rggluggm 5, 1940 REMEMBER WHEN (By The Canadian Press) Lou Nova of San Francisco got 1ft the canvas in the third round, ;0 go 0:1 sand batter Gunner Bar. ,u11_'.§, Finnish heavyweight, 111w subnihsiorl, wzuninz 0n a technical KUOCKOUL in the seventh round of their scheduled 15-round bout at wrw York a year ago tonight. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN 9.1.325 QEYEN . N. SYDNEY GETS FRONT LINED NORTH SYDNEY, Oct. 4-mi- ditlon of another player who did his puck-chasing last season w-itb Geraidton Miners. r.1!l1Z-\'.1t:gcx Fred Ralph, was anzzou <1 by Victorias’ hockey club OIIIL‘ night. The 21-year-old forward tips the scales at 182 pounds. He will play l0- here with Maurice Marshand. de- fence, a teammate of last. veal", who has also been signed by the Nnrthside_club.____ ~ _ __ _ I 2i‘ , DOWN TNE BACK STRETCH first two-minute stallion to .0 tl1e Maritime, Provinces for ing purposes arrived a few , mo. 112 is Laurel Hanover v 11 1--1 by The Laurel Hall 2.05 1-4, 1:1 <11‘ Po or tli-e Great 2.07 1-2. 1 ' 1.1111 i1; llollyrcod Polly 2.10 1-4 .1 t1 Dodge. Laurel Hanover was ..:l in 1931 and is therefore nine cll. 11c took a record of 2.0‘ ihrzc-ycur-old in 1934 and tings of over $8,000 at the ‘ .1 season. The next year, . k n record of 1.59 1-4 ;' ,1 1 :i in 193$ and 1937. He . 1 tmcittficcnt horse standing 16.2 . i11~h and weighing 1140 11v was purchased by Dr. .\lcl_-."un, New Richmond, lil 123D nnd it was to give 1 mi opportunity in the stud t -~ l‘ -m:- itmfc arvargemcnts \1. ': l-‘zdni; Alclingv, East Royalty, to . .Ie 111m. P1111 of ilic most sensational horse ,- ' 1:1 rut-en! year's was th-t- dis- ~ ‘ 1 Ago Khan. leader of and one of Great i O‘.\'ll0l'S and breeders‘ of Mahmoud. winner y to n United States .< is a magnffl- . e thoroughbred. u: ' ' in color and :-. i cs of Arabian "cc. blnlnncud had won 1 "1 1'11 the turf and had ,=et uo ~ .1 fnr the tricky one and a l 111%‘ Drbv course nt Epsom of l l lle has born in the s’ud 1.0 smsons and the ice was Tw- /\l?‘."l'i."f‘.l‘| smthcatc acquired ' .: to" :1 fraction of his 0'10. Prior to the war his ntivei" estimated syntiicuie which "utl is composed of . is who arc lntzr- 1 ti 1:1 tho brcedinr: and develop- u~ 1» o.‘ ‘he thornuzrhbrcd and they I t- the Vundcrbllfls and Walt- 11". scu of W.~.‘.tcr P. Chrys- ‘ deceased. who found- ..:r motor car corpora- viVtlilld. holder of’ the world's ' q lt‘t‘fll'li of 1.59 3-4 over a . nnlr- truck. and 1.55 1-4 over a - 1r .v‘.:. us wt-Zl as the two milc ' znnrk and several other 11:] si.ll ntloihcr to the .1. lmxziigtoti, lint. inst. week . ~1 he il'(tiil‘li n mile under saddle 1.11 3-4. He was ridden by Mrs. Dodge. Johnson. H9 beat vicus best. record by 3 1-2 "Hg... Thuc wus some great racing at . Ontario, Fair Wcck, St-p- 71h nud 29th. The 2.30 t division, was won by brst time 2.13. The sec- n was won by F'le!:\ Silk. .11 ‘Ll-i. Th: 2.25 class was P111111‘ G. Junior. best time 'I".‘.c 2.28 class was won by - fill, bcst time 2.12. The ".1 was won bv Laura Bell l 3-4. 