I BATTE RI ES FULLY GUARANTEED mum ssso 17-Plato . . . . . . . . $10.50 LAWLOWS AIITO SALVAGE Opposite The Forum . Phone S88 245 Fitzroy Si. Knocks Out Landry In First Rount Bunny “Ace" McCloskey. hard- punching former Charlottetown boy last night won the Maritime middleweight boxing crown wthen he knocked out Bill Landry in the first round of s scheduled ien-nursd encounter. 'lhe end came with lramatll guddenness. Landry, after being knccked flat with a terrific left hand smash to the chin in the first minute of the scrap, got up without a count. For the next minute and a half McCloskey piled into his heavier opponent \-.ith a devastating, terrific mid~ Jection attack. Then came Lhe payoff; as they came out of a clinch McCIoskey caught Landry with another punch to the mid- section; down went the cham- pion. He was on his side as the <ount tolled off and just as 1t urns completed jumped to his feet. But he was all through for the evening. From the time bunny caught Landry with that terrific left hand smash to the jaw it was just a matter of tfme. As he sunk his left into his opponent's laid-section. the blows could be heard all over the Forum and ii’ Landry had come out for the sec- ond round it doubtless would have been over in quick order. Semi-Final Young Chuck Ormon of Hali- fax. 126 pounds of fighting fury and game. courageous Beau Jack put on a sensational display in the semi-final as Ormon won by a technical knockout in the fifth round. But for the length of time the fight lasted the big crowd was treated to both fancy and rugged fighting. Coming out for the first round Bcau Jack, attempting to gain revenge for s previous defeat at the hands of Ormon. came out last and shook Ormon up with some solid smashes to the face as he kept the Halifax boy from get- ting into close quarters. Jock woo counter punching well and had an edge in the round. starting the second. Ormon worked in close and wen-t to work on Beau Jack's fluid-section but Bau rallied to stagger the Halifax toy with another right hand smash. Again Ormon got into nose quarters with a two-fisted attnok but once again the Char- lottetown fighter shook his oppon- mt with a solid right hand. At the bell. however, Ormon landed 1 smashing punch to Beau Jack's mouth. Orrnon started to take complete rommand in tho third. His body REMEMBER WIIEII By Tho Canadian Press Jack Dunm, owner and managzr of the Baltimore Orioles of the In- tematlonal League, died in Balti- more 20 years ago today following a heart attack. Dunn's baseball club won the pennant seven times in a row from 1919 to 1925 -—- a record that still stands. NORMAN CUSTOM Serfd-am in England was a pnod- \:-."t of the Norman conquest. — (For Sale MOTION PICTURE PBOIECTORS Now or Used-SB M. M. and 10 M. M. - Apply B. ll. YIO, Indiana. Doclsr for llolmos PNIOWII- are: noises son; sans Brown Wood ‘rigor Stand- ard Brod Stallions, 1.01%. All 9. Slro Tiger flowers. DQ Almoda Mitchell. Biro of Dal Napoleon Dlnot. This lions rsood wall fill “WT-fir ‘#4? '5 Ya Brewer, Nah llalovor, oto. This Ilorso la a 2.1a class Pacer and weighs 1100 lbs m Isle 0 wonderful Biro. punching was slowing Jock up and the winner had the Beau down lor a nine count in the closing minute of the round. Throughout the fourth Otrmon pummelied his opponent almost st will but tho (tharlottetown boy refused to go down and he took the big crowd to its feet as he suddenly staged a two fisted rally to drive Ormon all around the ring. T-he end came in the fifth. Or- mon pinned Beau Jack against the ropes with another body at- tack; shifting to the head he caught the Beau with o right hand smash that sent the loser down for a nine count. Jack got up to run into mother flurry of punches and down he went again for nine. He was out on his feet as he got up and Danny McCob mack stepped in to award‘ Ormon his technical knockout victory. Sparkles Gallant of Halifax proved be was plenty game and that he could soak up punishment like s sponge when he lost s four round decision to