l “ The Chew fr r You" iilckizriiiuiclioisoiis BLACK TWIST A Home Product ~~ Popular Everywhere Yankees Equal 42- Year - old Mark With Doubleheader Victory (By the Canadian Press) The three top squads in the Am- erican League swept doubly headers yesterday. but the pit- suers couldn't edge any nearer ' the runaway New York Yankees Baseball Results AMER lC-AN LEAGUE First Game. iwho stretched their victory skein New York 100 200 000-3 5 0 t0 19 in a row. tlelng an Ameri- Uleveland 000 000 100-1 9 0 can League record that had stood NPWW") 511d BETTE; Embreeqfor 14 ears. LOPEZ. l-legan. l The anks clubbed Cleveland I twice. 3-1 and 7-2. to equal a mark vow York 023 001 100-710 1 set by Chicago White Sox in 1906 (“levelzmd 000 001011-2 6 1‘and climb within reaching dis- Rasohi and Robinson; Gromek, Lance of the maior league mark oi Getlel. Lemon and Began. 26 straight set by New York Giants in 191B. Chicago Cubs won 5iephens. an-i Eerund Game First Gama .21 straight in 1935. Boston 200 001 010-4 f1 3 Meanwhile Boston Red Sox Oilulin 000 (I90 100-1 6 1 . downed Chicago twice. 4-1 and 6-3 Dobson and Pariee; moat. Lee although they needed l1 innings and Tresh. D‘ckey. ‘to capture the nightcap. and the Second Game. second-place Detroit Tigers whit» Boston 000 000 012 03-6 9 1 . bed Washington 7-5 and 4-3, Ho! Chicago 200 100 000 00-3 l1 i) Wagner's ninth inning single (11 innmgslfllrvucht Tigers tlfeir second win Dorish. Muiphi‘. Klingon John-land enabled them to stay one son and Tehbetts; Gillespie. Caid- game ahead of Boston. urll. Malizterger and Tresh. Dlck- l Bobo Newsom. 38-year-old right- gy_ -ander obtained from Washington itibout i0 days ago. won his second first Game. istraight game in Yankee livery llashinggon 30?. 000100-5 9 o as he captured the opener at Detroit 40010] 0l.\'—7 l0 2 Cleveland. It was the 200th win Hnefner, Scarborough, Candini- 5n his gypsy major league career. Rookie Vic Raschi won his second ‘game for Yanks. holding the In- \\’gghlngfnn 100 03o 00-_g_3 9 1 dians to six hits in the nightcap. Detroit _ 010 000102-416 0‘ Yankees. who have defeated Hudson. Pioetti and Evans. Fer- BYEFY Amfiifflii 116118119 Ciflh 6X- rell; Trucks. Overmlre a.nd Wag- ‘R99 Del-Wit diiiiiig their Winning “a; spree. meet Tigers today at De- troit in a vital game. Phiidds-lphl; 001 p23 o19_1517 |_ St. Louis Browns‘ defence col- SL Louis 00g 000 (0f)_ g 7 g lapsed completely in the ninth Fowler and R053.‘ sanhrd. Z05 innin: last night as Philadelphia d“; swan! Md M053’ ‘Athletics- already fairly certain NATIONAL LEAGUE gof a triumph-clubbed home nine and llfancusc; Benton and Swift. Srcond Gama. Pittsburgh 000 30:) 400-7 a olruns to Clip Brownies 16-2. Brooklyn ooo coo o1o-1 s 2‘ iiemi‘ Thompson. one of two Queen Anti Klutiz; King. aregg.fi"‘~'fir° Players sir-med by the Bumpy and Edwarqs_ ‘Browns Thursday. played second base and went hitless in four si. Louh oiio 101003-511 o "i!" i° "is Piete- Boston 000 000 020-2 9 Z Brccheen. Pellet and fi-lfflgivih; B ti. Sh un. S. Joh.so and 7 H ' ' l! .335... " " e Baseball s_ Big Six INTERNATIONAL remove Newark Z02 301 001-9 15 1 -- Syracuso 002 0T0 300-5 10 Z‘ (By The Associated Press) Starr and Lollar; Prendergast,‘ (Three leaders in each league) schultz ilnd West. . Player and Club G AB R l1 Phlllies '70 2B9 ~13 99 . THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PAGE SEVEN With no game scheduled junior baseball players of the City Lea- gue will receive a breather to- night as will also the fans