. SEPTEMBER 21, 1934 BOWLING HOCKEY WRESTLING 7 NEW OF THE CHARLOTTETOWN SPORT WORLD Tllli GUARDIAN W RESULT ll F l.ll.R.A. HUME RES SERIES liostponed P.E.I. _High- landers and Signals Series Will Be Shot on Saturday. 1m official result-s of the Home s95 Series which was won by rifle team oi’ No. 2 Company, m. Divisional Signals of this City, u" just been received and are as wows: Col. D. R- Street Trophy m, g company, 6th Div. Biz- nm, Charlottetown . . . . . .. 3845 gm Canadian Light Horse, may ........ ...... .. 3842 t g1, B, 003s The Can. H. ‘we, Truro, N. S. . . . . . .. 8784 qmviug ReglL, Kemptville, Ontario . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3714 mm Divisional Signals, O 4 tsws . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3682 Ig" Coy. Annapolis Regt, _flfidg0iOWI1, N. S. . . . . . ., 3666 up and "B" Companies, The Oolchester 8a Hants Regt. . 3313 QIGNALS VS. HIGHLANDERS lhe first matoh of the postponed mual series between the P. E- I. lighlllndcrs and N0. 2 Comlimlll. [ll Div. Signals will be sllot on (la Charlottetown Ranges oil Sat- mlay, September 22nd, commenc- m; at 2 pm. sharp. The team line-ups will likely be as follows:— I. E. I. Highlanders-Capt. A. W. mm, Capt. James Coles, Q.M.S. Li. McCabe, Sergt. Percy Hooper, sergt. G. G. McLennan, Sergt. R. L. (bles, Pte. Eric Coles, Pte. G. A. (Jules. Signals-Capt. W. A. Smith. QM.S. A. Gormley, QMS. J. S. more, OR. Sgt. Roy McCabe. tergt. J. C. Stewart, Sig. P. .1. hndlignn, Sig. J. S. McDonald, Sig. R. E. Jenkins. Minneapolis Wins From Columbus ii. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 20—Mill- Mpolis battered its way back into 04 fight for the American Asso- ciation baseball championship and ibo right to meet the International ltlgiie winner in the "Little World Series" by trouncing Columbus in the third game of the plluyoff con- tests today, 11-6. The league series now stands two bone for Columbus and will be resumed at the Ohio city Sunday tltemcon. ' No Novice aoaunr JOHNSON Outflclder for the Philadelphia Athletics, is no novice when it comes to hitting a baseball. He lcd the American League in home runs un- til Jimmy Foxx and Lou Gehrig nlnnagcd to catch up to him. Bob covers plenty of ground in the out- field and has n. strong throwing arm. High Scoring On Summerside Rifle R a nge Wednesday, Sept. 19th, will long bc relllcmbercd by the members of the Summerside Rifle Club, due to the fact that on that afternoon, Dr. H. S. Allen broke the record o! thc Rifle Range, making a score of 103 out of 105. His score was 33 at the 200 yards, 35 at the 500 yards, and 35 at tlle 600 yards. The previous record of 102 was made by Dr. Me- Donalcl, who is now in Western Canada. Tile shoot was a preparatory one so that the boys could get in sonic practice for the big event of the season, which is the annual compet- ition for thc Allen Cull This is now held by Walter Schurman, who is milking every effort to retain it; for another season. Among the top scorers of the day were the following; Dr. H.S. Allen 103 Llewellyn Rogers . 90 Walter Schurman 97 C. B. Rogers 97 Brenton Clark 96 Dr. A. W. Lcard 95 L. R. Allen ..............-.... 