PAOE FOUR. BABE RUTH 'Big League Scores HIT HOMER Slakes Forty-second Circuit Clout of Season Yesterday Still Behind Gehrig NEW YORK, Sept. 18. Babe Ruth's forty-second homer of the season helped the New York Yankees to score a heavy victory over St. Louis Browns in the first game of a double-header yesterday. Ruth is now just two circuit clouts behind Loo Gehrig for the year. The Yan kees also won the second game but not by such a large score As a result of the double vietery the Yankees went into a tie foe National League New York 7, St. Louis 2. Boston 1, 2, Pittsburgh 0. 4. Brooklyn 3, Chicago 4. Philadelphia 8, Cincinnati 3. American League St Louis 0, 1: New York 17, 6. Cleveland 2, 2; Boston 9, 1. Detroit 3, Washington 1. BASEBALL STANDINGS National League Won Lost St. Lotrts 6 New York - 85 Chicago 79 Brooklyn , 75 Pittsburgh 72 Boston 62 1 1- ( i mn in Lii nj , q 4 second place- with- the Washlrigtont-imiatl 55 itu lust it game w me Detroit Tigers. Union steamer Cardena and OP.R. steamer Princess Mary are both due In port this afternoon ox evening from the south. Neither had reported arrival time up to 2 pjn. American Lea sue 50 61 68 71 74 84 86 91 Philadelphia 100 " 43 WashJtapteor 86 57 New York . .". ' 86 57 Cleve(apd 72 70 St. Louis 59 85 Detroit - "... 58 86 Chicago 55 87 Boston 56 87 - ALL THAT IS REFINED IN MEN'S CLOTHING IS YOURS , . FA Rlf tik Itk QtxV & VEN OF AFFAIRS have long favoured , j O IhToh-praft r r Q ' CLOTHES f yt for both business and social wear i because of their quiet elegance of style and quality. EXCEPTIONAL VALUES v v from 2 5 ' " Complete stock of Furnishings j of Style and Quality in well X known, brands, from. Canadian' Lj manufacturers. & Bryant Company c5 , Limited r j v Alder Block, Sixth Street , Phone 297 Pet .658 83 37 .514 f .493 .425 .420 77 .601 01. .403 87 SPORT CHAT If there are four legs In all Can- ada capable of streaking over cin dered stretcnes like those lightning nmbs two young men from the west flashed at Amsterdam In 1923. delving detectives of the Dominion's Olympic committee will find them They must uncover speed and more speed if Canada's sprint supremacy is to be retained at Los Angeles next summer. It may be a simple matter to find toe quartette of flying limbs oertMftx the four which Plv William anil TtMimi. D.lV.U .sway over tne world's fleetest three years mo aren't entirely Ieaderw- but the fact Is gradually asserting Itself that this country hasn't a sprinter, at the moment who could beat an International field or more than one quarter-mller who could itarve a fraction from 49 second over the 4 10-yard route. That Is f Olympic team next year are looklne " " .1U,. ,K- MAM - t.-u uw Mil liujucu fM4cot uic uj-way ana even more Intently Into the class-rooms for material. Thev J5"! aren't so sure Williams Is going to tcome back or that Ball will ever I return to form. Thev hone sn almost everything depends on these two eveni out iney must be dash-men of quality so they can't take chances. Should Williams become once more the peerless runner he was In 1928, the year he eraduated from high school, or race as he did at tne British Empire Games two years later, Canada won't have a problem at all so faras Its sprinters are concerned. The Vancouver marvel can look after the defenst. of his 100 and 200 metre titles with out assistance If he is right. But the Williams who was beaten by; ten-second sprinters last summer wasn't. Besides a few df the old old "guard who ran for Canada In the ' last youngsters who might ably fill Wil liams' shoes in another year. They beem to have about everything the British Columbia boy had' 12 months before he became a national hero. If anything, Johnny Fltzpatrlck. the bronzed Hamilton fiver, is faster than ever and If he were in training tnia season probably would trounce any sprinter In Canada, lncludlnz the Olympic champion. He passed up the Dominion championships this month at Winnipeg and It was at Winnipeg that a battalion of youths paraded In big company for tne mst time but not the last. One of them stands out as Canada's most promising sprinter. At 17. blonde Bert Pearson, of Hamilton Central Collegiate, is national 100- yards champion. His big win came only a week or ro after he won the schoolboy championship of Ontario. in tne opinion 01 his coach, Captain R. Cornelius, Bert Pearson, at 18 may have a Maple Leaf crest tacked on nis oreast and crack runners of the world's nations lined up beside him. If the widespread suree of schoolboy talent invades the Olym pic field, Pearson will lead the way. Already on his heels are several young fellows whose futures seem