Sif to the Aces and wih him out hy 4 se int i a z mainland. Ron MacArthur, had intimated he was not And so the edict went through without a dissenting voice. ALL THIS CAME to pass before a gentleman by the name Doherty took over the president's chair. Although Doherty no part whatever to play in this edict, he has been the tar- ior abuse ever since he took office. We hastened to add at Summerside sportswriters have never blamed Ivan. In stead they have repeatedly stated in their columns that merely carried out an order that was left on the table for Williams is happy with the Penguins and there never i ‘much stir raised over Doug’s playing with a capital city team. Aces has almost created a Charlottetowm Summerside war. certainly didn’t throw any oil on the troubled waters he signed with Parkdale and lined up against his former That was the cruelest blow of all. ~ THERE WERE MANY contradictory rumors going concerning Eustace. One was that he didn’t want to play with that he would gladly turn out with light. If the Jater was corréct, then with Parkdale, a card that bound him son unless Frizzell was willing to let him if Sandy would agree or not to let Reeves he did the leacue rule was still there stating Eustace couldn't perform with Summerside. It would have to be changed Reeves to go with the Aces, and Frizzell would have to agree. \ However, Frizzell isn’t going to get any defensive -help Reeves. Over the weekend the niftv rearguard. announced ad he was hanging up his skates for the season and taking over - the coachine job of a Freetown team. He will be no help to the Royals in that position but then he will not injure the Aces’ en a ee Se een. oe Se of the year. We refer to Ron Ma right as a beaver with his Christmas photography. Ron’s case by the league late in November and allow the great defenceman to turn out with boys. year but right was ihdifferent about playing earlier this ious..to. get hack into action. He will WE SEE BY an item in Toronto’s Dally Star that Harold Ballem, Oshawa and Toronto bowling ace; advocates 10-pin bow- Hing as an aid to boosting a five-pin average. ee Harold was warned when he took up 10 pins that his five pin ‘aged over 266 for three games. Harold is the son of Mrs. J. W. Ballem, Charlottetown and @ brother of Art Ballem, Charlottetown and Charlie Ballem, Summerside, both well known in Island sporting circles. AT 38, Milwaukee's Warren Spahn is showing no signs of age. The great lefthander has led the National League in 1959 in the following: complete games (21), innings pitched (292), hat- ters faced (1,203) and has tied Sad Sam Jones and Lew Burdette for the most victories (21). This was the 10th time that Warren had won at least 20 games. His lifetime record now stands at 267 victories and 172 “T's no wonder the New York Yankees would like to have this fellow on their staff. Who wovldn’t? PRESIDENT of the Island Senior League, Ivan Doherty, has announced that Maurice Goodwin has been added to the league’s refereeing staff. Goodwin has already worked three games. _ AS WE WERE GOING to press, word came through: that the Island League agreed to rescind the ban on both Eustace Reeves and Doug Williams at a special meeting yesterday. This would allow either to play with the P.E.I. Aces provided other teams involved, Perfection Penguins and Parkdale Royals, agree to re- lease them. We understand some hot dickering was going on as the Meeting’s decision was made known. Reeves, has signed a card: and has played several games for the Royals, but he quit the leasue Sunday ss a time to coaching in a rural league. Wiliams is signed with Penguins and it is not thou volved in the dickering. apace Emery-Baldwin Bout Sanctioned QUEBEC (CP)—Gene Letour- feau, national commissioner of the Canadian Boxing Federation, said Tuesday the federation is' willing to sanction a bout between Burke Emery of Sherbrooke, Que., and Gordie Baldwin of Tor- onto for the vacant Canadian light-heavyweight title. Letourneau said the fight would probably be held in