Edited Text
%)| FOLLOWING the head decision
Ny} of Raider Frost over Esquire
| pirect' driver Joe O’Brien accepts
the Fait Oaks Farm trophy from
Bay State President Paul Bowser
who made the presentation in the
hame of his farm at Lexington
Mass.
DOWN THE
BACK
STRETCH
‘New York tabloids are featur-
our native son, Joe O’Brien;
an excerpt from the New York
Mirror, written by Sidney Fields,
| tas this to say: “Joseph Cyril
| o’Brien, one of the canniest driv-
ets and trainers in the harness
ing game, stands five feet: six
| mohes, weights 130 pounds, drove
is first race at 14, is now 40,
and has white hair sprinkied with
grey- ‘
“And the hair is not from
horses that win, but © froir
that don’t,’ says Joe. He’s
driven in More than 5,000 races
| His middle name (Cyril) means
| ordly’, which is hardly applic-
able. He’s gentle, shy, always
|
‘| driven by his two ‘assistants —
| Tom Carter, from Indiana, and
tators, who stood up-and cheered
their favorites in the close .fin-
ishes that took place..
Another interesting feature of
the racing was the fact that
séven of the eight dashes were
won by horses bred and trained
in this province, namely — .New
Forest (E. Bernard) 2.16 2-5;
Ken's Pride (L. Kelly) 2.16 2-5;
Jolly Bud (Harold Cudmore) won
dashes 3 and 6 and took a new
record of 2.18 2-5: Ann’s Dream
(G, Callbeck) owned by Willard
MacDonald, Summerside, won
dashes 4 and 7, time 2.12 3-5 and
2.10 2-5; G. Ann.C., owned and
driven by George Callbeck; won
dash 5 in 2.12 3-5.
Our native son, Joe O’Brien,
won the W. N. Reynolds Memor-
Lions Swamp.
|
Barry’s Lions last evening took
the Rollaway Aces for a ride,
walloping them 17-4 in a regular
City Softball League fixture at
the Old Diamond. Frank Bell cal-
led the balls and strikes and Red
MacFadyeén was on the bases.
The Lions got rolling early in
the game, driving in two runs in
the first, two in the second and
three in the third. In the fourth
inning they got six runs and in
the sixth they got another four,
The Aces; on the other hand,
Were held scoreléss till the fourth
when they drove home three runs.
Their only other runs was in the
sixth.
Rollaway Aces
Lorne Israel, on the mound for
the winners pitched five-hit ball
and walked three. Wilf Shepherd
and Henry Hartinger shared
pitching ‘chores for the Aces.
Shepherd started off and was re-
lieved in the third by Hartinger
who went the rest of the way. Be-
tween them. they gave up futeen
hits, walked six and their team
committed six errors.
Longest hits for the Lions were
triples by Longaphie and Sammy
Gregory. Whitlock of the Aces
also hit a triple,
Gregory of the Lions had the
on batting average hitting 4 for
Indians Down
| MILWAUKEE (AP) Mil-
waukee’s Carl Willey bested the
Cardinals’ Bob Maibe in a rookies
Pitching duel Tuesday hight. Del
Crandaill’s eighth-inning sacrifice
fly sent over the deciding run as
the Braves defeated St. Louis 2-1.
The triumph, in the second
meeting of a four-game series,
enabled the Braves to climb with-
in a half game of the National
Giants, rained out- at Philadel-
phia,
Hank Aaron led the Braves at
the plate with four singles in four
trips and had, a hand in each
scoring burst. The Milwaukee
right, fielder pushed his average
to .305. ;
CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleve-
land’s new southpaw, Hal Woode-
Shick; won his second complete
game Tuesday night, stopping
Washington 5-3 after the tribe's
Cal McLish was beaten 42 by a
pair of 12th-inning home runs in
Shamrocks. This game will be
played at Memorial Field with
Braves Defeat Redbirds;
League - leading San Francisco |
Senators
six straight.
The Indians got’ off to a 20
lead in the nightcap on a first-
inning double by Vic Power, who
missed most of the first game
because he thought only one
game was scheduled and arrived
late.
Rocky Colavito had’ a home run
in each game.
The rain-dampened crowd if 7,-
783 saw a lively rhubarb in the
fourth inning of the opener when
Tribe manager Joe Gordon
charged Camilo Pascual after
‘the Nats’ pitcher’ had split the
helmet of rookie outfielder Gary
Geiger with a fast ball. Geiger
was stunned and left the game,
but was-not hurt seriously. Um-
pire Charlie Berry and Minnie
Minoso headed Gordon off tefore
he reached Pascual.
DETROIT (AP)-~The hit-happy
New York Yankees blasted 23
safeties off five Detroit pitchers
night over Boston Red So» who
scored all their runs on homers
.|par-five first hole.
| Wed., July 23, 1958 The Guardian Page 7
TORONTO (CP).— Marty Stan-
ovich, -240-pounder from Chicago,
and veteran Jack Penrose ‘of
Miami Beach, Fla., shared medal-
list honors Tuesday in the qualify-
ing round for the Canadian ama-
teur- golf. championship.
Each fired 68, three under the
Scarboro course par, to put with
69s. of Monday.
At 137 they were five strokes
under par for the 36-hole quality-
ing distance and 14 strokes bet-
ter than a group of fine who went
into sudden-death playoff for the
last. qualifying spot. They fin-
ished at 151. ‘
Two of the nine were shuffled
out—John Miller of Minneapolis
and Ernie Nerlich of Toronto.
Bach had a six at the 584-yard
‘Last qualifying figure prepara-
tory to match play starting today
with 64 players becamé 151 when
57 golfers finished the 36-hole test
with 150 or better and*nine were
in the 151. bracket.
There were 14 who bettered par
in Tuesday’s windup round. For
the two days of play only six
were under the 36-hole par of- 142.
Nick Weslock of Windsor,.Ont.,
and Gary .Cowan' of Kitchener
were the only . Canadians who
could match Tuesday’s 68 by the
two top Americans. Each had 71
Monday. *
With them at 1389 was Bob Brie
of Milwaukee, who had rounds of
69-70.
Starting the first round at
BASEBALL
RESULTS
National League
St. Loitis 000 001 000-1 5 4
Milwaukee 000 100.0lx—2 8 0
Mabe and Landrith; Willey aid
sen (28); KC-Lope (9).
Baltimore 000 000 0022 8 1
Two Americans Share Lead
In Canadian Golf Tourney
match play today will be 26
Americans, of $7 who entered,
and 38 Canadians. The original
entry list for the big field in
qualifying play was 186, but
because of scratches and with-
drawals 171 -completed Monday’s
first round, There were a few
more withdrawals Tuesday.
STEADIEST GOLFERS
Penrose and Weslock played the
steadiest golf of the day’s low
scorers, Neither strayed from par.
Penrose sank birdie, putts of
two, 10 and 14 feet to cut the
three strokes off Searboro’s par
71. Weslock dropped a’ six-footer
at the seventh, another at the 16th |
and ran down a 15-footer at the
home hole.
Stanovith, who is 43 and bends
low over his club despite girth, shot five birdiés on the
front nine and two more coming
home but slipped over par at the
short second and the par-four 455-
yard 12th.
