c.- Tlfltgfilialliififiliifflllgld CUABIWAN ~ r \ BOXING Piiiladelphiai sols... Won vyCh ’Ship A irMaclimen , Again Show ‘Punch That Wins Ball And World’s Tituliar Honors‘ ——Defeated Cubs Again Yes- terday . By 3 To 2 Score- Haas __Gets Home Run l In r" I! Gould, A. P. Sport! Elb- 1913. ‘ liar. PHILADELPHIA. Penn. Oct. ‘Riel-e did not seem ntorethan the lL-The dreams of the "old master" Connie Mack. came true this af- ternoon. when his youthful Athlet- ias won the baseball championship ofthe world with a finish that pack- ld Ill the thrills oi a story book climax, all lie nerve ting-ling excite- ment of the final act oi a melodrama. The nineth inning of fantasy became thy nineth inning of reality. when ' the “men of Mack" American league champi-us. surged from behind b score three runs and beat the Chic- ago Cube. champions of the National League. 3 toB in the fifth and decid- ing game of the World's Series. With the President of the United States and the first lid.- of the land. w applaud them, joining the ap- plause of more than 30.000 fans. t.ie Athletics for the second straight game demonstrated their unconquer- able spirit by rallying to win afterlthe game‘ seemed hopelessly lost‘. with two out in the nineth, Bing Miller veteran right fielder oi the Mackmen, drove the decisive blow to the score- board. a two bagger that brought‘ Al Simmons across with the win- Q ning run after George (Mule) an; big. raw boned. centre fielder had tied the count with a smashing home run, over the right field wall. as Max Bishop-rested on firsts/fillers drive with ths count Land 2 spoiled the last desperate strategy or the Cubs and their big. right hander, Pat Mal- - one in passing Jimmy Foxx inten- ticnally. It toes down as the $50,000 blow of the series. deciding the difference between the winners and ‘losers share cf the spoils. The finishing rally was the‘ big moment for the old Master Mack. as he saw his fighting young dub smash through the gamest kind of defence by the_Cubs. clinch the series by a margin of four games to one and give him his fourth world's championship. his and a number of hard hit balls. it seemed were combined to make saie what now is a world's record for the 67 year old leader of the Athlflics. No other manager in base- ball has aver won four worlds series This was Mack's fourth in six tries since i905. ldding m9 to the other victorious years of i910. 1911 and 1. uemotest for the Athletics to vldntcdayaftertherhadbeenbeid w‘ two hits for eighta innings b1 the fast ball of big Pat Malonq and af- ter Wally French. pinch hitting for (Rube) Walberg in ‘the nineth. had struck out. the Cuba had driven tbs hero's!‘ the first game. Inward Ehmke. out oi the box in the foilrth inning with a vicious attack. with two out that produced ‘two runs and what looked’ liks a secure. lead as Malone mowed down the Maskmen. n it hadn't beenfortha memory es the lucky seventh" Saturday, crowd might have given up hope en- tirely. when French fanned. It wasn't in the cards fol-anything like that rally of the fourth game tabs n- - , ' ~;. ;. 1 "e at" r1. ". mam by the "m, “m, but,“ _ _ Free For All trotube 10ft u as! the hhnal ltradv geio right re: ?l"lr’:'ini’1i. aulslo Atmatiu o! m”, ‘he warm.‘ ‘may . . . \ ‘l’ CR 0L of ti. light no t _. sla o . ore t.e 0.0.- o v inn g. mom now’ u. no‘ buunyunmime ‘Jase-e . I ‘ - é i1! ‘A [HE SER|E° A lciailfissd 1 by t-ttififléhirsmgdlal‘ e36 "vos l adng 7 t- 0 Ima ‘n the sul- lutmlnuoukmywwuith» ..-.. ... 1 o ‘.9 er .~..'.-:\s.='!..c,..e.5=.f2 -‘.‘ 2-. .-. 