SEPTEMBER 11. was i‘ My? . Cardinals And Cubs Close BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING 1n On Giants As League Leaders Lose To Reds 7-2 1%’? Night Tourney Resumes After postponement Ladies‘ Belts‘ |11 it an 1112111 M rourllannnl. continued alter m; held H, 6-2. tult- . p1 the Qudlfl ant ylcwll‘ gnd mtu re play was wdlillan and G. Chandler mist A. Wright and W. L. Horns? w, The lllumlillan-Chandler com- guuiion won out. Scores were l-5. H. 7-5. Belly Rogers and Alex Math- luon teamed up in another mixed doubles encounter to mmors 11nd E. Connors. 6-1, 6-1. TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE '1, coyle vs. J. Kenny. I. Pierce and A. Hogan vs. ltaliueson and G. Irlam. ; M. Doyle vs. l". Mallett ' l. Wright vs. D. Heartz. 0. Rogers vs. O. Johnson. .l. Burden and G. Irlam vs. O'Brien and M. Doyle. Baseball Results‘ NATIONAL LEAGUE glhllwso 000002 010 a s 1 I 11111191011111 011000000 2 '1 a 1M 8nd Hartnett; Walter and 161m, “gallows 000010002 313 0 ston 310000000 2 5 5 Johnson. Halnes. Heusser J. 511mb and Oflrodowski Ryba; ulllliin and LOPQL giencinnali 000 101 320 7 15 2 geYvrk 001000100 2 '1 2 lTlflgcr and Lombardi; Gabler, Coffman and Grace. “rizglllfeh 4:10 010 021 11 14 2 swulll 000 01a 010 :1 11 2 J8“ 1 "1111 Todd; Frankhouse, 1°81. Winston and Phelps, AMERICAN LEAGUE Waihingm new“ 11 000010 001 2 5 0 Ncwsom a q . Ha§mod' 11 HOZMI. Bridges and New Y0 Clair-land l3 . kngoséiléowlfielt’? and Dickey; Al- Filgl . 11111111111111“ Lnui Archer, Mchucki, boiling and Hemsley 5'11"“! game: Philadelphia 51- Louis t neg? M1119» 9111110 because dark- Fiflk an ""1 110mm INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE F1111 0001000 000 1 '1 1 uff mi? m" 020 200 03x '1 11 2 “h 1 ilnhans and Baker: Doubles matches were play- Holy Redeemer tonnis courts e10 unfavorable weather. m“). Rogers defeated M. Shaw, from F. Pierce and F. Mal- ktLSCOICS were 6-3, 6-0. C. O'Brien M. Doyle won from A. Hogan 11M. lllorris by default. a ""1 Crousc. ON‘ Rochester Melton, Kn 1nd. “may nagre; and Gray, Weil_ ghglps and Mixed and as plfly in the club's up more than a week 111 the only singles fix- mixcd doubles’, J. Mc- l D. Hcartz took an easy of the men's doubles the three-set battle of F. ag- defcat I. 1.30 Men's Singles Mans Doubles Ladies Singles 8.30 Ladies Singles 9.510 . Iilixod Doubles C. NEW YORK, Sept. ill-The Na- tional League leading New York Giants 10st three ways today. They dropped a 7-2 decision here to Cincinnati Reds, they lost a full game from the pace-setting mar- gin, which was clipped to 3 1-2 games. and Manager Bill Terry was taken for a suit of clothes by Charley Drossen, the Reds‘ pilot. The outfit was the stake in.a bet Terry made with Dressen that the Reds wouldn't win nine games from the Giants this year. Today's victory was the ninth. The defeat, coming at the same time as the second-place St. Louis Cardinals won their game in Bos- ion, dropped the Giants‘ league lead to the danger mark. At Brooklyn Pittsburgh Pirates clubbed