Probable Pitchers
NEW YORK (AP) — Probable
pitchers for today’s major league
games (won and lost regords in
parentheses) :
American League
New York at Detroit (N)—Dit-
mar (5-1) vs Lary (9-8)
Washington at Cleveland (N)—
Ramos (7-8) vs Bell (3-4)
Baltimore at Chicago — O’Dei}
(9-10) or. Johnson (3-6) vs Wynn
(9-9). : :
Boston at Kansas City (N)—
IMonbouquette (0-0) vs Grim (0-1)
i National League
San Francisco at Philadelphia,
(N)—Worthington (8-5) vs San-
ford (6-9). . :
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (N)—
Drysdate (4-10) vs Friend (11-11)
Chicago at Cincinnati (N)—
Hillman (2-1) or Briggs (4-10) vs
Nuxhail, (6-5).
St. Louis at Milwaukee (N)—
B.C. Oarsmen Bring First
Gold Medal To Canada
By STEWART MacLEOD
Canadian Press Staff Writer
CARDIFF (CP)—As expected,
the husky contingent of oarsmen
from the University of British
Columbia Tuesday brought Can-
ada her first gold medal of the
current British Empire Games.
But top honors. at the pic-
turesque, mountain - dominated
horth Wales town: of Lake Padarn
went to England, which captured
three of the six top prizes avail-
able to the Commonwealth oars-
men, forcing two fancied Cana-
dian crews to settle for silver.
In the day’s erowded track and
field program at Cardiff Arms
Park, two hurdlers broke a world
record and nearly every event oh
the card brought a Games mark
tumbling.
Canadians had to settle for a
pait of six-place finishes while
the rampaging Australians
cleaned up at the track with
three gold medals, two silver and
one bronze. :
But the unheralded Canadian
fencing team came up with a
silver medal in the team epce
event, proceeding undefeated to
the final round before bowing to
England, which has yet to con-
cede a gold medal to any rival
swordsmen,
NO SWIM FINALS
There were no finals on Tues-
UK Cadet Team
Retains Trophy —
BISLEY, England (Reuters)—A
team of United Kingdom cadets
retained the Alexander Graham
Bell trophy at Bisley Tuesday by
defeating an eight-man_rifle-
shooting team from the Royal
Canadian Army Cadet Corps 712-
i
| also qualified in the women’s but-
day night’s swimming program
but the records: toppled just the
same, highlighted by a back-
stroke leg of .1:12.3 in the wom-
en’s 440 - yard medley relay
by England’s Margaret Edwa:ds
that shaved one-tenth of a second
off her own world record over 100
yards.
Automatic Games records were
set in the relay, increased from
330 yards with the addition of a
but'orfly leg, and in the men’s
and women’s butterfly “events,
which were new: on. the games
program. ;
The Canadian team of Sata
Barber, Brantford, Ont.; Irene
Service, Vancouver; Margaret
Iwasaki, Vancouver, and. Gladys-
Priestley, Verdun, Que., qualified
for the final and Miss Iwasaki
events
ing berth in the men’s 220-yard
butterfly. ;
Irene MacDonald of Hamilton
was lying fourth at the halfway
point in the women’s high diving.
competition, which ends Friday.
TRACK HEROES ny
Individual heroes of the track
were a New Zealand
schoolteacher with a withered
arm and:a South African detec. .
tive who survived a broken neck
and came back to break world
records. ’ .
Murray Halberg, a 24-year-old’
| teacher whose left arm and shoul.’
der were permanently damaged
by -a rugger injuty eight years
ago, ran a field sttldded with bis
names into the track to win the
three miles in 1¥ minutes, 15 sec-
onds, a games record,
terfly. :
But the pace in the men’s 440)
freestyle, in which two Austral-
POWER FOR INDIA
The Colombo Plan will help fi
nance a plan to bring. electricity
to 10,000 Indian villages _bya,1961,
jans anda Scot. bettérex the
Games record, was too fast. for
Bill Slater of Vancouver and Ken
Williams of Toronto. Susan Sang-
ster of West Vancouver and Miss
Priestley fared no better in the)
women’s 440. -
Montreal’s Cameron Grout was
the only other successful Cana-
YOUR NEED IS OURS
Wheel Balancing
Wheel Alignment
Fram* Straightening
SPENCE & McLEOD
Dial 9628
Eden St.
dian swimmer, gaining a qualify-
7
after shave
hé likes Menthol-iced _
he’s a cool one!
He simply avoids a
shattered temper and that burned-out,
feeling by using
Mennen Shave Creams. And to stay
especially cool and collected
: | N. Re = . aire : nday, July
| Gene Mattueci, from Brooklyn.| ial Thitee-Year-Old Pace, ‘purse| Spy Ready calling the balls and by Tackle Jensen ahd Pete: Rua. Chicago 000 310 00x—4 8 1 : . Sund !
Joe did own four horses of his| $10,679, at’ Roosevelt & strikes. The other fixture: Roll-| rs Harshman, Zuyerink (8) aad i : i ~
own, but sold three because his|last week with Shadow "Wave, away Aces at Junior B.Y.C. The; nels. Triandos; Pierce, Lown (9) and TURKEY SALAD SUPPE
Solemn High Mass at 11 a.m. Std. Time
ight. 2 ( 701 in a match at 200 and 500
: ae The remaining wi ; sey .,| Luesday night. and scored a 13-3} Crandall. : Coe : :
ke siet driger| OY Harold Stead and owed by} Consecutive | 15th game. ppd, wet grounds, ae Oe j Qi y
i yr he nig ray driver! the Mapeo Stables, Semmerside, cane ee Hei hes Pahiony “The defeat, was the Tigers’ sixth | Chicago at Cincinnati, ppd, rain. Annual Meeting pei ywg NB. age G. yet _ . MENNEN \. #
pang trainer eS. A. Camp|He was by the Moncton-owned if Lish’s|in seven games. American League Rae ae a i
ae ier, California, in! sire, Federal 2.01%, and was bd to a se ennihe axing ts Norm Sieburn paced the Bomb-|New York 202 126 000-13 23 0 Of M.A.S.A. To Be land, Verdun, Que., 88. LATHER SHAVE menthol-iced
orses have earned | raised in that province i ans Aiea oh f +, | Detroit 000 010 002-3 7 1 A.0. a 6 sca
$2,000,000. Joe is the only! ‘PURS ; 5 ae — ers with four hits, including his a en : om ’
So RAs Won the ri BIG PURSES ee - é@ighth home Yun with a man | .. Tutley and Howard; Eytan, Hel d Sun da FOR RENT
: |. And now we turn our eyes to f | Hoeft (3) Susce (5) Fischer (6) y
crowa in trotting: ‘The Hamble-| faraway tracks, where Maritime Ba Games sboord \ie the Ath tuning. Gil te sen (6). and -Heann.. iRéy« Floor Sanders and Edgers
tonian, the Yonkers Trot, and the} drivers are competing for some | |MeDougald, Jerry Lampe, Yogi| 0." tgs: NYk-MeDougald (6),| MONCTON (CP) — The annual] alsd | af Be
Kentucky Futurity. The | three| of the largest purses offered, and ° os Bersa aid Hank Bauer bed three] ao (3); Detwermal 'S);. . | meeting of: the Markie Ames|| leer Gbalere and Varsishos T. ANNE’S SUNDAY-
he Brown Jug is the one 1 tried wie; have Pleasure in reporting This Evening Se hey MeDougald's was his) poston 000 102 000-3 8 1| teur Softball Association will bel] for sale ST. ANN
! ‘ at Egyptian Princess won the a sas City 200 000 0024 4 0| held at Amberst Sunday, it was
five times and missed,’ says Joe. ! ‘ KANE wo-out | wansas City 200 00 ; : CHANDLER BROS.
