OCTOBLJI3 gs, "1953 Ii.S.. college Football (By The Canadian Press ) Rice Elli, Cornell 7. Oklahoma 7. Pitt '1. Princeton 20, Columbia 19. Holy-Cross lit. Colgate 6. Yale 13. Brown 0. Rutgers ll0,'Virginia Tech 18. Penn 13, Penn State '1. Navy 55. Dartmouth 1. New Humpsliire 14, a RIIUIIE is- land 13. SOUTH Maryland 20. Clemson 0, North Carolina 30, Washington and Lee 0. Duke 21. Tennessee '7. South Carolina 19. Virginia 0. Georgia Tech 6, South. Metho- dist 4. Texas 28. Houston '1. Arkansas 13, Texas Christian ll. - Texas Tech 2'1, Oklahoma 13. Alabama 21. Vanderbilt 12. Waite Forest 18. Villanova 12. MIDWEST Wisconsin 13. Marquisette 11. Iowa 54. Washington State I2. Michigan 26. Tulane 7. Michigan State 21. Minnesota 0. Illinois 311. Stanford 21. Northwestern 33. Army 20. Kansas 23, Iowa State 0. Notre Dame 37. Purdue 7. Kansas State 27. Nebraska 0. FAR WEST Idaho 20. Montana 12. Wyoming 27, Colorado 16. Uela. 12, Oregon 0. Washington 20, Oregon State 0. Ohio State 33. California 19. x BLIlE- P.ETEll STEAMSIIIPS LTD. M. V. BLUE PRINCE Freight will be accepted until 5 p.m. Wednes- day, Oct. 7th. for next sailing of MrV Blue Prince to St. John's, Nfld. For spacereservatioiis and rates, apply:- NEWFOUNDLAND SHIPPING SERVICE. P. 0. BOX 65 - PHONE 8737 .ontinenta A Limited" It's the pleasant, luxurious way to travel--"The jdsper We ” on the Continental Limited . . . Canadian National's nclable daily link between Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, e. inoki, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Edmonton, jasper and Vancouver. Canada's magnificent scenic beauty reets you with a new adventure every mile while you relax in the air- ronditioaed cdmfort of attractive bedrooms, standard and tourist slee rs. lounges and coaches. Delicious meals in attractive ining cars served with Canadian National'I traditional courtesy and efficiency. By arrangement at major . points you can have a drive-yourself car waiting for you. l For Nsorvotionl ond lnlorntollon regarding your business and pleasure trovnl, no, write or phone your local Conodlon .” ' ' Posunger Agent. I c ' g I L. .1. MacDONAI.I). District Passenger Agent, C.N.R. Station Dial soon Iltl ONUY IAILWAV SIRVIN-0 All YEN PROVINCE! 4 The Maritime Major Hockey League . will open the 1933-1954 season Oct. 19, it was announced over the week-end. The '18-game schedule will end March 9. The opening games, on a. Mon- day night, will see Charlottetown at home to Sydney Millionaires and Glace Bay Miners at Halifax. Mondays and Fridays are hockey nights for Charlottetown, although there may be a few games on other nights. Meanwhile Islanders Club presi- dent Frank MacDonald and coach ”Bucko" Trainor are expected to 'l'eLlll'I1 from a scouting' trip to training camps early this week. The Schedule October:-- 19-Sydney at Charlottetown Glace Bay at Halifax 20-Charlottetown. at Sydney 21-No games 22-Halifax at Glace Bay 23-Halifax at Charlottetown Glace Bay at Sydney DI-Sydney at Halifax - Charlottetown at Glace Bay 26-Sydney at Charlottetown 27-Charlottetown at Sydney 28-Halifax at Glace Bay 29-Glace Bay at Halifax 30-Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney Blmydvriey at Glace Bay Charlottetown at Halifax. Noveinber:- 2-Halifax sit Charlottetown 3--Glace Bay at. Sydney 4-Charlottetown at Halifax Sydney at Glace Bay 5-No games 6-Halifax at Sydney Glace Bay at Charlottetown '7-Charlottetown at. Glace Bay Sydney at Halifax 9-Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney lo-Sydney at Halifax Charlottetown at Glace Bay ll-No games 12-Halifax at Charlottetown 13-Glace Bay at Sydney 14-Charlottetown at Halifax Sydney at Glace Bay 16-Sydney at Charlottetown 17-Charlottetown at Sydney Glace Bay at Halifax 18-No games 19-Halifax at Glace Bay 20-Halifax at Charlottetown Glace Bay at Sydney 21-Sydney at. Halifax Charlottetown at Glace Bay 23-Sydney at. Charlottetown 24-Glace Bay at Halifax Charlottetown at. Sydney 25-No games 26-Halifax at Glace Bay 21--Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney i 23-Charlottetown at Halifax Sydney at Glace Bay 30-Halifax nt. Charlottetown. Deoember:- 4 1-Glaoe Bay at Sydney ?.