\8 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Thurs, May 14, 1959. BASEBALL RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Chakales, Funk (11) and King, : American League Hannah (8) . HR: Mtl-Amoros; 201 100 eoe--3.13 3 Tor-Pope, Jok. Sul- G00 000 000—0 Columbus 230 200 000—7 14 0 Shaw 2-0 and.Lollar; F. Miami 000 010 000-1 7 1 livan 1-2, Casale (*) and White.| Limes and Baich; McDermott, games (won-lost records in pa- rentheses): - American League Chicago at Boston—Wynn (4-2 vs Hoeft (1-2). 007 000 12x—10 13 0 “Purkey 43, W. Schmidt (3) dolph (5) O'Toole (7) and Bai- Hobbie 43 and S. Taylor. Chi—Banks (8). 8 000.000 000-0 2 0 - * . +—Pizarro (0-1) vs Jackson (1-4) Tor Valdes, Gray (8) and Brumley; Kovacs Grabs Split Decision Philadelphia at San Francisco —Samproch (2-1) vs McCormick (0-2). Cincinnati at Chicago—Nuxhall (1-2) vs Hillman (2-1). B.C. Lions’ Coach Goes To Eskies ‘ Phillies on two hits as San Fran- Stadium Wednesday night. vised bout ranked No. 7. Both fighters weighed 146‘. Cubs HumbI Giants Shut Out Phillies — = ton—were rained out. night National League games. PURKEY BLASTED mez ey ard ) Si vs Kemerer z first gr: a tball league eeting line (8) snd ‘Thorens. Hegan (); mens TASS os Denies CHICAGO (AP)—Charley Scott | 1955 when he belted a record five,|# CJRW recentily. The secret- S. Jones 3-4 and Landrith. HR:| ‘ight)—Herbert (1-3) vs O'Dell scored a first-round knockdown | even though | was 1958's league token and — SF.-Mays (4), Wagner (1). oH}. and went on to gain a svlit 10|home run champion. Loser Bob ae hh aes, 20 Mice oe oma 2) Nata tae Sand cen Nt De | Pe ele rr ane oc" Yaa "Sea : i 020 000 000—2 7 : ; : ; , ingto ean ae 4) and Crandall:| Milwaukee at St. Louis (night) weight boxing title, in Chicago face him in the third before|'s ctu er two teams from Jackson (1-5) and H. Smith. HR:- : Soot 8408 favrie. de ee |. The first game or games of the Mil. Bruton (4). gametes” ok” tan bagel slaged’ wicked pusching power | ai‘, an, Trancisc®> Philadelphia | regular league schedule will be International League (night)—Friend (0-6) vs Podres erly but Dupas came back ird baseman € Jones! played on Wednesday, May 20. Mtl 100 000 001 10-3 7 0 ; ruined Sam's bid for a, no-hitter) Eeforts are being made to have 000 110 000 11-4 6 2/ ‘*2)- strong despite cuts over both | with seventh. timore and Detroit at Washing- |. Milwaukee was at St. Louis and Pittsburgh at Los Angeles in an infield single in the The Giants wrapped up the vic- Named Pres. Of PC Softball Loop Charlie ‘Hughson was elected a Summerside all-star team play one of the Charlottetown teams in Summerside on Victoria Day, Toweel To Fight Tigers Sell Larry Doby DETROIT (AP)—Detroit Tigers May 18. Player limit will be 15, the same as last year, and an entry fee of 50 cents per player listed will be imposed. Brazil Blanks e Reds 10-0; - fifth in a . (i) Abermathy (2) K Ernie Banks’ grand - slam cisco whipped the Phillies 60. tory in the opening frame, reAch- ae Washington pois Tracks (@ MonBer (8) ant homer in a seven-run third in-| Jones struck out 12, the most|ing ex-teammate Ruben Gomez| within one game of the fee at New York post-| Bucha. HR: Mia-Burke. ning backed Gien Hobbie’s three-: by a National League pitcher this| for five runs on five hits, includ- poned, rain. ere afin Mletbde American League Mave ne by Wille! were ° , tras - over Cincinnati Reds} In the "s only 8. Kansas City at Baltimore Pest) Brobable Pitchers Wednesday. game, Chicago White Sox shut out| White Sox’ victory was their) “ive poned, rr; The game was one of twa-after-| Boston Red Sox 3-0. Three other ms National L . NEW YORK (CP) — Probable noon contests in the National) scheduled contests—Cleveland at ° ‘ ‘a Ses ook! Gl sehen fer tetny’s whaler lene League. In the other, righthander |New York, Kansas City at Bal-/ Charlie Hughson “> a 2 o As Welterweight Wednesday sold outfielder Larry EDMONTON (CP) — Dan Ed- wards, coach of British Columbia semi-final bout of Tuesday night's eard featuring Yvon Durelle and Ted | ; Lions most of last season, has been named assistant coach of Edmonton Eskimos of the West-| eighth. Welterweight Joey Durelle of Baie Ste. Anne and ar a cae cousin of Yvon, earned a it , = : as assistant under head coach