mammal» SPORTS FRONT By NICK FILLMORE Heard About Town THERE ISN‘T MUCH on the local scene, to talk about today. In Illpick away at a few items that have been brought to my Jim Poulton, who has been out of action in the ring for the 1' because of an injury. is loving for some youngsters in the Charlottetown area to train as amateur I‘lxebl'eséé“Jug: thellighgr fboysfare better training mater- s eas er i ' - hegfflywdghb. nd ights for them than the ‘ y Mac'Millan potttd two goal< Saturdav night ar. - lei: won .an exhibition game from Tulsa 3-2. Ni:icMilla§0(s}ii:ss 3:25 feeling great:‘ but commerts he doesn't want to play in Inehhtén'éil’ltcali Hockey League, He says he would rather play coaching KaerPro mop where the players are younger and the ' There’s early talk of filming an Island lntcrmedi ‘ A’: Hockey League with two teams from Summerside. (iii: Junior, and t_wo from Charlottetown. possibly one Junior. With two Junior teams in an Island league fans could see a pretty goodbrand of hockey. The BaSilica Recreation Centre will announce its schedule next week‘for the coming winter months. Speaking briefly with program director ‘Spy' Ready. 1 would say City youn'lsters will have .a program available to them seldom found in any other Maritime area_ ‘ Olympic Preview A PREVIEW of what. can he expected in the 'l‘uki‘o Olympics was given at Los Angeles over the. weekend as United States track and field athletes broke tWo world recc-rds. equalled an- other and bettered the Olympic standard in nine other events. performances of the Americans indicated they once again lead the Olympic track and field onslaught. fol- lowed closely by the Soviet Union. Rex Cavrley bettercd the world mark in the 400-metre hurd- les With 491 Sunday. and Saturday Ralph Boston broke the listed world record of W feet 3‘; inches set by Russia's Igor Terovanesyan with a leap of 27 feet 41/4 inches in the broad Jump. Boston also had a leap of 27 feet 10'; indies but it was wind.aided, Thirty-year-old Mike Lz-rabec. a California school teacher. matched the, world record of 44.9 in the 400-metre dash. Gerry Lindgren of Spokane. Wash.. running the 10.000- metres for only the third time in his life. won it in the fast- est time by an American this year. . . The existing Olympic records bettered were in 100. 200 and 400-metre dashes. the 400-metre hurdles, shot. discus and ham- mer. pole vault and broad jump. OH The Cuff MONCTON CARDINALS will represent New Brunswick in this weekend's Maritime Juvenile championship baseball tour- nament in Charlottetown. The Cardinals. paced by the three- hit pitching of DENNIS DAN. defeated Fredericton I of F Vik- ing 4-2 in Monolon Sunday to win the lK‘Si-Of—lill‘ee series two games to one. Moncton won the opener 2-1 but lost the second game in Fredericton 0-6 . . . HANK SEIFRED. Summerside RJCAF. .aking a name for himself in Island and Maritime golf circles this summer with some fine scores in a ample of important tournaments. Seifred topped another tour- ney over the weekend with his 75-76—151 score in the Maritime meet for top amateur honors . _ . U ABERDEEN’S basketball Acadia Axemen play a schedule of 21 games this Treason: 10 of them at home. Among the teams from outside the Maritime Intercollegiate loop they will be playing (are CANISIUS COLLEGE, Buffalo: St. Bonaventure Indians, New York: Gainnon College, Erie, Pa CK R COLLEGE. Houl- ton. Maine: and Lorin: Air Force Base. Loring, Maine. The Axemem will be at St. Dunstans Jan. 22. The return game Will be played at Wolfville, Feb. 3 . . . PHIL DOIRON. _ Islanders for his skills with a hockey stick. has been tearing apart the New Brunswick baseball scene with a booming bat for the greater part of the season. Doiron. who won_ Just about every honor possible in the NB. league. blasted a 375-foot three- rim burner for MONCTON ACADIANS Sunday as they wli St. Stephen ‘t. Croix 13-6 to trail the provincial finals two to . games one 3 s i O Local Drivers drive “11819?” 