, , ANOTHER Harness racing is being held the local Driving Park during every afternoon and evening at Old Home Week. In the above AINNER Jphoto Totnrny Shanta: (1) is seen after the fourth or. Five Survivors Of Hockey Club Gather For-centennial By BERNARD DUFRESNE tawa Valley town celebrate its Canadian Press Staff Writer centenniala . RE‘NFREW, Ont. (CP) — “1 Ross, retired general manager never heard so many lies in all of Boston Bruins of the National my life." Hockey League, sat kibitzing as That was Art Ross, great Boa the five great hockey stars of 50 ton hockey figure, talking Wed- years ago recalled the old hockey nesday as five survivors of the wars. ' old Renfew Millionaires club of They were: LeSter Patrick, 74, 1909410 gathered to help this 0t. of Victoria; Fred (Cyclone) Tayo )SPORTS FRONT The man ' gement of the Provincial Exhibition so far are cer- tainly getting a break from the weatherman. Early yesterday the sky became mighty overcast and it appeared as If both and evening performances’were certain to be washed out. But the rain held off and gave the big holiday crowds their chance to take o in the great sport show. » - , , And so far the show’has been up to par—if not better—than previous years. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday the races pro- grams were of an exceptional order wtth thrilling stretch drives ' in evidence on each and every card. Favourites have connng home fairly consistently but every now and then an.vouts1der romps home a winner and rewards the faith some few pan-mutual betters have placed in him. 4 ‘ There still are three big days left and you can bet your last dollar that favourites will have their work cut out for them. These remaining race programs should prove as interesting and as tough to pick winners (as the ones that have new gene mto history. Here’s hoping the good weather continues and that tins Old Home Week will eclipse all. other}. I. - , That was quite the brawl that Dusty Rhodes and Joe Margoneri ofithe Phoenix baseball club staged recently aboard an van-liner. Both men have been fined by the Phoenix club for the scrap that got both of them kicked off the plane. The club was enroute from Portland, Oregon to Los Angeles when the battle broke out. ' Neither Rhodes, the hero of the 1954 New York Giants world champions, nor Margoneri, left-handed relief pitcher, Was hurt in the fight. _ . . The two players really went at it with ‘a vengeance, breaking lounge chairs, smashing tables and terrifying other passengers. The stewardess claimed both players had been drinking ironic bottleand were arguing. ‘ _ r _ j The manager claimed the two were ‘friends’ With a real aptl-, tude for needling. Only thing 'was they carried the needling’ just a bit too far. And after all an airline:- was not intended to act as a boxing or wrestling ring. When San Francisco was reached Dusty and Joe were-politely told that their presence was no longer desired. That’s where they got off, smiling and well-behaved. How silly can some guys get? i t O O O . Milwaukee sportswriters have stopped pussy-footing about the Braves chances of repeating as National League champions, , They’ve come right out and said it’s in the bag and let it go at that. ‘One can hardly blame them after seeing the Milwaukee club perform on their recent homestand, concluding with that sweep over the pennanLcmiscious Giants. . . . ' We liked the way onewriter put his thoughts: . "The ‘don’t mention it yet’ approach that so many fans are beginning to indulge in as the Braves head intothe Stretch of the National Ledgue race, seven games in front, leaves me as cold