| ON egg phe Wy are : see . three six. ro as. at Seattle, Wash., last yal a alplapta ester gay -The bloody and courageous challenger from the Texas back- woods community of Cut and «Shoot couldn’t answer the bell for the 13th round. It was ruled a 12th-round knockout. - Harris was far behind on points. and bleeding from a bat- tered nose and. cuts near both eyes when he trainer. ‘asked ref- eree Mushy Callahan to stop the slaughter... Was UNBEATEN "Roy, who had been unbeaten in 22 professional fights, collect- ed -100,000 for his brave and sometimes awkward perform- ance. It is estimated Patterson's take will be more than $200,000. The 23-year-old champion was down. for a three-count. from a left and right in the second found. but bounced up to take|of the head. He floored Harris: was down again for counts of | seven and thrée. He took a nine dissatisfied with!count in the 12th. command. OU times. we m more Next title defence seen for June ¥ Patterson's manager Cus d’'Amato. still feuding with the powerful international Boxing Club, ‘said the champion is com- mitted’ to a title defence next June “in Colorado Springs, Colo. But he didn’t name an opponent’ and he left open the possibility that, Floyd might fight in the meantime. .Patterson termed Monday fight's fight the toughest of his defences. The others, against - - Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson and Pete Rademacher last year, also: ended in knock- outs. Patterson hadn’t. fought since: stopping Rademacher in day night, he said: “Myabest fy Nope of them were any fHarnie said he’s like to fight Pat- terson again. He added: “I’d be more aggressive.” - Patterson’s left hook and right | eombination scored repeatedly during ‘the middle rounds as he ww: vee eT eee Pte fon pany hac ago se ahs Seema ra ie aie ‘Champ recovers from knockdown ‘LOS ANGELES (AP)—F loyd Patterson, his tim- ing: suffering from a year-long ring layoff, ser ambled back from a second-round knockdown: Monday night to belt challenger Roy Harris into wobbly incompet- -enée and retain his world heavyweight boxing crown. 'seventh with a right to the side | eee ae this fight than. any one I've fought in the last few years,” Patterson said. “If I had been able to gct started it might have been a different fight. I know that if both of us had more fights we would have looked a lot better. I'l probably fight more often now.’ THIRD DEFENCE. : It was the third successful title defence for Patterson, “who won the championship in 1956. by knocking out, Archic Moore in five rounds. Patterson, from New York, spotted Harris 944 pounds at 18414 to 194 but landed the: pow- er Punches. He knocked Harris down for an cight count in the In the eighth Roy stalked the counter- punching Texan, a 6-1 betting underdog. FOUGHT BACK IN 11TH ‘Harris was firing back as late as the llth. But in the next round Patterson scored well. When the challenger went back to his corner, trainer Bilr Gore decided he should take no more|- punishment. ° Big Henry Harris, Roy’s father, said things would have been dif- ferent if the challenger had trained in Cut and Shoot, “There was too much activity up at that training camp in the mountains,” Henry said of the Arrowhead Springs site near San Bernardino, Calif. “Lotta cars shining their lights on Roy’s house at night. Roy couldn't sleep.” ee Callaghan had Patterson lead- ing on points 117-97. Judge ‘Frankie Van had it 116-102 and Judge Tommy Hart saw it 117- 98. The Associated Press score- card was 118-102. Under Calif- ornia rules, if a fighter -has been | beaten and is unable“to answer the bell it is ruled a Kayo. | ~ Marlene hot contender