099-2%” F- d $ 0 I. ‘LADY BIRD’ CAMPAIGNS "1e 1 '00 " wwsxuxorox «(in —Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson plans Officials of the Charlottetown ,Driiving Park levied $10.00 fines against two of the drivers "ar- ticipating ln Saturday night's. : race card at the local raceway. Stanley White was fined for interference and Walter Downc tle-stop campaign by any US. president‘s wife on her own. She will make the .be called the “Lady Bird." 1.682-mile : . 1 trip Oct. 6-9 aboard a train to ible of horses (eleven) and is around We‘l’rOVlncev any _SeV‘ a enteen entries eceived t from outside the Charlottetown Dour heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali right, shakes hands with challenger Sonny Liston after their formal signing for their title rematch Nov. 16 at the Boston Garden. I SIGN FOR TITLE H' The signing was witnessed by Herman Greenberg, center, chairman of the Massachusetts tFormer Ch'iown Horsemanl Doing Well On US. Track By JIM CULLEN Special Sports Feature Jack Quinn. a former resident of Charlottetown. P.E.I. been carving quite a name for himself in United States harness racing circles during the pas eleven years. Quinn was born and raised in Charlottetown. Jack was fourteen years old when he landed a job at the ,Charlottetown race track. Jack 5used to take care of horses i which were owned by A. B. Cut.- ‘cliffe and Harold Cudmore at the local raceway. He got fllS first: taste of driving in compet- ition when he teamed 3 Harold Cudmore owned entry to a win in the ice racing meets which were staged on the North River. Quinn left the Island when he was still too young to obtain a drivers licence on the Island and journeyed to Toronto where went to work training horses. Jack left Toronto and travelled to Maryland U.S.A. in 1953 to further his ambitions to be a horseman. Jack’s purse earn- a) W l logs in his first year on the New England 1: i re u it l$2,815. Last year his purse earn- ings were $53,117. With the suc- : cess he has been having and the horses he is scheduled to idrive Quinn has set his sights l at $100,000 for the 1964 season, -which is a tremendous increase lfor such a relatively short per- 1iod of time. paid $10.00 for an unsatisfactory ,BIG BREAK George W. Francis, of West- starts. Last year be exceeded that figure and recorded 63 wins Quinn will observe his 33m birthday this October and has raced all over Canada and most of the tracks south of the bor- der including Roosevelt and Yonkers. Quinn now calls tli Brandywine, Del., track his home track. Jack told his lam- ily on the Island that ‘Brandy- wine is as nice as Roosevelt to him. He said he always liked Brandywine and more at home there because he knows more people there.‘ In the harness racing world they use the term 'catch driv- er’ w one reinsmen pinch- hits for another. Quinn's repu- tation has boomed because of his success while ‘catch driv- ing’, but the Island native ias n a consistent winner With his own stable as well. ONE OF FEW Jack is one of the few reim- men in the big time to have more trotters than pacers in his (9 were . stable. One reason for this is that Francis seemed to prefer the high stepping trotters and Quinn prefers them because they haven’t so much equipment to get hooked up in, they're freer and easier to handle. In the winter Jack stays at l the Francis, Holmdel farm and trains the trotters and pacers there. He takes care of twelve of Francis’ horses and a num- ber of others owned by Bob Poore of Smyrna