Tile ainbldextriius art of the hen Y ork Yankeesl Mickey llantle Is getting to be a sore trial to opposing managers. liiziiitle merely switches from one ride of the plate to the other. de- pending on whether he is facing in right or left-handed hurler. Above he is shown batting righiy A! trip and lefty at bottom. doing. It with aqual zinc from buthi .5” EITHER SIDE aides. Recently he demonstrated graphicaliyyby belting out hom- ers from either side in a game against the Chicago White Sox. giving the Yankees an 8-7 vic- tory. Mantle thus became the first switch-hitter in the A.L. ever to hit homers from each side of the plate twice.MantIenow has 17 homers. well ahead of the pace set. by Babe Ruth when he hit 50 homers in 1927. .5f&.-2:255 rho Charlottetown Guardian, Monday: May 28. 1958 1 Despite the fact. Gloria Lebers- fild missed this return shot dur- ing a table tennis tourney at Lib- Winning Stone To Be Presented MONTREAL, (CPl--- The stone that won the Canadian curling championship for Billy Walsh and his Manitoba rink at Moncton. ix 8. last March will be formally gresented to him in Winnipeg Fri- IV wA.M. MacDonald. chairman of the curling championship com- mittee. plans to fly from Mone- ton carrying the 40-pound stone as personal luggage. He willlleavo liioncion Thursday and arrive in Winnipeg Friday. illegal Reward: Common Practice Says UCLA Senior l.0S ANGISLES fAI'l -- IIi'lITII- Man Cilreton. husky UCLA senior- lays illegal rewards to aililctesy are a common practice in the Pa- cific Coast Conference. And he says of his school's Crosstown rival University of Southern California: "They hold swim Dariies. and if an athlete dives in the ll0'Jl 3"” comes up with a dime. he 54! 8 new suit of clothes as a prize-" Cureton. who helped UCLA WIH three PCC football championsliins. called the conference's ban on M! alma mater a farce. "There's not is school in the roll- tei-mce that. does not ailllsldilr above the code limit in one way or another." he said Monday night. Curetoli will pie for Toronto in the Big Four Foot all League next season. Under a PCC ruling in Vicicrll. 3. C. Monday. UCLA's entire 1955 varsity an d freshman football teams will lose a year's eltgzbllltv unless they can prove they 1'9 till".-cl no illegal financial aid The conference alleged Carlie! that unidentified Ur LA athletes had been paid 840 I month outside M PCC code. Cop leTiTsiiiie. WINNER BY ANOSE erty. N.Y.. she won the event- by I nose. PROUD FELINES Cats were regarded as sacred animals in ancient Egypt. and many were embalmed with their owners. rams (AP)-Althea Gibson of New York. the first Negro woman admi' I to the U. T Lawn Tennis Assoriaiioii r a 11 k i u it s groutin- ucd her doniuiaiion of the interna- ilnnal circuit Saturday when she won the French women's singles champion by beating defending titlohnlder Angela Mortimer of Britain 6-0. 12-10. Miss Gibson's victory. her sov- enth in siiccessioii and lath in all in the tour which began in India last Decembe.. Iershadswed Lew Hood's exptcted victory over Swe- den's Sven Davidson in the men's final 6-4. 8-6. 6-3. The big blond from Australia blew Davidson off the court in an hour and 20 mi- IOOK ADVICE TO HEART Record-Breaker Sime Told To "Next Time Run Faster" I! WILL GRIMSLEY DURHAM. N. c. (AP)-After V0.11!!! DIV! Sime of Duke univer- sity ran the 211-yard dash in 20.1 seconds on May 11. clipping a tenth of a second off Mel Pattnnis seven-year-old world record, he dashed to the telephone. He put in a call to his father. an airplane nactory guard who lives in Fair Lawn. N. J.. and ex- cltedly sputtered out the good news. There was a pause at. the other end. Then came the father's terse reaction. "Next time." the elder Elma admonished. "run faster." That Dave took the advice to I heart is unimportant. The incident