$= PAIY a Wednesday, STONE GATHERS NO MOSS HERE Ted Stone was shouldered off the field by his team-mates af- ter throwing his two-hit 1-0 win over Levys the other night. The boys continued the congratula- tions in the dressing room and the members of the Transporters can be seen above heaping praise on the young pitcher. The group includes Jack Durston, Bill Kellar, front are Gord Ward, Ted Stone, Frank Varga and Bob Burr. In front of Burr is team captain Nick Mroczek. --Photo by Dutton-Times Studio EVERYTHING FROM' . Oshawa sport fans should be flocking to the Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium tonight in large numbers. 's Negro softball champions, will be famous Chicago Hottentots, world visiting Oshawa for an exhibition UAWA Seniors, who have a bye into the Ontario Sr. "B" playoffs this year. The UAWA team, almost exactly the same club that won three Ontario championships for Pedlars, will give the powerful Chicago Hottentots a real battle. The proceeds of tonight's exhibition game will go to help sponsor minor softball for Bantam, Midget and Juvenile-age boys in Oshawa and for this reasen, the game deserves strong support from local sport fans. The game itself should be a thriller and in addi- tion, the Hottentots feature special "Ghost Ball" and "Pepper Game", show very interesting. It's schedu moderate admission fee of fifty cents for adults and fifteen cents for children certainly shouldh't keep anybody away. * The Niagara District Baseball League night, St. Catharines Stags and Welland Generals played a 4-4 game and it had to be called on account of darkness. This will hold up the NDBL playoffs just have clinched first place but the other positions are still in doubt. Just what will happen in the Inter-County now is hard to say. The Executive kicked London's ace hi wins back to the teams that had eliminated London's chance of finishing in a playoff position and put the I-C loop in the position next week. However, London Majors and Bill Farquharson are protesting the ruling, with great vigor and there may be another meeting and some more re-played games. stands and the playoffs get started next Monday night, the I-C teams may pidy the Niagara District winners--if they are ready. Meanwhile, it looks as if the Niagara District playoffs will not start until about Saturday, Aug. 23. * The meeting held by the NDBL 'men last night resulted in a few of f the re-play games being speeded up, but they'll still be another week at least before playoff positions are known. Meanwhile, Oshawa Merchants have three games in succession, all at home." in Niagara Falls and lost the game 6-4 to the Kerrios. We have no score-book or wire report on what tomorrow. Meanwhile, Merchants get ready to play an exhibition game here tomorrow night against the Friday night, St. Catharines Stags play their home game here in Oshawa under the lights and on Saturday night, Stags play the Merchants here, in Oshawa's final home game of the schedule. have one game left, another visit to Niagara Falls. * BRIGHT BITS: --Bill Brownlee was eliminated in the fourth round of the Eaton Gold, Cup lawn bowling play yesterday, losing to F. Scott of Runnymede, who is in the finals . The Oshawa entry made a fine showing in the primary play but went out in the first round of the consolation to J. E. Eastwood of Toronto . Browns beat Chicago yesterday on Jim Dyck's 2nd John Hetki won his 12th for the Leafs, . Cards beat Cubs 1-0 yesterday. St. Matthews . . homer, 3-2, in 11 innings . , . over Springfield, last night . . SOUP TO NUTS" This is the night that the world- game against the powerful Oshawe entertainment presentations such as all of which promises to make the led to start at 8:15 o'clock and the + * wasn't improved any last that much longer, since Merchants urler, Early and gave five London been defeated. This automatically where they can start their playoffs If the I-C Executive * * BAD GUYS WIN... Bo-Bo Resents Tag-Team Loss Applies Konk to Ref. Goddard Just wait till the Ontario Ath- letic Commission