.131 a It's Good To Be 0n A Winner When It Comes To The Best in Chewing Tobacco You Can't Beet Hickey & Nicholson’: Black Twist Record Entry List For Women’s Golf Tourney Baseball's Big Six (By The Associated Press) Leading batsmcii (three leaders in each league); ' VANCOUVER, Aug. 1B—(CP— The entry for the Canldill X men's open golf tournament, which begins Monday, is a record 200 players, officials of the Canadian Ladies Golf Union said today. Robinson G AB R l-l Pct. The cream of North American Dodgers 113 4-11 93 161.365 women golfers will tee off Mon- Williams. day over the Capilano Golf Course Red Sox . 116 422116150356 here for the Duchess of Con- Kell. Tigci-sm. 104 414 7B 145 .350 naught Trophy, emblematic of the Dillinger, women's championship. Browns .. 98 38B 54131 .339 Tomorrow morning 134 women Slaughter, compete in the Canadian closed Cardinals 113 437 83 141 .323 championship-restricted to play- ers not on inter-provincial golf teams. Defending champion Grace Len- l-lome Runs: ekmerican, Steph- ens, Red Sox 31; National: Kiner, l, _ Pirates 32. ‘f Runs Batled ln: American, Ste- czyk, of Newington, Conn., is phens, Red Snx 13; National, Rob- rated top threat for the open inson, Dodgers 96. title. Free For All Trot Highlights Final Day Of Great ,Race Meet The Prco For All Trot with five evenly matched horses scheduled ‘In come to the wire headlines this afternoon's ncing program st Can- ada's Finest Track and the event, held over until the final day should Ht in nicely with what has been an outstanding racing pro- gram. Nell Kalmuck, Wait N'See, Evs Worthy, Mariorie Hanover and Leo Brewer are time-tested and proven trottcrs; that they will make g, mighty race of it goes without saying and before the event is fin- ished fans will have witnessed one of the most stirring duels of the entire week's program. Then there is the first division of tho 2.28 Trot with six more evenly ' snatched trotters coming to the wire and as is the caso in the Free J~ For All event, anything can happen before the final mile has been i ll. "cfhnd don't lose sight oi the two classified trot and pace dash events. ‘ Ilse two classes will go three miles ouch, with positions being drawn r - for each mile, and once again upsets are very apt to he numerous duo ‘ to the manner in which the entries in both classes have been banded i ti . ".11: meeting concludes in the evening with the staging of the three evenly-matched classes postponed from Thursday evening. All three are evenly matched and should prove a fitting climax to this year's Old Home Week racing program. Hero is how they will go away. afternoon and nlrhfl AFTERNOON musician rror s. mo: - a DASHES --szoo.oo ran DA§H LBJ-SHIRLEY H. TEMPLE, owned by Col. J.P. Hooper, driven by W. Crsi Inl-L-JENNTE l-l-Ii-LADY WORTHY 2nd. owned and H-I-HILDA MAC. owned by C. Green, FB-UFMARGUERTIE ROSE. owned by 6- Sohunun. C-bb-ALBOLOMA. owned and driven by B. '1‘. Ramsay. I-HPSPEEDWELL GUY. owned by M. Bell. driven by l. Moreside. musician rnor a. PACE - a DASHES - $200.00 PER DASH - I.- I- L-ELSIE B... owned by ‘LB. Trachey, driven by L. O'Hara. l- l- IPDUKE 0F HYLAND, owned and driven by 1LT. Bamsay. 8- O- L-O. K. VOLO. owned by L. Bsrrieau, driven by H. Harrison. 4- I-lik-RANDOM HARVEST. owned by J. Rankine. driven by L. Ttunkino. l-ID- t-BARON, owned and drivus by Col. D. A. Maclinnou. l- 1- 6.—BONNiE'S BOY. owned by Miss Hsrkncss. driven by L. O'Hara. I- 8- l-Sllt FRANCIS DRAKE, owned by o. MsoDougsii, driven by A. E. Phillips. ' l- d- ‘L-QUAKEIVS BOY. owned by Geo. Kuhn. driven by I. Conroy. l- 2- L-TOGO BARS. owned by Bert Doyle, driven by G. Lewis. 10- 7- d-GERTTE REAMORE, owned by J. MscKinnon, driven by N. Chalsson. FREE FOR ALL TROT -- PURSE $900.00 (SPONSORED BY MOOBI l MoLIOD LTTLT I L-MABJOBIE HANOVER, owned by I‘. 