THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, July 14, 1961 JACKY CUPIT LOOKS AT CAN ADIAN MONEY, 'reached tonight, only the low 60! Meanwhile, such well - known|sor, all 145. ' Arnold Pa | RE | HAS HOPES FOR MO Fernhill And Texas Tied For Lead In Canadian Open By TOM WILLIAMS Canadian Press Staff Writer WINNIPEG (CP) -- The 1961 Canadian Open golf champion- ship heads into its final qualify-| lesser 69 in the second round to pick/Doug Sanders lights of the professional tourn-jup a stroke on Lema and tie Casper 144. ing round today with ament circuit riding over estab- lished stars. At the end o fThursday's sec- ond round at the rainy Niakwa Country Club course, the lead- ers with five-under - par 135s were Jacky Cupit, 23-year - old rookie from Longview, Tex., and Tony Lema, a fourth-year man on the tournament trail trying to come back from two shaky seasons. Thursday's round saw the Open field, originally set at 150, reduced to 98 professionals and four amateurs. Twenty-two of the pros and three of the ama- teurs were Canadians. After the 54 - hole mark is One Stroke Back Now BIRKDALE, England (CP)-- A torrential rainstorm forced suspension of the third round in the British. open golf cham- pionship today. The stewards expressed hope that the downpour would ease enough to permit resumption of INTER - COUNTY Rookie Is Third Game Three schedule games were played in the Inter - County Softball League last night and they resulted in two very close |contests, both decided by one: run margins while the third {game resulted in a shutout. FOLEY'S RALLY TO WIN In their game at Alexandra scores and ties will qualify for figures as Doug Ford, George |Saturday's final round and a|Bayer, Dow Finsterwald and ishot at & share of the $30,000 Bruce Crampton were 2 Sa |prize money offered. |par 140, Marty Furgol ha Bi V Cupit fired a steady one-under|Stan Leonard of Vancouver 142, Park, Foley Plumbing spotted 143. and Billy s Motors a five-run lead in y "the first inning, then played both brilliant defensive ball as 1 | the handsome ex-Marine from| gg canadian scores after 36, |San Leandro, Tex. Imer Only Two One - Run Margins, A Shutout then singled and Wallace "walk- ed" at this time, with Maxwell cl positions with him. McGhee got a walk off Maxwell and Bourdage singled but the next two batters fanned. | Maxwell stopped the Motors boys with only one hit, a single | by Kutasienski, for the remain- ing six innings. . Meanwhile, Foley's got to Bourdage for a walk to Bryan and hits by Edmondson and Mc: Linton, to score a run in the! second. They added another in the fourth, two in the fifth by Wallace's double and Edmond- son's homer. In the 6th, Knox doubled, Maxwell was safe on an error and Corrigan's single scored Maxwell with what proved the winner. DODD MOTORS WIN Dodd Motors Juveniles nosed, out Crawford Construction 7-6 in| their game at Lakeview Park. It took them nine innings to get! a winner. This was also a comeback ENITYN SEBA GAMES SCHEDULED ONTV THIS WEEKEND ® Saturday, July 15th Channels 2, 9 - 2:30 p.m. New York vs Chicago. Channel 4 - 3:55 p.m. Pittsburgh vs San Francisco Channels 3, 6, 11 5 p.m. Canadian Open Golf Tournament Channel 4 - 1:25 p.m win, with Crawfords getting three runs in the first inning, two walks and singles by Cor-| nish and Hodgson. They added two in the third and one in the fourth. After that Yahn had better control, gave up fewer walks and so stayed out of trouble, in spite of the odd hit collected by Crawfords. Gillard, pitching for Craw- fords, was tagged for a run in the first, two more in the third and singletons in the 5th, 6th] and 7th frames. Davis had a) homer in the third and an open- ing double in the fifth. Jian scores alter | {well as showing attack power, Fara, wis to the cou ies YET 08 Jl. Joe To ke out a 85 dciton lapart in the opening round de-|CaM AXA O ol Wallace started for Foley's | i {pro at Winnipeg's Elmhurst, , '%t hix ni spite a steady rain to post ali 4 prank Whibley, 27, of