GUARDIAN Ne," Forward Line SIIOCIXJ ‘Grea yd S engthen Abbie Three new forwards, constituting s complete line for the Abegweit hockey team in the coming season arrived in the city last night. These players, Joflre Desilets, Ray Cetliffc, and Walter Brenneman formed the famous Bulldog trio on the Btratford Juniors in their memorable tilt with Newmarkst for the Dominion Junior championship 1832-83- ‘ The Nawmarbat teun of that year like St. Michael's of Toronto this year was a , ‘ "' selected team and barely nosed out Strat- ford for the championship. The Bulldog trio was the outstanding line of the series. The three players came to or lotteiown vls indus- trial transfers. RAY comma: plays centre, is 21 years of age andwelghs 1'18 lbs He is an exceptional player with great; speed, and hockey brains. Authorities claim centre coming out of Ontario since the days cf Howie Morena. Getliife is on the reserve of the New York Rangers and will report at their fail tr-aining camp. He is regarded esagreatpropoepectbutwillbe given one more year in amateur ranks. JOPTRI DIBIIEI‘ is a product oi Northern Ontario and was brought to Btratford for their jun- innipeg Team . Plans New Bid In Rugby Race lonship this year. Into the shoes of who bilt the team last year,_siep he is the best, rushv tltlists of last year who were elim- inated in the Canadian semi-finals by i ronio Argos. have their eye on cupping the Dominion champ- Carl Omnin, Team For omingQSeason iorteamJi-Ieislflyearsofags, weighs 168 lbs. and plays irhhqfl wing. He is the property oi the Montreal Canadians and will report to their fsll training camp in Win- nipeg. Leo Dandura-nd. owner of the Canucks, states he is ready now for pro company, but he does not wish to start him in the hard pro grind at his present age. Desllet is packs a hard shot. . WALTER. is in his 22nd yehr, weighs 1'10 lbs. and plays left wing. He is a most cap- able performer using his weight to advantage and 1S‘0!Ll2h¢ reserve list of the Chicago iBlack Hawks. Forty to Race In Air Cruise For Melbourne (By The Canadian Press) LONDON. Bflpt- Zfa-Mildenhall, the new E0781 Air Ilbioe aero- droine in Suffolk. will be the start- ing point of the England-Mel- bourne sir races in connection with the Victoria centenary in October. All competition will find _accom- modation there several da'ys before the start foz-‘the speed race, fixed for the early morning of Saturday of October 20. Two hangars, each mess ‘ing 250 feet by 120 feet. will be available to shelter the rac- ing planes. The Royal AeroyClrub, which is charged with the organization, found no civil aerodzome had the necessary housing aocounnodation for the aircraft entered. Withdraw- als announced have seduced the number of intending starters to b9 and several other crews am un- likely to come to the starting line. However, the number of actual competing ,‘ es will almost cer- tainly be more than 40. some oi an exceptional skater,_,~tricky and two of his lieutenants. They are Bu“ 35,1101, wq (jqggqgy 331151;, them large multi-engined transport IathQAI-l‘ Both playing, they take on new roles oi Joint coaches. Better bal- ance is being achieved and a re- serve line-madly missed through unavailable players last year-is being cverobnip. lion Adelmsn. ' 21d pounds and standing five feet nine winches, will be balk a4; centre. Adel- ‘man has the record ofnever havi-ns ‘snadeabedsnarpinmimportant ame. Eric Law. six feet one inch t weighing less than Adelman, Qwill be reserve centre. The guards present a formidable may of strength. Johnny Patrick. if riy with Regina Rourhriders: is ceretti, Johnny Christie. and Ceca Rayon. compose the list. Pet- "rick tips the scales at 1'10 pounds: ‘Oeretti at 185. Christie at 1N and Raven is heaviest at 210 pounds. Eddie Kiishner. Denny Konchsk. Lou M08111. Cam Doherty and lCl-iaimoey Dugg form the tadkles. ‘lfonchair. coming up from the Jun- ior ranks, is looked upon by club executiva as the "find of the sea- son." Ho is six feet tell and weighs illbpoimdaMoguLastai-ofthe Winnipq-Argos game Iss1; year, is displaying his skill and speed again this year without any weakncu. Kahst. Alf McLaughlin, Steve D and Art Raven are the my Mugs. Kabst played under Doc Spears at Wisconsin in 19$. lhastjbeen given all-American men- tion and was picked for the an- nusl mast-West Shrine game. He six feet and weighs ies no nds. t quarterback will be Bobbie who played with Doc {Cardinal squad. Short-he is five ‘feet nine inches in height-he Molshs 106 pounds. Cliff mose- ‘MPWdhrstcdoneofthebestCan- adieu-born backs in the country, gfwiil also play at quarter. "Jug" Anderson, one er the best players. At the ends will . son oi’ Lester Pat- We are. finding your 25c Dinners’ Very Popular‘ " "my one _ i rum nuhunni 146* craft. 