"‘ »-l"-1?’-/-‘=‘<*~s-~¢--epl.-....... THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN 13491191211111 "P.'?.'.'i'.‘.l IF YOU WANT A SUIT THAI WILL MAKE-UP WELL- WEAR WELL—AND KEEP [T5 SHAPE auuuuvrco snrmn umuncvunr also MILITARY CLOTHS for Officers‘ Uniforms Khaki and Air Force Blue The: as! q s... ma...‘ ASK voun YAILOR roR Roamrzx REDS AGAIN SQ 1 SEEKS THIRD World l Series Facts, Figures (BY The Associated Pl-eu) The standings: W L Detroit (AL) 3 3 Cincinnati (N14) 3 3 First same (at Cincinnati): R. ll E Detroit (AL! ‘I l0 1 Cincinnati (Nil) 2 8 3 Batteries: Ncvrsom and Sullivan; Derringer, Moole, Riddle and Wil- son, Baker. Attendance, 31.793. . Second game (at Cincinnati): R. II E Detroit (All) 3 3 I Cincinnati (Nil) 5 9 0 Batteries: Rowe, Gorslca and Tebbetts; Walters and Wison. Attendance, 80,640. ‘rllird game (at Detroit: Batteries: Turner, Moore, Beggs and Lombardi, Baker; Bridges and Tebbetis. Attendance, 52,877. Walters Great Hurling Plus Defensive Brilliance Of Mates Main Factors In 4-0 Victory (By JUDSON BAILEY Associated Press Sports Writer) CINCINNATI, Oct. 7-(AI’)—Il’vucky Walters, the wonder boy of National League pitchers for two years, pitched and batted Cincinnati Reds to a 4-0 conquest over Detroit Tigers today and forced the 1940 World Series to its limit o! seven games. Just as he hurled three-hit ball to tame the Tigers in the second game of the Series and even the standing lust Thursday, Bucky today pitched a nearly flzurlrss five-hit game to strangle them into a shutout. But almost more than his nit-hing, the 30,481 hopeful hometown fans goggled at the home run their hero hit over the left field wall in the eighth inning. This blow, the second homer Waiters hit this year, only served to heap humiliation nn the Tigers. It came off young Fred Hutchinson long after the Reds ilzul sewed up the victory by shelling Lynwood (Schoolboy) ltmve nfi‘ the mound in the first inning. In two respects tlu- struggle followed the pattern 0t’ the other series games-first that each rival alternates victory and second that the games usually are decided errly and finish one-sided. R. II E The Tigers banked heavily on} '1~—~ Cincinnati (NL) 4 l0 1 repudiatml; 1311s’ DPITYYYYIIIIiYlCO _ a- As the result of the Reds tri- Detroit (AL) 7 13 1 samst W1111<‘1‘-* 111 1111111" 111111110115 .ulllpll_ llle 1940 World Series will tangle, when he “was kllcckocl out ; in», Lin; firs; to go seven gameg $11104} by s. five~run uprising ill the fourth 1st, 1,0 ' inning. Instead that the Reds s Cardinals beat, these same stuff iTigOr-i in 1934 for the last world they lchampionship won by a National the same liked before Tlrst Baseman McCormick tried to beat pinchhltter Earl Averill to the bu; after fielding s grounder and drop ed the bell in a collision with Ump e Lee Ballanfant and in the ninth Myers made a wild throw after a nice fielding play on a grounder by Gehrlnger. Only in the third and ninth did a runner get as tar as third and in the latter case it was Averill who dashed across while the Red in- flelders were busy making a double play on two others. The Reds, who filled the bases in the sixth and seventh innings netted only one run, but this lack. of punch was their handicap all, year and the fine fielding and pitching more than made up for it. Cincinnati's third run came dur- ing the