ocTo 3:1: 2o. m1 Q eowuuc . HOCKEY WRESTLING ROWIQERS EL KELLY AW BICMGTIR _.i_-_- Kinsman Loses .Decision While Leslie Is Of Island Heavy ‘Rtle. Sport Forum The Shorts L-" or, Charlottetown uuard an, Charlottetown, r. it. 1., Jcar Silg-Kitidly allow me space in your Vlilllflbld sports page w uickc llie anmteur situation exist. mg lluougllout the lilaiilimes a little lnore understandable, club or. llcials, athletes and the general public have been so confused of late U111! nobody seems to know irllut it is all about or why. As the lnlzul difficulty has been willl hoe- key we will explain that matter list, ulthuuifli some of the same troubles pertain to other sports as well. Solne years ago the M. P. B. A. A. U. ol C. gave tne hockey clubs per- mission to form an associatlzn m control foster and encourage the playing of good clean amateur hoc- K9)’ amonrpt. the youth of the Mari- luues with the understanding that same would be conducted according :0 the amateur code of the A. A. U. of C. A.l went fine for a num- ‘oer of ycars and we lu these pro- vinces enjoyed well controlled hoo- kcy played by Maritime youths; for instance the Halifax City League and others of like calibre in other parts oi Nova Scotia, -New Bruns- wick and Prince Edward Island. Tlicn came the affiliation of the Mbrilinle hockey body with the C. A. l-I. A. and trouble; for instance the Truro Bearcat wrangle, the Mciictun Hawks squabble and the Wolverine fiasco just to mention a few of our trials. Now the situation has broadened out and is verging on the chaotic, not only for hockey, but other sports as well. i Snce accepting office a few years llgol have given the Maritime sport control matter a lot of study and after taking things over with our executive ‘and others directly in- terested in the welfare of athletes came to the conclusion that Mari- time sport is over governed with too many associations, all appar- cntly doing the same thing and non»: doing much of lulythinfl- 1n otlur words it has developed into different bodies selfishly thinking oi only one branch of sport and for- getting the others. As the M. P. B. A. A. U. of C. is the senior govem- lng body of all amateur sport and it tiring the duty of its officers to see that every branch of athletics ls properly, efficiently and econom- lcaliy conducted and being frm y convinced that one body with com- pNPIll- committees can do just that, I suggested to the M. A. H- A- Eli lhcu- last annual meeting that they rote themselves out of existence, instead of them doing so, and while the meeting was a very slim one and not by any means representa- tlvc of Maritime hockey clubs. the mulling adopted changes t0 thc amateur rules and thereby left only one course open to the Maritime Anrilteui- Athlete Association, viz, the inking over direct control of auiatciu- hockey. At our annual meeting hcld the 6th inst, s. reso- lution was passed that the M. P. B. A. A. U. cf C. appoint commit- tees to take the places of associ- ations now in existence, for the management of sport in different branches. Therefore from that dale 1t is not necessary for amateur clubs to affiiate or pay fees to any organization other than the parent body, viz., the M. P. B. A. A. U. of C. We must have unity ‘n sport as in other matters and it can be readily seen that if the‘ various branches of sport are permitted to adopt different amateur rules then it. will not be long before all the good work that Maritime sportsmen have done for years in building up this organization will have been for minghl. and an athlete would not know whether he was an amateur. Drofessional. outlaw or what have You. To avoid just such a situation this open letter is official notifica- tion to amateur hockey clubs that ll they do not affiliate with this branch and abide by the Isles we will have no alternative but to bar them from further participation in amateur sports. This after Ill l! tmll! common sense if we 6981" Proper sport ‘control, and as I hon- “llll believe amateur offlclak- ath- letcs and the general pubic reallm that. necessity, I do not expect we well have to take the above men- tioned action. The situation from a club standpoint now is, that l0 Mk9 Part in organized amateur sport. all the fees a senior club has to lily l! llve ddlars per year and twenty- llvc cents for catch amateur card. dvlnr sway with all the affiliation 799$ t0 other organizations. 