The Iona Softball team fabove)
| which is at present in first place
jin the Southern Kings Softball
League in competition for the
LEAGUE-LEADERS
Jamieson Trophy. Team mem-
bens are left (front): . Alfred
Connolly, Johnny McCabe, Art
0â Shea) Leo 0OâShea,
MacCabe, Erwin Connolly. Back
row left: Herman Connolly, Leo
Mooney, Glen McCabe, Merlin
McKenna, Gerard Mooney and
Eddie | Mervin Mooney.
Ann's last evening led
the ers to the wite
| in the. âfourth and. seventh
dashes in an eightddash card
held at the local driving park.
Her ri mile was in 2:12 3-5
and in the second dash she
paced in. 2:102-5, the fastest
time of the night, The bay mare
js owned by Willard MacDonald
of Summerside.
Only other double dash win-
ner on the card was Jolly Bud
who paced the first mile in
2:153-5.. On the second trip
âaround Jolly Bud took: a new
record for himself, going the
mile in 2:13 2-5. In the second
~ race on the card Ken's. Pride
|} Jolly
Mt. Carroll (C. Smith)
Tom Scott (D. Wisener)
Bud's Echo (J. Gay)
4 Washington
+) Watski;
also took a new record, 2:16 2-5,
| Other winners were: New
Forest, G, Ann C. and Peter
Federal. -
The first daily doubleâ on aâ
of Kenâs Pride and
paid bettors $21.50.
The aultation in the fifth race,
on a âcombination ticket of G:
jAnn C. and Peter Federal paid
$7.80 and the last daily double
paid $6.70. . .
- SUMMARY.
Dash 1
New Forest (E. Bernard).
lucky Logan (L.;Neill) ©
Vivian Strong (A. eer vais
Time: 2:16 2-5. :
New Forest owned ae E. A
Bernard, Hunter River. =~
âKen's Pride: (L. Kelly) 1
Sandy Yorke (S. White) 2
. G. J. 4G, Sobey) sit
rince Edward (H, Sexe? 4
| BASEBALL
RESULTS
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
National League | t
010.002 001-4: 10 1
- 011 400 30xâ9 9: 2
Solis (2), Hobbie â(4),
Fodge (6) and Neeman,; Viaddix
Bailey.â LâSolis. HRs: Chiâ
eeman (9), CinâThurman (2).
hila * 004 021 100â8° 9 1)
000 300 0126 8 0
Gray, Morehead {6) ancâ Sa-
Albanese, Constable (8)
and FitzGerald. WâGray. LâAl-
_jbanese. HRs: PhilâAnderson (2),
sea tii
d Columbus
"| Toronto
"Havana
Sawatski. WashâLem: .
International League
First
J Rochester 010 000 1 2 6 2
Columbus 000 112 x 4 9 0
Gibson and Katt; Douglas, Pep-
per (7). Arroyo (7) and Rand. W-.
Toronto 000 000 000 9 5 0
Havana 020.000 1ixâ 4 10 0
» Johnson, Richards (8) and Han-
/nah; Cuellar and Izquierdo. L-
/Johnson., (Suspended: game of
+ dune 28)
| Buffalo 200 000 010-3 7 1
7Richmond 101 301 0lxâ7 9 2
Newkirk, Hahn (4), Nagy (6)
and Noble, Weisler and Oldis.
Newkirk. ~
-
nw
000 000 200-2 7 0
000/000 08xâ 3 5 0
|» Valdes and Teed; McDermott,
McCall (9)
Mott.
Rochester
and Coker. W-McDer-
310 000 010-5 8 1
001 100 000-2 6 3
eKuzava, -Lovenguth (5) and
Oliver; Swanson, OâDonnell (2),
â) Pepper (6), Arroyo (8) and Rand.
| WâLovenguth. LâSwanson.
900 000 110-2 7 2
2 01 000 20xâ5 10 0
Pearce, Dixon (6), Tiefenauer
| (2) and Thompson; Cueche, Pena
{7 and Grandcolas. WâCueche.
LâPearce.
| Cape Traverse
Defeats Legion
Last night at Queen Hlizabeth
7Park in Summerside the Cape
Traverse Nine defeated the Leg-
ton 10 to 4, Harold Leard was
the winning pitcher giving up 9
its and striking out 7 Legion
tters.
