FADE U12! , BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING Record Attendance Looms For World Series Games; Teams Primed For Opener BY SCOTTY RESTON -_ _ .-__u... Associated Press Sports Writer NhW YORK, 50b1, 28—-(AP) — The cnlmcst spots in a baseball- mrid New York today were the Pol.) Cv:i»i1nd.~ and the Yiuikee stadium where the Giants and Yan- kecs \\'0l‘l;cd out on their home diamonds for the last time before ilzey meet. in the first game of the \\‘-'l'1f‘1 series Wednesday. The two i-litbs will practice on rival fields tomorrow, with the Y.1 kies getting their sights ad- jlkififid m zhe opening-game scen- cry ac time Polo Grounds while the Ginnis trike a Itrkout inthe Bronx 311111115111 These drills will complete pre- parations for a series that not only ' Park “'85 6V9" Searched todfly for i 1'35 the big town agog, after a l3- j. 1.1‘ 11 ;1‘\‘."l1 in this l‘l\'31l'_\'. v. iich promises to shatter box-of- fice records for lmsebiills cham- pionship affair. ANNOUNCE SELLOUT The YkiHkUCn followed ‘.110 Giants today in aruiouncliig a. sellout of all reserved seats. This means more thani i! t5.- capaciiy of each 51X QJIIYFS On the day of each game, 24.000 UJZPPSPTVCG sears will be on sale at Polo Grounds, or 30,000 at. the Yan- 1 kce Stadium. The unreserved sec- i I-lnlls consist. of grandstand space I w°Y1d “T195 Lick“ “MP9” “we Ma's Guy. Maxie Dunn, Rapture and at $3.30 or bleachers at. $1.10 each. i There were two new develop- ments and countless rumors in the two camps today". _ l B111 Terry (hanged his batting! order. moving Mbl Ott. National.‘ Mriguc home run champion, into‘ the 019611111) position in place of centre-fielder Jimmy Ripple. Ripple, brought up from Mon- treal Rs. 11s at the beginning of the ' season was moved to fifth and will probably yield to Hank Ieiber if the Yonkers use a left-hander. GOMEZ LIKELY CHOICE Managci- Joe Micflarihy promised to announce his starting pitcher tomorrow Judging from today's workout. Vernon "Lefty" Gomez will vet the call. Charlie Buffing. who has been mentioned with Gomez as the poss- ible Yankee starter, spent the en- tire practice session in the batting Cfigf‘. Moiiic Pearson. Yankee pitcher who injured his back last Thurs» day, spent. most of this morning undoi- the lights and then worked out for the first time since the in- jllfy. l-le reported to McCarthy that he could not throw at full speed. The Yankee Manager said he doubted that. Pearson would pitch before Sunday: if then. Terry said Crirl Hubbtll definite- iy would pitch the opener. The iouihpnw ace hopes for warm but , rtnendv 11s.. been sold at, the . "' 70 or $600 per ticket, for I , self pretty soon or I won't b: able weather. Hubbell spent most of the prac- tice period shngging flies and talk- ing to reporters. With "Hub" on the mound, the Giants were favor- ed 3-5 to take the opener, but the Yanks were favored at 11-20 to take the series. i The big town had the baseball l fever. Hotels, night clubs, and i theatres all reported a. rushing i I business. Meanwhile, both ball clubs took , steps to guard against 3111511 at the l park gates Wednesday. Mbrc than 600 special policemen will be as- ' _. signed to the Polo grounds. The i‘ stowaways. ‘ Unreservcd grandstand and i bleacher tickets do not go 011 sale ‘ until Wednesday morning. but the line of prospective buyers was growing tonight First to arrive was “Tony” Albano of Br: Qlyn, who an- , nouneed he had been rit the ticket ‘ booth since Sept. 18. Ticket Scalpers In NEW YORK. Sept. 28~iAPi -! making the law of supply and de- . mand pay high dividends today. 