as a mother-dn-law’s kiss, any mother-indew. ’ - “What’s wrong with honestly anticipating another pennant at this time? And talking about it? Weren’t the Braves unanimously picked in April to win, Aren’t they just heading for what they were supposed to be headed for all along? Haven’t theyshowed themselves the most solid club in the league? , “If they don’t win, there’s something wrong. It’s quite correct not to count chickens before they’re hatched—count 'em, that ls~ but how about anticipating them? V ' , They’re the best club in the league and the best must win over the full 154 games. There‘ is going to be growing talk of a pennant in the next few weeks and quite properly and normally so and it makes no difference what anybody says about “Sh—h-h on such talk.” “Why be an ostrich?" t t O i 3 Milwaukee Braves Red Schoendienst still holds the longest hit- ting streak in the National League this season. The league has ruled that Orlando Cepeda’s hit in a game July 23 had notextended the Giants’ first baseman’s string to 18.games. The game was a playoff of a game between San Francisco and the Philadelphia Phillies which began on June 22 and under league rules will be rcorded as 'a game of that date. SchOendist’s string began 19 and ran through .May 10. One of baseball’s all-time greats, Pie Traynor, is ill. The former Pittsburgh Pirates third baseman and member of baseball’s hall of fame, is resting at his borne after being dis- charged from a Pittsburgh hospital where he underwent surgery for rémoval of a chest tumor. 1! t O t t It will be Don MacDonaldand Harry Simmonds battling it out :hhiis weekend over the Belvedere course for the club champion. p. Don reached the final bracket by disposing of Joe Mahar 3 and 2 while Harry beat Bobby Dowling by an identical score. _ u The championship battle will be a 36-hole match play competi- on. l C t t t t And still on golf doings. ' Merrill Pineau won low net for the N. B.—P. E. I. area in the B015 hole-in-one tournament, firing a net 66, Allan Macmillan was runner up with 67. ‘ ‘ Wendell ‘Gump' Gillis had a gross 72 but club officials had no word as yet whether it was good enough to make ‘Gnmp’ a prize Winner. ' - 0 t t O t Wes Westrum, former catcher for the New York Giants and now coaching for the San Francisco club, is high in his praise of theyoungsters on his ball club. Wes feels the boys are just beginning to learn some of the finer points and he has high hopes for them for next year. ' Here’s what he has to say: , “These Giants are mostly kids. They have tossed away some place between a half dozen and a dozen ball games by rookie mis- takes. And they have won many more that they might have lost, despite rookie bonehead plays. But they make fewer mistakes all the time. They are going to be tougher, rougher and more in- telligent every week down through the rest of the campagn. By September they should be really rolling along. And next year— look out. londe, 70, of Montreal; Bert Lind- say, 77, of Sarnia, Ont; and Herb Newsy,” said Patrick, “wasn’t it Haileybury we beat 1742?” "It was like hell," batted in Ross, who played for Baileylbury the year that a couple of Ren- frew Millionaires —- the late Sen- ator M. J. O’Brien and Alexan- der Barnett—(banln‘olled a team of stars with the hope of bring- ing the Stanley to this small town, 65 miles west of Ottawa. ‘ mom TEAM" . Then Newsy, who had scored plained out of Ross’ hearing that it was against the old Silver Sevens in \ Remembrances? I ' “Well, it’s like , this," said Newsy, a great lacrosse player as well as hockey centre, “these fellows are getting pretty old and their memories-aren’t as good as they used to be, the incidents theyrecall usuallylead to argu- ment-f? ' . ' ” . ‘ ,Latér, Ross also in his 703, paid tribute to the five returnees. The only one missing was Frank Patrick of Vancouver, not well enough to makezthe trip. In armore seribus vein, Cyclone Taylor, .Said “it’s not everybody who can comeback to old haunts andmeet old, friends. ‘ V “The memories comicrowding sion for them.’