a § ER 1'4. 194s , _ "Perieriiemntlled \/"Yee,selSweet(epaerepe|-Ied |ee...in ElflhlfllaialllIlflhili-é-TITISTQYUJ every Sweet Cop yee snelle ls "letter lien lver"l Play Continues For Caddy Championship Wiiiii l6 entrants in the champ- ionship division o! the Caddy championship match pie? at the Belvedere Golf Club, only eight. intrants were left in the running ls e result of the conclusion oi DAILY ACROSS l. Malayan boat l. Jewish month 9. Period o! time DOWN l. Large snake I. Quantity o! paper S. itoxving ~ implement p. Narrow d. A corn- roadwsy modlty l. Begin B. Famous iori. . Girl's nsme (Texas) Unit of d. Any split electrics! pulse resistance (Indie) 1. Keel-billed . e 7. Coin (Peru) cuclroos Perterrn l. Reimburae .A detached 11. Covers with aod 18. Otherwise 10. Little girl CROSSWORD uulaul unis EIIIIJL! klLllI IP-APWPTT- Hisihiblia Elkliilzl etees (Gr. uL-Jlfl myth.) luUnderahct vlaterwheci Hill B 20. River (In) . I1. Location Emma 31. Sernblances 32. Men-nor S8. Feateaod Iirst round play yesterday. Play in the quarter iinal round will be continued today. The ioliowing are theresults oi the first round play: Wendell Burke def. acotty MalcAulay 8 end ‘I; Roler Clarke dei. Russell Kelly O and d; Doug Cameron ‘dei. Doug MacDonald 7 and b; Donald Clarke dei. Jackie Duiiy '1 and 5: Billy Gurney dei. David Soper 2 up; Earl Dillon dei. Pic McCormac Jr» I and l: Donald Gallant dei. Ron Atkinson 5 and i: Bobby White def. Albeit Phillips 9 and g EJHBEE EBB TITGIIJEI BEBE EIWEE so. Amphibian 42. Sleeveless garment (Arabia) M. Finnish seaport dum with laces mollusks 1 5 4 IT- W“? B. Inter . Dried grape . Indefinite article hi. Animal d South Americl ,0. Molybdenum (s lmh) ITPullwlth , dliflclllly IlAmmaative i vote ijitCtbese OLBibiicsi - r - name ldlmmerlll ,0. River (Europe) d6. l-leutboy I d7. Lifeless l l‘! 4a. Clothes ~ 9 DAILYQTCYPTOQUOIE-llereb how to work it: " A X I D L I A A X ll __ ___ aaoouorssnow . One iettsr simply stands ier another. In this example A ie used ier the three Le, X for the two 0's. ete. Single letters. apes- "Orophes, the length and iormatien of the words ere eli hints. Each Qty th_e_code letters are difleront. A Onptognna Qlehlel IIVVII U! IPJTA P]! IIIUW. PAH NGVPIPOD UIPXW CWVGDPWI-T RITA WUWD-ITWIIWQ Yesterday'- crypuqaem as LONG uvarrn ran ulsnas “an. ‘rnalr sav. as born ms sonar ldAN-UDALL _ . gilaglgiiigity ma; [natures lyndleetiliae: 7*“ GK! .~.4 eirereii- ii nyone eelrs you ii ilimne and see ins-L’ Sport Echoes From Prince County Joe Bernard hes dlone it again! Bummersld-eb "Miracle Man o! the Mound." answered the 5.0.5. call when Daley ialtered in the eighth inning alter pitching a whale oi a game for seven frames. Bernard was touched ior a single which broughit in tlwo runs in the eight-h, bu-t struck out the next tour men. In the first oi the ninth he was behind MacKenzie, three balls and no strikes, a tight spot that would dnunt many a piitoher, but not Joe Bernard. Summer- side's flinging ace rallied. and struck the cliawy Charlottetown second sucker out. The lust man he had to inc-e was the redou-bt- able Whitlock. but this didn't Tue Joe either. The harder they are, the bigger the smack in the oa-toh- er's glove. ‘ ' O i O I While we hail Bernard as the special nemesis oi the Capital City sluggers. the contribution that Parley Daley made towards our ssoomd victory must not be over- looked. Daley allowed only two hits up to the end of the iiith inning. and no earned runs were chalked up against his delivery all alter-noon. He got into difficul- ties in the eight chleily because oi two errors. e might have worked his way ou-t oi the hole he was in ii he had wntinued pitch- ing. but there was loo much at stake. and Charlie Hogan couldn't eiiord to take my chances, so he played the ace. 'I‘ha<t ace was trumipe, brother. don"t minke any mistake about that. O I O I And that little fellow by nsme of Hank! Were we right when we called him "Mr. Short- stop"? Only for that old Whammy thing. we'd give him e brand new sobriquet. You guessed it, "The Sultan oi Swsti". lsndryb homer with lvlicimls on first was a plppin and cams Just when the player-a and ians were a. isit dejected be- cause Charlottetown had gone into the load ii! their half by scoring a run that shouldn't have happened. His grand slam was the tuming point of the oonltest. It put the boys in the driver's seat. and although they were tied briefly sitar this they were never age-in headed. O the Cluioth hitter lfionlcie Oeltwey pinch hit for Gallant in the iourilh, but was not given an opportunity to extend his record oi coming through in the pinches, Ryan clipped him with an inside pitch and he reached first. His being there proved intporia-n/t, bees/use if the bases had not been iii-led, the iree itlicket to Daley would not have ioroed in e. run. and as Mat-M. . New York Ranger Forward Injured i? LAKE PLACED, N.Y., Sept. I (OP) - Manager Frank Boucher q! the NHL. New York Rangers today announced that forward Eddie Slowinski 0! Winnipeg will be out oi’ action for a week or more with a bad knee injury. in mother oi the