4 oF nee Le . a . the | i i sik [: 3 I Ht FH i Hr 43 SUMMERSIDE — The small if j : z digging out the for another sum- recreation at Queen Eliza- summer’s program will of- at 6.30 p.m. when Mayor Currie oy electrical a long tradition i the first ball. Little League, Babe Ruth League and has little girls’ softball leaguers will tely removed and the area, all begin their summer schedule Some’ 182 children in ali have been registered for the summer of fun and competition. On Dominion Day it is hoped PORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN ag FR RRES af ios chi? f E Peter's Bay Rovers on Saturday St. : - with Floyd Jay throwing one-hit ial Field Legionaires 85 with Ernie Crane limiting the safeties. Then on Sunday at Memorial | ¢ congratulate the King’s County | > teams their victories over the Charlottetown squads the Sicee they beat were only of junior age but boys in this capable of playing pretty fair baseball. We thi the quality of ball has improved down are more young players in the loop making their presence felt in a big from this league have played three juniors. Abbies were trounced by; Peter’s and Legionaires tasted defeat at! County league, we can’t forget that win Peter's Bay Rovers on Sunday. The going this year, losing their ball | a i and several of their players. There were ugly rumors lat the Bombers might have to throw im the sponge but that : em Sunday over the ambitious Rovers should kill all such | "As we said before, the King’s County league just wouldn’t the same without Peakes. They have played a big part in ing the loop to the prominent position it has today i _ circles. : ” We sincerely hope that they'll be competitors for many years } come. “CHARLOTTETOWN JUNIOR TEAMS will improve with every good players on both Legionaires and they all opposition plenty of trouble before the down the 1959 baseball season. - ion is these young players need and the more will be. Both teams were jittery in their "ll gain confidence with every tussle. American league could manage to have play Sundays, there wouldn't be any worry Bombers repeating as champions of the junior circuit. ites just can’t do anything right on the first day When they get involved in doubleheaders, the world really go bad. The New Yorkers will climb right up the ings and appear ready to take charge of the ue. a Sunday twin bill and the Bombers are out of | tion for at least another spell. RECE: SERIES with Chicago White Sox proved an time Al Lopez's Pale Hose to get revenge on Sten- : their last trip to Bigtown, the White Sox had | of three to New York. There were many whe | t that series was the end of Lopez and com- as was concerned. But these prophets got a real things turned out the way they did in the recent series | P. | Sox dropped same pattern _ WHILE ON the King’s Peakes Bombers over St. have been having tough E % i f al i : hi ga TEAMS < a5 8F i Bi ee ow ti the opening: game and things started the previous series. The Yankees had | illy Pierce and rest shouldn’t prove too tough. But | Hose fought back with a real fury and beat Turley, Ford in that order. 4 big difference this year with the Yankees is that they are | ling to win is and the big ones. Without -these big ones, you don’t win | a the Bombers will start grabbing those big ones but a8* pennants are most necessary to get into the world dy they have allowed a lot to slip away. | HERE IS THE SAD STORY concerning the Yankees and Sun- y ball games im 1959. April 12—beat Boston Red Sox in a single »; April 19—lost single game to Boston; April 26—dropped win bill to Baltimore Orioles; May 3—lost pair to Detroit Tigers; y 10—won twin bill from Washington; May 17—split pair with ' City Athletics .