_.I:_'.Pheasants Unlimited “ of the Association Monday night. Pick A Winner ON THE ISLAND IT'S Rickey & liicholson's BLACK TWIST CHEWING ITIIiIIies .Will' “Shoot The Works” Against Brooklyn Next Week _§.',f.‘,’;£3“§§hm8h.§?.l’§h ii-iazi’ - Fight Facts I And Figures "to "shoot the Works" when his "‘Pliilil'€5 tangle with Brooklyn l-Dpdgerd next week—-and he ad- .. milled today it will be ironic if me Bluejays stop the Bums short or their pennant dream. n h .. Doditclil-s sVeiIeIlO glatvewfrie ltiiae {appt-Lr‘: (Mwchnd 7”“) guylity to be manager of the Phil- lies,‘ Chapman exiplains. “They j brought me up from the minor ~ leagues as a pitcher. a move for i“ which I'll always be grateful to 'Briinch Rickey. and then sent me iinre when I was appointed man- ager last year." Chapman said he'll use his three top moundsmen against Brooklyn ' in the three-game series that 5mm next Mcuday at Ebbets . .Ficld. __ "I used Oscar Judd and our - other topnotch flingers against “the Cardinals all year so I think it's only fair that I do the same against Brooklyn," he says. weight championship. Principles-Joe Louis. champion, vs, Tami New York, challenger. Place - Yankee Stadium, New York ss. Time—First preliminary, p.m. E.D.T.; main bout, 10 pan. Estimated attendance -.28,000 persons and $275,000. Approximate weights-Louis 208 pounds; Mauriello, 196. Betting odds-—Louis 1 to 9 to in w . Prom0ter—-20th Century Sport- ln Club, Mike Jacobs, president. Broadcast — Radio, Broadcasting Company network; television, National Broadcasting Company network. Louis Heavy Favorite To Stop Tami BY SID FEDER NEW YORK, Sept. 17 — (AP) -— Joe Louis puts his World Heavy- weight championship on the line Annual Meeting The annual meeting of Pheas- ants Unlimited will be held in June instead of in April as form- erly, it was decided at a. meeting President F. A. S. Jones in a brief address laid it was import- ant that the propagation of all game birds in the Province should he encouraged and recommended that a full time fish and game of- ,,licl'\r{al beF npiolnlid, t th ‘ 1'- F811 00111. 118K!" hrynin Yankee Stadium against e treasurer of the Association said clmllghge of tough Tami Maurlello he had received a large number of, and Joe flgmies 1t. to be a short enquiries from American sports-‘aiigihvs work. men concfrning accommodations in} PromogiermMtilsfi Jacalia tallrcduthleie the Prov nce. . r n one r Constable Spurgeon Jenkins of Joe had about deeded w play i201! the R.C.M.P., said it was his opin-, the rest o! the year following hie ion the greatest menaces to Hun“ V1010?!’ 0W1‘ B111? 001111 in 31-1119- ‘ia- “we; m“ ..Ei§5iil8h§’°§‘.la its... . ..i.‘:;a.:i c £21353 ghaflff°l§§lfulvyvlfllffli‘_' in the Bronx for Tami in recent ter of Agriculture. said he consid- dB-Vsjust "5 if he's svmm ‘he Eng‘ ered the fish and game resourceslu-sh channel °!' s“ ‘m 5 “Mime ol- lhe pmvlnce had reachedhhakfor several days. But practically no point in their dev lopmeni,_where giglfnxfiglate rbmn“ mrkeep ‘md Fill official hould b int d t ' “my "i" Wm‘ look after tshem. eegldgssed thg mm ‘my kind or “ 1°°k4n m! m“ opinion that q solution of the go‘ problem would soon be reached. iugggaofirl}; t-i-Bmfmla mnlhg: wgtfrig‘: the hmegwflnghtjémrt m?“ rounds. The local betting boys are M. m FmnBy d t" " M“? l“ quoting “mi money 1t will be a1 e o“ ' over in the first, five heats after the bomber and the barkeep comic - gar} at. 10 p. m. E. D, T. (11p.m. A.- 'ii' you like Louis to wind uo somewhere along lib.