"Qualify Buys" 655-A 1953 DESOTO 4-Door Sedan One-owner, low mileage MUST SACRIFICE TO CLEAR Vancouver List Price $1650 Our Low Sacrifice . . . $1395 688-C 1951 BUICK 4-Door Sedan Custom rddio, heater and defroster Automatic transmission, seat covers, near new tires. Our Low-$1095 704-A 1953 FARGO '/2-Ton Pickup Dark Green, fully re-conditioned Your Opportunity for a TOP QUALITY UNIT %m 697-A 1951 DODGE 1-Ton Flat Deck Top condition, reody to put to work at— ONLY $775 1952 PLYMOUTH 2-Door Radio, Sun Visor, Heater and Defroster, New Paint RX-125-B ine Fordor Automatic, radio, rubber as new. Clean inside and out. THIS WEEK ONLY at This LOW PRICE $899 749-A 1956 FORD Tudor Sedan Thurs., Fri., Sat. Only! ONLY $1888 "Always a Good Deal All Ways" at Pollard BROS. LTD. "SEE FERNIE FIRST" 2nd & George 22-L-l 776 Cars Burn Up Track In Saturday Races Ten cars, including three from Quesnel, thrilled fans at stock car races held Saturday at the old airport grounds. Fastest of the day was Denny Styan of Quesnel who raced up a time of-'2.r>V<: seconds. Cars and their drivers participating were (best limes in brackets following name): GO Dahney klore (29); 88 Joe Yuhasz (27Mi); !W Ross Hocking (27%); 101 Denny Styan of Quesnel (25V£); :3 John Warner (28); 00 Carl Ene-rnark of Quesnel (2GV4); 5 Stan Johnston (2SV£); 7 Bill Jackson of Quesnel (29V4); 13 Lloyd Wicks (2S»/2); GG Dave Ovington (29%). Next racing day is tentatively set for July 13. lESULTS "A" Main — 1. Denny Styan, 2. ohn Warner, 3. Joe Yuhasz. "B" Main — 1. Stan Johnston, 2. Lloyd Wicks, 3. Dan More. 1st Open — 1. Denny Styan, 2. Toe Yuhasz, 3. John Warner. 2nd Open — 1. Bill Jackson, 2. Jdyrt Wicks, 3. Dan Idore. Australian Pursuit — 1. Lloyd Wicks, 2. Stan Johnston. Soccer Films .Soccer films will be shown tonight at 8 o'clock at the Cariboo lealth Unit Building, sponsored )y the Prince George Soccer League. Everyone Interested is nvited to attend. NO EXPERT rmANTFOItD, dnt. (CP) — At he opening of the North Ridge nunicipal golf course Mayor herman took three swings at a golf ball before he dubbed it 10 eet down the fairway to officially open the course. Drive-In Service, Sensible Prices We install all types of glass in all makes and models of. cars. Expert workmanship. Estimates. Custom Mirrors and Table Tops B&A AUTO GLASS 639 2nd 671-L-l frEI.IX KOHNIvE Oliver Slau But Good - - Too Good In Fact Lloyd Burgart Poles 3 Homers; Fred Kapphahn Hurls Win For A's PRINCE GEORGE 10 OLIVER 4 OLIVER 25 PRINCE GEORGE 1 Prince George baseball was humiliated Tuesday night. And how. Just what happened is difficult to explain, except that the Athletics pulled a neat 10-4 triumph over Oliver OBC's Monday, then submitted to a 25-1 pasting the following night. 24, Prince George Citizen Top Wrestling Card Planned June 28 A top-notch wrestling card featuring five out-of-town matmen has been planned by the Prince George Little League to help raise funds for building a new park. Slated for June 28, Nick Kozak of Vancouver, Bob Cummings of Texas, Bud Ratel of Chilliwack and Bill and Felix Kobnke, both of Williams Lake, will see action on the program. The card will be held at the Civic Center. Park Flowers Will As Dancers Gyrate More than the daTicers' foet were trod on when 800 participants and spectators attended the rock and roll dance last Friday night outside City Hall. In a sharp letter to city council parks board. yeserday complained that the dance resulted in'spectators tramping on fiower beds, shrubs, of even using window boxes for grandstand seats. Many of the damaged plants will not bloom this year as a result. The board requested that the next open-air dance, scheduled for tomorrow, night, be shifted to Quebec Street between Sixth and Seventh Avenues. The dance, sponsored by local radio announcers Marcel Leveque and Barry Boyd will get underway at 7:30 p.m. Manager Fernie Ollinger went through three'pitchers before he finally found someone capable of stopping the OBC's in the second game. He was Larry Jensen, who {rotted to the mound from center field in the sixth inning and allowed only three runs and two hits for the remainder of the game. THREE HOMERS Jensen even fanned Oliver's Lloyd Burgart. who had poled three tremendous home runs earlier in the game. Garry Dreissdn and Ritchie Snyder shared the hurling duties for Oliver, permitting three hits. One was a home run to