A 4 14 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Oct. 13, 1965. Montreal halfback Pat Bat- ten seems to be taking to the air to avoid tackle by Toronto Argonaut Pat Watson (58) dur- 8 Dash Card Three SAINT JOHN, N.B. ‘(CP)—! Lennie Sparks of Halifax, rely-| ing on a strong left, scored a fifth-round knockout over Peter Schmidt of Toronto here Satur- | day night to win the Canadian | welterweight boxing champion: ship and fulfill a pre-fight pre-| diction that he would finish the| champion before the ninth round. | Sparks, on even terms with the 29-year-old veteran until the fifth round, attacked with a ser- lies of lefts and rights to the lhead and body, sending Schmidt against the ropes. Then six con secutive lefts and Schmidt jdropped to one knee, taking the | 110 count at the 2:45 mark. More an 2,000 fans paid $4:200 to the fight, one of three scheQuled 12rounders on the card. All were for Canadian | titles. | In other bouts, Canadian ban- tamweight champion Jackie Burke, 116%, of Saint John re tained his title with a unani- mous decision over Jo Jo Jack- son, 118, of New Glasgow, N.S-, and Alex Martin, 111, of Trem ton, N.S., scered an 11th round TKO over Dickie Peterson, 112, of Saint John for the vacant fiy- weight championship. FLYING AL. At St. John Tripleheader +} v Sale and Schapire employed @ code, involving finger signals, to in. dicate the number of hearts ' Bridge Leagoe held, was first made by US, Ignores Inquiry players. It was investigated by - a British the appeals committee of the a oe oo an | world federation and then re- inquiry by the World \ferred to its executive commit Federation into allegations that tee. two Britons cheated during the! |World Championships in Buenos Champs Decided | a las sent it a report of proceed- For the 25-year-old Sparks, it|Sparks’ head,” he said. “That's ter he had made a strong start. Aires. but the British league. c was his 20th knockout in 32 vic-\why I took the count. The hand| The flyweight fight was even| The league sald im a state | ines ut fae 0 i fag ment that it is ignoring the fed- tories. His record includes a was useless and I couldn't fight | for two rounds before the better- lo inet the .The British “jeague holding arewant Sear Gatonts a ae sendinlened Sven tok: one. In| Traited “states, ‘because PY the its own inquiry, being ee L | . OPENED CUT —— Pike tae nee toe me EIR, Pongnens Reged 3 way it was conducted. It said by Sir John Foster, a lawyer ter taking a left. Martin then) opened up with four straight combinations, knocking out Pet Boris Scha- 22d member of Parliament, and gag 1. ne tae Bourne with two aszessors. ° cerned, were not given ade-| perk meni. moheee = |quate opportunity to defend) PARIS (AP)—A Paris tailor [themselves before two commit-|has just.the answer for the\ ski ecar eet aneene _ - his tees of the world federation. (buff with a heavy social calén- ee malay of gh the “The British league also|dar. He is displaying a ski uni- et ‘claimed that two persons who|form which converts with a few Showing no ill effects from a puffed left eye, Sparks started om eee sone See with strong in the fifth round and ® 7 mig. ghters opened a smal! cut over were bleeding from the noses Schmidt's right eve with a left from the ninth round on. to the head. Later in the round, WAS TOUGHEST FIGHT Sparks struck with a right to’ It was Burke's toughest fight the head and two lefts to the and his first defence of the title body, dropping Schmid for a he won a year ago from Johnny ltestified against the vlayers sat} zippers and turnovers into a mandatory eight count. Seconds Devison of Glace Bay, NS. HOCKEY los members of both commit-|dinner jacket. later Schmidt went down to Burke scored the only knock- ltees, and one of them prepared | LONG IN OFFICE stay. Sparks weighed 146%, 'down in the ering encounter. MEETIN the world federation’s report on| PARIS (AP)—Foreign Minis- Schmidt 145. Jackson, wi opened a six ‘ G the incident. jter Maurice Couve de | Schmidt, who has won and inch cut over Burke's right eye | As no details about the con-|2as held his post longer than lost the title five times. said he in their non-title fight in, New!) There will be an important at henihe included in| 22” other French foreign minis sprained his left hand in the Glasgow, tumbled to the canvas|meeting for the Charlottetown ‘ested hands were ter in more than 300 years. He third round. ‘at 2:40 of the seventh round af-|and District Junior Hockey Lea-|the report, it was impossible to recently exceeded the tenure “I was trying to protect it but ter taking a hard right to