LONELY MEMORIAL FIELD Here's Charlottetown's splen- deserted on Monday. May 1931. did athletic field in picturesque 1958. Softball enthusiasts are Victoria Park. Memorial Field, holding practices on other /city the scene of many stirring base- diamond but baseball has yet to ball battles, looks lonely and have an organization meeting in WightmanTropI1y Could Be Next I By STERLING SLAPPEY again: next month. LONDON (AP) — America's The Wight-man Cup may be the crumbling sports empire -— once next to go.‘ dominant in practically every Twelltyflght Ye8_1‘8 880 United sport from frog jumping to cow States women tennis players I‘-00k wrestling—-is expected to crack the cup from England and, unless SPORTS FRONT By PIUS GALLAGHAN A small item appeared on many sport pages last week but it certainly didn’t attract a ‘great deal of attention. It stated that the St. Louis Cardinals had sold pitcher Herman Wehmeier to the Detroit Tigers for around the waiver price of $20,000. It merely added the facts that the 31-year-old right hander started three times this season but was pounded hard and compiled a 13.50 earned run average. His record was 0-1. Wehmeier had never any real claim to greatness but he had his moments which he likes to remember and other like to forget. And Milwaukee Braves are ones who surely would like but just cannot forget Herman. It was at Busch Stadium on Saturtiay night, B, 1956 that Wehmeier dealt the Braves one of their ’most cruel ‘blows. He was chosen to pitch for Cardinals against the Braves in a game that meant nothing to the Red Bards but a pennant to the Milwaukee club. Opposing him was the great Warren Spahn, a hurler who will long be remembered after the name of Herman Wehmeier-is completely forgotten. The Braves were in a terrific stretch drive with the Brooklyn Dodgers for the right to meet New York Yankees in the World Series. The Dodgers had won a double bill from the Pirates early in the day and were a half game in front of Fred I-haney’s Braves. A win for Milwaukee would knot things again and Sunday would find each team playing single contests to conclude the regular zchedule. A playoff loomed as a real possibility. But Mr. Wehrneier pitched that night as if the Cards, not the Braves, were seeking the National League flag. It was a gruelling twelve-inning affair that the Cards finally won 2-1, with Bruton’s homer the only tally off the St. Louis moundsman. Spahn pitched a brilliant five-hitter but it all went down the drain as did'Braves' pennant hopes. Milwaukee won Sunday but so did the.Dodgers and that meant Brooklyn had the flag by a ‘one-game argin. Yes. Milwaukee will long remember the pitching performance of Herman Wehmeier. And Herman won’t easily forget the oc- casion. You can be sure orfthat. , t O t C 0 It certainly must be no consolation to Roy Campanella that his buddies, Los Angeles Dodgers, are occupying the National League basement. The paralyzed Campy «would feel a lot happier if his former teammates were gaining more glory for themselves. While most of the news about‘ Roy has been on the ‘sober side’ the word from New York neurologist,’ Dr. Howard A. Rusk, is the most cheerful we read. ~ ‘ Dr. Rusk feels that it is indeed favourable that Campane1la’s paralysis is relaxed rather than spastic. The doctor states that rehibilitation to the place where they can earn a living and return to a dignified position at home is now acheved for 75% of these individuals paralyzed in both arms and legs. The neurologist adds gtait never has he seen one of his patients in better physical con- on. All of which makes the future for the former Dodger receiver fiat much more