D 1T0 / n i“ i. r. ~ 401m one ow- w». an,» <15: Home With ..--.., m r- ”) Rowe, 22- fials and serve notice that -drag-out battle for the championship of 1934. g Trailing by one run in a dazzling duel between Rowe & Lefty Bill Hallahan of ‘ gue champions tied the score in the ninth on pinch-hit- Gerald Walkefs single and triumphed in the 12th, off Qfiflother southpaw, Bill Walker, as Goose Goslin’s rousing _ mehit to centre brought Charley Gehringer home with {tin winning run and clinched a 3-2 decision for the cele- (Wfited schoolboy. I Iowe Brilliant we signaliaed his debut under ld Series fire by hurling one of most spectacular games in got away with s character- . spurt, the youthful giant , s ed down and simply over- ; .red the National I-eflfllle champions the rest of the way- Qowe yielded only one hit in the lfit: nine innings, a long double by r Martin in. the Ilth. From tliuiourth to the 11th, the Tiger pinch-hitter lifted a. weak fly mid- derbolt was absolutely in- _ bless he retired 22 batsmen Nrorder. "Altogether only 28 Car- _a_ls faced the boy wonder in , t v i those last nine innings. I-Ie struck, out seven, including Joe Medwlck, hitting star of the first game, twice and had the entire batting order of, the National Lcaguers hand- cuffed with a. bewildering assort- ment of speed, curves and a change I a pace. l” Share Spotlight j ‘we was the big hero for s -»* g crowd of 4.8.461 cash cus- rs. A slightly bigger turnout _ for the opening game, but he elites the Tiger laureis with Gos- IliEVI/‘alker and Ervin ("Pete") ' the light-hitting outfielder "g-u drove in the first Tiger run in ourth with a double and scor- etyingruninthenintmto - it possible for Detroit to cap- .- the Schoolboy‘s spectacular s lob - , besides driving home the . 1 run, helped save the game jise third when his great throw tiflldickey Cochrane, after Jim ' single, cut down Medwick e plate and halted the last a1 attack of the afternoon. 4 re they had piled up no less f; , five errors in the first game s performed miserably, the 1 t played error-less ball todsy. were lucky, perhaps, to save ine after being held helpless s. succession of "clutches" by en's fine pitching with men e bases, but they never quit ing and they looked like an ly different ball club st the I - j- ~ Anybody’s Series . 'A‘s-a. result o: their thrilling cori- .» quest, the series stands one-all and-it's snybodyu baseball war now 1 as the contending forces headed to- yihighti for 8t. Louis and the third i. game tomorrow on the home " National ‘ Cardinal pi (nalsiglied the iaak of picking up he family job where Diuy Dean off with an 8-8 decision yes- ' . The Tigers will rely on heir slim fast ball right-bender, Imnmr B1440 d. it ,5 5 Elsi? E2 E owe Pitches Bengals" a Spectacular 3 - 2' Gosiirfiiéirs Single To gQZSend Gehringer Scurrying i: (By Alan Gould, Associated Press Sports Edi t‘ (A. P. By Guardian’s Special Wire) 3;: DETItOIT, Oct. 4-Surging back into the World Series t behind the superb pitching of Lynwood (“School- year-old pitching giant from Eldorado, gransas, Detroit Tigers came from behind today to cap- lllte a 12-inning baseball melodrama from St. Louis Car- ’ t soxuvc BASKETBALL crass scour IIn 12 Innings Winning Tally. tor) it's going to be a knock-down- the Cardinals, the American PETE FOX berg twice fanned with men on bases. Rowe himself came up three times with runners aboard but he, Detroit development system in fanned three times before he camei Erwin (Pete) For, outfielder. Pete through. in the ninth. with a Sail-l served at Wheeling, " ille and rlfice bunt that sent Pete Fox. wlw Beaumont, Detroit farms, before had singled. 