just luck." grintiei from esi-to-ecr as he hurried t) the telegraph office to wire his father. a noted Maritime riflemzir.‘ W01. Gladwin. SO-year-rld mem- ber of N0. 6 Company R.C.E.M.E.. at I-Iaulax, also quickly flashed word JJJXIIE ovhere his family ls known as the “Shooting Gladwins." Hts father, EF. Gladvvin ls a for- mer well-known shot, and he hrs two brothers Edmond and Arthur, shooting in the competitions at: Conn-ought Ranges. , For the other leaders, it was an old story to come out cn top of the neat. ‘their names dotted prize lists for years before the war. ' Behind the leaders came i0 with scores of 101. They included Fit.‘ Sgt. ‘Tommy Gregor of Ottawa and Saint John, N. ., and S.Sgt. B L. i-tiunsey" of Latvrefice Town. N S , and Capt. JR. Ferguson of. Montreal. | Amorif 16 with a century u-cro such orcll-known shooting names u LL-Co-l. J. Neale Dovt‘ of Saint John. AVPHHCO Edward Island team of eight were declared victos of the Mridon bferchants Cup flrcd over O00 yarns as the sun dropped 1n the west. The Eastern Province gocnpiled 854 P0ints of a possible I00, one more than Ontario. Next In order were Nova Scotia, 349; Alberto 348: Quebrc 343; New Brunswick, 341; Manitoba, 337; British Columbia, 322 and Saskat- chewan 319. Member; of the winning team end scores; Sgt E. Coles, 40;.Maj. 11.1". Gormley. 4B; Opl. P J. Land- rignn, 42; Capt. ER. Burke. 46; Capt. RA. McCabe. 47; Lieut. IT. Hooper. 44: Sgt. GA. Coies t5; Capo, A J McCabe, 42. The Prince Edward Islanders flo_w to the ranges by plane and will return this weekend the same way after making a creditable showing in the various competi- lions. he Dodgers Pull Four And ilalf Games-Ahead Bmoklyn Dodgers pulled 4 1.2 $01065 80681-1 0f St. Louis Cardinals in the National League pennant; chase yesterday by syorlng a 1-0 triumph over Boston the Cards dropped 5 Pittsburgh Pirates 5-3. Carl Furillo, honored in a pre- game ceremony, drove home Ed Stanky with the pay-off run 2f] the eighth inning to break up s brilliant hurling duel between little Vic Lombardi and the Brav- es’ southpaw ace. Warren Spahn. Lombardi allowed four 511113.05 and fanned six while Spahn gave up six blows and struck out three. Fritz Ostermueller pitched fine seventh-place Pirates to victory over the Cards and rendered a decision to service to the Brooklyn Dodgers“ the team that tried to give him a ticket to the minors three years ago. Ralph Kiners 30th home run with two aiboard ih the first itin- ing gave the Pirates an early lead but it was Jimmy Bloodworttfs single with the bases loaded in the sixth which provided the winning runs. Murray Dickson, the losing pit- cher. drove in two of the Carts’ runs with a single and double. Scoring three times in the scr- enth inning. the tall-end Phil- adelphia Phillies came from be- hind to defeat New York Giants 6-5 for their third straicht triumph ovcr the New Yorkers. Big Don Padgett broke up the game by singling with the bases loaded. 'I\vo runs scored on Pad- getts pinch-hit blow and the third came home when Joe Lafata hoot- ed the hit. Prince 00. Softball League Schedule Schedule of the recently formed Prince County softball league: AUGUST:- 17—H. C. A. F. at Borden. l9—Kinkora at. Kensinlzton lib-Borden at R. C. A. F. ‘Ii-Kehslngtoil at Borden 21—Klnkora at R. C.A.1=‘. 24-11. C. A. F. at Kinkora 26-—Borden at Kenslngton 28—Kensihgtrm at R. C. A. P‘. ZS-Ktnkora at Borden Lil-Borden at Kinkora. SEXPTEBFJR:_ 2—-R-C-A-F. at Kenslngton 4- Kenslngton at Ktnkora. Semi-finals. sudden death-I vs. B and 2 vs. 4. Finals tvro out of three games. League games: win 3 points, tie, i point, Five innings constitute a game. The president of the league is W.O. 2 E, F. Buliis. The team captains are as follows: Borden. T? Rtlfzers; R.C.A.F.. W.O. Gallop; Kinknra. L. A. Farmer; Kenslng- ten. F. Nauss and O. H. Darrach. The night racing card at the exhibition track tonight should provide a fitting climax to what has been n great week of the Braves while , "Sports of Kings" feiiturlnfl R5 it ; does horses who have not placed ‘ better than third in summaries. In ladditioh to assuring close raclnfl _it will nlso give the owners a chance to pct a piece of the money and will also provide the chance for visitors to sce the trottcrs and pacers performing under the lights. 