Sherbrooke sometime after the christmas hol- days. Emery is the CBF’s No. 1_con- tender for the crown vacated last month by Yvon Durelle of Baie Ste. Anne, N.B. Baldwin is rated second. ; Baldwin was rated fifth in the heavyweight class in the last list of ratings issued by the federa- tion Oct. 12. But, Letourneau said Tuesday the federation decided to rate Baldwin second in the light- heavyweight division after receiv- ing a letter from his manager, L. Sullivan of Toronto, say- ing Baldwin had sweated down to 271 pounds and was “‘in terrific cent fights and ts a good pros- pect, said Letourneau. The national commissioner said the federation has been in touch with Al Bachman of New York, Emery’s manager, about promot- ing the proposed fight but noth- ing is definite yet. Bachman also manages Robert Cleroux of Mont- real. No. 1 contender in the heavyweight division. Letourneau said it fs risky to stage the championship fight dur- ing the holiday season and added it would probably be held in Jan- uary or early February. He said Sherbrooke is the logl- cal place for the bout because it is Emery's home town. Baldwin's manager said in his letter to the federation that his fighter was training hard and eager to meet Emery. MEMBERSHIP DOWN NEW YORK (AP) — Member- ship in the U.S. Communist party is shrinking. A party official es- z Phil Goyette, eluding Detroit defenceman Warren Godfrey (5), slides the puck past Terry Sawchuck in a National Hockey | 7 es Fey Sa SCORE vz League game in Montreal. It was all in vain. Detroit defeat- = | ed Montreal 3-2. (CP Wirephoto) Perfection Penguins, behind the Senior Hockey League game at the Charlottetown Sports Arena. back on top of the heap. GP WL T Pct. Penguins 9 6 3 8 .667 Royals $422 2 Aces 13:33 4 Saints 4@31 12 Doyle’s performance between the pipes was magnificent. Time and again he fended off the hungary Summerside crew, sev- eral occasions being on break- STRETCH | ,aways. The only goal to get past the Penguin netminder was @- screen shot which he never saw. The first period went scorelesé lalthough both teams had golden opportunities of making the red light blink. Three penalties were Merrill Pineau dentéd the twins at the 58 second mark of the sandwich session to put the {Penguins in front and scored | again five seconds later to make |the score read 20 for the Per- ACES SCORE Hogan’s Aces finally got on) “One of the most popular driv- ers in the Maritimes is Orwell Morrissey, a native of this pro- vince who has been racing his stable of horses at Saint John Raceway. for the last several seasons, and is one of the top drivers at the track. Orwell made a trip to Ottawa a week ago and has returned with Miss Phil Mite, by Volomite 2.03- %, Hollyrood Phyllis, p, 2.00%. Last year, as a four-year-old, Scotch Philip took a record of 2.15 1-5, but this past season he has been going great guns and now sports a tab of 2.06 — a real- ly excellent mark for a half-mile track. As will be noted, his breeding is exceptional. His sire, Scotland, by Peter Scott 2.05, dam Roya McKinney 2.07%2, is one of the world’s great sires. At the end of 1958, he was credited with 244 trotters in the list, 11 of them with records in 2.00 or better, and 67 with records of 2.05 or better; he also has 192 pacers with records of 2.25 or bet- ter, 10 in 2.00 or better, and 61 in 2.05 or better. His sons and daughters are carrying on like the sire, in producing top trotters and pacers. Miss Phil Mite is by Volomite 2.03%, by Peter Volo, 4, 2.02. Volomite is the world’s greatest sire, with 305 trotters in the list, trotters have taken records of 2.00 or better, and 100 of them have trotted in 2.05 or better. He fas 22 pacers with records in 2.00 or better, and 114 in 2.05 or better. From the above, it will be seen that Orwell has secured for a , -| patron ‘of his stable a tremen- dously well bred horse that has been brought along carefully and has shown this year that he pos- Sesses great speed, as you will note by the record he has tak- en. Last year he was big and