545- ‘.- _'*“"'I.’..:L _ ‘Stretch Aci'vantage Five Full Games Red; To With 3-1, I0-inning Win NEW YORK. Sept. 5—'I‘he New York Giants blanked Philadelpl-iiu 6-0 iodav behind the nine-hit [Itching of Cliff Melton to stretch , .. winning: ='i'eak to four , vrraight in the National Baseball Lgvaguc-. , Frank De.-n,aree's homer with one aboard featured R five-run Giant splurge in the first inning. 1 R’.‘OklE Hugh Cfisey hariclcuffedi Boston Bees with six hits to lead ; the Brooklyn Dodgers to a 8-2 vic- TY. Casev and Lou Fette hooked up ‘ in a nglit pitching duel that was I Dl'CkPri up in the third inning by Dolph C6ml1ll'5 2-mi homer of the I‘ year. Cincinnati Reds tacked down ’ another mrrer of the league D9Ii- I nan! manv fans believe they have I in the bag by nosing out the sec- I .. :0 Cardinals 3-1 in a 10- I .'igirle. I The ctory stretched their ad- I r the Cards to five: . Today's cnnurst. iias full Va -. rrrilay of a 6-6 Lie Monday. , FARTHING HISTORY S LLANDUDNO. Wales Commcmcraiinu the opening of ;i new hospital here, a l‘illlllfliill”‘3 Welsh hat czniirning fal‘I.liil‘i£'S bearing every date from 1889 in 193.‘! W8‘. i')l‘E‘SCl""lE‘(‘l to Pl‘ll‘i('£‘§s Alien of Aihlonc, who opened iliv l1()S])lIli.l. BELL T0 Gi()()D \v\'0RK DARIJNGTON. lrliiglaii bccn (lciiiited to :1 (‘lllll'(‘ll and will summon lhf‘ ijllhflll lu i>:i\‘Pr rt, Hflllilllion -le-Skerne. D;ii'1iiigi.on‘ suburb. , 1' I i 3.9. Beartrap —-—(CP)—- | \ Cliie-‘SNAPSHOT GUILD INFORMAL PORTRAITS Is Winner Of Maritime Skeet Title ST. GEORGE. N. 13.. Sept. 5- ICPI —After two days of intensive cornpetition, G H McGee of the Utopia Skeet Club, St. George, won the Maritirn: skeet Cham- pionship for individual shots here today. Mrs. H. E. Rogers of the St. Cl'OlX Skeei Club, sc. Stephen. placed second. They scored 96 and 93 respectively. C. I. NcNabb of Oxford. N. S. and J Anderson of Halifax post- ed 92's to tie for third place. The International Team Match was \\'0.‘i by a group from Caribou. winners inc‘uded Jack Learmoni. of Truro. N. S nrd A Osborne of Darimoruth, N. "A. B Mann. Truro. N. s.. 90 J. Dnane. Triiro. 85: L_ \ . 'TV:iiro. 85' H Green. Dart- mouth, 82; Dr. H Peel, Truro, 81: I. Smart. Soiitui Queens, N .S _80; mors, South Queens, 79‘ R _. ’l‘;’ll‘i. 'I‘riiro. 78' A. Mac- . '1'‘ nm 7R and Don Lear- ii, 'I‘.2:ro, 77 '1 e Triiro learn won the five- . <-fn<< B. Championship with a ' :0 of 390. l'se lilinard's for sprains. Use a portrait attachment to take informal portrait close-ups such as this 1 with in box camera or fixed-focus folding model. UMMER is an ideal season for in- formal outdoor portraits of your family and friends, and informal por- traits are about as easy to take as any other type of snapshot. Natural- ly, such informal shots are not to ‘be compared with the work of skilled, oxperienced professional photogra- phers . . . but, since you take them yourself for your own album. they do have unique personal iniercst. Your informal portraits may show one, two, or several persons. grouped naturally-— without stiffness. The subjects should fill most of the pic- ture space; too much background is detrimental. Faces should lie turned so that a good likeness is obi:ilned—~ whether profile, full-face, or in be- tween-—hiit as a rule the riibjccts should not look directly at the cam- era. Two types of lighting are accept- able. Direct siiiilight from one side is all right, but slmigiit-o\'ci‘lica(l lighting from the noon sun produces harsh. displeasing sharlows. For a softer lighting. zinri hotter like- nesses, place (he siiiijt-ct.