Brooklyn pitching for sev- cn runs in the first two innings and then went on to overwhelm the Dodgers 11-5 behind Bill Swift's effective pitching. Swift helped the batting attack with a homer in the eighth in- ning. while Frenchy Bordagaray hit one for the Dodgers in the fifth. Chicago Cubs. thanks to Stanley Hank's eighth inning homer, scored a 3-2 victory over the Phillles at Philadelphia to gain a ‘full game on the league-leading New York Giants. Hacks circuit clout, his sixth of the season, came with two out in the eighth and broke up a pitch- crs‘ battle between Bill Lee and Bucky Walters. At Boston St. Louis Cardinals with Boston Bees out of the fire with a late two-run rally today and gained a. 3-2 triumph that moved them to within 3 1-2 games of the pacesetting New York Giants. . The Gas House Gang used 2o players, including manager Frankie Frisch and four pitchers, before three pinch hitters and a substit- ute runner came through with the two vital runs in the ninth inning. AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK, Sept. l0—Hal 'I‘ros- ky climaxcd a battle of home runs at Cleveland today by teeing off against one of relief pitcher Kemp Wickefs slants with a mate on base in the ninth inning and belt- ing it out of the lot for a 5-4 Cleveland win over New York Yankees. It Was 'I‘r0sky‘s 37th round trip- pcr of the yea;- and cllmaxed a winning three-run rally in the last half of the ninth for the Indians. Earlier, Lou Gehrig had poled out one of Johnny Allen's pitchm for his 45th homer of the season for the American League cham- pions, and Bruce Campbell had‘ belted one out for the Tribe. Dfitroit playing at home gained an even break with Washington both for the season and the closing two-game series by winning 5-2 be- hind the five-hit pitching of Tom- my Bridges. The victory was the slender 10002002X 5 9 0 1k 021100000 41a 1 001100003 514 1 org 400 141 101 i2 1s 3 5 100 300 000 7 a a Gllmllvrt and Hayes; Vanni-a. Liebhardt, x1111- 020200000 410 1 100200010 4 9 0 livilavcs: Knutt. 11101111111 t Playoffs) 010000000 1111 1 00000000004 s O‘Farrell. righthanderfis 20th of the year. The Zame was the last of the season between the two clubs, each team having defeated the other in 11 of their 22 starts. HOW THEY STAND INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE SEMI-FINAL PLAYOFFS SERIES “A" Buflalo 1 l 1.000 Newark 0 1 .030 SERIES "B" Baltimore 1 0 1.000 Rochester 0 l .000 AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 92 47 .662 hicego 74 s4 .536 Washington 73 66 .525 Detroit 73 66 .525 Cleveland 72 66 .522 Boston '70 69 .504 St. Louis 4B 85 .566 Philadelphia 49 85 .355 NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 8-2 54 .003 St. Louis '18 5'1 .072 Chicago '18 60 .565 Pittsburgh ' 73 64 .533 Cincinnati 69 6'1 .507 Boston 62 73 .459 Brooklyn 56 '18 .418 Philadelphia 45 90 .333 . Home Run Standing Yesterday's Ilomera: Clitt. Browns 2; Gehrig, Yankees; Campbell, In- dians; Troskv. Indians: Higgins. Athletics; Hogan. Senators: Pciers. Athletics; West. Browns. Goodman Redsf Lombardi. Reds; Moore, Giants; Swift. Pirates Bordagaray, Dodgers; Berger. Bees: Hark. Cubs; Camllli. Phlllies, one each. The Leadfis: Gehrig. Yankees. 