210 l-2, the third heat wrn bv Olver Grattan in 2.00. ivurt- 0f the meeting was the l ‘ t of an cxbibition mile in 2.001 '1 '11.‘ tunic-y nr-nld jinccr Beatrix i» larval and driven by Allen Elf of Sarnin. ‘c sftic of the Nova Scotia Ex- -n prrpcrty bv the 120W?"- c <11‘ Nova Scotln and the city \' to the Department 0f 1:2, will probably 1 l! for all time from .111".- ot Halifax as an exhi- :1 and race centre. (‘hrvclcs P. Barrett of Spring Creek ' .. Purk I-llll. Ontario, is .. _ trl irbsclutc dispersal brood tnurcs, 20 coils. ' and racing \v:i‘.<~" i.:;.t met Chzirlle the 111111 when we were rac- ‘ inc 1c." at Toronto. and ' 1 opinion of him. lie ' s:rvi:c t) drive a 2.05 1-4 in a big bet- 11 ixic" a1 acquitted himself in u: class sLyZc. Cimrlie is a ihor- 1 il0l.~’.'lllil‘.l an, could train 0i‘ c.l us anyiwdl- He than any man in to pr :l:e the IJCE tracks . tucu w.th fast record pacers. In 1011 hc at ‘nricd the Chicailo .1110 purchased a three-yin‘- rtlt cullcci (lrtntnn Roywl. '30 11 some the next sprln! l h-n a m‘le around 2.10 ~n'd him for $5.000. 4E . ihc following 511F311? 1 stakrd. 1n bis first a record of 2.06 1-1 1y afterwards 1110i ut which put him g. 11c was sold for the rg and tiriftcd to some i11 Ohio. - While in Cliurlzes ownership he hr’! tor-n brcd to three mares and w 2:1 thrrn colts arrived at train- 11111 age th. showed startling speed. c111 of 111cm. Louie Grat‘an takifli 'l cf 2.03, nnoiher, Roy Gm.- vz n rrcord of 2.01 1-2 and '1 robot-d of 2.01 1-4. Char- ..c set cut on a hunt. for ".'i‘i‘.ll ltoycl. flzinllv locntlnZ him ‘ h" him back to Sprint! ' k .arm whore he b90001"- successful sire of pacefs in the nir Anvrit-n. M11011! the great sons he 511941 ll".l‘lc iwccr Charlie's ownership ‘W! Czwitnu liars 1.511 1-2 that won some 5mm“ ‘u st ‘res in a s’n~'o s"f»"‘0'\ 11"‘ 'tr-~t" money winning nae" ‘ 111201-11. At Snrintl stock farm Gratian Royal ed Grattan Direct. 2.10 1-4 that has sired two minute and near two minute pacers. Other sons of Grat- tan Royal that have sired extreme speed are Oro Grattan, sire of Dom- inion Grattan, 2.0g Grattsn-ar- Law and Silent Grattan. Preparations are being made at. Dufferin Park oval in Toronto for the fall and winter race tneetirgc. Fall races will open Saturday, No- vember 2nd, with a thr-ac-year-oh pace, 2.20 trot, 2.18 pace and free [or all pace. Another program will be raced Monday, November 4th con- sisting of a 2.22 pace, 2.26 trot. 2.28 pace and 2.12 trot. There will be further m-octings on November 9th and November 11th and after- wards each Saturday and Monday until Christmas when the fll1l1Li£l' big program of harness racing for trotters and pocers will take place followed by a similar big program for New Year's week. 1t is regrettable that after hav- ing raced through so many so without a serious ac? de lngdriven ihrze irc 02's in the two minute list and eight pacers in the same magic circle, the final wind up race day, of the lazt big ' mzct of the season, at Lexln September 28th, should be the .. selected for int/e to deal a near tra- gic blow to Vic Fleming, nce Cun- ndian driver, who has made his home in the United States for sev- eral yenrs. Less than two wot-ks previously 11'.