G. MacFadyen led the winners
/ hitting 2 for 4 including a double
7@nd a single. S. Gardiner had 1
for 2 and W. MacFadyen hit a
home run, Enright Doucette led
his team with 2 hitsâ in 3 trips
to the plate. Sonny Stull and
Henry Gallant had 2âfor 4. Des
Oberts, Art Sonier and D.
Tsenault each hit singles.
George Campbell played a
i Sleady game in left field for the
ape Traverse team, while Art
hier made a fine grab off Da'-
-MacWilliams bingle in the fifth
inning.
Gord Sullivan was plate um-
Rire,
| sparkling four-under
\holed-out chip shot of 25
Billy June (C. Smith) :
Willardâs Choice (W. Kelly)
First Again (A. Burbine) â
Buddy OâConnor (F. MacKay)
Time: 2:16 2-5.
Kenâss Pride owned by §. J.
MacDonald.
5
6
1
8
Dashes 3 and 6
Jolly. Bud (H. Cudmore)
Propane (ââ)
Chalidale Comet (C. Smith)
Meg (D. MacNeill)
Cooly Boy (E. Bernard)
Captain Morgan
(M. iKennedy)
Useitaâs Boy (H. Willis)
Allablaze (J. Bernard)â
Times: 2:15 3-5; 2:13 2-5.
Jolly Bud owned by H. P.
es Brackley. : S
âDashes 4 and â
Annâ s Dream Secestieus 8
: aes Peeanwe
~~ wWrENATH
pe
-Taurida Bay
Jolly Bud, Ann's Dream.
Are Double Dash Winners
War Cry Rang
(J. Avennadit) 3 24
Just Bettyâs Mark
(D. Wisener) = 2
Betty French
(J. Hennessey )
Meadow Abbe (J. Pound). 5 -
Time: 2:12 3-5; 2:10 2-5.
Annâs Dream owned by Wil-
lard MacDonald, Summerside,
}
Dashes 5 and 8
G. Anp C (Callbeck)
Peter Federal (H. Stead)
(J. Arsenault)
Gay Spirit (J. Gay)
My Darling (J. Hennessey) 5
Vivien M. (G.\ Sobey) 6
Cathy Clegg (W. Bowness) 7
Time: 2:12 3-5; 2:11 3-5.
G. Ann C. owned by G. A.
Callbeck, Summereside; Peter
Federal owned by Mapceo Stab-
les, Summerside.
1 2
22
33
45
4
7
6
Tuesday, July 22, 1958 The Guardian, Page 9!
Lions, Aces
Are Winners
Barryâs. Lions and Rollaway
Aces were winners in last even-
ingâs action in the City Softball
League. The Liots defeated the
league leading Junior. -Basilica
Youth Club 8-5. and. Rollaway
dropped the Irshmen 5-2.
Art Balem hurled for the Lions
and John Hughes took the loss
for the Youth Club. Duke McCal-
lum smashed the longest. hit. of
the game a homer. Apps Arsen-
ault of the B.Y.C. squad and
Forbie Kennedy of the â Lions
each hit triples.
Umpire was Frank Bell and
base Judge Jack Kane.
In theâ other softball fixture
Ralph Pineau was on the mound
pitched for the Shamrocks.
eau gave up only three hits.
Reggie Hughes and -Paddie
Shepherd got doubles for the win-
ners. These were the only extra
base hits of the game.
Pin-
Little League
Action Yesterday
Jn the first game of Little Lea-
gue baseball yesterday the Yanks
shaded the Red Sox 6-5 in an ex-
citing game of ball. The winning
pitcher, George Frizzel struck
out 10 ing~batters. Robert
MacNutt hit a home run to score
the winning trun and for the
Yanks. Alfred Wakelin started for
ithe Red Soxâ and took the loss. He
was replaced by Gauthier and
then Kennedy.
The Tigers swapped the league-
âleading Braves 18-0 behind the
one-hit pitching of Billy Weather-
bie. Paul Doucette hit a sharp
single in the 5th inning to spoil
Weatherbieâs no hittre.
Jimmy Duffy led the Tigersâ at-
tack at the plat eand palyed a
fine defensive game to lead his
team to this win. i
In Pony league baseball the
Indians edged the Cubs 8-7 Jack-
ie Lane was on the mound for the
winners andâ Reggie McClintock
took the loss. Lane sent 13 batt-
ers down. swinging. Roger Gal-
lant led his team to victory by
getting two double oe and
scoring 2 runs.
