ry St. Louis Whips Cleveland; — Packers Edge Baltimore By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS St Louis’ Charley Johnson, passing with pinpoint accuracy, threw six touchdown passes, lifting the Cardinals to.a 4913 rou! over the defending Nationa! Football League, champion Cleveland Browns Sumday Johnson completed 11 Ks 19 for 810 yards through-the air and the Cardinal-defence pitchea in with six interceptions. Sonny Randall was the chief target,’ grabbing three of Johnson's scoring passes. He also hit Willie ‘Crenshaw, Bobby Joe Conrad and Billy Gambre!! for scores Raltimore Colts, winners . in the NFL's Western Division last year, dropped a 20-17 decision to Green Bay Packers with sub quarterback Zeke Bratkow = the Packers hero Elsewhere in the NFlz New York Giants edged Philadelphia Eagles 16-14. Dallas Cowhoys ripped Washington Red = Skins 27-7, San Francisco ‘49ers stopped Pittsburgh Steelers 27:17, Detroit Lions edged Min nesota Vikings 31-29 and Los Angeles Rams nipped Chicago Bears ™)-28 In the American League. Buf- stitute falo Bills beat New York Jets 33-21, Oakland Raiders topped Houston Oilers 21:17 and San Diego Chargers and Kansas City Chiefs played to a 1010 tie SHORT OF RECORD Johnson played only — threé Blair Richardson Is Knocked Out Ry NICK FILLMORE GLACE BAY,2:N.S. (CP Gomeo Brennangof the Bahamas knocked out a surprised Blair. Richardson with a crashing right to the head in the 11th round of a scheduled 12-rounder here Saturday night to retain his British Empire middleweight boxing title Brennan, 26, appearing to tire after the sixth round, rushed out of his corner as the bell rang to start the ghith and landed a solid right of Righardson’s chin at the five-sec mark . that sent the Cape Bretoner reeling to the canvas. Referee Bob Reaton of nearby Sydney counted the Canadian champ out The fight, before 4,433 fans In Miners Forum: here, was Brea- nan's third title defence this year and his 78th professional fight without heing knocked down The knockout win was his 30th KO victory. Both men weighed 159 M.A.H.A’ Action Galore HAbHFAX—(€P}———The—Hali-} fax Junior Canadiens will not get a bye into the Maritime junior finals this season, the Maritime Amateur Hockey Asso- ciation decided here Saturday. Officials of the Canadians ear- lier last week had requested per- mission for the bye. The Canadiens were granted | permission by. the MAHA during its annual meeting to import four players on the stipulation only two could be used in play- ether Maritime offs against teams ‘MARITIME RACING... ~ SACKVILLE — DOWNS; ONS 8. head. But Richardson, 25, born at nearby South Bar, N.S., came on strong in the sixth and sev- enth rounds, and took charge of the fight in the eighth. DIDN'T SEE PUNCH “I didn't see the punch,” said Richardson. ‘‘The first’ thing I after three periods, quarter and edged periods with substitute quarter- back Buddy Humphery working ~ the last quarter. The six touch- downs fell one short of the NFL single-game record shared by Sid Luckman, Adrian. Burk and Y A. Tittle . Bratkhowski replaced jured Bart Starr eran end Max McGee on a 37- yard pass play in the closing minutes that lifted the Packers past the Colts Andy Stynchula’s third field goal of the game, an ll-yarder with just 11 seconds left to play, pushed the Giants past the Eagles. Dick UWnch blocked a Philadelphia field goal. attempt with 5'2 minutes to go and the Giants moved determinedly downlield with Earl Morrall’s passing ealing ‘up most of the the in- yardage, to set up Stynchula's winning hoot Olympwaisprint champion Bob Hayes stored two touchdowns as Dallas won its second straight and took over the NELs Eastern Division lead. Haves caught a Don Meredith pass and raced 45 yards for his first TD Brennan fought well in the sroce GAME - firpt five rounds, stinging Rich- wilt Plum’s last-ditch touch- ardson with sharp rights to the qown pitch to speedy Amos Marsh with 22 seconds remain- ing covered 48 yards and beat Minnesota for Detroit. i Los Angeles, tr ailing 289 rallied for the final the Bears. Munsen en- three touchdowns in Quarterback: Bill knew I was fiat on my back and gineered the spurt, marching the fight was over. It was a the Rams 80 yards in the final terrific surprise.” 