emphasizes how a father's athletic zeal produced one of the sports marvels of the age and eased Uncle Sam's concern about the Olympic Games later this year in Melbourne. The elder Sime was a minor league baseball and basketball player. When Dave was live. he was batting baseballs and bounc- ing basketballs around the back- yard. At 14. he was an accom- plished ice skater. At Fair Lawn high he was an all-star in base- ball. basketball and football. He became a runner strictly by acci- dent. Dave has I kid brothel Richard. six. following his foot- steps. Today Dave Sims is 19. a strap- ping college sophomore of slx-feet- three and 185 pounds whose recent assaults on the world records in the dashes and hurdles have made him America's greatest Olympic multiple - medal prospect since Jesse Owens in 1936. . . Already they're tabbing him "the world's fastest, human"-aan accolade yet to be P0SIliVPly proved-and down here in the rich pine tree and tobacco belt they un- lllnchlngiy call him potentially the but ,ll.;-mmd athlete the country ever produced. Sime's first love is baseball- he's a switch-hitting centre fielder. a la Mickey Mantle-and his speed and throwing arm have attracted . ll 15 major league clubs. some of whom have offered Ill! to 530-' 000 for him to sign. In football at. hi h school he was a triple threat talback-fine ball- carrier. good passer and a punter Lopez Says Tribe Has "Bush" Fans CLEVELAND (AP)-The mali- ager of Cleveland Indians said Saturday fans in Cleveland are "bush" and "don't: deserve a ball club in this town." Manager Al Lopez delivered the criticism after some of the fans cheered an injury of Indian third baseman Al Rosen. Pete Runnels of Washington Sen- ators crashed into Rosen at third base in the ninth inning Friday night and Rosen fell to the :.i'oniid. writhing in pain. Some of the fans cheered. Rosen will be out of the 'ineup iiidcfinitely with a wrenched knee and a bruised ankle. "The fans here are bush." an angered Lopez said. "Tliey don't deserve a ball club in this town. I never heard anything so sickening in my live. IST NEGRO WOMAN IN USLTA Dominates Tennis Circuit nuies. The 28-year-old American girl. seventh ranked in the United States. had been beaten in all four previous matches will: the 24-year- old Eng? . girl. Miss Mortimer. unaccountably nervous in the first set. settled down in the second and in de a battl: of it before the more than 12.500 persons in Roland Garrns stadium. Wh ll it we over. Miss Gibson was so happy at beating Miss Mortimer for the first time that she leaped over the net like a man to put her .arm around her op- poncni. The second set was a llrnrrher. C A . ddI;uul I MK-N FISH Rs,” AIZI. a':-:ar- 7.i'iir-.-.5” I.I.?.g'I:l...ca. ' -N RI .1. FfbilQo”3i- TOW FISH Al Birinlnoham III INGRAM. Eng'Iinri IMH- Canadian Davis ciipr-r Don FW- Ilna of Toronto and Hamilton Ri- gmhgg of HP United t yggmgfim able to hit 60 yards onu occasions He's skipping football at Duke. much to the agony of coach Bill Murray. ln a dual track meet with Navy this sPl'III8. Duke found itself with- out a discus thrower. They called on sime and the big redhead won the event with a toss of 143 feet- the first time he'd ever thrown it Anglers May Answer-T; Which Is Best Tuna Resort by DAL WARRINGTON ('anau'sian Press Staff Writer Salt water aiigii-rs around the globe may soon get the answer in a lnnlrii-iitniis qilrstlnil. ls WNIl:cpol'l, N'ov;i Scutiil. still the WtII'I(I s hml iiiiin fishing spot? Or is laiuiloii-. Soiillri"s flip fin- islicd as ilic nicer.