* Dodgers Edge Bra In Playoff Series Opener © By JACK HAND Associated Press Sports Writer MELWAUKEF( AP) Young relief Playoff series for the Na- League pennant. series will continue today at the vast Los Angeles Coliseum _ With the Dodgers’ Don Drysdale » (17-13) trying to close it out in two straight. Lew Burdette (21-15 fwill work for the Braves. me is 6 p.m. ADT last three innings. In fact Roseboro’s homer was the only extra base blow of the soggy afternoon. It looked for a long time as though the game never. would get started. Ten minutes before game time, it started to rain, gently at first and-then harder and harder. iThe ground crew pulled the tar- paulin over .the infield while the playérs sat down on the bench to wait it out. Finally the rain let up and the umpires came out with President. Warren Giles of the league to con- fer with the opposing managers. After a long discussion they or- : Sherry, a 24 - year - old right ' hander from Los Angeles came to the rescue of wild Danny Mc-| Devitt, the Dodger starter. in the second inning. Working with the Coolness of a veteran. the young man who was brought up from: the St. Paul in early July allowed only four hits in_the last 7 23) ecoreless ings. | All this fine pitching in rain. fog and heavy dew would have been wasted if Roseboro. hadn't slammed a 2-1 pitch by Carlton ley evér the right field fence! “his 10th home run leading off! the sixth. The blow:h® the Dodger} eatcher, who is doin!\a man-} sized job of trying to TH. the} ample shoes of Roy Campanela, | fell five rows into the engpemig. about 375 feet from home. plate. TAKE 10 HITS Charlie Neal and Norm Larker;where’-the final game or games|Bruton drove home Logan with) with two men on in the fourth.| each had three of the 10 D ager | hjts off Willey and ‘relief man! Don McMahon who pitched the! dered the game started, 47 min- utes late It was played undér lights from the very start. In the late inn- ings a fog rolled in. Both teams played remarkably good .ball un-1 der-the circumstances but it was not one of those thrillers you will retell to your grandchildren. BETTER IN L.A. f The Dodgers, Los Angeles Variety, did better than the old Brooklyn brand ever. did.in the first game of the playoff. The Brooks lost in two straight to St Louis in 1946 and dropped the first to the New York Giants in 1951 before fina.ly being knocked out in the third game by Bobby Thomson's ‘‘miracle’’ homer. Now they go-home to a tumul- tuaus greeting at the big coliseum with its 250 - foot Teft field fence best hitter, Duke Snider, who was on the bench with a damaged knee. He was available only for Only 18,297 braved the threat of rain and ignored the unusual comforts of home baseball tele- vision in the Milwaukee area. The crowd was about 32,000 below the standing room turnout that set a new County Stadium record.Sun- day when the Braves clinched a tie. Among the onlookers was Al Lopez, manager of the Chicago White Sox, the American League champions, who will meet: the winner. If the Dodgers win two straight the series,. will start Thursday at Chicago’ Comiskey Park. If it goes three games the opener will be Friday. SCORE FIRST The. Dodgers got to Willey for a run in the first when Neal singled off Bobby Avila’s glove behind second base, took secon¢, on Wally Moon's infield out avd scored on Larker’s single to Walter Alston to give starter }{c- right. - ; Milwaukee forced mtarager Walter Alston to give starte’ Mc- Devitt a fast hook in the second. The little lefty got one wan out) and then walked Johnny, Logan| on four pitches. —-§fccessive| singles by Del Crandall and Billy} will be played today and Wednes:|the tying run. day And they did it without their/to Willey, Alston eame from the|Braves. Eddie Mathews was hit-| SPORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN THE BIGGER they are, the harder they fall. That about sums up the attitude of those Morell bantams who won the Maritime baseball é diamond. The King’s County youngsters rallied in great fashion after losing the first game in a best-of-three series to the Halifax bantams. The boys from Morell managed to get even with a 10-8 verdict in the second Scotians 12-3 in the clincher. championship Sunday on their game, then trampled the Nova THE YOUTHS from down east surprised Island baseball! fol- Jowers when they sidelined Moncton to capture the champior- ship of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. Most of these baseball enthusiasts marvelled at a village the size of Morell producing a baseball: team that could win the N.B.