y itev. ia:4 rsupci I Uul ufliiy, Julie 2b, , It ICC Mi Marlene Wm First Round Hotelmen Leave Cellar; Down Terrace 11-3, 6-1 ( GANTOM ...... Cafe Protest To Be Lodged With Football Association tiny 20-v.r,,'m" 8u Commercial Hotel used the , only one of the runs, s-ored by Terrace tetm as their ladder to j Burton's double and Keith Wili-climb out of the Prince Rupevt lams single was earned. ronlhlU. Oct., ra 7, ,lter a bad .i ,brC- Wrathall's Win Loop Finals The Mixed Spring Bowling championships was taken by Wrathall's Thursday when thy downed Tiger Cats by 131 pins !n the playoff between loop winners In A and B divisions. Tiger Cats were given a 705 handicap for the five games and bowled games of 996, 1026, 773. 1131 and 1057. Wrathall's total of 5,819 came on games of 1.244. J.154. 1,169, 1,105 and 1.17. Laies' high game for the night went to Helen bumMord of Tuer Cats with 289 while Agnes Pierce, Wrathall's lead-off bowler, rolled and District Baseball League cellar yesterday at Roosevelt vuroiM gave up the three runs1 """"'""na match In ,h, J on five hits IIS !Uq .u,i- Wnmpn'.-, n..i . "l striking out' 10, Burton allowed! day mplons'-eight runs on seven hits and she ed..d i struck out one. Mainland allowed i ne m v three runs on three, hits' am. 'kHh"'c champi0 j Park as they took both ends of a twin bill, 11-3 and 6-1. The hotelmen's twin kill places them in second place In the league, a position tluy haven't seen all year, five games behind league leading Gordon 1 f ; 1 , i I an ut k uu s unrr. ' In the second game Gnrdir COAE Cameron allowed only three hits I to account for the one run Ter- ' mco s'nrri u,l,il ln.-l..,. ..w ,.i . I Larry Mathew.s'was tagged for I ND and Anderson. At the same time, Terrace drops to third place and Esquires to the dungeon, both five and a half games out of the lead. ' The referee re-placed the ball, this time for an indirect free kick. Tamburini cleared th? goal mouth of players and Tait was home free with an unattended goal. Gondola rallied but could not score, despite a play which saw Tamburini almost put the ball through the posts bodily, the last few feet on his stomach. Although the ball went between the posts, it was ruled no goa . One faction of spectators was incensed by the call and fl partisan fan ran on to the field throwing dirt after referee Morven. Billy Adams, Paramount outside right, scored the final goal of the game, a drive which Viteri appeared to have little Inclination to stop. A game between General Motors and the Gondola Cafe is scheduled for Wednesday night 11 lia-i, Cameron held the visitors TEST OUR 1954 CLARENCE (HAP) DAY will succeed Conn Smythe as general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs hockey club midway through the next National Hockey League season. The change Is expected to- take place officially Feb. 1, Smythe 60th birthday. Day has been assistant general manager for the last four seasons after a coaching career that spanned the most successful seasons of the club. Sparking the opening win for j scoreless for five Innings while Commercials was curve balling ; the hotelmen came up with tw.i Vic Carolle who was making his! runs in the fi"st and four in the first re-appearance In district j top of the fifth. Up to this time, ball circles in several years. Car- j Cameron allowed only one hit, a olel, In town three days and , single to Fisher who was le!t stoned with the hotelmen two stranded. of them, ield tne Terrace ninef Mathews put Terrace Into the scoreless for five Innings while ..,-oring column when he ground-his team mates racked up 11 , d to cllff Dah, , 1,121 for hh!h three. Jack Paul,! Wrathall's anchor man bowled i both high single and high three with .270 and 1.010. The league will end the season: with a banquet in the Valhalla ! Hall Saturday, July 3, at wliica; all team and Individual trophies ! will be awarded. Team members: I Wrathall's Agnes Pieiv", j Charlie McKlnnon, Heidi Hoi-! ke'stad, John Laporte, Margaret Laporte, Armendu Dc Ha and i STUDEBAKf STATION WAGo run--- ... u .,..., . Carolul s hoiies for a shut-on . . , PCL Standings at Roosevelt Park, but it will probably be played tomorrow i were shattered in the top of