-in v H . ,.;__ I ' " Turn Back Acadia To Garner First Victory .- ....r.,-21-i.a< SPORT ECHOESI 3y Norman Maodonald I lummersido Bureau of The Guardian I Congratulations Congratulations. belated but hoes” of the other felldws. Hil- none the less sincere. to Dr. lard was president of the Sum- Hillard Clark on his election as merside Baseball League last president of the ISHL. We don’t summer and everything went break into print half as often as smoothly. The rock and shoals our contemporary columnists so are a bit more numerous in the for that reason some of our ISHL. but we think Dr. Clark’! messages. congratulatory and fact will steer the hockey ship otherwise. are of necessity “Ec- safely througth the danger spots. ' Rumor At Work Dame Rumor. that gahbv old gossip. is spreading a story to the effect that the Cape Tra- verse Evinrurles and the Sum- merside Crystals will merge to become one hockey club in the near future. Now that the Cry- stals can no nger depend on RCAF Pla_ ers to complete their team. it seems to its that two evenly - matched teams from Charlottetown l‘,\Ir_ite we said “evenly - matehe(i." not power-parked and the other com- posed of cast-offsi and one team from Siimmerside should be a pretty fair division of talent and result in close. exciting hu- ekey. if Summersiele. with her population. minus RC.-\F' person- nel. can muster one team. then Charlottetown. with her popula- tion. shoiilri be able to put toge- ther t\\‘0 teams of eriital caliber —that is. if they grow as many l'!I'.Vt"lx'F_\' players per city block as ire do down here in Summer- side. and we have t‘\'Pl‘_\‘ reason to believe they were siirprised to see how miirh oral protest the re- ferees take In the National Foot- ball League without any penalty given. Yesterday a tall fellow named Burnsi playing for the New York Giants was penaliz- ed twice for illegal interference, and both times he danced aroun the referee. gesticulating wild- ly and apparently deliverin quite an oration. As he wasn't wired for sound. we could not tell what he was saying. but it was clear. announcer said. that he wasn‘t congratulat- lle ing the referee on his calls. There is a penal for talking. but that must de- pend on the choice of vocabul- ary. not the accompanying ges- titres. Briefs - Henry Richard is off to a flying start in the NHL scoring race, and may do some- thing brother Maurice was nev- er able to do. lead the league in scoring points. . . Mahovlich paid the first small installment on his million dollars‘ worth of hockey talent Saturday night, scoring the winning goal ag- ainst Chicago. He’lL have to do that —— every game. and then sell hot dogs at intermission to he worth all that money. Lost Summer's Bouquets We've patted on one on the back Whose pitching feats this year i for days. Our flrirnl contributions ceased to t ii‘: For months we hm-ri1't paused ’-lYlL' the praise Of Island hny-. iilio stole the sporting show. t . The first and foremost of our With two three-province titles in Is n i la ii lads Who in Toronto did to stardom zoom; Of training r.=er,=ei'eranr:e he had st.