- May 24—divided doubleheader with Balti- May 31—beat Washington in single game; June 7—split with nd Indians; June 14—lost both ends of doubleheader to pit Tigers; June 2i—dropped two more to Joe Gordon’s In- and June 28 were beaten twice by Chicago White Sox. That's hardly a story you would expect to hgar or read about world champion but then these days world ampion\ are not treated with too much respect. If the Yankees ose the | ; n league pennant this year, we wouldn't blame them if yw moved to have Sunday ball banned. You certainly couldn’t blame them. THE FEATS OF BABE RUTH have been recalled many times. whe Sultan of the Swat smashed record after record and his 60 ‘ runs still stands as a challenge to ambitious sluggers. | a. Yankee pitcher Waite Hoyt tells of a home run hit that ‘certainly wasn’t the kind the great slugger usually ‘ormer Ruth di out. ' 4 Says Hoyt: “Babe R is the only man I ever saw who got a run on an infield fly. The Yankees were playing the Boston or am there was a strong wind blowing in from left field. fielder, the third baseman, the shortstop and the centre raced for a pop fly Babe hit. We thought the ball had mmerside Raceway Gets | ack On Job Wednesday ~ the Hamilton Douglas’ managed | Trenton Steel Kings 13-6 in a} | 4g) n Island | ; shoe players are invited to at- end. who will operate it at the Domia- have already been sold for race night. ¢ _— side Minor Players Begin Activities Today to have the Springhill Fencebus- ters in Summerside to play the Summerside Juniors reinforced by a few of the intermediate play- ers. The Springhill team must get a guarantee of $40 for ex- penses and it is hoped that the sports fans of Summerside and vicinity will rally behind the boys and ensure success of the venture by ing a tic- ket for the game. Johnny Carroll plans to bring the crack Lewisville Cubs over to Summerside on Saturday if the Springhill project meets with success. BASEBALL RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League \MARITIME’S FASTEST Mighty Lee with George Call-,tan and Belle paid $42.69| Time: 2.13:2 beck of Summerside at the reins, inthe second day Youble The| Windy June owned by Col. D.A. stepped ee ee ce a ee sweeping dashes Clegg .20 and the Emmett Bernard. ture free-for-all at the Charloite-| quinella on Dunlop B. and Eric’s| . C PACE Pe es Park last night. Peg paid $43.90, j Belle Texas (Arsenault) 11 ng on a track softeaed by | Next racing card at the Driv-;Norine Clegg (Dickie) 293 ' }occasional rain showers and dur-|ing Pafk is slated Friday night.| Eddie Hoosier (Cyril Smith) 6 2 ing a cool, windy evening, the SUMMARY G. Ann C. (Callbeck) 36 roan gelding fimished about two D Pace Jolly Bud (Cudmore) 47 lengths in front of Island bred | Prince Edward (Cudmore) 1 My Darling (Hennessey) 7 4 Just Betty's am Sor ag the | Vera Signal (Cyril Smith) 2) Meadow Abbe (Pound)’ | ie } fastest mile in the|/Sandy Yorke (White) g|lzzie Reynard (C. Smith) 8 @ Maritimes so far this year./wait For Me (Bernard) 4| Times: 2.14:3; 2.14:2. arnt Ste eek Me ret dock Si xen'e! Pride (L. Kelly) 5, Belle Texas: Owned by Mapce - a ps Cain (Smallwood) ¢| Stables, Summerside, driven by Betty's Mark was second Rest Jee é ) 7) 3% Arsenault. bet Hames ag the ewpected del Te Verdict (C Smith) -slureusy FREETOR AML be ir failed to materialize. Con- seat co * | Just Betty’s Mark (Seaman) 2 2 - vair broke the first time around| Prince Edward owned and driv-| Convair (Cormier) 3 0 and was drawn from the second |e by syardg eo Brackley. Bertram Hanover (L. Hennessey) r RACEWAY OPENS AGAIN Te ee. ae cae ne atias © -s ; ‘exas won both dashes of s Dream (Poulton) 1/ Sky Prince (J. Hennessey) 5 4 - the C Pace with young Joey |Janet M. (Neill) 7 Times: 2,09:2; 2.06. je ’ Arsenault up while Dunlop B.|Perfect Hal (Bernard) 3; Mighty Lee: Owned by Willard : and May S. Grattan split dashes |Watchim’s Star (Callbeck) 4 MacDonald, Summerside and U nc U re e a r ru mM of the B Pace. The Grattan mare} Pearl Mac (C. Smith) 5) Rankine MacLaine, Chariotte- went the mile in 2.11:2. Callie Hal (J. Hennessey) 6, town, driven by George Calibeck. : card were won pun Prince fo te, 7 Dunk B . ie a 2 . Doctor J.D. (Smallwood) 8 op B. (C. O’Brien) 12 . 