—— The innit, Chastotiotows, Wed. Dec. 8, 1965. 9| SPORTS FRONT Hoop Squads More Advanced By CHRIS ANNETT Collegiate basketnall ts getting into high gear in the Mar- these days and the college teams, # they have not started their intercollegiate schedule, have been en- progresesiv: in the past few seasons and all the work by coaches such as Stu Aberdeen of Acadia, Al Yarr of Dalhousie and others was culminated this past season with Acadia’s sensational ‘ By CARL MOLLINS LONDON (CP)—George Chu- valo, sion here Tuesday night over a) surprisingly stubborn Joe By- 10-round battle. Chuvalo, who had been *ex-" pected to dispose of the older | Bygraves easily, fought half the his eyes from cuts high on the _ | forehead. stood a rain of rights by the| Torontonian that staggered him | Canadian heavyweight | boxing champion, won by deci- | % graves of Britain in a bruising | 7 bout with blood streaming into, Jamaican-born Bygraves with. | F Canadian Champ. Chuvalo Whips Jamaican Bygraves ninth ¥ ie Bygraves tried to box his out of trouble in the first but found himself up fF i ; ' triumph > Canadian Intercollegiate Championship, This early the season it is evident to, all that Acadia, im the second round, sent him nadian St. FX and Dalhousie will be the powerhouses for al- reeling across the ring in the In the second round, Chuvale ready this select group have posted tournament victories eighth and hurled him against got in a left to the chin, then over an assortment of U.S., Quebec and semi-pro teams. the ropes at the final bell. blocked an attack from By- St. Dunstan's Varsity certainly _ does not fit into The loser won repeated ap- graves and returned with @ the upper brackets of this league and indeed will have to plause for fighting back. The right to the face and then am- work to win a game, BUT the SDU club must be considered crowd in Royal Albert Hall other right to the forehead. unique among the clubs entered in the loop for two reasons. jeered when the referee raised ¢ a | Referee Harry Gibbs of Lon To begin with Ed Hilton has three Prince Edward Chuvalo's arm in victory. GEORGE CHUVALO don warned both men in the Islanders on his starting lineup and if one were to survey Chavalo, 28 and 207 pounds, | third round for using their every starting quintet in the collegiate leop it is doubt- said afterward he had never, Chuvalo, ranked third among heads, and Chuvalo immedi- ful whether he could find a similar situation (that is three been in trouble. He described | challengers for Clay’s title, now ately replied to that warning by. ° local stars). Now loyal St. Dunstan’s fans, don’t mis- the fight as ‘‘a good workout— has won 37 of 47 contests. By- (clubbing in lefts and rights to. , construe this statement. Eddie Lawlor, Postie Connelly and just what we wanted” against | graves has won 42 of 73 fights. |the body and the face. er Pau) MacGuire are three of the best players on the -club IT DOESN’T COUNT “a very durable, tough fellow.""| Ungerman showed little inter-| In the fourth, Chuvalo again | - ont a Se ons _—, — a : EARNED $10,000 est in a $30,000 offer to fight |started with lefts and then eud- out Mate Ghe eanid squads lke Acadia and SFX, Marto Andretti, 26-year-old Motor Speedway record with a tire test. Official recog are dretfi, driving a rear-engine eee Ohare ropes oe ee on sae f Aageatinn a dealy — es alae 3 Bas ; — . 