» bbies i356 0 "rm: (Jl-IARLUTTETOWN ouauulau pener N. B.- LE. I. Series PAGE SEVEN 1., urr SAVERS m, Cooling and A \ \ I l - r 1 smoke-tired mouths. 5gb PEP-GRIN?‘ WlNT-G-GREEN OL-O-VE LlO-O-RIOE GINNOMON Vi-O-LET 20 Years Ago and» 5., A. A. Stewdrt owner, l ... the 2.17 class at Charlottetown p126 3-4. Cherry Ripe won the u; trot in 2.21 3-4. Baron Cecil, mied by Thomas Munroe, New QIssgOW, won the three-year-old Me in 2.28 3-4. lleo liouck won from Billy Papke h a smelling six-round bout at Philadelphia. At the Canadian amateur cham- uni. ~___i____. lflnnrd’: ll good for Nenrlfls, refreshing to pionshlps at Montreal, D. J. Cable, Montreal A. A. won putting the ld-pulllld shot with 39 feet 6 inches, Ind W. Halpenny, M. A. A. A., of yliarlottetown, the pole vault with if feet, defeating H. S. Babcock, New York, and Alex. Cameron, To- ronto. A. R. Klvlat, Irish-Amer- ican Club, New York, won the mile nlzo 4-5, a. new Canadian rec- Yhicago Cab Leaders BOARD 0F STRATEGY CUBS‘ LEI"! to RIGHT: Coach Charlie 0'1.eary; Manager Charlie Grimm, who is also his team's first baseman and Coach Corrlgan, LOOKINGEM OVER \ direct wire and the big sign board. N. S. GETS HORSE h—-' - nv "rec" FIRST BLOOD \ Si. Stephen Kiwanis are one up‘ Nova Scotia has another valu- ln the N. B.-P. E. I. baseball semi able tmtung stallion added m its finals, Abegweits lost yesterday 8 ‘breedmg were“; with the p“. to 1, but have yet B11 01111031131"? chaseof Spurgeon Gammon, the 0f llfinll the BErIBS-flfld PBYhBPS {well-known New Glasgow horse- winnlng the two province title. éman, of Reamore, 2.13%., which he Their chances, however, seem slim ‘bought, from H. B. Rea, Reamore from the Elli/B. eipevifllly when 0H9 Farm, Valencia, Penn. Reamores looks askance at that 1019-81565 breeding is of the most fashionable score. Nevertheless a night's rest lines, he being sired by the famed and the fact of their playing on Guy Axworthy, 2.08%, sire of four home grounds and in the Presence two-minute trotters and the head of home fans, may have a tendency 'of the greatest family of extreme to help turn the tide tomorrow performers the harness horse breed- and stretch the series to the limit. ing world has ever known, his dam At any rate here's hoping. being Maru (darn of four with re- __ cords better than 2.13) by Peter SIGN BOARD WORKS OUT theGreat, 2.07%, the world's great- est extreme speed sire. His grand- ma was Harvest Queen by Arion, 2.01%, and his third dam was by Expedition, 2.1554,, by Elcct-ioneer. Rcamore is a. bright boy and a stylish horse in harness, being above the average in conformation and bears a close resemblance to his sire. He is eleven years old and got his win race record of 2.13% as a three-year-old over a. half- mlle track. He has not been used The Guardian-Halifax Herald el- ectrical baseball sign board had a “work out" yesterday afternoon and eveningin preparation for the opening World Series game today, and needless to say everything went like clock-work, the various lighting effects being watched and, admired by hundreds. Therefore ‘fans may look forward to seeing PROBABLE L INE UPS (Canadian Pres!) mew YORK, n. Y., sept- 2B- The probable lineups for the open‘ lng game of the World Series at the Yankee Stadium today. Cubs i Catcher . Hartnett Dickey Pitcher Bus}; Ruffln!‘ 1st Base Grimm Gehfi8 2nd Base Herman Lame“ 3rd Base M31151, J. Sewell Short Stol! C. Koenlg C- 61mm Left Field gggphmggn Chapman Centre Field Moore Coombs. RJght Field Cuyler Ruth. Umpires: Dinnen and Vflnsmfla-n (American, H. Klenand Macar- mta National). Time of some 13° lp, m. (EST) Wrestling R e s u I t s (Canadian Press) HALIFAX, N. S., Sept. 2'l—-To- nlght's wrestling resultsz-Carl Van Wurden, Ottawa, defeated Dick iBarent, Boston, two falls out of Ithree. Jock McDonald, Ottawa. and ; Hugh Reynolds, Akron, Ohio, wrest- led 20 minutes to draw. Henry lrs- linger, British Empire champion. and L. Beverege, Boston, wrestled one hour to draw. Irslixiger won the first fall with aeroplane whirl, 27.49. Beveredge won second fall with series of wristlocks, 3.15. about a dozen old enough to har- ness. This year, three of his best have been trained and all showed they can trot in 2.10 "or better. Phyllis Reamorc has a record of 2.09 and Peter and Rex Reamore better than 2.13. Mr. Gammonb new purchase should certainly the games as they are actually played via the Guardian's leased a great deal in the stud, but has prove a. valuable stock horse. Only One Error In Entire Game Kiwanis Show-Batting Strength ST. STEPHEN, N. 13., Sept. 27- (By The Canadian Press)-—St. Ste- phen Kiwanis’ vdefenss of their Maritime senior amateur besebal. championship began suspiciously today with an 8 to 1 triumph over Charlottetown Abegweits, Prince Edward Island title holders in the first tilt of a three game semi-fin- al series. Kiwanis timely hitting and wild- ness on the part oi’ the Island hurl- crs accounted for the