1 and Helen's Dream. Time: 2.16:3. | May S. Grattan (Bernard) 3 1 s Sutfered By Patterson [resis Be ie cere eee ro es, 8 ‘big pays at! james Poulton, Charlottetown,| Mr. Joliscott (L. Hennessey) 5 3 pari-mutuel. Big win pays driven by Harry Poulton | Willard’s Choice (W. Kelly) 4 6 NEW YORK (AP)—Floyd Pat-)for him to do something with that) to him.” eee eens, Seca: ane D TROT AND PACE ee ee terson suffered a punctured left/right hand. Three times before] Did yqu think it could happen, |Ptince Edward. $24.50; Dunlop) wis, june (Bernard) qi caer Jae Cemeey SY eardrum in his knockout defeat|when he stuck out the jab I|Gross alked. Be re Sh Mey S- SeRNN | eeeg 1 (.. Kelly) 9) "geet settee oa by Sweden’s Ingemar Johansson|found myself moving straight to| “Anything can happen,” Floyd — to 2 The Sheik (Poulton) 3| Times: 2.12:1; 2.11:2, 0 last Friday, the former heavy-|his right hand.,] was right im! said, “But I didn’t think jit would. | oon. pr pond Peeve Donley Darnley (C. Smith) 4) Dualep B., owned by B. Sicha weight champion told the New |line with it. Three times he didn’t}? wanted so badly to win this)”. “$98.20. Windy June had led |All Budlong (MacFayden) Sous. Haeher River, driven ly York Post Monday. do anything about throwing the! one. I guess 1 was too confident, Soke faye Aigaonst ou ed \pexter Scott (C. Smith) | ote dy ae May pier veron In an interview with Post eol-jrig't at all. I kept thinking! maybe a little overconfident.” | gaily double tickets had been|My Hero (Neill) Tliows, dives mae oo umnist Milton Gross, Patterson) msybe he doesn’t have a right. purchased on her. May S. Grat- Basil's Girl (Craig) 8 nard. said a punch to the ear appar-| Maybe that’s why he never used ently aggravated a slight injury/it in training. - he had suffered before. “It looked to me that he'd had Physicians say Such an injury, | the ehance, but hadn't done any- unless infectious; could be/thing about it. K looked to me cleared up within two weeks. like he'd be willing to go 15 Patterson said he slept most of | rounds that way and that’s how Kan City 001 000 001 8—10 14 0) Detroit 100 100 000 1— 3 13 2! Daley 8-5, Garver (10) and | ;House; Bunning, Morgan (3),! Schultz 1-2 (10), Smith (10), Sis- | ler (10) and Wilson. HRs: KCy-| Hadley -‘6). Exhibition Cincinnati 000 000 -100—- 1 5 2 Cleveland 102 210 02x— 8 10 1) Moorehead, Fordon (6), Maly | (8) and Dotterer; Guerra, Ham-! ner (7) and Nixon. HRs: Cin- | ads. } Pendleton; Cle-Held. New York _ 010 020 000—3.13 5) nk the Milwaukee 010 100 38x— 8 11. 0! Bronstad, Coates (8) and) Berra, Blanchard (4); Spahn, | Rush (2), Trowbridge (5), Giggie | and Crandall, Lopata (2). | HRs: Mil-Adcock, Lopata. | International League j Havana 000 000 002— 2 7 0; Buffalo 002 100 20x—-5 10 0) Cuellar, Car{illo (8) and I2-| quierdo; Short, Erickson (9) and Coker. Miami 100 000 000— 1 4 0 Rochester 000 112 00x—4 9 0 Anderson, Stewart (7) and Kor- check; Keegan and. Staniland. STANDINGS American League W L Pet. GBL Cleveland 9% 30 565 — Chicago o. 2 oe: 3 Baltimore 38 34 .528 2% New York “a D Si 4 Detroit 7 6B ST 4 Washington 2 @ 1 8 Kansas City 31 38 .449 8 Boston 31 3 443 8% PROBABLE PITCHERS NEW YORK (AP) — Probable pitchers for today’s major league games (won-lost records in par- entheses) : : American League New York at Baltimore (N)— | Ditmar (6-5) vs Wilhelm (9-2) Boston at Washington (N)— Brewer (5-4) vs Ramos (7-7) Kansas City at Detroit (N)— Coleman (2-6) vs Lary (8-4) Chicago at Cleveland ‘(N)— |have let myself be tricked. I was | fighter. With Rustico for North Rustico. In the second | game Ray Tyler pitched for Oys- ited Bed, with Gallant coming on second game for North Rustico, but needed help from LeClezir in the later innings. home run for Oyster Bed Bridge in the first game. softball loop are Bonshaw Winsloe. Saturday, after losing his title to|}I made my mistake. I was care- Johansson Friday might, exceptjless. The next time he let the left fer~a short session at home with go I wasn’t even watching his the doctor. right. All I was watching was the WAS OUTFOXED left. After the left I moved in just In discussing his third—round'as I'd done before and that’s knockout loss to the surprising) when he caught me. The right Swede, Patterson told Gross: | followed the left and I was right} | ‘He’s.a thinking fighter. Heithere.” : outfoxed me. He tricked me be-| THE RETURN fore that right and I shouldn’t; How about the return bout? “The next time,” said Patter- fooled by him. son, “I'm not saying I'm going “It looked to me like. he