93 -S. Your individual measures Tl-P TOP 9-18-twf 3i. The Tip Top §tore Talte: Pleasure in Announcing the Visit 0F ART. BRADLEY Special representative of TIP TOP TAILORS, wlio will be at this store on Friday and Saturday September Zlsi and 22nd It will be his pleasure to show you the finest array of British Woollens Tip Top Tailors have ever displayed. Beautiful materials for Suits and Overcoats made to He will welcome the opportunity of showing you his models and samples, whether you purchase or not. FIT AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. "9' Overcoat Are Sold Inclulively By TIP TOP STORE New Brace Block in any model you desire. CLOTHES ABA MACKENZIE ADVANCES Til SEMI-FINALS Three Canadians Re- main in Running for W0men’s Open Golf Title. ' By Edwin S. Johnson, Canadian Press Staff Writer (By Guardian's Special Wire) TORONTO C-OLF AND COUN- TRY CLUB, Toronto, Sept. 20.—The long and rocky road that leads to the Canadian Women's Open Golf throne has narrowed down to the gruelling stretch drive for a scintil- lating quartette that strode boldly today into the semi-final brackets. Tomorrow Canada will send three of her outstanding aces into battle- Ada. Mackenzie, defending champion of Toronto, Mrs. C- B. Ford, of Van- couver and Mrs. W. G. Fraser, Ot- tawa. They were faced with but one invader, Molly Gourlay, member of the British Curtis Cup team. In tlle semi-final round Miss Mac. kenzie will figure in her fourth suc- cessive international tussle, meeting! Miss Gourlny. The lower half brings‘ together Mrs. Ford and Mrs. Fraser in an East-West tcst of skill. 1t was a day of (iisappoilllnlcnts for two other members of the Bri- tish international squad as Miss Doris Chambers, the team captain and former British open title-holder, passed out of tlle picture before thc relentless pressure oi‘ Miss uackcn- zie by a 2 and 1 decision. The other victim was (all, lollg-zlriving Dillllu Plulnplon, who was unable to match the brilliance of Mrs. Fraser, who as Alexa Stirling, annexed both the Canada and United States open crowns some years ago, The Ottawa star scored her victory on the homc green, one up. Miss Gourlay saved the overseas contenders fronl a disastrous rout by conquering Mrs. A. B. Darling, of Montreal 4 11nd 3, the most decisive victory of the four. The last pair to get. away provided by far the most spectacular golf, Mrs. Ford ivaging a crushing assault on par to outlast tlle resolute Toron- to star, Mrs. F. J. Mulqilcen. The final result gave the British Colum- bian a margin of two and one, but 5119 had to produce some remarkable shots in tlle late stages of tlle match to cheek a stout-hearted rally on the part of her opponent. llslllli llslllls NATIONAL LEAGUE R- H t First game: St. Louis 020 002 000 4 6 2 Boston 000 100 000 1 3 0 Carleton and. V. Davis; Brandt and Hogan. Second game: St. Louis 010 000 000 1 '7 (l Boston .....000000000 0 8 l. Walker and Dclancey; Frank- lloilse and Spohrcr- Cincinnati . 100 011 000 3 l0 0 New York .. 001 n11 001 4 l0 2 Derringer and Lombardi; Hub- bell and Danning. Pittsburgh . 000 O00 010 1 5 0 Brooklyn . 200 O00 0C0 2 8 0 Hoyt, Grimes and Pudden; ‘ Milnns and Barres. . 100110 400 714 0 . 000 002 10x 9 l4 2 and l-larlnett, C. Chicago . Philadelphia Wameke, Bllsh O'Fnrrcll; Hansen, Collins, Davis and Wilson. ARIERICAN LEAGUE l R. H. E. 30512011 .. . .. 000 O10 O02 3 10 0 ‘ Si), LOlilS 000 100 012 4 B 1 ‘ Morena and Hillklc, Lcggett; Blaeholdcr and Grube. .2060001201117 4 Detroit 100 0Z0 301 '1 14 4 Bronca mid Jorgens; Mnrbvrry, Hamlin, Hogsctt, Sorrell and Hay- worth. New York Washington . 100000000 1 7 0 i Cleveland . 102 001 11x 611 1 ‘ Cohen and Phillips; Harder and i Brenzcl. 1 i Philadelphia . 20o 112 00o a 11 a l Chicago . 