decision over Young Fuson of)... ryie. Youngling requested Monticello, Me. _ his release to return to college ee ee Os Edmundetos | football in the United States. | easily defeated Danny Farns- The 34-year-old Edwards, a vet- worth, Bangor, Me. eran of the Nationh, Football The other bout on the card was| League, joined the Liots as a eancelied because one boxer| Player in 1956. He took over as could not make the trip te Cari-;coach when Clem Crowe. was bou. fired. “SPORTS FRONT. By PIUS CALLAGHAN BARRY MOORE is back in the softball business and the lea- gue is giad of it. ; For a time this season, Barry seemed decided to leave it to ‘somebody else. However, when several of the boys got talking it ever with the genial restaurant operator, he changed his mind and ern Interprovincial Football Un-| | ion. ' He will succeed Ted Youngling)| | : ~YINS SPORTS CAR RACE carter of Hamilton, be-} car race at Jarvis, Ont., May 9. , hours, Ray jhind the wheel of his XKSS Jag-|It uar, is ringed with am evergreen/|car r garland after winning the 500-|codriver Craig Hill raced the, Driver's Asociation. sports'car over the course in JOCKEY MAKES DIFFERENCE kilometer over-all class 14 #minutes, 58 seconds. s the first professional sports | Presenting the garland is Hona in Canada. Carter and| Cross, Miss Canadian Racing four | (CP Phote) here he is again sponsoring the Parkdale Lions. PERSONALLY, we are mighty pleased to see Moore back in the fold. He has always been one of the game’s greatest backers and his interest has done much to bring softball back in such a big way =i r city. = “beley bos secured Forbie Kennedy te do the coaching chores and that should mean that this season’s edition of the Lions will be a real bunch of hustlers. Forbie will direct traffic from his cat- ching position and you can bet he'll have the team really talking things up. 9 Kennedy is a most capable receiver and is in the game all the time. The Detroit Red Wings’ performer keeps things on the move when he’s in a softball game. The Lions should be roaring a ‘little louder than ever. — NO SCHEDULE has-been released yet, but we are informed that games will be played on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights. On one of the three nights, action will take place on both the old diamond and Queen Charlotte diamond. The other two nights will see a single game staged at Victoria Park. This will mean four hall games a week and this certainly should be plenty to satisfy both players and spectators. _ There is still some doubt about the league getting away on next Tuesday. This was the proposed opening date, considerably earlier than any previous year. Right now, the talk is that the first cun may not be fired on May 19 but possibly a week or ten days later. “There seems no great reason to get things underway before the first of June. However, if the teams are ready, the opening can eome anytime but make sure things are in order before the launch- takes place. ; ead rad gered means a whole lot to the success of the league.” Let’s make certain this softball league gets just that. CHICAGO WHITE SOX outfielder Al Smith is doing his best te make Chicago fans change their boos to cheers as far as he is A has been having a rough time of it since he went to Chicazo “to take the place of Minnie Minoso who went over to Cleveland In- dians. The White Sox folks loved Minnie and they were really up in arms when he was traded away: They took it out on poor Smith and gave him a time he won't easily forget. The reception certainly had its effect on Al who went into a | eal batting slump. The worse the slump the more the crowd rode him. It got so that ever time Smith strode up to the plate, he was the target of many insults. - THAT’S HARD ENOUGH to take in the ball park of any op- posing team but when that kind of a reception is given you right in your own backyard, It’s downright tough. ‘oned the last time the White-Sox and Yankees tangled We menti ed. That night they went at him unmercifully, | . That night ther w ih how Smith was treate: run in the eleventh yet he was the fellow who drove in the winning 1 ‘ ag Tuveliey night in Fenway Park, Boston. the Red Sox and the White Sox got tied up in a real marathon that finally ended aftet 12 