-i of millionaire aiiclcrs-7 .luv.I Iliiiiliiii: alum! it brings worried frowns to farm of Wedge- porl's L400 residoiits For the little fishing port in soiiiliu'iw;ini'n Nova Scotia has become prosperous sincc Michael i.crnci'. New York big camr hunter and fisherman, pioneered tuna angling there in 1935. Fisliin: iisii:-lily :-Iaria for the sea- son in late June and therela plenty of "I-IIISF for concern. The Hip. a mile-wide Ilt'IaI stream where the hip hlucfms used to fight for the bait, just isn't pro- during. Some say the fish are still there. But if so they sure aren't biting. Last year w.1:: the worst ever a paltry 57 fish cl-iiixzill where a record 1.774 were taken in 1949. More have been landed in a single day in some years. And all the 57 didn't come from the lanious flip. The tuna xzuidea took sportsincn into other waters up to 25 miles from Wedgeport. in search of the giant fish. No one expected the 1949 catch to be maintained year after year. That was the climax of annually increasing catches. But since then. except for nnc season. there's been a steady decline-to 451 in 1950. 379 in 1051. 350 in 1052. 131 in 1953. A jump in 288 in 1954 brought hope of boiler t.hincs4hope dashed by last year's poor showing. PLENTY OF GUESSING Tile cause? Nobody knows. some say the occaii off Nova Srntici is warming. that the tuna have cons to colder waters. that the herring. which bluefins like. .aren't there habits of tuna that ills mostly guesswork. Every summer the fish. ranging up to half a ton in weight. migrate north along the gulf stream. past the Bahamas. along the United States east coast. to the waters of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Usually they reach wmlznnnri about late June. lingerinc in iced on schools of mackerel and hm-rim: until early October. Then they move on to parts unknown. I ' he already has broken three world , He has had six clot-kings at 9.4r On another afternoon. in a meet with North Carolina. he won the 220-yard low hurdles with the world record bettering mark of 22.2 seconds. took the 100-yard dash in :09.4. the 220 in :zo.3. each just a tenth of a second off the world records. finished second in the broad jump and third in thi- discus. Thus far this year--his first year of serious competitive track- records and tied three others. lie cracked a 32-year-old world indoor mark for the 100 with 209.5. the am-yard low hurdles t 22.2) and the 220-yard dash 4120.1). He equalled the world indoor record for 60 yards t:06.ll. the 100-yard dash (:09.3l and the established 2ao.yard dash (:20.2l. which he previously had beaten. More amazing than his series oi record-beating and matching per- formances has .heen Sime's con- sistency. In 14 races this spring he hasn't. gone over 9.6 aecnnlls seconds and one at 09.3. eqallinugi the world record. ' "He never runs a bail race." says the Duke track coach. Bob Chambers. "He is the must re- laxed man I've ever seen. lie has- wonderful concentration and a ter- rific urge to win." 1 Sim; is large for a sprinier.' being four inches taller and 2m pounds heavier than Owens in hisi prime. but he has tremendousi power and grace. He runs wiihl long, smooth strides like ii man o'war. his feet seemingly floaiini: over the ground. He could carry a bucket of water on his head. "Dave has the same tremendous. power of Owens bill I think he isy a much smootlier and more re-A laxed runner." says Chambers. 1 Sime. whose Scottish name I'- pronounced in rhyme with ”.lim” not "time." is a personable. hand- some youth with dark brown eyes They're caught occasionally all along the coast. Cmdr. Duncan M. Hodgson of Montreal landed a 077- pounder in St. Ann's bay off Cape Breton island. N.S.. in 1950. That's the biggest taken by an angler any- where in the world. But. for consistently good fishing Soldier's Rip topped the lists-until now. Harvey E. Teller of San Francisco caught Wedgepnrt's larg- est-932 pounds -0" 1951. The aver- age catch is between 400 and 700 pounds. Commercial fl ii in 0 r m o n have killed bluefins tipping more than 1,000 pounds. They