nmev "TAKES oven 1 Charlie Grimm Quiis Braves By an coaiuoAN' BROOKLYN (AP) - Fred Haney, 3 58 - year - old fonner 0.-is broadcaster who never inn-lied higher than sixth in five W... as a major league man- ;,.C.. took over as pilot of M11- iilaiikce Braves Sunday amid tn- ,j'n-alions that he would last only until the end of the season if he does not produce a pennant win- nelrlancy. who handled the old St. Lani; Browns two years and piusiiiirgh Pirates three seasons. took the job almost reluctantly 43,...-,iM night when Charlie Grilllrll resigned. . "1 didn't know anything about It until 20 minutes before the announcement." said Haney. "I refused to say yes or no until I talked to Charlie. When he told me to take it, I accepted." Braves' president Lou Perlni refused to be pushed Into I mi-nor concerning Haney's ten- ure miii this brought about fresh ql(ll'lll(iLl0n that ex-New York i;:m1s manager Leo Durocher ill1Elll be called in if thg Jraves don't win the pennant. .51?" SKIDDED T0 FIFTH PLACE -i can't say how long Haney mu he manager," said Perinl. NHP has a contract until Q. end nl lllP season. The success of the mnn will determine how long he slats" vpi-int nhviously has been dis- plmisod with the Braves' Def" liiIil1lalll'(' this season. After lead- chise switch to Milwaukee. ing the league. they sldddedi fifth place and rumors began cir- culating that Grimm was on the way out. Grimm seemed relieved that it was all over. He has been offered the job of manager of personnel procure ment for the Braves. "I haven't decided whether" I'll take it yet." He also is reported to have been offered a front-office job with Chicago Cubs. Haney managed the Browns in 1939 and 1940 and finished eighth and sixth. respectively. He was fired in the middle of the T41 sea- son. He broadcast the Hollywood, Pacific Coast League games from 1943 through 1948. then was signed as manager of the club in 1949. After winning the pennant In '52, he went to Pittsburgh where his team finished last three years running. Grimm. one of the most popu- lar figures in baseball. has had his ups and downs as a manager. He handled the Cubs from 1932 until he quit in the middle of the '38 season. He signed again as manager in '44 and stayed until he was made a vice-president of the team in T49. Then it was down to Dallas. muwnukee (at the time in the American Association) and fi- nally to Boston in '52. He was with the team through the fran- COVERS ALL SPORTS Thirteen Names Added To Can. Sports Hall Of Fame TORONTO (C?) e Thirteen names were added Friday to Call!- ,;nn'g sports Hall of Esme inclu - ing the "Paris. Crew of rowini fame from Saint John. The selections. COVel'lnS 599'” from horse racing to dog sledding. were made by the I151”. "3ll0”"l committee of sports editors and columnists and sportscasters from every province. Fifty-two athletes were named to the hall last year. BASEBALL RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS SATURDAY National League Tin 000 100 000 02-3 5 0 N York 000 000 100 00-! 7 1 Fowler. Ackcr (7). Freeman (ill and Burgess; Worthington and 5...-ni, Mangan (11). W-Freeman. Milwaukee 000 000 020-2 7 1 Brooklyn 200 000 Olx-3 8 0 Conley. Johnson (8), Jolly (ii) and Crandall: Craig. Labine (8) and (lampanella. W - Labiiie. L-John- sun. HRS: Mil - Adoock; Bim- Snider. (Called end of 7th. rain) St. Louis 000 0000-0 fl 0 Pittsburgh 020 000 0-2 2 1 Welimelcr. Collum (7) and Smith: Friend and Foiles. L-W:h- mcier. HR; Pgh-Walls. Cliiraszo at Philadelphia. ppd. wet grounds American League Washington 000 000 0004 4 0 Chicago 030130 00x-7 8 0 Griggs. Ramos (4) and Fitz- Gerald; liarsman and Lollar. L- Griggs. HR: Chi-Rivera. Boston 201 000 020 001-6 12 l lirlroit 011 000 210 000-5 ll 0 112 innings) Tlrcwcr. Sisler (ii) and White: (iromck. Abcr (Bi Trucks (8! and