I SEFFEMBER .25. 193s VHE‘ (IHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN‘ EWS “p.00 RT W0 Ru? Louis Igayoes Baer In Fourth R f DetroitNegro ShoWsNo Mercy As He Pummells Baer Into A Submission Louis Rises TTfiow Heights o: Fistic Greatness In Writing Finis ‘ To Ring Career Of Ex-Champion -- Baer However Shows Mag- nificentCourage In Face ()_ The Devastating Fists Of The “Brown Bomber.” — . , Cubs tangle here with the c ds And to Loman Cairns, smart hurisr displayed his best form (By Edward J. Nell, Associated Press Sports Writer) in a five-game series that Willairie- shortstop of the new champions the series. seven innings he had his opponen ‘s literally baffled (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wii'e) YANKEE STADIUM, New York, Sept, 24_,A brown ‘The Winner Bill (C. P. by Gllnrdll-n‘! Spoclll WIN) 5t. Iouis Pittsburgh 11-3 at St. Louis today to give warning to the league leading Cubs that the 1934 world champions are not yel. out of the National League title chase. The Cards aided Hallahan with 11 hits, including home runs by Jim Col- lins and Leo Durocber. It was the veteran southpawb 14th victory of an erratic season. The win reduced the Chicago lead to three games and tomorrow the termlne the 1935 champions of the National League. The Cards need five victories to Hallahan Leads Cards In Comeback NEW YORK, Sept. M-vwild Bill Hallahan gave only three hits u Cardinals defeated Chuck _ Templeton ‘a SPORT RAI TS STEWAIf T19 WIN SOFTBALL Brilliant Double Ploy s; Cairns In 9th Halts Losers IX-CHAMP on W ~~< EATER‘ SAY "turning back the sensational last inning rally of their, opponents with the tying run on third base Stewart's Bakery softball team last night captured the City Soft- ball championship ‘for 1935 when they took their third victory from the defending champions, the 8th Battery squad by a 'l-6 score. It was the deciding game of one of the most bitterly-fought playoff series in local history, the teams entering the fray deadlocked with two wins apiece. It was also the fourth straight game that the win- ners margin of victory had been decided by one run. goes the hero's mantle for last night's encounter for it was this player that nipped the tying run WithiTying Run On Third to put runners on first and seoon Wiif Whaien got his third straiglfl hit to score both men, reachinfl third on the throw to the plate anti then Calms completed his brilliant double on Mclnnis’ fly l0 end till game and. series. "j To the winners congratulctlol; They played like champions all t way andproved they have dgcalpe able crew both at bat and vfieldg and it is to be hoped they will b9 able to participate in the Mal-itinw playdowns as they have a team that should give mainland squad! a battle from wire to wire. ‘ Ray Stull last night's win keeping them scoreless and granbu ing but two hits and having but I at. the plate with a brilliant double men Ill-Ce him during this stretchi- plliy to end the game. Will’ Whalgn He had nine strikeouts to his credo was on third base with one out 1i? when Had McInnis bit a fly over short that looked like a sure hit. win the championship but four out of five would bring them a tie and Nqlilre a playoff. The Deans are ready, Paul being slat- ed to start against Lon Warneke. tornado, merciless, savage Joe Louis, swept over the mag- nificent Max Baer tonight, picked him up in the most devastating whirlwind of punches the prize ring has seen . -lF' vou can sale/l: all. time ‘_ ‘Walter Goss the Battery moundli "Been is um: bursa may