Canadian new chal- “The stocky little champion began a lenge for the title she won in'Amatcur six times and played pin it 1956 by ousting Mrs. Margaret Watkins of Grosse Point Farms, Mich., 7 and 6. Another Canadian, Roma Neundorf of Toronto, also came: over up with a 7 and 6 win over the grand old lady of golf, Mrs. Ed- win UW. Vare Jr., of Philadcel- “PROVIDENCE, RI. un Georne Araujo, 138, Providence, out- pointed Pancho Carmona, 136", Puerto Rico, (10). Free Uclivery of Chinese Food Phone 3329 Deep Fricd Prawns $1.15 Garlic Sparerib $1.05 Green Pepper Chop Sucy 95¢ Shrimp Egg Foo Yong $1.00 Chicken Fried Rice 95¢ Free Delivery ($3.00 Orders) Melrose Chop Jucy ‘Calhoun had dropped Merecr VUUUeuWEY Wallace's Dept. Store 3 Beas net Tm TWO MORE REASONS TO SHOP AT WALLACTOS CANNON AND DAN RIVER BRANDED SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES - WALLACE'S DEPT. STORE VUNUUUNONNUUNNEY é ¥ oy oe “a4 Nig! hye hye Pe A 4 bea for U.S. championship DAREBS Ger >i iter hariene Stewart Streit-of-Toronto: didi't, lose a hole in winning her first match as play began Mon-. day in the United States women's amateur golf championships, but ber opponcnt was so erratic she took 13 strokes in two holes. | { | among the most decisive of the | Calhoun weighed 16842, Mer- » COP | The scheduled 10-rounder was Ree eee eee ee ee eee eee e eee (ee eb oe phia, who has won the. US. 25 times. The one-sided victories were 60 first-round matches played the 6,467-yard Wee Btrn Country Club course where women’s par is 37-38-75, Rory Calhoun belts Mercer in six rounds SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP) -- ‘Rory Calhoun of White Plains, N.Y. unleashed a vicious body attack to score a sixth-round technical knockout over Georpe (Soldier) Mercer of Little Rock, Ark., here Monday night in the New Yorker's first boxing match las a Heht-heavyweight, 172. stopped at 1:26 of the sixth after for the second time in the round yw ve Ne mye + ‘PERFECT FORM is ‘displayed by life guard Nelson Kinney in a diving exhibition .during last Friday's tcen dance. at Gyro swimming pool .in MeClymont Park. —Staff photo. Ticats team to beat in Big Four ratings By The Can The Big Four Football Union opens for business tonight w ith teams facing Montreal. Each team has 14 games in the next 13 weeks before league champions from East and West meet for the Grey Cup in Van- couver. Saturday, Nov. 29. In the. East Hamilton Tiger- Cats are rated the team to beat. They captured the Grey Cup last year. To be considered seriously are Ottawa Rough Riders. The dark horse is: Toronto Ar- gonauts, definitely . improved ;drom. last year’s. fourth place club, Montreal Alouettes, whoj headed the league for three straight. seasons, then slumped to third last year, are rated even weaker for 1958. ° «; Argonauts take on the Rough Riders and the Ticats go against the Als tonight. AWAITING CUTS The import picture on the Big Four clubs is still clouded. They “Are “REINS GN tains iT tye doing any late shopping. All four clubs are plagued by injuries, The Alouettes, who can least afford it, have five doubt- ful starters, including star end Hal Patterson, on the sidelines with a shoulder injurly. Rowzh Riders are migsing two linebackers with broken and first-string quarterback Tom Dimitroff is resting with a sprained wrist. Argo coach Hamp Pool will be sending his squad agains, an Ot- tawa team that should have “an exceNent ¢chunce” for the cham- pionship, according to coach) Frank Clair, Clair has switched from ai twin-fullback offenee to a wing- Jackson, a rookie sensation from Hamilton's McMaster University, MATTER OF ENDURANCE