‘w?’ TIRES — FIRESTONE - TIRES For safe, sure motoring equip your cor with- FIRESTONE TIRES Also: FAN BELTS, SEALED BEAM HEXADLIGHTS, HEATER HOSE, ETC. ALCOHOL, ANTI-FREEZE TOM DAVIES Rod Indian Service Station P50001234 Gt. Goo. St. Intermediate Playdowns Get Underway At The Forum saurmsdiats pleydwms start at m, lbs-urn tonight when legion hoauyisis tangle with Southern Kings All-Stars in the first game or twp game total goal series to decide the team to advance against m; Prince Coun-ty winners. All Stats are reputed lo be a fast. hard hitting outfit with lots d gpggg and polish scattered yhmughotllt their lineup and their followers are confident they will give the Lesion foam a mighty battle oi it all the way. Th. garne is slated to "y gt 9 o'clock. l... srnrrcii (Continued Horn Page a) I 1-Ie is a my" black gelding that has ncv- er started in a race but looks as though he wilt make good. Ind 1 hope so for Mr. Hanlcyfs sake. because he is one oi the bestin the game." .. . . Thanks. Thfllle. come again! i- get under- i- 0 4' Ths annual meeting of District No. 11 oi the United States Trot- ting Association was held in the Tovirn Hall at Amherst, N. S. on Wrdncsday afternoon. February 36th at two o'clock. The meetln8 was presided over by LL-Col- D- A. MacKlnnon, Charlottetown. and L. l". Bickerton oi Amherst was appointed secrcl-BYY- M110"! 111°" present were Fred Delahunt. Charles Clarke. W- M05115“??- Moncton; Jarnca Ryan, 513F108" run; 1". c. Mccurdy. Truro; Dr- 1".C. Dougnn. Charlottetown; Wil- liam Latta. River Hebert; Frank Berry, Cape Tormcntine; Layton Spence, Port Elgin; Norman Des- Bnrries, William Lorimcr. Alex- ander Leadbetter, Lmme Letcher, springtrlli; Kirk Trenholsn, Lee Sharp. F. C. Coates. John Pren- ilce, Amherst; D. 1. Charters. Snckville: Fred Violette, Edmund- aton. Over B0 proxies were re- solved from members who could not conveniently be present. Q- 0 0 O- ‘lho official notice from the U. 5312A. calling the meeting was road and then the chairman. Ool- MacKinnon. spoke a few mill"!!! thanking those present for their attendance which was at a eon- slderaibls inconvenience to many of them, and regretting that oth- srs whom we would like to sec could not be there. This particu- llirly applied to Charles Ballard of Sydney Mines. who did not feel equal to the trip in winter conditions, and D. W. Griffiths of Fredericton, whose wife reported hlm in New York. The Colonel said that. the U.S.T.A. had pro- gressed with giant strides and had bccn lie means of i-IIDFOV- ing the standard of harness racing and giving it much favor- able recognition and popularity- Tts aim was to make the sport s thoroughly clean and enjoyable nnc and to give its track mem- bers and horsemen the best sar- vice possible. No one can ques- tion but that it has been a power for rood. O § f O The Colonel intimated the first business before the meeting would be the election of a Director for Neva Bcotia. He said the present 006llpasit was diaries Ballard of Sydney Mines, who had been of treat help in furthering the int- crusts of the U.S.T.A. at all times and in promoting the har- Mai horse sport. 1.. F. Blckcrton loved lo niration of F. C. lleihlrdy as a Director. It was "waded by Charles Clarke and motion carried. It was moved by D15 F. C. Dougan that nominat- l°lll cease. This was seconded by 7- Iserimer. Motion carried. Mr. rdy was asked to take aseat it the left of the presiding Dir- "WI. Col. MacKinnon. 