lWrDrw r1 T x iv EPY .117 WE ARE UNLDADIN llARD NUT DDAL A. PIDKARD 8i DD. A PIIDIIE 24D ENTRIES Montague Races WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4 $1600. ,- In Purses-$1600. NO. l. CLASSIFIED TBOT-PURSE $400.00 LUSTICIA ..................................................... ..C. H. BARON JOLLY HABVESTEB KELLYS NIGHTMARE PEERLESS HANOVER. LEE McKILLOP . LEE BREWER MARION L. Chandler, Charlottetown Jamel Given. Halifax ......James Given. Halifax Dr. Bishop, Charlottetown . C. Cruickshanka, Halifax B. Gunwell, St. John's’ Nfld. .... ..Milton Bell. Charlottetown “Niall “ ,‘ Remington NO l. CLASSHTED PACE -- PUB-EB $400.00 DUDY BUDDONG DALE B. Jiarold Stead, Charlottetown ......... “G. H. Hughes. Braekley JUST FLEC flgrqlfl r‘ -' Brinkley Dn- lh 3- B Walker. Halifax rvsr BETTY ..........;..................................Dr. n. r. = Charlottetown MARY MBRK Ens-l e r‘ _ 1r 1 * LORRAINE ABBE .‘.'.........e................»............... James MacNeil, Kenaington MISS KNOX 1-], '- c: - NELLIE WORTHY C. A. BUDLONG FLO DIRECT .. ...Cecil Drake. Cardlga; t llowatt. East Royalty ........ "H. Boutlller. Halifax no a. CLASSIFIED rnor - runes more BONNIE DALE ............................... -..... ........................ ..Cliester Blrt. Pl id mitosis"; 6- a e " » K -""‘ L0 G .. .11 id Steed. BUTHERTA ........ .. ‘m Morgidzfotldzlttf: Vesaey, Charlottetown A. Bernard. Hunter River Earl Bueil, Village Green Earl Mill, Charlottetown ohri Laduer, Charlottetown Ben . .. , Brackiey no. 4, cussmsn mo: - runs: mono nears neuonr GUY HARVESTER. BUD KALMUCK GEO. MAC any ANN’ “m” ' A. E. Phillipe, 0’Leary LYNDA .. WAIEO w MIR-LB nmacr W11"; w°fi°'u'ff,:: VALLEY LONG .........__......_........__... Anne“ Q Lowm, M°n“'“° may wonrny 2nd. -_-_._.._e_... .. c. n. Willie, Brnekley LUCKY NUMBER ...........-......-m._......_. illnrd Kelly, Bnnbury reruns nor -- - - _ c- - i DONNA DILLON w. c. Lewis, New Waterford. c. n. ""8 ABBI - - - - - - - - . . . . . .. c. c. English. Piotou JOE LOUIS VO om BUDLONG _. " “"1"” w!"'”°" N‘ s‘ Randall MacDonald. Militown Crola. 21.1. Any eddltlonnl entries will be declared at Walker's Li stsbl ‘Tuesday. Aug. S. Owners or agents pieeee ‘attend. n" ' U.I.'I.‘.A. BUI§ ‘IO GOVERN- PAlI-MUTUIL BETTING DAILY DOUBLE PHOTO FINISH Ieaaltal Aid. Montague, serving meals and refreshments on grounds ~ ADIIIIIION: Adults $1.00 Children under ll years. free Olldlll: Itarfn. l‘. B. Molielne llldgea, D. X. MaoLeod, Barry Murphy, Harry Sllllphant ‘Ii-era. Hugh Wllker. Bollnd Wood. Bay Keenan ildk e! Coarse. W. I. Brown. _ ‘ GEO. MMINTYBI, Secretary. uiiuif niouio ENTRIES Entries l-‘er Saturday's illglt llaees tiaae TUESDAY. AUGUST 3RD. FEATURE RAGE 2.20 FADE - S IASIIES - PURSE S500. 5 - DLASSIFIEI DASIIES - I c =u1~1i~=ius » ~01.» noentijwaax"; 0| SALE IN ‘ or All. onus sronrs ~ " mo uuromciesmu . At Olympics Musial llas lio A Trouble lleading ll. L. Batting NEW YORK. Aug. 2 —(AP) - Although stan Muaial of the 5t. Louie Cardinals is finding the .460 batting mark -an elusive figure, he ls experiencing little difficulty in staying ahead of the field in the rnce for the individual batting championship of the National Lea- gue. Muslal slipped e couple of points during the week. and dropped to .391. but it still was 6i points bet- ier than any of his pursuers could manufacture. Through games ending Sunday, Aug. 1, Musial had collected 147 hita in 3'16 times at bat in 94 gdmee. Runner-up to Musial was rookie Alvin Dark. Boston's flashy short- stop. who moved past Andy Pallao of Chicago with a .330 figure. Paf- ko experienced a bad week, drop- pmg 22 points from .350 to .323. Only two points behind Pafko in fourth place was Richie Ashbuin, rookie centrefieider of the Phiiadei- phia Philiies at .326. In fifth place was Tommy Holmes. veteran Braves outfielder at .319. . Musiai had three other "firsts" besides the batting honors. The slugging Cardinal pacemaker own- ed the most hits. 147; the most runs, 84, and the most triples. l1. in addition he trailed only New York's Johnny Mize for runs bat- ted in honors 80 to 82. and was second to Philadelphia's Del Ennis .ii doubles. fi to 29. He ranked fourth in home runs with Si. The home run leader was Ralph Kincr of Pittsburgh who last year tied Mize for the league lead at 51 a- piece. Kiner had Z8 round trip- pers, to W for -Hank Bauer of Ciii- clnnatl and 26' for Mize. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Philadelphia "N59 40 596 Cleveland .. 38 592 New York .. 39 559 Boston .. .. 40 533 Detroit 49 434 Washington 55 437 sf. Louis b6 391 Chicago 64 335 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. New York 44 532 Brooklyn . 44 5n st. Louis . -- 45 521 Pittsburgh . .46 m Phiiade I ... cinoihhiti f‘ ....aa be 483 Chicago AT 412 Ben ilogan Wine Third Golf Title BUFFALO, N.Y., Aug. 2 - (AP) _Bantam Ben Hogan today added the western open golf champion- ship to his national open and P.G.A. crowns — the first men ever to hold the three titles the same season. And he did it. in an lI-hoie play-off with Seattle's lid (Porky) Oliver, in such impressive style that he had his pudgy opponent rooting for him at the finish. Tlhe stone-faced, IST-poundar from Hershey, Pa. who hits like e. heavyweight and putts like a bil- liard shark, turned the run-filled finale into a rout as he smothered the westerner under a nine-stroke avalanche - 64 to Oliver's .73, It was the moat one-aided play-off since Bob Jones whipped Al lis- pinoss. by 2e shots in the ae-hole play-off for the 1989 natienaiopen leureis. Hogan, a perfect golfing ma- chine except on the third hols where he hit one chip shot a bit 1m hard. carded s. aa-ao-ea, eight under per. That clipped two strokes off Brookfleld Country Club's yes. 0rd. and left Oliver so far behind that it was practically no contest. Oliver scored 97-36-73, [llJBi AUTOMATIC ..;.o;... THE GUARDIAN. Broken Yesterday; Non-winner Steals Show Dy JACK IULLIVAN OLYMPIC STADIUM, Wemblcy, Alli. 3 — (W) — Sixteen champ- ions were crowned today at the Olympics. three record! were bro- ken, and the weaker sex won the only points for Canada. But the show was stolen by a man who didn't win. Iieut. Emil Zatopek. the iron Oeach .who won the lopiio-sneire nui last Friday. just failed to bring off the coveted double in the 6.000 metres. The 04,000 capacity crowd at Wembley Stadium inok the never- say-die army officer to its heart as, covered in mud from puddles that dotted the brick-red track, he made a terrific last-minute spurt to make up arrears of about 60 yards. Zatopek beat the Olympic rec- ord for the distance and provided one of the moat stirring finishes ever seen on en Olympic track. He failed by only six feet to catch amazing Gaston Reiff of Belgium. whose 14 minutes, 17.6 seconds trimmed 4.6 seconds from a rec- ord set at the last games in Ber- lin in i986. Canada's point-winners were blonde Viola Myers, 21-year-old Toronto sprinter, and leani- nrate Pat Jones of New West- minate, 8.0., only 1T. Only other Canadian to place in the first six in any event ho far is Art Jaekes of Toronto. He was sixth In the high jump Friday. Running through a drizzle 3'! rain which forced spectators un- der umbrellas or costs, Miss Myers was Ln fourth spot all the way. She finis ed a mere four yards be- hind tali Fanny Biankers-Kmn of the Netherlands, 30-year-old mother of two children who won the Olympics "fastest woman" title in 11.9 seconds. Miss Jones got away to s p001‘ start but kept ahead of Jamaica's Miss C. Thcm-psOn. other Champions soc-metro run -_ Mal Whitfield. United states army sergeant, who beat out Arthur Wint of Jamaica. world-record holder. to set en Olympic record of 1:492, six-tenths of a second better than the 1032 time