r Chisox Blank Dodgers 11-0 7? In World Series Opener By JACK HAND CHICAGO (AP) — Muscleman Ted Kluszewski, discarded by the National League, drove in five guns with two homers and.a single for Chicago's hitless wond- ers Thurgday as the White Sox blanked Los Angeles Dodgers 11-0 in the first game of the 1959 ' ‘World Series. * WYNN PULLS UP. __Wynn was removed in the Veteran Early Wynn, whose 2 regular season wiiis were tops in the major leagues, blanked the Dodgers for seven innings before developing a sore arm. He was replaced by ace reliever Gerry Staley, who completed the job. Big Klu, obtained on waivers from Pittsburgh Pirates Aug. 25, knocked out both starter Roger Craig and relief man Chuck Churn with drives into the right field, stands. , also erred with a wild peg to the plate on an easy chance, TWO IN FIRST Chicago had scored two on Craig in the first inning on a walk to Nellie Fox, the first of Landis’ three singles, Kluszew- ski’s single and Sherm Lollar’s 400-foot sacrifice fly to deep centre. There was one gone in the third when the sky began to fall on the Dodgers, to the vast en- tertainment of most of the capa- city crowd of 48,013. The -White Sox .fans who had waited 40 years for a series, chanted ‘“‘Go- Go” like a college cheering sec- tion as the score mounted. Fox started it with a double that bounced off the wall in right centre. Then came Kluszewski's first homer, barely clearing the SEVEN-RUN INNING The Go-Go Sox, who usually, depend on speed, clobbered Craig | and Churn for seven runs in the in Churn, but he- immediately ran into trouble. Lollar lifted a high fly to left centre. Wally collided under third. Kluszewski opened his assault ‘on Craig with a single to right in the first,.scoring Jim Landis; with the first of two Sox runs in thé inning. During the big third he finished Craig with his fly ball that just Darely made it into the lower stands in right, once again scor- ing Landis. His second homer: was a 400-foot smash into the: upper deck in right in the fourth) with Landis once more trotting home in front of him. .. This eye-opening performance, by a man no National League; m wanted, tied the series rec- for _runs batted in, held} i; Tony Lazzeriand Bill . the mark in the Game game, Oct.-2, 1936 when New York Yankees were thump fnzg New York Giants 18-2. eighth after leadoff man Junior Gilliam singled. It was the sixth Dodger hit. The losers got eight fn all. Word from the dugout was that Wynn's right elbow had stif- slightly and manager Al! Lopez did not want to risk further damage. as , With Gerry Staley, his old de- @endable bullpen ace all heated ap; Lopez-was taking no chances on not having Wynn ready for a in Los Angeles later in the Sox te sent 11 men to plate in the third. They had i an 12-foot wall behind Norm Lar- ker. That finished Craig and brought Moon and Snid the ball and ider let it drop. Billy Goodman promptly singled past Hodges, driving in Lollar..., | WILD THROW Al Smith hammered a double to the left-field wall. When Snid- er’s peg toward second rolled wildly toward first, Goodman scored and Smith went to third. Jim Rivera rapped, back to ‘Greatest Thrill Ever’ Says | Kluszewski Of Sox Victory | By JERRY LISKA CHICAGO AP)—“‘It greatest thrill I ever had,”’ said} traditional _post-game interviews | Ted Kluszewski in the Chicago! had to be held on three fronts—;} vanquished Dodgers. 