UNUSUAL caaroar Paatum BUNGALOW ~ :''7 P‘ . its ' - [HI Zh ad Ix .Il?:“1~f I1’ 1 to "'° -,ri " m .$"°“.- . .-.r I |.v p. ! 2- "' *’ new Q- I- 3"5’F°§"'m-is V‘ " fa ' J 5' ‘}'+".‘7-.- 139%.: It - .... L -'c‘I l . o-n-.13.-3 ’ . I Wood siding, long one of the . ai-nurite exterior cladding ma- crisis for houses, is manufac- tired in a variety of widths and shapes and the choice is largely a matter of personal prefer- enco. Siding also can be bought ~ in rvarious lengths. With longer siding there are fewer joints and this tends to improve the appearance of the house. it is important that only dry stock be used for wood siding. If it is not used on delivery it should be stored out of the rain. 1; Careful storing will also keep the siding from getting soiled. giding should be nailed to the raining through the sheathing. nicss lumber sheathing is used, iid joints should occur only where there is a stud to nail to. lure two lengths of siding are oiiied end to end a bevel joint shetterthanabuttpoint.1ftihe 'ood..does shrink a little along v rzlengt-II the joint will remain ‘conspicuous. COAT After it is nailed on. wood sid- g-should not be left exposed the weather too long before ie first coat of paint or other rest-rvative is applied, espe- ' . ' warm. dry weather. Vmd is hygroscopic. that is, it an absorb moisture from the '- i . On the other hand. in dry .s or when the siding is ex- used to the sun’s rays it loses his moisture rapidly. Repeated horses in moisture content may cause the siding to crack warp. Some species. such as cedar, will stand up better May Go §:‘.L\i FRANCISCO (AP)-The sun finally shone brightly Sun- ny after three days of rain but There was ev ‘I’ i they would be able to re- ‘éif Play today if the weather Uicast of “fair and warmer" h°ld$ good. The usual Candle- ark winds were helping e-6 5' O O C no In 8111. Francisco Giants 805'. the two senior umpires. We cannot go today. despite ‘hf biua " id . ood Exterior Finish Seen 5 Old Favorite For Homes I than others. but in any event the protective coating should not be too delayed Plywood is another popular material used for exterior clad- ding and if it is properly main- should be as service- able as other types of exterior uilder will first make ure that he is getting exterior plywood — plywood designed specially for exterior use. When the panels have been trimmed to size the edges must be treat- ed a g a i n s t moisture. Lead aint, r some other recom mended sealer, can be used for this purpose. ALLOWS CIRCULATION allows air to circulate under the panels and moisture to escape. lent to use furring strips, a sec- ond vapour barrier may be in- stalled next to the inside wall surface to keep the space dry. Plywood panels should be giv- en a protective coating as soon as possible after being install- ed . unless the material has been wiiterproofed at the factory. Staining alone won't necessar- ily give effective weatherpro - ing. A positive sealer is requir- ed. This sealer is sometmes combined with the stain itself. Tempered presswood panels, asbestos cement shingle - wood shingles, composition siding, and aluminum siding are also popular as exterior finishes. Some of these require little or no maintenance. 6th Series Game Today worst October storm since 1904. However. the outfield was soggy Water oozed o a heavy turf underfoot and a fly ball probably would have stuck ere it landed k Matty sciiwaiil head grounds- off early and started work on the outfield. A chemical had been used to soften up the adobe soil. “We'il definitely go tomor- irow," said Schwab. “The out- «field should be 70 per cent i - ‘ marrow. We re ay ‘to ass." - Both ball clubs were itchy to get back into action after rest- ing since Wednesday when New York Yankees took a 3-2 e in this best-of-seven series with the Giants. The Yanks remained the sixth nu kee manager Ralph 30113’! starting choice. Billy Pierce. another veteran ' . southpaw, remained Giant man- beca 1: . , . , by nut;-9.3;“ .11 an-oc:gvh lager Alvin Darks pitcher for of Sn l‘rancIsco’llthe sixth Game. illtdwn 1 Eagle For Title Beats i will * ywood exterior finish should ‘ fu Alternatively, if it is not conven- ' of i but was 05' ii.» Lr . IN THIS UNIQUELY-styled bmglow. ‘J. de Keresucs. Montreal architect. has creat- ed an unusual feature in the design of the carport which is approached by a semi-circular driveway in front of the house. A patio is recessed between the sleeping and living areas and forms a quiet outlook. The living - dining room and principal windows face the courtyard to which there is easy access from a spacious h l. Ample space exists in the kitchen for eating. Utility, heating and storage space are provided for in the basement and also a playroom. The en- trance of this house should face north. . The floor area is 1,272 square feet and the exterior demenslons are 48 feet. eight Inches by 33 feet, seven inches with the carport projecting another 12 feet. working drawings for this house. known as Design 2310, may be obtained from Central Mortage and Housing Corpor- atlon at minimum cost. FSPORT ECHOES By Norman Macdonaid Summerside Bureau of The Guardian The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Oct. 15. 