hears about that one! Having called it the way he saw it . . . and having acted as blind as a bat in the process, Sam God- dard, referee in last night's feature attraction of the weekly wrestling card at the Arena was faced with two rather irate muscle- men and close to half of the overflow crowd when he started for the dressing-room. The main bout was a tag-team affair between Bo-Bo Brazil and Bill Stack, representing the good element, and Roberto Pico and Hans Hermann, doing the work of the bad guys. Hermann was subbing for Fred Atkins who picked up an injury in his bouts recently. But to get back to last night's battle, the bad guys won the first fall, the good guys the second and then the referee signalled a final and deciding win for the Pico-Hermann team on the strength of a rope-aided pin by the Mexican of the first citizen of Bowmanville, Mr. William Stack. This pin followed some of the fastest, most chair and fan-raising excitement the Arena has seen. It was no wonder that Bo-Bo rushed the referee after the an- nounced pin and victory asking a reasonable explanation. Even Stack, recovering from the pasting he received before the fall, put in his few cents' worth. The fans lined the ropes and added their voices to the growing riot. Things . got more' violent. Brazil waved his arms. Goddard waved his . . . and the next thing you knew, Bo-Bo administered two Ko-Ko Konks and kayoed the man in white. Suddenly coming to his senses, Bo-Bo realized that this wasn't Hoyle and with the aid of Stack, they carted Sam Goddard . . still unconscious from the Konk . . . through the -crowd to his dressing-room. We wonder what the OAC will say about Bo-Bo's post-bout action. Laying out an officia] isn't too good. Of course when you saw the way the boys lost the bout, you must admit there were ex- tenuating circumstances. Goddard just locked the other way when Stack fell backwards in front of Pico. Roberto slapped a .| Kurgis and Jim Bull Wright rassle pin on him with his hands, while his knees rested on the lower rope. This gave added weight to the pin. Goddard failed to notice the rear- guard action and just counted three. That was it. In the semi-final, the Masked Marvel . . . a big, not-so-tanned individual who doesn't look too familiar . . . pulled a familiar hold on Warren Bockwinkle to score a clear-cut win. It was the reverse unconscious. The'hold was favored by, if we recall correctly, the Red Demon and-another Mask- ed Marvel. It isn't too legal if one scrutinizes it closely. The preliminary saw Sonny to the limit of time to fight a draw. Wright pulled a lot of dirt and worked quite diligently at making a complete wreck of Kurgis' left leg. Kicking and kneeing the mus- cles he had Sonny almost crawling around the ring as the gong sounded to save him from defeat. At the bell, Kurgis had recovered slightly and from a kneeling posi- tion was delivering solid blows to Wright's solar plexus. St. Kitts Stags Tie Generals In Important Game ST. CATHARINES -- St. Catha- rines Stags and Welland Stokes- 'Generals played to a 4-4 tie here last night in the Niagara Dis- trict Senior Baseball League. The game was called at the end of seven innings because of darkness. A walk and singles by Stan Yack, Ray Borowicz and Frank McDonald gave Stags a three-run edge in the first inning and they added another tally in the second on hits Joe Promowicz and Yack. Welland scored their opening run in the fourth inning on a Stag error and a double by Carl Wyles to left field, The visitors exploded for three runs in the the fifth to tie the game on a walk to Alex Billyard, singles by Fran Shottke and Johnny Lab- nock, a double by Bob McKinnon, an intentional pass and pinch-hit- ter Cam Pickard's single. The draw maintained Welland's chances of climbing from fourth place in the final week of the league schedule. Welland: \ » = = (a) Pickard, Buzash, p .... Larouche, p .... DD ht ht ID tt ETT TTT Teer HOMO MON NO COMOUNOO INU E SOOO WNOOONP TOTALS .. St. Catharine Bernat, If .. Yack, 2b Borowicz, McDonald, 1b