45: Trosky. Indiars. 37; Foxx. Rod 50x 3'1; Oit. Giants. 30; DiMaggio. Yan- kees 28; Averill Indians 25. Lelgue Totals: American 095. Na- CANADA'S LARGEST serum; ciGnARElTE TOBACCO tlonal 548. total 1.244. I01 NEWS pulled their second straight game‘ Gateways Eke l Gut Win Over Fen cebusters (C.P. By Guardian's Special wire) YARMOUTl-I, N_ 5,, sepy 1|)_ Yarmouth Gateways, Maritime‘ champions, drew first blood from Springhill Fencebusicrs today 111 the opening of the Nova Scotia baseball championships In a dull game that ended sud_ denly and dramatically with a burst 0f slleéd. Gateways shouldered their way toward the championship with a 4-3 victory, It was Cnpie LeBlanc, shifted in what was termed a strategic move 1n the ninth inning from pitcher's; b0)! to 16ft He'd. who provided the game's ‘big thrill Beaton hit one so hard out Copies we)‘ it looked like the. fiance-busters would score their two. men on bases to take a late lead. in the series‘ opener. Bu’. LeBlanc3 scooped it lip and huricd it home so fast that Embcrly was caught at the plate and Brown was nailed before he reached third in a double play that ended the game. Previous to that the game was slow and comparatively uninterest-‘ ing. Yarmouth used four pitchers but not because any of them were in difficulty, Ken Meinot was hit. only twice in four innings before he retired because of a strained back. Cliffie Surrette was replaced‘ by loBlanc who entered the game 1 in the last half of the seventh asi a pinch hitter. and Nate Bain took 1 over for Copie in Coach Ernie Grimshaws ninth inning surprise move. Yarmouth scored only one earned run-when Doug Horton was walk- ed in the fifth, sacrificed to second by Comeau and sent home on Zoomio Dcveaus sharp single thrrough secnod. A wild pitch gave the champions a run 11111111 iirst inning and a series of errors put them into a commanding 3-1. lead in the sev- enth. Doug Horton and Deveauboth advanced a base when Fowler's re- turn to second from Deveaus single was wild. Later a wi'd throw home struck Horton and both he and Deveau scored unearned runs. Sprirlghili had their big time in the eighth inning when they brought up the score to 4-3 with a two run rally. Fowler and Dykens both scoring off Fraser's single. Fencebusters‘ other run was made in the fifth when Brown doubled. advanced to third on Beatorfs grounder to Surretie and home on Doug Horton's error. ‘The line-score: Springhlll Yarmouth 000 010 020—3 100 010 200-4 Somerville Cracks Par At Garden City Scotty Reston, Associated ‘ Press Sports Wriior) (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) GARDEN CITY. L. L, Sept. l0- C. Ross "Sandy" Somerville. vet- eran Canadian golf star who won the United States amateur tit-l»: in 1932, shot the Garden City course (B! in 47-31-71 today as invaders dominated the