0. Costes. driven by I. Campbell. h-EVA WORTHY. owned by Dr. P. McIntyre. driven by G. McIntyre t-WAIT N'SEE, owned by George Gregory, driven by L. 0'Mesra. L-NELL KALMUCK. owned and driven by Willard Kelly. h-LIJE BREWER, owned and driven by Emmett Bernard. NET DTWSDN 218 TROT — PURSE $500 L-SENATOB. CBAIGMYLI, owned and driven by H. '1'. ltamssy. L-LOUISE PROTESTOR. owned and driven by Clayton Spence. l-GUY AUBREY, owned by Fred Reeves. L-FEATHER DUSTER, owned by L. Johnston, driven by C. Willis. l-REUBEN LEE. owned and driven by E. A. Berra"! Q-DTCK BUDLONG, owned by D. M. McAulay. ________.______ EVENING SECOND DIVISION 2.26 PACE — PURSE $500M L-MAYME AXWORTITY. owned by Dorothy Fowler, driven by G. Lewis. 8- JOEY lIAR-VIJSTER. owned by ll. O'Brien, driven by C. O'Brien. l-NILL COCHATODALE, owned and driven by C. I‘. Willis. t-MABPS DELIGHT, owned by W. Draught, driven by W. Lewis. la-LII-i BUDLONG, owned by Charles Sutherland, driven by B. Mae- g. KALMTICK. owned and driven by L. T. Letoher. driven by C. F. Willis. driven by S. Bernard. Brookins, driven by C. Donald. G-ABEGWEIT MTLADY. owned and driven by C. Smith. Hunter liver FIRST DIVISION 2.20 PACE — PURSE $7N.00 L-DIOK BUDLONG. owned by D. M. illoAuisy. driven by Daniels. lv-BUSTEB (2.. owned by Dr. J. A. Donahue, driven by L O'Brien. le-QUICK LICK. owned by I. Harknom, driven by L. O'Hara. 64-!!! IUDLONG, owned by W. llennessey, driven by J. Hennessey. l-A. G. SCOTT‘. owned by It. Letober. driven by G. Lewis. Ge-BILLY CONN, owned and driven by l. Iewness. it-ASSIFIBD PACE - 3 DMHES- — $200.00 til DASli g muons. owned by Goodwill sorta. driven by r. a ' .dwlllilyl.lohl omssyuoiuc. 7 so: "' ewuslzlltlrewndrivnbyllerset ‘Isldllrivtag In view of the fact that this is a column that. is devoted entirely to sport. we feel that it would be fitting at this time to recount a recent article writen by Oscar Fraley which appeared in the Ot- tswa Journal on August 15th.. which pays tribule to one of the greatest sportsmen of all time in the person of Babe Ruth who died just one year ‘ago on August 16th. . e ‘The Babe will have been gorse one year ago tomorrow and, while most baseball men feel that soon- er or later someone will surpass his ‘big 60', the world knows that rec- ords aren't needed to remember George Herman Ruth. It has been 22 years since the Bambino smash- ed his record 60 home runs. That's a tremendous span of time in a game where records are made to be broken—a.s this greatest of them all surely will be some day. o "And, while the odds are against it, they may even wipe his name completely from the record books on some future date. It will take a lot of doing against his total of 714 homers; his winning the longest game 1n series pitching history, 14 innings on the hill, and his series mark of 29 consecutive shutout inn- ings, among others. But they'll never erase the glowing memory of the Babe. see "For here was a man marked for greatness, an intimate idolatry which scorned to make him a mem- ber cf cverybodyts family. It was a magnetism outlasting time which is impossible to explain. Even the Babe felt it, and couldn't puc a [finger on it. ‘Sure everybody knows me.’ he qul-pped one day. ‘Why not, with the mush I've got.’ . t e o "But one thing 1s certain, he had a. grip on the national imagination —even the international feelings- such as no athlete ever had. or probably ever will have again. Dur- ing his last illness. just. a year ago. as letters poured in from kids who never had seen him. a. doctor tried to explain it. ‘Why? Because of what he stands for. A kid from any fork of the creek knows he can make the grade if he's got what it takes. You can't buy it. You can't pay someone to do it for you. It's just that the kids are particp- lar about their heroes‘ s o s "So it was that s. kid from a Baltimore industrial school left be- hind a legend. o moral hcline run for others who started to the plate with two strikes. already on them. "And when he left, a year ego to- morrow (A-ug. 16), he had had just about everything he wanted except one. That one unrealized desire was to manage the Yankees, the team he had made. The club will dedicate a plaza. to him tomorrow. just outside the towering white walls. and you feel almost as if it is l. salve to the Club's conscience. For