-P.E_I. baseball championship. But these baseball promoters down King’s way, don’t worry_one little bit where their opponents hail from or how highly rated they are. They go into every contest with con- fidence galore and it has paid off handsomely. Along came the Halifax bantams and again Morell boys were decided underdogs in the betting. After that first lop-sided triumph by the Haligonians, there were many who just shook their heads and said Morell didn’t belong in playoffs with a team from the Nova Scotian capital. After you could drop the whole village o? Morell into a wee corner of Halifax, so why expect these Morell lads to do anything vith the opposition from such a large centre. all, HOWEVER, the boys who were managed and coached by Don- ald MacDonald and Louis McGuire didn’t play any attention to such line of thinking. After that 11-3 walloping, they got together and decided they had a chance against these mainland visitors. They refused to throw in the sponge and they_came bouncing right of the floor to land the knockout punch that was hard enough to give Mgell its first Marifime championship. i You can’t say enough good things about these folks down King’s County way. As we have stated on several occasions be- fore. they are the most baseball-conscious folks in Canada and every honor that comes their way is richly deserved. Baseball fans in this section of the province are indeed of their young champions and indeed they may be. How- ever, that pride is shared with every Prince Edward Island sports- man who is really amazed at the feat of the Morell lads. This little village has done something that the capital city of Charlotte- ¢own and the enerprising own of Summerside couldn't do, that 4s bring Maritime honors this year to our province of Prince Ed- ward Island. > < cave-a good account of —" i that classy Moncton teasn that went on to gra Si anaes chemplonship of the Maritimes. The manner . the Monctonians mauled the Nova Scotia chamions made Morell- Peakes look like the second-best junior baseball team in the sea- side provinces. Then Mt. Stewart almost took a eres ane last Sunday. The Hamilton Douglas-managed outfit carri Maccan crew to three games before losing out and af that we understand that final game has been protested by the Mount Stewarters. This is the same team that finished on top in regular season play in the King’s County league, then bowed out to Peakes - Bom in the league semi-finals : mer bh King’s County ball in with this great game So there you have a great record for 5 3 -eryhbody connected this 1959 season. Everybory cenne down that way is deserving of the utmost credit. From a very humble beginning. baseball has grown to a mighty power in the MORELL-PEAKES junior province's smallest coun}; Our hats are off to this terrific sport section of our Island. ) 4s MILWAUKEE BRAVES and .Los Angeles Dodgers are in a playoff for the National League champonship and players on each team and their supperters can look back and see a game they let slip by that would have meant the pennant without the necessity of a post-season play: Both the Braves and Dodgers “Jost tough ones-ones that could just as easily gone one way as other. e" However. on the final day of the schedule the Braves would have to consider themselves as fortunate for getting that win over the Phillies. Al! their five runs were unearned and a Eddie Swyer came up with a reliefer in Humberto Robinson t had everybody asking ‘v hy’. Robertson looked anything but sharp and he even balked with a man on third, giving the Braves a mest important run. Nev ertheless, Sawyer, didn't see fit to take him out of there and there he was till the last Milwaukee out was mace. “Up until the seventh Jim Owens-was doing quite a joo For six innings he was the comp! three hits and not one earned rin. It w men only ‘ Braves’ tally coming as the result The first man-up in the seven dugout ‘in a flash. He waved in Robinson and out six innigs of brilliant hurling ’ ed was said to be that his arm The re2zson Owens was lift tizhtened. We think ticht as been much better than after he reported, a bribe cers airing the"Rame were so relieve that fhev ‘had no facts w on his success or failure wasn’t