3.5 _ “y u my w”! w" fiatuw ~ y" T? C pletely. That i: ins! what happen- yrs: lilacs occasioned when he sen‘), 3 m‘ w‘! may w” t" 1.,” "m IJICI-ael , '- od t: Wlbcn. It, cost the Cubs the iionnllcl to the rubber. Seven run. And they proved that rel-inner. flI saw A y 1 1'1 i’:lul'i'l 29*" a ""2112 totie, up the ubEilJiCi in seventh. I: isn't‘. emu-mg mememmcy,theym‘-' W" ---- ------- -- H ‘ g 7b A SETZES and l"*‘t‘.: the rest oi the customary lltlng to wast: p‘ mo“ eh; gum; a “gnu gum. 915151118911 ---- ------- "-3, 3 3 _ ' ‘ _, Y W42 yg ' way on cmon terms. ‘otrength by _. _ in a fresh hurler 1mm ,- - ; _ _ Hill Jr. ...... ....... . 2 3 f I» linafillurvv lyndkan |sr..crr.. lrirarn rlghu mow-c Playllz; a sun-field is.a tough job. unless ch: pic. r hi; been renlovec i JGllifilThl GTGIC ..~. our-J A 4 ' I d t 1- -. 1 .11 wuso 61-. f “w; ll n‘ _ _ with gwtbluls “thundering herds" _ . o no .n.v low we n or a p n i... '~._ OFFICIAL IQX 800B! “m°"a'm’ 2'21’ m,‘ stampeding fans to several famous 8312i! example. the grid has these met” sunshine Dunning m oats“? ‘Manly plays Such u field’ 5m” I scored at Ram“ '- 0 ~~ . z so ch” gridlrons today. even the World Ser- attractions today: Notre Dame vs. the weather a“; is itfg-‘mtrcertin h“em had mum chw” m °b' Rcmmfl t? u” n“ ‘ - , mun“, An_‘_n_routn - ‘e5 sun-en a partial eclipse m public Navy at Bal-Mmore, Chicago vs. m_ ball. No mat r ow m! n“ e serve him. I d-o know, however, that y: played a hunch that has. horny, Macmillan, 3b. 4 0 1 2 8 0 ‘ h“ 1 1 interest. True. the capacities of. diam; gt gm, perm, vi Virginia Poly ‘mibm 3m" ‘are swicei nzturagy he played both balls. which he ulti- entjesults throughout the sum l, ‘English. a. .\4 o 1 as o s‘? u‘: ‘y z 2 Wrigley Field. Chlogg/r and Shlbe at Philly, Holy cm. V. Rum,‘ a. 8MP!- m=nw‘t’;d~ uglzsamactions mately lost contrary to the reallylmer. m practically every game dur_ Honlsby. 2b. .. 4 0 ‘0 I 4 1 u’ 3 a Park. Philadelphia, were sold out New Brunswick. Browns vs. Prince- outrun“ a o ervpl , he” weigh; great sun out fielders. ling the past season in which Rommel. ‘wmm. c!‘ ___‘_, __ 4 o 1 1 n 1 ma”. M" n -* -"--~ "-5 6 4 weeks m advance o! basebalrs grand ton m the Tigers. lair and the are“ save. PEYhB-DS. a “Oifds Vy O11 the Cleveland club we haveéhas been used as a pinch hitter Cuyler. rf. 4 1 1 3 '0 0 rah,“ ' 5 5 finale. tens of thousands applying in intesectional between Yale and born: chaagiogzilfhrggtbau rushes in Charley Jamieson, one oi the greatest Svmflihin! 0'4! 0i the 011111183’. wulflf,‘ ' . ... ...... u. “u. l | _ u ‘ . _ __, . v . stephenwnl u_._____ a 1 1 w! o o Imnkzm‘ in’ 2.2‘. vain for all too limited admision. Georgia at Athens. Ga. an S“ i“ Saturday M October “vim sun iielders oi all times. Jamieson ‘ed with his good pinning, has given’? o 11o o p Moody E. ‘ma’ of one Bu’ w“ The entire nation seems to follow If the World Series were played a evepmcreasmg strides’ the world never charges straight in on a high the Athletics a xvin, often when than g 1 4 o 0 ‘ ‘max Ju-dn‘_m Main“ Glue each World Series play in detail via week or two earlier there would be no m m1 “and out as me much fly that he has plenty of time prop- Igame seemed hopelessly lost, Rpm-é“ I,’ Malone. p. 3 0 1 0 (P0 my Jo; M I 1 éydner hmus radio and the press. There's nothing such conflict. and the common com- Samsw s M5 f the d“ erly to Judge. Instead, he cuts across mel's record for the season ' __ ' 1mg]; '33 g g 351° 3 Ema‘ Phnwt ma’ J H Rgbertson‘ wrons with the size and fervor of plalnts of “cold weather baseball" bigger attr.“ 02h‘) a 3MB, amp“ lat a slight angle and thus escapes wins against two defeats and most: ‘ ' “A , » -, '__‘__ r ‘ public interest in baseball. but- would vanish. thmmbravlisfgsz wezrqiuy thelm: looking direct into the sun's rays, In lo: m.