-ads. Example for young hopefuls- Alfred Groom. A cool. pniceri youngster. still of midget age. Stamps Nip Lions And Retain Lead (IALGARY it‘Pt —— Calgary Starripeders maintained their sin lead in the Western Football C0nferen(.'e Saturday night by . shnw _ ' j with the flu that made him miss e e nipping British Columbia Lions have brought him fame. Young Weatherbie of Charlot- tetown's all the rage. This year he won a lot of base- ball games. MacKenzies' Green - Shirts, his- ory-making team two years. I-lad Gi-ady‘s bat and glove right on beam With Jenkins and Martin rating extra cheers. We guess that brings us pretty mu h to For other Island stars we'll have to wait. v?; , 5 v :5 ' MEET Silver Cove Rosie. highest rated female at the re- veitsz Jim Furlong booted I g . Halfback Willie Fleming d he had shaken a bout h ldthe 36-28 in an exciting see-saw hat- ‘Lions last game as V tle before 10.800 fans. a record ‘iva.v for BC. with three touch-' turnout for this season. idowns—one a 97-Vard 59331139!‘ The win kept the Stamps a ll“ the third quarter‘ point ahead of Winnipeg Blue I l Bombers, who downed Edmon-l O I ton Eskintos 30-20 in Edmonton A S Southpo A Southport resident. Earl Co- rish. Southport. made a great‘ h s owing with his beagle, Silver Cove Rosie, at the recent Cape Breton Beagle Club field a n d pack trial. . Silver Cove Rosie topped the 13 inch female class to grab herself a trophy and ribbon and then walked away with the Dr. Ballard Medal of Honor for the highest rated female at the show. The sire of the top female is the international champion. Gold Tone Chimer. owned by Dr. Lawson. Montreal. The dam is Silver Cove Betty. Mr. Corlsh got another big thrill out of the recent show and it wasn't any great wonder that he did. Nine ribbons that were. won at the Cape Breton show were taken by hounds which had originally come from the Corish kennels. l cent field trials and her as- L ter. Earl Corish. Southport, P E.I. l I . Mr. Corish began his beagle industry about eight years ago and is satisfied his efforts have met with success. Showings such as the recent Cape Breton one would appear to indicate his success has been plentiful. An employee of Canada Pack- ers, he enjoys his hobby to the limit and has.every intention of further improving his stock. The Dr. Ballard award winner seemed mighty happy to pose with her master for the photo- grapher. She did exactly as she was told. endeavouring to look the best for her newspaper viewers. Mr. Corish. himself. seemed delighted to pose with this outstanding beagle. , Each apparently figured the ioccasion was a noteworthy one. And it was indeed. Big Race Classic NEW YORK (AP — Mighty ‘Kelso Captures Saturday night. and left Lions with only a slim chance of over h a I‘ l l ii 2 Saskatchewan Reiighi-iderc for the league's third and last playoff spot. The lead changed several times as the Stamps and the Lions battled to a 7.7 fir<t-quar- ter tie. a 14-14 tie at halftime and 23-28 at the end of the ‘third quarter. Harvie Wylie. Pete Manning. Lovell Coleman. Ed Buchanan and Larry Robinson s c o r e d _ touchdowns for the Stamps and Robinson added all five con- lP|ay Draw By STUART LAKE OTTAWA tCPl - Ottawa Rough Riders of the Eastern Football Conference are protest- ing referee Norm Maxwell’s interpretation of a scoring play .th:it helped Montreal Alouettes gain a 21-21 tie with Riders here Saturday. . The d’ puted play came just before the close of the first half. ‘Montreal quarterback Sandy Bob Brook «Stephens pitched a 40-yard pass tinteiidcd for end Marvin Luster. ‘The ball was deflected by Ot- tawa's Whit Tucker, hit the Ot- tawa cross bar an bounced "else made a powerful claim on an unprecedented third con- secutive horse of the year title with a 10-length victory Satur- day in the $108,900 Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont Park. The five - year - old gelding owned by the Bohemia Stables of Mrs. Richard C. Diipont. also won his third straight Gold Cup. a feat never before ac- complished. and smashed the Belmont track record for two miles to boot. smael Valenzuela brought Kelso to the wire eased up in three minutes. 