thu "l,,lDn WMU "Iln m'", u- nw ine piate. OB Hxth when Terrace's rlgli MARGERY SHARP, 17, of Fredericton, won the award as the outstanding girl performer at the Eastern Canada Track and Field Chumpionship at Montreal. She also won the 100-ard and 60-yard open sprints and topped off the clay with a victory in the open broad jump. She will compete in the British Empire Games trials finals at Vancouver next month. I' or a rood reommkn J our A-:l Al'STIS. A J car win, a low pri J SHJI5. that incluiles rM" ber seats, Irather 1,1 directional slgnaLvaudhr defroster unit. L PCT. 3:1 B1J Jack Paul. Tiger Cats John Hamilton, Jane Shamenskl, Al Sandtord ; Holh-wto1 i Sun ftleKO .... : Oakttinct knn PriinrlRn) An official protest will be lodged with the Prince Rupert and District Football Association by the Gondola Cafe following their 3-1 defeat at the hands of the Port Edward Paramount.? Saturday liij'ht at Roosevelt Park . No reason was ndvanced by Oondoki man.v'er Frank -Cam-pagnolo for the protest, but ieanue president Maurice Bishop has called a meeting of the league executive and representatives from each team for tomorrow night to hear the case out. Bill Baxter, chief referee for the league will also be at the meeting, as will Denny Morven who refereed the disputed game. The game itself saw the Gondola Cafe score the first goal, a cornev kick deflected in by team captain Adrian Tamburini. Port Fdward evened the score ten minutes later when Inside right Picy Tait booted a ball past O. Viteri, Gondola goalie on a penalty kick. A hard driven ball caught by Viteri started off the first serious hassle of the tame, when referee Morven ruled the goalie hcci taken too many steps before kicking the ball. Placing the ball for an indirect free kick, the referee attempted to f-et, the Gondola eleven to line up for the shot. Gondola players swarmed around and referee Morven's attemnt to place the players in position resulted in Giovanni Nicoli almost being evicted from the game. The free kick itself, an anticlimax to the colorful preparations, was made by Percy Tait who failed to score. There was no further scoring in the first half. Port Edward went ahead 2-1 shortly after the second half began on a goal which came as a result of another disputed play. Referee Morven placed the ball for a penalty shot after Percy Tait was pushed near the Gondola goal. After the whistle was blown and Tait had still not kicked the ball. Tamburini ran out from the Gondola goal and booted the ball up the fieid. w ii 47 40 ii 39 . 40 . 36 .5(10 41, MS 61, 4U4 10 .476 111', 47r 13 434 16 .415 101, Rose Cap, Win Gardiner, Hel'-n ; Settl(, Sandford, Joe Kurdzlel and saemmento' .. Cameron walked n;:ne and struck out five. Mathews also walked one and stmek out thro;. Terrace left eight men strand d In the first game and .seven the second. Commercials left seven On the bases In both games. fielder Fisher, missed a third strike and catcher Herb Morgan dropped the ball. Fisher streaked for first and Morgan's tljrow to first sent the bull out to pasture along the line extending to right field from the stands. Jack Llnd-ny. Commercial right fielder, figuring1 on the overthrow belnj pood for one base, moved over 1 Los AllKeH-a Jack Mclnnis. Purtlund 34 AUTO SERVICE evening to allow for the first game of fhe Rupert-Ketchikan All-Star baseball series Wednesday. Line-ups: Port Edward Cyprian Nisyok, g; Percy Adams, lb; Tom McKay, rb; Bob Morven, ch: Pete Campbell, rh; Willie Mark, lh; Art Gurney, cf; Nelson Morven, il; Cecil Morven, ol; Percy Tait, ir; Billy Adams, or. Gondola Cafe V. Viteri, g; Quinto Scatena, lb; Pietro Del Grosso, rb; AJbert Karau, ch: Walter Del Ross, lh; Giovanni Nicoli, rh; Adrian Tamburini, cf; Frank Ansclmo, il; Bill Mc-Kee, ol; Egidio Nordlo, lr; An- gelo Miehle, or. Super Valu.in Second Place After 9-3 Win Over Kinsmen WIL Standings Vancouver 37 19 661 W L PCT on Yakima 34 28 .546 6 Edmonton al 25 .BtS 8 Tri-Ctty 30 33 .476 101, Lewlslon 28 31 475 lOli, VU'torlu . 