hopeful. It t O I ,3 Eddie Stanky, fiery Cleveland Indians coach and former St. Louis Cardinals’ manager has opened his mouth again and as usual his utterance leaves a lively topic for debate. Eddie was never one to keep his thought to himself; that fact has got him into plenty of trouble in the past. ’ Now his latest comparisons- of players ate sure to get some- body on his neck right smartly. Comparisons are always odious and this one by Stanky is one that seems certain to get National Leaguers up in arms in a hurry; particularly from Bill Rigney and his San Francisco Giants. _ Here’s Stanky’s statement: “The more I see of Mickey Mantle, the more I think he has it all over Willie Mays.” , i It III It i Local curlers held their annual meeting last week, electing new officers to conduct their business for the coming season. Satisfactory reports were given by the various committee chairmen all of whom worked hard to make the year the success that it was. ” There was one new report—that was the one concerning the Dominion Schoolboy Curling Championships held in Charlottetown this past winter. This was indeed a big venture and ‘everybody was skeptical as to the financial outcome of it. However all came off without a hitch and there was no red ink needed when everything was over. Receipts, made up of programs and ticket sales totalled $5,400.80, while expenditures amounted to $4,633.27. This left a credit balance ‘of $767.53. something which was hardly expected when this mammoth project was undertaken. The tremendous publicity that this province received through these championships cannot properly be valued. Prince Edward Island was made better known from one end of the Dominion to the other and it was the kind of advertising that does any province proud. All those who were connected with this great sporting event are certainly deserving of the highest commendation. It 1! it It 3 The amazing feats of Bob Turley, New York Yankees’ mounds- man, still continues. Turley racked up win number six on Sunday with a 3-0, five- hit job of the once-annoying Washington Senators. Turley’s triumph came after old Sal Maglie had pitched the American League _pennant holders to a 5-2 victory in the opener of the twin bill. Old Sal not only hurled the complete game for the Bombers but came through with a three-run homer. . Turley kept up his sensational mound duty with his win over the Senators. It was number six and four of those were shutouts. H18 earned run average is now below the 1 mark. With 'l‘ruley_ Shantz, Larsen and Duren performing the way “h9Y,3l‘9 at Present the Yankees are threatening to make this y$::sSe1‘aceda real Joke. As of Monday they held a 61/2 game bulge White gig! nplace Kansas City Athletics and 91/2 over. the Chicago pale H0se.th‘;‘:’ "1 the league basement. These_were the same were to worry the Yankees in this 1958 season. Somebody bett - - - .. . _ maintained in mfg‘ gtlin esI0ircr1aerth}n(gagd11:1cl:a1cfe,any interest IS to be It .4. 4. * * ‘ the Reds nutlasled the Braves ll-7. TI'l£:.:h\i:0l.“I§a£Il§n Sunday whén Purkey for 13 safeties but Bob was still in there ;:1tmtl1(1mSf‘pm1mded World Series here Lew Burdette wasn’t so I 9 ma Out’ . . lucky. The Reds scored three tunes 11? the thhfd. then ‘chased the great Burdette with a six run rally in the very next llllllllg. Burdette was the loser. Too bad that the Yankees didn’t meet- Lew 0 he ' record would look much more impressive. m re 0 n. ms G N" H. ~t Page 8 The Guardian Tuesday, May 20, 1958 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—U.S. District Judge Mell G. Under- wood Monday moved to simplify the issues in the government’s