-i in “open shade"—for example. at fin» c-rizc of shade from a hig tree, wilt-re they will revolve livl‘t reflected from the sky, but no ilirrrt sun. Informal portraits in direct sun- light require no Increase in ex- posure. In open shade (not under trees or a porch) try Lin exposure of 1/25 second at f.8 lens opening. With a box camera or inexpensive folding type, use the smallest lens opening. and give a very short. time exposure —about as fast as you can work the shutter—wii.h the camera on a firm. solid support. A focusing camera enables you to take reasonable close-ups without a lens attachment, as well as Tuli- figure shots. You can also take full- figure shots and group shots with a. box camera if it has a. “tvv_o-point" focus setting, enabling you to get as near as five or six feet to the sui.-.]eci:. But for real close-ups with the in- expensive camera, you will nee: E portrait attaclimcni-—a sirali mp- plcmeninry lens that slips on over the regular camera lens, The l'ihCl1' meut does not change the exp -i: iis. Often, an informal portrait gains interest if the subject is busy with some everyday activity—for enm- pic, filling a tobacco pipe, if a man, or Cl‘O('ll(.‘[li’lE. if a woman, The ac- tion ndrls story qualIiy—-and tell! more libflili. the subject. Conc‘~"nd nctIon—siich as conversation-adds uiiily to a group picture. Make ii collection of good, infor- mal portraits of your friends and family. They'll justify a special soc- tiou in your snapshot album. 246 John van Guilder I'll take Club eve that I_s_ a chew- tlme. There’: a chew it tastes a lot better! W Hires, 00‘- ~0n_ N’ E_ 35. E McCu]_ dav won the-300-mile Thompson ,S0x Coast .. ’.1if§.’.'i} ioipiiiiii§i[:iii*‘i'* Over Hockey Situation NEW HAVEN. Conn, sepi ~'>— (AP) ——Possibility that war in EU!‘- ope miglit hinder professional hoc- key in Canada and the United States this winter was considered here today. ‘but Maurice Podeloff, president of the lni»ernai.ionsl-Am- erican League. was inclined to be optimistic about the situation. Most. of the players are Canadian citizens. Even if Canada decides to send an army abroad. Podoloff said. a ‘maioritv of the players are mar- ried, nest. of them have children and presumably will not be among the f'rst called to the colors. Chalks Up Third Win In Speed Classic CI..EVE'L.AND. Sept. E»—(AP)-— Roscoe 'I‘urner of Chicago to- Iropliy race to become the first _three-time winner of the ' classic. I Turner averaged 282-miles- an- hoiir for the 30 laps around a 10- iiiilc closed course. The victory before an estimated 60,000 spectators brought Turner $16,000 Tony Lcvier of Montebello, Calif, was second with an average of 272.538 miles an hour. Earl Ortmaii. Canadian Colonial Airways pilot. from Montreal and‘ Neiv.'ii.'.»;, N, .J., l'uI1nEl’LiD each of we last iliree years, took third place and \\'OD 54000 To 4-2 Win Over Tribe 6 NEW YORK. Sept. 5—iAP)— Chicago White ‘Sex scored four runs in the first inning today and coast- ed to a 4-2 triumph over Cleveland in an American League Baseball game. Five singles, two errors and a balk by Harry Eisenstat figured in Chi- cugos first inning surge. The In- dians scored boith their runs of!’ Jack Kncti in the third Six.