One thing that losing fans who accuse the drl- New York (Cisco 5-16 . or this case. they would be farmed vers of ' by holding Locke 1-2) at San Francisco out to the minor leaflet (Marichal 17-7) (N) eatm back the horses. Jack feels too many fans just don’t under- stand the difference between trotters and pacers. A trotler can be pushed too hard by a driver. As a result the horse gets rough and the driver has 0 Boxing Commission. at a Bos- ton motel today. (AP Wire- photo) lBy 3 Today’s ‘games with probable pitchers: (won - lost records in paren- theses) timore (Roberts 11-7), New York (Downing 12-7) (N) 19-10) at. Boston (Gray troit (Wickersham 18-10) (N) Clevelanlii (Siebert , De. Milwaukee (Blasmgame 5 - irks Quinn are (N) at Houston (Johnson 10-15) ( Los Angeles (L. Miller 3-8), (N) Chicago (Jackson 19-10 By BEN OLAN NEW YORK (APl—Remem- ber when they were speculating whether or not Willie Mays would finish the 1964 National League baseball season with an average of .400 or higher? That was approximately iour months ago after San Francisco Giants' outfielder had com-- plated the first month of the campaign on May 14 with a .449 mark. He's now hitting .299. This isn’t the first time this year that Willie's percentage has dipped. under .300. He was at .267 after the opening four games of 1964. In game 0. 5 though, he had two hits in four at bats, lifting his average to .316 It increased steadily there- after through (a 20-game batting streak. However. on June 14 his av- erage had dropped to .364. On July 14 it was .334 and on Aug. 14 .323. In the past month, cov- ering 27 games, he has col- lected ,only 19 hits in 97 tries for a .196 pace. Mays hasn't finished under .300 since 1956. t WRAP UP TITLES Meanwhile, Roberto Clemente of Pittsburgh and rookie Tony PROBABLE l Oliva of arr. .9 av, TONY OLIVA a. have the National and Ameri- can League batting titles. wr apped up. . Clemente gained three points remained in second place with 32? followed by teammate Minnesota appear to Aaron at .315, Billy William of Hank PITCHERS , 1 THE ASSOCIATED P sass ‘ major league ball rican League (Kaat 16-8) at Bal- (N) ; Los Angeles (Chance 16-7) at Ame Minnesota Kansas lty (O’Donoghue MONT-REAL (CW-Montreal 0.0) ‘Alouettes of the Eastern Foot- ‘ball Conference Monday put. on waivers two of their brigbtca. [stars flanker Marv Luster 8' llialfback Dave Hoppmann. ‘ announcement said they subject to recall if none ‘ Chicago (Horlen 11-8) at De- tNarum 9-13) at 6-6) (N) National League , The St Louis (Gibson 15-10) at will be ' 4) of the other Canadian football league teams claims them. In Washi gton Their play this year received critical reviews by coach Jim Trimble — Luster for butler- finger receiving and Hoppmann for inept blocking. y were among the players Trimble complained were not Philadelphia (Bennett Ill-12) m2 .. Pittsburgh (Friend 12-16) Cincinnati (Purkey 10-8) at ) to h 1d back to keep him in stride. The fans see the driver holding back on the reins and immediately accuse him of cheating_ Jack is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Quinn who now re- side in Dunstaffnage and were formerly from Giarlottetown. l l l fiHeld At On Saturday, Sept. 12, the field. N.J. U.S.A. was the mat. ,Red Cross and YMCA held their whom Jack credits for his first iannual Provincial Swim at the big break. Quinn was driving in [Charlottetown Y.M.C.A. The ithe New England circuit and meet resulted in lowering four lthe Windy Hill Stable which or fowns. Quinn Jack now l {married and says he is not wv-n—v‘v-W - . n. . 3'17“- - imam, SUREENOUGH dwarfing halfback: Richard Fleoker. (20) Alexandria, Ind., and Tom Keller (6). Garrett, have a combined Ell.