actually the Babe needs no monuments. s “He has them 1n the hearts and the minds wherever he played. Even outside the big leagues. for the Balbo barnstonned all over, and there are markers in Georgia oow pastures and in Kansas fields. And in even in those romotp plmoes old timers will came out and 17°11"- and say to strangers: ‘Soo way over there. over the top 0f that born? That's where I saw Bs-be Ruth hit s. horde run: “As far as the Yankees are eon- cerned. the recognition comes a bit late. As for the Babs. the kids don't need anything to r '" him 111-001. the srsyim kldl 0! yesterday, the apple-checked kids of today, or those of tomorrow.’ Double Program i9 ilorses lost ln Race Track Fire BATON, N. M., Aug. 1B-(AP)— A fire swept three barns st iifesa Park racetrack on the edge of Baton early today. Nineteen thoroughbred horses burned to death, Damages were placed from $00,000 to $135,000. Fire Chief W. l’). Moore said I lucky change in the wind and nc- tion of firemen, jockeys andtrain- ers with garden hoses saved the rest of the $200,000 Pllfli- ‘ Only s trickle of water was sv- silable from the two-inch lino to the park. Heaviest single loss was the stud, LuBre. Howard Lackey of Raton bought the stallion recently from C. S. Howard for 010.000. ___________ DIDN'T GIT AWAY , 3.0. -— (G) — The biggest fish ever taken from ldsra Lake has been cailht by AJ. Bernie of Revelstoks. Bis prise was a BO-pound rainbow trout. The province's rainbow rec- ord is still s lit-pound monster’ osvlht some years ego. a THE GUARDIAN, Cl-TARLOTTET OWN Open Season Dates For Ducks, Geese Revealed Oi iiarness Racing Today Weather conditions forced postponement of the Old Home Week racing program scheduled for last night and officials-of the Exhibition Association on- nounced that the three classes scheduled to start would take place this evening. The original afternoon pro- grom, headlined by the Free For A-Ii Trot will be raced as sched- uled this afternoon with the first heat being culled at 2 o'clock shorp. Lund Wins liver Bridgewater Fighter Apllearirig on one of the pre- liminary bouts of a boxing card staged at Bridgewaier, N. S., on Wednesday night, Bud Lund, isl- and featherweight champion scor- ed a unanimous four-round decis- ion over Gerald McEachern of Bridgewater. One other local fighter, welter- weight Austin Squarebriggs, also appeared on the card. but lost a split decision to Al Batten, The bout marked the first vic- fory for a Charlottetown fighter in a number of appearances there by local fighters over the past few months, and according to reports, Lund put on a splendid showing and has been asked to return there in two weeks’ time when he will meet Billy Snowball in an exhibition scrap. Baseball Results NATIONAL Philadelphia 000 105 500-4 11 1 Brooklyn 001 010 0121-6 11 1 ' Borowy. Konstanly and Somlniuk; Barney, Erskine. Bantu, Palica, Minner and Edwards. Ghlcago 000 000 000-0 3 1 Pittsburgh 100 000 l0x——2 9 0 Lads. Mimcrtef and Owen; Walsh and McCullough. New York 001 002 0B0- 6 12 1 Boston 023 221 00x-10 l2 0 Jansen. l-llgbe, Hansen, Behrman, Jones. Zabala and Westrum; Sain, Voiselle and Saikeld. (Only gavmes scheduled). AMERICAN Washington 000 400 000-4 6 2 New York 000 401' cox-s '1 8 Harris. Haynes and Evans, Early; Byrne, Piilette, Reynolds and Sil- VCTB. Detroit 101 000 000-i 5 0 Chicago 000 000 000—0 6 2 Hutchinson. Trucks and Swift; Pierce Plerettl and Malone, ‘flpton, Wheeler. Cleveland s40 10d 000-14 1B 1 St. Inuh 000 010 soo- 4 ‘l B Lemon and Hogan, Trash; Draws, Winegarner and Inliar. (Only games scheduled.) INTEBNATIONAI First Bnltdnwfl 010 010 1-4 11 ‘i film-onto 000 001 4-6 12 2 Moldovan, Widmar and Muncuso; Judd and Hey-man, Wagner. Second Baltimore 012 012 011-8 14 2 Toronto 000 000 188-1 10 l Blchsil and Holton; Wright, Poesehl, Porto, Smith and Wagner. Syracuse 001 000 000-i ‘l 0 Montrul 000 000 000-O I 1 Perkowski and Incnanno; Mc- Glothln and Lembo. Jersey City 010 000 000-d 1 I Rochester 004 000 011-6 i0 1 Hardy and Ndble; Schultz and Marshall. ‘ Newark 000 001 1B0 