who have been witnessing games four nights a week ever since the sea- son got underway but come the first of next week it 1s likely the juniors will get going full blast again on the second lap oi’ their schedule. And speaking of attendances there has certainly been a marked improvement in fans interest the past. couple of weeks or so. This has been patricularly noted in peek-night games in both junior and City League circles and shows definitely that when the players snow plenty of hustle and aggres- siveness. as has been the' case so far this season. the fans will re- spond one hundred percent. And another thing that has caught the attention of the fans is the much improved brand of ball being played by the juniors. They have been showing steady im- provement in every game and it is now evident that if the lun- lcrs are given the same encour- lagement in the years to come as ‘they are receiving this year it (won't be too long before the City ‘will be able to field a strong sen- l for outfit. Joggins intermediate baseball team will meet intermediate Abeg- ‘welts at. the Park diamond here ‘Sunday afternoon in an €Xh1blti011 encounter. Confirmation of the encounter was received last night iy President Sammy Doyle and .a:tlng secretary John Hlgson and lrhe coming encounter should give ‘fans a good inkling of just how i Island teams will stack up against mainland squads when playoff time rolls around. l i Secretary Charles Willis has a ilikelv looking harness racing card ‘lined up for his Covehead track ion Saturday afternoon. Glancing .over the entree in the four classes which appear in this issue there doesn't appear to be one horse Montreal 02'.) 140 (‘00-7 l2 l Walker. _ Toronto 1C0 1N 000-6 l0 0 Boudreail. 1nd. 73 25"! 39 88 .3110 that lavs over the field and the Heusser, Klein and Campanella; DiMagro. Yanks 31 303 6i 103 .337 result should be even keener and Konstanty. Thompson and Baits. Kell. Tigers 80 303 35 102 .337‘ closer racing than was witnessed ' Haas. Reds 77 300 41 95 .317. over this fast track on Wednes- gnflmm, 909 p10 cor-z 10 1 Gustine. Pirates 83 320 60 10B .319 driy afternoon last. Jerscv City 001 1Z0 00x—4 7 ‘l Kuzgvg and Weigcl; Andrews Runs batten in. American League‘ Ever since the. announcement of and Grasso. -DiMaggio. Yrnkees. 59: National the second day's racing to be held Buffalo t0‘) 200 000-2 7 1 League - Cooper. Giants. 70. Saturday was made racing fans Rochester 5B0 ‘all 0011-0 13 (I Home runs. American‘ Leaguq-f nterest. which already is at a Pierce. Rugovin and Yount; Williams. Red Sex. l6; Neflfliaiinigh point. took a decided im- Yoachim and Williams. .I_eague - Mize, Gants. I6. petus and it would not be a bit ' surprising but another record BHRYBI] iawev/infsarreaies gllflflfid by them for the einands of modern mo- toring . a . recommended b them for use in all Chrysler-built vehicles. Cbvym Pawerlinc Batter- ie: are always up to super-strength when you buy them . 1 1 never stale hmeverweak. lnsisron ' Cbryco Powerlina Batht- in . 1 | and be sure! O Cbryco Power/ins Bat- mm give you Powbr for dependable snrtln . . . Pawn- for your car s ig- nition system . . . heater . . . lights . . . radio. They're approved by Chrysler engineers . . - wnar "EIIRYCO" Mww :&.'.*"".$.‘:."--'ei.';.i::is "is: oa". a daccumiea n! ma-iii-‘eii. can" flymonc , D366: and De or: I 335:3!