01o e21 O01 5 1 2 I Marcum, Dietrich and F. Hayes; f Earnshaw and Shea. j Leafs Win Two 1 Straight TORONTO. scnt- 20 — Tbmiiifl VHO THmuou Hi5 wluslno OF aoru we Eamon auoufa. nwurulz cwwus Yl-uo ‘KERR, PERFORMED a rear THHT out; ‘rwO _ courses um) wee 0011c acre . Amateur Golf King i l i | DENEIZ, -OFIEN GETTING ueu. 01152 300 VRRD6 ON Hi5 re: Snow's! k (By Edward J. Neill (Associated Press Sports Writer) NEWPORT, R. I., Sfpt. 20 - A ganlblcl‘ of tlle sca, n11 his chips on tlle rolling board Harold S. Van- derbilt (liecd dc l(l'ili.;'l_\' with the winds today ~.., ore Cllc of the most, amazllll; llllllllDllS ill all tllc history of the fnblcd America's Cup. He shot his snowy hulled Rain- bow cui of the sea haze to over- ‘ of 6 1-2 nlllllltes in - 1'. add three minutes, 26 --. more for his first victory of the series over Themas Octave Murdbck Sopwitlrs challenger from Great Britain. Endeavour. Not in the mclnory of the oldest salts was there a. recollection of anything like this evcr taking p‘ace before in tlle history of the inter- national racing classic that goes all the way buck to 1851. And tonight, inst-cad of an all but unconqilcrablc lcad of three straight victories, which he had by the mutual consent of all but Van- derbilt at, tlle half way mark this aftemoon. Sopwithfls lead was only 2 races to 1 with anything liable to happen now in the thrilling battle of the QlTflf shops. Starting out today in typical Rainbow weather-w. breeze of only 6.8 statute miles an hour at the start nine miles south east of Bren- ton light ship-for the 15-mile run to leeward and the bent back the sanlc distance against thc wind, the big cup defender gavc n miscr- nble display to thc outward mark. The air ivas puffing cut of the north cast, exncfy lllf‘ same sort of conditions lllldcr which Vander- bilt, ill the first race last Saturday. piled up a lend of amost a mile before the 5 l-Z hour time limit cauflht him two miles short of the finish line and milfic it "no con- test". Instead of taking the lead todly, or evvll giving thc swiit-rilnnillg Ellrfcnvollr-rl flrlht of it. Rainbow sipped steadily “r11 ill the run tcwnrd n poll off til: southerly cud Vanderbilt Scores Sensational .Win of Block Island. Tllcy went. over the line together in bright sun- shine and a sparkling blue sea, both under nlaiilsails and jlbs, bug», once the manoeuvring for the start was GYM‘, out came the parachute spin- TYTIIIFTS-JJIC “Mao West" on Rain- bow, tlle “Annie Oakley" on the blue-bolt Britisher - and away went Endeavour. That was the first astonishing de- velopment of the day. for this sort of thing was silpposedly Rainbows last hope. Bealrn Mcnclzly in a wllanging breeze over the wmd- ward-leeward route, trimmed again Tuesday in n. fine sailing breeze ov- er the SO-mile triangular course. United States hopes rested on light airs. Here thc-y had them, and yet Endeavour steadily opened mcre and more water until she rounded the l5-mile buoy at 1:27:17 p. m., exactly two hours, 2'7 minutes, 1'1 seconds after the start. wi'h Rain- bow six minutes, 39 S""‘llZlS, about a. mile of rolling" sea, hcllind. Once around the nlnrk. Vander- bilt looked at the deal and made his choice. A third straight victory ill the best four ollt of scvcn ser- ics. would just, about set the ship- pcls packing tho old mug for the trip baok to Pmulnnd for the first time since the America won it in £11 sail around the Isle of Vlight in 851. He took a desperate chance, went off to port look"" ' "r wind. and the powers that \ such things must have murvc at his cour- age, or sol-rowed for his plight, for within 