10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturdey, Mey 28, 1960 THERE IS NO DOUBT ON THIS CALL Sievers in this action in the third inning of last night's A's- Chicago game in Kansas City. Sievers gained second base on Kansas City's third baseman Andy Carey puts ball and glove firfily on Chicago runner Roy a double but was thrown out | Carey. Shown taking a close at third when Gene Freese | look at the play is third base bunted to Dick Hall, Kansas | umpire Hank Soar. ; City pitcher who threw to | --CP Wirephoto "Balloon Glove' 'Easy To Handle Says Courtney NEW YORK (AP) -- "It's easy to handle," Clint Court- ney said Friday after using Baltimore's new balloon glove to catch knuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm in the Orioles' 3-2 victory over New York at Yan- kee Stadium. "I don't know how many pitches would have jumped past me with a regular glove," Courtney added. 'This was the first time I ever caught him. Boy, is he rough to catch. I don't see how anybody ever bits him." Manager Paul Richards, who thought the glove "worked fine" in its first game trial, suggested the giant size glove after Wilhelm was charged with four wild pitches and his catchers with 11 passed balls in 28% previous innings this season, Courtney went through the game Friday without a passed ball and Wilhelm without a wild pitch. Richards, for ome, thought the glove made the dif- ference. The glove is half size larger than the ordinary catcher's | mit and weighs a little more than two pounds compared to the one pound, 10 ounces for | the ordinary' glove. It is legal under baseball rules, which say a catcher can wear a glove of '"'any size, shape or weight." | sports MENU Bailey Breaks Tie By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' WEEK-END REVIEW: -- STECE RIDZIK of Tor- onto Maple Leafs is rapidly becoming somewhat of a sensation. It's bad enough when a chappie doesn't turn out to be the pitching sensational figure you hoped-- but when he turns around and compensates by blasting out a home-run, then you really have trouble . . . BENNY PERET came through with the expected last night. He knocked off the world's welterweight cham- pion Don Jordan for an unanimous 15-round decision . .~'ANGLERS who like to rely on the almanac or the barometer, are having their inning, It seems that the good fishermen are convinced that these things have a bearing on fishing success . , . PITTSBURGH PIRATES have attained Vinegar Bend Mizell in a hope to strengthen their pitching staff. It was a four-player swap deal with St. Louis Cards .. . JACK ROXBURGH of "Simcoe has been named the new president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association . . . VICTORIA PARK may run in this year's Queen's Plate race--or he may stay south of the border to run in the Belmont Stakes. E. P. Taylor's decision will have a big bearing on the mutuels . . . ONTARIO AMATEUR golf champs of recent years, Henry Martell, Phil Farley, Nick Wes- lock and Jerry Kesselring, are all figured as better- than-average choices to win the Ontario Open Golf title this year, June 9 at Cherry Hill Club Course . . . THIS COURSE is a deceptive 6,600 yard-course and a real challenge to the Ontario Open aspirants. MONTREAL ALOUETTES are happy to announce that their veteran centre Bob MacLellan, will be back out with the team this season. He was going to retire but. apparently the Montreal brass talked him into playing one more season ... NINO VALDES, the Cuban giant, meets George Chuvalo next week--Tues= day night in Toronto and if this bout doesn't prove anvthing else, we'll at least be rid of one of the alleged heavyweight contenders . . . SHRINER'S CIRCUS is holding the fort at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium this week-end. This may be bad news for local soccer fans but on the other hand, when one realizes the tremendous amount of good work and civic-minded charity that is supported by the "Shriners", then you have to admit that this organization is deserving of the best, in the way of public support. They had a good erowd on hand last night--tonight, we hope local citi- zens will turn out in large numbers and give the local "Shriners" all-out support. It's a good circus--a worthy cause--and a fine group of