30° seconds for the winning A divinity student at Emerson sere: a 10-yard TD pitch to College in Boston, Richardson Terry Baker. squelched earlier rumors that John Brodie passed for. one TD and ran for another as San he would give up boxing in favor of a career as youth worker in the United States. He—returns.to college today, where he will con- tinue training Izzy Kline, -Brennan’s mana- ger, said that if Richardson wants it, he will be given a re- match. Brennan left for Miami, Fla, Sunday, where he will re- sur training after a week's rest . ¥ Meets; | | Campbellton Tigers and Sum- merside RCAF were ‘ordered ‘to pay $250 or face suspension for failing to complete intermediate | “A"’ playoffs last season. A. Hook Walsh of P.E.L's Prince County Hockey “League, was suspended for five years for striking a referee last season. | A resolution to lift the life sus- ‘pension on Buck Hickey of Syd- ney River, N.S., was defeated. Hiekey was suspended for hitting a player over the head with a stick last season. The Finnish national team will ‘tour the Maritimes during a ic anadiah tour this season if the \Canadian Amateur Hockey As. ; sociation approves. . Steve MacDonald of Sydney “Was elected “MARA, Sat ry Mente Peter- ~ Others” {bi Yen president -~of --the-. Francisco wonvits second straight. John David Crow and Brodie hooked up on a 49-yard scoring manoeuvre on the ‘49ers’ second play from scrim- mage and_the Steelers were on the way to their second loss. PROBABLE PITCHERS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Probable pitchers in- today’s major league games wor-lost records in parenthesis): National League Chicago (Jackson 13-20) at Philadelphia (Bunning 18-8) (N) Milwaukee (Blasingame 16-10) at Houston (Dierker 7-8) «N) Cincinnati (Ellis 21-9) at Los Angeles ‘Reed 6-5 or—Podres- 6-6) «N) j St. Louis (Sfallard 11-7) at San Francisco (Spahn 7-16) Only games .scheduled) Ameriéan League Kansas City- (Talbot 10-11) at Baltimore (J. Miller 6-4) (N) Only game scheduled) and hit vet) @ & Fisher, slides into home plate for a tally in the third inning in a game against the San Francisco Giants. Number 27 is the Giants Juan Marichal. Toronto =) Bs WINNING PITCHER Milwaukee pitcher, Hank Milwaukee sank the Giants 3-2 and combined with .the Dod- gers 1-) win over the St. Louis Cards created a tie in the National league pennant race. Argos | Finally Win By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor TORONTO (CP) — Toronto Argonauts, dubbed the misfits of Canadian professional foot- ball this year, surprised a sea son's low crowd of 17,364 here Sunday to defeat Winnipeg Blue Bombers 24 - 22 and snap an eight-game losing streak. “The loss was the Bombers’ first in three East.- West interlocking games this year. And the new-look Argonauts accomplished it the hard way at windswept Canadian National Exhibition Stadium. They 17-7 at the half, fell behind 22-17 | on a third-quarter Bomber on- slaught and then sent the crowd home happy with a converted touchdown in the opening two minutes of the final quarter. Just about everything about the game was new to Argo- ~|nauts who previously had de- vised all sorts of ways to lose a game. Their pass - catching ends and halves found a way to hang on to quarterback Pete Liske’s passes and the 24-year- old rookie discard from