-Glace Bay at Sydney Charlottetown at Halifax 3-No games I 4-Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney 5-Sydney at Halifax Charlottetown st Glsoe Boy '1-Sydney at Charlottetown 3-Charlottetown at Sydney 9-Halifax at Glace Bay 10-Glace Bay at Halifax ll-Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney 13-Sydney at Glace Bay Charlottetown at. Halifal 14-(Sydney at. Charlottetown 15-Charlottetown at Sydney Glace Bay at Halifax 18-No games 1'1-Halifax at Glace Bay 18-Glace Bay at Sydney Halifax at Charlottetown 19-Charlottetown at Glace Bay Sydney at Halifax 21-Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney 22-Sydney at Halifax 23-.Chai-Iottetown at Glace Bay 24-25-26-No games. 28-Sydney at Charlottetown 29-Charlottetown at Sydriey Glace Bay at Halifax 0-Hallf-ax at Glace Bay 1-No games Jsnuary:- l-Sydney at Glace Bay 2-No games A 4-Sydney at Charlottetown 5-Glace Bay at Halifax p Charlottetown at Sydney t ,,. 6-No games OUT R WAY By, J. ii. gyijilliums gr-r14.',, r2 W. '1. r we vou THINK.-'-' WHAT ,, I ' . in, H e 4-... .- WE'l2EEAl2LYBll2D5' EARL - , . ; ' .. WITH -rs-us LAUNDRY, euzp ) , I. yjiggi --1 come ol.gANgl9 wt-urr . .- -3555 TH on .' l H t-' "l -- -ouie ”woi2Mr .1 I . 6”.Q.4”?Yf"" I r, i i- A . iit'I,.u uh. II ,, lb . . I "”"W-i' l. Vi” '.x”ll.,;,I'I.t'ty,(t;llj,-Vi-Ira!" ' . wt-Iv MOT!-tieizs "GET GRAYMD g I r ?.u;-;-'9 . . -..,-....- -.;...-.. Maritime Major Hockey League To Open Oct. 19; Sydney To Play Here TI-IEI-GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN Duke Snider And Billy Loes Heroes As Dodgers Win Saturday Game 7-3 7-Halifax at Glace Bay 8-Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at. Sydney 9-Charlottetown at Halifax Sydney at Glace Bay ii-Halifax at Charlottetown 12-Glace Bay at Sydney 13-Sydney at Glace Bay Charlottetown at Halifax I4-No games 15-Glace Bay at. Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney 16-Sydney at Halifax Charlottetown at Glace Bay IB-Sydney at Charlottetown l9-Charlottetown at Sydney 20--Halifax at Glace Bay 21-Glace Bay at Halifax 22-Glace Bay at Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney 28-Sydney at Glace Bay Charlottetown at Halifax 25-Sydney at Charlottetown 26-Charlottetown at Sydney Glace Bay at Halifaig 2'l-Halifax at Glace Bay 28-No games 29--Halifax a-t. Charlottotown Glace Bay at Sydney 30-Sydney at Halifax Charlottetown at Glace Bay. February:-- 1-Halifax at Chanlottetown 2-Glace Bay at Sydney 3-Charlottetown at Halifax Sydney at Glace Bay 4-eNc games 5-Halifax at Sydney Glace Bay at. Charlottetown 6-Charlottetown at Glace Bay Sydney at Halifax 8-Sydney at Charlottetown 9-Charlottetown at. Sydney l(leHalifax at Glace Bay ll-Glace Bay at Halifax 12-Glace Bay at. Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney 13-Sydney at Glace Bay Charlottetown at Halifax 15-Sydney at Charlottetown 16-Glace Bay at Halifax Charlottetown at Sydney l'l-No games 18-Halifax at Glace Bay l9-Halifax at Charlottetown Glace Bay at Sydney 20-Sydney at Halifax Charlottetown at Glace Bay 22.