l O u ni.nduini_u,uiuioii.iown.w.a.octs.1oaz. SPORTS FRONT By l-ms CALLAGHAN Saints Make Debut . ST. Dunstan’s University varsityfootball squad had their At- lantic Football Conference ‘A’ section baptism last Saturday after» now ‘cton where fought the University 01 New Bcunswicl; to a 7-7 tie. Ed Hilton. coach of the local scholars, wasn’t doing any blow- ing about the Saints earning the one point. In fact, we sensed Ed was ii bit disappointed. He didn’t exactly come out and put it that way but he did tell us that his boys made several mistakes which he is hoping will not occur again. 'Jne next time SDU takes the field i.» this Saturday and the site will be right here on the local university football field. That’s ..l.e afternoon the Red and Whiters host the Shearwater Flyers who own one decision in three starts. v HILTON is working his boys hard for this coming encounter and lie has high hopes of picking up a decision in this weekend action in Charlottetown. However, Saints have it rough on this Tfiaiiksgiving holiday because, after playing Flyers here Satur- day, tney journey to Sackville Monday for a game with the POW- erfu. Garnet and Gold Mount Allison crew. That doesn’t give the Malpeque Road boys much chance to rest up after Saturday's action against Shearwater. _ At any rate, local football fans should be keyed up for this opener and tile world series has even co-operated by having no game on Saturday afternoon. The series is on the west coast Thursday and Friday and the boys travel Saturday. It will be Sunday before action renews in the Yankee Stadium. Argos Spring Surprise TORONTO Argonauts surely sprung the football sui~prise_of the season with their convincing triumph over the fast moving Calgary Stampeders Monday night in -‘he Alberta city. The win moiied the Argos within two points of the Alouettes and the last paayolf spot in the Big Four. _Argonauts next see action this Saturday afternoon when they host the Tiger-Cats from Hamilton. Montreal gets into action Tliaizksgivim Day_ Monday, October 8 when they play hosts to , Oitawa Rough Riders. A Toronto win and a Montreal loss would surely give the Argos’ stock quite a boost. . _ . We have the notion that these Argos are meaning business this time and that they will be mighty tough to keep out of the playoffs. If they should make the grade. then the opposition had better be careful. They almost sidelined Hamilton last season and that surely would have been a terrific upset. _ . _ - So don‘t go selling these Argos short. With Tobin Role tossing that pigskin with deadly accuracy, these Hogtowners are a for- tunate outfit. World Series Facts WHEN the Yankees play their first game in tliel962 world series it wil be the l43rd scries game they have participated in. They've won 8, lost 53 and tied one to date. ‘ _ Veteran catcher, Yogi Berra, has played in 12 uorld series and has played in 68 games. Old Yogi is tied with Frank Friscn lor¥the most doubles in series play. Each has ten to his credit. ‘Folks often growl about how long a baseball game takes but thoae attending a series game between Cubs and Tigeis in 1908 had no such reason for ‘beefing’. It took the Cubs just one hour and 25 minutes to trim the Tigers that afternoon. » ‘REMEMBER Dusty Rhodes? _ He was the fellow who was belting home runs for the Giants back in 1954 when they swept the world series from the _Cleve- 'm Indians i.li four straight. Dusty faded after that but in that ‘all classic he batted a cool .667. And of recent memory is the performance of young Larry Sherry in 1959 when the Dodgers topped the White Sox four games to.two. Larry