_’ LEGENDARY .‘FEAT Cyclone'prefers to let the aura of legend. and mystery surround his‘feat' of scoring a goal while skating backwards the length of the ice against Ottawa. ’ {“Look itup in the old papers. I'm» not, Saying anything,” 'he. said. Then, to Herb Jordan: “I hear you played quite a bit of tennis after your hockey days.” “That’s, right,” said Herb, 3 Quebecer who came here with his French-Canadian bride in 1909 to play hockey and work forSeh- ator O’Brien's construction com- pany, and never returned to Que- bec City. w “ I had known I would have com down and beat you in five minutes,” said Cyclone. castrate Will . ‘ * Meet tendon ~ LONDON (AP) -- Willie Past- rano of New Orleans Wednesday night was matched in a return contest against British heavy- weight champion Brian London-— the'fighte‘r who nearly knocked him out of world ratings last February. London promoter Jack Solom- ons said the lO-round bout had been set for Harringay Arena Sept. 30. Patterson Won’t. Predict OCEANSIDE, Calif. (AP) Champion Floyd Patterson de- clined Wednesday to predict the outcome of his heavyweight title fight Monday with Roy Harris of Curt and Shoot, Tex. But Patterson made it clear that ifthe bout, at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles doesn't end early, he is geared to fight the full 15 rounds. Probable Pitchers , NEW YORK (AP) — Probable pitchers for today’s, major ‘eague games. (won—lost records in par- entheses): American League Kansas City at Chicago—Daley (2—1) vs Shaw (472) Detroit at Cleveland —- Hoef-t (8-9) vs McLish (12-6) New York at Boston—Larsen (8-5) vs Sisler' (7-5) , - National League Milwaukee at Cincinnati (N)— Willey (7-3) vs Haddix (6-5) or Newcombe (2-10) ‘ Chicago at Los Angeles — Briggs (4-2) vs Drysdale (6-11) St. Louis at San Francisco— Mufifett (4~3) vs Amtonelli (12-10) 101“, 7‘4, Vancouver; Newsy-La.’ Jordan, 73, of Renfrew. ‘ But Ross-needled them. He got ” some of his own “Hey, nine goals, in x that game,‘ ex. ‘ in and it’s difficult to find 'eitpres' ‘ ( yesterday’s afternoon’s card, The other tWO horses are Feather Dus- ter and. Queen Rodney. ~ . ‘ Canadian, ,. Junior Tennis Results OTTAWA (Cm-Results in the junior Canadian tennis champion- ships Wednesday included: Juvenile Boys’ Singles Quarter-finals B. Piers, Trum, N.S., defeated P. Kent, Sault Steal/Earle, Ont, 64,6-3. » ./,, 2 Juvenile Mixed Doubles ' Second Round B. PienstTruro, N.B., and N. ‘ Weatherston, Halifax, defeated I. O’Gonmau Walker Winni— peg; 6‘4, 6'1s Bo} -' and Girls’ Mixed Doubles First Round 6. Harlow (and J. Cooper, Itali- fax, defeated D. Duggan, Ham- burg, N.Y., andD. Baird, Buf— falo, oo, oo.‘ . . , B. Piers, Truro, NS and S‘. Little, Halifax, defeated T. Ur- ban and A. Albels, Buffalo, 6-1, 6-2. . Junioi' Men’s Singles ‘ Quarter-finals - K. Carpenter, Montreal, de- feated D. Woodworth,'1falilfax, 13-1r1, 7-5. 1 V - ‘ _' Y. LeBlanc,‘Marieville, Que, defeated, Baker, Haiti. 6:1. 