serrations so. 1936 WRESTLING BOWLING HOCKEY Hubbell AnjJQ-Itaffing Are Slated ForHurling Duty; Rain Forecast In New York (By ALLAN GOULD (Associated Press Sports Editor) NEW YORK. Sept. 29-—(CP) —Damp and dismal weather had two linker 100151" "n Pfellflrflllons lor the start of the world series between New York's Giants and Yankees at tho Polo Ground. The third one may be slipped across in the form oi conditions war- rsniing a postponement of Wednesday's opening game, featuring a pitch- lng duel between the left-handed Carlo “ScrewbaiP l-lubbcll of the Gun!‘ lml rilhl-hlllldld Charles “Red" ltufiing oi the Yankees, but sll hands had their fingcl! crossed while hoping ior the bqt, Weather forecastr-“continued cold and prttlrisbly raliW-chillefl pp‘- pet-ts for a capacity crowd at the National League park, even with all reserved seats sold and speculators _ g fancy prices from fans ar- riving tickctless irom many parts of the continent. WEATHER nslvrraus ENTHUSIASM Upwards of three-fifths of the Polo grounds’ capacity oi nearly 52,000 has been sold 1n advance, but the weather appeared likely to put a dampcr on the enthusiasm oi’ fans seeking admission to the un- reserved stands at $3.30 or the bleachers at $1.10, starting at 2:30 A. S. T. Only s handful of men seeking the distinction of leading the line into the bleachers continued their smund-the-clock vigil tonight out- side the National League park. Today's rain washed out the workouts planned by both teams on rival grounds. The Yankees record- breakirlg “Clouting circus" thus will swing into action against Hubbell without any preliminary practice in the Polo grounds, considered a hap- py hunting ground ior home run hitter-s. No decision to postpone the opener will be reached until con- .ditions are examined, overhead and under-foot, by Baseball Commis- sioner Kencsaw Mountain landis tomorrow, around noon time. The Giants, with the ace pitcher oi baseball in Hubbell, likely will he the beneficiaries oi any delay. The more rest Hubbeii gels and the oftener he can be shot against the record-smashing "Murderers Row” of the Yankees, the better will be the ultimate chances of victory for the National League Champions. ' , TERRY’! PLAN Manager Bill Terry's program now calls for his kingpin south- Oow to work the first and fourth games, with any subsequentassign- rnent depending on developments. ‘hrry would not hesitate to call on Hubbell ior o. relief trick, if it a-P- veareli such strategy would be de- oisive. . _ l-lubbell, by his own admission. prefers warm weather to be at his best. From the Yankee standpoint, therefore, the hope exists oi being lble to pin the great lefthenders ears back before he gets throushly warmed to his task in lull-degree weather. Bllt it's only a hope. Bet- ting men rate the "Terrycrs" 3-5 vhoices for the opener, with K1118 Carl on the mound tossing his screwbaiis at the opposition. Mailager Joe McCarihys open- lug-game choice of Rolling, instead 0f the lefthanded Vernon Gomez, caused some mild surprise among observers who figured thc Yankee 0110i would prcfci- to gamble on the first but erratic southpaw at the start, with the reliable Rulling on ‘on ior second-game duty. ‘ "Ruifing is our best. pitcher and we will probably need our best to heal. “liubbclifl said McCarthy- "Besldes he will mean additional hitting strength in the lineup." Ruffing is one of the hardest- hitting pitchers in the game. He "Pquently gets pinch-hitting as- signments and packs a long-range Olallop. GOMEZ VS. SCHUMACIIEII. Whether Gomez will oppose Hal Sohumachcr. the right-handed ex- ponent ol the ‘Sinker ball." in the second game at the Polo Ground, remains to be scen, With Monte Pearson, Yankee righ-hander. on the sidelines with a lore back and possibly out of the series altogether as a starting pro- spect. McCarthy's pitching situa- tion is pretty much a "Rllllhig and