came out of the bullpen four times to win two games and save two others and easily become the greatest Dod- get of them all. . Another Dodger or rather a former Dodger, Gil Hodges, has a record he would sooner forget. He batted .000 in the 1952 series. getting no hits in 21 official times to the plate. - And you must remember the run that won the world series to: St. Louis Cardinals back in 1946 agahist Boston Red Sox. Enos ‘ Slaughter came all the way from first on a sin gle by Harry Walker. Stars Remain Alive; Nip Dodgers 11-10 Cuker Pineau, also batting -Buck Whitlock's Stars did it 95- for Ralph \Goldston of Hamil- Ottawa Rough Riders had a g ' ' l ton Ti-Cats (dark sweater, No. welcoming committee waiting . LDSTON SURROUDED 21) after Goldston caught a pass Saturday in Ottawa. The Hamilton drive Ottawa Trampled the Ti-Cats 27-0. (CP~Wli-eplioto) fizzled and his bay gelding Ar -_ Dfldy to ‘double victories - ‘ Two" local horse last night when‘ they 1 A vs - ‘ Ice Taylor of Nine Mile Creek mood’: jiutulte lhliior free-for-all and in winning the first dash had his Calumet Budlong offspring step- this the fastest mile of the night.‘ 2:01-2. Also in the same race Blll Boyle! pf Charlottetown was in the sulky behln more Lo Hill who emerged with 4,5 sum- . The curtain-raiser saw Aud- ray’: Pride. driven by Charles O'Brien take ii new mark‘ 2:17 flit and in the final dasn Cyclone Kelly equalled his life- time mark of 2:14.-I. . There was only-one other dou- ble dash winner on the card, Nine year old‘ Jolly Abb, rein. ed by rt Bernard. svgpt ' .of an AA and A ales in times of 2:11-3 and 2:10- Otlier winners on the Sum were Jolly‘ Light‘ and Mixhty May. J Dlck captured a cooler LOS ANGELES (AP)—Speedy Ihim a spot on the bench, .Maur,v Wills raced home on Ron crossed up the strategy, He Fairly's shallow sacrifice fly in’ filed to Mays in medium cen- the last of the ninth and kept ti-e Los Angeles Dodgers _allve Wills tagged and sped home Tuesday With all 3-7 VlCl0l'y in safety past catcher John Or- that. evened the best-of-three sing, who was uued National League pennant nlay- slightly to the left of the plate off series with San Francisco up the baseline to get Mayy Giants at one game apiece. ‘peg _W . ven _an _unexl>ected. It was this kind of a game, life when rookie pitcher Gay- incl; Sanford, 3 24.game win. l0l‘d Perry Passed UP 8 f0}‘ce1ner for San Francisco, had a Play all third and llll'eW l0 lll‘Sl two-hitter and a 5-0 lead when P358 011 Daryl SD€l1C9l‘'S 53011‘ :he was taken out after walking flc_e_bunt, sped.home ahead of am; d off the sixth Willie Mays, slightly Off-target Sanford had been forced to run throw on Fairlys fly to centre. hard in the top of the sixth, “'35 3 tense. dl‘3_m8ll¢ ‘scoring from second base on game—at 4 ll_0lll‘§. l8 l'lllllllleS‘Davenpo1't’s single with the the longest hlhe-lllhlllg Collle third of four runs scored in that in malor league lust0ry—that frame off Dodger starter Don ran the gamut from the sub- Drysdale. Obviously Dark fig- lime to the ridiculous. The .1“-ed his pjtche,-_ who was suf. Glallls blew 3 5'0 l93_d Wllell fering from p heavy cold, was the Dodgers broke their string [fired of 3.‘.