111e,. were asking s20 for a $5.50 f ticket, demanding that three be bought at a time, and still not fill- ing the demand. Even Ed Barrows private supply 1 of 8,000 tickets was dwindling. “I'd better put one aside for iuy- to get in," said the Yankees‘ gen- eral manager. Leaves For Atlantic City Lloyd Matheson, local born hoc- key player, leaves this morning for Atlantic City where he will seek E berth this season on the famed Sea Gulls of the Eastern amateur league. Lloyd played last 5885011 with the Denver Canadians at Den- ver City. Watson MucEiven. erst- while Abegwelt. net-minder who also played last year in Denver left Monday for Boston. Other hockeyists who will short- ly be trekking to other fields are Harry Currie who will rejoin the Hershey B‘a.rs accompanied prob- ably by "Tick" Williams, Johnny Squarebriggs and Clarence Steele may once more don Baltimore Oriole colors. lllilieilllllllllllliilll Mmuracruacns [Jfljunonnm m] I “I've had most of my bad days in cold weather this year," he said. The Money I {if Cardinal Prince Captures Grand Circuit Feature LEXINGTON, KY., Sept. 28-(AP) —Cardlna.l Prince, pacing star of the Hotel Baker, stables, St. Char- les. 151., won the Reynolds stake, feature of today's Grand Circuit meeting in straight heats. He paced the fix-stand third heats each 1n L59 1-2- Harry Stokes, former driving ace of the Grand Circuit had a great afternoon, winning the Lafayette Hotel Stake, secondar" feature on the card, in straight heats and also the 17 trot with Coffee, owned by , Emgle and Failor of Canton Ohio. ‘I SUMMARIES i Ilrfl Race, 3-Year-0ld Pace, 3 Heats, $600 , Biérritz, Br, C. By Volomitefv- Fleming) 1 1 1 Fayre Lady, Blk F (H. Short) 3 2 6 1 Symbol Greene, 13G (Craig) 4 4 2 1.10m Patch, so (c. Dean) 2 s 4 lHalleys Comet, Billie Jean also startled- Time 2.04 1-2, 206 1-2, 2.05 1-4. ‘Second Race. The Lafayette Hotel 20 Trot. 3 Heats, $2,000 Trubrooke, BR H BY Truax (H. Stokes) 1 1 1 lMaster Piece, CH H (C. Dean) 2 2 2 gMac Q Guy, CH G (W. McMillim 3 3 6 Donald 'I‘ruax. BH (HStone) 4 4 3 Guy Grail-fill. Ray Hamilton, Revei- Volgomar aslc started. Time 2.04 1-2, 2.04. 2-04 3-4. 1mm Race. r110 neynoids. 3 Heats $2.000 Cardinal Prince. BH BY Peter Pot- empkin (S. Palin) l 1 1 Dominion Grattan. BIZ (T. Berry) 2 z 2 Jane Azoff, Cl-I M (H. Parshall a a a Miss Hof, BM (A. semi 4 4 5 sonny Boy. Dobbindale. Pronto Hall Tracey Hanover also started- Tlme 1.59 1-2. 2-02. 1.59 1-2. Faiurih Race, l7 Trot. 3 Heats $000 BG av Victor vole m. St/okesfl 1 1 ciiiiimei Eric. BH (Vi/Dickerson; 4 a Grace Hanover. 1m cr. Berry) 3 3 3 sperma- Qafie, BC (I-IPBTSIIBU) 5 4 4 Ambassador, Del Hanover. Fell 819° started. Time 2.0a 3-4, 2.04. 2.06. Baseball Tilt Po s tp o n e d Coffee. QII-BITIAII FIIIUYVL‘ TKINGSTON, ONT. Sept. Z8-—LCP\ , » the final 36 holes. \.I\JI'\I\I.I\I'\LV [W9 “mi SPORT WORLD Chuck Templeton ‘o SPOR TRA ITS - UH/CH WILL COMING sec/es? "r14: Yn/vxees Abrams" Question f A l. Lamb Leads Held For Pro ~ Championship BY WALLACE-WARD Canadian Press Stair Writer CATARAQUI GOLF CLUB. 1 ——W.ill.ie Lamb of Toronto's Lantb» l torn club. defending the Canadian i professional golfers‘ champion." ip won at Montreal last ycni", reached the half-way mark m the 72-11010 medal play tourney with a five- stroke lead over his fellow C111- adlans today. ' Tricky greens and rain-soaked turf boosted the scores and Lamb ' was four strokes over par. His 173.1‘ of 72's. for an aggregate of 114.