r tl 1! ji t- n n ,ri 1 SalUiday. June ti. 1953 ?-' W i A ' Braves Retain League Lead With 3-2 Win Over Phiil.es NEW YORK ( Milwaukee raves clung to tneir sienuer CYOs Down Motors in Trophy Play half-game lead in the National League Friday night with an ti nning, 3-2 victory over the third aee Philadelphia Phillies. The game ended after Brook- ' .?. -.- ,' a-j '- yn had edged St. Louis Cardin- jiwv ... . ). er aw.. .- . "..u j -r. is . e- m w , 5-4, and the Braves went PYO soccer rluh added another . . J ' AbyL ! .5 v-ir" V 4 . " . " . . Ui ..IV...- .'". ......"". I wJ '"JVi.A - f .fiAVfc. "--'.' Ic.. .J Ji r I Into extra innings knowing they Giants trail the Braves by six Fames. Other Scores: National League St. Louis 4, Brooklyn 5. Chicago 1, New York 11. Milwaukee 3, Philadelphia 2. Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh 4. American League Washington 8. Chicago 4. Philadelphia 2, Cleveland 3. - New York 5, St. Louis 0. Boston at Detroit postponed WIL Yakima 10, Spokane 8. Trt-Clty 2, Lewiston 6. Victoria 5, Wenatchee 6. Edmonton 5-8, Calgary 4-3. Vancouver at Salem Dostixmed had to win to stay on top. Had Milwaukee lost, Brooklyn would have moved into first by a single percentage point. New York Giants shoved a notch closer to first division by trouncing Chicago Cubs 11-1 with Ruben Oomez striking out 11 In his first major league tlv North Star Football League I ht.sj : tAiLlSkti V" li?.--- . V t I-" Vf w 1 by defeating the Battery by 4-1 j ?T "Ui Lj V-A-l- 'J 4f ' lat evening rUsHV CN V31 M Ay-it PV tf V CYO had the better of the first M.. lA "tST L;ti "u- VU WC'WiVS halt with Scr.tani getting the t VlV " 4 V5-.' iCl' i - f J I V only Boal. &-atani later hit the UXiA p" ' ' frw? ! , ! ' upright with a grand drive but . - 7 4 r' f ! 'X- ,1. , I the ball rebomiued into play !V 4-7, - J JLs V"k V-S ' & with Maron In the Battery goal -X . J V 1 $ - ' ,. j well beaten. Carolli cleared when L , y-',Vr-.'C ,Vl - e. , x ." - Vfl the Batterv stasied a sustained i f. i A4 ?t -"- - . . f 'VdM2 " 1 .ni.Lk ; w " " V , 'V . VA L. J I The second half was faster iw., . .. . jit. i 1 PROCESSION ROITE The Queen in her state coach passes through Trfalgar Square on her 1 way to the Coronation. ';IJ23E2I t2?.. Holiday Wear BLUE JEANS CORDS SPORTS SHIRTS Prai'lirally yours at THE SPORTS SHOP and Shroedar handled the ball to prevent a goai with Maron beaten, but from the resulting penalty Tambourini made the score 2-0. In another hot CYO attack, after Maron had saved splendidly, Tambourini turned a hot drive into the top of the i ei. Then in a Battery attack, Neill and Stanforth combined fur another onslaught and in trying to clear. Rutton turned the ball into his own goal. But CYO got that goal back when Verhaar and Silversmith com- SPORTS ROUND-UP Air Cadet Chief Attends Meeting j OTTAWA (CP)-A delegation of Air Cndet Leairue and RCAF of- I ficlals will attend the confer-j nice of the United States civil, air patrol being held in Cheyenne, Wyoming, June 5 and 6, 1 Hy fi'AYLE TALI JOT NEW YORK (AP) Ren Hogan will finjTan lol worthy of his remarkable talent, waiting uourini wno added a fourth. 1 tor him when he tees nff nvov rivtiniKhV Air l adet headquarters an- Battery goal showing good jurig- WinnWOpt acres in fllS Ill'St try at the British Open : nounccd today golf championship next month. Subjects to be discussed at the conference Include ttv forthcoming International cx- ' meiu ana khs 01 SK111. Dunbar and Gomez defended well. Boul-tong played hard and Shroedar improved as the game progressed. Mazzoni tried hard. The forwards are still painfully weak and oifly -when Darrow Gomez went forward towards the end 1 The little battler from Texas i has rhcsen, maybe deliberately. ' 'the longest and the meanest! links in all Scotland as the ; ; crucible in which to prove his I claim to authetic greatness. No '; L'.b. player before Hogan has change, of air cadets between subdued Carnoustie, nor com" Canada and the U.S.. as well really close. If Ben does, there I as the international drill corn-can be no further argument i petition between Canadian and iif . 1 , 1 c cnancea 10 nave Been on I hand the last time the Unitel j States top stars came to grips j with the fearsome layout on the j wind-whipped Firth of Tav. U.S. cadets at the Canadian National Exhibition Aug. 29. Heading the Canadian dele-ration will be Air Cadet League vice-presidents George A. D. Will of Melfort. Sask., and Eric M. Duggan of Edmonton. Air Commodore J. G. Bryans. officer lommandins; No. 14 training group headquarters In Winnipeg, will it-present the RCAF. WIL Leaders Return on Victory Trail did they threaten much. They ' need Pavlikis. Smith and Cam- : eron. j The CYOs were a well-balan-l eed team. Mohan had little to ' do in goal. Carolli and Letour- j neau were equal to the weak attack of the Battery. Rutton. , St atani and Romane were not I hard pressed. Tambourini was; the marksman w ith Verhaar j crossing dangerous centres. ' SERVE BURTON TYPE SPICY NUT BROWN ALE j mat was in 1937. when the U.S. ! I Ryder Cup team tried to tame I j Henry Cotto-i, the great Eng-1 jlish player, and Carnoustie., in ! Mhat order. They came out of! i it bleeding from every pore. i ! There is nothing freakish! i fbout Carnoustie, no skatir.i : i rink greens or deeply furrowed 'traps. It is just a long, toush golfmg layout, bleak and windy 0a By The Canadian Press Lewiston Broncs. Western International Baseball League leaders, eot back on the victory trail as they put the skids under Calgary Stamoeders. 