‘*consectltive ‘scoreless inn-* Before sanfm-d's success”, lllfi‘ Wllll 5€V9l1 lllg l‘llllS "1 llle {could get the side out. seven Slxlll» lbig runs were in and the hun- lgry Dodgers, scoreless since the sixth inning on 9-. no TRIES EVERYTHING After his Giants fought back ; Alvin Dark manoeuvered d.,s_ of five straight. were not to be perately, using four pitchers in elllell the ninth and eight in all, before I-9° walls» all °l35c“l'9 hand‘ the champion b a se stealer m°'d_°Wll ‘Wm New Y°l'l‘ Me"- ‘flashed home with the winning provided the big blow wlth_ ii run three-run pinch double off Billy All even at one game each, 0'99“ _' lthe two teams will play a third If ill“ Glallls had ll°l “me %)a1UI1('.nthlS aftellinooili ind Walter lélfllgli’-ed l°m_l- Splolltll’-ighstcolfn ’ a e ’ '-coo arena 3 with they Iienllxiglntl hangriiig in the —hvroe$-hwagsgegg llfiwgingiéegyzglg balance. _ v , Righthander ‘Juan _Marichall_undlsputed hero of this sunny (.13-ll) of the Giants will oppose = 3ll°l'll°°ll- _ , leity John Podres (15-13) of the . Purple 8881 cushions sailed Dodgers. l The winner will go into thelgl’-l’5 World Series against the pa ‘l°l'Y ticzitly waiting New York Yam: 1 when Walls finally Friday's l 40 “Q the Score at 7_7_ manage, game with St. Louis and losers ru nto the area and the Dod- staged an impromptu vic- celebration on the bench came home y base. caught Willie Mays trying to go from first to third on Ed Ba!ley‘s pinch single. Itlwas a most important play, for Bail- ev’s hit had scored Davenport with the run that closed the gap to 7-6 Willie would have been the potential tying rim on third with nobody out. On the next play after Mays was thrown out, Frank Howard lost Orlando Cepeda's pop fly in the sun, stuck out one hand al.d'dropped the ball for an er- ror. A walk to Felipe Alou loaded the bases and‘0rsino's sacrifice fly drove in pinch run- ncr Carl Boles with the tying n At the end of the long after- noon. Stan Williams, who was sllppo ed to start passed over for Drysdale, wasl the man who shut the door on the Giants in the last 1 1-3 inn- ings. As a result Williams was thr- winner. Bolin, fifth of eight pitchers used by Dark. was charged with the loss because he walked Wills. who scored the winning 3 n . This day started off quietly .enoug'~i with the Giants pushing » - 5, d, w I» Pet.GBL ‘ gg;gd;.sf“g,;;e §n3§°°'{,.e“g: . sn";.:l::_"l :’;'_’°§f1u San Fran. .. . ioz..s2..ez:.—.. Monthly Alou’s double. Los Angelel ooooo7oo1- s 12 1'” ’‘“l*'°l°‘ 1°’ 52- " I In the sixth, the oiiunetcsl Sanford Miller (6) 0'Dell Eifglgggg, 33 g ‘a $5 * h ed D d l t ' ' ' . Mgnasm, Rgiuig 3:!“ :3“ :;i-:33: ili;L.r£olig)(s;kc(&::) ywuwaukee 3.; 75 531 15' 0 Guaranteed 90 days or 4000 miles land a 5-0 lead. A walk to Hal- ' ' _' l I-°'“l9 _ 34 73 -519-17 C Guaranteed trade-in all ller. a double by Jose pagan. $'°'§a“i’ °("l"° ‘file Philadelphia 81 305031916 . his °w""°° 1m.ysdale.s em" and singles by ry ae, uc 6). Per- jougmn 54 95 _4m 35 tallation arranged. , — chuci: Hiller. Davenport and "“°‘l‘l ‘7l' Smlll‘ ‘l”- Wllllllm 88° 59103 .864 42 « willie Mccovey appeared to _ls.l (1442) "ll R°5eb°.l'°- C" New Y°l'k 40 l30 -250 30 KGB.’ 9. ‘have put the game beyond mllll17l- (Best-of-three series tied 1-1) ~ reach. ’ When the Dodgers came up for the sixth there were feeble bugle cheers and uninspired ls of “chni-ge" from it». dis- k,.Cs_ starting Thursday in the 3 safely when catcher Tom Haller appointed fans. All that changed park National ‘ll'°PP°ll winner. llll'° h . League me lWalls and had leave lgame He required to close the wounds strategy clicking press box as Da er manager Walter high in rk and Dod- Orlando Cepeda’s quickly as 10 Dodgers paraded w at the plate on an infield you could hear the wheels ogibouncer. Haller was spiked by inning Four got hits. to the hitter Andy Carey was hit by six stitches 1 a to the plate in the seven-run pinch- pitched ball with the,basel full and two were walked. Wills thi hard way in squaring their '50‘) best of three City Bar-‘ball Lea ‘e final series last night at morial