- victories have been scored J Philadelphia snnuraaal. am- Y I“, s. - M, m, m“ Many would like tohavethg world on m, other ham we,“ Sm“ at 5° a ‘n m, an,“ his entire connection with the Am- relief roles with some freak hep , B15301!» 31L 4 l l 2 0 0 magi“ ‘Rings: they“ ‘V?’ V,» Series played a week or two earlier are always ‘sell-outs, and it is unfair zimilcnififngi “gnu, xigeosecon: 53h rerican League. I have never seen him | penings entering largely into "th I l . . rooms _ ,5 , . . Hm- “ ‘ i 1, 1 ° ° use a... one filled with armour dat- m“ L‘ n“ wswm’ bumu“ m m” w “k m” “m” magmm "° “d” icirday in October finds football u. full ‘ wmvleieil’ 1°" Si!“ °i l "Y W‘ "minim- Cochrane, c. .. .. 3 0 0 i0 ,1 0 m‘ from m, “m, mm ma 17th new 811t- years it runs smack into so many receipts by shortening their season. command of the natmfs spatugh,“ slmmons, i1 4 1 1g. o o g fir,“ Au m. room! a" "munch imliflriant eflrlv~season football with a good break of "Indian Sum- : ° 3 1 9 ently furnished. and give one an .3 5.° oidrsaofwhatis meant by the term ' . i ° 9 0 8 ° royil. we also visited the Cathedral. 0L’ “TH " 0 o l 3 0 and returned to London to our hotel. E 9 9 o 3 9 After supper we only wentoutabout. . ~——~— ' o ° ,9 1 o the streets in the vicinity. We were , 9, 9v; 0 0 0 warned not to go out alone, but in » TOM]! ....... “.531 I_ CT!‘ I O pgh-j qgpgtmlg, g w; might ‘at [nip ‘F-WM 1W Weller: in ninth inn- difleuities in sorrows vastness. One 1*‘?- - - oi our fellows had ventured out ‘of Boy Scout’s Diaryt-ii“. The Great Jamboree " ny Scout wul. n. auruoli. - . , Ailfllet 16 . ‘After breakfast we were taken in bum to_the station and left for Window. 0n arrival we proceededto lthn College.’ We passed under an ‘oiifainne archway into a quadrangle Illrrounded by the various school buildings. In the centre is a mom'- criai to Henry VL. who fo ndpd the collage in mo. m. the ou t it ac- commodated only I0 students. new itlloldl 1.060. The chapel, the most conspicuous building. is on the right. notice “rom- with the clock. in hull). In!“ School. on the left. All than bulidiugl were erected prior Lo UNA-over 400 years ago. The fourth Miofthequadrangle is composed of the Upper lehool which was built Iain-Quid i Ipnliarged, “ rostate . :l***‘*l‘.l'"~ 7‘- ‘rl: “'..’.f."i.’.‘.'i.'i‘! ‘i; ,l I -_-a-‘ fir m." j. ‘ Zilfifiiaarrfi r beforelddi, orcveriwyeara agoflrhe nrat visit we made was to-tbe chabli, the moat interesting tbiapifcr . inspection being the wail paintings. which are aaidnot tobava-Jhiir equal in England. Tbeoriginalpaidt- ing of "Sir Galahad" is iimainr Among the relics. ‘of mhicntlierfia qultea iot. was pointed out-tho azi- aign down by Admiral run-d Janice at the Battle of Jutland. The amm- school contains pillars madedromtbe woodiof one of tbs shine of tbtlvaai iall Amanda. The naniqof manyof the great men vhoatiendadizfidd have been carved by themselves (cm- trary to discipline) on u» dllifl Among them we yore that of Walpole. Chathaut. cheris- Valli: m. .welilogm.;ellal,ir;.orbr. OM- atolla. “It b6 W4 CLAOIZ BAY. N. l. Oct. ll-'I‘he "Overcoat" Racing Meet held at New Aberdeen ‘rrottina Park this after- noon, which marked the 01min: 0i the horse racing season in Cape Bre- ton. provided some fast and exciting g-aeing but was a financial" flop. over $800 will have to-‘bepaidfrom a gate amounting w seepof which means um. the funds of the Racing Association will be de- pleted considerably by the time the cheques are passed around. PAh.FIOO. the Glace Bay oom- aon with a win defeating