-Halifax at Charlottetown 23-Glace Boy at Sydney 24-Sydney at Glace Bay Charlottetown at Halifax 25-No ganies 26-Glace Bay at. Charlottetown Halifax at Sydney 27-Sydney at Halifax Charlottetown at Glace Bay. M:u'eh:-- I-Sydney at Charlottetown 2-Charlottetown at Sydney 3-Halifax at Glace Bay 4-Glace Bay at. Halifax 5-Halifax at. Charlottetown Glace Bay at Sydney 8-Charlottetown at Glace Bay Sydney at Halifax it-Glace Bay at. Sydney Halifax at Charlottetown 9-Charlottetown at Halifax. Soccer Results LONDON, (GP) G Results of soccer games Saturday In "19 United Kingdom. Home International and World cup Qualifying Match Ireland 1 Scotland 3 ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Ai-senal 3 Pruton N E 2 Blackpool 2 Manchester 0 0 Bolton W 2 Tottenham H 0 Chelsea. 2 Sunderland 2 I Huddersfield T 4 Aston Villa 0 Liverpool 2 Sheffield W 2 Manchester U 1 Burnley 2 Newcastle U 0 Charlton A I Portsmouth 1 Cardiff City 1 Sheffield U 3 Wolverhampton 3 W Bromwich if Middlesbrough 1 Division II Birmingham C 3 Leeds U 3 Blackburn R 4 Bury 2 Brentford 1 E.verton 0 Bristol R 4 Hull City 2 Derby 0 3 oldliam A 1 Doncsster R. 1 Rotherham U 2 Lincoln 0 3 Notts C 0 Luton T 1 Fulham 2 Nottingham F 4 West Ham 0 Plymouth A 1 stoke C 1 Swansea T 0 Leicester C 0 Division III Northern Aecrington S 2 Chesterfield I Barnsley 4 Workington 2 Bradford 2 Scunthoi-pa U 1 Carlisle U 0 Tranmere R 2 Chester 2 Wrexham 1 Crewe Alex 0 Southport 0' -Darllngton 0 Gsteshead 2 Grimsby T 1 Bradford C 0 Hartlepools U 2 Halifax T 0 Port Vale 5 York City 0 Rochdale 1 Mansfield T 0 Stockport C 5 Barrow I Division III Southern Bournemouth 1 Torqusy U 2 Coventry C 0 Northampton T 0 Exeter C4 Southampton 0 Gillingham 3 Norwich C 1 . Ipswich T 1 Watford 0 Leyton 0 1 southend U I Millwall 0 Brighton 2 Newport 0 2 Queen's P 1 Reading 8 Aldcrshot. 1 shrewsbui-y T 3 colchesier U l Swindon T 5 Bristol 0 0 Walsall I crystal P 0 SCOTTISH LEAGUI Division A Aberdeen 2 Partlek T 1 Clyde I East Fife 1 Hamilton A 2 Dundee I Hearts 6 Stirling A 1 Queen of S 3 Hibernian I Rslth R 0 Airdrieonlans 1 . Dlvlelon B Albion 1?. 3 St. Johnslnne 2 - Alloa 1 Third Lanark 4 Ayr Uyl Stenhousemuir I Dundee U 2 Arbroath 2 Dunformllne A 4 Motherwell 3 Porter A 1 Cowdenbeath 0 Norton 4 Kllmsrnock 6 Yankees Bomb H Continued from page 6 Furillo's double play ball. The Dodgers hall men on first and third with nobody out and a run in when Woodiing took Billy Cox's fly ball and doubled Hodges at the plate with a beau- tiful no-bounce throw tn Berra. Mant.le's homer in the five-run Ihird gave the Yanks a 6-1 rush- ion that looked mighty soft to McDonald, the follow the. Yan- kees trled to trade away all last winter. McDonald kept skirting disas- ter time after time until he was flattened In the eighth. Hut thr- Yanks kept. adding to the lead while Brooklyn threats blew up. Carl Furillo rapped into a double play when the Brooks ha. gan to get. tough in the fourth but a fifth inning spurt finally produced a run. With one out. Junior Gilliam was hit chy a pitch. Singles by Pee Wee Reese and Duke Snider rode him home. Then McDonald tightened up again. - Meyer eased through a rough sixth when the Yanks loaded the bases with only one out but fin. ally hit the dead end in the sev- enth. Billy Martin, the serles' leading butter with 10 hits, only two short of the record. blasted a Meyer pitch into the left field stands following Bcrra's single. Vf'1dPTllnE the gap to 8-2. Ri7.zutri's single and McDonald's double that took a bad hop past Jackie Robinson ran it to 9-2 later in the same inning. The Yanks piled on anolhnr in the eighth on Coilins' double riff Ben Wade, ii sacrifice and Berra”; fly ball. McDonald finally got Ines; in the eighth, Robinson, Campanella H10 Droduced one run and brought up Cox whose ihrne-run homer closed the gap to 10.6, In from the bullpen