the American League showed he could run with the ball, ncehsanciiilainanianci peste Golden Gaels Th 1rottle goal led | He threw two touchdown passes to flanket Pat Brosnan and plunged over from the Win- nipeg one-yard line for a touch- | down himself. He was good on 10 of 20 passes for 249 yards | and picked up 48 yards on nine carries KICKS 3 CONVERTS Jackie Parker Incked the three converts and single points were added by Jacki Simpson and John Vilunas on wide field- attempts. and a towering with-the-wind #5-yard punt by Dave Mann. The Bombers, looking for ; their seventh victory in 11 | starts and. a first-place tie with Calgary Stampeders in {the Western Conference, were di- .rected again by backup quarter Dick. Thornton. He scored two touchdowns. on short runs and | pitched an endzone touchdown pass midway through the first quarter to Ken Nielsen who got behind Argo defensive back Mike Wicklum. : Norm Winton was good on the three convert attempts and Fd Ulmer got the other Winnipeg point on a wind-blown = #8-yard punt, X- Men - _ intermediate baseball title. ~ = Ch'town Legi ~ Shut-Out Viki The Charlottetown Legion Ju-<and manager Ryan niors proved themselves the have had too much ame bat ‘class of New Brunswick and they had pleanty of quality. Con- |Prince Edward Island baseball nelly came up with several daz- teams yesterday afternoon at zling grabs on infielders pegs to ' Memorial fieid_ when they cruis- cut short potential scoring ed to‘a.-5-0—tziumph. ever the | threats by the Vikings. The re- |N.B. Junior Champs, the sFred-| moval “af Cart” MacQuaid to left /ericton Vikings. This victory al-' field did not harm the smooth- | ‘lowed the local juniors to win nesss of the infielders play as the best of three series for the Fred MacDonald at the ‘hot cor- N.B. — P.E.I. junior title two ner’, Weatherbie at shoristop' games to none as the Legion had and Walker Bradley at second squeaked oul a 3-1 win in Fred- each came up with real fielding ericton last weekend. gems at the right time. From As has been the case for the third to second to first seemed better part of the junior games to be a popular routine yester- it was a combination of Mike day es the Legion pulled off one Kelly and brilliant Charlottetown defense w hen the pressure was Largest Crowd Attends Races on that enabled the locals to grab this win. Although Kelly! allowed but one hit in the con- j test he was forced to pitch,him-' yo G na self out of jams several times as Poa <hr ty vor he walked six batters and — hi8 for the Lower Montague stock teammates allowed three errors.’ car races yesterday afternoon. Joe Donovan of Morell won the pat driver award for the day ed Viking batters down like. The and alee the wephy fer the yeer. However when the chips were . trophy, donated by James 168. : : King, will be presented annually Allan ‘Postie’ Connelly play- yniess a driver wins it for three ing at first base for the Juniors years in succession. for the first time in the series Other awards will be ; showed that coach Handrahap eq next Sete - due present | . je’clock curfew the days events MORELL WINS. “*%* ne! completed. KINGS TITLE In the ladies race Mrs. Sybil Dewar was the winner. The tro- vee for best driver in the ladies Morell defeated Mt. Stewart | Huskies by a 32 score yesterday | afternoon before some 2,000 fans as also presented to her. "Felecine were the winners: First race, Donald Ross, Ben- Balderson: at Morell to win the Kings Coun- | * ty Basebal] League champion- | idan toe heen ae ship after a thrilling, nip-and- Third race, Keith MacLeod. tuck battle. Joe Donovan, Dondid Ross Morell won the first game of Fourth race, ladies: Sybil De- |the series by a 12-1 score; the war Huskies squared it last weekend | Fifth race, Lorne Anderson. with a 31 