anti-trust suit against the United States Trotting Associati 11. Th e government claims the USTA, through its charter, rules and regulations, has obtained a stranglehold over harness racing. The judge told attorneys rep- resenting the government and the USTA to “-take the chips off your shoulders and talk things over” on what should be tried. The at- torneys went into a huddle. The government has asked the USTA a series of complicated questions which the USTA did not answer. The USTA has asked the govern- ment a series of questions which Charlottetown. Activity at Memo- Anti-Trust Suit Against U.S.T.A. .. by BEN OLAN .. NEW YORK (AP)—A ma.ster- ful pitching staff with a combined earned run average of 2.05, 13 complete games and seven shut- outs in 24 games confronts the seven American League run- ners-up as they seek to prevent New York Yankees from making a shambles of the pennant race. As they head west for their initial swing of the young season, the Yanks hold a 6%-game lead built largely on the efforts of starting pitchers Bob Turley, Don Larsen and Bobby Shantz and the excellent relieving of Ryne Duren. Among them Turley, Larsen and Shantz have won 13 games and lost none. Turley, 6-0, has gone the distance in each of his victories while -recording four shutouts. He has yielded only five the government did not answer. Monday’s hearing was to deter- mine whether any or all of the questions should be answered on both sides. - Judge Underwood said the first question to be settled is whether the USTA is engaged in inter- state commerce. After that, the court will rule on the issues. which will be pinned down at the conference of the attorneys. The judge asked each side whether it could agree thr/. the whole issue is whether the asso- ciation's rules and regulations are in accordance with the law. The conference will determine whether the issue can be stated that simply. The hearing was preliminary to a full dress trial of the suit. rial Field has been very limited to date. Perhaps it will liven up in the next few days. Says Snider's Attitude Wrong LOS ANGELES (AP) -— Duke Snider “no longer has the mental present form is misleading, the United States will lose the cup this year for the first time since 1930. Cup matches will be played at Wimbledon on June 13-14. (In golf and tennis alone the United States recently has lost the Davis Cup, Ryder Cup, Curtis Cup and Canada Cup besides los- ing the unofficial Olympic Games championship and various other titles great and small. attitude for baseball.” Los Ange- les D o d -g e r s general manager E. J. Bavasi says. “Something is wrong with Sni- der.” Henald Express baseball writer John Old quotes B-avasi as saying. “I have no sympathy for him. With all his talent, look at him-—-only five runs batted in this season, and we had counted on him heavily. . “I should have suspended him in Florida after he reinjured his operated knee in a car accident.” Bavasi was asked if he intended to suspend the veteran outfielder, who is batting only .225 and is reported not following medical advice to take specialexercise to break down knee adhesions. “That wouldn’t do any good now. He’d still draw his better than $42,500 salary. No. he'll suf- fer along with the rest of us.” Would Bavasi like to make some trades? ' “The way our fellows are going, nobody wants any of the Dodgers, and I don”: blame them.” Asked by Mi r r o r baseball writer Charlie Park specifically what was wrong with the club, Bavas-i said: ' “Well, whatever is wrong, Walt Alston (manager) isn’t to blame. Bavasi pointed out that two pitchers the Dodgers were count- ing on, Don Drysd-ale and Don