h THE cntiitoilltamwunuvanim ‘successions MADE T0 PROVIDE a . HEAVY PENALTIES m ‘BASEBAIiIr 1111 - e FOR INTENTIONAL PASSING NEW YORKHOOL, 1-8. - One of the reactions of the 1986 world's series was distinctly uuJulaa. The many intentional passes iven iBabe Ruth made the fans how and provided an involved topic for the hot stove league. this winter. \ Today at 3.15, 7 8: 8.45" Matinee-Ade- 110.; " '“'Night-2iie, 21¢, 11¢. LAYsT siiowiives TODAY ‘BEBE DANIELS ‘glonel pass belnirconsidsred for pur- poses of debate. that in wllichtlie pitcher throws four straight balls: 1-—f1‘he batter to refuse ‘to go to jlrst, another man substituting 1hr. ‘him. Thule, if Ruth were up e_ a man was on first. the ‘big Yau ee “This PALM BEACH GIRL” The swiftest, most exciting race story ever written by the speed-story writer Byron Morgan. “wildcat Willie” _ Juveiiille Comedy Fish/Ives so wA no A thousand hearty laugh ITS retiree-r ENTERTAIN MENT s! An uproarious knockout! You'll giggle with glee-you'll hip-hip with happiness- you'll howl in your helplessness as your ribs crack with laughter! . OTHE ‘l. R PICTURES-ORCHESTRA ionnv —YOU MUST rouicm SEE— --“iRENE”-- A GREAT PLAY A GREAT CAST A GREAT SCORE A GREAT PRODUCTION BIG ALL LOCAL i CAST Benefit K. 0f ( ‘. (lharity Fund Prince Edward Now - norm‘ Miss (IT! Tiii-Wéivdiiiii? -i ~ l». -_ ‘ no,- i-I .._\ hL-li will 'l9|iKiIs|.| lh-r-iiil Uil-pciiwir; -~ ' L1H!" ‘ill. , - 135i! oar-i», \.iiiiuu\i-r, ll. l. (‘The UIQPSI lll,‘l'lllll lliziililillllill ....._» . Bridge Founder Versatile The mnn who lli.1'l'()\'l'l'l'§(l hrIiLgn was u champion in several other BDOfl-l before ho iiually ll\\i'ii||l-‘ u master 0i" the raids in hi.. own game. "Bridge is llio vuialioil and avoc- ntlon 0i‘ Sidney S. lwnz hut ll" hn-l ileeli.-a~liii\\'l’i1y!. -tl'lt‘l‘liill', and ping pong champion. and onci» annexed the rlflflllli; ilvlo oi rho Wiilsl. Leaguev (iolr and pantry even now hold more fasciiiziiiou for him than cards. 17h fpoiliitar American card game, in which Lena! has won flu U0 1B,. _ .1, hilt? lic was sdarchliiy: for: in7 6f ‘the "rope trlck". ‘lie-latter hc‘ found oulydt tnylll, ' iioncil in Ind u. l "inllnhaiioiiiil eh mid 522 medals, was horn- liiii he did discover bridgef Wliist hiid been played for gen riliiwlilfi and was the reigning tav- wills) oi‘ liriiish army officers sta- IL required four however, and frequently were only three officers lof anal rank at h jlflsi.» A “dummy“ im-"ll WZIS ileviscil, and thereby iv. Lcnz brought the game - with him in 189-1. He dill M. win his first championship uii- i‘l 1mm, but since lies acquired lihe Iirldgc and whiirt lilies t"l"ll iwclvc limos. Simon uu-l Hchustcr have published a ,honk illl his ivork. i . Prii lliilyifY-fi‘. ilicrc i ess Eats" ‘Pill-J llAflUE, Oct. l5. — Little Priiiwrna Juliana. of Holland attend- r~-l naval maneuvem in tho North iii-a on board the cruiser ‘Sumatra, and lush-lied on sharing the sailors‘ lolisvcnuc of beef, red cabbage and ilillillllizfl, ' \\'illi tho hourly appetite of sav- cuiccii, she prououiiccil the food ex- cellent. but the noise of the big 'i§lll‘.i§, ahc thought, wag a rather dis- ‘inirblng element in the enjoyment oi‘ a quiet meal. Mothc. Aloihs do not eat clothes. This is (done by the grubs which, develop Jrnm the eggs the months have laiii. ' ,0,‘ _ "pf .94- Sail0r’s Mess ‘Not all of Ruth's eleven passes were intentional. But when a pitch- could no; be walked on four pitch- Qd balls. Sonic substitute would ad- er did set out to hand Ruth a baeervance to second. and ‘Ruth would on bails, the stands didn't like it, aiid