. ,.u»n ’ Dire after he had called Johnny Logan safe on a double, play ball ,_';'§1ugger Turnbull and Wallier Charlie Hogan's fight card Wed- “Peanuts” _Arsena'u1.t trade D111‘|~ flesday night at Civic Stadium in shes in their semi-final clash on Summerside. The scrap was 5 Atkins Banks On li‘§.".§‘§f.-In "2-in”.-”9i.§’t’§....I-.7:.a’...tn‘.’.°&.i’.....i’ii.’.; Punching Power since Carmen Basilio went hunt- mg I-01" bi»:-’g’er_ game. Akins and ,:~S'l'. LOUIS (AP)---Virgil Akins links on punching power to nul- Martinez are the survivors of an involved elimination tournament. Vince Martinez's boxing skill might in a 15-round bout for the Both Akins and Martinez are guaranteed at least $30,000. Each _ _ takes $15,000 from the television world welterweight l1l1€- 51113581‘ rights and at least $15,000 more Avldns is the 9-to—5 favorite in his or 30 per cent of the gate. home town. Akins, 30, is on a hot streak The championship of the 147- at the moment. with two knock- WRRSPORTS FRONT ‘ I %‘TM hottest baseball prospect to come out of the cornfiields filowa since Bob Feller" is what they say about Denny Menke. 74‘:-,Wl1o is Denny M€11k€'-’ Well” he’s a 17-year-old youngster _ is reported to have received $100.00 for signing a baseball gfitract with Milwaukee Braves recently. The young shortstop- pitcher was inked to a contract by Braves‘ midvvest scout Eddie I Dancisak at the home of his parents near Bencroft in Northern Iowa. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. ..;..;.. The world champions have not announced the amount Denny got for coming to the Braves but the facts are that they outbid nine other clubs who liked what they saw in Menke. Yankees, refhiteedsox, Kansas City and Philadelphia were particularly in rest . — . . . . .. It was only_ a very short time ago that Milwaukee paid out mother large sum, possibly in the neighborhood of $100,000 for 17-year-old pitcher, Tony C-‘loninger of Denver, North Carolina. Menke’s father, who caught and played the outfield for Des Moines in 1936-1937 and for Springfield. Illinois in 1938 said he had been instructed by the Milwaukee club not to reveal terms of the contract. , ‘ What father wouldn't keep a secret for a pile of cash like In t? ' Iva e 1- av 4 0 ’ St. Louis Cardinal's boss Fred Hutchinson is a man who tloesn’t believe in beating around the bush. Fred delights in.c.all- log a spade a spade. Right now he has fired a blast at league umpires and their boss, National League president, Warren C. Giles. Hutchinson claimed all of them were too busy worrying over Chavez Ravine ' By ems CALLAGHAN ‘PANTS’ INS TTLE - andthe beanballs, and not interested enough in calling plays on the baseball diamond. , It all started after the Cards blew a 2-0 lead to the Braves in the ninth and lost the decision 3-2. Fred insists Vic Delmore.l presiding at first base pulled a raw one on the Red Binds in that fateful ninth. The Cardinal manager charged the first base um- on which the second put-out was registered while the Braves first run scored. The decision set the stage for Joe Adock and his pinch home run that gave the verdict to Milwaukee. This is the way the Cardinals’ manager argued. “The guy was out but that’s I judgement call and you can’t argue about It. But you do have a right to protest when an umpire starts to all a man safe when he's 10 feet from the base.” -- Hutchinson was warming to his subject. ”We managers have 'no recourse, anyway. The only penalize the managers if one of their pitchers throws at somebody. As is managers can tell what I pitcher is going to do on the mound. A pitcher is going to do what he wants to without waiting for the manager to tell him." 1 Hutchinson ‘also claims that Delmore gave the Red Birds two bad calls the Sunday before in a game with Cincinnati Rad- Iezs. He claims Ken Boyer was hit on the foot by a pitch but ,D61more refused to allow him first base, Ffred claimed Boyer lllent the night with an ice pack on his foe. Latter Hutchinson shims Frank Robinson of the Cincinnati team stuck his arm ‘Wet the plate on a change-up pitch and got a free trip to first. ls Hutchinson just sour because his club lsn’t where they were expected to be in the league standings or has he really 19¢ an honest beef? ‘ . We wouldn't know. . 