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Daily Times-Gazette, 9 Aug 1952, p. 11

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STOCK CAR " Above' is shown the quarter- smile track at Pleasure Valley Ranch, North Oshawa, this city's RACERS PERFOR newest sports centre for the | holding forth there tonignt. r racin enthusiasts. ! oe : {| --Photo by Dutton--Times Studio | MO The stock car 'demons' will he 6. 'NEW TRACK DY PAFKO PAYS OFF "3-Run Homer In 10th Wins, .Dodgers Re-Establish Margin = By JACK HAND 'Associated Press Sports Writer 'Handy Andy Pafko finally is pay- pf Brooklyn some juicy dividends the big deal of last season. Hitting ¥, even .300 with 15 home rans and 55 runs batted in, the 31- year-old outfielder is refuting those who said he was *'all washed up when Chicago put him on the block. | . s to be overcoming a A ee Manager Cush n. His first 10 homers cam Sith nobody on base. Then came 14st night's three-run blast off Curt Simmons in the 10th inning for a #3 victory over Phillies. PORTANT WIN L¥°1t was an important blow for Dodgers. enabling them to stretch their lead to 6% games. New York was shut out by Boston's Max Sur- kont, 2-0, and St. Louis lost to Cin- LEADERS IN MAJOR LEAGUES By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE AB R H Pct. Musial, St. Louis 400 75 133 .333 Atwell, Chicago 243 28 175 .309 Kluszewski, Cin, _ 349 41 107 .307 Lockman, N.Y. 402 74 123 .306 Addis, Chicago 240 31 73 304 Runs--Musial, 75. Runs Batted In--Sauer, Chicago, 8s. Hits--Musial, 133. : Doubles--S8choendienst, St. Louis, 28. Triples--Thomson, New York, 9. Home Runs--Sauer, 27. oe Bases--Reese, Brooklyn, Pitching--Roe, Brooklyn, 8-1, .88! Strikeouts--Spahn, Boston, 122. AMERICAN LEAGUE AB R H Pet. Fain, Philadelphia 355 55 122 .344 Woodling, N.Y. 283 40 93 .329 Kell, Boston 364 47 117 321 Goodman, Boston 320 53 101 316 Mitchell, Cleveland 313 39 97 310 Runs--Joost, Philadelphia, 78. Runs Batted In--Doby, Cleve- | land, 82. Hits--Fox, Chicago, 141. Doubles--Fain, 32. Triples--Rizzuto, New York, 10. Home Runs--Doby, 25. ! Stolen Bases--Jensen, Washing- ton, 16. Pitching--Consuegra, Washing- ton, 5-0. Strikeouts--Pierce, Chicago end Shantz, Philadelphia, 114. U.S. Netters Gerry Kesselring | {third Ontario amateur golf cham- 'Reaches Finals | KINGSTON (CP)--Gerry Kessel {ring, 23-year-old shotmaker from | Kitchener, set out on the 36-hole final match today in a bid for his | pionship in four years. | A victory over Jim Neale of | Hamilton Glendale would make the Kitchener star the unquestioned ruler of Ontario golf. Defendin amateur champion, he also hol the provincial open title which he won a month ago in a 54-hole medal play test against pros and ama- teurs. Kesselring, who plays out of both the Westmount and Rockway clubs at Kitchener, had a tight battle with George Eluck of Windsor Lakewood to get into the final. He {downed the Windsor player one up lin a tight semi-final battle that re- | called their gripping final match in {the 1949 amateur when Kesselring {won on the Westmount course on |the 38th hole. | INEAL'S SECOND TRY | ! Neale, playing in his second Ontario amateur, downed Ralph |Waechter of Kitchener Rockway {one up. Last year he went out in the first round. Kesselring, who captured the | Ontario amateur in 1949 and 1951, picked up a three-hole lead in the | first four holes of yesterday's semi- | final but Eluck trimmed him down {till the Kitchener youth was only {one up on the 18th tee. Kesselring was short about a foot on his ap- proach putt, when Eluck on his last chance missed the cup by four inches and the match closed. Neale and Waechter reached' the 18th tee on even terms. Neale landed on the 'green on his third Pafko drove home five runs with | DICKSON STARS his homer, a double and i Jong + Murray Dickson took matters into fly ball. Preacher Roe, who 00k ic own hands for downtrodden over in the eighth after Ray Moore | 5, 1, 0) pirates. He shut out the turned in 6 1-3 innings of brilliant relief work for Chris Van Cuyk, | Chicago Cubs for 10 innings with six hits and then broke up the was the winner. Surkont, veteran righthander,|game with a 10th