citizens putting it on--all of which makes three good reasons why it should receive all-out support. BRIGHT BITS: -- Jerry Barber slipped yesterday and his margin in the Indianapolis Festival tourney dwindled to one stroke . . . HAREWOOD ACRES, near Jarvis, will today be the scene of Canada's first major , fast-car automobile race . . . BALTIMORE ORIOLES beat N.Y. Yankees 3-2 yesterday on a combination of Hoyt Wilhelm's six-hit pitching performance while his catcher, Clint Courtney used an over-sized catcher's mitt to stop Wilhelm's tricky knuckle-ball delivery . . . BILL MOSIENKO has resigned as coach of the Winnipeg Warriors hockey club . . , LOCAL MINOR baseball and district Intermediate softball teams are in action on Monday night, and it might as well be pointed out that the local summer sports season is definitely open. BRITISH GOLF - Longshot Yank Feels "God On His Shoulder' PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (36th after a match hat had the (AP)--Bob Cochran, 47-year-old|American hanging on for his life with a lean and hun from the second hole straight to look, went into the final of [the 38th the British amateur golf cham- 'GOD ON MY SHOULDER' pionship today as the 5-t0-2 bet- | "God was on my shoulder," ig underdog against Irish star said Cochran. "I hope he stays Jg¢ Carr. |there . . ." arr, a British Walker Cup| Carr, winner of the title in 1953 player end two-time winner of and 1058, made the final with a a. was 240-1 favorite even two-up victory over Scotland's the tournament started. Jimmy Walker. He won the last Ceghran then was a 500-1 Jong- sit ow many think that Cochran two holes to make it. | Irishmen from Dublin were |coming over the border in droves | | By ED WILKS Associated Press Staff Writer | Since he started hitting major |league home runs back in 1954, Ed Bailey has slugged one a sea- son against Milwaukee. Just one |a year, no more, no less. And he couldn't have picked a better {time for his 1960 jolt. This one was a grand-slammer | & with two out in the ninth that broke a tie and gave Cincinnati a 95 victory over Milwaukee Friday night. It moved the Reds within a half-game of the third lace Braves, who blew a 5-0 kj lead and a chance to close in on National League - leading San ;° Francisco. SLIMMER LEAD The Giants lost 5-4 at St. Louls and now have only a one-game| ? lead over rain-idled Pittsburgh, starter Lew Burdette with a sac- Los Angeles defeated Chicago's|rifice fly. Jim Brosnan (2-0) won Cubs 5-3, giving the Dodgers allt in relief, blanking the Braves five-game streak for the first|0n one hit after starter Bob Pur- time this season. key gave up Ed Mathews' second | .. home run of the game, Bailey, a left-handed hitting + : catcher, made it five RBI for|™" shot in the fifth. |the night with his slam off south- BOYER LEADS BELTERS {paw rookie Ken Mackenzie (0-1). 'The Cardinals, out-hit It was Bailey's fourth home run/heat southpaw Johnny Antonelli RON KLINE Pinson's second triple and two in- decisions over the past two sea- tentional walks. sons with four runs in the fifth. Bailey, the Reds' top hitter at|Ken Boyer's 11th home run, tops 328, had been batting only .167 in the majors, came with a man against Milwaukee with one hitjon and capped the spurt. Ron in 12 at-bats. He was 2-for-4 and Kline (2-3) wae the winner with capped a four-run fifth against/Lindy McDanlel's save In the | Foleys Beat Crawifords | Foleys squeaked a 2-1 win over|Foleys when his double drove |Crawfords in Inter-County action both Bryan and Soloman home. last night. Crawfords made a strong bid to | Crawfords scored their first at least tie the game in the sixth fang only tally of the game on a|as singles to Hughes and Lean {run by McKinnon in the second. |plus a walk to Stacey resulted in | McKinnon reached first via an a bases loaded situation. error. Hughes singled, driving Second baseman Gardner saved McKinnon to third, the game for Foleys by relaying Stacey, Crawfords' pitcher, [2 hit to the shortstop who then drove McKinnon home on a solia jimg2ed the runner to third. double. With two still on, Craw-| FOLEYS: Nelson, ss; Gardner, fords failed to score as the next 2b; McGarry, ¢; Bryan, If; Der- two batters popped out. vent, 1b; Soloman, cf; Corrigan, Foleys, although