Unranked California light yyweight Kid Sisto Rodri- held highly favored Von y of Philadelphia (right) to @ 10-round draw in a Nationally P7 iC ~ ALL EVEN AFTEN TEN televised fight Friday night at the Arena. Clay was a 13-3 favorite over the native Puerto Rican who was rushed into the fight last week as a replace- ROUNDS ment for Jesse Bowdry, St. Louis lightheavyweight who pul- led out because of a viris at- (AP Wirephete) tack. By RALPH BERNSTEIN J Press Sports Writer PHILADELPHIA ‘AP: — With Bell gone National Football fague owners appear headed a knock down, drag out battle 'r a new commissioner. The quest starts today. The are scheduled to meet in late afternoon after rites for the 65-year-old ell, who collapsed at the Pitts- th-Philadelphia game Sunday DIV Picking NFLCommissioner ill Be Knockdown Battle | side, maybe a judge, senator, or | governor. Some: would like to settle the ithing quickly, even today if a Imeeting of minds could be jreached. Others say the task is too important to do on the spur jof the moment. The latter greupv jwants to wait until the draft meetingat the end of November. In talking with the owners, ene familiar with the league and its | tossing the ball to Bel! for a final decision. But now there is no Bell to take the ball | The number one name freely offered by a few owners as their choice for the job was Edwin J. ! Anderson, president of the Detroit Paul Brown, general man- - coach of the Cleveland | Lions. 2ger Browns, came out for the Detroit | executive. Dan Ree f the Lo Angeles Rams said Anderson “‘is fine with me.” Ind was pronounced dead 10 min-| People could feel old an:mosities| Walter Wolfner of the Chicago later at a nearby hospital. A poll of owners discloses they re in agreement on only one in hey’ll never find another Some think the rotund commis- pner’s successor pm the ranks. Others feel he PUG NEW YORK *~AP)—The New ork State Athletic Commission, ging misconduct, Tuesday ok steps to revoke the licences three principals in the promo- on of the ill-starred Floyd Pat- on-Ingemar Johansson heavy- eight title fight last June 26. In the wake of a month-long es of hearings, the regulatory ody struck at\Rosensohn Enter- Inc., promoter of the Bil\’ Rosenschn, former pad of the organization who o with his partner, Vincent elella,_ and Cus D’Amato, man- ger of the deposed champion, itterson. The commission dirccted that parties show cause why ut: vul, should come) be brought in from out-i subject, } Tising. Bell had kept them dor | mant. A few owners feared that; if a man from the ranks were’ ‘chosen he would favor certain 'clubs as against others. One owner harked to the times when the owners could spend three days wrangling over one finally giving up and N.Y. Athletic Commission | Aims To Revoke Licences mission and appeal their cases, the action has the effect of bar- ring them from further fight ac- tivitics in the state. FRIENDLY WITH GAMBLERS The commission also banned Wilhelm Wins 1959 Earned Run Championship NEW YORK (AP)—Hoyt Wil- jhelm, Baltimore's veteran | knuckleballer, won the American League earned run championship the past season to become the first pitcher ever to win the title ineir licences should not be re- oked. Although the accused have a nce to appear before the com- Backstretch phe has won nine conzecutive | ces up to early September and: trainer, Bob Walker, states makes her rivals look. as In a recent race Sara was brought out and passed three| mn | . The many admirers of the pac- , Mighty Lee 2.03 4-5, will: be Interested to learn that he is now Blue Bonnets Raceway, Mont- where he is exnected to this week. F. R. MacLaine, harlottetown, who is coowner ith Willard MacDonald of Sum- side, is in Montreal to attend hty Lee’s debut at Blue Bon ig) hs We understand that the owners Blue Bonnets Raceway, Mont-| val, have acquired the Richelieu | also at Montreal, and) hese two, under the capable of | puis Levesque will give Mont-| an even more attractive | for trotters and pacers to orn Mr. Levewque, who the Montreal syndicate, at- &. Dunstan's University, iin each major league. Wilhelm gave up only 55 earned earned run average in 1959. fig- ures