Todayâs activity:
9:30: Minor League; Redlegs vs.
Cardinals,
âBy W, R. WHEATLEY
Canadian Press Staff Writer
âTORONTO (CP)âGordie Ball,
"| a top-rated Ontario amateur from
the Toronto Weston Club, shot a
âpar 67 Mon-
day to set the pace for a whop-
tg big field in the first qualify-
g stage for the Canadian Ama-| i
Golf Championship.
The six - foot, gum - chewing
golfer sank a 30-yard chip shot
for an eagle two at the 16th role
in his crackling round. Another
yards
earned him a par at the seventh
. | after he had driven out of bounds.
- Martin Stanovich, a 240- pound | pl
bolfer from Chicago, scored an
eagle three at the 10th and came
in with 69 to join pores. Brue' of
Milwaukee. .
Jack Penrose of Miami Beach,
Fla., came in among the late
finishers with another 69 to
create an all-American bracket at
that figure.
There were 13 par-breakersâaâ
jsharp contrast te the complete
lack of sub-par golf over . the
Scarboro club's par 71. course
in Saturdayâs play for inverpro-
vincial team honors and the jun-
ior Canadian championship.
SIX IN THE 0s
lf a dozen Canadians were
e 70. bracket â Doug Bajus
ind Bob, Kidd of Vancouver ohn
Munroe of Sydney, N.S,, Wilt
Homeniuk of Winnipeg, Bruce
Castator of Toronto and veteran
Jack Nash. of London, Ont.
The field of about 180 did not
finish until. well on into the. eve-
ning. Another 18 holesâ will. be
ayed today. The 64 low scorers
for the 36 holes will start match
will be/reached Saturday.
Nick Weslock of Windsor, Ont..
1957 champion, shot a par 71.
He joined a big group at 71
It included the only former cham-
pioh in the tournament - Dick
Chapman, &r., of Osterville,
Mass., who won at Saint John,
WASHINGTON (AP) Bob
Felier Friday hurled a verbal
fast ball at the payment of huge
bonuses to promising sees:
âRidiculous,"â snapped âeller,
who got nothing for signing âhis
first contract except three. auto-
graphed baseballs, â
In. denouncing bonuses that
have run above $100,000 a crack,
Feller disagreed with another for-
ne baseball great, Jackie Robin-
âBoth Feller, ClĂ©evelandâs former
strike-out: king, and Robinson, ex-
Dodger third baseman, testified
before the Senate anti-monopoly
subcommittee. on sports legisla-
tion already passed by the House
of Representatives.
âDonât punishâ? young players
by discontinuing bonuses, Robin-
son said. He said payments
for signing a contract provide
youngsters with a nest egg to live
on if it turns out that they lack
the ability to make a career of
the major leagues, â
The bill would allow the sports
Stuart Now A
Full Fledged
Major Leaguer
{
PITTSBURGH (AP)âDick Stu
art, a 25-year-old home run hit-
ting phenom of -the minors, came
to Pittsburgh Monday for the
first time as a full-fledged major
leaguer and gave every indica-
tion of being a changed man.
Speaking quietly and with none
of the boastfulness which charac-
terized him at the Pittsburgh
Pirate training camp last year,
Stuart said he hopes to stock with
the club although heâs batting at
only a .170 clip.
Since being called up from Salt
Lake City little more than a
week ago Stuart has played in 11
games. Despite his low patting
average he has driven in 12 runs.
He struck out 18 times in 47
times at bat but five of his hits
have been for extra bases. In-
cluded are four homers, one @
grand slammer.
Feller, Robinson Disagree
On Matter Of Bonuses
to regulate TV and radio broad-
casts of their games, »
Minor league spokesmen say
big league TV is wrecking them
at the gate. Critics of the provi-
sion argue it is too sweeping and
could lead to wiationwide black- |.
outs, |
Repres entative Kenneth B.
