qaroduced battles all the way with ,. this time with Lee's Nightmare. Kavola a_i-_-_ Great Racing Seen At Covehead Yesterday As Z-day Meet Starts Perfect racing weather, a " htning fast track and s crowd well In excess cf 1800 ncre in aflendance at the opening yesterday of the 5|; two-day meeting st the Covehead rgcing track and the fans were "ll repaid for their attendance. From the time Starter Dr. Ii‘. C. Dongsn sent the first field of home; on the way the fans always had something to enthuse over. such as blanket finishes, merry battles all the way down the stretch --'with the issue always in doubt and the hollering of the crowd a couple M time; the decision went against their way of thinking. But however. it was a great day of racing. Finishes were always close as the trotters and pacers battled it out every part of the oval and with today's card, in- "cluding as it does the much 111k- ed off $1.000 free for all in addr- tion to three other great cards winding up the program, racing fans, and they alre plenty numer- "nus, will witness a. racing card the equal if not better than any seen ever the Island tracks this season. Once again Starter Dr. B‘. C. pougan turned in a magnificent ‘b, well on a par with the per- 1111111811085 he has been giving all season long. At times yesterday he did have difficulty duo to bad act- or; and drivers trying to beat the pole horse away but his usual warning had its effect and it \vas surprising to say the least how both horses and drivers steadied down the very next trip down. In the Junior Free For All Kavola, driven capably by Roy Bnrnet was the only upset, winner "of the day, heading the fi-old in ‘the first two heats and then fin- ally yielding to the favored, the Great G. in the final one. The class driving finishes marking every mile. Jocy O'Brien, a veteran of the sulky but still looking as youth- ful as ever took My Partner home in front in each heat of the No. -l Classified but again the crowd eaw stirring battles. so stirring J11 the first heat that many were of the opinion that Free Trade houid have been the victor. Free ade was second again in the second heat but it was O. U. Volo who provided the competition 1n the stretch dnlve in the third and final mile of the class. Prince Budlcng, Harold Cud- more's good pacer took another straight heat win in the No. 2 Classified but in the final heal .1111! crowd once again voiced its displeasure, many thinking Roy Shelburne had taken the honors; the judges decision stood and Prince showed a definite superior- .“lt_v as he paced off with the next two heats and race. _Eleven starters came to the wire in the No. 3 Classified and 088m O'Brien was to the fore. hcadlnl! the field in every svith Marion L., furnishing the competition in the first two and Just Flick; in the third, the lat. ter coming on in the stretch to beat out Marlon L. who had raced on the outside of the Nightmare practically the entire mile, heat ‘labs ens letter hem this word as Mir! Mi lnelu e new word: BOOST IIAIAIII: "SHAVET-Tlh l "B" aarlyou bust-bowed "s"?! lillli Mall entries to (Icisat-‘a. as Natalla Br... Toronto s. penal Every month the first ten correct enlriu drawn each wia I10 CASH- doubled to I20 if accompanied by a top from Coillta Rapid Shave. Bend an many entries as you like. N alnea of winners will be published. @IDA1I'I IIAU. “Kl-IS ONI YOU IIIAVI IIYIQUT IKfl-IYIDI ll. ‘*1! Gill‘! . read: hairs at bean where beard 1 is tougigest. Siuv- l‘ u r t a —- tm relalnslt fii‘! lhfl lib- lil naob right - J balrl Your raror - Mac Fingo (O'Brien) ' Pittsburgh McComrac, Charlottetown. No. 1 Classified My Partner (O'Brien) Free Trade (Campbell) O. U. Volo (Stead) Sandy D. (Conro . .. Bonnie's Boy (C. O'Brien) The Baker (Burt) Time: 2.10 3-4, 2.10. . Winning horse owned by Stanley, St. Stephen. N0. 