Pool figures the season's laur- els will go to the team that lasts the longest. “The coach who can keep his Important men ont of the in- flyrmary and gradually bring hts tenn up to phaylng perfection, as did Hamilton’s Jim Trimble last soason, can count on pacing the sidelincs at Vancouver's Empire “and fourth time in the bout. Hy ED WILKS Associated Pross Sporta Writer Whether New York Yankees ean blow thelr American League lend ds a question toa be consld- ered by dreamers, But ean the Orioles give Baltimore its first nish in the flrat division? The Birds, who have Improved aneh year ainee thelr rebirth in 1054, finished pust a game short of fourth-place Detroit last son son. And after drubbing Kansas Clty 82 In the only major Jen- Onoles now we within a half game of the fourth-place Tlyors. Even with an l-game losing vkid--—longest slump fy ofther longue this senson—the Orloles Nuave spent mort of thelr time in the flrat division Jn the Jaat Month, The sump tumbled them from recond to slyth, not as bad i Ib suunndla In the Ali's closes i ¢ 4 oof en Pe PERELE LE PET THA S MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP Orioles ue pame scheduled Monday, the} eee he Stadium.” packed, seven-team second divi- slon, They sipped past Clave- land Into fHth by winning thetr third in a row Monduy night. GET ONE Wee Baltimore had but one hit--a third lnning bunt by Willa Mir- anda—but held a J-1 tle with the As until opening up agalost loser Ralph Terry (7-10) Ina sevenerun alxlh inning, Cene Woodling socked a two-nn home er and Dick Willams crashed a thras-yun shot in the big inning, Nee Brown (hed) won it ana no-hitter after losing three in arow, Roger Marla scored hoth rungs for the As, belting his 22nd home run in the elghth singling and seorlng for na l-) tle In the fourth on Worry Bimp- son's slneglo and Wal Sintth's sic. rifice fly, The Orloles' (rat run eunie in on Miranda's bunt, a hit battor, hasdes ne | ie: Pee eeee ‘, e ay United States National Footballr League make their cuts before! arms! ed-T. We'll start Hal Ledyard at; quarterback to replace Dimit- | roff, Behind Ledyard is Russ take aim rftor adian Press each other at Ottawa and Argos have recharged ‘their line, where they now have six American imports. field is flashy Dave Mann, for- merly of Chicago Cardinals. of the NFL. : The big question about the Ti- cats is how much Cookie Gil- christ will be missed as fullback and linebacker. Gilchrist, whose temperament «brought some Hamilton club officials to a boil, was sold to Saskatchewan ‘in as many Western Interprov- ; ‘in first downs. In the pack- 2 irst w ‘Roughriders after last season. Alouettes’ hopes are pinned on a handful of seasoned imports with a few homebrew players. Seven of 17 American imports are holdovers. Scouts are search- ing for a good import tackle or two to beef up the Alouettes’ line. | PCL Standings By The Associated Press i wi iL Pet. GBL Phoenix ........ 76° 54 .585 - San Dievyo ....-. 74 #595 .509 2 Vancouver ...... 13 5B 557 BY Portland ....... 65 66 496 Ily, ‘Salt Lake City .. 638 G8 481 13%, ‘Spokane ...... 6O G9. 465 15% Sacramento 57 74 485 19/4 Seattle oo... 0.0. 