0' O 0 0 A discussion took place regard- h‘ flllllllestlon of entries, that is l horsemen entering in one or 5'" meetings on aha some date. mil was takenpart in by a num- ‘I’ of those present and the un- "iihous opinion was expressed "it l rule be forlnuhted by thc U-l-‘IZA. ranking a distillation If entries an offence punishable W Inc or otherwise. Other mat- ‘II were discussed by s.» slurp, 1m Lstta, A. lnadbetter. James Tonight Basketball Games Yet To Be Played Elollowing are the games yet to be played in the City Basketball League released yesterday through the courtesy of President Father Walter McGuigan. - March 1, Air-my vs. P.W.C. 7:30. March 5, SD11. vs. Army 7:00. March 5, Navy vs. P.W.C. 8:00. March B, S D U. vs. P.W.C. 7:30. March 12. S.D U. vs. Navy 7:00. Miss-ch l2, Army vs. P.W.C. 8.00. March 16, Navy vs. Army, ‘i230. Oifficlal referee is Earl Gosa Banadian Golf Ass’n Meeting ‘TORONTO. PH). 8 — (OP) — The Canadian open golf champion- ship for 1947. ‘with prize money totalling, $10,000 will be held at some club in Ontario this year from July l6 to July 19, with a Toronto club the probable location, it was announced tonight at the annual meeting of the Royal Canadian Golf Association. The Canadian amateur champ- ionship will be held at the Royal Quebec Club during the week 00m- rnenclng Aug. 11. The Canadian junior championship and the Wil- lingdon Cup litter-provincial com- petition also will be held at the Royal Quebec Club. on the openintl day of the amateur tourney. George W. Long of Kitchener was elected president, succeeding Jack Fuller oi ‘Ibronto. Other office" elected include vice-presidents EN. Robertson; Saint John. and R C. Holbmolr. Montreal; W.D. ‘Itsslor. Toronto, as secretary-treasurer and 131-1, Banks n! Toronto as assistant smetairy. The executive committee include! premier John Hart of Victoria: J-G- Fitzpatrick and J. Watson Yuile. Montreal; Gaston Amyot. Quebec: Dr. Earl O. ‘Primer, Fredericton. and G s. Mofifat, Halifax- m, Turner represen‘ both New Br-tmswidr and Fri-rice Edward 1s- land. S’side Juveniles WinWayToFinals For P. E. I. Title The Summersida Kinsmen Juv- eniles last night won their way to the P.E.1'. juvenile finals by a 14-0 victory over the Kerssingion Juv- eniles in a game played at Ken- aington rink. The victory gave the Bummer ide squad. last year's Mafltime champions, the round 28-0. They defeated Remington by an identical score in the opener at Summerside earlier this week. Last night's game, which was witnessed by only a small crowd. gtarted easy enough with only two goals scored in the first P97105- Then. as the Summerside team found its stride, they turned on- ihe heat and scored eight in the middle canto. finishing H11 the inter with four more in the final session. The stunmersi‘ team now meets the winners of the Juvenile series at Charlottetown for the Provin- cial title. Lineups’: Remington: Goal. Kennedy; d0- zaioe, Penoarirsst. Punter: fw- wsrdk. J. Bernard, Oatway. Mur- phy. Condon. Wall. Hateiy. Mills. Bunnies-side: Goal. Dslslel; de- fence. Msohcod. McLellsn. I-Iuestis. Morrison; forwards, Ieeki’. Gov. MsoKsy. Stewart. R. Mtlfllhy. C. CUMMAIIY _ lint Period. l-Qside, Tacky (Mclelladr) 2 -— S'6ide., McKay (Gey) Penalties-None. Second Period. 5—-SSlde.. Gay (MeKlU) 4—-B'Sidt-. McKay (I-flkyl 5- s'stde., McKay glfclfly) 6—8'Slde-. Gay (lee ‘I-Qlde. 1106!!) s-sulds. may (mama) l-dllde. Inky (Malay) to - Raids. Morphy l- tta; ¢ renter. a. accuse. rum-st. Tairfsmss. . n - aside. new. 1g ‘.- slide, (Bernard) is - aside. rainy their) 14 - 981d’. usual (Ions we Penalties- Mined l2)- Gus-Ins Referees. 