S‘tengeIHasNineYanI<sOn Squad For AI Star Game CHICAGO (Al) - Manager Casey Stengel wound up wit.-h nine of his own New York Yankees including three pitchers Saturday as he completed the 25- player American League squad for the July 8 all-star game. As expected, Boston's Ted Wil- liams-omitted from the starting AL lineup named in Friday's poll of players, coaches and man- agers-was picked by Stengel for his complete squad which has seven pitchers. The eight players, exclusive of pitchers, who received the h-i-ghest vote at their respective positions in the player poll will start and play a minimum of three innings. Remainder of the squad was named Saturday by Stengel. Stengel‘s complete unit also in- cludes five'players from Chicago White Sox; three from Boston Red Sox; two each from Cleve- BASEBALL RESULTS , By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League St. Louis 500 100 020-8 12 0 Phila 000 000 001-1 5 3 Maglie and Smith; Simmons, . Gray ( 9) and Lopata, Sawatski (6) L-Simmons. HR: Stl—Green (6) Phil-Sawatski (1) San Fran 001 001 000-2 5 1 Cincinnati 000 008 00x—8 12 1 McCormick, Monzan-t (6) Glel (6) Grissom (6) Crone (7) and Schmidt; Nuxhall and Burgess. L-Monzant. Chicago ’ 010 101 000-3 8 2 Pittsburgh 100 140 01x-7 10 0 Drott, Henry (5) Hotbtbie (5) ’ Hillman (7) and S. Taylor; Ray- don, Porterfield (6) and Foiles. W-Raydon. L-Drott. Los Angeles 100 001001-3 4 1 Milwaukee 210 010 112x-7 1'1 1 Podres, Klippstein (1) Erskine (7) Kipp (8) and Roseboro; Wil- ley and Crandall. L-Podres. HRS: LA -- Hodges (.12) M11 - Logan (8), Aaron (13) American League New York 001 410 020-8 10 0 Kansas City 000 000000-0 3 0 Ford and Berra; Urban, Bur- nette (4) Grim (7) and Smith. L-Urban. HRS: Nyk-Siebern (5) Carey (9) Berra (12) Baltimore 300 011000-5 6 0 Cleveland 020 002 011-6 10 2 Loes, Zuverink (6) and ‘Brian- dos; Grant, Wilhelm (7) Moss-i (9) and Porter. W-Mossi. L—Zuv- erink. _ Washitnvzton 010 201000-4 7 1 Chicago 000 304 01x-8 14 1 Clevenger, Hyde (6) Stobbs (7) and Courtney; Wilson, Shaw (6) Staley (7) and Battey. W-Shaw. L-Clevenger. HRS: Was-Bridges (3). Sievers 2 (17), Zauchin (5) Bostog 000103 010 001-6 9 2 Detroit 010 002 020 000-5 13 0 Sisler, Smith (9) Wall (12) and Berberet, White (11) Bunning, Wehmeier (6) Aguirre (9) Lary (10) Hoett (12) and Wilson. W- Smith; L-Hoerft. HRS: Bos—Jen- sen 2 (22), Lepcio (3) Det--Ka- line (9). International League Havana 010 000 001- 2 1.1 0 Rochester 000 000 000- 0 5 2 Cuellar and Izqluirdo; Laven- guth, Wright (9) and Katt. L-— Lovenguth. j Miami 100 000 008 1- 511 0! Buffalo 001 100 020 0- 4 8 0} Green, Card‘-well (9) and’ Bucha; Johnson and Noble. W- Cardwell. l Richmond 711 000 10-10 Montreal 140 230 20-12 Bronstad, Parsons (3) Post (4) Bethel (5) Dick (7) and Com- mand, Oldis (7); Faust, Janose (1) and Teed. Friol (4) Columbus 212 001 000- 8 13 1‘ Toronto 000 001 010- 2 7 2 Daniels and Rand; Milnancitn, Richards (3) Dixon (8) Pearce (9) and Thompson. L-Mclnarcin. 