25 minutes. the entire com- plexion of the race was changed. Vanderbilt foilnd wind and with the big Genoa iib he had set af- ter rounding the marl: pulling por- fcctly, thc Rainbow startcd up. The wind had hauled around by this time so that the trip home. instead oi’ being against. tlle wind. was really a close reach with the breeze, frcshencrl i0 about cicllt knots, coming in south cast hr south. Sopwitlrs Rainbow “(>011 crlmc sliding upon n and thc wind. Maple Leafs nladc it two straight ovcr R0 llestcr \Villgs hero tonight. when they dcfcntcd the Birds 5-4‘. in the second game of the Inter- llllllOIllll 1.9112005 ""01 lY-“Ymffl p.195 l0 (I0l0rll1i1l0 the team to m". tcr thc little world scrlca Actioul “qll no“. t9 RiffllPxlTi‘ tuml r1‘ =w . whom thc ll(‘Xl. till?" K511193- if 1190" cssary will be piavfld and each team made bu: errors be-runs and defeated tho 111810013 4'3- rant... Make It Two 1.. Row .Over Tigers; I-lurlersi Walloped For s1 Hitsi , times ' good considering the bad wind cn- BRYENTUN AND MBINTYRE wliilcls Bicycle Races Staged At Driving P a r k Yesterday K e e n - ly Contested. A dazzling sprint one hundred yards from the finish that just nip- ped Frank McIntyre at the wirc gave Lloyd Bryentorl the one mile Island bicycle championship in a race staged in connection with the horse races at the Exhibition tract". yesterday afternoon. McIntyre, however, earned the two-mile crown an hour later when he beat out Cullen and Lewis 1n the two mile event with another driving finish. Seven of the Island's crack riders took part in the races and the made were exceptionally zountcrcd on the upper tilrll of the truck. In tlle mile event Lewis lumped into the lead with McIntyre and Roper just trailing. Coming to the three-quarter mark the latter pair started to close tlle gap with Mc- Intyre taking the lcud at the turn into the stretch. It looked like tlle latter rider's race but Bryenton, coming like a whirlwind from away back, nipped him inches from thc wire. Roper and Lewis also staged a neck and neck fight for third with the fnrmcr ivinniflg by 11,315 a wheel. The time was 2 lllinutcs and 34 seconds. Shortly after the start of the two mile event, Brycnton suffered a spill that necessitated his with- drawal but the loss of the favorite in no way affected the closeness of the race. They were all bunched for a mile and three-quarters with Cullen and Roper taking turns leading the pack. At the start of the final round Lewis broke clcar to ollrtc again be in front coming illto the strctch. Two hundred yards from the finish McIntyre and Cullen challenged and the riders staged a thrilling battle all the rest of the way. Mc- Intyre had a. llttlc too much left and the race was his in 5.22 with Cullen and Lewis finishing in tllc order named. WRIG-L-EY FIELD. Chicago, Sept. Zil-Ed "Strangler" Lcwis tllc oi head-hunter of the wrestling mat. failed in his efforts t0 119E011! the world's heavyweight. championship tonight. Before a record-breaking crowd of 32,000. Ielvis. graying and north’. went down 1o crushln: defeat in his match with Jim Londrn. gcn- erally recognized as titleholder, un- der the floodlights at Wrigley Field. Lewis was slammed to the nlat with a crotch hold with Loudcs leaping on him like a cat t0 EDD!!! a punishing llllmmcrlock and a three-quarter Ne'soll. Lewis gamcly tried to squirm ollt of it. but fcll victim to defeat after they had wrestled 49 minutes and 2'7 seconds. bouncing off the defenders sheets. was hitting back against