Harry Poulton in a preliminary. Unable to get out of the way of Poultonfs rap- ier-like left Jab. Gallant was down for three counts during the four rounds but managed to hang on to the end, rallying in the final heat to 'make his best showing of the fight. The decision was an unanimous one. Goby McCloskey and Lloyd Mar- tin put on another hair-raising bout in another four ounder as they slugged away at each other from the opening bell to the final gong with neither one of them being able to earn an edge. Both hard punchers. they had each other in difficulties several times throughout the scrap but although groggy at times they failed to hit the deck, both, however, slipping to the canvas together on a couple of occasions. Young Dempsey and Johnny Doyle, two youngsters, put on s. great display in a threeround curtain raiser. Both alugged away at each other with a will. both showing some smart boxing tac- tics and the two kids got a great hand as they climbed from the ring. The decision was o draw. As an added attraction. s com- edy wrestling match was staged between Young Quinn and the Masked Marvel of Charlottetown. Neither Quinn nor referee Tom MicCloakey liked the tactics of the Masked Marvel and it wound up two against one. MoCloskey get- ting the worst of it as he had the shirt ripped from his back while tussling with the Marvel. United States Football Results By Th; Canadian PrUI Williams 0 Bowdcin 26. Michigan State l9 Penn State 16 Wayne 6 George Washington 20. Colin-tibia 14 Army 48. Northeastern 0 Bates 20. Duke ~11 Richmond 0. St. Mary's 33 Fordham 2. Marquette 8 Pitt 7. Yale 6 Cornell 6 (tie). Northwestern 14 Michigan 14 (tie) North Carolina 21 Navy 14. Purdue 14 Ohio State 14 (tie). Mass. Coast Guard 0 Harvard 69. Dartmouth l3 Brown 20. Bucknell 21 University of Buf- falo 0. N. C. Stats College 14 Wake Forest 6. Fort Belvoir 30 Quantlco Marinas 6. Brooklyn College 25 Wagner 19. Otterbein 33 Ohio Northern 6. Rutgers 7 Princeton 14. Xavier 6 Miami 28. New York University I Insider 0. Penn 40 Virginia 0. N. Y. Union 2'! ltonsoclaor Poly- technicai Inotif/tlbe ‘I. EAST: Colgate 47. King's Point ‘I. Syracuse 31. Holy Orooo l2. SOUTH: ‘Iulano M. Album- 0. Kentucky 10. Vanderbilt ‘I. Tennessee Polytechnic 20. last- em Kentucky 7. North Carolina State l4. Wake Forest 0. William and Mary Si. Washing- ton and Lea 18. ' Miami 20. Florida ll. Georgia Si, Oklahoma A b ll IS. Louisiana mu ‘I. Mississippi l. MIDWIST: Iowa 1!. Indiana 0. Illinois H. Wisconsin 21. Missouri SS. Iowa State ll. Purdue 14. Ohio State 14 (tie). Ohio Wesleyan 1S. Grerlin (I. Minnesota 40. Wyoming 0. Nebraska l6, Kansas 14. South Dakota 8. Aullltans (5.1).) 0. Michigan State JTOU l1. flo- v trc Dame Jsyvsoa 1 lhmlino 13. Dakota Wesleyan .'I QOUTIIWISI‘: Oklahoma l. Koala ltata ‘I. ‘nus A a ll l4 ‘hlaocbristfsn 0. Tons Tech 1|. Baylor l Tessa I0. Arkansas l. Ill WIIII 4' Flkht fans all over the Island although disappointed by last nlkhts quick ending to the main bout of the card staged ,1 ih Forum. will hail with delighet Bunny NfcCloskeys capturing of i-he middleweight crown. the first title held by the Charlottetown b0! Slime he started his ring car- eer. 1|- Il- 0- 0 No fair-minded person will take Anything away from MoCloskeyfls Vim")! He went into the ring in perfect fighting condition. He did most of the fighting, all the time it lasted and it is certainly no fault of his or his managers that tlitde fight ended as suddenly as 1t d . 1|» tl- 4- -l~ But during the short while the fight was in progress Bunny gave 8 die-Inlay of punching prowess and ring work that took some of the old timers back to the days when another middleweight, Jack Mc- Kermit, was fighting in local rings. The shots that Mccloskey was driving home last night into Landry's mid-section were sinking in wrist deep and make no mis- take about it. when McCloskey hits anyone that way they are hurting and hurting plenty. 