eee ee ee oe ee ee eee, gee |The Guardian, Charlottctown, Wed, Apr. 22, 1958. ‘TESTS EQUIPMENT Mpcemen ‘Louts Lourmais tests swim from Montreal to Quebec this: suit and equipment in pre-| City. He hopse to prove the hu- paretion for 8 planned 120<nile| man body, properly protected “MUSIAL SPOILS NO-HITTER ° can surivive prolonged excurions in coldest waters (CP Wirephete) _ Cubs Blank Cards 1-0; Braves Down Redlegs By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ,Louis Cardinals with only one Glen Hobbie, 22-year-old Chi-|hit Tuesday — a seventh-inning eago Cub pitcher, shut out St.|double by Stan Musial—for a 10 SPORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN FRANK ‘KING’ CLANCY is a goodwill ambassador for the | ‘Toronto “Maple Ieafs but you'll have a hard time convincing Canadiens’ Doug Harvey that the King is going about spreading anything like goodwill. Chicago victory. It was the second no-hit bid that Musial had spoiled in four days. His seventh - inning single was the only hit off San Fran cisco’s Jack Sanford last Satur- day. Henry Aaron boosted his bat- ting average to .567 with a single, double and triple during Mil- waukee's 7-4 victory over Cincin- nati. Warren Spahn won his sec- ond of the season. Vada Pinson of the Reds drove in four runs with ia single, double and triple. |{TIRNDOS TERRIFIC The only day game in the Recently Clancy described Harvey as ‘“‘the magnificent cheat’ and the master of cling and ciutch. He goes out of his way to) describe Doug a really great performer who is getting away with murder on the ice lanes. Before anyone gets all excited and comes to the conclusion that we are branding Harvey the bad man of the National Hockey League; let us point out that we are merely attempting to give you a little of the sports copy that has been written this past week’on this very subject. EVERYONE who watches a hockey match has ‘his own opinions on whether a player is ‘dirty’ or not. We have ours on this Harvey matter and undoubtedly you have yours. We are not trying to sell our opinion to you, so that being t ease we will not even express it. However, we are going to gi you some of the going: eseasdin Pac satma gen Bus va “veal tigre Harvey expresses surprise at Clancy’s uttenances, whe says, “At a dozen dinners and luncheons I heard Clancy call himself an ambassador of goodwill. I believed him. Now, I hear ’s trying to keep me constantly under the eyes of the referees. Wants me to get more penalties. What kind of géodwill is that? SPORT COLUMNIST Milt Dunnell of the Toronto Daily Star discussing the utterances of Clancy and his allies has this to say | on the matter: “Clancy and others have claimed, since the cur- rent feuding with the Habs began, that Harvey would obstruct his grandmother ‘et a taffy pull and would wind up scolding her American saw Gus Triandos knock in five runs with a pair of home runs in Baltimore's 5-2 tri- umph over Boston. Triandos jruined Jerry Casale with a grand | slam in the first and another homer in the fifth with nobody on Hobbie had a perfect game un- |til Musial doubled with two out in the seventh. He had retired 20 men in succession before Musial the | Slashed a bounder to left field just ve |inside the foul line. The Cubs scored the lone run in the second'on Walt Moryn’s single, a walk, an infield out and Sammy Taylor's single. Rookie Gary Blaylock, making: his first start, turned in a fine effort, scattering five Cub hits. 248TH VICTORY | The league-leading Braves won | their fifth in six starts although |Spahn gave up 11 hits enroute | to his 248th major league victory. ; for holding him back. They figure, in short, that Harvey breaks-;Bob Purkey, knocked out in the most of the by-laws in the book and beats the rap by looking like a@ deacon who has suffered a hot-foot while singing im the choir.” THE CAPABLE Canadiens’ rearguard seems to have let the neediing get him. If it didn’t, then he would not have bothered te start making replies. But Doug has made rebuttals, one of which goes like this: “Hockey is a bodily contact sport. Everybody out there is little tricks. Don’t tell me I’m the only one in the game wants to see hew far the rules will. stretch. In one of our matches with Chicago, I got three penalties im the first period. My own idea was that I might have deserved one. So, when claim I don’t get penalties, they don't know what they’re telking about.” HARVEY WASN’T finished by any meams. He had more to get off his chest and he proceeded to do just that: “The other night, we're playing Toronto in Montreal. I’ve moved into position to block a Leaf shot when—whammo—some- body whacks me im the back with a stick and I’m knocked out of the line of fire. Ron Stewart ‘tips the disc in the net for the tying goal. Whoever hit me im the back cost us that goal. I don't know who it was, but I give him credit.” f DOUG THROWS a bit of sarcasm into' the whole affair with this femark: “There’s something that worries me in all this falk. I'm afraid Ti get a guilt complex. Then I'll go around thinking I'm guilty of all these crimes they describe.” All the other teams in the National Hockey League sincerely hope that something will worry Harvey to such an extent as to affect his fine defensive play. However, we would advise these other outfits not to depend too much on such a thing happening. We have ilie idea that this fellow Harvey is going to be around playing his usual fine game for a few years yet. | WHITBY DUNLOPS may not have things so easy tonight when they