Endeav- our's sails. offsetting, the d"ive from tlle other side. Sopwith had to no ovcr on the port tack, to got away from him, and he 10st Vfilllllblc dis- tance, n01; only there bllt coming about again aftcr he was free. With a white wntcr bone in llcr teeth, Rainbow, with Sherman Hoyt of New York, one o1 the defenders aftcrguard, replacing Vanderbilt at. the whccl, sailed steadily less thnn 100 yards to weather of the challenger. Only once bcforl‘. when Columbia nipped Shamrock II by 4i seconds at thc finish lino from for less back, could anyone BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT Kiwanis Again LWin From Gateways? Champs Way To Tough Hurling (C. P. By Gunrdiz _ ST. STEPHEN, N. B., S Kiwanis, displaying their old straight win over the Nova Stephen-Milltown needing on mouth next Wednesday. Play was mllch tighter who, like Calder, went the en baffled for practically every they stretched two hits into narrow lead. Loses Control At the end of the fifth inning both nloundsmen had allowed only two lllLS each. The young southpaw star momentarily lost control in the sixth and Mitchell's score for St. Slephen.was the first run of the game. Calder held Gateways scoreless in every inning except the seventh, Goudy and White cross- ing the plate for Yarmouths two runs. When Fuller's control slipped he passed Ross, who reached third on Mitchell's single. Moffzltt, following with another single to shortstop. went to third while Ross was tag- gew out. in irynlg to score. God- frey's big bat then boomed a third single, permitting Mitchell to count with the first run. Goudy started Galloway's two-run rally in the next inning. Flicked on thc wrist by a pitchedball, he went to second on White's single and llmloiiol MAT rile through shortstop. and three miles past the turn was grounder from Godfrey’: ha» both runners advanced when Bain sacrificed. D. Horton bounced one to Mitchell, first baseman, whose i pcg was too late to prevent Goudy ifrom scoring. White registered on E the squeeze play as Boyd was toss- ‘ ed out after bunting. l Hits Pinch Double Fuller held Kiwanis hitless in f their half of the seventh but they Iii lllct his curves in thc next inning. Roy Boles, pinch-hitting for Ross. made good with a twn-baggcr when LeBianc fumbled tho catch. Lee ran for Boles and scored easily on Mitchell's vicious right single. With the score tied at two-all, Moffatt doubled and Mitchell came home with the final run. Goudy, who had previously booted the ball in centre before missing Moffattis fly, was benched but Fuller re- mained on the mound and with , good support managcd to hold Ki- 1 wanis in chock for tlle rest of the ‘ inning. Aflcr 1r". out in the ninth in- ning‘ i. f‘ rcvivcd the visitors‘ spirf ’ |‘ l, slnglill g. Thcir hopes were short lived. however, Bain struck out and Godfrey's peg caught White at sccolld, CIKllIIEZ thc game. As was the case yesterday. Ki- mvunis had only one error. It hap- l pencd when Moffatt. shortst. however. : (‘ost 3‘ Errors Iill-llloutll players wclw lW-imll- siblo for thrco errors. l-I. lic-ron, llll7tbl"'(1 a bcullrlillg d1lr- ing a scoreless inning. A fumble‘ and wide throw by Boyd. in the: scvcntll ,(‘lll'll)l(‘t'l Coffey to reach, second base. Goudyls booting of thc ball in ccllirc (fold was n slight coll- lrcmembcr anything like this. tribution towards llle two Kiwanis —-—- _ Even then, it took anothPr spccinl runs in thc eight. NEW YORK, Sept. 20. — After fore the final pumut, was sjwom- [dispensation from the fatcs