- way. you have to put up 17 to 1. ‘That's how sure the gambling gentlemen are of a windiip before the IS-roimd route Eliminated B n "_- ' Louis will scale about 208 pounds LIVERPOOL. N. S, Sept, 17_lto Mauriellcfs 196 at the weigih-in (CPL-The Nova Scotlg iunihrlat IP30 101110110“!- xsellllvtlln 121112,: “god: erivh linrffwfid thdilljirxrisriitraie years younger than‘ c I - - - — . , Dool Larrupers ellrdlinuted l-Iailfeax ~7°9*wh° h" been munch‘? “D chasm-ms l, chhlkln u 4,3 and down Bash‘l3oulevard s':ice yvlflqfy‘ Llvcipool no“? mcgfhw 1939. He's had 71 starts. lcsinsr ‘waterfall-l strands l" me provfnj rmiv seven. In his latest go the belted cial baseball finals starting in the} “sh "mm" Bruce wwdmck cape Brew“ town next weaken,‘ out. in five rounds last May to run his Winning string to 12 since 1944. Baseball REMEMBER WilEll Results Eddie Goodfellow, a member of .wo Detroit Ricd Wing Stanley Cup teams, was named playihs coach 01 the mo wines by Manuel‘ Jack Adams six years ago toda . A con- verted centre, he starre foru10 e I NAT] ONAL years as a IIQICIICCQIBH in‘ m ghlm 1m 00° 1O0__z 9 o N. l1. L. and was w ner o e Broom?“ 3H0 O01 00x4 12 1 Hart Trophy as tine lefigues sixt- El-lcluom Meyer‘ w,“ and valuable payer t e pre oils y . aviiliilgsigon; Hatters, Lombardi and STANDING ROOM 0N“,- 51- Louis 200 all 002-40 ll l DEVONPORT, England _ (¢p)__ 000 001 010-2 ll l "§;'3,,§t°"1 Stoker William George Crook. 11w- "nd "m"? Kcnlwd“ in a court-martial for desertion. ' mpson- Ahemathyi strum“ deglined an invitation to sit down». Bee and Lombardi. A stout man, he lost his trousers in Cincinnati 002 000 300-2 l0 l‘ a m‘, “ml hall h, borrqw g, pair too Boston C01 230 02x-8 12 0 llghl lol- hlm| ' Hflki. Lambert. Shaun one" __ _~_4. --——---- Mueller, Ianismno; Johnson and muggy APPOINTMENT _ Padgett, Masi, j- - l GLASGOW, Scotland — (CP) — ~» Al " Hon. Victoria. Bmcl. 411ml L’. tine 6th Baron Balfour of urle {Washington 102 001 000-4 9 1 and sister of the present Lord Bal- llbetroit ‘Q0 000 0ix-6 B 1 four, ihas been appointed 801N111" Pieietti. leopard, Wynn and of Duke Street Prison. She has governor of the girls‘ Borstal In- stitution at Aylesbury. B11038- 7911115’; Benton, Tmut and reblicits T Richards. -J - / (5111 ett twill‘ lilo-Kill“; iii H American ‘~ for tihe 23rd. time tomorrow nightl Tittle involved —World heavy-i thnmlmi Detroit, W041i)’ banner meet gets under- u-ulih way this afaenloon. Length of Bout-ill rounds or|° 3.30_I.iatest word from Charlie Willis, and gate’ is lightning fast and that every- IHI: CHARLOI I I.‘ ILNVN GUARDIAN PAGE SEVEN interest Judslng from pro-race and enthusiasm much of the pop- ulation o-f Charlottetown will be the Covehead race centre as the opening day i); the Q O An impressive list of entries dots the various classes and some f the best horses of the Maritime; will be battling it out at the wire. promoter. indicates that the track thing points to one of the best racing meets of the season‘. ‘I i- Beadlining the card today will be the Junior Free-For-All which will bring together such speed- sters as Peter Brooke. ‘The Great G.. Billy Jane. Kavola, Alcyone and others. The classified events are all well filled and it's any- body's guess as to a*winner. For what it is worth. fat Tony Galento declares. in his own in- imi-table words, that Joe Louis at 32, and after five years without a hard fight. is ready to be taken "by the first hard-hittin’ young- (Canadlan Press) Two games ahead with 10 to go was the story of St. Louis Car- dinals’ flight toward