- who will of only no pounds. (AP We) for the Windy Hill stable in his man but is living mos comfortably. The ex-Islander won 51 races rookie year, finished secon or third 120 other times Russia Sends 341 Athletes MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union plans to send 341 athletes to Tokyo "to prove once more" that it has the strongest Olym- pic team in the world. Yuri Mashin, leader of the Sovxet Olympic team. placed more emphas'n on national glory than personal achievement as he out- lined Russia’s Olympic plans at a press conference Monday. The final Olympic team se- lections will not be announced until Thursday, but Mashtn said plans call for men to com- pete in 20 sports and 68 women in seven sports. Mashin mod- estly predicted the Soviets will win 40 to 50 gold medals and will pile in 720 points. Officially no point totals are recognized in the Olympic games. The Soviet team won 37 golo medals at the Melbourne Olym- pics in 1956 and 43 gold medals at Rome in 1960. Chief rivals for unofficial team honors will be the United States. the combined team from East and West Germany and the host Japanese team, Mashio said. The Americans will do their best to close the gap from the last two Olympics, in which the Soviet Union the STANDINGS By THE ABCOCIATED PRESS American League W L Pet.GBL Baltimore as .599 — ’New York 04 56 .592 1% ,Chicago M 01 .565 2 ‘Deu'oit 77 N .517 10% Los Angeles 75 72 .510 13 Cleveland TI 72 mo 14 Minnesota 72 74 .403 15% Boston 04 ll .4. 04 Washington 5.” .fi 31 Kansas City 01 .372 I posted highest number of points. ' ‘Francis liked the way be hand native records and setting one four-day train trip through eight l led a horse. George offered him pool record. southern states in the first whis- 8' job as trainer and driver With The meet managers thought the meet was a success. but accepted the offer were disappointed that more en- owns his own Sta- ltries were not received from 10,. were 1' area. Tignish having the bigg- est representation of ten entries. The following are the results of the various events. ‘ Girl’s 9-10 yrs. 20 yds. Fr lstyle. Jennifer Howatt, Debbie ,MacKinnon, Donna Pursey. 12.7. ‘ Boys 9-10 yrs. 20 yds. Free- Charles os's. u Beck. 2.4, Girls 11-12 yrs. 40 yds. Free- ,style. Pat Jewell. Olivia Acorn. lDiane Taylor. 27.7. Boys 11-12 yrs. 40 yds. Free- style. Frank Roper. Gordon Beck. Charles Sellar. 27.5. ‘ ls 13-14 yrs. 60 yds Free- tis. Wanda Ross. Boys 13-14 yrs. 60 yds. Free- style: Stephan Wonnacott. Bob Jewell, Angus Beck. 35:2. Girls 15-16 yrs. 1!) yds. Free- MacLenn. Nancy George 54.6. Boys 15-16 yrs. 30 yds Frec- style. Bruce Boner. Mike Condv. Blair Mayne. 51.3. Girls 9-10 yds. 20 yds. Breast- stroke, Jennifer Howatt. 19.4. Boys 9-10 yes. 20 yds. Breast- strokewhe-‘ry Webb. Charles oss. .1. Girls 11-12 yrs. 40 yds Breast- stroke, Pat Jewell, Debby lthyb nes. Margret St. John. 37.6. Boys 11-12 yrs. 40 yds Breast- stroke. Ralph 5:, Frank Roper, Gordon Beck. 36.0. Girls 13-14 yrs. 60 yds Breast- stroke, Wanda B e t ty George. Maureen Coady. 57.1. stroke. Angus Beck. Stephan Wonnacott, Bob Jewell. 53.6. Girls 15-16 yrs. 80 yds Breast- stroke: Fran Whitlock. 1.11-0. Swim Meeting style. Betty George. Richie Cur- . 44.1 style: Fran Whitlock. Heather . Boys 13-14 yrs. 60 yds. Breut- no Ch'town Today’s Sport meet the Power Kings exhibition softball game tonight at ' underway at 6. . Power Kings are currently par- ticipating in the Charlottetown ' ' als. Junior BYC fin ball club and they will be going all out in an effort to upset the Hawks who M to get underway. producing to their abilities. 