Gomez" basis. ll. looks like a blind draw alter the lirst two games, so hr as the American Leaguers are mncerncd. The Giants. meanwhile, propose h rotate Hubbel, Sohummdrl and Fred Fitrsimmons, the ist flinger of the pumling knuckle-ball. Dick Cofimsn, c rlght-hander, and Al Smith, a southpaw. will be the no. one no. two relief flingers, Terry said today. If more deiinite and calculating plans mean anything, the Giants thus appear to have better oom- mand of the pitching prospects in advance of a series that most everybody. including the rival Lea- gue presidentsexpect to go six games. It's axiomatic among baseball men that pitching is at least 6o per cent oi the world series battle. To back up their flinging, the Giants believe they have an effective de- fence. Each batting order shows iive hitters with marks of .300 or bet- ter for the pennant season, a iset that has been somewhat overlook- ed in the baliyhoo on behalf oi.’ the American Leaguers. Nevertheless it is s fact. the Yankees carry a bigger punch, irom top to bottom of their starting lineup. The home run kings oi the two major leagues, lou Gehrig oi the Yankees and Mel Ott oi the Giants, occupy the cleanup spots but Lou has collected 9 rouncl-trippers. to Mel's 33. with mid-town hotels booked solidly ior the series, New York was host oi the biggest crowd in its baseball history. The weather may hit capacity prospects but the ad- vance sale is such that new records for attendance and gate receipts will be set, under any conditions, i! the series 300s six games. The sellout o! all reserved tickets by each club on s. three-game basis means that nearly $1,200,000 already is in the treasuries, subject to re- funds ior any unplsyed contest. Yankees Favored To Take Series In S ix Games NEW YORK, Sept. N-(OP) -- New York Yankees will Win ti"? world series in six sum. v- r0110! newspaper men and 0mm" N‘ iicials indicated 006W. Summarized, the reasoning oi the majority was as follows: The Y1!!!- kees’ power is greater than the wizardry of thefiiants’ aoe pitcher. Carl 1-lubbell. Yankee batters are long-range hitters and will benefit by the short left and right fields /in the Polo grounds. ldubbeil may not be effective ii it is cold Ind “mp tomorrow, as the weather- man predicts. The minority opinion holds that the prospect oi bad weather fsv- ors the Giants. Any postponement will gave i-iubbell another day oi rest and with l-lubbeli on the mound the Giant-s hold the now hind. minority claims. Furtherinom m9 Yankees batting reputation was made against Airiericsn League pitching which, they clllm- '5 m‘ ferior to the Notional League pitch- ing. How Thé Rival Hurlers Compare ___._ NEW YORK, Sept. 29-(0?) - Here is the tale oi the cimpflrlilvi? Pitching statistics for Carl l-lubbflil and Charley Rullillll prospective rivals in the iirst pnmc of the world series Wtdnesdnll sllowlnx wins, losses and pcrccnlntzf‘: w l. no. llubbeil 2a a sis mils; min .02 NEWS OF l THE urlhkbrrrrrrrliwlu GUAKDiAN a SPORT WORLD SRain Threatens Postponement Of Series PAGE SEVEN BOXING BASKETBALL OTHER SPORT pener C a n a d ia n Advances In Match _ Play SUMMIT, N.J., Sept. 29—-(OP)— Ada lvilackenzie, Canadian veteran oi the goli wars, swung easily through the first round oi match play in the United States women's championship here today while a former Montreal star, Mrs. Thomas Rudel, provided one of the few up- sets oi the chilly day. While the Toronto woman was steering expertly between the haz- ards oi tile Canoe Brook country club layout to vanquish Mrs. Frltzi Stifel, well known west Virginian, 5 and 3, Mrs. Rudel, the iormer Doris Taylor of Montreal and now oi New York, toppled the Pacific northwest champion, Marian Mc- Dougall oi Portland, Oregon. Despite a steadily dropping tem- perature that made fingers blue and still and club control difficult, dramatic upsets were noticeable by their