Keating (Rep.-N.Y.) testified that
failure to limit major league
baseball telecasts would amount
to forced ' destruction of theâ mi-
nors. :
Denies Africans
Barred From
B. E. Games
SALISBURY, Rhodesia (Reu-
tersâ-An Empire Games -Asso-
ciation official Friday denied ne-
ports that African players are
barred from taking part in fed-
eral Empire Games teams be-
cause of color or association
olic
J Bary Pichanick, chairman of
the Mashonaland (Southern Rho-
desia- branch of the Empire
Games Association, said:
âphe inclusion of athletes de-
pends upon their being affiliated
toa properly constituted sporting
body.â
âAt the moment, there are no
oe we know of in this cate-
âBut Africans could be expected
to find a place in future Games
teams.
BALLOON SETS RECORD
MINNEAPOLIS AP â The U. S.
Navy sent a balloon âand 225
pounds of. scientific equipment up
130,000 feet for cosmic ray data
Sunday-an altitude record for
film - recording plastic balloons,
The instruments, however were
jettisoned to earth andâ have not
been found. Near Forsyth, Mont.,
the load was automatically re-
leased and dropped by parachute.
A spotting plane traced the
orange and white chute down to
10,000 feet, then lost it in a haze.
play Wednesdayâ and the finalsâ
= Sets Pace In Qualifying
Round For Amateur Title
1
2
at
5
6
N.B., in 1949. Chapmanâs son was
three strokes higher than his eat
Monday.
Ball was over par at only inet
hole during his round. At the 455-
yard par-four 12th he was short
with his second, chipped up and
two-putted for a five.
He breezed through the front
nine in 34, two under par. getting
a birdie four at the first and an-
other. at the third where he sank
a, 25-foot. putt.
At. the 275-yard par-four sev-
enth he put his tee shot out of
bounds. It cost him two strokes.
He fired his next 25 yards from
the pin and holed out his chip
shot. â
Ball birdied the 10th and after
his miscue at the 12th went in
paris to the 285-yard 16th, . par:
four. His drive left him 30 au
short and he sank his chip shot.
for the eagle deuce. He parred
the remaining two holes. â'
Stanovich and Brue shot nines
of 37-32 against 36-35 par.
Introduces A |
Jet-Age Sulky .
HAMBURG. N.Y. (AP)âA de-
{signer of rocket missiles intro-
duced a jet-age sulky to harness
âracing at Buffalo Raceway Satur-
day.
Veteran horsemen gazed in
astonishment as Levi Harner
wheeled out for workout seated
âin a rig that consisted of two
wheels, a cross bar and a single
shaft connected to the horseâs
âback.
_\ The horse, Baldwin Hanover,
ticked off a half-mile in 1:01, the
best training performance of. his
eareer. The object of the sulky,
the first completely new -one
since 1892, is to. cut down wind:
resistance, said its designer Joe
King.
for the winners and- Sonny Mahar|
Lhis new job.
â| fella where to play,â
9:30 Little League: Braves vs.
yanks: Dodgers vs. Tigers.
2:00: Pony League: Indians vs.
Cubs.
Redlegs Crush
Chicago Cubs
CINCINNATI (AP)âBob Thur-
manâs three-run homer helped
power Cincinnati's Redlegs to an
9-4 victory over Chicago Cubs
Monday night. Harvey Haddix
had. to squelch a Cub ninth inning
rally before nailing down the vic-
tory that jumped Cincinnati from
the cellar to fifth place in the
tight National League scramble.
Tt was the sixth victory in 12
decisions for Haddix who fanned
four Cubs and walked two.
A single by Johnny Temple and
a walk to rookie Dan Morejon set
up Thurmanâs big hit in the
seventh inning.
The first five innings included
some strange -baseball. Three
Cub pitchers walked eight Red-
legs, hit two batters with pitches
and had one wild pitch.
Ball Game |
This Evening
Barry's Lions this evening meet
Rollaway Aces in a regular City
Softball League game, The game
will be played on the Old Dia-
mond.
By JACK SULLIVAN
CARDIFF (CP) â Irene Maec-
Donald of Hamilton, Ont., the
worldâs No, 1 springboard diver,
placed second Monday night to a
comparatively unknown English
girl in the most sensational upset
of the Australian-dominated Brit-
ish Empire. Games swimming
program.