- had driven Dusty Han- over 2.00 to a world's rricc vecnrzl ovcr a half mile truck. 2.00 1-2. 2.00 3-4. It was in the first tit-lat. of the Kentucky stake. the day's feature event for four-year-olds. when a collision occurred bctwcen Gentleman J‘rrn drlvcn by D3: Pur- shall. Volsifon driven by Vic Flem- ing. The Lovely Lady driven bl‘ Glen Campbell and Princess Part driven by Harry Thomas. All four drivers and horses went down but. Thomas managed to disentangle Princess Peri. and drove to the stand. Volatlon and The Lovely Lady finished the race without drivers. Gentleman Jim and Doc Pnrshdll carrying a wrecked sulkv were ap- parently uninjured. Flcming was rc- movedto the Lexington b85011“! suffering severe head lacerations and possibly a skull fracture. A week from next Monday ls Thanksgiving Dav. Ortober 14th. That afternoon the Victoria Driv- ing Club are putting on a Matinee program of four events which are being well advertised. The horses. owners and drivers are familiar to all our readers and ‘icy are assur- ed that the afternoon will witness some great racing. It is the last. kick and final windup of a great season. Hundreds of race fans have wanted another chance to sre their favorites in action and they wlil get it. It looks like a big afternoon's sport and that all mrts of the Province will be represented. The entire proceeds go towards the am- bulance fund of the Carry On Can- ada Corps who are the sponsors. Curiously enough it took a grand- son of Peter Vclo 2.02 to defeat the champion race pacer of the sea- son. Fearless Peter (3) 2.00, son of Peter Volo, 2.02. William Cash that did the trick at Delaware, Ohio, and incidentally established a new world's record for three-year-old pacers over a half mill! track. is a son of Cold Cash 1.58 1-2 and Cold Cash is a son of Peter Vnlo 2.02. It looks as though Cold Cash ls go- ing to be a great sire of pricers as there are several good two, three and forlr-year-olds by him racing this season. l-le has had only a limited opportunity- Another son of Peter Volo 2.02. Volomltc 2.03 1-4, is starring as a sire of pacers. At the close of last season he was credited with time: in the two-minute list and has some grout ones out racing this year in- cluding Doctor Baker 2.02 l-4, win- ner of fourteen races. other sir-e whose. P infie limelight is Bert 14 by The Abbe 2.04 1-2. Through tho western states there are quite a int of good two and thrcc-year-olds by mm also ggmc 111 California. The following write-Hi! from The Horseman and Fair World describes 1n graphic language the free for all race in which Dusty K111101161‘ 11nd Vic Fleming were the principal actors. DELAWARE, Ohio. Sept. 19111- "The big crowd today was lured gut in part, no doubt, by the fact that they wanted to see the frec- for-all pacers go into action in the first division of the Trotting Cllub pacing series; Five stars all sporting records of two minuicl or bztfer. going into action. is somethinl innt few