considered a likely ager Sawyer want from the bench. UP TO THAT seventh fnning, hurler account of themselves in that crt sner 63, battling tocth and nail ard were on a 1-1 basis hill things started to happen and ‘first vlace deadiock with the Los Chi.ago Cubs gave the Deig three last days [he Dodger in 11 innines The were cla ; but Roger Crane tame 4 the Chicago earned the s reall But the Dod- from the early innings there | However, the Braves wil not turn their noses up at Outtome. their ‘Victory of Sunday, Septem! got get one earned run ail afte that the five runs * ‘ kom” « the final standings tA! the « ory the : , es finished the regular season with 86 victories Dodgers and Bray and ® defeets, t col Humberto whose only prominence came incident recently surprised at seeing Robinson in to this season in the thi tthtered er <i, it was anybody's ball game and young of holding the Braves in check. aster, allowing the Haney- as a 1-1 game,with | of shortstop Joe Koppe's error. ete m th sincled and Sawver was out of the went Owens iid have been, Jim would have In fact, the announ- hatever to offer their listeners You could judge by that he in this crucial series. But man- ed him and he’s the, man that ran the Phillies the Phillies had given-a great 1cial series, They had, won the before bowing 3-2 in the second rd. Then with Humberto on the away went the Braves_into a Angeles Dodgers rs a rouch time also in those ung on in the opener to win 54 19.7 in the sandwich game hats in the finale r wictory on that final dav wasn’t much, doubt about the 27, even though they’ eould The records will show of fl gift variety but noon ‘ wore natt s art that is that Braves Determined To Bounce Oif Floor | j | After McDevitt threw two balls dugout, scratching his head and) touching his cap. He waved to! the bullpen for‘ young Sherry. Sherry ran the count on Wil-| ley to 3-2 before the Milwaukee By DAVE 0O’HARA Associated Press Sports Writer MILWAUKEE (AP) “We've been doing it from the back end| all year long and now we have to! keep doing it.” That was Milwaukee manager) Fred Haney's philosophical com-' ment after the Braves dropped a} 3-2 decision to Les Angeles Mon- day in the opener of the best-of-| three. series for the National League championship “It’s been uphill for us just! about all the way,” the little skipper said. ‘‘We're not quitting now. We're still thinking of com- ing back from Los Angeles as champions." The Braves weren't so noisy\ and in such a joking frame of mind as before the game with the Dodgers. -But they were far from discouraged. “This is going to the end,” said | slugging third baseman Eddie} Mathews. “It won't be able to gol any farther. We'll just have to iget them in the two games on the coast.”’ ‘CAN’T WIN ALL’ ‘‘We just got beat,” Haney said with a faint smile. ‘You can’t win ball games on six hits. We couldn’t come up with the big one when we needed it.” The Milwaukee pilot defended his gamble with Carl Willey as his starting pitcher in the all-im-| portant playoff opener “T have that one satisfaction,”’| Haney said. “The kid went out and pitched a good game for us He only gave up three. runs and you can't do much better than ' BASEBALL By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League Playoff (First game, best-of-three) Los Angeles 101 901 000-3 10 1 Milwaukee 120 000 000-2 & N McDevitt. Sherry (u-2) (2) and ves 3-2 pinch hitting duty if needed. 7 Wills came up with Among the onlookers was A]/Single. Moon forced Neal, but}: Lopez, manager of the Chicago Larker’s second \ single, off end ‘the threat. He walked: Joe| | piv-h hitter Lee Maye in the fifth erd the inning. He retired nine vi a ‘hrough for a two-out single in der's sub, saved the day. Deme- down Bruton’s 390-foot leadoff | year.” | MacEeachern, took the 440 yd./ string pitchers, in 56 sec. David Weale|the girls were really shellacked | ¥ erly discourage most kids of | ¢_| bantam leap of 5 ft 4 1-4 in. Other firsts old David Baglole, 10 year old | pitcher hit a ground bali to short- stop Maury Wills who juggled it for an error, loading the bases. Avila's sharp grounder in time to force Willey at second but Crandall scored on the play. The run, of course, was charged to McDevitt who had put Crandall. on base. Los Angeles tied the score at 2-2 in the third. With one out, Neal collected his second straight Avila’s glove, moved Moon to second. Gil