w ~_----..._,__ ...........__._..___......._........,. ........_.-,_......._... starts. Great George St. l nanmnron Let us have your Badminton Rackets for Re- stringing now and avoid the rush when the season THE BIKE SHOP Charlottetown FChocolate Has Great Ring Record; McCloskey To Workout This Afternoon In the best fighting shape of his career and looking every insli of lt Bunny McCloskey arrived ii. the Olty last night for his b Kid Chocolate wl iel tni at the Forum on Still the same i‘ i r that started his Flfll,’ oii-vei- here when only a more kid Bunny would say little of how he exp-cc:- ed to fare against his colored op- ponent but it could easily he (llS- cerned that his one iiini is to iulfl‘ the Boston battler into i-zinip and so climb up another rung of llil. fistic ladder. t Chocolate Arrives Today Kid Chocolate \\ill ariive in the City tonight and local fznis who have been wondi-iing just l‘.'l\V oocl he is can i-cit assured that cCioskey will lie meeting one of the smartest fighters he has ever met in his career. Chocolate born in Hivuna. Cuba- ll a lad of 24 years and in hi; ring career has already taken part in over ninety bouts “inning about. ‘l0 and in his last 50 fights, out of Boston, has won the nod in 45. A fast, shifty mittslinger Choco- late hits hard with either hand and while he can dish out plenty of punishment he can also take it when he has to be on the receiv- ing end. He is managed by "Irish" Johnny Clinton of Cambridge. i155, Among the men Chocolate has met are Bob Flanigan. A1 Trossi, Louis Fezula. Eddie Ictoumeau and Billy Lancaster all well known in ring annals. That in brief is the ring sum- mary of Chocolate, It is a good one and fight fans should witness one of the most gruelling. hard- hitting sciups Saturday night seen here lfl a long while. As stated before McCloskey \vill work out at the Forum this after- noon at 2 o'clock and in addition Chuck Orman who fights in the semi-final and Lloyd Carr, both of Halifax who is in g, preliminary will also go through their paces. Advance sale of tickets will go on sale at the Forum this morning at i0 o'clock and prospective buy- ers should be there early as an overflow crowd is expected. _Webb Batters Out Decisive WinOver Castilloux To Win Title MONTREAL, Oct. 10 -- (CH- flattering out a decisive win over bruised and tired coroner"- hnnfiwgbh, “nappy little Mont- real egro, lifted the Canadian llfihtwelght erown from Dave Cus- il oux in a lz-round bout ut the Forum here tonlslll- Wm!’ wellh- id in at 133 1-2 and Castilloux at I31 l-I. Webb. who once fought as a pre- liminary boy when the nslnz '3"!- tiliouk was at his peak, forced the llllll flllou' ut and for t-he last flvyiuognds ad the former clhamp- lqg lilfijginn grimly and fight- ing. dsupieateiy to weather the fawn the little Montreal Reno's flailing flats. Oaltilloux was a badly tired lighter from the middle of the bout on. but Webb finished appur- alitly as fresh as he started, bob- bing and weaving about the vet- aran and forcing him to hang grimly on the ropes and cover up. One judge called the fight even. flit gave seven to Webb and five to Castilloux. and the other split it eight to four for the new champ- ion. kc?! for the early rounds and brie flurry or two by Castilloux k the final stages, Webb forced e fight. His constant bobbing and octopus-like weaving of his arms seemed to baffle Castilioux and he was able to l-znd few good solid blows. B; kept Webb off with a vicious left Jab in the first three rounds, Ind staged a desperate rally in the early part of the llth and 12th. but he tired rapidly and couldn't k0 away from the piston-like flsl ing of his 26-year-old oppon- Int's fiatl Both fighters felt one another‘ out in the first and Castilioux ltumbled momentarily to one krice but didn't fake a count. the second lite flCutlfl opened L little and liveb-b nailed Cos. with a flurry of right. d Hts tn the heart and bodygtfhnnt wplently h-urt the champion. Gib was missing frequently in the third round as Casty ducked and bobbed {Hid ilOt in some telling INK W113i his left‘. jab. Caattillousc was taking the fight to Webb as the fourth opened and pinned him with several hag-d PlIh-iis and lefits The i-eioice worn- ‘d Qltillotrx for hitting low In o. Webb opened up in the fifth and, hammered Castllloux almg the ropes before the veteran tied him up. castilloux was tiring rapidly and was ducking more and more minetantliy to get out of the way. From there to the finish one mund was almost a repetition of the previous as Castilloux came out slowly after each bell and weather- ed the storm momentarily before Webb caught up with him and pounded him relentlessly back to the ropes, Oastilloux was tired and hurt. andforsecondsonendmadeno effomt lo fight back but was trylns yust m dud: a haymaker and avoid a. knockout. Welbb had him up ass-inst W! mpes as eocih round ended. p011!’