80111717318 1° 59001113‘ joining the Tigers in 1938. While base. I not as showy a player u White, be It wu at this critical juncture. ' has rmes into the Tigers‘ machine with the outcome in the balance. I smoothly and is considered a very that Cochrane déllldéd t0 “Mi-miter valuable asset- Fox drove in the IBM-handed Gerald W511i“ 1°!‘ tying run yesterday in the 9th Jo-Jo White. lead-off man, but a “mm; break in the Cardinal defence pav- ed the way for. Walker to come through with his vital baeehit. The Herc is another example hf the but Goslin, coming in fast. lined a perfect throw to Cochrane. who Ieasily blocked oil and tagged the Cardinal out-fielder. Abruptly Ends The Cardinal attack ended a! it had begun. For the remaining nine innings, so complete was ‘Rowe's stranglehold on the pro- ceedings, that only a. half dozm balls we're hit out of the infield. Alternating his over-hand fast-bail with a. baffling side-arm curve that broke sharply across the corners. the Schoolboy had these rough and ready sluggers thoroughly tamed. In the ninth he fanned Medwick and way between the plate and first base. First Bill Delanoey, the back- stop and then Collins started for the ball. Then both hesitated and before either one could make u? his mind, the ball fell Just inside the foul line and then chromed across it. Instead of two out, as the Cardinals should have made it. ‘Walker had another chance and he quigkjy gelzed, 1t by belting the ball on a, line to centreiield, sending For; home with the tyins run- The blow also Kfiocked Hallahan from the box. Another Cardinal south- paw, Bill Walker. promptly came Collins in successio . To show how to the rescue, trapped Gerald Walk- _ much better and evm faster he wai ef 0g ‘first base and then struck I getting as the game was prolonged, out. Manager oochrane, sending the | Rowe registered five ~oi his seven battle m“, extra mningg, ‘strikeouts in the last four innings Rowe made only one mistake in Hallahah meanwhile, although a capitalizing his belated opoortunitybit erratic, was equally effective for triumph. That was when he Iwhen men were on the bases. The grooved one that Martin slapped _ llhullky SOlIthI-WFW 1881184 1W1‘ Dill- for two bases in the 11th, with one r 8S but he allowed only 81X hits in out bu; the schoolboy then fanned something less than nine full in- Jack ‘Rothrock and retired Frisch uinss and had the ‘riser resulm on a pop fly to Geh,.mg.er_ eating out of his hand. His sup- Meanwhile Bill Walker g-radual- DOrt was shaky but none of the ly lost control and WIS the direct “m” Cardinal emu’ b? M331"- caugg o: his own undoing in theiFrlsch and I-liallahsn himself, fig- mth‘ He escaped trouble m (he ured in the Detroit scoring. out and fanned Rowe for the th selves together and fielded sensa- tionaily. The infield was Homes to Battle For Right to Meet Baer. NEW YORK. Oct. 4--Wlth a crack at Max Beer's title at stake, two young heavyweights meet in Madison Square l‘ ’en tomorrow night in the first indoor show of the metropolitan season. ’ The IO-round encounter between Art Lssky, Minneapolis giant. and Steve Hamas, former Penn State College football luminary, is the first of a series of winter elimina- tion contests planned. by the Gar- den. The survivor likely will be pit- ted laainst Baci- in a big open sir carnival next June. Inter in the winter the other leading contenders among the big fellows will be trotted out to see what they can do. The” include the late champ, Prirno Camera, Max Schmeling, also a former stan- dard bearer, and the promising Jack Pe¥xrson of England. e Broadway sporting gentry in- stalled Ladrw as a favorite stodds of '1 to 5 tonight. but this price msybeshortened iostosbefore the boys start brswllng, around l0 p. m., 21 S. T. J u n i o r Abegweits Play Today ‘rhe first gsinecf the Maritime Junior Baseball finals between the Charlottetown Abbies and Amherst St. Pats will be pla ed at the O. A. A. Grounds this inoon at 8.15. 