27 3 1 4B II Wenatchee 2 34 400 111;, Salem 28 38 .433 13 ROOFING ll",rw yuur roo( lth Asphalt Shingle RENOVATING m House Inierion FOUNDATIONS W ork or AH Hindi Estimates Given on Work GREER & BRIDDEN Itv ItOH MOr.RIS Si:pcr Valu took the game away from the Kinsmen Saturday night by a 9-3 score to move back into a second place tie In a close Little League race. for the ball, while Fisher loped around all the sacks to the plate with a ground rule home run. Terrace starter Jack Burton allowed five runs In the flr.it Inning and three in the setfond before he was replaced by Oeorge Haugland who was making his debut as a pitcher. Haugland allowed only tlfrce runs on three hits and held the hotelme.i scoreless from the sixth Inning. Terrace scored again in the seventh and ugain in the eighth but Going into the third Inning with a 1-0 lead, Super Valu stole the game with eight runs ofl five walks and three hits with one batter hit by the pilcher Ken Dockendorf, pitching his first game for the Kinsmen, gave up nine walks and four hits and struck out four for Super Valu t nine runs. Kinsmen moved Robert Adams in to finish the thi:l FISH EATERS Japan has the highest per capita consumption of fish in the world, about 83 pounds I'lionc flfl!) LIMITED 213 First An. H No Team Assured Top Spot As Championship Day Nears Inning. He gave up only one hit to put out the Super Valu flame. Foster who finished the game on the mound for Kinsmen allowed no hits and gaveout only three bases on balls striking cit five. Don Love who pitched the entire game for the winners gave 90 r'.. 3-2 (1st game 11 innings i. Boston 2-1. Chicago 1-9. Saturday New York 11, Cleveland 9. Baltimore 5. Philadelphia 4 do innings) . By The Associated Press Five teams aie wa?ln'4 a bitter .buttle to gain first place by the Fourth of July- date that tradi-.lon has marked as "Championship Day." Since turn of celi.ury approximate seven out of every 10 ma - or Canada. ...WO-'"' firtlOO". up only five hits and one free pass. Kinsmen runs came in the ; bottom of the third on hits by Eiic!:f:on and Dockendorf and - ,A' jor league leaders on July 4 have j c,ne On to win ttv nennant. ! Tri-Ciiy Shades Salem (o Vacaf WIL Basement ', a Super Valu error. They added two more in the last Inning when Foster and Olsen both con r Boston 3. Chicago 1. Detroit 5, Washington 4. Baseball Scores WESTERN INTERNATIONAL Saturday Victoria 1, Wenatchee C. Edmonton 12. Yakima 5. Salem 0. Tri-City 1. Lewiston at Vancouver post-poned-rain. Sundav Salem in, Tri-City 11. Edmonton 1-2. Yakima 0-5. Victoria 3-(i, Wenatchee 2-3. With only a week to go no team is assured of tap .spot o.i mid-seai-nn iioiiday. New York Giants lead Brooklyn by one same today but the National League pace-setters face a "crucial'' three-jame series with tho Dodgers at the Polo Grounds starting Tuesday. nected for triples and Voagan hit safely. Love struck out nine of his opponents. The loss moves Kinsmen to the cellar, one game behind Super A WONDERFUL LESSON IN GOODWILL WHICH WE MUST NOT MISS. ' I Tri-City shaded Salem 11-10 .in 12 inninss Sunday and vaulted from the Western International Baseball League's cellar to a herth ii1 the first division. . ! Valu . and Sea Kings who are Cleveland boasl.s a same-ami Thefit tothU country It was Tri-City'.s sixth win in i a-hnlf advantage over Chicago tied for second with .500 averages, and two games behind the leaue leadin? North Stars who are batting .572. h! '"ii- in the extended ser t;tntc ' Remember when Hv Tlie Canndliin Pr-3s A GA2ETA. MO KUU) L of . 2"'..V!fW. gttJt in the American League: Yankees will engage second division Washington Senators In a four-name set. NATIONAL I.KAGl E Sunday New York 3. Chicago 2 HO innings e. Brooklyn 8, St. Louis 0. Philadelphia 4-2, Milwaulw 3-1. Cincinnati 9-3. Pittsburgh 9-4 Jack Darragh, known as the j pinch-hitter of hockey because I of his ability to score goals when j they were needed, died at Ottawa I PACIFIC COAST 1 Saturday San Francisco 1-1, San Dic'o 0-1. Sacramento 4-5, L03 Angel's 8-1. . Hollywood 1-2, Seattle 4-3. Portland 2-2. Oakland 3-1. Sunday Oakland 5, Portland 4. Hollywood 6, Seattle 0. Los Angeles 10, Sacramento 4. San Franci.sco 3, San Diego 1. les with the Senators and led them in fourth place a single percentage point ahead of Lewis-ton. Salem replaced the Braves In the lear.ie basement. Yakima took Edmonton's raoi'.