Geisel, rf Lewis, 3b . Bennett, cf . Augustyn, ¢ w © happened--so it'll have to keep until visiting Peterborough seniors. el After that, Merchants * * today against Leo Rogers of Lindsay Port Hope Legion Takes Over Lead Juvenile Playoff PORT HOPE -- Port Hope Le- gion Beavers took a substantial lead in the round bobin series for the championship of the Lakeshore juvenile baseball league when they whipped Cobourg Maroons 8-0 here Monday night. The loss was the second for Cobourg and gave the Port Hope club its second win as against no losses. The third team in the set, Bowmanville, has one win and one loss. As in the previous win, left- hander Roger Lee was the key fgure, hurlinga four-hitter. He re- ceived tremendous support from second baseman Bob McDerment who rapped out three singles for a perfect night at bat. Stu Lingard started on the. mound for Cobourg, but retired in' the third when Port Hope went bunt-crazy and laid down seven hits for a like number of runs. He was relieved by McIvor who held the winners in check for the bal- ance of the contest. ROLLER WILF CARTER is Coming Saturday, Aug. 16 © TICKETS ON SALE AT HENDERSON'S BOOK STORE EVERY MON., WED. AND FRIDAY NO ROLLER SKATING THIS SATURDAY SKATING ZAREN. They played last night | 24 4 ELLAN 000 130 0--4 10 ST. CATHARINES 329 000 0--4 5 2 Errors--Yack, Lewis; Runs batted in-- Wyles, Labnock, Pickard, McKinnon, Mec- Donald 2, Giesel, Yack; Two base hits-- McKinnon, Wyles; Stolen base--Lonczak; Double play--Augustyn, Yack; Struck out 1.4 Buzash Li LaRouche 4, Promowicz 5, artin 1; Bases on balls off--Buzash LaRouche 4, Promowicz 2. > Colborne Dodgers Score Playoff Win COBOURG -- Colborne Dodgers got the jump on Port Hope Ontar- ios in their best-in-seven Lake- shore Intermediate B playoffs on Monday night, winning 6-4. The opening game of the semi-final round was sparked by the brilliant relief pitching of Bill Ball, the Colborne fastball hurler. Ball went to the relief of Karl Higgenbotham, Colborne's American Negro star, in the first frame and from there OAS. on held the losers to two hits while striking out 16. The losers got all their runs off Higgenbotham on three straight walks, two Colborne errors and a lone hit by Keeler. Irwin Post and Higgenbotham weighed in with triples in the win- ners' attack and Chuck Hall came up with two for four in their eight- hit total off Jim Hart and John Holman. The game was marred by the Port Hope club's protest of the Col- borne lights and the use of Dave Hill, a Cobourg Player, released this year to Colborne. The protest will be heard at Thursday night's Lakeshore League meeting. The series resumes Wednesday in Port 400 000 000--4 3 3 012 200 10x--6 8 3 Hart, Holman (4) and Baxter; Higgenbotham, Ball (1) and Black. Brownlee's Rink Loses Sth TORONTO (CP)--A single bowl and a tape measure sent F. Scott of Toronto into today's final for the Eaton Gold Trophy, top award at the 18th annual provincial lawn bowling tournament. It took the last bowl in the final end of yesterday's semi-final match to defeat the Hamilton rink, skip- ped by R. Bell, and a tape measure to decide the winner. The loss smashed Bell's hopes of recapturing the gold cup he won in 1948 or even the runner-up posi- tion he held last year. Scott, who in 1948 won the Rice Trophy, top provincial singles award, will lead his rink against L. Rogers' Lindsay crew in today's final. Rogers moved into the finals by defeating E. J. Adgey of Tor- onto, 22-13. Yesterday's results included: Eaton Gold Cup--{ifth round: Toronto, F. Scott, 16; Oshawa, W. J. Brownlee, 9 Lindsay, L. Rogers 15; Cleveland, I. Craig, 14 Semi-Final: Lindsay, L. Rogers, 22; Toronto, Round E. J. Adgey, 13 Eaton consolation--first round: Toronto, J. E. Eastwood, 17; Oshawa, W. J. Brownlee, 8 Robert Simpson Trophy--Fourth round: Toronto, A. Rogers, 18; Kingston, Re Hinton, 9 Northern Electric Trophy--Sec- ond round: Kingston, E. T. Dennison, 21; Toronto, D. Wright, 7 London, A. A. McLeish, 17; Port Colborne, S. Wincott, 11 Kingston, A. M. Galt, 18; Toronto, N. Nelson, 