echoed their boos o! disapprov- a ~ " . » , Most, of the fans Are-opposed the intentional -pass. The basebilll managers are in favor of it — with- in recent years it has come to be as important a part of the defence as the alignment of lniielders close ‘ to the plate. when these ls a man on third, and only one out The customers say that they pay their money to see the hitters giv- en a chance to hit; the managers counter with/the qqntention that an intentional p885 ‘is only a gamble, anyway. andtbgt. the pitchers have the right to talm a chance. There the argument rests, with Commissioner Landl-s apparently siding with the managers, since he thins far has taken no official con- siderati0n of the scores of plans de- signed to do away with. or heavily penalize. the intentional pass. SOME SUGGESTED PENALTIES The plans are ingenious. Follow- ing are, a few of them, the inten- i still be up. Sooner or later the pit- cher would have to get the ball over. - " Z-Jrhe batter to take twp bases ‘instead of one. a -The batter tojiave his choice pitched to. 4-—The batter and eeedlng him in the line-up. id go to second, and first. ffiflpadflygly, One of the condition; that seems most unfair in the suggestions is that four straight ballsare consid- ered an intentional pass. Frequent- ly a pitcher ls unable to gct a ball over the plate. That‘ does not Big-- nify a purpose to walk the batter, but rather an excusable temporary deck of control. And yet, it the matter o; inten- tion was left up to the umpire there would be protests from players and fans. » The ‘writer's guess is that base- ball will see the intentional ‘pass retained as a part of every- luau- ager's strategy for at least another. season. Bowling Ohallenge We. the Radios. do hereby chal- lenge the Optimists to e. friendly genie to he bowled oii. the Charlot- tetowwBowllng Alleys on Wednes- day nlg-ht, ptwslght o'clock. (Sgd.) b Gauthierfl-I. Josey, G. Dazlel, -B. Josey, J. Essery. Wanderers Beat Bermuda, 38-0, in Game At Halifax HALIFAX, Oct. 18. — The tour- ing Bermuda English rugby play- ers went down to defeat yesterday for the second time on “the Mari- time tour, when the Wanderers da- ieated them in an exhibition game. 38 to 0. — , ' ‘One-sided in the score. the time nevertheless offered a ‘(ins ax ibit- ion of rugby and pleased 1.000 per- sons who braved a cold wind to watch the game. Captain Pantry, leader of the Bermuda team. declar- ed the game to have been most en- joyable of any his team has engul- ed iii on fhe tour and congratulated the locals on the fine brand of rug- by played. ‘ The Bermuda visitors threatened often but failed to scorc. while the superiority of the Wanderers was seldom in doubt. The large score was due to the effective work of the Wanderers three-quarter llne which worked with clock-work pre- cision, their efficiency increasing as the game progressed. Their scrum heeled out regularly again and again, giving the line of,exeel- lent chance}: r ’ ”i The Bermuda three-quarter ‘line failed to gcygolng and never had control ot the ball. The ecorqy-J at half time was eleven to nothing. Lieut. Commander Murray refer- eed. U. S. Football Scores wow YORK. Oct. 18. —— United States football results Saturday: Michigan 20. Mlnresota 0; Illinois l3; Iowa GrN-orthweistern 20,_Indi- ano 0; Notre Dame 28_ Penn State 0; Purdue 0, Wisconsin 0; Kaunas Aggies 27, Kansas 0; Oklahoma 11. Drake Og-Ohlo University 6, Denlsen 0'; New York University 21, Tulane 0; Brown 27, Bates 24; Ohio State 32, Columbia 7; Princetown 13, Navy 27; Holy Cross 21, Rutgers 0; Pennsylvania 