compiled by The Associated Press disclosed Tuesday. He won ithe National League crown in. Feature Sports The Orioles’ right-hander had 15 victories and 11 losses the past) year, pitching in 32 games with kees and one against Kansas games, before losing to Detroit on June 15. more, 2.92 and Billy O'Dell, of the Orioles, 2.94. . Whitey Ford of the Yanks, who} was the ERA champion last year with 2.01, was seventh in 1959 with 3.04. Then came Early Wynn percentage was 3.13. Rounding out the first 10 were 3.27. of Chicago, who had the most! Providence victories, 22. Wynn's earned run! Springfield Bud Daley of Kansas City, 3.17) and Milt Pappas of Baltimore, | Juebec Buffalo ;Cardinals said he had an open ene outside the league, ‘““maybe a man with legal training, eral judge. A commis:ioner from | the league has got to have ties} and might favor some clubs. It will be very difficult for the 12 clubs to agree on anyone.” eiceenpomemenesetonnioniie Charles Antonucci, also known as Charlie Black, from promoting or | even attending any more fights in| iNew -York. Black was described | us an advisor and go-between for} ,D’Amato and a man who is friendly with, gambling and un-| derworld elements. The effect of the commission ruling on the return Patterson-| Johansson bout, tentatively set| for next spring, was not immed-) iately apparent. It seemed to rule out New York as a possible site. There was no indication whether | the National Boxing Association, which controls boxing in other |states, might follow New York's | | action. z | Velella, president of Rosensonn | Enterprises, said he still held the | contract for the bout and he ex-, , pected to proceed with the promo- jrums in 226 innings for a 2.19 | tion—under a new name and in | new areas. “We are changing t | Cur organization imm Inc., he\ name of ediately to " Velelia, : 1952 with a 2.43. mark while re-| }{arlem attorney. said. (Continued from page 8) _|ieving -fér the New York Giamt8: | 7: -¢ CONTROLLED BY VELELLA Resensohn originally was pres- ident of Rosensohn Enterprises when he makes a move |27 starts. He had three shutouts, | I:c., but post-fight developments h her in the third quarter /two against the New. York Yan-/disclosed he held only one-third of the stock and the other two- hough they were standing still.|City. Wilhelm won his first nine|thirds was controlled by Velclla. | The ‘commission also struck at what it called underworld influ- fotters in a blazing burst of| Bob Shaw of the Chicago White | erces, accusing Rosensohn of ac- peed. Then after a little breath-|Sox finished second with a 2.65| cepting a $10,000 loan from Tony , Bob opened up somewhat and | average: Camilo Pascual of Wash-|Salerno, described as a “shady the final quarter in 29 2-5| ington was third with 2.67. Art|character” and “widely known bnds. Her mile was something | Ditmar of the Yankees was fourth|racketeer and underworld fig- than 2.05, and according to|with a 2.90 average. He was fol ure,”‘to help finance the promo- Bob Walker, she was just breez- lowed by Jerry Walker of Balti-|tion. Velella has said that Sal- js also | erno is a client of his. _ STANDING | American League WL F AP. 0.19 10 14 6 12. 12 5 4 i) 17 17 Cleveland Hershey Rochester owe eee \W®nmoensoo COnnrwuwac 0 1 1 0 0 0 wows @ Wiring Sales and Service ste enc has made jn the various enter- with which he is connect- 161 Queen Street NEWSON ELECTRIC Electrical Contractors @ Appliances | @ Fixtures i ore} |, aes Spareke the : Pee - SUPPLEMENT Powresy in the Big Four football : 1 “Offic WAMPOLE LETHINAL! SOYA LECITHIN mind. He said he favored some-| his 56 throws having\ been good. a’fed- ettes is far ahead of the field on Run Into Bad Luck By JACK SULLIVAN Last Tuesdey, the four-year-old Canadian Press Staff Writer colt, winner of more than $55,000 Ccnn Smythe and Larkin Mal-|during his three years of racing, ona td been spending money} was destroyed. ike millionaires—which they are|. —on horse ~ flesh the last few/COSTLY WIN 3 years. As a result, their stable of! Lest Monday Major Plight wt thoroughbreds has been cne of te feature at New Woodbine but} the most successful in the coun- Pulled up lame and will be side-| Ey jlined for the balance of the sea- They've taken gambles that , 5°"- ' have paid off but al! of a sudden | Two days later Eskimo Flyer, ! their luck turned bad. Last week|a four-year-old chestnut colt from) probably was their toughest. the Larkin-Maloney stable, snap-| A couple of weeks ago, Caledon | ped his left foreleg and may have) Beau, 1958 Queen's Plate winner, to be destroyed. Eskimo Flyer) suffered a foreleg fracture in a Aad won nearly $18,000 in 1958 race at Toronto's Old. Woodbine.