1n the c-rcums‘ Ministry 8816M to postpone formal occupation of the new air station till after the races so the competi- tors could be satisfactorily accom- modated. ,_ Mildenhsll serodmme has a mag- nificent, smooth surface. Its long- est l-ake-ofi runway measures fully 1.500 yards. which should be more than ample for even the most heav- Vldllls r hue-off. Selection of Mildenhall adds about 16 miles in the length of the first, and the longest, direct stage in the. race-from llingland to Baghdad. The new distance is 3.- 508 miles, and the majority of the crews who start in the speed race will probably attempt to roach Baghdad non-stop. Cruising speeds of the order of 200 miles an hour are confidently expected of the faster craft. Plans oi the Australian organis- ers are based on the amumption the winning machine may reach Port Darwin¢in less than I 1-2 days frcm<the start and cross the finishing line in Melbourne before dawn on the following day. having mails the whole journey of 11.955 miles in‘ less than four dayl- 1n rm the first flight from malend -tc Australia took 30 days. "T 1' us. Jumuns INEALIBIBLE run PlAYllFFS Failure to Set Dates With L o c a l Team Leads to atction By M» P. B. A. A. U. of s) (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) , N. 5.. Sept. 25_Ngw Brunswick will not be represented in the series for the Junior baseball championship oi the Maritime Pro- vinces because " ton Juniors have failed to arrange playing dates with Charlottetown Juniors, Prince Ed- ward Island title-holders.‘ ' This was announced tonight by Sheriff _C. D. Bhipley, Secmtany oi the Maritime Provinces Branch,_ Amateur Athletic Union of Canada, who said the Nova scotia and Island champions would play for the title. The opening game oi Nova Sootia final series was played here today when Wlhitney Pier Juniors defeated Almhers St. Parts 4-2. Sheriff Shirley said Monoton Jun- iors originally agreed to play Char- lottetown Juniors in Moneton on Monday and go to the Island on Thursday. Later they requested a postponement ‘until Tuesday and then asked that the game be fur- ther postponed owing to illness o5 players. Byron Brown of Charlottetown ccrrmnlnicated with Sheriff Shipley The Rainbow, two races, won four sirelsht W 11 yachting supremacy for the United me.- wit}; thcnliritish cha“ tain the America's Cup. symbol o! -5 _ I11 Straight -~-.... Endeavour by States. and after an in ‘ m the Moncton Juniors were declared in- eligible for filrliher competition. Sheriff Shiplsv also mid he had received no word from the Bathurst team, winners of the New Brunswick Intermediate title, rewarding their willingness tqrmeet Charlottetown in the Maritime Intermediate series. He intimated drastic action might abo have to be taken in their case. Whitney Pier Takes Openingk Came Of Final ii- 3 lly laden racers. The surroundinz‘. country a not and open. offtmlilhey Pier Y. M. c. r. baseball team 11° WW1“ mimliim- "111 lmflserearea Amherst st. mu 4-2 today ememm? hndmil-in the first game of a two out of mom 1°‘ mwim“ m“ mm“ bedhrea series for the unior baseball forced to descend directly after;champ1°mh1pog1q°v35c°t|a_ win- i i (C. P. By Guardian's/Special Wire) AMHERST, N. 5., Sept. $.—Whit- ners of the series will play Char- lottetown juniors for the Maritime junior title. at. Pats were leadin! H! in the seventh inning today when the Cape Bretoners went on a batting spree and scored four. The locals got their two in the first inning when B11116? out g clean single and Wei-filler)!” 151d down s perfect bunt after Ripley had stolen second base. Rip- ley scores from third when a throw to second went astray and Weath- erbes who went to third on the gems play, scored on a wild pitch. Playing smartly, they held their led until the seventh when the Wlhitney Pier boys smashed out six sharp singles. A couple of fielding errors on the part of st. Pats as- sisted thc visitor! DlIttiBC Wm" four runs to cop the series opener. International League Star . .0 ,2 , .' A . x \ r ’ a nukkv! ab / I CARDINALS ABLUSINR Ill vci-k- Giants’ lead in the National League pennant race to a 881819 game and assumed a very threat- ening position yesterday when the Cards defeated Pitwbllrkh 11-2 be- hind Jerome ("our") Deon m4 the Giants suffered a 4-0 setback from the Phillies and Curt Davis. who limited the league leaders to four hits. In the five days which remain before the season ends, the Giants have three games 1'0 nil»? 