Hodges’ single past Eddie Mathews drove in Moon. ENDS fHREAT Sherry gave up two singles in the fearth but struck out Avila to Adoyck and allowed a single hy bu, made Logan ground out to row until Logan broke the eighth. ; In the ninth, a fine catch by centre-fielder Don Demeter, Sni- ter went back to the barrier, al- most hidden in the fog, to drag drive. ¥ Sherry took his time, despite the constant threat of rain. Once he and Avila engaged in a star- ing contest that suddenly ended wifen he whizzed a called third strike past the veteran infielder} ear heading parade for Ameri- The Dodgers completly bottled up the power hitters of the less in four trips, striking out! once. Hank Aaron walked twice, grounded out and struck out. The best Crandall could manage was two singles. CHICAGO (AP) “I'm Charlie Grimm Monday as ager of the Chicago Cubs ~ HAIL TO THE CHAMPS Manager Al Lopez waves from | can League champions as it ar- | official celebration for Charlie Grimm Succeeds — Sheffing As Cub Manager as|nants in 1932, 1935 and. 1945. happy as a kid,” said 6l-year-old| After leaving the Cubs, Grimm) cided. I'll sit down with him after) he succeeded Tommy succeeded Bob Scheffing as man-| manager |Braves on May 31, 1952. He went! The- resignation .of Scheffing With them to Milwaukee and was) happy. yfore the boys came up to Los An- Sh 4made into a piicher by the base- White rives al Chicago’s City Hall in | Sox, us in some capacity yet to be de- Holmes as| the world series and‘ talk .over then Boston! the whole Cub picture Scheffing said he was -not un- of. the ‘Surrounds LA. r n é‘ The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Sept. 29, 1959 7 Sherry's Slider Won For gers By DION Henderson Do perfected it at St MILWAUKEE (AP)—Last win-|Paul this summer before he was ter 23 - year - old Larry Sherry learned to throw a slider in Ve- mezuela and Monday the Los An- geles Dodgers went one-up on the sociation in July. 4 “It wasn't behaving for me all called up from the American As- the way today,” Larry said, “It Milwaukee Braves in “ae Na-| started out all right, then I had tional League playoff. And there's some troubies with it in the mid- a connection. idle innings. But it came back.” Dodger Manager Walter Alston | summoned Sherry from the bull-tunate a good deal of the time. pen in the second, with the|7 threw some bad pitches, a cou- Braves threatening. and_ the ple of them to Aaron.” young righthander shut out the) what about the ninth. when defending champions on four hits the rest of the way. The slider was his big pitch. |might have tied the ball game Larry’s older brother, Norm, ca rT , or who caught him at Spokane be-|_ «1 scared’ the hell dut of me,” erry ‘said. Dodger ,caitcher John Roseboro, whose sixth-inning home rua off Carl Willey gave Sherry his win- geles, told the slider secret in the Dodger club house, Larry” was ball coach at Fairfax High School} ning one-run .margin, said he in Los Angeles, but he only threw! oe, ne ’ c fast balls. curves and.a chang:- Co parprianiiy Shares: Ser ormance ™ “He's always that goad,"’. Rose- ‘TAUGHT HIMSELF jboro said. “when he gets - it Last winter, playing with Mar-,9¥¢T-" — acaibo, he taught himself the eee j Pennant Fever most inexpensive salesman you can LOS ANGELES (AP) — There was pennant fever in the air at the coliseum Monday as Dodger fens turned out in droves to pur- chase playoff game tickets. | There were as many women as | men in the long lines that moved slowly to the ticket windows. Tickets were on sale for both} today’s game and a possible | third game Wednesday. In the) event the Wednesday game is un- | necessary, refunds will be—made. | employ ---a GUARDIAN - PATRIOT WANT AD Phone 8506 “T was what you might call for+ | Billy Bruton sent Don Demeter to the centre-field fence for what White Sox Hold Workout Mon. The NEW _. Jafter three years as skipper and|rep!aced by. ar ae on eee a ie er givag new job sintment of Grimm was. an-|17, 195p- After that he returned, wi , but it will a pretty \ . noeaes by ‘club president Phil| to the Cubs. serving as a sice, good one,” he said Le . oo a eee bh Wrigley. The Cubs shared fifth|Dresident—a title he still will| Grimm, former’first base star) S0™ Worked tut Monday in Co- louch=Maste IL place in the National League this ©4!TY ' | for the Cubs, played in the big | MISKEY wee sai opps eg oy wosnene ~ “ ‘ a season for the second straight| “A Manager's job is a tread-|leagues from’ 1916 through 1906, | televised ws peayok gee oe! Ke ‘Sr that unless it's a shutout.” : |mill to nowhere,” said Grimm.