inning single for a 1-0 verdict. held the second-place Giants to | shot Waechter on his fourth, Neale putted out on his fifth to win, MATCH GOES ROUTE Officials announced that in to- gays neal Num Rs elng Ly eale play a fu oles, By MAX McMAHON no matter where the match ends. Canadian Press Staff Writer If Kesselring takes today's round MONTREAL (CP)--The United he will become the fourth golfer States Davis Cup tennis team to- [to win the Ontario amateur title In Clean Sweep Over Canadians four hits, stopping Al Dark's 22-| game hitting streak. Ben Thorpe | and Jack Dittmer drove in the two | runs off Max Lanier. | Ewell Blackwell needed relief: help to save his third win of the season after Cincinnati chased Cliff | Chambers in a five-run fourth in- ning. Roy McMillan's double with {tant hit. Andy Seminick hit his | | 13th homer and Enos Slaughter his | ninth for St. Louis in the free-hit- | june game. the bases loaded was the impor-|c Rookie Bill Glynn's homer in the 12th enabled Cleveland .to tighten up the American League race with a 10-9 win over St. Louis Browns. Indians now trail the idle New York Yankees by only 2'2 games. Rain washed out the Boston-New York and the Philadelphia-Wash- ington night games in the Ameri- an. Chicago came from behind twice to sweep a doubleheader from De- | troit, 4-3 and 2-1, behind Billy Pierce and Joe Dobson. Jim Ferrier's Magic Putter Eams the Lead By JERRY LISKA . CHICAGO (AP)--Midway leader Jim Ferrier's gifted putter today was a magic wand that beckoned golf's richest prize, the $25,000 top money in the whirling "world championship" fairways carnival. "Ferrier, massive former Aus- tralian who became a U. 8. 'ctiizen in 1944, 'took a two-stroke lead over the 1947 national open champion, Lew Worsham, into the third round of Tam O'Shamber's $90,000 four- ringed circus. "A former Canadian open cham- plon, Ferrier has added scorching rounds of 68-86 for a 36-hole total of 134, 10 under par. Big Jim's metronome putter tapped only 27 times in yesterday's 31-35 effort. DISCOURAGING NEWS ; «This was discouraging news to most of the 80-player field, of which bo 10 still remained thin fing distance of the 37-year- old Perrier. "Worsham, who yesterday wob- bled to 71 from an opening 865, was a stroke ahead of Argentine star Roberto de Vicenzo of Buenos Aires and Pete Cooper, White Plains, N. Y., knotted at. 137. 'Vancouver's Stan Leonard added a 76, to his 69 for 145. Pat Flet- eher of Saskatoon was far back with 75-81--156. : TWO AT 138 Earl Stewart, Jr., of Dallas, Tex., who spent three eagles for rday's 70, and slim Dave Huias Newark, Del, were not- at 138. 'Five strokes behind Ferrier at 139 were the current United States open champion, Julius Boros of d-Pines, N. C.; Jimmy Clark of Beach, Calif., and plump Ed Oliver, registered from Chi- 0 (dn the $12,000 "world" women's p event, Betty Jameson of San gtonio, Tex., still had a bead on the $5,000 first prize with a 36- hole total of 145, four strokes ahead of Patty Berg of Minneapo- e "world" amateur was re- ved into a hot scrap between 1 Campbell of Huntington, W. Va. defending champion Frank | nahan of Toledo. Campbell's | BASEBALL RESULTS and STANDINGS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 000 111 110-5 10 1 Cincinnati 000 500 30x--8 13 1 Chambers, Tieffenauer (4), Bre-| cheen (5) Yuhas (8) and Rice; | Blackwell, Podbielan (8) and Sem- | inick. Chicago 000 000 000 0--0 6 0 Pittsburgh 000 000 000 1-1 5 1| Rush and Atwell; Dickson and | Garagiola. New York 000 000 000--0 4 2 Boston 110 000 00x--2 8 1 Lanier and Yvars; Surkont and | Cooper. | Brooklyn 110 010 000 3--6 10 0 Phillies 120 000 000 0--3 10 1 Van Cuyk, Moore (2), Roe (8) and Campanella; Simmons and | Lopata. AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game Detroit 000 010 200--3 10 © Chicago 000 000 004--4 1 © Hoeft, Stuart (7) Littlefield (9) Trucks (9) and Batts; Pierce and Lollar | Second Game Detroit 010 000 000-1 10 0 Chicago 000 000 20x--2 6 0 Houtteman and Ginsberg; Dob- son and Johnson. Cleve. 