minor ovals can boast OI. End pflol‘ to post time the running com- men; w“, "how fast will they go, ca,“ they knock the world's record. and who is going io win?" Inside of an hour's time the crowd was giv- on one of the rertl treats of their lives, for Vic "victorious" Fleming had his latest pacing star, Dusty Hanover 1:59 as sharp B»! the W111- try winds that blow in his native state of Maine. where his ownrrs, John Sullivan and Fred Mawhin- My. gm- a good many years have been among the leadln! 81191901181‘! o! our pastime. Gem“ away 1n perfect align- ment from the barrier, Fleming scoring in second position. had Dus- ‘y boiling, grabbed the track going into the first tllfl, cow's" l-is field over m m. quarlcr i? :29 3-4. Little P“ 1:55 3.4_ hero of so many s.ir- mgrffrifkflng half-mile track duels, second, Zivic WYns Welterweight’ Title By Decision NEW YORK, Oct. 5-<AP)— Fritzio Zivic of Pittsburgh won the world's welterweight championship tonight by outpolntlng the game little negro, Henry Armstrong, in a io-round thriller before a screaming crowd of about 11,000 fans in Madison Square Garden. Zivic weighed 145 1-2; Armstrong 142. solving Annstrongb buzz-saw style by backing away and boxing beautifully, the rough. tough Pitts- burgher closed both Henry's eyes through the first halt‘ oi’ the fight so badly that Armstrong couldn't see him through the last half. With this advantage Zivic just backed off and banged away, scor- ing mostly with a flicking straight left anti solid right nppercut. Game to the finish, Armstrong stayed on his feet just until [no final bcll rang, then collapsed ncar Fritzlcfls corner. His zzconds led him to his stool. De|—Baker_ Confident Cf Outcome Buy Charles llunkley Associated Press Starts Writer DETROIT, Oct. 4—-(AP1-Tl1e first. blast 0f dvfiana- suvcpt into the World Series t or, l\.-..1nuger cf 1J- thc c‘ mung sCCLLH cf his club, 7-4 victory cinnati Rods. Baker expressed confidence in his “nine silt-tit old men" to belt. the Reds cut in the ncxi. two‘ games. i ctnebt u ‘.1011 ever Cin- Goes To Glace Bay GLACE BAY, N.S., Oct. 4.—_tCP) -—G'.aco Bay Minors, ot \i1c Conicry Hockey League announced tonight acquisition o1 Alt-x. Arcnor o1 nin- nipcg. former playing \\'l1ll Sum: John in i112 old IVIill'I.lll'll' Hockey 1p‘ 11.... i..._____.___ _._._ _-. ,Tcm1n_v ISridgr-r. veteran curvc ball kiLg of [iltchctl ti~c 'l'lg:-rs in u 7-1 virtrry ovcr Cincinnati Reds in the third ‘gwnzc ti‘ tln- 1910 World Series at I-‘rggs ritudizrni in Detroit. It was I Bridges ftuntli win against one tic-feat in World Series competition. Puts Detroit One Tommy World Series Facts, Figures discord. Dustys itiatnier of winning made it quite apparent that he would be right in line to grab off the two-h-cnt honors for the half- milc trucks. for all re had to do was a 11111-2 in 2:04 1-4. But Fleming took ' no chances. the 171:1 was in high when the burricr wsnt up. they were at the hnlf in 1:01 and Dusty under‘ a mild dri 2 hv F'"mi"v' hcld Little: Pat safe h 2:00 3-4 taking a mighty chunk of no less than three and