the National League pennant after the league- leaderl had handed New York Giants a 10-2 pasting while Brook- lyn was downing Chicago yester- day, Heading to Boston for their fili- al stop of the last eastern invas- ion, the Rod Birds were riding high with the first National Lea- gue ZO-game wlncier of the sea- son in Howie Pallet. southpaw stylist. - The Cards‘ "stopper" coasted home with no. 20 although hit hard in the late stages, yielding l1 hits in all, eight in the last tiirce innings after his mates had given him a commanding lead. Puller is the first left-hacider to reach the goal since Carl Hubbeil and Cliff lligellton did it for the Giants in 3 . Enos Slaughter, the Birds slug- ging right-flelder. shared the headlines for driving home five runs with a two-run homer, a single and an infield out. The Cards routed Monte Ken- nedy in the four-run fourth when he walked Pollet with two out and Red schoendiensi, and Terry Moore followed with successive singles. When Kennedy hit Stan Musial with a pitched ball, Mel Ott wav- ed in Junior Thompson who gave up a two-run single to Slaughter before retiring the side. Ten Games To Go Cardinals Ride High . To National Pennant. ninth. opposition of Chicago to win 4-2 but with l2 games left to play to won three less than the Red Birds and lost one more. If the Cards Wln six of their games, the Dodgers must win nine to tie the Birds for the flag. The Brooks meet the pesky on Billy Jurges' double, h. walk and Bob Sturgeons single. Boston Braves, given only an outside chance by many experts of finishing in the first“ division. climbed to within a game of third place by walloping Cincinnati Reds 8-2. . It was the Braves’ fifth straight victory as they prepared to play hoslt to the league-leading Card- ina s. Si Johnson, nicked for two runs that put the Reds in front in the; t Dodgers overcame the stubborn the Cards 10, the Dodgers have ‘ lsbe was the boldci of the women's i i l. l The Women's Amateur Chum. gfhmiv. winch will h? played 5 Year atofiiuthem I-liiis c, Q B. i i .-‘ ‘to Sept. 2am. iioma. Seit 23.41 BADMINTON Let us have your Badminton Rackets for Re- stringing now and avoid the rush when the season starts. TIIB BIKE 8H0? Great George St. Charlottetown Woodcock Wins Over, Lesnevich In Eighth Round By Knockout i . LONDON. Sept. 1'I—(CP)—Br tlsh sports fans who have spea the major portion of the post-w era seeing their athletic heroes db feated by invaders watched witli glee tonight as Bruce Woodcoc British and Empire heavywcig Pennant Race At A Glance national titles iii six events. but the.AAU officials limited her to three in Olympic tXJimpetiLlQll_ Mrs. Zaharias‘ appcirancc iii the championship at Tulsa rs he. maritable because it wasn't until Sh? had W011 1118i; about every horm- there was to be “on 1h basketball. baseball and track that she took an interest in go‘! Friends challenged her interest 111 the Kaine nv telling her t‘.zi: golf was ‘one s/pcit where her na- Pittsburgh Pirates in s dollble- “P11 Pfvbahiy at- -_ . . bvxins champion. knocked out Gui header may WW9 the cards at? gar: llwtltltlialhgblelvll on thnn gzymégineglwgehgilh lgflafgibspito‘ Lesnevich .of Ciiffsrde, N. J tangle Wm, Bmy southwcrflfsl one wagonnfs to.y. PIE-y m. - world lightweight kins. in e1; red-hot Boston Braves in a singlcl est in this colggiui‘) Brooklyn won 88; Lost M: Pct roglgdakn ck t d d b 851m- ' l5 y“; wlll he m“ M u, .620; Games behind 2; Gamu to e ° W’ pm u“ Y i Leo Durochefs Scrappy gang, the first ear m“ M w_ . be play m‘ right smalh to the chin. came III sewed the game up in the open-l (Babe) Dlfihkson z lfi-Mudmd Remaining Games:_- a" minute’ 4° Semnds “f U" mg frame by blhsllhg Paul El-lclbicompeted in mks a U155 MS 5L Louls__ eighth frame, Lesnevlch weighefi son for four hits and three runslhas been me o tsiverét; Bill” Home Cmcicmatl z‘ Chicago 3. 