1- o in 9 9 You would expect the Milwaukee writers would be smffins lbit at the gallant bid the San Brancisco Giants are making ill the National League pennant race. Well that is not so and we produce a comment by a Brave illlortswriter that proves it. We think it worth letting you have‘ .1 look at. Here it is: - _ "The good run San Francisco’s Giants are maklng these “PIS days of the National league race isn’t necessarily a ‘flash. :11 could continue. For behind it lies the potent fusion of prom~m1s~ . Syouth and civic enthusiasm in 'a new land. There’s no tellmz I W far it could propel the team or what it might lead to. The ».’IP¥9ll of this year’s Giants. generally pick-ed Ifor a second div- .~1on finish, is not unlike that of the 1953 Milwaukee Braves. The Fmflarity. in fact, is striking. = , = - ; "The Braves came to Milwaukee with essentially I ..V0Unfl vleallli the Giants settled in San Francisco this yea!‘ “"1l3h_l5-he -tame kind. The Braves were pulled immediately to the cit_y’S fiI’0S0In; the Giants have enjoyed the same kind of civic cuddling -(amlllllgh not the same coddling). The Braves, who finished sev- "ml in the National league as the Boston entry in 1952. W011 at In“ in their new surroundings and on May 23 Of their fimt year iwere up in first place; the Giants who finished sixth a~yB_31‘ 33°- §aVE started out the same way and day about are sharing the I aduwllh milwaukee. - . S The old Boston Braves moved here with such relatively §.I°““tZ ball players as Mathews, 21; Logan, 16; B*l‘11l0n. 231. Bum» '55 Clandall. 23. The old New York Giants started out this year Em’ such as Davenport 24' Cerpeda, 20; Schmidt. 35; KIWI-and» :243 l\I'cCorinack, 19.“ ’ ” '_ I 1,1‘ ‘-gathews, Logan. Bruton. Buln, Orandall werebig forces in be drwe that carried the Braves into a second place finish. Da\-'en= 5 ”°”~ Ceneda. Kirkland. Schmidt and l\.’IcC‘;ormacl‘<. have been the: ' N kin-d_of force behind the Giants‘ surge now. I Pom ,‘ v , h ‘F enthusiasm----they'T9‘ ,5“ to belgilllng youth and new fres cmc » I We" history has a habit of repeating It self- ‘ 11 ¥ ‘V 'I' If Iherp , . « t ‘rh calibre of competition 31; the City a11Z12;‘§e‘"$'+‘b.§...Zb‘23.i;.,,;;,‘§1,.‘ removed Wednesday Ilght WI‘-Ell two of the 53-): games seen ‘here in .V€3.I“$-" V*’6I'5 Dlayedi zllo look Junior Btasil.ica‘\.'outh Club 11 innings to demise of : lit} Agiman from Summerside and Willis Heimess4e.Y'5 R01I3‘“’3-‘-’l ‘5 V ' - 7 A‘ . '. Ll 11. their ,Il1‘st defgatto stage a last inning rally to hand Barry *3 0 f , : T . ‘of the young season. . f 1 his 15 the kind of competition that makes for I su-0065511 , R and this year's league seems certain of success. ' ‘g onawa-V and the Junio"s‘ each dropped their first two ball ‘limes’ but they soon dot out of their lbsim’ ways. A098 have re- .u1rl’e‘;d°d with three sttraight triumphs andbthe B.Y.C. have won ‘ ‘ H-lellt‘ last four contests. 1, , . E -Juniors have been eeftinr splendid I71‘-"1‘I'-‘*3 In 9 Pm}.- ‘lllltllelb Elem the three that‘ Ill-T35“ dropped came about 15:12:; 1"‘ 4E,5i‘)0tawI1?jd: (‘f pits-lune’ The games lost were by I--5 D-0-~- mentis A-1i:ll1El1¢‘l1lnl1aI1I\‘ have been a bit of a disappoizzlt-~ 5° far but we feclfltlieresu no cause tr‘ ““’?’