EEE EEE IE REE ERE REE EEE EE THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday September 18, 1959 BASE-RUNNER IN TROUBLE Outfielder Norm Larker of | Pizarro, is heading for second the Los Angeles Dodgers, is but the throw from first base- | Last night in the Kinsmen Sta- dium Hollandia jarred the hopes of the Thistle Club of taking the league championship, by defeat- ing them 3-2 while in the second match of the twin bill, Kickers downed a fighting UEW squad by a 3-1 count, In the first match Hollandia and Thistle put on quite a show, although at times play was rather scrappy. Both teams were fairly evenly matched with the half- time score standing at 1-1. Hol- landia in the second period had a definite edge on a worried Thistle side and outplayed and outscozed them, with the final tally being 3-2 in favor of Hol- landia. PLAYER INJURED Torvic at centre-half for Thistle and Vermeulen on the forward line for Hollandia, collided early in the match, putting Torok out of action for most of the game. He had to get pine stitches in a {cut over his eve. This proved to |be the downfall of Thistle as Torok is the key man on de- fence. Two of the Hollandia goals came from defensive blunders. Vermeulen had to have medical treatment after the match. Hol- landia had severdl injuries dur- ing the game, which might af- fect the performance of the club LL EE a di i Cb Ea an gh dh A ER a a ol i a EE Gath 8 a LEE EE Te EE EE EE Hollandia Upsets Leading Thistles in future games and this would be a iough break for them, as they have been coming along very s'rongly of late. Scoring for the winners were Westerink, Vesters and Vanden- berg, while Thistle's goals came from Kelly and Richmond. WIN FOR KICKERS In the second game, Peterbor- ough UEW started out in great style and had the Kickers squad] |on edge, playing in great fash- ion, and for the first period the |{UEW eleven lcoked as though! |they would come out on top. However, Kickers scored the first goal on a beautiful shot by Duiella, which had the goalie beat fair and square. .UEW re- taliated late in the period on a weak shot by Payne that trickled past a maze of defenders, who had goalie Rohr blinded. The score stood at 1-1 at the halfway mark. KICKERS TAKE CHARGE In the second period, Kickers took most of the play away from the UEW squad and Duiella in- creased their lead with another lovely shot into the corner of the ni mistake, scoring with a bullet- like shot. Although the visitors came close on a couple of tries, they tailed to reduce the odds and the game ended with Kickers ahead -1. | This game was cleanly played under the management of referee J. Denholm who kept things under absolute control and as a result of the win, and the loss by Thistle it looks like a sure thing for Kickers' name going on the UAWA Trophy once more, unless the UEW or Hollandia can outsmart Kickers in their upcom- ing games. Thistle Kickers Strila Hollandia Folonia Italia UEW Scots occ Malta Pi. Hope Uxbridge FUTURE GAMES Saturday, Sept. 19 -- OCC vs. Port Hope in Kingston Stadium at 7.00 p.m. ana UEW vs. Thistle in Peterborough at 6.00 p.m.; Uxbridge vs. Kickers in Ux- bridge at 6.00 p.m. 33 32 32 27 67 80 59 60 4 39 30 42 63 25 57 25 101 18 9 21 14 EOS eumannw NOSWHhANWOWNNW 4 ef. A little later under pressure from the Kickers forwards, a UE defender gave a foolish pen- alty on which Jockel made no WT LFAPis. 