131 1'2 Pmmds- wwdwcl‘. 192' The gllb, had nlgked southpaw, man athlete m "ma?" mg Vlffl- total ' ' The triumph 0f the British Joe Hatten for a run in the first glnce long bqfore 5th ‘°““,_§X Away: Chicago 3, Boston 2' to- er’ knocked out by Tam‘ Manuel“ and after the Dodgers scored an- Qlygllplc Games~'n 1,05 ca. 171i“: . ' m, New YQPk C"? 1115i 51711118. Will other run in the sixth on Galaifs when. she flake‘ world "he, ’ Brooklyn: wlmesse/i hy “Baum” Crmvd "t goillbie handd Hvigilkeivstfllnclc. titigiih the Javelin. nigh luillflecolltit? 31111191 Philedelvhla 3- B°sl°" 2' égiloowili: Ariafiflttfliaqdgd c ase a n e eve :- - - . n . clllplglnll him formtheir finsal l-luriibliseban throw‘ M the who Cmcmnatl l’ Pntsburgh 3' total (5175-1100) Lesrievich, his left eye battere shut in the fourth round, trle unsuccessfully to regain his feel after Woodcock applied the clin-i cher. The referee's count ended while the American's hands res mained on the canvas. From the first round, which wen! to Lesnevlch, the Briton was the aggressor. He put Lesnevlch dowll with s. right in the second round but the American was on his feel without taking the count. The only damage suffered by ‘Away: Boston 3; total 3, Indian Land Winner in Straight lieats iiral ability would be v19 great, Woodcock was a cut on his left.’ i i l lowers that unless the champion |the manager he always had trust tough 23-year-old in- | Joe Cronin, it will be remember- All the other St. Louis runs came on homers, Marion's third of the year in the fifth inning, Mus- ial's 14th in the sixth, both with the sacks empty. and Slautzhteifl: steir who’ll give hi-m the woiks." Il- Il) l- O Publicity vendors have been working overtime in a belated nt- thl-rd inning. thereafter held Cin-l help to hol- bwahlse She shamed to tempt to draw a good crowd for Promoter Jacobs’ latest venture. ‘nth Wm‘ Kumwskl on base m the It is true that Mauriello has never been knocked out-despite the fact that he has been on the can- vas more ti-mes than he himself cares to count. O ~9- '9- 0 It is equally true, however, that he has never faced a fighter who packs the dynamite in either hand that is possessed by Louis. Better fighters than Maurielio have found that out. O 0 t! To the contender for the heavy- weight crown Galento has bellow- ed this advice: "Forget about the bob and weave. Go in there throwin’ punches in your natural style tonight and you'll knock Louis out." 0f course Galento goes on to say that if he had not used the boh-and-weave strategy, "I'da belted him out.“ O =91 {I It is the general opinion of sports scribes and other ring fol- Great Sports Era Recalled By Sale By W. M. GLADISH (Canadian Press Staff Writer) Passing of a famed downtown Toronto hostelry from the Scholes family of athletic champions has been recorded in nostalgic terms sport commentators. their somewhat personal iamen-tatioris 0V9!