H man was also in great form, A littid I "Ni-N Louis ls on: orniE egg-liter since the heyday of Jack Dempsey, smashed him down three times, finally crushed him in four rounds before the first $1,000,000 crowd of boxi ng’s new era. Baer was knocked out after two minutes and 50 sec- onds of the fourth round. In the less than 12 minutes he faced the chocolate cyclone, he took a beating so unmerci- answered, for a long time to come, 131m probably will pitch Thurs- sy: St. Louis lumped into s. three- run lead in the first inning at the fiXDense of Red Lucas, Collins’ 34rd homer of the season scoring Medwick ahead of him alter Lynn SMHLL CLUB ‘PRELIIVYBOY. ‘l1 llllilulllllllzll Cairns racing out with his back to the ball made the catch and then whirling fast. pegged a perfect throw to his catcher to catch the runner attempting to score after the catch. It was another story- book finish to a game that had the shaky at the start he was found for eight hits in the~ first threfl frames but after this was every b‘ as good as his opponent. He allowlu ed but two safe blows in the is! five frames, allowed one run anl“ fanned three. he ' Kill , r11 - . ,, ful, so complete that the crowd of 90,000, nearly filling the isskeiiuescihiild hiise fiivkecrliiis liedgonm Midmiiis igfgttym’ eiiir M]! hmaahifiifii". iiiiulioi, “m” or excmmm srcwanr-iiox Scglfg. n ros I ' huge ball park, gasped at. the cruelty of it. Wasn't Even a bristle disturbed on "#111118 Hid swell“: second Kins . " . s.» ’ ' Murley 2b . . s 2 1 2 2 q ~' H “an T his kinky head. glgyfdhfifrltlénetiinltniéocghalilfilces ,, _ - " ‘ dBut fir; defeat tléc Bstllci-y “igl- whitioék, lr".'..'. s 1 2 z o o " o n In his dressing room afterward out error and made two hits. i'li§§§i3<.'ii@%.§§,§§-p'li'i€é?mgrsuogkln}.céuggptalfgpali aagrgggggi“ am}. tism rgriened lflplgililislilllfiill; Stirling!!!“ ‘it l s‘ i, 31 91 i) : “u.” "ma, "u, ‘hm, “my huded cfluomhn’ ‘Wm: to m“ m u“ Baer said he was through with the v Giants Win Twin Bill BA w IRIG p‘ ' ..” fashion and in their first turn at Hunger, c _ - 4 1 0 12 o q ' _ 2 Int through the crimson mask of his torn features, was hammered to the 1'1"! Y°P0V01'- His manager. Ancll .Vlth Al smtih pitching shutout __. . . —Ai\ T ' ‘ " ~ bat put together five safe blows Whelan, 1b 3 0 0 5 0 Q = floor under two-fluted blasts that hit him with all the suddellness and Htmmanl “m! Dempsey ‘fled w ha“ in the m“ and the Plum“ _ __ _____ _, ' y’ to garner four runs. An error by Cgimg 55 , . 4 1 g 3 1 Q , deadly accuracy of a iommy gun at point blank range. He was floured °°n5°1° mm’ agieemg m” w” but“ ‘mntflbumnl "W" °"°1'.5 l“ the the losers gave them another run Mlepzeiyl], 3b __ 4 1 1 3 1 - ‘ three times in all, twice in the third, for counts of nine and four, the They want m save mm ‘mm ‘my semnd- New Yuk Giants t°,°k a 1n the second and again in the McLellan ff " 4 0 0 0 9 a . last time saved by the bell, hauled to his corner by his chief second, Jack m°r° °i ,’Whl\l’- he took tonight. both ends of a doubleheader with Fl Round B R d third another miscue allowed them Totals i U“ 37 7» 10 g7 5 Q s. Damn” They dont believe, and 90,000 pco- Philadelphia, winning 6-0 and 7-6 g y w count their sixth mm During an . . . . . . ‘ ‘v y When the blast tore into his head again in the fourth. he sank to 111° m" w" Wm‘ “lem- lb“ "Y ll New YW- * ms Ray Sm], using a baffling "H BATTERY m R H m A i one knee by the ropes, across-the ring from his own corner. So badly had Fig“, ma“?! take mm‘ °f inn’ and Th‘? Giant's mule “u