ee ELE OEE EET * Pe y ees, Marjorie Hill, 18-year-old brunette majorette, has been MISS ALOUETTE es By THE CANADIAN PRESS i : E g i bY i ® i 25 ‘ret ey g o2 E i off i REREE 28 x z a Ht bE [ f FF THIRD SETBACK In other . Montreal Detroit battled to a 1-1 tie Sa ‘|day and then the Red handed the Rangers their third straight setback with a 42 tri- umph at Detroit Sunday. Veteran Bert Olmstead who seored only 10 goals all last sea- son was the key man in Tor- onto’s weekend sweep. i real at the end of the 1957-58. sea- son to add experience to the Leafs lineup, scored twice Satur- day and insured Toronto’s win Sunday night when he outgunned Hawks’ netminder Glenn Hall for the third goal with 36 seconds remaining in the game. George Armstrong, Frank Ma- hovlich, Tim Horton and Bob Baun scored other Toronto goals/ Saturday night while Tod Sloan, ! Bobby Hull and rookie Stan Mi- ures 34-25-36. A high school a ue — a — will represent mamed Miss Alouette, 1959. Five jouettes in Miss Grey Cup |kita tallied for Chicago. Baun’ Rest, Give inches tall, che man | contest ot Torduto, Nov. SU.” [oi senna ba ede ie iNHL games. SPORT BY NORMAN At Chicago Sunday, Bob Pul- \ford and Ted Hampson were the |other Leafmarksmen. Hamp- son’s goal was his first in big jtime competition. Ron Murphy scored for Chicago. POWERHOUSE FOR BRUINS ECHOES MACDONALD It's surprising how many sports |tham bad ones over the long hati. writers consider what happens | But in the World Series it depends in a World. Series as a positive index of the contending clubs’ strengths and weaknesses. Act- ually the series is just a glor- ified and much publicized edition of any one series of games throughout .the season. If it is true that one swallow doesn’t make a summer, or a hangover, then surely it is equally true that a World Series doesn’t prove too much in the department of who’s better than who. For example, take Early Wynn. He won 22 games. But he lost— was it a dozen? He was a con- quering’ hero 22 times, and a frustrated flinger going down to ignominious defeat a dozen tines, if that is the correct num- ber. What shall we call him, hero or goat? We have to call him goat because he lost two games | in the world series. How can anyone assess the | sbility of a team which took part in 154 games during the season, by what they do in six games af- ter the season is finished. Both Los Angeles and Chicago had their good and bad series during the long haul. It happened that * the Dodgers. riding the crest of a sensational finish in their own league. used that momentum to | beat the Sox. If another World | Series were started isn’t it about half wav between the realms of possibility and probability that Wynn would a hero. and Sherry, yes, even Sherry, would be a goat. We'll grant you there is more | tomorrow, | 'to a fairly large extent whether they are blowing hot or cold dur- ing that particular time. Horvath, Bucyk and_Stasiuk 'were the whole show for Boston. Horvath picked up two goals and one assist Saturday and followed up with one goal and three more ‘assists in the big win over the Stamps Keep ‘Alive: | Upset Eskies 41-23 By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Calgary Stampeders kept alive, their playoff hopes Monday by upsetting Edmonton Eskimos | 41-23 and moving into a third-| place tie with British Columbia} | Lions in the Western Interprovin-| }cial Football Union. The victory at Edmonton fol-| lowed a Stampeder massacre of | Saskatchewan Roughriders 53-13 at Calgary Saturday. . | In the other Monday game, the! — - running Winnipeg Blue mbers scored a 27-14 triumph over the Roughriders at Regina At Vancouver Saturday, the s®c- ond-place Esks mauled the Lions 38-14. ’ i ' j PASSES CLICK At Edmonton, Stamp halfback |Gene Filipski scored two touch- downs on passes from quarter- back Joe Kapp and rolled 4, | yards for a third. Four of quarterback Jackie Olmstead, obtained from Mont-|° Parker scored a touchdown, a field goal and two converts and halfback Joe-Bob Smith and full- back Normie Kwong also counted touchdowns for Edmonton. Meanwhile, at Regina the Bombers’ win kept them four points ahead of Eskimos while Saskatchewan absorbed its 12th loss in 13 games. LEWIS SPARKLES Halfback Leo Lewis scored two of Bombers touchdowns | while new end Ferrell Funston, a stand- out in the game, and end Ernie Pitts accounted for the others. The touchdown by Pitts was his 14th on a pass this. year to tie a league record set by Saskateh- 'ewan's Jack Hill last year. Quarterback Jim Van Pelt threw four touchdown passes, kicked three oe but was wide on his fourth try. Fullback Ken Carpenter and end Ron Dundas tallied the Rider at stake in the World Series, and | Parker's passes were intercepted | touchdowns, both of them con- what writers call “money” play- | by Calgary and three of the inter-| verted by Reg Whitehouse. ers may play over their heads, and others disport themselves