'dressing room after thei White | the White Sox dressing room, the} |Sox clobbered Los Angeles Dodg-| Dodger dressing room and the ‘ers 11 in Thursday’s World Bard's Room ithe Sox clubhouse Series opener. Big Klu had a threefor-five| single’ and two homers—|Sox and Walt Alston of the Dodg-| ida five runs batted in. Kluszewski said he wasn’t sure Room for—interviews. |of his first tworun homer in the ; riotous Chicago seven-run third) ous,’ said Lopez. He was referr- inning. “But I knew I gave that second one—another two-run smash 3? singles, three doubles and a in the inning and the) chipped in with three! errors. | fT In the big inning, Duke Snider) « It took the milling mob of -writ- somebody : ued get a World Series mark for er-,ers and photographers about 10 pitch to Gilliam in the eighth in-| officer might just as well carry a ors in an inning by an outfielder| minutes to crash through a cor- don of police and ushers into a} dressing room that by then was tired and the elbow got cool and 4Way. when he was charged with two— | @ dropped fly and a wild throw. Second baseman Charlie Neal Defeat Won't Have Effect On Club Says Walt Alston By CHARLES MAHER Associated Press Sports Writer | CHICAGO (AP) — “They told who had won five straight, was me about how fast the White Sox were,” said Walt Alston, ‘“‘but . gaid veteran Carl Furillo, ‘‘than training instructors, Jack ‘Spy’! Roger Goss, QCHS, 2. Allan Mac- The quiet, cordial manager of Los Angeles Dodgers summed up the 110 defeat handed his club by Chicago White Sox in the world series opener Thursday with the comment that “‘they just beat the hell out of us. That's all. They just beat the hell \out of us. “In a way, maybe it’s nice to have them get all their runs at} once. I don’t think the fact that they didn't tell me about all oa ‘the score was 110 is going to have any real effect on us men- | tally. This club has been behind, before and come on to win.” Alston's estimate of the Psy- school had a grand total of 117 chell, BHS. chological impact of the score seemed to be shared by many players. BETTER THIS WAY “Td rather get beat this way,” lose a real close one or lose one on an error. Tomorrow the White! Gox will wish they had some of; The top male athlete of the | Mile Run (Boys) 1. Jim Cul- those runs they got today.” | Duke with Furillo. “If we're going to take a beat- fag.” said the Duke. “I'd much} @ather get beat like this and: then} @in the close ones. When we go out there tomorrow, will be nothing to nothing.” The Dodgers, reminiscent of their daffy, days in Brocklyn., | committed three errors altoget- her—all in the third inning. SNIDER GUILTY Snider was guilty on two. He, @iid left fielder Wally Moon con- | verged under a high fly by Sherm | Lollar and bumped together just | @s Snider reached for the bail. “Wally hollered,” said Duke, “but I didn’t hear htm. I yelled, too, several times, but he appar- ently didn’t hear me. I had the! ball in my glove and it just It's happened be-| fore.” Moon said he didn’t have any idea‘ Snider was near him. Later in the inning, Snider} plucked a hit by Al Smith off the left - centre field wall and threw toward second. Nobody was-there and the Duke was stuck with another error. “T threw to second because 1} figured I had a chance to get him,” Snider said. : THINK FAST “You have a picture in your! mind where the runner will be’ and then throw. You've only got an instant to think out there.”’ *Charlie Neal committed the third error of the inning when he| @ bouncer by Jim Rivera, threw low to Johnny Rose- at the plate, trying to geti ity ment. PRESS"CRASHES IN fairly serene. Smith. . ; Dodger starter Roger Craig. driven out in Chicago's seven-run third, but Alston said there were that’s a “no excuses to offer for Craig.” Neal who-threw to the plate try- ing for Smith. But the throw was into the dirt and escaped Johnny Roseboro while Smith scored and Rivera took second. It was ruled |. an error for Neal. Just to rub it in, Wynn followed with a long double in left centre, scoring