7-5. > = ' . P. Sullivaii, Belmont, Mass, ile- feated D. Crotty, Montreal, 6-4, 7_s_ . .g . . . . _ » Junior Women's Singles ' .Quarter-finals‘ ' r J. Heldman, Hamtramclr, Mich. defeated L. Jobin, Quebec, 6-2, 6-3. ' Junior Men’s Doubles ; Third Round D.r Woodworthand B. Cunning- ham, Halifax, defeated B. Jacob Parker, Toronto, 6-3, 641. ‘Y, LeBl-auc, 'Marieville, Que, and L. Leprohon, Montreal, de- twted J. Hedri-ck, Freeport,_N.Y. and E. Baker, Haiti, --6-2, 6-4. Junior Mixed Doubles First Round - , AC. Heldman and C. Fry, Ham- tramck, defeated M.- CroSby, Rothesay, N.B., and“ D. Morgan, Fredericton, 6-4, 6-4. \ ' ‘ Second Round » P.‘Dewis, and D.-Woodworth, Halifax, defeated, M.’Fry and P. Grossman, Hamtramck, 64), 6-0. N. Netter, Scarsdale, and}. Sullivan, Belmont defeated B. Sul- livan, Montreal and G. Neal, St. John’s, leld., 6-1, 6-3. Boys’ Doubles First Round B. Marcus and K. Harbin, Hol- land, defeated M. . Carroll, Ot- tawa, and B. Piers, Truro, 6-2, 6-1. " Junior Mixed Doubles First Round 3R. Cunningham, Halifax, and N., O’Brien, Winnipeg, defeated J. Oliver and T. Janos, Buffalo, 6-2, 6-0. ' May S. Grattan, 10-year-old chestnut mare, owned by Chas. Asprey of Campbellton, N.B., captured all three dashes in her class * yesterday afternoon. The mare took the second dash on the card in 2213—1, the fifth in-2:12-3 and the eighth in 2:14. - ; Taurida Bay stepped off the fastest milein the last dash of afternoon’svcard, 2:12-2, I In the fourth dash Tommy Shanter lowered his mark by one mark to 2:15. . Other winners on the program were: Feather Duster,.Jolly Dick and Bernie Dan. The first daily double on the second and third races, paid $26.- 10 on a combination ticket of ‘May S. Grattan and Taurida Bay. May S.’ Grattan also paid $14.20 to win. The quinella in the fifth dash paid $4.80 on a combination ticket of May S. Gratt‘an and Royal Onyx. Jolly Dick and Bernie Dan com.- bined in the second daily double to pay lucky ticket'holders $92.00. Bernie Dan also paid $16.90 to win. The exactor in the eighth dash paid $2620.11: the fourth dash Tommy Shooter paid $19.80 to . . SUMMARY Dashes 1. 4 and 7 ‘ ley Mayhew, ‘ Royal Onyx (G. Callback) Page 8, The Guardian Thurs.,.August 14, 1958 May S. Gratia n _ 3-time Winner Bernie Dan Tommy Shan er (L. Neill) . Hennessey) 2 5 I 4 1 3 Queen Rodney (G. Callbeck) 3 3 Vivian Strong (C. Smith) 5 4 5 Oappy- Gallon (G. Willis) 6 6 D Times: 2:14-2; 2:15; 2:15. Feather Duster owned by Stan- Kinkora; Bernie Dan owned by Jack Brown, Tommy Shanter owned by Alvin Parsons, Breadalbane. Dashes 2. 5 and 8 May S. Grattan) E Bernard) J .‘an Clegg (D. MacNelll) Bud Hehly (G. Turner) Sister Dawn (J. Arsenault) Famous Boy (L. Neill) Blue Mary (J, Jewell) Cooly Boy (R. MacFadyen) 8 D Times: 2:13-1; 2:12-3;-2:14. May S. Grattan owned by Chas. ' Asprey, Campbellton, N.B. Dashes 2 and 6 Taurida Ray (J. Hennessey) 1 4 Jolly Dick (H. Poulton) 3 1 Lahey’s'Boy.(l‘.: Barnett) 2 2 Vivian M‘ (G. Sobey) N 6 3 Jolly Bud (H. Cudniun‘e) 4 6 Kingsize'(G. Gougen) 5 6 . Times: 2:13-1; 2212-2. \ ‘ ‘ Taurida Bay owned by Ste-_ wart, Murray Harbour. Jolly Dick ' owned by Mrs;_Ja_mes ~Poulton, Charlottéltown. Feather Duster (A Binomial-1 2 2 Josedale Clansman stepped off the fastest mile of Tuesday’s rac- ing cards by doing the twice- round-the—oval,lm 2:09 flat.‘ The brown h , owned by George Turner of math. won both the first and third dashes of the Junior Free-For-All on the even- ing card. The secOnd dash Was won by Scottish» Light in 2:11. In the afternoon program Ra- ven Abbe, owned by HR. Bevan of Charlottetown, captured two firsts and a third in the jr. free- for-«all event. The Bevan owned gelding, rained-by “‘Roach” Mac- Gregor, also went the fastest mile on the afternoon card, 2:10. New marks were taken by Frances Gallon and Hoosier Doc- tor in Tuesday’s racing. ' - Other winners . were:‘,iBaby Train and Myrtle E7 in the after- nobn, and in the evening, Down- town, Moab and Here Am I'were winners. . 