3 Clmssified Lee's Nightmare Marlon 1. (Sample) Just Flicka (Cudmore) . Gwendolyn Aubrey (Mor- rison) .. Billy Aubrey (Brooklns) Nellie Worthy (Bueli) Sampson Royal (O'Brien) .. Maudene Bucllong (Agnew) .. Vera Britton (L. Kelly) Buck Grattan (Campbell) Time: 2.14, 2.16 1-2, 2.16. O'Brien, Elmsdale. No 2 Classified Prince Budlong (Cudmore) . Roy Shelbume (Barnet) Marjorie Budlong (Rankine) Sister Henley (O'Mea_ra) Time: 2.14. 2.15 l-fl, 2.15 Cudmore, Brackley. Baseball Results AMERICAN LEAGUE Chandl {silo Robinson; Haynes, Maltzber r and Hayes, 'I‘re5h. New Yo 110 030 002 7 10’ 3 Chlcagr 010 B30 00x 9 13 2 Bum m ttel, Wight, Drcws Papish, Caldwell and ' esh. Phil elphia 001 000 0000 1 S 1 Det 0000000011 2B3 (l0 innings). Marchilclon and 040 000 ~6 13 2 000 100 100-2 i 0 'Dobson and McGah; Kramer. unririef, Fercns, Ferrick and Helf u tz. NATIONAL LEAGUE 020010 000 3 7 1 Brookl 000 020000 2 9 1 Ostermueller and Salkeld; Higbe, Bchrman and Edwards. Pittsburgh 000 000000 0 5 3 Brooklyn 010 020 00x 3 6 0 Heintzelman. Hallett. Gerhcaus- er and Camelli; Branca and Ed- wards. Chicago .. 00100030 4 6- 4 New York .. 000001011 3 1i 0 Lade, Prim, Chlpman, Bchmltz, and Schefflng- Grlssom, Schu- mache and rasso. Cincinnati Philadelphia 000 200 Blackwell, Heuaser and Mueller; Judd and Semlnick. Cincinnati .. 02002001 5 8 Philadelphia .. Mally, Gumbert. Lamanno; Schanz. Grate, Hughes and Hemsley. Seminick. St. Louis 000000001 1 'l Boston .. 2 Brscheen. aglola; Sain and Masl. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE _ Sbmi-Flnll Sari ies 4-2.) T. U R, .11.. ‘I351: m t. Williams wen lig tweigbt title. . .......-.-r-1........ d Races snnr I _ SEPTEMBER i901! $10 ~ 0.00. Fm for All. ' A Other Classified Roses ' .111 "222 -843 434 555 SUMMARY Junior Free For All Kavola (Barnet) ....... .. 1 1 2 The Great‘ G. (McAlduff) .. T 2 1 The Walnut Abbe (McLeod) 2 4 ‘I Gay Law (Hood) .. 3 3 0 Peter Brooks 2nd (O'Brien) 6 5 3 Alcyone (Hennessey) 4 7 4 Sunnymead (W. Kelly) .. 5 6 5 Time: 2.10 3-4, 2.09 1-4, 2.10 1-3.‘ Winning horse owned by I. I. Miss Cleo Dale (Walker) 10 11 dr Winning horse owned by James Winning horse ovined by’ Harold Washington 103 120 001 8 11 l Cleveland . 000 000 010 1 '1 1 Haefner and Early; McCabe, Krakauskas, Gassaway and Hogan. Wiegel. . New York 110 000 020 4 12 0 Chicago 1 000 000 000 0 T 1 100000000100 001K250 3 100 001 202 6 l0 l Heusser sold 1 .. 00002000x D 1 Burkhardt and Gar- l es Newark "000040000452 ‘Montreal oooooom III Pillette, Ka ll, Mustalkis and Berra; Inga, ehn and flanks- (Royala win best of seven ser- Start at} P. M. 'a . provided the 1300-odd spectators on _of the series pkyeg t: date. SEPTEMBER 19, 1946 IHI: CHARLUIT l’; IU"VN GUARDIAN l Charlie Willis wasn't foolin’ last week when. in conversation. he stat- ed that the cream of Maritime har- ness racing horoeflesh would be present for his two-day meeting which got away to such an aus- picious start yesterday afternoon. 4- 4 sl- ~0- There was little to be found want in the racing that was hand yesterday. Finishes were of the blanket variety, the weather was ideal to say the least, thc trcca: was ligihtn-lng fast and the horses were as evenly matched as possible. 4- Il- l- l- 1 And promoter Willis has an even better card on tap for today feat- ured by the big $1,000 Free-For-All that has attracted a small but sel- ect entry list with Anti-Aircraft and True Hal heading the entrants. + <0 ~0- l- For Anti-Aircraft, it will ‘be a chance to redeem himself for the beating h nessey's new import here during the Goodwill Races last. week. Many think that Charlie Horton's big pacer was not up to his best form on that occasion but just as many more feel that the newcomer to Island tracks is just a wee bit too good. for the big free-for-aller. 