innings. Who broke this one up? That's right, Al Smith with a ¢wo-run homer in the top of the 12th. bie Probably now, Chicago fans will an 6 on the outfield- er. Perhaps, they'll begin to realize t not his fault that Smith is in the White Sox lineup. Perhaps, they'll stop blaming | ith Minoso being traded away. anon cae is senting hard to make the Windy City folks take iki to him. : gna ego ball games is an excellent way ef accomplishing this tas. ONE OF THESE DAYS, somebody is going to start taking | those Los Angeles Dodgers seriously. Their actions for the first couple of weeks of the 1959 campaign didn’t draw too many rave notices because just about everyone figured it couldn't possibly last. When we wrote this column, the Dodgers and Braves each had 2 600 percentage, but in games won and lost the Los Angeles gang were ahead by one half game. We still hadn't the result “f the Mil- waukee game at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, or the Pittsburgh- Dodgers clash in Los Angeles Coliseum. Without these contests, the Dodgers had 18 wins in 30 starts. They picked up their 18th win on -\ May 11. Last season their 18th win didn’t come until June 4 and at that stage of proceedings they were exactly ten games out of ot ee ah that the Dodgers are three and one-half weeks ahead of last year’s pace. They are, by far, the team ap has shown the greatest improvement in either league. They ar getting good pitching from Podres, Drysdale, McDevitt, Williams, Labine and Fowler. There doesn’t appear to be anything too much the mat- ter with their fielding -and their hitting, especially some of those fellows who had a lean 1958, has Walter Alston really smiling. By now. the rest of the league must realize that the Dodgers are trying to have part of the 1959 world series staged on the west coast. They may not do it this year but they are surely giving it a game try right now. NEIGHBORS, the San Francisco Giants, have cooled caret. It.may be only temporarily but it has dropped them ‘ourth ce in the league standing. : — ; ay the Giante5S ball park last a proceeded take three out of four from ‘the Rigney men. Mon- hor could keep it up Tuesday and fell 6-5 victims to those Giants regained their batting eyes and walloped the Pirates the Giants than the Dodgers. And | Much more was expected of justify the confidence placed in them. How-, iccting the Dodgers are out to show folks that Los baseball on the Pacific coast. i BALTIMORE (AP) — Those horse racing fans who know what jockey Eddie Arcaro has done in the Preakness stakes in the past |are taking another look at First Landing. the mount he is to ride in the 83rd running of the Preak- ness at Pimlico Saturday. The track oddsmaker has listed the Brookmeade Stable’s Sword ' Dancer, who was nosed out by Tomy Lee in the Kentucky Derby, as the probable Preakness favor- ite at 2-to-1 odds. Bob Sloan, the mutuels manager, made First Landing—third in the derby—the second ‘choice here at 3 to 1. Arcaro is the winningest Preak- ness jockey with six triumphs. The Master has ridden in Balti- more’s triple crown classic 14 times and has been in the money on 12 occasions. He hasn't been worse than third since 1944, with 11 mounts. Pimlico jrailbirds, ‘who were chased under the stands Wednes- Basilio Receives Word About Proposed Bout SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)—Car- men Basilio's camp disclosed Wednesday the fighter has re- ceived his first word from Ray Robinson about a proposed Sept. 21 fight for the middleweight ~ championship. Basilio also has received an of- fer from New Jersey promoter Willie Gilzenberg for a fight with Robinson in Newark or Jersey City this summer John Dejohn, Basijlio’s co-man- ager, said Basilio received a tele- ‘gram from Samuel Rose, Phila- delphis city councilman | -who hopes to promote the fight in | Philadelphia's 100,000-seat Munic- ipal Stadium. Robinson said he will wait to see what the New York State Ath- letic Commission does Friday. That is the deadtine for Robinson to sign for a Basilio fight or lose his title in New York. The NBA already has vacated Robinson's title but_has indicated it will re- instate Robinson if Basilio 1s agreeable to the Sept. 21 fight. Dejohn declined to -say whether he is