003 010 113 001--10 12 1 St. Louis 620 000 010 000-- 9 11 2 Feller, Brissie (1) Harris (3) Gromek (7) Rozek (8) Wynn (8) and Hegan; Pillette, Harrist (7) | Hogue (9) Madison (12) and Court- | ney. Pat Murphy Still Leads but Johnston Is Close Second WINNIPEG (CP)--Two easter- ners dominate the field today as the three-day Canadian track cyc- ling championships wheel into the final day. Pat Murphy of Delhi, Ont., has pumped his six-foot frame and featherweight cycle into a two- point lead for all-round champion honors. . Runner-up--with a good chance |of edging out Murphy--is Toronto's Art Johnston, with 20 points. Win- | |nipeg's Bill Bullman trails in the | |champion race with seven points. | JOHNSTON GAINS | Johnston gained five points on | Murphy yesterday after Murphy {led opening-day events with 17 points. Murphy, Johnston, Bullman and New York By THE CANADIAN PRESS INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GBL 42 53 57 58 62 61 66 72 £632 S551 9 533 11 500 15 .470 18% 470 18% 436 22% A415 25% Montreal Syracuse Rochester Toronto Baltimore Buffalo Springfield Ottawa 72 Friday's Results Springfield 4, Ottawa 7 Baltimore 11, Toronto 1 Buffalo 1, Rochester 0 (10 ins.) Montreal 9, Syracuse 7 Today's Games Springfield at Ottawa Baltimore at Toronto Montreal at Syracuse Buffalo at Rochester Sunday Ottawa at Montreal Springfield at Toronto Rochester at Buffalo Baltimore at Syracuse (2) NATIONAL} LEAGUE W L Pct. GBL 680 -- 68 32 62 39 614 6% 62 45 579 9% 56 48 538 14 52 52 500 18 43 60 417 26% Cincinnati 4 63 411 27% Pittsburgh 31 79 282 42 Friday's Results New York 0, Boston 2 Brooklyn 6, Philadelphia 3 (10 in) Chicago 0, Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 5, Cincinnati 8 Today's Games New York at Boston Chicago at Pittsburgh -8t. Louis at Cincinnati Brooklyn at Philadelphia (2) Sunday New York at Boston (2) Brooklyn at Philadelphia St. Louis at Cincinnati Chicago at Pittsburgh (2) AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GBL 64 45 582 -- 61 47 565 2% 56 47 54 5 50 528 6% 49 515 8 53 514 8 46 64 418 18% 36 72 333 27% Friday's Results Detroit 3-1, Chicago 402 ~ Brooklyn New York St. Louis Philadelphia Chicago Boston Cleveland Boston Washington Philadelphia Chicago St. Louis Detroit 56 52 56 Philadelphia at Washington, ppd | Boston at New York, ppd Cleveland 10, St. Louis 9 (12 ins.) Today's Games Boston at New York Detroit at Chicago Cleveland at St. Louis day 1s shooting for its third straight victory against Canada in the final round of the North American zone tie. If the team of Vic Seixas and [three times. Jack Nash of London |won it three times, Sandy Somer- ville of London four times and Phil Farley of Toronto six times. In quarter-finals, Kesselring de- | THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Saturday, Augwt §, 1900 n NOT ONE GOLD MEDAL By EDWIN 8S. JOHNSON Canadian Press Staff Write, LONDON (CP)--Failure of #Bri- tish athletes to win a single gold medal in track and field events at the Helsinki Olympic games, has sent the so-called experts into sessions of soul searching and post mortems. The men who weighed up the evi- dence in an effort to find a cause, reached the simple conclusion that Britain's best just wasn't good enough and that a change in national outlook is necessary. Based on lessons of the 1952 games, Britons have been told that if their country is to be promoted from the ranks of a second-class | power in sport those responsible for selection and training must stop thinking in the past. APPROACH TOO INSULAR London sports columnists gener- ally were agreed that the British approach to international competi- tion was far too insular and that her leaders of athletics were in- clined to underestimate world oppo- sition, ] Blind, complacent optimism, they chorused, just isn't good enough. Stan Tomlin, a leading track and field authority, summed it up this way: "We have been smugly satis- fied with our apparent improve- ment and have completely mis- judged the world rise in standards, There has beer no t at the fin- ish. Lack of n and lack of ough training has beaten us." r writer suggested that the British Olympie contingent had been "cluttered up with flash ath- letes," who never had a chance in a roman holiday of new Olympic and world records. MANAGER TESTY Jack Crump, British Olympic team manager, was inclined to be testyy about the criticism of the British shewing. "The whole team has done better than .we had any right to expect," he said. 