aes tinge Be Poe ty pc hee Loge ay VT Bes YEN TY TP ey se eo yan BOR SS ee ee ee 2 way aE ey eoeev a ee yw “wo Tr Fe FF TT, Fr Te evvie er ever se ere ve ve ee ee we ews row WR oe es ae SS yuu woe § Prince Rupert Dally News Tuesday, October 9, 1962 Forty more entries required to round out men’s schedule waeknnns soason is only two; The first draw will be for 7 Drawmuston -and Peter Bell,|p.m. and the second draw for awmaster at the Prince Ru-|9:15 p.m. Tuesdays and Thurs- ~ Ralph Houk says he isn't worried | By JOE REICHLER ~NEW YORK (AP)—Managers Ralph H ouk of with.on By The Canadian Press Eskimos in unsure position ly three games left — se pert Curling Club, is waiting for entries for this scason’s men’s curling schedule, He says he expects to get 48 en- tries to, round out a schedule whereby -a&. team can play two days or Wednesdays and Fridays. Only cight teams have entered so far. Entries are. being ac- cepted by Peter Bell at 4183 or Alee Till at phone 5224, A mixed bonspiel is slated to ‘7 xT: a 7, St rr 2 le of an F rancisco . / . soe _. ‘ : . games a week and get in a tolal - i . New York Yankees and Alvin Dark of San # Saskatchewan Roughriders have Edmonton in a position the D[skimos |! 28 sames not including play- begin the evening of October 19. mest aorveed that the World Series, now all even at . ; . . Te ant offs. Norman Kinslor is sting te Giants agreed ‘ ; i ver ‘ , haven’t experienced since the first year they rejoined the Western Football Con-| The men’s season starts Octo- | complet te tlood Meee he 7 ie two victories apiece, will go the limit of seven games. ference. ber 24, —— : unnctinase saniariein Edmonton at B.C. in the eve- ning and Saskatchewan at Ot- tawa Rough Riders in an inter- In Winnipeg, Gerry James, co-leader in the conference scor- ing race with Coffey, got all of The 28-20 defeat handed the Esks by the Riders in Regina by the beginning of next week. Of course, the rival skippers disagree on the winner. Although the Giants pulled) éven Monday with a 7-3 victory, in the fourth game, in which : the brilliant Whitey Ford was lifted after six innings, Houk. said he wasn’t worried. He said he planned no changes in the lineup and confirmed that Ralph. Terry, his 23-game wi- ning right-hander, would be the pitcher. Dark’s choice was right-hand- er Jack Sanford, a 24-game win- ner who defeated Terry 2-0 with a three-hitter ‘in the second game of the series. “Pm not worried,about the way our boys are hifting,’ said Houk, although the Yankees have hit only one home run in four games. “We're hitting the ball all right, but not to the right places.” -Dark pointed out he had pre- dicted as far back as three weeks ago thata Giant-Yankee World! Series would go the limit. At the | time the Giants were four games attempting to bunt home a run- ner from third base, was hit on the finger and had to retire. Fireballer Bob Bolin took over, survived a bases-loaded situa- tion in the bottom of the fifth, and then ran into real trouble. He opened the inning by walk- ing Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris. Elston Howard flied out but successive singles by Bill Skowron and Clete Boyer drave in the tying runs before Pon Larsen came in to put out the fire. After Hiller’s grand-slammer, the Giants picked up an insur- ance run in the ninth as Matty Alou scampered home on @ throwing error by Bobby Rich- ardson. The Yankees got their third run in the bottom of the inning on successive singles by Tony Kubek, Richardson and Tom Tresh after two were out. O'Dell then got Mantle to hit into a behind Los Angcles Dodgers with ; only