“ or! a (‘ban CHRYSLER connotation ‘41/11) i Red BOX. crowd will be on hand at Cove- hend track tomorrow afternoon. Had Mclnnis‘ Legionaires serv- ed notice last. night that they are gomg to prove plenty tough when Cltv league baseball playoffs roll around. Their victory over the strong Rovers crew was a well earned one with the Legionaires displaying n battinr: punch in the pinches that wasn't to‘ be denied and if they can keep up their timely hitting it. is certainly going to offset the fielding miscues they are guilty of. Okay brother. call me a mt. says Oscar Frayley. but with the good dory Detroit a seasick l0 1-2 games in the backwash it seem about time today to jump ship and ad- mit that the New York Yankees are destined to steam triumph- lntly into port in the American League pennant race. Maybe the impetus has come from the wind in the lungs of loquacious Larry MacPhall. Or perhaps the propulsion is due to the gale stirred up by Joe Di- Maggio‘! bat. But whatever the cause. we capitulate, strike our colqs and hamstring the halyards in bowing to the irresistible force. It couldn't happen to a worse guy or a nicer bunch of fellows. Concerning MacPhail. the un- cheered untouchable the less said the better. Nobody in baseball. including his own employee. wish- es him any luck. But for the fel- lows who make it possible for him to clip coupons. we will now stand en muse and sing a song to the shades of Joe McCarthy. iUncle Joe must have left a lot of the little people. concealed un- der the davits at Yankee Stadium when he shuffled oft to Buffalo. For the Yanks weren't conceded any better than a third place fin- ish last spring and yet here they are pulling a walkovor as the 194-6 ‘rho real reason is one Stanley -(Bucky) Harris. a gentleman. a leliolar. and despite those tributes an all-around ‘pica guy and a first Widow"s Pride 1. Winner OE Feature ST. STEPIIEN, N. 8.. July Trot Postponed SARATOGA SPRINGS. N. Y. July l7-(AP)-The $10,000 Bost- wick Trot. feature of tonight's Grand Circuit program at the sar- atoga Raceway, was postponed un- til tomorrow because of rain. the trot. for two-year-olds. will hc a single dash instead of two. money in the Pree-For-All day harness racing meet here. The New Brunswick town winners when Mac 225 'I‘rot and Pace. $5.000 Albany Stake for aged pacers has been added to tomor- row's ca/rd. 2.25 Trot and Pace. Purse $600 Time 2.14 1-2. 2.1a. 2.19. Winning horse owned by Dr. H R. Dean. Sussex. iAt Maple Hills In a softball game at Maple Hills I 2.17 Trot and Pace, Purse $600 jers). Donovan (catcher). 4 ‘ Time 2.13. 2.13, 2.17. Winning horse owner by A. M Nason. Princeton, Me. Race At St. Stephen 17- rCPl-Wldows Pride. a St. Stpeh- on horse circled the oval in 2.09 and won two heats to take first this afternoon at conclusion of a two- or sussex was represented among the Abigail cap- tured the first two heats of the The other event, 2.17 Trot and as originally scheduled. Pace. went to Peter Piper. from Also postponed was the $5.000 Piflcfiiflli. M6- Arden Stake for aged trotters. The Summary- between Elm Avenue Hawks and Maple Hills All Stars jest r11 _: l-I wks won 27-8. Battery fore Eilzl Peter Piper (Keyesi -------------- ~ 1 7 1 A enue Hawks, Murphg- m. and Sunnernede (Mehan) a . . . . .. 514 n rs: §°~il‘~"°. ‘i'°“.