the“ “ms . ii“ change of pace had his opponents w when“, y 5 1 3 3 0 1 I ‘ he been beaten, so complete was his thnshhlg that his eyes were opaque, "s" lsjriasgnz-lolfi d5 Lo is in the first game in the first ,‘(C. P. by Guardian's Special Wire) up after the bell until Referee swinging futuem Stewarvs sml led Mann“ ' " 5 1 o 2 o ! _ ’ his knee ‘ mbled, as he slowly shook his head from side to side. The 199g" we 3 9°“ ' u mm "Win85 '9" curt DIVB- Donovan pulled him away. Louis 6_o at the end u. me seventh but Currie '2‘) "" 4 1 1 1. 6 u i’ - blood from his face was pouring over his cheat as he stayed on one knee *- Despite the mistakes of the ROUND ONE round. h, the m5, hm 5, the eighth the Power" 4 1 1 5-0 * - until Referee Arthur Donovan finished the complete count of i Phil-s in the nlshtcar. the same d,“ 1 ' ° -' _—_—_—_—_—._~_—____———=;~—_-—— —~ PRELIMIN-Uhms was a nip and tuck affair. Baer came slowly from his ROUND THREE fime wok on a‘ Hem comp a“ gigang; 3b --~- i 9 1 1 '1 ‘ The Dod rs dro d Boston orner hunched in a half crouch, ‘ n‘ c “a e1 1b -- 0 0 9 9 7. confide.’ o“ heirhvtvagnféltig ‘hi: itilelllircgsl,‘ itlrlbniicliiixilg ’ Th0 filrsti of themhlye éour-mund- Braves s. lglitle deepzrpe into the 2nd Iiouls stabbed his face light- with fresh energy, Baer pawed deillightaivg dswklghe tgosshri‘ Owen’ V‘ - ' ' ' ' "' 4 0 o 2.10 i,‘ Across m, plum Dempsey in m5 sughny’ no mm or an expression firs. DR? 1m nary a s, idnt leave National league cellar when they ly a. half dozenntimcs with lefts- at the negrds head with his left. 1' U61 g 1a g t 1'9 ‘i’ G°55~ P » - - I - -- - 3 1 1 0 _1 high pitched voice, was screaming ppouno his broad, pink lips, no light All“ 1551" 1n 001M ldhs- Nathan took both ends of a doubleheader Louis missed s left hook to the but Joe stabbed steadily, flicking as: £513‘ tgismmeqjt) ‘Qua utl-hsa e Totals .... .. s"! o a 24v___a __ lo him. pleading with him to set in his dark eyes. i-le might have am‘- l‘ bllsk "silt heavyweight at Brooklyn s-a and a-s, the night- body and Baer ripped into him Beer's face with left jabs. Louis °“'- a Wm" “e "1 a" Earned mssllg-vlvgllfiitfs 4 {the}; : . ; a error to -pi1ll the scCrc to 8-4 before the side was retired. In Stewart's half of the same inning they push- ed over what proved to be the win- ning counter. McNeill the first bat-- thucided a left hook on Beer's chin, but Max, gaining confid- ence, roughed Louls in a clinch, belting his head with both hands. Louis shot a clean right hard to from New Haven, Conn., knocked down George Chin. Wilkesbsrre blond. a minimum of once a round and won on a technical knockout after 2:19 of the third when Chip savagely with a. right to the head. They locked in a clinch, both cold and deadly. and poked carefully at each other. His face never changing, Louis flicked a stream cap going 11 innings. F ‘Jnny Babioh went the route for the Dodgers in the first, breez- ing along in front after his mates had put over three runs on as up, but the magnificently miscled playboy, who hadn't flincbcd once under his terrific castigation, couldn't hear him any more than he been going out, there to spar with a friend in the back yard, instead of meeting that crisis that guarantees him a shot at Jimmy Braddofirfis 5; runs batted in: Cannichael a, Stull. Hunter, F. Whelan. McLela lan, Power 2. Williams 2. W. Whol- an 2; three basc hit: MrNeiil; twvl could the roars from 90-000 scwflm- heavyweight tltlenexl summer with , ins voices. beetles dwrioirthe ring the ‘odds overwhelmingly in his was