!iG;L‘>l‘J_6~,_1.948 .. _ rue laggiggiaiy. qnaatograrowu Wayside At Favorites Fall By‘ Montague Racing Meet Yesterday Favorites took another licking ‘y, the Montague harness racing may“); held yesterday afternoon qith sn estimated crowd of 2600 “n, seeing four out of nve fav- orites fall by the wayside in the n”; racing program staged. Two of the five classes staged went to extra. heats before the winner was “cided, with Tennessee Sue be- h; the only winner to chalk up ., straight heat victory while Kel- ly‘; Nightmare, winning the No. | classified event, was the only favorite to come through in the days program. Tennesse Sue in winning the feature event chalked up the first upset win as she led the field of four in all three heats with a smooth pacing performance and being given well rated drives by driver Dave Wiscner. Lee's Night- mare was second in all three heats, with Vella La Veils. and flay Law finishing in that order. Kelly's Nightmare made sure oi her victory in the No. 2 event by capturltig the fiiQt two heats but was forced to bow to The Baron in the third and final mile in the sensational drives that were be- lng iincorked in the stretch. Billy McVeigh, improving with every- ract alter losing the open- ing heat of the Classified Trot and Pace to Single Streak. show- ed all his pacing ability to take the next two miles in stirring ducts with Lucky Spencer, but it remained for the final two events on the card to produce the most stirring action of the day. In the first division of No. 4 Classified. Shirley Temple, after being fourth in the first two heats non by Bud Kalmuck and C. Al- bert. Hudlong, the Hooper-owned and driven mare came back to win the third mile and force an extra heat; then she paced away from the other two heat winners So account for the second victory of the clay for the Hooper stable. Bribe Britton made an even more spectacular comeback in the second division of the class. Sixth giihe first heat and dropping ark to seventh in the second. she looked well out of the running but. with Ola Budlong and Just Betty splitting the first two, the Babe made an extra. heat neces- ry by stepping oil’ with the .ird. The rest is history. Babe led Just Betty and Ola Budlong u) the wire in the raceofl to ac- count. for the fourth upset win el the day. 1 Summary:- f No I Classified Ihnnessee Sue (Wlsener) . 1 1 Lee's Nightmare (O'Brien) 22 Veils La Vella (Swecnejy) 3 3 flay Law (Allen) . 4 4 Time: 2.11, 2.12 1-5, 2.13 2-5. ' Winning horse owned by James w flower. Charlottetown. No 2 Classified clly'| Nightmare (Shaw) ron (Semple) a McKillop (Allen) Billy Aubrey (Smith) Killy Kalmuck (Kelly) Jolly Harvester (Baxter Quakers Boy (Conroy) Time: 2.14, 2.18 3-5. 2.16. ‘ Winning horse owned by Dr. Bishop, Charlottetown. Qpcnwuimv- crustacean-e Oa~l<0:)\.b~»eI Classified Trot and Pace Billy McVeigh (Craig) .. 2 1 i Single Streak (Conroy) 1 3 3 Lucky Spence (McArthur) e 3 2 Eleanor G. (McNeil) . 8 d4 Quick Lid! (O'Hara) S 4 b Nell Kalmuck (Kelly) .. l 5e Time: 2.11 1-5, 2.14. 2.14. Winning horse owned by Dr. T. Hooper. Charlottetown. No. 4 Classified (1st Div.) Shirley H. Temple (Hooper) C. Albert Budlon (Walker) 2 1 8 Bud Kalmuck (Semple) 1 2 2 Shy Ann 2nd. (Phillips) .. 3 3 4 5 6 5 6 6 Atbegvrelt Milday (Smith) Miss Commando (Lowrie) d Time: 2.15 3-5. 2.17 2-5, 2.10 1-5. 2.16 4-5. g Winning horse owned by 00.. J. P. Hooper, Charlottetown. No 4 classified (2nd my.) Bebe Britten (Baxter) 6 Just Betty (Seaman) 2 Ola Budlong (McDonald) 1 Rosalie Hooper (Hooper) 8 4 7 Bob Canuok (0'Meara) Bonnie Dale (Kelly) Josedale Flyattvay (Spence) 8 Lady Worthy 2nd (Willis) b 6 d ‘Plme: 2.15. 