|He was with Philadelphia. St. tween the Braves and Los Ar} ce 4 Willey; a slender right-har TT én a a es _!*“But Tam very happy to be|Louis and Pittsburgh aswel! as geles Dodgers in Milwaukee. F Da who has taken his: lumps this! “mm, who spends his spare Being a manager is my/the Cubs’ and had a lifetime bat-| ‘We'll have to work out every! year, sat around the quiet club-|time romping. with his eight house waiting for his teammates|Standchildren and raising shet-| |to dress and board a bus to the|!and ponies on his farm near St airport | Louis, returned to the Cubs’ man “It's another one—just like all|/@gerial role for the third time season long,” he said. “No luck.| He replaced Rogers Hornsby as (John) Roseboro hit a fast ball|Cubs manager on Aug. 4, 1952. on the inside. It's the pitch I've|He was succeeded by Gabby been getting him out on al]|Hartnett on July 20, 1938. Grimm returned as manager on May - Roseboro’s blast Into the! 1944, taking over from Jim Wil- bleachers in right dentre proved! Son. He was out again on June the wirining run as Willey took! 10, 1949, Frankie Frisch replac his ninth defeat against five vic-|ing him tories. Grimm guided the Cubs to: pen SPORT ECHOES BY NORMAN MACDONALD Charlie Ballem—coach of the, Summerside High School track | representing the Island in ladies’ 5@‘VY a and field team, take a bow. Char-| softball were defeated twice by ¥'SCom in Carl's ears, back 9 ilton Tiger-Cats, his greatest rough first love. Scheffing will stay with! ting average of .291. Ron Howell Has Terrific Season TORONTO (CP)—Ron Howell,/ilton high school ranks speed boy with Ham-| The 185-pound, five-foot-11 half- is having one oe moved into a tie for the in- seasons since break-| @" s into pro football from Ham-| Big Four football league by scor- —_ _ ing a touchdown as Hamilton de- a | feated Ottawa Rough Riders 23-14 a giving, The a4 is in ( Saturday. It was his fourth touch pink of condition a was ‘stl -|down in the Ticats’ last two 3-year-old rearin’ to go after four rounds} : 3 . | games and his eighth of the sea- le dog-eat-dog, that had Blizzard's ao Gentiocbien him with Ot- |manager protecting Hts fighter tawa's Dave Thelen at 48 points. by throwing in the towel. Now The Summerside Thunderbirds, if some one Howell, used as a pass catcher and to run back kicks because of his great speed. now has scored touchdowns and points with some boxing! whisper words of | with no| 3. man would lie’s kids piled up a total of 68\the Nova Scotia champs, Hali- | 9&"S of cauliflowers in bloom! ag he did last season when he points in the Island interscholas-|fax Ladies. in Halifax on Sat- jtic meet Saturday ,as compared | urday by scores of 5-4 and 17 ‘1 |with 36 points by their nearest|The local girls put a a surpri-| it as vet Those arain the boy should go places.| finished in a tie for sixth kids from - Morell did: in the scoring race. Every thing they do| helen, a line-smashing import place competitor. Winston Smith did| singly good showing in the first Seems to be done in storybook | halfback, was held scoreless Sat- the mile in under 5 min.—4 min.|game with Wanda Chappell pit- however, and dash topped the: 100 yd. dash entries/in the second contest. Nancy Co |with time, we understand, some-/fin was the star batter for the where between 10 afd 11 seconds, | Thunderbirds, hitting a home run, and David Bernard was ahead of|a double, and single. all the high jumpers with aj} Carl “Agape” Arsenault really fans at. Summerside Civic Stad- jum on Friday night zard-Arsenault scrap hed all the Marlene MacNeill, Summerside| é@ar-marks of a street corner also won the inter’ school re-|brawl except no one phoned for lay in the fast time of 530 3-5'|the cops. It proved that Carl ¢an sec. | handle himself in that kind of for Summerside were seven year, old Grant Somers, nine year Rosehboro; Willey, (5-9) McMahon) (7) and Crandall HRs—L.A: Rose- boro (10). Bill Beer Tops Field of Bill ‘Pud’ Beer emerged the sored by local professional] Cecil | ‘Bubby’ Dowling over the week- end at Belvedere course ‘Pud’.sank a 40-foot biride to clineh the-crown on the ‘second | playoff hole Beer ‘had finished | the reguiar 96 with’ 70-76, the. same total as Harry Simmonds