woe. ay ve Pere ‘straight game by stopping Sask- |. _ of victory was a convert missed aS ee Pave igi wh dia iph er er FPP eM Ie Karat CS @ o sree dss fons squeeze | ‘Edge Stamps 15-74. behind Dorow’s arm By The Canadian Press Something good has to happen to a professional football club that loses 10 straight games. For British. Columbia Lions, it was A B = With - regular quarterback George Herring watching from the, bench, newcomers Dorow Passed -and ran Monday night until Lions squeezed out a 15-14 victory over Calgary Stampeders. second from bottom in the West- ern Interprovineial Football Un- jon, “, Dorow, 27-year-old former all- American lured into Canadian football from Philadelphia Eagles of the National League, had started the season with Sask- atchewan Roughriders. They used him as a temporary rep!ace- ment for injured ace Frank Tri- pucka and when Tripucka mend-~ Lions snap- ed, Dorow was cut. ped him up. EDWARDS BEAMING Monday night, Lions coach Dan Edwards beamed like a lucky last half at Vancouver, Dorow found a way around Calgary’s defence for some snappy passing and two touchdowns of his own. Ted} Hunt converted one and Norm Fieldgate scored a safety touch. In the other Monday night game, Winnipeg Blue Bombers edged Saskatchewan Rough- riders 14-13 by checking a last- half Rider threat in Regina. Thus, Bombers took a seven- investor. In the point lead in the standings. Sas- 'B. katchewan ranks second. two points ahead of Edmonton Eski-: mos and three in front of Stam- peders, NOW. TO WINNIPEG ‘ Next weekend, Lions—with the slimmest of mathematical hopes for one of the three playoff a spots—play Bombers at Winnipeg : Satu rday and the Rouguriders at Monday. Calgary and iton play a home-and- ‘series the same dates. m; Regina Monday night, ombers won their seventh atchewan once on the two-yard line in the fourth quarter befove finally yielding a last-minute converted touchdown. Margin by Riders’ Jack Hill in the second quarter. . Leading Winnipeg scorer was quarterback Jim Van Pelt with eight points on two field goals, a , POLOP OO POO LOO COCO LO OOS Champ from B.C. retains titlee—— TORONTO (& -— Canadian amateur welterweight cham- | pion Harold Mann of Prince | George, B.C., had little trouble | Monday night taking a five- round decision from Hamil- | ton's Eric Spath in a bout at non- palace title boxing Pier. CORRECTION LAST CHANCE Owing Reg. $25.50 ton SPECIAL PHONE 2101 Philpott, Evitt & Co. Ltd. T.M.C. TRANSPORTATION CO. wishes to announce that thoy will assume operation formerly operated Transfer. we must vacate one coal bin SAVE $5.00 PER TON on McLeod River Lump Coal There will be NO inter- ruption of bus service. 1 Dorow. WUIVE Sek d ese vse se sstes tuts hesete single when another field soa! was wide of the mark, and a con-' vert on Leo Lewis’ touchdown. Hill and Bobby Mulgado scor-: ed for Saskatchewan on passes | from Tripucka, Hil converted; one of the TDs. With Tripucka completing 17) of 35 attempted forwards ta Van! Pelt’s six of 18, Riders had 248-: 66 margin in aerial yardage. but: trailed in rushing 220 yards co! 138. Saskatchewan had 22 first: downs to Bombers’ 16. The Winnipeg touchdown was. ble. wall three times from the Bomb- er two-yard line in the fourth, | but failed, In Vancouver, with 18,500 fans: row put on a one-man show. He: seven-yard run in-. the second ‘quarter and the other on a one- yard plunge in the fourth. Fieid- ! ; gate set up both TDs, first inter- | POMCDPPOD IRC RPOOROEOD CODD OOOO WIFU STANDINGS By The Canadian Press : WeLltT F aA Pits Winnipeg 10 2 O 271 133 20 Sask. ........ 6 4 1 215 205 13 Edmonton 5 5 1 212 215 11 Calgary .... 