1h“ same registraton card taken out fr ' _ays so. h°°ll9y can be used for baseball.’ ba-‘lmllnll. track. boxing and in)‘ other sport coming under the con- trol of this branch. Suitable tro- Iilllch emblemlric of amateur hoc- ksy championships in senior, inter- Zoiediale and junior will be provid- Tllc operating cost of them. A. n» A. inst season l-oughlv speflltlll! was a little in excess of twenty-two gllhdreu dollars 811d the cost o1 lkscbell in the three prnvnceli over ‘g-‘le thousand dolor-s, the 118111‘?! °l' Othel- sports I have not at pru- illl- Mint I would like to know and "ll we officials of amateur clubl 1 way. Continually landing telling Shorn l‘ still!!! a courageous Lcg in the last two rounds, "Irish" Leo Iilisellly last night won a. judges’ 5e. c on over Earl Kinsman of Ber. Wlclfi NOW Bcotia. after ten mums of russed battling in the main event of the boxing card staged at the Forum. Kelly's thrilling decision victory came a]. m‘ 3"!" 3188M had shorn George Leslie of Souris of his Island heavl/Welflllt lllle after two mill- utes and ten seconds of battling in the first round of the semi- final aflair. Kinsman. giving Kelly a ten. IXIlmd pull in the weights forccd the highly-thought-of local boy to the limit before losing the judges‘ nod. In the first eight rounds of the scrap Kinsman, one o! the best counter punchers ever to dis- Plliy his wares in an Island ring, blttlfld Kelly 0I1 even terms, ‘Blere were no knockdowns but despite this fact both boys gave the fans plenty to enthuse over, Able t0 take Kelly's best punches Kinsman made hLs best stand ln-.- the Island boy tocover up re- Penlcdly B8 he scored with pun- ches to the head and body. Forc- ing the fight in the fifth and sixth Kelly earned a margin in points only to have the Annapolis Valley Apple Belt mittslinger stage an- other comeback during the sev- enth and eighth to square matters once more. In the last two ses- sions. however. it was Kelly all the blows Leo rushed his opponent all over the ring during the ninth and tenth but. Kinsmans experi- ence stood him in good stead from a. knockout defeat when the tide suddenly turned against him. After suffering two previous knockout defeats at the hands of the Island heavyweight champion George Leslie, Stan Bigger last night cheered the hearts of his followers no end when he won a l-rourld technical knockout vic- tory over the Sourls boy after two minutes and ten seconds of fight- ing. Forcing the fight as he came out of his corner Leslie had it much his own way in the first minute and a half of the scrap. Fans were envisioning another Ieslie victory but suddenly, like s bolt out of the blue, Blggsrs right hand landed flush on Leslie's jaw and the champion went down for a nine-count. Rising gamely to his feet Leslie ran into a. left hook and as he struggled to his feet at the count of eight his seconds threw in the towel, marking the and of the Sourls boy's second reign of Island heavyweights. "Tiger" Williams, possessing too much punching power for hls_op- ponent came through with his third straight victory over paddy Stewart at the end of two rounds of fighting. Stewart. recipient of a hard right hand punch to the stomach. was saved by tho belllll the end of the second but was in no