to Fuller collfiilcd Kiwanis to scvcll three tight, well played ganles, De- plished. brine Rainbow heme in fumi- Svp- hits as against- 14 allowed ycstsrdav trolt Tigers and New York Yankccs Jimmy Foxx clouted his season's with wasn't getting the draw with by his follow southpaw, “Conic? let down today at Detroit and cn- 43rd home run with one on in the _a big reaching jib that Vanderbilt LeElallc, and Nate Bain. Calder 80-890 ill 8 50351011 0f heal/Y hit-tint; first inning and Frank Higgins add- was enjoying with thc Genoa, a big permitted five. including till” b)‘ and 100w fifildllli; which ended witn cd a four-base blast. in the fourth sail that billows out front. While White. New York tlle winner, 11-7. This to enable Philadelphia Athletics to Vanderbilt, was flblg to 55111 close gave tlle Yanks an even break in the beat Chicago White sox 6-5 at Chi- to the wind, barely nblc to set a THE BOX SCORE series and reduced the Tiller lead to caao and sweep the five-same ser- straight course for tlle fllllSll lino 5% games. ies- without tacking. the Britons ‘ib Ynrmouih AB R ll P0 A E Jmltllillthlzrgflclk Pmgadni-lh“ It“ ihihlysvairiltluloslmmetis l" 2192K‘ was drawn nowhere near so U110. Amlrv- ii- - - - V . -- 4 0 1 2 0 0| same 01' an Sun u ler "- an e . 0X. imllll c So with had to tacl: u ain. 11nd H. Horton. ss. 4 0 1 1 4 l tinguishcd himself by making his Bonura, two. Bonuras 26th llonlcr in 05mm“ around twm, it, an.“ L,B1_.,nc_ rt 4 O 0 0 0 o] second hit of the season but it took came in the second inning iOdHY- 10st dismnoe but he made celimm Gnudv, c; 4 1 Q 1 Q 1 alot of clouting by his mates to keep Johnny Marcum recorded ills sca- of fetching the mark M. the Wm, m. WMDL CL H 1 0 o o o o‘; him on the hill. He gave up 14 son's 13th victory. but needed thc down through n“, gum“, Wm‘ whim c_ __ 4 I 3 4 1 o . blows, including a homer by Goose assistance of tllf‘ relief pitcher Bill Rainbow now m," ha"; m“ m, BM" ‘zb’ _ 3 n n , 5 0 | Goslin and Charley Gellringel-‘s Dietrich to subdue a Sox uprising front‘ m? nmv qupsum wnmqm ‘n 50.40,, 1b _ _ 3 0 n15 0 0 200m ml’ n1 the year‘ m the ninth‘ United Sfilcs ivcll-\v‘"hcr" iwas Prvd 2b 1 0 O 0 2 l Tile Yanks tok a 2-1 lead off Fred Cleveland Indiluls at homo scnt- whnthcr o} int vqndp"’ljilt"i 6+‘ Fhnp}. I, q O 0 0 4; n Marllcrry in thc first and scorcd six tcred six runs ovcr ilvc innilllzsio end “:0 m h? t ‘tackxt t“ _ ' " _‘> M _ __ _ _ times in tlle third to settle tlle nrgu- Will thn final gnmc oi their scrlcs m“ H01 H"! got v QUIT‘: “ca? T t I; 2Q q r 24 l8 1 . ment then and tllcrc. They scllt l0 with Washington. fi-l. bchilld i119 I I“ l m“ d ‘, “fen k \ -', O a‘ ' ' ' ' ' ‘ ' “ ‘ “ " ‘ I inlell to tlle plate, collected five hits pitching of Mcl linrflcr. 1° m m? a“ c Ln“ bml“ _ . alld two walks and thc Tigers made Boston Rod 50X at Sf. InuLs took H? hit it Silltwk 0Y1 the 1105!‘ at Kiif-‘mf A“ R " P" A F. two errors. a 3-2 lead ovcr St. Louis Brozvns in 0-15-34 \\i.h FllflFfl\'f‘llf‘"l‘1O- ll‘ 6.1.... . 2 g (l) (l) g Tile rest of tlle game was an en- tlle ninth i _ but Pilfk TFIITWF- ‘m! ii no l “f i" ~ T‘ n} S l 1 O ,' durlmcc tent as the Yillks net i032 . ~ lllll‘l 11.? u hnl-nr owl c ‘ ll-‘lvll ._~ l. v 1C1 ‘L. ... n l i) o l - ‘om, pnfkrcrs ‘m. a mm! or 17 “new”, m u“ yunnc h“; h, _-n_-,. two Cords l. hlbows r..'1_'.