811d m5 Cardinals five. Should St. 101115 beat Pittsburgh again tomorrow and then sweep its four-game ser- ies with Cincinnati. the Giants would need to win all three games. one from Philadelphia and two from Brooklyn, even to tie for the title’. At least one Cardinal defeat isnecessaryforldie Cliantstowin the pennant outright. fleStI-ndlndoftbefiofibnlen Glues (ilub W. L. RC. Behind tePlsy New Yorkfis 0'1 .690 8 8t. Louhel ll’! .016 l 5 Princess Peg _ g Wins Kentucky F u t u r i t y (A. P. By Guardian's Special IIEUINGT%, Ky" Sept. 36. -- Princess Peg, owned by J. I. and E. T. Lyle, Plahfield, NJ, and driven by 5. 11‘. Palin, today won the 42nd renewal of the Kentucky mturity. equalling the world's record for a four-heat race. The race was des- crlbed as the fastest four heats ever trotted by ohree-ycar-olds. Lord Jim in winning the first heat lowered the season's record for three-yar-olds. Princess Bug's fliird heat in 211116 set a season's record- for three-yesr-old fillies. The Classified Trot was declared iinkhed after three heats when darkness prevented running of the fourth. British Aviator Forced to Land Wire) cleanw around just how much she obtained prob- ably never will be known. News 0f Yacht Race Received Silently (A). h, Ce—'dian's special Wire) news of ilhe defeat cf the Endea- vor h lire Mnerlcafs races was on the shed whens Endea- was ‘edit. Was urtlnilllhfld departed for their _O. M. Qiqmwiiirs boat tothy in con- trast to her showing yesterday, and the fact the British sloop captured the first two races of the series. nsmnsuramiciri-rrnssron GEOHGGYIUWN, British Guiana. Sept. 25~Play was halted by rain this afternoon and prevented Brit- dsh Guiana piling up another high ‘score in their semnd innings g ’ the ” ‘cs eleven in the fourth day of their match in the inter-mlonial cricket tourney here for the right to enter the west Undies finals. A sudden downpour just after lunch when British Guiana had compiled 321 m1- rive wickets turned the pitch into a little la/ke and although sun shone brightly later further play was post-boiled until tomorrow. a office. If obtainkig no order. she would become faint, fall into l. chair and then grslb ravenously for a welner which she gnawed as if furnished. Just to clinch donations she would explain the weiner and three cents was all that stood be- tween her and starvation. ...‘Z’.‘.°"s.*'.§"i$.'73‘l!.'il# _ moninuilllli run will If the electric light hail not Imi- ed lust as the doors were opened 1n the Bedeque rink on Friday night, the largest crowd to have ever assembled to see a tug-of-war contest would have been on hand. The lights went out Just as the crowd were entering the rink, and for the space of an hour darkness prevailed. The trouble was finally located in the generator, but could not be remedied that night. Gas lanterns were secured and the fans I l had left for home. It is estimated that nearly 1,000 people were on hand to see the pulls for the main interest of the evening was the pull between the great rivals for the tug-of-war supremacy in the Province. namely, the Monta- gue Potato Slingers vs. the Bedequc Rink team. The personnel of teams is as follows: Montague Potato Sllngers: Simon Nicholson, Captain, Doug MacClow- an, Allan Nicholson, Lowell Poole, Charles Mellish, James Donahoe, J. Bridges, Edward Donahoe, Beecher Dewar, Trevill Saunders. Coach. Bedeque Rink Team: Frank Jar- dine, Captain, Lloyd Burns, Harry Muttart, Brenton Bums, Wilbert stsvert, Percy MacMurdo, Norman MacMurdo, Gregg Mulligan, Brew- these two er Waugh, Robert Baker, Coach. Everybody was on tip-toe to sec the team from Montague corne to grips with this Bedeque team, and in the frist pull it looked an easy win for Bedeque when they hauled the Montague team across the line in twenty seconds, but Montague was not used to pulling on a hard surface, as they pull in soft ground, but the Montague boys are apt pu- run-an Final Drive Puts '1 r l. made the most of it, althouflh 501119 ‘ Strong-Morrison Trophy, but the. lead to a single game as the second- place St. Louis Cardinals defeated St. Louis Into: Playoff Positiori ‘Cardinals Can Tie Giants By_ Winning Remaining Five Games 1' Even IfvWorld Champions Take Their Three. (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, Sept. 25—St. Louis Cardinals, behind six-hit ‘pitching by Dizzy Dean, defeated Pittsburgh Pirates 3-2 today at Si, Louis and moved within a game of the National League-leading New York Giants, who lost to Philadelphia. _ By winning their remaining five games, the Cardinals can tie the Giants, even if the world’s champions win the ihree contests remaining on their schedule. The elder member of the pitching firm of Dizzy and Paul Dean was in fine form as he scored his 28th victory 0f the season. A three-run attack in the first inning