1|- 1- i- 0' Congratulations are in order to Bunny. No matter irrhat some may think. this writer is of the opin- ion that the title was wan when McCloskey belted Landry with that. smashing left hand in the first minute, a smash that ssnt Landry down and so surprised hm that he climbed right back on his feet without a count. 4- 1l- i d- That we think was the payoff. The winner kept boring in with a hard body attack after that and Landry could not possibly have stayed in there under that kind of punishment. He may have. or may not-and we are not a Judge of human feelings-have been able to stay longer. but McCloskey would finally have caught up to him for keeps. , + t! 1|- 1- But the card as a whole was a good one. The fights Pfefiedi-Yl! the main bout were all real hard- hitting, and at times wild sluselns affairs so good that they had the fans on their feet all the time. There was action every minute and McCloskey gave the folio I glimpse of a hard-hitting, light- ning fast middleweight during the time that Landry managed to stay in a horizontal Position in front of hi1:- 4- Il- 4- The following is a little late with hockey now in full swing but it will prove interesting to baseball fans vho follow the Big Leagues. It is from the facile P911 of Doug Vaughan of the Windsor Star: 0 0 0 0 Hats of! to the St. Louis Oar- dinalsl ‘Ihey are worthy cha-m- pions of the baseball world if a team ever was. If the kn ck- tlmvn, da-ag-uam-out series ust concluded proves anythhw- i! 15 that no championship was ever won on a reputation. 4- + 4» 0 The Red Sox, on the strenslh of breeding to an American League pennant. went into the Fall clas- sic at odds varyins s11 ti" "Y from S to 1 favoritism to ii to i. They come out of it with nothing more to show for their efforts than second money 8nd "ml l" their own 1111111: crdlv Billie"- 4» 0 As for tho Oordo they mwd that they are mode of the stuff of which real ehamiilofll l" moulded. A dozen times during the battle for National League honors they were on the Ho" but “m; 1p swinging. Made heavy pro-season favorites to coo the crown in their own circuit they wore handed their first iolt bi’ the Mexican League to which they lost their top pitcher. Max Lanler snd several lesser lights. 0 O '0 0 That would have been enough to prove s knockout wallop to a loso courageous band of_ athletes. But, as flr _ as the Cards were concerned. it was only a chsllenl! tadlginwlththairqvikosartd flht tho harder. Eight down to tho last day of tho season the! staged s nock-and-nock struggle with tho dougbty Dodgers of Brooklyn. The teams finished in a dead heat and tho first playoff in the history u maior 1H8"! baseball was needed to determine tho winner. ' O O 0 O What happened in that playoff is hiotory. ‘lilo Cards won in two straight games. anon 1...... to. Oolorsd '1. 1W3} State 0111mm,’ n. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Pro Basketball League 0|1ens 0n Nov. 1st By MURRAY ROSE NEW YORK, Oct, 21 — (AP) — Having taken some uuhaPPY Ban- ded! Bit t/he long lines of basketball toms who couldn't get imo the big ammo to see the hot-shot Oolleg. ions 1m action, the hard-seamed gents who run some of the larger trwdoor sports palaces have welded together the Basketball Association of Aurerica, a new pro loop, in or. drea- to take care uf overflow ous- tomers and the cash they bring to the box-offices. 'l‘he backers of the BA A. be. lieve tlhey can make the pros pay off once they lmvc established the traiibne of the loop. ’ ‘Theawnersqftheteamsinthe 11 ci-tiets of the association, one of which is ‘Toronto. for most part are the corporations which own the big arenas in which the other spouts prosper. They have plenty of money behind them and are willing to lose this year in order to put the league on a firm foo-ting. The loop begins operations Nov. 1 and each team wil! play a 60- gnme schedule, 30 at. home and 30 away. Split into two sections, the circuit will hove six teams in tlhe east and five in the Wes‘. The cast- ern gnorutp is made up oi’ New York. Phdladciphia, Vvasthington, Provld. mice, Best-on and Tcmtnfo. The soc-stern fives are Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis and Plots- bulrgvh. A play-off will be held at the end of the season, and Nod Irish. executive director of Madison Square Garden as well as basket. ball boss of the wreath, says a $75.