âI just dived badly,â the 24
year-old Canadian cheerfully ex-
plained in an interview. âIâm dis-
appointed, but I guess a person
eanât be on all the time.â
The upset, ereated by Chair-
mian Welsh, also 24, of Thornley,
Durham, capped a suspense-
filled swimming program that
saw the amazing Australians fin-
ish 1-2-3 in the womenâs and
menâs 110-yard freestyles.
set by Dawn Fraser, an Adelaide
store clerk. The 20-year-old Miss
Fraser, slim and streamlined.
smashed her own world mark
with a sensational 1:01.4 in the
short sprint. That was one-tenth
of a second better than her
recognized mark of 1:01.5, set in
THREE IN ONE
England, Scotland and Wales
comprise the worldâ s rhea larg-
est island.
A world record sprint time was |
the Australian national cham-
pionships this year.
Monday night's vietories
brought. the âAustralian total of
firsts to four, along with two
silver and two bronze medals.
ANOTHER GOLD MEDAL
Besides Miss Fraserâs gold
medal, lanky John Devitt, world
holder in the menâs 110 freestyle,
picked up a first in 56.6, one-
tenth of a second slower than his
own games record of -56.5, set in
a heat Saturday night.
Australiaâs Terry Gathercole
lowered another games record in
the 220-yard breastroke when he
won his heat in 2:41.2. The pre-
vious mark of 2:52.6 was set in
1954 by John Doms of New Zea-
land.
The Canadians, wha now âhints
won two silver medals and one
bronze one in the pool, had final-
ists in both freestyle events but
they didnât have a chance against
the Australians.
The first two weightlifters to
see .action added a couple of
bronze medals to Canadaâs col-
lection, although top honors went
to South Africa and Barbados.
Reginald Gaffley, a Capetown
storekeeper, wiped out the 1950
record of 655 pounds set by Fook
q
NEW YORK (AP)âThe adven-
tures of Yogi Berra in right field
are just beginning but already
there are tales to tell.
Yogi muscled the-centre fielder,
Norm Seibern, outâ of the way to
eatch a fly ball Sunday against
Kansas City. Earlier a fly car-
oomed off his gloye into the
stands for a ground rule double.
After the: Sunday doubleheader,
the Yankees were telling Leon-
ard Koppett of the New Post about garrulous Yogi and
âYou think he didnât find people
to talk to out there?â asked Gil
McDougald, the second baseman.
âHe talked to me. He talked to
âthe bullpen. He talked to the
fans.â ;
âAw, I just kept asking the
said Berra.
âAnd when somebody called me
Canada Rej
Poland's Idea
OTTAWA (QP)âCanada has in-
formed Poland that the Commu-
nist countryâs proposal for a de-
nuclearized zone in Central Eu-
rope does not form a basis for
agreement.
Canadaâs position was -commu-
nicated_to Poland in a diplomatic
note: dated July 9 and made pub-
lie here Monday by the external
affairs department. It was in re-
ply to a note from Poland Feb.
14 outlining the proposal.
The Camadian note said it is
apparent âthat this (Polish) plan
for a first step toward disarma-
ment in Europe falls short of the
limited approach to Âąhe major
problem (of disarmament) and
therefore could~ not be expected
to provide a basis for negotiating
an equitable agreement.â
. The note does not elaborate, but
an official of the external affairs
departmentâ said the Polish plan
would make permanent the parti-
tion of Germany into Western
and Communist sectors. The
West's objective was to bring
about a united Germany after
free elections.
CONTROL SYSTEM
The Canadian note says Canada
attaches particular importance to
the âPolish government's recogni-
tion that any agreement should
be supported by an effective, con-
trol and inspection system.ââ
It adds that Canadaâs judg-
ment of the Polish proposal. does
not necessarily ââexclude the pos-
sibility of negotiation leadiag to
an agreement limited as to re-
gion or subject...â however, |
âany such approach would, in or-
der to be acceptable, have to con-
tribute towards an increase in
mutual confidence and at the),
NEW YORK (CP)â_Nearctic, a
92-to-1 shot from Canadaâconsid-
ered so lightly that he was put
in as a field entryâcaptureds the
$50,000 added Michigan Mile Sat-
urday and set a track record in
a runaway race at Detroit.
Elsewhere on U.S. tracks, Ed-
die Arearo triumphed on Bold
Ruler in the $110,500 Monmouth
Parkâ Handicap at Oceanport,
N.J. Round Table woa the $87,100
Laurance Armour Memorial Han-
dicap in Chicago and Strong Bay
achieved his first stakes victory
in taking first money at the $116,-
900 Westerner at Holiywood Park.
Nearctic, ridden by jockey Ben-
nie Sorensen and owned by Wind-
field. Farms Limited, upset the
favored Swoonâs Son and 12 other
horses.