'I'ried"and Proven as a result their victories‘ over Whitney Pier, Cape Breton champions, and the Moncton Rovers, New Brunswick tltleholders, the Amherst team are favorites to keep the junior title on the mainland, but the locals are Just as determined that the crown shall rest here. , ,Under the direc- tion of Lou C i the boys have been diligently. clng and base- ball fans may be usui-ed of a bang- up tilt in this afternoon's encase- merit. tie the score until the ninth. Hal- lahan gave a sample of his ability in the pinches when he checked the Tigers after Martin's two-base wild threw on Hogan's grounder in the sixth. On Owen's weak tso to the box, Hallshan caught Rogeil at third. then forced Fox t0 POP ird straight time. In contrast with yesterday's slop- py work. the Tigers pulled them- steildy th. when Frisch fumbled oeh- The ‘risers had men on bases gngefs sharp grounder and ROBE“ In every inning except the eighth. walked, but he set the stflde m? while Hanan“ ‘"5 Wrkml- b“ Goslin-s wmning wallop by walking . they Passed up all their chances to Gehringer and Greenberg in suc- cession, with one out. in the last frame. The Cardinal southiiawu control was Slipping so fest that he got only one strike across in ten successive pitches to these Tiger hitters. The count was one bail on the Goose when the runner Wash- ington slugger connected and smashed the ball on a line to deep centre. . Tried lIsi-d Ernie Orsstti tried hard to handle the ball quickly and attempt to cut off Gellrlnger at the plate but his throw was so wild that there was not the remotest chance for a play and the crowd was already Pflllllllil on to the ileld as the Tiger second baseman registered the decidin! run. The home players were fair)! mobbed by enthusiastic rooters and it took a detail of police to help them fight their way through the Jubilant throng to the dressing room. Itwasastoughsballgamefor theCsrdinall to lose as it was thrilling to Tiger partisans and de- serving to Rowe. whose winning performance on the whole ranks among the finest in world series annals. The over-time duration cf the game was only two innings short 0f the record. set», in 191d when Babe Ruth pitched Boston Bed Sox to victory over the Brook- lynsitciin iiinnings/rhefam- Wear... _ longer Look . . . "smarter" At the outset however. it _ Rowe was slated for a again, giving Rowe fine support that included a spectacular diving catch by Rogell smash in the seventh. just a little just a little of Delanceyu BIG FIGHT scuinuiii run lllNiliHT Art Lasky and Steve, I. I CHARLES _ GEHBINGEB Second baseman for the Detroit Tigers, who is conceded to be the beat second baseman in the Amer- ican League since Eddie Collins and Napoleon Lsjcle were in their prime, being a sensational fielder and an excellent batsman. He is hitting close to .880 mark this sea- son. Gehrlnger scored the winning run yesterday. CARDINALS BIIIIBRINEII “IN nijm Goslin and Rowe Cen- tre of Attraction in Dressing Room Of Tigers. (By Charles Dunkley, Associated some writer) (A. P. By Guardian's special Wire) DETROIT, Oct. 4—Murder was in the hearts of St. Louis Cardinals as they charged into their dressing room. all of them with faces burn- ing with rage. after they had drop- ped a heart-breaking game to De- troit Tigers in the 12th inning to- day. Frankie Ilrisch, fiery little leader of the National League champions. was so enraged that he ordered newspaper correspondents awaiting him out of the room until he had time to cool off, or perhaps tell soirie of his players just what he thought of them. "It wss a tough game