Mil keep trying.’ ys Jo Gar corel Sabre Abies: Phere are two games on tap for Ee tpmied wig hs — ilies Brewer - and White; Dickson,| announced here ‘Tuesday — byl, Plywood Place Dial 6557 at Lennox Island
“Joe now drives almost all the Racewa 1 st : ie dri sevelt tonight in the City Softball Lea- ne Te re nin IBMINE DY Gorman: (9) and OChiti. W - Gor-| Association _ President enry ; TION
jorses he trains; the rest ate|Earl Avery, time 205 Lhe" °|gue. Barry's Lions at B.LS. Ainictice “43. victory Tuesday | M4" HRs: Bos-Runtels (3), Jen.) Kelly. ‘ INDIAN RESERVA
27th, 1958 |
| wile, Betty, says: ‘owning horses| defeating one of the finest ficld|game will take place at the Old| Lopez’ drive came off Tom| Lollar. W—Pierce. L—Harshman. All Home Cookin a pun -
[is for well-to-do e'. The|of three-year-olds in the world,| Diamond with Frank Bell doing) Brewer who. hed pitched three-/HR: Chi—Boone (2) 6. ngs 8 6 Chicken Barbeque Sea Food.
‘| yearling he owns is out of Scott| including O’Brien Hanover, re-| the umpiring. | hit ball and held the Athletics/ gecond t
‘ este ae Rage Hambleton-
ian in : a 8 appropriately
named Golden Promise. .
and Betty have a home tn
a2 Joaquin Valley; California,
_| aid every year for 10 years they,
fave been promising themselves
imp breeding ranch. He has no
hobbies, no interests, only horses.
“And where do they stay while
‘}he’s racing at Roosevelt? With
Pmends in Old Westbury —.on a
prse farm,” é
THE RAIN é
Despite the rain which came
wn in showers midway through
¢ meeting at Truro Saturday
tht, the entire program was
ced. In races 1 and 4, Gilda
lle (M. Turner) was 3-1, Lou
time 2.14 4-5 and 2.15 1-5. Races
and-6\ — Windsor Chief (Le-
|
Races 3 and 7 — Rainbow
Clegg (K. Pinkney) 2-1, Robert-
dale (MacLeod) 1-3, Wing Com-
Mander (Jabalee) 4-2, Josedale
nsman (G. Turner) 3-4, time
2:10 and 2.11 1-5. Rainbow Clegg
led by W. E. Piers, Pugwash,
Robertdale by F. T. Stan-
i race, the rain was coming
Sth dash on the card, it
eto
increas-
a downpour. k ;
afta Fraser Scott (McCulley)
time 2.24 4-5: winning owner
Dr. J. A. Delaney, Summer-| pig Boy (E. Haley) 11 “"’
: Little Deb (R. Johnson) 2 i ivel i
A eel of rain caused the Borel Budleng | ee : ; Action Yester day : an d
ing Saturday night at Sack-| Paicourt Pal (MacMillan) Ts = ;
Mille Downs to be cut down to| Joppa Maid (E. Shawl a3 In yesterday's Little ia go :
titee dashes. The first two dash-|Abbasong (L. Walker) 5 4| baseball activity rs veNe cS :
Were raced under, clear con-} Time 9.14 1-5 (new record) : feated the Yanks 7% Oh HEVIS :
itions, but in the third dash.|2.12 15 (new record), wee ant Maco aula ciene the ‘
the free-for-all, the rain came BADES FANE ne ON eee ante
fown in a heavy shower. Des: Runnymede Beale (Mount) i 6 ee ee etactus ataes eee mae
'Pite that, the mile was stepped Congressional Boy (A. Lan- ng sein os foh the sixth ° eae } :
De aeee et a Paaking it gille) 5 1| Inning with the bases loaded to Starters With Positions
Auelbth mile in 2.10 or better at| Darn Good Pick (E. Shaw) 2 5 riers lg Mee tinea! yee Mie :
Will bere itis season, | [Newport Dean (Walker) 42) Citic mar the leading batter of as ese
mary ile, toticed in the sum-| Danville Delegate (Mauger) 3 4 the: day, hitting 3 for’ 3,.Peter For J uly 23rd, 1958.
teaeaecrattan (1. Wal-|Slicker ‘Tass (MacDonald) 6 3| (6 JAN, ie nal catch : eae 4
fr pace Mighty Special (H.
) Tson) and, Frsd Scott (J
7; (ven); also Royal Atom (A.
4 a Newport Chief was
ace 1 Dynamite
lo (S. Daniels) 1, Cattie Direct
- Gaudet) 2, Cymac (E. Smith)
Globetrotter “(L. O'Brien). 4,
ing Way (Moreside) 4, Per-
ct Hal (MacGregor) 6, Dia-
fond Lady (H, Walsh) 7, Dusty
smbro (FE. Langille) 8, time
cent winner of the $108,000 Mes-
senger Stake for three-year-olds.
TYPICAL O'BRIEN we
It was a typical O’Brien drive
ness Horse’, commenting on it
states that Shadow Wave's show-
Crown this summer and fall.
Summary: Shadow Wave
(O’Brien) 1-1, O’Brien Hanover
(Jordan) 3-2, Napoleon Hanover
(Harner) 2-5, five other starters,
times for. the first mile: 30 2:6,
1.01 3-5, 1:32 and 2.02 1-5 —. terri-
fie speed for a half-mile track;
the last mile was paced
2.03 1-5. Sa ee
And at Bay State Raceway, Joe
won the feature three-year-old
: pace, purse $7,500, with Raider/side. F
eno iacheod), 14, David G.| wrost, time 2.06 |G: Cutelitfe, and Gardiner and
42, and three other starters,| <1", another feature event, at/ Harold Leard led their team
Saratoga Raceway, New York,
the B Trot, purse $800, was won
horse, that has won over a mile
track in 2.03 3-5.as a three-year-
old, but probably because of his
great size and great stride; finds
the half-mile ovals hard to ego-
tiate, — ;
At Baltimore Raceway on July
12, driver Quinn of Charlotté-
town won with Major’s Son.
d, Truro. In the last dash of| Sackville Downs (‘Thursday | cher, ora made a fine runn-
ight): . 7 : ee ing catch. ‘ e
very heavily, and in the nem) RACES 1 AND 4 G./ Campbell robbed I. Camp:
Dark Yankee (G, Mauger) 1
Royal Value (C. Smith) DNF
Leon Spanglés (E Smith)
Don Truax (G. Gaudet)
Four other starters. Time 2.12,
2.11 2-5, : BES
RACES 2 AND 6
Time 2.10 2-5 for Runnymede
-|Beale, owned by John S. Sav-
age, Fredericton. Time 2.11 for
Congressional Boy, E. Langille,
owner Fredericton, N. B. :
A RACE 5.
Texas Hal (H. Walker)
Jollity Kiften (A. Carter)
Ronnie Spencer (H, Yorke)
Tim Clegg (E. Butler)
Time 2.19. Winning owner Don-
ald McAulay, Pugwash.
RACE 8
Vera Signal (C; Smith)
& OF bo
in both. dashes, and ‘The -Har-|.
in|. With Ray Barrett pitching a
Ball Practice
This Evening |
this evening at 6:00 o’clock at
Memorial Field.
Cape Traverse
Swamps Tigers.
two-hitter the Cape ‘Traverse
team defeated Tyne Valley Tig-
ers 13 - 2 last night in Summer-
with 3 hits in 4 trips to, the plate.
