Baseball Results gy -run cartaossx rnnss Saturday National League Milwaukee 000 002 000-1 0 1 Chicago (00 010 00x-5 0 1 Nichols, Buhl (1) Johnson (0) Jolly (7) and Crandsll; Klippsteln and Cooper. L-Nichols. HR: Chi- Bilko. Sauer. Cincinnati 000 031 001 00-5 7 1 st, Louis 000 000 230 01-6 13 I Baczewski, Coilum (7) Judson .3. Fowler (0) and Lsndrith: Ra- gchi, Lint (II) Stsley (8) and semi. W-Staley: L-Fowler. l-IR: Stl-Ssrni. Pittsburgh at New York. Phila- delphia at Brooklyn. ppd. rain. American gus Chicago 000 101 OW-I I 0 nptmit 000001 M0-1 D 2 Keegan. Hsrshman (0) Johns .9. and Sawatskl; Zuverlnk, Her- bert (8) and House. W-Keegsn. L-Zuverink. I-IR: Chi-Mlnoso. New York 100 000 050 201- D 15 I 001 030 101 202-10 12 1 Mnrgan, Reynolds (0) Brsnca (7: Sam (8) Ford (10) and Berra. silvers (10); Kinder. Hudson (8) Kicly (9) Kemmerer (9) and White. W-Kemmerer; L-Ford. HRs: NY- ri.-uer: Bos-White. TIrvFianfi 000 003 001-4 5 I V ""1ini'c 100 000 000-1 8 0 wnd Pagan; Turley. Cha- kaiu (R) and Courtney. Moss (0). Boston i.ii..:glun at Philadclhis (2! -.rl. l.' ” H International League i..irai.. 001 020 000-1 5 i iv -riciiro 040 020 00x-6 12 0 K. Johnson. M. Johnson (5! 5.. ..it1. 17: and Lakeman; Meyer ;.nrl Ernuti. Rncliester 001 000 030-4 9 0 Tnynnto 30100010):-5 8 0 Lima. Blaylnck (7) Markell (8) and Burbrink; Minarcln. Shore (8) and Howard. (ltlawa IOOOOOOOOOOOOO4-514 2 llirhmond 000 000 010 000 001-2 10 2 Ditmar and Watllngton: Haben- irhl, Mcdlinger (9) lieintzelmsu .mi and Johnson. Montreal 000 000 100-1 '7 3 i'i.'li'ZIi1Zi 001 001 20x-4 ll 0 Lehman, Fabbro (7) Hood 18) mm Thompson; Powell and Gu- rrra. Football Star Weinmeister Hits Former Employees Nixw YORK (AP)-Amie Wein- nirtstrr. all-star National Football lmgile tackle who quit New York Gzanis to play for British Colum- bia Lions of the Western Inter- p:m'.ilClBi Football Union this sea- Iilll. has put the rap on the Giant nlallR;.',PITl6Di. for "treating us like trinlinals when we lost a e." In a byline article in the sep- temhrr issue of 'n'ue Magazine. wmnmeister said he was tired of having Giant co-owner Wellington Maia "act like a private eye" in pirirllrt sessions. He accused ths management of "pushing economy beyond the point of virtue." Giants declined to comment on the article. weinmeister said Giants "hired Jim Howell to coach because they could get him cheaper than they could get a Buck Show or Paul Brown." 1-Is said, however, he thinks riowsll will be a good coach. Listing the reasons why he left Giants, Weinmelster claimed he was "never very happy" with the club because he "didn't feel the management has the best interests of the team and men and the game at heart." Always had cordial rela- tioru with Steve Owen, who was fired as coach. t Wemmeistcr said he will get 015.- 000 a year on I. two-year contract with Lions at Vs.ncouvm'. He claimed he (0! Itll.iI'l) in his con- tact and 01.000 in a special cheque trom Giants last no em- phasised he never was dissatisfied with Giants financially. We-inmeistor said an Important mason why he decided to play in Canada was to be closer to home is Seattle. only 100 miles from Vancouver. As for tho National Football Imam. Weinmeister suggested a minimum salary. something like Min-r league baseball's 00.000 pay for exhibition games and some llllitem of player representation to the commissioner. Swim Recognized K0!.KE81ONE. England (AP)- its nmciai-no-year-old. 230-pound Munit Guler of Turkey has swum W Enaiiah channel and his feet Mi been recognised by the Inter- national Long Distance Swimming Federation. Oulcr crawled ashore botwaan Dow and Deal sunday. night, vi-in-ml II, flash light and tried to "PM to someone that he had "um over from France. But. in the cold. pro-dawn dark. :64: then was no one to greet. trim. The next day a spokesman of P federation said it had no ob- WW on the scene and the achi- "Fmr-nt couldn't be recognised. (Bill Jimmy Heath. vice president " federation. put things right - EV. dmicre is no reason at all to Mlllghi Gulcr swam tha channel.” me Heath. "Everything was con- ” P M with the weather conditions h'nV””lnR. We do not question the h'lf"ly oi the people in the Glielriih. nmmd boat accom; :i).iiy ITESC -Limos ..,... lasan. the bag 3 -0 ".'.'