three-quarters seconds out of the old two heat record which Rm‘ Hcn- g ley had set at 2:02 3-4 and 2:02 l-i. several years back at Columbus. Ohio." scn, I . cr. Atic11.l.1r.cc-31.793 Lczigttc. Archer a fight wzngct. Th, .,..,:',“,; p ayeql the last fcw yours in ILIILP; land. 1 “- L ' 1\l.1 u 1 Chief Cou11.:l 1:51 ' ‘M’ ‘ z half in 110.), the three-qua: ‘r; t , ,,..., t - , . .1130 1-4 andhflzrshctl llmnc with, m“ 1"‘““‘ "5 c-“°“"““',',-“ E Fleming sitting still in 2:00 1-2 and nflro" ‘M’, 7 m 1 Billy Directs lull-mile track :11 ' (-il.,.e,,nvu ‘ml, 2 8 2 record 012C034 cstnblishcd at Rut- . P v Nmxom and sumnln. land. Vt., in 193B went ruto the Dy, ‘Mwlm,’ Rune and ‘v11; Second game (at Cinclnnatit: R II E Dctrnlt (AL) (‘inclniu tNLl Butt r Rzwc. Trbbct -. Attonclloticc-SOIS-io. Third crime (at Detroit): Grrsicu ivultcrs anti Wilson. Game Up 12 Bridges Detroit, who yesterday mixture of really great and equally emphatic hitting. ner, a seasoned figiiltb-hflfidfll‘ wnr. lfirst three innings was a tby Campbell. a. after he had fanned ‘and York in succession in the sec- 1 o fourth, when Barney McCosky and Goodman rf Gehringer, both left-handed bat- ters. led off with singles and Mc- Ccsky reached hcme as Greenberg Lcmbardi c Cubs“ Win 4-0 CHICAGO. Oct. 4—(AP1—Big B“l L»: rzsing from the dept-Its 0i t ‘viouul League season. Sgx to five h.ts io- - zhc C..bs pcutidcti out a 4-0 in the fcurth gmae of the n (‘!"' s"'"s. ETHII team is won txvo games. o i.\il,l (llil 100 101-4 l3 Ii (‘hicugu t.»\I.| 001i 001i 000-0 5 3 urti Tctlti; Rigney, and "i1". l1. Tchbctts. Fcurih and filth games at De- irot Saiurtlu}: and Sunday. Oct. 5 and 6; h 11nd seventh games ut Citriiznati. Nhlldfly and Tues- tday. Oct. 7 anti B. i ’I‘l1ird grime attendance and fl- nancinl figure t 1\t.tc1_1dancc—52.87’i. [ 11cc :pts-0219.151.00 I Playc s pocl—$111,76'l.01 um rv Coi1ncil—$82,l172.t35 i C bs altd Leagues‘ sl1i\rc—-$'i4.- 511.35. l Total attendance and financial‘ R H E (‘lncinnuti t.\'I.) 4 I0 I Dcirnli. ML) '7 13 l Bditrr = Turner, Moore, Boggs s and and Lombardi, Baker; Bridge Serve by SAV INQ buy WAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATES STETSON MADE IN CANADA AND SOLD AT All. STORES WHERE STYLE I5 PARAMOUNT figures. three games: 1 Attendance-Mimi) I Iieceipts—$219.15l.00 Players’ pool—S200.Sl63.48 I Advisrry Ccuncil~$76fl5296 (‘tubs and Lenszues‘ sharc -$1'13.- 915.66. BROCK HATS by STETSON O Smart Women Wear Stetson Hats, T001 HATS hit into a double play. York hit a Baker c wasted single but the Tigers were Joost 2b routed one after another after that Myers ss until the big blow-up in the sev- cniih. first. Bridges was pitching exactly Beggs p ihe same kind of ball, giving noth- .ng that looked like a good ball. jured catcher who started the game .n a surprise move by Manager Bill McKechnlc and played seven in- tiings. led off Willi a double in the spark the Reds to victory, tried to lneim" igers Take Z-l Lead In Games Over Detroit Dynamiters Blast Three Redleg Pitchers For I32 Hits And .7,-4 Victory — i (B! JUDSON BAILEY