still growing, and found some difficulty in finding his gait, but this \year he has settled right down to business and has shown a brand of speed that should make him a 2.00 horse on a mile track. Orwell is, of course, as one ‘would expect, greatly pleased with his purchase, and we are confi- dent that with his careful man- agement Scotch Phillip will be one of the great race horses in the Maritimes in 1960. TWO NEW COLTS Richard Jabalee, North Syd- ney, has added two mew colts to his stable. Both were purchased at the Delaware Sale,.Ohio, re- cently. They are - Killarney Boy being trained by Denny Moore in Kenton, Ohio. This past summer, Mr. Moore trained and raced the two - year- old Irish Frisco, owned by Mr. Jabalee, and gave him a record of 2.12. The Jabalee Stable in Cape Breton is being wintered by Phil Pinkney at the Northside track. It includes: Wing Com- mander, Glen Allen Top Brass, Ronald Hanover, Grand Miss Volo and Arabian Night. shape.” timates that mem-| The above information is taken ~ bers total no more than 10,000.|/from Aubrey Keizer’s column in The all-time high was about 75,-| a recent edition of the Cape Bre- Baldwin has looked sharp in re- 000, reached im 1938-1030, he said./ tom Post, and we may add that ” a the very promising pacer, Scotch | Philip, by Scotland 1.59%, dam! and 304 pacers. Eleven of the and Scott's Frisco, and they are eg Mr. saa has been a great sup-| porter harness racing in the! Maritimes for many years, andj the writer, when identified with) ithe Charlottetown track, always | lappreciated the support given iby the Richard Jabalee stable during Old Home Week. A recent release by the United States Trotting Association dat- ed December 12 from Columbus, Ohio, has the following: “Bye Bye Byrd, the busy four - year- old pacer which established both speed and money marks during) the season, is The ‘“‘Harness)| Horse Of The Year.” “The results of the nation-wide vote by harness writers show that Bye Bye Byrd received 4% votes for first place, more than) the combined total of all others | nominated. Adios Butler,.the three - year - old winner of pac-/| ing’s Triple Crown, was second with 14 votes for top spot, and Bullet Hanover, fastest two - year- old ever, rounded out a one-two- three sweep by the sidewheel- ers with the third place finish. “Votes from 87 harness writ- ers from coast - to - coast were tabulated on a 10-5-3-2-1. basis (for first, second, third, fourth and fifth) with Bye Bye Byrd| compiling 566 points. French in- vader,-Jamin, despite only five starts in the United States, tied with Hambletonian winner, Dill- er Hanover, for fourth place. Each received 184 points. “Bye Bye Byrd, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Rex C. Larkin, of Chi- cago, raked in $199,847, and re- troactive bonus and other pay- ments, that will make him the first harness horse ever to top $200,000 in one season. Among his seven performances in 2.00 or better Was a 1.57 4-5 stepped at Roosevelt Raceway - the fast- est time in history for a stan- dardbred on a half-mile track. “The vote also gave Canadian driver, Clint Hodgins, a corner on driving honors, as he guided both Bye Bye Byrd and Adios Butler. j “In divisional voting, most win- ners far outdistanced their rivals. Blaze Hanover, property of the S.A, Camp Farms, Shafter, Cal., was tagged “‘Two-Year-Old Trot- ter Of The Year” “and the speedy Bullet “Hanover, owned by L. B. Sheppard, Hanover, Pa., and T. W. Murphy, New York City, was a solid choice in that age’s pacing class. Diller Hop. over, fram the Hall Stables Watertown, New York, buried his his three-year-old, pacer in the history of the sport and owned by Paige West, of Snow Hill, Maryland, and Angelo Pellillo, of Scarsdale, New York, was offer- ed little threat in the pacing cat- ory. “Bye Bye Byrd far outclassed his fellows for ‘‘Aged Pacer’’ hon- ors, but the French trotter, Ja- min, and Senator Frost duelled closely for the ‘‘Aged Trotter” crown. The tri-color bearer, Ja- min, owned by Mme. L. Olry Roederer of