|ard so far this season. Cookie Gilchrist Can't Be Blamed TORONTO ‘CP)—No one can i rine touchdowns. Gilchrist’s scor- blame Cookie Gilchrist if Torontojing is made up of five touch- Argonauts fail to hit a Big Four/acwns, 14 converts and seven football union playoff spot this) field goals. season. He can score the points! Third place is shared by Dave with his boot or by.running over |Thelen and Bobby _ Simpson» of the opposition when he carries! Ottawa Rough Riders, each with| the ball. 148 points on eight touchdowns. Statistics compiled by The |Next in line is Tiger-Cats’ Gerry Canadian Press show that the 24 | McDougall with 42 points. year-old Gilchrist has scored 65 | | Terry Meyer of Kitchener- porns, nearly one-third of AT | waterloo Dutchmen heeds ,the nauts’ 164total in 11 games.'Ontario Rugby Football Union fwenty-seven ef these have been -o-ing jist with 72 points. 20| — in ~ = ~ ma to | more than runner-up Mike Nor-|! give him the lead in the league's |i. —a}<9- ofthe Dutchmen——} scoring race. . ] a } pre Cockie holds an 1l-point mar- Bill Mitchell of the University og uf Western Ontario leatls the sen- gin over Ron Howell, Hamilton's ; punt-return and deep-pass speci- jier intercollegiate scorers with 12 alist who has scored 34 points on |points after two games in_ the : Saaclcepen jcollege circuit. Terry Porter of| Queen's is second with eight. 59 Yds. Separate - 3 Tops Rushers 'In Big 4 Loop NEW DIETARY Official statistics, not including Monday's games, show Dave The- len of Ottawa Rough Riders maintaining his lead with 813 yards gained on 138 carries. Gerry McDougall of Hamiton Tiger-Cats took over undisputed . possession of second place with _ 780 yards. Dick Shatto of Toronto Argonauts, tied last week with McDougall for the runner - up spot. slipped into third place with |734 yards. Ottawa quarterback ‘Russ Jack- son took over the passing lead on average yards gained, with 99 vards on 65 attempts. Tom Du- biinski of Hamilton has the bes: completion. average with .607 of But Sem Etcheverry of Alou- yards gained passing with 2,240. | Fteheverry. has aticmpted 308) pesses and completed 179.: Next ts Hamilton's Bernie Faloney who has completed 100 of 179 attempts | for 1,606 yards. Red O'’Quinn of Montreal still leads in passes received with 39, while teammate Joel Wells is sec- ond with H. Shatto maintains his third-place standing with 31. Charnley Signs | To Fight Brown LONDON :AP!—Dave Charn- ley, 24-year - old British cham- pion. Tuesday signed a contrac‘ for a title fight against worle lightweight champion Joe Browr in Houston, Tex., on Dec, 2. The contract carried a 96day retur: fight clause REFORMIST LET OUT LONDON (Reuters!—Mrs. Bea trice Snowden, self-styled “church reform idealist’’ who chained her- self to a statue in Westminster Roman Catholic: cathedral in June, was released from jail Sat- urday after serving nine days of a 21-day sentente. 6 oz. 14 oz. $2.95 $5.95 Charlottetown 163 Kent Dial 3170 _Giggey'’s Pharmacy. | Smythe, Larkin, Maloney Streak ‘ The injury to Eskimo Flyer | happened as the colt was running | second to Tyawk, owned by Jack! Singer of Winnipeg and Les Lear | of Calgary Stampeder football | club fame: But Eskimo Flyer wasn't gaining on the western- owned horse, holder of the world record for 6'2 furlongs. Tyhawk established his world | mark of 1:14 4-5 at Turf Para-| dise, Phoenix, Ariz., last Febru-| ary. FIRST IN EAST It was the first eastern racing, victory for. Lear. who coached | and played for the Stampeders when they won the 1948 Grey Cup 12-7 over the heavily-favored Ot- tawa Rough’ Riders. Lear, an old-time player with Winnipeg Blue Bombers, lost his coaching job with the Stamps after the 1952 season and turned to the horse, - racing game. He finds horse racing a lot easier than football coaching. “At least I don’t have to prowl the streets until dawn looking for thoroughbreds,”” he said in.a re- cent television interview. ‘‘When I was with Calgary you'd almost think I was on the dawn patrol.”’