Newcomibe, have won one game and lost 10 between them. But Bavasi thinks the lack of hitting is more responsible for the Dodgers’ occupancy of the cellar than poor pitching. , Wightman Cup teams have not ‘been named yet but British tennis leaders expect American players to be Karol‘ Fageros, Mrs. Dor- othy Head Knode, Mimi Arnold, Althea Gibson and Mrs. Margaret Dupont. There's no Maureen Connolly or Doris Hart in that bunch and no one, not even 1957 Wim- bledon champion Althea Gibson, is clearly a better player than the British probalbles of Christine Tru- man, Shirley Bloomer, Ann Hay- don, Angela Mortimer and Sheila Armstrong. V “Our chances are definitely good this year,” said S. B. Reay, secretary of the Lawn Tennis As- sociation of Great Britain. HAVE BEST CHANCE “Without a doubt we have our best opportunity in the Wightman Cup this year since’well before World War Two.” American women's tennis has, like other American sports, de- clined during the last five to seven years. Sometimes the de- cline has been rapid. . _ Althea Gibson has taken up a singing career in addition to ten-. nis since she won the Wimbledon title against an extremely poor field last July. She unexpectedly lost several matches in tournaments thd s spring and her form has been most unimpressive while the -form of Miss Truman and Miss Bloomer has been improving—es- Pecially on grass, the surface for BcIrry’s Lions To Hold Practice) A softball practice will be held this evening at 6 o'clock by Barry’s Lions on the Old Dia- mond. ’ Wightman matches. The British team will be named about June 2 or 3. Seven points are at st a ke in Wigh-tman matches—-five from singles and two from doubles. With a month to go many Brit- ons are picking their team to win by 4-3 or even 5-2. BASEBALL . RESULTS . By run CANADIAN pnnss National League DEATH ACCIDENTAL TORONTO (CIP) — A coroner: jury has ruled as accidental the death of a Conaught Medical Re- search Laboratory worker March 20 and found he died of encep- halomyelitis or imflammawtion of the brain after he wa-s bitten by a lab monkey. Evidence was that David O’Hana, 39, was bitten by a monkey used in the manu- factune of Sailk poliomyelitis vac- C1116. Mil 010 100 001 001-4 13 1 ‘ ’ ”“ 0' 100 000 002 000-3 12 1 1S1Da1lm Mcmahon (9) and Cnan- . \ call; Ihrppstem. Jerrcrorat (8) Plymouth Sedan Dodge Suburban Plymouth Couch Dodge 5640 Lawrence (10), Lown (2)1 Acker ‘ Radio I(12)Loand lI3:iley.Mlfi(: PMc]1{)’Ba12»<)ri1; Colon Blue Colour Blue Tw0_T0ne Two-Tone. cihn-‘-13%.-y (25): '_ 0 ’ 0 Y ONLY: ONLY ONLY I t ' l L ~ ...s.:;':. .. $1595 } $995 $1395 $1145 Toronto 200 025 01x—-19 0 0 Ricketts, Deal (6) and Oliver; * Blake and Thompson. L: Ricketts. HRS: Roch-Stevens; Tor-Morton, Nelson (2), Goliat. Second Rochester 501 000 1-7 10 1 Toronto 002 001 2- 5 9! 4 Kuzava. Wright (7) and GI)allId- uDOIl"I' TAKE CHANCES! earned runs for an EIRA of 0.83. Baseball Ass'n. Holds Meeting A special meeting of the Mari- time Baseball Association was held in Amhenst, N. S. on Sunday. Island representatives at this meeting were Brig. W. W. Reid and George Francis. During the course of the meet- ing discussions were made on: age categories; provisions of tro- phies; constitution of the Associa- tion; date, time and place of an- nual- meeting; crests for cham- pionship teams; and announce- ment of playoff dates for the cur- rent year. Any teams taking part in In- Club ‘Stakes At Belvedere Doug Fraser and Dave Cox provided the highlights of club sweepstakes held at Belvedere Golf Course over the holiday weekend. Fraser shot a sparkling 75 on Saturday to win the opening day’s stakes with a net 67. His handicap was 8. Runners-up were Ron Ketch and Dave Cox each with net 67’s. Ketch went around in 87 (handicap 19) and Cox in 95 (handicap 27). Monday it was Cox who fur- nished the surprise. He cut 5 off his Saturday score carding a 90, good for a net 63. Jack Beaton was runner-up with a _ _ net 75. His handicap was 4. terprovincial Playoffs are Inform- A large nmnber M golfers ed that the playoff date is Sevt. participated in the events played 20 in disagreeable weather. Raven Abbe Is sociation will take place on July 13. g The annual meeting of the As.