day's practice for ‘the 1936' amateur championship. which starts Monday. Somerville was wild with his shots on the outgoing nine but ‘scored four pars and five birdies coming home. The London star's scoring exhi- bition on the back nine was the greatest in the history of the fam- ous oourse. He was playing from the centre of the tees. Somerville was playing with Dr. William Tweddell, captain of the British Walker Cup loam. who brought, his mcn to the scene of the championship for the first time today. Tweddell. playing with Somerville against Georire Dunlap. New York and Alan Smith. Ashe- vllle. N. 0., shot a 76. Dunlap and Smith had 78's. Somervllleis round was the only sub-par score reported. though Garden City, which Qiays hflrd 01' easy according to the wind. was calm today. Three players, how- ever, did manage to equal par 73. They were Jack McLean. the for- mer Scottish amatour champion; O'Hara Watts. Walles. and Albert "Scotty" Campbell. Seattle. The present Canadian amateur champion. ‘Fred Haas of New or- leims; Charlie Mayo. .Ir.. Long Beach. L. I. and Roger Kelly. hos Angeles, report-rd 74's, and Johnny Goodman. Omaha. and ..Gordcn_ Peters, Scotland. had 76's. OF 111; SPORT WORLD _.Canadia.n..0ncn..1zcli. RINGINC _i (i. B i5 IN up FATHER TELfoAue-i-rretz ri-tsw-"sttz AKE HER IN E HIM- i'l._\$_ SW6 v1 hr. CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Chuck Templeton '0 SPOR TRA 11's anticipates BRITISH Ememe DlVING TITLE Hotozw. Little Blasts Field For Op (By Elmer Dulmage. Canadianl Press Staff Writer) (C. I’. By Guardian's Special Wircl TORONTO, Sept. 10~Lnrrupin,*, Lawson Little, the San Francisco sucker. put on his first big show to- day since turning ptolcmional and led a vicious assault on Si. An- drews‘ par in the first round 0i thc 72-holc Canadian open 2011 61mm- pionship. . The former monarch 01' 1h: um- atcurs. apparently rcadv after months of canipagiling t0 gct ini touch with tile pros, smnshcrlit-hc course record with 6'7, thine imrlcr par. and a quartet of hi;- mot feared rivals couldirt thrash 111': public coilrso quit: that badly. One stroke bchind the former amateur champion of Britain and the United States were Jimmy Thompson, another bcltcr from California, and chubby Abc Espin- oca of Chicago, Ulllll Little cum.“ along with s. Sfifflfllltlillfll eagle on lhc 18th holc. it sccmed broad- shouldered Jimmy and veteran Kbe would share the lcad-Prship. Still later Draper Gordon Brydson of l.he.Tor0nto Mi.\%‘i.=..s.'lllg1n Club. Tony Mnnero. United States open champion from Grccnivich, Conn, and Ray Mangum of Dayton. Ohio. completed the par-busting for the long day with 69's. While Brydson l-Pd the domestic brigade with his 1111': sub-par. four others shot their wry into con- tending positions and a. dozen or more yielded to par so little that they couldn't be counted out on the basis nf today's scores. Jack Littler of Ottawa. form-Pr Quebec. pro title-holder, and long Bob Cunningham of Toronto rc- tumcd cards of 70 and little .lulcs Huot. of Quebec. 