the | gue this evening, at 7.30 sharp. assess the evidence, the British) of seven years and three I hurt it again in the fifth round head. Another. right had stunned | |months, eet im 1648 by Francois jthe meeting is slated to take league said. when I bounced a left jab off'Jackson earlier in the round af-|place at City Hall. The that Reese | Guiot. SMU Whips | ing Eastern Conference foot- defensive halfback Ron Howell. — ball game in Toronto Saturday. Looking on at right ‘is Argo Argos won 24-21. (CP Wirephoto) S‘side Ints. Lose In 11th | The Saint Marys University | Huskies showed a flash of last season’s form as they tramoled | |an injury ridden Saint Dunstans University squad a 67-0 defeat in a Bluenose Conference foot- | ball game played here on a rain | SDU Varsitv | ST. JOSEPH, Me- mramcook Rovers won their se- cond Maritime Intermediate ‘‘A” baseball championship _ since 1961 here Sunday, defeating Suummerside All-Stars 54 in [1 N.B. (CP) Goes Tonight Nimble Knight running in this race. Races one and five should Racing spectators won't be shivering from the cold at the Yharlottetown Driving Park this evening ‘heaters have been in- prove to be two of the most ae ) i as the deciding game of a stalled) but an gotion packed | closely cemented of We S70 incu-cotarad. dries eight dash card should send a) few shivers up and down a few | are slated to leave the gate. spines when the programme gets | Mr. Charmer looks good on the underway at 8.00. |rail but will be given a good The most excitimg race of the | run to the wire by Fair Sail; evening should prove to be Princess’ Mark, Miss Jo Jo and races f ur and eight. The horses Nimble Knight. The latter will running in this race ars as fol-| probably go to the gate as the lows: Lord Dazell, Frankie's | bettors favorite. Chief. Rollomatic, Miss Flam-| Rounding out the card is the ingo, Wick’s Ace, Miss Jo Jo | fourth double dash feature of and Dennis Herbert. | the night and with a full field Races two and six should | of eight horses this class should prove to be very interesting | give bettors plenty to think with Mr. Charmer Fair Sail, | about before they wend their Princess Mark, Miss Jo Jo and | way to the wickets. Three Win Two ing as six evenly matched horses | Memramcook won the game jin the lith when Dick Cormier was hit by a vitched ball with the bases loaded. giving pitcher Ed Gaudet his ninth consecutive victory Don Schurman, who re- tired 14 batters in a row until the 11th, was the loser Memramcook won the open- ing game of the series at Sum- merside the previous weekend. | but lost the second 7-5 here. Ro |vers stole 31 bases in the three games, including nine Sunday | before almost 3,000 fans. | Gaudet pitched an eight-hitter. |walked three and struck out nine. Gerry Smith gave up all six hits on the Summerside hill. | He walked three and fanned three before being replaced by) Schurman in the sixth. soaked field Saturday. | Hard running Jim Stewart led the Huskie attack with five touchdowns, while halfback Dar- rel Burgess recorded three. Dave Murphy, Steve Armitage and Jerry McAllister each had one major and the scoring was rounded out by a safety touch and a conversion. Burgess led the visitors ground attack with a total of 166 yard’, % of them coming in the first half. The Huskies had a to- tal of 464 vards along the ground as compared to the Saints 168. C.Y. MacDonald was the leading rusher for the Saints. In the air St. Marys was 14-28 | : and a total of 282 yards. Quar- |: terback John Driscoll had five}: completions in 17 attempts for | ® 82 yards. Both teams had diffi-| ® culty in handling the ball and|- fumbles plus interceptions were | © frequent. Huskies had three majors nullified. Don Sutherin Makes Advance ) © ° At Driving Park | emie tenet ceria om | ats’ place ng star, Ving F ‘Gk Monon. Cn ee ee a n the Eastern Three double dash winners {Dennis Herbert To Lose Money ence scoring race Sunday as highlighted the eight dash card| (E. Ferguson) 26| TORONTO (CP)—Ernie Ter-|Hamilton defeated British Co- held at the Charlottetown Driv- Cyclone Kelly (L. Kelly) 3 2jrell of Chicago, World Boxing lumbia Lions 25-7 in a Canadian ing Park Saturday evening. |Rollomatic (J. Campbell) 43)Association heavyweight cham |Football League interlocking ‘Nimble Knight, owned and |Asket (R. Annear) 5 4\pion, says he will be losing |game. ‘ f driven--by-Sid-Stead-of Charlotte- | Chuck..H.(S.-Stead)- ~-6-5money--by defending —his- crowp’|--Sutherin™ kicked-afield “goal, town led the field to the wire | ‘Times: 2:14;-2:12.4. against Canadian champion three converts and a single for in both heats of the junior free-| Bifty Silver owned by J. Stan- George Chuvalo in Toronto Nov. |seven points to run his se for-ail in times of 2:16 and 2:16.1. |!