‘t" s. :2: Stars. M L_ . R z -: _ -a y r1 lan ( ra ury ac a” “d ‘W’ m“ h Hal llfcKlnney (Walker) .... .. a a a iParade Awaits (iraziano In Brooklyn CHICAGO, July l‘! — (AP)_ Along the streets of Brooklyn to- day a hero's homecoming parade awaited Rocky Graniano, boxing‘: black sheep boy who won the world's middleweight boxing cham- pionship with a smashing vlctq-y over Tony Zale in sweltering Chi- cago Stadium. As the rock-a-bye kid headed east for the parade the build-up began for the third in the Zale- PARIS. July l7 -(R»euteroi —Rocky Graziano’! Chicago victory over Tony Zale for the world middleweight box- ing title crowded the critical economic situation out of the Mac Abigail (Walker) 114 ""1"" "i "is Frflwhmen w- gamaflon Lady (Haley) 3 3 1 day. Their lament was that I June Henley (McDonald) 2 2 a; it may be some time before Gamfl Milton Budlong (Burtt) 44 zj their idol. European champ- Inflatjgn (Annsf/rgng) 5 5 5‘ ion Marcel Cerdan. can get Keyw- (Ryan) 5g 5‘ a chance to fight the new champion. ‘ Grazianitrscrles 0f thrillers. with the best guessing that the next, thrlll-a-second match might be in ‘ Chicago, Philadelphia. Cleveland or even New York. where Rocky Etlll is barred. Atlantic City also was mentioned. Last night's no. 2 brawl-the first was ln New York last year —drew 18.267 fans who contribut- ed to a record indoor gate of ' $422,009. Rocky received 570.441 for winning the crown and Zale _ _ $140882 for losing it. n" F" ‘m’ m" m” One thing is certain-thriller ' . no. 3 can't be held until late 0n giiowlksidpgidilefliqlsg; 111')‘ October or November. because i Worthy gimme fsamesg) f a 3 a Whlifl Rocky has the title. he also i -- “he Baker (Meham 4 4 5 has some fancy souvenirs from hi! ST. LOUIS. July l7-(AP) —St. A. G t. n (K. k tikim“ 5 six-round technical knockout vic- Louis Browns have obtained a 30. Twigs 210 269 pglrlc 5 4 itory over. game Tony. which even- friay option to buy Negro infielder ' ‘ ' ' ' ' ed things for his six-round knock- Wlnmng horse owned by o‘ " out defeat by the Indiana steel mill ‘Lorenzo Davis 0f Birmingham Black Barons. the Club announced today. "We have not signed him and ;i'i9'5 Mt ("Omihc here." a spokes- man for the Browns said. "We Wry, St. Stephen. Remember When hand last September. These souvenirs included a slic- ed left eye. still held together with clamps today. and a right eye which was shut tight. Meantime. a disappointed Zale .l~.ave an option to bug hi 'lth- “T .in 30 days it we M1,. awn...‘ i Jimmy Courtwrigiht. Ottawa looked ahead to the third meet- stay with the Black Barons and ylavell-i-i thrower. and Johnny ing. with the quiet prediction that ;\ve'll continue to scout kin-L" ‘hearing. Windsor sprinter, carried he wanted to "try Rocky once the Canadian colors 10 years ago more. because Tmvsure I can lick Merger-inc, 2b. {class manager, Anything . nice ltorloy 1T1 the Pan-American games him." which hanpens to Bucky isn't good ‘at Dallas. and placed Canada a enough The only shame felt. by .~distant SGCOIT-j in the final scores sc a matter of fact. for All the of battle on him. he looked .basehall and baseball men is that with six points. The United States far more the winner than Rocky. .the cream of‘ the profits must go jfinished with the high i to the front office. 123. eounts of Both Zale and his manager Sam Plan, were bitter that referee Johnny Behr stopped the fight Entries For COVEHEAD RACES SATURDAY JliLY 19th BABES START AT 2 (YGLOBK SHARP Positions Wlll Be llrawn Tonight NO. 1 CLASSIFIED BRIGHT SPOT. (O'Brien). Owner E. Burke: 0. U. VOLO. (Stead). Owner H. Stead. BONNIES B01’ (O'Brien). Owner .7. Harkneh LORRAINE ABBE. (Kelly). Owner J. McNeil]. WAIT NSEE. (O'Meara). Owner G. Gregory. NO. I CLASSIFIED IIELEN BUDLONG, (McKennu). Owner L. O'Brien. QUICK LICK. (0' rien). Owner R. O'Brien. LTLLIE BELLE. ( ‘Brienl. Owner C O'Brien. JAY voao. (Mills). Owner c. smith. JANETTE DALE (Kelly). Owner Willard I‘ MAC WATSON. (Downe). Owner E. Down. SIIY ANN. (Phillips). Owner J. Phllllpl. C ALBERT‘ BUDLONG. (Kelly). Owner L. Kelly. LADY WORTITY 2nd. (Buchanan). Owner R. Buchanan. MAUDINE BUDLONG. (Agnew). Owner A. Agni!"