—’1‘-l’ “Gut them‘ ‘li4,,Ey.Il,1}:‘IV€ ‘plenty of talent but are jus‘tWa wee bit short of condi- get in the groove soon. hat we _ W mm“) chm need no“ is a little bit of .:U<-*"-I \W'5‘”““" W5 bvc“ Y to date watching these gall}-(.t~.s‘. , St. Louis I Herbert close one all the way with Arsen- ault finally getting the decision of all three judges. outs over Tony DeMarco and one over Isaac Logart. In fact, he is the world champion already in one state, Massachusetts, were he destroyed l)eMarco.’ ~ However, Akins was beaten by Gil Turner and Franz Szuzina last year a.nd his career record for 65 fights is 47-17-l, as com- pared to Martinez’s 60-5 for the same number of scraps. 'A(kins has been stopped twice. Martinez. 29, never failed to last the dist- ance. BASEBALL RESULTS By run CANADIAN PRESS American League First Chicago 003 000 200---- 5 9 2 New York 021 133 2()x—-12 15 0 Wynn, Fischer (5) Qualters (7) and Dollar, Battey (7): Larsen, Duren (7) and Berra. W: Larsen, L: Wynn. HRS: Cthi-Torgcson (3) NY-Mantle (8). Second Chicago 200 000 001--43 12 1 New York 0()0 000 002-2 6 1 Moore and Lollar; Shwantz, Ma- glie (9) and Howard. L: Shantz. HR: C.‘hi—L‘olll-ar (7). ~ Cleveland 021 000 ()()()---3 7 0 Boston I . 000102 02x—.5' 8 0 Bell, Wilhelm (6) and Brown; Smith. Fornieles ( 4) and White. W: Fornieles; L: Wilhelm. HRS: Ole-Brown (5); Bos-Gernert (10), Jensen (11). ’ Detroit 001 100 400-43 11 1 Baltimore 300 000 000-——3 4 0 Foytack, Aguirre (1) and Wil- son; 0’Dell_. Bea-mon (8) and Tri- andos. W-Aguirre. L-0’Dell. HR: Det—-Boone (5). KC 000()()00000002-—-282 Wgtn 000000O000()(l0-070 Terry and House; Pascual and. Courtney. HR: KCy-—-Held (3). National League Pittsburgh 000 020 010---3 9 1 002 200 00x--4 7 0 Friend and Foiles: Mizell and H. Smith. HR: Pitt-Stevens (6). Phila 010 001 500-7 ll. 0 Chicago 000 060 0()f)—- 6 10 1 Sanford, Semproch (5), Farrell (7) and Lotpata; Hobbie, Mayer (7.), Elston (7) and S. Taylor. W:' Semproch. L: Elston. HR: Phila—Lopa-ta (6). Cincinn-atri 111. 300 1.104! 13 1 Los Angeles 210 000 001~4 8 1 Purkey and Bailey; Erskine, Bessent (4) Kipp (4) Roebuck (8) and Roseboro. W: Purkey. L: Er- skine. HR: _C'in-Purkey (1) Hoak (3); Los-A-Hodges (8). Milwaukee 002 000 020 000~4 132 San Francisco 000 -202 ()()(L---5 15 2 Sparta. Bur-dette (7) Conley (8.) and Crandall; Antonelli. Gomez (8) Grissom (8) Constable (12) and Schmidt. W: Con-stable; L: Conley. HR: Mil-Logan (5). International League Toronto 000 001001-2 7 1 Richmond 221 100 00x—-45 13 0 Minarcin. Dixon (2). Johnson (7), and Hannah: Welsler and Old-ist. L: M-inarcin. Builf-alo 210 000 210-45 9 1 Miami 000 00() 000-0 7 1 Cox and Noble; Bun-ker, Mason (3'), Lapeire (8) and Coker. L: Bunker. Rochester 000 000 000-0 3 1 Havana 000 010 06x---7 9 0 Browning, Wright (8), Kuzava (8) and Oliver. Cueche and I7.- quierdo. L: Browning. Montreal 000 103 1l0-6 10 0 Columbus 000 020 020——4‘10 0 I-harr-is, Colllum (8) and Gartta; Pepper, Arroyo '(6), O'Donnell (7) and Band. W: Harris. L: Pepper. Probable Pitchers NEW YORK ( AP) -~ Probable pitchers for today's manor league games (won - lost records in parentheses) : American I.-eague Detmit. at Wash.in.(gtm1 14_0e.f+, :3-5) vs Griggs (‘I’---ll Kansas City at Baltimore (2. Twi-night) - Kellner (0-1') and (1-0) vi: Johnson (1-4) and Palpep-as (1-1). Cleveland at New York (N)-_ Tomanek (1-1) vs Tur-le.V (3-ll Chicago at Boston (l\‘)——Wilson (5-4) vs Nixon (1-6) National League Philadelphia at St. lxouls (N)-~ Moreliead (0-0) vs McDa lel (3-4) ‘ l\’_l,1i’au_l-:ee at Les A es '.1\l)l ' A or T1‘(3‘.‘.“bl“1CI.:=,’E (0-2). V254‘ (N)... Cincinnati at Francisco: (N) —- I-Iaddix (3-3) vs Monzant (4-3) R Pit-I.