rlslnz- grossy from right many hits and a base on balls in of lofts into Beer's fozelicad, hook- the jaw. and poured a volley of for tripled to csntre- The next bat- base hit: Stull, Cairns, whilioogq in thunderous waves you -ouid al- 1a.,“ u, Wm n, hands. for the fourth time. Mann the first frame- ed a hard 19p; to the head then 1e“ hooks mm the side o; the ter McLellan hit a. long fly to hits; qr: stun, g; G055, 10; dqubu most feel. His left; hand was a piston, ae- Weighed 177. ChiP.175 1-2- In U10 $660110. B0551’ Rois, former smashed Boar's chin with both former champions head. Baer took Tight to score the runner after the play: Calms to Hunter in ninthq catch: the next two men went out in order. Starting the ninth Owen slammed a hot one to McNeil]; the throw to base on balls: off Stull 1 (Goss);l off Cross 1 (F. Whalen); strucfl J‘ out: by Stull 9; by Goss 3: firsfl ,," ., base on error: Hunter, Marley. ‘ i 1' Bob Pastor, New York heavy- weight. once a golden glove pride and New Yer-k UIIIVETSIi/v student. won an easy four-round decision infielder and outfielder. his first complete game. Dli-Ched hands on the ropes. A right to the head brought blood trickling from Beer's nose and he forged in des- perately. missing a long wild right. his lacing magnificently, staking after the negro, as Louis moved around the ring. lashing his face with lefts. Grinning through a Over his head swung the final l0, and probably with it the end of his career, for he earned close to $30‘),- 000 tonight and he said he was curate as though it were running in a groove. and as Baer. the huge- shouldered white man. whiter even by contrast with the golden choco- Yank- Defeat Senator: through if he lost. Dempsey rushed late of his negrds chin, fenced care- over Terry Mitchell. roush. Nd‘ Baer opened up with a savage at- bloody mask. Baer ripped - left first was juggled but the base Whitlock. W. Whalen. lvilolnnis 2o “, ‘ scrim the r1118. dragged him flick fully with him Joe started his plan headed Irishman from Boston. NEW YORK, Sept. 34—(A-PJ— tack but Louis survived the storm hook into Louis’ head, but the Judge rulcd the runner out. on the left on base: Stewarts 6: Battery 5Q in the 001119!‘ in hi5 flfms- l" the of destruction. Rlllht finder the gun. Pastor flicked Pounding 30ml) Hldlw End V0002 and drove Max into a corner negro pinned him on the ropes closest decision of the series. Math- Umpires; Al; the pmpo, y...‘ ~ brief. deadly second of silence that Terry's face with a left hook, cut- Olin Rogers for 16 hits, New York where lie hammered his head lin- and knocked him down with acson singled and Goss drew a pass Kane; on the bases Earl Goss. 81W“! 101100’! the T919559 °T 5° Steady Deadly Attack ting and closing completely his Yankees ran their winning streak mercifully. Baer reeled in the barrage of left hooks but tho bell much pent-up emotion usht eve. to six straight games today as they corner pinned there and Louis saved him at the count of four. Hi8 001F110‘! "We? flhlllled- Mk9 5 The Irishlllln did his best 8041118 turned back the Senators. 