threatening in 3b; Mason, rf; Banks, p. the first, were unable to get roll-| CRAWFORDS: Yuill, ss; Arnold ing until the fourth inning. Bryan |if; McHugh, rf; Hodgson, 2b; hit a single and Soloman got on Cornish, ; McKinnon, ¢; first by an error. Hughes, of; Ashton, 1b; Lean, of; Mason scored the key hit for |Stacey, p. With Grand Slammer seventh after Orlando Cepeda hit a two-run homer. The Dodgers collected all their rune in the. first four innings off 1 loser Glen Hobbie (3-6). They got the clincher in a two-run third on a walk and singles by Wally Mcon, Norm Larker and Duke Snider. Stan Williams (2-0) won it with Larry Sherry's relief in the seventh. Pro Athl ole iy Money Mad | =~ McNichol LONDON, Ont, (CP)--There is nothing in sport for a profes- sional athlete to consider but money, Doug McNichol, Mont- real Alouettes' Big Four all-star a tWo-|defensive end, told a youth club| half when Lou Vass {meeting here Friday night | "You get dependent on the 12-6,|money you make in professional first sports and when you retire you of the season and followed Vada (3.1) for the first time in nine have to look around for other! {ways to supplement come," he said. McNichol, a member of the Alouettes for seven seasons who may be traded to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, said pro football is actually standing in the way of |his promotion in his regular job. | "If I quit pro foothall my firm {would move me with a promo- tion but if I keep on playing they will think I'm only interested in football," he said, "The way I've been treated in the last three weeks I wonder if the past seven years has been worth it." McNichol said the trade has been a good thing because it has |forced him to make up his mind | whether or not to continue in the game, '1 was very disappointed at first but I realize now it has forced me to make a decision." your in- MOSIENKO QUITS WINNIPEG (CP)--Bifly Mosi- enko has resigned as coach of | Winnipeg Warriors of the West- ern Hockey League. General- manager Jack Perrin said Fri- day Mosienko, who took over the club when Alf Pike left to coach New York Rangers of the Na- tional League, blamed pressure for his decision. BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS |San Francisco 24 1% |Pittsburgh 1% Milwaukee 3 Cincinnati 3 |los Angeles 6% St. Louis 6% | Chicago 8 |Philadelphia 16 By THF. CANADIAN PRESS |Washington at New York (2) American League National League W L Pet. GBL| Pct. GBL Baltimore 600 -- 649 -- Cleveland .600 622 1 Chicago .588 652 4 Detroit 517 526 4% New York 516 486 6 Washington .406 444 T% Boston 400 367 9% Kansas City 31 333 11% | American League National League | Baltimore 000 030 000-- 3 6 1/L. Angeles 022 100 000--5 9 0 [Few York 000 001 001-- 2 6 1/Chicago 000 101 100--3 8 0 Wilhelm (2-2) and Courtney;| Williams (2-0) Sherry (7) and Ditmar (2-1) Shantz (6) James Roseboro, ,Pignatano (8), Hobbie |(9) and Berra. (3-6) Elton (3) Freeman (6) {Chicago 001 210 102-- 7 9 9 Marehead (8) and Rice, Avereill |Kan City 020 200 000-- 4 11 1/(8). | Pierce, Kemmerer (1-2) (4) San Fran 010 001 020-- 4 12 4 and Brown; Herbert (2-3) Kucks|St. Louis 000 140 00x-- 5 6 0 @ Giggle (9) Kiely (9) and| Antonelli (3-1) Miller (5) Ship- |{Chitt, HR: Chi-Freese (1); KC-/ley (7) and Landrith, Schmidt Chiti (3). |(8); Kline (2-3) McDaniel (8) Boston 101 000 020-- 4 10 1|and Smith. HR: SF-Cepeda (9); | Wash 000 002 001-- 3 8 0 StL-Boyer (11). Brewer (3-4) and H. Sullivan; | Milwaukee 101 120 000-- 5 7 2 Pascual (5-4) and Naragon. HR: [Cincinnati 000 041 004-- 9 11 0 Was-Green (1), Burdette, Rush (5) Mackenzie Cleveland at Detroit ppd, rain. |(0-1) (6) and Crandall; Purkey, Today's Games Brognan (2-0) (6) and Bailey. (And Probable Pitchers) |HR: Mtl-Mathews Cleveland (Hawkins 3-3) at De- Bailey (4) [frost (Aguirre 2-1). Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, ppd Chicago (Donovan 1-0) at Kan- rain. |sas City (Daley 4-2). Today's Games | Boston (Sullivan 1-4) at Balti- more (Portocarrero 3-0) (N). (And Probable Pitchers) Sau Francisco (Jones 5-3 or | Los Angeles at Chicago San Francisco at St. Louis Monday's Games Cincinnati at Philadelphia (2) Milwaukee at Pittsburgh (2) St. Louis at Los Angeles (N) Chicago at San Francisco (2) International League W L Pet. GBL 7 181 -- 856 1 504 3 S515 5% 483 6% A432 8% 8371 10% 204 1 | | | Toronto | Buffalo Havana Columbus | Rochester | Richmond | Miami | Montreal ! International League | Toronto 003 200 000-- 5 7 Buffalo Ridzik, Funk (3) Scantlebury (5) and Thompson; Erickson, Smith (4) and Lonnett, HR: Tor- Ridzik. Havana Richmond Wieand, Arroyo (9) and Azcue; Stafford, Flowers (8) and Shantz. Montreal 000 100 000-- 1 6 1 Rochester Perranowski, 000 100 000-- 1 7 1 Hoskins (4) and 2 (9); Cin-|Coleman; Ricketts an- Canniz- |zajo. | Miami at Columbus ppd, rain, 'oday's Games Toronto at Buffalo (N) Miami at Columbus (N) Havana at Richmond (N) id shake the odds--if he can and even in chartered special] Washington (Clevenger 1-2) at O'Dell 1-4) at St. Louis (Sadecki|/Montreal at Rochester (N) gel his nerves under control. [planes to watch the match, Extra #Get a new set of nerves, play customs men were put on the th sort of par-shattering game road to check on the border. yqu indulge in earlier and you| It was expected that a crowd can worry Joe," was the advice|of between 6,000 and 10,000 would of*Briton Gordon Huddy, the man|arrive. Cdehran defeated in a 7% hour| The Irish were saying "It's our le over the par 36-36----72|day, no matter who wins." Royal Portrush Monks Friday. | Cochran, a widower, is of Irish Cochran defeated Huddy en the ancestry. 4 |Borlon at Baltimore (2) {New York (Coates 4-0) (N). Sunday's Games Chicago at Kansas City |Cleveland at Detroit {Boston at Baltimore Washington at Detroit Monday's Games Cleveland at Chicago (2) Detroit at Kansas City (N2) 1 Philadelphia (Owens 2-5) at Pittsburgh (Friend 5-2). | Los Angeles (Koufax 1-4) |Chicago (Ellsworth 2-1). Milwaukee (Willey 2-2) at Cin- cinnati (Hook 3-3). Sunday's Games | Philadelphia at Pittsburgh Milwaukee at Cincinnati at | Sunday's Games | Toronto at Buffalo (2) {Miami at Columbus Havana at Richmond Mortreal at Rochester (2) Monday's Games Toronto at Rochester (2) Miami at Columbus. (2) Havana at Richmond (2) Montreal at Buffalo (3) 1] 300 100 000-- 4 8 1 SPORT FROM BRITAIN { LONDON (CP) -- Scenes from, | It was a football classic, Frank- an unforgetable soccer final: |furt, the, German champions, grudging player scores again with a curv-| ing founded 57 years ago. In 1922, its stadium accommodated ,000; now it has been enlarged to hold JE, a Shere SHV ans Som Hail Ferenc Puskas As Soccer's Greate {: g | | NEW YORK (AP) -- American and National League baseball all- stars won't have to face the best pitcher in the opposing league in both games this year. The games will be played July 11 at Kansas City and July 13 in Yankee Stadium in New York. A new rule bars any pitcher from taking part in both games. Last year Don Drysdale of Los An- geles Dodgers. started both games for the National League, That rule, and one increasing the rosters of both teams to 30 players, are the only innovations this year--the second year for two all-star games. Last year the second game was an added starter for which plans had not been made. The Nationals won the first- game, 5-4, and the Americans the second, 5-8. For the third stra year the eight starting men will be chosen SPORTS | All-Star Pitchers In Only One Game by the players of the res| ve leagues. The managers will select the other 22, including pitchers, aud also will name their coaches. Last year the rosters were lim- ited to 26 for the first game and 28 for the second. The starting players must play at least three innings, with the pitchers limited to three innings unless the games go into extra innings, in which case the pitch. ers in the game at the end of nine innings may remain in at the discretion of the managers. Al {Lopez of the American League champion Chicago White Sox and Walter Alston of the world cham- plon Dodgers will manage the teams. PAKISTAN TEA | Pakistan's 1960 tea crop is ex- | pected to reach 57,500,000 pounds |ot which 17,000,000 pounds will for export, jammed into Glasgow's Hamp- header and expresses his ecstasy|den Park began to wonder by gleefully | beaten. A baffled goalkeeper salutes in| Calmly, inexorably, confident of admiration as the same their mastery, the Spanish stars drive. with deft passes and tricky foot- In both cases, the hero is Fer-work. In the end, they made # old ex-Hungarian