13 Lindsay, S. Elsden, 18; Toronto, T. H. Mowson, 11 ' Third round: Kingston, E. T. Dennison, 17; Windsor, G. H. Galbraith, 13 Buffalo, G. Calton, 15; Kingston, A. M. Galt, 8 Toronto, H. Mort, 20; Lindsay, S. Elsden, 11 Toronto, H. J. Taylor, 15; Corn- wall, J. E. U. Rouleau, 6 Fourth round: London, A. A. McLeish, 22; King- ston, E, T. Dennison, 8 SPORTS CALENDAR Wednesday SENIOR EX. SOFTBALL Chicago Hottentots (World's Col- ored Champions) vs. Oshawa UA- W.A. Seniors, at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium, 8:15 p.m." (Pro- ceeds to help sponsor minor soft- ball in Oshawa). MINOR SOFTBALL PLAYOFFS Bantam -- Fernhill Park and Eastview Park, at Connaught Park, 6:30 pm. (Sudden-death, OASA elimination game 9-innings). Rundl Park vs. Valleyview Park, at Radio Park, 6:30 pm. (Sudden-death OASA elimination game, 9-in- nings). Winners of these two games will meet in a sudden-death elimination game on Friday, Aug- us 15, at neutral park, to be nam- ed. Midget -- Connaught Park vs. Rundle Park at Valleyview Park, 6:30 pm. (Sudden-death OASA elimination game, 9-innings). Win- ner of this game will open 3-out-of- 5 final series against Sunnyside Park Midgets, at Sunnyside Park, Friday, August 15, 6:30 p.m. INTER. LACROSSE Scarboro Maitlands vs. Brooklin Dodgers, at Brooklin Arena, 845 p.m. LEGION MINOR PLAYOFFS Bantam -- Victors vs. Oshawa Dairy, at Alexandra Park, 6.30 p.m. and Motor City Bowling vs. Stark's Plumbing, at Harman Park ,6:30 p.m. WHITBY PLAYOFF Whitby Stokers and Whitby Royals, 3rd and deciding game of A category series, at Whitby Town Park, 8:30 p.m. Thursday EX. SENIOR BASEBALL Peterborough Petes vs. Oshawa Merchants, at Kinsmen Civic Mem- orial Stadium, 8:30 p.m. LAKESHORE LADIES SOFTBALL Cadillacs at Maple Grove, at Maple Grove, at 6.30 p.m. Whitby vs. Cedardale Go-Getters at Alex- andra Park (Oshawa Fair), 5.30 p.m. LEGION MINOR PLAYOFFS MIDGET: Rexalls vs. St. John's, at Lakeview Park, 6:30 p.m. Skin- ners vs. Oshawa Dairy, at Harman Park, 6:30 pm. EX. SOFTBALL "Turk" Broda's NHL All-Stars vs. South Ontario County League All-Stars, (Injured Players Benefit Fund) at Ajax, 8.30 p.m. SUNNYSIDE PARK PEE WEE | BOYS DECISION BATHE PARK | 8-2 | In a CRA pee wee boys softbail! game played at Sunnyside Park last night, the home crew came up with | a fine 8-2 win over Bathe under the pitching of Fuller, Winacott was the losing hurler for the Bathe Park team. He al- lowed two runs in the first, three in the second and singletons in the third, fifth and sixth. Bathe Parks' only scoring came in the third and fourth innings. SUNNYSIDE PARK -- Morden, c; Eldridge, cf; Ross, 1b; Fuller, p; Johnston, 2b; Clarke, ss; Graham,' rf; Sadowski, lf; Kellar, 3b; and McRae, 2b in 3rd. BATHE PARK Winacott, p; White, cf; Piper, ¢c; Hutchinson, 3b; Romhanya, If; Gow, 2b; Chase, rf; MacInally, ss; Maly, 1b; and Oleske, cf in 3rd. Umpires -- Bircham and Davis. HARMONY PEE WEE BOYS LOSE 21¢+10 TILT TO CONNAUGHT Connaught Park pee wee boys| softball club stampeded the Har-| mony crew right in their own park last night by a 21-10 score in a CRA Minor softball league game. Petre pitched for the winners and : allowed two runs in the first, one in the second and seven in a wild fifth, Denny King hurled for the losers and saw nine runs scored in the first, seven in the second, two in the third and three in the fourth to round out the tussle. HARMONY -- Patterson, ¢; Pow- ers, rf; Harkin, rf; Terwilliger, If; Challice, 1b; Den King, p; Dave, King, ss; Fleming, 2b; Hoskins, cf; and Geisberger, ss in 4th. CONNAUGHT Taylor, 3b; Middleton, 2b; Petre, p; Westfall, 1b; McLean, c; Starkey, rf; Cole, ss; Redpath, cf; Delong, If; McNeil, rf in 4th; Pollitt, cf in 4th and Hanley, If in 4th. Umpires -- Taylor and Demows. PROTESTS DECISION Jake Mintz, co-manager of for- mer heavyweight champion Ezzard Charles, said yesterday at Pitts- burgh he has asked the National Boxing Association to reverse the decision which gave Rex Layne of Utah a win over the Cincinnay | negro. At Paterson, N.J., Greene