14-6 Bi hammered him savagely up to the Dempsey ran out, dragged the A Detected kw cobrafs head. his left snapped wt- oniv from the port side. but Pastor Washington. bell. Blood covered his face, Baci- bloodied white marl to his corner . out. out. wmetimes a ha“ ‘hull whipped him handily. though he The Yankem started their as- slapped disdainfully at the negro and they sought desperately to ‘than the crowd broke forth swu- times in a row. sometimes a Iiozcn could not floor him. mtcilell sauit in the second when they bat- as ho walked to his scat. Innis restore him. Louis’ round. a c this time in s Ml1<>1b°°s “B 3"“ and alwavs Beer's f-‘vrlv 0W‘ "all weighed m4 i-z, Pastor 184 3-4. fed around- and scored five times round. "MY ‘hm? mcmths “W hesvvvtlslll ddflsively grinning face, was right jieorgia Turner, 10-year-old 'I‘lll- to drive Hadley from the mound. ROUND FOUR. champion of the world. raised hi8 in the middle of the other end of 5a boy who made a“ kinds o; gm“. Rogers took the remainder of the ROUND TWO battered head. looked around him. Apparently the crowd thought he had chucked it. had stayed there on one knee when he might have risen again for more butchering. l-i icd his head in a towel and sla ser- ed from the ring steps. out prize ring perhaps for the last down the aisle. the last trac clowning and bravado for whic he bdr- f a the flick of a black snake whip. it. Once Beer's head was poked back far enough. once Baer was up out of his slight crouch. in flashed Joe's left holflr. deadly accurate as Half way through the first round. Boar's features began to give way. The first lcft hook that smashed into his face drew a trickle of blood from the nose. Then a right bashed ble for Max Beer in the former champions training camp at spec- ulator. hammered out a four-round decis'on over Heinz Korihaas, Ger- man heB-Wwelflht. in another gory spectacle. Kohlhaas weighed 205 pounds, Turner 1B5. o Technical K. 0. punishment. The Indians blasted out 15 hits, including three home American League champions. 14-7. First basemai Hal ‘rroslfy got his 25th homer of the season and catcher Roy Phillips hit his first as a member of the Indians. The third homer came from the bat of runs, at Cleveland to defeat Detroit Tigers, Again Baer came up slowLY. Daw- ing with his left and Louis snan- ped a left hook into his face. Baer crouched low as the calm negro stalked him and blood was trickling again from Max's nose. They boxed carefully in midi-lug and suddenly Louis smashed Baer into a. corncr with three tremend- ‘Baer came out Louis stalked him like a panther after stricken game. Barr's head with his long lofts. He was setting Max kill. A lcft sank deep in body and he stumbled back. An- other left nnd right bent him at the middle. A left and right to the chin rocked Max and as he leaned haitingly and He stabbed up for the Max's At CHARLOTTET OWN Wednesday Afternoon Sept. 25th was famous, gone. full on Max's lins. and blood stltr- ode“ Hale ‘m; r1 ms to m‘, Chm PM" milk back a amst the “meg he threw ‘But he was Max the mngnific t ted there. At. the end it not only Food continued w m ' ' g ' ‘ ‘ g ‘ ' _ , , , n {may u With two homers by Irving ncd foolishly, ilttcrly unable to his first punch of the round. n. . _ fi in there. for the short time he! t covered Boers face and chest wt Jorm Bu,” a husky Argent“ Burns. e vital part of their nltpok solve Joe's attack as the negro light right to the head. Max back- The “mmal Fuium!’ R0095 0f "i0 Prince Edward ed in the face of the greatest cha e the chocolate soldier has made in his brief professional care Twenty-one knockouts in as fiizh Louis now has scored. and the e seems no end to the amazing ilgh ing possibilities of the sensatio from Detroit.