SEPIEMBER 10, 1931 _ __ 'r'I-ri1'£_§nAlu.o'l'rE'ruwN GUARDIAN »-AGE si-IVEN - i _ i -T __ _ . _.ii 1 _ _ ` f.; ;J;f aocncil ,,, _masks-rBAi.i. ' i , ROVERSWI CI Y SO TBALL LEAG_,E TITLE BUWLIN G BOXING _ -li Ygung Northend Team Give |=|a5'hy Fielding Display To Win Final Encounter I6-9 The flashy lelding northend Rovers, displaying the batting prowess in |19 pim-hcl that has marked all their playoff games, last night won the City Softball Championship for 1937 by sending the defending ,mglpioiis lst Medium Brigade team dawn to a 16-9 defeat in the fifth and final game of what has been a red-hot seriesdhroughout. Refusing to crack as they saw the desperately battling Artillery mm threaten to overtake their early lead at various stages of the game me Rovers came through in the ninth inning with a 6-run burst that ,prlled victory for them. Up to this time it had been a breath-taking lllugglc with the losers threatening time and again, but instead of the ,-oimgstl-rs breaking it was the more experienced squad that blew sky high, ‘l‘|\ey lril-d desperately hard to regain their lost ground in the last nf the ninth but the best they could do was push across one run- md that \rasn‘t near enough. ____ ____ l But fans won't soon forgot thc F:"""""T` W""`"_`1 struggle they witnessed last niglit. Away to a 5-0 lead in the firsti . White Drives Two Winners AtCircuitMeet SYRACUSE. N. Y., Sept. 9- (Apl.-B:-li Whit. e won both feature races, on -today's Grand Clrclrt procralii when he piloted Ro,=nl.nd olrliefl by his son, Gih White oi Lexington, Ky., to victory in the 515.030 All-American Handicap Dash, and scored one of the serl.'~oli's major up cts as he gllldr-cl 'I‘\\'lliglit, Song to triumph in the $4.000 Govcrnoi"s State for ll ' ii' ' Q 11 ' . b li th .00 f th . lh"""-""""°°m trmters' l ii/iliolzssgililerse lie; in ellie rciefirnsivi cmmol' _- V _ , Tllilight. Song wa. conceded little l-hliiire to beat Dean Han- over 21001-4, formerly Mr. Watt. but While cut out the early pace in the first' two heals and Rosa- lind had just enollght left to win. Vic Fleming, veteran Syracuse retnsman from Duridns, Ont.. also drove two wlliiicr=. sending Billy Direct to a straight heat victory in ilie $1.500 Hanover -State for lhr<<‘-_rl-al'-old trotters and com- ing bark for another strailzlitlicat when br-hind Calumet Eblis in the 2:12 trol, Ro~alnfl's time of 1.12 l-4 was inliolllicrll as a new world record im' the :nie and la hnlf trot. The rest previous time was 1.14 1-2. INDIANAPOLIS. Sept. 9-Angel Child. liolclcr of the track t.r,otting l-r"orri_ follnrl the Indiana 'Stale fa rlzrnllllds oval to her -liking again today and trotted to vlci/Dry in tlirrc srl-nllrlit heats of the $1,500 L. S. A_vrl=.< 2:00 Trot. The hav mare from H. W. Boyd‘s Uhlcaso stable. which set the rec- ord of 200 1-4 two years ago. had lbfsl time oi 2.02 in the $900110 heat under the reins of Spec Er- skine. i-.~-_:xT- __,._~%~f:'-M 1_1. STYLED . . . For Going Places _‘X _ it s.. \/\// L I ‘~ f'»§°. ._., . ~zlnd doing things, correct for every oc- casion. In the new fast shapes and shades of Green, Metal tones, and regular colors. 