3 . ' The first daily double in the af- ternoon paid $9.10 on :a combina- tion of Frances, Gallon and Miss Tom Scott. 2 The exactor, in v the fifth dash, paid 3a $4.60 and the second daily '-=double saw Hoosier Doctor and'Baby Train combine to pay lucky ticket hold- ers $25.60. Esso paid $28.00 to place in ‘the sixth dash. , . On the evening card a combina- tion ticket. of Josedale Clan- man and Moab paid $14.00 in the first daily double and thequinella plaid'$11,10." The exactdr, ‘on a cembi‘nation ticket of A land and’Sco'ttish Light paid $6 [1" " The largest pay so far this week was ‘,in the second daily double, which saw‘a combination ticket Josedale Clansman"“-'Sieps Fastest MileOfi Card, 2:09 ~. 60. 'A Win ticket on'Heie Am I al- so paid $29.50. Scottish Light paid $15.70 to win in the fifth dash and War Cry Ranger, the final dash of the night, paid $17.80 to place- ' . _ . . TUESDAY AFTERNOON - i ‘ SUMMARY .» . a Dashes 1. land 7 Frances Gallon (Di, MacLeod) . . . 2 Baby Train (J. Arsenault) 1 Miss Tom scott (D Weisner) Tara Boy (L. Neill) Czarima V010 -(C. Macbeod) Al Budlong (R, MacDOnald). Edgar Herbert (L. Pilon) 1, Times: 2:14; 2:12-3; No time. - Frances Gallon by D. MacDonald, Baby Train owned by 0.0. Pratt, St. Peters.- ’ , ‘_ { Dashes-2, Sand-8, Raven Abbe (J.»MacGregor) 1 1 2 Dunlop B. (E. Bernard) 2 3 4 Just Betty’s Mark (D. Weisner) Betty Trench (D. MacNeill) Cottage Frank (Goguen). Bookm'm‘ (M. Grimes) *_ Meadow "Abbe (J. Pound) 'Timesr 2310—2; 2:10;.2zll. lJustsfieltty’s . Mark owned by Mrs. -D.‘J.’Seamlan, Charlottetown, Dashes 3 and 6 Hoosier Doctor (D. Weisner) Myrtle E. (L. Kelly) ‘ Essa (O. Poulton) Pericless (C. Smith) Hoosier Henley (G. Turner) Ranida ;(Jr. Chappell) C.P.’ Clegg-(J. Arsenault) 12 61 725 343 434 557 676 321 453 546 677 765 of Moab and Here Am .Ipay $273,.- The Peake’s Bombers advanced into the King’s County Baseball League finals by defeating the Mt. Stewart legionnaires 12-7 in Mt. Stewart, Sunday. - Freddie Handrahan, making his first start for Peake’s this season, pitched and fielded a su- perb game. He allowed only five hits and struck out five. ' Art Coffin went the distance for Mt.’ Stewart. He turned in a brilliant effort, but some shaky fielding accounted for his down— fall. His blazing fast ball sent '10 WI'F U Schedule Opens Tonight I, By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Western Interprovlnclal Football Union opens its 1958 schedule tonight in Winnipeg with a renewal of the Edmonton Es- kimo - Winnipeg Blue Bomber rivalry that climaxed last fall’s post-season play. 1 They will meet in an atmo sphere of mutual respect. ‘Coach Bud Grant of Bombers has picked the Eskimos as the team to beat again this year. His Edmonton counterpart, Melvin (8am) Lyle, has returned the cmnplimenrt. The rest of the five-team cir- cuit will wait for the weekend to see action. In a single Satur- day night contest, Saskatchewan Roughriders meet British Colum— bia Lions in Vancouver, where a crowd of 25,000 is expected. Two games are scheduled Mon day night, Lions in Calgdry against Stampeders and Riders in Edmonton against Eskimos. The lsgame schedule -— in pre— season speculation expected to produceone of the closest races in years—ends Nov. 1. . The Bomber-ESkimo clash will bear many similarities to last fall’s league final. PLOEN AT CONTROLS Kenny Ploen, the Iowa sensa- tion who led Winnipeg’s triumph in the final, will be at the con- trols for Bombers and he’ll have largely the same backfield going for him with Charlie Shepard Leo Lewis and Gerry James along. Eskimos still have Jackie Par- ker at quarter and he is flanked by their two booming fullbacks ANormie Kwong and Johnny Bright. r ‘ , _ Perhaps the changein Eskimos sincelast year is in the coaching staff where Lyle, a for- mer Oklahoma University assist- ant, has talk-en over from Frank Peak‘e's’ vsMme" I In L‘eagu‘é Fina's town;.’ Myrtle E owned by 0.0. Beake’s batters down swinging. Phonse Smith again led Peake’s homer to right. George Kelly had a long double in the 3rd. Ernie Crane was outstanding for Mt. Stewart. He collected two hits and made five spectacular catch- es in centerfield to rob Peake’s batters of extra base hits. A crowd'of well, over a thou- sand (witnessed the game. Char- lie Ryan was behindihe plate with Kenny MacDonald on- bases. » / Next Sunday Peake’s opens the finals on their own diamond, against Morell. Game time 2:15. (Pop) lvy, now with Chicago Cardinals of League. Grant is in second year since leaving the Bomber playing ranks for the head-coaching job. In pro-season exhibition com- petitions, Eskimos would. seem to have an edge over Bombers. They won twice over, Hamilton while losing to Ottawa with their secondastringers going most of the way. Bombers lost to Mont- real and Toronto. Yanks And Canucks Reqth Junior Tennis Semi-Finals By ARTHUR WILKES Canadian Press Staff Writer ' ,omAwn (GP) — Thesemi- finals were reached in all six singles and some doubles events in a heavy day marked by nu- merous upsets at the 11th annual Canadian junior tennis cham- pionships Wednesday. Two Canadians and- two Amer- icans advanced to the semi-finals of four singles classes—the junior men’s, junior women’s, girls’ and juvenile girls‘ singles—and one Canadian reached the semis of the juvenile boys’ singles. All the singles semi-(finals and most of the doubles semis will be played today and the champion- ships possibly will end Friday with all 15 finals. Gerald Du‘bie of Hamtramck, Mich, Yvon LeBlanc of Marie- vill-e, Que, Keith Carpenter of Montreal and Paul Sullivan of Belmont, Mass, won Wednesday’s junior men’s singles quarter-fi- nals. HALIGONIAN OUSTED Dubie defeated third - ranked Canadian Harry F-auquier of To- ronto 6-4, 64. LeBlanc (ousted un~ l ’ seeded Edouard-Baker of Haiti 6-1, 7-5. Sullivan downed Dennis Crotty of Montreal 6-4, 7-5 and carpenter, scored a 13—11, 7-5 vic- tory'over the second-ranked Cana- dian David Woodworth of Halifax, theonly upset of the four singles. The semi-finalists .of the lunior women’s singlesare Judy Traviss of Toronto, Judy Boriand of Win- nipeg, Julie Heldman of Ham- tramck, Mich, and Barbara. See- wagen of Bayside.‘ N.Y. (Miss Traviss defeated Vicki Berner .of Vancouver 6-1, 6-2. Miss Seewagen d o w n e d Dela Freedhlolif of Toronto 62, 1-6, 6-2. Miss Heldman beat Louise Jobln of Quebec 6—2, 6‘3 and Miss Bor- l-and ‘won over Pam Dewis of Halifax (M, 6-3. Geonge Seewagen of Bayside and Clay Hamelin of Buffalo, N.Y., scored upsets in the juVe- nile boys’ singles quarter-finals beating the defending champion Ron Seifort, South Bend, Ind, 6-0, v 6-2, and the top Canadian Michael Carroll of Ottawa 6-4. 6~1, respectively. with two hits, r one a booming? Racing Results At Hezelbrook Results of horse races held at Hazelbrook Saturday, August 9: Class A. Buddy Watson (E. Clow) 1 1 1 Money Counts (A. Jay) 2 2 2 Time: 2.23: 2.25; 2.28. Class B Dr. Bunter (L. Wood) 1 1 2 Donald Lacci (Larter) 3 2 1 Don McElwyh (H. Muirheat12)3 3 Cash Money (E. Murphy) 4 4 4 Time: 2.30; 2.34; 2.34. Starter —— J. Thomas McKenna; Timer — A. Hughes; Judges -- E. Ballem, J. J. McInnis. Halifax, Truro Races cancelled HALIIFAX (Cm—Harness rac- ‘ing programs here and at Truro were called off Wednesday be- cause of rain. , Ellis, O’Leary. ‘ ’ : TUESDAY EVENING SUMMARY Dashes 1, 4 and 7 Downtown (J. Bernard), 1 1 6 Here Am I (Jr, Ohappéll) 3 5 1 Dixie K. (W. Nicholson) 2 2 2 Jollity Leigh (D. MacNeill) 4 4 3_ Jolly'Jim (Daniels) 5 3 4‘ Samba (D. Ratchford) 6 6 5 Ginger E (L. Kelly) ' _. 