- ing rights and iefis into his b0_dy and catching him frequently with stiff jolts to the head. The right side 0f Clastllloiuca beck was red- dened fmm tihe blows he took as he ducked almost, to the canvas and weaved to one Hide. _ Knowing he was beaten on points. ossiiiioux made a son-e rally in the 11th and scored with several hard jabs and hooks to Webb's head, but once again Webb forced him back w Me ropes and Punish- ed him about the body To Discuss Formation 0f Hockey Loop SYDNEY, N. 5.. Oct. i0—(CP)— Representatives frflm Gllc! Bl)’- Sydney. Antigonish and New Glas- gow will attend a hockey confor- ence at Port Hmvkesbury Satur- day to discuss the proposal to form a four or five-team puck eir~ cult. The session originally was scheduled for last Sunday but fell through when Cape Breton rep- resentatives were Unable l° ll’ tend. The shift of Truro Beorcats to the Maritime Big Five neasue he! hit the Antigonish-Plctou-Cape Breton loop, and there are reports that Pictou may not be back l" action this winter. sportamanb tart. M. 1mm. already has hh sorta series. The only trouble ll he the crowd still waiting to buy locate. Bo had-Graeme. “l-lusky" McCabeZs intermediate All Stars will meet Sydney Mines Ramblers for the Maritime title the Cope Breton team chalking up their third straight victory over Dartmouth Wednesday to capture the Nova Scotla crown, 4' Il> 4 Il- As has been the case with Is- land bail teams this season once again they are forced to play their opening games away from nome, meeting the Sydney Mines team Monday and Tuesday of next week ‘m the first two games of a oest of five series with the next two scheduled for Charlottetown the latter part of next week, probably Saturday and Sunday. 1- 1l- 1- l‘ Winners over Tatamagouche All Stars. last year's intermediate champions the new Nova Ssntia champs are reputed to be a strong well-balanced squad with plenty of hitting power sprinkled through- out their lineup, i- f Q l» They will likely furnish the stiffest test of strength that the locals have faced this season but notwithstanding McCabe’s team, right at the peak of their form, are confident that they can climax their ood season's work by bring- ing t e first Maritime ball title in the intermediate class to this Province. If O f '0' All Stars have been working out every chance they can get. Flaws that have been noticeable in their playoff games to date are grad- ually being ircrned out and the players are showing plenty of spir- t and hustle as they prepare for their final test. Il- + l‘ '0' ‘Charlie Ryan's juniors. also gun- nrng for the first junior ball title ever to be captured by an Island Squad met s setback yesterday afternoon but it wasn't on the ball diamond. Leaving here at noon they could not get passage across to Caribou when a cable became entangled in the rudder of the S. S. Charles A. Dunning and they were forced togeturn to the city. 1- However the boys took it philo- Sfiplllvfilly but nevertheless it tc-r- ces them to leave again tomorrow morning in order to play tomorrow afternoon and after the long auto- mobile trip will have only about a half hour to spare berm-e the umpire calls playy ball, Il- Ilv + But, there is plenty of fight and spirit throughout the ranks of the New Brunswick-Prince Edward Is- land champions and they will like- 1y overcome this latest setback end give the smooth-fielding Liverpool team_the battle of their lives. In fact 1t wi-il not be at all surpris- ing if the local youngsters prove to be a little too hot for the Nova Bcotlans. At least that is the way local fleas thought; s? "wing", l- Qllnlev Frank. former news- paper sports columnist, has a tlmelv piece in the current issue of the Saturday Evening Post on the ancient theme that pitch-in is the commodity which pays off in the World Series. men always sav "pitching and the breaks." o- e 1|- 0 Mr. Frank delves deep in the records to prove his