said the N.B.A. would "not intrude on any state jurisdiction." VIEWING YOUNG PROSPECTS FOR CARDS Two former baseball greats, Frank "Creepy" Crespi, former 2nd baseman or the St. Louis Cards and Bennie Borgmann, a star of a previous generation, are shown above at the Oshawa Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium as they compare notes on the young prospects who attended the St. Louis Cardinals' tryout school here Monday and Tuesday. Photo by Dutton--Times Studio. ---- 16 Survivors Canadian Open For Gal Golfers By JIM PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer EDMONTON (CP)--Few of the most. ardent golf followers were optimistic enough today to attempt to pick a winner from the 16 sur- vivors in the Canadian women's open golf championship at the Ed- monton Mayfair. A comparatively unknown golfer all but eliminated defending cham- pion Marlene Stewart yesterday and a' young competitor extended a one-handicap player to 26 holes before losing out. The rest of the field went almost according to form. Mrs. D. MacDougall of Saskatoon grabbed a strangle-hold on the first three holes and didn't lose her grip | uptil the 19th when champion Mar- lene from Fonthill, Ont., dropped a birdie four to win. GO TO 26 HOLES Daintry Chisholm of Montreal and Mrs, Maurice Glick of Balti- | more, Md., came up with the out- | standing marathon of the opening iround when they went to the 26th hole before Mrs. Glick won out. Their medal scores topped the field, too, when Mrs. Glick parred in 103 and Miss Chisholm took 194 for 26 holes. The two top qualifiers--Mary Gay of Kitchener, and Edean Anderson of Helena, Mont.--blazed through without difficulty. Miss Gay whip- ped the lone Edmonton qualifier Mrs. T. S. A. Sutherland, 6 and 4, and Miss Anderson won 5 and 3 over Mrs. J. Dagenais of Laval- sur-le-Lac, Que. Rae Milligan, 18, of Jasper, Alta., was not extended in winning 5 and 4 over Mrs. W. D. Edey of Winni- peg. MARLENE OFF GAME Eighteen-year-old Miss Stewart was off her game, putting badly after poor seconds and approaches. Mrs. MacDougall was steady all the way, going two up at the third. They were ever at the turn but Mrs. MacDougall was two up after 11. Miss Stewart came even with a par three on:the 17th and the 18th was halved. Miss Chisholm was one up at the turn over Mrs. Glick and held a lead until the 18th when the Ameri- can evened it, They halved to the 26th where Miss Chisholm was one putt short. The seven American entries came |. through the first round but two will, fall today when Grace Len- czyk, 1947 and 1948 winner, and her sister Lorraine of Hartford, Conn., meet Marie Polk of Chattanooga, Tenn,, and Polly Martin of St. ! Clairsville, Ohio, respectively. S MINOR UPSET. Lorraine Lenczyk pulled a minor upset when she defeated Mrs. Gra- eme Pyke of Montreal 3 and 1 and 'Grace won by default when Mrs. R. S. Rideout of Regina sprained an ankle. Miss Stewart meets Mrs. G. E. Wilcox, Jr., of Miami, who won 2 and 1 over Shirley Fry of Esqui- malt, B.C., and Miss Anderson runs against Ada Mackenzie of Toronto, who defeated Mrs. C. Shuttleworth of Toronto, one up. Miss Milligan meets Mrs. Glick 'and Miss Gay goes against Anne Sharp of Fonthill, a 2 and 1 winner over Joanne Goulet of Regina. UNDER FLOODLIGHTS AT iis SUNSET SPEEDWAY See Canada's Sensational New Sport -- Free Parking STOCK CAR RACING EVERY FRIDAY AT 8.00 P.M. OSHAWA'S MOST EXCITING NEW SPORT SPORTS ROUNDUP By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK (AP)--The Ameri- can League, says manager Lou Boudreau of the Boston Red Sox, probably is heading for a wing- ding of a finish. He seems to feel that his club has about as good a shot at first prize as either the New York Yankees or the Cleve- land Indians, The former shortstopping great has fooled 'em all this summer by keeping his colorful mixture of raw rookies and fading veterans right up in the race. He is stubborn in his belief that, given a couple or three breaks from here on, they can win it all. He has figured it down pretty fine, "We play