‘§‘I)llY'(gh at (iliziéago - Law By THE CANADIAN PRESS Righthander Bob Purkey added a homer to his pitching triumph Thursday as the Cincinnati Red- legs dropped Los Angeles Dod- gers 8-4.'It was his seventh vic- tory. ' In other games of a full Na- tional League schedule. Philadel- phia Phillies edged Chicago Cubs 7-6. St. Louis Cardinals downed Francisco Giants took a 5-4 deci- sion over Milwaukee Braves. Chicago White Sox and New York Yankees split an afternoon American League doubleheader, Yankees taking the first game 12-5 and White Sox the second 3-2. Boston Red Sox defeated Cleve- land Indians 5-3 in the other aft- ernoon. ‘nonons HOM‘ERS At Lns Angeles, Puckey was nailed for two runs in the first inning and another in the second. After that he didn't let a. Dodger Flyers Down Shamrocks R.C.A.F. Flyers dumped B.I.S. Shamisocks into the City Softball League cellar last evening, wal- loping the Irishmcn 11-3 in a regular league game played be- fore a fair-sized crowd of shiv- ering fans at Victoria Park. The Shamrocks handed the Air- men ';he victory in the very first inning The Flyers scored five times in that first frame on one one base hit. Keith Dalziel. who started for the Shamrocks ed the first four men he faced and thereby forced in a run. Beardsley promptly cleared the sacks with a booming double, took third on an error and came home on an infield out. The Airmen added four more in the second, again managing only one hit, but getting help from a pair of walks and three damaging errors. They conclud- ed their scoring for the evening with a pair of runs in the third. Again errors paved the way. The first two men up were safe on miscues and coach Sawyer sent them across home plate with a resounding two base wallop. All the winners‘ runs were charged against starter Keith Dalziel. He gave up three hits. walked six and struck out none. Ev Beagan, who relieved him with one out in the second, pitch- ed good ball the rest of the dis- tance Ev didn't allow an earned run, yielded only two hits and allowed only one runner to reach base in the last four innings. Sawatsky was the winneg hur- ler, bitched six hit ball and get- ting fine support from his team- mates. Joe Coyle and Lorne MacG-uigan managed doubles off his offerings. Len Arsenault was umpire at the plate and Red MacFadyen handled the bases. Here's the. present standings of the five teams. P W I. Barry’s Lions 4 , 3 1 Rollaway Aces 5 3 2 Junior B.Y.C. 6 3 3 R.C.A.'F. Flyers 5 2 3 Shamrocks 4 1 3 Kuenn Probably Out For A Week BAL'I‘IM-ORE (AP) —-, Det1'olt ce-ntrefieldler Harvey Kuenn prob- ably will be out of action a week because of eye and face lnluries received in Wednesday night's game with Baltimore Orioles, a doctor said Thursday. : Dr. Erwin Mayer, Orioles phy- sician, said 25 stitches and plas- tic surgery were used to close wounds in Kuenn’s lower right. eyelid and on his face below the eye. Mayer said the lower lid was torn almost. in two. but said Kuenn’s sight will not be im- paired. Kuenn was injured when he fell on top of a seven-foot wire fence in left centre field while trying to snag a home run ball hit by Pitts~bu.rgh Pirates 4 - 3 and San . was minus his control and walk-- past set-ond,hase until Gil llndgcs hit a bases - empty homer. his eighth of the year. in the ninth. Purkey got his homer in the sec- ond, Don Hoak getting another for the Redlcgs in the seventh. Righthander Dick F a r r e] l, striking out five Cubs in the last three innings, did a brilliant .job in relief and Stan Lopata hit a two-run homer in the seventh to help the Phillies to victory. But the vlc«to,ry went. to Ray Semproch, second P‘I‘Il‘I(a(“I(“'Il‘)I‘Il.R pitcher who was lifted for. El pinchhitter when the Phillics un- loaded a five-run seventh inning to offset a previous Chicago six- run explosion. REACH .500 MARK St. Louis’ victory put them at the .500 mark for the first time this season. The Cards got to Bob Friend for seven hits and made them count in handing the star riglithander his fou rth loss against eight victories. Two of the Cards’ runs were unearned. The Cards now are in third place, five games behind San Francisco. ’ Rookie first