use nets or harpuons. PLAN 1056 CONTEST Despite 1955's discouragement all is not gloom in Wedgeport. The Nova Scotla government. which sponsors an annual interns tional tuna angling contest. has an- nounced Sept. 12-14 for the 1.956 bgcn "legged 3, me gig, of me match-the lath. by the way. since North American semi-final Davis 1937- g Cup round between Canada and Forty-two aiiglers renresentins the United States. to be played the -Commonwealth countries. Ar- July 25.23 ",9 US. Lawn Tennis S9"I'"3- CIAIIA3 C"h"v Mcxlmv "19 Association announced Friday. United States and Venezuela took ' and a schoolgirl plexion. For all its 185 pounds. his body is lean and sleek. He has virtually no hips and his legs are long. Mel Patton. whose 220 record Siiue smashed. has been workinit with tho Duke star on his SPF aways. Oflfp he gets a full head of steam. Sinie seems to explode. ''I don't think there's a man alive who can beat him." says Chambers. Victoria Selected As Site Of Davis Cup Semi-finals NEW YORK (CP'eVii-ioria has iilated it. ion. N.Y.. a director of the match. and South anglers in Europe 10 teams to enter. What happens any more i So little is known about thei Miss Mortimer started it by trim, ning her own service after the game was deilced seven times. Miss Gibson held hers and the score. went to 4-4 afic a couple of service breaks. Bot.h players becaiue rattled as the set wore on. and Miss Mort- imer lnsi her service in the 10th game. Willi a chance in wrap up the match. Miss Gibson also became fluatereii and blew her own serv. ice in the 20th game. She rallied. however. All break Mills Mortimer wi-rigepoi-i's future as the world's tuna angling capital. again in the 21st game with a brilliant passing shot. with her service coming up and an ll-I0 lead. Miss Gibson quickly won IIil't'P. points for match point at love and banged over a sizziiiiu ace in ' iish the match and clinch the title. Davidson pill up a dogged tight Biainst " rl that kept the centre court customers clieerm m m m court customers cheering. But he was unable to handle the biz serve and fantastic placements of the 21-year-old Aussie Davis Cup star. L. TOPDOGNOW-- AICHII Mgggf. mics maanacr dzossp 727 WE llEAWWEIGIlr rxrzs , Mair rxwr WM xx; it up Awecwla axv -. H .fll5 FtaaA?-- 1154549; 7715 osr at-' till! 5051515; lI'IIOZl ;ya4IPE7'E Fr! A 'suary" hm Edf A!cIIM"9 DIEM WIMIIMO Bow 0 I119. IIa;v5iltA'.1voMtafAy'I9 rats 105 37444 zzxtcrhrasercrtok .5 .. - By Alan Mover" Atosr IIMIFRG APE W51!!! air! so 6000 I R (paw, me: pan last year. In three days they caught only three fish. one of them disqiialiiied because a shark mu- Kip Parrinizion of East Hamp- back from talking to big-game America. says he expects at least between now and then may decide The matches will be played at the Victoria lawn tennis and bad- minton club over a four-day per- iod instead of the usiiiil three days because one of the dates fall on a Sunday. Renville McMahon. pres- ldent of the USLTA said. Canada. represented by Bob Be- dard of Sherbrooke. QUE. Don Fon- tana of Toronto and Henri Roehon of Montreal. won its first round recently against the West Indies 5-0. The same team probably will play the United States. which still has to name its team. The U.S. drew a first-round bye. The 11.5. - Canada winner will meet the winner of the Brazil vs. Mexico matches for tho moo title. El.l.rI:eTWlT;;T Hickok Award NEW YORK (AP! Jackie Burke. 'irinncr of the Masters golf tournament. Thursday qualified for this 810000 Hickok "professional athlete of the year" award. Burke iron the April poll of sports writers and -ports:-asters. Other monthly winners were Bob Pettit and Paul Airizin. pro basketball players and jockey Eddie Arearo. Burke won the April poll by a wide margin over Jean Bellvi-all. Monlri-at hockey player. followed by Mickey Mantle of New York Yallkci-.