BY ALEX MORRISON , CENTRAL PRESS CANADIAN GOLF COLUMNIST ; Flying s ersl some see them. most don' . Not so flying elbows in golf. Those you canlsee every- t where on the golf course and prob- ably in your own swing, it you had it photographed. There it no fault that you can do any greater harm to your swing and game. The tendency to lapse into this fault, even among the better players. is ever present. It is natural for the elbows and hands to move away from your body. That is how you reach out for things. In salt this reaching out must be chngod to s reaching down as in holding the club in the starting position and when striking the ball. This downward- reaching is pos- sible only when the upper arms remain close to the body. This relatively close position is impor- tant also because it helps you to keep your arms and hands work- ing in harmony with your body. Since the particular position and movement needed for golf isn't one you are already accustomed to, it has to be acquired through proper training. A valuable contribution toward such training is had in today's instruction. Simply place a soft object between your body and your upper left arm to be held there throughout your practice swing. This will not prevent you from hold Ing your left arm fully extended or keeping your right arm relax- ed. It should help you to place and keep your hands in a good posi. iion on the club. It's a simple and easy way to ilreaiiy improve your swing with all clubs. MT B.Y.C. last winter and is our- felll-ll leading the city league with a nisniing .100 batting aver- age. Bobby Simmons and Wayne Mac- Donald. both of whom are still actually of juvenile age, are new additions to the Stars and the Dod- gers, whose lineup is well stocked with veterans. have a newcomer in Flick Landry. who was a great performer with Montague in the lsinnd Hockey league. The first mainland team to vis- it the island in some time will be making an appearance at 7-TRINIDAD TORNADO I ”Some-speed and a lot of hard Now and then Mike gels beaten work," is Formula of Trinidad in the 100 or 220-yard sprints but sprint-min Mike Agostihl in Van- it's usually by someone who set or couver for police games Jilly 2. equalled a world record. IN THIS CORNER S-'si'cIe Back On The Beam; 4 New Faces Spot City League It would -seem that a full slate of sport activity will keep the com- ing holiday weekend a busy one. Summerside will be the scene of most oi it with three hllrness ra- cing cards scheduled and a base- ball game on Saturday afternoon. Pontlncs. a baseball entry in the Summerside Town League will play a return visit to engage Tom lIIacFarlnne's Stars. it does our old heart a lot oi good to see Bnmmerside back on the baseball beat. it was a sad Burke has won two games for the Fiyers without tasting de- feat. in the second game of the year he threw a 4-hitter at the Stars and his teammates got lour runs behind him to win 4-! and Wednesday evening he set down. the Dodgers on 3 hits while whltewnlhing them 8-0. Last Sunday Donnie Machean took to the mound and blanked the Dodgers on 3 hits. and the Flyern, whom a lot of fans said would be woefully weak at the Upper Arm Against Body K of BEGINNER SHIRLEY S M I T H (:- learns to hold arms and hands in L proper relation to body by practic- ing with a salt object held between upper left arm and body. .This develops harmony between action of body and hands. July ztith. They are the Phili- delphia Sepia All-Stars, an all- negro team. who will play an all-star squad picked from Jun- iors nnd intermediates of the city league. The All-Stars are not a baseball team in the ordinary sense of the word for their roster is a mixture of both male and female players and aside from playing a credit- able brand of baseball do their best to entertain fans with a bar- reli of laugh-provoking tricks. The negro team is managed by Richard Mays, who claims to be a cousin of the one and only Willie Mays. Mays'is re- portedly quite a clown who can play any position on a baseball diamond. day in the baseball world when the Western