baseman Orlando Cepeda came thrmigh in the last of the 12th at San Francisco. sin- gling home the winning run with one out. Cepeda, a newcomer from Puerto Rico, tagged Gene Conl-ey's first offering to left field and Jim Finigan scored easily from second. C-on-ley, one of three lvlilwau-kee pitchers, book the loss. Left- hander Jim Cons-table, taking over in the 12th, got the victory, his first of the year. Sherm Lollar was the hero of Chicago's second game victory over New York. He rapped a two- run homer off starter - loser Bobby Shantz in the first Inning. then made it 3 - 0 with an RBI single off Sal Maglie in the ninth COULDNT PROTECT LEAD- Yankees got all their runs in the ninth off singles by Andy Ca- rey and oBill Skowron, an error and a force-o‘ut.. Winner Don Larsen was unable to protect a 10-3 lead In the first. game. Larsen. who drove in four runs with two singles and a sac- rifice fly. weakened ln the sev- enth after serving a two - run Dinch homer to Earl Tongenson. He was awarded the victory, IIOWBVBT, his fourth without de- feat. Yankees lost rightfielder Hank Bauer for two or three days when he hit the right field wall and suffered a sprained left hand attempting to snag Torgens-on’s homer. In Boston, Gene Stephens,“ pit- I . I '0.’ ‘ --. -9 CEFCIIDBIS Edge Pirates; Tigers Trample Orioles right arm of Rocky Colavito, dashed home with the deciding run. Inserted as a pinch - runner in the eighth, Stephens beat Col- avit.o's throw on a slide. Sammy. White followed with a single that brought in an insurance tally. Hoyt Wilhelm was the loser as he made his third appearance in this series. Mike Fornieles got the victory in relief. BALTIMORE (AP) R n y Boone's grand slam home run in the seventh inning backed up Hank Aguirre"s brilliant pitching Thursday night for a 6-3 Detroit victory over Baltimore. Aguirre took over in the first inning after the Orioles had scored their only three nuns off Paul Foytack. The tall left- hander got. Jim Busy to fly out to end the inning and allowed only two hits after that for his second victory -against one de- feat. The victory enabled Detroit to replace Baltimore in seventh place in the_American League. WASHINGTON (AP)—A two- run home «run by Woody Held provided Kansas City Athletics and pitcher Ralph Terry with a 2-0 Victory over ‘Camila Pascual and Washington Senators In a tense 13 - inning duel Thursday Only 3,692 fans saw the game. night. For Held, at flftlh-inning substi- tute for Mike Baxes, who left the game with A sprained right ankle, this was homer No. 3 for the season. The blow into the left field bullpen following a single by Vic Power rewarded Terry with his third victory of the‘ sea- son. Until Held connected. Pascual had the statistical edge on Terry in their duel. Over the first 12 innings, the Cuban righthander ram, June. 6, was Ponfincs Romp TO 27 - 0 Win The Summerslde Pontiacs drubbed the Tyne Valley ’l‘igers in a regular fixture of the Prince County Softball League at Tyne Valley last evening by the score of 27-0. Pontiacs had 23 hits off pitcher R. Campbell. The Tyne Valley boys got only 3 hits, none of Gerry Mcln-tyre in 2 innings, 2 off Dick Crozier in 2 innings, and 1 off Charlie Ballcm in 3 innings. Eustrace Reeves crack- ed out two home runs, one of them chasing two runners ahead of him, and hit 4 for 6. R99. Phillips had 5 singles in 5 trips, Ulric Gallant had 3. for 6 eluding a home run. Grant Grady, 3 for 6, one of his hits a triple, Coke Grady 2 for 6, and Don MacEachern a perfect 2 for 2, one of his bingles a three bagger. The fielding gem of the game was a sensational catch in centre field by Dave Birch to Rob Greg Deighan of a home run. STANDINGS Ky THE CANADIAN PRESS National League W L Pct. GBL Milwaukee 27 17 .614 —— San Francisco 29 19 .604 - St. Louis 22 22 .500 5 Pittsburgh 23 24 .480 