Shoerullah was second and My.
Night Out, 1957 winner. of the,
Michigan mile, was third.
1ST DETROIT START
The Canadian horse, making
his first Detroit start, upheld a
Michigan Mile tradiiion. No fa-
vor.te has ever won this race.
The sleek four-year-old brown
colt, out of Nearco and Lady
Angela, won $40,765 ivr bis own-
A
Cenadian Horse
Wins Big Race
ers. Nearcticâs âanie âwas 1:36,1
over a fast track, 1-5 of one sec-
ond better than the track record
set in the 1956 running by Non-
nie Joe.
Nearctic rallied from a shak-
ing up in the early stretch and
gained a leading position early.
Nearctic raced wide throughout
and had plenty of speed left at
the end, winning by 2% lengths.
He returned $44.40, $17. and
$8.80 in capturing his sixth vic-
tory in eight starts this year.
Shoerullah paid $30.60 aad $16.40
while My Night Out was $11.40 to
show.
) The victory makes Nearctic an
early favorite for next Saturdayâs
Michigan Sweepstakes, another
$50,000 added event over a mile
and one-sixteenth.
REBELS STILL ACTIVE
ORAN, Algeria (AP)âFive per-
sons were killed and âabout 40 in-
jured Sunday when a rebel threw
a grenade at an oven-air movie
showing at Saint-Denâs-du-Siga
about 30 miles from Oran. A
i
negotiating a world disarmament |
requirements for a successful ,,
from the stands, I just looked
around to see who it was.
NEW SIGN LANGUAGE
âOne time I look out and he
is pointing to the ground,â said
McDougald. âI couldnât figure out
what was âwrong. Was there a
hole in the outfield? Or maybe
a four-leaf clover?
âYou know what he meant? He
was trying to tell me he was play-
ing shallow.â
A few minutes later McDougald
raced into right field to catch a
high fly right in front of Berra.
âT could caught the ball,ââ said
Yogi. âI was there, but you
holler I'm supposed to let Jou
have it.â
over Siebern in centre.
GET JUMP ON BALL
âT must of got a hulluva jump
on that cit said Yogi. âBecause
Later in the,game Yogi bowled}
There Are Tales To Tell
Of Berra In Right Field.
I didnât realize 1 was that, far
over-in centre.ââ
âDead centre,â
gald. . i :
âWell, you was playing right
field,â said Yogi. âI had to go
somewhere.â
Casey Stengelâ was pleased with
Yogiâs adventures in Hank Bauer}.
land. f
âWell, he did all right,â said
the Yankee manager. âHe canât
catch yet. His glove hand stil
bothers him when he gets behind
ga McDou-
-the plate. So I might just as well
use him in the outfield. He can
play there. Iâm not worried about
that. oe
Like most of | 'Stengelâs moves,
this one paid off, too, Yogi hit a
two-run homer and in the 10th in-
ning to win the finst game 4nd
had two singles in the second.
HAVERTOW Ph (AP)âDow
Finsterwald Âąaptured the 40th
Professional Golfers Association
champior "
of 276 âSunday as a 19-year-old
ghost came back to haunt the
great. Sammy âSnead, j
Three shots back of Snead with
15 holes to play in their head-to-
head duel, Finsterwald drove to
âhis first major. title with a bril-
liant closing 67, three under par.
He finished two strokes ahead
f Bill Casper, of Apple Valley,
Calif.; who thad~a 70 for 278.
Snead, whosé mighty game went
into camplete collapse as pres-
sure mounted on theâ sun-baked
Llanerch Country Club âcourse,
salvaged a scrambling 73 for 280.
âThat was just one stroke better
than the fast finishing Jack
Burke Jr., winner of this tourn-
ament and the Masters in 1956,
who eagled the 15th hole and shot
a 70 for 281. j
BREAKS JINX
For Finsterwald; 28 - year, old
son of an Athens, Ohio, attorney,
the victory blotted out the grow-
ing belief that he was destined
q
same time not complicate the
solution of other problems.â
Canada remained , concerned
along with Poland over the con-
tinued failure to achieve progress
on. A gid disarmament.