to lose," he blurted out later. "We shouldn't have lost it Our defence wasn't what it should have been. Hellsban pitched a wonderful genie but the team that got the break won it." Hisch, no doubt, was referring, to the incident in the ninth inning when Gerald Walker, pinch-hitting for Jc-Jo White, Tiger centrefleld- er, popped a high fly along the first base foul line and both De- lancey, the Cardinals’ catcher. and| Rip Collins, first baseman‘, through either making an attempt to catch it. Two seconds later Walker singled, scoring m: with the tying run "f donjt ears whst anybody says, I still love to win," Frisch yelled, “breaks or no breaks. I came near mistakes but I think we booted away today's game." The againsttiietigersinstlloulsto- morromflguringthst the other hslfcftlieDeanbi-other-sisready llsnsglrlslshi nld aemtsiaiosm wersflli auc- zlstyuéovictorysudreadytnstart . ~ z Iewiitfstarilloisaiytrifleathe slim, , sgsiusttheCar- 4mm. ., "Didirtllowe-plteii s swell gsmefiluasked. . "minimised-glycine." '7‘ .. The “Goose” mm tiilllili nmmsmu I (0. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) HALIFAX. “ct. e-Handsome Ed ' Don George, m, Buffalo, claimant of the world's heavyweight wrest- ling championship tonight defeat- ed Harry Luudin, the Cornell Ter- ror, 218, in straight falls in the Halifax Arena, retaining his role as a paramount mat contender. It was the best display of grgp- Dling seen in Halifax and the Buf- falo tbunderbolvs prowess at Icmmbllild and thumping down his opponent apparently tickled the 1,200 fans. As the sleek, capable performer ran through his string of tricks and finally smashed the terror to the floor, they cheered. Sleek as a movie star, clean-cut I8 e M11688 b0! he was as able a iléiwinl‘. h‘? '5'?“ °" ' ii 1M- vrse tuned. ""1""- i-l"! 11118861! his way to the decisive victory. n; m m; n"; fall after a half hour and five sec- onds of straining and g with an effective head scissors. ‘rhen when 12 minutes and 23 seconds ' on the second en- Mimi". George Rrasped Lundin for l" “will! re whirl that i un the terror to the floor. p - LEON ALLEN GOSLIN Better known to baseball fans ss “Gcose" Goslin. la one of the snark plugs of the Detroit Tigers. An ex- cellent outfielder, Goose swings a wicked bat. lle is batting better than 800 and has driven in more than M» runs. Ills lifetime batting avers-so is around 32.0. Goose cracked the siusle yesterday which gave Detroit the game in the 12th inning. Leafs, Red BirdsResume A Play Today COLUMBUS. Ohib. Oct. 4-001- umbus Red Birds and Toronto Medic Innis. ill-it kllilnl time until tomorrow night when they go back ' into action in the fifth game of the little world series. in which the Columbus club is leading three games in one, enjoyed themselves The birds practised a bit at the Stadium, and then the entire squad attended an appreciation dinner tendered by tlic fans of the city. Ibo leafs slept late and then leafed until this afternoon when they moved out to the Stadium for a. short workout. Church Bowling League Plans ‘B rill iant Playingln To u rn ey (A. P. By Guardian's Spools! Wire) PHILADELPHIA, . 4-Star ing one of the most amazing recov- eries in the history of the United. States women's golf championship m1. Opal Hill, 44-year-old Kansas City matron, today defeated Mrs Leona Cheney, San Gabriel, Calif, on the 24th green in a thrill-packed climax to the quarter-final round of the 38th national totwnament. Their marathon struggle com- pletely overshadowed the other fourth-round lS-hole matches which saw Mrs Glenna Oollettl Vare, Virginia Van Wie, the de- fending titleholder, and Dorothy Trsung, 30-year-old sensation oi the early rounds, winning penul- timate brackets with plenty to spare. Mrs. Vere, continuing her bril- liant sub-par play, defeated Mrs. orld Series World Series ‘Sidelights (By Paul Michelson, Associated Prom I Writer) M!" .. (A. P, By Glllrdllll’! Spoolll WIN] DETRO rr, Oct. e-Rowe atariec out today like s. "Schoolboy," but finished like a professor. Both the "schoolboy" and h... Dean are making the baseball ex- ile-. = tl-il-ii-Q-lii ,» -. -¢ - < n! --r l. .i, ..