~ ie Pi ay rt ——* ee eee ee ee Bs ~ Bosox . Taylor, _.. Yankees could do no good. - ’ Redlegs Stop Burdette; : les 5-0 | Blank Orio 5 - BASEBALL RESULTS American League —* (2). W-Browning. L- ee ee S| suceate 023 001 002—8 14 0 Buffalo 100 006 002—9 11 4 Scantlebury, Funk (6) and Han- nah, Thompson (9); Green, Mrozinski (6), Mason (7), Rod- riguez (9) and Coker. W - Rod- riguez. L-Funk. : Campey Wii Receive Big Purse <2. Baltimore McLish and Nixon; Donovan, and Shaw (7) and Lollar. W- Mc- Lish.. L-Donovan. HRs: Cle-Col- aviio (7). Chi-Landis (2). ; National League Phila 000 320 012—8 13 1 Pittsburgh 000 000 010-1 6 0 Conley, Farrell (9) and Sawat- ski; Witt, Giel (4), Smith (7), Blackburn (9) and Burgess. W- Conley. L-Witt. Cincinnati 300 000 000-3 7 1 Milwaukee 000 000 020-2 11 1 Lawrence and Bailey; Burdette, Pizarro (8) and Crandall. W-Law- rence. L-Burdette. HRs: Mil — Mathews (10), Torre (1). Angeles club pledged receipt to the former tcher, who was paraly- auto accident early last $75,000 estimate was ey af i s 3 Jackson's 10th inning triple -and a tight three-inning relief job by lefthander Bill Henry combined for a 43 Chicago Cubs victory over St. Louis Cardinals Friday night. « Jim Brosnan, third Red Bird pitcher, took the defeat. He's now 0-3. Henry struck out five men in his three-inning stint, gave two hits, and took his third victory against one defeat. CHICAGO (AP) — the distance Friday night in feating Chicago White Sox. 3-1. The victory was fashioned only three hits including run, tie-breaking homer avito. McLish, who lost his shutout the fourth inning when Jim dis cracked a homer, limi Sox to five hits and fourth victory a DETROIT (AP) — ing’s triple and ond baseman the relay from Detroit Tigers ninth inning and over Kansas City d yainght at Briggs Stadium. *s hitting had the Ath- pparently on the wa victory. He tripled home of in the third and his fice fly brought in an run in the sixth PINCHHITTERS COME THROUGH PHILADELPHIA (AP)— Here is one for the record conscious major leaguers to shoot at. . In the seventh and final inning of Thursday’s Lincoln- Olney Public League game, platy g=8 li : E i ge ig 38 an Hec the i ti iF .- 5 z letic: Chicago 010 000 010 1—3 12 0 St. Louis 101 000 000 0-2 81 Anderson, Henry (8) and S. Nieman (8); Blaylock, ' Nunn (8), Brosnan (10) and H. Smith, Green (10). W—Henry. L —Brosnan. - International League Montreal 010 020 001—4 _6 2 Rochester 002 113 15x—13 13 1 Birrer, Collum (6), Gray (7) end Teed; Browning and Rand, SPORTS FRONT : By PIUS CALLAGHAN IT TOOK an exhibition baseball game to shatter the attendance record. : : Thursday night at Los Angeles Coliseum the Dodgers and New York Yankees staged an exhibition tilt as a benefit for Roy with the Brooklyn Dodgers. 62 but nobody cared very much. mattered was that a huge crowd | was seriously injured | | CAMPANELLA was there Thursday night in all his glory. | Another great favourite of Flatbush fans, Harold ‘Pee Wee’ Reese | ‘wheeled the crippled Campy onto the playing field. Roy acknow- | Jedged with sincerest appreciation the tribute the folks had paid | him. It was a night he will never forget and it surely must have made his great physical handicap seem not nearly so great. | Yes, 93,103 persons paid way into the Colkecdea for this friendly game. It was ne seven thousand persons more than jammed Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium on that October Sun- | day in 1948 when the Indians were playing hosts to Boston Braves | in the world series. This time there was nothing at stake but it) was merely a get-together to honor a guy who was one of base-| _ ball’s quest colorful figures, ae SPORT FANS are pretty rough at times. They can get on a ~ player and almost ride him out of the league. They can be im- patient and at times downright unjust. Very often they lose il trace of common sense if their team is taking a lacing from an However, in spite ‘of all these faults, sports fans are a most sentimental lot. Show them a worthwhile cause and they'll respond most generously. They don’t soon forget what great guys have) done in various branches of sport. And so it was in the Campanella case. Everybody loved the big fellow and that love still continued even though he has ceased to be an active player. : : When we hear and read these grim stories about racial pre- fudices in parts of this continent, demonstrations like the one at) Los Angeles Thursday night restore some of our faith in humanity. | None of these 93,103 folks worried about the fact that Campy is a| Negro. To. them. he was just a great baseball performer who met with a miszhty tough break. This wheelchair business must get Campy down at times. How- ever, when a fellow finds out how much sports fans think of him, it surely must make things a whole lot better. Campanella has no doubt now about his popularity among baseball fans. If he ever had such doubts, Thursday night would surely dispell them. . WE WERE TUNED in to the Kansas City-New York game the other night and we got a bang out of a great hand given to one, of the Yankee pinch hitters. All night long the Kansas City folks | were roaring for their Athletics and were giving Casey Stengel’s | boys. plenty of boos. The Athletics could do no wrong and the Ss ~ iw: by a Dod-| said they would, of the gate to New . The Yanks paid! expenses. | drew 93,103, the, or US. | the amount taken in| not announced, so Campan.- | coud only be estim-} 3 z iff rei F RE However, Stengel called one of his, batters back in the late innings of that 3-2 ten inning battle and sent a pinch hitter up to the plate. The crowd got one look and they let out.a rear of ap- proval. It was Enos ‘Country’ Slaughter who had performed with the Athletics before going to the Yankees. The folks loved ‘Coun- try’ w! he wore a Kansas City uniform but the fact that he was garbed in Yankee dress didn’t make the folks forget the old campaigner. They gave him a great ovation and you.can bet Slaughter really appreciated it. Another example of what true sport fans are really like. LOS ANGELES got a great six-hitter out of young Stan Wil- Hams Th y afternoon in San Francisco. The r hurler held the fast-moving Giants to half a dozen base and one run as the Los Angeles gang eked out a 2-1 decision Over Jack Sanford. Podres and Drysdale appear headed for good years and if Williams can be put in the same class, the Alstonites may prove very troublesome. Norm Larker, who came on to play first base after Gil Hodges was injured, drove in all the Dodgers’ runs with a two-run homer. Willie Mays was the only Giant batter to trouble Williams. Willie collected half of the ’ hits. AND SPEAKING of Willie Mays reminds us that there was a time when Mays did practically all the patrolling in the Giants’ Lincoln coach Frank Light- - foot decided to. give his_ re- serves a chance. Lincoln led 10-1. He sent up three pinchhit- ters, Bull Judge, Sam Stokes and Ed. Shiminskie. All hit home runs. 3 Teams Are Represented At Softball Meeting Only three teams were repre- sented at a meeting of the City Softball League last night at Union Hall on Queen Street, B.I.S. Shamrocks, Juoior B.Y.C. ; and Rollaway sending delegates. Barry Moore, coach of last | year’s Parkdale Lions, is uncer- tain whether he will enter a team or not. Should he decline, Harold Hennessey has shown desire of forming.a—4th team. Deadline a this- 4th team is May It was decided that games will be played on Tuesday, Wednes- day and Thursday of each week. Regular practices will be held starting Monday night and each team will have a number as fol- lows: B.I1.S.