- 0OO to $90,000 jackpot will be divid- ed (im-cmg the top warns. Irish says: “We're P014118 major lagging salaries flu a/t-tract the best players in the game and to give the customers a real show 011i!‘ payrolls compare Pavcmably with the National Hockey League and even with big league baseball." Sport Briefs Here's u, touch to take the chill out of these breezy October days: The annual Oxford-Cambridge boat race will be held March 29 next at 5:15 p.m., instead of the usual 11 a.m. start. The late start is enforced by the tides. SHANNON AIRPORT. Eire, Oct. 21 — (OP) -— Jar! Bnksi, heavy- weight boxm 11cm Kuipmontt, Pa" amrived here today on his way to London where he will flgiht uhe British lighol-lmvywei-Zilt chamtp- ion, Freddie Mills, Nov. 5. He was accompanied b. his manager, Nate Wotlfoem, and trainer, Whitey Bim- stein. MOSCOW. Oat 21 — (AP)—'I‘.i'1s ail-anion apm-"s oommrttoe am- rmmoed it has approved sohedilbw for ckey play this W" in its two leag%—on=. using the Canadian style “tit/it six players on a beam and the other favoring the R ' 1 style with 11 players. NTEW YORK. Oct. 21 -(CP) — Canadian Chinese who attend-ed the hockey school conducted by New York Rangers at Winnipeg. his been sent to New York Rovers of tiha Eastern League, Ranger of- Now in Windsor, mat... where tihe Ranger farm team 1s n nclnldlitng its pee-season naming, Kwong will be the first onincse to newton“ lo organized hockey in the United Btalteowheuihetakeothelcefor 09am; iqggtug game agadnfl. Boo. 1m Oiyunpico in Boston newt Bill- day. ACADIA WINNERS wourvnha. n. s. Oct. ao- tw)—rAcsd-is University seniors scored an ‘ll-S victory over Dal- housie University Saturdal WM the Axemenk three quarter. John Lcggitt. Glace Bay, N. S. scored two trys in the first half. Another Acadia 11111111 111m!“ Dolhouoio Oubo 14-0 in an inter- mediate match. Billy Baxter, Nottingham For- est football club halfback, has fig- ured in the shortest transfer in tho game's history. He moved to Nottl County. whose ground ll threeminutcs’ walk from Forests. ‘The transfer price wasn't re- vealed. Dvivc oul’ ACHES ficials annotmced today. "mad @1811 llld P1111181 Will Wants Match With Louis BAIJIMDRE, Oct. 21 —(AP) — Tho lidlsnfand Boxing Commission today named Curtis (‘mo Hlotchet. man) Sheppard the No. 1 heavy- weight boxing championship corn- tender. and his manager, Max Wax- man, urged the Commission to use its powers to arrange a mawh wifih champion Joe Louis here next sum. mar. Not oumtingnhis fights this year, Sheppard's record since 1808. an- octrd-ing to Nat Flclrohers ring rec. lord book, boxingb "bible? is 34 victories and 23 defeats Ioour of the losses were via the knockout route, tvwo of them caning in 19-15 —".0 Petnk Daniels, Louis’ sparring yin-rinse, a-nd to Jersey Joe Wnloott. Li’l Arthur Wins Decision ilver Frechette . TORONTO, Oct, 21 —(CP)—l.i'l Arthur King. 128 1-2-pound Toronto Negro. tonight punched out a clean-cut decision over Paul (Blond) Tiger) Frechette, 121 3-4 pounds, of Lowell- Mass, in an eight-round main boxing bout at Maple Leaf Gardens. King had the more experienccd Frechette on the canvas for the count of nine in the tthird and the fourth rounds. Anglers at Jasper JASPER, Alba. Oct. 19 —l~lenry T. Emerson, Jr. of Droike Road Indian l-Iill, Cincinnati. is the champion angler of the Maligne Rive-r Anglers (I-l-llb, according to John Stark, manager‘ of Jasper Park Lodge, headquarters of the clrulb. The 1946 championship brings to the winner :1 gold mitten and a pemrlanetmt membership in the club second prize in the cluo chcnupion- ship uras won by M G. Maguusovn, 805 Wilnuot Road, Soarsdale, New York, who has been awarded a silver button The winning speckled trout weigih- ed exactly three pounds and was 18 inches in length with a girth of 11 l-2 inches It was caught in fast ivater witin o six ounce fly rod, the heaviest allowed under the rules of the club. the fly used was a brown bucktnil streamer. The opening n.