srnriKv, lui t ;!K TED WILLIAMS RETURNS FROM KOREA FOR TREATS IN KOREA AP)Flight surgeons h,v star Ted Williams to the United states for 2.Tm and nose ailment, a U.S. Marine Corps spoke" ' Williams, pilot of a marine Pnn.hl'... sma" If' "V t V 1 j Fifth Yankee Loss Considered Serious Indians Down League Leaders 7-2 With New York Gift Runs his 38th mission June 10. as gr(,UI 4, Red-Hot Senators Take 10th Victory Salem Maintains Lead While . Caps Humbled by Edmonton By The CanndlRn Press The red-hot Salem Senators extended their current win streak to 10 games in a row. Friday night and maintained their slim half-game lead over Lewis-ton for the Western International Baseball League The spokesman said the Boston lied ' So . leave for the U.S. within a few days. By BE PHLEGAR Associated Press SiKirts Writer . V; j J ,i I- 1 ! f I When even the Cleveland Indians can beat the Yankees maybe it's time to take this five-game New-York losing- streak seriously. leadership. cvny uiun iiul'i it un wague t : club had defeated the Yankees i on three hits for his second thi season. But in seven fames ' victory. the mere sight of a New Vnrk ! Ted Kluszewski In If 1, a- .. nnifnrm cniiserl the cpennHl 1 Cincinnati's rl o u h 1 e triumnh place Indians to roll over and , blasting a home run in each j game to take over the National play dead if So what happened Friday , League lead with 21 Thf fiinnta tiainmprnH the i i . i - ? Senators edged by Tri-City Braves, 3-2, while Lewiston wes, winning a 6-5 squeaker from Spokane's Indians. The third and fourth place clubs changed places, however, with the Edmonton Eskimos moving in behind Lewiston o" the strength of a double win over Vancouver, 10-4 and 5-4 Capilanos slipped to fourth. In the league's only other action, Wenatchee Chiefs clubbed Yakima's tail-end Bears, 9-3. The Victoria-Calgary tussle at Calgary was postponed because of wet grounds. Salem got all the runs it needed in the first frame. A walk, a single, two outfield flies and a double gave Senators their three runs and their 10th straight, the longest victory skein of the 1953 season. The Braves collected singles in the second and the sixth. Ray McNulty. the Edmonton hurler, was top man for the Eskimos in their twin win over the Capilanos McNulty won his eighth game of the season In Attention to ijour going the distance in the opener and slapped a pinch-hit single to left to drive in Edmonton's winning run in the last of the ninth in the second game. Another fine pitching and batting periormame was turned in by Wenatchee's Charlie Ou-bre, who went the distance for the Criefs in their victory over Yakima. Oubre also, connected for two safeties, good for four runs on the Wenatchee side of the leager. He scattered nine Yakima hits. j At Lewiston, Bronc manager i Bill Brener won his second : game in as many nights as he i twirled the Broncs to their win ; ever Spokane. Lewiston put the ! game in the cooler In the eighth ' inning as they scored four runs '; on two singles, two doubles and a walk. It was the seventh : straight setback for the In- i dlans- I MIL STANDINGS (Top Nine) i W. L. Pet. Salem 35 21 .625 Lewiston 34 21 .613 Edmonton 36 28 .5H1 Vancouver .. 32 24 571 ; Wenatchee 27 32 .45S Tri-City 25 31 .448 Calgary 25 31 .446 Victoria 25 32 .430 Spokane 25 33 .431 i Comfort The Yankees threw the ball last-place Cubs for 14 hits in-around in the first inning like eluding home runs by Wes fugitives from class-E and pre- I Westrum and Daryl Spencer, srnted Cleveland with four gift j The White Sox spotted B03-runs. j ton three runs in the first two Such generosity couldn't be innings, then rallied for four In overlooked, even by the Indians, ,ne seventh as NeUie Fox and and Larry Doby and righthand- i Pherm Ixillar doubled and Tom er Bob Lemon made sure it Wright delivered a pinch-hit didn't go to waste. ; triple. Doby parked a. pair high up Witn tne bses loaded and into the seats in the third and:two out- us Zernial singled to fifth Innings and only a ninth- I 'we tne Athletics their decision inning, two-out homer bv pinch ; ovpr tne Browns-hitter John Mize saved the i Tne Senators' loss to the last-Yankees from their third shut-Place Detroit Tigers was their out of the year Mize's blow was 1 s'xth straight this week. Clyde the last of just five hits 0ffiVolImer nit a home run witn ,-emon. Tile final score was 7-2. jtwo on for a11 o Washington's runs- In the National Iaeue. the i I' V EDNA MARKHAM oi Newmarket, Ont., is Canadian girls' junior archery champion. She scored 42 hits for a total of 154 points at the eighth- annual Indian John memorial shoot at Brantford, Ont. She won the title previously in 1951. SPORTS ROUND-UP S bed ii led 1 lisl,ls to: VANCOUVER , Doily KETCHIKAN Doily (except to; EDMONTON ond Points East Direct . . . Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, For a Well-Planned Holiday Anywhere CONSILT By GALE TALBOT NEW YORK. The patron saint of the modern umpire is the late Byron Bancroft Johnson, who organized the American League in 1901 in a snarling fight against the old, established National League and, as one of his first acts, raised the men in blue to a position of authority, dignity and security they pace-setting Milwaukee Braves put up a much stiffer fight than the Yankees, but they bowed to their second-place rivals, Brooklyn Dodders, 4-3. on a pair of two-run homers by Duke Snider and Gil Hodges find now lead the Dodgers by only one game. St Louis Cardinals took over third place from Philadelphia bv beating the Phillies ',-fl nnrl Hollywood, Seattle Lock In PCL Race By the Asw.c l.ili'd press CYO Hands Motors Its Worst Defeat had not known before. Up to that time the life of an ire 2v2 games behind. Cinein- I Seattle and Hollywood are still nati won a twilight-night dou- ' locked in a terrific fight for the Billy Evans, who came out of Cornell to give umpiring a touch of class it might have lacked umpire had been a hazardous and degrading one. Baseball was BASEBALL SUNDAY Kt Prince Rupert Gordon & Anderson vs Terrace Double header Game Time 1:45 p.m. CYO handed General Motors Its worst defeat of the season with the final score 6-1 In last night's football game. Tambourini scored three goals, Van lerland two, and H. Nuyten, one. Mills got the only goal for uiLiicauci null! riiL-MJUIgll, Dt "-v- ia.-i ixoguc icauci aill JJ, and 4-1, and New York Giants but Hollywood acted like a Class defeated Chicago Cuhs fl-R D club for several inninn-s nf itjs a rowdy game, and the men who j before, tells of an April day in made the decisions were subject : Chicago when the fans peppered almost daily to, intimidation and ;nim and tne veteran Hurst ,with worse by players and club own- a shower of bottles. -Neither was the Motors but. missed a penalty i.MjSial ,x,t... (game with San Diego Friday; ,nignt A losing streak f five isn't: e . , J , , : too unusual, except in the case : thfa" dhed Oakland ! of the Yankees. They haven't j I?6., PC nders, 4-1 and i :4 . -1 Hollywood nosed out San D wn ers alike. I hit, but Evans still was a little j ,lrk "THE COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICE" Realizing that baseball could n in the dressing room j cyQ ,ndivlduaU never become a truly great game I u neean t worry about those and as a team and the MotoI any uiuii iiimi mat in a c . , " ' n uiego had a 7-2 lead on row since cagey Casey Stengel ; 'K"31 the seventh, chief- took over as manager at the unaer sucn conditions, Jonnson ' 111 "P"', mj ui even June, i let it be known- from the start j Willie," Tim told him uncon- jstart i'f J.he 1949 season. were outplayed on all counts. Stars for the CYO were Rut-ton, Tambourini, Van lerland, Battisti and Verhaar. They had that the umpire, there was only 1 cernedly. "They lack control '.7 nuiiywtAAl pinn ing was ineffective and the the i fipMincr crtnttir When the warm weather sets ln ' In less than two weeks. one on the field in those days, f; I z most economical Yanks have frittered awav Si', tough, prepare to do a lot of i , The Stars pushed over four was his personal representative and .as such, supreme. He warn games of their league lead. They o....u. Uv.B1,,B. in, aic ucsu- Rutfnn's hrnther F Rnltnn iuhn rung in their half of the seventh and anu San ouii Diego uicgu catcher caicner made maae two iwo still own a substantial eight ed that he would stand for no ! y at 100 yards.' did well. game , . bulge , over the , Indians ... ... . . For the Motors. Ebv. Furune Since their inception as mar- Mills anC Eckert were best with abuse of his umpires or for any infringement of their authority. He made it stick, too. A vivid picture of the scandal- ket places centuries ago, fairs Pat Wilson playing his usual nave compiled an impressive list scrappy game. He would bs even ous pre-Johnson era, as well asjof contributions to better living more useful if he didn't scrap so meat you can buy - less than 10 cents a serving!" ; " ---- that of the past half-century neipmg io cnan new courses, new much. But there is no doubt methods and better ways of about Ms keenness. Silversmith living. kept gcal in the second half. k j V 11 "'em possioie Dy liuerienng rLr ,l t C'eveland, f"7. half with a runner on the base path al?H iSnVn'y a wlwn'he did not have possession v game behind in third place ! of tne ball ""i;:"! ft T i ars won the game on two ' 8 ' ipgthe chafleng, mers off Theolic FrpTh fV? ' Smith, who took over the pitch- Zw the" '"g ln the "inth t0 P10tect a 7"6 sweep over York Wh Sox whioped Zol S S Friday i1 Tomm Saffe" hlJ e night Philadelphia snapped a riVf four-game St. Louis Wowns fLfh, Td fe Wa"S "le tW dWn the winning streak 6-5. and Detroit ,tU Ver beat Washington. 