4- + O <0 However that is neither here nor there. It. will be battled out this afernoon over tihe fast racing strip at Covehead and fans are promised many a thrill before the Free-Forr- All goes down in history. But the other three classes are very likely to funnls-h just as many thrills. Horse racing. no matter where it is held is always filled with those things and today's program rfwujd be a fitting climax to the Ove- head track's activities for tlhe sum. R161‘, Q ~0- 0- 0 Charlie Ryan's junior baseballers have a chance of copplng the Island junior title at the Park diamond this evening when they meet Sum- rside juniors in on, fourth game o their best-of-fiva playoffs with the local ‘youngsters leading two games to one. I.’ l-‘rorn tihe camp of the Charlotte- tonians last night came the word that thev expect to wlnd uo the series. They are confident of doing Than Was (By Sid Peder) YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Sept. 18-—(AP)—Joe Louis kept his promise tonight to "make a quick one" against Tami Maurlello, but he kept the promise so well prob- ably even he was sunprlsed at what a short night's work 1t was. He caved the roof in on thc tubby Bronx barkeeper so com- pletely and so rajuclly with a fancy display of all his gaudy artillery, that he chalked up the second fastest knockout in heavyweight championship history. It took him just 2 minutes and 9 seconds to beat the round man from uptown New York into a helpless hulk. And but for two right hand "crunchers" he missed by a shade a few seconds earlier, he might even have equalled his own world record-the 2:04 it tool: him to stiffen Max Schmeling in their return bout back in 1938 in this same ball yard. Although he'd been saying right along in his training that it would be a short night's work, the bomb- er might have let it last u bit longer than it did. At 211 1-4 pounds—'1‘am1 scaled 198 l-Zla-Joe was heavier than ever before in his 12 year career in the ring. Tami ' Louis Keeps Promise But Fulfilled It Earlier Expected and Louis might have been m- cllned to feel him out for, say a round, anyway, But Tami walked out as he'd been expected to, with his fists flailing. His-end the-first punch of the fight can ht Joe flush on thc mouth, an for a moment there was a possibility that the taproom tender might do the im- possible. Joe_ staggered halfway across the Friilf- There is no doubt he was hurt by this right-hand ham- mer that tore into his face. He bounced into the ropes. He blink- ed. He came out slowly to meet the rushing challenge of the dark- haired clouterr who himself has a record of 51 knockouts in 7'1 pro- fessional starts. He knew now he had to go to work, and right now. And that's exactly what he dl-d. While it last- ed it was fireworks all the way and thc unexpectedly solid tum- out of ringside customers and the faithful in the lower stands and <the upper tier o-f this triple-dock- ed ballpark were on their feet and roaring virtually every second of the way. a took from Wal Hen-Z‘ - Joe Sleeps Before; Tami Afterwards NEW YORK. Sept. 1s -(AP)— An hour before he entered the ring against. heavyweight champ- ion Joe Louis, challenger Tami Maurlello was singing and dan- cing in his dressing room to n song entitled “When you sock them you rock them." The music was supplied by two friends who play- ed mouth organs. Maurlello raised such a racket that the handlers of Champion Joe, a few doors away, sent word by a deputy boxln commissioner to “please be quet; Louis is sleeping." lluoit Tourney This Evening that but no ways cocky about it for thev know full well the latent strength that lies in the bats of the‘ Summerside kids. 1- rl- 1- 4' On Friday night fh intermediate All Stars, led by flashy Mccabe will Journey to Summerside for the second game of their best-of-five Series. And Bsain it is a case of a Charlottetown team having a game advantage over their Western op- Donents having won the 019v Same But like the juniors tihe inter. mediates have a lot of respect for the summerslde ball tossers -and knowing that tihey- just edged out the Summsrslde team in their last appearance against them -- the wore was 2-1 — will be looking for an even tougher game on Friday as the Summerslde team will be en- deavoring to get back on even foot- lmr with tihe smooth-fielding Char. lottetown crew, K. of G. Softball On Friday eve-airing sharp the Cundall ds and Bob- by Suckers meet in the final stage of the third game of the finals in the Knigh-ts of Colum- bus Softball League. The Suckers are leading 2-0 in games and have a 12-’! edge on the Kids in the third genre. only three innings away from at 7.30 the title the Bockers will be fighting every inch to hold their lead. while the Kids will be equally anxious to at least get one lame of the series. a Baseball's Dig Six , ‘Three leaders in each league: Pia r, Club AB R H Pct x uslal, ‘ vCardlnlll l“ 576 110 312 .308 ernon %lr’rnalt'ors .... .. 