3.50 To 7.00 Prowse Bros. Limited _ "My Halter" il-~%_@ » -*-_._;~._ _ two frames Rovers saw Artillery make the count, read 5-3 by the end of the third and threaten to repeat their startling comeback of the fourth game. But last night Rovers continued to score i-uns. Three times before ‘he ninth in- 'ning arrived the losers had :lraun u to within two runs of their frame with a like number of tal- lies. Entering the ninth trailing 10-8 things didn't look too dark for the Army team but when the first two Rover batters got on on' errors away went. the Army bal- loon again and before the win- ners had been retired six runners had crossed the plate. That in brief is the story of last | ability of the northcnd youngsters. I Artillery outhlt them last :iight b_v the slim margin of 15-14 but where their fifteen hits had been good for only nine runs, Rovcrs accounted for 16 on their safe blows. There was only three of the Rover runs earned as nine Artillery errors looked after that part of it. but the winners had the stuff to come through with needed hits. They flilly deserved their victory. and heartlest. con- gratulations to them. Out of the last game emerged _the figures of Hec MacQuarrie and Aubirl, Blacquiere as the hitting heroes. Three times during the tilt McQuarr1e poled out long home run drives to spur his mates on but it was wasted effort in a losinl: cause, but the big first baseman deserves a lot of creclit just the same. Blacqulere, hitting safely five times out of six :vos the sparkplug of the Rovers' at- tack. BOX SCORE ululmaicuoamwuv; ¢»-m»-wNz».1w¢-=N o»-.-:su-1-aa-zo: i-r-r~:l:»-wmv-"‘g norooo¢lvGO°"> ¢o»-oeoeso F1 Rovers Jay, 3b. Stewart. rf. McKinnon, c. Whitlock. 2b. Blacquiere. lf. Cudmore, lb. McNeill, ss. Cairns. cf. Mollins, p. Totals 47 16 14 27 12 i Artillery Mclnnis. 2b. Currie, ss, Whalen, c. Williams. 3b. Power, cf. Kane, rf. Stull, lf. McQuarr1e, lb. Kelly. IJ. ~c~.n»¢~u\uluiroc-oi; ¢:..i>-¢>-‘=..:o»-ON BJ¢»1l4P~4l~J€»50-°lQ©= o Q>¢ ®©©"‘&~2|s') Ill 'N 'roms 5 -9 E 2-1 ia 9 Summary Earned runs: Artillery 9: Rovers 3. Two base hits: Jay. Blacqlliere, McNeill. Williams 2. Power. Three _bnse hit: Power. Stewart, Blac- qulere_ Home run: McQuari-ig 3. Sacrifice hit: Whalen, Stolen base: McNeil. Whitlock. Struck out: by Kelly 5: Mollins 4. Base on balls: by Kelly 5: by Mollins 2. Passed ball: Whalen 3. Wild pitch: Kelly - 2. Double play: Mollins to Cud- more in seventh. Left on base: Rovers 8; Artillery 6. Umpires-At the plate, Bill Lawlor; on the bases, George Francis, Fred Whalen. By Innings 123 456 189 Rovers 410 300 116-1 Artillery 012 120 021- cami 53: Q1-ll __ Berger W/ins Lightweight FOR SALE 7 Cham 1' 'nsh ' _ n 0 _ lp 1936 DELUXE F0110 SEDAN .i“.‘i§‘.l§"i.t?t.?°§l° .t’.§.?’2‘i§'§."‘“.‘.§: h . Pffficr Condition I;‘_i‘i"°¢..°.':_‘.‘.‘.l'.’.§1‘.; fifriltiliif” tolli. r e scrn nunanmous - E s ppla roul)1Td deilisoiti ovfer Dave Castilloux. anot- er on rea er. |09. R- In loriliuiidillsliybzh Ylhxhfiigihi ‘cihlihlff ` lc mond Street n the Canadian Boxing Fed to gal ' eratloi'i‘ll recognition as successor to A1 lbromm of Montreal. V/U0 N' p _ _ Ryn, the Austin, Texas. donblc ace. 0 onents but o each occasion . _ 4 _ Rlinlirers-respondednln' the very nexti M155 ‘_]°d1Ze-lowskat “my fal' F a v o r i t e s Advance At Forest Hills » BY BILL BON! - Associated Press Sports Writer FOREST HILLS. N. Y., Sept 9 _(AP)-Two contenders who lad not lost a set kept those recorls clear and two others who had m- ; countered early difficulties cane Q through with ease today as be vacant semi-filfbl brackets were filled in the combined mers and women‘s United States tcniis - singles champlonsliips_ ‘ F0111* performances impressve en~'~li in rhr- r-ff--ienry of tleir execution to make up for a lacbof . the tlizils witch attended ycser- |dfl_\"S prnlzrnin were supplied 8,- _ 000 sun-drenched customers -b,' J. Donald Budge. strong favrritc, Jilfiwigli Jedrzejowska, the pul- verizing Pole; Frankie Porkcrand Helen Jacobs. Biirlgc moppcd up the 19-year- old junior champion from Los Angeles, blond Joe Hunf. 6-1. 