.: .» ‘ in WI 0! Dr. Roger Ban- dher notable runners ' at the Char- ' I ’Ar'iltourie's last evening Iv. v ..,- L a; PRESS ~ M‘mnea a nifty .. out nine holiday '8' Baltimore eated New York 3-2 in the after-noon - malt double- j only empower-league , Detroit. Tigers scored - y over the tail-spin- Mema and Joe ns g Bergman toward ids victory with bases-cum . ..- in the seventh. Nio-L -.. drove in them-totes! ‘ m a single in the 3'41w was the Oriole’s since theyies. .. major league high for .,.I of 11 consecutive de- Ithpziwho heat amn- 1n‘gelveonesday, lost his g against eight vic- Angrre came out of the ‘ - a-naderetiredthe hate to save Jim Bun- ~ : I first W since his no- - three “elm ago. -r ’mifl'ohe‘dut away Same . “it moterpiece ‘ : Wee Sox when his Frank House. I; . , homer that just r ‘ ‘field screen. ’1; homer was the 30th h by Running, Who R‘EsuLTs "mo-antistatic" " ‘ I June‘l 500005 010 000 1.12 10 2 1000243100000—1121 3 . Acker (1)191!”- lfihMcoch), Lawn (7) ,_ (BYNmEbIIl (11) and p‘l-H'll ll.‘ (1) _, v - fd)—He¢n~(7)~ll‘arrell ‘ “Mutt. Depart (8) Began " '— Nuxball; L —- rat-nu. .‘lnelemole. _ .. - .. . tu-~‘~9LlLs199. 1!. 0 , ‘ ooloooiaH—s 0 1 v ,g‘ . Schmidt (8) and ‘ Sewetski. RBI—tin: Bailey (8). national-League MO 001020—3 5 0 . ,5 -0 ~11!!! Chitin; . Browning. ‘ V (8) James (8) Post ’ - Oidis. L—Browning. League City 0000000024 6 0 00030000x—3 9 0 ilierbert (5). Gorman (8) :Bunnlng-Aguirre (9). ‘ _- W-Bunning,-' L-Grim. , ,I—House (3‘. , ‘ .. 000100 200-: a 1 , I 01* 0000000024 7 0 .4 Ginsberg; Dit- ' ) L - Hits: Bait—.Nieman 1'1 (3);» NY—Skowron 500. 010 201-9 12 1 100020 000—3 7 2 in " and Kucks, . (I) and Berra. L-Kucks Moroccan; (0); NYk- w. (82). . 000 200 010—3 11 0 . . u,“ til {lulu n: t »~- (I. I 'l .v. ‘t m . ~ *000010 aux—s 12 0 ' 9 Fo’rnie‘lfl (5) R, and White; Valentinetti . Rd Courtney. W-Valen- a It s Monbouquette. HRs: fin" Wash . Sievers h . s“ end Lollar; Narleskl. s (7.) Mont (9) and . strum-Igor an: Ole-Min- -°e 000000013—4 10 o 1‘ h 020 020 20x—6 11 1 wk)? ,(7) and Crandail; ' Face (9) and Kravitz. W- ‘ Loom 3-.» 204103 000—12 1‘ 2 120021000.— 0 10 1 _ 4‘16er (6) and I Gibbon, Arroyo (3) ' Aland Rand. W—Bmg- n“ ‘ “_ "‘ “use... (of I to help stimulate interest in track and field training. Franz Stampr is athletic advisor at the Univer- sity of Melbourne which has pro- six complete "games 1x123 starts. He won 20 games last year. ' singles, one-of- them by Running. accounted for all the Detroit scor- ing. Bob Grim was the victim. of their last 12 games. [ever burnedfin Pittsbungh like a mmawnygas well Monday night as the Pirates choked off a last- dltch rally to‘beat Milwaukee's National League leaders 6-4 and dirtib into e second-place tie. “ironed with relief as Joe Ad- 'ééck’fe fly ended a ninth-inning .. Braveemally tallied three knocked in one run and scoied of doubles in, Chicago’s 3-1 tory over Cleveland. Billy Pierce » Hunted the Indians to seven hits including Minnie Minoso’s 16th home run. A The White-80x stolethl'ee‘mes in the fourth inning and. with three hits..ecored-two runs. 'a single. He we second and scored can double byFox': Jim "Landls then beat out a hit to see- oud, while Fox held on. both .Fox a-nd:Landis pulled a 'doutbi-e.g__steal,._fcay Boone’s sacri- fice lily scored Fox with the second Chicago run. Orioles 'bwlepta-daw-niglit double- New York Yankees Monday, Winning the opener 3-2, then Scoring. live nuns in the inning of the nightcap for a 9-3 decision.. ' ’ five M10511] five trips/one his and Howard. ' , . 