. (CP)—The ‘Edmonton Es- 4 tm. ae ard tay ok B ++» rfrom the one. Mobra converted. owe .ee to, . aye _______.___and_gave_the—ball-to the Lions ” “ou Dhe: ball bounced “he attempted to run the ball out. --:Edmonton went - ? ? fs .““gnard and the officials signalled “hap » hibition win in a row for the} “champion Eskimos, who picked "to the leit. ©4 : thee eure gy A oe : : * 1 ‘ at a . ane . op . + : . Be a, felons oF . ' : ; } te! . * { . * . ae + Noy ates ead ’ waa : ‘ . . , . ey et ‘ ‘ , . : . + “ an ue Seat i Se . * . . 7 % “SAN FRANCISCO kimos, powered -by full- backs Normie Kwong and Johnny. Bright and fea- turing a strong defence, |: "defeated the British’ Co- lumbia ‘Lions 9-6 Sunday inthe first exhibition of} Canadian football in Cali- fornian “. A crowd’ of 16,000 -in’ Kezar Stadium, apparently caught on- --to the different rules played by '- the Canadians in a hurry and roared their approval ‘through- out the closely-played contest. The victory was the third ex- up their first point on the open- ing kickoff when Joe Mobra’s ‘kick hit the crossbar and re- sulted in a rouge. into the 4 €nd zone and Chuck Dubuque was hit by a flock of Eskimos as After an exchange. of ‘punts, 48 yards in seven plays for a touchdown with.Normie Kwong busting over LIONS RALLY The Lions bounced back in the third quarter, going 43 yards in 10 plays for their lone score. ~-=Primo Villaneuva caught two of Murray Duncan’s passes in ‘the scoring drive and.Cameron caught another for six yards and a touchdown. Duncan’s try for the extra- point was wide ives Hol terre oe COLD WAVE—Here’s a happy soul who’s.found the perfect spot to beat the summer heat—atop a massive snowfield at Hardangervidda, Norway. It’s easy to get to, since tourists can drive right up to its clifflike ledge, at the side of the Norwegian Highway, linking Bergen and Oslo. Snow blankets + the mountainous region.the year round, and this stretch of / road is only clear for traffic dpring the summer, Bench For Berra — In Batting Slump — By The Associated Press Yogi Berra, veteran New York Yankee catcher and one of the world champions most feared hitters, is Edmonton threatened again in’ “the fourth quarter and ‘took the. ball to the bionis’ four. >” os -. «Kwong powered over: the right a touchdown.: However, ‘they re- versed their.decision..after rul- , ing that Kwong had not made it _.on the one. After three punt exchanges, Mobra attempted a’ field goal . from the 29. The kick-was wide - but long. Dubuque picked up _ the ball but conceded the rouge after seeing he had. no chance to run it out. It was apparent from about the second quarter that the San Francisco crowd, sitting under a bright sun, was accepting the Canadian game. Cancel Golf Tourney “VANCOUVER —~The propos- ed $50,000 B.C. Centennial Golf Tournament —-the richest in Canadian history—may have to be cancelled beenuse of con- fieting dates with other tour- neys, Keith Matthews of the B.C. Centennial pol! committee sald Saturday, The 1058 tournament, fourth rlehest In the world, is sehedul- Gd for Aug. 27-Sept. 1 at Point Grey course here’ Mr. Matthews said Milwaukee, BL, Paul and Edmonton are pro- poslng to stage simultaneous tournaments after the annual All-American and Tam O'Shan- ter tourniumnents, which are held In the first two weeks of August. “We will be foreed to cancel “thestournament Hf the U.S, Pro- tessiona) Golfers’ — Association _, alters our propased dates, which . ee passlbe to change,” he ~ sald, Fn pete eben Re em Deleat Halecos VANCOUVER (h—New Wort. minster Royala defeated Van- couver Walecos 4-0 here Aature day before 1,648 Conat Leaune _ Hoccey fauna here, Wednesday right Royals will play Bt. Andrews to declde who wil] compote Against Wiles for ‘the leanne champlonship, Hale. ' gow won the first divishon of the hmer gerbes, , OM) Perey. waa the ator of Bate /urday's game and colloatad a cowbey hat from offlelats after jin front of a pennant scramble in one of the worst batting slumps of his Major Lea- gue career. So Manager Casey Stengel had him sit out Sunday's game against Baltimore. wR ” It: was another one, of the days; when’ .Casey’s strategy worked. Off the bench came Berra’s un- derstudy, Darrel] Johnson, to, lead Yankee’s 14-hit assault on Orioles with three singles and one RBI as Yanks won 7-2. The win put New York 5% games ahead of runner-up Chi- cago who split with Detroit, winning an 11-2 nightcap after losing: 8-5. . In other American League games, Boston swept Washington 8-5 and 4-3 in 11 innings and: Kansas City dragged Cleveland down to sixth place, its lowest standing in 10 years, with 7-0 and 9-8 victories. There’s a pennant race miss- ing in the National League to- day and the chief suspects are Conley, Spahn, Burdette and Buhl. Milwaukee’s “big four and no more” has the Braves 54% games ed Barclay take the opener for New York, 5-0. ‘ Giants’ Willie Mays tripled twice and singled twice to run his hit streak through 18 games. ii: Saturday’s action, Milwau- kee trounced St. Louis 5-0 be- hind Spahn’s five-hit pitching and Brooklyn blanked Pitts- kurgh 3-0 with’Don Drysdale spacing seven hits. Cincinnati got by Chicago 7-2 while Phila- delphia at New York was rafned out, Leaque Shift Seen VANCOUVER.— Ced Tallis, general manager of the Vancon- ver Mounties, sald today he is not alarmed by the proposed franchise shifts of the Brooklyn Dodgers to Los-.Angeles and the New York Giants to San Pran- cisco, that is quickly changing from a riddle into o romp with no sign of a letup. Lanky Gene Conley, veteran Warren Spahn, controversial Lew Burdette and strong-armed Bob Buhl, They have done it all in the Braves’ two-week brenk- awny-that has left the four] He said all organized minor ather pretenders lagging in the} baseball leagues will undergo dust. ° Ja tremendous realignment" if Since July 28, the ble four has|the majors Invade the Paeifle drawn 13 consecutive starting Const this fall, assignment? and come nway with In place of the Paelfle Coast 12 victories, ‘ League, Tallis envistons an It was the rejuvenated Con-teleht team loop comprising Van- ley's turn Bunday and the 6-8") couver, Seattle, Portland, Salt nNeht-hander, free again of his arm miserios, turned in a steady seven-hitter as Milwaukee whip- ped &t, Louls for its seventh strale@ht, 5-1. ‘ Linked with Brooklyn's double defent by Pittsburgh, Philadel- phia’s split with New York and the rainout of Cinelnnati's doubleheader with Chicago, tt left the once torrid race with Its worst ease of gaposis since the first ery of play ball, St, Louls, losing’ six straight, trails by 6%, Brooklyn by 61%, Cinelnnatd) bye? and Philadel- phin by) - Ken Toyer’s — ninth-Inning hane run deprived Conley of a shutout but he had Jong since winpped up his fith straight Vietory and his etght In nine de- chilons