condition to come out-for the ‘third and what was to have been the final round. Laddie McCormick took l three round decision from Rollie Cone stable in another preliminary en- counter while ln the openlhs flshl of the card Harrison Ryan, a 596' and edition of Bennie Blnns pull- ched his way to a three-round decision over Ivan Docherty after being held to a draw in the first round of the encounter. likewise have thought of ls what benefits do they derive from £1165: different associations other thhllt the permission lo play lh WW1“ competition? They have already re- ceived that sanction once they "B" annulled vglth thgubraglf; and hm ue ama r c - befnViglgld here remind all Mnrlllmfi clubs and those interested ll; 83°‘: that there is onlY m" 5e" ° “t be teur rules and surely that all": A the code as laid down by l 9 - t: U_ o; Q, There cannot be diffelgerlll rules for hockey "m" 1°‘ assign‘ whim i etc. There has to he n Wm we are to have a healthy] my me gallon. somgtmlz; "u es are a - the cfieanldlalelsre 1:1?- lalrllfgefi us in ' clubs should send dfleflam m ‘he "l"“lfliiillliéti“l.lliltll’“fin°fi°i c Bill . “yo; o; m‘ malomy ghoul be “lhem out. "“°“‘““°“' the“ hm t olnl to into 099mm“- w‘ m no a b m w-vl c-h» c ~'-~=r"r:.. is; just. because 1' A H’ vie‘ are intelligent enough rt-s in these w agiijuscitlijnrcezwilnilpowill do so. ma magler of fact we would have As l t. better off and We 119W!’ wgterofoelther tho C. A. H. A- 0r _ g 5, as our essoclatton gllhAlllieen 10:38!‘ and 0111' m, latter has brought no I hope this letter lstlng situation a would ask all in- Maritime athletic the officers of this i king this body a grief. In conclusion I hall made ll"! 9X little clearer and terested in Olll‘ youth to ustst "EVE-Ill! ti! ___. IMINA TED the fourth canto when he forced T THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN QR WORL 55ers ‘A Menow, winner of Belmont Futurity worth $56,825, 1; shown above Wm, J k Ch 1 piloted him to n new world's rewrd of 1:15 1-5 for the six and ii half fllrlgilgiy andmlll: gvuiligluliiilhllrvllé: Headley. Menow beat Tiger by four lengths with Fighting Fox taking third ‘position after a. hem flhl-lh with Tlser- The Headlcy racer is the leading juvenile of the veal" with total earnings of ssgazs Kurt-singer's victory with Menow marked the first time that a jockey had won all roul- big American étzlltgzun the same year. He was astrlde War Admiral in the Kentucky Derby’ the Preakness and Belmont o l .W1N BOXING Belmont Record breaker §igned With Detroit Club (By The Canadian Press) DETROIT. Oct. 19~F0lloWin§, his aiulounced plan of signing at‘; least half a dozen amateurs U115‘ season, Manager Jack Adams OI _i Detroit Red Wings, NatlonaLI-Ioc- key League champions and Stan- ley Cup holders the last two soa- son. announced tonight the ac- quisition of Harry Currie, 21-year- old forward. Currie. who performed with the Hershey. Pa., amateur club last season, will make his professional debut as a centre with Pittsburgh Hornets of the International-Am- erican League, Detroit's farm team. Early injuries and illnesses have given Adams little chance to play . his Red Wings as a whole in prac- tice sessions. Centre Gordon Pet- tinger and wlngman Pete Kelly are recovering from an attack of in- fluenza whilescotty Bowman, vet- , cran rearguard. has a badly strained side muscle. None of the trio will get in the city championship series which starts Sunday but they arc-expect- ed io be fit for the regular season opening at Toronto Nov. 4. Marty Barry, Larry Aurie and Herbie Lewis, ace first-string for- ward line, worked together forthe first time this season at the ice session today. I SEEKS DEFENCEMAN LAKE PLAOID, N. Y., Oct. 19- (CPl-Fdlling the gap left in Montreal Maroons’ defence by the retirement of Lionel Conachcr, is the main worry of Coach