Field, overcoming a 1&1 deficit and edging Irv c- Ma ( C K1nnon’s Dodgers 11-10 in one of the longest games of the season air the local diamond this sea- sq'p. over 31.5 hours. .The victory forced a third and deciding game, which will be" played this evening start- i ' at 7 o'clock sharp. nglonnie ‘Funnel’ MacLean was tlfe hero of last night’s contest. lthcLean was called in to pinch- hl for young‘Jamie Kennedy hithe top of the ninth inning with tli bases loaded. one out and score reading 10-8 in favor 3 the Dodgers. MacLean slash- ve. when catcher Beaver Arsen- afilt caught Kane off third. The n_'ext sticker struck out to end one. " ‘S _i i. ,1] race four when he hit the wire iii? with a 2-for-4 performance topped the Dodgers. ln]nth_ ' Officiating belllhd llle Plate’, Wills. who had stolen his 101st matched hrainpower in lwas Louis Lund Wllll -llmmy ‘\l- ibasc earlier in the day. worked" len, George Hawkins and Bill1Bob Bolin for a walk to open oughlin assisting on the bases. ‘ythc ninth. Now with Wills on | ;first. a threat to break for sec- ‘ond at an moment, Dark reacher. into his bullpen for left- hander Dick Lemay to hol Maury close to the base. 1Sian Mayhew Has Winners WALKS GILLIAM FREDERICTON (CP) L H t k Toushie Mauno and Little Me .inge$i1lsw:l5osse° chaff“ hgentherilw J01‘ W01‘? d0lllll€ dash Wl‘llll9l"5 Tto first no less than eighti in Tllesday lll'Ell‘l'S elglll-ddczl. itimes meantime. he d of 2,709,491, roared its approval. drove ‘in Gilliam TOSSES OUT MAYS in 35 But the real celebration came also stole a use. at the end with the Dodgers SNIDER DOUBLES . charging en masse to the platel Gilliam walked and Sanford to greet Wills when he scored left the premises. Reliever S the winner. Another shower of Miller gave up a double to Du cushions sailed from the seats Snider, a sacrifice fly to and the crowd of 25,321, that Tommy Davis, a walk to Wally boosted the season attendance Moon and a run-scoring Dodgers Deadlock Series; Shade Dark's Giants 8-7 of the former Dodger great, singled and the bases were full. When Carey was plnked by a pitch Moon came in with the lrd run. Walls, who had 13 hits in 28 trips and had driven in 12 runs as Dodger pinch hitter, smashed a long double that hit the wall in left centre on one bounce. Howard, Camllli and Larry Burright, running for Carey. scored. Walls scored when Wills hit the ball to Cepeda who threw to Haller. The catcher dropped the ball as Walls slammed into him and it was learned later he would be lost for at least five days—_if needed that long- 'because of the spike wounds. Davenport and Mays had sin- gled in the eighth before Bailey hit his pinch single to centre on which Davenport scored but Mays was thrown out. Willie yelled at third base umpire Jocko Conlan and coach Whitey Lockman kicked the dirt but the ruling stood. .Willle said 9 ale to all-time major league record to’ Howard. When Davis‘ fly with the first gs, the font Almost overlooked in the shuf- cheered as though it had won lie was ii tremendous play by ‘e pennant. Tommy Davis in the eighth. Little Stu was replaced‘ by Davis. who shifted over to ceh- 0'De1l. who was no better. tre field after starting at third Pinch-hitter Doug Cainilli. ea later. “I guess I was out.” donated by Archer d Mac. old for emerging with thg the final trip. Clifford MacDon- ald made the presentation to driver Harry Poulto t The quinella on the third re ii. .10 on a combination 0‘ -l0lLV Dick and Wlllnrd’s Choice. The first double paid $18.30, the second double $16.40 and the exactor 10 ’ Following. is the summary;._ ash 1 Audrey’: Pride (Chas. O'Brien) ' 1 Tommy Shanter (A. Bernard) 2 -Miss Ellis (J. Arsenault) 8 Hollybud (J. Jewell) 4 Ray Lee (Clarke Smith) 5 Dot’s Boy (E. Bernard) 6 Dr. Alex (D. MacNeill) 7 dnf Rush Hal (R. Shephard) Time 2.17 Audrey's l’ride owned by Mrs. A. Thompson, Crapaud. P — 5.50, 3.50. 