- BUDDY BUDLONG} (Stead). Owner ll. Stead. MONEY MUSK. (O'Brien). Owl-in- L. O'Brien. NO. 8 CLASSIFIED GUY HARVESTER. (Arblng). Owner B. Wllliamt PETER. AUBREY. (Callbeck). Owner G. Callbeok. BONNIE DALE. (Kelly). Owner C. ‘Blrt. KING GRATTON (0'Meara). Owner J. Ladner. LIN WORTHY. (Willis). Owner C. Willis. JIMMIE DALE. (MeNeill). Owner W. McNelll. ARCHIE DALE. (Stead). Owner B. Wood. M188 IRELAND. (Don-no). Owner l. Donne. BRENDOWS BOY. (Praught). Owner L. Prought ABBIE GUY. (L. Kelli). Owner A. l. Cuteliffq NO. l CLASSIFIED MICKEY BUDLONG. (Jay). JTMMIE A. (Arising). Owner P. Arbing. DFIW BUDLONG. (Stead). Owner H. Stud. YFLLTE WATSON. (Cudruore). Owner B. Cudmorb "("1" CONN. (Schuman). Owner P. Bovmeu. <i“"‘" BUDLONG, (Duffy). Owner C. Duffy, ""8 COMMANDO. (Collins). Owner Dr. P. McIntyre. JUST A GIFI‘ (Seaman). Owner Dr. R. P. Seaman. DALE 8.. (O'Brien). Owner G, Hughes. Photo finish will ‘be taken of every heat. Purl-mutual betting. Refreshments will be served In the new rornm-vnltv centre. U. l. T. A. rules to govern: l‘ "‘*' d~c's'on to be final. the first time Tony was floored. 0o Not Want To Discuss Chicago Bout NEW YORK. July 17-(AP)— The New York State Athletic Commission maintained official silence today on the winning of the world middleweight boxing championship by Rocky Graziano. who is under suspension in this state. "I do not want to talk about the Zale-Grazlano fight today." chairman Eddie Eagan declared when asked if Rocky's technical knockout over Tony Zale mlgnt foreshadow a return of the New York clouter to the good graces of the New York Commission. Whynott Wins Bout WATBRVTLLE. Me__:|'l?p1y__lT — (AP) - Roger Whynott. 147. of Halifax. Canadian middleweight champion. kayoed Johnny. Cot. 146. Westfield. Mass. with a solid uppercut in the third of 10 rounds Z11 a bout here tonight “To Additional Sport See Page 5 LAWN MOWER SERVICE PRICE $1.00 SHABPENING - REPAIRING Molt Modern Equipment in the City. We Call For and Dellvc A. W. PETERSEN 100 Iltlroy 5L. Charlottetown - ‘ Phone 2580-8. THEATRE Victory Practically Agssures Winners Of Second . Section Pushing across three runs in the strain cf. Q09 1181f of the seventh to break Mclsaac r1. the 6-1111 deadlock that was crest-Perry c 0d iri the last half 0f the sixth and Lund 3b. holding their opponents to a singJMcAleer p. vie counter in the last of the eighth. Totals lliad lViclnnls’ Legionairgs Jast ‘highl- practlcally clinched second ‘fiwilon honors of the City Baseball Leasue by dvwning the riorihsncl Rovers 9-7 in a nip and tuck struggle. The game continued on into the ninth inning with Legi-ohgirgs pushing across five runs. including a homerun by Eddie Luiid. their first baseman. and Rovers had counted three times ‘m qneh- half of the same inning but darkness called a halt with two out pnd the score reverted back to til-e last of the eighth. A triple and two Singles gave the winners two runs in the ffrst inning with the Rovers (‘lilting 1t, in half in their turn at the plate on a double an errcr and stolen base, Single cCiinf-Ers in the sec- ond and third as Rovers were be- 2°:°HQ - “>~”co q”°“°"“0O9~_ “Qa”qp ROVERS E. Ward if. McKinnon Whaltn rf. C. Ward s; Trainer lb. Latte; c. I-llgson 2b. Rice 3b. Corish p. ‘Whlilock sl. Totals ' of. m “"um+»“u>»L; :@*o** “*‘ocv-4a“o-.