King Clancy as he hurries his National Hockey League team through daily Bill ca“ Builds Team For Cleveland WINNIPEG, Oct. Ill-Bill Cook of New York Ranger hockey fame has begun his first; year asa man- ager seeking to carve an Interna- tional-American League sqnnd, Cleveland Barons, from 23 players assembled lat Winnipeg training quarters. _ Last year the outfit, known as Cleveland Falcons, was the door- mat of the Canadian division of the league and finished in the cellar. Bill has five amateurs working out with 18 professional players. He particularly likes the play 0! Walter I-Ioldltch and Bev North, forward and defenceman from Calgary, and Stuart Smith. cen- treman from Kenora, Ont. “I expect to have at least two of these players with my team lhis winter," he said after a practice session yesterday. Cook said Peggy O'Neill. Saska- toon; Lorne Duguld, Bill Cook, KingstomOnt; Earl Roche, Mont- rcal: Moe Roberts, Cambridge, Mass: Arthur Berlett, Buffalo; Walter I-Iergcshelmer, Winnipeg. are almost certain of spots with Barons, » Jean Pusie, colorful French- Canadlan player once with New York Rangers, is sure to make a place if he recovers from a back injury suffered in an automobile accident last summer. Binns To Meet Kelly Oct.29th As a result of a challenge Issued at the ringside lls‘. night Bennie Blnns ls to meet Leo Kelly here on October 29th for the Island middleweight. boxing title. Ever since Kelly has made his presence felt in Isiand boxing circles this fight has been look- ed forward to eagerly and fans are envisioning one of the most sensational scraps ever put be- fore an Island audience. ' that cIubs have had to struggle un- der, the smaller and junior clubs will I feel be in better financial condition and with the paying sports helping those that do not draw such good gate receipts, we will again be able to build up one powerful body that, besides be ng a credit to the Marillmes will be an- other lesson to the other parts of Canada what we down caszerizers can do. In this regard I would- welcome any suggestions or constructive crit- icism from club offlc als, athletes and others, including lnsl- but not least sports writers, ill order that this branch can once more be put. beck on a common sense bilslness- like operation bass. Yours very trul association ‘n ml “ram hgglthy 0H0. faction of l0 will! with the ellm- . Mudensomo feel Y. TIIOB. L. MACDONALD- President DLRBAAJI. I O. I Sports Dope (By Eddie Brietz, Associated Press Sports Writer) NEW YORK, Oct. 19——F1a.sh_ Pittsburgh Pirates will be broken "P ll lllfiy can get what they want, Except for Dltchers Baucrs, Tobin, and Bowman, catcher Tedd and inflelders Brubaker and Handlcy, "Hill's ready to shoot the works- Wancrs and all. Arky Vaughn 15 definitely 0n the block. Svllv Krlcger. the middleweight. is running for Councilman 1n one °f the Bl~l°klyn district-s and may make it. . Mike Jacobs and Joe Gould spotted walking up Sixth Avenue 1n their new camel's hair top. coats-oh. oh-solnebody had bet. ter look out. Ancil Hoffman ls due tomorrow from California. to line up some winter biz for the Messrs, Baer. More baseball deals due to pop any (lily now. They call Pie Trav- "l" the "Caspar Mllquetoast" b: m9 Dllots but he slapped more fines on his players this season than any other manager. I dOIlvt R0 around advertising it," 5|1y5 Pie. as it hurts the lllavcrs‘ sale or trade value." Down The Alleys- s- IIOLY NAME BOWLING Ivorian uuudhlgg Last rilgm. tile third round of the Alex Connell Announces Retirement OTTAWA. Oct. 19 —(CP—Alex Connell. netmlnder for Montreal Maroons of the National Hockey League, ‘announced tonight he was definitely retired as a p'ayer. Connell, who came out of retire- ment and helped Maroons win the Stanley Cup in 1934-35 season, said he made the decision during the summer after