‘ IIISBUDBBTHDCG OI numerous tmfnhies from the taproom walls being described as the termination of an athletic reitm. But the printed heart-burning did‘ not go quite far enough. The sale of the pumprcom marked the close of an era during which tav- em-keepers. generally. were forth- right celebrities of the sports world. Those were the rugged days when the routine tour bv Tcr- orito sport scribes in search of news meant dropping into num- erous bars and ante-rooms to interview the ale-house proprie- tor. Even some of the land- naarlrs have long since disappear- To discuss baseball. a visit with the late Jim McCaffery at the old Bay Tree Hotel was a daily necessity; ‘Ibm Flanagan at the former Grand Central Hotel al- ways could talk on about Jack Johnson. Tom Longboat. T1111 > develops sleeping sickness over- night. Mauriello will need some- thing more than an unusual punch to go anywhere near stopping him tonight. _ It O O Coming on top of the recent Bos- ton Red Sox pennant clinching win in the American league Tom Yawkey who has spent millions to bring Boston an American Lea- gue pennant had this to say of "Having a perfect manager did the trick. I always said Joe Cronin was the best manager around and now I'm convinced. He's the best ‘in the business, the best now and the best there even- W25.” ed managed Washington to their American League pennant before being traded to Boston by Clark Griffiths. Always it has seemed to us. particularly in the days when they had Grove-to name one outstanding pitcher-op that outstanding corps of pitcliers- O'Rourke m4 0th" champions of that Cronin seemed to be (logged the (my, p, J, Mlllqueen was ‘vlth ill-luck hut this year he has l-hlne hos; ll, lhe “eh-lam Hotel finally comr- through, when Town“ was the theme; Bob 4- 0 1- + Falconer, champion cyclist, held Going on says Joe Cronin: I lung-l h; hls gpadlllg House on the had the men who save me the Canadian Wheelmefis Association. players and he did not hesitate mnversaflon gt the old Queen's a minute in QIWNR credit to his Hole] always dflflgd i0 lwfseg and entire team. That is the kind of n hockey because Winn-eff. and man Joe Cronin ls. He. himself. malhlon were (hm-eye jaunt to has had his ups and downs hut the Empress Hotel to see the has always taken the bitter with Dlgggile glam; was necessary for the sweet and to-dav he is nrepar- Qlltgrlg Hockey Association mat- ing to meet the winner of ‘he red gel-g; the old B05511] House was hot battle between Brooklyn always good for lacrosse. then over Dodners and th- st. Louis Car- to Scholes Hotel to izevuie view- dinals in the National League. point f Champin Jack and Ciliam- p-llm [nu-by which time your newspaper had already 80M 1° press. , That was the daily ‘£0111 d0 plaisir" of a ‘Ibronto snort-l W111i»- el- 0a yesteryear. It was the abort era when the Toronto baseball team paraded downtown streets M011 1101'“- drawn stages to advertise the Mg game at Diamond Pl 111- varlabi y Tr Hotel. e l ugly-acmed Scholes - it might Baseball's Big Six ‘Three leaders in G each league. lélayler. Club AB B. H I Pct. u al, be Lou or 1pm or Jack-arrived Cardinals .... .. 144 M6 116 312.868 h; the 01¢ Union Station to be Vernon. . hauled by willing hands while Senators .1850 81101 J06 perched on a hook-and-lad-der William Weston. the destination beins Red Box ...... 143 4O 140 170 .348 Bcholee Hotel for acclaim by 111i!!- Bopp, or, oivb officials and countless Braves ........ .. 121418 12143 .342 admirers —- with business ex- Per coptionlliy good. forswth- ky Bed Box .... .. 