set up at Ins Anceles. Guilt. by Britain's Tom Hnmpson. Discus throw -- AdelPh° 0°11‘ soiini of Italy who twice broke the Olympic record today. His final mark; ma feet, two inches, or seven feet, 6% inches beyond the record o; Ken Carpenter, United States, at Berlin in 198d. Pole vault-Owen Gulnn Smith of the United States, at 14 feet, 114 inches. ‘Fencing — the French men's teem in teem play? lions Elek 0f himggry in women's individual foils. - Swimming - Greta Anderson of Denmark, who won the loo-metre free style title in one minute, 6.3 seconds. Free style wrestling _. George Bobls, Hungary. heavyweight: v.1. viitala, Fihldfld. flywelshi; Nassuh Akkah, Turkey. bantam- weight; Gezarifer Bilge. Turkey. featherweight; Glenn BrandbUh- ited States, middleweight; Ceiai Atik, ‘rurkey, lightweight; end Yasar Dogu. Turkey, weltcrweiihf- Shooting -- E. Vasquez 0am. Peru, tic-metre free pistol. Ted Haggis of London, Ont., safely through the first qualifying round of the zoo-metre dash, was lneted in the second round when he placed fourth. Only two could qualify. Don Pettie of Cal- gary failed in his first-heat fry. Heavyweight remand Peyflfit of Montreal, sole survivor for Can- adn h. the free rtyle wrestlinfl competition, was defeated in both his bouts today. The Canadismbaeiretbell teem, after one victory lut week, was beaten unexpectedly today by "Huuguy, fl-fl, in Sh! CIOIQSQ game of the elimination round so far. The cenedian eoo-metra Mm- ming relay time was sixth in its first heat and was eliminated. liric Coy of Winnipeg, the Do- rniniorrs only entrant 1r; the dis- cus throrw, felled to qualify. Veteran Speedboat Champion Injured PIGPON’. Ont., Aul. 2 — (OP) —Jeckie (Pops) Cooper of Ken- sss City, Mo, 74-year-old holder of a world's apeedboat record, suffered severe inluriea today overturned during the sixth run- ning of the Plcton regatta. He went to hospital with s frac- tured skull, broken aims and leg- 'was "little hope" for his recovery. Ooopen pitting his 18b class Blue Biases against larger 23S close hydroplanel. was roaring up the home stretch on the first lap of a heat, when his craft sudden- ly shot into the air and turned a aomersault beforO 10.000 spect- ators. Cooper was hurled clear but‘ the boat crashed down on him as he struggled in the water off this hem-n Ontario fawn. lellow einitestenta dived to res- cue Cooper, who wee bleeding from a gash over the right oer when brought to the surface. , Dr. Waiter Robinson of Alexan- dria Bey. Ont. a competitor. ec- eempanied Cooper to hospital here and remained’ with htn through- out the afternoon. Cooper owice won the Plcten releth gold cup 1n other years. ALIAYI All IIOOII The wood thrush ainla each m m - .. . _. when his racing boat, Blue Biases, . idioms. Doctors mo tonight there ‘ cnAnuorra-rown Ted Williams Still Reading Stick Parade CHICAGO. Aug. I —- ‘(A I) — Pitchers put the brakes on the American League's top hitters last week. but Boston's Ted Williams still headed the stink perade today despite a six-point clump to 3&3. Williams actually increased his margin three Xaoints to 4i over runner-up Lou Boudreau as Cleve- land's manager-shortstop slipped nine notches to .343. ‘miznpin’ Ted banged six hits in S0 trips last week. while Boudreau collected five in 23. Al Zarllla. of St. Louis advanced from fourth to third spot with .336 through Sunday's games. De- troit's George Keli, third last week, Dlummeted 25 points to s. sixth- place .317 Detroit *§_ Wilt Evers 01 w“ fourth with .332 and Cleveland's Dale Michell fifth with ma. Rmmdlnfl out the top ten were two newcomers. Barney McCosky M Phuldflllhifl. .309. and veteran Luke Aimling. Chicago. m; 5nd Hank Maieski. Philadelphia, .304; and Bill Goodman. ‘ 303, Baseball's figSh By The Associated n1- (Three leaders in each league) Player and om. G AB R i1 Pot. Musial, Cards 95 382 S’! 