since his return to forny: Bam Jonos Jost it as Eddie Mathews drove in two wilh his 28nd homer and a slngle and Johnny Logan hit a two-run double, The Inst place Pirates made 11 hitea in euffing Brooklyn 6-2 in their second game after Bill Mna- “OrasK!'s Lwoeat single had won the opener, 4-3 dn 10 Innings, Rooklos Jack Sanford and Curt Barelay traded three-hit shutoufa at the Polo Croaunds, Bnnford winning hia 16th for the Phils, 260,.dfler Danny O'Con- Lake City, Denver, Omaha, Min- nenpolis, St. Paul and Winniper. eet eeeetmeene eran: ators aa RMR HH Ea ee eee te yee ADAMS HO: te eye wee This advertisement fe not ) Sacred three gonads, nels three-run homer had help. rs lea a ew, - : Daily-News 11-7, Oe The second Terrace-Esquire game will be replayed Sunday in Prince Rupert. Hotelmen and Gordon and Anderson will de- termine one finalist. Thursday night at Roosevelt Park. Terrace Loggers are still “the team to‘beat” for anyone eyeing ‘the championship trophy, But Esquires almost made them “the team beat” yesterday as they held more than their own for six and a half innings in the first game and were feeding them a no-hitter in the second encount- er until pouring rain foreed the end. The Loggers came from be- hind to win it with a four-riun outburst in the bottom of the seventh. They loaded the bases on a walk, an Esquire error aid Biderolli’s single. put the wood to the ball and sent a two-bagger into deep right field to score Burton and Prekaski. | . TWO CLINCHERS. ' Singles by: pitcher Neil Sauve and catcher Jack Burton drove in two more for the final score. - Winning ‘pitcher Sauve whif- féd 13 batters and walked only three in giving up eight hits. ’ Ted Careless, hurling his first senior league game after gradu- ating from tife Ponies, was tag- ged for 10 hits, walked nine and struck out two. Esquires appeared to be well on the way all other teams fac- ing Terrace this season had to go when they trailed 2-0 in the first, 4-0 in the second, 6-2 in the fourth and 6-4 in the fifth: \- PROF PLOO DOLD DP DL OLOP PLE PLOLDEPOL LE ' FIRST GAME BOX SCORES: . . Terrace — 11 AB H RB Paulson, lf 0.0... 5° Davy, 2b... ...... 5 R. Croome, Cf ...... 3 Burton, cou... 3 Prekaski, 3b ....... 3 Bridarolli, 1b ....... 3 Reynolds, rf ........ 3 G. Groome, ss .... 5 Sauve,p......... 5 TOTAL ............. 35 1 s Prince Rupert — Specht, lf 0.0.2 Bury, 2b 2.00000... Scherk, ss a—-Ritchie Bill, 1b Curry, c .. ... Spring, cr... Lister, 8b 000... ... Ogilvie, rf b-—-Bodger Careléss, p TOTAL .oon. ow... 35 8 a—Grounded out for Seherk In Mth; b-—Grounded out for Opil- vie‘in 7th, PPIOPLIPGLOLPIELELPRLOVORELOPOVOVS SCOHMN EE HBP ON GOW OHHENR RHO Dae Wtee DAH hin QoOocnnceceocooencoco NrOononoonoa A bizarre play during which the ball was Jost on the field helped Esquires take the Jead In the sixth for the first and only time in the ball game, Ray Spring led off with a single. Righthander Ron Lister dragged a perfect bunt towards Mrstand bent it out sprinting. Next mano up, Gerry Ogilvie laid a weak bunt down the third base dine, Catcher Burton piek- ed up with time to spare and throw to third. Third baseman Bob Prekaskl cautdivt eet a glove}: on the ball and wound up searching for dt ino the prass TRY DAILY NEWS CALSSTFTETDE | “Man, I'm sold on OLD!” \ | CPhomas Adams Distillers AMIVERSTHURG, ONT. while Spring, ister and Ogilvie raunded the course, TW vnees 1 Witany ue