130 M7 Q 104 .800 - ams xlted sex’ .... .. m 40a 140110 s4: in 41a n 14a as: Tonight and Friday night, all players are asked to be on hand at 'l o'clock at the Parkdale Quoit Olub bench on the Mt._ Edward iboad. Just A “Duickie" ROUND ONE ‘There was a delay while Louis’ gloves were adjusted before they were called to the centre of the ring by Donovan. Maurlello caught Louis with a smashing right and staggered Louis against the ropes. Joe came back with a right and floored Mauri-ello for a count of nine, A left hook_ was the punch that put Maurlello down. Joe charged 1n with right and left. A smashing right hand hurt Maurlello and he hung on. Louis drove a terrific right to the ribs. As Maurlello held on Louis dug both hands to the body. Louis caught Maurlello in a neutral corner and drove a barrage of punches that dropped the chalk-tiger for the full count in 2'09 of the first round. Standard Dup Golf Results Three more matches were eon- ducted in the Standard Cup handi- cap competition yesterday. lldGliggey defeated c. Craswel n . B. feppin defeated J. Mcliachern l; Pierce defeated a. Likely a and 3. Pennant liaoe At A Glance ted Press) D1; Lost M; Pct. h? I (Assoela St. Louis won x-Doea not hcluds tonight's haul.- - 'lltl___ll'e__getll'l mnomu, ' . fl -- (or) - Albert Steinblwliomito s1ollnlst. has . Ooneerr stum- been one Animal Ooaeoem- of m‘: "'°"°' l ' '1:1m"w° p“ - of»: ss- m. mun s... .... .. m m 11s soo ace ma; ‘Mm, bjfnnd’, 1'4, (5.3... 015m .... ..~..- rot an 1o m an i° iii-Y 1° .~ Runs batted inz-r "mem- hitlonal League: x-Sl “ . 11' _ ,.. . ., 2 f... a "an". urn-c "u" » ,, ' " z- n. . - _ 3m. m"m_ mltws ‘ hlcago 3. Boston 1. To Rational he o: x113" can}: ‘art-mm? ; American ue: en . m‘ m“ ‘m,’ m“ s“ Home-Philadelphia 3. Boston I. Cincinnati 1, Pittsburgh l. total ‘l. Away-Boston S total S. was announced last nlshi- He f-iw had stated last night that his team would not ap ruling which already plaved in the finals en because of ineligibility of Mid- ilo Decision Announced Re Players SAINT JOI-IIN, N.B,, ScpL 1g__ LCD-Further information on the status of two st. Jggeph bgge- bail players. Alonzo Gaudet and Val Bourlreau, was given tonight bv bile New Brunswick Baseball Association, Si. Joseph has lost the first two games of a provinc- ial final series with Saint Jcvhn St. Peter's. According to word from the Nova. Scotia Baseball Association, it st-ill regards Gaudet as cron- ertv of the Kentville Club be- cause. although the club claimed it gave him his release July 10, this was never brought to the attention of the Association. Similarly. no release for Bou- clreau has been received by the New Brunswick Association from Shedlac. No protest against the players has been made by St. Peter's. The provincial organization started an investigation on 11s owrn initiat- ive. No decision has been an- nounced and none may be made until the matter of transfers comes up for consideration next season. had youth—23 years to 32—o-n him, " When I was a klcl in school back home in ‘rexas I hao a teach- er who took time out every few weeks to have us go back and re- view what she had tough; us. She believed that too much knowledge crammed into ‘l5 without a pause for a review and explanation could be confusing zmd so she ‘cad u; go back over the ground she liacl covered in order to be fully sure been teaching us. Doubtless vour head hasn't been crammed