27. Chicago 0; Hob- art‘ 21. Union 0; Yale 14. Dart- mouth 7; St. Lawrence 20, Manhat- tan 3; Buffalo 2. Clarlrson 20; Her- vflrd 27. William and Hary 7; Syra- cuse _21. Arm 27; Illinois 13_ Iowa 6 New Bediord 5, Newark 0; (fol- gate 18, Pittsburgh 19; Ohio Uni- veslty 6. Denison 0; Northwestern 20, lndlanna 0; Kansas Aggie-s 27, Kansas 0; Notre Dame 28, Penn ‘Stats 0; Michigan :0. Minnesota 0; Wesleyan 27, Rochester 8; Purdue 0. Wisconsin 0; Alabama 2l_ Geor- gia. Tech 0. U. N. B. Rugby Star Seriously Injured JACK BABIITT SUFFERS DIBLO- CATED KNEE CAP INfTRO- JAN GAME ON SATUR- DAY. FRJBDDRIICTON. Oct. 18.— Unl- ver-slty 0t’ New Brunswlclcs cam- paign for retaining the Mac Tier ‘Cup, indicative of the English Rug- by Championship of Eastern Can- ada. which they won at Montreal last Fall, Ila suffered a rude t. ilaclg Babbitt star of the bac dl- vision and the player around which the red ;nd.blsck's attack as well as defensive ploy i|_htiilt,,s fli- " ed a seriously-dislocated kiie cap Z five miiiutesafter-i __ 11.1w. ii._uein's. on Saturday wit start ot the in mtgsint John tlis Trojans and lie is out of acfioii forths rest of the season. .~, . 'l‘o till the hols but e ni ers line it-is likely‘ t son will btaievcdlu n» played’ oh inc 1a lines iii m: second halt of a; Isiut John and looked lo that he will be continued there. , a leave , t at full-hock o and t e s lisndldlttlbarel» li- dridge. of Quebec. who forli played Upper 9 ulian rns .-., mantra Collelfl. tnokr. the tution Bluenose Wins. Second Race From Haligonian (Canadian Press) ___. ........... .. HALIFAX, Oct. 18.——0n board of C. G. S. Arloux: Bluenose, Captain Angus Walter. defeated the Hall- the second race of a series to de- cide thevchamplgnship of the Nova Sco-tia Fishing fleet, here today. but he failed to finish within the time limit of five hours, -and third race will have to be sailed. Dalhousie Beats IWODFVIDDE, N. 8.. Oct. 18. -— Dalhousie senior football team dc- he_re yesterday afternoon. Mount. Allison _ - Trims Moncton A By"~li8-3 tho Moncton football team on the college gridiron at Sackville yester- day afternoon in the firsTgame of the New Brunswick Footbail_,Lea-, g-ue. ' ' superior passing and. runni ,- the visitors seldom being able" away with the ball. Mount Alison scored six tries, nono being convert- ed, while -M0nct0n’~s tally came shortly after the opening of" the second period. , Alex Turns Down _ Theatre Otters ST. JJOUYS. Oct. 18.—The shamb- ling, shuffling gait of Grover Clove- laiid ‘Alexander on the diamond is his gait off the field of playflnnret- entious and sincere. he travels in his own style. II-le is as plain as the old glove that he wears on the bail lot, is the latest of baseball's sudden heroes. Success and obscurity are all one -with him. . People wanted him to appear at various dinners find luncheons‘. Others wanted to sign him for ex- hibition games_ and theatrical a8- entg brought offers from Omaha and other Westeri; cities near the little town where Alex was ‘born and where his mother still ltyes to- dly- r :. 2H0 waved none of them away listened carefully to each Juan's story and gave him a definlle ans- ‘wer. He could or he could not. g0. that was all, but he was shontgwlth nobody. He ~ went ‘around tif-dosens of functions, while the hysteria over the Cardinals’ victory W83 shits height in lSt. I40lllB-8lld it has n0?