7. eo anions todo a cee gry — Brcengg © a ae lap of 164.1 miles-per-nour. set only fm qualificationg and Ford, le a native of Trieste, | manager, said the fight “went aon wet, the Canadian got in two lefts to” , é ame & ware ’ further than we wanted, I mu “ the body and then: another - SDU does not recruit the length and breadth of the eastern | & new unoficial Indianapolis The mark was set during a the 500-mile-race itself. An- Italy. (AP Wirephoto) | samit." He said Chuvalo. will ce ie we ane os lefte pa rights, we seaboard for basketball talent. If they did, no doubt they too Sap a ay aa . return early in the new year cod in ; ack| In the fifth, Chuvalo agai. =. cotild be» power in the Intercollegiate hoop league. Hillton oe —s had pow , . my and seek more fights in Britain, | 5, Clay,” Ungerman said. He|Sarted with a left to the face ~- iy noes to go with what is on campus and as St. Dunstan’s preferably against British Em-/3,, lodged a formal challenge |@™ another vicious punch te’ not known a3 a basketball power it ie mot too likely that @ pire champion Henry Cooper. | ith Cooper, but details of a|the body, but emerged from a it is going to get many talented players from ‘south of the Bygraves, 34 and 209% pounds | 1 <cinle bout here in January |Clash of heads with a gash high border’ for any other than acedemic purposes.. However the - ; said he felt Chuvalo was lucky |i) are being discussed on his forehead and blood other two Starters.on the SDU squed, Owen Jay and Mike fo ” | in the decision and he hoped for : epurted from it. saliva were picked up as a result of a Hilton trip to the a@ rematch. Bygraves, his right) WORKED WITH LEFT His seconds worked hard and ates. eye partly closed by a bruise,| Bygraves worked on. Chu-/} though the wound atill troubled ~ What the Red and White give away in ability however, mM | said he will change plans to re- aie cuts with a flicking left|the Canadian it never gave him they make up for in effort and this years ver- ; : tire permanently to his farm | jab, and by the sixth the Cana-|too much trouble. Std sion of the team is little different. “When you haven't 4 k ; outside London if he can fight | dian was having trouble seeing| In the eighth round Chuvalo got the height you have to do something” says Ed Hilton By THE CANADIAN PRESS |Red’ Wings, then hustle back |player to sit out this game un-|change his mind about retiring. the Canadian again. las blood flowed into both eyes-|got in a good short left that sent and done he has. With McGuire and Gino Emile Francis, the doughty home to meet the Wings again til the last minute. Brewer wouldn't comment spe-| Ungerman said Chuvalo 1s Chuvalo cut his way to vic-|Bygraves staggering on the MacLaughlin doing the most of the rebounding. Connelly, little general manager of New|Saturday afternoon and the cifically on the possibility but Teady to fight any heavyweight |tory over Bygraves but failed to jropes. But Bygraves weathered Lawlor and Jay are free to fast break and this they have York Rangers who now has|Toronto Maple Leafs Sunday|WORSLEY IN GOAL did say no Leaf’ official had |in Britain any time, but a Te- score @ knockdown. , |the storm and came back te done most successfully in three pre-season games against taken ‘on the coaching job as |night. Gump Worsley likely will be spoken to. him recently about | match against Bygraves would | Chuvalo came to Britain after |keep the fight alive. Prince of Wales and the Ree Centre All-Stars. well, can’t be accused of picking} The second attraction tonight |i@ goal against the Bruins al-|returning and that his retire-|mean little in Chuvalo’s aim to ' ‘. = Mount Allison and UNB look to be logical prey for the |soft ‘spots. \i@ in Montreal where the tail-|though Blake had figured on us-|ment plans are unchanged. fight his way back into a posl-|@n unsuccessful attempt to cap-/HAD LITTLE DEFENCE ° hungry Saints hoopsters and should. the Red and White dis- No sooner had Red Sullivaniend Boston Bruins meet the |imgé Charlie Hodge. But Hodge; [ear defenceman Marcel Pro- ition to challenge Cassius Clay ture the World Boxing Associa-| The Canadian again attacked + play as much drive, determination and hustle as they Have |peen fired as coach than Fran-|second - place Capadiens, who | WS struck over the eye in prac- /novost has had a cyst removed for the world title. jtion’s version of the world |strongly in the ninth round with in pre-season play they have a good deal of the battle won “|cig was saddled with the unen-|trail Chicago by only one point tice Tuesday and although the ¢om his chest but is expected | : short left punches, followed by before they start. injury doesn’t appear serious, | cig. SH Breraves could de ‘ viable duty of shepherding the jin the standings. to play Saturday. Red Kelly is | { i . Blake said Worsley will get the f / | 5,8 ’ was stay on his feet, sagging Rangers through four won TWO cai, getting over a wrist injury. He | Chuvalo said in his dressi RAMBLINGS... games in five days. The Bruins mave been some- had to sit out last Sunday's | : en He starts out tonight in Chi-\thing of » nemesis against the| Maple Leafs, now i fourth /zame in Detroit. | eee, Toronto Maple Leafs, who prided themselves on having (C480 where Rangers face the Montrealers, winning two and by ao One Ue ene idig | Coach Punch Imlach plans to "| thi we aataeed. I ako ee the strongest blueline corps in the NHL when the six teams [Powerful Black Hawks, current 'tying one in four games played | oii" they meet the Bruins in ave his kid line together. He | 2 “ wary of the “British rules and” hit training camp mow have one of the weakest.. Bob Baun, (National Hockey League lead-'go far. The tie was a 44-affair jy cirday but are beset |S21d Ron Ellis and Britt Selby didn’t want to get disqualified. ‘~ another mainstay of the club hit the..dust Sunday evening /°TS. jJast Sunday in Boston where iby infu alee played particularly. well last “This prevented me. 2 when, as Foster Hewitt described it,’ Alex Delveccio sat on Rangers move on to Detroit Canadiens had to wipe out a Whe waeet blow was the lose of (aunday. The other member of ing all out inside, like I usu- him. The ‘result of Delveccios little rest was # sojourn to the (for @ game Thursday against |three-goal deficit. Bobby ‘Baun. The rugged de- |the line is Pete Stemkowski. ally do. : hospital for Baun and the result of the“Visit.a knee oper- | There’s a glimmer of hope for jc nceman suffered torn _liga- Bee : “But I was satisfied to win : ation that will sideline the ace defenseman at least. six —| Ma Fe | Rangers tonight. The high-flying ments in his right knee and is LONDON (AP)—Britain’s top |polize the parimutuel windows |¢nis one” weeks. Have pity on Sawchuck and: Bower. ny males a a oe more = a eat te at leat ix weeks.” bookmakers called - a a oe ea track. i | Chuvalo nursed an inch- : vulnerable at me, inning , os Tuesday to decide what to do| 'y poured money on two} : The Division of Physical Education has scheduled an in | Are Becoming four, losing four and tying one. | a ae ae ia oe | about e huge betting coup that loutsiders which had no chance. souiky Ser a ed nes formal supper meeting at the Islander Motor Lodge, today | . . That’s not particularly im-| vad oe Were. sent lthreatens to cost them millions ‘Then they made isolated bets him quite a bit during the fight at 6:30 p.m. for recreation and minor hockey officials from | Pool Experts pressive when Hawks’ record on "Yo set Carl Brewer to of dollars. 