in ceptions set up touchdown drives. | Kapp and fullback Earl Luns-| Van Pelt completed 11 of 21 passes for 254 yards and Bomb- \a manner below par, but even . ford also scored Calgary touch-|ers rushed for 116, Roughriders this generalization is not fool- proof, because a hero in - World Series is often a goaf in another--take Hodges for on ex- |. ample. The Dodgers showed marked superiority in their 93 victory, but the White Sox weren’t exactly bad in that 11-0 affair. If | Aparicio had got the ball that | skipped “over his gieve, who) knows how it all would have end- | ed? As Al Lopez said, it was! just one of those things, and he wasn’t referring to the “thing” in | feft field at the Los Angelgs Col- | tseum i Teams have. poor series and good series. If they’re a good team, they have jnore good series T Mounties Crush Axemen 107-3 SACKVILLE, N. B. (CP)— Mount Allison Mounties gained more than 1,000 yards runging and passing Saturday in whip- ping Acadia Axemen 107-3 to set a Maritime Intercollegiate Foot- ball Union record. Scoring nearly two points a minute the Mounties picked up an impressive 591 yards along the ground and another 431 im the air. : Available records indicate that Mount Allison is the first Mari- time team to reach the century mark. They broke their own league record of 9% points in a game. They beat St. Thomas Tommies 86-0 in 1957. “Pete Smallman from Montreal led the onslaught with four touch- downs. Bruce Macfarlane and Bob .Windsor picked up three TDs eath and quarterback Mi- jan Zipay counted’ a pair. Ricky Black and Bob,McLaren added single touchdowns and Harry Haukkala scored one and booted li converts. | downs. Guard Doug Brown kicked led in first downs with 20 against one | two field goals and five converts.!16 for Bombers. RoundTableCops Rich Manhattan NEW YORK (‘AP)—The Kerr | Stable’s Round Table took com-| mand about an eighth of a mile! from home to capture the $53,200 Manhattan Handicap at Aqueduct | Saturday. The racing world’s big-| gest money winner was ridden by | Willie Shoemaker. | The Manhattan was a rugged) 15%-mile route and Round Table’s| time of 2:42 3-5 was listed as a track record. Middle Brothér ‘set’. the mark of 2:44 25 in winning the Lawrence Realization under 120 pounds Sept. 30. | Round Table won by a length) over Bald Eagle. who came up in| the stretch to take second by 1%; lengths over Coloneas* In winning his ninth race starts this season, Round Table | paid $5.10. $3.4@ and $3. Bald Eagle, ridden by Manuel Ycaza, returned $3.40 and $3.10. while Coloneast with P. J. Bailey up) was $6.90 to show. | JIVE MUSIC WINS | Guide, John Choquette, the horse was timed in 50 36 for 1 1-16 miles over a heavy tnack. Tony Graff paid $20.20 and $7.20 while Netego returned $2.60 to show. In Lexington, Ky., Hal Price Headley’s Rash Statement used a late rush to put dewn Patty's Son and win the $935,525 Alcibiades stakes, opening day feature at Keeneland. ' At Albany, Calif.. Mr. Eiffel came from behind to score a two- length victory in Golden Gate field’s $28,200 derby. Sailor’s Guide id tity nis Wins Jockey Cup TORONTO (CP) W— Sailor's the Australian horse cwned by Dr. ‘Leon Levy of Phil- adelphia and ridden by Howard Grant, Monday won the $17,000 | Jockey Club Cup at New Wood- bine. In Chicago, Russell A. Firestone| Sailor's Guide scored an easy Jr.’s Jive Music won the 33rd/ three three-length victory as he running of the $42,025 Hawthorne} ran the 1% miles in 2:09 1-5 over ae Maple Leafs, Boston Bruins Share First Place In NHL Habs. : Marcel Bonin got two of Mont- Bucyk tallied once and as-|real’s four goals with the others sisted once Saturday and then! going to Claude Provost and de pumped home two more goals|fenceman Tom Johnson. Bernice and added an assist Sunday.|Geoffrion had three assists. Stasiuk picked up a goal and! Goalers Jacques Plante of three assists Sunday to go with|Montreal and Terry Sawchuck of two assists he ‘hed Saturday. Pies took oe cae Seek pected | and Larry Leach got other Bruin ieee markers while Brian Cullen, John | If ond | Hanna and Ken Schinkle, with ef i, fz tallied for Rangers Satur-)| WATCHES And RINGS | Bruins broke Sunday's game . wide open in the third period WILLIAMS, McKenney rookie Aut Erick |} 137% George j se te a ae Pas Se ee a Fs ee oy ee ee ° - a % a a 6 . PERFE <I T PIP Ss ’ EE ee oe Ee REEEE i A poets pen eae TORONTO 7 brs. 05 mins. — Maritime Central Airways to Moncton leav- ing Charlottetown 400 p.m. Connect with TCA at Moncton—frequent First Class and Tourist Service to Toronio. Connections in -Halifax for TCA Service to Boston. Ask about big savings on family travel in Canada and to, the U. S. FLY NOW—PAY LATER, if you wish, on any flight in North America or overseas—minimum fare $100. WEATHER-WATCH RADAR FOR SMOOTH FLYING! a For information and reservations see Morton Dew Limited, 181. 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