Associated Press Sports Writer) i DETROIT, Oct. 4-—(AI‘)—The dynamite In the bats of Detroit Tigers exploded again today with two rcverberating home runs and a total 0| 13 hits to blast Cincinnati Reds, 7-4 and give the American gestalt??? (hampions a two-games-to-one advantage in the 1940 World The P-‘liiusion. six hits and four runs in the seventh inning, shat- tered what had been a peaceful pitching performance by two Tennessee v rurvcbaliers, Tommy Bridges and Jim Turner, and sent the 52,877 De- troit fans into luch ecstasy the game had to be halted several times to clean up the debris they showered on the field. The hits just started popping like firecrackers-a single by flunk Gffifillllfrif- a home run by Rudy York a single by Bruce Campbell, an- other homer by Plnky Higgins. Nobody was on and nobody was out when Turner gave up. Whitey Moore set down the next two batters, but be, too, gave up a single to Dick Bartel] and a double to Barney McCosky and wag in des- perate straits when Charley Gehringer finally raised a pnp foul to end the shouting. ) set off aoiher rally by singling off York's glove at the start of the ninth. Pinky Higgins fumbled a bnunder by young Bill Baker. who had relieved lliombardl. and Edd-1- The contest as a. whole was at pitching For a time it seemed that Tur- left-hand hitter, _ . Gutenberg Cincinnati tNL) AB R H 0 A Worber 3b M. McCormick c! w n: I1 . Detroit tied up the score in the F. MttCormick lb Ripple lf ’I‘urner p Moore p During this time after the faulty x Riggs ._ig._igg.g,p..uso-m.s>a-s>cnp xx Frey A oo~oooo~o~ooo— 5 oooocw-Mr-H-Qnc" : QQ3®G©>4IJ-b.\3’-D>#<AI S QDQQF‘&IQQQOG>-*CGIB Ernie Lombardi, the Reds‘ in- 87 x-Batted for ivlcore in 8th xx-Batted for Bsggs in 9th. 1 I Total: wcond infill“: and Bx-xlgo: retired Dem,“ (A1,; Art, n [10 A j 1111f mgxt IZIDHgLCYs in ordehr 1 _1 n t e six h e gave up is ony walk of the game, to Werber, who fiiréglstisc, i <1) é i‘ 3 immediately was tagged trying Gemini“ 2b 4 O 1 1 4 stéfll second. After M. McCormick Gl-eenbem u 4 2 2 1 0 Jngled, the slender control snccinl- york 1b 4 1 3 3 0 fst. who won two games for Detroit Campbell r; 4 2 3 4 0 1:1 the World Series of 193i out Hiagms 3b 4 1 2 0 3 out the Reds cne by one un- Tenet“ c 4 0 0 5 1 .tit the last two innings. when. wi-n Bridges p 3 0 o o 1 the game won. be relaxed to give‘ 1 the Reds six 0f their 1O hits and Tomi’ 35 7 13 27 12 three of their runs. 1_ , 1 Jim Richie‘! “'11? 11, 110K111" ‘Cincinnati 100 00o 012-4; icmer vesior av in mcmna to, 000 100 42x—-7 i ' Uiilosilittl evrn L, dgublg of the third World Series gamez- l 11x11, base Rainey C. Henley Wins F ree-for-al l At Bridgewater BRIDGEWATER, us, Oct. 4. _ iCPl-No truck icc us 511111.111} til 1U 0t Eastern Cunuilws 2.1;. cs cclntmwtl 1n inc tutu. t livo-tiuy race mwl. licltl iltlu 1.1 Jack KtilTs lirisiue scan. w only Llirec-Linn- tunnel, 1.111: Named Race hcnois 1n lit-dis. liulfllnu for rrtozxl 1r were 13111111 Yorke untl .1111 ll i\I(l)‘0l‘ H M. Sue-envy o1 l; tltucr. tirovnled the iiiUoL 11v, when he recoverui from - to guide Raungv G. lie" at": the ulri: 1:1 iln- l: om. Aaron 12., onvtu 111111 Mclsuuc. “s ioict-(i .11 11c innit 1n CiliICllil second lJuriilk/D over Tracy Hummer. 