."r....." Football Team " Objects. To Imports Ruling IlON'I'REAI.. (GP) - General manager Lew I-layman of Montreal Alouettes has taken issue with s. Canadian Rugby Union announce- ment that teams must abide by a URI! ruling on the number of im- parts they can play in a game. Harry Mcnrlen. CRU secretary. ball teams may use in any one only eight of the 10 imports al- lowed. This was unanimously ap- proved at the annual meeting or the ORU. but the Big Four league at s. subsequent meeting decided that playing nine imports a game would be .....misslble. Hsynisn said each league should be allowed to conduct. its own' af- fairs. The ORU "could not legis- late against the sovereignty of the leagues.” The natloml organisation had the right to govern certain prin- oils. especially where inter-union Canadian Exports Continue Decline OITAWA (OP)- Exports. Vital to Canadian prosperity. dropped by 060,300,000 in July. cutting ship- ments for the first seven months of 1954 by sall.l00.000. Foreign trade generally slumped in July but Canada was still buy- ing more from the world than she sold. resulting in a s15.soo,ooo defi- cit in the month's trade, more than doubts the l1.1o0.000 adverse bal- ance a year ago. the bureau of statistics estimated Friday. This deficit. piled on to others in previous months, pushed the seven- matters were involved. but indi- vidual lesguu retained their do- mestic Jurisdiction. CRU rulings-supported by dele- gates from Big Follr and the West- ern Intcrprovincliil Football Union -could later be "amended. IF proved or rejected" by the respec- tive unions when only regional considerations were involved. Hey- msn said. month adverse balance in unison.- 000. Just Ul2.Bw,000 below last year's 8204.000.000. Exports to all countries dropped in July to 8329.lD0.000 from 0808. 300,000. reducing the seven-month total to 82.200.000.000 from 02.115.- 000000. . The preliminary estimate showed trade down in all major markets. Exports to the United States drop- ped in July in 0lM.0O0,000 from s:li2,700,000 last. year, cutting the seven-month total to ti,330,'l00,000 from 31.422.300.000. SOLD LESS T0 BRITAIN sales to Britain were sliced to 055100.000 from 001,300,000 in July. reducing the seven-month ship- ments to 680,000,000 from, 3301.- 100.000. Total imports dropped in July to 8344.600,000 from u06.400.000 with the cuts showing sharply in buying from the US. This reduced im- ports for the seven month to 82.- 396,100.000 from 82.622.000.000. Imports from Britain were re- duced to s35.'ioo.ooo from 347.100,- 000 in July and to t239.500.000 from s266.'l00,000 in the seven-month laszed-up Type Religion Deplored WHITBY. Ont. (CPI-A United Church minister deplores the mod- ern, jazzed-up version oi religion that enables us to refer to God as "the man upstairs." Rev. George Connolly, Christian field secretary of the Montreal- Ottawa and Bay or Quinte. confer- ence. was theme speaker Friday at the five-day meeting of the Young Peoples Union oi the Uiuted Church of Canada. More than 300 delegates from across Canada are attending. . Mr. Connolly said some moderns ask favors of God as they might of the type of parent caricatured by Dogwood Bunatesd of Mr. Jiggs. He criticized gospel songs that are selfcentred and egotistical. "Just because they are set to catchy. jazzy tunes, and can be sung with much vigor and swing, we tend to overlook their theology and un-Christian ideas." he said. A great many well - meaning period. Christians assume salvation of one IIFBR Shooting Film In Msmrasicooit tI.B. MONCZION. N. 3., (OP)-The Na- tional Film Board is shooting a film based on the historic struggle of residen of the Memramcook valley against the sea. . The film will not be in the tech- nical veln. says Leonard Forest. formerly of Moncton, assistant di- rector of the production. It will be a ”man against the sea" story in human and dramatic terms. The picture will show the cust- oms snd ways of life of the de- soul is the object and end of the Christian faith. he said. I-Invlngi achieved that, "they sit back and sing songs of praise and glory for the great Joy that is in their hearts." . "I am not saying we should not rejoice at our salvation but some- times preoccupstion with what the love of-God has accomplished in our hearts takes so much interest and concern that we fail to realize that the kingdom has relevance to the whole of life." Monday, August 23. 