CYCLE MARATHON WINNIEFR Art Higham, Toronto winner of the J20-mile bicycle-marathon, held last week at Dundas, Ont., will represent Canada at British BASEBALL Empire Games in Wales this his wife after winning competi- I:ion. Ditmar (7) Grim (8) and Berra. (2); NY-k-Berra (7). Mantle (7). Oleveland 000 001 200 4-7 15 0 Boston 010 200 0(1) 2-5 7 8 Nanlesl-nl, Lemon (5) Kelly (6) AMERICAN LEAGUE Willhelm (6) and Nixon, Brown Chicago ()02 000 320- 7 9 0 (5); Sullivan, Sisler (8) and Ber- New York 010 001000— 2 5 1 beret. W: Wilhelm; L: Slnsler. Pierce and Lollar; Sfiurdivant,|HRs: Bos-Jensen (10) Gernert SPORTS FRONT By pros CALLAGIIAN The owner of the Milwaukee Braves_ Lou Perinl has re- fused to confirm or deny that he was a participant in a recent secret meeting to discuss the chance of bringing another major league team to New York City and the expansion of both major leagues to ten clubs each. A New York sports colunmist, Red Smi(r.'h_ wrote that Perini had met with Parks commissioner Robert Moses, chair-main William Shea of the mayor’s baseball committee and two other unidentified persons. Smith claimed that all except Perini were bound to silence but Lou might just as well have been because when asked for a statement he had no comment whatsoever. The New York columnist that Perlnl arranged the meetlngandtoldthosepi-esenttlhattheleaguewouldprobably be ready to add extra teams in 1960 or 1961. He is supposed to have agreed with a suggestion that each current member sell three players to form a pool for the new clubs. other players would come from the minors. Smith maintains that Perini asked if there were sponsors in New Yornk who would put up $3.5(X),000 for Players if a $12,- 000,000 Flushlng Meadows stadium was completed. Asked how he arrived at that figure, according to Smith, he said each player would cost close to $100,000. Smith said Moses and his colleagues then began to figure that for four new clubs to buy 32 players each at $100,000 apiece would cost $12,800,000. Split up among 16 clubs this would give each present owner $800,000. “This, Perliui was told. was just nnotlierscheim to enrich unfairly the men who now c‘ont:i'ol the. gains, "Smith wrote. When we did this column Pittsburgh was only 4% games be- hind ti‘ league leading world champion Milwaukee Braves. A combination of pretty fair pitching and some solid base hitting has kept the Pirates of Danny Murtaugh right in the thick of the National League race. 0 Danny has some better than average ball players and he is doing a fine job of getting the most out of them. He likes all his players and it seems that they all like Danny-a migibty help- ful situation. However Danny recently went overboard for his second baseman Bill Mazeroski. Here’: how he expressed his feelings about one-half of his double play combination: “Without knowing much about the other league I venture to say that Bill Mazeroski is a leadpipe cinch to become Mr. Sec- ond Base. 1 make this statement knowing full well that we have two or three more good ones in the National league, starting with Red Schoendienst. Remember that Mazeroski is only 21 and in but his third year of professional baseball. He has baseball in- telligence, tremendous desire and exemplary habits. Remember what I'm telling you. Mazeroski was molded to do the unusual. Like coming out of the army and starting off batting .314 with- out the benefit of spring training.” * )1: it it I We have been beefing about the inability of the rest of the American League to cope with the New York Yankees. Yesterday we ran across an item that was doing just about the same thing. The author was supposedly a New York Yankee but his name was wi-theld. He moaned in this fashion: ‘‘It’ had enough that we have all the players. What makes it worse for the other teams is that, they press so bad against us. Take a game we played in Chicago recently. Jim Rivera gets to first base and Ron Jackson is up. We try to pick Rivera off first. He is three runs behind and he is taking big leads, well, Marv Thinonebenry at first drops the throw. The ball goes a couple of feet past What does Rivera do? He starts for second. Marv picks up the ball and throws him out. Then Jackson hits the wall in