0-4 11 2 Buffalo 004 000 000 1-6 ‘T 4 Harriet, Dodson, Woop and Taborn; Cerrssquel, Wade, Sliver- msn (41. Hsusmsnri (B) and War- 1'01]. ll. B. Tennis In Semi-Finals FREDERICTON, Aug. 15-(0?) —-,An ail-Fredericton final for the Junior men's singles crown was assured today when Burt Simpson and Jim Crockett won their semi- finals in the New Brunswick ten- nis tournament. Simpson defeated Daiisrd 'Le- Bianc, Moncton, 6-1, $2 while Crockett eliminated Stu Dyson, Fredericton, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. Rein held the nurnbcr of matches down to 12. The only other semi-final scheduled today was washed out. C. Machltlian, Montreal, advan- ced in the senior men's singles QTTAWA. AUR- 18 — (GP) —I.n the government today told hunt. m-s of ducks and geese just what they may and may not do tihls autumn. 1n an B.000-'word document, the Resources Department outlined regulations and seasons for hunt- ing migratory birds in the various provinces of Canada. In general, the regulations are much the same as they were last year, with a few changes in the open-season dates. For the first time in history, the regulations extend to Labra- dor and Newfoundland, which be- came part of Canada last March 3-1 Them will be an open season for ducks and geese in the Avalon and Burin peninsuias of New- foundland mm Oct. 1 to Oct. 311. On the rest of the island the sea.- son will be from Sept. 15 to Oct. 31 The bag limit for the island will be seven ducks and five geese for any one day. For the season it; will be 150 ducks. exclusive of mergansers, and x geese, other than brunt. 1n Labrador, the season for ducks and geese will extend from Sept. 1 to Oct. 31. There the bag limitwwill be 25 ducks and five geese in any one d-ay. The sea- son's limit will be the same as that for the island. 1n This Province 1n Prince Edward Island. the season for duels, other than wood ducks, will run from Oct. 1 to Nov. 24. The season for geese other than brunt will run from Oct. 20 to Dec. 5, while the brant sea- son will be from Nov. 1 to Nov. 30. The bag limit will be seven dLTCks and five geese for one day, or 100 ducks and 25 geese for the season. The seasons vary for various parts of Nova Scotla. except Tor brant which may be shot. through- out the province from Nov. 1 to Nov. 30. The season for ducks, other than wood ducks, will be from Oct. 1 to Nov. 24, in Invcrness, Victoria, Cape Breton, Richmond, G-uysborough and Cumberland counties; Oct. 15 to Dec. 8 in Am- tigonish, Plctou, Colchester, Hants, Kings, Annapolis and Diz- by counties; Nov. l5 to Jan. 8 in Halifax, Lunenburg. Queens, Shel- burne, and Yarrnouth counties. For geese other than brant, the season run; from Nov. 15 to Jan. 8 in Queens and shelburue coun- ties. In the rest of the province it will be from Nov. 1 to Doc. 35- The bag limits will be seven ducks and five geese in any m? day and 100 ducks and 25 S0986 for the season. In New Brunswick the open season for brunt will be from Oct. 15 to Nov. 14. The sec.- son varies for ducks and geese 100' various parts of the piravince. In the southeastern part of the province, the season will run from Nov. 21 to Jan. 14 for both ducks and geese. On the islands of the Grand Manon group the season will run from Dec. 5 to Jan. 2a. In the remainder of the province it will be from Oct. 1 to ‘Nov. 24. The bag limits will be '1 ducks and five geese in any one day and ion ducks and 2s seese durinl the season. iiow They Stand (Canadian Prose National Losguo st. Louis ____.._.... so 42 .622 Brooklyn ......_....... 68 43 .613 New York _.__..... 5'! 54 .514 Boston .............. .. 5'! 55 .509 Philadelphia 5'7 57 .500 59 .468 47 .407 Chicago '72 .374 Friday games: Brooklyn at Bos- ton; New York st Philadelphia: Si. Louis st Pittsburgh; Chicago at Cincinnati; all night. American League New York .. Ti 41 .639 Boston 68 4S ‘.596 Cleveland ............ 67 47 .588 Philadelphia ....-._. 62 52 .544 Detroit . ............ 63 53 .543 Chicago s..._.. 49 65 .430 Washington .._.... 3B 13 .342 St. Louis ....-.......... 3'! 