point, stat- ing that it's practically an even money bet that the losing teain in any given World Series some will not score more than one run. Although the greatest slugger! have marched in steady proces- m cnaatorrarown GUARDIAN Harri Q's: shortstop Johnny Pesky gives Dom DiMaggio at right. Boys Rudy York, left. a happy pat in the diressing roomafter Red Sox won the Series opener at Sportsman's Park, ‘st. Louiston York's homer in the 10th inning. That's outfielder lEormer, Vezina Trophy MONTREAL Oct. l0 - (GP)- Lorne Chabot, whose National Hockey League goal-tending ex- tended over a dozen rugged cam- paigns, died in hospital today, his fighting heart finally stopped by a lingering illness that had kept him bed-ridden for more than a year. Poison from osteo-arthritis and progressing nephritis, a chronic disease, had infiltrated his whole system and although Chabot had stoutly maintained he would re- cover. his friends have known for many months that he was a dying man. His death came just five d-ays after his 46th birthday. Only last March. as he lay m bed in a west end apartment, he expressed confidence that he would regain enough strength "to take oare of my wife and two boys the W53’ I always wanted to." An amateur star on two Port Arthur Allen Cup winning teams. Chabot turned professional with New York Rangers in i925. He ended his career in 1996-37 with another New York team, the Am- "Y0u win or lose on pitching," he quotes Joe DiMaggio as say- lug, "That's the big thing every time. the pitching. I don't care who's hitting and pitching. The pitcher always has the edge. He can make »you hit his bail, whether you like it or not." t 4- + I) Di-M o did not man only in the Word Series, but throughout the entire szasan. 0 ."You never heard of a man hit- t .500 or anywhere near it, did you?" the Yankee outfielder asks. ‘That would mean getting a hit every other time at bat. You get one for three and you're doing all rlfltt." ‘D ‘ O O Which is all true enough, but the big drains in these names is in those moments when the ions- ball hitter is at the plate. You can tell it tlrrougb the broadcasts of the present series when Wil- llama comes uo-lult u you could feel it when Babe Ruth was ploy- . The rocker provides the ex- citanent in almost any lport. A good many fans with work to do can only hover a certain length sion through the series, it is no more than a 7 to 5 shot that the winning team will score more than three runs a game-surely a modest figure. 0 o O e The Thad o: Lani?» FORUM saruunar 9:30 p. m. THE STAR BOXING ATTRACTION‘ ACE MoCLDIKEY vs. run cnocourm McCLOSKEY, born here, hos gained o notable place in lilo boxing would, has fought ‘in Madison Square Gordon a‘ number of times. of time beside the radio. The! wait until Williams has had his tum before they return to their jobs, which proves the pulling power that an offensive thrfll has over defensive till. Winner, Lorne Chabot Dies After Long Illness wrioans, after having played in the intervening years with Toronto Maple Leafs. Montreal Canadiens, Chicago Black Hawks and Mont» real Maroons. His greatest season was in i934- 35 when he replaced the late Charles (Chuck) Gardner in the Chicago nets. That year he won the Vezlns Trophy as the league's best goal-tender and was named on The Canadian Press all-star team. From the start of his profession- al career he was a standout net- man and twice the teams in front him won Stanley Cups. The first was Rangers in 1927-28 and the second was the Maple Leafs in 1981-31. . Chabot was out; of the playoffs only once. Got-man's Tribute OTTAWA. Oct. i0—(CP)— Tom- my German, veteran Canadian sports promoter and one of the fathers of the National Hockey League. tonight expressed "dep regret" when informed of the death in-Montreai today of Inrne Chabot, former NJLL net star. “I am very. very sorry to hear of Lorne’: death." German stated. "He was a great goal-keeper and an extremely fine fellow." German was manager of Mont- real Maroon! in 198d when Chabot was with the Montreal team. Ma- roons were defeated that year |\y Detroit nee Wings in a grueling Stanley Cup series after Montreal ‘finished first in the N. H. L. stand- ngs. Charlottetown Bowlers In Tournament WOODSTOCK, N.B., Oct. 10 — (CPO-The Maritime bowiiriz ur- nsment. for the Brunswick- trophy. won last year b Blake's of Woodstock, will be ha here Nov. 4-8. Entries to date are