87 9/P.m. ¢/ OASA Senior "B" Playoffs -- SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES SOFTBALL Girls' Exhibition Game--Whit- by Merchants vs Oshawa UAW Del's, at Alexandra Park, 7.30 p.m. Oshawa Minor Assoc. Playoffs -- (Midget Irague) -- Woodview Park vs Fernhill Park, 3rd game of quarter - final series, at Fern- hill Park, 5.30 p.m. sharp. (Ban- tam League) -- Radio Park vs Woodvicw Park, 3rd game of quarter . final series, at Wood- view Park, 5.45 p.m. sharp. SATURDAY'S GAMES SOFTBALL Tony's Tie Series With 1-0 Thriller Tony's Refreshments defeated Thompson Plumbing 10 last night at Alexandra Park, to tie up the Inter County Softball League championship finals at one win apiece, in a thriller- diller softball battle that had the fans oa their feet, from start to finish. : "Rich" Wilson was the big hero of the Tony's win. He limit- ed thz Plumbers to only four scattered hits and besides that, OASA Junior "A" Playoffs --|he drove in the only run of the game ~f Southern Ontario|ball game, to give himself the |finals) -- Hamilton Nickey's vs Wi. . ; |Oshawa Scugog Cleaners, at| Wilson hooked up with Griffin Alexandra Park, 4.45 p.m, {in this crucia: contest. Griffin NAGA Intermediate - Industrial|3!S0 allowed only four hits but Playoffs -- (1st game of All-On-|T0nY'S won the game by bunch- , championship finals) -- Sar-| Ing two of their safeties. It hap- | and then Wilson followed with a solid double to left field, where the ball evaded Stinson long enough to le! Berwick score. A good 1efay-throw caught Wilson at the plate, as he tried to stretch his blow into a home- run. That one was the only run of the ball game. Wilson himself was fortunate to get past the first inning but after that, was full vawe for his win. Cole open- ed the first inning for the Plumb- ers with a single and Campbell followed with a blow to right field. Oldfield grounded out to the box and then with one out, Weldon grounded to shortstop and Cole was thrown out at the plate, trying. to score' on the play. p A double by Campbell, in the 'ROUGH WEEKEND Blue Bombers Hit The Road By THE CANADIAN PRESS the season with an ankle injury. third inning and a single by Wel- don in the 6th, proved the only other hits that Wilson allowed, as his mates, especially .in the outfield, gave him brilliant sup- port. Snow's one-handed stab of Oldfield's drive in the sixth saved what might have been a game- tying homer. Third game of this 3-out-of-§ playofi final series, will be play~ ed at Alexandra Park, on Mon- aay evening, at-5.00 o'clock. TONY'S REFRESHMENTS -- Varga, ss; McAllister, If; Snow, rf; Bryan, ¢; Mackness, 3b; Me Cabe, 1b. Berwick, cf: Wilson, p; Selby, 2b. 7 THOMPSON PLUMBING-- Cole, 5s: Campbell, 3b; Oldfield, 2b; Weldon, c¢: Copeland, 1b; Ulrich, ef; Stinson, If; Sheppard. son, rf, Griffin, p. |(1 Inia Pol 75.0% pened in the fifth inning when ni Syme V5 Oguavs Duplate, sin Berwick singled with one out | OASA Pee Wee Playoffs --| |{(3rd and deciding game of - - |series) -- Frenchman's Bay » Kingside Ousts - - Storie Midgets Zone finals) Oshawa Mer-| [North York, at Agincourt, 2.15 | Kingside Park Midgets elimin- chants vs Kingston Indians, atated Storie Park boys in their Kingston Cricket Field, 5.30 p.m.|quarter-final series, taking a 14-11 OASA Intermediate ""C" Play-|decision Wedne-day night at the offs -- (1st game o° Southern On- Storie Park diamond, to sweep) tario finals) -- Brooklin Steven-|{the mound in two-straight games. son Motors vs Dresden, at Dres-| Kingside Park will now visit den, 8.15 p.m. {the winner of the Woodview| (2nd game of Eastern Ontario shown above, a "dead duck" and he knots it, as the Mil- waukee Braves have him trap- ped between first and seeond, m the fifth inning of their game on Tuesday. Larcker, trapped off first base, by pitcher Juan man Joe Adcock (foreground) to second baseman Felix Man- tilla, has him cold, Backing up the play at upper left, is short- stop Jounny Logen But the Dodgers still won 8-7. --AP Wirephoto Eastern Zone Merchants Cop First | TRACK AND FIELD {Fernhill Midget series, on Mon-| | Oshawa and District Annual! Monday night, in the first game [Track and Field Championships|of their 2-out-of-3 semi-final ser- Meet, at Alexandra Park, 1.30/'€S p.m. | se angsday bigs game at LAWN BOWLING (8 