‘ JASPET Park Locme this summtr marked a greatly in- creased miter-est in the Maligne Rivers Anglers Q".1b and through- out the seastm s came 1m that tihe fishing conditions were splendid . Briefs-From Britain By The Canadian Press LONDON —t'JP)— The Admir- alty ls nfiforing private [inns near- ly a dozen warships of the sloop class. up to 1.100 tons including Larry (King) Kwong. ZLyear-old “w new,“ Mmmlw yum‘ mm chantrecs. , NEWRY. Northern Ireland — (C Pl- Post/man John Malian caught a41-2poundtor1gaeelona main . IQNDON -—-<OP)— Tho supply ministry has asked children to col- lect rose hips, needed for making Vitamin C syrup , England — (OP) - Lorii Mayor Kahleen Gmnhers has innmohod a 20,000 pound (000,000) appeal to wild homes for the aged IONDGI --(CP) — Pilneapples from ihoAmmo, glhce chnrril fromPnncoandIt-allmaaadusxo port fkun fipln and arrive soon. TER. Biglanti —(C'P) -'Iihe oilby is cutting by 13 1.2 per cent its rate ‘or hydraulic power from menial amino charged with fir at 1,000 pounds per __ TII‘, Section‘ —(OP) --'l‘he St. Andrews league of pre- nIotm-iatns has mvivcd authority 1o commute at an from Ale mo near hero. , England —(CP) — of oil boring st Olilnglqv- GLAXOVW, —-(OP)— bRs. Vid- at Jbocb, 0S. mo of Scotland's moot gmlrmhhed motlern metahno sums, Btgiand -<cr>- After a: flrot flight, M11‘, Hannah Riley said her only oomphlflt- WI! 'vico. Montana State Ooliqo ‘I. that the wings limited her view. BRADFORD, Iqigland -(CP) -—- A drive has been slanted for per- rdsoion to Imw Sunday movies In towns [in Yorkshire's West Riding GLASGOW --(OP)- The Olyde paddle simmers Queen Impress. Dilvhq of Rotisssay and hgie 111 Io um; oer-upped our war oer. ' Wanted PAGE SEVEN Jurges Dropped From Active Player List CHICAGO. Oct. 21—(AP)—Chi- cago Cubs today dropped short- stop Billy Jurges from the active player list, but at the same time signed the 38-year-old baseball veteran to a coaching contract for 1947. The move, because Jurges was ranking Bruin shortstop last scu- aOn despite his years, prompted speculation the Cubs were about to complete a deal for a new shortstop. The Cubs long have been reported interested in Marty Marion, shortstopping ace of the world champion St. Louis Car- dinals. Only shortstop listed m the Cub roster now is Lenny Meru‘.lo. Alouettes In First-place Tie With Argos (By The Canadian Press) The big four football race, that once looked like another runaway for Toronto Argonauts, was tight- er than bark today after Mont- real Alouettes trounced Ottawa Rough Riders 25-15 and drew 1n- to a. first place tie with Argos. Rough Riders helped Alouettes out more than a little by dump- ing Argos 12-3 at Toronto Satur- day before moving on to Mont- 'eal for the Sunday game. Argos and Alouettes now have l2 points each. with Ottawa lust two points behirli and three games to go. In the Ontario Rugby Football Union, Toronto Indians blanked Sarnin Imperials 18-0 to stretch their unbeaten streak to eight games. The second-place Hamil- ton Wildcats turned in another whitewash job. downing Windsor Rockets 29-0 as playing coach Prank Gnutp sparked his team with a flawless passing attack. Wildcats. two points bchind In- clans. meet the leaders at Hamil- ton next Saturday in a decisive game. Toronto Balmy Beach goose- egged the winless Ottawa Troj- ans 11-0 to complete the bill. Winnipeg Blue Bombers blew a chance to cop the Western Can- ada League when the tall-end Saskatchewan Rough Riders edged them 18-17 at Winnipeg. Bombers wound up 1n a tie for first place with Calgary Stampeders and open a home and home series at Cal- gary next Saturday for the west- ern title. In the intercollegiate lcague. big Bob McFarland sparked Univer- sity of Western Ontario Mustangs to their third straight win, scor- ing ll points as the Bronks harn- rnered