.We therefore remain ready
to âexamine suggestions which
might be expected to: lead by.
stages to the final aim.â
The Canadian note says. the
Geneva conference on the polic-
ing of nuclear tests is evidence
of a widely held h that solu-
tions to special aspects of disarm-
ament may contribute to a, gen-
Is New P.G.A. |
Golf Champion
for a âbrides ius! role in big
time golfâa sent runner-up,
but never a champion:
For Snead, a superbly - condi-
âtioned 46-year-old athlete bidding
for his fourth PGA championship,
the blowup was a repeat of the
â1939 nightmare in the National
Open at. the nearby Philadelphia
Country Club,
There, needing A 5 og Hea lent
hole to âtake the crown, he blew
to an 8. ,
Finsterwald collected $5,500 for
his triumph while Casper drew
$3,500, Snead $2,400, and Burke.
Former Toronoto hockey rig
Bill Ezinicki, now playing âout
Lynfield, Mass., scored anh
â298.
Koneat Fi res
More Costly
_OTTAWA, â (CP) â Forest
fires devastated more than three}
times asâ much timber area in
Canada in June as they did in
the corresponding month last
year, the northern affairs depart-
ment reported. Monday. i
Nine hundred fires destroyed
or damaged 355,000 acres of for-
est in the month, compared with |
$51 fires and 106,000 acres in
June, (1957.
The department: said June usu-
ally is a month of few forest fires
because vegetation reaches its
peak growth at this time ofâ the
year and acts as a fire retardent.
However, the weather this June
was usually dry, especially in
Western Canada.
Since the start of the year, 3,-
218 forest fires have burned 1,-
047,600 acres of timber area.
There were 1,611 fires inâ May
eral. settlement.
which burned 459,100 acres.
IS LATE ..
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and a paper will be delivered right to your door.
a.m, to 9:00 a.m. if your paper
6561
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ED'S
DIAL
173 Great George St.
Edâs Slogan:
French farmer was shot dead as
he drove out of his farm at Or- |
leansvills
For the Fastest Service in Town, Call.
TAXI
serve â the goal for which we strive!â
6561 ie
Ch arlottetown
i} total of 605.
â| tinuing neck-and-neck struggle be-
| points against 100.93.
Hung Toh in the bantamweight
division with a total lift of 660
pounds. England's Ronald Brown-
bill lifted 630 pounds for the
silver medal and Marcel. Gos-
selin of Quebec was third is a
Blair. Belnham, who rrsdwed
last-minute permission to com-
pete for his native Barbados al-
though he has been a bus conduc-
tor in London for the last two
years, captured the middleweight
titleâ with a total hoist of 795
pounds. Roy Mearthur of Trin-
idad, who lifted the same total,
dropped to second place because} i
of greater body weight. Adrien
Gilbert of Bagotville, Que., was
third with a total of 785.
SECOND TRIUMPH ;
Raymond âPaul brought Britain
her second fencing gold medal in
two starts by winning the individ-
ual foils event as Canadian man-
ager-coach Carl. Schwende, the
last of three members of . his
team to survive in the event,
brought Canada her first points in
the competition by finishing fifth.
The over-all effect was a con-
tween Australia: and England âat
the, top of the unofficial point
standings with Canada a distant
third, Based on ay, 10-5-4-3-2-1
count for the first six finalists in
each event, the standings gave
the Aussies a slim lead of 84 to
Englandâs 83 with Canadaâs teal
reaching 40.
Apart from rosy prospects foe
a first gold medal in the rowing
finals, Canada was assured of at
least a point in the pool when
Sara Barber of Brantford, Ont.,
qualified for the final . of the
womenâs 110 - yard backstroke
when she came third in her heat
in 1:15.4.
But her time was far behind
the nightâs best of 1:13.1, marked
up by Englandâs ae Grioham, |
a games .
THRILLING EVENT !
But all the suspense. came
in the night's last event, the
womenâs diving.
- Miss MacDonald entered the
final phase of the competition
with a slight lead over Elizabeth
Ferris, 17-year-old blonde from
Greenford,, Middlesex. Miss
Welsh was fourth, and not.even
noticed by the crowd tillâ the
third diveâa backward 14% som-
ersault layoutâthat turned out to
be the difference between vietory
and defeat.