Kit. ut it wasn't his night. He walk- |five-under 65, had to settle for| 20S of Westmont." ed Boivin, fanned Monroe then lan even par 70 in the second i . walked Campbell. Kutasienski {round. Tachan, a 25-year-pro, took a was safe on an error in centre 71 Thursday, Whibley, who al-\and Bentley homered. Howard CLOSE TO LEADERS most didn't come to He Open | =----=--aem-- m------ Hard on the heels of the/because of a heavy gol lesson) . {leaders were portly Joe Camp-|schedule at the Kitchener club,| CRA Neighborhood bell, Dave Hill, Tom Nieporte 4 a 70. " i land Jon Gustin all with two-| Among other Canadians were {round totals of 136. George Sead son 3 Toronto Oak- Softball Results | Two strokes off the pace were dale, with 140 after a two-over, pn CRA Neighborh sS0cia- Jack Fleck, Mac Main, and Cu-72 Thursday, Al Balding of Tor-|tion sotfball action 9d Associa |pit's older brother, Buster. Dave onto, and Al Johnston of Mont-|the following results were re. Ragan and Bob Goalby had 138.|real, and Ruby Horvath of Wind- ported. In a Pee Wee Boys' game at Lake Vista, the home park won over College Hill by a score of 3-2 in one of the best Pee Wee games of the season. Nestic scored in the first inning for College Hill. Butt scored in the seventh, with help from Bilin- ski and Fry, for their two runs. Lake Vista scored all three runs in the fifth when Wright weak-| leaders --Dai Rees of Britain blown over and par golf became ¢ned a little. Cranston walked, and Harold Henning of South|a significant achievement. Hudgins doubled, Wallace sin- Africa. | Nagle was one of the early 8led, so did Blanchard and Palmer was tied at 143 with starters and faced the rain and/Mvers and the first three run- defending champion Kel Nagle wind at its height. Although he ners scored -- enough to win of Australia who beat Palmer|shot a 75, his play was a bril- the good game. | by one stroke last year. liant display of storm - defying! Sunnyside Park Pee Wee! Rees and Henning shot 74s golf. girls, playing at home, defeat-| The tying run in the 7th, came) as the direct result of an error, as the Dodd 'team was "hang- ing on the ropes." Then they won it in the 9th when Wright | Min ta vs Cleveland Channel 9 - 2 p.m. New York vs Baltimore ® For the FINEST Picture . . tune in your ball game on ---- ENITH 19" Portable TY SPORTS MENU on at a gia ed Zion Park girls 23-16 in a|doubled with one out, advanced ND SLACKENS free-hitting tilt that saw Killen|on an infield out and scored Conditions were only slightly of Zion hit a homer while Eld-|when Markus came through . 72|better when Palmer teed off but| ridge had two for the winners, | with the game-winning blow. activities during the afternoon. Two 18-hole rounds winding up |the 72-hole tournament had been Thursday after their opening-| round §8s Wednesday for 142|WIND |totals. | The 6,844 par Nipigon Win SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' NOT FOOLING! The Kingston and District Soccer Association has a fine 10-team league operating there this summer -- another of those sensational soccer booms of the past few years that has been experienced in many of the larger cities in Ontario and Western Canada as well. And the men running the Limestone City toe-ball circuit intend to keep control of their league too -- judging by their actions at a discipline meeting last night, On Monday night, a player, George Martin, pushed the referee, Later in the game, John Szabo, of the Hungaria team, kicked an opposing player after a hard tackle, When the referee, George Gray in- tervened, another member of the Hungaria team, Jeno Jenoska, the league's leading scorer, punched the re- feree in the face, Over 200 fans swarmed the field, the referee awarded the game to the other team, which was leading 2-1 at the time anyway. Then Szabo kicked the referee. Last night, the Kingston soccer bosses sus- pended the Hungarian (not necessarily 'Freedom') fighters for life and Martin was suspended for two years. Ontario and Canadian