- died out yet. People everywhere in- vlted him to take a drink-St. Innis folks are hospitable. , Through the West they call. Alec. affectlonally, "Old Pete". Although that nickname has never csueht ln the lEsat. Like all good nicknames, it just grew ‘and nobody knows wher it started, least of all Alec hlmee t._,. H M lAleit is 39. and next tow-leek Quinn of the Philadelphia Alli ettas is the oldest pitcher in the, ' oli leagues. He is eight month-fill ll‘ than Welter Jdliretoir but (titted lathe bl show four. years after the, famous They. the B'lg"'l‘l‘illi' 31 the Senators. . y :,.l‘t‘l Does Your _ , Is Your Breath‘ Bull . Do v51, Know Whsthor You Hove may» clhfl‘ ' m -t-.,_ oAfAfi .. ‘ islly good la as“ wher‘ sad fhvflflgll‘ M‘ . l "-11.00. Imsll Ilse 50c. yliigqolonels substitute (or s oQoH-l .8old by draggis Si? T}? - t " ls and WOMGYI. l4--__ cat-sigh’ ofigoing 1o first or ofjtoiting to he ‘the man suc- I gonlan, Captain Mayle Grouse. lll_ _ q Acadia By 6-5 ‘Score ' ifdated Acadia by a score of 6 to 5 MlObMJTON. Oct. 18.——-By X score“ ‘ of 18 to 3IM0unt Allison defeated ' The Mount Alli-son u... won on " get‘ ' _ defended his title at Philadelphia. W lililllii i If Service and Parts Spreading across the entire Dominion and serving the hundreds of thousands of owners of its auto- mobiles, tlie unified service system of General Motors of Canada offers those owners certain ad- vantages and, economies impossible to obtain for 0th" cars’ than one of them or not. - Only General Motors produces parts for cars oi’ six different price classes, thus accomplishing tre- mendous economies for each in purchase and Producfiml- frontier . . . Only General Motors has the market in all these classes to absorb the large-quantity shipments that save so much in distribution costs. border and throughout the U Only General Motors manufactures six distinct makes of cars, on which more than‘5,000 parts in service station stocks are interchangeable. economical" service at servi where, any time. Only General Motors is able to pass on to motor- ists the economies of standardization, simplified ers of its cars! GENERAL MOTORS of CANADA, LIMITED OSHAWA, ONTARIO - w’ éaxx-(‘B Cltrgl.‘ CADILLAC ciiisviioLET<§ a?“ -._/»l\,;.~\ OLDSMOBILE OAKLAND PONT_I s -i ‘ ‘l ,2 , . i ‘ l Canadian Hudsorfs Bay to the-border . inventory and conserved storage space which this interchangeability provides. Only General Motors service stations are equipped from a stock oi more than 40,000 parts, to ser- vice six makes of ‘cars, whether they deal in more And, meeting an international demand, General Motors’ chain of service stations spreads through city, town and hamlet, not only to the farthest not only from, ocean to ocean and . . but on over the nitcd States. Tlfus Canadian Cadillac. McLaughlin-Buick, Oak- land, Oldsmobile, Pontiac and Chevrolet, offer Canadians the assurance of intelligent, expert, ce stations every- Thus General Motors oi Canada protects the own- qeyméLAucnLiw- BUICK AC GE N E RAL MOTORS y y“ QANADAAm... GM 1047A r , any prlnc, dcsplto the enormous lurilTH agallil-il ll. T0 MAJORS iiA-l.'i‘i-M0ii1<:. Oct. 18. Jun lio- Suzanne Defeats Miss: Mary Browne icy, slur shortstop of the liaillmolwi 3031116; 0.1 13_ -._ gnu-Jun," international Loagim Club, rculiz ‘Lenglen. French tennis star. dcical-zell ‘l 5"‘? rem" "Iiilu" lmlllllll drlflllll ed M1" Mary Bmwnq 5.4;, 5_1-todny wiicn Manager Dunn formally before a crowd u; 3,990 n, m.) Bo... anliouiiccil lllfigrgillfl to lhc Phlladol- “'0, I YWOUD O _,_ 1x . Few (on arena l“; nigh; l; was m.) plila American League (llub ior ‘wow; ‘have w“; hbtruuswkxiblit; French woman-a “m; appearance cash and players. Noilcluiis wore Iumrbul Such ,3 EmlL Uelgmn yo,‘ .Gilbert’s Butler Ils Canadian Rugby At Toronto—Vsi-slt; 11; Queens 5 (intercollegiate). g Montreal-Mcflill 22; Hamil- \\.