our last six games at home, three against the Yanks and three against 'Washington, and that's what I'm banking on," Lou said on his last visit here. "Those games could be the pay-off for us, especially if we get some pitching help from Ellis Kinder. FEARS YANKS Asked which he feared the most, the Indians or the Yankees, Lou had some difficulty making up his mind. "I guess you've got to say the Yanks," he finally decided. "They've got the depth, all those good young fellows on the bench, and Stengel keeps shifting them around to get the best from, them." Then, we said, the simple truth is that you fear the Yanks more than you do Cleveland. What is this unholy spell that the Yanks seem to cast over their opponents year after year, anyway? "No, wait,"" Boudreau remon- strated. "I don't mean to say they've got any better chance of beating us out than the Indians have. I'm afraid of that Cleveland bunch, too. A club that has the kind of pitching they have, you've got to respect them, even if Bobby Feller isn't having such a good year. "As a team, maybe I fear the Yankees a little more. What I feel about the Indians is that they might be strong enough to sneak in." MUST RETURN TO U.S. Richard Gonzales, 26-year-old United States fogtball player, was placed on suspended sentence at Toronto yesterday for housebreak- ing with the proviso that he return to the U.S. immediately. Gonzales, who came here to try out with Toronto Argos of the Big Four football union, pleaded guilty, saying he had been drinking. \ BASEBALL EXHIBITION GAME Thurs., Aug 14 Game Starts 8:30 p.m. PETERBORO MARINES OSHAWA MERCHANTS - Gen. Admission T5¢ Children 25¢ KINSMEN CIVIC MEMORIAL STADIUM Three Teams Tid For 3rd Place in Lakeshore League To All Representatives: The following is the final standing of the Lakeshore Juvenile 'Basehall gue. Bowmanville Oshawa Tannery Cobourg Port Hope Oshawa U.AW. ly after the O.B.A. i 'have been decided. RADIO PARK MIDGET GIRLS TROUNCE FERNHILL PARKERS In a CRA Midget Girls league game played last night at Radio Park, the visiting Fernhill Park girls were whipped 20-3 in a one- sided game that was never in doubt after the first inning. Fernhill Park girls went to bat first. Thompson and McCreary scored and they had the bases loaded before the 3rd out was made--but that first frame was Fernhill's only good one. They didn't score again until they got a lone tally in the 5th. Radio Park Midgets scored five rung in their half of the first frame, notched six more .in the bottom of the 2nd, added to their total with big jumps every inning while every player enjoyed a big night at the plate, especially Thomas and Delves. FERNHILL PARK -- Thompson, 1b; McCreary, p; Clark, If; A. Manuel, rf; B. Manuel, cf; M. Millar, ¢; Dearberne, ¢; Twining, ss; Horner, 1b; Sawyer, 1b. RADIO PARK -- B. Long, 2b; Fice, 1b; Delves, rf; Thomas, 3b; Andrews, If; Hale, p; Johns, c; Ogden, cf; R. Thomas ss; Row- den, rf. Umpires: H. Aldred. D. Beauregard and PITCHING FROM THE RUBBER i Your pivot foot must be pi contact with the "rubber" every pitch. You should not wou into a pitch. "Rubber" is 24 inches long and 6 inches wide. If no runners are on base, Begin with right foot on "rubber" few inches in from 3rd base oh 2 Left foot is slightly behind right leg; spikes on wight shoe hang over "rubber" and bite into earth. Hold ball behind right leg, body relaxed and slightly bent. Gloved hand hangs loosely. 3 Distribute weight about evenly on both legs while re- ceiving signal from catcher, with right leg taking slightly more lean. Keep windup simple by not wasting motions and energy. Delivery begins by transferring weight to right leg as arms swing in front, You. ifs Ff ouivel that sums i / ba as in every s control which brings the extra- ordinary quality that sels one ormer above the other. n the ability to approach gy coolly, to control every move and moment, lies the answer fo better results. This i is one of a series designed fo incrpose the pleasure of Cana. dios. who participate in sports. BREWERY LIMITED. cc. L]