alll, 0-17 16 published or displayed hy the V-lquor Control Board or by the Government of Britis! ~uluimble ~ | League Finals Near Despite Weather By MEINIART LAGIES Two.out of three games scheduled for the Prince Rupert and District baseball league ‘championship playoffs were rained out yesterday, but Terrace step- ped a little closer to the finals by beating Esquires Bill Reynoids | Staff Writer’ Esquires threatened again in the top of the seventh when Bill, Spring and- Lister filled the bases. Dawn Bodger, pinch-hit- ting for Ogilvie, grounded to ,second base for the third out to end the Rupert team’s last scor- inig threat. ., - Don Scherk once‘ again proved himself as one of the league’s miost versatile players when he walked twice, singled once and ‘doubled once as short stop in. the first game, and tossed a five-in- ning no-hitter at Terrace in the second. He struck out six and walked three. oO? Terrace 220 200 40x---11 10 27 P Rupert .. 000 223 000— 7 8 2 Saiive and Burton; Careless, Spring (8), and Curry. World . : Golf Scorers CHICAGO iP—Leading scorers | and money-winners in the $101,- 000 world golf tournament: — Par 72-72-72-72-—288. Dick Mayer, La Jolla, Calif. $50,000 72-69~-70-68—-279. Sam Snead. wnite suiphur Springs, VW. Va., $7,500 65-69-72-74-—280. Al Balding. Toronto $7,500 67-69- 71-73—280. Gene Littler, El Cajon, Calif. $2,750 71-~70-69-71-—~281. George Bayer,. Los Angeles $2,750. 73~70-70-G8—281. : Mike Souchak, Grossinger’s, N.Y. $2,000 68-70-70-74—-282, , $1,800: 71-70-68-75-—284. _ | 66-77-69-73—-285. Art..Wal. Jr., Pocono Manor, Va. Dow Finsterwald, Tequesta,’ Fla. $1.800 68-74-70-72—-284, Bob Rosburg, San Francisco $1,800, 69-71 -71-73—-284. Jerry ‘Barber. Los Angeles $1,500. Arnold Palmer, Latrobe, Pa. $1,500 70-70-74-71—285. Shelley Mayfield, Jericho, $120) &R-70-72-76—286. , Bill Casper, Bonita Caffr., $1,100, 72-70-70-15-— 87, Earl Stewart, Jr., Dallas, Tex. $1,100 69-73 -71-74—287. N.Y., Bob Harris. Winnetka, Tl. $1100, 71-75-71-76——-287. Marty Furgol, Lemont, Il. $1,100, 75-72-71-G0—287. Ed Oliver, Canton,’ Mass, $1,100, 21-68-75-738—-287. ‘ Gary Player, Johannesburg, South Africa $700, 71-71-71-75—288. \ Stan Leonard. Lachute Que, $700, | 75-68-71-74--288. , Roherto de Vicenza, Mexico City, ! a CANADIAN LEGION Piggy Bank Guaranteed $290 | Tuesday, August 13_ ‘LEGION AUDITORIUM EVERYBODY WELCOME MISS SUN GLASSES—Actress- Singer Sandra Church takes ‘her place:in the sun at the Town House Restaurant in New York, where the. Sun’ Glass Institute named het Miss Sun Glasses Of 1957; . Bombers Upset * Riders ‘WINNIPEG (): — Winnipeg Blue Bombers, showing a strong ground attack, romped over. Ot- tawa Rough. Riders 36-6. here ‘Saturday night in an exhibitién football game before more than 10,000 drenched fans. , The veitory gave the Bombers an even split in their two-game exhibition series ‘with the Big Four clubs. It also. maintained Winnipeg’s record of never hav- ing lost to an Ottawa téam in exhibition. or Grey Cup - play. Bombers lost their opening ex- hibition contest in Winnipeg last week to Hamilton Tiger- Cats 21-0. Ss * Winnipeg coach Bud Grant threw four quarterbacks into the game, with Kenny Ploen getting the big share of the signal-call- ing ‘assignment. But the Bomber team was also quartebacked by two other imports—Chuck Cur- tis and Guy Martin—as well as homebrew Barry Roseborough.. . mara, Gerry James