1934 Canadian professional 0111111171011, had 72. Redvcrs McKenzie of Montreal scored 73. But the fireworks were supplied bv the long hiitcrr.—Liltlo and Thomson in part iculnr-nnd the steady. d(‘ll(i1,\'-(1llli,ll\f_.‘; Eqiinosn. who lost tn Bobby Jones for the U. S. iii-lo in a play-oil in 1929. hashing olit (l!'l\'(‘S which fru- qu-ontly went. 300 _v.1rds and b01201" down the ample Si. Androlvks fair- ways, Little discmrrcd n ulnglc putting touch to no with his power His 67 was so good 1n ovcry dclnil that the San Franciscan became a firm favorite lo lift the tiilr- which Gene Kunes of N stown. Pm. did not defend because of illness. Find Going Tough ST. ANDREWS GOLF‘ CLUB. Toronto. Sept. ill-R. C. Duchcmin of Halifax was wc‘l dmm the list when the scores were posted l-Odnl‘ for the first round of play in 11101 The Nova Scotia n . "the trap-ridden course THE LIBRAQY- A ND IN" eri Golf Title strokes. finishing more than a doz— on strok-Is behind the van of thc brilliant. ficlrl 1f Canadian and Un- it-cd States shotsmcn seeking the title. James Rimmer, n fellow Haligon- inn, had bett-cr success on tho diffi- cult cour..c. H0 ivont out in 4i and ‘ back in 3'7 for r111 excellent '78. A disastrous 44 on the outward nine ilolvs \\'l'l‘(‘l'{"(1 “$11711. otherwise would hnvc bcr-n :1 flllc c3111 fol‘ Mr. Duchemin. On the hom-Tivard stretch. us lip steadied and got the frcl 0f Ill‘! course, he picked up a lino 37. Aliollici- ivould have put him wrll ivithin rrichzzig distance of thr- lcnrlcrr. Wrestling Bout Ends In Riot l MONTREAL. Sept. 10—Cy Wil- liams of 'rllllflllfl.$.st‘l'. Fla., known to the wrestling world as the “Tal- luhzisscc 'l‘ r.‘ was hcld by pol- ioc today 1 imvlug n minor riot at the Forum 11... the cont-l sion of a wrestling show. Police were holrlinz: the hcnvvlveight wrc-stlvr plnulniu- 11. report from hos- pital on the condition of Eddie, Quinn. ll11ll1il'_'1‘l' of Yvon Robert» who \\'kl\' knovksd unconscious in thc scufilirz win-h lnliowcd Rola- crlis \'lCl0l'_\' over Hank Barber in, the main 110111 '01 the show last night. (‘hallengcs V Rnbcrt wilmny, “'11P! 10st to Al Mcrczor on 11 [uni in llll earlier‘ 110111, ont- crcd ihc ring. drcvscd in strret 0101110.‘. 11nd ('l‘l‘ll(‘llf_'!‘fi Rolr-rt. The Montreal 11¢. .1 claimant to tho world championship tiilc. ig- nm-pr-l Vllilliplyif. and tilrncci his buck on him. Wil‘iums. npgmirvnilv llllurialcd. .~;\\'llll’I a fist 11nd crashed Quinn, mun th: cvmcn: flour ouhizi- 11191 ring: Then \Vlii‘.'\l11S slipped n‘ hcnrllock n11 Rnbcr‘. and tossed 1111111 in the mat. This \\'1'i.~ n signal for a gencral froc-for-all. Spectators rushed into the ring, flsls fl~w and kicking b."