-:. and Vic Wcriz of Cleve- land O. K. Rubber Welders Summersirlo Charlottetown LET us oiu-:cx roux risiss NOW. AT NO COST To YOU. WHEEL BALANCING 850 Per Wheel OPEN SEASO Itixlvrii:-l Altair-. 'lliui.slci' Dear-I (Ill'II Service Rliwrratliin Kumw ilfls i-..ii-liq-r jg w l gunumlav . -- . 5"" '-”""'k'r "W hall to "PPR the. iatinll Softball Leagiir in Ottawa, ;a,,,m lleight Worries Archie Wi.'x'l)S()R. Eiiglancl iAPr Lilzlit heavyweight champion Ai'i'Ill(3I Mtlf)l'0 fretted with a ivi-iulii is,-.-i,h.i lcm Thursdayeneediniz to shed ninc or I0 pounds-eas he pi'iip.'ii'crl for his Juno 5 title defence :'lQ.'illlsC Trinld:id's Yolanda Polnpcy in Lon- don Moore, from San Diego, ibilif. worked six feverish rounds in a CAI-IAiDefers Cup Decision Mt'lNTRl'7AI; ttff-'t -- The t'llli;; dlan Amateur Hockey Association Thursday deferred decision for onp year on a prllprmal that Maul; Leaf G3l'i'IPDS in Toronto be the home for lb: Memorial Cup finals for the next 10 years. The proposal was pr:-senierl to the FAliA's annual meeting here on behalf of Penn Smyihe. presi- dent of the National Hockey heagiio Toronto Maple Leafs. VIardeiis' 'Copiers Keep Eye On Fisherman ST. JOHN'S, Nfid. (CPI This fisheries: department had wardens in liclicopicrs and on the streams Thursday to keep a wary eye on thniisnnds of N:-ufnundlamiors Irnnpimz to the bush in do battle with the lighting mud irniii. Besides enforcing the bag limit ---three dozen trout. or 15 pounds plus our iroiit n d.:i,v- the wardens were there to romiurl anglers ol the new sca lrniii and salmon open- ing days. in former years May 24. when every Newfoundland angler worth his salt hits for the rivers and ponds. was the first day oi" iho sea trout and salmon season. Itsggnfoef prim M Mn: included - Noricr J. Erskine Clark Ltd.. yoitr John Deere Dealer for Queens and Prince Counties announces the appointment of Mr. Gordon Corr. 190 llln Ava as Imlliell agent. Char- lottetown one for John Deere machinery osdpum. i small. boiiinl lymnesiuin in his, camping to lose nearly ll pnililrl a' day before the bout. British sports writers rlI'l";Ki"(I him about his weight. Monro carp : them the brushoff. "That's my sor- i ret, he grunted. Observers believe the buriy' champ, who professes to 39 Vi'1lFS of age but is believed consiriciallly older, is nine to 10 pounds oipr the 175-pound limit. Volande. 27, fiiziii-rs In liair no problem making weight. ilis fl:,'tli- ing weight is 170 British writers have made .'ili-ore a prohibitive favorite. saying the champion will crush the priiiw of Trinidad if he is able to boat lhrI scales. fiixi i'iro.p...,.,,i,.,.. M H" .5sn.E Wilhdrawslllharge Against De Marco Ai'(;L'STA. Mains (AP)-Bangor boxing prmnoicr Leon P. Gormal -IV TIlUFSfIa.V withdrew his com- plaint agaiiist former welterweight l'IlR.mI7III" Tnny DcMarco and the lilaiiic Boxing rnrnnjlgginn mow 1'9 temporary sllsnrnsion of tho llostnu fichipr. flinrman had complained in 111. Maine romniission that DeMarco li:i:i withdrawn from an oral Agree- lll('llI to meet llo:-ir-lnp Khalfi of .Al5:crl;l at Bangor May H. for things you need and want Geiisoln S1000.-it Household l'1lll!l!l for any wnrtliwhilg pmpogg. 115, 35. way thouasnds of people ever? you get the extra cash thev need on term they can afford. Y1 you have a steady income. and you can meet the regular" monthly pay- ments, you can borrow within)! onrlorners at HFC. HOUSEHOLD FINANCE w. n, Nssnpal I30 Grout Gus-go 31.. who 1. phone 397 COIAILOITITOVIN, P.l.I. A Ticket Instalment Plan for Canadiam who want to travel now and pay later For the convenience of iravrllrn who Inst In by first and my later RUAF Toclref hnalmem Plan is the ansvirv. This plan K espcriaily sum-A for-. 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