7S .82 Friday Games: Boston at Wash- ingt , Philadelphia st New York; Cleveland at Chicago; St. Louis (2); sii night. International League Buffalo .... .74 52 .587 Rochester ....... '13 55 .510 Jersey City ....._.. 68 54 .56‘! Toronto .. Q 56 I52 Montreal U7 H .575 Syracuse 54 U .443 Baltimore ..-_.._- 47 76 .382 Newark .. 42 ‘f5 .30 Irt games: Syracuse st Mon- treal: eitimors at Toronto: New- ark at Buffalo (I): Jersey City st by defeating .1. Streeter, lethally 0-8. $2. - Rochester: all night. . wordy, complicated legal language, ' AUGUST 19. 1949 Sport Echoes From Prince Bounty Those who see the second B!!!" of the semi-final series in the Prince Edward Island Taurus bo- tween the R.C.A.F. Ail-Stars and the Charlottetown Abegwelu will probably witness as a. side-silo! to the main attraction the cui- aticn of one of the tightest races for batting leadership seen on the Island for some time. The two contestants nre Maurice Goodwin and Glen Matheson of the Abeg- weiiis. One more time at but for Goodwin without a hit would put them into a tie. That's how close it is. And there is still s. possibility that Verne Larter, the Charlotte- town catcher. may sneak under the wire ahead of both. The unex- pected can happen just as in a horse race. The Curran d: Briggs baseball diamond is now equipped with s sound system and the names of the players, the number of balls and strikes on the batter, and oth- er particulars are given over the sound system as the game pro- grosses. Fans say 1t makes the game more interesting for them. O O 0 Frankie Oatway who is waiting for a call to the Navy has handed m his uniform and is all throuBh with the Curran dz Brigg-s club. Frankie started off slowly with the old hickory this season but kept getting better as the season went along and was leading in the im- portant department of “runs bat- ted in" when he retired. Since then Mathescn of Charlottetown has passed him in that department and now leads the list. Matheson ha-s 11 R-Bfs to Oatway's 10. Frankie will be missed in sports circles when he dons the bell- bottom trousers and leaves Sum- merside for parts unknown. He is a lop-notch baseball and hockey player. Ho won the scoring race in the Charlottetown City League last winter. We wish him the best of luck in his new sphere of action. No doubt he will make o. name for himself in sports in the Navy. I I O The Prince County baseball league is starting its play-offs this coming Sunday. Due to the fact that college boys will be leaving their respective teams in Septem- ber, the league heads have decid- ed to have sudden death games in the quarter and semi-finals and s. best two-cut-of-three series only in the finals. Kenslngton who has re- mained idle during the regular season will enter the play-downs with a sudden-death game with the Kinkora team at Klnkora. Kenslngwn has s lot of untried players who have seen little no- tion in organized ball, but under the capable tutelage of Irvin Jay they have been coming along fast and might spring an upset at Kin- kora to get into the Prince County League semi-finals. O C I We think it is too bad the Cur- ran do Briggs farm club hadn't en- tercd this league as they have a smart team and would have pro- vided plenty of opposition for the other members of the league. They may still challenge the winners for the "B" championship of Prince County and 1f they do we wouldn't be surprised 1i they gave a good account of themselves. I O I We hope the juniors and inter- medtstes on Prince Edward 1s- lsnd. (particularly the juniors) will follow the example of the Prince County League and the Halifax and District League and get their playoffs over before Col- lege boys are forced to desert their teams for the college campus. There is not much honor in de- feating s team that has been crippled because its players have been forced to leave the club to pursue their scholastic careers. O O I We received a letter recently from Paul Kinch. Secretary of the Prince County Baseball League. asking us 1f we could help with s problem that had come up in