orie ar 'was a ree-scoring| . | affair. Kingside got one run at the| re Dalles Tournament start on a double by Pleau and a| Lawn Bowling Club, 1.30 p.m Finals don't expect a friendly welcomed single by Noakes, after two out. Weekend," says Bomber coach They added three more runs in{Bud Grant. "We play the two| The Grey Cup-champion Winni-| Gerry James has been working peg Blue Bombers hit the road in| With the club but still has a the Western Interprovineial Foot- Weak ankle. He spent a long ball Union this weekend. They|Streich in a cast after suffering broken leg last season. from their hosts. Bom tied with Calgary in bt . third place, plans to dress quar. This is going to be a rough i. ,.ck Jackie Parker, who has been out for four games with SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' Oshawa Merchants defeated Kingston Indians 7-5 last night at Alexandra Park, in the first game of their OAS. Senior 'B" 2-out-of-3 Eastern Ontario Zone championship series. The winner meets the Hamiltor-Toronto win- ners, in OASA Senior "B" semi- finals. Last night's Senior "B"' playoff SOFTBALL FANS had a couple of real entertain- ment treats, if they took in the two playoff games at Alexandra Park last night. The twilight tilt, an Inter- County League championship finals, second of a 3-out- of-5 series, saw Tony's Refreshments tie up the series at one win apiece, when they nosed out Thompson Plumbing '1-0, in a real scorcher. "Rich" Wilson for Tony's and Griffin for Thompson's, put on a real pitch- er's battle and it took some sparkling defensive plays by his mates to retain the slim one-run margin, which Wil- son himself helped attain with his timely hit. In the sec- ond game last night, under the lights, Oshawa Merch- ants defeated Kingston Indians 7-5, in the first game of their Senior "B" Eastern Ontario Zone final series. Merchants go down to Kingston Saturday evening, 5.30 o'clock, for the second game of the series. If they tie it up, they'll likely play a daylight third game in Belle- ville, or perhaps a floodlight tilt at Madoc. This one here last night was interesting softball entertainment, with everything from weird to wonderful in it. Each team got some soft runs in the early stages but good relief pitching by Bob Boyce and three solid home-run blows by Palmer Knight, Tommy O'Connor and Ken Courtney, gave Oshawa their winning edge. Prior to that, there were some sloppy errors in fielding and thinking, Saturday brings up some more promising diamond action for local ball fans. Kinsmen Civic Memorial Sta- dium is the site for the third and deciding Junior "A" baseball game, between Kingston and Oshawa UAW Local 222 Juveniles, tomorrow afternoon at two o'clock. This is the final wind-up of the series that was stalled when Kingston successfully protested.to the OBA that the second game shouldn't have been awarded by the officials to Oshawa, when they were a half-hour late, last Saturday here. Local 222 boys are confident they can knock off their Kingston rivals in this. deciding game and earn the right to proceed in OBA competition. Scugog Cleaners Juniors face the acid test tomorrow afternoon at Alexandra Park, at 4.45 o'clock when they face Hamilton Nickey's in the first game of the Southern Ontario Junior "A" OASA finals, for the right to go to Sault Ste. Marie and contest the All-Ontario title, which Oshawa Scugog Cleaners captured last season. Nickey's are rated as one of the top Junior teams to come out of Hamilton in several years. They eliminated the strong Toronto "Tuxedo Junction" team in two- straight games. Basically, the Nickey's are much the same club that defeated Scugog Cleaners in OASA Juv- enile semi-finals, back about three years ago, when the Scugogs were then known as "Sunnyside Elks." Coach "Wib" Mal has had his team out for nightly workouts this week and if