Rivera with the seventh run of the inning. As though big Klu had not done enough damage already to his old playmates in the Na- tional, he finished off Churn with his two-run upper-deck drive in the fourth. That completed the scoring for the day. The Sox, used to grinding out one-run decisions with a walk, stolen base, infield out and a sacrifice fly must have been amazed at the ease with which they scored. At the end of the cool afternoon they had 11 hits off five Dodger pitchers. Landis (14-9), the hero of the Dodgers’ victory over the Yankees in 1955 when the Dodgers won their only world championship. Bob Shaw (18-6), a right-hander acquired from Detroit last year after he asked to be traded im stead of returned to the minors, was manager Lopez’ second- game nomination before the first game. Shaw has been the big sur- prise of the Whife Sox pennant SPORT ECHOES BY NORMAN MACDONALD . We're betting on the Chicago White Sox right across the board —Wynn, Pierce, and Shaw. We'll be greatly surprised, however, if the pattern of victory follows the first game where everybody did what they weren't expected to ‘do. The Los Angeles Dodgers are noted for their fine pitch- ing. But the Sox went on a bat- ting spree, and the Dodgers pitching gave way at the seams. The Kiuzewski, who according to one expert, “seems to have winners, ranking right behind the 39-year-old Wynn on the pitching SUNDAY IN LA After today’s game there will) be a one-day travel break, with} the series resuming Sunday in Los Angeles. They will play in Los Angeles Monday and Tues- day; too, unless the White Sox win four straight. If sixth and seventh games are néeded they will be played in) was—the-beth-players’-dressing rooms, the any more in the seriés."’ in|" the fourth — the Cadillac treat-|in the eighth. and Kluszewski each had three!Chicago next week, following an-| and Smith weighed in with two/other one-day break for travel. doubles. The weatherman eaid it would During the game, word was re-|be partly cloudy and cool today) layed from Los Angeles that all) with the temperature in the 50s. | seats in the 92,000-capacity Colis-} First report from the clubhouse eum had been sold out. This as-|was that Wynn’s elbow trouble, sured a record player cut for the was not serious. Lopez said Wynn test share in the receipts of would be ready for his next turn. | the first four games. The old| Wynn was in his usual form. | mark of $11,147.90 pocketed by His first pitch to the first eight each winning New York -Giant in! batters was a strike. After Char- 1954 probably will be topped by lie Neal's scratch infield single $3,000 to $4,000. jin the first, the Dodgers didn't For today’s second game, it/get another hit until the fourth will be left-hander Johnny Podres'when Moon beat out a bunt. Because of limited space in! “I don’t think it will _bother me L Lopez was charitable to the “They just had a bad day.” said the senor. “It could happen to any club. But it sure feels goed to win my first—Wortd Series game."’ Lopez’ 1954 Cleveland In- dians lost. four straight-to_New— ers, went directly to the Bard's) York Giants As players of both teams \trudged up the stairs one fog- for the press). Both managers, Al Lopez of the “Wynn's elbow is nothing serti- Dodgers: “You ain't plaving M'lwaukee you-bunch of bums.” | ing to the stiffness in Wynn's |pitching elbow which forced the a veteran right - hander’s removal. ae ‘Hunters’ Corner cet WANTED OUT “Early signalled me to get ready after his first} (Continued from page 8) ;Sieeping bag with him, crawl said he was “getting into a thicket and doze the time He would have at least peace of mind and be in far bet- ter physical condition. |MEANS JUSTIFIED ee | Wynn ‘began stiffening up.’ This situation is not confined tc hunting for sport and recrea- tion. What happencd with the lobster situation? A raiding squad from the mainland had the si- tuation under conteol pronto. They had to adopt Commando tactics I'll admit but the end jus- esis ‘. ,» w.1,| tified the means. A howl was His arm’ was al! right,” Walt\rsised to the heaven’s but lob- said, ‘‘and he said he had his ster poaching was on the way -if stuff. They just hit him hard, not already out. Then without ll. And they hit some good warning the picture changed : overnight. 16 cases involving lob- | pitches. ster infractions were summarily City High Schools Hold Track Meet Queen Charlotte High School |and Birchwood held their annual ricia track and field meet yesterday afternoon with Queen Charlotte having 2 points mote than Birchwood. The North River Road points compared to Birchwood which picked up 88 points. The students from: both schools out in full force, were under the supervision of their physcial Ready of Queen Charlotte and Bill Ledwell of Birchwood. day was Arnold Macleod, a Snider, a generally skil-'husky 14-year-old Queen Char-|BHS, 3. Morgan Mitchell, BHS. @ul outfielder who was charged 'lotte student who picked up a Time- 5:07. with two errors Thursday, agreed total of 19 points. Jimmy Cul-| len, also a Queen Charlotte student, was ‘second with 15 16-year-old Marjorie Bradley, also from Queen Chariotte was the SCOre| ton female athlete, Marjorie and|Leod, QCHS, 3. Gary Nicolle, her twin sister Margaret habit ually star for their school in various sports events, Marjorie picked up a total of ® points yesterday. 7% yds. (Girls M yrs.) 1. Brenda Hennessey, BHS, 2. Heather MacLean, QcCHS, 3. Dianne MacInnis, QCHS. , 7 yde. (Boys 11 yrs. ) 1. Ian MacDonald, BHS, 2. Mike Campbell BHS, 3 Keith Mac- Eachern, QCHS. 7 yds. (Girls 12 yrs.) 1. Chery! MacQuarrie, QCHS, 2. Shirley Pound, VHA, 3. Lane Johnston, BHS. Z 75 yds. (Boys 13. yrs.) 1. Donnie McClintick, * oe a David Mitchell, BHS, 3. Peter Pineau, BHS. a 7 yds. (Girls 13 yrs.) 1. Dianne Burke, QCHS, 2. Suzanne Bradley, BHS, 3. Catherine Shepherd, BHS. . 100 yds. (Boys 13 yrs.) 1. Ken Foley, BHS, 2. Jim Webb, QCHS, 3. Cyril MacDonald, BHS. 100 yds. (Girls 14 yrs.) 1. Carla Smith, BHS, 2. Frances Mahar, BHS, 3. Jane Hogan, QCHS. < 100 yds. (Boys 14 yrs.) 1. Arnold MacLeod, QCHS, 2. Wayne Flynn, BHS, 3. Jim Cullen, QCHS. 100 yds. (Girls 145 yrs.) 1. 4 dismissed and I have it on good authority that a number of boats seized, valine, in the thousands of dollars, are to be returned to ‘ their owners. Travellers returning from West Prince tell me it’s wide open once more. Fishermen are grab- bing cod heads for lobster bait as soon as they are cut off. It’s nothing to see boats pulling away Janet MacDonald, QCHS, 2. Pat- from wharves loaded with lob- Sherry,- BHB, 3. Aileen) ster traps and cod heads and |Kane, BHS. heading for the lobster grounds | | 100\ yds. (Boys 15 yrs.) 1.!in broad daylight. An opportunity | |Barry Diamond, QCHS, 2. Don'to end 95 per cent of “lobster | Cousins, QGHS, 3. Regan Mit-|poaching was tossed into the discard. The sad part of it is 1. | it’s the fishermen's families who 2.| will eventually suffer. The end) (Girls Bradley, | 100 yds. Marjorie 16 yrs.) QCHS, Margaret Bradley, QCHS, 32.|is in sight, Whe will take the Marjorie Waye, BHS. blame? 100 yds. ‘Boys 16 yrs.) 1. |QCHS. Mt. 4 ft. 1 in. High Jump (Boys) 1. Earl | Murphy, BHS, 2 Roger Goss, QCHS, 3. Arnold MacLeod, Jim’ MacDonald, (Tie). Ht 4 ft. 8 in. | Running Broad Jump (Girls) | 1. Marjorie Bradley, QCHS, 2.! Brenda Dowling, BHS, 3. Nancy | Roberts, QCHS, Frances Mahar, | | BHS (tied). Dist. 13 ft. 10 ins. Running Broad Jump (Boys) 1. Gary Nicolle, BHS, 2% Leon- ard Gauthie, QCHS, 3. Roger Goss, QCHS. Dist. 16. 