just as bright. BUI Robinson and Eddie Dore. schoolmates arid team mates of Pearson, loom as possibles .hat-no selection committee can Ignore. George Powell, the slim speedster from Toronto, has raced lis way into a front rank berth. and Vincent Forbes, of Vancouver, showed at Winnipeg he can match ;inaes wun tne rastest steppers of he eastern contingents. Ralph Warns, who ran for Canada at Am sterdam and, with Fltzpatrlck. in the best sprint relay man available. bowed to Pearson's speed In the century final at the Winnipeg ihamplonshlps, but Adams Is not through. He defeated just as good , field as Pearson" downed when he apturcd the 220-yard final. The prairies seem to have only one outstanding sprinter Buster Brown, of Edmonton. Consistently a ten-second man in the hundred, Brown slipped under the mark sev eral times this season as he cam paigned and would have been a favorite to cop one of the Dominion 1 titles had he competed in the meet. : ujune uonen, curly-headed little Winnipeg star, plans a comeback! next spring that he hopes will land , ntm an Olympic job. Unless Jimmy Ball, who lost an Olympic 400-me-tres title at Amsterdam by turning THE DA2LY IfEWS ,.Prli r- ' i- Alex Wilson, just as good at the quarter as the half, prefera the lat ter and probably will concentrate on tne longer distance next spring. Fred Martello. husky TmlL B. C. youth, and Maurice Hughes, of Mon treal, sped into the Umiltaht this fall by their showing at Winnipeg and either may tum out to be a successor to Ball if the great beat Martello by a scant two yards ji the 440-yard event. Capt. Cornelius has hopes that the aces of hlrown quarter-mile corps may definitely push ahead, and he particularly poinu to Fred Shaver. Mickey McBeth and Ed Burrow. Shaver, however, la almost certain to become an 880-yard star Coach of thpOan-adian teams In 1924 and 1928, Capt eating the acceotanw of recl-irof Itv with the' United States as being ln the direct line of progress and of great economic value to all the wage earners of Prince Rupert. A sensation was caused at Kltsu mkalum at Tveek-entf when notes had been occupied by H. S. Clements, the Conservative candidate. "ARABELLA CIGARS So fragrant ... so fresh . . . so satisfying . . . ir" small wonder they hold the favour of cigsr smokers . . wrapped individually so you receive them Jo the samo condition as they leave the airy, sunlit factory . , , try the pocket pack of five. MEN ARE 0VERCLAD Head of Eni lUh Hygiene Body Commends Women's Dress LONDON. Sept. 18 Sir Thomas Oliver, president of the Institute of Hygiene, commended the modern dress of women in a speech at Letehworth. On the other hand, he WAS ONCE CHAMPION (Continued from rage One) defended It against Jeffries' attempted come-back and finally tlnquUhed it in Havana to WUIard. Bor nln Kentucky Hart was born Sept 16. 1876. in a farming community near rem Creek, Ky. His parent were of German stock. He attended the grade schools ,f" In Louisville V0"'. and !? then Jimmy really U through as a top- sU. men were certainly overetad. notcher. notcher. Hushes, Hughes, a a sUra. slim, arlttv gritty bov. boy, and. comnared with women thtr '"W Mw plumbing trade. rlothtne wa. .herm h.w a "inter was ire- qunt"' snMra ln hol days. and and anhMtlr nn&Mtente. Btr Mr t. Thomas wan . addressing the conference of British eonetlerec and be said that women did not dreas specially to attract the opposite sex. out largely to compete with each other! . "Taken altogether." he added. r"ther4fviclUn4he modern dress ofwomtft to efetnmend' it from OljTOpLd and aVelllg .trong CorneUM ' rwrtln heiUth " well as the thi the selection sePlecLrcommn committee can put its fj?!?.nt- hehope. aesthetic. But there U nothing at- collective ftneer on half a Amen mat Pererv Williams and Jlmmv t.ractfw nhmit mu .mi- in r-.t Twenty Years Ago In Prince Rupert September 18, 1911 young man. but it was something of an accident that made a prtsef Ighter out of the young plumber. His interest ln the game vaa aroused when he acted as second to a Louisville youth who engaged In a grudge fight with another snoruy arterwards Hart was elected to fight 'Big Bill" Schiller, a local celebrity In Louisville whom none of the other ring aspirants of 3all may be back next summer to for men. the day of elegance In dross the. ?0U d y er Md thf rikntutiM intA t. a,.u. nt anAt-m v,. .,.u matched for a finish and Hart cut an age that is past." , 7, . 