his pitchers, Ron Taylor and Glen Hornsby are in top form, then Scugog Cleaners should be able to give an excellent account of themselves against the powerful Hamilton squad. At any rate, the game tomorrow afternoon should be a real attraction for local softball fans. BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa Duplate, with veteran Jack McConkey on the mound, will face Sarnia Poly- mer's tomorrow night, eight o'clock, at Alexandra Park, in the first game of their All-Ontario championship se- ries, in OASA Intermediate-Industrial éategory. Sarnia ousted Hiram Walker of Windsor in the semi-finals and are highly regarded in Western Ontario as the potential 1859 Industrial champions but if the Duplate team clicks, the Sarnia team will get a real ; surprise . . . GIRLS' SOFTBALL, an exhibition game between Whitby Merchants and Oshawa UAW Del's, will be the attraction tonight at Alexandra Park, starting at 7.30 o'clock. UAW Del's will go to Florence a week from tomorrow, for the second game of their PWSU Inter, "A" cham- pionship finals . . . TONY'S and Thompson Plumbing play the third game of their Inter-County League finals, on Monday night at Alexandra Park, 8.00 o'clock . . . MARKHAM ACES won a 4-2 decision in Brooklin last night, to tie up their South Ontario County League semi-final series. Each team had five hits and all the runs were unearned. Third and deciding game is in Markham on Tuesday night . . . TORONTO LEAFS have bought three new players already for next season, in- cluding infielder Billy Hunter from Cleveland Indians; first baseman-outfielder Don Saner from New Orleans and pitcher Stan Pitula from Denver . .. "WONDER WHERE" Canada's champion filly, has been assigned top weight of 122 pounds, for Saturday's Fairbank Stakes event at Old Woodbine. Major Flight, Sunday Sail and Strongboy are rated as the main threats to Wonder Where . . , WESTERN CANADA horses, 51 of them including some of their very best, record-holders, ete, will invade Toronto this week-end, bidding for top honors in some of the main race events scheduled for the next couple of weeks. game produced a little of every- thing, rasging from glaring men- tal errors to solid home-run| and then Tinkess flied to left, scoring Hollingsworth on this sac- rifice, Deasey sacrificed then North singled, scoring Holland with the third run of the inning, making it 5-3. But after that, Bob Boyce, who replaced Masiewich in the fourth inning, settled down to get past the next three innings. He was in trouble in the 8th, when A. Senior singled to open and Tinkess bunt- ed and Boyce himself errored on Merchants took the lead at 3-2 in the bottom of the fourth when Tom O'Connor walked. Nichol sacrificed and Courtney ad- vanced O'Connor with an infield out and then on an error, when Tilk grounded, O'Conner scored. Trailing 5-3, Merchants clicked for a run in the sixth inning, on Nichol's opening single and then with two out, Boyce belted a| single North, in centre, made a {BASEBALL brilliant ome-handed pickup and a perfect, loug throw to the plate, but R, Senior dropped the throw, | with Nichol still a stride from| the plate. That made it 54 and in the seven'h, Palmer Knight hit a homer, just inside tke right-field {foul-line, to tie the sccre and with {two out, Tommy O'Connor belted (a homer into deep left-field, mak- ling it 6-5 for Merchants. Ken| |Courtney's homer, to open the| blows, with the usual run of|the play. Campbeil then bunted ordinary errors and base-hits in|safely to load the bases with between {none out. but Kingston missed Kingston opened with a single their big chance here. They fail- by North, Allarie's choice play ed to score, as Boyce fanned and Bob Senior's double, but|/North on a third strike called, Johnny Masiewich rallied to fan|then Ray Buzminski made a bril- the next two batiers. Then