soccer bodies will rec- 'Bantam Tilts Two previously rained-out! games in the Oshawa Minor Softball Association's Kiwanis |Bantam League were {up last night and resulted in wins for Fernhill Park over Col- lege Hill and Nipigon Park over Kingside Park. Playing on their home dia- jmond, Fernhill defeated College {Hill 9-2 with Spiers limiting Col- lege Hill to four hits. Walks to |Solomon and Logeman and | Cameron's hit meant one run in the third and Galland singled in the 7th and scored later on Logeman's sacrifice. The win moved Fernhill Ban-| tams up into second place, all alone in the league standing.| They scored three runs in the} second with a walk to Spiers and some good hitting by Cole, Stev-| ason, Morrison and Bryan.| {Spiers homered in the third. The score was 4-1 until the sixth| and then Fernhill got to Solo-| mon as he tired. They scored five runs in this inning, includ-| ling homers by Dearborn and| Griffin scheduled for today. A state- ment said that if play proved to be impossible today, two rounds would be played Saturday. Arnold Palmer of the United had been played through since °n€ States moved into contention cleaned|Thyrsday one stroke behind the'clubhouse year, Birkdale course was swept gale - force winds -- the stron est wind a British Open roun 11938. A big refreshment tent an marquees wer | d/by a one - e long par 5 16th, GIANTS GET HERVE - HO SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Three San Francisco Giants may be penalized by National League President Warren Gi- les for their actions in Thurs- day's 2-1 victory over Pitts- burgh Pirates. Third baseman Jimmy Da- venport and then first base- man Willie Mccovey and coach Whitey Lockman were thrown out of the game. Frank Secory, who ejected Davenport, said the infielder made obscene gestures and | used profane language after Secory called him out on | strikes. With the Giants trailing 1-0, MAY BE FINED ALSO the park along the right field line. It was foul when it left the park," ruled first base umpire Tony Venzon. McCovey rushed to protest and bumped the umpire. First base coach Lockman also rushed over. "Both of them brushed me," declared enzon, "and both cussed me." Umpire Frank Dascoli said | a report will be sent to Giles. McCovey didn't deny he bumped Ve nzon, adding "I told him I thought he was | blind. That ball was fair by 10 feet." in a sandtrap near the gree As he began his downswing the trap, the ball rolled slight he overshot cial ruling was a one - in the sandtrap addressed it Palmer took a 7 on the hole. pulling The big crowd is strongly for Rees, a Welshma (to be the first British winner the Open in 10 years. Gary Player of South Afric who was a pre - vorite had a 150 after tournament fa-| two by|by the time he finished the first Chapman. and Christie had one g-{nine, the sun had appeared and|apiece. d|the wind. slackened. Palmer's - over - par 73 was marred ame at Connaught Park, Con-|dustries to another shutout vic- stroke penalty on the nayoht deféated the In a Bantam Girls' League visiting Radio Park girls 13-10. This was Palmer's second shot landed; keen contest with Radio scor-|On a three-hitter, all singles by D.ling five runs in the first inning Ini for an early lead and Connaught ly park staging a six-run out- he the green, break in their half of the fifth, landing in the rough. The offi- including R. Hill's homer, to stroke tie the score and they scored penalty because the ball moved the winning runs in the 7th. after Palmer - Kay Helles ; 150 - Yard 'Putt Wins In Semi rounds -- eight strokes behin the leaders. WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Two A total of 46 professionals and| Toronto area golfers with plenty | two amateurs made the cut - off{0f championship experience be-| at 153 and ties to qualify for to. ind them. meet here today in day's play. the 36-hole final of the 46th an. -- [walks 'REMEMBER WHEN. . .? nual Ontario Ladies Open golf championship. Kay Helleur of Woodbridge | HOUDAILLE