-§ °g°H°° - m"O-~”ouoo= “pgnmn §*Om>B4O~pg3 K Nu»n§“oooo> i Earned 111K152 Legion 4, Rove" 4; runs batted in; Williams 5, Mg- kenzie, Strain. Larter 2. WhitIOCII 2. Whalen. rlflzson. Rice; sacrifice hit: McKenzie. Goodwin. McAleer; stolen base: F. Ward; double play: Lund to l-lenoessey; 19ft on base] i"! blanked bv Lefty AlcAleer gave Legion 3; Rovers 4; 1st base on er- the winners a 4-1 edge only to lose ror: Perry 2 McKenzie. McAleer. it when the norihenders squaredLarter 2. McKinnon 2. Trainer. 1i‘. matters in tile last of (he fourihiward, with a three run blast. i Pitching summary: Hits; or: Mo- The deadlock didn't 11st longiAleer 8; off Corish ll; base on as Lcgionaires pushed two runners b31151 by 14:51.98.- 2; by (30,151. 1; home in the fifth but for the sec-Iwiid pilgh; mrlsh 1; passed 5.1L end time Rovers rwred from bB-Larter; struck out: by Mc-Aleer 1; hind with counters in the fifth and ‘by Corish 2; winning pnghgr. Me- sixth to make it G-ail. IAWQR But the break came ‘rn the sev-| Umpiresz: At‘ihe plate. Jack enth. A passed betlers. an error, aixane; on the bases. George man. sacrifice hit. a double and single-sis, s)“. Ryan, rolled off the Legion bats and three runners scampered across the plate By Innings: with what prcved to be the win- 1 2 3 4 5 6 ‘f 8- ], fl l nrng margin as Rovers ‘rliinked in ° the seventh its they went out in Legion 2 1 1 0 2 o 3 s49 10 q order put together two doubles in Raver; 1 o o 3 1 1 o 1_.1 9 1 the eighth to account tor the final official run of the encounter. Five doubles. three ir'lp‘es and a homo run were hlt in the Jiard hit- ting game with Johnny Illgsoi-i ac- Yaeht Races art's f.i"iéi“.°ii‘illé'.i‘ifi2d.éiil"iii; At Halifax the circuit coming with nobody on.‘ and one out. Fielding features were provided by Irv McKiniion in centre field for the Rovers. accepting four hard chances with McKenzie of the, winners providing another bish- iight in the fifth as he robbed Elmer Ward of a single with a‘ leaping. one handed stab of a hard rmmzsuax. July 17-(CP)_ Two races in the outer. reaches of Hali- fax harbor will be staged 5315M- day by the Royal Nova Scot-ll Yacht squadron as a preliminary to the 366-mlle Marblehead. Mass. tc Halifax classic. which starts Saturday. hit ball. The Zetes and Windward cupl will be at stake in the preliminar- BOX SCOBE ies. open to any Nova Scotia yacht club entry. The Zetes cup com- LEGION ' AB B. If P0 petition-for yachts over 19 {eel A E f-fennezsey as 0 B. waterline length-will be over a 2 0>14.8 mile course. Smaller yachtl g will vie for the Windward Cup over a 10.7-mile course. Goodwin 1f. Williams 3b. i... to Wes! own/s RO/lii‘ am 1 | $‘A|D YQUILL ' ROLL EM BETTE wlTl-l OGDEN ,R S "PIII SMOKIRSI ASK IOI OOOIPFS CUT PLUG." THE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Provincial Rifle Association SEVENTY-FIFTH ANNUAL PRIZE MEET July 28th And 29th. 1947, AT 8 AM. Over $700.00 In Prizes Special ‘Rock Rifle Classes with service sights in all mull matches with over $130.00 in prizes. Free Transportation to Ottawa (or 24 members. Holt must be D. C. R. A. Tyros. Secretary will receive entries at 2'23 Richmond St. every ave- nfng from 6 to 8 or by appointment. Phone i537. Lieut. Col. D. A. MocKINNON, D.S.O., V.D., President. BLUE DAHLIA ‘ ALLAll 1m I l ' Lieut. Col. W. l. MacDONAlD. E. 0., i Secretary-Treasurer. i ioitilolsgm-t%esflv>nwtoefifiet%%