401"! THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Agfign Fillgd Begging ‘Maritime Baseball Card, Foru Fight fans —Wednesday night‘: attendance proved them tr- be very plentiful in the Province wll have ancther chance to view a1 outstanding (arcl tonlgit when Roger Brisson, protege of Pail Junior, a former fighter who hrs met Lou Ambers and Henry Arm- strong in his day, tangles with Wallace McLeod in the main e‘.- ent of tre Forum's provram. Mc- Lcod s Maritime heavytvelgts champnri. ; According to fans who have watchel both bays in action the scrap is i. natural and stinuld pact in n Paige attendance. McLeods ability tn absrrb punishment uni dish out plenty of his 01in is ivcil known and funs can re-t nssurci of the rugeed Cape Breton boy‘ giving h§ best. - Brisson, one of the contenders for t-he Canadian light hrnvy- Fight fans will also have an- other inning tonight when pro- moters Archer and McLcllan stage another card featuring Wallace McLeod of Cape Breton, Maritime heavy champ and R. Brlssoh of ‘Lewiston, Maine, in the feature leveht supported by e promising llookin: semi-final and several well-matched preliminaries. 0+1"? Brisson will be making his first performance in a local ring but it is said that he is a hard-hitting rugfzcd individual containing plenty of dynamite in hoth hands and his handlers are confident of him be-i ing able to take the measure of the present Maritime tlilist. iii-II Brissori is managed by Padl Junior, a fighter who in the past has met the mp notchcrs in his division and who is now teaching: c. large stable of boxers the finer points of the game he himself , learned in his years of experience. l ‘ -l- i- l- [ In McLeod, however. Brlsson will be meeting a foe-man worthy of his steel. In his fight. with Billy l Shaw of Montreal at the same Forum a few weeks ago McLeod shotved he could get up off the floor and come oh to win. He 1s in perfect shape for his test to-, night and his followers. a large numhcr of whom are at present. in the City, are confident that he will he able to hurdle the challenge of‘ the Maine mltt-sllnger. i -|- -r- ~2- -|- l f Stan Musial, “key man" in the} st. Louis Cardinals‘ pennant plans. still may open the door to the National League throne room with a resurgent bat which had been whittled to tooth-pick size early ln tIhe current season. 4- + + ~1- Musiat. last year's most vnltinblc player now boasts a .300 batting mark for the first time this year. 1- + 4- 1- Pittsburgh pitching_ which the husky first baseman clipped for five hits in nine tries in a recent double victory over the Pirates put the Donora, Pa” dynamltcr over the magic line that divides tlhe men from the boys in the base nit business. + + + 1- .3. Muslal accepted the big event weight title has 40 professional. fights ‘rndcr his belt winning 35 end ln-sitig five. 2O n! his victories‘ were by knockouts and in his rc- cent string he has six straight‘ v-ins to his credit A last and deadly pzuichel. Eris-son. ls rt iuggrl type o.’ individual who just glor- ies in heavy going and in this he will be well accommodated by the always willing McLeod. in audition u crowd pleasing‘ semi-final is being lined up with the pr-llminarics bang lined up in the P‘o:i.m's u°uai pleasing way. The entire card will furnish ar-. tinn and plcrty of harzi battlin: hi1 the way through. Tickets wll. go on sale this morning at the Forum at i0 rfclerk and Qmcitfs are lmfkln: for n heavy demarl from tnc fight fans, FIRST CHANNEL HOP ' JP. Jsianchnrd. a Frencllvgmn. "Ztlififd nis bnll0on_ across tf-e n,’- lifii Channel on Jar. 7. 