2.14 1-6. 2.16, 2.16 2-5. Winning horse owned by Geo. Thompson, Summerside. Indians Back)’ 0n Top In 71 l3 i4 23 B5 46 84 American (By The Canadian Press) Behind the four-hlt pitching of Bob Lemon. Cleveland B14151’)! batted their way to the we d the American League yesterdnl’. thumping Boston 9-0. A crowd of 30,745, sweltering in 90-degree heat at Fenway Park. saw the Red 80X dXQP 1'7 I!!!" back of the Indians in the red- hot drive for first place. New York Yankees moved clos- er to the top-JV; same: vfl the pace-by clubbing Chicago 8-2. In the only other afternoon tilt. Detroit Tigers handed the fest- skiddlng Philadelphia A's their fifth straight setback, 10-4. St. Louis played the Senators under the lights in Washington. For Lemon, it was his 17th vic- tory and his eighth shutout. A four-run second inning. in which nine of the ‘Tribe batfed and drove starter Denny Gale- house to an early bath, sent the Indians off on their war path. Every one of the Indians hit at least once except Ken Keltner and Bob Kennedy. Shortstop managd‘ 11.011 Boud- reau hammered his 11th homer of the campaign in the sixth a-nd Larry Doby hlt his eighth in the eighth inning. Boudreau, Joe Gordon, Doby and Jim Hogan each got three hits and three of the nine Indian runs were sent across the plate by Dob)’. Abeedy negro centre- fielder. _ PARKVIEW FOUR CLASSIH ED EVENTS L Opening '02 WEDNESDAY, Entries close Sofurdoy, August 28th. Send your entries to Amos Gallant, S0011) Rusfico .. RACEWAY “SEPT. 1st — $1.200 IN PURSES GIIITA PERCIIA tires are your besi buy I Tough; high ‘qualitymaterials; tg i v e G u t t a iPerchedres dependability plus a tread designed to grip on Canadian roads. Greater mileage-into uch drei This mark is gone guarantee of perfec- tion in any Gum Perch: JIM. . THE ROGERS HARDWARE C_O., Chrloitefvvvn, P.I.I. Phone I05 end ‘I300 7 Fighters Sign For Bouts NIW YORK. Aug. l - (A?) — The ‘ M. of " ’ ’. four headline fkhfars got together today at s. midtown restaurant and segned contracts for their Sept. 21 doubleheader 00x50! ihow at Jersey City. N, J. The linging ceremony was held up for a short time until Marcel Car-den, the I-Yeneh middleweight champion who meets world title- iholder Tony Zale in a 15-rounder, drove 1n from Idlewild Airport. Gordan had juat flown tn Part; ' Jersey Joe Wlloott and Gus Lesnevich. the two hesvies who will tangle in a. IS-rourider on the same card, were also there. Musial llas Big Margin n-rzw vonx. Aus- i5 —<AP> '- The sluggers are movinl U! l" Stan Musial aria may iii-event- W St. Louis outfielder from rnakini an unprecedented sWNP 0! N5‘ tlonal League balk-ins tit-W- A late surge b? 518 ~7°n\“~' Mlze has moved the New Yuri! Giant first baseman into 11H)?- piace in driving in runs with S6. Mize batteddn eight runs duriziz the week ending Sunday to w)? Musiel in that department by one run. Mt“ p150 pulled ahead of the Cardinal flychaser in homers a1- though the New Yorker trails Pittsburgh's Ralph Kiner by one. Kine: his S2 four-tblllfll. M!“ 31 and Musial S0_ But in the other hitting de- partments the story la still Mus- ial. He picked up three P0111" during the week to maintain his lead with a. .384 average, M) point-l higher than Alvin Dark. the run- ngr-uip from Boston. Dark is hit- ting .335. Musial continues to set the peel in runs with 105; hits with iiB. doubles with 84. and triples Wll/h 13. . Richie Asiihura, the fleet !h11- atielphia. rookie, fronts the but stealers with 28 and is fourth in bgtflng with .321 Chicago's Andi Paf-ko remains third with .333 followed by Ashburn. Tommy Holmu, Boston, .318; Country slaughter, 8t. Louis 316; Red Waitkiis, Chicago .316; Sid Go.