'The fact remains they weren't just quite good enough, but the competition out there was fan- tastic." Others, however, took a more serious view of what they contend is outright "shamateurism" under the protective cloak of simon-pure |M Olympic competition. William McGowan, veteran columnist for the London Evening News charges that continental countries, particularly those behind the iron c , regard sport as their great 'invisible export." Many foreign governments, he ~ Failure of British Athletes at Games Sends Sport Experts Into Post-Mortem says, back their national teams a3 lavishly and = would an army corps on the battletield, NO FINANCIAL WORRIES Under this regime, star athletes ded training , all the any guard one presumes to offer them money, but they are adequately provided for with jobs as civil servants for with jobs as civil servants or as army officers, The Americans, the writer main- tains, play it siightly differently OTA repeats oy. Seti nal pros sel them to college. There they are taken in charge by the most highly- paid coaches in the world and Sudies become a minor considera- on. 'Our choice seems obvious," said cGowran. "Either we gan put some elasticity into the interpreta- tion of the rules to find some way of subsidizing our sportsmen and hope for a few victories, or we can continue to play the game for the game's sake and maintain our no longer enviable record of the world's best losers." team play with a gross of 698 and defending champion Quebec had 702 for fourth. Miss Stewart's 150 won her the O'Keefe trophy for individual low gross in the 36-hole team play. = : YOUTH IN FRONT Youth had a strangle-hold on top placings. Babs Davies of Van- couver, third after 18 holes, took an 87 yesterday for 169 and fifth place. Behind her was 17-year-old Saskatchewan champion Joanne Goulet of Regina with 88-82-170. Alone at 172 was Mrs. J.C. White. | Herb Flam play as they did yes- feated Herb Epstein of Toronto 5 law of Laval-sur-le-Lac, Que., and | |terday in singles, then the Ameri- and 4. Neale eliminated Herb Rein. | bracketed at 173 were Mrs. J. Dag- | |cans can be expected to win the | best-of-five series and possibly send |second stringers Bob Perry and {Jack Frost, newly-crowned U.S. junior champ, into the final singles Sunday. Flam and Seixas are scheduled to meet Brendan Macken and Lorne Main in the doubles. Macken and Main last week took the Mexican team in straight sets. Yesterday, Flam defeated Henri Rochon 6-2, 86, 6-2 and Seixas downed Main 6-2, 6-3, 6-4. LITTLE EXPERIENCE Seixas and Flam have little ex- perience as a doubles team, but they should work out well because of their respective games. Seixas has a tremendous serve, good apprach shots, is one of the most natural volleyers in the game, has a lot of top spin in his fore- hand and a slice backhand. He showed his authority on the backcourt in his match with Main. While Main had more placements than Seixas, mostly taken near the and slammed back everything Main could retrieve and kept the ball going until Main erred, either by going beyond the baseline, or put- ting the ball in the net. While Flam perhaps lacks Seixas' power, he has a masterful control and touch. He knows where his |sions, and also seems to know | where it's going to be when, and {if, it comes back. SHOWS MASTERY He showed his mastery of tennis when he humbled little Rochon yes- terday, playing exactly the unorth- odox game that was supposed to fool him--drop-shots, angling shots to the corners, lobs and fast change of pace. Rochon said after the game that while he didn't dispute Flam was a masterful player, he was ner- vous and tense before the crowd. He said he usually plays a better under that kind of pressure. Main used his two-handed return of service effectively against Seixas yesterday. He also came up with an effec- tive 'service of his own. He aced the more powerful Seixas twice only one serve got by him. Macken plays a game similar to that of