local runs. “Howdy” Clark's’ slants were too much of a probleni"for the Island- |ers and only a hit by "Chuck" Jcmmett in the first inning allow- ed them to tally. The series will be completed in Charlottetown with a game Thursday and another Fri- day if the Abegweits wln. The calendar rolled back to last October as the series opened. In 193i Kiwanis at that time name of Mohawks, and Abbles clashed in a five game series. In the final round ,St. Stephen won three straight lgames by one-sided scores. Improved Team Abbies threw a greatly improved team into the fray today, but where St. Stephen had played loose ball last year, every player was on his toes today. Kiwanis turned in err- orless ball behind Clark, marred only by a period of shoddy think- ing ‘n the first frame. Abbles were also strong in the field and only one error was chalked up against them. However Clark was too strong for them at the plate and they managed to collect five hits off his delivery. Fast Fielding Sensational work both in the field and on bases brought the large crowd of spectators up time and again. Ray Moffatt, short fielder for the home team, gave the Yankee!‘ To Win 8 '_l‘2_1 crowd two thrills, both of which came in the fifth inning. He leap- ‘d high into the air to pull down iquarebriggs liner in the first half. Then he came to bat and poled out a terrific clout that went for a home run. George Ayres, big left hand- er twirled for the Abbles for five and two third innings before he was relieved by Ron Hudson. Be- tween them, they allowed an even dozen to reach first base without being molested. Ayres walked six and Hudson two.. Four tickets were issued via the hit by pitched bail route. Frances Hurt Hand Frances, husky Abegwelt catcher, injured his right hand in the sec- ond innlng when a. foul tip struck it. From then until the end of the game his throwing to second base was weak and Kiwanis capit- alized on this to steal at will and put men into scoring position. Abbies AB R II P0 A Bradley 3rd McInnis 1st b Jemmett 2nd b Bolger rf McEachern ss Frances c Squarebrlggs lf Doyle cf Ayres p Hudson p MNNME-Iinlhippofi oooooooo-ecc QQQQQQNII4I-4D4 QOb-JNAi-ll-IQQO wwooxolhoumzo ocoooo-ooootll Totals Kiwanis Vanstone lf Mitchell 2nd H. Boles 3rd Purcell rt R. Moffatt ss Coffie cf McLean c Jellison 1st Clark p Totals EXCLUSIVE! Q In the Gillette nus suns-suns, you get the important advantage of ingeniously tempered shoving edges-much harder than the slotted center-u feature patented by Gillette. FIll-JEVTRIAI. COUPON CILLETI‘ E RAZOR CO, LTD. 1085 Si. Alexander SL, Montreal, Que. Gentlemen: Pd like to try the Gillette Blue Super-Blade. Please send me one absolutely free and without obliga- tion ou my parl- ' -‘ ChznlB7-9ld Nnnm Address (Zily The Score by Innings wark Bears Abbics 100 000 000-1 5 l‘ Ne Kiwanis Oll 114 0Ox~8 0 0 . The Summary—Ez1rncd runs J W!!! 8 I1 e l’ Charlottetown 1 . Kiwanis 5. Runs batted in, Bolger, 3-2. Moffatt, Mit- chell, Purcell, Coffee. Home run, Moffntt. 3 bnsr» ‘iii, Bradley, Pur- cell. 2 base hit, Jcmmeit. Sacri- fice hits, lilitchell. Stolen bases, Vanstone, Coffc, McLean, 3, Clark. Struck out by Ayres, 0 Hudson, (l, (Canadian Press) NEWARK, N. J., Sept, 27-The Newark Bears. Cilfllllillflllr; 01 Illi Iniernauionnl League, slaughtered the Minneapolis ltilllcrs, American Association pennant winners, ll to O, in the first game of the liltln Clam» L Hit by Pilchcn b3’ A-‘TCS- World Series today. Don Brennan, Clark’ 1 BY Hlidsml- vanslonov Newark mound ace, gave the Mill- Clark. Passed balls, Frances 2. ers only four hits. Left on bases, Abbies, 3. Kiwanis, 9f Time of game, 1 hour 50 min- utes. Umpires-Dr. Dougan at pint/r, Foley on bases. zzPersian Balm imparts a rare charm and distinction i0 the woman who uses it. Fragrant as a flovrer, deliciously cool to the skin, it al- ways resulis in complexions de- DETRQIT- 59m- 37—5tfl'h75'.\' 3' llghtfully young and lovely; In- (Bixcky) Harris Signmi a contract dispensable to “my dainty “.0man_ this afternoon i0 mflllflgc the DP‘ As a powder base for oily-textured {mil Tigers in 1933- Harris- Wh" skins or as a beautifying lotion, it has mflllflllfld the team for {our is unrivalled. Tones and stimulates years, left later for his home inpthe skin. Recommended also to Washington. soften and make the hands white. ‘The GAMES, Admission 10c Opening Night, Monday, On An Entertainment It MUSIC, BOXING, WOOD SAW NOVEL FEATURES WILL BE INTR Come ' and Enjoy Yourself, Bring 6 "at... --THE FORUM-- Will Be Firem Always Goes Ove ING, Very S AMATEUR Doors Open at 7 p. m. NI TWO warns or MIRTH, run AND omzrv en’s Night and When the Firemen Put. r With a Bang. Don’t Miss It. cm", FIDDLING AND OTHER ODUCED DURING THE CARNIVAL. the Family. i You’ll Have Big Entertainment at mall Cost. Proceeds for the Benefit of theAbegweit Hockey Teams Door Prizes Every Night b ommunlty Carmval And MERCHANTS’ EXHIBITION, Oct. 3rd to 15th