left but nobody was on base. ’I'hey’re three runs behind and they gamble to take one base. Truly spoken. ‘ O O O I 0 Philip K. Wrigley, owner of the Chicago Cubs and the man who still insists that baseball was never intended to be played under the lights, says he wouldn't be surprised if the National League expanded from eight to ten teams for next season. And A he adds that the league doesn’t need New York. Wrigley admits that the fly in the ointment i-s where are the players going to come from. “Major league players always have been a select group.” Wrigley states. — ‘This has discouraged many ygangsters from taking up base ball as a profession. But if we expand it will mean there’s more room at the top and it should make baseball more attractive to youngsters” he concludes. Wnlgley a little more than a year ago cleared the way for the Brooklyn Dodgers to switch to Los Angeles when he traded his Coast league club there for the Dodgers Fort Worth fran- chise in the Texas league. It was an even trade but in separate transactions the Dodgers bought Wrigley Field in Los Angeles for $2,000,000. t II II t 0 v World Series fever in June. " That's right and the spot where it is raging is in the west coast city of San Francisco, the home of the Giants. Bill Rigney’s charges are showing surprising strength and are having a game of “your turn-my turn” with Milwaukee as far as holding the National League lead is concerned. _ As a result of this condition of affairs, pennant fever has gfipped San Francisco Giants fans from Nob Hill to the water- ) on . - .‘‘We’re getting hundreds of letters a day asking about world series reservations and some even include cheques of $50 to $100 we have had to return ‘Giants’ ticket manager said re- “ tgélesgilsaantsxylclt the comforts of home for the first road trip and they mg“; 12%’ They were then one game off the pace fioarade by a s%ngle gaairIxieveTll)1:CyIk ll)!‘1SI'.S€l¥l!atFIl::fllS§§l)DIlfl:‘:’in§1l;'3l'1ll§ wever 1 ' ‘ » Perhvagghifietllégnwere shaded by the World champion Braves. 5 are really In earnest about this 1958 Na- tional League - they could go 3}/lI.0nl.‘lll:nt\Ar3I§‘7a-Ce. Gwen Teasonably good Dltc-hing * * II us at Philadelphia Plllllh. , ,' 7 0:: At least that's the way it 1 k K ' . infielder who had an operAatio(x)10l.s;'sItm\we?l«:1 I§e,3;f‘~V.€a“‘°“1 ‘letelan ment in his left knee. He will have to be pm a W“ hga" weeks. He'll be in a cast for four to six the rest of the time getting a co¢m.plet‘e rest Granny was hurt in a collision at second game with the Los Angeles Dodgers. weeks and will spend baseonMay261n. Q summer. Art gets big _hug froml laid up for 12 to 15 . (9); Cle-Harrell (5). Detroit 030 001 000- 4 7 8 Baltimore 000 211 20x—6 11 1 Lary, Susce (7) and Hegan, Wilson (8); Johnson, Lehman (4). L: Sturdivant. HRS: Chi—Rivera«.zuve1-ink (7), Hans-hman (9) and Triandos. W: Zuverink. L: Lary HRs: Det—Harris (3), Kuenn (4); Bait-Triand _ (9). Kansas Cy 003 1 1 000-5 12 0 Wash 100 200 100- 4 7 2 Urban, Trucks (7) and House; Ci-cotte, Stotbbs (5), Clevenger (8), Hyde (9) and Courtney. W: Urban; L: Cicotte. National League Phila 000 040 010-5 10 2 Chicago 104 220 02x-11 18 0 Roberts, Meyer (3) Hacker (5) Hearn ( 5) Miller (8) and Lopata; Drabowsky and S. Taylor. L: Roberts. HRS: Bhila-Hemus (2), Repuil-ski (7) Chi-Banks 2 (16), Walls (14). Milwaukee 100 010 113 21-10 15 1 San Francisco 313 000 000 20-9 14,- 2 i Thur.. June 5. 1958 I_ Page 8. The Guardian o lSpahn Wins For Braves; By THE CANADIAN PRESS warren sipahn, the kink-balling lefty has won eight games for Milwaukee Braves so far this season with his pitching. . _ Wednesday he won one with his bat when he went in as a pinch- hitter and singled home the Win- ning run in an 11 - inning marathon the Braves took 10-9 from the San Francisco Giants. Things weren’t quite that close in the other National League day- time acrtion — hot-hitting Ernie Banks slammed his 15th and 16th homers in Chicago as the Cubs rode an 18-hit attack to an 11-5 triumph over Philadelrphia Phils. WASHLNGTON (AP) - Mike Baxes rattled out four straight singles and drove in two runs to help the second - place Kansas City Athletics defeat Washington Rush, Trowbridige (2), Jay (5) Robinson (7) McMahon (8) ‘John- son (10) Conley (11) and Crandall Sawatski (8); McCormick, Worth- ington ( 7) Burnside (9) Miller (10) and Thomas, Schmidt (11). W: Johnson; L: Miller. HRS: Mil-Manrtilla (2). Crandall (8) Covington (10) SF - Speake (2) Sauer (10) Schmidt (7). Pittsburgh 000 003 000-3 11 1 St. Louis 020 300 01x-6 12 1 Kline, Porterfield (4) Black- burn (5) Gross (6) and Foiles; Brosnan, Mulffett (7) and H. Smith. W: Brosnan; L: Kline. HRs: P-gvh—Thomass (14); S'tL- Boyer (9), Musiarl (10). International League Toronto 000 100 0- 1 5 0 Richmond 000 000 0- 0 6 1 Crlmian and Thompson; Bthel and Oldls. Buffalo Miami 010 010 000 01-3 10 0 000 000 101 00-2 5 1 Tsitouris, Johnson (11) an-d Noble, Astroth (11); Anderson, Paige (9) McCall (11) and Bucha. W: Tsitouris; L: Paige. HR: Miami-Herrera. Montreal 001 000 000-1 4 2 Columbus 102 000 00x-3 13 3 Birrer, Collum (3) LaSorda (8) and Teed; Douglas and Rand. W: Douglas; L: Bivrrer. Roy “Tiger” Steele won a un- animous decision over Summer- side’s Bud Ramsay lad night in a 10-round main bout that was considered by many fans as the best fight ever seen ,at Civic Stadium in Summerslde. Steele floored'~Ra.~msay with a right to the head early in the second round, and Bud had difficulty fending odf the Tiger tor the rest of the 3 - minute session. Steele won the first three rounds by wide margins, But Ramsay, boxing cautiously and cleverly, fought to almost even terms by the end of the eighth round.- Steele settled the issue in the ninth, sending Ramsay down for another 8-count and he was in full charge for the remainder of the fight. Walter “Peanuts" Arsenault won over Doug “S1ugger" Turn- bull of New Glasgow by unanl. moms decision in the semi—f‘inal, but all three judges gave him the nod by the narrowest of mar- gins. T-urn-bull stalked. his man around the ring for the greater part of the fight, but seemed re- luctnnt to lead, and it was Arsen- ault who started most of the ex- changes. The boys got away with some spinning and butting in the middle rounds. but all in all it Barry's F Willis Hennessey's Rollaway Aces are in second spot in the City Softball League today. The Aces gained the runner- up position with a thrilling 5-4 victory over the league leading Barrys Lions last evening at Victoria Park's Old Diamond. The Rollaway crew did it the hard way, coming up with two runs in the seventh to hand the league leaders their first defeat in four contests. Barry’: jumped into I 1-0 lead in the first inning and made it stand up till the third when the Aces ‘sent three runners scam- pering across home plate. The Lions made t 3-2 in their half of the same ning and knotted matters on a 3-3 basis with a single tally in the fourth. In the sixth the Lions went in front “Tiger" Steele Scores Decision was a good, crowd.-(pleasing 6- round fight. Irving Rogers of Borden won another close decision trom Wen- dell Oliver oi Aliberton, this time the judges splitting their decis- ion-s, and all with only one point between the two boys. Rogers took the lust round of the rous- ing sorap, but Oliver used a very effective jaib to edge his rival in the next two rounds. Then Rog- ers fighting his way inside the superior reach of Oliver, scored heavily, especially in the fourth. A little gamester from Tignish named Roger Chaisson won a split decision over Donnie Arsen- ault of Summenside in the cur- tain-raiser. The boys slugged it out toe to toe on occasion, with Chaisson usually getting in the most blows. Emmett Tr-ainor refereed the curtain-raiser and the semi-final Wiif M-coluskey was third man in the ring for the special Oliver-Rlogers 6-round go and the final. Other officials were judges - Winnifred Mccausland, Harold Chlow, Earl Smith. Announcer - Bob Schurman; timer - Eric Sheen; counting for the knock- downs —‘ Ralph lVl3acFarlane. Rollaway Throws or Loss 4--3 and set the stage for the Rollaway uprising in the seventh. Henry Hartinger got credit for the victory although he needed relief from Wiff Shepherd in the final frame. The Lions collided seven hits, all coming of the of-' ferings of Hartinger. Art Ballem took the loss al- though he left in the seventh with the Lions leading 4-3. How- ever he left two runners on base