sixth-inning threat, Ripple and Wilson hit successive singles and Joost walked to fill the bases. Myers hit the first ball back at the pitcher and Gorslca threw to the plate to force Ripple. Then Walters came to bat and knocked a grounder to Pinky Higgins and Wilson was able to beat the throw to the plate. A double play ended this uprising. After the game Wilson revealed he had pulled a muscle in his l right leg racing heme in the sixth, but he said he expects to be able to play in tomorrow's finale. CROSLEY HELD. Cincinnati, Oct. ’i—(AP)—Official box score , of the sixth World Series game:— l lSafe--0n Baseman’s Error Eddie Joust, Cincinnati . .<-~- UARE SERIES WITH TIGER M48’ 1 ‘ . . I man, got away with something trill-n he slid solely into second a! i .1ikcd earlier today. lLeague club, Detroit (A) AB R H 0 A _ 6111111411155 _ , , , ,_ _ , _ Fourth game (at Detroit); ‘Bill Werbcr started ill(‘vSli‘£ll1lli[71 qnminnqri 15 1n a 50ml strategy; ‘Detroits Dlck Dariell dropped Sulllvans throw for an error in first \\ ol-lll bfifits game at Cincinnati- R H E with a tcrnlilcv liner ‘llliillilbll tile position to repeat this _ victory by Bartell ss 3 0 2 0 4 I But flger Slliflflillfgtlrlilifllnllr‘ error and won llle game 1-2. Cincinnati (Nb) 5 11 1 fence in the first. lllllullr. good for having big Paul Derringer ready Sullivan xx l 0 0 0 0 ' 1M1 .. 1.31 i. “i525. “aw r 2 s 2 1.’ :1 0010"“ REMEMBER WHEN . Batteries: Derringer m Wi n; c 1m ' a 1.1 n ' wl l uro ays lies snce W pp ng c 0s y c 1 m. Trout, smml, MCKain, and sull- Wain-l Ffhgnléog/slvgfirlglck 1H2}: thqklBcrgrgals in Detroit Satélridav-w gehnléger f}: g g g g (l) NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 7-—(CP)—, my The C"—"anad,an PMS) ' m e 1 .c s 1 l lers a al- eel-an " w 1 BT59 Newsom wmtendangg, 54,093, to sendppRlowe to the showers. comee baclgr withpgilck Newsom on Yggfinlbrg 4 0 2 l0 0 ggcnlénanggii) '10 LKEYSSVLQZ 1 _ , , ‘ nrrat Detroit llllrler who will to- ‘ _i_____ Werber scored on a llil by Good- one (lays rest and hope that he Campbell rf 3 0 0 2 0 pnch his wnmnmLL-S 1,0 a 5.2 Vi,“ T11 931‘ 0t 11199 dflllltfl 3111151195 111 ~ _ day iw [iii ill!‘ mnunll fol- the Tigers; mm, game l“ Detroit) man who raced home from sen- ital) continue the mastery that i-Ilgginq 3b 3 0 1 1 2 {my m” Newark 3mm 1,,|,e,~na_ 11_11 “_<11'_1d bfnfs 111~fl101i¥ NW‘ V0111 l » L v P ‘ ls 1111‘ 11'»111~' W"! ‘he "Bid 1°? ‘he I R. I-I E 011d 011 R1l>l>l@$ sharp shot to cen- subdued the Reds last. Wednesday Tebbetts c 3 0 0 6 2 tiollal League playoff cllalllpions, Pmkw” delvafim C" 1mm.‘ Rod“ . p1,,“ Q13“ --~,. up“. mnnlns ilrrldifll.’ time 11f the Serlvl- "1111- ‘cllwllllllu on.) o s o tre. land again Sunday- Rowe p o o o o 1 here tonight in the um. game of 1"4‘1““1°‘1.““-“g 11mm’- 1‘ 1e" W11 ‘ ‘"1 “ L, J, ,1; {w}, ,,,,,,CQ,,,; Bo" has already come through with ‘Den-on (AL) a 13 o John G°r5;¢a_ “m, reneved Rqwe ‘ The Ram although making two 50mm p 2 0 o 0 5 the Lune World series before a zodav, to Win tller foul-ill straight ; hgand June w“. two masterpieces. l Batteries: Thompson, Moore, 1H 111-5 011161‘ fiasco. came 11p with errors behind Walters today, look- Averill x 1 0 0 0 0 crowd of 6.000. The Colonels, Am- “mm champmnship- Ila was U191 ..‘L.’