their league. Dewey Doyle, the short- stop on the Tignlsh team, were the type of mitt they cs.li s "claw" in o game against Wellington and there was quite s dispute about regretted that we couldn't help because the rule book seems s bit what the currenL usage was eon- vou like to cull it that). Apparent- ly the teams have settled their been announced, but we tbmIht we'd give the problem s little pubiiclt and lee if anybody comes up with the right answer. A show of hands, please. Tic Lats To iilsssliy FOI CALI - ONI DAYTON bacon slicer, one showcase equip- pedkwith lights. V. S. Dennis‘, or . -— LOST — A’! IXIIIITION lrcundl. Wednesday night, a please phone Mil-L. WA m, Al. ply Russ Hotel. the legality of such an action. w. . vague about it and we didn't snow - coming such s mitt (or glove if . dispute as the play-off series have - lady's gold wrist watch. Iinder Seward. - Scott Spencer Wins Featured Free - Fglj - All Shows Great Pacing i’ Form Over Heavy Track In Last Two Miles Btorln g a gallant comeback in the last two miles ove; n, "h, soaked track after yielding to the assault of speed thrown st him i. tho first heat. Scott Spencer, Barry Hitachi fast pacing hnrgg gm,- Sydney yesterday continued his successes over Maritime tracks by Home Week racing program. the $1800.00 Free For All Pace, feature event of the o“ in a meeting crammed with thrills in each and every mile. Scott did it the hard way. In the first mile as the field oi seven bony-g“. hit for the first turn at a two-minute shot ho was forced to take h"; from the smooth-going Vella La Voila. Settling in positions after u" first quarter they raced to the three-quarters polo and hero an extrq, thrill was added as Gay Law. driven by Angie Alien. came from no. where to pace to the front and as tho Scott horse faded. fended on Veils La Vella’s closing rush in the stretch to win the heat. Gay L", paid $49.60 on the psri-mutuois in his upset win. Thrills Aplenty But the thrills weren't over by any means; in fact they were just getting underway. Vella Ls Vella again went to the front the rec- ond mile and after beating of! challenges by Carl Frisco and Anti-Aircraft, still held the lead at the seven-eighths pole. The fast moving field were closely bunched as they hit into _the stretch and what s battle it was. They. really cut loose nearing payoff dirt and momentarily it looked as if Vella had the heat but Scott Spencer, going like lightning away on the outside, came the last few yards tremend- ously fast to take the mile. For the entire half of the final mile Veils Ls Veils and Scott Spencer waged a tremendous, dramatic duel as they raced to- gether neck and neck: at the half Vella took back a little; at the three quarters the trailers led by Gay Law started to move at s fast clip and it was another sensation- al stretch duel but again it was Scott Spencer by a length, with Anti-Aircraft, in contention every heat, showing a flash cf his old- time power by winding up in sec- ond place and payi g place ticket holders $12.90 per Ecket. That's s brief story of the event the fans had been waiting for but there were many other thrilling moments all during the afternoon in the other three classes. ,So exciting and tense were the strug- gles that the steady rain failed, to dampen the ardor of the big throng and they stayed all the way to the final minute when Coleen Adam came flashing under the wire in the final mile of the 2.20 pace to pay 0R two dollar ticket holders with $82.20 as a re- sult of her stunning upset vie. tory. There was probably more uncertainty crowded into the aft- ernoorfs racing than has ever been witnessed here previously although the times were neces- sarily slcw due to track condit- ions nevertheless the tense. nerve wrecking struggles more than at- pned for the conditions prevail- ng. , The three class card scheduled for last night was set over for this evening with the scheduled afternoon classes, headed by the Free For All Trot. going on as advertised. and it all should make for a stirring climax to what has been an