| SILVER LASSES TABLE MOLASSES IS EXTRA-FANCY QUALITY! SILVER- LASSES TABLE MOLASSES IS , ONE OF NATURE’S BEST BODY-BUILDING FOODS! SILVER LASSES’ | TABLE MOLASSES MAKES THE MOST DELICIOUS COOKIES, CAKES AND CANDIES! ‘INTERRUPTION NOTICE There will be an interruption of electrie power on our Hunter River line on Wednesday, October 14th, weather permitting, between the hours of 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. to enable us to install additional voltage regulating equipment. The area affected will be from the Malpeque Road pumping station west through Hunter River, New Glasgow, and Rustico. MARITIME ELECTRIC CO., LTD. 4 * a* | And Silver Lasses is the only molasses to merit the Seal of Approval-of the House | of Austin, Barbados, B.W.I., your assurance of unconditionally guaranteed quality! sere «1 a) GP rane anal TABLE z SILVER LASSES TABLE | MOLASSES on the steering column with conventional shift pattern or floor mounted for that sports car feel *Suggested list price at port of entry includes (ROOTES PRODUCTS: HILLMAN - HUMBER: S - > : ‘ Fe? : Nat. President === wt oe ‘ Will Act Soon |: 2m % sxstuy «Barons Top Griffith, ead at the ton on would have to seek permis- Aces 5-1 en ee ee ee en nm thie Sinerione Lente) QuhnS. i: Chetan would act soon on what he ' owners to transfer his franchise ; . ; "| Barons T ight termed an enticing proposition to | approval of six of ihe eight clubs uesday night took their move his American League base- | - first victory of the young Ameri- ball team to Minneapolis. |is mecessary. Some owners have | can Hockey season, beat- Griffith said he had not reached said they want to keep a team in i™& Quebec Aces 5-1 on three a \final decision but added: “The the U.S. capital, but, Griffith has “TUCial Quebec penalties. proposition looks enticing.’ . jinxdicated he is confident of the} Ed Hoekstra scored twice for Minneapolis interests have required number of votes. Cleveland. His first which piedged, among other induce-| Minneapolis-St. Paul is one of Proved to be the winner—came ments, the equivalent of 1,001,000) the cities which the proposed new | at 13:07 of the first period’ with admissions for each of the first|Continental League has design- Quebec defenceman Georges Roy three years in which the Senators | ated for its operation. If the Sen-|in the penalty box. would play there. ators leave Washington, the cap-| Other Barons’ goal-getters were Griffith last year abandoned at iia] almost certainly be Greig Hicks, Eddie Mazur and ‘ the last moment a plan to takeisought by the new league. | Michel Labadie. © + . v ~ "Deluxe 4-door Sedan $1975 IM ORI< Completely new from, grille to exciting gull-finned rear deck, feature for feae ture the 1960 Hillman demonstrates the superiority of British craftsmanship, Save in style with Hillman . . . low operating cost, up to 35 miles per gallon fuel economy, low initial prices starting at $1795 port of entry. ¢ Increased horsepower, with no sacrifice of gas ‘economy. ¢ Improved braking efficiency for greater safety. e Wider, deeper windshield for better visibility. \ ¢ Custom-crafted interiors for more driving comfort. Plus these extra-special features... ‘ NEW FRONT GRILLE high style facade for a new, higher-powered engine that cruises easily at 70 miles an hour. NEW GULL-FIN TAIL DESIGN flanking a big, family-size trunk which carries luggage for five people with room to spare. NEW CHOICE OF GEAR SHIFT choice of steering column or floor gear shift, two-tone finish, built-in heater and defroster, turn signals, electric windshield wipers, Inland freight charges and whitewails extra, $1995 A BETTER BUY— BECAUSE IT'S BETTER BUILT PF UNBEAM a ~ MARTIN'S GARAGE 256 Queen St. Charlottetown, P.E.I. \ © mee el Se a La patentee cilia sienna mig ~ermeenearatniaias ap antiaiaitnamee