l CALGARY, -All four outfits hlq the turn in a bunch during the W' B‘ Ins y ‘ By W.)R. WHEATLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (CP) — Yvon Du. relle retained his British Empire light - heavyweight championship Wednesday night in a savage bat- tle with South Africa’s Mike Holt who failed to come out of his cor- ner for the ninthround. Holt ap- peared to collapse between the eighth and ninth rounds.- It was such a terrific slugging match that from the sixth round on it appeared one or both would drop from exhaustion. ,Pit Audette, a second for Holt, said the South African couldn’t breathe between the eighth and ninth rounds. ‘ Holt sat on his stool, his face went. white. His head fell back and rolled about and manager Piet Lourens tried to revive him. It Was useless. ‘ CROWD ROAM When he failed to come up for the ninth round, the crowd of about 6,500, which had been yell- ing throughout the bloody scrap, let out a roar. The fisherman from Bale Ste. Anne, NR, and the South African tore into each other from the start. , Holt was sent,down for a seven count in the third round and dropped Durelle for n rid-count "in the eighth. - ,, ' Durelle was bleeding freely from a cut over his lefteye dur- 1‘ ing the last few rounds. Holt was '1‘bleeding somewhat about the . mouth and nose. It was Durelle's ruggedness that saved him burn a possible defeat. He took everything Holt had to offer and came barging back for more, landing himself with solid blows when it ap peared he was in real trouble. Holt’s showing was a distinct surprise to many. He was scored ahead slightly on points by all three judges through the eighth rounds. . 3 The heat in the forum was ter- ‘ rifle and. plus the hot glare from '- .the lights, seemed to take much out of both fighters. Holt. repeatedly clipped Durelle with sharp lofts and rights—~11 real two-fisted attack—«but he was al- ways in danger of walking into one of Durelle‘s haymakens. For the eight rounds. before the fight ended in a technical eighth-round knockout, the scor- ing by the judges was: . ‘ Judge Bobby Leitham 37-36 for Holt; Judge Johnny Gow 36-32 for Holt and Judge Rene Oulmet had it 37-32 for Holt. The Canadian Press score-card had it 36-32 for Holt. , “Durelle weighed 173% to Holt’s 9. . In his dressing room after the fight, Holt said he bruised his left hand in the third round and that it pained him so he couldn‘t use it to full advantage the rest of the way. He said he found trouble breath- chuckwagon race at the Calgary Stampede. . .T..K.O._ A for the ninth he couldn’t get off his stool, scarcely a bi e to breathe. ' Durelle, in his room, said Holt was the toughest puncher he has ever met but he felt he was fig- uring the South African out and could have won by the nth round it the fight had gone that far. . The paid attendance was an— nounced at 5,025, the gross $21,000 and the net $18,000. ‘ , Durelle had a shade the better of the‘. first round, and lost, the second by azalight margin. In the third, he began to unload his heavy stuff, driving Holt off and then st'aggeringhir’n with a left. Yvon followed with a left and right in succession and Holt went down in his own corner. The South African took a seven~counti Holt hung on and Was in trouble again when the third round ended. _ Referee Maxie. Berger said Holt, on going down, apparently forgot that the mandatory eight count had been waived and was coming up at seven when'Durelle tagged him again. Mike didn‘t go .down this time but desperately grabbed Yvon and hung' on. Holt came back in the fourth even, break. He took the the fifth, \dniving Durelle to the ropes and opening the, cut over Du- relle’s eye. . Durelle took savage punishment in the ’sixth‘, Holt landing lefts (and rights to thehead almost pt will” for several seconds. The seventh was again Holt's. He drove Durelle off, then shot over a sharp right then sent Du- relle down in his own corner. Durelle struggled “up before ref- eree Berger could begin counting. By that time both fighters were solweary they hung on repeatedly but ‘ Durelle always seemed to have something in reserve after taking Holt’s weaker blows. Both seeming arm-weary, they pounded away in the eighth with- out any, particular advantage and the crowd, which had warmed up to the South African’s brilliant fighting, was suddenly