- don, New York _S02; Will Mar- shall, New York, .298 and Mlzc .297. 5t. bouts‘ Harry Brecheen mono- pollzee the pitehine department-i- fla has the best won-lost. record with 15-4 for rzaa. and tops the strikeout artists with 107 whiff victims. Travels Lung D stance For Tuna Tournament w-mocmeoatr. u. e. Aus- l6 — 4gp) __ An Argentine team will travel 6,000 miles to compete in the International ‘Tuna. Tourna- ment. to be held here Sept. 8-11., it was announced today- If» W111 l" the first time the mintl‘? h" been represented in the tmirna- ment. other squads will represent Ouba. the United states and the British Commonwealth. u Members of the Al, h!) will be: Pablo Baa-din. C r 3 Jairna Llavallol. oo-eapteln; CIR!‘ 11° Agni“; Jose B. P. Ayerza; 5- Charles Badman end Edie! E- l-losmann. Soldier's nip. the time mu (II where the teams will fish. i! Y" 5- mg good cauhee. Bo far this sea- son three times as many tuna have been landed than at the an?‘ “'“ last season. I’ Merchant Ships Badly Damaged MINDGI. Mil. fl-Gflilffif Merchant ships of Britain. U“? and Spain were badly damaged oii the British coast indiv- Th‘ new Bfme-ton steamship Aaia. out/ward bow»;- hem Southampton to Neutron. one holed amtdehlps below the water line and escorted blfli 9-0 port after a collision with the ‘I.- zoo-fon Italian vessel Oielnpo of! 8t. Catherine's P011“. W. 9' Wight. The Asia. curled I00 auto- mobiles for enact __ The (lciope. bound M Au..- wecp from the Black 80l- Nfi- 0T Odeaas. continued in her destin- ation under her own power. Brie was reported to have had he: bowl bedl! 401ml“ “W. m‘ to: line. . '.A lifeboat was studies V! W sate-tan wcnllh Iblc ma" Maxim-aground off the east coast. near Cronin. h! bowl H99“ 00"!- Q" (hipped I198 sud Isa apeund iii brood dsylllbt If“! mixing a wreck‘. In crew a! so p“ repuflbd. ll l. The Asia bart-hed st leutbemp- touwitbaboiehfeet lofllln m: port aide. extending above and below the water line. Home u! the export can in he: hold were under water. The ship will dock for repairs. which ere expected to ten a month, and her all". I'll l‘ trench-red be another e501. it was hoped the Asia's, he passenger-a, Charles Williamson of M treat. and Anthony Cowd. a Bri sh immigrant. for Aibe might ti-arider to the Queen Lia t-beuistieep a but. obs sailed five minutes beforé .4 IDNGION, N_ 5.. Aug. B - (C-P) — Nantes of two hockey play- ers , “toleekberthswlth koncttm Hawk: when their train- ing amp opens here Oct. 10 were released tonight by club officials. They are Bon Telento. defence- ml-n. from. Wlnnivil’. and Ray Barry, last year with ‘mronto St. Mike's Juniors of the Ontario Hockey Amociatton. This raised m eight the number of names released to date by club officials. Others are Peta Piquette. goalie. lut. season th Oshawa Generals luntors 0i’ the O. H. A_; Buck Whltlock. leading scorer in the Maritime Senior Hockey League last season. and a two-year man with Hawks; Dalton Barkwell and Bert Steele, last year with the now detunct Truro, N. 5.. entry in the league; Joe Dadeau of Edmundston. N. B.. and Bill Lahtz, last season with the Scottish League. Club officials said negotiations with other players in Quebec and Ontario are going on and their names will be released when satis- factory terms are arranged seven.) members of last year's team are expected back for tryouts. Picked 0p After Adrift Ten Days ___..