was/to beat him, but I'll be different fighting a defensive fight, only @ from the other night. I. won't be defensive fight. He was pushing} tricked, again. All he was wait- |. out that left jab only to keep me/ing for was the chance to land |. off, I thought, and he didn’t hit! that right. W I was smarter Fri-| me with it at all, at least I don’t! day night I would have backed remember feeling it. |up every time he pushed the “And it was nothing. He was jab. He'd have had to cane to) just sticking it out, kind of flick-| me then instead of me eoming ing it. By the second round) Mighty Lee Paces Mile In 2.06 At Driving Park | LAWN-BOY| , LOAFER Ss neither one of us had done any- | e thing. I was expecting the crowd So € bs to boo us, and I hate to hear the | Uris U i lid Enjoy Holiday { crowd boo, me or the other SOURIS — Sixteen Wolf Cubs Charlottetown R. T. Holman Ltd. Lawnboy Headquarters For P.E..I I figured I ‘had to do from the First Wolf Cub Pack) something. I hit him a couple of good hooks, but nothing much. MORE AGGRESSIVE “In the third round I was! accompanied by District Cub-| more aggressive. I was waiting) master Irene Kassner, Assistant | Cubmaster Helen MacKinnon and | e e Douglas White retufned yester- | Bridge Splits day from a pack holiday at the} Provincial Scout campsite, Camp Buchan, Point Prim. Warm weather, swimming, test Summerside Firestone Home & Auto Co. Ltd. Lawn Boy Dealer work, games and a campfire each evening combined to make the | holiday a very happy one. Transportation to and from the camp was provided by the Souris group committee under the chair- manship of J. B. St. John. Meals | were cooked centrally by the camp cook, Ralph Squarebriggs | Oyster Bed Bridge and North Rustico Split a doubleheader in the Credit Union Softball League yesterday at Oyster Bed Bridge. North Rustico won the first game 74 while the home team came through in an extra inning of the 155 Kent St. Douglas Bros. & Jones Ltd. Lawn Boy Dealer second game for an 8-7 win. and were eaten under a large | Emmett Gallant hurled the first game for Oyster Bed while Urban LeClair tossed ‘them over marquee. The quartermaster was | E. G. Kerr. tended: David Kassner, Richard? Kassner, Gerard Galant, Eric | Gallant, Rogers, Jimmy Innes, George St. | John, Dunstan -MacDonald, Wayne | in the late stages of the game. Bernard MacNeill started the The following Wolf Cubs w.| Matthew & McLean Joe Rogers, Thornton | Souris Ltd. \ \ Bridgetown MacDonald, Gary Dingwell, Alan |. Coffin, Gerard MacPhee, Lioyd Osborne, Eric Poole, John Me- Quaid. : Conakry, capital of Guinea on The other-two teams in the, the west coast of Africa, gets an | and | average of 169 inches of rain a year. Tilmon Gallant slammed a Central Bedeque Ralph Callbeck & Co. Pp. E. L 3 Pierce (8-8) vs McLish (8-3) National League i Pittsburgh at Philadelphia ‘N) | —Haddix (4-6) vs Roberts (6-6) St. Louis at Chicago — Mizell | (9-3) vs Anderson (4-6) Milwaukee at Cincinnati (N)— | Burdette (11-6) vs Brosnan (3-3) San Francisco at Los Angeles | (N)—S. Jones (8-8) vs Drysdale (8-5; Horseshoe Club To Hold Tourney The Brighton Horseshoe and Quoit Club will hold a Dominion Day tourmament on its grounds at 90 Ohurchill Avenue. The sin- gies’ matches, according to the club manager, Jack McCourt, will start at 10 o'clock Wednes- day morning. There will be priz- es for the winners and all horse- The following tournament com- mittee has been appointed: Len Phillips, Joe Gallant, Reg Mac- Lellan, Keith Dalziel.and Don- LOBSTERS For CHICKS & BROODER <° Open 7 Days a Week HOWATT'S | Lobster Pound Victoria ald Richards. od all a t of a cannon. The thing kept climbing and climb-| R kept racing around the bases. Finally, the ball down. I guess Babe was almost to third by this ing for ball everybody was jostling everybody else touched nobody while Ruth scored. It was the funniest in his whole career.” GILES, president of the National league was asked recently about expanding the lopgue. Giles replied in_ fre. id @ poker game with cight players and ail | before the draw. Along come two others who away. 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