amazed to see Holt collapse on his stool. CHUCKWAGON RACE surprisingly strong and earned an é "l Knewl Hdd The 5th", Said By MARVEN MOSS Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL (OPl—Yvoo Du- relle, his British Empire light- heavyweight crown retained after a bruising battle with South Africa’s Mike Holt, walked calmly into his dressing room Wednesday night and said he won the fight at least around before he ex- pected. ‘ ' y ‘ “I knew I had him after the fifth round,” said the 28-year—old fisherman from. Bale Ste. Anne, N.CB.,_ “but I didn’t think I’d be able to‘ finish him before the "llth or certainly the 10th.” Referee Maxie Berger awarded the bout to Durelle when Holt was unable to answer the bell for the ninth. _ “I will say one thing for Holt," Durelle said, fingering a one-inch cut over his right eye. "He’s the hardest puncher I’ve ever been in against.” ' - “And he (Holt) fought real good battle,” chimed id Chris Shlaban, Durelle’s coo-manager. ' ' As Durelle mumched on a lemon and Posed fO'I‘ DhOtOSTaDherS find knocked down Durelle in seven-ts I briskly accepted the handshakes of well-wishers, Shaban analyzed the slugfest for the dressing room crowd. ‘ She-bah sald/ snap-punching Holt gave him lots of anxious mo- ments, but he said he wasn’t “too Him After Durelle worried about the outcome of the bout." “After the seventh, Durelle told me he was losing the strength in his arms. But I could see Holt’s reserve was dwindling even faster than my boy’s.” .. Trainer Pat Colovito swabbed the‘cnt over Durelle’s eye .and said Yvon “fought a great fight, but Holt sure surprised me.” “We ran into a fellow with pow-er we never expected to find. It was a lottougher than we ex- pected. But I had a felling it would end that way.", Referee Maxie Berger, former Canadian lightweight and welter- weight champion, said: "It was the greatest fight I ever saw. Holt was the underdog, but he was just great. And he just didn’t have the strength. Durelle ~—well, you saw it." His bruised momma dunked in a bucket of ice-water, Holt said be nearly beat Durelle. .“I nearly had him. One more punch and I wtmld have been all right. It was just my han ." Holt injured the hand when he a round. He said he Wasn’t able to use it effectively during the re- mainder of the bout. He said his breathing gave out - A during the fourth round and at the start of the ninth, he just felt he couldn’t continue. Canadian ChOperon At The ' , % World ‘ Fair 00 OTTAWA (CH—Mrs. Charlotte L. Bienvenue of Quebec City, for- mer ch-aperon bf Canadian student guides at the Brussels World Fair, charges that one of three reports sent from Brussels to the federal government “libel-s the reputa- tions of the 24 young women” guides, - . She makes the charge in a letter of resignation of Trade Minister Churchill dated May 27. Her res- ignation was accepted as of. June 27 by Mr. Churchill. Mrs. Bienvenue’s letter, tabled late Wednesday in the, Commons, does not say who sent the reports to Ottawa. It says that a second report “based on a minor inci- MELBOURNE (AP) —- “Aus- tralian sports officials are seek- ing to end recruiting by Amer- ican universities of Australian sports stars. ‘ They protested Wednesday to the International Amateur Ath- letic Federation (AAF) which in turn called on the United States Amateur Athletic Union to an- swer the charges. Edgar S. Tanner, secretary of the Australian Olympic Federa- tion, said he is alarmed by re- ing at the beginning of thefourth round, and when the bell sounded pin-ts that approaches have been made by Villanova to Herb E1— ARG‘O HUSKI’ES PRACTICE. Pouncing on the ball as eagerly as if they were in the heat of a Big Four league game are a trio of husky Argo linemen. From left are: DickyFouts. Danny Nykoluk and Tex Schriewer. As workouts started in grim earnest, Argos had 2.5 imports, 14 new home- l' brews and 17 returning Can-adi~ ans in camp. From these, coach Hamp Pool will cull 30 to make up his starting team. Pool is tak~ ing full responsibility for the success or: failure of the team. If they don‘t make the playoffs he will fire himself, he announc ed recently. Seek To End Poochirig Oi Sta-rs By U. 5. Colleges, .. national sports federations and I tralian athletes who have starred ' swimmer; Kevin Gosper and Ba . at Southern California; and Jim