upset, thrill studded, re- cord breaking week of duels be- tween the cream of the Mari- iimes’ trotters and pscers. Upsets Start Early In the very first class and the very first mile of the 2.28 trot the racegoers got a sample of what was in store for them as Joan- dale. driven by “J1ggy" Arbing, trotted off with the heat over the favored Winnle's Last. nipping Winnie in the isst few yards with Dsn McEiwyn finishing fast to cop third place in another sur- prising action of the heat. Joanclale wasn't equal to the task in the second mile, however. She went away on top to lead the field around to the quarter pole ahead of Winnie‘: Last. but here Dan McElwyn. trotting steadily and smoothly all the way took over to make every post from there on n winning one. As they hit the seven-elghths the leader and I‘. .T. E. had opened up a big gap over the remainder but 1.7.15. couldn't quite make it in the rush to the wire. Dan led nil ‘i? the way in the third and ilh|1 mile to complete his conquest o1 the field of trotterl. At the half. way mark the field had bunched up after lining out the ‘first pan of the mile, but again when pay, of! dirt was neared Dan had 1m, much on the ball, winning by ‘ length from the fast closing 1r .7 E ‘ It was the same sto first division of the Tzslnpatg‘: Back in sixth place at the end of the first mile driver Claude 0'. Brien. driving despite injuries m. celved less than a week sgo, to“ Donald G. R. home in front in r sensational display of lfieed in the second mile and then led all the WHY to win the third heat an; race. Abner Britten Ted the slrhorss field sway the first trip, heavily backed to win. Abner looked u if he would come through ss in still had a nose in front halfway down the stretch but in the ilnsl 19° yards May Josedsle, 00min] out of nowhere moved up on eves terms ten yards from the we. and had a head to the good q she and Abner flashed under it almost like a team. Again Abner Britton went int; an early lead in the middle milq he relinquished it briefiy at lths half to Tiny Budlong but s break by the latter ruined all his chan- ces. On the backstretch the see- ond trip May Josedale made her move to be followed by- the whole field, but as they flashed by ti“ seven-eighth: marker it was Don. aid G. R. who had gone to fronti and he stayed there outpacing llhodola D., Richard Budlong and lviay Josedale in the battle to tbs ine. Driver O'Brien took Donald n» way in front for the final ted and made every post a winning one. The field all held their drives until the three-quarters pole had been passed and from there home it was a bitter, fast moving struggle with the winner 1151181118 0n to his lead and Rhe- dola D., Richard Budlong, May Jcsedale, Abner Britton and Tiny Budlong being packed as thick I sardines a few strides behind the smooth-pacing race winner. 5h? Ann 2nd Is Winner Shy Ann 2nd. showing worlds of pacing ability. came through as expected to win the second division of the 2.20 psco but coa- fained in the expected victory were a great many more racing thrills. The field headed by Chris MCEIv/yn were past the thres- quarters pole in the first mile be- fore Shy Ann could pace to tbs front and in the race to the wire she had enough speed left to off- set the fast closing challenge of Johnny Kalmuck who had 001M from far back to land in the run- ner-up spot. The track was getting very muddy as the field came out for the second mile but it made little difference to Shy Ann 2nd, ‘is the race for the pole Shy Ana took the honors and from there on there was no heading her. Thin time it was Chris McElwyn will moved up fast to challenge the right of the winner to the lead but was forced to drop back b0- YQrc the flying feet of the leader. And the racing thrills witnessed all afternoon continued right lnifl the final mile. Shy Ann, tgoinl IWBY on the outside, never really Chrll got up with the leaders. (Continued on Page '1) SANITWS ntsrnunnnr Six Miles from Charlottetown on the ' St. Peter's’ i-lighwuy . , p II A SIIRI ‘WINIII SANDY‘! is the 150i hi‘ Coed Iosd