6-2, 6-4, and tomorrow will go up against Pai'kei', hi.; Davis Cup singles mute who tool;_§1_ 6-2, 11.’-10, 6-2 decisiorl 1l'oni Johnip’ Van teixng with the booming loreliands - that have estabfislied her as top choice for the women‘s crown, de- feated Ruih Hardwick. hard hit- ter from England, at 5-4. 6-2. ing with Miss Jacobs, perennial contender and four-time former cliainpicii who won out at 7-5. If-R einer '-Zfii' Stcnipieixs. petite Engllsh Miss who was unable to > nel suull mu hots under Tomorl'ow's others semi-final matclies will pail Bobby Riggs, second-seeded Amerlcsn from Los Angelee. against Baton Gottfried _Von Cramm, Germ-"lit/'s last for- eign sllrvivor, and A tz Lizlina. next to Miss Jcdrrc-j0¥ka on the list of favored invide .,-. . against Dorothy May Bunny, thé Santa Monica, Calif. young-ter who _ves- tcrday cllsm‘ssed 1936 clianipion Alice Marble. , I Mclnnls", To Meet ‘,lKid" Ferguson, *__-._ The Crystal Rlrir. Siuninerside, is to be me Sooner' of a. pl-oniisiiig looking boxing card on the night Of, Weclnesday, peptember looh, when .Jimmy ivlopinis, clever local boy tangles with !Willie ',Kid" Fer- guson ol Halifax for the feather-' weigllt chanipioriship of the Pro- vince. Ferguson, one of the clever- cst. battlers in' zhc Maritimes, al- ready holds decislons over Kid Lantz and Kid Hart, two Maritime _ - _ 1 . Y _r_z;~:z-'~;-_.__-__= -- -- -f --vcr Z `-(A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK. Sept. 9-The pace- making New York Giants cushion- ed the defeat of their .southpaw ace, Carl Hubbell, by sliellaoklng Brooklyn Dodgers 9-2 in_the sec- ond hail-f of a doubleheader in Brooklyn today. The even break while the Cubs were losing to St. Louis increased the Giants' lead to three full games in the Na- tional League pennant chase. Young Luke }1strilin'5 :ix-hit flinging was too much for the Giants in the opener and the Dodgers took a 5-1 decision. Led by Mel Ott. who smashed four hits, the Giants came back to take t-he second genie with a sus- tained sliiow of power. Cards Finally lialt Cubs Through the combination of steady six-hit pitching by Lon_ Warncke and a 16-hit blast against. Charley R/not and Roy Henshaw, Cardinals finally routed their Cub ‘,‘jinx". `It was the first defeat for the Cubs in 12 meetings with the Red- birds. r Bees Sting Phillies 5-3 In Boston, Vince DlMa.ggio's homer with two on and two out in the sixth enabled Bees to con- clude their series Wlth the Phillies with a 5-3 victory. Frank Glabler, who relieved Ira 1-Iut.chin'~on in the .rixt-h and preventai further scoring. was credited ‘ with the triumph. Pirates Win In Ninth Arky Va.ughan's ninth-inning triple and Bill Brubl-iker's single _ gave Pittsburgh a 1-0 triumph` over Cincinnati. Soil-1-hpaw Eddie Brandt hurled one of the best games of his crane spla will. Brooklyn clams Awaii"T .0 Women Elimihaied To Increase Lea ue Lea f._v.-_._.