000201000450. 0000001004 7 1 5 7°“ ’ 5 ,, TRACK .COACI-I HOLDS ctNIc ‘ no: Shade Ath lanes: ‘- I A walk and Your successive The Athletics have dropped 10 PITTSBURGH (AP) —- remnant _ A season record crowd of 38.- ill? CLEVELAND (Am—Nellie Fox another Monday night with a pair Luis Apamcio started it with After Shéiun" Iolllar flie'd' out, your? (AP)-—Baltimore. duced manyr great runners. I inwbright ‘ the—"open championships moved ahead on the 17 courts of the Rideau Lawn 'l‘ennla Club in sub- urban Overbrouk. SWIFT won'k Chatting at the Armouries :are, left tozri-g'ht, James Pendergast, Franz Stampfl,“ : George Walters i . SIShma WASHZING'IDN-‘(Am 5’4— Man- ager Cookie La‘vasetm. Monday night patched thinning- effort from his :zre'lie'f pitchers; Vito Valentinetti and Dick Hyde. as his Wasfnngion’ Senators de-. feated Boston Red Shard-3. and physiotherapist Harry Hodge i when the Red Sox touched__him. - day night to preserve the three- Valerihlnetiti, alter 28 renter ap-'_ ' examine: skimp Mada-tuning last bm_.\ Canadian Press Staff Writer " blankedthe'Di-nves through seven Innings buthé’Was nicked for rum in the eighth and gave way to? fillet Roy’ Face, for finial’p‘ulbut ofit‘he ninth. .;,orrawa (CP)-’1‘wo upsets in the junior men's and women’s singles highlighted a record day’s play in the Canadian‘jtinibr ten- . his championships Monday. ' . Richarl Mills, 16, ctr-"Washing- ‘tou, fourth-seeded American in the men's 'cta's's. seeded woman Betsy Tat-um of .Mzin-neapolis b o (:11 _ lost second round matches to unseeded; Ca~ nadians. ‘ and second. Some 150 matcheswere layed sunny fleet "a - Bob Jacob, 16, lot Toronto, needed less than. an_ hour to knock alt Mills, 6-1,'M;_but then dropped ’a-‘thir'd- round 'matchgto Edouard Baker 60 Haiti, 6-1, ‘6-1. Baker is competing here for the first time. _ .. ‘ , H Marg Benson, 18, also of Tor- Juvenile players are under 13, first-sealed American. and Cana- ‘feated in early action.” .McNaliy at Ottawa, 5-0,. 5.1, E. also won three easy matches. Le- of the Provincial Sanatonium. pearances, made his first start of the season and he pitched seVen innings, yielding two runs on hits. Hyde came out of the bullpen for the 41st'time 'V and mopped up in the last twoinnings for a run on three hits. , , , Boston‘s Jackie Jensen and Washington’s Roy Sievers, wag- ing a neck-cand-neck battle with New York’s Mickey Mantle for the American League home-run leadership, each walloped, his; 32nd of the campaign, Mantle also hit his 32nd agamst' the Orioles. in Yankee Stadium Mon- wa-y deadlock. onto. had little trouble defeating Miss Tatum, 6-2. 6-1, in a quickly- played match. Play reached the round of 16 in the junior men's and women’s singles and boys' and girls’ sin- gles, and some matches were played in the juvenile classes. boys.and girls under 15 and jun- iors under 18. all at Jan. 1. About 100 matches are sched- uled for. today, . including some opening doubles contests.‘ The dian‘ players r e m a i [PERI unde- Gerald Dubie. 