1785. in tre first crosS-(‘linnhfl flight. ‘stoleally but Manager Eddie Dyer.‘ grinning and jubilant after the, double victory, predicted biggci f things. “He'll he the top hitter in; the league before the season ends," l he declared confidently. + + + + , Musial not off to a late start in i spring training as he blckcrcd with l owner Sam Brendon for the $50.- l 000 salary he figured his .365 i946 i mark rated. i Il- + ‘II 4' ‘ After he had signed. his troub-I les shifted from the fiscal to the‘ physical. He was ‘plagued by 1"» i l current attacks of appendicitis and | Toronto that he; it appeared for a time might have to drop out for an operation. But he continued tol play-with n date for post-season surgery-despite a. pitiful perform- ance at the plate. + + O i His timing was far off, he was swinging off balance and even rookie pitchers were fanning him. 4- 4' In the depths of the worst slump he had ever known Musial refus- ed to become discouraged. Puffin; a big cigar and gazing serenely out a train window on one of the Cardinals’ road trips, he told a sports writer: 1- + 1- 6 Night Racing router-tr At Charlottetown Exhibition Track RACES 2 HEATS EACH STARTING AT 8-30 SHARP "There's nothing to worry about. sooner or later I'll come ‘round- and I'll hit better than .300 this year." 4- 4- + 0 Breadon. meanwhile. was count- ering all queries about the miser- able showing of the last-piece birds with. "we'll be all right l! soon as Musinl starts hitting. 1-fe's the key man on the club and when he starts, all the others will pick up too. We'll start to climb with stun’: bottlzg average." o O And that 1| just. about the my it has worked out. r ' Philadelphia m Tonight Babe” Zaharias Will Turn Pro NEW YORK. All; l4 - (AP)- ivfrs. lvfilrlred (Brrbe) Didrikscm Zaharlrs women's golf champion of the Ilnttecl States and Brltair, notified officials of the United Ft-ates Golf Assocmtion tcday th-t she would turn prnfcssmnnl and accept 1 $300,000 mOUDn pcture of?’ “Aftc: deliberating fcr some lme, 1 feel that br doin’; a ser-‘r; of mot-tn picture rhorts on golf. 1 will further the edventement cf women's golf and of 801.‘ in gen- rral," W1.- sald. I "I 1111.1 compete as scheduled in .1 chart; match at Clcvrlnnd next Sundae and Jh the frllc-r.'ing week u! Columbus. Then I pir-n to g0 to Hollywood. I will be unable to defend my nations‘, title at De? troit ln September." l Mrs. fisheries was a till! nrofes- stepped out of the batters hm!‘ sional ivfcrv. but after n scfir! f! and mndc a "hrilf-iungc" for the' triumpU; the re-estabiishcd hlr amateur sfmtilillg and went on to win i7 \'OI1S€'UMVO tournaments- t Baseball Results NATIONAL Boston 000 000 000 0 4 0 Brooklyn .. . 000 000 01x l 6 0‘ S-pahh and Camelli; and Edwards. New York Z00 010 30x 6 ‘l ll Iott. Trinkle. Kennedy and-l Cooper; Donncliy. Schmidt. Schahz. 1"?” U" m"! teiwwtl ‘ht? lf/fGf/Cr (to. and the Jurislch and Semlnirk, Padgett. St. Louis Pittsburgh 30o 002 00x Dickson Wilks 0nd Wllber, Rice: Ostermuellcr and Howell. AMERICAN Philadelphia. 002 001020 5 0 1 "Tflft-H-"llsy w; m0 30x 3 m z country-wide strike Aug r New York Marchildon. Savafze and Rosar; 000 Fwd ‘ Reynolds. Shea and Robinson. Detroit 000 100 123 7 10 I St. Louis 000 000 000 0 4 l Ovcrmlrc and Wagner; Kramerw Potter ahrl Moss. Chicago at Cleveland rain. postponed. l INTERNATIONAL 1 l First. same:- Syracuse 002 0012 s 1o 1 1 00o 0010 l s 0i Pendergast and West; Katz andi l Desnutels, Butts. Second game:~ i ‘ Syracuse . 000 002 300 5 B 2; ‘Toronto 100000001 2 9 2 Mustalkls and Boslack; Kon- rtanty and Butts. ' First game:- ' Baltimore Rochester (7 innings). Podgajny and Lenn; f Green. Krist and Marshall. Second game: Baltimore .. .. 023 210 021 11 21 0 Rochester . 000 000 011 2 10 1 Kuzave and Welgel: Surkont. Green and Williams. First game'- _ Newark . 0013011 5 9 2 Buffalo . .400 110x B 9 0 Mueller and Miler; Pierce and Mordeski. (Seven innings). Newark . .. .. 