10 ins. . _Relay Race (Girls) 1. QCHS, 2. BHS. Relay Race (Boys) 1, QOHS, 2. BHS, Linnon, QCHS, 3. Leonard Gauth- lier, QCHS. jlen, QCHS, 2. Gerald Mitchell, Short Putt (Boys) 1. Arnold MacLeod, QCHS, 2. Bill Giggey, |QCHS, 3. Leonard Gauthier, QCHS. Dist. 40 ft. 11 in. Quarter Mile (Boys) 1. Mim Cullen, QCHS, 2% Arnold Mac- HS, Time 60 secs. High Jump (Girls) 1. Marjorie Bradley, QCHS, 2. Gail Johne- ton, BHS, 3. 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The Special Cooling System Conditioner in Perma-Fill actually improves engine performance, inhibits the formation of power. robbing deposits and scale on water jackets and radiator core . . ‘ Can't harm car finish and it’s kind LOWEST PRICE IN TOWN Gal. 2.89 a. 78¢ . MILTON STEWART AL MacRAE PROPRIETORS Opposite Dominion Bidg. sot cramp little They such in- s Dodgers battlers are not going to lie down and play dead all through the series as they did against Wynn. There’s too much sting im those shilkelaghs for that to happen. The Cubs beat them 12-2 in the stretch drive and they bounced back. It'll be a rousing “s¢rap, is my’ predic- tion, but the White Sox will win the lion’s share of the purse. Dave Bernard, Summerside high school jumper, failed to beat the interscholastic record by a whisker. In 1930 George Ayers jumped 5 ft. 4 1-2 in-! ches; At the time of Saturday’s | meet, because of a misunder-' 2 eee i ‘ — roads, f temperatures » and driving Se ese _ Conditions \ Super-Lastic “ i ; ©, 8 bs! o . cr Re Prie with - — with 50% heavier TYREX size ‘tia Class A" Viscose Cord than “New-Car” | 550-590/15 | 21.55 | 16.98 re . 600/16 24.85 | 15.95 / equipment... 650/16 31.65 16.95 -Lastie Hiway-B .. « rated t 670/1 : : chowce for bad-weather ving: with the 710/15 20.65 | 19.95 r r a ° fon vt ong 54 oo, apd ar, Origin- 760/15 31.30 | 22.95 ally developed as a super-traction snow- | 999-820/15 | 33.55 | 25.95 : mud tire, the engineers built in longer | 900/14 28.65 | 20.95 mileage a removed Ferg = poor a 850/14 31.30 | 22.95 i whi m aaae ae, Ride ‘Hiway-Byway oar day 900/14 33.55 | 25.95 i f t Tubeless pow Aug ge e Sic, “ementaeilidl or ueeweln aad Soe for sctalbotten, ankle-deep in mud. The power-grip - - tree rubber one o- greater G-O and more positive 5-1-O-P - ROAD HAZARD INSURED SAVE SAFELY PLUS 5-YEAR GUARANTEE ANTI: | The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Oct. 2, 1959- thought he had broken the record jwhen he cleared 5 ft. 4 1-4. Had acca MATURAL | = te? Sas 4 TOLAN Encineered for x Canadian < great second basemen in the Na-| ional League from 1931 to 1 with Chicago, Brooklyn, Boston and Pittsburgh. He managed the Pittsburgh club in 1947 and coached for Brooklyn Dodgers from 1952 through 1957 before shifting to Milwaukee in 1958. Herman and Jurges were tear mates with the Cubs for m: years. South Africa’s Kruger National Park, a preserve for big game, had 54,180 visitors in the first half of 1959. ; standing it was thought the re- cord was 5 ft. 4 ins. So Bernard he known his jump was a quar- ter inch below the record. he might have stfetched the elastic a little moré and made a new mark. ny Herman Signs With Red Sox CHICAGO (AP) — Billy Her- man, who quit Wednesday as a coach. with Milwaukee Braves, signed Thursday as third base coach for Boston Red Sox. Manager Billy Jurges of the Red Sox will do his managing from the bench next year. Herman, 50, was one of FOR .RENT floor sanders and edgers also “FABULON” the famous} “BOWLING ALLEY” finish f fer home floors. / CHANDLER BROS, 1 Plywood Place aR psc ai € BS i eee A oO eam , FREEZE et ne a "OPONTO ae) CANADA TIRE CORPOR