‘ Only 2i. ‘tawny as a mount-Bl lion, this was just another lay in Joe Louis'_ life. thouvh it bronchi back the million dollar gate that everyone thought died with Rickard. though it came to a climax under the blazing ring lights . - l. T . , gait),cazvlftlagugglwinnfg-Rlpy Filixfdheziywgligntfznztgfiy ‘$02M’. rookies. who dished out a total of ropes and Baer lashed him fur- start of the fourth. o ning bell to the last. As the bell divided declslon o", Mmmv Ne,“ 15 ill-BBB! It . enabled the iously with both hands keeping it WITH 5 TROTTERS ' Gun“ mum‘; g, Maia wouualldn‘; He slug- fltt o; T1115; out’ in the m“ 10m. guzdmigllct: Sweep I ----l-- H _ - V_,___ 7 , , _____ _,________ 1W ‘_____ ____ AND PACERS. _ , mur ero v a e news rounder. Cancels. weighed m l-s. ‘ . ‘ - - . l Referee Donovan ‘raped _ Bob ‘lefty’ Grove rained his , ‘l . Joe, never lifting his gaze rom Merritt s04 20th win of the season 1n the Cubs PfZmGd For Additwnal Sport 0n These young trotters and pacers are good mannered, the funny papers. 0011101‘ 33"" any request for special S10v0! ii’- h boiling commission today. Weill to a friend's home and tool: l\ hill. married Msrva hotter. hi! 19'7"?‘ old fiancee from ollics80 l-l 5"!" ll-‘lllo m‘! immbm mm u“ m“ n“ which hasn't missed n step since ’ , . '9 - mum, ‘l, m _ hi; wmll . and right there he had in the third with a right to the . another Philadelphia m r u Se t 4' _ Marmmem 5 %_°.a===-__-==__. . chin, but Moder pressed the but“, youngster. started the second mgfiéirplrgisdeéii-iga- Lgruls‘ g6 y i {K the Oil. in ill second straight defeat of the night d“ to me “mm; u, cub, _ "i when Jacob ("Buddy") Baer, Jlh. “m ve p? ’ e ‘ on n“ 731mm Eowmn m‘ l"! in "It" Dirk flflil- I you“... hm...“ o; m,’ m, ,, u, Practice for the Nomads it f)‘; ‘gglrghfi: 1,211‘; nfvzlmtfim LAND HARNESS memo y '°‘“"‘ "°°“'°“ °° "a" w‘ ‘l-“mtu P“ m‘ "uuns ‘i 5 two victories necessary to clinch 0"“ m“ mum!“ The rivllege of stal th b ‘ ‘ Srrfth of Kalisneii, mum“, l“ p gclock Ihsrn- the champkmshlp and m,‘ m, Ion TWQTBBEEAND P Sh! e 8 ove races has bee > bout that originally w“ mm ‘Q ~ ~-~— —A m1 d damn,“ o, the m, bu“ mun nan. ours secured by the CHARLOTTETOWN DRIVING PAR s semi-final but held after the __ 2‘ HOUR y, mpoccml o. the Cardinal pow- m w“ “M “a w!“ m AND PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION ASSOCIATION b L ‘m,’ M mama“ er, the Cubs hustled through s m.» "Hume mm“ m 1m reason of their being the highest tender. IUO o Pl ADA. in. ililrlllil; - ' ~ nlsrftmmo THE FRED C. MAN o HALIFAX. \. before the the tan of the negrofls skin. the ring. hauled him olf. Can Tile It! Louis“ straightened, never u mus- even lock. s‘ mm dint counts? NNEYiVIKNlA TU II z , no co. or - N. l.» ' l it flocked and smeared dark against . Baer loosed one barrage of punch- . es that stung Louis in round. and in the second round, af- ter Iouis, slowly increasing his power and drive, had flailed the for- mer champion unmerclfully along the ropes. Baer suddenly woke up just before the bell sounded. Just out of his own corner, with Demp- sey's screaming instructions still ringing clear in his ears. he drew back his lips in a snarl. pinned the first cle of his face changing that set. He walked sprlngily to with a first class belt in either hand. banged out a technical knockout over Paul Pros. big New Yorker, in the fourth round of the next preliminary. Starting the second round. Bres- cia cut Paul's nose and mouth and the continued hammering finally drew such a steady flow that NI- eree Bill Kavanaugh called a halt after 2:22 of the fourth. Brescia weighed 211, ‘Press 213. ' The huge crowd. jamming the park by this time. booted and Eddie Moder. clever New York heavyweight. fought a courageous uphql battle to win the last pre- liminary. a