040 010 100 Buffalo . . 100 010 001 Mallette, Kai-pal and Bush. Kerr and Yount. first game:- Jerley City Montreal .. 0000010 1 I 1 Kraus and Yvars; Heusser and Campanella. 01o zoo 00o s 10 0 twefkea 5 9 oiUhilcrl States motor cur industry‘ ‘first major pension plan. was rr-_ Ported near rempeion .oday. pensiDn plan and AUGUST 15. 1947 (By The Canadian Press) SHEIJIAC. N.B_., Aug. ih-Monc- ton O. Y. O. tonight won the right to meet Chatham Seniors in the first round of the Provincial base- ball playdotvns. C.Y.O. defeated Shedlac Eagles 2-0. The win was the fourth for the C.Y.O. squad in the four of seven series, which went to five games. One ended in a l-l. tie. GAME PROTESTED HALIFAX, Aug. 14-—(CP)-Pres- ident. Harry Butler of the Halifax and District Senior Baseball Lea- gue announced wnight that Hail- fux Arrows had filed a protest of a game with Middleton Cardinals yesterday which resulted in o 3-0 pefcat for Arrows. Butler said the protest was based on a decision of umpire Norm Mei-nil of Augusta. Me, when Arrows were batting in the sixth inning. With two nuts and runners on nccond and third bas- es. the Middleton pitcher attempt- ed to walk hntier Irvin Ruven On a high and outside pitch. Ruvcn ball. dint-a him out. Umpire Merrill FREDERICTON. Aug. i-i-ICP) -Marysvllle Royals gained a place in the New Brunswick sen- ior baseball playdowns by defeat- ing Frederlcton Legionalres 6-4 tonight and achieving a third win in a series for the championship of the Fredericton district. wmbardll Ford 0o. Signs New 009 n13 m9 5 9 117011101‘ PO0S|0Il Hall DEFRHIT. Aug. 14 - mp) _\ Fri-i. United Aut (CID-l. cmbrnlytng t‘! M flflrcement. to necotiatc th work cut clause" averted 1 of 10T- prorfuction workers. r-A" Event McKlyo Cash, driven by Joe O'- Brien the last two heats, yester- day captured the featured free- for-all of the Old Home Week racing program when the Mone- ton-owned horse won the second and third beats after finishing fifth in yhe first mile. It was another o the usual upsets that have been occurring since the meeting got underway and O'Brien got a. big hand from the huge crowd for his great efforts. And es an added ectacle the crowd were brought to their feet before the first heat got underway as Tip Abbe unseated O'Brien up the stretch, but game as they come the slim Jockey hung on to the reins for over a. 100 yards until he brought his charge to e halt. O'Brien escaped unhurt in his gallant ‘exhibition but Tip Abbe, pre-racc favorite was drawn f: om the race owing to a cut ten- dc-h in his left hind foot. While the free-for-allers held the spotlight the rabid race fans that again taxed the capacity of the big pleiit to the llmlt, snw stirring duels of speed in the tther three classes raced. with Donald G. and Billy P. C. Parker dividing the two heats of the first division of ‘he 2:29 Pace. Lynn- mite coming back with bursts of speed tn win the 2:26 Pace with a summary of 2-1-1. and Lustlcla. Charlie Chandler's rapidly im- proving trotter never lifted a nose ln winning the first two heats of the 212B Trot before dropping back to sixth in the final after going away in eighth horse place. And horses continued to take new records; Lynnmltes mile in 2.12 1-5 was a new tab for the daughter of Volomltc: Ann Clelzu. hnughtcr of Abner T. Cit‘!!! 1380011 the first heat of the 2:26 Pace in 2:11 4-5 to lower her mark. while nwsllcla tQd-ty sports a new mark j ef 2:13 as a result of her victory l’ Ill the 2:28 Trot. Those were the highlights 0'1 a meet that. is reaching a new crest pf excitement each day. Yester- day's throng was estimated un- officially as being the largest Thursday attendance on record. ‘with the fans being well repaid ‘iv seeing tests of speed and sta- mina that irnuirl be hard to equal nvtvhere. The meet winds up to- day with fovr more ‘classes com- ing to the wire, classes thatshnuld nrnvlde a fitting climax to what has been an outstanding program , And as ar- added attraction to- iilrzht. three classes of nttzht rac- intr will be run off. Twn heats will be ricer‘ tri each event and it its expected that a record crowd Captures Last Two , Heats. Finishing Fifth In The First will Jam the raceway for the i, ficiel windup of the big wggl; 2:20 Pnoe, 1st Division first Heal: As usual it w“ upset victory as Donald G, m?