51-4.: Cincinn-altl 20 21 .488 51/2 Chicago 24 26 .480 6 Phila deltphi a 19 25 .432 8 L05 Anlgeles 18 28 .391 10 American League W L" Pct. G-BL in- - _ requested to choose their The Guardian Page .7 Two‘ Softball Games Tonight Here's this evening’: Softball League action. At Victoria Park's old diamond the B. I. S. Shamrocks will play hosts to the league lead-in-g Bar- ry’s Lions. Over at Queen Charlotte High School diamond Junior B. Y. C. will be at home to Willis Hen- nes-sey’s Rollaway Aces.,This will be a battle for second place in the standings. Frank Bell will handle the game at Queen Charlotte and Kip Ready will umpire at Vic- - toria Park. Both games start at 0 o'clock. Golf Match On Saturday The president and vice-presi- dent will tee off on Saturday afternoon to begin the games of the Summerside Golf Club Lad- ies division. Other players are par- tners andvplay twice around the course. Esach twosome will toss for sides, and mark their cards whether for president or vice- presidént. The games may be played any time -on Saturday and in twosomes only. NEW! fle/dforze - city Click Deodorant PLASTIC APPLICATOR ' only [25, 0 A Man’: Deodorant 0 Fast Effective Protection ‘C light and Safe for Travel 0 No push-up, push-back FASTEST DEODORANT ’A MAN CAN USE! Ne\vYork S H U LTO N Toronto ‘ E. II. NIIPTHA GAS is the highest ‘quality Naptha Gas . . and will keep your camp stoves. Ianterns, e’rc., burning efficiently. ‘ MALI.ETT’S RADIATOR SERVICE 17 Alley St., off Elm Ave. Dial 6282 New York 30 12 .714 - Kansas City 23 19 .548 7 Boston 22 “J 24 .478 10 Chicago 21 23 .477 (0 Cleveland 22 25 .468 101/: Washington 21 25 .457 11 Detroit 20 25 .444 ll‘/2 Baltimore 18 24 .429 12 had a six.-hitter and he had per- mitted only one Kansas City runner to advance as far as sec ond base. FISHING DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN A GOOD no u )0 A GOOD CATCH AND A GOOD CHEW YOU CAN'T BEAT IT WITH I[[CKEY’S ting his speed against the strong 'l.‘VVIS1‘ MAIN BRACE NAVAL VETERANS WILL HOLD THEIR REGULAR "MEMBERS DANCE FRIDAY: -- 9.30 - 12.30 Music by the Mariners Orchestra ‘ Refreshments. V foods more available. LIME WORKS". Havelock, N. B; Oriole catcher Gus Triandos. FOR THE LAND’S SAKE -- LIME) Soil acidity slows down the decomposition o- organlc‘matter ,and reduces the yields and quality of hay and pasture. LIME is the cheapest all-round soil conditioner on the market and should be applied to acid soil, it makes all major plant Always Shipped in carload lots of 30 tons or more, - bagged or bulk. Order now from-— HAVELOCK LIME WQRKS remember, “H AVELOCK Phone 438 \ work. Grafton Street (5-3) vs Dmtt (2-2) R ANNOUNCEMENT , At the request of many of ourlivestock shippers. pro- ducers, and our employees, we announce the following schedule in our hours of business effective Monday. June 2. until further notice. - ‘FROM 7 A.M. T0 4 RM. STANDARD TIME We feel that this change will be to the advantage of many of our former customers who wish to deliver their livestock early in the day and get back home to their farm _ This will also enable us to conform with the time ob- served in the other Atlantic Provinces which is the motor outlet for a large portion of our Island's production. It will also give our employees an extra! hour of sun- shine during the summer months. I We solicit the cooperation of all our customers and trust that this change will benefit all concerned‘ CANADA PACKERS LTD. Charlottetown BARBECUE "LETS EAT OUT"-—Cunadiun Time has the things you need for enjoyable our—of-door cookery. Charcoal Briquefs I0 lbs. 1.29 Hickory Granules I for that tangy pickory smoke flavor 79¢ Charcoal Fire Starter by R-onson 5‘ 45¢ 'm—Lo" PICNIC srovfi‘ — n soaks. lulu. broil; on grid or on hluyod stool try top. No pain! needed. 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