0. hunch. dbl. _ . _..._ mp<s‘~ ‘u’... MARCH 1, 1947 ilueen Square Meets Skids Team Today Queen Square School's smart hoolcq squad tackle the undefeat- ed Stnnmersids Kinsmen Midget squad in an exhibition game at the Ilbrum at 12 norm today and followers oi the 1 looking forward to a real bristling tilt. The visitors boasting that unde- feared record have prover; their ability while the Queen Square School sqtlad are also a. 0111181316 lzand of ptlekohasers all cf which should g0 towards making an in- teresting tilt. ' Bowling CIPTOWN ALLEYS Commercial League C.II. Toombs é Sons:- G. Francis . .... ..244 196 175 G. MBUIBSOII . .. 1B3 179 135 V. Watts 135 n. Watts 15B C. Toomtrs ' . 130 Total-WM. Fred's Taxi:- W. Stead . . 191 15B G. Nelson 135 163 B. McDonald 143 293 R. Whitlock . Z53 335 Low Score 140 13° T0lBl—Z650. Points:- G. H. Toombs 8s Sons 3 l-l; Fred’! 1 l-2. High single R. Watts 276. High three R. Whi-tlock 681. K. of I’. League Die I-Isrdsr- I. Lafferty .. .. .. . 1'75 7.98 J. Brown . - 157 1-1. Flnlayson 150 E. Rice 221 239 H. Wart-on 0 153 ‘34 T: 101-258 . C. Blrown . .1 137 129 M. Cutcliffe loo tss 2:19 A. Jewell 5r 10a use C. McLean . 175 276 199 E. Butt. . .. 183 108 174 T0ltil—2557. High single C. McLean 276. High three C. McLean 654. Candlepln League Tigers:- A. Doran H. Poulton F. Doyle W. Taylor . . . B. McCallum West Dndsrs :- S. Peterson E. Stanley - 3‘ c. White 96 V. Martin . ~ 93 g1 D. Stanley m4.“ 45o 458 h a le B. MoCallllm- gigh iii?» B. McCallum. Points:- Tigers d; West Endcrs i. Tonight at ‘i100 H-Y Grads. At 8:15 Aces vs. Imperlflll- Suckers:- o. Isclair 399 345 139 P, Clkldy 178 l!) 15B V. Gallant 179 192 134 , s04 sis 4st Total Dreaslnau :— S. DOITUII 1V1 159 150 r‘. Cass h 11g H; ‘If, l“ I a m cs2 451 Total 1431. Points: Suckers. 4; Dffidnfmilhts '33:), giggle, O. LeClsir M6. High Three. C. lcclalr 612- gfe-Cr-ti-llant 197 179 1 M. n. MoGuliZan- l5! 201 1% C Costello 143 175 159 c Trainer 11o 102 133 577 637 601 Tbtel 1815. RJIIICIIZ— A. Ward 189 150 155 R. McKennn 131 1W 198 L’ S H8 102 1% L s_ 11o tso 133 X IN 012 Total 1772. Chucks:- E. MacDonald 182 19B 109 1,, MacDonald 14': 101 214 Reg. MacDonald $81 191 l" Wm. Campbell 10f 118 137 A‘ Doyle L12 W 13d w_ Muppgy 1G7 3m 130 9&7 00B B96 Total U33. Hot 8hots:— R. Bradley N0 Z51 W7 .1. COBdY lsa mo m C Kelly 139 ldl l4l. w. Smith 1'10 11d 13B p_ mp5,, 159 14B 164 Low Score 104 W 199 Total I02. High Single. :7. R. Budge‘. .. m: hoist-km. 4: (link! i. Isegsr- " °""°‘ 1% 5 if‘. I... Doyle I. CCHI Til ill Jfi l. Pava- lQ ‘UN It. It. John II Ill iss 1B0 1 l8 ‘this! OM. llslsoehi- 5, ‘nninor. 1M III 115 L. EH8 l'I0 I62 1B2 0. Gllfit 1N 1M 12B A. (Ilia! Z1 II 142 1r. lltflsegltal 3U Z I12 . l'I0 fi Bfl Tflll i. Hills Sl-ltgle: B. Gsudet 2G8. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Broken Knee Ends Ring Career PAGE NINE High thrcn I... F0 Tigers vs. West H. Montgomery B. I-Iowatt ... M Weir Team No. B- J. Rogerson E. Cameron . M. MacNeill Team No. l- High Three. I. Murtmghan 042. fills; Pllhhflll. I I-Il Ghan- 1... Bealrsio _..H ' rri 290. En tiers. Al. 8.15 Candlepl-r; League: Timers vs. Champs. of Macllleoltern‘ " l, Haszard . O. MacDonald .. . 73B ‘Ill '79‘. High single E. MacDonald and B. Howstt 2B4. High three I. MacDonald “=- Iig Iour Magoo All Stern- J. Power .. ".178 I4 B12 Ii. barter .162 214 213 R. Clneron . BB IBB I83 C. Micheal‘! . ll I3’! 18.1 O. befilslr .101 311 27'! Total-BIO‘! rsbaz- . .1. Mac-Donald .... .. B50 140 227 I. co ..... ..... 3B5 28B L. Cudmore 130 R- Giasy m9 w Score 91 Total—2233. High single B. Crockett 262. High three E. Diamond 583. O. Manuel . . 25.7 204 12D C. Acorn . 194 P. Slnimonds 137 J. Simmonds 145 Totai-2016. W. Cudmore .. 143 Jon Roach 198 B. Taylor 1S6 W. Josey .. ‘.104 Total—-2157. fligh single O. Manuel 253. Hl-gh thrcc W. Josey 601. Candlepin League Accs:—- ‘ Cr. Matlleson . .. 