... .-.n-- "Smokey" Was Hot Burgess Says Confidence. Made Difference In 1955 By JACK HAND TAMPA, Fla. (AP) When Smoky Burgess came to Cincinnati last April in a trade with Phila- delphia. Manager Birdie Tebbetts asked him two questions. "Can you hit lefthanded pitch- ”l)o you want to work every day?" Baseball Results At St. Petersburii. Fla. Chicago (A) OCT 001 l0()-- 2 7 I New York (A) 021010 00x--4 ll 1 Pierce. Keegan (41 'Wren t7) and Battey; Ford. Mater (5) Stanley (8) and Berra. Howard (6). W- Ford; L-Pierce. HR: NY-Mantle. at Clearwater. Fla Pizh (N) 000000 otomt s l Phlla (Ni 120 020 00x-5 ll 2 Pepper. Julcltlahan (3) King is) and Shepard; Simmons. Roberts (4) Owens () and Seminick. Lon- neti t). W-Simmons: L-Pepper. At Tampa. F18- St. Louis (N 000 tooooo-1 4 0 Cin (xi 000011 00x--2 l0 0 Jackson. Collurn (4) Jones and Rand. Cooper ll: Rabe. Acker (45 Scantlebury (8) and Bailey. W-Acker: L-Collum. At West Palm Beach. Fla. Boston (AI '.1t)2t)0t)000-4 2 4 Key (Al tit)-ltlltl 02x-7 ll 2 Parnell. Delock (4) Smith (7) and Zimmerman; Craddock. Her- riage (4) Harrington (7) and As- trotli. McKenzie (7). W-Herriazez L-Declock. HR: KCY-Pilarick. At Tucson. Ariz. Chicago (N1 020 (ill) (hill---6 ii 2 Cleveland (Al 001 100 05x-7 l2 2 Rush. Thorpe (4) Lawn (7) and Landrith. Hannah (5); Garcia. Tomanek (4) Narleski (7) McLish (9) and Nixon. Averill (6). W-N'ar- leski; L-Lown. HR: Cle-Averill. At Scottsdale. Arlz. NY tNi 002 000133-El 1'1 1 Bit (Al 020 000 030-5 ill 2 AHearn. Eroglio (4) Zanni (7) Bar- clay (9) and Murray. Jackson (-1): Moore. Wilson (4) Zuverink (7) Shallock (9) and Smith. Gasizill (8). W-Broglio; L-Zuverink. HR: litlz Pisoni. Spring Valley Beats New Annan Spring Valley defeated New An Inn by a score of 7 to 6 to tie up the North Shore League finals at one game a piece at Keiisington Rink in one of the fastest games of the season. K. Sudsbury led the Spring Valley attack with 3 goals and one assist. for New Annan E. Wall and D. Walker shot two each. C. Champion and Ron Kennedy handled the game hefore Q large crowd. Burgess. a part-tnne um'k9I' In lioth Clint-ago and l'llll:t(lt)llllll?l. ansueicti a pusitixe ”ycs" to both questions The result nas a 301 season anti a career high olH2l homers and 78 runs batted in the most homers he ever hit before in the Inajm's was six at Philadel- phia in l9.'i'.7 U "The ball park helped some. Burgess admitted. "Not that its any shorter in (”nn-iunati in Milli field I think ii": A Hill? ltlllfl lll' is 342 to .'l'.'9 fr-mt not the screen is lower I would hit halls aztiiiist the wall Ill Pliilatlclphia and they woiild hoiiiirc l)Zl('lx for -Inulrs or: drnibles in t'inrinn.iIi they clear the screen for home lltllS l ”But the big thing is conluieiit'e., the kind you act "rum olartnzl every day in Pllllatlellillla you; hardly knew if you here now: 10; catch until the plll)llt' nrldress fol- low announced the linciipx listi- ally they played me on!) azatnst righthanded pitching I alua.V'5 York Man On Bisley Team OTTAWA (CPL ':lletrilier.s of a rifle team to represent Canada at the Commonwealth shoot at His- icy. England. next June tlas an- noiincetl Monday at the annual meeting of the Dominion of Can- ada Rifle Association. It includes a navy man for tho first time-CPO. H. M. Oliver of ysliannon Park. N.S. l The team will be under ('()lfl- iniand of Lt. - Col. George