playing only part of last winter with-the Mont- real club. Maroon officials have been negotiating with him lately as to his future activities. Old Country ,. Curlers Will Tour Canada 1GP. By Guardian's Special Wire) TORONTO, Oct. Ill-The itiner- ary-of a team of 30 Scottish curlers who will tour much of Canada this winter was announced here today " by E. P. Atkinson, Honorary Secre- tary of the lllominlon Curling As- sociation. The team will arrive in Halifax Dec 31 and sal fur 110111.. Feb. 25. i After games in Halifax, the Scots workouts at this mountain resort. The problem isn't an easy one Clancy admits but the former Toronto Maple Leafs’ star, taking his first turn as a big-time coach. has his eye on a youngster he thinks will bring the solution,’ He is Maurice Croghan, hard-hitting defenceman last season with Que- bec Aces, Quebec senior cham- pions. Bob Gracie and Gus Marker, forward stars of last season's club are the only absentces from train- lng camp at present. They are reported as holdouts but Clancy expects the players will soon come to terms and report for condition- ing. ' Among the rookies tlTillg out with the big red team are Des Smith of Ottawa who played last season with Wcmbley Lions in London; Fat Perras, goalie; Bud O'Connor. centre, alld Johnny Ma- haffey, wing, of Montreal Royals; vlel Carey, goal, and Doug Boston, defence, of Toronto Dominions and Frank Sullivan, winger from Re- glna. N0 TROUBLE , WINNIPEG, Oct. 19—New York Rangers hockey organization chalk- ed up another record today. Manager Lester Patrick an- nounced he had signed all 31 pro- fessional players within a space of two ‘ ours last night. There Were 16 Ranger National Hockey League contracts and 15 Philadelphia Rambler contracts signed» Ramblers, Rangers farm hands, were finalist; in the Inter- Holy name “mm, uvumes w“ away, will play in New Brunswick against national-American I/ccgue last to u 800G stall. whii the scores run- ‘ "epresmtauves °f that lmwm“ and spflng‘ hing ggmewna; mm,“ and rof Prince Edward Island. Then the — bowlers working hum for the single mam Wm travel to Quebec any» puig _. Montreal and Ottawa before coming F d P 'l.‘welvc more couples will stun? l" Toronto. l Ofwdr 0S8 their mm o; me mum- wnlglu my After leaving here, the visitors 1 °'¢_"0¢,;_ - will journey 1o Fort William, then I G Foliowing are the scores: .' o" w Rfiglnfl- 0518517 8nd Edmoll- TBGIQSI First. ' lglll- tlV-ilt gli-likllStlfll tannouxficed. On 11 qgmmfi 253 21. ‘ c rp ac , le cam w pay in ' ' i. Uougany 14-1 is’ 593-1211 wlkam" and Winnipeg. Con tr: button B Second 11);; ‘the 50th annual Manitoba .Fle1cher 100 192 236. ' _- ,--_ Mann 2w l. . Games in Sudbury. Timmlns and - . ~, ~ Th,“ l‘ “’°_121° Kirkland Lake in Northern Orltario l‘é,l?égly<g‘lj'dggff_sp°s'c“t' B_ Connolly 195 203 169 will follow before the teams return Amos Alonzo lsmg" ’ the ‘United o. Young 20o 1'42 154-1059 m Toronto’ menu travel w ‘mm’ Slates ridiron's gland old man Fuunh N Y" and Boston rcheg the memories of 48 years gbtnkzgggzlfid 1070 fr“ coaching today and gave credit to Fmh _ M * all tthe dforwayd ‘Plies a1 m ahenout- B. Callaghan _ 20a 20a 204 a ran v! e ‘fmgbagg 5"“ °°“ r “ °“ "° M. Within 11s 137 93-10511 °° ' Si," A a S. d < The 75-year-old dean of waches M_ 3mm; 16, 22, 135 gdlll lgfie ‘remembers well that fall of 190s cLsCollkors 221i lsi 125-1010 _ ,sal;i“otl’lt"gg'ggorlthene 3:151 xcatlg: even-h l - R" gun“, 155 206 177 _T0 PIIOtROyGIS University of Chicago where he M. Aictelan 1x5 1115 155- 994 coached 41 veal-s before cohllns Eighth ._._____' to college of the Pacific five years A. NcCloskeyi 170 195 207 MONTREAL. Oct. 19 —(CP)-—- 8.20. F. Slnnott 15! 