54 77 412 22%, LAST NIGHT’S FIGHTS. ' SYDNEY, Australia i—George Barnes, 14644, Sydney, stopped Johnnie van Rensberg, 14114, South Africa, 13, (Barnes re- tains British Empire welter- S son | Eskimos switch to air attack By The Canadian Pre css Two spectacular aerial attacks produced two. stiff beatings in Western conference _ football night. Saskatchewan R oug h r i ds er passing ace Frank Tripucka’ was beaten at his own game. at Ed- monton, where the Eskimos, |. showing only glimpses of a still- |. potent ground offensive, took to the air in seldom-seen fashion to wallop the Riders 40-6. Jack- ie Parker fired. four touchdown passes and Don Getty threw. one. At Calgary, Nobby Wirkowski, the former Toronto Argonaut, and relicf quarter Maury Dune-{ an kept the Stampeders in the air most of the night with a var- iety of forwards that helped shut out British Columbia Lions 42-0. Wirkowski ‘ threw two touchdown passes and former Lion Duncan, one, It was the Lions’ second defeat incial Football Union games. They lost 49-33 to the Roughrid- | ers at Vancouver Saturday night. In the league opener at Winni- peg last. Thursday, . the. Blue Bombers beat Edmonton 29-21. SURPRISE TACTICS .- At Edmonton, the 18,000 fans accustomed to Eskimos’ steady, plodding line plunges of the last |. few season. got a.big surprise. Parker and Canadian Getty aid-| ed by a webk Roughrider pass defence and a solid Edmonton line could dono wrong by pass- ing, In all, the Eskimos had a net gain of 637 yards—not far off the WIFU one-game record of 654 set by Calgary in a 1957 vic- tory over the” Roughriders. In comparison, the Riders got only 223 yards from ‘scrimmage. Eskimos had a 26-20 margin They out-rushed Saskatchewan 252 yards-to 124}. and out-passed them 385 yards to 99. Parker, Getty, Jo-Bob Smith and Rollie Miles had. 19 pass completions in 26 attempts, while Tripucka and Canadian quarter Ron Adam completed 11 of 26. It was a. similar story in Cal- gary. The Stamps more. than doubled the Lions on first downs, 27 to 12. Both teams tried 27 forwards, Calgary completing 16 to B.cC.’s 11. The Stamps made 164 yards rushing to only 16 by the Lions, and out-passed their coast rivals 288. yards. to 124. George Herring, the BC. quarterback, was stifled in: near- ly every pass attempt by a hard-charging. Calgary defen- sive squad and four intercep- +.tions. By Bailey led Lions’ ground game, but his long gains—in- cluding one 66-yard = kickoff runback—were. nearly | always canceclicd quickly by =. the Stamps’ pass defence, Wirkowski scored one touch- down on a quarterback sneak from the B.C, one-yard line in the third quarter, and also -pas- sed for touchdowns by Lynn Bottoms and Chuck Holloway. End Jack Gotta took a TD forward from Duncan, and Ernie Warlick intercepted a Herring pass and ran it 30 yards to pay- weight title), ! | SATCHEL PAIGE WORKING HARD | | TO STAY OUT OF MIAMI JAIL going to jail, no Ayyril 2a ahd driving without a Heenee. until Oct. 1 and told Paige a out his areh-rival, national League victory, work ort, | at first reneriilee and n ground out. Milwaukeo Braves may be Olght yvames ahead in the Noe tonal League race,’ bub they're suill trying to catch up with Los Angeles Dodgers, who ara 34 gnines bebind, T's enough to make an alec- tronic abneus blow a fuse, but thit's the way things stand ba- tween the Graves and the Dodtre ers galng Into a twienight doubleheader that opens a fvae fame series at Los Angeles toe day. Tho Braves, who have taken i of 14 from Clnelnnatl, stand 12-6 against 6t, Touls and 11-5 against San Francisco, are only 6+ aginst the Dodgors, Mil- PROVOST PICOLE eorrere FORECOFE lalallala PORPCP EELS FEDOOCOCOCOCOICVGOS MIAMI, Fla, ub--A few more days like Sunday and pitcher / Satehel Paige of Miami Marling won't have to worry about The 50-year-old Palge was sentenced to 20 days tn jail by municipal Judge Charles Snowden for speeding Towever, the sports-loving judge deferred the sentence time he won a game for the Marlins, scored a win or struck Buffalo first baseman Luke Easter, Palge did everything but strike out Easter Sunday as he “scored a run and