1902. ll 'Looking over the lopsided scores in the games of the Atlantic Football Conference on Saturday, one would imag- ine there would not be many fans sitting on the edges of their seats because of the thrilling, suspenseful action on the gridiron. It’s quite natural and and ndable that these college boys in the Maritlmes do n play the exciting foot- ball-you see'ln the NFL. Yet, If you get evenly matched teams, resulting in close scores, with the outcome in more or less doubt till. at, least. the third quarter. it help! a lot to bridge the gap between our college football and that of the professions. Then, again, many of the boys The hockey moguls of the ISHL could take a lesson from the wholesale massacre that is occurring in the Atlantic Con- ference (with St. F.){. in there it's more like a soliloquy) what to do? Well, you can't fake close games and get away with it. The minute that fellow “The im" calls Mr. Gus Fan sniffs the idea that a hockey game is not on the up and up he's through. ‘ Honest effort is one of the main ingredients when you are cooking up fan interest that will get myrlads of faces ap- pearing at the ticket office windows. Wrestling is the only game we know that us will attend even when they know it's phoney. Maybe this is be- cause wrestling is not really Hab Goalie Takes Tilt In Stride i MONTREAL (CP) — Ernie Wakely. Montreal Canadiens' a sport. It's a side-show, half Tarzan and half slap-stick comedy. t Hope For Let us all fervently hope that no power-paickeud team will once again erase thrilling competi- tion and make a shambles of the league. reducing fans who Lopsided G-rid Scores are local produlis which helps too, of course. Ana er equal- izer is the never-say-die spirit of those “rah! rah!" boys and girls who can ring out those songs of victory ever when dc- feat is a roaring giant that chokes off the smallest shreds of hope. We watched St. F.X. clob- ber Dalhousie to the not very melodious tune of 58-0 and it was a pleasant relief when the station switched to “Bugs Bunny." Throwing all the col- leges into one ring will not make for more interest in college football unless some- thing is done to strengthen materially the Class “B" an ganizatious. lSiH-L Could Take Lesson But there should be tilting: which could be done to make your teams more evenly match- ed befoire the season starts. Even the NHL has certain regu- lations, giving teams that finish- ed lower in the standing the previous year extra privileges in the hockey auction which takes place between seasons. Last year the ISIIL turned into a runaway race that did not encourage the attendance of big crowds. The two fea- tures that kept the season from being more of a dismal flop than it turned out to be were the fact that the Royals were slow starters and did not get a strangle-hold till al- most mid-season, and the sur- prising surge of the Cape Traverse Evlnrudes whic came a little late to make much difference in the total take of the box office. Opposite love their is dished up at- tractive form. to staying home and looking at the Best of Tommy Ambrose. hockey whenft to them in an i i St, Mary's Huskies Crush lniury-Riddled Saints 35-O St. Mary's University Huskies. one of the top teams in the At- lantic Football "A" Conference. ran true to form here Saturday as they overpowered an inju ‘? ‘ riddled St. Dunstan's University squad 35-0. It was the fourth win in five starts for the Huskies, coached by former Shea-rwater Star Bob Hayes. F41 Hilton's Saints have lost three arts. The Huskies. with a gale of wind at their back in the open- ing quarter, took full advantage ofitando edupslf-oiead on two touchdowns. a convert. and a single. The Saints. play- ing without Frank and Jim Gar- and tied one in four 35 rity, two key linemen, and back! fielders Bob Simmonds and Graham Conrad. stiffened in the second quarter and came close to hitting the scoresheet while holding St. Mary's scoreless. The visitors added a third major in the third quarter to lead 20-0. and they hit for two more converted TDs and a rouge in the final period to make it -0. The game was played in a driving rain and a strong north west wind that made passing and punttng difficult. St. Mary's concentrated on their ground game and found plenty of run- ning room in the weakened SDU N spare goalie, is a blonde. re- laxed 22-year-old who took his first NHL game Saturday night pretty much in his stride. 