Ray Barrett had 2 for 3, Dale
‘ers. +s
two tiger pitchers I. Campbell
and Dave Birch. Campbell gave
up 13 hits while Birch gave up 5.
G. MacFadyen played a very.
bell of a potential base hit in the
fourth inning. Harold Leard
played a good game in right field
Gord Sullivan was plate umpire
Little League
in the first inning.
The second fixture in little lea-
gue ball saw the Dodgers drop-
ping the Tigers 7-5. Lyal Hug-
gan hurled for the winners and
sent eleven batters down swing-
ing, while Billy Weatherbie took
the loss. Gerry Kane of the Dod-
gers played a very good game at
first base and also sco two
runs to spark his team to vic-
tory.
Minor League got off to a good
The winners had 18 hits off the |
steady game at second base. In!)
‘the third inning the Cape cat-
helpless after giving up a pair
of runs in the first inning,
Is Voted For /
Rae Hickok Belt
who won the Naticnal Open cham-
pionship, has been voted for the
Washington 002 100 000-3 9 1
Cleveland 202,100. 00x—5 6 2
Romonosky and Fitzgerald;
Woodeshick: and Brown. HRs:
Wsh—Romonosky (1). Cle—Cola-
vito (18),
International League ~
.Crimian and Hannah; Hayden,
Sanche (6), and Grandcolas. L—
Hayden.
S. Raé Hickok $10,000 belt.
¢
—
T
1, Jollity Leigh; 2. Downtown;
“4. Keppoch Playgirl; 2. Royal
1st. DASH 7:45
No. 6-9 AA Pace 2 Dashes — $250.00 each.
§ 5. Jolly Jim; 6. Dunlop B.; 7, Here Am I; 8. Jolly Dick.
No. 5—8 C Pace 2 Dashes — $175.00 each
Boy; 5. Dr, Wilfred C.; 6. Ten Spot; 7. America’s Ace; 8. Tribune.
No 4—7 A Trot 2 Dashes — $225.00 each,
1, All Budlong; 2. Baby Train; § 3. Salley Volstadt; 4..Tara Boy;
3. Ginger E.; S 4, Mr. Joliscott;
Onyx; 3, Jean Clegg; 4. Myrtle’s
Junior Farmers
Proceeds in
Helireation Centre
NEW GLASGOW
» Wednesday, duly 23. Starting at 4.30 pan. -
Aid of the
\
_ Refreshments.
‘Indian Souvenirs and Handicraft
Se Burke’s Lad’s & Lassies Band
Come and join the latge crowd and enjoy the
: ee : : : i boat.
Str it in the off-|i2S Puts him right back with the} - : C i di tful sail across to the island by motor
cam fn g "Joe breaks colts| ‘PS for the Little Brown Jug,| “The Junior Legionnaires base-| mw yORK (AP) — Tommy rhs 020 2000-4 8 1 menunity Medical Centre P ae
and acts as manager of the re ae nee Bead gael ball team will hold a practice/ gout the temperamental golfer| Havana 000 001 0—1 6 2 rae
With
Velma Middleton
JULY
LOUIS “Satchmo” ARMSTRONG
AND HIS ALL-STARS
w
and b: ; ius ba +O See er ; :
el ; y Sectionman, owned by Elliot | MacWilliams and Gardiner each l this month. 9.00 Car Radio Installed
Tate) 2-1, L. G. Hail (Conroy)! Saunders and driven by Len|hit a home run. G. MacFadyen, Sp ecia th § —$5 : ;
Silver Dawn Honor (Connors) |q*Meara, time 2.131 2-8 on a MacWilliams and G. Campbeli|f With aerial—Reg. price $70.75,
Arabian Wake (nba ay. ukes| heavy. track. lt looks as though| 9 for 4. Dave Birch and & Gor-{f
ain 45 and 217 NM?| Len has found the key to this) rit had the only hits for the los: | BOWLAN RADIO & TV 114 Pownal St. é
SHOW STARTS AT 9P.M.
P|
day night at the SPORTS ARENA in Charlottetown. LOUIS “SATCHMO” | AN
HIS ALL-STARS AND VELMA MIDDLETON Willbe here for what we know will be the most thrilling
song and dance performance ever held on P. E. I.
| 1| start yesterday morning when
Fane 3s,owner — Byron Ken-| Zip M. P. (P, Willis) 4 obeys rt teat the Cardinale |5, Gallant Wey; § 6. Connie French; 7, Royal Trait; 8. Dextor Scott. |] SEONcORED BY THE CHARLOTTETOWN LIONS CLUB
| Medy, Halifax. Money Royal (F. Daniels) ? 6-4. Frankie Gallant pitching for
One of. the grenvest musical events in the history of Prince Edward Island takes place Thurs-
ARMSTRONG AND
f Race 2 — i ) : No. 1 — € Trot 1 Dash $150.00 :
| OBrien) 1 Pe mane E Reyme 2 7 Winning owner Je ae Taph bkcuapiay, the Cubs S$ 1, Oro Dale; 2. Bonnie’s a S ere Romney 4, Tommy 5 AT :
‘Baley) 2. Chevvie G (Moreside) E: Yeo, Miseolche, P-E.l. { ¢ oftehin «.|Shanter; S 5, Feather Duster; 6. Fortune’s Pride. ° rf ,
j ‘ : side) | EB: » Mis 1 Eokel under the 6-hit- pitching of Reg DVANCE ALE °
! r {pta! Maid (Mauger) 4, Wait gie Hee: Magatens.. nal No. 3 — C Pace 1 Dash $175.00. Daily Double A s | ‘
neer ‘A Cnet? 2 Teun Moore Fullmer = oe eee _, ae a hips 1, Jollity George; 2. Sister Dawn: S 3. reer ; +4 ane hb ' D - 5 d L
. , . bal uke Neils i , 5. Fairgo; S 6. Bob Clegg; SS 7. Just Verdict; SS 8. Bobby Brooke. ' -M t's: H h ru tore and an ions
fade Darby (P. Lavers) 7, for the losers. Goss was — top In Charlottetown: Tweel's Restaurant; Me nt's; Hughes g.. ’ y
Lane o 22, 15: winning owner —| Match Sought hatter for the Cubs, scoring four No. 2 — € Pace 1 Dash — $150.00, Daily Double :
gh O'Brien, Windsor Junct- ns. ; 1. Kay Clegg; 2. Nellie Bangs; 3, Miss Cyclonic; 4, Corona- Club.member.
cow , SAN DIEGO, Calif. — (AP) — Litt'e League Biandlines: pts, |tion Sue; 5. Pericles; 6. Lana Dale; 7. Curtain Raiser; 8, Record
“Race Moon E. Frank Acorn|Archie Moore said Tuesday re Braves . Ky 3 0. Pearl. Also eligible Ranida; Callie Hal.
ve tal r 4 rt ~ * is F DES TeTETrrTT .
tame up with a crowd-pleasing| is agreeable to a defence of his) Trav’ deseeeeeee 7 43° 8 os .
rogram Monday ‘night at” the| light heavyweight boxing na Redes Ag Charlottetown Driving Park In Summerside: R.C.A.F. Groceteria; Boates Pharmacy and CJRW.
harlottetown raceway. All the!pionship against Gene otiations| Tigers. :........ .. 8 2.6.4 .
vers gave their best, and that|and confirmed ine ch match. |Red SOX ..ceseeee 7 26 4 man
sed the large crowd of spec- are being made for such a .