Bill Ross in the sixth inning, a solo blast that dropped over the fence in deep center. Ross' homer and a second inning single by Gordie Cruickshank were the only drives in the game that, the Athletics managed to get out of the infield. Everybody else went down on strikes, infield grounders and pop flies. Frank Bencher got Prince George's third hit in the ninth inning when he beat out a tricky grounder. Meanwhile, the OBC's were pounding away for 14 hits and 25 runs, also capitalizing oh seven Athletic errors. seven ivtirs Burgurt did most of the damage as far as the A's were concerned. His three homers were good for seven RBIs. In the first inning he drilled.one over the left field fence with two on, pounded another over in nearly the same place the following inning with one on, and homered again in the fourth with one on. In three other trips he fanned twice and MXTRA LEGS IRVINE, Alta. (CP) — A six-leyged calf was born on the farm of Sam Roth near here. The calf had. four normal legs and two more dangling at the rear. Your Own Boat COSTS LESS THAN YOU THINK! See Our Expert Boar Builder . . . GEORGE GREENLEES HIGH QUALITY CABINET WORK Lloyd's Cabinet Shop 1380 Third Ave. Phone 850 31st AHNUAL WILLIAMS LAKE STAMPEDE 3 daysJUNE 28r 29F JULY 1 3 days ARENA EVENTS BRONC RIDING WILD COW MILKING CALF ROPING STEER DECORATING STAKE RACE WILD HORSE RACE TWILITE RACING THOROUGHBRED and PONY RAGES 6 Each Night — Starting at 7 p.m. FIRST RUNNING! B.C. CHAMPIONSHIP . CHUCK WAGON RACES This is a C.P.A. Show Thursday, June 20, 1957 lifted a deep fly to center. Two of the blasts were from the offerings of starting hurle'r Fred Therres,' the other on a pitch by Ron Baekman. Bill Gilchrlsl and Dreisson each contributed three hits to the attack. The first game, although interrupted for nearly half an hour by rain, was much better to talk about as far a.s Prince George fans were concerned. KAPPHAHN WINS ' Fred Kapphahn scattered 11 hits, good for foxir runs as the A's romped to a 10-5 victory. Gordie Cruichshank backed up Kapphahn's hurling with a two-run homer in the seventh, a triple and a single. Altogether, the A's reached 45-year-old Harold Cousins for 17 safeties'. The Athletics went two up in the first inning on singles by Cruickshank and Andy Stettner and an' error. Oliver evened the game again In the third when pitcher Cousins led off with a single, Gordie Mundle doubled and Ritchie Snider singled; However two tallies for the A' in the following frame put them ahead to. stay. Big hit in the in ning was Cruickshank's triple. IjINE SCORES Oliver Lures City Ball Fans With Juicy Bing Cherries Even though Oliver gave the Athletics a good trouncing Tuesday night, the team still remained on the good side of Prince George fans. Manager Don Coy and his club brought literally thousands of "juicy Bing cherries with them from the sunny Okanagan to be distributed among fans at the game. The cherries kept the handful of fans that attended Monday's game happy too. The club is distributing the cherries to fans In the towns they visit during their exhibition tour. Oliver Athl. —002 100 iO0— 4 —200 230 2lx—10 Cousins and Mundle; Kapphahn and Stettner. Athl. —000 000 .100— 1 . 3 Oliver —350 (10)34 OOx—25 14 Therres, Baekman (3), Sauei (4) Jensen . (G) and Cruickshank Stettner'(3); Dreisson, Snyder (G and Gilchrist. Will Fists Win Flag Fight For Yankees? By Ron Andrews Canadian Press Sports Writer A baseball official in Richmond recently said, in a joking manner, that the Richmond Virginiaris of the International Baseball League are going to be given boxing lessons. What provoked the remark was the battling New York Yankees, parent club to the Virgininns. For some strange reason, fights have become part of the major-league baseball scene this summer. And in most instances, the American League Yankees are among the participants. Yankee players involved in two fights last week. The biggest one, of course, was that which broke out in Chicago's Comiskey Park between Yankees and White Sox. Pitcher Art Ditmar of New York Yankees and White Sox centre fielder Larry Doby touched off a 2S-minute free-for-all. Included in the brawl were Sox first baseman Walt Dropo, and his opponent Enos Slaughter of Yankees. Slaughter left the playing field with his shirt ripped off his back, but he had given every-1 thing for his tea.m TEAM SPIRIT Earlier in the season, six