18. of Ham: tramek, Mich., runner-up in the fian last year. won three easy matches Monday, beating Mike Lelbehge of Shenbrooke,_Que., 6-0, 543.81% Don Curtis of Toronto. as, 5-1. I LEBLANC WINS . - - ,The top-seeded. Canadian male, , YvonLeblanc of Marieville, Que, Summerside The Guardian, Page 9 i Tues., August 12, 1958 Tyne Valley . Wins Final In Schedule The Tyne Valley Tigers won their last game of the regular schedule of the Prince County Softball League. beating the Legion at Tyne Valley by the score of 7-5. The Legion outhit the Tigers, getting eight safe bingles to four for the winners. But Tyne Valley batters reached first four times on "”“(“'S. Ronnie Nisbet’a home run in the mm and Elmer Go-rrih 5 triple in the fifth accounted for (our of the Tigers’ seven tellies. Two of the others were chalked up as a result of errors, passed balls and one Wild pitch. Ira Campbell was the winning pitcher, Bill Stull taking the loss. Art Sonier, Bill Stall and .Des ’Callaig‘h‘amallhitZIOr for the Legion. Harry Ramsey’s one- -hand stab of Ralph Champion‘s drive to left in the fifth, and cen- terfielder Owen Sonier’s swoop- ing grab of Gerry Morrison's Texas Leaguer in the sixth were the best defensive plays. 'Onlyonegametalcft in there- gnlar schedule, Cape Travers vs. Legion, and that may be played at Queen Elizabeth Perk tonight. George Yeo umpired behind ‘ the plate, with Gord Sullivan :Dur'elle And- ,Freddie- Mack Fight AUg. ‘28 MON-CTON (CP)-—British Em. pits and Canadian light heavy- weight champion Yvon Durelle of Bale Ste. Anne, N.B., and Freddie Mack of Brooklyn will meet here Aug. 28 ,in a 10-rouud, non-title fight. The bout was announced Monday night by Durelle’s man- ager Chris Shaban. Upsets.HighlightMonday’s blanc, who lost to Andre Teupin of Mont-real in, the closed junior men’s finall defeeted D. Smith of Ottawa 6-1, 6-0, Burton Wiersma of Hamtralmck, Mich. 6-3, 6-1, and Phil Johnstonof Ottawa 6-0, 6-1. Sharon Caldwdi of Toronto, winner of the closed juniorwom- en's crown, defeated Maria ' Stubbs of Winnipeg 6-1. 6-2 in he only Monday match. - 'The top American. Barbara Seewa'gen of Bayside, N.Y., won first and second-round matches 6-2, 6-0 over Mary Bone of Mont- .real and 6-2, 6-4 over Dellene Raymond of Toronto. The only Inset of Sunday's ini- tial play saw Della Freedhoff of Toronto defeated the third-seeded Canadian. Pat Ryan of Ottawa. 6-2, 245, 8-0 in the Mood round. CAIRO (AP) —- Egyptian press dispatches from Baghdad say the new Iraqi cabinet has decided to rename the Persian gulf the Arab gulf. ,Ex-Ylalnkee Gene Woodling had, doth homer, and drove ,m three- Beiltlmore runs in the nightc-ap.‘ Eighth-and» Connie Johnson beat the Yankees witha seven-hitter as he walked but one and retired 10' of the last 11 men he faced tor a 4~7 record. . . ' ‘PIHILADELPHIAJAPL- Pitcher Dick Farrell’s wild throw to first on a sacrifice play gave Cincinnati a 13th inning 12-11 vic- tory ' ovsr Bhila’delphia Phillies Monday'th in'the c0mnletion of a game suspended by Sunday curfew June 1. ing§a%§¥7mown HOP ILAIIIIIRLII v- BEGES - we. MALT Emil HOP FLAVOURE went to save_money —und still get the best In home mdo hop-flavoured beverages --Here are three Canadian melt extracts to satisfy every ‘taste...Dark,' Light, or extra light for those who prefer the sparkling, lighter type beverage. , he sure 10' use. . bedstead from lollemond A truly Canadian Company. x... \ Restaurant. , fl In Person . . . TheyFentostic ~‘I'UONTLHAMI’TON and his famous 1. INTERNATIONAL ORCHESTRA AND EchTING REVUE I 1' Tickets available at Stoed‘s Pharmacy, Mayfair Tea Room, Ment’e msiluh’l‘s‘lihfillli. Charlottetown THURSDAY. AUGUST 14th f "9.30mi to" 1.30 AM. A.» 