after|liant running shoestring catch to giving away a couple of runs in|rob Allarie and Senior forced the second stanza, Kingston came Camptell at 2nd, with a ground- back to tie the score in the ball drive to Tilk fourth. La el 9th, Hofiing sweet Knapp opened the fourth with dou with one out and Holland Tora a wp k and Hollingsworth was safe on Walker's error, hut{ th, Save the home club their in singled. Holland was safe on an|Boyce got A. Senior to pop out : > . error, then A. Semior's long fly|and Tinkess grounded out, to| Knight, Walker, Ccurtney and| to centre and an error at 3rd Walker, to end the game. id isin had two hits for the base, plus a passed ball, let both ppp ops cosTLY KINGSTON: North, ef; Allarie, | Knapp and Hollingswo score, | A 7 : i " Just like the visitors, Mer-|rf; R. Senior, ¢; Knapp, If; Hol- tying the score at 22 Bob Boyce) |. oot their first few runs on |lingsworth, 1b; Holland, 2b; A. |sprained knee ligaments. Parker will play at halfback. The Riders, trying for their SOCCER |the third inning, Pleau, Barnoski|biggest clubs in the league one Oshawa and District Assoc. -- and Noakes all doing well at the|day Soar, If We Soitie oo with| Italia vs Malta, at Kinsmen Sta-|plate, with Buechler helping out @ split, I'll consider us lucky." irst win in ei ill fi dium, 7.00 p.m.; Old Country with his single. p The league - leading Bombers Fors: oa jo sight a he Club vs Port Hope, at Kinsmen| Three more runs in the fifth, | meet second-place British Colum-|p 1120 from Baltimore Colts Stadium, 845 p.m.; Peterborough| Naokes, Balsom, Hooper and Bue-|bia Lions at Vancouver Saturday nq' jim Koes, a centre-guard cut UEW vs Oshawa Thistle, at|chler all coming through nicely,/night. They clash with Calgary| im Detroit Lions, Al Benecick Peterborough, 6.00 p.m. and Ux-|along with Tullock and Norton,|Stampeders Monday night. a tackle from Philadelphia bridge vs Oshawa Kickers, at|made the score 7-4 for Kingside.| Edmonton Eskimos invade Re- Eagles, is available. i Uxbridge, 6.00 p.m. {They missed entirely in the sixth|gina to meet Saskatchewan Jockey Basks In |but came up with a man-sized Roughriders Saturday afternoon a he . | 8 % splurge in the 7th in-|a are at home against Lions OBA Juvenile "A" Major Play-|¢VenTuR SP 7 i 3 offs -- (3rd and deciding game|DiPS: 28 pitcher McKnight faded|Monday night, P Hottest Streak CHICAGO (AP)--Jockey John Rotz Thursday scored with five winners in eight tries at Hawe throene to keep alive the hottest riding streak of any jockey in the U. 8S. this year. The .24 - year - old veteran boosted his nine-day total at the meeting to a remarkable 25 win- replaced Maslewich, at this poi. mistakes. They scored first, two|Senior, ss; Tinkess, 3b; Deasy, BIG SIXTH INNING runs in the sccond. Mickey(p; Campbell, batted in 8th; The sixth inning was King-|Walker singled to open and|O'Toole, p in 8th. I ston's big effort. They scored O'Connor flied out. Nicholl OSHAWA: J. Jordan, cf; Buz-| three rung in this inning to take|grounded, forcing Walker and |minski, If; Knight, ¢; Walker, 3b; a 5-3 cad. Knapp was safe on an|then with two out, Courtney O'Connor, ss; Nichol, rf; Court- error, Hollingsworth singled and singled ard Don Tilk scored both ney, 1b; Tilk, 2b, Masiewich, p; Holland bunted safely. A. Senior(runners with a wrong-field |Boyce, p in 4th, drew a walk, forcing in Knapp double, into right field. Umpires: Barnes and Willson. TICATS MEET ARGOS Riders Visit Alouettes Ben BEN WARD |who alternated with Faloney Canadian Press Staff Writer |Wednesday, will probably be] Big Four football hits the half- benched to make room for Don] Fernhill Park diamond Thi |way mark of is 14-game sched- Maynard, former NFL back with| thie fourth. and 2H : me of| ule this weekend with the spot.