Capital decided last Memorial Field on the night of plate pounded out 15 hits for a is-0 win. HOLIDAY year to fall away irom the game and not n baseball was thrown in any oi tion outside the minors in g nsersido all sea- son. But..aowUtho towp is back on the baanudvwhlio they may be a little rusty from the sent in hlbotlltion there is little Looking around the dugouts at Memorial Field we have noted :1 number oi new faces in the line ups of the league's teams. Some of the newcomer have been well known for their ability in other phases of sport but are strangers to the city league.,'l'ho Flyers CS- SPECIALS :'.lli"i. "f”&.'i'.'. 'l?.'r'.'i:i'."i.i'i.1i:. um... pm... Yaiiiy ii”..i'i.ii. ill Mauls Lsmprs last winter was just about the best centerman in the island hoe key league for the Montague Primrose: and who played inter- mediate. B baseball ior Rollie's Arrows is one of the new additions. dung I" I. As a matter of fans the dial? ilh i ernnso :ri.'i7-Loam team In am gone by: we will be honestl! gufpfldgn they don't win at ' NYIDN AND RAYON B SHORT SLEEVE E MINT GREEN. GREY, NAVY 1.95 others are Keith Dalsiel, Mark Ladnor who set some kind oi the scoring record in basketball cir- cles last winter by dunking 76 points for the Trotters in a same against the Atoms. and Gordie Silvers. a member of the R.C.lVi.P. stationed in Charlottetown. least do dz-tho two III!"- In plckglplht Flyers to make the trip to Summernide officials will be uvtogtlto Summuside fans a chancodo one what is currently the hottest team in the city league. The flyon have been getting some sterling telling from rishtbandnr MEN'S KHAKI PANTS " AMERICAN SANFORIZED DRILL T POWDER BLUE HOBBY JEANS 3.95 Also Frank Shepherd may be regarded as a newcomer to the league. Frank played a couple of games with the Stars last year but did most oi his catching for the intermediate B Arrows. Frank was a top deienseman with island hockey Ieagne entry Donnie IULGIU and lefty Jock Burke, who is makinz I comeback as a mouodsman. Jack started a couple of games for Jimmy Mac- Donald's Flyars last year but his playing was confined almost en- tirely totconterfield when he was one oi the league's best. Upsets And Rhubarbs Bloom In Britisl'li.adies' Golf Ch'ships t HOLLYWOOD STYLE 'SIZ'E628T03B-REG. 38.3, ' FINE WASHABLE DRILL ' REG. AND STRIDE STYLES BOYS' KHAKI JEANS MEN'S SPORT SLACKS d GABARDINES AND WORSTEDG 5.95 2.50 SUNNINGDALE. Ens. (CPI- Upsets and rhubarb: In the Brit- lsh women's amateur golf cham- pionship bloomed Wednesday like the rhododeatiroos beside sunning- tlole's iairllwo. Missing sitar two rugged rounds over g moo-mo Sunnlngdale , I , the defending cham- In the fourth and last upset. Bunty Smith was pounded into the ground by Margaret (Wifii) Smith oi St. Clair. Mich.. recent winner of the French women's title. Others reaching the round oi eight were Elizabeth Price of Eng- land. Mrs. P. A. O'Sullivan of I r el a n d. Germany's Liseloite Btenger. and Mary Ann Downey of the U.S. OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 9 PM. plan, Mrs.l;.Jassin Valentine of -ottrant U.8. cham- pion, Pnt' : the runner-up in Mrs. Valentino last year. Bar- bara-Rornnok of the u.s., and Mrs. B Itlphnns Blsiitii. twice -n E WHEILUCK .!;'fF SERVICE '5 ."N'.' . I Tlllf SEl:l'iCi Com little more than a standard tire! l25i) Athletes To Compete At St. Lambert . More than sso 1Ia(lsns'iottoiawnGtu'dian.Prlday.Iuno2I,lI5C 1, H to , Saturday In St. Lambert's third annual track and field meet, . -is ................n..g...,..g event program that llaI'l and womens age classes from midget to senior and carries Canadian-title ranking in two div- islons. Hill! minded Montreal suburb is spon- sored by the St. La '- p of the Canadian Legion and the - tellty's Community Sports Associa- B on The midget and junior boys' - events carry Canadian champion- , ship . are open. - The entries in the men's senior division includes -' Warner of Halifax. Joe Mullins the quarter-mile and half-mile. The women's junior class--um der ll-includes Fredericton in the field events