giving serious consideration ' to Gilzenberg’s offer. Horse Racing Fans Look Twice At First Landing day by another thunderstorm that left the track resembling nearby Chesapeake Bay. look back no farther than 1957 for an Arcaro coup. | Sword Dancer's rider. As the derby favorite, Bold} Willie and Eddie are the great- Ruler with Arcaro up finished! est of friends, but that will be for- fourth in Louisville behind Iron, gotten when the gates spring open Liege. But. two weeks later in the |for an expected field of 12 three- Preakness, Bold Ruler was sent) year-olds at 6:45 p.m. ADT, Sat- into the front end at once and|urday, with Eddie and Willie beat Iron Liege by two lengths.| thinking about the $137,700 net for Tomy Lee/has shuffled back to|the winner. | — i Spahn Scores 250th Victory S%. LOUIS | Spahn, California after his duel with Sword Dancer in the derby. Wil- lie Shoemaker, who rode Tomy Lee, replaces Bill Boland as (AP) — Warren Milwaukee's matchiess! Jackson was tough: for the Braves who didn't get the lead | veten dnesday night juntil Bruton cracked his game- | wrapped the 250th victory of| winning homer over the rightfield his major league career—a mark! pavilion roof. It was hig fourth of reached by only two other Na-|the season. tional League lefthanders—with a ae seven-hit 32 conquest of the &*.| Bisons Release Louis Cardinals. The s-year-cld Spahn decame| Luke Easter a winner on Billy Bruttn's eight-| inning homer after a tough duel with. Larry Jackson, who gave the Braves only six hits. The vic- tory evens his season record at Easter, who led the International Baseball League in homers and RBis in 1956 and 1957, was re leased outright by the Buffalo Bisons Wednesday. Easter, 38, played for Cleve land from 1949 to 1954 and was named top player in the Ameri- can League in 1952 by the Sport- ing News. Last season Easter led the Bis- ons in home runs- with 386/ This year he batted .176. In his\ four years with the Bisons he hit 114 homers and knocked in 349 runs. a9 P) leit 100% PROFIT Eppa Rixey (266) and Carl Hub- el (253) were the only other Na- tional League lefties to win 250. Spaha is the 25th pitcher in major league history to reach the mark, the 16th since the turn of the cen- tury. Spahn was shaky in the first two innings, then settled down to stop the Cardinals in his usual) brilliant fashion. Ball Practices This Evening Two softball practices are on tap for this evening. Parkdale wil work out-on—-QCH diamond and Rollaway will be at the Old Diamond. The workouts will get underway at 6-o'clock and a full turnout is requested by both coaches. v ; ; your WHOLESALE | BUFFAIA, N.Y. (AP) — Latkel: LONDON (AP)—Willie Toweel of South Africa, who lost his Brit- ish Empire lightweight title ~ at Wembley Stadium Tuesday night to Britain's Dave Charniey, will fight in the future as a welter- weight Toweel was knocked out in the 10th round of a scheduled 15- Tound bouthis first six years of campaigning. ‘weight. shiel BOWLAN’S RADIO & TV. Your Authorized _ -SYLVANIA. DEALER DEALER FOR SYLVANIA TUBES AND PICTURE TUBES. PROMPT SHIPMENT TO ANY PART OF THE ISLAND FOR DOCTOR BILLS NO OTHER -PLAN— pays so much.. -€osts so little...serves sd many} Doby to Chicago White Sox for more than $2,000 cash. No other player was involved in the deal. England 2-0 Before 150,000 Softball League Meet Is Called- RIO DE JANEIRO (CP)—Bra- zil stunned England's touring all star soccer team 2-0 Wednesday before a delighted crowd of 150,- 000 at the huge Maracana Sta- dium. Firecrackers ex ploded knockout in He had difficulty making the blue Queen Street. A meeting of the City Softball League will be held this evening at 7:30 in the Union Hall on throughout the contest as Brazil scored in the first two minutes of play and added a second goal after 28 minutes. ats real value EZ. \ THEY know... } % Over 200,000 Maritimers.are glad they have Blue Shield—not only because their family doctor says: “*it's the best’’, but also because the cost is so low BILLS. d and the protection so good! This low cost protection is made possible because not one cent of Blue Shield for profit. After necessary expenses, your entir@ Blue Shield dollar goes to help pay your doctor bills. 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