>s‘.l “mo \\'.l$ hlllrllrll. lb. 4 2 fl l-l 0 0 4:35:34, Endeavours 4:39:00. Moffatt, ss. 3 0 1 1 3 1| Ma r i t im e Young Schoolb-Fy- Hurler Loses when Kiwanis won, 12-5. Purney Fuller, high school hurler l noon, Abcqwvit- Well F o u rth Title Battle When Ki- Wanis Get 2 Runs In Eighth To Overcome Yarmouth’s 2-1 Lead. m's Special Wire) ' cpl. Zil-St, Stcphen-‘llilllown faculty of getting runs when most needed, squeezed a 3-2 victory out 0f Yarmouth Gate- ways thls evening and advanced another step towards a fourth consecutive championship of senior amateur base- ball in the lilariiimc Provinces. Big Mike Calder pitched Kiwanis to their second Scotia champions. With Si. ly one more victory i0 retain their title, the final playoff series will be resumed at Yar- than in yesterday’s opener, lire route. kcpt the homestcrs inning but thc eighth. When two runs, providing the final Calder, Totals . . . . . . . .. 31 1A) Replaced Goudy ill Sill. Baucd for Ross in 8th. 1C1 for Boles in Bill. SUMMARY Earned rulls, Yurmouth 2 Ki- wanis 3. Runs batted in, D. Horton, Boyd. hlitcllcll, Moffatt. God‘ ' Two lhlnC ll‘ 526131.00 hits. Bllill. Boyd, M . Struck out by Fuller 3. by Calder 4. Base on balls, off Fuller 1. Hit by pitcher, by Calder 2. Wild pitch, Calder. Double play, Calder to Mitchell. Left on bases, Yzlrmmliil 4. Kiwanis 5. Time of game. 0P0 hour. 45 nlinuics. Attendance 177m. Umpires. Pepper Martin at pin“, Joe Dcver on bases. tlnnsslli MAiF GAME (C- P. By Guardians Special Wire) NEW YORK, S0111. 20.-Cari inm- bt-‘ll Dut on a ollc-nlall show llure todayio lift New York Giants to u. 4-3 victory in their final struguio with tlle last-place Cincinnati Reds. The victory. gained in tllc nllllll inning, enabled ihcm to hold their loss to a. half game in illcir race with St. Louis Cardinals, who won twice. _ Hubbell not only piiohcd steadily 1n a duel with Paul Derringer but; singled home tlle winning run in the ninth after Johlllly Vcrgcz had walked and taken second oil an in- ficld out. Si. Louis Cardinals continued their pennant drive “lit/h a. double victory ovcr Boston Braves 4-1 311g 1-0 at, Boston as tlle clubs closed out; their season's rivalry. ‘The two tri- umphs put tlle Cards a. half gzmle closer to Ncw York Giants, lcavillg them 3*»: games behind the league leaders. Excellent pitching on llli‘ part of Tex Carlctoll and illll lrvflllill‘ inr- ried thc Cards ovcr iodnys (hill-wil- tics in tlle face of rnillcr spursi- 111i.- ting. Carleton limited the Blnlrcs to three lliis in rile opener to boat them for tlle sixth time this smlsoll then Walker came through with n. shutout although touched for eight blows, one more thnn tlle Cards made oil Fred Frnnkllousc. Rallying to score six runs ill the eighth inning. tllc Pllillics at houle came from behind to wipe out a hurl plied up by Chicago lll thc early frnlncs and went nlll-nd to score nil ultimzlic 9-7 victory ovcr the Cubs. Lon Wnrllekc and Guy Bush were tlle viciulls of the Plliilu-s‘ buts in the eiglllll. Wnrlltke unis rclzlovcrl JllCl‘ allowing thc first tour nlcll io hit safely and Bush ullo rclicrcil llllll vrns chllrgcd with thc loss. Continuing their sPplUTllbOl‘ push, Brooklyn Dodgcrs dcicntrd Pitts- burgh 2-1 behind thc five-hit pitch- ing of Lcsllc Munlls at Brooklyn. It wls their sixth straight victory". Brooklyn scored lllrcc runs in tho first off Waite lvloyt vrllell Frcy and Cuccincllo hit singles and Kocllccke doubled in betwecll. Munlls didn't lot a runner roach third until the fifth and missed ll shutout when Rid Lilras‘ pinch angle s‘ "rd Tvlillily 'l'll(‘\'l"li0\\‘ ill 1112- ligllltl. Pllpllsi Jr. Abbie" Grmu . Evcrybolh/ asked to be on hallil. Rail Practice for