§n,.,»,ed dunn 11"" ' "-‘~*~ "——~ iVander Meer, Hutchings and Wll- 3719931191‘ credlmblll? flglfmfllfii] Peta ed__tile_best they have during the Hutchinson n 0 0 O 0 0 merrian Association winners, were Immll game of ETEE‘6'_ a n1. lillto increases 11 New“ 1111 T . .. .. . .. 1" 1 31111» -111~1 Iwlilvvs’ 5111119. $121.- 1 Aimldame- 55-199 .- h ‘a2 3-‘. 1 .,. h‘ .. W; ' U“ “Hamil r" e ° .2‘ m; °a - lfllieiilw» ._ ,.__s . srimolllx" nllzlzr Tlunr m“ l sixth game (a, Cincinnati). ‘n t e _ Jinn“) c puck l ilglllilsculiillgglinligfitllviitllilgll; Nelrllarkablg x Batied for Gorslca in 8th {ices M Mcc my k Goodw ‘ ——’_ l 1 - ——-—- 1 - . _ "' 1 ' ' - 0 1C . man. .‘ _ - _~ ‘ Total attendance and financial R ll E (hr-films ‘York W111i!“ individual stops and throws. xx-Batted for Bartell in 8th Double plflys-JOOSL. MYeTS 117111 r-1leiglilgblelfillgliiilfliatl‘lNinth fig‘ e 1s». games) lDetroit (AL) o 5 o wane“ struck m“ ‘mly "Wo men‘ Mccclrmlck? We-"ber- 30°59 and F- English blasinezs house has met ille l v A cc, 2.25.0113 lcllllllnllstl m1.) 4 lo z Ggufmq; “$23k (fggacilgge- gut hel wllllreglonly two aid no; Clntilllhltl (N) an n n o a McCormick; R lMccomllc-k‘ M...” in, wuanpn and despjw at, \.,C_S;,_ owrzi-Slglg: fillenwnnntnccd we have R 5 slvlmvmsos ‘ Batten“; R0,}... P075103, Hut. wills k0 L ‘I111 n1‘- hk m“ l; hep ol ‘ s eacgma ts d pn W rb 3b 5 1 0 1 1 and F. McCcrmnk: Gorslca. Tob- liudfl$ has increased the value of .. ‘geek m most p n01 ifirgi, {onl- games only chlnson and .\ eetts; Walters B 9Y5 P 11, DD 4-2 ‘ ~ 011 Of ser 911-8 Jams. e re ire e er . t - belts and Yolk. Earned FllhF-Clh- Vcxporls, l‘ contained 1D a n; ll ~ ' “H, u] H3055 and wjlgon, ‘(lOWHET t0 mt? PM!‘ 1111MB ill"! T_1- order the inst five men he faced M’. McCormick cf 3 0 i 4 0 cinnan 42 Lpfl On hg5(._=_13(.l,~n;t 5; jun-m; 1-6 2n “Ml/J? Llgngney snln-e (X) $562, Attendance, 30,481. ilzers could do llctlllnt: _\\ l-h ‘it. and after HIHDK up a walk and a Goodman rf 4 ‘l ‘2 2 0 clncinnatl ll. Basics on balls-off _Lullliecl, ., L‘m.,,,-{,' l l I .. firs“. ‘E323.‘2f.’li2£fl...€‘°il~o..il.. 5§":."*1..§°"‘=<1 1m“ ‘.1;..if.°°.".""“* "1 2 3 l‘: A P Wore - ‘s nit include share of $l00,- Sixth Il-me fliiflfldfllicfl Ind - 5 ° " ' _ .1 L‘ e" ° 5m n ° ' e ° Prslc“ l 1P1“ f’ 2- 1700*» 1W1‘ , a“ 0:‘; “gmm- ‘e m‘ l élCllLll ‘l. 1 .. maul lo less mo rights money ‘lnancial figures: the Rfids theirl pelgngrjlqténhéltlgllliérllu In the third v/hent Die‘); hailed; Wllsélnzn g (l) (l) 2 g1 s0n),_ off Iiutclllnson l 1M. Mc- ‘l “Th Ilxllsfiib.‘ t s n e w r [Um]. 0x116 21:1. gamg a; (jjnginnnfl 1Attendance, 30.481, 1111-15 CW" 0115' l1 - 1 ~ doubled ulh one ou an wen .no.. b - - Cormlck). Smuck oili-by Gorsica 3 - -“ 11- H1111 15’ QM" _1 _ a -; _ . ._ _..___.._ 8 ‘ Receipts 3499 Senes. third on a fly. Walters made lMyel-s s! 4 0 0 2 4 (Wilson, Myers. Wrlitcrsl; 1331111111 11111 110-“111011 H1101 1111‘ 11 1 FOR (nu, \\_- nn.-l~u|;;|;s 1; I g H ,~_'_.._. ._-.~.;~. ._ s-‘ -_, ____ , Charley Gfihfllllgel’ Ipoph foul Lao irlwaibllgr; p a; i 1(1) mt; 1;! .;{nf(»j~__5n5,-,n 1 (ND-Ono. by Walters Jliszillnvaionl nhllrllli‘ b01115) m _ __ _ Catcher Jim Wison. n e our . o a .- (Greenberiz. (‘or cal. la‘ l‘ ‘l 11 1 i5 1 v , A- r -»-. __ - - ___0UTl sixth and ninth innings Frankl l Pitching sillnlllapv. Rowe 2 rum ffitelll0ibillilvligtf_\\ll ll \\l.x._ll_ll“.yola(l_v‘ rhsylfxlVcngLtn. ' t’. gnle-mlhar - ' McCormick, Eddie _Joost and Billy ‘Detroit (Al non 000 000-0 hlls in 1-3 innings: _Gorslca l ‘emamx l‘ W“ m "foé_‘d?fivf;.y..Amcaflhm L 1W W 9mm,‘ _......