Ny} of Raider Frost over Esquire
| pirect' driver Joe O’Brien accepts
the Fait Oaks Farm trophy from
Bay State President Paul Bowser
who made the presentation in the
hame of his farm at Lexington
Mass.
DOWN THE
BACK
STRETCH
‘New York tabloids are featur-
our native son, Joe O’Brien;
an excerpt from the New York
Mirror, written by Sidney Fields,
| tas this to say: “Joseph Cyril
| o’Brien, one of the canniest driv-
ets and trainers in the harness
ing game, stands five feet: six
| mohes, weights 130 pounds, drove
is first race at 14, is now 40,
and has white hair sprinkied with
grey- ‘
“And the hair is not from
horses that win, but © froir
that don’t,’ says Joe. He’s
driven in More than 5,000 races
| His middle name (Cyril) means
| ordly’, which is hardly applic-
able. He’s gentle, shy, always
|
‘| driven by his two ‘assistants —
| Tom Carter, from Indiana, and
tators, who stood up-and cheered
their favorites in the close .fin-
ishes that took place..
Another interesting feature of
the racing was the fact that
séven of the eight dashes were
won by horses bred and trained
in this province, namely — .New
Forest (E. Bernard) 2.16 2-5;
Ken's Pride (L. Kelly) 2.16 2-5;
Jolly Bud (Harold Cudmore) won
dashes 3 and 6 and took a new
record of 2.18 2-5: Ann’s Dream
(G, Callbeck) owned by Willard
MacDonald, Summerside, won
dashes 4 and 7, time 2.12 3-5 and
2.10 2-5; G. Ann.C., owned and
driven by George Callbeck; won
dash 5 in 2.12 3-5.
Our native son, Joe O’Brien,
won the W. N. Reynolds Memor-
Lions Swamp.
|
Barry’s Lions last evening took
the Rollaway Aces for a ride,
walloping them 17-4 in a regular
City Softball League fixture at
the Old Diamond. Frank Bell cal-
led the balls and strikes and Red
MacFadyeén was on the bases.
The Lions got rolling early in
the game, driving in two runs in
the first, two in the second and
three in the third. In the fourth
inning they got six runs and in
the sixth they got another four,
The Aces; on the other hand,
Were held scoreléss till the fourth
when they drove home three runs.
Their only other runs was in the
sixth.
Rollaway Aces
Lorne Israel, on the mound for
the winners pitched five-hit ball
and walked three. Wilf Shepherd
and Henry Hartinger shared
pitching ‘chores for the Aces.
Shepherd started off and was re-
lieved in the third by Hartinger
who went the rest of the way. Be-
tween them. they gave up futeen
hits, walked six and their team
committed six errors.
Longest hits for the Lions were
triples by Longaphie and Sammy
Gregory. Whitlock of the Aces
also hit a triple,
Gregory of the Lions had the
on batting average hitting 4 for
Indians Down
| MILWAUKEE (AP) Mil-
waukee’s Carl Willey bested the
Cardinals’ Bob Maibe in a rookies
Pitching duel Tuesday hight. Del
Crandaill’s eighth-inning sacrifice
fly sent over the deciding run as
the Braves defeated St. Louis 2-1.
The triumph, in the second
meeting of a four-game series,
enabled the Braves to climb with-
in a half game of the National
Giants, rained out- at Philadel-
phia,
Hank Aaron led the Braves at
the plate with four singles in four
trips and had, a hand in each
scoring burst. The Milwaukee
right, fielder pushed his average
to .305. ;
CLEVELAND (AP) — Cleve-
land’s new southpaw, Hal Woode-
Shick; won his second complete
game Tuesday night, stopping
Washington 5-3 after the tribe's
Cal McLish was beaten 42 by a
pair of 12th-inning home runs in
Shamrocks. This game will be
played at Memorial Field with
Braves Defeat Redbirds;
League - leading San Francisco |
Senators
six straight.
The Indians got’ off to a 20
lead in the nightcap on a first-
inning double by Vic Power, who
missed most of the first game
because he thought only one
game was scheduled and arrived
late.
Rocky Colavito had’ a home run
in each game.
The rain-dampened crowd if 7,-
783 saw a lively rhubarb in the
fourth inning of the opener when
Tribe manager Joe Gordon
charged Camilo Pascual after
‘the Nats’ pitcher’ had split the
helmet of rookie outfielder Gary
Geiger with a fast ball. Geiger
was stunned and left the game,
but was-not hurt seriously. Um-
pire Charlie Berry and Minnie
Minoso headed Gordon off tefore
he reached Pascual.
DETROIT (AP)-~The hit-happy
New York Yankees blasted 23
safeties off five Detroit pitchers
night over Boston Red So» who
scored all their runs on homers
.|par-five first hole.
| Wed., July 23, 1958 The Guardian Page 7
TORONTO (CP).— Marty Stan-
ovich, -240-pounder from Chicago,
and veteran Jack Penrose ‘of
Miami Beach, Fla., shared medal-
list honors Tuesday in the qualify-
ing round for the Canadian ama-
teur- golf. championship.
Each fired 68, three under the
Scarboro course par, to put with
69s. of Monday.
At 137 they were five strokes
under par for the 36-hole quality-
ing distance and 14 strokes bet-
ter than a group of fine who went
into sudden-death playoff for the
last. qualifying spot. They fin-
ished at 151. ‘
Two of the nine were shuffled
out—John Miller of Minneapolis
and Ernie Nerlich of Toronto.
Bach had a six at the 584-yard
‘Last qualifying figure prepara-
tory to match play starting today
with 64 players becamé 151 when
57 golfers finished the 36-hole test
with 150 or better and*nine were
in the 151. bracket.
There were 14 who bettered par
in Tuesday’s windup round. For
the two days of play only six
were under the 36-hole par of- 142.
Nick Weslock of Windsor,.Ont.,
and Gary .Cowan' of Kitchener
were the only . Canadians who
could match Tuesday’s 68 by the
two top Americans. Each had 71
Monday. *
With them at 1389 was Bob Brie
of Milwaukee, who had rounds of
69-70.
Starting the first round at
BASEBALL
RESULTS
National League
St. Loitis 000 001 000-1 5 4
Milwaukee 000 100.0lx—2 8 0
Mabe and Landrith; Willey aid
sen (28); KC-Lope (9).
Baltimore 000 000 0022 8 1
Two Americans Share Lead
In Canadian Golf Tourney
match play today will be 26
Americans, of $7 who entered,
and 38 Canadians. The original
entry list for the big field in
qualifying play was 186, but
because of scratches and with-
drawals 171 -completed Monday’s
first round, There were a few
more withdrawals Tuesday.
STEADIEST GOLFERS
Penrose and Weslock played the
steadiest golf of the day’s low
scorers, Neither strayed from par.
Penrose sank birdie, putts of
two, 10 and 14 feet to cut the
three strokes off Searboro’s par
71. Weslock dropped a’ six-footer
at the seventh, another at the 16th |
and ran down a 15-footer at the
home hole.
Stanovith, who is 43 and bends
low over his club despite girth, shot five birdiés on the
front nine and two more coming
home but slipped over par at the
short second and the par-four 455-
yard 12th.