‘ was plenty good enough however; b0 bring him out on top. Tomorrow the field, reduced by two with-i drawals to 36 competitors, will play Bob Gray of Windsor, Ont., Art i Hul-bert, of Toronto ‘Thornhill and Bobby Bums of Montreal Hamp- stead, all tied. Five shots behind Lamb, werel 1 Until Today Unsettled weather yesterday forc- ed postponement until today o! the second game oi’ the Maritime JUNO!‘ baseball semi-finals between Am- herst, NS. st. Pats, and Charlotte- town Dodgers. The opening B31119. played at Amherst, Saturday, was taken by the Nova Scotia chun- pions. 15-3. Winners of the best of three Nova. Scortia-Prlncc Edward Island series will meet New Bruns- wick champions for the Maritime junior title. Notice To Horsemen The first payment- for tho 1037 Pliillies Defeat i Athletics 5-1 PHII-ADEILPIIIA, Sept. 28-401’) ‘ —-Thie Phillies beat the Athletics 5-1 today in an exhibition game for the benefit of Mrs. Conte Cross. window of a former shortstop for bot-h teams. SCORE i Philadelphia m» 30o 000 002 5 11 a ‘i Philadelphia (A) 000 000 001 1 9 3 , Mulcahy and Grace: Gumpcrt‘ and Hayes. MAYO HOLDS TITLE DUBLIN. Sept. 28- (AP) --Mayo Giants Shade Yankees In The Outfield NEW YORK, Sept. 28-01?) — From every angle except speed and perhaps color, for whatever that elusive element is worth at the world series payoff window, New York Giants excel their Yankee neighbors in outfield equipment for the forth-coming frolic on opposite banks of the Harlem river. The National Iieaguers have the best all-round outfield in baseball at the current writing, regardless of whether Hank Leiber or Jim Ripple roams the middle garden between Jo Jo Moore and Mei 0ft, This takes into consideration the three essential factors of hitting, fly-catching and throwing. It holds true in spite of the slump of Lcibcr, who dropped from a .300 slugger in 1935 to a part time worker this season with a. hitting mark of only .280 and consequently yielded to the freshman development of Jim Ripple, product of the International League. The Yankees have a youthful and relatively inexperienced trio roam- ing the pastures. 'I‘l1c combination .of Jake Powell and George Selkirk, 110-111(11)! the sensatlqllal Joe Di- Mfllsio, boasts an aggregate major league background of only a half dozen years. Dimaggio is the big question mark. The 21-year old kid from Frisco had had a wounderful first year under the big top. His bat, his Al) Jenkins‘ Sets Eight New, Auto Records BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS. UTAH, Sept. 28—(AP)—Ab Jen- kins sci eight. new motor car speed and endurance records today~and then was forced by mechanical trouble to end a. run he's expected to brine n dozen more. "That's all until next iiixiwleil the bronzed Utahan. Jrnklns, who captured most of ihc world's major marks in a 26- hour grind last weak. sent his $40.- 000 racer away at 10:l0:37- am. AST seeking the records he missed last week. ' . The unexptwtcd end of the pro- jecicd 13-hour run came 51 nules after Jenkins smashed the 1,000- inllc rrcord of England's John Cobb. 150.85 miles per hour, with 165.73 MKRH. ' Mechanics swarmed around the mr as Jenkins eased off the course 1111i! into his pit tent. Examination ciiscloscd the vrnter pump impeller 11ml cut out. All the water leaked out. They fussed over the racer half zin hour before Jenkins, driving without relief, decided to call it a day ~ and :1 3cm‘. JENKINS‘ RECORDS BONNl-TVHLE SALT FLATS, UTAH. Sept. 2B_(AP)- Records sci, by Ab Jenkins today, ‘with time or rllslniirt‘ and the old records: 10f) 111110516957 M.P.H.; 167.69 iCobbl. One hour (Cobb). 