dent, suggests that our young liott and by Houston to Albert. Thomas, two young Australians. Elliot has the second fiastest time ever in the mile, 3:57.13, and Thomas recently lowered the three-mile record to 13:10.8. , In New York, Dian Ferris. hon— orary secretarystreasurer of the AAU, said he referred the IAAF inquiry to Walter N. Byers, exec- utive director of the National Col~ legiate Athletic Association. “We are confident that the rules and regulations of the NCAA and its various allied con- ferences fully satisfy the amateur requirements of the several inter- the Uni-ted States and interna. tional Olympic organizations," Byers said in‘Kansas City. Among the prominent Aus- at American colleges are the late John M 3 rs h all, Yale’s great vid Leanwmiddle distance run- ners at Michigan State; Murray Rose, winner of three Olympic gold medals in swimming who has completed his freshman year Bailey, 3 3558.6 miler at the Uni- versity of Oregon. Tanner said the “poaching” would be discussed at the IAAF congress meeting in Stockholm in August with a view to putting strong proposals before the next me e t i ng of the International Olympic Committee “Personally, I consider those responsible in the approaches to Australian athletes are aiding and abetting disguised professional- lsm'!) NFLD. PLANS FAIR ST. JOHN’S (or) _- Officials estimate between 45,000 and 000 people will attendt he second an n u al Newfoundland agricul- tural and homecrafts exhibition its Her Post people use alcohol excessively.” A third report “concerns me." Mr. Churchill wrote Mrs. Bien- venue June 10 that a report con- cerning 'her was submitted to trade "department officers in Ot- tawa. He said that in view of dif- ferences of opinion between of- ficers of the fair and Mrs. Bien- ven-ue “it would be as well if your resignation were accepted.” Mrs. Bienvenuue says in. her let for she was hired at $300 a month as social counsellor and chaperon of the 24 women students. How- ever. she had been given addi- tional duties and felt her salary should be increased to $500 a month. Failing that, she was re- signing, . Her letter also says the Cana- GiantsToppIe Philles; By THE CANADIAN PRESS San Francisco Giants smashed 14 hits off five Philadelphia hurl- ers Wednesday to smother the Phils 9-2. In the only other day game in the major leagues. Chicago Cubs swept their second doubleheader in four days, coming from behind twice to down Cincinnati 5-4 and 7-5. ,By winning, the Giants stayed in the hectic race for first place in the National League. Milwau- kee, leading by~a half-game, had a night game scheduled at St. Louis. Pittsburgh at Los Angelo also was a night game. . - MAYS FINDS RANGE Willie Mays burst out of his batting slump with two singles and a double, and southpaw Johnny Antonelli went the dis- tance for his 10th victory against seven defeats. Jack Sanford, ookie of the year in 1957.. was the victim .of a four-run Giant onslaught in the second inning,'only one of the runs being earned as the Phils erred twice. ' Jack Meyer, Johnny Gray. Bob Miller and Seth Morehead fol- lowed Sanford to the plate. -Wa nt _1 903 Model Car ? CANTON. Ohio (ALP) -— Antique car enthusiasts need no longer snoop through ruI'al garages for old model put-putts—thcy can buy one fresh off the assembly line. A local firm (Dyer Products) is producing an almost exact replica of the Surrey-a horseless car- riage that was all the rage in 1903. It comes complete with a tiller instead of a steering wheel, polished brass headlights, bulb horn and spoke wheels. A 4.8-horsepower motor drives it at a top speed of 35 miles an hour. 24 women students, 24 male stu- dents and three RCMP officers and their wives is not properly organized. The men had no lounge and a woman was living on their floor. on the floor reserved for the women “two men were lodged where there should be only women.” v Matinee Race 011 July 19. 