__ _-- _ri g d AS Crucial Seri€S In Quarter-finaI¢R0un.d with four hits. AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK, Sept. 9-Boston Red Sox worse thelnselves out to- day hitting and running the bases. but it was worth it since they hammer-ea their fm-oi-lie --jlnx" the i Yankees, into a. 13-7 defeat, end- ing the New Yorkers' six-game winning streak. After spotting the Yanks four runs in the first frame, they came from behind twice to chalk up the l victory wth li 16-hit attack at the I expense of three Yankee pitchers] Two ‘For Nats Wasliington won both ends of a doubleheader with the Athletics! winning the firt game 13-6 and; the second 1210. Seven runs scored in the fourth inning of the opener and nine in the third stanza of the nightcap cinched both games for the Sen- ators- Sox Best Browns Chicago made a clean sweep of the two-game series with the Browns, nosiiig out the cellar- dwellers 9-H. Jim Bottomley‘s team tried des- perately to make lt a contest. a- ninlli-inning rally falling one run short. of tying the _-core. Tigers Triumph In 9th Bill Rogell’s single with the bases full in the last half of the ninth inning enabled the Tigers to nose out Oleevland Indians 19-9 in De- troit. Four Indian hurlers saw service in the slugfest. Mel Harder being cliarged with the defeat. Detroit used three moundsmcn, George Gill getting credit for the victory. Indians' batnmen collected four home runs, two going to Julius career.__I-Ie l_et_t.he visitors down Solters. _ Lead In Can BY ELMER. DULMAGE Canadian Press Staff Writer Toronto, Sept. 9-tCP)-L.lght- S`I`_ ANDREWS GOLF CLUB. horse Harry Cooper. the best med- al scorer of them all, and veteran Leo Diegel, four times winner of the crown, scored startling 67's, three under par, to share the lead today on the first 18-hole round of the Canadian Open Golf Championship. Dapper Leo ;'&;ed a six-foot. putt on the 18th green for a. 66, a. fumble that bothered him not at all. "That is the only putt I've missed today," grinned Dlegel, as he walked from the 18th. Defending champion L a w s o n Little had to cover the last nine holes in par 35 to keep within champions _in their respective classes and iv. will be a stiff lost! for Mcllinis. regarded by many .tsl the oespinitt-slinger ever produced; on th_¢'1sland. | The semi-final. an 3-round al'-l fair, oi-rigs together for the second! time Ch5.‘:‘.‘l't McDonald of Sou'-is and Vic Troliholm of Macaan. Just the other evening at the Forum,' on the occasion of the Binns-Clay-, bourne scrap, this pair gave they fans a sweet fight for 6 rounds! that at the end was declai-ed al draw. At the time both boys were] dissatisfied with the decision .eo- tlwil' coming meeting looms up a lest. to see just which ic the sup- erior fighter. Two preliminai'ie5. pitting Cha;-'_ lottetown boys against Summer-_ side leather pllshers, round out a‘ cal-ri that should furnish plenty of action. LeBlanc And -Lane Chosen For _Mound Duty HAT-IFAX. Sept. 9-Halifax Cltpltais, a grim. detern-l.ined bunch of_bal1 players tonight. awaited the third game of their be-it-of-five series with Yarmouth Gateways for the Nova Scotia anmteur ba'=e- ball championship, scheduled 1,0 be P1-‘Wed here tomorrow- Kiiocked off twice in a row, the Olllltnls 'Vere prepared to throw the veteran Mcllish Lane at the confident Gateways in t.omori~0w'5 game. He will be pitted against