Pitcher Released By Wildcats KENTVILLE. NS. ' amberl. land pitcher, was released by Kentville Wildcats or the Halifax and District Baseball Wednesday. p Galnberg worked only two- thirds of an inning for the last place Wildcats this season. Kentville manager Archie Allen needed ex. rience. forts were being made by the Kentviile club to place C-amberg with a team In the Nova Scntin South Shore Leann- UNLESS I.AST-MINUTE SWITCH IT. LfMBEllT, Que. (CP) - athlotes are as- i Friday and NEW YORK (AP) Unless there is a last minute switch in the votes still to be counted, the National League lineup for the July 10 all-star game at Washin- ton will not include a single I955 starter. With five Cincinnati miles: In the lead three others in second place, men like Red Schoendlenst. Duke Snider. Ernie Banks. ROY Campanella and Eddie Mathews may be on the outsidflooking in. The American League vote. on the other hand. will show the 1955 lineup intact. with one exception- George Kell of Baltimore is lead- ing at third base instead of Jim Finigan of Kansas Cliv- sTlLL COUNTING Von! Although the ballot-tn! ended last week. votes still are being Al's Director ' Says 'Very Happy MONTREAL (CP) -- Directors Michel Nurmandln of the Mont-I real Alouette football club said. Tuesday "we're very, vemhappy indeed." ; Normandin spoke for the Big Four football club after learning that Sam (The Rifle) Etcheverry will be back with the Larks. A' United States court judge so ruled Tuesday at Santa Fe in deciding that Chicago Cardinals had no contract claims on Sam. ' "This is definitely a precedent in Canadian-United States footballf pl a y e r relations." Normandinj said. "I think this should end; such cases." Cardinals had claim-T ed a contract predating onw embraces The annual affair that has been up in this track-and-field slang”! "f "'9 Amem"'"- t branch Frank Robinson. centre gniiion. All other classes sprinter Jim Glace Bay is an en in Pet Doble of j (CF) m Jed V)-year-old Newfound- League vrribed Gamberg as a”boy with ientialltles" but a d d e d he lie said ei- signed with Montreal. counted in the office of sioner Ford Frick. Final returns In exlietled by the weekend. The Gilli! starters are selected by fan vote with pitchers and other mem- bers of the 25-man squads being picked by the opposing managers, Bl'00li1)'n's Walter Alston of the National and New York's Casey The current standings show Cin- cinnati with iive lenders: Second baseman Johnny Temple. short- stop Roy ML-Miilan, left fielder fielder Gus Bell and catcher Ed Bailey. , N L All-Star Team Void Of Any Of 1955's. Starters I The 1955 starters were Ted Klu- szewskl. Schoendienst, Banks and Mathews in the infield with Del Ennis, Snider and Dom Mueller in the outfield and Del Crandall catching because Csmpanelin was injured. Mickey Mantle of the Yanks still was the top vote getter with ll8,;35 for centre field on the American side. Next was catcher Yogi Berra of the Yanks with 111,- 522. Dale Long of Pittsburgh had 105,622 and shortstop Harvey Ku- enn of Detroit 103,380. ' 0 (NORTH RIVER ROAD) Time: 3 P.M. and 8 P.M.. "FREE PARKING ON GROUNDS NO PARKING ON ROADS Sponsored by Kinsmen Club" (13.5. To Telecast iii lI.ii.L Games Next Season NEW YORK (CP) - Plans are nearing mpietl casting over the Columbia Road- eastlng System's network of to National Hot-key'League games next season, it was learned Wed- nesday. The step will mark the first TV network coverage of hockey in tho U.S. Saturday afternoons. cities in the NHL-New Yok. Boston. Chicago and Detroit. Nona will originate in the Canadian cities. Montreal and Toronto. -.--M ---------- -.......-........... Ilwl' 'll ":3-"kg:-.t?,'&i” - And when-ovoi-you do dsdvo. you'll and an imperial nuo mean 01000 57- 0011 ll Cl 7''? ltttfial Doaior. Ho's the man who lnowngmakosoloas-n yonrnoinappysnotoring-l ...kIown hovwtokoop thomgoingvior 3:”; for happy motoring . . .n'ons oosnploso pro-trip cheek-up so an battle: on the best route for you. I .uC' Ibo V . for the tele- ' The 10 games will be played . The telecast: will originate in I