9i 100 G. Glllis . 76 76 J. Mclnnls 81 60 B. Acorn 80 '79 Low Score .. . . 86 '19 Tofal—l262. Imperlu|s:— N. Diamond . .. 89 89 93 C. Rowe . , 86 83 J. Brown 97 79 K. Ford 92 101 B. Fletcher . . . B0 87 B1 Total-HOB. High single L. Ford 101. Monday night at 7.00—Seml finals: Old HOLY NAME BOWLING Big Four League Old Timers:- E. Doucettc 222 257 154 P. Moquaid 164 173 238 J, Cameron 167 111 229 V, Qgylg 214 241 161 J. A. Bentley 184 E9 181 951 1%) 963 Total 204s. ‘ Five Aces:- G. Stewart 210 182 310 J. Callaghan 213 175 131 E. Robin 158 213 265 E. MCCubB 240. 213 1B6 J, Lawlor lBl 257 179 1012 1040 i071 Total 3123. High single. Ci. Stewart, 310. High Three, G. Stewart, ‘I02. Points: Five Aces, 5; Old T101615. Tonight at szis sharp: an Stars‘ vs. Arabs. Ladies Friday Afternoon League Team N0. Ig- _ vich weighed 174 1-2; Fox 172. Beau JackdAtlanta. ‘Ga-iwclterwcigiit, writhcslln pain anditrles t0 clutch his broken knce as‘ Referee Eddie Josephs awards a technical knockout to {Pony Juniro, Youngstown. O. TTIL‘ sudden end to thc fight in New York's Madison Squarr- Garden scems to have surprised Jnniro who ent- ered thc ring a 21 underdog. The injury put an end to Beau Jack's ring career. rocks, 1 1-2. W“ "' Q Q - E Dir-mm L v h R t B Wk,“ 2,, ,3; Q8118 1C 8 HIIIS . evenson 91 t h l g gtudmore‘ 102 To l B T a c. Mo... 1.. 154 I G Y 6C HIT-la Tolal—-2160. I. Bradshaw 195 B. Cameron 10.: Kayo Over Billy Fox By Sid Feder NEW YORK. no. 2a "(AP)- Old Gus Lcsncvicli. i-he aged guf- fer they said didn't have a chance, held qn to his world light heavy- weight championship tonigllit by knocking out fresh young Billy Fox, the knockout specialist in '10 rounds before a neat" sellout crowd in Madison Square Garden. Lcsnc- Blonde Gus, one-sided underdog in the betting against the tan ter- ror from Philadelphia who had run up a record string oi 43 straight knockouts in his undefeated career, punched iihc ears off Billy from Philly virtually all the way and then put him away with a ripping crushing barrage at 2 minutes 19 seconds 0f the 10th.. All the way it was the old story of just. too much experience as the 30-year-old king of the ITS-pound- ers pulled all the tricks of the bag from his 12 years of ring experi- ence and made tho Philadelphian flallcr fight his fight from start to finish. - _ And at thc 0nd. a crowd of 18,318 customers who contributed to a gross gate of $102,520, roared their cheers t0 the rafters for the victory of the white Russian walioper froth Cliflslde, N..T., who is making his first title defence in this coumtly in six years, after spending follrl years in the coast guard, The end .wasn‘t altogether unex- pected, once Gus switched from his cagy. canny ringm-anship to s charging. tearing aggressor Ln the eighth. Through the ninth. he bee! a loud, bass drum 0n Fox with both hands. In tire 10th a right siazizercd Billy. liis feared fists had no more power as he waved a harmless left at Gus. Two jabs and a hook slow- ed him to a walk. Then a r1811! cross tore over and l-‘oxwentdown as though hit by a sledge. He was on his back. his arms outstretched. until referee Johnny BYPYWS’ count reached "four." At six he was 0n one knee. At e181“. ll! l ovr-r the clincher. BYYIWS- 8905""! reached his feet, but he was hclp- lc=s wnbbluig, his eyes vacant and his hands at his sides. got. itltpcd across thc ring to put Fox's helplessness. Jllmlled ill 1° stop the proceedings. He srobbfll “f9 Qugkey- city swatter. but Billy. game as fhCy Come. wanted to fight some more, He wrestled wiiih the referee. but to no avail. Billy's manager. Blink)‘ Palerlmr 515° Pr“ tested unsuccessfully that his slidi- ator could so on. Low Score .. W162 166 188 A. McFarlans . 