i-ioulton and B or, Me., Saint Jclhn Cemraia, Haliax 1m ah, l-iailfsx Conn- Mlrlfill. oncwn Knights of P as. Fredericton. Giarlotto- town. Sussex uvi Blake's. KID CHOCOLATE in o well known American lighter. Hus not many of the loadings-calendars in his division. PRELIMINARI ES:- Chuck Ormon Halifax Kid Poulton Choilomtoym VS. Charlottetown ‘VS. Formerly ‘Ell. Beau Jack Lloyd’ Carr Kid Reid vs. Slugger McLeod . OCTOBER 11, 1946 Bcarcats Anil Middleton In 9-all Draw TRUIIO, N. 5., Oot. 10 - (ctr) — In a long tiresome baseball that drove umpire-in- chief Frank Martin to announce he was through. ‘Iruro Bearcats said Middleton Cardinals today fought to a 9-0 tie in the fourth Rome of the Nova flcotis senior s. The teams played out nine inn- ings in two hours and 4B nun- utes aa Middleton came from be- hind to gain the tie in a game which saw vigorous and numer- ous outbursts of protest by all ven i i cries iA ‘Winner . 0N ‘run isaano IT'S lllclteyli Nicholson's BLACK TWIST CHEWING J-_- a; can: BOSTON. Oct. l0 — (A!) '- sonabia ' ' iiles thereof,’ for a against the Yankees. parties involved. As a result the best-of-five series staimls at two games to one in favor or the Cardinals with the game being replayed to- morrow. A total of 2i players were used and there was a parade of um- pire baiters that called numerous halts in the same. Umpire Mar- tin. fed up with the situation. announced: “Tomorrow I watch the game from the stands." mm team used two hurlers. Johnny Mylretyn and Skit Fergu- son for Thuro and Fat Ray and Bernie Parent for Middleton. Middleton had to fight an up- hill battle from the first lnninfl after Truro picked up five runs. Thev finally went ahead in the ninth but the Bearcats came back to tie the score with s. singleton heir half of i Trum .... .. 500000301-9 i0 3 Ray. Parent (7) and Deveau. Shaulls: Myketyn. Ferguson <6) and Langilie. - Middleton Box score: “NNHO Psglierani, i»: " @ Q@¢¢¢@I"¢: a“ ‘U o 3”‘ > l MaoIn-tyre, Joseph. as. Feral-non. lf-o Roach. rf. .. i-angllle. c .. Medynskl. lb x-Matheson Mont. 1b My-ketyn, p-if ...... .. 5 °c.s.-.-u->-¢--5 5. e wO¢°NMO~4HHO= .- s-gggpggr-mossv- ‘rotsls 8| x-Batted for Medynski enth. S mm ry: Ebirne; runs. Middleton ‘l. Truro 6. R. s batted in. B- MHOIMYYC. Fe , Rgngh, Langllle, Parent. n. Seaman, smuiu s. Mvketyn 8- Dsvesu. Left on base. Middleton 7, Iruro 10. Three-base hits. D. Seam Shaulls. ‘Iva-base hit. J , Myibtyh. Hits and film! of! Mwketyn in five innings, sev- en hits and four runs: off Fermi- son in four innings. five hlis and five runs: m any in seven "m- ines. eight bits and eight runs: of; par-mt in two innings. two hits and one run. Strikeouts. n a. m. a. l" "Mm" a‘ "domains: Von eoh “Muffin. Halifax. plate: Reg. Beasley. Dflfillwlllll- ""4 ggqmery. Kentvllie. bases. Tfdteytgifl. Attendance: i500. Gronin liot Certain 0f Moundsman i Y; ‘Concentrated Assault Give Red Birds One- Sided 12 - 3 Victory . TALBOT six Boston pitchers, or regs record-equalling total of 20 solid hits, St. Louis Cardinals singled ell a one-aided 12-! victory over the lted Sox today, doadleeking the World Carlee at two wins An amased crowd of 85,045 loyal Se: renters. who had been given to understand that their own boys llwhod the heavy "mkry. lat for the most part in morons silence as the rampant med Birds tied the prefloua record for bite set by New York Giants in the 1921 serlen apiece. Every man in the Cardinal lineup, including pitcher George Mun- gel’, joined in the thunderous outburst of biugiea. Three of them. Enos Sllnghlgr, Whitey Iruiowski and Joe ‘Gsraglols, tied another scrleg mark by slashing four safeties apiece. Boetnnians hsihft seen any- thing quite like It Iilloe the battle 0f Bihker Hill. Calm in the midst of the car- nage. Munger, who two months ago was sweating it out with the army of occupation in Germany, mowed the Sox hitting array down with nine scattered hits and ermltted only one earned run as e mode certain the play-off would return to St. Innis. The lone honest tally made. off the big righthander was knocked in. naturally by Rudy York, who slapped a double into right-centre fi-eld in the fourth inning after Ted Williams had lined o. single. The other two resulted from Bobby Doerr's home run in tho eighth after Dom DiMaIIio had reached base on a flagrant error by shortstop Marty Marlon. Th0)‘ never should have scored, and Munger, whose employment by Manager Eddie