0th ers were veteran Ed Nickla and Milt Grain. given the axe b Trimble a few weeks ago. The cuts come at a time when the Alouette offence has been sputtering painfully. scar ing only 11 points in three games_ They also follow the resigna- tion last week of Leo Cahlll, the offensive coach. a the an- nouncement Friday that the Alouettes were dickering with BASEBALL SCORES Q SOFTBALL Johnny's Flying Hawks will in an be new softball diamond. The tilt is scheduled to gel in fi‘ 0 The Power Kings have a good are waiting for aritime Intermediate playoffs 1 Boys 15-16 yrs. 80 yds Breast- stroke. Bruce Roper, B 1 air Boys 9-10 yrs, 20 yds Back- stroke. Kerry Webb, Charles Ross, Callum Beck. 17.2. Girls 11-12 yrs. 40 yds Back- stroke, Pat Jewell, Diane Tay- . Debbie Rhynes. 34.7. 1 Boys 11-12 yrs 40 yds Back-, stroke, Frank Roper. Ralph Coady, Blair Mayne 1.10-7. 0 l ' Boys Open 100 yds. Freestyle: David Walters, Wayne Schleyer. ' Bob Lively. Time 1.02-1. Girls Open 1m yds. Breast- stroke. Fran Whitlock. 1.33-9. Boys Open 100 yds. Breast- stroke. Bob Lively, Mike Pick- ard. David Walters. 1.19-2. Girls Open 100 yds Backstroke (Ritchie Curtis. Mike Pickard. Doug Maclean. ganization or a defiance of its opposition to the bout. strip Clay of his crown if the rematch was signed. TICKETS FROM $10 T0 $50 $50 to $10 at the Garden, which nounced it was understood Clay ! pEN EVEN“ and Liston will get 30 per cent each from the total. news conference was called, the announcement was mad . champion had agreed to all terms early but the delay came through the ironing out of de tails among Liston‘s forces. in battery of lawyers and com- mlsSioners Gree Ra American League Kamas Clty I30 001 002— 7 15 3 B Heffner (9) and Tillman. Minnesota 000000210— 3 00 Baltimore 010000111— 4 9 0 Grant. Worthington (5-6) (8) and Battey. Zimmerman Pappas. Rowe (9) and Orsino. HRs:(23Minn. — Mincher (22), l. The WBA had threatened to Tickets will be scaled from Trimble the help H to the team that he signed him to a three-year contract during training camp. Lane. Also eligible :’ Montreal Stars Put, On Waivers retired halfback Don Clark. Tr. imble says Clark has been offered Cahill's coaching job but it has become evident that e team needs the speedy Ak- ron. Ohio, halfback as a player. The coaching assignment would an inducement of security for the much-injured Clark. Luster, 26-year-old product of the University of California, as starting his fourth year w with the Alouettes. Hoppmann, 24. was a top draft choice of New York Giants when he came to the Alouettcs a rookie last season. From as Madison, Wis. the Iowa state college halfback had a great rookie year with the A15. was so confident of oppmann could give m Mays Batting Under 3500; Clemente, Oliva On TOp Chicago Cuba at .323 and Jo. Torre of Milwaukee at .317. Oliva fell two points to .323 However, he . position on a 10-point increase to .307 with 16 hits in 35 at beta. The figures include Sunday's games. Elston Howard and Mickey Mantle of New York are tied for third at .302 fol- lowed by Detroit’s Bill Frechan with 3.00. Harmon Killebrew of Minne- sota continued to lead American League with 46 and runs batted in with 105. He had one home run and three RBI last week. Mays is the Natlonal’s home run pace-setter with 41 while Ken Boyer of St. Louis drove in nine more runs to increase his leading total to 109. Jockey Files Damage Suit CHICAGO (CF-AP) — Jockey Ismael Valenzuela has filed a .000,000 damage suit against the owner and trainer of Sndalr. winner of the world's richest thorough-bred horse race, it was learned Monday. The suit was filed in circult court here against Mrs. Mary B. Hecht and Canadian - born trainer Les Lear after Valen- zuela was replaced on Sadalr by- Willie Shoemaker. Shoemaker rode Sadair to vie- tory in the $349,925 Arlington- Washington Futurity Saturday. The winner's purse was $134,925 Valenzuela’s lawyer. Oscar