Yan- kee players were fined a total of $5,500 for a brawl which develop, ed in a nightclub. After that, the Yankee dugout was the destination for many barbs .from opposing players, who labelled the Yanks "Party Dolls." But this incident might be the spark which will win the* Yankees yet another American League pennant. The players are determined to stick together. Perhaps that is \vh*y Yankees are involved in so many fisticuffs. New York, however, is having a tough time dislodging the "old" White Sox from the top rung in the league. At the start of the season, the Sox were picked to finish behind the Yanks and were even chosen by a few experts to finish out of the first division. Many thought some of the Chicago players were Avenue Takes Minor Soccer Lead Dietrich-Collins lost their first two games of the season in minor soccer last weekend and the double setback was enough to drop them out of first place. The Fifth Avenue squad took a one-point league lead by edging Dietrich-Collins 3-2 Thursday and Columbia Klxeavating 44 on Sunday. Dietrich-tColliris lost to the Legion Sunday 3-2'. In the fourth game played, Columbia Excavating and Legion tied 1-1. Dave Kenward tallied three goals for Fifth Avenue Pharmacy as they downed Dietrich-Collins 3-2 Thursday. Neal Baxter picked uy both goals for the losers. Chalmers scored for Columbia Excavating and Rod Bell for the Legion in their 1-1 draw. Sunday, Bell .scored two more goals for Legion, and added to Frank Choban's marker, it was enough to knock Dietrich-Collins out of first place. Dennis Aske-land and Neal Baxter pumped hi the loser's goals. Dave Kenwood drilled in another three goals Sunday, making it six in two ga,mes to p'dce Fifth Avenue to their 4-1 triumph over Columbia Excavating. Dave Talbot scored tlie fdtitth markei while Chalmer tallied Columbia's only goal. F.our games scheduled for this weekend comlpete the first half ot the minor league schedule. Sec ond half of the loop resumes in September. STANDINGS ONE HAND CONTROL with new MERCURY MARK 10 Throttle and shift ar» on the tiller! Speed-r-Troll Lever lets you range from super-slow trolling to cruising speeds. Glide- Ang'e design i£ truly weMleaa. THE Home Furnishers CO. 1190 Third Ave. th. 357 Qver ,the hm &nd withou(. new faces, the team would have difficulty staying in among the top four teams. But manager Al Lopez has rounded his club into smooth-working combination. And, barring unforseen Injuries, it looks as though the Yankees' Cleveland Indians and Boston Red Sox are going to have trouble stopping the White Sox. W 1 5th Avenue ............... 5 Diet-Collins............ 4 ...................... 3 , D Pts 2 0 10 2 1 3 1 BY DON McEACHNIE Guess I put Afanni.x Constrruc-tion Company in a bit of a spot tipping fishermen off last week that the road into Tacheda Lake was open. The company was swamped with sportsmen, and have asked me to warn them that the road inay 'be closed at any time while culverts are being put into place. There is a Pas Lumber Company road which also goes into the lake, but 1 have no idea what shape it is in. Right now Tnchink and Nulki Lakes south of Vanderhoof are hotter than firecrackers. Frank Wilkinson and a party from Bal-dy Hughes Air Base got their limits of fish running from three to five pounds. The Qlbhs Tempter and rly worked well. Tom Morah has boats and accomfno-datioh at Nulki. It is too early for rainbow trout at Stuart Lake but the gray trout are biting well. They run 3 to 4 pounds in size. No. 3 and 4 FS*f Gibbs spoon and the fifty.* fifty wonder spoon are effective. On bright days use brass. Tezzeron Lake north of Pinchl Lake has been'giving up 3 to 5 pounders, but they are slow biting because of the amount of cottonwood fluff on the surface. Waters are still too high to make it wortH while trying for* steelhead. Reports that Squaw Lake, 45 Rod And Gun Club' To Discuss Range A discussion of the proposed Civic Center rifle range will highlight the monthly meeting of the Prince George Rod & Gun Club to be held in the 1OOF Hall next Wednesday, June 26. . Junior members and prospective members are invited to attend. An outdoor range, .303 rifle range, and a trap and turkey shoot are on the club's agenda for this summer, and further plans on the projects will be discussed at the meeting. Films will be shown after the business is completed. TOURIST VIC1M VANCOUVER