southpaw Oopie LeBlanc, who won a close 3-2 decision over Lane in the opening game at Yannouth. Despite the fact `I.eB1anc has merely to hhrow his glove on the field to -eat Nova Scotia teams, playing-manager Vince Ferguvn l of the Capitals wasoonfidenhmne _would take the gwme and the vet- eran rlght-honder felt the some woy. The biggest crowd of the season is expected to be present. l If Yarniolihh win: tomorrow-or later-it will be the second pro- vincial title in three years for the Gateways. Last year they bowed 00 Springhill in the finals. shooting distance of the leaders. at that he was seven strokes back with 74. The immediate competition was provided by broad-shouldered Ed Oliver Welmingtnn. Del., and stout Billie Bunke of Cleveland, former United States open champion. They had 69's_ Three strokes off the pace were Ed. Dudley of Philadelphia and Vic Chezzi of Deal, N. J., with par 70's, and another stroke back was Ralph Guldahl, American Open champion. Top Canadians were Bobby Alst/on of Ottawa and R. H. Green of Kingston. Ont.. who had 72‘s_ Bracketed with the best Can- adians were Willie Goggin of San Francisco. Jimmy Hines of Garden City, N. Y., Horton Smith of Oak Park, Ill., and Jimmy Thompson. Shawnee-on-Delaware, Pa. At '13 were such home stars as Art Hulbert. of Toronto, Stanley Horne of Ottawa, Lloyd Tucker of Kitchener. Ont.. and amateur Phil Farley of Montreal. Farley was the leading amateur. A, Skinner of St. Andrevfs, N. B., started out in great style with 9, par equalllng 35 but just about blew himself out of the tourna- ment on the second nine when he needed 4-5. How They Stand INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost P.C. Newark 105 42 .114 Montreal 00 05 .552 Baltimore 11 -510 Syracuse -510 Buffalo -49° Rochester 467 Toronto Jersey City AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost 1‘.C. New York B8 41 .677 Detroit 75 Chicago '70 iaoswn 68 Cleveland 67 62 41 'M 'ld '73 76 80 85 .472 97 '73 '70 B2 49 .336 seas §§§§ washington 0" --181 Philadelphia 96 323 st. Louis 38 ‘N 295 Narrow/u. uzaoila l_ Won Lost I’.C. vs 49 .iii ss _sas oo _sas oi _srl New York Chicago Pl ttsbu rgh '76 09 Bt. Louis 98 tlrlrl after winning the Lite froml Tcrontnh Tommy Bland in 1933- R4 S5 06 .402 73 .430 Boston Brooklyn Fhlladelphig, 53 '16 -411 Cincinnati 50 75 -'\°° . Cooper And Diegel Share aclian Open Doubles Titles- Decided As Tourney Ends- Eleanor Bourke became a triple winner in the Provincial closed tennis tournament yesterday when she teamed with veteran G_ F. Hutcheson to win the mixed with Evelyn Sinclair to capture the womerrs doubles title. She won the women‘s singles clhampion- ship several clays ago. In the mixed doubles Mr. Hutcheson and Miss Bourke de- feated Stuart McNutt and Evelyn Sinclair in a three set affair. Scores were. 6-3. 4-6, 6-3. Miss Bourke and Miss Sinclair were too strong for Doris Heartz and Gwen Rogers in the women‘s doll-ble‘s final losing only two game-S in each set. Other champions crowned dur- ing the tourney were. Frank Han- sen who won the men's singles title and Fraser MacMillan and Tom Guy wenners of the mens doubles event. ' Now --Enjoy Teamwork Shaving Use Gillette Blades in your Gillette Razor! Sze how easily and quickly stubborn bristles are removed when you use a Gillette Blade in your Gillette Razor. These two are made lor each ofherf- designed as a unit by the mme engi- neers. Gillette has spent millions of dol- lars on special equipment to make them function perfectly together. Buy _I package of Blue Gillette Blades. S_Iip one into your Gillette Razor _and dmoy the thrill of teamwork shaving. No.1” clllfmm 0|-lzlnll "-mmwnllr _ a ln-in io .m. F..s.”r.