- camc general. Sou1vho<iv' rwlllil! .1 chair 11nd hit somebody‘ else and immediately chairs were flyini! from thc rigsidc swtion into thc ring. It. took oiclit policemen to quiet- ‘n tho crowd and restore order. Wlliinzns was ordered hcld. Quinn was bclicvcd to lmvc sul- ion of the brain and our---t-oday--was--uncon-1 ‘the most errorlcss huninn I've ever on -Ti<-];"' \\'i!1‘i:nn_\ n“ BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT Croix Club Helen Jacob Straight Tilt At‘ Forest ST. STEPHEN, N. B. 151111., l0-- tBy Pitching three-hit bull youthful 1 Kenneth Kallenberg, put the St. (A. I’. By (iuardianfi- >lil'vi1ll\\'ir<'l Crolx baseball club o! Si. Stephen ; FOREST HILLS. N Y.. Sept ll‘ in direct mm for the jvm- Brunt. t-‘irven thousand LUIlllL: fun» 11.114111 wick senior baseball rlmiiiploiislizii 1 1111' 1111 llihvl- 01 b01111‘ bvli- Wvl" 11'- horc today as the bortiuz- club .‘1"\\'11 “"111 1001113 11111 111W ‘M’ chalked up a 4,3 victory 0,10,51,11,,‘ , trtxtltd to a most .\])|_~L‘Liil'.‘lllitl' 1s- John Marounsv Th‘, “m Wm‘ me 1 lilbition 11f tnp-fliglii vtillPjidq .1 second in the provincial bPsirilll" c- Gmgml-v dmmgi" “em ‘Wm m0‘ ‘ out-of-fivc game SETlPS. The l (l 11"" 111011‘ young Frank Pitrlu-r Wm be flayed at 5mm John _ land lhr- Unllvd Slailvh .\ll'.,, urda‘, afbvmoon Cllillllpltlllsllll)» were rcllllrrli Bub Cavitgnaru. Associated Press Sports ltriter; _ ._ _ _,, _ _ ,(!ilZll'. pl:1,\r=r.<---t\vo from Ellg .1. ‘The C101). Club. foimc-ny 1(ii‘!1'.vl I Parker yumwer mm iuwln‘ fled as the St. Stephen Klwanv. had my n...,.1. T“ ma .(. M headimcrs of the _prov1nce and ‘gnu winn,l,‘u"k‘1‘{ 64‘: 134i “m. Mallllmes in 5011101‘ competition (H, ‘V111,. h“, Qppmp-pr 1:1 one o‘ h“ seveml 11515- lmkdh" "P91111111 tomorrows sepia-finals. red-header! 3mm’ of the 111ml ‘wmc-h WMHCS‘ ilmn Budge, \\'.'i(lt"(i throuuh John (11133 R1111 1101i‘ all that is needed i -; 5;: ' 3110mm‘ W111 1° 1111"? 111"1l1 111C‘ 111°‘ ‘ Th1,- Oilltl‘ men's semi-finalists vincial title and a br-rlh in llu- p, .. n; Emiqand ._,.,,,,,(. ‘,._ M31111?!" 1‘1111ml’)1011~"111l1 5011"“ I i933 and 191M, 1nd Bryan "Bztvfi Kallfniruiz. n ‘JO-icar-oirl youth. ‘Grant. .lr.. v‘ . put an a dzizrlzn: 0x11101101; on the '1 mound and limited the sufc bios- “ of the loyalist Clly to three. 0m- of govcr the iii‘. which was n home run by Clarence idon two i110n....< ago. Moore. centre fielder. Hal Cronin, is 0x11001111 11> irlm Gran. who scored the rOPfllld Alarlmn EH62". Oil 111v $¥1'Pl1‘l11l l1 1‘-i< illi- run, colicctcci thc tuily ollicr rczl! }l11'0\'l'11§110\\'1l11 “"11". .- liwlnd lfi hit as Paul l\IcGratt:n1 annexed a 11m" P1111191"- scrnlch binglo in the third inning Thus, lht- long-aniicipdltli nit-ot- for ,h(,1i,.,,>nf(,,.\._ ‘in: on Alll1‘l‘l".lll turi l)t“\\'*.l'fl own‘. Knnonbwu was “mkinq in , Budge and Peri-v probably \\'.ll Lopngu-i, fol-m’ h“ mums H150 take place in Saturday's 1111111, On £3111’? £1 11101‘ l ' 11111011 ulici 1121111‘ ‘ . lwlllonmlllll’ through with base hits to vilt- 11m -‘ 15' _ 0-1 a ("lull ' r '“ bz-roiue the first. invuutr 11» :1. 1 ill big right-builder a mucking litur- gm Alwgvuwl, m" s,’ Crmx nub tltp llll-(‘t- l,lllli‘.