‘ through from the top o; m stretch to win the heat from 5w; P. C. Parker by two lengths. Awe; on the third score, Donald (3_ w,‘ at the rm‘. only to lose it to Billy P. C. Parker on the second tum Around the stands and 11p . backstreet-h Billy led the field all; Donald G. had too much pace left going to the front find wihnln| under ivraps with the mile in 2.18, Billy P. C. Parker second; M“, lone C. third. and Happy y,“ fourth: Maxine Dudds. Jfiiedl" Victory Miss and Random n,“ vest, the favorite, seventh. Second Bent: It was like break. ing sticks as Billie P. C. Parker paced to the front on the bee] stretch the first trip and ma“ every post a winning one. Strung nut all wer the mile Marlene c, came fast hi the last quarter u; net up on even terms with Billy but n break ruined all chances, Jnsedale Victory Miss was third, Maxine Duds Was fourth. followed by Happy Vale and Donald G. Frcc-For-All First Heat: The lightly-backed Joility, comtiig from far back at the seven-elghths, paced to tin fiont. halfway down the stretch u; win the heat in 2.11. Away. aim the start had been held up owznl to the accident. to Tip Abbe, Carl Frisco had the rail. Chuck Wor- thy tried him but had to take back. They were strung out com- lng by the half with Chuck Wor- thy jumping it off and they stayed in the same positions to the back stretch. There Pine Ridge Alex cpenerl out to lead at the three- quarters. At. the seven-eighth; Jnlllty made his bid and there was no stopping him as he won by a length. Pine Ridge Alex 1V3] second, Carl Frisco third, The Great G. fourth. McKlyo Casb fifth and Cltuck Worthy sixth. Second Heal: Joe O'Brien. show- mg his driving ability to the full got up behind McKiyo Cash for the mile, snapped the rail at the first. turn and from then on we! never headed. Strung out li"1 s The at the half with Carl Prim m second place. halfway up tilt back stretch Jollity set out eftei McKlyo but could only get to within two lengths of the leader The Grant. G. moved to third l1 the stretch, Carl Frisco was fourtll (Continued on Page ‘ll TONIGHT-q pa... ' Main Bout IO Rounds PlllCiSz- v Ringside Second uame:_ 'mmoor e a o Andrews. Picone and Grease; Reserved Gerheeuser and Sendlock. SNAPPY PRELIMINARIES $2.00 S: .50 R. BRISSON, 185 Lbs. — “WWI- Mimi WALLABE McLEOII, 1B7 Lhs.- svtlrv. M- ‘McLEOD FOUGHT HERE RECENTLY, GIVING A FINE DISPLAY Semi-Final. 6 Rounds COBEY McCLOSKEY-ISS Lbs.—CHARLOTTETOWb PAT DAVIS-l“ Lbs-ST. JOHN, N. B. ADVANCE SALE-FRIDAY-IO A. M. NO. 1. CLASSIFIED. NO. 2. CLASSIFIED. NO. 3. CLASSIFIED. Races will be two heats each with $150.00 for eacli mfle. Horses that have not placed better than 3rd in summary only ones eligible. Entries must be left at Judge's Stand with W. J. before 10 o’clock this mooning. $10.00 deposit must be made with each entry which will be refunded if horse notclaesified on starts. STARTING GATE WILL BE USED. Present Passes and Season‘ Tickets good "for ad- _ A t i . ' Ad!!!“ 70c; Chfldru‘ and?!’ 129 25¢- children's m wagons‘ and cum tnrqnn covered with a velile-iile cue me carried. At left, the - femurs. former we: plant worker. in Outs. Japan, the. puns non of e 0.], officer tn Qcekedlmvflltrcteo new simple the m ti to turn. cemet- photo uion ‘h- ides for the midget cor seen in photos ebovc. Powered lyct-I-borcapcwernotoqlunoltcbtthotucubc murnpteetngttielcy now-h the Irene. Whats Brown ‘mlesio ‘ t lllffim‘! m. ‘t. slim airplane an’ vltmti. of which timed . . ‘ ‘n’ .1 t m’ - t: aztt"-.t"..."-'i..°ttt“t"t t. w; ma. mu nu e auteur. l