DOES IT AGAIN | Kornylo pitched Houdaille In- tory last night at Alexandra Park, blanking Merchants 5-0, Bathe, Cole and Hircock -- and none of the Merchants could get to the plate. Kornylo had nine | strikeouts. | The winners got a run in the |first inning when Woods opened with a triple and then three forced him home, as Halik had trouble with his con- trol. In the second inning, Shear-| er and Kornylo singled and then] Woods homered to make it 4-0. The fifth run came in the fourth The Ville -- Model G2105. Slim styling in attractive West Point Grey color or Brown Mist color. © AUTHORIZED DEALER o "For the Finest in T.V. Service" call WILLIAMS Electronics SALES & SERVICE 1218 SIMCOE N. 725-2905 \when Brown was safe on an) error and Milne singled and) | | Tutak doubled. SKY-DIVING -- AIR SHOW Sunday, July 16th McC : McCovey lofted the ball out of By THE CANADIAN PRESS land Lou Evans of York Downs, ognize the suspensions. The must also post a $50.00 bon game. SATURDAY is "Softball a soccer doubleheader at Kin Kingston Hungaria team d before it plays another Day" in Oshawa. There's smen Civic Memorial Sta- dium on Saturday evening and there's a Leaside Junior League baseball game at Alexandra Park tomorrow afternoon at two o'clock. But the main activity around these parts tomorrow is softball. The UAW Picnic softball tournament semi-final is at Lakeview Park at 11:00 a.m. and the other semi-final at 1:00 p.m. with the final at 3:00 o'clock in t! he afternoon. The real big attraction, the one with enough variety, color and talent that it should attract well over a thousand fans to Alexandra Park tomorrow night alone, along with as many more during the day , is of course the Fourth Annual All-Ontario Junior Softball Tournament, THE JUNIOR tournamen from the Hamilton area, crac! t has 15 entries, four teams k clubs from Virgil, Wood- stock, Tuxedo Junction Juniors of North York, Burling- ton, ete, Last year, Oshawa Scugog Cleaners won the big tournament and then went Junior "A" championship in Cleaners will be one of the on to capture the Ontario OASA playdowns. Scugog top favorites to take the big handsome trophy and the individual trophy awards, in tomorrow's classic here-- but they'll have a lot of opposition, The draw for the first round will be made at 12:30, tomorrow noon, with all teams on hand and eight of the clubs will swin g into action immediately. From then on, until the championship final gets under way, under the floodlights, at 8:15 o'clock -- Alexandra Park is going to be & hive of softball activity, all after- noon long -- and on all of the four diamonds. There are handsome attendance prizes for the fans too -- so don't miss this big attraction, SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES SOFTBALL Beaches MAJOR Fastball League ~-- Oshawa Tony's vs Eddie Black's, at Kew Gardens, Toronto, 8.00 p.m. ; Neighborhood Assoc. (Pee Wee Boys) -- Harman at Bathe; Sunnyside at Eastview; King- side at Woodview; Connaught "A" at North Oshawa; Con- naught "B" at College Hill; Fernhill at Lake Vista; South- mead at Radio and Nipigon at Rundle Park. All games at 6.30 .m. J ' (Bantam Girls) -- Woodview at Southmead, 6.30 p.m. BASEBALL Lakeshore Minor Assoc. (Ban- tam League) -- Port Hope at Newcastle, 6.30 p.m. League) -- Oshawa at Bowman- ville, 6.30 p.m. LACROSSE ; OLA Junior League -- Whitby Red Wings at Hastings, 8.30 m. 4 OLA Senior League: Brooklin Hillerests at St. Catharines, 8.30 PI AMES FOR SATURDAY SOFTBALL Annual (Midget | |Four games at 12.30 p.m. (Draw, to be announced.) Semi-Final| games at 6.30 p.m. Tournament Championship Final, at Alexan- dra Park, 8.15 p.m. UAW Picnic Tournament Semi-Finals, at Lakeview Park, 11.00 a.m, and 1.00 p.m. Tourna- ment final, at Lakeview Park, 3.00 p.m. Neighborhood Assoc. (Atom Boys' League) -- Eastview at Harman; North Oshawa "A" at |Kingside and North Oshawa '"B" at Connaught. All games at 10.00 a.m. BASEBALL Leaside Junior League -- Peo- |ple's vs Oshawa Legionnaires, at