Probable Pitchers
NEW YORK (AP) — Probable
pitchers for today’s major league
games (won and lost regords in
parentheses) :
American League
New York at Detroit (N)—Dit-
mar (5-1) vs Lary (9-8)
Washington at Cleveland (N)—
Ramos (7-8) vs Bell (3-4)
Baltimore at Chicago — O’Dei}
(9-10) or. Johnson (3-6) vs Wynn
(9-9). : :
Boston at Kansas City (N)—
IMonbouquette (0-0) vs Grim (0-1)
i National League
San Francisco at Philadelphia,
(N)—Worthington (8-5) vs San-
ford (6-9). . :
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (N)—
Drysdate (4-10) vs Friend (11-11)
Chicago at Cincinnati (N)—
Hillman (2-1) or Briggs (4-10) vs
Nuxhail, (6-5).
St. Louis at Milwaukee (N)—
B.C. Oarsmen Bring First
Gold Medal To Canada
By STEWART MacLEOD
Canadian Press Staff Writer
CARDIFF (CP)—As expected,
the husky contingent of oarsmen
from the University of British
Columbia Tuesday brought Can-
ada her first gold medal of the
current British Empire Games.
But top honors. at the pic-
turesque, mountain - dominated
horth Wales town: of Lake Padarn
went to England, which captured
three of the six top prizes avail-
able to the Commonwealth oars-
men, forcing two fancied Cana-
dian crews to settle for silver.
In the day’s erowded track and
field program at Cardiff Arms
Park, two hurdlers broke a world
record and nearly every event oh
the card brought a Games mark
tumbling.
Canadians had to settle for a
pait of six-place finishes while
the rampaging Australians
cleaned up at the track with
three gold medals, two silver and
one bronze. :
But the unheralded Canadian
fencing team came up with a
silver medal in the team epce
event, proceeding undefeated to
the final round before bowing to
England, which has yet to con-
cede a gold medal to any rival
swordsmen,
NO SWIM FINALS
There were no finals on Tues-
UK Cadet Team
Retains Trophy —
BISLEY, England (Reuters)—A
team of United Kingdom cadets
retained the Alexander Graham
Bell trophy at Bisley Tuesday by
defeating an eight-man_rifle-
shooting team from the Royal
Canadian Army Cadet Corps 712-
i
| also qualified in the women’s but-
day night’s swimming program
but the records: toppled just the
same, highlighted by a back-
stroke leg of .1:12.3 in the wom-
en’s 440 - yard medley relay
by England’s Margaret Edwa:ds
that shaved one-tenth of a second
off her own world record over 100
yards.
Automatic Games records were
set in the relay, increased from
330 yards with the addition of a
but'orfly leg, and in the men’s
and women’s butterfly “events,
which were new: on. the games
program. ;
The Canadian team of Sata
Barber, Brantford, Ont.; Irene
Service, Vancouver; Margaret
Iwasaki, Vancouver, and. Gladys-
Priestley, Verdun, Que., qualified
for the final and Miss Iwasaki
events
ing berth in the men’s 220-yard
butterfly. ;
Irene MacDonald of Hamilton
was lying fourth at the halfway
point in the women’s high diving.
competition, which ends Friday.
TRACK HEROES ny
Individual heroes of the track
were a New Zealand
schoolteacher with a withered
arm and:a South African detec. .
tive who survived a broken neck
and came back to break world
records. ’ .
Murray Halberg, a 24-year-old’
| teacher whose left arm and shoul.’
der were permanently damaged
by -a rugger injuty eight years
ago, ran a field sttldded with bis
names into the track to win the
three miles in 1¥ minutes, 15 sec-
onds, a games record,
terfly. :
But the pace in the men’s 440)
freestyle, in which two Austral-
POWER FOR INDIA
The Colombo Plan will help fi
nance a plan to bring. electricity
to 10,000 Indian villages _bya,1961,
jans anda Scot. bettérex the
Games record, was too fast. for
Bill Slater of Vancouver and Ken
Williams of Toronto. Susan Sang-
ster of West Vancouver and Miss
Priestley fared no better in the)
women’s 440. -
Montreal’s Cameron Grout was
the only other successful Cana-
YOUR NEED IS OURS
Wheel Balancing
Wheel Alignment
Fram* Straightening
SPENCE & McLEOD
Dial 9628
Eden St.
dian swimmer, gaining a qualify-
7
after shave
hé likes Menthol-iced _
he’s a cool one!
He simply avoids a
shattered temper and that burned-out,
feeling by using
Mennen Shave Creams. And to stay
especially cool and collected
: | N. Re = . aire : nday, July
| Gene Mattueci, from Brooklyn.| ial Thitee-Year-Old Pace, ‘purse| Spy Ready calling the balls and by Tackle Jensen ahd Pete: Rua. Chicago 000 310 00x—4 8 1 : . Sund !
Joe did own four horses of his| $10,679, at’ Roosevelt & strikes. The other fixture: Roll-| rs Harshman, Zuyerink (8) aad i : i ~
own, but sold three because his|last week with Shadow "Wave, away Aces at Junior B.Y.C. The; nels. Triandos; Pierce, Lown (9) and TURKEY SALAD SUPPE
Solemn High Mass at 11 a.m. Std. Time
ight. 2 ( 701 in a match at 200 and 500
: ae The remaining wi ; sey .,| Luesday night. and scored a 13-3} Crandall. : Coe : :
ke siet driger| OY Harold Stead and owed by} Consecutive | 15th game. ppd, wet grounds, ae Oe j Qi y
i yr he nig ray driver! the Mapeo Stables, Semmerside, cane ee Hei hes Pahiony “The defeat, was the Tigers’ sixth | Chicago at Cincinnati, ppd, rain. Annual Meeting pei ywg NB. age G. yet _ . MENNEN \. #
pang trainer eS. A. Camp|He was by the Moncton-owned if Lish’s|in seven games. American League Rae ae a i
ae ier, California, in! sire, Federal 2.01%, and was bd to a se ennihe axing ts Norm Sieburn paced the Bomb-|New York 202 126 000-13 23 0 Of M.A.S.A. To Be land, Verdun, Que., 88. LATHER SHAVE menthol-iced
orses have earned | raised in that province i ans Aiea oh f +, | Detroit 000 010 002-3 7 1 A.0. a 6 sca
$2,000,000. Joe is the only! ‘PURS ; 5 ae — ers with four hits, including his a en : om ’
So RAs Won the ri BIG PURSES ee - é@ighth home Yun with a man | .. Tutley and Howard; Eytan, Hel d Sun da FOR RENT
: |. And now we turn our eyes to f | Hoeft (3) Susce (5) Fischer (6) y
crowa in trotting: ‘The Hamble-| faraway tracks, where Maritime Ba Games sboord \ie the Ath tuning. Gil te sen (6). and -Heann.. iRéy« Floor Sanders and Edgers
tonian, the Yonkers Trot, and the} drivers are competing for some | |MeDougald, Jerry Lampe, Yogi| 0." tgs: NYk-MeDougald (6),| MONCTON (CP) — The annual] alsd | af Be
Kentucky Futurity. The | three| of the largest purses offered, and ° os Bersa aid Hank Bauer bed three] ao (3); Detwermal 'S);. . | meeting of: the Markie Ames|| leer Gbalere and Varsishos T. ANNE’S SUNDAY-
he Brown Jug is the one 1 tried wie; have Pleasure in reporting This Evening Se hey MeDougald's was his) poston 000 102 000-3 8 1| teur Softball Association will bel] for sale ST. ANN
! ‘ at Egyptian Princess won the a sas City 200 000 0024 4 0| held at Amberst Sunday, it was
five times and missed,’ says Joe. ! ‘ KANE wo-out | wansas City 200 00 ; : CHANDLER BROS.