- NEWYORX,Au|.m_ (Ap)__ The tanker New Jm-sey fepgrted tonight to the coast guard that it he: picked up Mr. aha Mrs. Benjamin l". Carlin — driifting 2T0 miles from New York in the Atlantic in In amphibious jeep __ and w" with: them to Halifax, 1 S. The coast guard “in m, tanker reported that the Carlins had been drifting 1o daygj Mr. and Mrs. Carlin set out Billy this month in s surplus army nmnhlbh" leap Q11 what they said was a rourid-the-world tour. ‘Iiheir first destination w" the Azores. Th" 11¢ We ma Ava. ti. 160 miles at sec, when a Unifgd stntes MW destroyer sizhied their craft. There were no further details immediately from the m“; “mm Stories Arc Conflicting ._.__ \ WABI-IINGTON. Aug. ae-(Ar) A1881‘ Kiss and Whittaker Cham- bers. face to face in the Con- gressional spy hearings, took tunic. today at. stinging charges and de- niela revolvln: around a tale of a. Dre-War Red underground in Washington. Accused and accuser. they brought their utterly conflicting stories into the open at hearings before the House Un-American Activities Committee, and the her-rinse went 0n thto the night. Giambers haa accused ma; ‘o! b91118 l leader in I. Communist underground back in the middle 30s. He repeated the accusations tonight, again under oath. Hiss listened a few feet away. Earlier it was Ohunbers’ turn to listen. He stared stolidly up to. ward the lofty ceiling as m“ questioned his "sanity" and ac- Cllléd him c! being I. "bell-con- fesaed. liar, apy and traitor.” Hawks Strengthening For Coming Season Williams sun In Lead " oincAoo, Aug. as -- (Ar) - Ted Williams‘ batting leadership in the American League narrow- ed tihis week although his per- centage retrained unchanged born last week at. M7. Cleveland's manager, mu 3w- dxeau, gained tnvo points on the Boston star, increasing hia per. centage from .361 to .363, Others of the first 1o batter; this week: Dale Mitchell, Cleve- land. m; Al Zarllle, at. Louis 3&1; Barney McCosky, Philadel- Phlfl. 31.4; Luke Appllng, Chicago, an; Bob Dillinger, st. mun, .307; Walt Even, Detroit, 307; 10¢ D1- 11188810. New York, .297; George Kell. Detroit. 29v. and Bill Good- man, Boston. .297. Vernon Stephens of Bopbon i-Omfid the runs batted in col- umn. with 11 for the week bring- ing his season total to 102. Wil- llama had most runs, 90, (helm-t- ing seven for the weds. Boudreau 1W1 meet hits. m. Tom Henrich or! New York led with 33 dqub- lee. Ed Stewart of Washington was triples king with 1G. Joe Dl_ P1188810 had most home runs, his circuit trips numbering 3'], Dillinger! 2B stolen bases (top- ped that. department. John Km. mer was leading pitcher, winning 14 and losing 4 for Boston to av- 81186 .770 with 10 games com- Dleted. Leland Brlseie of Phila- delphia had 102 strikeoute, / Huge Building Program For Penn Railroad l A. Aug, m — (AP) — The Pennsylvania rall- rond announced today it is launch. in: a $216,700,366 building pro- gram, the largest in its history. Martin Clement, president of the largest rail netrwmk in the United States, set forth a plan that would make rolling luxury liners of the trains of the future. Under the plan, every PR3. through passenger train will have supervised children's playrooml, movies, refreshment lounges, tem- Derature controls and other super- modern conveniences, Here are some of tine hiprove- merits Clement. envisages; 1. Iloors that open at a touch through use or compressed air. 2. New style wheel trucks elim- inating virtually all sway on curves. S. Fluorescent lighting through- out giving “a mellow madawless glow no glare." 4. Ibnger passenger coaches with fewer seats, giving more leg rocm. b. Sleepers that are all-room cars with "no more open-section berths bxtra-twide panorama windows enclosed wardrobes and ample luggage mace." 6. Widespread use or private rooms for daytime travel on short tripe. i some variety l ., ,. .