face Vernon Canadians in the second game of their best-of-seven Allan Cup final. The Dunlops won the opener Sunday afternoon 5-2 but you eould bardly do much. future figuring on the basis of that game. The Vernon outfit had, just completed two weeks of tough road travel when they met the Dunlops on Sunday. The three days rest is expected to be much more of an advantage to the B.C. boys than to th Whitby club. Another thing which was considered a handicap to the west- erners was the huge ice surface of Maple Leaf Gardens. With one game under their belts; the Canadians are expected to be much more at home. ‘ Vernon won the Allan Cup in 1956 and Whitby grabbed top honors in 1957. This year’s winner gets a November European trip. THINGS ARE LOOKING up for those Los Angeles Dodgers, Young Don’ Drysdale who got away to such a disastrous start in 1958 is now sporting a 2-1 record for 1959. Monday night he | eight-dash |a word of praise to the two gentle allowed the hard-hitting San Francisco Giants only theer hits— me a homer by Willie Mays—as the Dodgers earned a 2-1 deci- | sion which pushed them into second place with a 6-3 record. , Drysdale claimed it was the greatest game he had ever pitch: | ed. In one stretch he retired 21, straight batters. Charlie Neal broke up the pitcher's duel with Sad Sam Jones by homering in the ninth os 4 The Dodgers got a fine performance out of Johnny Podres on Sunday and followed with this three-hitter. by Drysdale Mon- day. They were getting the home run ball in both battles and that’s good news to all Dodger supporters. Just give us another week or two to watch the antics of Walter Alston’s club. If they keep showing signs of winning ball _ the first thing vou know we'll be picking them to represent Petional Leacue ‘in the world series. we're not doing that just yet. 4 But |fourth, ‘suffered his first defeat. Triandos was the whole show at |Boston with ‘his two homers. The i husky catcher now has a total of 14 runs batted in and has. hit four homers. His average is .357. | Hoyt Wilhelm’s knucklers baffled the Red Sox who had only ,eight singles. Wilhelm walked in , One run and the second scored on a single, two passed balls by Tri- |andos and an error by the cat- | cher. Three night games were sched uled in the American League— | Cleveland at Detroit, Chicago at Kansas City and New York at Washington. In National League night action San Francisco was at Los Am geles. Pittsburgh and Phila- delphia were not scheduled. — ert Tee ; nord ings ene ge 2 by E Sidmey Carter Lloyd Shields Daily Double Pays $820.20 FORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)—The season's largest daily double of $820.20 was recorded when Our Fashion and Shadow Bound won the first two races at Fort Erie Tuesday afternoon. There were 24 tickets on the winning com- bination. Our Fashion, a three-year-old filly owned by Mrs. Roy Dew, of Toronto and ridden by Don Hale, won the first race by a length and paid $46.00 straight, $19.40 to place and $8.60 to show. Shadow Bound, owned by R. J. Gasperini and ridden by Ernie Warme, paid $27.60, $13.2 and $5.10 in winning the second race. Charnley Agrees To Meet Toweel LONDON (AP)—Dave Charn- fey, British lghtweight boxing champion, Tuesday agreed to fight Willie Toweel, South African holder of the British Empire title, in a championship bout at Wembley Stadium May 12. Charnley gets his chance to fight for the Empire title because Carlos Ortiz of New York, pulled out of his scheduled fight with Toweel because of eye injuries. Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) — Probable | pitchers for today’s major league games ‘won - lost records in! parentheses’ : | National League ' Milwaukee at Philadelphia ‘N) | —Burdette (2-0) vs Roberts (1-0) | San Francisco at Los Angeles | (N)\—Sanford (1-1) ws Koufax '0-0) | Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (N)— | Nuxhall (1-0) vs Friend (0-2) | ‘ St. Louis at Chicago — Mizell (1-1) vs Phillips (0-1) American League Cleveland at Detroit—Bell (1-0) vs Lary (0-1) Chicago at Kansas City ‘N)— Donovan (1-0) vs Garver (1-1) New York at Washington ‘N)— Ford (10) vs Stobbs (0-1) Baltimore at Boston—Portocar- rero (0-1) vs Brewer (1-1) B. C. MOUNTAIN Mount Waddington, 170 miles | north of Vancouver, at 13,260 feet is the highest peak in the Coast Range. DOWN THE BACK STRETCH There is good news from Truro with the announcement that the 1959 harness racing season will open there on May 18 with an card. The raceway will be operated this year by the Nova Scotia Exhibition Associa- tion, with Carl MacKenzie as secretary-manager. The regular program of night racing is expected to start in mid-June, with racing on Wed- nesday and Saturday nights throughout the season. At pres- ent, there are between 40 and 50, horses being trained or stabled at the track. In congratulating the new management, we must also give men who have conducted the rae ing programs there for the past number of years. They met all their obligations, and even on nights when the elements were against them and the attendance small, they always had a cheer- ful word for the horsemen. In Carl MacKenzie, the N.S. Exhibition Association )has en gaged one of the best-posted men in the Maritimes. Every feature of harness racing is familiar to him. and his previous experience as a race track manager will mal it easier for him ta handle this: quite responsible position. \ yo i Maritime friends of the pacer eee ee ae eee .. 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