Mil keep trying.’ ys Jo Gar corel Sabre Abies: Phere are two games on tap for Ee tpmied wig hs — ilies Brewer - and White; Dickson,| announced here ‘Tuesday — byl, Plywood Place Dial 6557 at Lennox Island
“Joe now drives almost all the Racewa 1 st : ie dri sevelt tonight in the City Softball Lea- ne Te re nin IBMINE DY Gorman: (9) and OChiti. W - Gor-| Association _ President enry ; TION
jorses he trains; the rest ate|Earl Avery, time 205 Lhe" °|gue. Barry's Lions at B.LS. Ainictice “43. victory Tuesday | M4" HRs: Bos-Runtels (3), Jen.) Kelly. ‘ INDIAN RESERVA
27th, 1958 |
| wile, Betty, says: ‘owning horses| defeating one of the finest ficld|game will take place at the Old| Lopez’ drive came off Tom| Lollar. W—Pierce. L—Harshman. All Home Cookin a pun -
[is for well-to-do e'. The|of three-year-olds in the world,| Diamond with Frank Bell doing) Brewer who. hed pitched three-/HR: Chi—Boone (2) 6. ngs 8 6 Chicken Barbeque Sea Food.
‘| yearling he owns is out of Scott| including O’Brien Hanover, re-| the umpiring. | hit ball and held the Athletics/ gecond t
‘ este ae Rage Hambleton-
ian in : a 8 appropriately
named Golden Promise. .
and Betty have a home tn
a2 Joaquin Valley; California,
_| aid every year for 10 years they,
fave been promising themselves
imp breeding ranch. He has no
hobbies, no interests, only horses.
“And where do they stay while
‘}he’s racing at Roosevelt? With
Pmends in Old Westbury —.on a
prse farm,” é
THE RAIN é
Despite the rain which came
wn in showers midway through
¢ meeting at Truro Saturday
tht, the entire program was
ced. In races 1 and 4, Gilda
lle (M. Turner) was 3-1, Lou
time 2.14 4-5 and 2.15 1-5. Races
and-6\ — Windsor Chief (Le-
|
Races 3 and 7 — Rainbow
Clegg (K. Pinkney) 2-1, Robert-
dale (MacLeod) 1-3, Wing Com-
Mander (Jabalee) 4-2, Josedale
nsman (G. Turner) 3-4, time
2:10 and 2.11 1-5. Rainbow Clegg
led by W. E. Piers, Pugwash,
Robertdale by F. T. Stan-
i race, the rain was coming
Sth dash on the card, it
eto
increas-
a downpour. k ;
afta Fraser Scott (McCulley)
time 2.24 4-5: winning owner
Dr. J. A. Delaney, Summer-| pig Boy (E. Haley) 11 “"’
: Little Deb (R. Johnson) 2 i ivel i
A eel of rain caused the Borel Budleng | ee : ; Action Yester day : an d
ing Saturday night at Sack-| Paicourt Pal (MacMillan) Ts = ;
Mille Downs to be cut down to| Joppa Maid (E. Shawl a3 In yesterday's Little ia go :
titee dashes. The first two dash-|Abbasong (L. Walker) 5 4| baseball activity rs veNe cS :
Were raced under, clear con-} Time 9.14 1-5 (new record) : feated the Yanks 7% Oh HEVIS :
itions, but in the third dash.|2.12 15 (new record), wee ant Maco aula ciene the ‘
the free-for-all, the rain came BADES FANE ne ON eee ante
fown in a heavy shower. Des: Runnymede Beale (Mount) i 6 ee ee etactus ataes eee mae
'Pite that, the mile was stepped Congressional Boy (A. Lan- ng sein os foh the sixth ° eae } :
De aeee et a Paaking it gille) 5 1| Inning with the bases loaded to Starters With Positions
Auelbth mile in 2.10 or better at| Darn Good Pick (E. Shaw) 2 5 riers lg Mee tinea! yee Mie :
Will bere itis season, | [Newport Dean (Walker) 42) Citic mar the leading batter of as ese
mary ile, toticed in the sum-| Danville Delegate (Mauger) 3 4 the: day, hitting 3 for’ 3,.Peter For J uly 23rd, 1958.
teaeaecrattan (1. Wal-|Slicker ‘Tass (MacDonald) 6 3| (6 JAN, ie nal catch : eae 4
fr pace Mighty Special (H.
) Tson) and, Frsd Scott (J
7; (ven); also Royal Atom (A.
4 a Newport Chief was
ace 1 Dynamite
lo (S. Daniels) 1, Cattie Direct
- Gaudet) 2, Cymac (E. Smith)
Globetrotter “(L. O'Brien). 4,
ing Way (Moreside) 4, Per-
ct Hal (MacGregor) 6, Dia-
fond Lady (H, Walsh) 7, Dusty
smbro (FE. Langille) 8, time
cent winner of the $108,000 Mes-
senger Stake for three-year-olds.
TYPICAL O'BRIEN we
It was a typical O’Brien drive
ness Horse’, commenting on it
states that Shadow Wave's show-
Crown this summer and fall.
Summary: Shadow Wave
(O’Brien) 1-1, O’Brien Hanover
(Jordan) 3-2, Napoleon Hanover
(Harner) 2-5, five other starters,
times for. the first mile: 30 2:6,
1.01 3-5, 1:32 and 2.02 1-5 —. terri-
fie speed for a half-mile track;
the last mile was paced
2.03 1-5. Sa ee
And at Bay State Raceway, Joe
won the feature three-year-old
: pace, purse $7,500, with Raider/side. F
eno iacheod), 14, David G.| wrost, time 2.06 |G: Cutelitfe, and Gardiner and
42, and three other starters,| <1", another feature event, at/ Harold Leard led their team
Saratoga Raceway, New York,
the B Trot, purse $800, was won
horse, that has won over a mile
track in 2.03 3-5.as a three-year-
old, but probably because of his
great size and great stride; finds
the half-mile ovals hard to ego-
tiate, — ;
At Baltimore Raceway on July
12, driver Quinn of Charlotté-
town won with Major’s Son.
d, Truro. In the last dash of| Sackville Downs (‘Thursday | cher, ora made a fine runn-
ight): . 7 : ee ing catch. ‘ e
very heavily, and in the nem) RACES 1 AND 4 G./ Campbell robbed I. Camp:
Dark Yankee (G, Mauger) 1
Royal Value (C. Smith) DNF
Leon Spanglés (E Smith)
Don Truax (G. Gaudet)
Four other starters. Time 2.12,
2.11 2-5, : BES
RACES 2 AND 6
Time 2.10 2-5 for Runnymede
-|Beale, owned by John S. Sav-
age, Fredericton. Time 2.11 for
Congressional Boy, E. Langille,
owner Fredericton, N. B. :
A RACE 5.
Texas Hal (H. Walker)
Jollity Kiften (A. Carter)
Ronnie Spencer (H, Yorke)
Tim Clegg (E. Butler)
Time 2.19. Winning owner Don-
ald McAulay, Pugwash.
RACE 8
Vera Signal (C; Smith)
& OF bo
in both. dashes, and ‘The -Har-|.
in|. With Ray Barrett pitching a
Ball Practice
This Evening |
this evening at 6:00 o’clock at
Memorial Field.
Cape Traverse
Swamps Tigers.
two-hitter the Cape ‘Traverse
team defeated Tyne Valley Tig-
ers 13 - 2 last night in Summer-
with 3 hits in 4 trips to, the plate.