d’Angelo, said today he plans to seek a writ of attachment to prevent Mrs. Hecbt from col- lecting th pu se. Valenzuela’s lawsuit 5 e e k I damages “for loss of profes- sional reputation." D’Angelo said he hopes to bring about a quick settlement by attaching the purse. Track sources at Arlington Park, were unable to say whether Mrs. Hecht has left the state with the Futurity win- nings. She resides in Miami Beach, Fla. EASE Elephant population at South Africa's Kruger National Park, estimated at 1.700, has doubled in the last 10 years. SUMMERSI’DE HARNESS RACING WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 SUMMERSIDE RACEWAY POST TIME 8.00 PM. RACE 1 Blue Mountain Girl. Mr. Gallon, Wlhite Law, J. Clegg. Chesterway Thomas. RACES 8 AND Mayne. 1.11-7. assuring them the commission's oston 011040000— 6 92 Ifighland Spirit. Chief's pay, my Comm. captain C8,, Girl; 9.10 yrs, a) yds Back. decision to approve the fight Pena. Drabowsky (5). Wyatt 8119"“ Mlfllty Dandy, wawanesav ROWdy DOW. Honest Patch. stroke, Jennifer Howatt 17.4. was not a breach with the nr- (9-8) (7) and Bryan; Gray, RA , Ritchie (2). Lamabe (9-13) (s). 0155 2 AND 5 Topway. Winnlo Chuck H., Port Hill Bloy. Rio Gra-nde. Billy 6. Command, Slippy Queen. Cathy‘s Gir. ACES 4 AND 7 R Paddyland girl. Princess 3 n or. Victo Scott, Cad‘ll'c Gold Dust. N g] w I d RACE I _ Billy C. Dudds. Linden Hanover. Mountain Birthday, Eleanor atch Ross, Gordon Beck. 93.4. (has a legal capacity of 13.300. Ha“ Bait—Bowen! (21). Girls 13-14 yrs 60 yds Back- Sam Silverman. partial pro- Nahm‘l Lug“ stroke. Richie Curtis, Betty meter with Inter - Continental PM" 110000"- 4100 George. «IO-Anne Stewart. 441. Promotions Inc., optimistically “"5"” _ “ammo-1 48 Boys 13-14 yrs. 60 yds Back- foresees a $5 million harvest, Short (1"7) and Dairymple; ’ stroke. Bob Jewell. Stenhan including all ancillary rights. Bruce “13'9’- Raymond (G’- Wonnacott, John McEachern Silverman predicts a $450,000 153w“ éghsand gteman' HRS“ 483- gate. The rest will come from a"- a on " Girls 15-16 Yrs 30 yds Bad“ radio, closed circuit television stroke. Heather MacLenn. Nan— and foreign rights. which m_ Cy Georg; 116~ 4- 80 d Back eludes movies. i will 0 s - yrs y s - . ..7I.-.| suck: Bruce Roper, Mn” Although it was not In- - .V More than two hours after the e A Clay spokesman said the n berg, Ton. bec. wson and Ed Ur 1.204. Girls Open 440 yds. Freestyle Fran Whitlock. Pat Jewell, D1- ane Taylor. 7.16-2. Boys 440 yds. Freestyle Wayne Schleyer, Mike Piekud. Stephan Wonnacott. 6.01-2. DIVING EVENTS Boys 10 yrs. and under. Char- les Ross. Boys 11-12 yrs of age. Frank oper. Bays 13-14 yrs of age, Angus c . Girls 13-14 yrs of age Wanda so. Boys 15-16 yrs of age. ‘(Jotn 'Brien - Open Diving (.‘cl'tipinn. Eoln O'Brien 0 Liston A 'Sign For BOSTON (APi—Dour heavy- weight champion Cassius Clay and smiling challenger Sonny Liston flamed Gov. Endicott Peabody “Massachusetts Mon- the cannon formal signing for that rent-tell Nov. 10 at Boston Gar- Afhr WI 9- i 1. statement, cm. .i. ncl Clay Fight of the Massachusetts Boxing Commission outlined stipu- lations for the 15- . ou— ofier the bout. amber; «ta 1’ had been ill touch m was officials. lXPURl . 01.. MN fit, (If) ' -. Llamas-rm»; ‘ N-‘. \ . o . I. .i, it'l'v' \. ‘ XIX? ' 1’1. column" GUARANTEED STUDENT LOANS See the local branch of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce for full information. . CANADIAN IMPERIAL ‘ BANK OF COMMERCE —: , --o--/ . i . +~ . "M:‘\. 4-» ~' g. ; ~- g .1, -X; ., .- ’ .-___ i ,~,'/ 4 ‘~ A.,-. ... ' '4‘” .....‘.... / , . P . , Happy Gallon C.. All Jolity. Gliding Billy and Win Barnes. Marie. Susan‘s Miss ‘3 i g).. v ‘Zr \; v I) - r4‘»3.\- 'DC we‘ve». “‘v ’IC: ‘3 y ..<.\a.‘ '9" A. v . ‘34?