Paris, finally won it by a 35-28 vote count.” ONE OF LAST’ Ed Keller, who has been man- ager gham Park at Sa- lem, ‘i which was one last tracks in Ameri- ca to season, |Mann. Arsenault closed the scor- Penguins Move In Front; Trounce Hogan's Aces 5-1 the board, with Grant Grady firing the wafer past Doyle in the dying minutes of the middle stanza. The first half of the third period was scoreless but at the 11.08 mark Apps Arsenault, the lea- gue’s scoring leader, made the score read 31 for the Penguins. Minutes later teammate Billy Mulligan put one behind Thane ing at the 15:04 mark making the final score read 51, thus avenging two recent losses to the Summerside crew. SUMMARY alties:- Leahy 3:36; Coyle 13:2; Harris 14:43. Second Peried:- Penguins Pineau (unassisted) -58; 2. Pen- guins- Pineau (Kane, Arsenault) 6:31; 3. Aces- G. Grady (B.} Grady, C. Grady) 18:29. Penal- | ties:- MacLeod 9:49; G. Grady | 15:27; C. Grady -18:61. Third Period:- 4 Penguins Arsenault (Kane, Pineau) 11:08; 5. Penguins- B. Mulligan (Car- ver) 13:50; 6. Penguins- Arsen- ault (Kane, Longaphie). 15:4. First Period:- No scoring. Pen- Penalties- Hennessey. Moncton Jr. Beavers MONCTON (CP)— Moncton Junior. Beavers, the rave of the local hockey scene, are looking for competition and to back their demands they have an ll-game Ellis, Armstrong Battle Tonight CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) — Hard- hitting Rudy Ellis will try to | make it 10 straight wins and pic- ture boxer Ace Armstrong will be trying to start a new string of his own when the two meet tonight in a scheduled 10-round bout. Ellis. 22-year-old Chicago mid- dleweight, will be facing perhaps the most skilled ringman he has encountered in Armstrong, 27, of Elizabeth, N_J. Ellis is ranked 10th in the divi- sion, on the strength of his re- cent wins over Rory Calhoun and Bobby Boyd. He has a 17-2-1 re- cord that includes 10 KO's. Armstrong, ranked 8th by the NBA, is 16-1-1. He has: one knock- out to his credit. Edwin Ak \quist Recieves Bids To Co-Promote Bout GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP)— Edwin Ahlquist, the adviser of heavyweight champion Ingemar Johansson, said Tuesday he has received offers to co-promote the Johansson - Floyd Patterson title fight in New York, but has not made any commitment. “Reports hete that I am ready to step in as promoter are very premature, however,” said Ahi- quist. ““‘The situation is at pres- ent much too unclear to talk of any arrang t now.” Swedish press reports had Ahl- quist,. Sweden's leading promo- ter, ready to step into the New Y promotional picture. On the .eve of his journey to London to discuss a possible Jo- hansson title defence against British champion Henry Cooper, Ahiquist said: HAD OFFERS “It is true that Y have had offers from some Swedish-Amer- icans to take over the arrange- ments for a New York return fight, that is of course, together with an American eo - promoter as I cannot myself stand as sole promoter.” Ahiquist, who talked Monday with visiting James Farley Jr., a member of the New York Ath- letic Commission, indicated ‘he might get commission support “I think the commission has appreciated my steadfast refusal to become | with the former reigning circles in the fight game despite handsome of- ferings,”” said Ahiquist. Ahiquist again said Johansson is determined to give Patterson the first chance at the title. Jo jansson dethroned Patterson on a third round technical knockout in New York last June 26. At said he was going to apply to the with| New York commission to have 's purse for that June’ . \Today’s Minor | Aitbies 271 putouts and 519. assists. In 1958, Ernie made 32 errors and finished with a .960 average. The officia: statistics also pointed up the importance of Jim Davenport, a third baseman, to the San Francisco defence. Dav- enport led his position with a 978 making only seven errors. the line - up because of a knee injury last September was one of the big reasons the Giants folded in the stretch. Jim played in 121 