pitched a two-hitter agalnst a. 6-1 Inter- Palye now has only seven days of his sentence left to Pete te ee 08 Oa RO BOE AOE me aE ote: wiwkee holds an odgo on overy other alah, And the Dodgers wre ahead against only two clubs for the sonwon-—labt place Philudelphia Wy 4 ’ 1 | ‘ 1 tO ' ' eee . pot at he Ow SAPARD BADIA RE Ee OOO PER Od hte Un od ata tau Bt oe bet take aD dale traricaca spice oAts $5954444 Sas MEE SPARTA ATAPI Ce dy Tee ere | POETS ae ee E RE 8 eaise t og A" « dirt, and Jim Bakhtiar-the Iran- day would be loped off each ee eet ne eet ire ete ee re f . © e and next to Inst Clacinnath The Braves, riding a sevens game winning streak, sond Pil Joey Jay (7-4) and rookle Carl Willey (8-3) ngenst the Dodgers tonight at Los Angeles, Tho. Dodgers wit) start Don Dryadule and Johnny Podres In a bid to hang on jn the frat divi- sion, ‘Mhoy're tod with St. Louls for fourtl, The second-plice Glanta moot ‘Clnehnati at Ban Pranelsco this afternoon, The third-place Pit- taburgl Pirates, tholr fivat findsh dn the frat division ance 1048, send Ronnie Kling (1d-9)) Phillips (6-6) of the Cubs Chicago, The Phillics are at St. Lows for a night game with Jaok Stanford (7-11) facing tho Cards’ Wilmer Mivoll (8-0), battling for against Thylor UL Monday ian prince—made a two-yard, plunge for another. Rookie Doug Brown kicked’ a first-quarter field goal. and: ‘three : converts. At Edmonton, four of the Es- kimos’ touchdowns: came on for- ward. passes... Halfback Jo—Bob smith ciu- ght two. of: the ‘touchdown - aer-. fals and’ ends Don.. Stiller: and Little League farm loop. was: ye ‘ Farm, loop “final ‘tomorrow night. "Stage ‘for,’ the final in’ th set. last ~night..when : Sport’ Shop won the, semi-final by: ‘default. over. Albert. and Me- ¥|: Caffery. The final at 1% pom. | tomorrow : at. Algoma | ‘Park, will see-Sport Shop clash. with © O.. Prince , Rupert pally News Tuesday, August 19, 1958: ' CARACAS, Vonezucla (i —Ike, 7 Chestnut, 127, Philadelphia, drew} cor, 129, : Caracas, Greer and Bridden,: bce en pete, Jim Letcayits. ‘took =: ‘one: apiece. i ‘Johnny: Bright - crashed over the Normic :Kwong got the other. on a- three- -yard. dive. kicked four converts. takes: Blue’ Boinbers. to Regina to. -‘mect the Riders Thursday. night. Stampeders play host’ .to ‘Edmonton. in Saturday night's only. game. ‘Giants. smack five homers © in home park By The Associated Press The Pheonix Giants have re- turned to. their ‘own ‘home run whacked. five balls out of the park to beat Spokane 9-5 in their. Pacific Coast left: side of the line for one 90-; yard TD‘run, and ‘fullback inate | Smith ! ‘The next scehuled WIFU game! ) haven last night. and’ promptly | League ; 7:15 P.M. ONLY TODAY TO WEDNESDAY | Meet---. “the Lady, in Red” who put the finger - on Dillinger! ' The Factual Story _. Ff the Shar: ” But Vicious Lives — _ of America’s ‘ "Public Enemies ¥ . me mer YZ gored bei aay ete: Ba BED] ayy: : “ we mite t LONE. a mutation Bo sresenhs pV uaniis stery, filmed me wil _ Seek jate the jungles of Mew Geineal wsieae CHIPS RAFFERTY. --- FRANCOISE CHRISTOPHE baseball contest. at San Diego, homer in the fourth cinched a 6-4. victory .for the Pads over Salt Lake City. — George Freese hit his: 30th, ‘homer at Portland to grab. the! league lead in that, department: but a couple of doubles at the: last minute gave the Rainiers an’ 8-6 ‘win, over the Beavers. : Sacramento and Vancouver | had the day -off from league: activities, but the Mounties took | an 8-3 shellacking from Eugene : exhibition game. Commodore Cafe We coter to private parties, _ luncheons and banquets. 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