-hit pitching Hank Greenbergs in two days swept Detroit T1861’: 10 a 4-2 triumph over St. Louis Browns Benton and George Gill dueled before H. small crowd in a playoff of speed | BASEBALL RESULTS American League Knott and Tresh; Dobson and Hemsley. Only games scheduled National League Philadelphia 000 000 000-0 9 1 New York 500 000 0lx—6 7 1 Harrell, Kezsieck and Millie-5: Melton and Darinlng. Boston 000 100 001-2 6 2 Brooklyn 000 221 l0x—43 10 0 Fette, Moran and Masl; Casey and Todd Cinc‘nIiati 100 000 00O—2 7 2 St. Louis 000 001 009-1 '7 l Walters and Lombardi; Andrews and Owen. Only games SChCdl!'."fl Inicrnaiiomil League First Game Newark Jersey Ciiv 000 (I00 031-1 9 3 Beggs and Wagner: Vf\.h(l(‘nh'. ' Pearce, Anderson, Sivcs and P r den First game--1 inninas St. Louis 100 000 010-2 6 2 Detroit. 100 000 12x-4 10 l < Gill and Harslniiy; Benton and York. Chic 0 400 000 000-4 14 l Clov and 003 000 000—2 10 2 Eisensizit. I Lnnior, ‘ 2’lI 027! 001 8 14 if ‘ §yracii.=e 101 (mi 0-3 7 ‘.2 Baltimore 1720 000 x—-4 9 3 Tisiiig and D, W.ii'rcii; l\'iatii'/.::k‘ and B WIil‘l"(‘l'i. Second G u im- Newark 105 000 l—7 ll 0 Jersey City 300 000 0-3 10 2 Barley -Ilild I-i0‘m‘ C”il‘l\(‘llii"f‘. And-arson, SiV?ss_ P.‘f\.'—'.‘P z*:'d Ai- wocd_ Three nitc games. yesterdays 5-5 tie. SPECIAL SESSION TORONTO, Sept. 5— (C?) — Prime Minister Hepburn today sum- moned the Ontario Legislature to meei. in special session Tuesday. Sept. ii) to consider possible war- time measures. BISHOP’S TREASURES LoNi')ON.~ (CPl- A sale of the accunii';a'.ion of 38 years was held when Dr. Winningtomingram mov- ed out of Fiilhrm Palace, residence of the Bishop of London. He will be succeeded by Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, ofVChe=fer. Gas! POP—-I'VE GOTTA eooo IDEA’. LES INTILODUCL MR. isuooe To COLJSIN MILLIE AN’ Mess: HE.’ LL MARRY HER‘. \5Z/OULDN‘T THAT BE A JOKE on HIM? Former Princess Clarissa Curtis Cantacuzene, ABOVE. when she was the wife of Prince Michael Cantacuzene. grandson of Uysses S, Grant, once president of the United States. was found dead in I1 New York apartment. Fumes were pouring from fivii gas leis whvn I the discovcrv was m do, but nulli- ilng was found to shed any “Elli . nn the death of the 39-year-nld I I daughter of a Boston society li-;id- i CL TIPPIE ANTDY “CAP" sruiaias Yrs--i oow? KNOW WHO \!/OULD LAUGH TH’ LOUDEST! HE. -- SERVE 'EM {BOTH RIGHT! - ' t Dammne. _ as of Mar in the air, the fleet remains the solid keystone or iron-clad moving fortresses. in typical of those that have thrilled )5 during recent manoeuvres; today the ships are for battle. This picture was taken ,. station attack h I ence. Wlicn war crashed out of the night upon Europe, marching orders (‘time 10 GT8“ 3F“Iin'3 "Mm! 01 “"9 h€lP‘¢S5''—m‘“'° um“ children. women. invalid: and old people—to leave their countryside. Above, some of the homes in 29 different cities and retire to the comparative -wan» .* . through the days of the Spanish Armada. ’1‘rnf:-.lgar, This piciure whether the subjects be wooden sailing um-ls rliish hearts in the put—|hips of the line moving into furniziilnu “somewhere in the North Sea". safety of the carrying gas masks and clothes. are massed at is London r3“"““' V/HAT IF THEY cor MArz'r2ii:o AN’ THEN CAME To VISIT us--'? GEE! \X/ELL MEBBE BUT——— UT’? Thimble Theatre. Starring P OPEYE — - IWANNASEE MR.NigHOL$, IT I IMPO rr ISN'T suci-(A GOOD ioEA,Ai=T:n. ALLI By Westovei‘ IEALOUG YOU COU ALMOST KILL GRIGGS I KNOW WHAT'S THE Ti2OUBLE...YOU'RE so WISH HIM ANY NO,I DON‘T sea ME BREAKING oow -BUT IF HE HAD ANY, YOU WOULDN'T A LITTLE SNEEZE POWDER WILL DO WONDERS IN THIS GROAN-BOX- I HATE TO MAKE MAC HAPP‘i§ ————- BUT THAT FRESH GRIGGS GIVES ME A PAIN IN ‘THE NECK,TOO