'v Flagman, a four-year-old bay colt from Gaspe, Que, captured both ends of an exciting free-for- all last evening at the local Driving Park to open Charlotte- town‘s Old Home Week program. The colt also stepped the fast- est mile, 2209, on his second turn out. Ann’s Dream was second in the first dash, of this feature event and Walter Rosecroft took second in the second dash. Flag- man went the first mile in 2:11. Miss Wilma Dale, owned by W. G. Barbour and driven by James “Roach” MacGregor. in the A pace took two firsts and a third. The four-year-old bay mare went OTTAWA (CE—Ottawa Rough Riders ran roughst over Ed- monton Eskimos by a 26-6 score before a crowd of 9,000 Monday night to complete their three- game exhibition football series against western clubs without a defeat. Rough Riders. who defeated Saskatchewan Roughrimzrs and British Columbia Lions earlier this month. had a relatively easy time against the Eskimos, who used their second-string backfield for the first three quarters. Then. late in the game, with Jackie Parker as quarterback and fullbacks Normie Kwong and Johnnie Bright carrying the ball, Edmonton charged downfieid 58 yards to an unconverted touch- N. S. Rifleman Wins Shootoff At Ottawa Meet CONINAUGHT RANGES, Ont. (OH—RCA!” Cnpl. V. C. (Vic) Lynch of Uniacke, N.S., downed eight shots in a dusk shootoff to win the special match for tyros at the Dominion of Canada Rifle Association meet. A tyro is a competitor who has never appeared among the top 200 aggregate Scores at- the week- long matches held annually at these ranges near Ottawa. Nine tyros hired penfeot 50-point scores to force the tie-breaking shoot 00f. . , Runner-up was Capt. D. 'M. Stillwell. of the Royal Canadian School of Infantry, Camp Borden, 0nt.;' Trooper Ken Baldei'son,of Griswnod. Man, a member _of the Manitoba D r a g o o n a. was third. Lynch began competitive shoot- ing three'years ago while with the RCAF lst Air Division over- with the Nova Scotia Rifle Asso- ciation. He is stationed at Greenwood, N.s. ' ORLANDO PRODUCTIONS‘ “3‘40th ‘th FAMILY snow” . WITH THE rolls. YOU KNOW” ‘.H II KW. A . CAROL 8. SHEILA a . ‘A' BY Poetic DEMAND * , WARD" ALIEN * CHf-o‘vlFICIN OLD—TIME RECORDS BOBVKING * “TOD RECORDS JOE BROWN * ' it A ,; QiCORDS and 4* OTHERS} SPORTS ARENA IAUG. 13—8z30 p.m. Adm. Adults $1.00 Children 500 Sponsored by Ch’town Fire Departmen’ the first mile in 2:13 and the ‘sec- ond in 2:15. - Other winners on this eight- dash card were: Palacona. Rou- ald Hanover. Pepper Boy and Peter Federal. In pari-mutuel pays, a combin- ation ticket of Miss Wilma Dale and Flagman in the first daily double paid $51.40, the nighest pay of the night. Fiatman disc paid $14.80 to win on his first time out. The quinella on the fourth race paid $18.00 on a com- bination ticket of Ronald Han- over and Blake Hanover. The second double on the fifth and sixth dashes paid $20. even, Ottawa Footballers Have Easy Time; With The Eskimos down by Bright. BRANCATO SCORES George Brancato scored tWO: touchdowns for Ottawa, one on‘; a 15-yard .. pass ' from quarterback { Hal Ledyard who played one oft his best games