126 139- 994 waiter (Rabbit) Mgrgnvme w“) "It changed football from a Ninth . p110; Murmur 11,03,515 through bruising, mass encounter into an J. Peterson I96 1B4 193 unnum- mwmguonu EH65,“ interesting game," he said. H" c°m°"“n “l "1 98"‘ 983 League grind. "The Rabbit" I-Iec- "I will never forget the year. Tflllll i go,- Racine club presjded; m. 'I'here had been something like 32 E- Vessev 186 158 l" nounced tonight glgned f one; dealt"; in 1905. Criticism reached Mtgalgml}? “a 157 H5“ 971 year contract as‘ team managerial. "l "c"? Ellie- ‘E Gallant 152 n1 n9 gemsatlsfactory increase over last haghvfrlallflléasoclomknéitteganslaw ‘fig: Eulljfiillf“ "3 1"“ 95" m ‘The deli] was concluded in short 113;} w; ellnglnillfd the must; atixiid R“ Duncan m; 190 220 tme. Maranvllle arinved here to- l; Pal-BB: e seine. an n e M mm, 77 83 137.. m day from Rochester and |m- "W" PM came 1n 0 being- Tonlghlfs Schedule at 7 O'clock mlldlflliel? Wfillt 11190 conference _“?“_‘”“ 5mm, (mm; with Racine. 11¢- left tonight to re- NEU-“lll WW5 "(WT K. Flynn A. Murlln lhrufilo Rvclleilrr- - , R“ Mlcplarlnne w, Umwuy =_~-_-_. -.;.;; »_-_——_-_: -; ».~;~_.—_—.—: LONDON, Oftt. lib-Wu ler Nell- E_ Ben v_ pun-mi A m"), R Dame; sci, German heavyweight. oili- A_ you,“ V, Coyle M_ MgFgg-lgne p, Egan pointed Maurice Strickland cf New L. McDougall G. Murphy A, whmn g mum“ Zealand in a 12 round bout to- J. Kirwin 1-1. McCallum F. Mallet/t i‘. MoChl-ey night. Neusel weighed - 208 1-2 G. Keengg B. Br0wn_ B, McMghqn 1r, Mcwllm pounds and Strickland l8’! 1-2. BOXING J BASKETBALL OTHER sonar B Y STELLAR TON TEAM Visitors Outsteady Young Local Team "any Currie Second Encounter To Capture 11-4 Displaying the same fielding class they exhibited in the first, gum. Stellarton Monarchs yesterday combined tricky bunting with a frec- swlnglng game to defeat Charlottetown Rovers 11-4 and capture thi Nova Scotia-Prince Edward Island softball title in straight games. Helped along considerably by damaging Rover errors, Monarch went into a 3-0 lead In the second inning, doubled their total with three earned runs in the next frame, their ran the count to nine in the fifth as only earned counters of the £81116 a result of another error with two down and then wound up their scoring with single markers in the sixth and seventh. ,___—_.—s____i__ Far below their usual fielding Us 3; two [7359 hit; Jay class throughout the game Rovers nevertheless threatened seriously‘ to get into the thick of the fight‘- ln the fifth after their opponents, had piled up their big lead. or‘ to this time the only semblance oi‘ a run the Rovers had was Ab Mc- y Kinnonis walloping homer to sen-- tre field in the second. In thel fifth. however, after the first man had been retired Stull got a life at first through an error at centre field. Jay drove him- home WlLh a double t0 right centre and com- pleted the circuit himself when the Monarch centrefielder threw wild attempting to cut the run off at the plate. A hit by Stewart and a pass to McNeill put runners on first and second but a spark- ling catch by Chet Fleming inlcit field off Vlfhltlocks hard smash drew Potts out of serious difficul- ties and stopped the threatening Rover rally as the Stellarton hur- ler accounted for the third out of the inning by the strikeoutmeth- od. The losers failed to threaten after this as the batters either popped up or grounded out weak- ly. their other run coming in the eighth as Monarchs had three er- rors in succession. Yesterday was a repetition of the game all Stellarton. I-Iad Rov- ers been nearly up to the form they displayed throughout their league games a. different story might have been told. Yesterday each team had but. three earned runs to their credit. Rovers had eight errors chalked up against them and while the visitors had a large five in the error column, nevertheless they never failed to tighten up with Rover runners on the sacks. Robbie Potts in pitching his second straight. victory against the Island champions granted but seven hits throughout the game and was never in trouble except in the fifth inning. On the other hand Monarchs again found Ray Stull for fifteen safe blows. Ir.