1 l See the nnwxn MORRIS ‘I000’ 0 &I'un¢vd&¢ $ I 0 only 1 , FINA AMAZING 50 mile er gal- . , I lon economy makeszspit pas sible to be a Two Car Family s‘|'A1'|oN for as little as $8.00 a ‘ month. (Average driving.) Norman Macwilliams MGCKAY Proprietor 59 St. Peters Rd. Dial 6448 Borden - 33-3 TUNE up? GREASING? BRAKE CHECK? OIL 115 Elm Ave. same route CAR To..; FINA slE‘RVI‘c‘E STATION WILLARD E. BETTS, PROP. Charlottetown “THE ONLY FINA STATION IN THE CITY” land Indians. Baltimore Orioles», and Detroit Tigers; and one each; from Kansas City and Washing- ton. The Yankees, who had first baseman Bill Skowron and centre. fielder Mickey Mantle ‘named as starters, also will be represented against the National Leaguers by pitchers Whitey Ford. Bob Turley and fast-balling Rinold Duren, catcher Yogi Berra, outfielder Elston Howard, shortstop tony Ku-bek and second baseman Gil McDou‘gald. THREE SOUTHPAWS Stengel will have three top left- ies to shoot against the Nationals, l. including Ford, Billy Pierce of the White Sox and Billy 0’Del1 of the Orioles. His right-handed mound guns will be Turley, Early Wynn of the White Sox, Duren and. Ray Narleskl. Baltimore's Gus T r i a n d o s. voted the starting catcher, will be backed urp by Berra and Ohi- cago’s Sherm Lollar. The player-balloted starting in- field of Boston's Frank Malzone at third, Chicago's Luis Apasricio STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League . . . . . .. W . L...Pct..GBL Milwaukee 37 28 .569 - x-St. Louis 35 31 .530 2% San Francisco 37 33 .529 2% Cincinnati 32 32 .500 4% Chicago 34 37 .479 6 Pittsburgh 34 37 .479 6 x-Phil-a 30 34 .469 6% Los Angeles 31 38 .449 8‘ x-does not include suspended second game of Sunday, June 29. American League W L Pct. GBL New York 43 23 .652 - Kansas City 35 32 .522 8% Boston 35 34 .507 91/2 Detroit 33 34 .493 10% Chicago 33 35 .485 11 Cleveland 33 38 .465 121/4 Baltimore 31 36 .463 121/2 Washington 29 40 .420 15% International League W L Pct. GBL Montreal 44 28 .611 — Toronto‘ 42 31 .575 2% Rochester 42 (32 .568 3 Columbus 40 36 .526 6 Havana 34 .40 .459 11 Richmond 34 41 .453 11% Miami 36 44 .450 12 Buffalo 28 48 .368 18 Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) - Probatble pitchers for today's major league games (won-lost records in paren- theses): ' National League Cincinnati at Milwaukee (N)- Pu-rtkey (8-4) v-s Spahn (9-4). Los Angeles at St. Louis (N)- Giallomlbardo (0-0) vs McDaniel (4-7). , American League Cleveland at Chicago (N)-Mc- Lish (3-5) vs Donovan (3-8). , Kansas City at Detroit-Garvet‘ mu ‘NI-Q .0RA ‘KKK’ CHANGE? Dial 5334 *5,’ and Nellie Fox at short and sec- ond, and Skotxron at first is sup- ported by Cleveland's Mickey Vernon at first, Kubek and Wash- ington's Rocky Bridges at short and M-cDougald, technically a second baseman, but handy any- where. The designated starting outfield includes Mantle in centre, Kansas City's Bob Cerv in left and B05- ton‘s Jackie Jensen in right. As capable replace in e n t s, Stengel has Williams, Detroit’s Al Kaline and Harvey Kuenn and Howard. Eleven players on this 1958 squad played in last year’s game in St. Louis won by the Ameri- can Leaguers 6-5. Iona, Montague Are Winners Two games were played yester- day in the Southern Kings soft- ball league for the Jamieson trophy, the game at Vernon being won by Iona 6-2 and in the game at Cardigan, Montague downed the home team 16-6. Large crowds watched both games. Irwin Conneltly went the distance on the mound for Iona and E. Mooney was his catcher. Ed Murphy and Norbert Fraser did the pitching and catching honors for Vernon River. The highlight of this game was a homer by Connolly in the sixth, however there were no one on base. In the game at Card.