and Ron La- tourelie. scored the Bomber touchdowns. Buddy Leaké con- verted three of the five. Gerry Vincent added three singles. © Speedy Tommy Lewis bagged Ottawa's only touchdown ‘early jin the third quarter—but the convert was missed. & Vancouver Host CAMP BORDEN, Ont. @i—-Next year’s army track-and-ficld championships are to be in Vun- couver, it was announced Thurs- day at the conclusion of this year’s Inaugural two-day con- 4700, 72-75-10-7)-—2B8, test _MR.WHITE AND MR.OWL "Don't you agree, Mr. Owl, that these WHITE OWL Cigars have a dalightful atoma ? Eycallantly rolled tool" hag something sta salte EE. A” MILD GATI “Ver You're both right | WITE OWL, ONAL NG OIGAR. , For Pate’s sake, Mr White... I'm on the but iF you must talk cigars, talk TASTE. Thats why L like WHITE OWL! fiy oyarylady.” 10¢ Wupuveler! ating 4: Pennant Hopes Dimming 1 |day. |}playoffs got under way Friday ‘|for, the Mounties. Ploen,, Leo Lewis, Bob McNa-. . te ’ : ‘ Prince Rupert Doify News = t~S __ Monday, August.12, 1957 eee a nee go 7 ee , «8 For Ambitious Mounties me oo By The Canadian Press | 7 “The Vancouver Mounties’ pennant hopes looked idiminiex after two games ofstheir all-important. Pa- cifie Coast League series with'the leading San Fran-, ciseo Seals and completion of a suspended game Sun- the Mounties and are now. 5% games behind San Francisco, The Padres won 7-6, 8-2, 3-2, Hollywood. Stars stayed ‘in fourth place, seven games off the pace, after defeating Los An- geles 6-5 and 2-1. They lost one game to the Angels, 9-4, Sucramento Solons beat Port- land 1-0 and 2-G-and now share the cellar with the Beavers. pop g°: : By The Assoclated Press , Softhall WoL Pet. Gun Wwe ' ‘ Sim Praneiseo .. 77 49 G11 The. Mounties dropped the Suspended game 4-2 after being routed 8-3 Saturday nipht. They mcovered to win 2-1 ih the sec- ond’game -of the series Sundédy but. remain five pames off the pace; oO oe San Diego Padres. defeating Seattle Rainiers in three ‘suc- cessive games, edyed closer to : / : VAneauiver oe. TE 88 HT 5 f - hs Sin Dero oo... Wl Bb 808 yy ayo $ 1 Holly wood "55 556 7 ‘ _ : Seatte oo... fb 62+ 612 ayy . i Los Aneeles ../. 56 78 4152 20 Underway Portland oo... 46 80 B75) 8! my Sacraments sh &O 815 31 Remember When Dazzy Vance, Brooklyn Dod- gers’ fastballer, set a 20th cen- turv major league record by Prince Rupert, Men’s Softball and, Saturday with’ two seml- final games, . Lota] 708 defeated RCMP 1|4- 8 at.-Gyro Park Friday behind the strong pitching arm of Jack: striking out 17 St. Louis Card- Doll... Fred Myers tuok the losstinals@in a 10-inning game ~ 32 lyears ago. The mark still stands On Saturday, Atlin edged Sa- | as 4 National League record al- yoy Hotel 8-7. Ian Dunbar was | though Bob “Feiler af Cleveland credited with the win, John | Indians fanned 18 Detroit Tigers Leniuk with the loss. , Oct. 2, 1938 for the current ma- RCMP and ‘Local 708 meet |? league mark, again‘on Monday at 7 p.m,, and. Atlin will play Savoy on Tués- dy.’ a ae ‘ry Dajly News Classifieds t ce mee cee Lill WN SSN Sen > SEAS SESE WN 2 SSX MN the W : . “yy, WEE oy, Ae x j yy 7 Ys Wy f Ys Yi YZ SVG tis & Wa lig CJ and your retreadabls tire, SIZE 670:15° Buy famous Flrestone Champlon Tres at this tow price fo fit most pro-1057° Chovrotots, Dodges, Fords, Mateors, Plymouths, ‘Pontiacs, Studobakers and olhor leading cars. 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