-syre C-l and 5-2 and Victo! in beat Wenatchee 3-2 and 6-3 to round out Sunday's schedule. Vancouver and Lewislon were i.ilt-. Nioe pilchers went to the mound before the final putout in the wild affair at Kennewick. Five Salem hurlers gave up a t r t : 1 1 of 22 hits to the Braves. Tlie Senators cgllecieel. 1,7 saf? 30 years ago today. Darragh, I' only 32 at his death, played tor the old Ottawa Senators for 13 ! years. ! Saturday New York 0, Chicago 4. Brooklyn 7, St. Louis fl innings i. ill SHOWING THE SWISS PFOPLE THE PRODIGIOUS PHENOMENON THAT IS CANADA. kce DE CLfeA'RL'Y INFORMED ' PhiUuU'lphi 10. Milwau Httsboi-gh 4, Cincinnati 3. AMERICAN I.EA(;l'E Sunday Cleveland 4, New York 3. Washington 8, Detroit 2. Baltimore 4-3, Philadelphia K !ows off four Tfi-Ci'.V:iniiiuidj-! men. I Tii-City sent the game Into i vcrtime with a pah of runs In the ninth. Salem scored once in the 10th and three times in the 11th but Tri-City had an equalizer for each tally. The Braves won the same in the 12th on .successive singles by Artie Wilson, Vic Buceola and Len Tran. It was the second 12 inning contest, in two days for the CITY I.EAfiPE KASEISAI.I. STANDINGS W L Pet. 1B O & A 9 1 .000 ComnierclulH fl 6 .428 ft Torniee . o 0 .400 51 Esiuires 5 8 .384 51', CFPR TONIGHT J0:15 p.m. Braves and Senators. Tri-Cily scored the winning run in the 12lh Saturday as the Braves edged the Senators 1-0 in the opening game of a doublcheadir. Tri-City won the nightcap too, 4-0. Vacationers original paintings of 22 Canadian Cities was seen, enjoyed and talked about by a quarter of a million people in 16 cities of two continents. The Seagram Collection of Paintings of Canadian Cities has won enthusiastic friends for Canaila around the world-friends who have gained a ne and vivid impression of our country as a land that is vital and growing, a land of tremendous natural and industrial resources, and remarkable human resourcefulness. . r.i c "n.,:io is now biifl1 Everywhere it has been shown along its 30,000 mile, year-long International route at brilliant previews attended by governmental, industrial, cultural and professional leaders, and at public showings the Seagram Collection of Paintings of Canadian Cities has been talked-ahout headline news. i, In the sixteen cities it visited abroad the Collection earned for Canada thousands of columns of newspaper reports, editorials, reviews, and pictures; magazine articles; radio and television broadcasts; newsreel films, widespread public at HON. P. A. GAGLARDI Minister of Public Works Tells the Truth About BRITISH COLUMBIA'S HIGHWAYS "1 J 1 J I f 1 KIM tUW jtnin 1U.uh o) c c o rir- ImX II f WUL CWFtCT Q ! l ne neagriiin aiivv. tour home, on a two-year trans-Canada which w"ill give Canadians the opportunity of seeing for themselves the colourful ambassadors of goodwill . these portrayals of our thriving M which have excited comment aroun the world. tention all testifying to the mounting interest and friendliness on the part of people everywhere toward Canada and things Canadian. Painted especially for The House of Seagram by distinguished Canadian artists, this unique collection of 52 - I. Che JHoiise of-Seagram- SLEEPS 2 ADULTS ONE SEASON'S CABIN RENT WILL PAY FOR A TOUR-A-TENT. NOW ON DISPLAY AT 654 DO NOT BE MISLED ! SOCIAL CREDIT KEEPS YOU INPOMED British Columbia Social Credit League KOUTI OP THI INK KNATIONAI TOUti SAM JUAN. . .HAVANA. , .MEXICO CITY . . . CARACAS . . . UtO OE JANFUO. . .SAO PAUlO. . '"f,J5 ' ""1 ROME . . . LONDON , .PARIS . .GENEVA. , .STOCKHOIM , ,TMC HAGUE, . .MADRID . . .AND A VISIT TO THE CANADIAN ARMED FORCES IN , 'mvHS. . OUT I OP TMI CANADIAN TOUi OTTAWA. . .MONIRFAl .. .CHARIOTIFTOWN . . HIIFAK. . ST JOHN'S . . . SAINT JOHN. ' "fRRROOKE".' WNWI0,i" . . .QUtlEC. . .LONDON . WINNIPEG . . .REGINA. . .EDMONTON, , .VANCOUVER. . .VICTORIA. . .CALGARY .SASKAIOON. . .WINDSOR. . .HAAtmw- BOB PARKER LTD. SERVICE STATION Mc Bride anil Serond Thu ivcrtticncpl li iwt publiihrf w rfiiyUyi W Mm tiqiiM Central Bev4 r by UM 6tnrnm4 ri,HH OF IT'S BY THE GOVERNMENT yl BfK.il Colmbii. , t 1 1 THIS ADVHTISEMENT IS NOT FUIUSHED 01 DISPUTED IY THE LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD 01 I