who happens to| The Glasgow be about the foot- |flated prices, realized they were Madrid defeated Eintracht of seen in Scotland. As Madrid left Frankfurt 7-3 to win the Euro-|the field the Scots gave the cham- roar" the time, Puskas scored four goals home side never gets. and confounded critics who said] Real Madrid, a million-dollar | First Round |_ CALENDAR | |LAWN BOWLING Men's Trebles Tournament | en Trophy By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS awa Lawn Bowling Club, 1.00 Toronto's streaking Maple Da: BALL Sc. fl import, vin- Scanfichury A rare py vs Parkers Cleaners at Burling- Teft ton, 8.15 p.m, hander from Panama, came on| in the fifth inning Friday night| NO fame acheduled oo hit relief as the Leafs defeated go -- Buffalo Bisons 5-4 and took a one- Sos rh Ou. County Leagues League standings. |IBASEBALL It was their seventh consecu- | Legion Minor League (Bantam) one of a head-to-head series with|Park and Whitby vs Jury and the second-place Bisons for the Lovell, Harman Park. Both Coming on after starter Steve SOCCER " Ridzik and reliever Frank Funk Osh. and Dist. Assoc. -- Strila Bisons bats, Scantlebury shack-(®4° Pm. led Buffalo the rest of the way, reach first--on an error. Third - place Havana a leaders, kept pace by blanking Richmond Virginians 1-0 while Montreal 5-1. Rain washed out a game between Miami ic COME FROM BEHIND ' Acsoclated Press Staff Writer Toronto won it in the last of myer catch butterflies with a three singles--the last by Don, the Baltimore Orioles are | Dillard which scored Jack Waters pa.k in the American League {had taken a 4-3 lead in the top Courtney surrounded Hoyt Wil- le tripled and j,o1m's knuckleball pitehes-- A player scores on a brilliant | 3¢0red first and 130,000 spectators swinging on the 80al| whether Madrid would finally be rigging. . came back, dazzling the Germans enc Puskas, a stumpy, 33-year-|look easy. crowd, paying in- eh in the world. As Real watching a brand of soccer never. pean Cup for the fifth straight|pions a 'Hampden | he might be losing his touch. - Icollection of football talent, was Wi | TODAY'S GAMES th Buffal ! u 2 (Ron Snowd ) at Osh- |Leafs today paid tribute to Pat SOPIBALL ow Soupop Cloatiers Scantlebury, 34, veteran SUNDAY'S GAMES and pitched 4 1-3 innings of no-goprRALL game lead in the International wt "Zion 8,15 p.m. tive victory and gave them round --Ajax vs Oshawa Dairy, Alex, league's top spot. gdmes at 6.30 p.m. had been unable to contain the|V® gril at Kinsmen Stadium, allowing only one base runner to Sugar Kings, three games back of the Rochester Red Wings defeated | and Columbus Jets. By ED WILKS the fourth scoring two runs on giove? Clint Courtney did, and |with the winning tally. Bisons jand. Solly Drake singled. which flutter around like butter- Funk picked up the victory, his flics--with a new, out-sized mitt against two defeats. Don Friday and the Orioles defeated Erickson (6-4), Buffalo starter,|the New York Yankees 3-2. lost. He was relieved by Bill| The victory, giving the Orioles {Smith who held Toronto in check their best road-trip (10-4) ever, {with one hit over the final 5 1-3|pushed them a half-game ahead |innings, but the damage had of Cleveland. The Indians, rained |been done. out at Detroit, match Baltimore's The Sugar Kings scored an un- .600 percentage, but have played earned run in the fourth inning five fewer games and are a half- and made it stand up behind the game back. ; 10-hit pitching of Ted Wieand| Third place Chicago, also a (2-2), who stranded 18 runners as half-game behind, defeated Kan- he strucl: out 10. sas City 7-4. And Boston beat Jim Pendleton walked with two Washington 3 i 8 fame inter- out to get Havana started and rupted by a braw " 1 Felix Torres singled him to sec-| , Ine Orioles now have won ond. When third baseman Granny of their last 15, five by one ay Hamner let Borrego Alvarez's|They plunked the pa ken 19 grounder go through his legs, |fifth place with a d Toe v Pendleton raced home with the against Art Ditmar, who lost his game's long run, hanging the de- first in three Secisions, A lye feat on Bill Stafford (2-4). on Wi BE oiling Rochester's Dick Ricketts (1-3) | NP" 5 oading's two-run double. scattered six hits for his first vic-|g/iihelm (2-2) gave up