\. Helen Jacobs cheered 111C l; 11311.1’ Boles. The hitting abihtv of St. Croix and faulty ficldinu; 011 the pflrt of the visitors spoiled‘ viriorv "m1 as early as the first 11111111: these two phases resulted in a run. In the second inning r1 1110111)“ a sacrifice and a timely single gave the border team its second run and m tho third they added m1. other on a hit and an crroi'."l‘hc fourth 1'lll'l. garnered in the fourth frame. “as one of the two earned runs scored by St. Crnix, crushing the Sun Francisco south- paw. (tussle Rucgencr. 6-1. 6-0. To- morrow Miss Jacobs will OIJPOM? 1h". crack Ellflibll soulhpaiv, Kay Siam- incrs. in what should be Miss Jac- obs‘ hardest assignment. . Neither of the other semi-final- ists, Helen Pccicrscn of Stamlordf Conir. nor Alice Marble of San Francisco. arc calculated as being capable of beating Miss Jacobs. or“ ,for that mailer. Bliss Stammcrs. .1; lihe British player should win 1o- II10lTO\\‘. Miss Jacobs and Missl -Stnn1n1crs already have mot three‘ tunes 0n grass, thc Briton winning both tvightmzm Cup assignmunis ‘ 11nd Miss .lacoh,< hcatinq her in the . nil-England chanui;o.\ hips. i By dogged rctric 111'; and out- steadying hcr rival at crlticnii Pcderscn climmnzcdl Rates Hubbell Greater Than pirations of the clauezthvr n1 the once great Mrlv Sutton, first Am- erican player to win a British title. NEW YORK. Sept. ilk-Gus Man- cuso took a man's size chaw of l0- bacco as he silt on tho Giant bvnch1 . . _ before todnyjq concluding numbcrihliss hfarble Avon her penultimate. with Cincinnati Reds and unhesiv- mmkpt’ 10st“ M‘ latingly picked Carl Hitbbell as Dizzy Deans pitching muster. The brains behind lhc Giant bat- Peakes Defeat ic-rics should know his subjects and] mmprlrisous. Ho. had caught both the Dizzy man of tlic Gas House Gan: and King Carl when the go-i ' ing was the toughest. l-lc caught - ~'r1-:‘..'i- '.. ,1 520.1313}?31113511111215.511? 251.; M“°P°.““~f?.~* "i‘.‘"“"°“1 Lhouflh u“, r0,“ Al“ m5 noun“; 10am from the‘ SLICK» ~Sf‘0l'(1 an: " g l tothcr victory in the ‘i711! town lull: ‘vllmllwlcus stopped his lallta1',Tl11‘ victims were the Holy R011- I211" s.a . s ~ -. " ' 1 \' b.. 11.11 1m -l . n11 1110.1 ,"Y(‘5' 311mm“ rates “n 0W" l tfifilllLlllillllllltllfll, wdiltccilihd: ' a 171-2 D1225"? 5am Gus‘ ‘lalmolmh ,1 d? i (1_‘["‘(l.l before “Fiddler usual i PM D12 m m9 second 11°“ H‘ W1‘ b: llrlllt tiitchincg and lll» tenni- you why. Both have more than» ,. ms hon‘... slugging Wm“. m, 111N111’ 01 1111111 11 1011'“ 11111 111 a l-Iolv nCtlfflllPl‘ llllli‘ touched the 01°51? 9111‘ D1"? 15 111111 1° 1111011 "n" l’.l\l'(1".\’p1i(‘llf‘l‘ for six scatter 'l hlls 011191055 1111f“ N01 Hubbcll- 110'“ 1.11.‘ country lads sluuzctl 20 ‘its .. 1\¢‘i'. soon. Out thcre I often think hes , 1,119 former b.1111‘; mar-rile l_\' bnilcri, 811001111! that llflrkivilidt‘ in with a ‘ from the blvx in the early stages oil .22 rifle." 1 the garlic. 