nine games left to play. “Dark had planned to pitch. Billy O'Dell, who lost the opener to the Yankees, but the soyth-- paw was needed in relicf Monday after the Giants took a 6-2 lead in the seventh on Chuck Hiller’s grand-slam homer off relief pit- cher Marshall Bridges. ““Jim Coates, a right-hander, began the inning after Ford was taken out for a pinch hitter in the bottom of the sixth as Houk force play for the final out. “T pan to start Sanford today, Billy Pierce in the sixth game on Thursday and come right back with Sanford in the sev- enth game on Friday,” said Dark. If the series goes the limit, the seventh-game pitchers will be Sanford and Ford, each mak- ing his third start. Bill Stafford, who went all the way beating the Giants in the third game, will pitch the sixth game for tne “RALPH TERRYY Tomcrrow's starting pitcher for the New York Yankees JACK STANFORD Tomerrow’s starting pitcher for the Giants we JUAN -MARICHAL Monday put Edmonton’s back to the wall. The once powerful Eskimos now have, to win all three of their remaining league games to stand a chance for the final conference playoff berth. On Saturday they took their third straight loss from Calgary Stampeders, 22-15 in Edmonton, while British Columbia Lions were whipping Winnipeg Blue Bombers 18-6 in Winnipeg. They defeated Winnipeg 27-22 in Vancouver Sept. 24. Quarterback Bob Ptacek had one of his more successful pass~ POPLOP LPL ODOR C4 SF POOL ODODL LL OCL ID Western Conference , WLT F A Pt Winniper 83.0276 192 16 Calgary 75 1282-269 15 Sask. 6 4 1.179/188 i3 BC. S| 6 6.0 249.237 12 Edmonton 48 1 246 297 12 oe OPO POLOD ODD DPE LOL EM PPD Pt ing days for. the Roughriders. conecting 13 times in “18° at- tempts for 251 of Riders’ total offensive of 383 yards. . He scored one touchdown and passed 73 yards to end Jack Gotta for ‘another. Fullback Fred Burket ‘accounted for the third. Steve Myhra, picked up from Baltimore Colts of the National Football League 109 days. a9, scored 10 points in his first game on tow field goals, three con- verts and a single. “ Edmonton got touchdowns from Jackie Parker, E.. A. Sims and Tommy-Joe Coffey, also booted ‘two converts, Cof- t who; Winnipeg’s points on a pair of field goals while B.C.’s Joe Kapp Eastern Conference WLT F A Pt Ottawa 6 4 0 241 189 12 Hamilton 5 4 1 200 187 11 Toronto 37 0 183 247 6 Montreal 96 2 185 235 6 Ce MOP OPED M LE EM OD AAT TOP and Willie Fleming scored touch- downs. Lions’ other points were on a field goal, single and twu converts from George Grant. Next conference action is Sat- urday, with Calgary at Winni- peg for an afternoon encounter, locking schedule game. Moe Racine booted a 40-yard ficld goal on .the last play. of, the game at Montreal Monday jj. | to give Ottawa Rough Riders a 26-24 win over Montreal Alou- 1 Alo pe ages MTR ettes and first place in the ear eee GRP COICO oimim LOLLOERIGIDA standings. an a 0 P TODAY ONLY 7 p.m, - 9 p.m. RRR EE Res, SENG RAG ie ne & murv LANCASTER ef ea on ‘ wt Tey vromnv CURTES Bill Mitchell kicked one 19 yards from a sharp angle Sat- urday night. to. keep Toronto Argonauts’ playoff hopes alive with a 10-9 upset win over Ham - jlton: Tiger-Cats at Toronto. That one came a minute and 22 seconds before the final gun. _makesa mother's he so frightened .