- . Yanks’ Brilliant Mound A Terror To . Larsen has yet to SW9 up 3 run in 23 innings. He has won three- Shantz, the league’s comeback-I of-the-year winner last season» 15 4-0. Duren‘ has saved six games and has struck out 14 batters in 9 2-3 innings. White)’ Ford has won three games, lost two and put together a 1.71 ERA. SHARP TRADERS Only four among the club's 10 pitchers are products of the Yan- kees’ prized farm system They are Ford, Bob Grim, Tom Stur- divant and Johnny Kucks. Larsen and Turley both were obtained from Baltimore in a mammoth winter trade-_ four years ago. Shantz and DItm_ar were acquired from Kansas City in a 13-player deal in February. 1-956. Din-en came to New York in the transaction that sent Billy Martin to the Athletics and Harry New Record Set In Road Race SYDNEY (CP)—— George Gal- lant of Halifax and formerly 9f Shediac, I\l."B.. set.a record. in winning the six-nule Wlutney Pier Legion road-race here Monday. _ Gallant covered the distance in 33 minutes 51.4 seconds, bet- tering the 34 minutes-(plus mark held by retired runner Roy AP‘ pleton of Glace Bay, N. 5- Former Boston maralthonef Eddie Kabaty of nearby Mem- bertou Indian reservation took second spot among the nine en- tries with 36 minutes 39 seconds. Following Gallant and Kabaty were Lewis Murray, Ora.nedIale, N. S.; Stew MacMillan Halifax; Roy Morrison, Glace Bay; John Paul, Charlottetown: Don Campbell, Halifax and Eddie Broolcman, Sydney. Other Tea snmpson to the Yanks last June. And 531 Maglie, who picked up his first victory of the year Sun- day_ was purchased from the Dodgers last September. Figures compiled by the Asso- ciated Press show that only De- trait Tigers approach the Yanks in the matter of complete games. Detroit hurlers have gone the dis- tance 11 times. Kansas City is next with fling f S ington and Clgvelud iv . each. And, mm . New York 5 ‘pgyed ., games tha ~ - teams. n any °~f "90 In the"earn Baltimore isfikggu. Then come A 1 ‘ Chicago 3.35, am, Vii: . ington 4.08, cmwfiky 0 Kansas City 4.19, '- L '3.) Supersonic Arrow Hos CcIncIcIcI_ Almost 400 Millgend By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (OP)-—-The project to develop and produce the super- sonic CF-105 Arnow aircraft will have cost nearly $400,000,000 by the end of the current fiscal year, govern-menut officials said Tues- day. The fiscal year ends next March 31. This amount includes an expen- diture for production of 37 Arrow by Avro Aircraft Limited, Mal- Informant; hgvgi I emmem u. . 1. against prodiiuufi, after sinking gg costs so far hay? I evenly split between, and production, ' '" of these are ton, Ont. Eight models and the other 29 are known as “pre - production" planesgused to work out “bugs" discovered in the original mod- els. Officials reiterated that the government will not decide until this summer whether to put the Arrow into full production. It has NOW Don’t to at maiden‘ made its original test flights and “' "*5 ‘%.