14s m 11s zoo aae rt was the-period 0i bike we Mire tests from Toronto Olly Bill 1° climb 101 m 70111.8’! Hamilton City Ball and of wo- Bunl. batted tn-Jhttoiial nu- noes w You“ men's goo: ltsunitor. Cardinals m Street roi- a -n miles from Queen Aaiori been Greenberg Catches Up To Ted Williams In Home Run Derby ‘approach ed by a clnnatl in check as the Braves play g5 a lullql-own woman l“, r-ame from behind to take tho stead o; a; l; you; g-hl lead in the fourth and coast After belng Shaw-h the ml“- home. ments of the some by a ioupic |of sports writers who weren't so ,hot at it themselves, Babe had a 14G for the homecoming nine iii. her first round. an amazing per- formance. She lczrned so rapidly a she abandoned her mrear as female pitcher for the House 0,1 David base-ball team to tour the country with Gene Sarazen playing exhibitions "antler the sponsorship .if a sporting goods concern. Later, she toured with Joyce Wethered, the Engiiszi star. -_Indian Land, stablemate of En- sign Hanover and tomorrow's Little Brown Jug, took care of the pacing feature at the second day of the grand circuit meeting today. juries, Jimmy Wingfield brought the speedy son of Scotland from Mrs. James B. Johnson's Castletori Farms of Lexington, Ky, home in straight heats. 1-2, Indian Land came from last place in the field of over Jack Mills, with Hi third. The second mile, stepped in DMAWARE‘ o" sepL n (AP) cheekbone and a bloody nose. HI was cool throughout, never ap- pearing to be stunned by any o! Lesnevich’s punches. Woodcock lost to '.l."ami Maur- iello in New York earlier thil year. Mauriello meets world cham- pion Joe Louis in New York to- morrow. Woodcock had built up a com- fortable point lead by the time the eighth round started. Leane- vich had to battle most of the way with only one serviceable eye after his left, which caused him trouble in the Mills fight. puffed and swelled in the second round. a favorite in With Sep Palin sidelined by in- In the first heat, paced in 2:05 six to win Duke Naturally, both Gene and Miss 2:06 1-4, saw Indian Land stave when the‘ fight Ended the By! By The Canadian Press lwethered worked with her on off every challenge by Gene W115 B10594 001111118191)’- Hank Greenberg, overtaking Ted her game and her 1Kt'l.li_1I‘0\'6m€'i1§FlBg§'S Chief Direct. Betty Black- A sellout crowd of 10.700 D1114 Williams in the American League was rapid. 5mm was mil-CL a total of £43350 ($175,000) t0 1101118 r1111 derby. 610111-81 hi8 3331 It wasn't ‘(mg before she had Nominations were listed today We 111E battle- of the season in the first whipped a.l1 of the outstanding for the inaugural presentation of Wood-cock. in hammering down yfisiefdfll’ 11s Detroit ‘Tigers d6- woinen professional golfers. l-Iow- tomorrow's Little Brown Jug. the NEW Jersey lflvldef- 511017794 featcd Washington Senators 6-4 in the only scheduled game. Greenibe-rg thus pulled even with iihe tall Boston siuigger in tihe SE8.- s0n's four-bugger totals. It was the 300th home run of Greenbeigs major league career. By driving in four runs yesterday he boosted his seasons R. B. I. total to 114. Just five beihlnd Williams who also leads the league in that department. The Tigers scored five runs in the first two innings on five hits. three of them for extra bases, and‘ chased Marine Pieretti in the second inn- ing. Emil (Dutch) Leonard pitched ever, about that time romance en- tered her life tar-d she married George Zaharins, the \\'€ll-l(.i‘lC\\Il wrestler and quit the prcfe-sloii- al hanks. She applied to the LTSGA for reinstatement as a?» amateur and after serving the required period of probation it was grant- ed her. During my tin.e I have seen and played with almost all if the great women golfers. bit none with the power of Mrs. Zaharies She's s. wonderful player and she will probably be the favorite at Tulsa. I - ‘ fvfldlfl" ' _hl h l h h lll ll-l t Baibe $110194 he!