full of knowledge bly reading this column, but never- t eless it does semi to mo that i; is a 800d idea to review some of the Smiimd vou have covered and that's why we've had reviews here from time m trme. let's check up on your iron play today. Dorit ever let anything induce you to sacrifice distance for ac- (iiifilfiy in playing your iron shots. And you can't attain accuracy with your iron shots unless you ~hcck over every detail of how to "_.lay them. when you use your woods you're trying to nit the ‘mi! as for as you can. but when you take an iron out of the bag you're trying to combine distance and accuracv S0 efficiently that the ball Will drop into the cup without. it being necessary for you to putt it m. all. If you can do that most of thc time, then it isn't necessary for you to read this column any tur- ther because voirve mastered a department of the game which usually challenges thc mvlce player. All of the good golfe-c, play- ers such as Ben Hogan, Sam Snead. Jimmy Demaret. Iierman Barron. etc, mav not b: able tc sink the ball every time they make an iron shot, but they're u cinch to put it up close t‘: the cup. In playin an iron shot. be sure to stand cooer 1o the bill than you do when you're using :1 wood. In taking up your club check your grip to make ccrtair- it is firm and square. Because the shafts of the clubs are not as upright arc nnd your swing will also be shorter. Let me caution ..Glaim Game . By Default MIDDLETON, N. S.. Sept. 1B — c?) -_ Middleton Cardinals today claimed a victory by default when Halifax Ship ards failed to turn u‘? for a Ha fax-Middleton Senior Baseball Le ue final same here. Um re-in-c lef C. M. Jfliidfle call play ball and declared the game forfeited after Lefty Leticri, Middleton pitcher. tossed the nec- essary nine probes. Shipyards coach Lou Zwerlinf! ar unless a league rew out two games f h t. w“ changed. One o te W0 Elm" thrown out was a Shipyards vic- tory, and since the action was tak- dleton catcher Shaulis. Halifax felt the victory should stand. If today's forfeit is u held the beesdt-gféseven series woul be left SPORT BRIEFS lly Jack Sullivan Canadian Pres Staff Writer LONDON. serfi- i6 40F)- Somebody once tabbed Jockey Gordon Richards as "God's sift i0 backers," and the first persons to agree with the description are the unfortunate bookies. Richards. one of the great joc- keys of the world, is past 40 bu! new still astride winnltiil mum" with an almost uncanny resiiill" ity. The “wlse" boys search for his name in racing progflml. hi" "W" shillings in the firm belief their returns will be in pound 1101i!!- Gordon who has passed the L" 000 mark in winners in 20 W!" i’! riding, just keeps rolling along. A Landon sport's writuer kept I ¢h¢i=i= on the "old timer in the fill! half of AuBust and came “a with I tally of 20 winners in 58 mounti- The same sports writer h" hounded Richards for the scent of his success and each time G01‘- don has refused point-blank. "But I really knew the answer before I put the question." "If writer said. "So do we aii- Here! a.horse and there's the winning st. Put one pest the other nt as soon as possible. It's all very elementary, but it takes a Gordon Richards to show S! will be conductor of the ‘v’ fir, _ , 30., his been concert aims: or the Promenade Bylnphon here, a member of the ‘Iiwor-‘o phony orchestra. and conductor of several coo pro. spams. ' haw easy it can be done. r Th"; may be many easier ways 1f earning a living. but l1 (O41 i! minute seems attractive enough. whatever thc method. The cateh in youbhoweverydlthalt tcillirzr sulngfrvill 0.. stablesthFsolilééllr leaglglh fifth PIECES L pct not e too ra cal y event ram were W01" . - 53g that which you used '..