|New York Giants. | ie four iding game Of}; ht on Montreal where the re-| This season Ticats hold 167 an original 2-out of-3 series that|yitalized Ottawa Rough Ridersiand 37-3 wins over Argos, who saw the third game end up in a|visit the Alouettes Saturday. |have only beaten them once since 77 tie. | League - leading Hamilton Ti-|1956. | Em Mitchell 3 th |ger-Cats visit the Argonauts at T RG ! m Mitchell was again oo © Toronto Sunday. |BLASTS ARGO LINE 2 | mound for Nipigon and bac by| Riders, who stunned Toronto| Coach Hamp Pool, who viewed good support. from her mates, 9g) Wednesday night after drop-|films of Toronto's disaster at Ot- turned in a winning effort that | ing five in a row, need another|tawa, said Thursday the Argo included seven strikeouts a cou-|yictory to move into a third-place|line was to blame, failing badly; ple of walks and only four hits.|tie with Toronto. |on both offence and defence. He Nipigon Girls Top Fernhill Midgets In Deciding Game Nipigon Park Banfield Construc- tion team finally cleaned up their CRA-Neighborhooa Assoc. Midget Girls Sof'ball League playoff ser- ies last night, winning a 52 de- cision over the Fernhill Midget Roto Dairy Bar team, at the| men Civie Memorial Stadium |cttS Pleau, Barnoski, Noakes, peders, winners over Bombers in| |big rally in the 7th, to win the|/Monday for Bombers. {hey didn't need any more {players at home. Defensive half-| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |ed over three runs in the first] tling) Torres, 137, Reynosa,/W. Craggs with Wasylyk helping for six runs, Tropack, Solomon, days tnat Rotz had won four or Greenville, S.C. -- Pete Rade-|and L. Craggs. Wasylyk homered |rally. However, in the 8th and 9th, |racing history, in that period he 0 {down smartly, to protect his lead ished second five times and third Miami, 4. | In the 7th inning, Storie Park FOR INFORMATION PLEASE PHONE . . . '} CANADA'S FIRST A.M.F. FULLY Fernhill girls got their two runs| Hamilton has a 5-1 record for|also felt the surprise walkout of| in the third inning when 8. Cobb [10 . points, Montreal is second quarterback Ronnie Knox, who opened with a walk, G Kehoe sin-|with eight, Toronto third with quit two days before, had a gled and both scored before the|four and Ottawa has two. demoralizing effect. inning ended, via a wild pitch and} . Quarterbacks Gerry Doucette two infield outs In the 7th, Fern- ARGO PROSPECTS DIM and rookie import Johnny Green hill made a last-minute try, with Few observers rate Argos|were absolved of blame by Pool, of semi-finals) Kington vs|and Peters, who took over, also The fifth-place Roughriders are 200 pm. {Balsom with a triple, Hooper, |their last meeting, don't play | ry A 2 ig FIGHTS LAST [Ether The winners didn't score in 0 BOMBERS OUT | Barnoski, pitching for Kingside, Los Angeles--Raymundo (Bat-|/inning, by Solomon, Mossey and Mexico, knocked out Frankie|out. In the third, King singled and|Mossey, W. Craggs, Wasylyk and/more races on a single card, a machei, 199, Columbus, Ga.|in the fifth, for his team's fifth|Barnoski set Storie Park batters| and the win of the series. Iseven times. FRANK HORNING -- RA 8-1389 AUTOMATIC TEN-PIN LANES Oshawa UAW Local 222, at Kins. [ailed to stop the attack. Rick-|idle Monday night. The Stam- {Buechler all contributed to this|Saturday and should be fresh 3 | t 3 NIGHT either the 8th or 9th frames, but Winnipeg will leave two ' top| |got a bad start. Storie Park push.