12-5. behind the 10-hit pitching of Russ Bu'ler. Monday evening's game brings ! the Motors ar.d the CYO face to-face in a postponed game. The ; ia:r.e two teams meet on Wednesday in a regular fixture. When the Battery and Gen-' eral Motors played to a one-all draw on Wednesday it was Sil- j versmirh who kept such a fine ! goal for the Battery, and not Nuyien as reported. ana uninenaiy to any except the finest golfing shots" It is an entirely fitting place for Hogan to face his doubters on both fides of the Atlantic and try to ijiuve 10 ir.em ne is the best the Butler, who chalked up his sixth ;n in eight starts this world has seen 5' iNi season, was in trouble only in Carnoustie stretches out ov ine nun. wnen aiampeaers got 7200 treetps voii., j four runs on three singles and a j yards. Like all of Scotland litetinte Foot liecllh brace of two-baggers. TO ADD FURTHER JOY TO THE PLFMNT-EST OF AH TIES... THE HE 0FH0STMD GUEST...HAVE BURTON'S DELICIOUS, THIRST QUENCHING ALE ALWAYS ON ICE AND READY TO SERVE AT A MOMENTS NOTICE. CHOOSE AN ALE AS YOU WOULD CHOOSE A FRIEND..J0H THE FINEST QUALITIES. t-lder links, it carrie.1 no official BRANDED POM. TRY BEGIN A CP Under the new Pou:try Brand Act Saskatchewan poultry producers now may have their fowl branded as a ! Second-place Salem Senators, meanwhile, kept pace with the par. Suffice it to say that th? competitive record for Carnous-, tie the last time we knew was 70. shared by four professionals. Our chief memory of the action T, riu-,g7 other league saw 12-3. vu.na oouiv to izie aericuiitire ' hop Tri-City department for ta!'..v letters Wenatchee shade Spokane 8-7 j , vvuiar llirr ill-vpn r-n in H.crin : and Yakima split a doublehead-, will attempt to master is its ' er with Edmonton, the .Bears j exacting demand for long, con-' 1 -J LI.. A lit. From Terrace . k me uprncr o-u ana ta- irauea shots in the wind to 1 monton the nightcap 4-2. j tightly-trapped greens. Some of 1 Danny Rios went the distance ; "-" longer holes extend to 567, with a one-hit performance in ! 50- nd 483 yards, and in sev-. Yakima's first-game win over cral instance traps bisect the! i Ekimos. Jack Widner's seven- j 'airways to hold down the ; hitter, combined with four Yak- ; length of drives. i J iraa bobbles afield, gave E-skimos ' ' ' 654 y TORONTO I HOME 5I1--4I Foot ailments and injuriei caused by misfitted shoes in early childhood can seldom bo corrected in later years. Insure your child's future foot -health and comfort by using our X-Ray Fitting Service. This modern fitting aid permits you to See that your child's shoes lit correctly . . . that pliant bones and tender muscles re not crowded and distorted . . . that your child't shoes mm - T J promote normal, UMI beahhy develop. fAM V Sk H ment of the del,-I 'fj cate foot structure. lAlli vl B"n, ,h" wboU EUM i v J I1t in lot an X-l &jil Ray Foot Em,n. y ' ! ' tlon . . . without r 5 & ihn 'I coet wilhout lea B hi jjLeJbMi obligation to buy. FASHION FOOTWEAR FREE $189.70 J DELIVtRy 1 T-.Vi. I 7 r " BASEBALL . SUNDAY At Prince Rupert CORDON & AXOrRSON vs ESQIIRIS At Terroce TF.RRACE vs COMMERCIAL HOTEL Double-Header ttie second game. I Wenatchee Chiefs were six ; runs down ??oir.g into the last i of the fourth before they got i tit-web rSt?iur. -up: tu:overtake Spokane. Salem got its winning run on a ismieeze play in the last of the : ninth to hang the defeat on iTyees. Joe Clardy crossed home (plate when Dick Sabatini laid . down a perfect bunt, j Home runs spelled Vancouver's win over Tri-Citv's celiar-I dwelling Braves. Capilanos got j two runs in the fourth when K. ' I Chorlton rapped out a four-j bagser and four more in the I ninth when Jim Leavitt grand- Consult your Tl Anl Cinjdian ficile Airtinn, siammea. L. V't'"'?- rM ;IcM -fej-' : u 'ivi-j--i--y5 C I Mu vie for the "Te Deum' which closes the religious part of the British Coronatinn is specially written for each crowning. The Complete Travel Service M. V. RVDON FOR SALE $2500, or Best Offer Received by June 30th A New Kermath IftO hi. p.; 2-1 reduction A 28-Foot Cabin Cruiser A Sponge Rubber Berths SOCIAL CREDIT Committee Rooms OPEN DAILY FOR TRANSPORTATION TO THE POLLS ON ELECTION DAY 176 -PHONE -178 ... A Dinghy A Anchor A Compass A Seart hlisht a Radio And Many Other Features AN EXCELLENT SEABOAT Reason for sellinghave bought a larger boat Sec It At Prince Rupert Yocht Club CONTACT DR. 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