7 7 7.- Times: 2:11-2; 2211-3; 2:13-1. nard Hunter-River; Here Am‘ 1, owndd byth P. Macintyre, Mon- tag“ , . Dashes 2, 5 and 8 I Josedale Clansman (G. Turner; . - 1 3 Scottish light (0 Constable) Abbeland (B. Barnett) " War CryRanger (Daniels) Super Hal (J. Kenny) Jollity’s King (J. Gougen) Times: 2:09; 2:11; 2:10. Josedale Clansman owned by George Turner, Dartmouth, N.S.; Scottish Light owned by HR. Be- van, Charlottetown, ' 1 Dashes 3 and 6 Moab (L. Neill) Callie Hal (H. Gebbesset) Trans Canada (C. O’Brien) ayhew’s Pick (C. Smith) . illie.’s Express (C. O’Brien) 5 Coronation Sue (D. MacNeill) 8 George Spirit (J. Smallwmdm Watchim‘s Star (G. Callbeck) 7 ' Time: 2:20; 2:18-2. Moab owned by L. Semple, Charlottetown. - . 215 323 452 644 566 vthl-J “QanhmeI-A I WITHDRAW ENVOY SANTIAGO, Chile (AB—Chile Wednesdaydecided to withdraw its ambassador to Argentina as a result of an attack by Argentine marines last week on a barren island at the tip of South Amer- ica that Chile claims. CANADIAN ARRIVES _ SINGAPORE (Reuters) -—.'- Col. F: .J Lyle, a Canadian industrial development expert, has arrived in Singapore to advise the gov- ernment on measures to encour- age and develop secondary in- sistence program. ) I J mans. National . ' Wilt} Barefoot Sedan {it 5"? l Lilia Downtown by Jack Ber- v 94; 165th Sgt'r. . - Landrigan, 94; 168th, Lt. Mary i= CONNAUGHT RANGES, 0T. tawa. —— (Special) — Sgt, Mike merside is one of the group as. the aggregate after the complet. ion of the first four matches in the Grand Aggregate of the nual Dominion Rifle Meet. a » Sible 350. The top man is’report- ed to have a four point lead; (142 over the Island: marksman. . A number of Islanders Tuesday distance of the leaders, are: Tpr. R. Barwise, both ,of‘ Char- lottetown and each with,“ a gregate of 331. Lt. Mary ‘ Lennan, Alexandra, folloWsF ‘ 329 and Maj. .G. A. MacDonald ’ Charlottetown 328. " "- l ' In the first match Tue'sday ' Bankers, Sgt. Susick scored. at 300 yards and then went onto They register a perfect 50 at the This effort landing in things . place in the match behind Gar... ' Cliff Strong of Windsor, N.S.(who' tawa, who obtained perfect, as at both ranges. , .‘ t 1 Other Islanders hr the prize list were: 150th,Tpr...B ,‘J. WT; MacLennan, 94; and Maj. G. A. MacDonald, 93. ~ shots at 600, Sgt. Susick" again . led the Island contingenti. 'He '- scorcd 71 out of 75, (73»won the match). Placing 33rd in the prize list. ' ’ rue - Auto - Casualty Marine _ . . G. G. K. PEAKE LTD. ' 78 Great George St. a Dial 4311 Charlottetown ,4 , granny service , Summer Schedule 7—9—11—1—3—5 " tune let to Sept. 21st- ‘ I inclusive 5 ' STANDARD For daily report dial CFCY on \ first weather broadéast dustries. Lyle was sent out under . the Colombo *Plan technical as- ' Cross early and avoid delay.“ No Reservations N ORTHUMBERLAND FERRIES LIMITED \ Susick of the RCAF Station, Sum. . ‘ cupying the' ten top positions in' ' So far Susick has amassed total of 338'points out of a pose “ night were within fair striking s Sgt. P. J. Laudrigan and In the President’s Match-15. “ Sgt. Landrigan, "Sir. *Balsw‘ipe' " wont ISLAfln.‘_chmnpl, u ’ Charlottetown, r- j; , also posted 99. The top'Spotma‘s, captured by another air, force" man S/L Dave Reynolds of OF M