injuries which have been plaguing the rangers, Slowlnski crashed into the boards during a lively scrimmage Wed- nesday. A nawjorward combination has caught the eye of Bcucher and possibly may be the third line. On it are little Dunc Fisher of Regine and bit Nick Mickoski of Winniivel. who ilank Don Raleigh o1 Kendra, Ont. Raleiih played with the Blue Shirts last season, totalling 33 points on l5 goals and 118 assists. Fisher and Mickoski started out the 1947-48 season with the Rov- ers, advanced to the New Haven Rantblers of the American Hockey League and wound up the season with the Rangers. Fisher end Miokorlsi are both 21 years old. Raleigh is M, Only one line is certain thus iar - the Edgar Laprade, Tony Mewick and Ed Kullman combin- ation, and Boucher is experiment- ing daily with wings to ilank Buddy O'Connor, flashy centre and one oi the league's highest scorers. 'Sulrnmerside won by only one run, every one oi those iiive counters were necessary. I I I I . Elmer Wiard came through (or Charlottetown in the role oi pinch hitter. His single drove in the two runs that tied the bull game. We seem to remember this same Ward making s very important hiiit in one of the championship games in Svummersdde last year. I O I t Jackie Kane's handling o! the game as umpire behind the plate was PSPUOIUELYI)’ good, According to the inns behind tlhe screen, Kane's calllimg oi strikes and balls lett nothing to be desired. O O U a Charlotte-town's infield, even in defeat, looked good as usual. They executed two smart double plays. making a total of live in the last. two games. I O O Sun-limerside now leads the series two games to one. and Charlotte- town is faced witil-l the formidable task of taking two games in a row. Charlie Hogan's crew do not ieel that they are out of the woods yet, however. as anything can harspen when these two very evenly ma/tmed teams pit their skill against each other. Joe Ber- nard will probably be ‘in there against Charlottetown on Sunday and the hopes oi local (one are high that he will be e.ble to clinch the championship for Summerside. His viutorlu over Carlottetown have been. ior the most part. very close aiisilrs, however, and the Ctepiltal City boys will no doubt put up e bitter fight to win this home game. I I Q O All slunmer we were under the impression that Charlottetown had more power in their attack than our boys. Strangely enough it is not turning out that way. Elu-n-nmersid-e seems to have the edge on power, and it is Char- lottotowrfs superior defensive work that is making the games so close tihus isr. O Oongir-aitulaiions to the Reece lend Junior Championship Now that they have triumphed over our locals. all Prince County base- ball iains will be behind tthvi in their fight for a Mariltilne title. {OOQ-OOC TOURIST SPECIAL i ONE HOUR. FLIGHT OVER BEAUTIFUL P. E. i. Bee North Shore Beeches, Green Gables, Sumiaae r" . Charlottetown, South Shore. One. Two or Three Pese- engere-—-$10.00 each Charlottetown Airport Paul's Flying Sonics 1800 ev een_ bone e couoleoi London twins 59mg; 1315M cualzolalgl. grandma-rows _ _ PAGE SEVEN e overco i at took 37years develop... iiiifiiiiliflli TAllORED-TO-MEASIIIIF ANY STYLE $44.50 lNGOMPlRlIl-I Vll-III Tee, for many years we had planned an overcoat like CRAGMOOR. Last year we were finally able to introduce it, proudly—-completely worthy of our 37-year reputation for quality and value. CRAGMOOR is tailored-to-meaaure of a fine, fleoc , soft fabric which nevertheless wears un- uauafly well and 05ers adequate protection with- out too much weight. The styling is top-flight and there's l 300d choice of colours in all popular models. In a word, this season's CRAGMOOR is I standout example of our nearly 40 years of experience in producing Canada's greatest cloth- ling value. Ordor Now For Early Delivery TIP TOP TAILORS LTD. 99 GRAFTON ST, SUNNYSIOE DRUMS FOB CHURCH BELL! ___- Pears should not be put in the The metal lithium is so soft that Drums were used in New Eng- reirlgeratm- until they are soit it can be cut easily with an ordin- land churches before bells became bone prove that horse racing and ripe. ary pocket knife. common. least 3.000 years old. POTATO FESTIVAL u» ENTERTAINMENT! CHARLOTTETOWN FORUM son" METAL ANCIENT srolu‘ F‘ TO KEEP PEAR-S J Ancient drawings on stone and la all Juniors on their winning the is» QCTQBER 5th and 6th, |9ll8 EACii AFTERNOON lulu EVENING SPONSORED BY The P.E.l. Innkeepers Association [n (lo-Operation with the Dominion Experimental Farm Al. Charlottetown and numerous Potato Growers and Shippers DISPLAYS S-iiOWliiC WORK BEING CAR RIEO Oii FOR TilE POTATO INDUSTR! Exhibits oi‘ Potatoes of all Varieties with Prizes Awarded to Best Lots A|so Commercial ‘Dispiays 0F Interest -- Entertainment For All -= OLO TIME FIOOLERS CONTEST MANDOLIN and BANJO CONTEST STEP OANOINO CONTEST 4. AMATEUR CONTEST Mail Your Entry letters for Potato Exhibits and for any of the Contests to P.E.i. Innkeepers. Association, Charlottetown. You will receive complete information. Prizes For Every Event 1. 2. 3. Watch‘ For Further Daily Announcements i .