—1; B.Y.C.—2: Roll- away—3; The other team will carry the number 4. Notices of practices will appear in the news- Papers. Argos Obtain Cookie Gilchrist TORONTO (CP)—Toronto Argo- nauts of the Big Four Football Union have obtained Cookie Gil- christ, powerful running fullback, from Saskatchewan Roughriders in a trade for two players and an undisclosed amount of cash. The two Toronto players sent to the Western Interprovincial Football Union club Friday are defensive end Menan Schriewer and defensive halfback Lou Elias. The hard-to-handle Gilchrist re- turns to the Big Four after a one-year stint in the WIFU. He was one of the top ground gainers in the western league and in the Big Four where he played for two years with Hamilton Tiger- Cats before being sold to the Roughriders last May. Hamilton let him go because he was feuding with coach Jim Trimble after playing a big ‘part in the Tiger-Cats’ march to the Grey Cup title in 1957. “| Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) — Probable pitchers in today’s major league in parentheses): American League Cleveland at Chicago — Score (2-1) vs. Latman (0-2) (1-1) vs. Wilhelm (3-0) ‘Washington at New York— Griggs (1-0) vs. Turley (3-- 3) Kansas City at Detroit % Gar- ver (3-1) vs. Bunnifiz (1 - 3). National League Cincinnati at Milwaukee — Pur- key (3-2) vs. Spahn (3-3) Los at San Francisco— Drysdale ( vs. Sam Jones (2-4) Chicago at St. Louls — Hobbie (3-3) vs Jackson (0-4). Philadelphia at Pittsburgh— outfield. Back in the Polo Grounds, Willie had Hank Sauer on one;Gomez (0-0) vs. Kline (2-1) side and Dusty Rhodes on the other. With these two, Mays played a lot more than centrefield. He was forced to wander’ at times into right and left to gather in fly balls. ie -But now in San Francisco, things are different. If Willie, the human fly trap, wanders more than a shuffle in either direction, finds somebody around to help him. In left field is Jackie Brandt in right Felipe Alou. Experts claim this trio could easily amount to the best defensive outfield in major league baseball. STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League ~~ W L Pet. GBL Cleveland. 13-6 .714— MANAGER BILL RIGNEY terms this outfield “best I've seen.”| Baltimore | 38 Ot a) oy - Rigney adds “It’s quite-a change for Willie. He never was one Chi 1t 11 ..500 4% to call the other outfielders off a fly ball like some centre fielders | 71 °S8° 1 ams do, but he got over there to “elp out, just in case.” x gag i ~ can attend strictly to centre field and concentrate| Boston 10 11 476 5 on his hitting. And his hitting in that game Thursday at San |New York. ; 2 = ee te Detroit 7 6 324 9 i oro baseball games (won-lost records! down Boston at Baltimore — Hoeft. Gasp Crisp- E iif ¥ > i? | i k : | Q an ; 3 #¢ FE aif i Pepe i i ad i : ei ai = a3 ; 5 . 7 i I i : gE f ( igi j Eve gf af ies aF eet iF i Dreams were giv- en their records by Frank Staf- ford,; who gave them ail their training. It certainly wes an out- standing performiance on his part abd on the part of the colts. JOE IN CALIFORNIA We have been wondering, and no doubt our readers have been wondering, what has happened to Joe O’Brien ’that he isn’t show- ing up at Yonkers. Some time ago, Joe shipped six horses with one of his assistant trainers to ‘Yonkers, mut he remained behind in California and has been train- ing a number of two and three- year-olds at the farm at Shafter, California River, the full impact of the Camp .