174 Z4 .228 E. Smith .288 183 2?) Totll—8080. ‘ High single J. Power 272. Bombers Defeat New Glasgow 9-5 The Charlottetown featcd New Glasgow a. score of 9-5 in Bonrbers r de- lmperials by an cxhibi tio-n ltockcy game at New Glasgow last night. The game clean. was fast 0nd The Bombers, leading 6-0 by the end of the second period, were in no danger at any time. They had an edge on play all the way. Lille-u psi- Bombers: fence, N. Wilson. Forwards. Roberts. Drake, Larier. Richard. McKay, Doyle. R. Sililphant; Defence. J. Bulman. R. McFadyen, B. Andrew; Iimperi-als: Goal. quiere. E. Gnss. J. Goal. Forwards. N. Young; de- M. Connolly; Dnuceilc, W. Blac- G. Andrews, B. Hill, E. Watts, L. Gill- lant, D. Cross. 1—Bombers, Wilson 2—Bombers, Lirtci- Summary First Period Second Period Ii-Bombers, Roberts. iRicharrll. (Roberts). 4-Bombers, Connolly lRoberts). 5—Bombers, McKay tRlcliard, Connolly) 6—Bombors, ‘Richard (McKay). Third Period 7—Impc1~inls. E. G055. 8—Impcrlals, E. G055. i-J-Bomhers, Richard). IO-Bc-mbers, Larter. ll-Imperials. Blacquiere. Connolly (Doyle, l2—Bombers, Connolly (Rich- arrli. 13—Iimpcrials. Dnurctic. lo-Impcrials, E. Goss (Dou cette). i MacDonald Bros. High three J. Power 70¢ Points: All Stars 4; Arabs 1. THEATRE MT. STEWART 2 DAYS—FRl.-SAT. 8 P.M. "BLOOD ON THE SUN" James Cagney and Sylvia Sidney Sea Jimmy At His Best Plus News Intermediate: Playdowns . At BURDEN SATURDAY NIGHT, MARCH 1 IORDEN NATIONALS Vs. SUMMERSIDE LEGION Admission 25 ond 40 Cents. ‘IQ F Slants after MiddleweiglsiTiile Takes Close lit-round WinFromWadsworth: Oxygen Device Used , . x y _ . The three Prairie provinces, Al- berta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba are experiencing the worst winter conditions in years and reports coming from game authorities in- diflflio thet upland game birds, par- tloullrly Hungarian partridge and pheasants, are suffering heavy cas- ualties. There is a, possibility that the season of 1947 will see a pro- tective blanket thrown over all illfvivins upland game birds from the Rocky Mountains to the cast- ern boundary of Manitoba, No mention has been made as to how the native Ruffcd Grouse and Prairie Chicken gre faring but as both these species are equipped by nature to cope with such condi- tions no immediate concern has been manifested concerning the welfare of the_naf.ive stock, 1.. the West. as in this province, both the Hungarian Partridge and Ring- necked Pheasants are introduced species. This Province has been blessed with a winter very favouruble to all classes of game birds so la: gs it has gone. Sieet storms in March could do hamt even yet, but qng Illllllg in the brrds‘ favour they are in tip top condition and would be able to withstand q week or s.) "Md 801"! Without. any disastrous results._ Many sportsmen are the opinion that this coming fall will see a great-influx of non-resi- dent gunners to the Province. From the way things are shaping up at FY9591“ it looks as if ‘The Island’ is the only province that will have any Huns this year and many in- terested observers are commending 'I'l1c_ P.E.I. Fish and Game Asso- ciation and Island Pheasants Un- limited for their timely recommen. dation that the number of hunt- rng licenses issued to non-resident gunners for the i947 season be lim- ited to 200. Furthermore ii the wishes of our sportsmen are acceded to by the Members of our Legislature visit- ing gunners will pay a higher fee for the privilege of hunting this fail. It was requested that the license for visitors outside the Maritimes be raised from $10. to $35. but gunners from the sister provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick be let off with a sum of $25. A ‘W’ dBYS s80 this columnist talked to a couple oi local R.C.M. Police Constables who saw consid- erable service in West-Canada prior to the war. I asked them how the Prairie Chicken reacted to weather conditions as ext-st in the West this ivinter. Both were of the opmion the ‘Chicken’ would suffer more from poachers than from Old Man Winter. It. was their experience, when on duty in the West, that once the bluffs and Coulee: become snow- bound and natural food became next to impossible to obtain the Prairie Chicken resorted to grain stacks grouped around homestesds. Many farmers took advantage of this trait by removing a pane c»! glass, or cut a hole, in g building commanding the stacks 0nd whcn the coveys of ‘Chicken’ alighted on them like a flock of hens a shotgun charge raked them from close range. Homestssders of foreign origin were the worst offenders but the practice was nc-t confined to ‘for- eigners’ by any means. A shotgun was not the only means used t0 take the big birds illegally. Many of the Central and eastern Europ- ean immigrants devised ingenious little ‘gagets’ that would take birds without any noise. Such a situation, particularly in the vast, snowbound western prairies, is difficult to cope with but numbers of convictions were obtained nevertheless. .. and it was no minimum penalty that was imposed either. Methinks that thc’ pheasants would have been better off this winter in this Province if we'd havs had enough snow_to block the highways. Gunners could drive cars to almost any Doint they choose this winter and they certainly took advantage of thc opportunity. Some little birds have been do- ing some "cheepinr ln-tely and by all reports the ears of some so- called rabbit hunters should be burnln at a lively rate. They're s, lot i clean sports among the rabbit hunting brigade but one would sort of compromise with 0ne's conscience to say the same about others. Many of our sports are a pecul- iar viewpoint with regard to our pheasants. Frequently one hears it expressed thusly: "I plld into the pheasant fund for two years and an sn-fltlsd to s phssssm whsthsr Imootltsssaasonoroatfima or two with a lotion lllrs that wouldn't make any lmrteciable dif- fa-ence but when two or three hun- dred have the same idea well. .its hard on the pheasants. Many oi the old ti-rno fishermen are beginning to get restless under the urge qt this unreasonable spring weather and arc beginning to over- haul tlrelr fishing tackle and var- nish their casting rods. By the feel oi things at present lcc will be s seerce commodity when the 16th of April comes in. The season on rabbits and foxes is now closed, since Saturday. Feb- ruary lbth to be exact. and w» (By John Innglois) ax. Feb. 2s - term-a dashing young man with a stronl left, a low crouch and an oxygen inhalatcr tonight brought thd middleweight boxing champion- ship of Canada to Mahone Bay, a arnell Nova Bcotis fishing t by taking io-round decisloa flrom title-ho der Len Wadswurt of Windsor, Ont. In e decision which failed N arouse more than routine home- town enthusiasm. 23-year-old Rog- er Whynott. 150, won the crown‘ from Wadsworth who, at an offl- cial 31. had held it for the last l0 years when he defeated an- other Maritimer. Ray Muclntyre of Saint John, N.B. Wadsworth. 