14B .390 Williams. R. Sox so 29s 1a 114 ass Boudreau. Inds. 93 350 71 121 .346 Zarillu. Browns as aas 4e 10a on livers. Tigers . 94 358 54 119 .332 Dark. Braves . 80 302 51 99 .328 Pafko. Cubs 91 s50 es 114 rs ‘ Aahburn, Phil. Loo s31 e1 12a. m gue. Mize. Giants. 83; American League, Dimaggio Yankees 90. Klrier. Pirates, 28; American Lea- gio. Yankees 24. Sohmltz Maintains Jinx Over Dodgers In ii-Inninglilotory By The Canadian Press rained his Jinx over Brooklyn Mon. day u he whipped the Dodgers r...- the fifth time this year, 4.3 m 11 innings. Usually all the Windy City flin- ger has to do is throw in his glove and the Brooks play dead. Yestcr. day they made him work but Ed. die Waitkus wok care of things in the ilth. with a double that drove in Schmitz himself with what gauged :1 be the winning run, Andy o rove in th ' Mm . fly out. e insurance run Waitkus and Pafko drove in the other two Cub runs in the first inning. each belting a homey, Schmitz gave up nine hits. 514881!!! the largest scoring my” in the majors this season. St. Lou's Cardinals shattered the seven- ilime will“!!! streak of New York by pounding five assorted fiingcrs for 20 hits and a humiliating 21-5 victory. The Redbirds scored in every inh- PLEASE NOTE: Runs Batted Iri- National Lca- ' Home Runs -Nat.ionai League. v gue. Keltner. Indians and Dimag- - 51110180’: Johnny Schmitz mam- I heaven: of!‘ _' DRE-TODD] the famous money-buck guarantee. BUNGDLEUM f. Gold Seal Congoleum Rugs .. .produd Canada Limited. Montreal. ' taoec' i Nothing transforms rdom us Quickly and at so little expense é ds u smurf Congoleum Rug i Bright, preliweesy-lo-core-for . .1. ii stays beautiful and new looking ‘cm amazingly long time! For Congoleum has a wear-layer ofUheai-‘ioughened point and baked enamel equal in thickness to 8 couirof the best floor paint applied by hand. And il‘s the only enamel surface floor covering with ing but the seventh and ninth. They routed starter and loser Ray Poet with a four-run first inning after two were out and continued their assault on Clint l-iartung. Ken ‘lkinkle, Monte Kennedy and Clem Dreisewerd. Their big inh- ing was the fifth when they count- ed eight times. The Cards collected 12 extra base wallops. only one sway from their own league record of l3. They smashed four home runs and eight doubles. Stan Muslai cracked his 25th. four-Ibagger. Marty Marion on fourth, Erv Dusak his third and Whitey Kurowski his second. ANNUUNCING . A our: HOLIDAY ‘ CL O SI N G . The Week of hug. 9th to 14th GIVING our STAFF A wru. DESERVE!) nrsr AND Ar‘ ‘m: SAME TIME not}... rum TO smog OLD hora: WEEK, our PLANT WILL e: CLOSED FROM AUG. 9TH TO 14m lNCLUSi-‘VE. 1' .. i-ioweveixggi AS A CONVENIENCE ro our. cusromras our orric: WILL s: orm “omit-iii. TO ‘i2 NOON EACH on TO RECEIVE CALLS mo GIVE our wonx. " ' - THURSDAYfAUGUST 5TH is the latest dole on which we con-org cry by Saturday, August 7th. New Method PHONE zone ‘ LIIAITEI man srczn on 1 A tiny generator in ti! x i_~ ‘ fuse. used in radio ,1 .155 _ boiirilrgtsie. make! 100.000 I?“ Kmgl By The Canadian Pra _ 1 ,__ i The baseball world was elicited The lowly Cincihnatiqs nida t‘ e" .. g by the suicide death of Willard ‘he "mt M their 0pm = Hershberger, 29-year-old second. REMEMBER WllEll ___ .' i,. imposed a 3-1 defeat o leading Boston Bravesjw most of their opportu the veteran left-ha Vander Meer. q-Q‘. QJTK» The Tribe stranded eédozen base runners before 12.994 Daidfld 5.13" n? years ago today. Hershberger, serv- ling his third season with the Redl was apparently" despondent oven Boston. the smallest nightlggfhome _ llus recent play and was found dead _ I n a. downtown Boston hotel. crowd of the season. - _ ‘fr... . i ept worii that is wanted for deli» ' *_ string catcher of the Cincinnati , 1-1 Reds of the National League, eight - x 5'.'.:-_\.¢.\.J Qssofms-kiuz-Iifi-i-a .. .-, -'-<».~..~ - *4