iliiuso. W-Sislcr. L-Trucks. HRs: Bo:-Vernon; Dct-Maxwell. Kaline. Now York 002100 DIX)-.'l Ii 1 Cleveland 010000000-l 2 0 Slurdlvanl and Berra: Score. Naricski (7) McLish (9) and He gan. Naragon (91 L-Score. Hits: NYk-Mantle; Cle-Wertz. llaitimore 000 300 120-6 12 2 Kiinsas City 000110 000--2 7 1 Johnson and Smith: Crlmian. Uni-man (5l Hamnmon la) and Tlioinpson. L-Crimian. Hlls: Bal- Niciiinn. Eers. lnlcrnallonal League (lolumbus I30 000 300- 7 l5 0 Montreal 101 030 00l- 8 l4 2 Kume. Spiccr 15) Miller (9) and Noble; Kipp. Nishita I7i llli-kiiis (91 and Roscboro. Miami 2ll I04 000- 9 13 .'l llulfiilo 000 000 314. ii 3 3 Cardu ell. Kipper (iii Llpetri (9) and Command: Draws, Fronts (51 Donovan la) and Tompklnson. Richmond 000 000 000- 0 0 0 Toronto aim we 00x-- 3 ll 0 Post. Kraly (5) and Waning- ton: Lovengutii and Sawatshi. Havana ioo ioo mo i-s ll 1 Rrwhesier out) no iooo-413 o Rahe. Sanchez I7) and Dot- lrirr: Russell. Marhell (lot and Riinil. Green (9). Chlsox Players Fined 3200 By Pres. llarrlilge CHICAGO (AP) .- Three White ”i'-?.”'iii..2'.i3.""f2'..i..””'...'..'i5 i'.'.':i...'.'.'l'..'t.'Z'i;'..'.' '.”.ii:i..'"ao1 Pager at Now who The committee also decided to set up a football Hall of Fame in 1957 in honor of the country's grid- iron greats. The Canadian Rugby Union. governing body of the sport In Canada. will be asked to recom- mend names for consideration by the committee. it was announced also that the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada Hall of Fame. now located in Mont- real. will be moved here this year. The ' t .5 went over a list of more than 100 candidates before deciding on the 13. Here is the list. by sports: Horse Racing: The late Georgi: (Allhe Ice Man) Woolf of Cardston. to. Track and Field: The late Cal D. Bricker. born in Listowel. Ont., and later from Grenfcil. Saslr.; the late Cyril Coaffee of Winnipeg; marathoner Gerard Cote. St. Hy- aclnthe. Que. Dog Sledding: The late Emil St. Goddard of The Pas. Man. Boxing: Albert (Erenchy) Be- langer. Toronto. one-time world flyweight champion. and Eugene Brosseau of Montreal middle- Welzht who held Canadian and Am erlcan championships. Rowing and Sculllng: The late Jake Gaudaur. Sr.. of Orlllia. 0nt., and George Brown. Halifax, world champion scullers. and a four- oared crew from Saint John. N.B.. Smilh To Fight In Montreal MONTREAL (CP) - World lightweight champion Wal- lace (Bud) Smith will fight in Montreal on July 3. it was an- nounced Frlday night. Promote Pete Audette said that an opponent for the chain- plnn will be selected within the next threeior four days. sriiiiniiios National League W L Pct. GBL Pittsburgh 30 .577 Cincinnati 30 23 .566 V. Brooklyn 29 23 .558 1 St. Louis SI 25 .534 1 Milwaukee 26 22 .542 2 Chicago 22 29 .431 7V2 New York 21 32 .396 9'6 Philadelphia 20 23 .377 101.4; American League W I. Pct. Gill. New York .17 20 .649 Chicago 28 22 .560 Slh Boston 29 26 .527 7 Cleveland 28 27 .509 9 Detroit 27 28 .491 9 Baltimore 28 29 -491 9 Kansas City 22 M .393 141-5 Washington 24 37 -393 15 While Career Boy. coupled with x CBOROS AND HOGAN TIE FOR SECOND i. 1-he.chanoci:oiownomrdi.n,unnl:s.Ju-o18.isu 1 Needles First At Career Boy 2nd;Fabius 3rd NEW YORK (AP! - Florida. bred Needles dawdled along in last place for almost a mile, then proved his claim to the three- year-old American turf champion- ship by roaring down the stretch to win the 88th Belmont Stakes Saturday. The handsome bay son of Pon- der bounced back with the old last-quarter kick that had hrought him victory in the Kentucky Derby May 5. as he zoomed home for a neck decision over C. V. Whitney's Career Boy. The Calumet Famfs Fabius. who upset Needles in the Prank- ness May 19 and prevented him from ”ecomlng the first triple- crowii winner since !948. finished third in the field of eight. Fabius took the lead going into the final bend but couldn't hold it in the furious stretch drive and dropped back to finish a length and a halt" behind Career Boy. Needles proved himself over the longer distance. covering the mile and a half in a fast 2:29 45 com- pared with the stakes mark of 2:29 1-5 set by Count Fleet in 1943 and equnued by Citation in 1948. The winner. owned by Bonnie Heath of Fort Lauderdale. Fl!