-.».<..=_ ports swell their chests. The experts 1 said they W"! 800d and drummed y up probably the lflliut fanfare that ever accompanied. any twq Pllyers into their first World Series. Usually. the famous first . timers are colossal busts. O O O Rowe, who watched Medwlcl hammer out four trips in four sue. cessivc times at bat yesterday, didn't take a chance. on "Ducky Wuckv" today. holding him to one hit in five chances. Medwiclr didn't ‘set a ref-i ‘good ball all day. “Goose" Cioslin's throw to the Dlate to nip Medwick in the third inning was a masterpiece. It was $0 litmus and accurate that it caught Medwick by 1o feet and ul- timately saved the game, as the run would have been the Cardin- als’ third- The two teams are all squsre- errors, too. Each has made five in two games. . If the Tigers had lost, Han! Greenbergs face would have been red. The big Detroit first baseman had chance after chan to become the day's hero only to miss, striking out twice with the tyuig run on base. He played a. sparkling defen- sive ganie to make up for it. Every time Frankie Prison goal to bat he sets s record. He gel one hit today to run his World Series mark to 58. Frisch also holdi the record for most series game: __»:=-i.--* H“. .,. 11in. zwny ;- -.iiu‘:' played, now 4h, and most times st _-_ bat, now 1'75. _ I O U Al Bchacht and Joe E. Brown participated in a prise fight with- in a roped arena near the plate sa the fans roared. Joe won by a "knockout" in the second round. Al was counted out by George Rafi. who caught a few of the synthetic punches himself. 5'1‘. LOUIS. Oct. 4—Despite their loss of the second world series game, the Cardinals remain the favorites to win the championship. Burt Well of Cincinnati, e and s; Miss Van Wie won from Frances Williams of Allentown, Pa, l5 and 8 and 2. we. Vare meets Miss Van Wie according to ievisedodds of Tom Kearney, betting commissioner. Hare are Kelli-nears revised odds: (Mrdinals in win seriefl. 7 to 10. Detroit to win series, even money- ’ Discussed Repireeenwtlves of tomorrow while Miss Trsung un- dertakes to continue her streak st the expense of Mrs. Hill. RUGBY SEASON’ OPENED (O. P. B! Glllnllaifa Special Wire) SAOKVILIIE, N. B., Oct. L-Mougt son hero today. Mount Allison win- ning the exhibition contest 12-5. idiscuss plans 4, and Miss Trsung defeated Mrs. the Icarus 1m‘ the whine sewn Cari n. Donner, Short Hills, N. .1. A number vi wires-mun: for the improvement of the dismissed and ioua church teams for considera- tfon. Allison University and Fredericton lkiiln about the end of the mon 91W took the lid off the football sea- art which tlme plans for the open- ing of the league will be definitely determined. league were “m” '” m‘ m‘ will be held this year on NOVEMBER I5 end l6. Particulars Later. L-EIO-l-Ri. Club representatives will me t i- F‘ ' . aoxnvcnua Community Carnival IIEIIBIIAIITS EXHIBITION THE FORUM OCTOBER 6th T0 13th One Full Week of Fun, Mirth and Gayety. Vaudeville- Boxing, Music, Gaines and Sport. SOMETHING NEW EVERY NIGHT Opening Night Saturday, Oct. -- PROGRAM- VAUDEVIIJ-E-Ceiueilv Anct, Chas. Naples a 00., nns mnrieagequegt Numbgrg- . i. u T-wo Juniors-ii Z-min. Rounds, ALSO-Joe O'Brien-vs. Stanley Steele in a Boxing r edy Act. A i _ AND 8cm v roe, N _ N hiiihgfi Longaphie, Sixy2- Com if"‘lifi~.i, Jrsnfli‘ .115 The Borden Fox Show *