Patrick. Ottawa. with Capt. J. F. Samson, Halifax. as adjutant. Its shooting members: Maj A J. F. Robertson. Mont- real ('S!ll W. E. George. Saska- toon: Maj. W. J. Strachan. Oi tawa: Lieut. E. L. Warner. Len- noxville. Que; Inspector J. A. Young. RCMP. Triiro. N.S.; Sgt T A. Richardson. Montreal: Sgt. Alex Parnell. Montreal: CPO H. M. Oliver. Shannon Park. N.S.; Sgt. R B. Cathline. Camp Borden. Ont.: W0: E. E. Wright. Stan- bridge East. Que.: CSM N. J. McLeod. Toronto; LAC. R. T. Snelgrove. Baden-Sollingen. Ger- many; Cpl G R. Ouellette. Wind- sor. Ont. Fte E. K Busby. Wiiirisor. Ont. Constable J B Saunders. R CM P. Ottawa. Tpr W. 15. Hardy. York. PF..1.: Sgt. N '1'. Davies. Regina and Lieut. ECG. Sullivan. New Westminster. The team will assemble in Ot- B! aboard the liner Nomerio from Quebec June 13 Maj.-Gen. H. F G Letsoh Ottawa. was re-elected president of the DCRA for his third term tawa June 12 and sail for England ihotight i could hit lefthauders just as good and think 1 proved it last summer." ONLY ONE OVER .300 Burgess. a stocky lefthanded bet- ter. is the only catcher in the Na- tional League with a lifetime bat- ting average over .300 and that goes for Roy Campanella and Walker Cooper. Sntoky”s llletime mark in the majors is .303. In 1054 he batted .368. high enough to lead the league only he missed by 55 the required 400 at bats. The rap on Burgess always has kc been that he was a poor defen- sive catcher. Thetrecord bears that out foi- he led the league with to errors in 1954. Under the tute- lage of Tebbetts. a former catcher. he has improved. ”l uas tying. myself up behind the plate so i couldn't move off a dime hut Tebbetts showed me a i-ouple of little things that helped me." said Burgess. Curling Draw For - hCh'lown Tonight 7 pin. Edison Electric Round Hillilll Ice 1. Ed Wood. R. Parker. lutluc .'ilcGuigan. B. Burden vs. F Maclnnis. E. MacNutt. Emmott MacDonald. S. Johnston. ice 2. - J.E. Burden. A.H. Roper. L. Johnston. V.G. Howatt vs. H. Spillett. Harper MacNeill. H. Willis J.S. Taylor. Ice. 3. - L. Turner. Hal Spillett. J.A. Simmonds. M. Reeves vs. F. Hobbs. G.R. Greenougb. W. Whit- lock. Cliff Campbell. Ice 4. - Dr. Maclntyre. S. Beat- oii. L. Wellener. L. Bagnall vs. R. Carruthers. W. Mellish. A. Tall. G. Anderson. 8.30 p.m.. Old Spain Section B Ice 1. - Dr. Moresfde. G.B. Bak- or. Ed. Brown. G. Stein vs. Dr. George. A. Love. Geo. Scantlebury. H. Wooldridge. ice 2. - W. Rodd. R. Atkinson. M. MacMlllan. H. Swift. vs. L Don- alti. H. MacDonald. W. Scanilehury Kip Ready. ice 3. - G. Wellener. Dr T. Hooper. J. K. MacDonald. Pres. Brydges vs R. Ewing. G8 Mac- Dougall. LM. Robinson. J Mr- Kenna lce 4 Don illaclntyrr. HF. Maclnnis. H. Hovtatt. W. Douglas, vs. R. Leclalr. K. Myers. P. L. Blakney. Abe Zakem. MANY PEAK! About 90 per cent of the area of Jamaica in the West Indies ls mountainous. tallest peak being 7.- 1400 feet. With their back: against the ropes the Milton Hornets hounced back at Bedeque rink last night to shade Albany St. Pats 6-4 in over- time and even tip their final series for the P.E.l. Intermediate ”B" title at two games each The rink was jain-pacl-teil uith about the best seen there this year. All three periods produced fast hoc y. The Hornets pulled into a 24) lead in the first period only to .si'L' thc St. Pats tie it up before the period ended. Once more Milton ucnt ahead in the second on lilacbutigal goal but Ronnie Cameron and P81 Nonnan fired goals for .