Ray Barrett had 2 for 3, Dale
‘ers. +s
two tiger pitchers I. Campbell
and Dave Birch. Campbell gave
up 13 hits while Birch gave up 5.
G. MacFadyen played a very.
bell of a potential base hit in the
fourth inning. Harold Leard
played a good game in right field
Gord Sullivan was plate umpire
Little League
in the first inning.
The second fixture in little lea-
gue ball saw the Dodgers drop-
ping the Tigers 7-5. Lyal Hug-
gan hurled for the winners and
sent eleven batters down swing-
ing, while Billy Weatherbie took
the loss. Gerry Kane of the Dod-
gers played a very good game at
first base and also sco two
runs to spark his team to vic-
tory.
Minor League got off to a good
The winners had 18 hits off the |
steady game at second base. In!)
‘the third inning the Cape cat-
helpless after giving up a pair
of runs in the first inning,
Is Voted For /
Rae Hickok Belt
who won the Naticnal Open cham-
pionship, has been voted for the
Washington 002 100 000-3 9 1
Cleveland 202,100. 00x—5 6 2
Romonosky and Fitzgerald;
Woodeshick: and Brown. HRs:
Wsh—Romonosky (1). Cle—Cola-
vito (18),
International League ~
.Crimian and Hannah; Hayden,
Sanche (6), and Grandcolas. L—
Hayden.
S. Raé Hickok $10,000 belt.
¢
—
T
1, Jollity Leigh; 2. Downtown;
“4. Keppoch Playgirl; 2. Royal
1st. DASH 7:45
No. 6-9 AA Pace 2 Dashes — $250.00 each.
§ 5. Jolly Jim; 6. Dunlop B.; 7, Here Am I; 8. Jolly Dick.
No. 5—8 C Pace 2 Dashes — $175.00 each
Boy; 5. Dr, Wilfred C.; 6. Ten Spot; 7. America’s Ace; 8. Tribune.
No 4—7 A Trot 2 Dashes — $225.00 each,
1, All Budlong; 2. Baby Train; § 3. Salley Volstadt; 4..Tara Boy;
3. Ginger E.; S 4, Mr. Joliscott;
Onyx; 3, Jean Clegg; 4. Myrtle’s
Junior Farmers
Proceeds in
Helireation Centre
NEW GLASGOW
» Wednesday, duly 23. Starting at 4.30 pan. -
Aid of the
\
_ Refreshments.
‘Indian Souvenirs and Handicraft
Se Burke’s Lad’s & Lassies Band
Come and join the latge crowd and enjoy the
: ee : : : i boat.
Str it in the off-|i2S Puts him right back with the} - : C i di tful sail across to the island by motor
cam fn g "Joe breaks colts| ‘PS for the Little Brown Jug,| “The Junior Legionnaires base-| mw yORK (AP) — Tommy rhs 020 2000-4 8 1 menunity Medical Centre P ae
and acts as manager of the re ae nee Bead gael ball team will hold a practice/ gout the temperamental golfer| Havana 000 001 0—1 6 2 rae
With
Velma Middleton
JULY
LOUIS “Satchmo” ARMSTRONG
AND HIS ALL-STARS
w
and b: ; ius ba +O See er ; :
el ; y Sectionman, owned by Elliot | MacWilliams and Gardiner each l this month. 9.00 Car Radio Installed
Tate) 2-1, L. G. Hail (Conroy)! Saunders and driven by Len|hit a home run. G. MacFadyen, Sp ecia th § —$5 : ;
Silver Dawn Honor (Connors) |q*Meara, time 2.131 2-8 on a MacWilliams and G. Campbeli|f With aerial—Reg. price $70.75,
Arabian Wake (nba ay. ukes| heavy. track. lt looks as though| 9 for 4. Dave Birch and & Gor-{f
ain 45 and 217 NM?| Len has found the key to this) rit had the only hits for the los: | BOWLAN RADIO & TV 114 Pownal St. é
SHOW STARTS AT 9P.M.
P|
day night at the SPORTS ARENA in Charlottetown. LOUIS “SATCHMO” | AN
HIS ALL-STARS AND VELMA MIDDLETON Willbe here for what we know will be the most thrilling
song and dance performance ever held on P. E. I.
| 1| start yesterday morning when
Fane 3s,owner — Byron Ken-| Zip M. P. (P, Willis) 4 obeys rt teat the Cardinale |5, Gallant Wey; § 6. Connie French; 7, Royal Trait; 8. Dextor Scott. |] SEONcORED BY THE CHARLOTTETOWN LIONS CLUB
| Medy, Halifax. Money Royal (F. Daniels) ? 6-4. Frankie Gallant pitching for
One of. the grenvest musical events in the history of Prince Edward Island takes place Thurs-
ARMSTRONG AND
f Race 2 — i ) : No. 1 — € Trot 1 Dash $150.00 :
| OBrien) 1 Pe mane E Reyme 2 7 Winning owner Je ae Taph bkcuapiay, the Cubs S$ 1, Oro Dale; 2. Bonnie’s a S ere Romney 4, Tommy 5 AT :
‘Baley) 2. Chevvie G (Moreside) E: Yeo, Miseolche, P-E.l. { ¢ oftehin «.|Shanter; S 5, Feather Duster; 6. Fortune’s Pride. ° rf ,
j ‘ : side) | EB: » Mis 1 Eokel under the 6-hit- pitching of Reg DVANCE ALE °
! r {pta! Maid (Mauger) 4, Wait gie Hee: Magatens.. nal No. 3 — C Pace 1 Dash $175.00. Daily Double A s | ‘
neer ‘A Cnet? 2 Teun Moore Fullmer = oe eee _, ae a hips 1, Jollity George; 2. Sister Dawn: S 3. reer ; +4 ane hb ' D - 5 d L
. , . bal uke Neils i , 5. Fairgo; S 6. Bob Clegg; SS 7. Just Verdict; SS 8. Bobby Brooke. ' -M t's: H h ru tore and an ions
fade Darby (P. Lavers) 7, for the losers. Goss was — top In Charlottetown: Tweel's Restaurant; Me nt's; Hughes g.. ’ y
Lane o 22, 15: winning owner —| Match Sought hatter for the Cubs, scoring four No. 2 — € Pace 1 Dash — $150.00, Daily Double :
gh O'Brien, Windsor Junct- ns. ; 1. Kay Clegg; 2. Nellie Bangs; 3, Miss Cyclonic; 4, Corona- Club.member.
cow , SAN DIEGO, Calif. — (AP) — Litt'e League Biandlines: pts, |tion Sue; 5. Pericles; 6. Lana Dale; 7. Curtain Raiser; 8, Record
“Race Moon E. Frank Acorn|Archie Moore said Tuesday re Braves . Ky 3 0. Pearl. Also eligible Ranida; Callie Hal.
ve tal r 4 rt ~ * is F DES TeTETrrTT .
tame up with a crowd-pleasing| is agreeable to a defence of his) Trav’ deseeeeeee 7 43° 8 os .
rogram Monday ‘night at” the| light heavyweight boxing na Redes Ag Charlottetown Driving Park In Summerside: R.C.A.F. Groceteria; Boates Pharmacy and CJRW.
harlottetown raceway. All the!pionship against Gene otiations| Tigers. :........ .. 8 2.6.4 .
vers gave their best, and that|and confirmed ine ch match. |Red SOX ..ceseeee 7 26 4 man
sed the large crowd of spec- are being made for such a .