victory, and Morell car 4, George Thorne pushed across-a—run_in the last Sixth race David Joheston, of the ninth yesterday to win the pesj Driscol, Merrill Herring. title by the narrowest of mar- Seventh race, Joe Donovan, gins. Louis Murphy and Art Coffin hooked up in another tight pitch: | ing duel yesterday. Murphy, who won both games. fanned 14 bat- ters, while |\Coffin, the ee Anaad last'| Sunday, The Huskies took a 1-0 lead in the second inning of yesterday's game, and added another in the top of the fourth to go ahead 2-0. | The George Kelly-coached home | club added one in the bottom of Roy Reynolds, Danny Loans. ‘Mount Allison Whips Aggies MONTREAL (CP) Mount Allison University af Sackville, N.B., whitewashed Macdonald College of Ste. Anne de Belle- vue, Que., 27-0 Saturday in an jexhibition football game. Mount Allison led 14-0 at half jtime, and kept Macdonald nee the fourth, and> tied it up in! the sixth when Brian McGuire hela ti ia tear scored on brotber Kevin Mc- quart ot fourth Guire’s hit.. 4 Going into te ninth, with the score tiéd at 22, Murphy struck ‘out the side, and Morell came to bat. With one out, Doug Mac- $ BRANDED INSPECTED Ewen drew a walk, and then) : Cletus Dunn tagged a Coffin de-|¢ livery for a triple te score Mac- | GOOD OR Ewen with the big winning run. ‘Zp MONEY 3 With the KCBL title in the bag, '¢ = Morell now meets Tignish next |- Sunday in the first game of the final series <or the Island rural Tig nigh advanced to the final with jwins over Mt. Stewart Saturday at Tignish and yesterday at Mt. | Stewart FAMOUS FOR he : | wild MacQuaid sccoted home: OP nee on Juniors ings 5-O pretty double play and just mis- score 5-0 In favour of the Le sed a couple of others. Bradley gion. came up with a picture catch in’ This was the second run of the the eight when he mitted day for the diminutive MacDon a screaming line drive about 15 aid who along with Weatherbie feet left of first base. Although made it to home plate in the not too many balls got to the sixth. autts Id those that did were deft- od cows ths ret Aga am Kal’, ui on Wayne MacDougall, C.Y. Mac: Donald and Carl MacQuaid. | Si ane ERRORS COUNT The Legion Juniors now ad- A very big factor in the Char- vance to the Maritime champion. lottetown win was the rash of ship against the Nova Scotia errors by the usually steady | champions. Vikings. Losing pitcher Gary Jones hurled a whale of a ball’ game himself, allowing only four! Charlottetown hits and two walks while whiffing ten Legion bat- ters. However it is hard to win when your own teamates are throwing the ball away and alert Charlottetown base runnin made the most of Fredericton NOTICE 10% to ele. Ye Men's & errors. Car! MacQuaid got the 5 oa Legion on the scoreboard in the Dow 8 Reys’ Wear third stanza. When an attempt- Gt. George St. ed Viking pickoff throw went) with the first tally of the day. The decisive inning of the con- . test was the eighth. Farly in ,Charlottetown's half of the in- ning Ken Scott, the Vikings first baseman tore a muscle in his leg while making a beautiful grab and this forced the Freder- icton pilot the juggle his lineup in the infield. A new catcher came into the game and the pre- vious one took over the first sacker duties. Walt Bradley then worked a base on balls and’ im- mediately stole second — base. Fred MacDonald, following Bradley's example reached first base and as Bradley stole third Fiddler tore down to the second sack. Mike Kelly, starring at the plate as well as on the slab lined the first Jones pitch into left center field for a single and both” Bradley and MacDonald scrambled home to make the The Paint Makers Co. All Kinds of Paint NASH ALUMINUM Windows, Awnings D. A. MacCANNELL 140 Great George St. BIRTHDAY PARTIES For the Chidren's_ Birthdays take the party bowling .... SPECIAL AFTERNOON AND EVENING RATES FOR GROUPS. CHILDREN LOVE IT! CALL. . 