games. Hockey Schedule Only hockey. scheduled for minor leaguers at Sparts Arena today is a juvenile tilt between and Vics at 69 pm sharp. Referees will -be John Davis, ‘Sr.), and Roy White ‘Summerside Minor Hockey | WEDNESDAY DEC. 16 : 6:9 - 7:00 p.m. No. 1 Pee Wee vs. No. 5 Pee Wee. | 7-4 - 2:00 p.m. No. 1 Bantam vs. No. 4 Bantam 8-9: pm. No. 2 Bantam vs Neo. 3 Bantam | 9099 - 19:09 pm No. 1 Mid | gets vs. No. 2 Midget 10-00 - 11:00 p.m. Juvenile prac- Sure to be welcome at Christmas . . . nylons for every lady on your git list. And this season, the choice is bigger, more soul than ever . /. from daytime hosiery to evening sheers to new, textured stockings ‘ . . in all styles, al! colors. Buy ‘em by the for generous giving, and savings, too! Ladies’ nylon hose, 42 gauge—30 denier $1.2! Ladies’ nylon hose, 45 gauge—30 denier. ............:. $ Ladies’ nylon hose, 51 gauge—30 denier ................ $1.55 Ladies’ nylon hose, 51 gauge—15 denier ............... $1.29) Ladies’ Lisle hose ......... . $1.56 Ladies’ rayon hose . $1.35 Ladies’ wool hose $1.95 .. $1.55—$1.25—980. Ladies’ substandard hose, 51 _gauge—15 denier and 4& gauge—30 denier Price .796 4 Ladies’ nylon seamfree hose All nicely boxed at no extra charge. unbeaten streak, including two Don Ramsay, manager of the smooth working Beavers, said Tuesday night that he’s issuing a challenge to any Senior, Juf- jor or Intermediate or college team in the Maritimes to home- “The team thrives on compet- ition” said Ramsay,” “they know the unbeaten skein can't last forever, but I'm sure they can give any Maritime club a chase for their money.” Ramsay says he hopes to ar- range games with teams in the Nova Scotia Senior Hockey Lea- gue; Cape Breton Senior Hockey League and Maritime Interco!- The Beavers, who have grad- uated to the Junior ranks this season after capturing the Mari- time Juvenile title last year, own a. 60-1 mark in the Monc- ton Industrial Hockey League, which operates with five clubs- Beavers and four Intermediate- type teams. 26 fight released. It has been held in escrow by the commission to guarantee Patterson the return. Both Johansson and Ahiquist will ‘visit British promoter Jack in London today. Solomons said in London he Is going to make Johanssn a “firm offer’ he wouldn't say how much, but it was believed to be about $200, for a May 31 meeting with Cooper at Lon- 63 decision over Fredericton Sen- don’s outdoor Wembley Stadium.’ Curling Draw | The following is the curling ‘aw for Wednesday night at the 2rlottetewn Club: 7 P.M. Ice 1 Open | Ice 2 — Game @1 Fina! [Sec- tion C) | Ice 3 — Game % Final (Sec- j tion “B™) | Tee 4 — Game 31 Final (Sec- tion-A Ice 5 — Dr MacDonald. J. Squarebriggs, A. Burke, Dr. Gel- lant, vs. Bill MacNeill. F. Han- jsen, J.S. MacDonald, J. Burden } irotate 8.38 P.M. | ‘Tee 1 — Open Ice 2 — Ken MacDonald, Woody Farrell, N. Kelly. Major Wad- j dell, vs. T. Mitton, T. White, John | MacDonald, Barry Moore. | Ice 3 — L. Turner, Dr. Kelly, R. Shaw. Terry Goodyear. vs. H.C. Trainor, W. Rodd, Dr. Hig- Ice 4 — Reg. Boyne. OK Pres- by, B. Main, S. Eagles, vs. Mel Jenkins, J.E. Burnett, F. Steph ens, H. Hosford 1 Johansson knocked out Cooper lin @ European title fight 2% years ago. — | Community Credit Union Open Membership @ Savings & Loans Insured |} @ Loans at Low Interest Office Open Daily Russ Hunter, Treasurer '} Smaiimgn Bld 2nd Floor ; SUMMERSIDE | CLOVER CLUB DANCE for holiday season! Information now posted on ‘bulletin board in Legion Home. HOW YOUR HELPS BREAK DOWN FATS IN THE DIGESTIVE TRACT _ @chy, nervous and need a laxative, LIVER BILE Carter's Little Liver Pills’ exclusive formula of vegetable ingredients re-. lieves irregularity gently and effee- tively, At the same time, it actually improves the flow of liver bile needed to break down fats in your digestive tract. So when you feel sluggish, head- \ take Carter's Little Liver Pills. Remember, Carter's not - ~ lieve irregularity, but actua a prove the flow of liver bile. 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