( Choose New l9ll9 SUITS CHOOSE NOW . . . PAY LATER l We’re ready with the largest array 0i Men’s Suits f in our history! Dozens of them in your size . h grand total of 650 Suits in the new 1949 models ‘it! . WHY NOT CHOOSE YOURS NOW ? Simply select the Suit of your choice . ; . pay a small _ . deposit and your Suit is reserved till required. Best 0f all, you get the full benefit 0f a supreme saving. 20% OFF 4.3 i Quick Recovery. 0f Stolen Bonds QUEBEC, Aug. S - (C?) — Quebec City police made a. quick arrest today and- recovered $26000 worth of bonds forgotten in a hotel washroom shortly before by J. N. E. Grenier, A broker. Police arrested Isidore Kraft, who dmcribed himself as a iur dealer. and charged him with theft of the bonds which were on their way to the Sisters at. Hotel Dieu Hospital. Brig. Grenier. the broker, carrying the bonds in a brief case, left them in a washroom at dew!» town St. Roche Hotel where he lunches every day. When he noticed his loss and was unable to locate the bond... city detectives were summoned. They made a rapid search‘ and finally took Kraft into custody on suspicion. They said they found the brief case and bonds in his possession. as well as a large etim of money. Kraft was charged with theft in sessions court. one: NDAL’S ' it "‘~‘ ' '1 1')‘ ti" ti’ . illflllliliiilllitlliIllIlllllllllllllllililllillililllllllllllllllllllllli ‘ Expressed Regrets At Not Being Able To Attend Function (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA. Aug. 25-—1=lrancirco Parde de' Zela, Peruvian commer- cial attache, said today the Rus- sian charge ifaiiatres wrote Aug. 21 “regretting his inability to be pressit.” at s. diplomatic reception for Hon. Ray Atherton, retiring United States Ambassador to Cen- ada. ‘Ilhe girlie-ring was held last night at the home of Hon. Alfred Benavides, Peruvian ambassador. It was attended by the heads of 3G foreign missions. The Russian charge, Nikolai D. Belokhvoetivok. was not present. "The Peruvian Eiriiassy," Mr. de Zela said in a. statement, "had received three days before the date of the reception a. letter from the charge d'a.ifairea of the U. S. S. R. embassy. acknowiedgifl! the invitation but regretting his inability to be present due to s previous engagement for that day." The Canadian Press last night 144 Great Rebel Forces In ‘ Escape Attempt i n1 DOUGLA! ‘l RANGOON, Aug. as - (AP) ’ The Burmese Government said t0- day that Communist - led label.‘ forces were in full flight (run thl ‘Ilharrawaddy district in mid-west- ern Burma.‘ pursued by Iioyall . troops who had split the Rebels into two groups. The rebels are attempting id,‘ escape to Arakan on the west. and}, Toungoo in Central Burma, tho. government said. Today's communique detailed government successes on ell fronts. including the killing of six well- ‘ known Communist leaders and. capture of enothen _ Experienced political informants 3 here have expressed concern for the future of the aeven-month-oldi republic of Burma unless the revolt. is crushed and 1 eon- t, dttiona restored without de ey. erroneously quoted Mr. de Zola as saying the Russian 12"" has ra-ther "rudely" even negleot- ed to acknowledge the invitation. $15,000. Y. M. C. A. APPEAL Be Prepared To Meet The Y. ill. C. A. CANVASSER Our Building Must Open $15,000. ls Required From The Generous Citizens 0f Charlottetown Dur Boys And Girls Arc DEPENDING 0n You Can You AFFORD To Fail Them? Give Generously-As This ls Definitely A Community Need