the Americans. His service, with his entire body behind it, is terrific; he is noted for his touch and control, particularly when vol- leying and his ground strokes have depth and authority. He and Main pave played together as a winning eam. ball is going to land on most occa- | {game away from home when not | |boldt of Toronto, 6 and §. | Eluck knocked out Doug McKel- {lar of Toronto, 2 and 1, and Wae- cheter put out Louis Georgas of {Owen Sound, 3 and 2. | Emerson Creed of London won the consolation sweepstakes yes- terday with a 74, one better than George Button of Toronto. Jerry Knechtel of Kitchener and George Hevenor of Toronto tied for third with 77s. Marlene Stewart Likely Repeater As Canada Titlist | By JIM PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer EDMONTON (CP)--The Cana- | dian women's close golf champion- | ship today rested on the perfor- | mances of two young Ontario golf- | jers in the final round of the 54-| hole medal-play competition. i The diminutive, 18-year-old | champion Marlene Stewart of Font- {hill is favored to repeat after a! | two-round score of 150--eight under | (par. But Ontario champion Mary.| | Gay, 20, of Kitchener pulled up on | the leader yesterday for a 36-hole {count of 153. . | | THREE UNDER PAR ° Miss Gay led the field in the second round when she blasted Edmonton Mayfair's 665-yard layout with a three-under-par 76. Diss Stewart toured the second 18 in 78. After the first round the cham- pion was five strokes ahead when she burned up the course in a seven-under 72. Miss Gay had a 77 Thursday. The two were alone in front. Rae Milligan, 18-year-old Alberta cham- pion from Jasper, and Daintry | | Chisholm of Montreal tied for third | with two-round 168s. | ONTARIO TEAM WINS | Ontario, resting on the scores of | Misses Stewart and Gay, was an| |easy wimmer in the inter-provincial | | team play with a four-player aggre-! gate of 648. Alberta was second with 696. { The host province had not placed better in team competition since an Alberta squad won the crown in 1935. Miss Milligan's second- round 82 that put her in third place had much to do with Alberta's showing and its winning of the team low-net title with 633. Ontario had a low net of 635. British Columbia was third in | i SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY enals of Laval and Mrs. Graeme | Pyke of Montreal. Mrs. D. Mae- Dougal of Saskatoon and junior Dorothy Herbertson of Esquimalt, B.C,, had 174s. So did Ann Sharpe, Miss Stewart's club mate from Fonthill. Ada Mackenzie of Toronto settled down yesterday with an 81 for 175. Miss Stewart's early record-shat- tering performance slowed when her drives shortened and her sec- ond shots lost their accuracy. She had four birdies and three bogies. Miss Gay seldom varied, firing three birdies and parring the rest. SCISSORED SPORTS | AHL MEETS AUG. 19 . The American Hockey League's board of governors, scheduled to | resume a two-day meeting last night, called it off and will resume the discussions at New York, Tues- day, Aug. 19. There was no explanation. It was reported, however, that some of the league's problems were such that the delegates here had to con- t with other club officials in their hometowns. Among the problems is the elec- | tion of a president to succeed | Maurice Podoloff of New Haven, | Conn., and the formation of a sche- dule for the nine-club league. STORK WINS The Rochester Yacht Club Stork, sailed by Jerry Castle, sailed to | first place in a 14-boat field in! the six-metre class in the Lake | Yacht Racing: Association regatta | at Toronto yesterday. The eight-metre class was won by .the Royal Canadian Yacht Club's Lorne Corley in Quest. The | Quest will represent Lake Ontario in next month's Barthel Trophy race at Detroit. through a series of running plays, pass offence and defence an blocking. The Tiger-Cats meet Winnipeg in Hamilton Wednesday. Injuries hit the Montreal Alou- ettes at practice Friday night. Jim Ambrose, as hometown boy, suf- fered a possible torn e in the knee and Calgary-bred y Tomlinson damaged an elbow. GRIDIRON GOSSIP FROM SR. RANKS By THE CANADIAN PRESS The curtain lifts today on the