-llhany and the St. Pats took a 4-3 lead title the third. A smart goal h,V Hornets Murph MacEachern sent the con- test into overtime. In the extra session Gerry Mac- llemcmher When By THE ('.-TN-ll)l.lN PRESS Fielder Jonrx. frvriiiri' mall)? league baseball l)it't)'Cl' and man- ager of the ”llillosx wonders"- Chicago White SEW--fllffl at Port- land. Ore. 20 yo.-tr: arzo today. Jones '.!lIl(lCfi the Sox to a world chanipioiisliip lll ltl(lt'- Jllilltlilflil writ- ers said ”ii base on halls. a sac- fans for the contest which was le (ice. .3 mien base and a long nyu ”& Milton Edges Albany 6-4 In Overtime To Even "B" Series Swain scored the winning goal toi- Mllton on a neat pass from Ralph Frizzell. D. Macllachern gdded the insurance marker. Murph Macliachern got I pair of pnalsfor Milton and R. Risher. Cliarlig MacDougall, D. MacEnch. em and Macswaln each shot slug- 5. Pat Noonan hit for two for Ai. han.l' and Leonard Noongn gnd Cameron each getting one. y Summary First period: 1. lion. M. Mac- lliachern: 2. Milton Fisher (Mac- Dougalll: 8. Albany L. Noonan. (Cameron); 4. Albany P. Noonan (Cameron Dawson). Penalties: M. MacEachern. Wick strom. , Second period: 5. Milton, Mac. Dousall: 6. Albany. Cameron (Daw son) 7. Albany P. Noonen. nPenaltleu: Wlckstrom (2), cm ll Third period: 8. Milton. M, Mac Earltern (D. MacEachern). Penalties: D. MacEachern. Wal- ' 9. Milton MacSwaiti, tFrizzell) 10. Milton D. MacEach- ('l'l'l. Penalties: None Plteferees. John Richard and Art crry. y . xzsnconsidered a rally by the M..-... -- .,...m.M.. ' SPORTS ARENA 30W'-E35 SKATING Bowling is up evurybody's alley. With father. mother Monday and Wednesday Afternoon - 4 - 5:30 Admission: Adults 25c; Children 10c ' Monday and Wednesday Evening - 8 - 10 P.M. Admission 50c 'I'uesday - 8:30 P.M. P.E.I. Hockey League B.Y.C. at PARKDALE and the whole family in the game. it Is now Canada's fa- vorite Ind cheapest particl- pant sport. Read how the five pin game. born In Toronto. sparked this new wave of popularity. ln The Standard this week. Get The Standard -on sale now. complete with magazine, l2-page novel and Tlll”'5d5.V rs: 8-30 P-M- 20 pages of comics. Only ten P.E.I. Hockey League cams, S.D.U. at MONTAGUE Thursday, 2:15 to 3:30- Pre-School Skate. t - 2:30 - 4:30 5” urdabkmng on SALE NOW mt A7617 240 lo 472 The instrument cluster in artfully arranged so you can see the safety lights for mmete , oil pressure. and water temperature: ('3') Ioldor hooded headlights are incorporated with sweeping from hit--nwny fenders. Headlamps are new T-3 Safety-Aim to give more light-aimed .1 Junior Macleodi May Be Back BYC Can Wrap Up Series With Parkdale Tonight What could be the final guns of the semi-final series between Psrkdale Flyers and the Basilica Youth Club will be played this ov- enlrig at the Sports Arena. Lend- ing 2-1 in games the youth club needs only one more victory to wrap it up and pnter the final round against the winner of the Montague-St. Dunstan's series. But the Flyers may have some- thing to say about this situation before the game is over. Manager Barry Moore let it be known over the weekcnd that an effort was to he made to get Parkdale's great defenseman Junior MacLeod back fiom Halifax for this important contest. Moore had obtained permission Minor Hockey Activities today at Sports Arena for Minor Lagues is as tollows:- ll.00 - 12.00 - Q.S.S. Paperwtr and Pee Wee; not in School. 