6 coupling the four other ruhners |‘ ready now to take om prcrnges ep. a R.C.A.F. and several of the more | ithe road is considered — nine | | , Some already have made) = forecast—a oe Zo — YOU /eny British heavyweight—after centres. 4 TORONTO (CP) — “re |wins and one loss in 10 games. their decision. They won't ave to name the first and sec- i sst,”’ Chav. The purpose of thie meeting {s to discuss the provincial putting pousiars atc an oe Then there’s the possibility | CURLING DRAW up. J jond dog : = raseadi ee. minor hockey playdowns, with respect ‘to classification’ (rural pool halls . . . or rather, in |Bobby Hall, Hawks’ brilliant | Wa doloddae ie: today" All the big London handbooks | Buckwheat ran first at 2-1 and and'urban), units of competition, house league teams, registra- | the billiard academies now |goal-getter, may miss the game. ate eanitaie a c aa have been crying since June 90, |Handsome Lass second at 94. | tion, eligibility. clarification, and other ‘rules and regulations, | that the fair sex has moved |because of a muscle spasm-in Ab e} ow 1964, when a 37-year-old junk But the tote paid $2,765.23 for | governing play: i. the back. iF uD. dealer named John Turner. suc- |28 cents—9,876 to 1—on the fore- | _ Women have made the | The Rangers can't expect aj’ PM | By cessfully rigged the tote -parl- |cast. These were the odds : : f snooker scene._The—Canadian—_-cakewalk_in—Detroit_either. The 5. rertpom H peo bell an, E. -imutuel odds at an obscure Lon- | which Turner claimed from off- = Billard League, which claims |Red Wings have won their last Vhs 2 SaRtOPUR” Stead, don greyhound track to pay |course bookies with whom he uc S er S to be the first professional jfour games after harvesting |) “a et eet ee Nes odds of roughly 10,000 to 1 on a had backed the combination. i snooker league in Canada with |only three wins in their first 15./"> 5!™mmons. six-dog race. eight men's teams, is hoping | to have a women’s division in |WILL NEED LUCK Against these Chicago and! Ice 2 — L. Wellner, S. Beaton, D. MacKay, G. Jenkins vs T. Whitlock, M. Wigginton, ‘E. Aus- The tears flowed still: faster | Monday when a high court judge ruled that Turner's action ‘DART RESULTS Down PV] [ operation within a month. } \¢j : a ; C ub At the Golden Cue Academy | Detroit gr hoc a ee es ee Trowel Kosbae was legal — afe remarked in The following is a summary | : in suburban Scarborough |Rengers ely will ne A oe H ie ner i. Ht. Sh passing that he had merely used of week's play in the Inter Club) The line of Billy. Weatherbie,) 2... ecxgueom| Monday’ night, two women |luck ae well as Francie, to say man. BY ene eae the methods bookies themselves |Dart League: Gary Cudmore and Alan Flood y,\~ ‘| members of the league |Bothing of the law of averages. isa ae Gow Whitlock, J. usually apply to rig the market | Legion “B” at Brace “‘A"’ 4-1; | proved just too hot for the Pro- | showed the sirls can renk {70 New Yorkers. hove won ane /Mact eas, Gr Welsh. j in their own favor. Brace ““B" at Sportsman 0-4; WE GUARANTEE vincial Vocational Institute to ~~ with the best in this tradi- |of their last 10 games, two wie ce 4 — J. Cameron, T. White, | CARL BREWER | Turner says his personal win- |Sgts. Mess at Legion ‘‘A’ 0.5; ) handle and led St. Dunstan's| tionally male sport. their last 14. |B. Stead, B. Simmons vs F.. Mac- o nings should run to $40,000. The Fire Hall at CLA 3-2. | DEPENDABLE DELIVERIES OF High School to a lopsided 10-1, hi POWERED BANK SHOT For the game tonight against Millan, R. Goss, B. MacLellan, : "et bdokies’ own estimate of the to- STANDINGS victory over PVI in a regular| * Gisele Maurice, 18, popped |Boston, coach Toe Blake of Ca- |B. Patterson. : tal pay out ranges from $14,- TEAM pwtp TJEXACO FUEL CHIEF _ Junior League Hockey game| ” a bank shot. into the corner |Dadiens will have to drop one | Ice 5 — H. Peters, J. Hughes, | 000,000 to $28,000,000. /Sportsman — 2015 5 30) Home Heating Oil : played last evening at the eet tard hh to make (Player. The limit now, since T. Burke, F. Lewis vs W. Mac- | - Legion .““A 2014 6 28 L 9 Charlottetown Forum. | your teeth rattle. She re- |Dec. 1, is 16 plus two ‘goalies. | Laine, K. MacInnis, B. MacDon- : WON’T PAY Brace ‘‘A" _ 20.12 8 24) warmti without worry all winter long® Weatherbie tallied once in © peated. the performance just |Blake has 17, not including de- ,ald, D.. Livingstone: : 8 Joe Corall, one of the big Lon- CLA 205-9 11 18) Deliveries right on schedule so you each of the periods for‘a hat| © to show it was no accident, _|fenceman J. C. Tremblay, who 8.30 p.m. | don bett!ng shop operators, Brace “B" 20/9 11 18 can newer run short. Fuel Chist ie the ! trick while Alan Flood had two, | "Mrs. Georgina Krachan, 58 Suffered @ check fractere Nov.| Ice 1 — D.. O'Rourke, B. Mac- said: “We will not pay a Legion "B 20 8 12 16) summing, and protective te your heat- tallies and Cudmore one. Single and grandmother of five (27 and may be missing another |Gregor, R. Pigott, P. Tanton vs penny.” ‘ Sgts. Mess 20 7:18 14; 114 equipment. Call we tor Texace goal scorers for the Saints were pocketed“ few more to show \couple of weeks or so. |D. Cameron, F: Cox, L. Burke, Another~ said: ~‘Persora lly, 'Firehall 20 6-14-12 -Buel Chief today! MacDonald and Flynn en Bill | Gisele waen't unique. | Tremblay worked out for the F. Callaghan. I'd rather go out of business | Schedule for December oth. ° - ‘ ; sveuna had two markers for the| Scotty Krachan, president ‘first time: since his injury when Ice 2.— E.F. Acorn, Eric Gil- than pay a penny to anyone ihe: ena Sprwtiinnae teak 3.:|Dial John Reed, injured by a blis-| © of the billiard league, says \he joined his mates yesterday |lespie, P. Perry, H. Crockett vs ea eres: at Brace “A” Brace “B" at aan Flood’ élap shot early in| gost the women “will really sur- but engaged only in skating. (Dr. C. Gallant, §. Lavers, H. | Under Britain’s 1845 Gaming Finan ore a g p | *9 | Dick Duff, laid up a week ago |Edwards, M. MacFadyen. Act, bookmakers and backers NOTE: High Single — nary 477 312 the match held the Saints at bay, forthe first stanza but con. | tinuous errors on the part of the, prise you. ; “They take a little longer to injury at a iwith a shoulder jpractice session, is ready agai Ice 3 — A. Llewellyn, W. Rodd, M. White, B. Dickson vs M. Bell, K. Dalziel, G. Trainor, D. Kil- Carl Brewer ,who shocked the @Fe under no obligation to settle Shama - CLA 138. ; ‘their debts. joie Reon at a techie at | But all betting shop operators | NEED WIND OR MUSCLE PVI defense in the second per-, do, watch out. They're (and likely will play. J . iod caused the roof to fall in. | deadly.” Sake said