~< _ 1, '- tv ' i» s -' . N. `THs fC1ii\`1u.‘o1"i‘i-:Tow1\i`cUA11D1AN ocTOBD1€"a;*`m§f . E . 2° 1 NevirsA ‘ Hme An . . MONDAY ""€fl"in» 11' CVCI III WORLD S T L-/T ,-»--~ inithing Wh° smned herself on WITH “TRUDY” 'l`I1lj'll~S'r GIRL To c0NQui-:ii ENGLISH _ Us consnr mor wi t l.i¢?lTING swriuairivc. Tag: ORCHESTRA TO”MUcH FOR CARDS 1 . ______, , Cardinals: High up. Robertson ` ---w made a diving emu or Highs not Miner, C,-eu) Swarnp St. threw him. t<;ut.. F‘€}ischtmi;p. lgifecllg Louis W/ith Barrage of Hits and Runs to ‘ Straight( Pl/in of Series of 9to- ' ‘ 3'--A Iexander Mound ini Third Inning-Pip- grass Hurls Great Came For Yorkers. The following. is yesterdays Yan- kee-Bt. Louis game by inning. Yan- kees. after shelling Alexander from lthl, motlntifin the third inning, startecvtorwork on Clarence Mit- chell who could not stem the ad-» van t.id'e oi' funn. The score end 9 to' 3. Over 65,000 fans a ded yesterdays game. teain.l.,,will rest today to hos tomorrow, where to Bt. Iaiiis. the if is j Q in `* E New York yes- for baseball. it warm about three tba' fam were forced to and vests. are being hovered by a press representatives _es- 'loo with a 'inoaqaaatins covertcanada and the Gehrig and the _/2 EDERLE CHANNEL AND COMED Take Second Shelled From Second Innlng _ Cardinals: Harper up, Harper got a base on balls. Wilson up, Harper scored on Wilson’s double into right centre. Maranville up, on Maran- vi11e's single to centre Wilson went to third. Alexander up, Wilson scor- ed when Lazzeri took, Alexandefl grounder ancl_ threw wildly past ble play. Koenig to Lazzeri to Cieh- rig. Hign up, nigh popped to Rob- ertson. V 3 runs, two ,hlts. one error. Yankees: Robertson 'up,- Bottom- ley took Robertson! high hopper and raced, to the bag ahead of cred. One run. one hit, no errors. Third lnning V oemig. Deninii- - up.- ~au.ruivu1e;' scored when Douthit hit into a dou- ‘ threw out to third. out takinga runs, one hit, no Ruth ` 4-L » .i. Y-USUAL PRICES _ r EDWARD vvendnesday-_ Thursday WHOLE TOWNS TALKING" r.\,‘.1 it high fly which Frisch snioth/not stem -tide. _TODA Y ONL Y Great Rodeo aid Cattle Round Up - Thrills Galore also NEW SERIAL The Tumble People Last Scarlet' Arrow CAPILTQL plays the part or a "sit /T -. 10111111 (Plper); .Fred R. (Brown). second;; Peter Bingen s>. mud; Peter, Belmont (Brown). fourth. B855 time- 2,10‘L-. . , o 1 Ladies Bowling an exciting imwiinz match W0* place on the Charlottetown Alleys 4 No runs, no hits. no errors. T` - r last night when the Gems met and "uk, right add" of me yank, defeated _the Kewples by 113 P5115- standing. laugh clown laugh." tho fact that all the action was who nailed a homer on Thursday H1153 PNUSM W°“ highest Single °f 4 l- C10'-0-UD with the camera. but few and showed up well yesterday, Big 158 and highest three oi' 357. some ci the Gems will have to fi-‘£12 ilwny from them and the na- me is considered in be one or ine C'EMS= Mo. Wynne . . . . . . . .. Hilda Praught Ann Walsh _ Mad e Dougan iss 93 120 141i 1091155 '11 105; 75 1 00 '16 88 'I2 80 121 Lily Davey 104 80 Hilda Gallant Millie Walsh Winnie Praugt Total 1432. '13 105 00 'M 62 45 .ni I T '~'~_»~| 99 109 148 104 81 NOTES There was such a commotion on s(:"'h°_“" W) -~~"34~l30°!t.hc Alleys the fans thought it was W ~--U21-03020 a nm but ii was only i-iuiia niniung c1ui>.... .......szo,i'1i.'1o _ st,,ke_ St. Louis ...820,l7l,70 The pins sure fell for Madge- NGK-1¢1fBl Ldlglle.. . i . .. . . .$”,I'1l.7U They knew how to keep in hm- som] wi: V reeoni. GOLF Mixed foursomes v. in. worimg _ Bot; The first. game last year, played gm _ . "H" the in limited confines of_ ces __ mm Forbes’ Plel .,atti-acted 41,487 fans,| ' _who _id $182,477 for the spectacle. poular .song on the alloys last' was "Goose Eggs"-Solo by (encored) all Join in the chor-' “'I`hat's my weakness now." "Mc“ has come if she had a the - please n-one miie: xevrpiss would get Orocateria. The picture plly "WINGS" in which 125 planes rise to xi climax towards the cud cl the story, will be shown at the Strand Theatre. Monday and Tuesday Oct. 8th, iltli. A few cf the announced facts and figures coiicerniiig the manufact- ui'c cf the dianin including five square miles cf war trenches, barb- ed wii'e._siic1l holes, Lrucks,_ti'nci0rs. The battle of St. Mihicl is rcfcughi, Five thousand men are engage-cl here in important paris. It has been twelve months in the making, most of ii; having been shut near San Antonia. Texas. It is directed by` 4 William Wellman, who \\'.i.'~; ii. mem- bcr of the Lafayette Squadi-cxi in the Wcrld War. In :iii article tics-N, cripiivc of the prcdiiciion it is writ- . 1 , ten . Begt time 2441/,_ I “Not ii fool cf the picture was F,.ee_fmf_au: Won by getty Difggp plictcgraphcd i'i~om thc ground which could conceivably lic mkcn from the air. The action- was "Shot" frcm airplanes, l`i'Om captive bnl-` loans :ind i`i°oin lofty parallels i`a1i_i:-, ir.; frcin six lu 100 feet high. ‘ "Flying 12,000 feet above the carih and :;c|mi“.iicd from thu ground by ia. cloud wall 8,000 feet, grime Lil~'I`ou many ‘fi'cpOi'i.>i‘:i’?" 1 Hilda ivns heiirii sihgiiiig "Ev- en though the four-pin kcups on‘ take up higher nccouiitaiicy if they thick. Charles Rogers and Richard Arlen, fexitured players in the pict- ure. completed one of the most un- usual fuits of aeronautics in the history of aviation during its tak- ing. "This was their work on the floor ci' the sky where each became at once director, cameraman and net- or, two miles and more above terra firmci. "Iii order to get the desired effects Director William Wellman had ,automatically operated cameras nicuntcd on the airplanes just back ,of the pi-opcilor and controlled from the switch- board in the cock pit. “'I`hcn Rogers _and Arlen, each alone in .1 separate plane, climbed IO more than 12,000 feet and more enacted one of the most _realistic si-cries cf the production. After cx- Chflnlzeiiig prcarranged signals each oi' the boys started the motor On his cimcra and went into the ac- tion of the sequence, while from o third ship long shots were made oi' the two plums, circling onddurting about in aerial combat. “From the time they left the ground until they retumed they were completely out of touch with the world. Not even the customary radio communication with the ground was available because Of ture of thesceno precludes the 111 115 hope to keep tubs oil A1iii`s ficoro. Wearing of radio receiving sets.” THE YANKEE S TRA TE GIS TS ___