-. playing Pace: Non-Winners $2,500 in 194s g-st.k}»anui= i}, m, your woods. Purse $1.001) ' cgggagg n as .542 Many golfers are under the mls- Highland Direct (Perrin) Jaostm" ' 76 51 531 apprehension that a good golfer Marilyn Chief (Berry) éhnadelphhl" " 55 g0 47s does not take a substantial iivot Srpanklln (Miller) Cincinnati " 50 53 A19 when playing or iron 5111f, 'I'liat‘s Carl Frisco (Mahoney) . . Pittsburgh 3;; 415 mt so, as a visit to one of our Edgar Hanover, Shally Bill. New York 57 39 390 tournaments will reveal, because LirdfleG Booker, I-lsgllywacltsrgl 313mg!‘ . if ou pla your rons ccrrec y an reen own 1p ‘ . RICAN LEAGUE youyare borlna to take a good one Times 2:05 1-4, 2:05 1-4. m AME _ 96 4-, gutdof the turf with your club- Delawsrrgrfialscltl: gallons-O - DH g2 or , ~ In usin our long irons beware Rodney B. C._ (Shively) 11 - 74 of taking; 331m‘ clubhead back ‘o0 Volotone (Palin) ~1~ $112155“? 7S far on the backswtrq because you Flyiiig Duchess (E8 lid) 8 3 mevejand 80 are apt to bend or “break your Patrick Hanover ( or on .5 x_st_ Lou‘, _ _ 79 fu-m 191'; arm, “brcak" your Laura Hanover, Ace Flyfl‘. 0n- 96 wrists. loosen your BT11) 0i‘ 1°59 control of zhe Clubhfiild i“ start the downsxvlng. Remember to start the ciubhead (iown 571v’ starting the latex-ail shifting of the weight from the right tcAthe lcft side and the turn of thc left shoulder, which null» We “"15 with it, simuizaneously. As a final up on iron niiw. one of the things which hciptd m‘! 1° master my irons was to remember 1o keep the bncl: of my left hand faced toward my 0191809111? 115 life club enters the hittlra area. Titus will help you to avoid any (‘iii-- why from rut-controlled wrist ac- tion. a to Bruce Woodcock, British heavy- weight, boxing champion whose punch couldn't be called B Diiwde‘ puff-. m Woodcock. aremrins for ,§_ Sept. 1'1 meeting in Lcndon W)! Gus Lesnevlch, finds hc can well- gffgfd to pay that amount just to take a few socks at some unlucky pugillst, He has been touring the Continent and at Stockholm 13.000 persons paid to watch the forntlelr rallroader ride rouKiHhOii We!‘ 5 d. hnélerag-ibtlnwho can throw the 2'1- inch-round football just as e051’ as if it. were a cricket ball or base- ball. ls goalkeeper for Clyde foot- ball club in the Scottish league. But the biggest hands in Scot- tish football are a handlcao to him in,hia spare-time job. He's a barber. DESIGN! FROM DUTY PHILADELPHIA. scot- iii — (AM-Rt.- Rev John C. White 79-year-old bishop 0i’ 59011171915» 111.. since 1W4. who insisted hf‘; would “not be told when to quil- has resigned from active duty in the Protestant Episcopal Church in the tr.s.a.. a church s90!!!- man announced today. CARPET! BEING UNIDADID . 1a Tut?)- Lsrge shipments car-pee om Bombay and Calcutta, Indlmmre being unloaded at the harbor here today. from aboard the Can- thls "easy money" racket. how- ever, ls to act as sparring partner da Indl ll snipe Wilma L5»: urahazymu Kimberley. that we understood what she had‘ 1on8. you will swing with s. more-r you Hanover, M Charlie Briggs is a handy man t0 m 0 t?" WEDDING AND Severe B By The Canadian Press The lowly. but toush. Pitts- burgh Pirates dealt Brooklyn's National League pennant. hopes n. sad blew yesterday when till! held the Dodgers to a. split 1n their imports/nit doubleheader. Lefty Fritz Ostennueller. Dod- gcr cast-off, held his fortner mates to nine hits 1n pitching the seventh place Bucs to a 3-2 vict- ory in the opener. Then Ralph Bramca. who shut out St. Louis Cardinals last week. came ‘hrough with a five-hit. 3-0 per- formance in the second game. The split left Dodgers a full two flames behind the front- running Cards before the Cards’ nigh/c game with Boston. The calamity to the Burns was eased a bit when Boston edged the Cards 2-1 in the night game. Rubber armed Johnny Sein held the westerners at bay until the ninth when they scored their only run. That shaved Cards’ lead to 1 1-2 games. but if DodSi-‘rs hadn't Ensign Hanover 1 Leading Three Year Did DELAWARE, 0., sem- 1PM?) -Ensign Hanover, an odds-on fave-rite. won an extra-heat race- off today to capture the first rac- ing of the Little Brown Jug. F1031". est race competition in history for threG-year-old pacers._ The Jug, conceived to give lhree- year-old pacers a race to match the trotters’ annual Hambleton-an, was worth $33,358. The win made Ensign Hanover the three-YER?