- cluding a home run by Lowe in the third with a mate aboard, the only extra base wallop Siellarton garnered. Stull had four strike- outs to his credit. Leading the Stellsrton hitters was Chet Fleming with three hits out of five times at the plate. while Jay and Stewart led the local attack with a brace of hits each. Earned runs: Stcllarton 3; Rov-l BOX SCORE Stcllarlon AB R H 1'0 A E Potts, p. B 1 2 I 5 1 l, Fleming. 1r. 5 0 a 1 0 0' Boutllier. ss. 6 0 1 3 3 1 Works. c. 5 0 2 3 0 0 Clarke,.cf. 5 2 0 0 0 2 Semple. 3b. 5 2 2 1 6 0 Lowe, 2b 5 2 2 5 1 1 Atkinson. lf 5 1 2 0 0 0 McLeod. "‘ 4 3 1 13 0 0 \ i _ _ _ __ __ ‘Total. 4B 11 l5 27 15 5 Rovers AB R II P0 A l; Jay, 3b 5 1 2 1 3 0 Stewart. rf. 5 (l 2 1 0 0 McNeill. ss. 4 0 1 2 1 1 “Illltlock. 2b. 4 0 0 4 3 0 McKlnnon, c. _ 3 l 1 8 2 2 Blacquiere. lf. 4 O 0 2 0 2 Cudmore. lb 4 1 1 11 0 1 Cairns. of. 4 0 O O 0 I stuup. 410001 Totals 31 4 '7 29 8 I l Summary ‘ home run: McKlnnon, Lowe; hits: 011 Stull 15, off Potts 7; base on halls: of‘! Stull 2 (Fleming. McLeodl, of‘! Potts 2 (McKlnnon, lVIc-Noilll: struck out. by Stull 4 (Somple 2, Potts, Lowe», by Potts 2 (McKin- non. Setwart); passed ball: Mc- Kinnon; wild pitch: Stull; left on bases: Stellarlon i0, Rovers ‘l. Time of game: 1 hr, 20 minutes. Umpires-At the plate. A. Mc- Kay, Stellarton; on the bases, Nels Whitlock and Blll LBW“??- Charlottetown. By Innings 123 456 789 R 033 0B1 100-11 010 O20 010- 4 All Serene In Fistic Circles‘ Except Mike NEW YORK. Oct. Iii-Michael Strauss Jacobs is in a fine pickle —worse off than the sport who's all dressed up with no place to go. All his life, Mike wanted to be a. czar but now that he's reached his goal as the great monopolist of boxing hekan unhappy, rest- less man. Except for a few barks here and there nobody battles him and old Michael can only sit around with no manoeuvring or phenagling to do. It's slow, quiet murder, that's what Czar Mike calls lt- ' "Ali's still on the western front," he groaned as he spread his hands on a desk clear of cablograms, telegrams, letters, contracts and. messages for the first time in years. "Everybodys signed, sealed and ready for delivery and noth- ing to do." Someone mentioned Jimmy Johnston, elf-Madison Square Gar- den firebrand, was always. ready for a fight and that he might give the Czar a harder run titan lie figured as soon as he lines up his promotional venture. “That's what I figured." said Mike, “but what does he do? He blames the State Athletic Com- mixion for all his troubles-for getting him fired out of the Gar- den. I'm the guy who did that. I'm the cause oi all his troubles. I manoeuvred lllm out of the Gar- rden. I'm the rascal. I hope he lmakes s living and I'll help all I ‘can lf we can get some excito- l merit." Michael arises at 7 a. m. daily, gulps down a half gallon of or- ange juice and gets, a good rub- down. Every day except Sunday, he's at his desk no later than ll a. m. But he's so fecllofS u-iih nothing else to do that 110's driv- ing his staff into nervous break- downs. "I hope all hell breaks loose ill ihi: boxing business very soon." moaned Walter St. Denis. his chief press agent. "Mike is so restless he won't let us do a tiling without he hrs a hand in it." Remember When Bluenosc, with Capt. Angus Walters at the helm, retained her title as queen of the North At- lantic fishing fleet at Halifax s1) years ago today. The Luncnllerg schooner won its best-of-threi series over the United state: challenger. Gertrude L. Thobaud to keep its 10-year international racing record perfect. Monarchs H E 15 5 Rovers 7 B C1251! "The purest form In which tobacco can be smoked." Canal ETTES‘ l l -..<