he won't name the | patrick. the season will be on Prince (Dave to go before magistrates, About 70 per cent of the Ch'town Petroleum Iee 4 — G. Dillon, K. Jenkins, faward Island January 6th, |oDCe 4 year to renew their I+ worid's 1,500,000 fishing boats Products Ltd. The Saints had led 3-0 at the | end of the first on goals by Weatherbie, Cudmore and: Flood | but Steele gave his second and) third lines a majority of the ioe themselves more than adequate- ly, pouring in five markers. ~ BOWLING Spurred on by Perry, King, Gregory and Doyle for the se- cond week in a row, the New of penalties with referees Don Method team took over top spot | whalen and Grant Crockett call- from Humpty-Dumpty in Holy ing only sit infractions. Name League play. All four! mentioned players came up SUMMARY #ein with a rousing 600 or bet-; First Period 1. SDHS, Weat- ter. Defeating Henderson and herbie (Flood, Lidstone) 8.20; Cudmore entry five points to|2. SDHS, Cudmore (Flood, Wea- mone. Geo. Doucette rolled High /therbie) 14.44; 3. SDHS, Flood ALAN FLOOD | PVI ‘scored their only marker ‘of the match at the 10:16 point in the second period but fine jwork on the part of goalie | Jelley squashed any other scor- \ing threats that |Play was generally {second and third both clubs missed some sterling ic mounted. ances around the others nets, |Southpaw Sandy Koufax of Los 'strikeouts, 82. The game was relatively free | Sandy Koufax | | ‘ | sme Takes All Honors | periods and/ | CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) —/most games with 10 or more Angeles Dodgers led the Na-| Marichal was the leader in tional League in eight pitching | shutouts with 10, two more than \categories in 1965. |Koufax. Don Drysdale of Los This was confirmed Tuesday |Angeles started the most games | pitching averages by the Na- 270. Ted Abernathy of Chicago \Zonal League service bureau. [Cubs appeared in the most Koufax compiled a 2.0¢/games,-- 84, setting a_-major learned run cverage last season. |league record. Larry Jackson, Juan Marichal of San Francisco another Cubs’ righthander, al- } lean the release of official 42, and yielded the most hits, ” F. Dillon, D. Mosher vs Dr. W. MacDonald, C. Campbell, F. Burke, K. ; Ice 5 A. Smith, L. Johnsto D. Rogers, J. Pierce-vs J. Squarebriggs, M. Pursey, J. Keith, K. Doucette, AT MONTAGUE Montague Curling Club draw | for today, Dec. 8th: 7 p.m. | Ice 1 — K. MacDonald, D: 0’. Connor, R. Ferguson, J. Taylor | vs E. MacDonald, L. Sinclair, K. Suullivan, B. Maclaire. Ice 2 — P. Sinclair, M. Nichol- ;son, H. Galloway, E. Davis vs -wart,-0-: 9 p.m, Ice 1 — H- Moar, E. Cudmore, |D. McGowan, B. Smith, L. Ste- | Hinnigar: /7th and 8th in conjunction with |C¢Rces. the P.E.I. hockey school for | coaches and referees. This cuit about 120 helpers to _mono- clinic is sponsored by the De partment of Physical Fitness| and is slated to run January | 7th and 8th in Summerside, as it was held in Charlottetown | last year. » FORUM SKATING TODAY 2:00 -3:00 Pre-School Children (25e per family) Brewer, ace defenseman for Also ~ Maple ae ora the — Skating 4:00 - 5:30 p.m. lew seasons wi arriving by Adults 25c |plane January 6th. nb a FROM TAYLORS... THIS CHRISTMAS GIVE oe sy THE SWINGER ~- é Turner's method was to re- eaten st Ch’town e muscles. oe ill propelled by sails or gas Gt George St. JUST ARRIVED HUGE SHIPMENT ALLSTATE WINTER TIRES Triple 756 for Island Chév's and | ‘Weatherbie, McIntyre) 15.26. |i ante was second with 2.14 fole lowed the most runs, 126. | C. MacKinnon, B. MacKinnon