““°!M‘ ’ has flown at more than 1,000 Wm °h¢°k CBC _ " ' miles an hour. Wiring quickly, MW ‘ ' ' The total of nearly economically. ‘' :neIc;;1d:1s)ne$175,0W,0w thus, isca FREE Expenditures for the Arrow this NOW will ccount for more than Igaifer ceni of the entire defence department budget of $1,686,000,- 000. Top Performer HALIFAX (CP) Raven Abbe owned by Roy Beven of Charlotte- town was top performerin an , eight-dash card . at Sackville ‘ Downs Monday, opening the 1950 harness racing season. The Island pacer won two of the half-mile dashes and stepped the ‘fastest time of the day at 1:03 5. Parrsboro reinsman Skip Yorke drove the second fastest time with his pacer Pius at 1:04 8-5. PUMPS . . . For Prices on Complete Sys- HERE I Now NOTHING LIKE IT! TERRIFIC vALu Es! TREMENDOUS SELECTIO-NS! .“N0 FOOLING". HEY ARE tems, Pumps for any depth DIAL 7596. . . ‘I 955 Chalmers Newson Winsloe PIylI10|lT'II Sedan Radio Colour Black ONLY MUFFLERS . $7.00 up BATTERIES $12.00 up $1645 1955 Meteor Coach Radio Colour Brown ONLY $1495 ‘I955 195! DodgI:ldSedan Dodge Cold 10 °°i3’i‘«'Li‘ $1595 rmns $14.00 up «. DIAL 9255 1952 5 Buick Sedan ‘ _ FRANKIE ROPER’.S Radio - » IRVING STATION Colour Grey Cor. Prince 8z[Grafton sts. ONLY $1095 1953 Dodge Sedan Colour Blue ONLY $965 I 1955 1955” 4 Dodge Suburban Plymouth §eIII :; Two-Tone Colour Bing ONLY ONLY $1595 . $1095" 7*- I oolas; Cohen, Crimian ()1, Rich- ards (4) T-iefenauer (5) Blake (6) _ and Hannah. W: Kuzava; L-— Cohen. Buffalo 101 000 003-5 11 3 Montreal 003 020 11x—7 11 1 Daly, Newkirk (8) and Noble; Bmrer, Harris (9) Collum (9) and Gatta. W: Birrer; L: Daly. HR: Mont-Dolan (3). Exhibition at Philadelphia Washington 003 101—6 8 4 Phila 031000 30x——7 8 0 Lumen-ti, Stobbs (8; and Kor- check; Monchead, Hacker (4) Gray (6) Miller (8) and Lonnett. W: Gray; L: Lumenti. HRS: Wash-n - Asp-romonte, Chrisley; Phila-Repulski, Essegian. Exhibition at Minneapolis Chicago (A) 010 000 000-1 4 1 San Fran 0()0 441 10x—l0 16 0 Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) — Probable pitchers f or Tues-day‘s major le gue games. (won and lost rec- ords in parentheses) American League ' " New York at Chiuago (N )—- -: sixty miles an hour! on A COMPLETE BRAKE cHEcK 'IAI(E vouR,cAR to YOUR wyéfia tERRII=Ic BRAKE HEAT AND WEAR FACTORS are the problems of today’: brakes. Imagine pressing your hand against a brake drum of The heat generated Is such that it could make :1 cheap brake lining completely useless after one fast stop! Roybestos brake linings are specially made to resist heat and wear—for your safety. CANADA'S BEST-KNOWN AND LARGEST-SELLING BRAKE LININO ‘EXTRA SPECIAL LOOK AT THIS , I 3 ONLY NEW I957 PLYMOUTH SAVOY SEDANS . “OUTBOARD JOHNSON MOTORS " , s1'si.0e $272.00 $312.00 3 H.P. 5‘/2 H.P. HoPo oacooooocl! on c: :5 Kucks (-11) vs Donovan (2-3). 1 Washington at Kansas City (N) —P-ascual (2-3) vs Garver (4-1). Baltimore at Detroit - 0’DellI (3-4) vs Hoeft (3-2). Boston at Cleveland. (N) Smith: (2-0) vs Narleski (5-2). , National League Raybestos Products are distributed by MARITIME ACCESSORIES LTD. HALIFAX, N. S. Branclics at Sydney and Dartmouth, N. S., Saint John, Fredericton and Moncton. N. B. San Francisco at Cincinnati -'.:.’\'I—-l\l(:Cormick (3 - 01 vs Law-1 rence (1-3)_ 3 Los Angeles at M1l\\‘aI1_kee IN)‘ -.—P‘0Idres (4-2) vs Conley (0-1). I Chicago at Pittsburgh (.\I)__ Drott (1-0) vs Friend (5-2). . St. Louis at Philadelphia (N)——! Charlottetown McDaniel (2-3) vs Simmons (4-3).; ' MARITIME MOTOR SUPPLY 42 Beasley Avenue F. R. "- 13- 51- PHONE 7358 - 7359 . 1o I-I.I=............$3mo HoPo In u o o ( c c Q 0 o o AN oI=I=ER 35 HP. 5552-00 YOU wILL BE SURPRISED so H.P. $873.00 A 20 FT. BOAT WITH A 5 FT. DECK AND CABIN 50* PLETE WITH A JOHNSON 25 H.P. MotoR-- I ONLY — $575.00. McLAINE LIMITED A z»-- MA1r:9u: 110*’