six-rounder. from Hank Hankinson, of Los Angeles. Big I-fxrlkinson floored Made:- for eight the rest of the WLY and won a do- cided decision. Moder weighed 1B8 3-4. I-Isnkinson 211 1-2. The Baer family absorbed it! hitil. thovgh conceding nearly so polmds to Baer u well u advant- » Ilel fn helsht and mach, authored 5 m4 ouieolniea nuaov most o; the my. ‘We received thy .I verdict. Mani-K Wllhld r-s and . o... , in each game. St. 3-0 and 8-8. Jack Knott allowed only hits in pitching the his season's 11th breaking s. 3-8 tie by scoring when Vern Kennedy walked Clift with the bases filled in the eighth inn- ing of the second game, Burns hit s. homer with lary on base in the ninth. Red Sol Win Doubleheader Three wild Athletic Louis Browns defeated the~ White Sox in both ends of a doubleheader at Chicago three shutout for victory. After pitching nailed him first with a lcfi. hook. and another right to tho jaw on the ropes. Bacrls face was crim- son from s. stream of Louis left Jabs. Joe whipped a left hook into the body. n. smooth moving choco- late machine, than belted the big white marl into tile ropes with an- other right to the he-nd. They cuf- fed at close qunrtcis. blood from Boar's face crlmsoning the brown man's shoulders. and Just as the ball sounded, Baer whipped a ter- rific right to the negros head. The negro faltered for n second on the ed into another dribbling down his lips, and Ref- eree Donovan warned backhnndlng. Louis was coldlyde- liberate as he flung a into Baeris head, then mashed his mouth up with a biting volley nf left jobs. Louis missed a long right and they fell info a clinch. A long right floored Baer. I-Ic sank to his knees, dropped his hands to the canvas and stayed there ‘helpless as Referee Donovan counted him out, a knockout minutes and 50 seconds after ihc COTIIQI‘, opener. when he held the Mack- men to three lfits until the ninth inning. The Box pushed over single runs in third. fourth and seventh and fire more in the eighth, due tr Boyle's luck of control. game and" passed two before yield- ing to Lieber with only one out. FOOTBALL PRACTICE TAXI SERVICE 1 0 3 0 IAN MacKENZIE I I ' brik 2 1-2-hour workout for the i Series With Cards CHICAGO. Sept. zit-The rollick- ing Chicago Cub pennant parade, dugout of the incredible Deans. With‘ the brothers Dean, Dizzy and Daffy, scheduled to fight them every inning of the way in their second straight mornili$ W! ' stead of taking advantage the hi!!! in the schedule. Every one of the players WI! ill excellent condition. The Dlwhe" were fresh and ready with “"1"” law's lull Warneke primed tel-pitch W!!!" ' Page 11 lllslllloll e 1988 Ind l!!! are eligible, the first payment of Two Dollars will be duo on October let, 1035. Mail your an, I. I. I. Wrlsht, Emmer- Prfme Edward Island. entries to the Secret- "'*“'.‘-'l"" fle- s gee-- blood him for left hook victim in iwo Lt.-Col. D. A. MacKinnon, D.S.0., President Island Harness Racing Club-$l,02<l2 in purse moncv to be distributed to the winners. N0 deductions. h TWO-YEAR-OLD FliTllRlTY WITH 7 PACERS AND 6 TROTTERS. THREE-YEAR- WITH 7 PACERS AND 7 TROTTERS. OLD FllTllRlTY require few scores and will give an afternoon's racing that should be as entertaining as the best, _ Come along and see your favorite colt from your see- IIOIICOIDPGI-G against the best from other parts of tho v Races sitart at 1.45 P. M. sharp, in the order named. i. . I i Admission 50c to all parts of the grounds. Free park? I ID-I-M-li L0804-9-20-tf _,,:...... m‘... *1"?- ,u—-->- ...»- 4._-._,,,.