20f) milr-s 171.05; 161.58 (Jenkins). 500 milcs 168.44; 159 011 (Jenkins) Three hours 168.45; 159.92 (Jen- kins). year," 170.97 miles; 167.69 1.000 kilometres 166.64; 159.41 (Jenkins). Six hours 165.94: 157.33 (Jen- n. . 1.000 miles 165.73; 156 85 (Cobb). grand throwing arm, his confidence and poise, had much to do with in- stilling the old winning spirit 1n the Yankees. The giant freshman Ripple, not only filled a yawning gap m me batting order but proved himself a real ballhawk. He probably will see considerable series action inasmuch as most of the Yankee pitching 5M1! is right handed. Iciber, a star- board swinger llkely will get the call if and when Lefty Gomez pitches for the Yankees. The Giant attack pivots around Oti. and his big but. The one time boy wonder, now inlhls eleventh season at the ripe old age of 2'1 was the batting hero of 1933 in which the Giants beat the Wash- ington Senators. He has had one of his best years. l-Ic plays the right field caroms at the Polo Grounds like a Willie Hoppe and has a mar- velously accurate throwing arm. Selkirk, the Yankee right fielder packs a solid punch and is flceter of foot than Ott but not otherwise in the same class with the Giant rival. In left fled Jo Jo Moore has an equally decisive margin over Powell excflpt in aggressiveness and speed. Moore, in the leadoff role, is one of the most consistent first-ball hit- ters in the majors. Ross Qfferecl Ti t l e B o u t In November NEW YORK, sent. fill-MP) -— Promoter James J. Johnston oi’ Madison Square Garden today wir- ed Sam Plan, one of the managers of Bamey Ross, world's welter- weight champion, offering Ross a bout with the winner of next Fri- McLamii-i and Tony Canzoneri. Since Ross has cancelled his trip to Australia to meet Jack Carroll, w TO GIVE HIM A oo ‘null-EAR BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT BflXiii-Qi Main Bout: "in 1U 80111118 RINK Wednesday, October 7th at 8.00 "P. M. George A. Leslie ex-cliampion of Prince Edward Island VS. William Maclnnis — 10 rounds. Winner m take purse. Also three Middleweight bouts by the 1).. Middleweights on the Island, PRICES: Ringside 15¢. ' IIBZAEJENT ' -st Rush 50c. i One Canadian. Left In U. S. Golf Title Play (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) SUMNHT, N. J., Sept. 28-Fol- lowing in the footsteps of her celebrated fcllow-townsman, Tony Manero, who sprang a surprise by capturing the 1936 0pm Title, MJ-s. Estelle Lawson Page of Greens- boro, N. W., likewise staggered the dopesters today when she shot a course record-smashing 75 to win the qualifying medal 1n the United States women's golf champ- ionship. i The husky north Carolinlan, who used to “just swing a club" until four years ago when she played her first full round and alnoe then has won the north and south title once and the combined north and South Camlinas‘ championship three times, toured the par 77 Canoe brook country club layout in 40-35 as 511B clipped t/wo strokes off the former competitive stand- ard. Of the five Canadians who went out among the traps and wind- swept rough hopefully, only Ada. Mackenzie, Toronto veteran of many tournaments, assured herself of a qualifying berth. Despite a shaky eight on the par 5 first hole, the off-times Canadian champion carded 45—l—6. A distinct shock was the com- plete oollapse of Mrs. F. J. Mul- queen, Toronto woman who won the Canadian close title at Mont- real