15o 1-4, not only held an advantage in weight bu! out-reached the handsome Mari- time contender and stood a good two inches taller. By Slim Margin Whynott, who also holds the Maritime welterweight title, v/a-s awarded the fight by judrzo Etting- cr and referee Jack McKcnns by a slim margin as against a nod/ for the Ontarioan by judge Gir- risen. During the bout. Whynott re- introduced hrs oxygen inhalalor which he had used with amazing results in lifting his Welter crown from Joltin‘ Joe Pyle of Montreal and New Waterford, N5, last full. After the second rollnd he received his first revitalization treatment and they were con- tinued at each intermission- to offer the bewildering spec» f-ncle of the Nova Scotian wobbling Into his corner, fak- ing the treatment and coming out bobbing like n Iliflflltflu nette. Dllfillk the battle. ' llotvcver, wadswurth Dill to good advantage his superior reach and heizzht iq hold off the curly-headed con- tender. Without fanfare {Lilli sblil less foot-work, the Windsor right- cr-almcst l0 years the scnioiw-l dangled a tantalizing left in ivlly- notfs face and followed it up witii a six-foot, telescoping right nanil drive. In a semi-final bout. svrar y Percy Paris. 13s. of rd»..- cin-glli,‘ l-Ovk a ropulur IO-rc-ullri ric- rrslon from Duke Hudd. 145, oi Baint John, N.B. Paris, an r.gila ngro scrapper, uscrl a powerful speedy levft lab to beat the Noid Brunswick fighter. The championship Slrllgpk‘ ajmn- ed with a spurt and thou down into a cautious. rub series of saliies as the ’ meeting for the first out each otherb rspav‘ mapped out their ,_ second round, m-irkcri by zit ous clinches. at iimr". hr-luzlil boos of disapproval from lhq house. Whynott danced out hi sprmliliy fashion after the oxyrzrn ‘rrals ment had been applied for the first time ‘in ihs fight, and man. “Bed t0 slip in a couple cl uni-i lefts to the champions 110st". Bu Wlldsworth, displaying export-m- ced effectiveness in itilighiing pummelled short. sharp blows id the body which began to show, effect on the Maritimer. When these were followed up with 1mg, rocketting rights Whynctt seem- ed to be looking forward to the restful clinches A Slug-fest But he had Wadsworth dazed, il not. wobbly. in the sixth and sev- enth rounda 1n in all-out slug-fest: ivhircll sa/w both fighters swinging wildly, momentarily rlisrcgartiing style and guards. Neither of the battlers drew much blood during the match. Evident on Wadsworth. however, was a cut over the left eye-ho- lieved a memento of the three- round defeat he suffered at the hands of Tony Zale |, month ago. Whyrwtt, who has been fightin recently out at New Englnn Stilton. topped a lO-round decis- ion to former Canadian Welter charnplon Dave Castllloux in Que- bec a year ago. Tonight's bout. first Dominion contest. in a number of years, re- called slmilar events staged ha- fore the Second World War when Tiger Warrlngton was defending his Camdisn heavyweight champ- ronship. A game fighter, Whynott put up a good struggle in the two fmal rounds. _ In the ninth, he unleashed his potent left for g isw drives a1 Wadsworthb head as the champ- loin tried vainly for the kayo punch. But it didn't come then, nor in the final round which 92w ihs fighters, visibly tagged. battlc out ‘to-and seconds at final ll. Manager Critical Bf Fight Bsclsion HALIFAX, Feb. lI-Vie Oliver, massages o! boss Len Wadsworth of Windsor, Oat, and Hamilton. who led HI Canadian middleweight basing championship tonight, sald is ass interview is desHon Isl the fight was “fie wort sass I yell” Olvc sale IQ: Wisasli s! Mahono lay, I.l., who took the cowl: Q Isa l0- the place and ho (Whyssofl) wouldn't fight at all. Io Jest hung on.” "Everyone we've inked is thinks Len vmn eight rounds at lead. I think he took seven myself. hen will htoek him GIE€XB time.” he added. 55mins; p. inlaid... on niln trust that all snares and trap have and muskrat closes on MlttJl "Id