six hits, tory. Jim Frey, Billy Harrell and, 0 each by Roger Maris and Gene Oliver each stroked two hits Yogi Berra--and each drove in to pace an eight - hit attack Tun. against Moutreals Ron Perran- Yankee Manager Casey Sten- owski and Dave Hoskins. gel admitted he was giving further thought to benching Mickey Mantle (0-for-18) and Bill Skowron (2-for-25). Russ Kemmerer, (1-2), a right- hander purchased from Washing- Ramblers File ton, pitched 5 2-3 innings of four- Bankruptcy Note |hit, shutout relief for the White PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Phila- g,y after starter Billy Pierce delphia Ramblers of the Eastern j,i 5 3.9 lead. Luis Aparicio had | against Camilo Pascual (5-4), who had won four in a row. Tom Brewer (3-4) won it with an eight-hitter, one a pinch home run by Lennie Green in the ninth. The brawl came in the fifth. It started when Pete Runnels, the AL's top hitter (.360), said some- thing to Pasccal after ducking a Birds Half-Game Up By Win Over Yanks | nigh, inside pitch and thea {watching a third strike. Pascual |was knocked down and suffered an ankle injury in the melee that followed, but stayed em the mound and finished with 13 [strikeouts. That gave him the major league lead by an 81-79 margin over Dom of Los Angeles, ENDS IN TIE Thursday evening in the Stadi- um, Italia and Thistle fought their way to a 2-2 deadlock in the worst exhibition of sport that has been seen in town in a long time. From the "opening whistle it was apparent to everyone that neither team had any intention of playing in the proper manner and the game deteriorated to such an extent that the fans were thor oughly disg! A Italia opened the scoring quick- which they held until the second period when Subways got their first goal from a penalty kick. It was not until late in the game that the score was tied. The referee, although far too lenient with both sides, was not entirely to blame, as no man could have kept up with the num- ber of fouls and infractions com- mitted Thistle, Italia Play 'Vicious' | An official with less {would have thrown out of | the players from both teams witle |in the first fifteen minutes. Tackling was vicious, while the attitude of most of the players was questionable, It is to be hoped that the lay- over this weekend will have a cooling effect on the teams and that we have seen the last of ex- hibitions like this, Apparently the coaches and managers have little control over their players and i is time they ly and had a two-goal lead to|did |LEAGUE TABLE > he] # LE BoP NO~~oo™ crave essS™ United Hungaria CONN B® g OHO Ng oSmgeanS en OPN AR Hockey League have filed a peti-|o,r of the Sox' nine hits and tion of bankruptey in US. dis-|goored four runs. He broke a 4-4 trict court, tie in the seventh against loser 'The petition filed Friday listed Ray Herert - (2-3), scoring on $29,582 in liabilities and $6,049 in Al Smith's infield out after hit- assets. President George L. Da-|ting his second triple. vis Jr., said $5 of the assets are] A walk and consecutive singles in cash and most of the rest in by Vie Wertz, Gene Stephens and equipment. Frank Malzone gave Boston two Owners of the arena said they runs in the eighth that broke a are interested in taking over the 2-2 tie. It was only the second club. Davis is co-owner of the victory in 13 games for the Red arena. 'sox, but their third of the season | DRUG. STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. 000 000 000-- 0 10 2 108 010 00x--5 8 0 MITCHELL'S DRUGS LID. 9 SIMCOE ST. NORTH RA 3-3431 MEDICAL PHARMACY 107 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH RA 3.42783 TAMBLYN DRUG STORE SHOPPING CENTRE RA 5.8541 | SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. DON DOWN TE 117 SIMCOE ST. N. VIGOR OIL STATION 78 BOND ST. W. BISSONETTE'S SHELL STATION 381 KING ST. W. C. ORPWOOD'S TEXACO STATION 461 PARK RD. §, MONTY'S B-A STATION 284 SIMC! FIRESTONE TEXACO STATION KING ST. E DURNO'S SUPERTEST STATION 574 KING ST. E. CLEMENT'S ULTRA STATION 352 WILSON RD, §. BILENDUKE'S ESSO STATION 1004 SIMCOE ST, §. RHAME'S TEXACO STATION 1487 SIMCOE ST. N. COOPER'S TEXACO STATION 410 RITSO ROBINSON'S E 574 RITSON RD. §. RUSS'S CITI PARK ROAD SOUTH XACO STATION OF ST. §. & DIVISION N RD. N SSO STATION ES SERVICE