3.50; 5.90, 3.90; 3.90. - asllel 2 and 6 Armond's Buddy (L. Taylo Santiago (Clarke Smith) r) 1 2 Jean Clegg (S. Stead) 3 fieir OWILDOIBBI -in dash- ‘ on 3 and s. - ' in the. ’ 3 1 2 3 Capt. Chief (A. Bernard) 4 5 Myrtle’: Boy (L. Walsh) 3 5 la Royal Onyx (R. shepiuu-d) ,5 4 Cyclone Kelly (B. Willis) 4 1 ‘Ginger E lCll\"l¢¢ Smith) G 5 Jolly Bud (W; Downe) 5 7 Tune 3-1333. 3.12: . Future Chief (Clarke Smith) 6 6 Jolly Dick 0%” Mrs. J. 0rlandC 7 4 ‘ . 0 lTwo'{Loca|“ Horse Owners Re-in Horses For 151 Time Morley’: Pride (R. Annenr) 3 8.80. 8th dash - 4.00, 2.20; 3.40. ashes and I c bflglity May (D. MacNeill) 1 2 Gary Lee Clegg (M. Kennedy) Jolly Dick (11. Poulton) Wlllard's-Choice (W. Kelly) 2 8 Scottish Light (L. Hennessey) James Poulton, .‘(L' ease’) Scottish Light owned by Lorne Hennessey, Charlottetown. Pa — 8rd dash - 13.00.. 5.30. 2.90; 4.50, 2.70; 2.00. 7th dash - 5.00. 2.00. 2.10; 2.90. 2.10; 2.10. Dashes 4 and 8 Jolly Abb (A. Bernard) Mighty May owned by Omar Kinch, West Roxbury. Mass. Cy- clone Kelly owned‘ by Gillls and Agnew. Charlottetown. ‘ Pay th dash - 8.80, 3.30, 8.00; 4.30, 8.00. 9th dash - 6.10. 3.00; 2.80. 2.10; 2.10. " - 1 1 Lola Hal. (3. Boylea) 4 5 Blue Sky Lark (E. I Jolly Frisco (Clarke Smith) 3 4 . 3 Dunlap B (D. Machlelll) 4 2 hue 2-0732. 2-09 stalag Hanover (E. Bernard) Al-rnond's Buddy owned oy 5 5 Lee Taylor. Nine Time 2.11:3. 2.10:2. , Ply! — and d - 7-70. 3.3!. Jolly Abb owned by H. H. Jen- 2.30; 3,10. 3.60; 4.a0..0tli dub - king, southpom, 2.90, 2.10, 2.30; 1.40, 2.80; 4.60, pay, ... uh duh . 3,50, 2,49; . Dulles I and 7 STANDING National League 10Z¥.S« LE any car or truck motoil-Hlirry. Buynowandun.10%oii offergoodfortendnysonly >'1.\l.* ‘‘ 1‘ ALLSTATE Rebuilt Engines 1-- -iarness racing card at Fr - iwalkcd Junior Gilliam. Dark erictcn ‘replaced Lemay with Perry, 1 Toughie Marina, driven by 24 - year - old righthander-, re- Blair Bernard and owned by cently recalled from Tacoma. Stanley Mayhew of Kinkora. E With men on first and second P.E.l.. walked off with dashes ;and none out. Alston called on one and five while the lvrajo: jspencer. an ex-Giant. to lay horse wamed OH with heat; ‘down a burnt. This he did but it ,went back to Perry who sta we,,_. ;to throw to third where Jim ,Davenport was waiting. Instead ,he whirled and threw to-first._ ‘retiring Spencer but tting iwills. representing that pi-i.~ iclous winning run. reach third. in L113 5 9 Once again Dark went to the <- / ' lliilllpen This time he called for Mi a lefty. Mike McCormick. I-Io ililready $1831 pléihnneld to lwalk . 'ommv a s. e eague end- Sfcige Practice Coach Charlie Ryan has call- ed . four and eight. Single dash winners ‘l‘ribune_ Marcus Hanover, Julie Woollen and Dot Hal. Little Major was clocked in the fastest time it the night 5' ing hitter. loading the bases. He wanted McCormick to pitch to Fairly. a left handed batter. R0881-:8 ‘EM UP But Fairly, who had one hit ll 0 to roll the BEST PHILIPS in ' ‘ 2 ISLAND ‘RADIO CENTRE looquoonstroot ._ ‘. o .nd. A full 9 tin ll“ 91313119! his ugwef “"0” this Same. a pace that en M’ ' M‘ .=___:=-- Eiiioy (Sales &Service _ pilll.li=s takes the time to"build the best _..i ii’ 1‘? F Tl.,l1‘;‘,.1” ‘\A",i"\.}-‘;‘§"." PHILIPS puu;.;wv-auiumi........., , (!tooltrouCiItrolb"tberouo_o.iwlty:)- . , ~ .. ‘ no . - ‘- ‘rhrouu-''uniee.seeyo.uridhp-.duiu-iociy.- . ......l.l .-. '.‘. .1 '.ii...'.. 1