‘Lg»an, Carl Cronin and Pete MacAulay play- ed stand out game for the home team while Bruce Ciair and Bus Dutney madera ‘double play for Montague and Harry Stewart brought home two runs with his line drive. Joe MacAuley and Harry Hughes did the honors for Cardigan wlhile Ken Batllum and. Hugh Power were their opposi- tiom. COPPER SULPHATE moi IN CANADA L’ r. ll Tm null or non scom uunluc . . . Tonouto I. oluno , .._—__.L lgage 8, The Guardian I Monday, June 30, 1958l Cavcln Wins L. Richards Stakes NEW YORK (CP)-Joseph E. O’Connell’s chestnut - coated Cavan, the Irish urchin who romped to victory over Derby and Preakness winner Tim Tam in the Belmont Stakes, Saturday won the $47,900 Leonard Rich- ards Stakes at Delaware Park. The last of 11 starters at the final turn, be pulled a Silky Sul- livan hat trick and outdistanced the field to take $35,000 first money by two lengths and return $3, $2.60, and $2.20 to his backers. He ran the mile and a furlong in 1:49 2-5. Walter M. Jeflfords‘ Piano Jim was second, paying $4.60 and $2.80. Third was Windfield Farm’s Grey Monarch, who paid $3.80. In Chicago, millionaire thor- oughbred Round Table, ridden by Willie Shoemaker, sky - rock- eted his earnings to $1,090,014 when he won the $55050 Arch Ward Memorial Handicap. In money matters, he received $33,000, surpassed Citation’s $1,- 085,760 and now is second only to Nashua who has earned $1,- 288,565. Cain Hoy St'.a=ble’s Red God lorded over the $27,700 Roseben Handicap at Belmont Park for an easy four-length triumph to pay $30.90 mutuel as the second long- est price in the field of six. Sec- ond came Greentree ‘ St-awble’s Cohoes, the favorite. Legion Defeats R. C. A. F. Flyers The Summerside Legion de- feated the R.C.A.F. Flyers at the Airport softball diamond yester- day by the score of 1-0. Sonny Stull was pitching for the Legion tea-m while Fnamk Steele did the flinging for R.C.A.F. Doucette scored Charlie Deighan from second in the only tally of the game. \ 00 W557.’ fake the Family, ‘IVE witl: III: ‘ FAMILY TRAIN TRAVEL PM Do . Round Trip Fare For the ”Head” of the family. Mother: One-Way adult Fare For the round trip. Sis: One-Way adult Fare For the round trip. 12 and under 22 years of age Junior: ‘/2 One-Way Fare For the round trip for children of 5 and under 12 years old. Under 5 free. 0 Between Eastern Canada (Capreol, Sudbury, Cochrune, Windsor, Samia and east) and Western Canada (Winnipeg and west). Between Canada and Midwestern and Western United States. Between Western Canada and Eastern U.S. I 0 Leaving Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays Complete information from any C.N. or C.P. Ticket Agent. CA—|:AD_lAI«I NATIONAL Information and reservations from D. B. SMITH, c. N. R, Station. ... .._.__.. T: ‘- . ‘=2.-.--—_.— ..__ _-—-— -—— 0 Generous Return Limit PACIFIC Phone; 5663 By JOHN FARROW STOCK!-IOLM (AP) - Brazil won the world soccer champion- ship Sunday by outclass-ing Swe- den 5-2 in a drama-packed world c-up final. The Brazilians switched on their magic in the first half for at 2-1_ lead and treated the sell-out crowd of 50,000 at Stockholm’s Rasunda stadium to as fine a display of football ever seen. Every man in the Brazilian team was a star. The individual brilliance of the South Americans combined with superb team play and precision passing outclassed the Swedes, who fought ‘all the way but never stood a chance. Brazil had 22 shots at goal dur- ing the whole match and the Swedes