The Great three straight heats. Pale Face won first money in a $300 purse. __ Betty Aubrey, owned by the Son- ora Lumber Company oi Guysboro, won first money in the 1.20 class v sir- Aubrey. ofiied by Dan ‘Kennedy of Antigonish. won in three straight heats. Dorothy 22., second, The following is the summary: llone the previous night. and got scared blue when a crowd gathered "rcundihim-no doubt admiring his natty uniform. but he thought they had ulterior motives and ran all the waybaek to the hotel. where he ar- rived breathless. August 11 ‘Ibday it was arranged we should soothe-sights of London . We started with the Canadian Building, a large ubetlon with many line rooms nicely furnished and decorated. We next visited the Houses of Parliament. we nvrDr. Johnson's original diction- ary; also Big Ban. the famous clock olthe House of Commons Tower; the loyal robing room.‘ the entrance hail, tbaante rooms. the Hour; of Jnrdl. the Peers Lobby. the House of Commoner. and the membersdobby. Thaxfioilu was not in session, but we Jere told it accommodates e80 aiauibera. Prom bore we probeeded to. Wtatminater Abba . On entsrinl on main chapel we saw on all aides busts and monuments to famous lritilb “Nansen. soldiers. authors. audrpcata. We also visited the Un- hlownloldlerb grave where we held aglacrt armour. and the Brampton became- wreath on u» grave, devised brim x. o. o. I. of that munity owned horse. closed the sea- loott, Sydney Community Horse, in _ Dick Bingen second. In the 250 i BASEBALL f i l WRESTLING , , BASKETBALL ‘ ‘ _ y, __ , BOWLING , OTHER SPORT \ ‘ I A, Partial Eclipse Too oAo I cm? SEE Jack P. Quinn, pitcher of the Phil- adelphia Athletics who tried a come- back a Ia Elunke,‘ but failed. His "apltter" could not get by and he was forced to abdioate. James Foxx, first baseman of the Philadelphia tAthlaiics whose home runs and general all-round effective- lea. the Chicago Cubs, whose muff of‘, Haas’ high fly to deep centre made ness was the talk of the World Ser- him the proverbial World Serlea. Lewis (flack) Wilson. outfielder oi “goat" of the beheading arrangement. In onercom were wooden horses and soldiers at- tired in 16th century armour. We wanted to sea the Crown Jewels, but these we were told were not on ex- hibition. It seems that the crown jewels of Ireland were on exhibition in Dublin when Lord Aberdeen was Governor-General. and myaterously disappeared. never to be found. since then the authorities thought it wise to lock up the English crown Jewels lest a libs fate should befall them. Wanext visited the Z00. and had a Qahrian town.’ We also aaw, the efava senate-raw. we of the ' QM interesting raiialawaretheoor- Qlatids Cbaifaldthaltdoa of Scone Ulflliilhulfietivlliilllfitlilb and lwttlahlhee were formerly orewn- _ all. vertex-Imp we visited‘. one fiidfirthe non gallium ‘we ibajfifi: ‘wereidths zuasasawaiuralr. alter mm seidmnaaainaavtaunoa and great time feeding and watching the various kinda of animall. John bet me we would not m‘ a silver for moo; them-and he won. We went in Buckingham Palace to see the changing q ti’ Guard. a ceremony that thousands or visitors mry m. aauoh to‘ our agreeable Itlffiiflruil autborittta allowed ua Scots Guards and the‘ Grenadier Guards went through their routine of being relieved and taking over the guardianship of the royal palace. It was certainly a unique and pictur- esque sight, and we all enjoyed it im- mensely.