Canadian 1952 football season at Ottawa's Landsdowne Park. The premiere performance will be an exhibition game between the cur- rent champions, Ottawa Rough Riders and Winnipeg Blue Bomb- ers, The cast is brimming over with stars as well as a host of ingenues, The Bombers flew east with 40 players and coach George Trafton --who's got the "widder green' blues. Shedding a erocodile tear or two he moaned: 'We're green . . .we lack depth. . .many of the kids still are a couple of years away." But a look at Trafton's roster shows that his kids will have the solid support of many big brothers. In uniform will be snaps John Brown, quarterback Indian Jack Jack Jacobs, middles Buddy Tins- ley and Dick Huffman and Tom Casey at left half, s his ours season of Canadian foot- all. Coach Clem Crowe of Ottawa said, "We're out to win this one." Heading his cast is Pete Karpuk, in top form after recent workouts. Frank Clair, Toronto Argonauts mentor, will fly to Ottawa for the exhibition tilt after he watches his own boys in an inter-team game. {The Argos meet the Blue Bombers | il" Toronto next Baturday. Clair Jack in action. Carl Voyles left his Tiger-Cat workout in Hamilton in a happy frame of mind. In fact he gave the players the week-end off. But not before he whipped them The "go slow" signal was hoisted over the Calgary bowl this week as coaches Les Lear and Ed Cham- pagne urged their eager Stampe- ders to hit their teammates more gently during workouts, Star im- port Johnny Bright, who injured a shoulder last Saturday, should be back in uniform soon. The Stamps play an exhibition tilt with the Alouettes Aug. 18. ton Aug. 16 in Edmonton show indica- tions of a record crow do0,1001.6 tions of a record crowd of 16,000. The Esks, working in hot weather, have had only a few minor easualties so far, Coach Glen Dobbs has cut down his Saskatchewan Roughrider ros- ter to 38 men. Three quarterbacks --Dobbs, Doug Belden and Butch Alvinger--are taking turns at the hurling chores. | STARS YESTERDAY By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting: Andy Pafko, Dodgers-- | said he's interested in seeing Indian hit three-run homer in 10th for | Brooks' 6-3 victory over Phillies, {driving in five runs with homer, {double and. long fly ball. | Pitching: Murray Dickson, Pir- | ates--shut out Chicago for 10 in- | nings and drove in only run of game with a single Jor 1-0 win. 79 SIMCOE NORTH WILSON AND LEE MUSIC STORE HAS ALL THE LATEST RECORDS OF ~ WILF CARTER DIAL 5-2822 WILF CARTER to the ZAREN, Philadelphia at Washington . Sunday Detroit at Chicago (2) Cleveland at St. Louis Philadelphia at Washington Boston at New York 138 gave him a two-stroke lead. Mike Bryan of Winnipeg meet to- {Joyee Ziske of Waterford, Wis., day in the finals of the quarter- held a five-stroke lead over Betty mile race. Heats and final of the wland of Lexington, Ky., 159 to half-mile, and the meet feature, a , in the world's fourth phase, 25-mile, 150- race, will be run the women's amateur. |oft today. i er | PLEASURE VALLEY SPEEDWAY Simcoe Street North -- Oshawa Sat., Aug. 16, 7 p.m. 7:00 AM. TO 9:00 P.M. SIX POLLOWING DAYS OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9:00 P.M, JIMMY'S SERVICE STATION 813 SIMCOE-S. Corner of Conant VINCENT SHELL STATION 227 SIMCOE §. JIM CLEMENTS 102 SIMCOE NORTH CLIFF MILLS MOTORS 226 KING W. STATHAM SERVICE STATION 59 KING W. KENT SERVICE STATION 40 ATHOL ST. at Athol SARGANT TEXACO STATION 278 PARK RD. §. ROSS SKITCH TEXACO STATION 83 RITSON RD. SOUTH SATURDAY 1 oH AUGUST You'll See and Hear WILF CARTER and His Two Daughters, Sheila and Carol Singing, dancing and yodelling with their Daddy! -- PLUS -- "The ' Four Hillbilly Jewels" FREDDY LANE (Champion Old-Time Fiddler of All Canada) LITTLE JOE, Comediene and Your Old Favorite HANK LA RIVIERE Free Parking t First Time in Canada ! /4-Mile Banked Dirt Track! Our regular Sat. Night Stock Car Races will be held that week only on Tues., Aug..12, ADMISSJON: Adults $1.00 (Tr x Incl.) -- Children 50 cents Don't Miss This WILF'S Big Show and DANCE! Fun Galore! ADMISSION: Adults $1.00; Children 50

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