who sported a 72-74. : The ladies’ championship went to Mrs. Fred Cannon with a 91.) Runner-up were Miss Gai] Must-. ard and Mrs. Ron Parker. Here are other results of week-! end play: First. division— Don ‘Juggs’, MacDonald, second division— Dave Street, third division—Pete >= Ford, fourth division—Ivan Ber- rigan, junior championship—Billy Giggey, doctors’ championship— | Dr. Kent Irwin, insurance champ- ionship-Doug Saunders, left- hand- ed championship—Norman Nichol- son, Canada Packers champion- ship—Merlin MacKenzie, senior championship—Horace Jardine, driving championship—H arry Simmonds, CNR championship Don ‘Jiggs’ MacDonald, merch- ants’ championship—Bill Beer. Ladies Division— First divis jon—Mrs. Douglas Dennis, sec ond division——Miss Dorothy Ste | wart, first-year charhpionship— | Mrs. Stan Bryenton, nine-hole | championship—Mrs. MacNevin, | busimess vitis’. championship— | Miss Blanche Conway, most im proved player—Mrs. Bill. B "Starters With Positions For ‘Wednesday Sept. 30th, 1959. 7.30 P.M. NO. 3-7 CLASSIFIED PACE — Dally Double 1 ; NO. 4—8 CLASSIFIED T & P — Quinella 1. Jean Clegg, 2. Janet M, 3. Callie Hal, 4. Ted Genesee, 8. Jolly Dick, 6. Brian’s Dream NO. 2-6 CLASSIFIED TROT & PACE — Daily Double . & 1. My Darling, 2. ‘The Sheik, 3. Myrtle E, 4. Propane. 5 Lilly's Pointer, 6. Royal Train S 7. Mr. Joliscott, 8. Prince Edward. NO. 1—3 CLASSIFIED PACE 1. Ranida, 2. Bertha Clegg, 3. Bowery Boy, 4. Miss Cyclonic, | 5. Lee Cyclonic, 6 Stormy Clegg, 7. Rena Bell, 8. Nellie Bangs. - Charlottetown Driving Park = PRESENTATION OF ACCOUNTS — All persons or corporations holding accounts payable by any Department of the Province of Prince Edward Island are asked to please present them to the Department concerned on or before October 15th, next. " MELVIN J. McQUAID, A Provincial Treasurer, Department of Provincial Treasurer, Province of Prince Edward Island, Cirlottetown, — driving championship—Mrs. Fred Cannon. :/ September 48, 1958. The Bliz-| Sry of the year.. ++ THE ROLE OF CANADA'S MILITIA SPECIALISTS IN SURVIVAL-RESCUE 1._McGee Volo, 2. Ginger E, 3. Cathy Clegg, 4. Here Am I, 5 |victor in the tournament spon-| Helen’ Dream.- { } fashion First they get banged urday after a two-game outburst 35 sec, to be exact. Doniching. They had no other first around by the Halifax lads to!in which he netted seven touch- the tune of 11-3 which would! downs. : Statistics eompiled by The age. Not those Morell-| canadian Press show Howell and for-leather boys. They came off| Thelen 10 points in front of half- the floor and handed the visitors pack Cookie Gilchrist of Toronto two defeats to win the Maritime | Argonauts. Gilchrist counted a championship, some feat for @ touchdown and three converts endeared himself to Island fight village that size. Congrats, kids.' Saturday when Argos upset Mont- real Alouettes 399 and: ran his you've given us the best sports, | point total to. 38. dividual scoring leadership in the! | day,” said manager Al Lopez of! {the Afnerican League champions. “We'll have to try to keep sharp. The delay fouls up all our plans.” Sox pitcher Early Wynn said: “All we want them to do over there in the other league is to decide who is the champion. We} ’ don't care Who we play.” ' “Trainer Eddie Froelich said the} ' strain of the tight finish of the} ‘ regular season and the additidnal lone of the playoff may put too much burden on the National | League winner. | “There is only so much emo | tional kick a player can cope ‘with,’ he said. “The eventual winner may be out of zing. And there can be no doubt but that their pitching will be worn down.” , yevecrrers Fi ---& touch so light, so responsive, it’s almost electric# _. Tryttdgy ca Underwood Limited CUDMORE BUSINESS UIPMENT W000. The ‘60 Oldsmobile rides with silken smoothness because of new nylon-sleeved shock absorbers and new constant-flow shock absorber Avid! 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Exclusive Wide-Stance chassis keeps the 1960 Oldsmobile level as can be on curves and corners 33. steady as can, be on highway or byway. A ABOVE ALL . Silent / New Vibra-Tuned Body Mountings insulate the body from road noise and harshness, give the 1960 Olds the quietest ride you've ever tried! See it at your local authorized ' quality dealer's wunsoav OCT. 1 . | EQ |179 Grafton St. Dial 5681 . = & oo Oldsmobile’s rugged Guard-Beam frame sure i -