5 “Things went just about as3 [they did in training camp." he‘ said quietly in the dressing-. room after filling in for ailng Jacques Plante in Montreal's 6-3 than any I've been in, "though. .and I thought my timing was htly off." i Wakely. a native of Winnipeg, :wa.- second-string goalie for |Hi:ll-Ottawa in the Eastern Pro iiiockey League last season. He was made back-up man to [Plante after a sparkling per- iformance in Canadians‘ training : camp. Toe Blake, coach of the Cana- ‘diens, said Wakely played well “a little nervous" in the first period when New York took a 2-0 lead. Gump Worsiey, Wakeiy's counterpart in the New York nets, said: “You can't tell me that kid wasn't nervous. “You get so you can sense it. Besides. look where he play last year. Sub for Hull-Ottawa. What can you expect?" the infield cover 5 Mets Purchase Sherry, Smith NEW YORK (AP)—New York Mets purchased catcher Norm and outfielder Dick Smith from Los Angeles Dodg- ers Saturday for an undisclosed amount of ca limited serv- U2 3' O '1 Sherry. 31, saw ice with the Dodgers this sea- son He hit .182 in 85 amea but is regarded as a fine de- fensive catcher. He the older bfiotiier of Dodger pitcher Larry e Smith. 23. was with Omaha of the American Association in 1962. A righthanded batter. he hit .255 and had 19 homers. He also stole 30 bases. out nine and walked one. For the Eagles Allie Mac- Phee pitched eight innings al- lowing tfnwee runs, five hits, Coliougii in the ninth who pitch- to three batters. lie out one and allowed no hits. Funnel M-acLean of Charlotte- town was umpire. base judge was C. Pineau. Charlotte- town; third base llldfie was Floyd Jay Stewart. 8. Stam psi Shade Bombers 19-1 5 By THE CANADIAN PRESS With a tremendous fourth quarter drive. Calgary Stam- peders blasted their way into first place in the Western Foot- ball Conference Saturday, de- feating defending Grey Cup champion Winnipeg Blue Bomb- ers 19-15 in Winnipeg. In the other action in the WFC, Edmonton Eskimos. with Jackie Parker back at the helm weaving his well-known magic. scored a lop-sided 26-7 win over British Columbia Lions in Van- couver. results left Calgary in first place with a one point lead r the Bombers. Winnipeg has two games in hand over Calgary. Saskatchewan R o u g hriders. who defeated 0 awe '?miqh Riders 29-21 in Ottawa Saturday are one point back of Winnipeg in third place. Eskimos. with two games left in the schedule. trail Saskat- chewan by four points. Lions. with three games 0 < (D third and final playoff spot. TRAILEI) AT HALF 15,800 fans in Winnipeg Sta- dium saw Calgary drop behind 7-4 in the first quarter and trail -5 at the half. Winnipeg picked up a third quarter single and the Stampeders roared back with a pair of unanswered touchdowns in the final quarter to walk away with the game. Jim Dillard and Lovell Cole- man scored Calgary touch- downs with Larry Robinson booting two converts. a field goal and a single. Jim Furlong added a single. For Winnipeg. touchdowns went to halfback Leo Lewis and inside linebacker Dave Burk- holder. with Gerry James boot- 9- A . ing converts on both and the third quarter single. At Vancouver. the the 30-year- struck old Parker, playing his third game since a 30-day injury lay- off. passed for all three Edmon- ton touchdowns and faked so well he had the Lions defence going in circles. Eskimos 12-0 after the first quarter. 17-0 at the half and 18-7 after three quarters. Parker passed for touchdowns to Tommy-Joe Coffey. halfback Bill McKenny and end Jim Let- cavits. Coffey also picked up five points on a 17-yard field goal, a single off a 31-yard field goal attempt and a convert for an 11-point night that gave him the league's individual scoring leadership with 104 points. Halfback B o b I) y Walden booted three singles to complete Edmonton scoring. . Lions got their only touchdown on a third-quarter pass by quar- terback Joe Kapp to halfback Tom Larscheid. George Grant converte Iaiififwiilirsin P. E. I. the rush. and save Siding. and Cl; Atlantic Roofin A NAME Have your insulation done now before ALSO — Approved applicators for Johns-Manvllle Asbestos phonrd. with insulated backer board. " OR FREE ESTIMATES CALL 9 and Insulation Co. YOU CAN TRUST 18 spring Park Road Dial 4-6275 A PROFIT SHARING PLAN College Gri NEW YORK (AP)—Miami of Ohio and West Virginia are the newest of U.S. college football's giant-killers. Mighty Ohio State is on the rampage in g a in and Army, under a new coach. is bidding to reclaim its glories of the mid- 1940s. It was this quartet of teams which created the biggest im- pact as the season hurdled an- other topsy-turvy Saturday and headed toward the halfway m ar . Miami. 