‘ We also heard and saw the Royal Scottish pipers plely and par- ade in thq Palace grounds. After this we went over the famous Inndon Bridge. but certainly there was no sign of it "falling down." as the old uuraersnrhyrno has it. We took in Trafalgar Square with the far-fam- ed Nelson monument. also Piccadilly. After dinner we visited the city. the lilansion House. where the lord slayer resides. the stock exchange, interests generally of London and‘ the iavo no - everything without obstruction. wennd went to the th-éatrcsi-our patrol lined up "by the castle wall while the taking in the "Talkies". which were very good. then home to bed. the Bank of England. the commercial ‘ August ll When Aunty Nelly met ma in Ar- rowe Park she arranged with mo to come to her home on Sunday. our By BILLY EVANS PHILADELPHIA, Oct. l4.-'Connie Mack's faith in Santa Claus has been revived. That IO-run rally in the sev- enth inning of the fourth game did it. As a matter of fact. Connie isn't so sure but that Hack Wilson, centre fielder of the Chicago Oubs, isn‘t Santa Claus himsdf. He figures Hack needs only the whiskers to com- plete the picture. Wilson. who up to the seventh innings of the fourth game, had been the shining star of the Cub team,“ practically erased his previous fine play. by one bad inning. In the l0-run rally of the Athletics. Wilson, usually aymlghty 500d field- er lost two fly bails in the sun. One went for a. single, the other for a home run. Had he caught both balls the Athletics would have had only three or four runs instead of 10. M... kliunchzirildi Philly Sunfiei Turned The Tri‘ Sends Rommel To The RubbevlifEi pecting Something Out Of Th1 Ordinary To Happen—It_Did i r d I: .- (A g. Wilson in charging straight m,‘ gob: ,7 allin believes there is a Santa hunches . The Philadelphia centre field is a rather difficult spot to play in the early fall. While the rays 0f the sun ‘SUJCBQCBI! Quin" 511d he W131i’ $63 are not so blinding, it is the lighilsjtvro more runs over the plate wh . . and shadows that cause the mos‘. ‘ CrLmm bunt/ad and he threw the bal led his eyes against the sun, and . is invariably the case. the aunts . f the argument. .; Now that you know Connie M; it is not difficut to understandZ-‘i Mack, like almost every onbti}; connected with baseball has “l superstitions and believes strongly .. _‘ ' , _ . , Mack, who hes nsistently the experts since the series ope§lc , with his pitching selections, made ' i most peculiar shift in the four game that to the averagedeym: no doubt meant nothing but tg t; initiated caused considerable 'di cussion. It will be recalled that after Chin" , ago had scored tvco runs oif Quinn '.- y the sixth, bringing its total lo iou. ' Mack removed the veteran spitba‘ ‘ pitcher. At the time, two Yhen wer“ g or. bases and no one out. Walbel" ' CONNIE MACK played. is some of the old sporting blood left in Charlottetown. Asa lover of good clean sport. l must congratulate the C. N. R. employees in getting a tug of war team in shape to compete in this big event in November. Now ..After a series filled with thrills, upsets and for the most part mediocrejball Cornelius MeGilllcuddy. veteran manager of the Athletics has come through. with another world series banner. nu use and judgement rwod him in mi» seem] “gum. a bu] aggregation worthy of the! steel. Mack wtamaried, cl ‘ guessed and out mansuv ed the Cub "general" in every game of the fiva~ JOB MeCARTBY i then Sir why can't there be a Cit team got up and sent to Amh and try and keep Charlottetown the map as being sood Sports. n leave it all to the C. N. R. boys t0 d0: I am Sir. etco ‘v SPORTSMAN; PLEASE 1mm T0 rsoa nmsa Tug Of War At The Amherst v PVinter Fair the Bpofld Editor speaks for itself; suaoarvcalvmaa-w The following letter received by - liri-I-ag glad-to anewfhat than _