‘ °“-5~ = Jack Mi-ils (Welch) . This ininiésmiyht {The igiliskiiiifii "W11 <11 the W" who‘ 5'1" 1"" chm Direct (Thom-s) overcome the lead. ‘mmted m‘ ‘hfiwilmms “Fm” Hi Duke (Severens) at George billy-S All tmencm‘ Betty Blackstone an Tournament in Chicago with a score of 310, defeating a. field which included two former v.0- men's champions, Patty Berg and Terry is ~. - , r Betty Jameisorir ‘who 121178 now “m, Mmme (Taylor) l Syflglrfkeflei Igllsgfliils M“ again and competing as poesson. s v Poplllp Ruby (Weich) 2 X .ma_or league ‘ODJWL so Louise snuggs of Lgédahsprais’ Brewster (B Perry) . d fegf 2% aft-erg» ‘ Ga. recent winner e - Ladda S t, (C ) v 3 u , ~ , . . - men's Western Amateur Cham- Frlfim “Enppegreyand lowland to Eigeigeaikrlp hiésesadanvlggltléiolifié; In Returning pionshlp at Cleveland, Ohio will probably be the chief onsmcle iii Bllbgfg path‘ to ‘lie championship, but lhel-e are others. Miss Mary pacers paying off $35,358. By post position, the nine horses and driv- GFS BIB: (no driver); driver); Indian Hall, honey; Linda's Boy, Henry Thom- as; Honest Truth (no driver) But- ternut King, Bob Piaxico; Ensign Hanover, Sep Palin, and Desota Hanover (no driver). Indian Land (Wingfield) Dale also started. Scott also started. considerably more punching pow- er and boxing skill than he D10- duced in winning a l2-rourid de-' cision over Freddie lVlills in the same ring last June. McCarthy lias Eyes 0n Another Job BUFFALO. N. Y». seat. 17-01?) .409 McCarthy, who retired to his farm last summer because of failing health after gfeaiigyétiléglal; riichest race for three-year-old I-Iis Lady, Joe Hylan; Royal Chief Quick Trick (no Jake Mn.- The results: Pace Non-Winners of $4,000 1946 Purse $1,000 Times: 2.05 1-2. 2:06 1-4. 2A Class Ohio Owned Trot (1st Division) Purse $750 I've made no connections for next year and haven't tried to 1118K! any" Times 2:11 1-4, 2:13 1-2. 24 Class Ohio Owned Trot .",’,'E‘“P*“,§l,. Tflmjvl ST; 1:35‘ ‘McMillin of ore-n Bay Wisc for wllsm-‘fld 1Q“"“:%“) lam" $75“, 1 According to reports, some fil- A l “ ism l emp 5 ‘ h dfeaied sane i-i “W83 ‘l’ er” " ready confirmed the Yankees. Sl- Terry. who menace-d New York ‘“'““‘°°' w ° ° 1 Elaine (Egan) _. . . .. .2 3 . B y h..,_,,,,,,g,, phat", =0 as emu»- s-h tr 'i'“i"i‘.'.“'li..i‘.'.?3f'.i."2..§il.° Prop-c»- ei-k» ~82 h.".':....s""r....'..., today he was "definitely lnterest- t en °5 7 l “on! n‘, Peacemaker (Carey) .... 6 4 Senators and Detroit 1-38.15 a" cd‘ in returning to baseball-thisTN°1'r1:é1£\ BBQ-i; ‘fig? 3f For." Flying Eagle and Hanett also m the market for new waders l“ time as general manager of theilmfd Ore or Dafothy Gummy-e started. 1947 NntE-onal League's Cincinnati Reds.‘ ‘Lghnadélphu Time 2:10. 2:10 3-4. "There are a couple of pretty Terry, one of the greatest first- Qt ‘ Classified Trot Purse $1,000 ma. my lllhgarihy basemen of all-time, told The Associated Press that he had lleféfllmw ZEALAND “OAS-rs spokesman or ING FIGHTER Cincinnati interests who were try- PROM“ . ing to buy the Reds. _ ml D _ z" s t, is -‘ The spokesman was identified Bétuglumlg" fl’... Ngqc/mzflilland by Terry as a Harry Hartman, a, welterwelghl boxing chamilififli, e handle the Reds but on my o like Miss Key (Cameron) What A Scott (Vineyard) Lc-rd Clive (E. Smith) Earl's Spencer Volo (Fitzpat- zilsn started. i0 Ehgllsh plcmoier, Jnck Solomons, ‘ - good jobs in said. “But s0 iai I've no‘. been appmhchcli 1 think iliere lite two reasons why. The first is the own- ers don't know iviiether I'm really well again. That they'll see at the world series. "The other is they don't MOW whcihcr I intend to romziwti 11$ 1h! chief advcsor to the Ynnkr-r- man- 2 l . i 2 5 8 rick) . . . . 