\.\‘. \ bonus“ I on" A mini p. n. F. u. a (exhibition). t t "Maureen-Toronto varsity 0: on-treal McGZll 0. (Intercollegiate). ‘At Ottawa-Ottawa lllmtgos 2. Kl u n E v i5 Prepared For Guests ' ‘Is Unearth (Canadian Press.) COUIUDEN-AY, 13.0., Ocl. 1S lThrou li the vlliganco of tho i lvinclnl‘ police, a Blflllllw CM“ ‘custom has been unearthed, Wll lniust have been causiiii! l1 -' and wiiiitoii loss in game. Wllell were being shot before their spring were born. The Chinese , lurs each m» unborn tswnfl- llllllildlillllil‘ lnm-edlents from l?" a dococtlon is poured oil’. Wllll-‘h their women. . - ».i.‘-.figj.i;.. ti?‘ 54:11!’ ’ Dsngerounlzliinssselflii" otert with s cold- ‘Ward ll" your sold with Nyll" ‘Fm’ NYIPs Syrup °f T" "'4 °°-' umv Oil. it uremia the '1' aim against turthei- int-b l and than Nysls Loxeleeld It l‘ '5 d.» dipoiiiiibls lsiistivb. 1,10,, Pl i. l. s . y’ i. “ ‘axlngfdlliqnlll-stlalghiiileillgolfiliélbdllal/ili“ nnnommbd‘ v liFi-i" who “huttles" for John Gli- ‘ - . - ‘ hortfthc movie actor. , ,_ ' gglrlvwilglségzragflll-Blaly zdlzlliigfid 0f I ’ l lilmilll has learned that his master ' " i ‘* - ' I 66 99 s lill(‘ at most any hour io walk G Beglfln; Rotgen lliilo the llilllfl! with one to fifty afne oon lgllvflla without any ivuriiifig. Be- 00 Me llli! u ical ln-ioic butler Emil is ll'li“lf" -- _ we Anemone. oci. 18.-Minor mory lowly-ll». "lhhlllill Burrtflllle “(lltlactlllafl Goodsel-l, world's champion sculler. BER shelve..- mil lie i i . ‘ ‘ IAN‘ 0 L 18‘__T] “R u I t Fl fllfllilgfifl Ollflil formerly a resident of Auetrallamw.. of new; whlch fuss lhlg)“g:ll|t.‘ll pmvision orders which he can‘ bu‘ go" 0"“)! Annles‘ h" accepbilie middle. oi‘ Kurfiiersienilanim,‘“mm” m m“ ‘Emu’ and fiamdw‘ ad t’ QOHTIIBZgBdOI Pat lilzlOla/IWGW the Bloadway o, the arlatwrauclllvorcil in twenty minutes. ,3 ‘d: and trte oi! a? iorha aha, pion-‘west and. Wm mo" be a nlelnom l‘0l‘ instance, Emil flgyQ-[o u"; l‘! 1hr!“ Toll“ “rtnlf t Bill rmmfi-sl Car trucks are being removed grocer’ “I mm‘ Nimm" 0"“: The n?‘ y‘ h e “m; “m baht ollftllll the street and laid ‘on thefglnom. ml“ “m” "mmmr “"9 ma‘ t ‘i’. a‘; wlon m“ “and: gzarélllbrldlo path where oncc iode mem-icnnmllm. pvmylhm“ for i‘ "mm" since lgss dwhen illidwsrd llanianihersl-i’! "l" H0116!"- of Hohensollci-n “m. "I'M Plllllwnkeep on the pan- ’ and tlfé nobility. "Rotten row" lost in,’ filmhlpst QHIBLNO‘ TM’ l" lb its clamor when Wilhelm ll fled t2“ y dmimm‘ men" "i"! 9° ‘"4.’ to Holland. And the increasing‘ we “my “I'll 80.9"‘ I ' lrnlTic made necessary the replace ment of the car tracks. But the two lanes of elms will remain so that in summer street cars will travel‘ through a bower of green. ..___-¢¢0c~____ - . British Saddler-e Art Aided By U.S. Demand. (inter-provincial). ' . - Al. ‘IVffllt0—BlllllY Bfiloll .18; IDNDON, Oct. 18. Think t l 01ml‘ ‘Bllfllfill 3. (Q- - F. UJ- the demand-horn the than“ taste: At Hamilton-Ham ton l7; iiloirt- y... Mm m," and ma.“ ma “M, - I lner" er addleri. art is not yet ‘ ldeed in England. | . Were It not to th pewerot the , ' ‘ nation there would b: Ohrigtllhdtpgmygggzggfal "'§,,},',',,",',,',_"'9{',§§,,§§ . inopziien . 609:3; than lalg-It-lllte “fhiéfhgflfidsr! at“ W51. . to n "A Jam ill»... cab-syn: .N.l.Q-QQQ]M»IQ"OIO.I- defied lender's-work ‘at I v fiiiiaid l- any, w. 1am." it m aim ini- u" mmmny. m , - Mus,» i gm -l-"‘i t r1 .4. ‘p11 01d ilhinese Custom" ivllling to give ammuch as filly",- foetus is then mixed with .1. greatly prized as a medicine nlleb-‘ittiic m: mm. rill