1958 ’ Strawberry, Race Track All Horses Welcome The Cubs’ double victory at home raised their winning streak to five straight, while the Red- legs have lost seven straight. Bobby Thomson’s two-run dou- ble in the ninth inning gave the Cubs their first-game win before 30,412 fans, BITTER LOSS The second game loss was la bitter one for Cincinnati since the Redlegs blasted two homers, both by Pete Whisenant, three doubles and four triples in a collection of 11 hits as Brooks Lawrence suf- fered his seventh setback. Lefty Bill Henry, last of two relief pitchers to carry\ on for sidelined Cub' starter Marcelino Solis: picked up the victory—his~ second against no losses. Solis, a 28-year-old southpaw, arrived in Chicago on a post- noon plane from Fort Worth, and was put to work almost imme- diately. A 15-game wmner against two losses for Fort Worth in the Texas League, Solis pitched into the seventh inning before he was finally derailed. Lee Walls and catcher Cal Neeman hit home runs for the » HAVE YOU : A NO-FUTURE 1 JOB? A healthy outdoor life with good pay makes this an excellent op- .‘ portunity for physically fit young ‘ »men of 17-35 who meet Army selection requirements. LIMITED OPPORTUNITIES ' NOW IN THE FOLLOWING REGIMENTS The Canadian Guards The Royal Canadian Regiment Royal 22c R’cgiment , The Black Watch ‘(Royal High- land Regiment) of Canada Enquire now or mail this coupon to . ARMY RECRUITING STATION AAG (M) Headquarters Eastern Command Bell Road Halifax. N. 5., Tel. 3-9181. Loc :2 Please send me information, without obligation, on career op- portunities in the Canadian V Army. NAME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ‘ ,‘ (Age) Also-Cluldtioo s . . . - . ..‘ CITY/TOWN . .. . . ...... . .' . . . . . .. (Telephone) PROVINCE ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. a. Key No. 9—1230 RECORD HOP AT THE ‘ROLLAWAY CLUB THURSDAY NIGHT Everybody Welcome Admission 35¢ dian residence at Brussels for the IF here Oct. 6-11. More than 40.000 attended the first fair last your ‘4 l ’9.-. YOU ’ OWN / c you can receive 1958 "(VICTORY LOAN BONDS ' higher rates of interest ‘ {plus a cash bonus. today at any branch“ of The BNSV byexchanging for o CANADA CONVERSION BONDS The BANK of NOVA SCOTIA .Braves Shade Cardinas' Cubs in the opener. BALTIMORE (AP) Jack Harshman drove in four runs with a pair of homers Wednesday night as he pitched Baltimore Orioles to a 6-5 victory over Chi- Page 12 The Guardian Thur., duly 17, 1958 Lumpe’s two-on, two-out home run in the fourth inning brought New York Yankees from behind for a 3—2 victory over Detroit Wednesday night. Bob Turley al- lowed the Tigers only three hits ‘ while winning his 14th in a strike- out duel with Jim Bunning, who had won five in a row. BOSTON (AP) — Boston Red Sox, held to a lone hit for five in- nings by veteran Murray .chk- son, exploded for four runs in the sixth Wednesday night for a 5-2 victory over Kansas City Athlet- centre scoring the t. fourth runs. him WASHINGTON (APV‘ Sievers’ second homer of game, a two-run blast with out in the ninth inning, cu a four-run rally which gavel?“ ington a 7-6 victory over club” land Wednesday night, 9’5 ST. LOUIS (AP) '-— A m . one-run homers (by Hank, d‘ and Ed Mathews in the fifths, l ning gave leagueleading kvee a 66 victory over St. I,“ Cardinals We (1 no sd a Henderson & Cudmore Mid-Summer 5:: ca 0 White Sox in the second . , . 57mm. gagie of a twi—nig‘ht doubleheader. 10$~ _ , chatheyvi1t hggngrkhms second of Chicago won the opener 6-1 on a Jackie Jensen, Bostons slug- ' 6 I138 ‘. 1e_d c score, m seven-hitter by Dick Donovan. ging outfielder. capped the unrlls- Aaron s provr ed the NEW YORK (AP) —- Jerry ing with a long double to right margin. _ lg Continues THURSDAY..— FRIDAY .— SATRDAY UNTIL 1 mi Thanks for the ferriffic response to our Mid-Summer sols, will continue fill Saturday of 'l.p.m.- . _ Men! This is your opportunil'y to save Dollars on s u mm a; span-wear and workweur. Come in Today—this very DAY. a A hi ‘ C, Soles GOLF Regular $9.95 , o CASUAL ‘ o CANVAS -— Reg. 3.50 «SHOES Hem Foam Tough Navy Fabric lOO°/o NYLON JACKETS fit Zip Front Windbreaker Style 0 Famous Bantamnc Make 0 Red, Navy, White, Powder-Grey O Washable - Windproof $7. 'llegulal: $15 v 0 100% Black C Camus :32 .99‘ ‘ Famous ,l. Miller Make -— Fifi? 9mm? SPORTSHIRTS A sell - Om- last time Now a recent SALE of this lowest Discount PRICE. MIDSUMMER SALE SPEC-ML \ PAN Regular 95 Worsteds _ 0 Grey Flannels -Blu§. _ _l Harvey W0 . T - SHIRTS ; 0 Fresh New Stock—Regain! o’ Stripes - Whites - Fancy “m $5.009. » KHAKI' Repeat Shipmenf Sanforized ‘Guaranteed 3.98» ‘ x“; and higher ALL won t r Virgin Wool -, ' 9 Fulfil" $3.95 . lars Short Sleeves brain-any, 5.95 and 6.95. . sarsa TS 4.95