1 t! . in .mi ,h. Ar. ... Immediately became a hero In Sir Thomas said he did not observe ln men any evidence of a great de- lr- In Ik.l. .1..V.I 1.... " -- .v- So he forgot his plumbing wrenches for good ' an dtoek up' box w MICH (WIWIIH(. UU 11 ' , was not so long alnce women's dress. , V" .He ?rtd ., 17 suc" P knockout tfnd befflme a with iu numerous petttowu. w equally heavy and unhealthy. Ex- natlonaI ngure- ..w.. w hw. nnocxea uui once , H. S. Clements, Conservative can-'the ehinw in hm t uu. dldate for Skeena In the federal!, rWM L "? " , " . ... kiijcjicu uui vmj once, ana mat , election, and M. M. Stephens, one "The tndncv to colrfa on th h,. ,.. of his leadtnsr aupnorterr, were chest hive dunnaantwH and vnnm, i . i. w vice last night when Rev. W. H . Urancer. Such maladies as anae- ' -eo,: Mv a sermon on "R'-cl-, mla and chlorosfl so prevalent ln roclty in Religion." lyoung women of 40 years ;iav h (practically disappeared, while faint- Robert Gtmten made a speech at 'win nubile aasemhue and at tn. the Labor Union meeting In the j aww vuv v vMtw. ah sa iCB Empress Theotre last night advo- 0f American teU In a particularly warm June, the average weight of the men's clothing was found to be 8 lbs. Oosl, oomparrd with the wom an's average of 2 lbs. 10 oz. Argument la being continued this afternoon in the civil case of An nette's Ladles' Ready-to-Wtar v used by J. S. Cowper In a public fMlM Myrtle Ca at the Sunreme .Ab0-ut. About thr three montn months hU later speech were found in a room which Court Asalaoa. Ths arcumsnt rta-tjwit acmg noot at Kcno. c"wd numbered only abqut thi. this mnm.n morning and nH was in,.r. interrupted' for the noon recess. Insist on "GRANTS BEST PROCURABLE" The Original For Sale at Vendors or dlreet from "Mall Order Dept." Lluor Control Board, Victoria, II. C. MsCOTCn WHISKY M jRrichcst'in finest J,. MHGHJUQ MALT aflVk n. i ', " tnis auvcrusemcnt is not published or displnvcd bv tlie Liquor .Control Board or the Government of British Columbia. a fight at Milwaukee In 1001. Han rahan record before and after that bout was not Impressive and Hart was generally believed when he Mid the knockout was an accident The Kentucklan won his way Into the front rank of heavyweight contender when he took a decision over Jack Johnson afUr 20 rounds :it San Franc Ueo on March 28. 1903. Johnson was three inches taller than Hart and he told friends of his ooponent afterwards that "that little fellow Hart gave me the tough est fight of my life. Hart The 6000. but it was sn enthusiastic bunch of fight fans and it gave Hart a big hand when he put over the finishing punch ln the twelfth. When the victor entrained for home that night a band led him to the station playing "My Old Kentucky Home" and another aggregation of drums and horns met him when he arrived at Louisville as king of the heavyweights. Hart capitalized on his victory by touring the country with a road show. Then he took on Burns and was badly beaten. "J couldn't have caught Burns with a bicycle after the first few rounds." he related afterwards and he made charges of unfair tactics which did' not, however, command serious attention. With his prestige gone, Hart retired to- a small cottage near hU birthplace, where he farmed, hunted and fished. His only connection with the prize ring was as referee and he made ty reputation as an efficient "third man" In the ring after the Perry-Bryson bill had U'KAtlzsd boxing ln Kentucky in 1020. , The former charnpion had to give up rcfereelng in December. 1930, when h became HI after supervising a bout in Louisville His physician ordered him to bed, pronouncing r by far the greatest value around to see what was coming up behind; manage a notable recovery of form, the Dominion must look elsewhere for a quarter-mile ace. !hls ailments liver blood pressure Hart married M. ler of the Fern ': September. 19j. children. To Take Second Carl Frederick Will Piss Th.wi City Temorrow Knram; U Prince (ieorn .t:ur Carl Frederitk-charged with V 1 lountrymen ai 'i:. the OmiiiMa co .-i, ,. x nier of last yi ur Lie. the city by p . i neers aooard Qeorg.' tomcuro be taken by Ira n . where he will tak prune Oourt A, Fredericks . ' I aim wmi . .... mif. ..k . week. rrcucne It much of the couruy manner, of JTr tte.-prta mill iiri se-vi preme Court A George this yra: agreed at that :i was traversed ti HOTEL ARRIVALS Savoy Hotel Prince Rupert -11 hotel Hnt In all rooms. a. J. rnmnouMr pro Cot. Of Frasn .. :' ' SAVOY Chris Kroma .. ihd Pat BftKlr : Vancouver. New Royal Hotel THE HOTEL W' ! ' -Hot & Cold wa'' l: PER D.W ANW ' p J. Z.i E. ewls. Stewart. ntmi city .i TAXIDERMY Furs L.f.l v All Kinds of M nUn J. A. LKKTIN Prince ceoi TELEPHONf M VALENTIN MAIM F0 SKICnNA IlKANt) Creamery Butte' Cottage Cheese ritE.snrASTErni7.EO AND CRXAM DAIl Early Oellverj - furoDg' ine t'