McGlll Redmen 18-2. Backflelder Don Bark of Uni- versity of Toronto also notched li points as Varsity whitewashed the luckless Queen's University squad 21-0 at Kingston. NOW WHO'S CRAZY STUDENTS WONDER DUNEDIN, N ‘I. . Oct 21 —(CP) -—'I‘wo Ola-go University students sitting in their automobile ivere ap- proached by n. stranger who ad- mired the ear ano asked if they vmnmed to sell i'.. Thev named a price which the st/rn-ngor promptly accepted. ' One Kudent went into o. garage t4) give the pmciliascr an official nooeipt and the car was handed over to the stranger, who drove off. Then the students found that nei- iiher had received the money, as each hho-ught the purchaser hnd given it to the other. They hitod a taxi and gave a. frenzied chase. but Qsid not find tho ma‘. ‘may reported their loss to the police who informed them that tlhe ptnohoser was an escaped inmate of the Otrokonui Mental Home. Af- ter "bowing" the car he had driven hart 11o (the name and reported his mourn Thelvwo wudotnto are still won. daring jut what the transaction makes them. FOR DELICATE CHILDREN BROUG-l-FIUN - 1N - FURNIES. England (C?) —- Sir Robert Rankin has given historic Bromh. ton Tone-r and 1205 acres to Lan- oashiro County for use as an open- s-ir school for delicate children. LIB, Ihgllnd —(CP)- Oun- adfm-mado utility hs-nitirro soon will be on solo here. IDNDON, -— (GP) -- The Post Office has Qtalvoti plans for re. painting lobtzr boxes and telephone kiosks because of the linseed oil slsortage. , To soll. 1000 Ala Bottles by Tender. Write In 000. Montana. manna J- THE BETTER GIFT in single, double and triple strands at Broekett’: Jewellery Bout Postponed PI-HIADBILPIHA, Oct, 2—(AP)— Promoter Herman Taylor announ- ced today that next Monday's scheduled i5-round bout Dutweell Bob Montgomery, holder of the New York~Pennsylvania version of the lightweight title, and chal- lenger Wesley Mouzon. has been postponed until Nov. 26. Tho postponement was made be- cause Montgomery cut his lip while sparring yesterday, Taylor said. Sport Shorts From Britain (Clznadian atheist-tr Writer) LONDON. Out, 2o - (C?) With all this tail: about shooting nodwts to the mccn English sports- men decided to give tin-rm a my- out-ch (he ground ‘hirchied to p, motorcycle. The result delighned s dentists but (he man-on-the street tiltougdht It "final," Wcunbmy Stadium was packed with 85.000 persons, and another 310,600 ttried to got in, 11s Bill Kit- -, dim. cnrwtctin oi Wembeys Speed- way motorcycle team, pmparcd to Ei-vc iihe first yiubllr. demonstration 01f a roctcct-alssistied motorcycle. It was a. side-show ho the regular fipefidwvoy meeting alt the park and lmd been bnllyhous-d for weeks. Tile rccket b11110 outcome of six nmnths work by Prof AM. Low. llwesid-emt of the Intemplanetary So- ciety and Britain's lmding rocket; expert, voas cm imposing sig1ht Twn rcokeits were fixed on each side of the black wheel, encased in alumi- mzm shleldsq T110 rockcrs wrerc touched off by uri cuectric button when the rider cruised to tthe starting lime and, with flames and smoke pouring iircnr them, the machine almost s-tallod when only halfway around the trork. Kitchcttt, who described tthe ride as "'1 grand experience," said he upwind tlir- throttle “to keep going." Prof. Low so-id the experiment proved rcckcts can prcpcl machines “and I hope nrxt your h: have four roclcot-assistcci machines in a speedway race but with dmlble the nrcifett. power " The spectators, dampened by a. sutdtdtem downnoirr of rain. didn't sir-are ihis vicw “Let's just to petrol-power- ed miotorbfzo racing-Anne's more 11m in it." said one disappointed onlooloet- » Arsenal footcball club has signed Albert Gaudmunxtswn, Iceland ceri- iizc-forword. as an amateur. Dank- h-zlired and sllmly built, Guldmund- sson is strurwing shipbuilding in Boutadn. He ptlayed a fcw gatmns for Glas- gow Riamgtcrs of the $oottislh League last season. . Roll-en Hesfotd, B.A , is n schoolmaster who gets respect from his pupils in the classroom and