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Satunday_nigit. president Dr. Hillard Clark of Rorderview Roy won the first ‘Sunimerside:~ second- Vice-presi- ~heat—of—the— pace in_2:08 and dent Fred Fox of Lunenburg finished second in the last heat. KINGSTO N. oa (CP). eng Oe 1. Sant lac” The | sec- Queers - University -Golden ond came inthe fourth quarter. Gaels never. allowed St. Francis. and capped a 66-yard march by Xavier X-Men inside their 30- Queen's which was highlighted yard line while rolling toa 21-0 by + diving catch by Bill Me-. exhibition, football victory here Carthy on a 20-yard pass by Saturday. ' Connor. It was the second shutout for TACKLED BY SEVIGNY \N.S. and third vice-president Rol Floise Wick, winner of the sec- ‘McLenahan of Fredericton. ond heat in the night’s best time Calgary Stamps | of 2:06 345, had finished fourth in the initial heat. Other winners on the card He * Twins C were Rorderview. Bob Lee (2:10. ~ 45)" Golden Law (2:10), E.T. e&dios (250 2-5), (2:14°45), Miss Betty M. (2:00 05) and Quaker Bonnet (2:13). TRCRO (OP)*— Rain Satur- day forced postponement of a racing card. It will be held Tuesday night. SAINT JOHN, N.B. (OP) — Harness racing cards scheduled Saturday at Saint John Ewhibit- ion Park Raceway and at Monc- ton’s Brunswick Downs were postponed because of rain and rescheduled for tonight. Sally Gallon | Trample Lions CALGARY (CP) — Defensive halfback Larry Robinson scored a touchdown, two converts and a single to lead Calgary Stam- - peders to a 21-7 win over British Columbia Lions in’ a Western Football Conference game Played in a driving snowstorm before about 19,000 fans Satur- day night. The victory moved Stampe- ders into first place in the WFC Standings with 14 points, two points ahead of Winnipeg Blue inc Bombers. MacNEILL HURT George MacNeill, a mem- ber of the SDU Varsity foot- ball team and goaler for the Maritime intercollegiate hoc key champs last season shat- tered “his arm in two places Saturday during the Saints game against fhe Acadia Ax- men in Wolfville, N.S. Mac- Neill was unable to- make the long trip back home with the team who were trounced 28-6. First Fl ‘the Gaels in as many starts _ this season ; ~ Carleton Univergity Ravens 450 _they defeated | Sept. 18. | Heino Lilles, the Gael's 187- /pound fullback, carried the ball 16 times, and ran for 172 yards and_two touchdowns. Veteran quarterback Cal Connor threw a seven-yard pass to Don Bayne for the Gaels’ third touchdown. Larry Ferguson, who punted nine times for a 43.8-yard *ver- age. kicked singles of 59 and 40 yards. Eric- Hafeman con- verted once. Lilles scored both touchdowns ag; - Dodgers, Giants se THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mvibe American League pennant race ended Sunday as Minnesota Twins ¢linched their first flag, and the National League pen- nant race started all over again with seven games remaining as Gan Francisco and Los Angeles finished the day ina tie for . first place. their games -hy -downing St. Zoilo Versailles, Minnesota's sparkplug shortstop, scored the first run after smacking a triple, and drove in the. final .run with a seventh inning sacrifice fly as the Twins edged Washington Senators -2-1. The victory was No. 99 of the gzeason for the Twins and elimi- nated Baltimore Orioles, the last team with a chance .to.caich them. -With the Twins’ victory already on the scoreboard, the Orioles edged California. Angeis_ 21 for straigat victory. In the NL, the Dodgers ran winning streak to ‘nine Louis their seventh Cardinals 1-0 behind the pitch- ing of Don Drysdale and the baserunning of Maury Wills, while the Giants dropped a 3-2 decision to Milwaukee. TIED FOR FIRST