¢y Meyhew, Kinkora. 1. . | |total to 65, just two points The brown gelding figured in |_2md Daily Double—$15.50. | Terrell, who does fairly well fewer than leader Moe Racine, the first daily double as it com- financially as a singer with a iplace kicker for Ottawa Rough bined with Jolly Wayne, who |! ‘jrock n’ roll combo, , says he |Riders. won the first heat, to pay 41-40 | could have made twice as much| Third with 4 points is J. We in the first daily double. ‘ ~ “\fighting the Toronte heavy- | Lockett of Montreal Afouettes, Bifty Silver, back from a suc- ‘lweight in Chicago. ‘who was held scoreless in his cessful mainland sojourn posted | “In Chicago I have a terrif team’s 24-21 loss to Toronte Ar- the fastest time of the even- following in two different \gonauts Saturday. ing (2:12.4) in copping the sec- crowds, the fight fans and the | The leaders: ond of two wins. The Stan May- 4 jrock and roll rans. We'll never | j TDC FGS Pits hew owned mare was handled iget the full impact here.” \Racine, O 0%12 5 OF by Eric Arsenault. | Considering the $45,000 guar- |Sutherin, H 01715 3 @& ‘Combined with the victory of yjantee he has for his 15-round |Lockett, M 800060 @|* Riistion Bay in: the. seventii jfight here, Terrell figures he |Watkins, O 700 0 43\¢ Gai he Snare payed: $15.50 in Fy \would have pulled in close to/Scott, O . 6000 BiF the second daily double. Rus- '$100,000 in a Chicago fight. |Grant, H $000 % tico nets owned by Bennett : Carr handled by lyre 4 k ° od Pinca also won, the third deh | Track Governing Body to complete the roster of double dash winners. en ssetty tia ot hen Approves World Marks tico Bay and Bold Debbie in |: the third dash paid $46.20 in NEW YORK (AP)—The Intér-, Other records approved: the first quinella of the night national Amateur Athletic Fed- | J. May, East Germany, 2:38.23 and the second quinélla paid F eration, world governing body for 1,008 meters, set im 1964; $%.00 when Free Chance and ‘4 for amateur track and field, ap- two walking records by Chrig- Knight Way crossed the wire in LARRY ROBINSON jproved 15 world records Satur- toph Hone of East Germany, that order. More exciting racing action is | acvore exciting racing action is| Larry Robinson this ing at. eight o'clock this “evening at, eight o'clock’ Widens Lead | day and affiliated 13 new mem- bers. London's Marquess of Exeter, president of the IAAF council. listed the fantastic 70 foot, 7 nted. | inch (21.52m) shot put by Texan 5 ec | RY ME CANADIAN PRESS (Randy “Matson among: the op- SUMMARY Kicking specialist Larry Rob- jproved records. . DASHES 1 and 5 Jolly Wayne (A. MacPhee) 1 3 True Lady Lou (R. Annear)-2 Knight Way(L. Taylor) Dixie Lou (T. Palmer) Free Chance (E. Larter) linson collected nine points Sat-| Australias urday to lead Calgary Stamped- three others. 4lers to a 28-19 victory over Ed-| The IAAF said it approved al! 32)monton Eskimos and to take a records stibmitted at this ses- 511 peg sero aa in ~. be | sion, - did not are applica- i ootba onference individ- tions for severa rformances eee ee 6 6/ual scoring race. - lof world record canner, facie Rava: 0006. 2,30: 2.10: $11.40, .2%¢_ 2year-old product of ling three more by Clarke and oe ees “Calgary's Mount Royal College the mile mark by France's “ond Quinella—$25.00 kicked two field goals and three Michel Jazy. >" Jolly Wayne owned by Richara COVerts to run his total to 87| A two-mile record of 8:22.6 by A. MacPhee, New Haven. points, 17 more than second- Jazy, set June 28 in Melun, Free Chance owned by G. Ai- Place Peter Kempf of British |France, received approval but fred Larter, Charlottetown. (Columbia Lions. his mile time of 3:53.6, set June DASHES 2 and 6 | Tommy-Joe Coffey of the Es-|9 in Rennes, France, was not Nimble Knight (S. Stead) 11 Kimos tied a WFC record with |submitted. Fair Sail (J. Pound) 2 3\his four field goals in one game. HOLDS MOST MARKS Mr. Charmer (W. Henderson) 3 2|He also kicked a convert to| Clarke, the swarthy Austra- Willard’s Choice (W.