19 4-5 seconds, which smashed Nashua‘s 1956 record of three minutes. 20 2-5 seconds. The time was two-fifths of a second off Kelso‘s Ameri- tinued his phenomenal domi- nace of the Golden Gate Han- .dic;sp at Albany: Calif., by rid- -mg Mandate to a 3%-length vic- Story in the $21,590 race It was the fourth consecutive ;Golden Gate Handicap triumph for Longden. a 55 - year — old grandfather. and the seventh ‘time he has won the event in the 16 times it has been run. It was his third victory of the day lat Golden Gate Fields. boosting ihie record lifetime total to 5.849 [Wll'l‘ t Longden moved his mount to lthc outside at the stretch turn, llook over command and drew ‘out to defeat the favorite Sea ‘Orbit in the 1 1-16-mile race. BAD TOP WEIGHT Sea orbit carried 128 pounds. Nickel is used_in about 2.500.- ! t rt Beagle Grabs Top Prize M l staging a spectacular come- back in the second half, ‘ Dunstan’s Varsity trounced Aca- dia Axemen M37 in an Atlantic ootball Conference battle at S.D.U. field Saturday afternoon. Cfl so- the contest and they were mighty fortunate to trail by only a 7-0 '1 score as the half time whistle sounded.- Tlic Axemen widely outplayed the Red and Whiters in those first 30 minutes and the Wolf- ville Collegians deserved a wid- er spread as they rested for the third and fourth quarters. The arlottetown scholars were equally as u-nimpressive the early minutes of the third quarter but ilhings started click- ing when quarterback Fred Rip- ley hit Dick Tlngley with s my yard pass. Saints suddenly caught fire and began moving steadily. to Axem-en's goal lin Fullback Jim Bentham. playing a standout game all afternoon carried the pigskin over from a scrimmage t"'" "’ ' E“ ‘Perry's attempted convert fail- C is l. . ' ed bu . . because Saints were in charge the rest of the way. SAINTS GRAB LEAD Before the quarter was end- ed, Ed I-li‘.ton‘s boys had grab- bed a 13-7 lead on a major by .~ halfback Len Ellis and a convert by Perry. After a steady march toward Acadiz-i‘s end zone. Ellis struck for the locals second touchdown after a jaunt from 12 yards out. Perry .'made no mistake on’ . the kick this time. ' Hilton sent young .Wes. Mac- back early in the closing quar- ter and Wes seemed delight- ed with his chance. Saints were . back on their own 34 yard line H‘ 1.4- C when _MacA1eer started engineering that never stopped until Graham .alfback, raced over for their third touchdown. Again Perry's kick was g A r the extra point and it was a 20-7 ba game. The Axemen were, however, far from through. A 20 yard pass to wingback Caldwell sent the Nova Scotlans deep into Saints’ territory. The Axemen had a first down on Saints’ three yard line but. it was here the locals showed their greatest defence. They refused to yield to Acadia pressure and had just taken pos- session of the ball when the fi- nal gun sounded. ‘ SAINTS OUT PLAYED Saints‘ supporters had little to quarters. At the six-minute mark ‘fullback Harvey Gilmour raced over on a three-yard plunge for the day’s first major. A kick by Keith Caldwell made it read Acadia 7. Saints 0. Gary Mer- __ rill. Wolfville quarterback and l P. Wright had combined to make :Gilmour's plunge possible. {Wright accepted a honey of a '34-vard pass from the Axemen's field general to bring the ball to he three yard line. Acadia kept up the attack in the second quarter and it seem- ,cd just a matter of time before ithcy would hit paydirt again. ....».x-av.