last week. She shot an oven 100 and went to the sidelines. Kelly Leaves‘ For Detroit ‘Pete Kelly left yesterday for De- troit to start training for the com- ing National Hockey League cam- paign with the 1935 champions. Red Wings. Kelly will stop at Mon- Meal en route to visit his family. ms. Pete Kelly will join her hus- band in Detroit some time later. Down TbeAlleii/c IIOLY NAME 1mm. nowym; Al Blanchard and m5 boys envy" ed the Bowling Season 111st mm: when two teams of his dainci? Orchestra met to decide on m. pin knocking ability of the big and Iiittlc Horns. The B1B Horns won over ilirli- opponents by the small margin 0133 pins. LITTLE HORNS '1‘. McFarlane 55 127 117 Loo Dolron 171 198 131 Bib McGrflsor 13a 115 16a 1R8 Mcfimsor 129 124 11a Alyre Arsenault 137 147 216 623 711 805 Tot-a! 2141 BIG HORNS Johnnie Gamhnm 12B 111 153 Albert Blanchard 10s 147 10a Archie McFaz-lane 149 198 2 waiter White 104 160 l6! Vernon McFarlane 10s 140 17$ 594 762 8130 Total 2224 Hight ‘Three A. McFarliine 4162. BOWLING MEETING There will be a meeting of eh interested 1n a mixed bowling tournament at the Holy Name Hall Thursday evening Oct. 1st at 1 o'clock. This tournament is (ipcn 1c every body get your entries in early. Set Record For Freak Shots nosroN, Sept. 28-(AP) Two 1191f- ers using the same type club scor- ed holes-ln-one on the Wcslill golf club's Iii-yard seventh 1101i here within five minutes of each other, establishing a record for freak shots. . T. G. Patterson scored the first one yesterday with a mashlc-niblicll while playing in a. foursome. G. M» Wilson, playing in a. foursome di- rectly behind Patterson, saw I119 gen}, and wok hi; mfl51l10-1ll1)1i('1€ from the bag declaring: well, boys- I guess I'll try it, 100." His tee shot rolled into the c1117- —: '3 day night's fight between Jimmy , Gi ll tory, l under- HA5 T'O fl/ezlvirz P101113‘ SAYS “When l saw the expert craftsmanship at the llotte fac- wi why Gil/anal gin" m, h. ml)’ held the football champion- Johnston said he hoped to make Ella; $1111.62: BLADES’ ' gztfljgiy flfi°zcfofcrltlzt °“ a £03 Mum-la‘? "5 ilrfdmsult °Y \ EIGHTH BATTERY PRACTICE the match mi- 1m November. I °r s: ” i 1‘ If a sufficient number of Trotter! ry over x yes ‘r a“ hm . i? Mhmmm‘ vmwuv" Wberani MELVIN runvis 00ml!!! ea 8!‘- i enter in the Two, Three and Four “m w“ m“ 8W5 “m1 11 PM“) l minim nniii-iy softball practice and Ross. ymms 0111011410 Hebrew. Fvrmqr G-Mfl" ""4 ‘ p Year 01d Stakes the Trotter: n: tllllve points. Goals-in which the ; this owning at 5 (ydock, A gun have met three times with Ross i Nemesis o] Gangdam 97w oer/ass Pacers will be started in sonar: al goes under the cross-bar-eouni tu|~n..ouj_ o; piuym-s 15 roque5;ed_ 1 winning two dcgjsjmm and "Joltin; Jrmoof/zw! I at flu '“"“*°'“- E L a WMGHT. three points each. 31171110 minis l The first 111ml!‘ 0r the Charlottetown 1 Jimmy" one. All 17119 bouts wcri B L U E [j | |_ L E T T E a L a o E s Jmoke ; rice swnum "m mmd Whenever the bflll 0W5 . Borden scrim will b0 played at the hard-fought and so close the deck- N Ow 5 Hm q 5; _. m pug 59¢ 4 L-6833-9-29-li, W" the ‘Jrmbu’ vlfilififlfl. park diamond. ions always raised controversy. I Q I i p“) I BRINGING up FATHER -5, George stem...» HEARD WHAT I SAID? m‘ h_’—“ _ MMEWJ i7‘ ME IN ‘NT DE RATION l5 coum- DE FLATION A FINE FIX- ASKED TH’ Ll AT YDUP OF" WANTS TO SEE CQJNT 1F H WANTED , FICE TODAY‘ HE D YOU“ AN’ HE 5IAlD | i FSQAKiFAOfiINE Sgsélli‘ -' IN5ULTED HlM AN HE CHALLENGED ME A DUEL" High Single Alyre Arsenauli-zit .