-Kelly) —4 4/ boost -his-total points to 57 points lian who holds most of the Times: 2:16; 2:15.1. which moved him to fifth from world’s distance records after a Ron Clarke broke 4 Pays: $5.40,;-3:10; 3.00; 5.40, eighth spot ‘in the standings. néear-incredible European ~ tour 7 fs soto cake The leaders: wc this summer, was credited with st Daily Double—$41.40. DC FGS Pts \records at three miles, 5,000 Nimble Knight owned -by H. Robinson, C 1 36 13 6 87 meters and 10 miles- Sidney Ee eae eee B.C. 2-26-10 2 70 | His times of 13:00.4 for three a Coleman, C ee A iles 13:25.8 for 5,000 t Rustico Boy (A. Pineau) 11 Reed, § 10 0 0 { a a were wh ie Los pr Bold Debby (S. White) 2 2 Coffey. E 21010 § S7igeles, June 4. He also had ap oe a : g Abendschan, § 0 20 10 & 86 [proved a 10-mile effort of 47:12.8 6 Vee ; : | set March 3 in Australia. Miss = , s3| GRANTED NEW TRIAL | The council also approved a tie CG Chappell) 6 7/ |six-mile record of 27:11.6 by . ye “§ | TORONTO (CP) — James J.'Gerry Lindgren, a Spokane, e heueealt) |Parker, 37, of Barrie, Ont., for- Wash., teenager. : Shadydale Tonette (J. Gay) “8 4{mer Canadian heavyweight; Clarke, however, has run a 1 boxing champion, was granted 26:47 six miles, has a_ better Times: 2:18.83; 2:22.1. Pays: $39.40, 3.80: 3.00; $5.90, |8 new trial Wednesday by the |three-mile mark at 12:52.4 and 2.10: 2.10 Ontario Court of Appeal on ajhas bettered the listed world “ist. Quinella—$46.20. jeharge of defrauding a widow mark at 10,000 meters : with Rustico Boy owned by Bennett of $490. Parker was sentenced 27:39.4. ale * ‘prison, but has been free on APPLIED FOR in October, 1964, to 18 months in 1 1\bail pending appeal. Carr, None of those records was Charlottetown. DASHES 4 ard 8 japplied for, however. Bifty Silver (EZ. Arsenault) 1 Racy NESE lon droits vega ae een tee te fe TR apne an tne abeeiemesta eB Fr emener NE MI ‘one ‘both set in Potsdam, May 15, four hours, 2:33 for 30 miles jand four hours, 10:51.8 for 5S0- 000 meters; a 27-4% broad jump |(8.35m) by Ralph Boston, Nash- ville, Tenn. and a 23-11% ham- mer throw (71.06m) by Hal Com nolly, Culver City, Calif-, and a 3:04.5 mile relay by the South- ern University Track Club. The last three all were set in Mo desto, Calif., May 29. The council also approved twe \women’s records: a 52.4 for 440 yards by J. Amoore-Pollock of /Australia. and a 10.5 for the 80 jmeter hurdles by D. Stamejcie of Yugoslavia. : New members affiliated were |' New Hebrides, Jordan, Togo land, Gabon,. Gaza, Chad, Saudi Arabia. Singapore,“Antigua, ‘Barbados, the Virgin Islands, Nicaragua and Quatar. Later Saturday the IAAF re- affirmed its recognition of the ‘Amateur Athletic U.S. affiliate. The Marquéss of Exeterpres ident of the. world body. said it* will continue to recognize’ the AAU regardless of any- U.S. government action in the dis- pute between the AAU and a new domestic rival for control of U.S. track and field “We are not concerned with politics, nor governments,” the British peer said. ‘‘We are con cerned. with sports, athletics, athletic groups. The AAU is our member. We recognize only one body. That is the AAU.” The long struggle between the AAU and the U.S. National Col- legiate Athletic Association at time threatened to wreck the American Olympic team and, more recently, has been Union, its| One thing about daily newspapers. More often than not, it’s the daily newspaper that gets behind the community drive for a new hospital. It’s the daily newspaper that uncovers that shady deal in public business. It’s the daily newspaper that prods and probes where you'd like to. The daily newspaper acts as a mirror, reflecting the overall interests and feelings of the people in the community. And 57° of the people interviewed in a recent survey validated by The Canadian Advertising Research Foundation agreed that the daily paper does just that. This reflection of community interest seems to carry over to newspaper advertising too. In the same survey, 70% said that things seem to be advertised in newspapers just a the subject of an inquiry by "7 iU.S. Senate subcommittee. a4 > 5 ip aR Make AM cle ION el PR Ata AA EAP IOI LONE 1 ELAN BC LENA Bi hate Bt BEARD elle. Hn tt Pete ss y, She Guardian “Covers Prince Edward leland Like. The Dew” “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” Dispray Advertising Department — Phone 894-8506 they seem to know what interests people most when they’re interested in buying them. Only 13 °/ found tele- vision ads, and 5% radio ads, to have this same timeliness. And people like newspaper ads. 83% use them as shopping guides, and have found that newspaper ads are a reliable source of value at a good price. On the other hand, 56% felt television ads made extravagant claims that were hard . to believe. Sy Small wonder so many advertisers use daily news The way the odds are stacked, their : ads sage just when you’re in the market for their product. And it gives them a nice head start when what they advertise is / ~ something that interests you most. e \