1054 Stories conflict Over Kingston Fire and Riot KINGSTON. Ont.. (CPI-Prison. police and fire authorities sifted a welter of conflicting stories yester- day, as trusted prisoners continued .....nm.m..j.m.m..m. scendants of the Aciidians, with a historic reflection on the mainten- ance of the dikes since they first were Unit 300 years ago. Director of the film is Roger Blals of Ottawa. A crew of NFB technicians arrived here to begin research work and start shooting preliminary scenes. The Memramcoolr valley is the centre of operations for the mari- tlme marshlands rehabilitation ad- ministration, reclaiming la n d flooded by the high tides of the Bay of Fundy. Major part of this work involves rebuilding dikes along the coast. iciitto, chief penitentiary engineer. The -Guardian Page I ' the job of cleaning up dshrifn from a fire set Sunday by liotlu prisoners at Kingston penitentiary. Discovery of a 100-foot rope. with a claw attached, stirred spee- ulation that the Sunday outbreak was part of an escape plot. A guard uncovered the rope in litter in the yard when the disturbance san- tred. There was no official comm on the find. Earlier, officials, in- cluding Maj.-Geii. R. B. Gibson. Dominion commissioner of prisons denied that a break was planned There was still no report on damage from the Sunday outhreal pending a report by Col. R. W. Unofficial eSilmiliPs ran from ti.- 0O0,000 to S2.000,000. Extra guards were on duty but prison officials were reported 14 feel there was no immediate danger of another riot. OSLO tCPi - Roman Cathnlis ynuth organizations of Sweden. Denmark and Norway are holding their seventh annua' summer sem- inar on Utoya island, Tyrifjard, in east Norway. USED CARS and TRUCKS at rock-bottom prices Due to record sales of new Fords and Monarchs WE HAVE THE YEARlS BIGGEST SELECTION OF HERE'S WIIY WE CAN GIVE YOU THE YEAR-TS B ditioned and spotlcssly clean! If you're looking for the best used car or truck deal in town, look for the Ford-Monarch Dealer sign and the A-1 sign-sure guides to top-notch value at rock-bottom prices. See how much more we oiier . . . come in now and make a deal! wsiar IV MEANS EVERY USED CAR AND TRUCK THAT Priced for Warranted RATES THE A-I SIGN HAS BEEN Reconditioned by expert servicemen for appearance and performance. Inspected and checked for safety. outstanding value. Truthfuliy and accurately advertised. by your Ford-Monarch Dealer and backed by his reputation. mmonmzcilg EST SED-CR D 75.2.92 syn: Ineanyaa can rim? tie 0541f? ano'776e 0M1 C With new-car sales at a record high, we have the biggest, freshest selection of used cars in our history . . . a huge choice of low-mileage, late-model cars-expertly recon- EAL! r rzxwyy : ti LOOK THESE 0VER.:- ons-half of the needed first 30 days. IN SUMMEIISIDE 1951 METEOR COACH 1951 FORD SEDAN 1950 FORD SEDAN 1949 roan COACH ma roan coicii 1952 CHEVROLET SEDAN 1949 PLYMOUTH SEDAN mi STUDEBAKER SEDAN ms PONTIAC COACH 1 All of these cars are In good condition and are cars you would be proud to own. All cars selling for 81000 or over are equipped with new tires before they leave our premises, and they are sold with a 30 day GUARANTEE on a 50-50 basis. You pay only mechanical repairs during the Maclean Motors Ltd. FOII - UOIARGI DEALER IIAL 2257 Car and Defroster. Value. 24,000 miles IN CHARLOTTETOWN See "5. R. JOHNSTON LTD." for Used Truck BARGAINS. CARS I953 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION- Four Door Sedan with radio, 12.000 miles. Like new. 1952 FORD- Fordor Sedan, 13,000 miles. er. The car you've been looking for. 1952 CHEVROLET- Sedan Delivery. in first class condition. A Bargain. I951 METEOR- Tudor Sedan. 27,000 miles. A car you will like. I947 FORD- Fordor Sedan. Ily car at a reasonable price. - I947 FOR Tudor Sedan. Heater & Healer Si Ilcfrosicr. Heater & Dcfrosicr. TRUCKS I953 FARGO I-2 TON PICKUP- 13.000 miles. I . "El Three-Ton FORD- guaranteed, ready for work. I953 CHEV. I-2 TON PlCK-UP- An economical buy. - "SET WARRANTY”-6 Months or 6000 Miles On All Used Cars and Trucks. THE ABOVE LIST OF CARS AND TRUCKS ARE FULLY RECONDITIONED AND READY FOR TE Appearance excellent. ROAD. For Uihcr Good Values Visit - S. R. Johnston Ltd. FORD - MONARCH DEALER M. Peters Road underseai 1-It-aicr and Defrost- A good fain- Just broken heater. Hcatcr It Deirosierl. Exceptional Dial 5.548 ' IN MONTAGUE CARS and TRUCKS ARE EASY Mcilowan Motors FORD - MOIIAROH DEALER MOIITAGIIE ll:-fore those nice summer days are over. drop Into McGowan Motors and choose a good Iisrd car Ii a reasonable price. You are sssiired of satisfaction, quality and courteous service. TO FIND AT PHONE 33-21