off southpaw Larry French gave Dizzy an early lead and he held it and kept the Pirates scoreless until the ninth when Paul Waner beat out a slow bounder to Duroclier and “Arky” Vaughan hit a home run to the roof of the right- iield pavilion. Young Curtis Davis of the Phil- lles. one of the season's outstanding first-year pitchers, took a terrific slash at New York Giants’ hopes of remaining in front in the National League pennant race when he shut them out with four hits today, the Phils winning 4-0. . The defeat reduced the Giants’ in_ a free hitting contest in which Broolza made 15 blows and Boston 14. i Ninetcen-year-old Phil Cavarctta. recent graduate of Chicago's prep ranks, hit a second inning homer out of his home park that gave Guy Bush and Chicago Cubs a 1-0 vic- tory over Cincinnati. Pittsbprgli 3-2. In the losing column they were all even with 57 ‘defeats each but the Giants had played two more games and won two more to gain their margin. As a result the New Yorkers were faced with the necessity of winning their three re- maining games to tie for the title pils and they had the coach of the champion Kilmuir team. Trevill Saunders, to help them out, and in the second pull the Montague boys hauled Bedeque across the line in forty seconds. Each team had then a pull to their credit and FRENCH CRUISER IN NEW YORK (AI. By Guardian's Special Wire)‘ NEW YORK. Sept. 25—'l'.‘he Iiliench cruiser DlEr-tfecastcauh are‘ rived Saturday a); New York for e, nine-day viei-t. As she steamed the final pull was called. It was a excitement was at fever heat when should the curds sweep their five remaining contests or to win it out- greet tus-of-wer exhibltlon- The rightifSt. Louis should lose one. A up the bay. she fired a salute of 21 guns which was answered by the guns o! Fort Jay on Governor's Is- strength of the better trained, and they pulled after the pull the boys lined up and gave three hearty cheers for the winners. Mr. W. A. Meoihaggan was present as the manager of the Montague team and is an enthusiastic tug-of-war fa". In the junior pulls Upper Frec- town vs. Carleton. ‘Iliese are two pretty evenly rnawhed teams, but the first in one minute and twenty seconds, and the second in two minutes and five seconds. eque: South Freetown won the first pull in one minute and five sec- onds, and the second pull in one. minute. eque: The Central Bedeque team eque was awarded the pull by dew fault. On next Friday night the Mon- tague Town team will be on hand to pull the Bedeque Rink team, and a great pull is expected. The -i will have the electric light fixed and there will be no delay. S. Pnlcnoi run an: pillow Practice for 8th Battery softball. team tonight at Industrial League diamond at, 5.45 sharp. All are asked to be on hand. Ti e Would ‘ Ne c e s s i tate SpecialSeries (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, Sept. 36-11 the Giahlis and. Cardinals should end their close National League pen- nant race in a tie, the rules require two team!» W” single Giant defeat would almost pretty evenly matched. but the eliminate the Terrymen unless Bt. Montague team. probably were the Lou); 550mg b; l§aflen twmg Bedeque over the line in one mln- Zachary gave Boston Braves a 9-6 ute and forty seconds. Immediately victory over the Dodgers at lkoctklyn Upper Freetown won both pulls. __ South Freetown vs North Bed- l Central Bedeque vs. Lower Bed- ' were not on hand and Lower Bed- ~ land. The Dilntrecestieaux has been stationed at lvilsstinque in the French West Indies where me will return aitor the New York stay. Three runs in the ninth off Tom nunuoneunuu TO 01.1.0 ERSOF. “BIG FOUR” HOCKEY)‘ Manyrcqueets from polntshithenvineehave been made for several years for a broadcast of the hockey games played in the Charlottetown lbrum. The directors, in common with those 1n other Maritime centres. have not hem favorable m the past. The requests, however, have been quite heflsnt, and fans in various sections have ng-gested a. phn, wbesfley the germs may be obtained by them. ' If a sufficient number of rsflo owners are interested, the Forum directors will accede to their wishes. Enough mo must be subscribed th defray the expenses hiclflant to the broadcast. MnIsnMcKcsuiqMsinsga-ofthelliorlnuhmo offlic matierandwillvlsltvarhvlsllflhkhoonneoflonwiflil llndlo listeners in outlying places may communicate wili Mr. McKans-ie, 10 Ambrose Si», as he can only vidt the chief towns and villages. 1:660 Leaflbalrblsupqausesseswbewasssnssalefasasasassonu best." Mellow, Fragrant, cooF-tbese . qualities have insured pipe enjoyment p17. to three generations of smokers. M Selected Virginia |eai has made ""5 LII lillllll "Pill" our F|'~.)\'