-. and Jack Dudley of Stlllwater. ()kia,, paid 33.30. 32.40 and 3210- known as the Paris Crew who held the world title in l87l. The Paris Crew was made up of Elija Ross. George Price. Samuel Hutton and Robert Fulton. SET 1871 RECORD The Paris crew won fame by winning the epic race of 1871 at Renforth on the Kennebocasls river six miles east of Saint John. The four men who worked in lumber mills in Saint John. de- feated a British team from Tyne in record time of 38 minutes. 50 seconds over six miles. Cote. 135-pound. cigar - smoking runner and considered one of Can- ada's greatest marathoners, has completed 25 years of long-distance running. He won the Boston Mara- thon four times. a record aur- passcd only by the celebrated Clarence DeMar. Gaudaur. who raced in the era of the great Ned Hanlon, won the world sculling title in I896 and held it until 1901 l "on he was 43 years old. Plan Maritime Shoe Tourney Officials at the Brighton Horse- shoe Club are planning a Mari- time Horseslioe Tournament to be held at the club sometime during the summer. invitations are being sent out now to clubs throughout the Mar- itimes. in expectation of a busy season at the club another horseshoe pit is hclng added. The official opening of the club will take place on Dominion Day. For Quality : Mildness Value CAw'.xi).x s -I-t.S'l'l.'.S'li .w .' ll.t'(.' 'l(.'Alll-illl Ttill-X('t(.l You can borrow the cash you need qiiicklv and edaily . . . and get life-insurance protec- tion for your family if no oxlri uafl If your present loan lacks this vital protection . pay it off with a Trans Canada Credit life-insured loan. TH! All-CANADIAN W LOAN COMPANY moo om WW7 ii IMA liar liner Call in today. Dial 3523 Belmont; Whitney's Jazz Age in the wager- ins. returned 32.90 and 3210- 1"!- bius paid 82.30. It was the. third richest Bel- mont. Needles collecting 383.600 from the Kross of 8119.660 and in- creasing his earnings in two years of racing to 3570.655. Needles is no Count Fleet. Ci- tation or a Swaps when it comes in speed. But no more exciting I horse has come down the pike in recent years. Four times this year In races worth more than a 8100.000 each he has appeared a beaten horse with only a half-mile to go. Yet each time-in the'Flsmlngo, Flor- ida Derby. Kentucky Derhy and now the Belmont Stakes-his bob- bing head was in front at the finish line. Only in the Preakness did his vaunted stretch run fall short. By WILL GRIMSLEY ROCHESTER. NY. (AP) .. Cary Middlecoff, the lanky dentist from Memphis. Tenn., who cured the Jumpiest nerves in golf, won his second U.S. Open champion. ship Saturday with a score of 231 as the closing bids of Ben Hogan. Julius Boros and Ted Kroll died dramatic deaths. The 35-year-old Middlecoff. once so fidgety his clubs would freeze on the backward swing, crushed Australia's Peter Thomson, the halfway leader, in a bitter head- to-head duel and then sat back in sweat out the challenges of the great Hogan and two other old pros. Middlecoff shot twn finial rniinris of even par 70 over this Oak Hill Country Club course to win by a stroke over Hogan, bidding grimly for his fifth Open championship, and the bull-like Boros. champion in 1952. Each had 282. MISSED FOUR-FOOTER Hogan's bid was broken on the next-to-last hole-the 71st-where he missed a four-font putt-a rar- ity for him-and Rorns' cnanc. died on the 72nd where a bold 15-foot birdie putt