1, Mnncuso, ihink. Hubbell is :i'cat-, Fails. who wnrc xvei‘. pleas! d wvh = er than cvcr this season. a good (‘Xlilbliifili of bascbzili. viz-i -———-— —- pressed ihcms-rlvcs favorably of tlhc 9 ' ' . Pcnkos‘ catcher. G. Smtth. w 1'» Baseball SBlg SIX handles- his mate's steaming 11.111. ~—~* with graceful case. To prov" lit‘ Géfflid W811i" <11 1111‘ Tilwfi 1°01‘ 1 had a good fielding 10am "Fizlcll ovcr sole pos-ossion of lll1l'<‘l plnrv l "(nggljd 111v“, 11p" 1111» last 11111110 in thc Amcnrln Lavina in" o1 ,<~11ly to have his fiFlflPlis 0111-11 110w: Baseballs Bu: Six ycslvrrlny hi’ 1 0311101101111; out in orrlcr and roiiliui getting two hits in four iimcs at ‘ 11m,- mpunn m‘ ,1 (mum 1: ,~1r~~ bat to boost his mark one p '- w_ \\Y\1-,'\1;\11_ cvntazc point t-o .3633. He brokr- n T1“, 0,,1,1_,,1_;1,n: yypfftlfjlll‘ L-e with Bill Dickey 0t’ the Yuiik- 111,. }{l)l_\~ Rwirrmcr 111110 1 ccs. who wn» idle and 1411111011 Whclan who 11111101110 1111111 fourth plitrc. In the National ,-;ll()l'l§l~‘.‘1 G l~‘:".il1ci.<ui11;». ~; League, Paul Wancr o1 ll1\ 1' t . ('m(‘f0l1l_\' boosted his first-place llllll , l3 points ovcr second-p 11cc SCORE I11‘ INNI\'(‘< Medwick of the CHl'(1il1l\1.\, r: 1 his average one point to .1169. by ‘ {bakes 304 Li“ ‘to l-‘l getting two 1111s in four chances. ![')1\' liericcmcl" 110 0111i 11111 J while. Medwirk went hltlvs. in flvc LlNlIYPS trirv to tho plalc. Q The standings tthrcc lcadintrl Pcakrs: .l. (‘urrzm ‘lb. .l. livulwxv hitt-brs in each lciigilci: iii‘. (‘i Smith c. Xliicllt-lllli G Al‘; R IlPci.1K. Xlrvonev Jib, J. 31110001111111 l1 Averill. Indians 15175581111210.3713 . 1,. klncfionnld rl. J, Gillan (ti. 11.- Allpiilltt. White Sax ismvh lb. - 12447111021711.3721 Ilniy Redeemer: l1‘ \Vil‘.‘l.ll‘l s» r.- 1211518 891511.360 \V_ Wit-clan 2b l-I 'l‘l~on‘.b~ r1. R ‘496 031110.368! \\'1l11.1i11s p 1V Rh. F. McNeil] lb. E 6562 911200.356 lnirtcr Rh .\' p, P. Cnl1il11l'.\ cf. '1‘ P Wnncr, P" . 15B. - ATHE DREAM 0F ‘.11 hgfillfl iyiqu " 4M Pliclps. DDdZCl; l 1 C(lllll0_l'§71l.__.l. 7.\fc_ll1l1_ls<_c_.__ __ Jr. ____:;;--- -‘- :5 _‘ l uimnrllm 1 D I Z z D points, Miss y C a l1 husky Dorothy May Sutton Bunclvi of Sanlri Monica, Chill] 6-3. 4-6.‘ ' 6-4. ending the championship as-4 H. R. Team_ K-liyr lC-onrge s Meets Kay Wins Second Stammers In“ Semi-finals Hills Today B ruin s 1A nd Canadiens Trading In Deal ri.1l \‘Virr~l In ;. i Lvligllv ; lilnnlrw 1' Aduzi i _ .1116 l TP-(‘lllfll zed. Rt-c. 11'.j l5 Ell! '4‘.\'l"il 11'" clollcctcd ten hits,‘ lilcluziing a of hm. summfl‘, i‘ llii: lllllllll‘ ii u~~ 1115.111 11 Gglllnl‘ Cull by Ros.“ a ‘Film-l by‘ to will the womins clinnllroi pmnlmpd '0 bml m" I” c o - 1 . '. ‘ P) and a dmll” 1'5 for the fifth >trcught yrur. 0'1 k; ,, NF.\\' Y1 )1’. 1'1. ' 1hr: irp youl h. Th... 1111:. C1111); . o. u. 11:12. line tli: t\:1.- niu- o: 12:11 1,111.- orllll and nun-i 1'li1‘t'l‘.'- ' 1011;: hlxavc; of 1hr- u-mw,» - F“ lklt‘ B0 ‘icr. by B1111. (hr prime 1 ..m1 rln- I, 1110 (‘humps " ' 1 firs’. season t wiirtr lflll‘ (fill-i 1 Bllnliv 1.x no .'\~ 1.1.413 1T1 l)ll>lll<‘.\ if. lg ropo nmsici‘ n in! lll ricics oil’ ho 1.\ kn/ (‘rviiliwii of ship for h:- n Local Golfers AcceptAm/terst In v i t a t i o n Rifle Slioof S atu rda v (‘M1111 '. (‘runb '1. 1 ilir ‘J1'“l. I1“' BY ("JOLLY-- MAESEJS VOICE 15 ' {Se}