Dyer had been re- garded as a considerable gamble, should have been credited with a ORG-TUNNEL Brand New Series By knocking tall Tex Bughaon from the mound in the third inn- ing with a concentrated assault and continuing to beiobor his five honest but inept successors. the‘ birds from the Mlsslssi pi made- it a brand new World Ber es. and the stunning blow they administered to the American League champions might still be felt in the fifth game here tomorrow. '- Mungefls unexpectedly brilliant performance "set up" the Car- dinal hurling staff and made it certain the Boston: would have to look once again at both Howie Pallet and Harry Brecheen. the two crack lefthanders who ‘gave them so much trouble in the games at St. Louis. Manager Dyer said Pallet, who lost the opener at St. Inuis on Rudy York's 10th inning nomer. would hurl again tomorrow. Either Mickey Harris. who was beaten by Brecheen in the second me, or Joe Dobson was expected o I0 for the Red Box, though Manager Joe Cronin. still somewhat dazed by what he had just seen, was none too certain about anything. Bobby Doers‘, the Box second baseman, was spared at least part of his manager's travail because he was stricken with a headache toward the close and sought. with Cronhrs permission. the sanctuary of the clubhouse-H.» was expected to be okay by tomorrow, Whether Hughson and the other five Sox throwers ever would re cover com letely from the knock- ing aroun they took was ob- iematical. The other five-t is only fair to Hu hson to name them. tom-were Si! the oglei-nfif their appearance. m I y fire - ltvba. Zuber. Mace Brown, and Clem Dreisevverd. Ryba, at; 41, was the oldest of the lot, and he didn't do any worse than the others. They all looked, about alike to the Cards. No other team, incidentally, ever has use more fllngers in a World-Cerise game. - Slaughter Blaya ‘Ihll While everyone on the t. Louis team got in on the not. aulhter swung the biggest bl-t. Starting with a lead-off homer in the esc- ond that‘ greased the skids for Hughson. the fleet oeni flllllc m: suave is secausl in: tame: sravs fielder followed with a double and two singles and scored four of his team's runs. Kurowski slammed two doubles and’two singles. Garagiola, the N-year-oid rookie catcher, hit a two-b ger and three singles in success on and powered three runs across the plate. Marty Mar- lon ot a double and two singles and necked in three. It was not until two were oul in the ninth that Captain Terry Moore finally got his hit, a single into centre, but it proved the one that tied the record. Stan Muriel, with a chance to break- the previous mark, drew a walk, and Slaughter, with an op- portunity to be the first player ever to hit safely five times in a series game, popped out to York nearfirst for the final out. He warthe only batter to whom Drelaewerd pitched. veaeran right- Wally 50x. strove new- eiaily to make a battle of it. He rapped Munser for four straight singles. but he didn't have any support from his younger team- nvi-tes. - Doerr, with his homer and a single was the only other Sex t get more than one safety d3 Mahler's slingshot fast ball an sharp curve. The Cards changed their defence against Williams since his success- fuhbunt of theprevious game. They shifted Marlon over to the right of second. alongside Red Schoen- dienst and Muslal, and left Kurow- zkl to guard the third-base terri- o ry. ‘Nd, apparently not liking the new set-up did not attempt to bunt. but swung from his heel all day, Hie one hit was a nsr liner over Schoendienst into right field, but that was the only time he sot the ball out of the infield. roi- a game that was so ragged otherwise, it was remarkably well (Continued 0n Page ‘it Fcrricr Leads I Golfers In Tourney ONTOOMIIBY. Ala.‘ 0.11.10- ( )~4im Ferries. Chicago pro. flashed a IO-ustder-par 62 to set the wee in the mil-Ill round of Mont- ’ $10. i..°2t'i.'i... open golf tourm- Ipgier uailed the record fol P. , Afaqponao ed tournamentl. “idiom Moore, travelling sec- retary for the pro organization. Be turned in an eagle and eight birdies over the tlé-lfill-YBYQ Be uvoir links and one-omitted l1 I |~ Cm stroke behind IPerrier and will!“ the previous course rec- m Ky Lofoon, pro from 0r- ls do. Fla. bunched at 04 were three 01M Dutch. Harrison of Little Rtwl! psigjlorey of Springfield. 111.. and Ellsworth Vin-es of Los anti; m, mm" ‘National ten" etiahtoion. t."