since joining! Riders three seasons ago. 1 Gerry Nesbitt, new Ottawa Im-! port from Arkansas, and Cam-3 dlan Frank Fraser scored the other TDs, both on plunges from the E-skimos' one - yard line. Garry Schreider kicked t-wo con- vem. . AI Balding To Enter Hospital TORONTO (omen Balding. who won the Miller trophy match play tournament Saturd y de , spite an attack of news ,, has decided to enter hospital'here for a medical checkup alter the Ga- nadian open golf championship in Edmonton later this month. Balding, 32, who had to take a 45-minute rest during his semi- final match with Joe Noble of Toronto because of illness, said he would enter Toronto General Hospital Sept. 2 to have doctors determine what causes his recur- ring attacks of nausea and “dou- He heart beats." again, on a combination ticket of Miss Wilma Dale and Flagman. The exactor in the seventh race paid $23.90, Pepper Boy and Blake Hanover being 1 and 2. Pepper Boy also paid $14.80 to Win. Dashes 1. 4 and 'I Palaeona (H. Willis) Ronald Hanover (H Jabalie) Blake Hanover (A Burbine) Royal Train (Jr. Chappell) Pepper Boy (G. Turner) Connie French (D MacNeill) 5 New Forest (E. Bernard) 6 D D Times 2:142; 2:124; 2:12-3. Palacona owned by Henderson and Willis, Charlottetown; Ronald Hanover owned by R. Jaballe, Sydney; Pepper Boy owned by George Turner, Dartmouth. N_S. Dashes 2. 5 and 8 “NAQH 63 14 22 56 31 45 Flagman Takes Both Ends ‘ Of Exciting Fr‘ee-For-All Miss Wilmidale (J. MacGregtir) 1 Guy Haven (DanleISI Peter Federal (D. MacNeill) G Ann C (G. Callbeck) Mr. Jollscott (J. Henneseey) Laurel Henley (Turner) Times: 2:13; 2:15; 2213-1. Wilmidale owned by W.G. Bar- bour, Charlottetown Peter Feleral owned by Mapco stables, Sum- merside. ‘ , Dashes 3 and I Flaggman (R. Barnett) l 1 Ann’s Dream (G. Callbeck) 2 Walter Rosecroft ((Daniels) 6 Farscud (G. Turner) 3 Sir Joseph (D. Constable) 4 Robertdale (C. MacLeod) Times: 2:11; 2:09. 5 Swanson-- |' s f it . Flagman owned by LS. Watte. , . Gaspe, Que. - - ‘ ' " ‘ Almost every man enjoys 11¢ Suggested uric. All taxes included seas. When he returned to Canl ada two years ago. he continued operation. pails. Electric Motor . Equalizer Pulsator has only one moving part. Especially adapted for cold climate . Individual vacuum control for each cow for quicker let-down of milk. . “Duraglas” Transparent Pails let you see how cows are milking. Rubber bumper bands and boots protect the tough glass gtgw “Rom/v MR. FARMER - - - - We invite you to visit our Canadian Tire Store during Old Home Week . . . . We have iust received Cl further shipment of the famous National Milking Machines. 4 I 0 BUY TODAY AND MILK TONIGHT 0. Enjoy ALL the advantages of the highest priced Milkers—yet your actual cost ' of the 2-cow model is lower than most other single unit’milkers. It’s easy to explain why the National Milker offm so much more value at such low cost. The secret is simplicity. There is not a single part of the milker which does not serve a useful‘ purpose , . . And the same rugged simplicity which makes possible the low price, is alto your ' assurance of extra years of dependable. trouble-free performance. greater when you consider that here is no expensive installation—no costly pipelines to main- tain. It is ready to use the same day you buy it. 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