5 6 O 230 193 10 | © 110 O 119 301 2 | PP PP LP PD OP DPD LOD OPP DODD D DOPOD ED cepting a Calgary pass and then recovering a Stampeder fumble. Also in the fourth, Lions made it to the Calgary one-yard line where Ed Vereb was — stopped. Calgary's subsequent punt was blocked and _ Fieldgate nailed Tea Duncan behind the line for the safety. Counting the Calgary touch- downs. were Very] Switzer and Gene Filipski. Doug-Brown con- verted one TD and scored a sin- gle when Mel Gillet was rouged on-an attempted field goal in the first quarter. Dorow gained 202 yards by completing nine of 20 ‘attempted passes and contributed to Lions’ {08 yards rushing. Stampeders moved 196 yards. along. the ground, and 201 the aerial way by completing 12 of 22 forwards. set up by Cookie Gilchrist’s fum- it was Gilchrist, too, who: tried to break the Winnipeg front: half-filling Empire Stadium, Do-| scored his first touchdown on a‘ * , . vag bay ete ang t PESOS REE E He re we BL eH HH ee PEON HHe Hr Haas eed wrv ys wys ‘ irst vi ictory | | } i f f BOB TURLEY . T knew IT had it” Balf control big factor for Turley NEW YORK (® —‘I was no Bob Feller out there today but Ir was quick,” New York Yankee ; right-hander Bob Turley said Monday after he beat Milwau- kee Braves 7-0 in the world ser- les. “TI never gave in to anyone out there. I knew I had it ‘when I was warming up, arid I never worried about anything,” the tall, good-looking. Yankee ace said. - Turley led the Yankee pitch- | ers this year with a 21-7 record, and a miserly .2.98 earned-run average. In his first series start against the Braves last Thurs- day in Milwaukee he failed to last the first inning as the Braves teed off on his pitches for three hits and four runs. They won “the game 13-5. “Out in Milwaukee I was miss- ing and had to come in with a fast ball or some fat pitch that wasn’t doing too much either” he said. MASTER SCHOLAR Turley is known as a master scholar of pitching, spending his off-the-mound hours in a cor- ner of the Yankee dugout study- ing the wiles and weaknesses of opposing batsmen. “I didn’t do much differently in the way of strategy than the other day,” he said. “The big dif- ference was control.” — SPORTS ROUNDUP Detroit trades layne in stunning NFL deal DETROIT (AP)—Quarterback Layne, given as much credit as anybody for bringing championship ‘football to Detroit, was sent to Pittsburgh Steelers to @xpiry of our lease immediately. 2.9.50 per ton of all bus service by Princo Rupert - Monday i ina stunning National Football League trade. To shocked fans Detroit Lions coach George Wilson said: “It’s a cruel, hard business. But I have -}a joh to do and I can't let senti- ment enter into it. licked.” The deal shifts the 31-year-old ayne to Pittsburgh for quarter- back Earl Morrall and two high draft choices, one next year and one in 1960. The trade has a strange quirk. Wilson started the move that brought the former Texas star to Detroit in 1950. Wilson, then an assistant coach under the late Bo MeMillin, suggested the Lions acquired Layne from the old New York Bulldogs, Detroit gave up four players to get quarterback Tobin Rote from Green Bay Packers two years ago, Wilson tried to alternate Layne and Rote and though the two players remained personal friends, Wilson and = President- General Manager Bdwin J. And- erson aald they were aware of friction, “Tt Just didn't work—-not ever," said Wilson, If I do, I'm teenmatewn mee vein tena VANCOUVER @&—Phil Malon- cy, eaptahn of the Vancouver Canucks In the Western Hockey League, may find himself with Chicngyo Black Hawks this sen- son, General Managor Tommy Ivan of the national hockey lengue beam has made an offer to Van- couver general manager Coley Hall, it was lonvned Monday, “Chicago Is gotting warmer," sald Hall, “A doal may be com- pleted before the weekend," Paes per pemmene mere TORONTO Gh—