'l‘l1e Baker, owned ov Al Longfiiis, swept tne two tinoi heats in 1.1.9 \\i..l 0' 1111s 1J1- i't‘(.'l. is. 1111c 110.1110 1 111.1111 biting-iota, .\l _ Sul.y, 1111i 15111-11.) t; tcsieu o5 a liuiiiibtl c1 t: 111g witnout cotnpL-‘ntith. cuass, and LUQ not. iéiiit.‘ p.11’; 1n any tfVtiiila. $55235.‘ Si? §3Z‘r,7w‘§i§2.°1..§“.”,§°§3§ 900st 511cm -=@~1111s_1*1~1>1>1@ W1 °“““““”' the best of the long-hitting can- ‘mtvmg mo o“ base mm mbodi, l~'ree-tor-.»\1l nonaders from the junior ciicuzt. " _ . i The Reds Save him a. run m the .31" My?“ Fmflgd °“ Iwrflifllflvy G1 116111121‘ 15W 4 1 I gm; inning when 3111 werbe; 111N095 and Pinch-hitter Lontileliauron L. 1015mm)‘ l3 3 doubled on the first pitch and Ival FY93» “miller Cincinnati CFWPIQ- Hiwv Bantam 1i<:1t1 1' J i1 2 Goodman singled him hcma lifted a lly toiccmre. Werber, fight- lJuuv Patch 151mm .111 2 4 4 Turner faced on“, 10 mm In [he .lng v0 the bitter end as usual. 11111-2: 2.10; 2.00 t; 2.024%. first three 1nn-_Ln_;' émwk Quysinglcd lfllO short left. and Baker _v three and once giiichctl seven suc- i"1l/<I*é111'0\\' 1206110 £33106 bill Nmml In“: ' 1 v- , " - . ac A c ormzc anne an u.c . . rclegsliltiIiastitd-eliie,‘ pltiaivergqdsliltigt Tlgtfirri 111K119 “'35 0""- gf-iif,‘,d§§§f".1§°,f‘5""l'» ' ‘ ' ' ' "-1 A 3 cuited. although he had some Jean Home‘; ‘ f‘ “‘ 3 trouble with the portsiders. BRIGGS STADTIJM. DEF-Wit. 5mm Joe 5 4 The Qnly m; he gave up 1:1 the OCt. 4—iAPt—OIflCi8I bOX SCOTG lune, 21L,’ m Classifit-tl Race The Baker illialkei") Signal Senator Direct L. -l~1:1i1ncs1 1023110111 E or .1. blcCortn k. 11: Runs batted in-Goon Huggins 3, M. .\IcCo" Jcost, Werl v I)OIllbfl“ lfcCoskv. Ziberg. Home _ DOllbIn Xpluvs-Wr her. Werber. gznr. 3. Left on buses De. Cincinnati Bulges l Briducs :3 Beggs 1 (Yorki Turner 5 runs B (none out in run= 2 hPs 1n runs 3 hits in 1 nuchcr-Turiirr. . . Ballonfuir. NL; l hww IIr-il, AL; N. base. Kiczn, NL; Or. ='o_'-'. Al, Tme-Qfllil At» tendancmpaid. 52.87. ("so l\Iinard‘s fnr dandruff. it is. The final wind up 0f the season. now through the efforts of the VICTORIA DRIVING the Province in four matinee events, Classes and entries are: — CLASS A PACE-Jane Azoff 1.59125, CLASS A TROT-June Evans 2.10%, .. CLASS C TROT AND PACE. Lucky Guy. GeorgeMac, Ethel Bellini, S Guy and others. last ilall in iane Fans Hundreds have been anxious for a race meet. Here who will bring together the best trotters and pace-rs ir‘ M0 C1‘! AFTERNOON. UCTOBER 14th. Thanksgiving Day, at the Provincial Exhibition 'I‘rack GARRY 0N CANADA B0 RPS Help a worthy cause and see some wonderful racing. 2.11, Millie Kalmuck 2.12. CLASS B Pace-Major Bowes 2.12%, Usciia Britten 2.12%, Nell (Iochatodale 2.16. Dir- ect L. 2.09%, Miss Victoria 2.14. ADMISSION TO GRAND STAND AND RACES 50c. This is afforded CLUB Charlottetown, under the sponsorship of the 1.1.1.; L. 2.011;. Squire Hanover Scotty Watson, ileut Mac, Anna I .11