The shy young Canadian girl,
who gained a third in the 1954
Games and duplicated it in the
1956 Olympics at Melbourne, got
off to whatâ she later described
as her âworst dive of the whole
competitionâ while the English
girl came up with a superb effort
that shot her into the leadâ104,07
The English girl stayed in
front. from there on although
Miss MacDonald exeeuted a su-
perb last dive that gave her 16.02
Sie in the complicated system
of judging.
Ben Brooke C.,
Unknown English Girl
âCauses Upset In Diving
poorly as this,â the Ganadian
said, âalthough I have no alibis.â
WIN TWO MATCHES
Houston and George Dewar won
both its matches and moved into
a four-way tie for first place in
the pairs sĂ©ction of theâ lawn
bowling tournament.
Northern Ireland, Australia and
New Zealand were bracketed
which has six more rounds to go.
Jack Linford of Lacnine, Que.,
suffered his third singles defeat.
a Hong Kong opponent.
Toronto was twice defeated by
Barry Coster of Australia in
heats for the 1,000-metre sprint
event.
âPat Murphy and. Paul Enoch,
both of Toronto, failed to survive
the first round of the 4,000-metre
pursuit.
THREE SURVIVORS
Canadaâs nine-man boxing team
was reduced to three survivors
who have yet to see action. {
Flyweight Waltér: Henry, the
Hong Kong born fighter who now
lives in Orillia, Ont., scored
a technical knockout over Les
Sheather of Australia in the sec- â
~ round of, his first match Mon-
lay :
He was knocked out in the first
round of his second match with
Tommy Bacha of England,
Bantamweight Kai Yip, li, of
Lethbridge, Alta., outpointed John
Allen of Ghana over the. thiee-
round distance, although he had
plenty of trouble with me a
Ghanaian. *
Monday night Yip lost a deck:
| sion to Liver Taylor of Australia,
Harness Racing
On Mainland
FREDERICTON, .â (CP) =
Three horses were successful 1
beating their own records \dur.
ing an eight double-dash harness
racing card at Fredericton race-
way Monday night. :
Scotch Feather paced the mile
in 2:11, Harvest Queen in 2:16.38
and Lady Lou Hal in 2:19.
SAINT JOHN, N. B., â (CP)
owned by Dr.
B. Parlee of Saint John was a
double winner on an eight dash
harness racing card at
Exhibition -Pafk Raceway Mon-
day night, taking the fourth in
2:15.5 and the eighth in 2:13.
lowered his track mark twice at
nearby Sackville Downs Monday.
Owned by Donald MacAulay of
Pugwash, N. §., Big Boy came
home in 214.1 in the second race,
and in i
in 2:12.1, The daily double paid
$49.10 for a combination of Big
Boy and Dark Yankee, who step-
ped by a two horse spill in the
firstâ race.
The quinella went to Texas
Hal and Jollity Kitten for $10.50
âT canât remember diving as
pay.â ;
All Home
in
Proceeds in
TURKEY SALAD SUPPER
Junior Farmers Reereation Centre
: NEW GLASGOW
Wednesday, July 23. Starting at 4.30 p.m.
Community Medical Centre
Cooking.
Aid of the
s
Mother:
For the ro
One-Way ad
Junior:
2 eet SRR ete
@ Between Eastern Canada (C
and west).
United States. Between Weste
'e Stop-over privileges
@ 300 Ibs. Bagga
Âź
âTo maintain the goodwill of those. whom we
4
Round Trip Fare
For the âHeadâ of the family.
One-Way adult Fare
For the round trip. 12 and
âunder 22 years of age.
Ya One-Way Sack
For the round trip for children of 5
and under 12 years old. Under 5 free.
Windsor, Sarnia and east) and Westetn Canada (Winnipeg
Between Canada and Midwestern and Western
@ Leaving Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays
Complete information from
__any C.N. or G.P. Ticket Agent,
EEE EI TEEPE TE ITE TE EIDE AE Eg,
GO WEST! Take the Family, SAVE with the
FAMILY
TRAIN TRAVEL
PLAN
und trip.
: Sis
ult Fare
apreol, Sudbury, Cochrane,
rn Canada and Eastern U.S.
@ Generous Return Limit
ge Allowance
in four matches, losing 21-17 to.
"The Vancouver entry of Alex
withthe Canadians in first place
in the round-robin competition â
Canadaâs cycling contingent ~
.Jwas eliminated. Fred Markus of ~
nearby. .
LIFAX, â (CP) â Big Boy
@ sixth he did the mile ="