and two errors helped to get them home. Lorne Israel who re- lieved gave up no base knocks. The Aces managed to garner rune base hits. For the winners Shepherd poled out a long home run. Hartinger smashed a triple and Jimmy Hughes a double. Duke McCul- lum and Dick Carroll connected for doubles for the Lions. For June A Pace 2 Dashes — D Pace 2 Dashes — $150.00 River Mark. 1. Brian’s Dream: 2. George 5. Ken's Pride; 6. Ncll’s Lad; 7. D Trot $150.00 nie Frenc11_ Charlottetown Driving Park Starters Wi th Positions 7th, 1958. '|_ Dash 8.00 O'CIock Jr. rree For All Pace 2 Dashes — $200.00 each No. 5-3 1. Jollity Leigh; 2. War Cry Ranger: 3. Scottich Light; 4. Betty French; 5. Sir Joseph; 6. Record Pearl; $175.00 each. No. 4-7 1. Myrtle‘s Boy; 2. Bobby Brook; 3. Ginger E; 4. Jolly Jim; 5. Perfect Hal; 6. My Darling; 7. Jolly Dick. each No. 3-6 Daily Double 1.Eva Budlong; 2. Peter Federal; 3. Uscita’s Boy; 4. Pro- pane; 5. Wait For Me; 6. Muuphy‘s Abbe; 7. Fairgo; 8. Little D Pace 1 Dash $150.00 No. 2 Daily Double Spirit; 3. Sister Dawn: 4. Esso; Jo-llity’s Guy; 8. Lana Dale. one dash. No. 1 1. Just _In Time; 2._Sally Volstadt: 3. Bonnie's Girl; 4. Bernie Dan; 5. Mildale; 6. Vivian Strong; 7. Colonel Budlong; 8. Con- Senators 5 to 4 before 3,808 spec- tators Wednesday night. ST. LOUIS (AP)-Ken Boyer’s inside-the park home run and Stan Musial’s three hits, includ- ing a home run, paced St. Louis Cardinals Wednesday night In a brisk extra - base attack that again defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-3. Boyer’s drive was high Off the left-centrevfield wall in the second inning. When Bill Virdon slipped starting a long relay, the fleet St. Louis third baseman followed Joe Cunningham across home plate. B.Y.C. Wins In‘ Thrilling Game Junior B.Y.C. and R.C.A.F. Flyers participated in the most exciting softball game witnessed so far this year. This regular league fixture went eleven in- nings with the B. Y. C. squad coming out on top with a 3-2 verdict. This was the third vic- tory by B.Y.C. over the Flyers in recent days. Last weekend they captured a twin bill in Sum- merside. Mike O'Brien started off for B.Y.C. being relieved in the eighth by John Hughes. 0’Brien gave up 9 hits, struck out four and walked none. Two of these hits were triples and one a double. Hughes on the other hand, gave up three hits and struck out nine. The local lads had only one error again-st them. Marchand went the whole way on the mound for the Flyers. In all he gave up eleven hits and walked seven. The Flyers were tabbed for seven errors. There were no walks given up by pitch- ers of either team. In the sixth Doyle of the Fly- for abusing the umpire. He was replaced by Robbie. Leblanc re- placed Robbie in the eighth. Dave MacLeod, recently home from Boston University, was called in to pinch hit for J. Blanchard of the B.Y.C. squad- in the eighth. ’ Apps Arsenault was umpire for this fixture. Base judges were Lennie Arsenault and Jack Shep- herd. Shamrocks Meet Airmen Tonight City‘ Softball League activity resumes this evening at Victoria Park with 13.1.5. SI1<s:mr:)+éks en- tertaining the R.C.A.F. Flyers in a game which was originally scheduled for Monday night last. Rain forced the postponement. Len Arsenault will umpire this ers was thrown out of the game ' I Cubs Clobber Phillies BALTIMORE (AP)-Baltimore Orioles defeated Detroit Tigers for the sixth straight time Wed- nesday night, coming from be- hind to win 6-4 on Gus Triandos’ two-run homer in the seventh in- mug. Rustico Flyers Are Winners Rustlco Flyers scored a double- header victory in the opener of the National Park Softball lea- gue. In the first game Rustico edged the National Park 10-9 and in the second coasted to an easy 17-9 victory. On Wednesday Rustico stagger- ed Dunstaffnage for 17-6_ W111. A. Peters was the outstanding Rus- tico player in all three games. B. MacNeil was on the mound for Rustico in all the encounters. WEST JORDAN. Utah (AP)- Poised Joe Miceli of New York caught young Jay Fullrner with a vicious leflt book here Wednes- day night and knocked him out in two minutes and nine seconds of the third I‘0|l1l‘.I.d of their welter- weight fight. 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