7-3 Mt: fl.e'cl fence' beattle. remained a half game MIISlAI HfrviF y fjv WINNERS TMC SLOGAN CONTEST finest Qualify Mjj during which the arbiter rose j to, his present stature, is contain- I ed in James M. Kahn's "The! Umpire Story," published by G. P. Putnam's Sons. You'll wonder when you put it down why it took so long for someone to put this colorful clan between covers. Kahn, a former baseball reporter, has tracked down just about every funny story ever told about the never-endini , struggle between the umpire and the player. Tim Hust It was who coined the immortal phrase Tyou ' ;4art'-d;tieat. the' hours'1 and who: wore a baseball cap with the letter "B" on the front because. ; he said, "it stands for best anri Johnson wants you fellows to know how I stand with him." l 7 Wj iterod eight hits. Catcher Ray ' .,... 7 ' i , r : M . ' . f : v. . s V. .- British Runner Oi teig won the game bv smash First Priic No. 1226 C4MM POM In? his 17th homer of the year wilh one on n the fourth. Fan Francisco, which has been plagued by injuries and a losing streak, bounced back for its second win against Sacramento as Elmer Singleton went the dis Second Prize 1 No. 1045 Third Prize No. 1098 tance for an 8-3 decision. The Seals collected 12 hits off three Sets Hot Pace f LbNDON (AP)-Roger Banister ran the third fastest mile n record but failed by two seconds In an almost secret attempt at the legendary four-minute mi!e. The 24-year-old Oxonian, now a medical student, was clocked ln four minutes two seconds in a paced race at Motspur park. His time was the fastest ever for a British rnuner and was only six-tenths of a second short of Gundar Haegg's world mark of 4:01.4 set in Sweden in 1945. Sac pitchers . while Sinetetnn was scattering seven blows. Los Angeles edged Portland. mam VACATION SPECIAL 4-3. Dixie Unright. Aneel out fielder, lofted a homer out of the Portland park in the eighth inning for the winning marein Bob Spicer, who relieved Angel A HIGH QUALM PORK HOiM PACKED FOR THE starter cal McLish In the sixth, bianked the Beavers the rest of the way. Lyman Linde was touched for 13 blows and was charged with the defeat. P( L Standings ' W L Pet Seattle 53 35 .602 Hollywood 52 35 .598 Upset Victory Scored in Race ' WESTBURY, N.Y. (API Paige Direct, owned by Paige H. West of Snow Hill, Md., scored an upset victory last night in the Massapequa junior free-for-all bok.e; for ond snack Los Angeles 50 40 .550 Portland 42 41 .500 San Diego 39 49 .443 Sacramento 38 49 .437 San Francisco 38 50 .432 CANADIAN COVERNMEHT Here'i a reo buy ... o hearty, satisfying, porls luncheon meat you can serve hot or cold-dozens of exciting ways! Delicious ond nourishing you ten get H ot only a few Penn four big, satisfying portions each from every can! Buy a supply at your 9 this weekend look for the special "Canod brand, l" Luncheon Meat" or your favourite for P1 supply for home, for the summer cottage, ...((,. price i so low you'll find if e" whi le lo buy a case or two I Oakland 37 50 .425 THE GENERAL "Silent Safety" TIRE oil Rayon Construction PLUS COLD RUBBER TREAD Has a- SAFETY FACTOR of 10.5 This is 80 higher thon ony other tire Original Price 6.70 x 15 $46.30 Trade-in on your old tire 1 5 . O 0 or More YOU PAY $3L30 This Tire is Guaranteed Unconditionally KNUTSON'S Tire Sales A Service puce at ttooseveit Raceway's grand circuit meeting. Alan Myer guided Paige Direct to the top at the quarter mile and was never hsaded as he cane home in 2:02.2. In a four-way photo. Shamrock Sally, nosed out Steward Lad, the favorite, for the place wilh Scotch Spencer fourth. GEORGE DAWES AUCTIONEER Phone Black 846 and Red 127 LINDSAY'S CARTAGE AND STORAGE LTD. Established 1910 MOVING . . . PACKING . . . CRATING SHIPPING . . . FORWARDING . . . STORAGE Experienced handling Local, Nation-wide and World-wide Shipments. 'MOVE WITH EASE . . . SHIP VIA LINDSAY'S" Agents Allied Van Lines Ltd. Phone 60 or 68 Cor. 2nd and Park Are. B$? IfalueofthieWeekandEvwWe&ygi NEW AND USED TIRES VULCANIZING RE-CAPPING WE FIX FLATS i Red 548 811 Fraser Street AGRICULTURAL PRICES SUPPORT BOARD, OTTAWA- St; jf