11 member of the Mid- American Conference which sel- tackle th w d ieams Pull Stunning Upset 1 vy ;the two cu ly eights of the Big Ten, pulled gaged in the fight for the No. 1 the bandits turn breaks into touchdowns. ILLINOIS SMOTHERED Ohio State bounded back into the battle for national honors by smothering Illinois 51-15. Just to take some of the taint away from their 9-7 loss a week ago to the University of Cal- ifornia at Los Augeies, Ohio State rolled up a conference record of 517 yards on the ground alone. While the Buckeyes were giv- this awesome display of \ power in hopes of raising their ranking from off one of the biggest football :position—Alabama and Texas- surprises in years by knocking over Purdue 10 7 Purdue, ninth ranked nation- ally and still popping its buttons over a 24-6 victory the week be- fore over Notre Dame, was un- prepared for the rugged defence and alert, inspired play of the youngsters from Oxford, Ohio. the other rolle a 21-point underdog. Miami pounced on three Pur-jrecovering for a ‘ Both clue fumbles and scored ldowns. Texas took advanta both had narrow squeaks. Top -ranked Alabama edged defensive wall. They rushed for a total of 325 yards. with Clou- tier leading the way with 168 yards in 21 lugs for an 8.0 aver- B9 0!: e. In contrast. St. Dunstan's was held to 62 yards on the ground. ‘ and Hilton was forced to go to the air, in spite of the adverse elements. in this department,‘ the local Saints had an edge with first downs rushing I First dmms passing 2 First downs peualities 0 Yards rushing 325 Yards lost rushing 18 Net yards rushing 307 Passes attempt ll Passes completed 3 Yards passing Passes intercepted by 2 Punts 3 UIU1 0|§ I-5 “ ea 59- 3 S‘. Punting average Fumbles lost Penalties 21.7 2 ca _¢;._-K.‘,’:: SUMMARY I-‘irst quarter SMU -- Tnuchdowii — Lancaster SMU —— (‘nnveri -— Schnedier SMU Single -—- Schneider SMU - Touchdown-—LoiseIle Second quarter orirltl Third quarter No so 3°55 ““°Y- “ed Ripley and I SMU .—- Tout-hdown—Cloutier i.i°i.”§.".f;"*°' °°":P‘°‘*":.£:r:i . . while the visitors made good on : three of eight passes for 49. SMU __ .;,ng,,,fi5-cneide, The SDU d°f""°°- led by D0" . SMU — "l‘ouchdow-n— Cloutier D°5R°°h°5' ‘”h° turned in his‘ SMU — Convert—Schneider usual fine game. threw the Hus- _____._%‘_._____ ays on three occasions in the; second quarter. Saints moved, into S in the half when ‘ Ripley hit end Dick Tingiey with 3 Mike O'Brien for 18 yards to the 27-yard line. and Ripley found : on DesRoches uncovered with‘. 18 1 they were going all the way. On first down. Rilpley's pass for} DesRoches went mplete_ j st sec- ond and the scoring bid fizzled. Wes MacAleer. a Parkdale product and perhaps the only home-brew ever to quarterback an SDU Varsity team, moved Houston 14-3 with Lee Roy Jor- dai. scoring one of the touch- ge of two Okla ma mbies w‘ 9-6. One fumble set up a 26-yard field goal by Tony Crosby and d into the end with Perry Mcwiiliams E h . fourth-ranked Southern points on a 31-yard field goal. { California and fifth-ranked Mis- a pass and a conversion. all by siss' isi one man—Bob Jenc FEATURE DEFENCE slashing defensive play also resulted in victories for both 8E0 Army and West Virginia over favored opponents. Army took pi took the week off. Lou- ana State. No. 6. whipped Miami (Fla.) 17-3. Washington, 0 pass interceptions rocked i the local tea 9 13st i quarter. on passes by MacAleer 5 and Piiley. Ray Loiselle picked off a Pilley pass on the SDU 28 ‘ and had a clear path for the The local Saints play their‘ next game here next Saturday} against Acadia Axemen. GAME STATISTIC Ma '. SDU First downs 24”” 7 ‘ IVIIIIIIIICITZ4 I See us tor complete Wiring Installation ; in your new home or repairs to your pre- sent Iiome’s wiring. 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Instead of ground-gaining power, however, the trademark of the n w Black Knights is savage defensive play featured by a tough, hard-hitting unit known as the Chinese Bandits. While the 2.500-member cadet corps dons red coolie hats and chants weird Oriental ditties, 3‘ i used in space. Electrical Contractors NOW! RUSCO Windows and Doors in BAKED ENAMEL i “COLORS” ‘ for new homes. schools or i any type of construction. ‘ F. J. CAMPBELL 138 Up. Queen Storey Electric Ltd. AUTOMATIC WASHER & DRYER REPAIRS We iiaxc ii full hlilll nf fzi('tn_r_s' lraiiied §(‘l'\'ICt‘llll‘l1. ilitics uiiii pzirts for all m.ii. Phone us today . Storey Electric Lid. ‘- Dial ('h'InWn i.‘.:lli — c\"~I(li‘ 35132 .. . NOW is THE ' ‘ TIME We. have two of the Insul- ment at your service Sourls Phone 183 FOR ALL OTC CUSTOMERS 96 Queen Street % IN OASN BONUS IIISOOUNT NOTES It looks like money. it feels like money and can be spent as money at all CTC stores . . 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