vs s Gerard Arbing had High,Single |Penalties:: Mitchel 14.20 lowed by Vernon Law of Pitts | Milwaukee Braves’ Tony Clo |G. Kennedy, R. MacDonald, H. THE NEW 341 for week’s play to help| suis Portes: 4 aba Le burgh Pirates, 2.16, Jim Malo-|ninger and Pittsburgh's _ Bob | Robbins, H. Robbins. POLAR Humpty Dumpty stay in second ‘clair 714: 3. SDHS MacDonald | 2€¥: Cincinnati Reds, 254 and |Veale gave up the most bases; Ice 2 — Dr. P. Macintyre, P. OID © : spot. Joe Gallant led Macleans | a ‘nae. ¢ as “ines |Jim Bunning, Philadelphia Phil. |0? balls,-119 each and Bob Gib-| Warner, H. Matheson, B. Mac- LAND CAME $ LeClair) 7.34; 6. , Flynn \son of St. Louis allowed the Neil vs E. Shaw, A. MacGregor, RA : to victory with a 311 single. ; : ‘ (Irwin, Dunford) 9.15: 7. PVI, \lies 2.60. lies 2 34. J. MacNeil, E. Maclarre. FOR ONLY STANDINGS [Andrews 10:06: 8. SDHS Flood) Earned run averages are |mOst home runs. New Method 31% | Weatherbie (Cudmore ) compiled by multiplying earned Humpty Dumpty 31% |(Cudmore) 10.26: 9. SDHS, |Tuns by nine and dividing the (IE LP AN CSAS $ 95 McLeans and, Son 27% | Weatherbie (Cudmore). 12:31, |total by the number of innings | ere OE ; ’ Charlottetown Billiards 23 Penalties — Macintyre, 2:55; |Pitched, Said 19 Gallant 6:23: Squarebriggs 17% | 12:32; Affleck 19.54. Third Period SDHS, LeClair Island-Chev’s Henderson and Cudmore x |(MacKinnon) 3.26; 11. SDHS|strikeouts, complete games with | R Hockey Practice | Weathernic (Flood, Cudmore) |27, most batsmen faced 1,207 > ey jlow-priced POLAROED CAMERA. Bleck 150 x 14 TUBELESS RESERVE YOURS NOW--QUANTITIES ARE. LIMITED OTHER SIZES AT SIMILAR SAVINGS | 11.26. Pemaities Acorn 14.07. Only players listed to report for Juvenile practice Wednes- day, Dec. 8, 1965. All players | —_—en WEEN | The Dodger ace also led* in \games won with 26, winning percentage .765, a* record 362 | GIFT HIM WITH |and longest winning etreak, 11 | ‘games. He lost eight games. |KOUFAX SETS NEW MARK for the Sweaters SOMETHING TO WEAR! Speed Flex 24.99 WHAT A PERFECT GIFT! GUARANTEED 12. MONTHS listed must be dressed and rea-| The Western football all | By leading ja ERA forte Speed Shaver 17.88 i, = ly to go on the ice at 5.30 p.m. | star team shut out the East (fourth consecutive season, s LLS TTERIES A Players to dress in Room No. 2.| 35-0 at ‘Winnipeg in the fax ea league mark he} @ All wee! ALLSTATE BA seeekes 10.45 W. Birt, B. Foley, P. Stanley,! second me game nine (Shared with Grover Cleveland ‘ \ °s L. Brown; R. Younker; J. Dow-| years ago today — in 1956, |Alexander of Philadelphia Phil- © Benton ALLSTATE ANTIFREEZE ee a ee 2.49 % ling, J. Arsenault, B. Whitlock,| Led by Grey Cuup-winning |1ieS who led for three seasons @ Pullovers 7 : ; b B. Doherty, C. Campbell, J.| coach Pop Ivy of Edmonton, |Starting in 1915. ; ey “ei Hennessey, J. MacDougall, B.| the Westerners converted | In addition to the strikeout © Bulky Kris 3 : © 156 se es Turner, M. MacDonald, H. Mc-| five touchdowns against |mark, the Dodgers’ fireballing, | @ Cardigans ‘ - i mM’ 4 a Quaid, B. Newson, A. Acorn, T.|- Easterners coached by |lefthander.set two major league 1 KENT a Kitson, B. Steward, G. Ellis, K.| Hamilton's Jim Trimble in jcareer records. They were for BE: NR pee oe Ballem, J Reid, G. Claybourne. the game at Vancouver. most no-hit games, four, and. > ae se ss fas ——— - ee a oe re 1 : + ; Se tpa¥ ~ a “ pags. einen &sih . . gesagt 5 om ae A IO LEMMA: SL, tg A cs + iy ante en thug nt, athena, fl, Mh OE 2 ete KF ‘ Tt ere