‘ old leading money winner of the year, dragging down $173579 to boost his total to 365.349, Second money, $8,839, went to His Lady. owned by J. M. Davis of Clayton, Del. Dr. G. B. Gill's Quick ‘Trick \of Washington, D.C., .ook fourth money and fifth went to Honest Truth of McKinley Kirk's Washington Court House. SEE OUR SELECTION OF inner CF Junior Free - For - All l z-‘vn’ f qfcfrrr (V wsrcnas, nraxuonn runes J. R, WILLIAMS Great George Street WE BUY OLD GOLD Pirates Deal “Bums”» Pennant Chances Al ody Blow. -1..- blown their first one they would have been only half a. game out of first place and happiness would halve relsned in Flatbush. Saln held the Red Birds in the palm of his hand until the ninth inning when limos Slaughter’: 18th homer of the year ruinedhia shutout bid. Before 26.500 cash customers. the tying run was on wound base when he retired J00 Garaglola for the final out. - Harry Brecheen. Eddie Dyer’! starting choice. had matched Sain pitch for pitch through four scoreless innings until the Braves manufactured two nuns on one base hit. Dick Cu1ler's double, in the fifth. Title Cards still boast a decided advantage over Brooklyn Dodgers who split with Pittsburgh. The Dodgers no-w have 10 games ta plav compared to nine for Sta Louis before the season ends a1 week from Sunday. Anv combin- ation of nine Card wins or Dod- oer losses would Rive ihe Bird-l the flag. . ‘Locked Doors At Rangers’ Practice WLNNIPEG. Sept. 18 —(CP)< The curious or interested wh might have planned t/o alien 50mg Qf the New YOflf Rufiilflf hockey school sessions here had better think alwifl- N0 one is ai~ lowed inside the rink without s. pass. Manager Frank Boucher ex- plains this volley of aiivwins 011i! newspaper-men andRanger scouil and officials to wltne5$ U" Practices sayirtimmibigfxpenisifiii! t 1'8 B D --~»- whfsiisfiiiyseafo a batch of looke‘! room lawyers showimt lib Vi"! pencils. chef-iii? b°°k5 9nd,, m portant-looiring documents. 110W TliEY STAND NATIONAL LEVAGUE ald Ford, Ra ged Stranger. Tyson lwyn Hanover and Grand Parade also started. Times: 2.09 1-4, 2:09 1-2. 2.0a Bar Trot (Closed) Purse $2.500 Mr. Volci (Dunboody) .. ..11 President Elect (Miller) 22 Lingo Direct (Aldrich) 3 8 Day Peep (Perrln) .9 3 Cheer Up, Jean Val Jean. A_lex- andria, Agatha Hanover, lxeen Hanover, Cardinal Leeds, Phoebe Snow, Luzetta“ 8., and MYSZQTY May also started. Times: 2.05 3-4. 2.06 3-4. Little Brown Jux. 3-Year-Old Pace, Purse $35,358.25 Quick Trick, Honest Truth, In- diana Sal, Desota Hanover, Linda's Boy, Butternut King also started. Times 2.02 3-4, 2.03 1-4. 2.05 1-2. 2.07 1-2. Fire 0n "lluoan Mary" nausax. 1a 4w)- Flre broke out on the main deck Cunard-White - forward of the ska-minute victims in three m] ab '°“"d °"""’m°"‘h°’ ‘hm “mum isetrgnxoolrirlnzrndmclieufgedmgézeral 5min- _s°memnes_eng ts m Sweden utes of excitement before it was arfhingiwnifiiihs extend his extinguished by alert crew mem- 1 917577155 w“ w Denmark‘ ‘Ilhe small blaze of undeterm- i d started in a lame" TM °h""°“' "Mk l‘ m “y slllrceaf odfulrlrlotlces nuns on a bili- in board attached to a wood- en bulkhead of the slant liner- Damage was nesiiaible- - constitute the open season on the year 1946: Ensign Hanover (Smart) .. 3 1 2 1 H]! Lady (Hylan) .. . 4 4 1 3 Royal Chief (CBmGPOII 8nd . Berry) ~ 1 3 3 3 Philadelphia 4-9 x11)“, game not included). 0 O For clean, comfortable; good-looking shoves use MINORA BLADES Canada's favourite in quality and low price - 4 for 10¢ l2 for 25¢ Hunters Attention Hunters are hereby notified that the follow-rig wifl partridge and pheasants for NATIVE GROUSE-October 15-31 inclusive. HUNGARIAN PARTRIDGE-Octoher 1-31 lnclmivq bag limit 8 birds per day) RING NECK PHEASANTS-October 15-19 lncluslya bag lirnit 5 cock bl per day’ for the season Signed :—' W. F . ALAN srswslrr. l, Minlstef of Agriculture- a