-‘ ’-" '1. Saints — Convert’ — Perry. by Jim Griffith gave Saints pos- Merrill hit halfback Hollis with ' a 15 yard pass and then on the! other statistics: next play. Gllniour raced to the 5 First downs. Acadia — 19. Aleer. Sherwood. in as quarter- Sa . errlll 7. e ball‘ Saints on the oil and was Punts - Saints —— II (39.6 yd. f owing play finally stopped two yards from 3V9I'380l- Acadia 12 (14.8 yd. the goal.liue. A terrific tackle avera e) Fumbles - Saipts 3, fecovefi them out of ed C Acadia. 1. recovered 0. a bad situation. Penalties - Saints 60 yd, Au- A large crowd viewed the tus- dlfl 30 d» - ale and saints’ students got their Elected from game - Jim chance to holler when Saints fi- G-‘iT1‘i_ty. Saints and 14- KIWI‘. session and cheer about in the first two 39 "1 nally starting rolling in the last Acadia. all. Fullback Bob Simmons and tackle Frank Gsrrity of the ed and White watched from the sidelines because of injury. SUMMARY ‘First Quarter ! « Acadia — Touchdowi1—— Gilmore. - ‘ 2--Acadia —- Convert — Cald- 11 nd Quarter Scoring -— None. Quarter 3 —~ Saints —- ‘Touchdown - :11 S is n am. 4. Saints -— Touchdown — El- POPULATION CLIMB Population of the six Euro- pean Common Market co untrles is growing at a rate of 0.0 per‘ cent annually. Enjoy tglirgl). Trouble - Free ‘I’? Heat with si-isu; lis. i _ as-i-is—c t-re Fourth (glrliel"lel' my l e ” ‘ (Iii. Saints — Touchdown — Con- n . STOVE & FURNACE OIL CALL R. C. BARWISE DIAL 4-4315 Aiithorized Shell Agent for Charlottetown and West cl Charlotte MALPEQUE ROAD I Is . tick into Luster's arms at the can record for two minutes set 12 more than Mandate. Time for ‘goal line for a touchdown. at. Aqueduct in 1960. -' [tie distance was 1:42. ' g j a 1; en eral manager Mrs. Robert L. Dotter s Guad- Mandate paid $7.80. $3.40 and 5ALEM- N H '( P‘ “ B"b lGeorge Terlep said a protest alcanal, who ran sixth and last | $3.20. Sea Orbit returned $25) B!"‘"k- 8 f0l|"‘.V’<’«'“"0l‘l Meaflm" iwas wired immediately after for more than 1% miles while for plac War Colt Ownefl by Dnnald R- {the game to Commissioner Syd- Kelco was duelling for the lead. show. Nite Shift paid $4.40. Macl\'€‘nziF of Glace BELV» N-5;‘ iney Halter. came on to finish second. El-l in ago. Hobeau Farm’! W15‘-1-‘ed mild in 3 /‘:34 _“3“‘7l" ; Under Canadian football rules mendorf Farm's Nickle Boy was lfive-year-old Beau Purple led all CH‘ WON by 5<‘0ll‘h TWP "‘ 2-05 , :1 pass that hits the ground or ‘ . ltlie way in the slop to win the at Rockinsham Park Saiurdayggny part of the 5031 is mien PAID $2.50 ls131.250 Hawthorne Gold Cupby nlflill . ‘ liiicom e. Kelso. the heavy favorite, paid labout two lengths over Bass Drive’ Am-" F"5'e" l‘3"’V”‘.gl Referee Maxwell ruled Satur- $2.50. $240 and $2. . Guadal-l lef. fl-‘HT! 9!“ 971"‘ ‘DOV 0109*“! “‘ ‘day that because the ball hit a canal, is ltlto-I shot ridden by: Beau Purple drove through a sixth to the half and dropped player first. then the goal, Donald Pierce. returned $4.10 ‘steady drizzle to splash 1% hack to last until the lead of the ‘was in play when Luster caught and $3. and Nickle Boy. with «miles in . H stretch. Flying through the ?i:_ Johnny Rotz up. was $3.30 to 250 for owner Jack Dreyfus Jr. stretch 305 BVOOR finished lhlfd i Terlep said the rule book slow I Beau Purple paid $11.60, $7.11) 3% length: behind the winner- ldnesnt seem to cover Maxwell's Kelso earned 370.785 and in- land $5. Bass Clef. owned by :—“‘"‘";— " “ ‘interpretation and that Riders creased his earnings to $938,380 Mrs. Vera E. Smith, returned i sked for I ruling from making him the sixth leading Sgndmfl fl 1 bed third ‘M re us no us _...a..sv: —.. sw- -.