absence but a prime home- bred favorite, Patty Berg. had to stage a courageous uphill fight to stand of! Eva Shorb of Ohio, in a battle oi lB-year-olds. Two down and live holes to play flflimt the comparatively unknown Ohioan, the snub-nosed red-headed Minneapolis walloper gamely pull- ed out. the match on the 18th green. she canned s. ticldish 7 1-2 foot putt for a par five while Miss Shorbfs try from eight feet for a half halted on the lip oi the cup. 1i imk our ROI! on the back-nine for the 1935 runnerup to oust Miss Shorb. Meantime 19-year-old Pan Bar- ton. Britain's popular chgmpk)“, easily survived the opening bu- rage. wiul her wood snot; covey- 1X18 amazing distance, the smiling English girl thumped the capable Mrs. Leon Solomon oi Kansas City t and S. Miss Barton was seven 0V" Dar for the 13 holes oi the match but Mrs. Solomon said, “Pam is the girl to beat." "Mrs. Frank Goldthwaite o! Fort Worth, Tex, 1906 Curtis cup plgy. er. was knocked out. by the veteran Mary K. Browne oi Wiiloughby. Ohio, runner-up 12 years ago by 3 and. 1 alter leading one up iii. the turn. Stanley Ho rn e Wins Canadian Pro Golf Title (0.2. by Guardian's Special Wire) OATARAQUI GOLF CLUB, King- ston, Ooh, Sept. 29--(C.P.)—Young Stanley Horne oi Ottawa's Hunt Club strode past faltering Willie Lamb on the Cstaraaui layout today and wrestod the Canadian profes- sional Golfer's Association cham- pionship from the Toronto pro. Horne carded s total oi .294 for tho ‘l2 holes oi medal play and beat Lamb by four strokes. Tied with the defending champion in second place with 298 was Dick Borin- wick of Toronto Oakdale. Lamb led the starting field oi 37 yesterday with s. pair of 72's to give him a 36-ho1e score oi 114, four over par and put him five strokes ahead oi the field at the hall-way mark but he started to slip this morning. The Torontonlan carded. a. '16, six over par ior- the first 1B and l0 for the first. nine and 35 ior the second. going eight strokes over perfect figures for the 18 holes. Chuck Tlemlpleton ‘a SPOR T RAI TS Local Juniors Eliminated Bamc ON Th: By Amherst Thrusting back the challenge oi the Charlottetown Juniors, Holy Redeemer, to win the second game or the semi-final series ior the Maritime junior baseball cham- pionship by a 17-4 score, Amherst St. Pats advanced yesterday to the linal round of play in the defense oi the title they have held the past two years. Champions oi’ Novs. Scotia, the st. Pats defeated the Prince Ed- ward Island hope in Amherst last. Saturday 15-3 and then came here to wallop the Juniors on their own grounds in the best-two-of-three series. The victory in the semi-final round sent the Amherst team into the last bracket, where they will tackle the New Brunswick title- holders in the final attempt to hold their seaside province champion- ship. Holding the local team scoreless for five innings, the powerful Nova. Scotia aggregation pushed two runs across the piste in the first and five YAN w )' more in the fifth. They were never “'5 headed and the home team never : 9 ‘~ ' ol/Egg-Ae/snjfiswfk seriously threatened the victors. E \ - l - -///5 spzsw/o teale070 am: or s“ mo" by m’ 1m“ “m” A 2a v/czaezes, bvcwa/ua m sneer/oar bum‘ Elwin?’ °° u” 17 “m! “m” J 1’ KflA/xs s... as 1».- YENE$ 100M051’ ed by st. Pm. who mashed our 14 O A! "Wcwm" - hits. Amherst rim only three mis- takes in the field and Charlotte- SPRINGHILL, 315., Sept. 29 — iCPi-St. Croix ClllllbBd aboard Springhlll Fencebustcrs here today and took a long stride towards re- gaining their Maritime baseball crown, shutting out the mining town boys 8-0 in the third game 0i‘ a three-of-five serios. On a cold, blustery diamond situated on the ‘highest point in Nova Scotias mainland, the New Brunswick Champions hit safely oil Schoolboy Purney Fuller eight times, took advantage of nine cost- ly Springhill errors and had things their own way from the