only seven. It was the climax to three weeks of gruelling competition that saw 16 teams start out in a bid for world soccer supremacy. Heavy rain left the ground wet and soggy. Pools of water stood on the ground. GOAL IN FOURTH MINUTE The game started dramatically with Swedish inside forward Nils Liedholm scoring for Sweden in the fourth minute. It was a goal that sent the crowd wild with ex- citement. But the joy of the home fians was short-lived. Brazilian centre forward Vava, who like many Brazilians uses only one name put the South Americans _on even terms in the seventh minute and from then on the Brazilians took complete change. . *WlNNEll’S CHOICE EVERY 4 MONTH Brazil Wins Soccer Crown Other goals in the match came from Vava in the 32nd minute, Pele for Brazil in the 55th min- ute, Zagallo for Brazil in the 67th minute, Agne Simonsson for Swe- nen in the 80th minute and Pele again i-n the 88th minute. Brazil deservedly became the first South American team to win the world cup on European soil. CLEAN GAME The match was as good natured a world cup final as any in the 28 - year history of the competi- tion. There was not an incident to mar it. _ Swedenls King Gustaf V1 Adoltf congratulated th e new world champions and the runners-up. France finished in third place Saturday with a 6-3 victory over West Germany which took fourth place. ' Satu=rday’s match was played before only 16,000 at Goteborg’s Ullevi stadium. Jllste Fontaine, Erance’s star inside forward, scored four goals and sent his personal tournament record to 13 goals-the highest. REMEMZBER WHEN . . . Bobby Jones won his third United States Open goltf title in a lopsided title playoff, 29 years ago today. Jones and A=be Espi- nosa each had scores of 294 for the regulation 72 holes, but in the 36-hole playoff Jones won by 141 to 164. That was the year before Jones scored his grand slam, vic- tories -in the U.S. Open and ma- teur, and British 0-pen and ama- tour; 1958 HFTH ANNIVERSARY A CADILLAC lg , AVON MINKCOAI I-'-NE SEPARATE MONTHLY. CONTESTS ARE acme Hap- JUNE 15th THROUGH NOVEMBER 14th mc|_uswE_ ENTER EACH CONTEST As OH’-EN AS YOU wism lHclney Forms CINC’LN(NATl (AP) - Manager Fred Haney will have six mem- bers of his world champion Mil- waukee Braves on his squad when he takes the National League team into the annual ma- jor league all-star game at Balti- more July 8. Outfielder Hank Aaron and catcher ‘Del Crandall were selec- ted for the starting lineup by a vote of the lealgueis players and Haney picked four others Satur- day as he completed the 25-man squad. Haney chose pitchers Don Mc- Mahon and Warren Spahn, ‘short- A LINCOLN National League All-Star Team stop Johnny Logan and third (baseman Eddie Mathews. According to custom. the triall- ager picks all of the pitchers and Haney rounded out his llllfllilg staff by selecting Johnny Anton- elli of San Francisco Giants.Dlck Farrell of Philadelphia Phlllles, Bob Friend of Pittsburgh Pirates Larry Jackson of St. Louis Car- dinals, Johnny Podres of Los An— geles Dodgers and Bob Purkey of Cincinnati Redlegs. Haney’s other selections were outfielders Richie Ashburn of the Phils and Walt Moryn and Lee Walls of Chicago Cubs; catchers ‘on A $7 ENTER CANADIAN T-ETRoEmA's FIVE Excnmol MONTHLY ‘ A IEVI VITTTTTER EVERY uolml \ (ml. and-fine!-conhd cteuusdnagu Nov. mi, map . 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