@ Qaughter’s love forbidden ? What fsthe secret that — 7 p.m. - 9:05 ea art sO METRO GOLDWYN MAYER: PRESENTS AN’ ata GEt 7pm. - 9:18 | CHILDREN 35c » ALL SHOWS = Walt Disney presents es A t P A : 1 se HAP BEE MITEL HUTTON tried for a big inning. Coates Yanks. gave way to Bridges after giving The odds still favored the up a walk to Jim Davenport and Yankees, both for today’s game a one-out double to pinch hitter and the scries. They were rated Matty Alou. :7-to-5 to win today and 8-to-5 “The left-handed Bridges pur-ito take the series. posely passed pinch hitter Bob! Jinescores: Nieman to load the bases, dis-j First game, Thursday, posed of Harvey Kuenn on an 4: infield popup, then threw the New York broken finger after yesterday’s game Maple Leafs October sign Mahovlich fey filled in at fullback for in- jured Johnny Bright. - in CiMEMASCODE end METROCOLOR TRA aT I a 200 000 121—6 11 0 grand slammer to Hiller, the San. Fran. 011 000 000—2 16 0 first of the Giant second base | man’s professional career. The chunky little infielder: had hit only three home runs all season. The Giants were riding along with a 2-0 lead on the strength of a two-run homer by catcher Tom Haller in the second inn- ing when things began to go wrong in the fifth inning. Starting pitcher Juan Mariche], By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Osaka, Japan —~- Kazuc Taka- Ford and Howard; O’Dell, Lar- ‘sen 8, Miller 9, Bailey, Orsino 9. W—Ford. L—O’Dell. HR: NY— Boyer. — Second game, Friday, Oct. 5:: New York 009 000 000-0 3 1 San. Fran. 100 000 10x—2 6 0 Terry, Daley 8 and _ Berra; Sanford and Haller. W—Sanford. L—Terry. HR: SF-—McCovey. Third game, Sunday, Oct. 7.: San. Fran. 000 000 002—2 4 3 New York 000 000 30x—3 9 1} Pierce, Larsen 7, Bolin 8 and yama, 130%, Knocked out Larry Fernando, 129, The Philippines, | w—Stafford. (4). . New York — Emile Griffith, Bailey: Stafford and Howard. L--Pierce. HR: SF—Bailey. Fourth game, Monday, Oct. 8: 151, New York, outpointed Don !San, Fran G20 000 401-—7 9 1 Fullmer, 15954, Utah, (10). Non-title. Buenos Aires — Federico Thompsen, 146, Argentina, out- po.nted Jorge Peralta, 1144, West Jordan,|New York 000 002 001—3 9 1 Marichal, Bolin 5, Larsen 6. Ford, | Coates 7, Bridges 7 and Howard. O'Dell 7 and Haller. W—Larsen. L—Coates., jor $110,000 TORONTO -i—-Toronto Maple Leafs, their lineup bolstered by $1,000,000 worth of left winger, drubbed the . National Hockey League. All-Stars 4-1 Saturday nignt. . Frank Mahovlich, a marked man as a result of the astro- nomical bid for his serviecs by multi-millionaire Jim Norris did his best to make the Chicago Black Hawks’ owner look good by scoring. one of the Toronto goals. Norris made, the original offer at a gay party ina Toronto hotel Friday night after the All-Star dinner. He peeled off $1,000 in bills before a gathering which included several’ officiats from the six NHL cities. Statford Smythe, Leaf presi- dent, said Saturday: “No human 'peing is worth $1,000,000-—to buy Uuruguay, (15). 0% ‘ Dat pe kl Seagt Pte ep aR at ATE ‘OFFER MILLION DOLLARS | of the Chicago Black Hawks . Wr ir — Tommy WRs: SF—Haller, Hiller. i i ' $ Ivan, general manager of the National Hockey Leagua, ‘or sell. “I consider this to be a publicity stunt.” ' Smythe told reporters Friday night that Norris would have to repeat the offer Saturday at noon before he would accept.” “wWe'l] get the World Series off the sports pages,” he told. news- paper men at the party. Norris had Chicago general manager Tommy Ivan take a certified cheque for $1,000,000 in Canadian funds to Maple Leaf Gardens Saturday, Smythe then sald he would have to take it up with his hoard of directors, Saturday night he said he had no intention of call- ing a directors meeting, “Pm not doing anything about it,” he said in an Interview, “We'll wail to see the general renetion.” Harold Ballard, Teaf vice- president, an Jack Amell, a Leal director, are reported to have accepted a down