\. » -~\ Myers helped out wltlfrdouble plays. Clncinnati- (N) 200 001 l0x—4 ‘inn 5 hits in 6 2~3 lnnzngs: Hui- m“ N0 h.“ n ~ o.’ $4 O30 to “- mhinsonlrllnlhiti ll l. 1' .. -... .. .1 ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ' Errors I-lad No Effect Errors-F‘. McCormick. Jl/Ivers. Losing dspitcller-Rcxvcl.‘ Umyllalllrtjsg- m‘ n . twd u h Hm}? bagedT fmgflodms-ll; lgggjsb-VHJAL)", will“: fdllnnfnm 1 ..'.\: (ll‘l lalllvs. but “'0 t‘0llri(li‘l‘ ll lilo . . ‘ ‘ ' “ w ' - ‘ 1 ~ l» — - lrxlcv or a i0 c r-r l'(‘.l$OllilJf‘~ The two errors L _no e ec on ‘Wa ers no zlsev Kl _- s n [rN 1 B151 [All b Klrm , v 1 11 l1 tl:l€_galill€. In the_elghtil__lnnlng lBax-tell. Home run- u els. ‘ac - L. 3b. Tlmc-...-l. Attendance nrqnn-rnlnnts for drill-en- not iooialm - -- paid-30A81. “heart 'l World t. . all... l " "“ v-u ~.. 4b v - I“, tures uni?» the Detroit batters Prawn‘ ‘o Left u. r1611- Brrles n Cillclnllltl. “when: and nulls; moo-u . .~ ...... _~...~.‘ out Falltcll 0M1" ' n a a u =11 Bill in Se“; a1‘ Clnoméa“ do “ruck out wnson is behind the plate for the e s an l s em» ~'rs ate u» the Reds-Tl Bu. Sluggers on I'd tslllns i. _ .- ‘c n of those 1PM"? a zel-"tre ‘£508.73 ‘ll! ole over-In: 0111s of 11w 1V111111 Frank McCormick and Ernie Inmbm-di; Tigers “lhnk" v.- Mill Starting The Slaughter The start of Detroit's second-inning blast against Cincinnati in the first game of the 1940 World Series at. Crosiey Field. Ilnnk Green- bfl-K n, crossing the plate with the first. of the five runs. Looking on are catcher wny-n of the Iteds. and Sullivan (No. 8) of Detroit. J. P. iilacPherson & Son QUEEN ST., CIIARLOTTETOWN l Expert made to measure men's, also new stock suits and overcoats that flt at a RIGHT PRICE- ,1 llfllfiili’ for the town's current sun- ,.,. MORE POWER IN INDIA SASSARAM. Illdla-(CPI _The unvernment of Tiihal" opened tile}- first stage lll the Bihal- PlCCiYiflVli-l tlcll llroieci llv switching on vice- ‘So many false statements are made by German wireless thata few rletzliLs regarding business may not be considered as lxillg out. of lllilfl‘. The iolioxrillg facts are nbsoilliely correct: “Our yearly sinl-k-iaklng date is September ilO, and if we colnpllrel the r Export turnover for the twolve~ pcrfc; Oil our own export. . p!'f‘<‘."i‘\'v‘(l ti: z" f‘. ’l‘llcv hafl kept) at lS. now through the Guy and others. last tall in ifane Fans Hundreds hav.e been anxious for a race meet. Here The final wind up of the season. efforts 0f the VICTORIA DRIVING CLUB who will bring together the best irotters and pzlcers in the Province in four matinee events, MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 14th. {thanksgiving Day, at the Provincial Exhibition ‘track, Charlottetown, under the sponsorship of the GARRY or CANADA c0 nrs Help a worthy cause and see some wonderful racing. Classes and entries are: — CLASS A PACE—Jane Azoff 1.59%, Aaron L. 2.071,?» CLASS A TROT-June Evans 2.10%, Squire Hanover 2.11, Millie Kalmuck 2.12. CLASS B Pace-Major BOWQS 2.121,.’ . IlSCllfl maul... 2121/4, Nell (‘ochatodale 2.16. Dir- 1/0 Miss Victoria 2.14. ect L. 2.09 /-9 CLASS C TROT AND l’A(‘E-Sc0tt_v Wznson, Lucky Guy. GeorgeMzlc, Ethel Bellini, Silent Mac, Alma ADMISSION TO GRAND’ SAND RACES This is afforded 50c.