came Kur- ava, a lefty who likes to pitch to rlghthanded batters. Ile promptly struck out Dick Williams on three pitches as Dressen ropl-amsrl pinch-hitter George Shuba with pinch-hitter Williams. McDougald's home run on Jag Black in the top of the ninth seemed a lead enough. Stengel. however. wanted to make cer- tain. When Gilliam led off with a homer, Reynolds began to throw hard in the bullpen. Reese flied out but Duke Snider sing- led to right. That was all for Kuzsra. Sten- gel waverl for Reynolds. the open- ing day hurler who was supposed to be "out for the series" with a bad back. Jackie Robinson was the batter. With the count two balls and one strike, Jackie rapped into a game- ending double play. The game started in brizht sunshine and mici-70 degree leni- porature. By the eighth inning it. was cloudy and growing dark. prompting the umpires to nrdnr the lights turned on for the last. two innings. the bus- Singles by an d Fur- Imperial Oil Limited call fori Queen's P 0 Dumbarton 0 Every power-packed Atlas Heavy-Duty Battery is guaranteed for 30 moifths in passenger car service --with 21 Written Guarantee backed by Get Atlas-and get coast-to-coast protection! By JACK Harm I BROOKLYN. (AP) --Duke Snider.I Brooklyn's homo run hero of lnsli October, hammerrri home four big runs to back up Billy Lrws' gritty pitching Saturday as Brooklyn squared the world series with a 7-3 victory ow-r New York Yankees in the fourth aaine. Bouncing hack to even Ill.ill.l'l'5 at home after lnslllg (he first two. at Yankee Stadium, the Dodge:-.;; clobbered Eddie Ford, Tom Grir-I man, Johnny Sain and Art Schal-. lock for six doubles and it home? run in their l2-hit total. Start:-rl Ford was the loser although hci pitched only one inning. .' When Loes. a sad failure since" the all-star game in July, falteretl: in the ninth to load the basis wIth' nobody out, inanazer Chuck Dres-I sen called for Clem Laiiine tn! choke of the Yanks. The game closed with n flourish when Billy Martin, trying to score a second run on Mickey Matle's single. was cut down at the plate by Don Thompson's pet: to Ray Campanella. Campaneila tagged Martin on; the shoulder hard to make cnrtainl of the final cut. Martin turned anti glared but made no menaclngi gestures. y Snider, Wl1:)sP four homers helped Brooklyn take the Yanioi to the seven-game limit last yeaiyl smashed a tremendous 45 - foot blast over the right - field screen and off building across the sreet; ii: the sixth inning. It was Siiitior'.x' double hitch off; the same screen that drove in lwoj big runs In the first inning wheel the Dodgers unloaded on ioftliand- er Ford for three runs. Again in the, seventh, l-I. Snider double to the: it-ft-field corner drove in a faurtlii run. I Junior Gilliam with three dou- bles, two of the fluke variety, and Loes with a pair of singles were the other big Dodger hitters. I Loes had won only one complete game since July 8 and wasn't. ex-I pected to last the route against the Yank team that beat him 3-2 in, last year's sixth game. But the tall, skinny risrhthander knpt firing the ball past the Yanks to strike out eight men in a fair follow-up to the job Cari Erskine did Friday when he set a series record of 14 strikeouts. Not until the fourth inning when Yogi Berra singled with two out did the Yanks have a hit. By that time. Loes was rolling along with a 3-0 hul,r:e. He inst his sliutnut. in the riftli on Ifnriinis irinle flll'l Gil McDougnld's 370-foot hnmcr. Although the 2'3-year-old hurler was being hit hard for. long f'lv balls. he skirtnd serious trouble. un- I and honoured by 38,000 dealers in Canada and the United States. 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