payment, Ballard and Amell then signed a plece of paper which read: “We except on behalf of Maple Leaf Gardens.” No one, apnar- ently, noticed the misspolling of accapl, Al} the fuss didn't do Mnahov- lich any harm, Ne had been having contract diffleulties but the Lonfs signed him toa four- yoar contract for a reported $110,000 Saturday—after = the Chicago offer, Tho Leafs hadnt’ beaten an NHL team Jn thelr pre-season were tho Toronto snipers, The Jona gon) for the All-Stars was seored by Cordic Howe of the Red Wings. Despite all the talk nhout con- fom was as rocky as the road, What atest for new ‘63 Cheve » solct suspension systems! om ___ THE ONES THAT WHIPPED THE BAJA RUN... . TOUGHEST UNDER THE SUN... OF NEW ENGINES, FRAMES AND SUSPENSIONS! Dae y , ms A at rene? hours in low gear, There was n took 17 clays lo go 1,066 miles] like this new '63 feature, Sometimes the caravan crept alon — just an ocensional traveller on burro or horseback, W's that kind of route, Tt narrawer fronteends certainly patd off, . Users who operate in close quarters will TO SHOW THE WORTH 3 +e ‘i Be g for o traille exhibition schedule but looked like the Leafs of old Saturday, eae os ie hs at oes ay ino Boor Ne in the first DIRE S Phin BE SO a0 erring period and Mahovilch, Shack When you came toa river, you Tight squeeze for the mediur Chev adde frames TT ’ ed : a ; alums and. Chevrolot's ladder. ramos Tem Dick Duff and Bobby Pulford got wet, This Baja river hot- . henvy-duty units in this gorge, Their new iliistood ‘a overeat punish | ment, Shown is the 4-ton pick- up with now 292-cu.-in, "6 cyl- inder engine, . ait Thy. hiss “ity ~292-cu.-in, *6-cylinder engine, a these tough, quality-built (63 Chevrolet trucks atures ns high as 122 dexrees F. burned the land in the desert area around Dry Lako- one more ardeal any (ruck (hal goes to Baja huis to shrug off, pa CH ete Nature created the world’s toughest proving ground for trucks — the Baja (bah hah) Cali- fornia Peninsula, Mexico, It’s thousand miles of tortuous trail that defies travel. Chevrolet tackled this route with a Carry- all, a Y4-ton pickup with new 230 cu.-in, 6- cylinder engine, a *}y-ton pickup with new medium-= duty unit with refrigerated van, a mediume duty diesel tanker and a heavy-duty tandem. Rocks, ruts, washboard and washout racked the trucks from bumper to bumper. sand, dust and rivers tried to swallow them.» Hour after hour was spent in low gear at tem- ” perature up to $22 degrees I*, oy It took 17 days to go the 1,066 miles, and” not one Chevrolet truck dropped out! Bach day's run was finished on schedule | Trucks that can take this kind of beating enn take on your toughest truck jobs, Sce with all their new improvements at your Chevrolet dealer's, - eA pttanal at antes coate QUALITY TRUCKS GOST LESS A General Motors Value oS ny 2 } 4 ; rae mE ai i eae een a vo Ulsplays cheque for $1,000,000 made out to the Toronto Maple jtract problem ; wp oT a } . 00, 8, all ‘Tor - a — Lent Hockoy Club in payment for Leaf Star Frank Mahovilich, | ors wore aligned and in univorm gy 8 The cheque ts signed by Black Hawks owner James Norris, Ivan |Mahovileh, centres Red Kelly) °° : sud ns. far as the Hawks are concorned “the denl stands”, but [and Billy Harria and defence- : | ¢ Leafs president Stafford Smytho sald the deal could not be (man Allan Stanley signed Batu ANZ On ae + “ 4 ve considered, . . + == OP Photo tany. . | — 406 and Ave, Wost poe . : ‘ . s Phone: 2303 or 2304 wh ae : . . . . . : ‘ ao, onta ath tly Ah hh Ded nied de ache A esha aot ae a a n a. phils rere ee OE AR ER EE OR APE AE ORO DMs 2 ington EO tei