first in- ning on. Nova Scotto, invasion a success by his team hit the play-off trail, his second in two starts against Spring- hill. In making one of the poorest showings oi the year, Springhill lost favor with its fans and gave the New Brunswickers a great chance to get back the title lhcy lost to Yarmouth Gateways last. year. St. Croix needs but one vic- tory in the remaining two games oi the series to cop the champion- ship. _ Under the wildness oi Fuller and the eccentricity of the springhili two luns in the first inning and kept piling them lip from then on. Phil MacCarroll. fielding and bili- ‘ting star or the game, was lire sce- ond man to face little Purney in the contest. l-le walkcdThcn Gor- don Colic-y socked a, triple into deep centre, alld scored when Tili- bot hit through third base. The visitors scored another in the third on a combination of three Sprlnghill errors and lllroc more in the fourth when McCarrell clear- GORDON FIFE, Soldier of Bespectacled Cecil Browneli made , the Si. Croix first encounter in its pitching his fourth shut-out since ‘I St. Croix ClabTakes Lead In Maritime Series By Blanking Spring/rill 8-0 ,stumbling block. He allowed seven I i town sluggers could only hit the boll for six safeties. Amherst struck n. scoring spree in tin- iiith, pushing across five runners and continued the splurge in the sixth with three more. Add- ing another in the seventh, the lnainlsnders went wild in their hall oi the eighth to bang out enough hits ‘for six runs. The Charlottetown batters scor- ed one lone run in the sixth and struck s. good inning in the eighth, wheniit was too late, to add three more runs to their total. ed the bases with the game's most inlportant hit. They addsd two more in the sixth for good measure. BTOWllEll was the Fencebustcrs hits but never lost his fine con- trol. The miners were never dan- infield and outfield, Si. Croix got Cwhrig 1b geious, with the St. CTDlK fieiders no‘ SCORE on their toe-s when the Busters 4111110111 5B R H 70A E am get fill bases. ranlplelnlb ‘I 1 1 1 2 0 Another tusscl is scheduled for 3110009. 0i’ 5 3 2 0 0 0 tomorrolv with rlghtllander Thomas ChHDmB-fl. l‘! 5 3 Z 0 0 0 Albert Iilllkicttcr, Bprlrlghills 308k, 1b 5 3 312 0 1 hustling young “lvllountalnBoy“ and lowthentb d l 3 0 4 l Ken Kallenburg slated to do pitch- C. Ripley, ss 5 Z 0 l 0 0 111g duty. Kerr, l! mild p 5 2 l. 3 3 0 Winters,c 511810 E1115. l? 1 0 l 3 2 0 Naall x l l 0 0 0 0 probable Bellxx looooo ‘ . T0031; 45 1'1 l4 2712 3 B a t l‘ n g Neall batted for Ellis in sixth and Bell replaced Ellis. Charlottetown UrdGFTOdIIy Blanchard. so 4 a 1 a s o Hennessey. c i 1 1 s 1 1 LeClair, lb 4 0 3 9 O 1 '1‘. MacKinnomss 4 0 0 2 0 l NEW YORK» 5w‘- “ricpi m s. MacKinnon, p if 4 o o 1 2 1 The probable baiting order for the H shephndv ab, p 4 o 0 3 1 2 first world series game Wednesday J_ ooyle’ c‘ 4 0 o 2 0 o with each plnyi-ls‘ final unofficial T‘ Connors, p If 4 0 0 o 0 0 batting avclfluvi L.Maci{1nnon,ri 2 1 1 0 0 0 YF-“kws Gigi“ Totals a4 4 s21 l0 a Crcoctii, ss .1291 Moore if 3.310 ‘Rolfe 3b .31". Bartoll ss 29a Smnzby llngnfa E ‘ Dimggio M '33:, 25:11,“) Amherst go 5:5 a 1 e 091?: a L Dickey‘ c no: Ripple cf .305 Chlm“ ° 0 ‘ °.° 1 ° 3 ° 4 5 6 Sc "k 'i .308 . Ll‘. us .3 1 _‘—~_ instill i]! 20s Wrllitlcilccn: Sb .230 CHICAW- 5”‘- 29 " ‘AP’ T ‘Lazzcri 2n -281 Jackson 3b .230 |Bf“'“°y 3°55‘ Pmlms"! defer"? °f Rumng p .291 Hal-Dam, p I225 l ills world welterweight champion- ship against Jack Carroll at Syd- ney, Australia in December, was cancelled today by Manager San Plan, when Charles Lucas, Aus- tralian promoter, cabled he would be unable to deposit a $25,000 guar- antee and $1,000 for expenses, in a | Chicago bank. NOMAD PRACTICE Tlrerc will be practice ior the Noilluii rnltby squad at 5 o'clock sharp nt Victoria Park. All are naked to bu on hand. “WI-land n. Hand! NOW iT l5 MAN TO MAN. AS THE OTHER IS ALMOST ‘UPON HIM, FIFE PULLS THE TRIGGEW-ONLY TO HAVE Hi5 PiSTOIJJRM. John Dean Is lWinnier bf’ Halifax Free-for-all Trot; HarvestMelody Wins Race ____fi s“... .3. .;',°’I;...’