Tipped the cup and missed. Shortly afterward Ted Kroll came to the 441-yard 16th hole needin, pairs in to tie for the championship. But there he took a harrowing three-over-par seven. hitting his second into the trees and, after reaching the green in' four costly whacks, three-putted for one of the biggest blowups in Open his tory. Hogan. one stroke off Thom- son's pace going into the final day. had rounds of 72 and 70. Boros finished with 71-69 and Kroll with 7&7! which gave him a 285 for a fourth place tie with Australia's Thomson and Ed Fur- izol, llig lame-armed winner in 54 Middlecoff put on an exhibition of brilliant shotmaking for three days and four rounds over the 6.902-yard course. putting together rounds of 71-70-70-70 although he blew to two fat sevens on the first and second rounds. LATE COMEBACK He started off wildly Saturday. missing eight fairways and hittinp,' ml" mu? "EDS during ih . mg round. but great IEECOIIHETI-:5 kelp! him at even par. n the afternoon, it nppea,-ed h "light told when he went one ove1e' par on two of the three finishing holes but he -nailed a beautiful par- l0llr (N1 the final hole of his 281 Tllell-lif' sat bank in the dining room. Just off the lflth green, to await ilcvclnpmenis, Ncedlnu ”i1l.V I13? for the last two holes to tie and a birdie to V”"- llugan liii short on the 17th and pitched up to within four feet. He iiicasured the putt carefully. 001'? ll? liziiised as if his concen- ti'.'-itiriii has hriikon. Then he striiki-ii 1Iii- liall it ucnt wide on tho iipiii-r sirlc of the Clip. llo look a iiiie-iiipr-par five. Tlicra has the final hole yet to play, hut iIiii:an's second shot left him -10 feel from the run. He went for the hole bolrilv but the bail scampered 2'2 feet past” NARROW MISS LAST YEAR Hogan was tied for the cham- pionship last year by Jack Fleck. the unknown frriin Davenport. Iona, who l'l('fll him in a playoff Boros bulled his way in and out of trouble all day to come to the final hole with a chance for a tie. He laced a beautiful approach in the green. but the ball was 15 feet wide and a bit short. Boros gave the ball a (list for Saturday's final rounds. Rifle Shoot HALIFAX (CP I-An eight-man iioints Sunday in win 1lii- inlcr. Maritime rifle feel at nearby Bedfnrd, New Hi'iiti.swii-k, dcfnnil. IRE lllamr-ion. had 774 and Prince Edward Island 7ti7. SOFTBALL GAMES TONIGHT Lions vs. Shamrocks, Old Dia. mond. Abbies W. H Y C , PElI'liflillt' Ilia- the next day. Hock failed in qual. Get behind the wheel of a new International-take it out on the road where you can actually feel the; Both games start at 615. Nova Scotia team picked up 785 W. Gary Middlecoff Winls U.S. Open whack but it hit the side of the Cl!!! and curled out. Middiecoff who gave up a prom. ISJIIB career in the dental profes- sion to follow the tough golf inn has been the most consistgnt money winner on the circuit for solid 10 years. NB Team Winslsailors Drop 2 To local Teams llaida absorbed two beatings at lhe hands of city softball leagu; tr-aiiis over the weekend. On Sat urday the B.Y.C. won going away 16-10 and on Sunday Barry's Linn, squeeked through to a clog. 5.; victory. m Baseball Practice There will be baseball pram-tire. tonight on illcmnri.-ii Field for the Stars and Flycrs. Time is 5 45. diderence. Compare its tru-truck styling, comfort,. visibility, power. . . then compare its price.' You'll want to make a deal-now! INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS no than at your International dealer or branch INTERNATIONAL HARVISTR COMPANY OF CANADA LTD. W. R. JENKINS CIIABLUITIIIOWN 208 Great George Street Phone 6563 225 THORNE AVENUE. SAIN ta ke a drive 7” UWWINTERNATIONAL T JOHN. NEW BRUNSWICK A. S. MacSWAlN & SONS MOBELL, P. E. I. CLARK SUPPLIES LTD. DIAL 3210 DAWSON SERVICE STATION CBAPAUD E. C. GAUDETTE