|2ack Rick Miller may be out for| y {ners. {got to Barnoski and pounded him| It was the fifth time in seven Ryff, 137, New York, 1. {scored later on hits by Wasylyk|L. Craggs all scoring in this.big|feat unprecedented in Chicago {has ridden 61 mounts He has fin. stopped Ralph Schneider, 227, run. Bl a re "ha A hl A Featuring . . . P. Kenoe and S. Wilson getting] on bases, but they couldn't get the one more hit needed. Parson pitched for Fernhill and! she blanked the Nipigon Midgets] for the first four frames. With| much of a chance against Ticats,| who said they weren't given any who had little difficulty beating|protection, and both will un- Alouettes 25-13 Wednesday. Thus| doubtedly see action Sunday. the Rider-Alouette clash has an| Argo officials are looking to re- added importance for each club. cent castoffs from the NFL to Coach Frank Clair said Thurs-| bolster the line but none will be day Riders will have almost the available for the game against the score 2-0 for Fernhill, Nipigon |, a Jineu Pe CaS |8¢ p that rampled Argos. | took the lead in the Hern mings G. | But corner - linebacker Bill So-| Scero opened with a hit, Cross-|walski who suffered a bruised man singled with one out and pin against Argos, and defensive then with two out, Em. Mitchell | eng Lou Bruce, out since Sunday connected and score later on a|yith a: twisted knee, are doubtful good drive by B. Fowler, to make starters. it 32. | Ottawa's key man will un- In the 7th, Nipigon added two doubtedly be import fullback] runs for good measure, Crossman Dave Thelen who scored four) and Em Mitchell again crossing touchdowns Wednesday while the plate, with B. Fowler and Nor-|rolling up 171 yards on 23 car- ris helping out nicely, ries. Canadian Russ Jackson is NIPIGON PARK -- Em Mit- slated for the quarter slot again. chell, p; B. Fowler rf: Norris, Clair, Thelen and Jackson said 3b: G. Nosal, lb; L. Nosal, 2b; Wednesday's big win was mainly Scero, ss; B. Graham, If: due to a tremendous blocking job Crossman, ¢; El. Mitchell, of; D, bY the line. The arrival of three Graham, If, » import lineman seeking regular FERNHILE PARK -- B, Kelog,|LT12, Jrchabiy, lelped inspire Ith sent ; 1b; Bevan, ss; C. Cobb, If; Bell. |! present regiiars 2b; P. Kehoe, 3b; Parson, p; Wil-|[ NEW TACKLE FOR ALS son, ¢; S. Cobb, cf; G. Keh rf.| Some changes are in prospect| ---------- fp Alouettes, - John, Raulik,: a Remember When ? {rookie from Vita, Alta., may play| « « o defensive tackle, replacing Ted r CAN y {Elshy who suffered a dislocated By THE CANADIAN PRESS |shoulder Wednesday. George Ebbie Goodfellow, a great de- nixon, cut last week by Green| encanta seasen in the/gay Packers of the National | p cague, was| F named playing coach of the De- Switzer may Yeplase Yen troit Red Wings by manager] End Hal Patterson and half-| Jack Adams 18 years ago today. back Ivan Livingstone have not A converted centre, Goodfellow |fully recovered from early-sea-| was the winner im 1940 of the son injuries. ; | Hart trophy for the player. Coach Jim Trimble of Ticats is judged most valuable to his expected to use Bernie Faloney team. |at quarterback. Tom Dublinski, Ticats. Tackles Tom Saidock and Nick Mumley are expected in Toronto in a day or two. Rocky Denies Any Comeback GREENVILLE S.C. (AP)--"1 gave my word to my wife that 1 wouldn't fight again. I plan to keep it." That was retired world heavy- weight boxing champion Rocky Marciano's reply Thursday night to a new rumor that he plans a comeback. Here to referee a heavyweight fight between Pete Rademacher and Ralph' Schnider, Marciano admitted he had asked his par- ents in Brockton, Mass., what they (nought or a possible come- back. They were so disappointed in to even mention it" Marciano, who retired un- defeated, said. Marciano said he believes the rumors started with his 35th birthday party in Ff. Lauderdale, Fla., Sept. 1. "I fold my, friends there I wanted to announce a comeback | --next year 1 wanted them to] come back to my 36th birthdar! me UNDERGROUND BALL RETURNS PINDICATORS TELEVISION LOUNGE SNACK BAR COMMITTEE ROOM PAVED PARKING FOR 125 CARS ® AIR CONDITIONING » SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO CHILDREN'S LEAGUES. SMALLER BOWLS AVAILABLE TO STUDENTS PLUS FREE INSTRUCTIONS. 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