-nos ‘Situated mall prise lsststa postfl slim $i79compIe. .4 money winner in history. th i i ' ffi . f‘,§3°_,§’"§§,‘g,.§§:d?§§f i;-I.,§l.;e§e.;;.iK: Veteran Johnny Longden con- paid $4.60. . . g : Takes :gm°§i;gk:fi°:;l' M:m°:u,s ml_ . \ . lf'yos think not automobile value is us «Custoiinnqdollncludss odlitstoblebodid seeds anti-freeze in winter. A not ' 3 ing. ‘ f f R thing of the past, take a close look «I soot:.(Optionolininootoun.) mounted engine that gives better ‘ - NEW YORK ‘AP, _ Light \: The fact that an elisibe e ro a I n S ttionswl963CustouiVot|cwagoo. And every VW has a bolt-ii heater traction-on snow and-tce.'A dependable 1‘ . pass receiver touched the ball HM I heavyweight contender_ nous I,-,.;¢i deflected “ “"° '1'’ "°'' ' you‘! notice lid its the. some and defroster. (Extra out on most com.) englnotliutgehu overogeofafl silica r . 2‘ J01"; °‘.N"“’dY°”‘~ *3 "*i°'“""n r puts it in the catezory sliopeoslostyoca-.Iiitthat’stliesea-etotf "‘ ‘ ' ‘ " ' ' “ " 4 g..-.‘,g,.°§',,_ 1' .. v 'e. 5.09 previousy llfl-l ’' » ‘ ' ' ’ . ' '~ _ bggen Bob Plffosm of washmwwiiere vou disregard the" bl]-‘lei oursoeccs.And1lio ieosonoVollowagon sun vlaoiywiiiclfliteld woslien melon [you think corprtces are out of this “ . to.iching the goal pos . . , , ton tau 2? saecgilgginmeigealighgtz M,’ V ' is worth more when you trade it in. We I. ootomottedloltm. "°t’~ii. take hours. The '63 Custo ‘ roan o _ - ‘ 2 A Madison Square Garden Satur- n,:,"‘;§:,f““;‘l’,"{ 't‘§,f,‘§-:“;'§f,t”‘l‘;“af, DETROIT (AP) _ The W mum ‘hora’ um Dem“ never dung. In ‘basic design, we lost And -the there‘: soisettilng» we‘vo wmgugguhuuamhwnh d"{Jl5m~ Tedd Mam“ halted over Toronto Argonauts for the defeated Detroit Red Wings first two goals. . "'°PhF”VhU‘. . ‘ always engine lid V .. the sceillizluled ll}-rounder after 13" ’‘'’’°“ ‘’°'‘“‘''' “' “’° Bl‘ capmlized on Chicago Black Only superb play by soul? F“ '’‘‘‘''‘P'‘' “' 5' Pd“ 1* WP 5 MUG’ if Jones sent his substitute oppo- Hawks penalties for and tlliiellé Glenn flail pgeeiv-outed Dctroits _ I . nentreeling across the ring with scoring Sunday night an eh. margin mm s greater. 1 hard right to the jaw. Foster |(° Ge‘. possession of first elm Vida“: First period: No scoring. p... “M ‘°i-".:""°.:8":..::::: °° '9 5 li“.......°"" “°°*" “"“° v ' :.';'°:.: §'.:::':':.‘=.........*‘~ M $’ Z01‘! 0 Cy» W 0 ' 1: 0 5 v been of vi ‘nfection. ' Detroit. with four victories 11:44. Gsogss 14:21. Lunds 10:: 1wei.ghednul;2 pounds. HIS SITUTOUT and a tie in their fllve games. 18:19. .- Foster 14.. S broke oi-ecu same : 1. Detroit, - ‘ floated the 3-year-old sPBlNGFI1:LD. Man. (AP) gm. ¢wo:e:o.1.. : at saqgcond Detyeecmo 3 4 / _ sgumk) t H umteri‘3‘¢:go:nl1tih.:flrstrmmdfotIsoolic':oI|!I|ie'-gtitflflfil¢“Nspe1|eerlyfnthesecondperiod.s-,mn‘ mnui‘tl.,U:ls;ansIl(Dal- . - I can ‘mid 5'“ ya-g , : ; - ‘ rigli. to the is .' Hockey league shutout hit ,,,°’}’,°.,",'.§§ Hwhgn gamut: olflemtn; 1 (McDoIIld. v. . L 1 ' I Mlle d°tt’!H"‘°“"‘”'-"*Y"¢"“" t 1 flrstMakil10 .PsIaItles-Y , , ._ “"'""'iS§’a°$i‘.‘§i‘ 3S"§."-£J'°i'& ""“"‘ » . ' ' I-l Nwi;;,U1lg;- "3; };",’,‘,,,, ,. ,,.,,'“‘..,’‘.?',,‘‘‘'' ’ i V " » ‘ 4 "'°",,,,.- 5"",-» until no . .3 sins isiggiiigg.-= m - . Al. 4' . g A . . - « : . ' ‘ stage when Vic - ‘ v _ . 6 ' -- ,m,u”‘‘'''‘, 3 scored early in the aim m&¥M§ 1‘-3 “° '”.n '9'‘: e fl N“ T L i .31 f _ ‘ 1‘ '3" V scoredCIIleuo' Esll 101111-40 ' ‘ _ ' < ‘ 1 ' it“ fl . i 2' Mm "3~mn"-‘_._. ..,g'-=='::, ,_ _, ,_.: ,..,.,..,,. , . Aimiortssd Denier, -HIIlI»5-fl3.7i;- t --~ ~. \ v _ _ ~ ‘ i . i . | ..