-| chain stores, - |Early Closer Stake for $1,000, ad- Murdock Nicholson, “|Mrs. James Poulton, "|W. A. Roberts, Durham Bridge, Stitch Dec ar Ortega ais 3h ISiOns | FR | | ; i ck SEE TT F ; 233 § : } : i E 4 Ted Kluszewski Won't Give Up PITTSBURGH (AP)—Muscular Ted Kluszewski of Pittsburgh Pirates, used mostly as a pinch- hitter this season, just won't give up in his battle for the re@ijar. first base job. The big slugger came off the bench Thursday night to start against Philadelphia Phillies. He quickly pepped up the sagging Pirate offence with two singles and a 10th inning home run for a 54 victory. Klu raised his batting average to .480 with 12 hits in 25 trips. The homer was his first of the E ‘ described as “a trotting fool.” The above information is tak- en from an article from “The Horseman and Fair World’’ sent them by Jimmy Dunnigan Jr., a noted harness writer in Cali- fornia. He ends with: “Here is one stable that will not have be announced when it arriv- on the racing scene. As soon Mr. O’Brien decides it's time climb those Rocky Mounitsna and head across that Ole Man year. Afterward, Kluszewski observed happily that he believes he can keep right on hitting if he can play regulary. He added: “I just know the more I play, the better I hit. Norman Woolworth, one of the famous Woolworth brothers, owners of the five-and-ten-cent and also the owner of one of the leading rac- ing stables that performs on the Grand Circuit and at larger tracks, made his appearance as a driver last week at Yonkers Raceway and won with his home- bred pacer by Knight Star, West Indies, in a romp in 2.09 2-5. A few minutes later, the enthu- siastic amateur was second to P. E. 1. Harry Hirsch, Sydney, N.S. Sen. G. H. Barbour, Charlotte- town, P. E. L. H. B. Willis, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. Douglas Hill, Charlottetown, P E. I Stanely Dancer, driving Vickie’s| Randall MacDonald, Peter's | Demon. Woolworth’s mount was; Road, P. E. I. Gunga Din. The event was for| Randall MacDonald, Peter‘s Road, | trotters. Following will be found the entries for the Three-Year-Old P. E. 1. Jack Annear, Montague, P. E. 1. Mack Annear, Montague, P. E. I. H. and F. Stables, Halifax,—N.S. Gerald Fitzpatrick Woodville, Mills, P. E. 1. Donald Grace, Antigonish, N. S. Miss Sharon Walker, Halifax, N. i ; Barclay and Norris, Halifax, N. s. R. B. Stevenson, Parkdale, P.E.1. | The second payment of $10.00 | on July 1st. when horses must be | named ded to be raced at the Charlotte- town Driving Park this season. It is the largest purse for three- year-olds ever offered here, and we must confess that when Race Secretary E. Frank Acorn. men- tioned the amount and particu- lars of the Stake, we thought it orga de mens pea However, it has been so enthu- siastically received that we be- lieve it will prove to be one of the best events of the season. Three Year Old Early Closer $1,- 000 added. Listed below are the nomina- tions for the above Early Closer. The total purse at the time of the first payment - $1,000.00 plus 320.00 Nominations; or $1,320.00. ENTRIES Wilfred L. Furness, Vernon Brid- oo, PF. &. & Joe Power, Charlottetown, P.E.T. Dr. T. R. Furness, D. R. Baker, Kensington, P. E. I. Read Stevenson, Rustico, P. E. 1. Roy L. Clark, Rustico, P. E. I. Wilbur MacArthur, Kensington,'' P. E. k : John Rae, Gordon Trail, Hum- fries and Southampton, N.B. NORTHERN DWELLERS Canada’s Eskimo population of , about 10,000 is scattered across | a northern area of more than 750,000 square miles. It’s Carver’s For Oil’ i eC, Syndicate Stable, Summerside, P. mn Syndicate Stable, Summerside, j ee i Peter McMahon, Kensington, FP. a Mrs. R. D. MacFadyen, Hunt4 er River, P. E. Il. Blair Bernard, Bucfouche, N.B J. M. Larrabee, Guysboro, N.S. Springton, Pp, ZB. 1 Dr. J. T. Akins, Fredericton, N.B | Retwresmace FUFI Charlot-| ivan IFSFI DIAL 3583 Walter H. Carver Ort tetown, P. E, L ve N.B. Mrs. James MacGregor, Bedeque, CAPITOL - summersive TODAY (SATURDAY) 2 — 7:15 — 9:15 (SEimuTamraser eee TECHNICOLOR® - stanaye To Swing Deal Athletics Sell Yanks May Try OLIVER - IRON AGE POTATO PLANTERS HI-SPEED — 2 ROW — RUBBER TIRES . NOW AVAILABLE AT 1958 PRICES - Also have on hand couple Single Row Planters and Full Line of OLIVER MACHINERY including New and Used, Tractors. Will Accept Potate Cofitracts in Settlement SIMMONS & MacFARLANE LTD. SUMMERSIDE ‘ P. 0. Box 819 With Senators NEW YORK (AP)—The falter- ing New York Yankees may try to swing a deal with Washington Senators during the latter team’s visit here during the weekend. The Yanks must cut three men by Saturday night to meet the 25-player limit and they would like to use the excess talent in a trade. General manager George Weiss acknowledged he may confer with the Senators’ president, Cal Grif- fith, during the series. | Phone: 2233 J ee “through the Venture Plan The Naval Aviotor is @ superbly-trained, highly skilled member of the Navy Team. In Canada’s modern Novy, he flies power-packed ariti-submarine Trackers . .. swift Banshee jets . . ; versatile anti-submarine helicopters. The sky is his — and the ocean, too, for he is trained in ships as well as aircraft. On his sleeve he wears the gold lace of officer's rank and the gold wings of the pilot. These are not easily earned. But they do have their rewards, and the Naval Aviator has good cause to be proud of them. oe The training establishment for future naval flyers is HMCS Venture at Esquimalt, B.C, - Venture provides a two-year course designed for young men interested in Naval Aviation. The next course begins in September, and applications for entry are being accepted now. To be eligible for Venture, a young man must possess junior matriculation, er the equivalent according to province, and meet the requirements as te age, health and character.” ee Fee On acceptance, he receives a seven-year conimission in the Royal Canadian Navy. His training is fully subsidized. Tuition, uniforms, accommodation, food, beoks and medical and dental care are provided, The Venture Plan offers: 1A full senior matriculation university entrance course in the first year, Cadets write the regular B.C. senior matriculation examinations, 2 Professional naval training, ashore and at sea. 3. Flying training up to solo standard in light aircraft, 4. A full programme of physical training and sports. Immediately upon graduation from Venture, a cadet is promoted to officer rank and begins training in service ‘aircraft. THIS IS IMPORTANT: June 30is the closing date for the next course at HMCS Venture. If you are interested, act NOW. , EE EE SE SE SE SS TS SS LS ’ ae“), | AND SUNDAY IS MOTHER’S DAY! Make this an occasion to take some snapshots of Mom, and also some family pictures to send to relatives and friends! ‘ . Mail your films—colour or black and: white—to us for finest processing, and enjoy our special Maytime prices! During May we also offer a 15% Discount on Kodak Films, Cameras and Photo Accessories, and on our Binocu- lars and Telescopes. Mail- your Films, Negatives, and Photo Requirements to: George Wotton Photography | ” BOX 1600, SUMMERSIDE . OFFICER CAREERS, \ Naval Headquarters, Ottawa, Candidates must have reached their 16th but not their 20th birthday on | Please send me complete information on the Navy's Venture Plan for officer training. January 1st,-1959. = For complete details of the oppor- J MY NAME : Pian nas te REM enna One ADDRESS et: ciry PROV. HMCS “QUEEN CHARLOTTE” , DATE OF BIRTH ole ees LAST rn COMPLETED Tel: 4913 SCHOOL ermal te ep OOO ROYAL CANADIAN NAVY