That left the Dodgers and Giants tied for the top spot, each with.seven games remain- ing. Drysdale, bringing his record to 2212, pitched a five-hitter ‘and Wills, who stole two bases for a season total of 90. almost singlehandedly —-provided__the ~~ game's onl¥ run. Wills beat out a bunt in the first inning and when pitcher Ray Sadecki attempted to pick him: off, proceeded to ‘steal %c- ond’ and raced to third on-a wild throw by first baseman Bill White. Jim Gilliam then singled Wills home: While Drysdale was winning. San Francisco's 22-game win- | ner, Juan Marichal, failed again to beat a Tirst- division club. He | ADDITIONAL SPORT PAGE 14 has not been able to do that’! since Aug. 10. Gene Oliver rapped the deci- sive blow off Marichal, a solo homer in the sixth inning that | built the Braves’ lead to 30 and | handed the Giants their fourth loss in the last five games. The third - place Cincinnati Reds lost to Houston 4-2 on a three-run ninth-inning homer by, rookie Chuck Harrison, but__re- mained three games from the top. The Reds salso Shave seven | games lett. Tonight (Mo In oth8® NL action, Philadel: phia edged New York Mets 5-4 | in 10 innings and Pittsburgh Pi- | rates defeated Chicago Cubs 5-3 in 10. innings. Elsewhere in the AL, Chicago White Sox whipped New York Yankees 53, Kansas City Ath- letics-edged Boston Red Sox 21 land Detroit Tigers and Cleve | land Indians ~ split a lsades: the Tigers winning the opener 2-0 and the-Indians tak- | -ing the second game 7-1. POSTPONED — Car Races At Freetown nday) At 7.30 pedoegeZens Fee gram emyren double- | was. brought _Roger Sevigny of the X-Men.. .. The Gaels “-made. 22 first dowris compared to 10 for the visitors and chalked up a 600-. yard—total— offence, 305— on: the ground. St. Francis gained 165 yards. Connor threw 4 passes and completed seven for 161 yards, including a 46-yard pass to down by Doug Cowan and a 31-yard tose to Larry Plancke on a -bootleg play. ‘ Support - United Fund —_— Hunting Licence Available he BIKE SHOP and SPORT LODGE ‘S$—Knightway ~.F.—Dixie—Lou-—- |4—Happy Galion C |S~—High Price | 7—Miss Fiaminge | 7—Ripov Yo MON., SEPT. 27 8:00 P.M. Ne i—Purse $100 1—True Hero 2—Miss Lucky Relle 3—Lady Galion C. 4—Triflite a . 6—Brown Budlong _Mr. Farmer: 8—Thunder Girl : 2 and 6—Pnrse 918 each 1—Am Castle 2—Chief’s Gal 3—Miss Cool Eves @'tl Angel; 6—Amy Thorpe ‘J—Splurge 3 and 7—Purse $125 each 1—Lani Kai 2—Doctor Alex 3—Dennis Herbert 4—Poplar Eden 5—Nimble Knight 6—Sunny Key easel Mr. Farmer: L'll Angel: 8—Frankie’s Chief Alse eligible: Bobby Brook . 4 and & Purse $225 each | I—Little Art ° | 2—Armond’s Ruddy 3—Mr. — Key 4-Hi J 5—Mountain Marie 5 and 9—Purse $125 each 1—Echo Ridge Eddy — 2—Sammy Galion 3—Mr. Charmer 4—Far Stride 5—Billy G. Command 6—W. M. X. er Ist Daily Deuble—1 and 3 Exactor—5 2nd Daily Double—?7 and § 138 Gt. George BM. CH town S Heft a a AT CE EOE Ms RMT ty LADIES NIGHT oo Have You Given to the. United Fund Campaign ? Hey. L'il Angel! Perhaps you. haven't noticed we're plenty busy on the land these days. Got lots on our mindss now! Sure, Mr. Farmer, campaign for United Fund. They've got a big job trying to raise $281,876.00 to carry on the work of 27. agencies. Well, L'il Angel. 1 said yes, last time, but a couple ‘of bucks is still all I can manage now. Right, so why not pledge it just like everyone else is doing these days. Talk it over with your canvasser when they come. We’re‘all set up to remind you you inaiee nee You know how nice it ‘hours when you need what the United Fund needs now... - neighbours ... your help... your RAIR SHARE. This Advertisement is Published by a Local ur FAIR SHARE and so have the people in this ? ee ——o * s 5 to have friends and neigh- elp, Mr. Farmer, and that’s friends and € > Public-Spirited Firm