3 4 Ford Spencer and Nathalie Vol Times 2308. 2108, 2311 1-4. “Tl . d rl k. B lilsl chnm- _ terms-that I would become gen-‘gtlogfzllgl-Etlio ériiish Empire wel- l. Weiliwrwelifihl cxggngilonleave for agsfhat they'll find out if they er“ "mm?" “m m“ °f the Redslterweight title. is considered in e w D y offer me a ion. But I'm 1111i 8°‘ but of the club's affiliated teams-"INW Zgalflfld the most promising He declined to name the Cin- boxer ll-le Dgmlnlgn has produc- cinnatl interests trying to piir-ed m recent yg-grs. chase the National League team. , m; has had comparatively few my‘? ‘bouts. but has won most of (hem f i ily. Boxing judges think he - u for the original Johnniele" l a d left Scholes (1046-1818), mention al-‘hu ‘h’ m“ 1°“ e“ an a lab to the body ever seen in New Zealand rins- HE W" a qjgclglgll- this year over Vic Pat- most any sport and he was it. with a. cap = His achievements: England for the title 112311 B11011! |to c to build five or six pitches for use cf local players, as a mernoriial t0 players who died in the First and m; l9 jump at the first offer. There are too many ihiniis to con- sider. I'm still on the Yankee pay- roll. but I was never meant to sit qulgfly 0g] .1 farm \\'ll"'i fir" new season opens." "1! 1 get the right kind ofdpro- position with the right kin d contract with the right owner- yes." he end of the year, and proposes visit America on his way back o New Zealand. tawucasraa. cram-Tn --Gioil- ester Rllby Football Club #41115 world's amateur snowshoe reoord- wk Australian llqhhwelxhl M4 Second Great Wars. holder 40 years: ‘ a r ' ' North American “ ‘mhlnj rowing crow: clmmpiOn boxcn: cbsarmion IOO-yard M1111": Can-i adian 10-pin champion i.n 1880;; manner of the draninion Ontario~ L-aaosse Club; dmnrioloa weight-| thrower, etc.. etc. , Iltollovzina in his footsteps werei two sons: Lou F. Schoies (i880- 1042) and John L. Bubbles. who bu jugt [old the family llotel. Lou’; rowing titles included the Oamdian iutn o)‘ 1-1111 M11101 scuilipehohonorai. this} U. S. jumr ossocn n an se or chemo member of the ohm- riionoliio double-l. and the Diamond Sculls at Hsnley-on-‘Ibsmel tn 1904. The honors 01f John. Jr» 111-‘ eluded: undefeated world feather- Cenadisn feath- w can : wiiin u, Red Street wihen naumiy mart-skirts lox 110. . m were. barred. Who sci? ‘ta: flovno Roma. vnant some fun beck n “elem c - ‘Notional lane: Hire, Giants erweight and lightweight American. League: Oreenberit. mm. and Williams. lied s» as. ntmosm obcunmn ~ burgh in 190i. a1; Arbociittlltbsrhcsbssaknowa g as as»: um u m- a wlgf‘ nun flI-savn " "' u“ '5' PII ‘I'll! B A entered $169M: been do- "a; ‘Ahgpouqhpp WDIfiyIflIlI-Ilfi sums leans ~ - u I rsfloshsatlsr external In! M» . . boxin| titles in 1897-99 and the e uival- ant-weight title in ani-ihm- 1M the American titles of the class at New York in 1910, and at Pitta- The Bcholes added mud-l “Iggy w the athletic honor roll-s of Canada. WEDDING FOOTBALL MEKENI. Sierra Leone — (GP)- Celetirations at a recent wedding in- eluded a novel form of entertain- ment. Tigaguests watched n. football {in n "the Bride's Bide" rid the "B I160 degroonrs Side." The ‘s lids wen, 1-0 PIPE TOBACCO Tiy ROSEBUD and see for yourself how if DOES deliver satisfaction