helm-worship from th-ern Saturday EfiiflTiCiCiilS In school they call him “Sir” but it's "Good Old Bob" c111 the football ground l-lesford is goalkeeper iior Huddersfield Toyvn. lilngillish League first. division club. Charles Hart, a1 years young of Metreway, Twickeriholm, who wm- plcvted a 24-min: wnlk from Wind- sor to London it: six hotum isn't satisfied with himself Af-ter his trike he hold reporters he wouhi I-uwemadettsrwiinsteadda. wail: “but I twhrod my lonoo and couldn't put 1n much trlining " He hopes to (mmtirwe truiniw- and "do bigger fittings." LONDON. Oct. 22——(CP)—Proh- ably the oldest, and most unique horse race in the world. the New- market Town Pirate, went on as scheduled this year and the win- ner was riddcn by a 17-year-old Irish girl, Mollie McGrnth. The race was inaugurated in i606 by King Charles II to com- memorate his accession to the throne. H‘! ordered that "the plate is to be rid for yearly, the second Thursday in October, for ever." Mtlch of the original character of the race remains. It is run over four miles, the only flat: race of this length un the British turf: entries close about half-hour be- fore the start and prizes to first. second and third iockcys are val- ut-d of. about £30 -(Sl20.) It was n local affair until some ycnrs ago when women hogan tn take Phrt. In 1043. the last time the rncc was hold. n duke’: sister. a jockeys sistcr. .1 hookmnkerk daughter and ihc daughter of (our trainers took fact. Only professional jockeys arc barred by the clause which reads “no man is admitted to ride. . .’ that is either serving man or; groom." Army Beats Columbi: 48 - 14 In United States College Football NEW YORK, Oct. "Ll-JAP Long runs characterizedvthe p Saturday as thg list of unbea United states college foot teams was cut almost in half. Army. back at the top of f): heap as the no. 1 club, alloo Glenn Davis locsc for 66 yards an a touchdown and then unleash Doc Blanchard, for M yards another counter as the code“ hammered out their 23rd couscous tive victory. This time previously unblemished Columbia was Ch‘ victim, 411-14. A 47-yard pass and run pl engineered by Bobby Layne. 303 Texas its third straight touchdo in its Zi-O romp over Arkansas, the Razorback’: first def Springs of 65 and 89 yards broug Iowa home the 13-0 winner ovq Indiana in the big nine’s biggell surprise. Longest run of the day, ho ever, was turned in by end Powell of Florida A. and M, whfl intercepted a pass three yards fr! his own end zone and scarnperol the loti-yurds for the marker thud gave his team a 7-0 decision ovd Morris Brown. Short, consistent gains brougll Tennessee a 12-0 triumph over Ala- bama in one of the day's mos: im- portant clashes and shot CoacI Bob Neyland's record to 36 con- secutive victories. The Iowa victory over Indium was the most lopsided in the bi] nine Saturday. Northwesterrl and Michigan struggled to a 14-14 deadlock, a score that was match: ed exactly by Perdue and Ohfl State. Pennsylvania continued to gin evidence of power in taking apafi Virginia, another unbeaten teens until today, by a 40-0 score and Harvard, gradually‘ gaining e err-l prestige, humbled Coast Qua 69-0. It was the cadets first 1 setback. Brown spilled Dartmouth. 20-1‘ and Syracuse dumped Holy Croj 21-12, in a pair of eastern sfi prises that equalled the Michigtfl State victory. North Carolina, which iously hnd never scored on Nov“ got enough tallies this time to» feat the midshipmcn, 21-14, wit Charles Justice the hero. Josef Szczyglel is rnortiti; that's what. He filled out his weekly foob- hall coupon, placed it in his Jvallofl and went out to post it. At thy post-office he discovered bofll wallet and coupon missing, The wallet was handed in at iii police station. It had been droppol into a house letter-box, Had if! been posted, his entry would htavl netted him the record price o! 540.747 ($162958) on hl-s penny chance. To complete his mortificatiors, more than £3 his wallet. was missing from or» _ BLUE 811111133 wrrn: ms: 311A nooks zvm gown!