2.00 - 3.00 - Q.S.S. Paperwts and Pee Wees not in School . 4.00 - 5.00 - Special Practice for Abbie Juveniles. P-EPROOF Fl Can Regain Welter Title CHICAGO (AP) Clnllen" Johnny Sutton concedes that canlt outslug welterweight chm, ion Carmen Bulllo but be is cei. tsin he can outbox him and 1., gain the crown Wednesday night. Managers of said tighten had reached their peak gi from this and to make arrangr lug at 12 noon until 1.30 p.m. and conditioning Monday. ouch gn meats and was waiting word from then front 4 p.m. until game time, heavy preparations weighing on Macloeod last night as to his chan- which will be. as usual. 8.80 sharp. 14-pound limit. can of getting back for the single game. It Junior is able to make the trip the Pu-kdsle club will fly him over this evening. It the Flyers lose tonight's game they are through for the season but it they can pull out a win. and manager Moore is still quite con- vinced tliat they can. they will have the starry Macbeol back for the last game of the series. Junior is scheduled back from his course on Marcli'19th. The fifth game-it necessary-of the Parkdale-B. Y.C. series would be lieduled for March 2. B.Y.C. coach Wally shepherd will likely be Itanding pat on the lineup that has whipped the Fly- ers 2 of 3 games. Don Simmonds. who made his first playoff appear- ance in the last game. will pro- bably be back in nets. B.Y.C.'I regular goaltender John Gehrke received an eye injury in a pract- ice session over the weekend. As has been the custom through the playoffs the Arena will hold an advance sale of tickets beginn- 9lL(coNE.S D Johns-Manville COLORBESTOS SIDEWALL flow, never rind point to preserve nearest J-M dealer or write to Canadian Johns-Munvlllo, Fort Credit. Ontario. Provide mart anterior Ityllng . them. For free folder-an your SII YOUR NIAIIIT J-M DIALII AVAILABLE AT 'w'F -ENSlh(l0N - Human).- SU'it'llEllSlill - fr it Lt1tl'ill ' .li . ltilillillllih OLD5 Step out of the ordinary... find out for yourself what wonderful things , Oldsmobile can bring to you Mi. RACING DATES The following program of racing dates for 1956 has been approved by the Racing and Sports Com. mission of P. E. Island:-- Saturday, June 16th-Charlottetown Saturday, June 23-Charlottetown Monday. June 25-Charlottetown Wednesday or Thursday, June 27-28-Chltowii Saturday, June 30-Summerside Monday, July 2-Summer-side Thursday, July 5--Charlottetown Saturday. July 7-Charlottetown Wednesday. July 11-Summerslde Thursday, July 12-Charlottetown Saturday, July 14-Charlottetown Monday. July 16-Charlottetown Wednesday, July 18-Summerside. Saturday, July 21-Summerslde Monday, July 23-Charlottetown Wednesday, July 25-4lll'TlITle1'5ldC Saturday. July 28-Charlottetown Monday. July 30-Charlottetown Wednesday. August 1-Summerside Thursday, Aug. 2-Charlottetown Saturday. August 4-Summerside Monday, August 6-Charlottetown Tuesday, August 7-Summersldie Wednesday, August 8-Summerslde Saturday. August 11-Charlottetown Monday 13th August to Saturday, August 18th inclusive (Exhibition Week). Racing dates subsequent to Exhibition and Old Home Week are open for application. Official licenses will be issued May 1st, 1956. JAMES PENDEBGAST. , Secretary. 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