- ""e .i".=.“.::..'.:.._.-....r... .~..... i 5 F. io for f°" 25* it 50* - lil ll c Gillette Blades doubles crown and later combined" BY ALAN GOULD Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 9-. 'illi llli ther .#113 13-11019 5*-*ml'fm‘a1 "mich tlil- ei-,1lilli, I-lc llrlli l _Miss 1‘rites reached the semi _,.,,_._ __,,,,`,), _,.,.,,,,_,3' fU“1l5 M31' ln the day- 0“"lm‘~'- rlialkell up .ilio:l'_ rl,-. ili llivr--f.' *ll lil il 'lie iilial 1..l'.\i1.‘.\'li,\, " lirflix- ll milli- llc lilt.-, .rfi :l li_lr\\,' :is l\.r.ll>l-ll d-'i hi. 6-lholv, 1-ll ._ N35' I-“Shel “lrnnipegls 19' 10111” Sl. Croix l“.lil.~ 1"' l" 'll/I9-“H0511 Ch‘*mP1°“».m"‘d came in the .sf-<-oild il in the iii'.\t and live- mile.-. at hal Bi'o\\'lir-ll`s pill-11.115 \ until ilu: l:l.~t iiiruif-I \‘»`l1€‘I\ ight Pontiac.. liallcrl out l ri a r0\=.' and cole-ri ol then, was not lil _.il-li 'b;-cl self, but he iw-1-f-i‘ got he deservfd from hr. one of che Sl. Siepi earned. He allow-ri il? they were well sl>i"`L ;'-~\'<,~ in ill fi of witch ming. an- the 1292 111 riilr tits in US 81.1"' th:-se singles io rlln. Until L~rl,_\» 11.1-l ilmitfrl 'iii-iii no W0 sCrll1<:ll l;.~>‘.\'_-_ Bill Daiiler\» '.\'lio o ~ ll. NEW YORK. Sr-pt. The New _York Commission today , recognize the winne ooming 15-round Marcel Zlhil of Fr Apostoli of San wp:-ld; igilddlewelght .9 .ij`l<'~_~eci li mx iorln liiin- llie .=-uppurt iiiates. Oniiv 11-11 l`lll`1S “'05 hlts, but 9-iAPl~ Siate Allneoic decline-fl to r of the forth- niatrl: bl-r-.recli ance and Fred F‘ralicis<:o as clmmpiori. washington ooz mi oio is is 2 » Piilisasiphia siooooooo 6 5 2 l - Lanalian and R.. Ferrell; Kelley, Krsiteuslm, rink, Archer. 'rut-be . i_. TIFF l $1 1930 1930 _ l iozs ioai Y 10:10 1931 1931 1933 1930 1933 , 1933 iosi 1935 1935 1931 cans ‘ 11.152"‘€51ili?.§i`§"'N§§§.i"in§"‘ia¢.1§ifI B ,wc NEED 1'-nn ao-o-M so our 'rn Good Val-ues at the follow-ing . up to $ 1 00.99 ’ 1928 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN 1929 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN 1930 GRAHAM SEDAN 1927 CHEVROLET SEDAN 1 1928 CHEVROLET COACH Two to choose from f 1929 FORD COACH 00.00 to $200 CHl*;\'R(ll.1‘1'1` 5'] .- ' FORD SEDAN “'l‘l1l‘l’ETT Sl‘il').\.\' ("Hl'1\'R(ll.ET (`(),-\(`l‘l (`Hl‘]\'li(ll.l‘]T (`U.\l'l'l CHl§\'R(l'l.l‘iT ('0l'l’l‘] $200.00 in $300.00 NASH lx PLY1\l()UTH SEI71§u~ CHl']\'R()l.ET SEDAN FORD COACH $300.00 in s500.no NASH SEDAN NASH SEVEN PAS-S. FORD SEDAN CHEVROLET COUPE CHEVROLET COUPE my The A-Domed Pnl.) We also have Two Heavy Trucks, in per- Yesterdars lomers: Solters. in- feet c0“d|t|0n~ ’1 Ferrell, Senators; Hasson, Bruck- “il” er. Moses, Athletics: Connors. White Sox; Phelps. Dodgers; Di- Maggio. Bees, one each. A. E & ‘ 0. Pric . .00 l 1) \.\ SEDAN Gehrm y_.,,,k,.,.,_ 33, po,,,,_ Rm Phone 600 Charlottetown Phone 600 G,,m,_,_ In ` "Where Your Dollars Buy More” ES EY (50 : I es . l l l l i l l 1 W; ; t. _ ,__ 4 i" l‘~ I/fungi Totals: American 110; 1 l lN‘¢l°“‘l 56°; ww! 11270' L' sri * .i _in \f 1 . 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