.‘3;‘.‘i".2:.;.’°;‘:?l British Golfer Against Us e Jvhh. won the llree-Fbr-All Trot 2 i.rr straight heals at the Provincial C 0 f S t y m l d MONTREAL, Sept. 29—lc.P.)-. exhibition homes rwes here tpdny, ; defeating the sen-satimnl Heather-l‘ bell from Charlottetown. . Heather-bell, owned and driven by C01. D. A- Mfl-cKinnon, planed second m qwh he“; Another m.,ar1°ue_ Jock McLean, British Walker Cup (own home, q H, qhmdmos Lusty golier who sin-lost lifted the United [Qfigp- finished third m the firs, l States / amnion! crown at Garden and third heats and fourth in the Clly, NY, this nlomll favors doing 590m‘; away with lhc slymie. guy Mmxumon mo” Harvest McLean, who appeared headed for Mdody w first monq m the 127 victory in the ilnal until stymied no‘ and Pace’ winning m: last two by Cincinnati's Johnny Fischer on ha,‘ ‘we: placing third in the the 27th hole. stated yeslcrday alter opener_ secondmoney wéntmmuset an exhibition mulch lrere lie has owned by mom Vickers. Sydney “Mays ‘well “Bam-‘l i‘ “m1 m" Mm,‘ what happened to him in rho A m!!!“ ha“. ‘Mm, ,1. Ole“. amateur will be a. staunch support- owned by flank Adam’ won the er for its removal from the game. 2m Page’ in stmlghl hens‘ H- M‘ It was a. reporter, not McLean, Sweeney: signal smut“ from wholbrcught up the question oi Bfldgewlm back sewn‘: money. stymies with McLean and Hector Thompson, British and Scottish SUMIVEARYM ’ Champion. McLean showed no re- ""°° F“ A] (53 l sentrnent at Fixhelds victory and praised the United States stab‘ Ml“ mm» Arihl" Mmll» 5""- terming him a. “Chap with a. ligat- ‘kmn . 1 1 1 ing heart." Humfiben’ 0°!’ Mwmnnw> char‘ McLean said that since his meet- btuwm‘ 2 7 3 with Fischer several outstanding 5”“? Fri-Will QH- chflxmer» 95"‘ players had voiced an opinion wtlieww" 3 4 3 against the retention of,the stymie. H“k!°9tIM-M°A"m“1!§°¥5m€wn ‘The trouble with. these stars is P- E- 1- 4 3 4 they admit the stymie is wrong, bu! Tim?- Z-N 3-4. 1-11. 314 1-2- dismiss the problem by saying they 143 PIN- (PIP!!! $300) wouldn't want anything to do wltlfi MIN‘! T. C1088. Frank Adams, Hol- its removal." l!!! 1 l 1 513ml Senator. H- M. sweeney. exposing himself to the elements 911489075131‘ 3 3 7 With amazing persistence so that 9W’- 5~ 3- 3- Bfelm- 35W“ he may be present Wednesday m. 4 3 3 see the Yankees and the Giants Quaker Girl, Clyde Surges, i-laii- W, 1m. victory‘ fax 3 5 5 »:::~—~.-—..:~_—.~—_~ ———.~:-1' Calumet Duke, Geom€ Kuhn. Duiznout-h 5 4 4 Time 2.11, 2-11, 2.11 Sci 2.17 not and Pace (Purse $300) Harvest Mandy. Col. MaoKinr-lon. . Charlottetown 3 1 l AIliset, Robert Vickers, sydrlcy Mines l 3 2 Hedgemore. F. H. Coop" Port Elgin. N.B. 2 4 3 Dudey Patch. Sweeney. Bridge- WMIGY 9 S 4 Harvey Aubrey. C. L. Dauphinee Halifax 4 8 6 Belfast. J. A- Kerr. Truro B 5 5 ‘Roxie Peter. C. J. Walker Halifax 5 B 8 l-lcl Brlttcm, Stewart 8x Corrie. New Gil-SSW B 6 ‘l Paul Killins, T- D. Blackie. Great ' Village l0 l0 9 surlwor-thy, Prank Adams. Halifax ‘l ‘l D1’. Time: 2.19 2.15 1-2. 215 3-4. Varied Are The Roads To Fame FINE CU Steve Brodie lumped 01f thi- l Brooklyn bridge and made his name imperishable. Ore-eyed Connolly made a career of getting into place without pay- ing even the war tax. Such is lame. And tonight we have Anthony L. Albano who bids for everlasting rc- membmnoe as the guy who was first in line at. the bleachers gate o! the Polo Grounds for the 1936 world series. In some ways Mr. Albaho in- spires greater awe than Brodie or Connolly for Mr. Albano has been walling at the gate for ll days, By Bob Moore and |ol1n Holes TiilS SUiTS ME.... lossms ASIDE ms USELESS warm-.. u: commas m A DEAll-i srauecla wml Hi5 MAD Assaltmlr. . nir- 1.. .. "~-.':flr'r.....""