Alexandra Park, 2.00 p.m. LACROSSE | OLA Senior League Port Credit Sailors vs Brooklin Hill |crests, at Brooklin Arena, 8.30 p.m. | Oshawa Minor Assoc. (Pee {Wee League) -- Whitby Rotary (vs Whitby Woods, at Whithy |Arena, 10.00 a.m. SOCCER Oshawa and District Assoc Kickers vs Italia at 5.00 p.m and Hollandia vs Hungaria, at All - Ontario Junior 6.45 p.m. Both games at Kins-|pan, Tournament, at Alexandra Park.'men Civic Memorial Stadium. (weight title). ONE BIG INNING Nipigon Park boys won their| 10-8 decision at Kingside Park| by virtue of a wild scoring| splurge in the second inning that netted them nine of their 10] runs. Bar and Taylor twice! each, Haggerty, Holmes, Park- inson, Salter and Dick were the players to cross the plate as | Panchuk, for Kingside, was guil-| ty of a few walks and also | grooved too many. However, Nipigon only got one| more," a homer by Barr in the fourth. { Kingside got one in each of the| first two frames, a couple in| the fourth and then came up with four runs in the fifth to make it 10-8 and for the last in-| ning, excitement was keen as| Parkinson and his mates held] on grimly to get the win. Chi - Sox Bosses Want Al Lopez | As '62 Manager CHICAGO (AP)--Both owner| Arthur Allyn and front - office chief Hank Greenberg want manager Al Lopez back next| year as pilot of Chicago White Sox. | Lopez was quoted by a Tampa, Fla., newspaper man after the all-star baseball game in San Francisco Tuesday as saying he might retire from managing after the 1961 sea- son. the genial White Sox manager said: "I didn't tell him I was| going to quit. He just had a feel-| why Taylor deserved his shut-| ing that I was. It simply was his interpretation." he had not yet talked with Lo-| pez about the 1962 season. "I hope Lopez will be back as manager next year," Allyn| said. { Greenberg also was enthusi- astic about Lopez. TWIN - BILL Tony's Nip Hetfering's; Maclean's Top Scugogs The Oshawa City and District) Softball Association's bi-weekly doubleheader at Alexandra Park last night produced a very itght pitching duel in the opening game, with Tony's Vendors nos- ing out Heffering's Imperials 1-0 and in the second half of the twin-bill, it was the batters who dominated the action with a total of 23 hits, including five home-run blows, being piled up as Maclean's Esso defeated Scugog Cleaners 10-8. Ron Taylor for Tony's and Reg. Hickey for Heffering's, were the rival hurlers in the | first game and both were in top|gled and form. Hickey struck out nine batters and gave up six hits while Taylor also was touched for six hits and he only struck out four -- but he didn't allow any runs. Neither pitcher gave up a single walk in this well pitched tussle. None of Tony's got more than one safe hit and the two that produced the lone run of the game were a single by Jack Armstrong, with one out in the fourth. He advanced on a wild pitch and scored on Dan Ture- ski's double. Ron Simcoe had three of his team's half-dozen hits and broth- a {er Bob had two of the other|e But on his return to Chicago, three. Heffering's just couldn"t|Cole th r to first get more than one runne d that's base in any inning an out. Given a couple of runs, |Hickey's performance was cer-|runs in the fourth and then Scu- Allyn, in Miami Beach, said tainly good enough to win most|808s were held off until Sud-| games. TONY'S -- Berwick, cf; Ren- nick, ¢; Mackness, 3b; Arm- strong, 2b; Brabin, If; Tureski, 1b; Solomon, ss; Snow, rf; Tay- lor, p; Varga, batted in 9th. HEFFERING'S O'Reilly, {2b; Jordan, 1b; R. Simcoe, 3b] Iloyd Mapes with three hits, "I want to emphasize that 1and 2b; Hickey, p; B. Simcoe,|0ne a homer, Jackie Cole with Sylvanus Apps, wearing the/émerged as winners from colors of the Hamilton Olympic| Thursday's tense semi - final |Club, won the pole vault at the| matches. British Empire Games trials 27] Miss Helleur, with a spectac- years ago today at Hamilton, | Wlar wind-up shot, downed tourn- Apps went on to win that event|2ment medalist Mrs. Noreen |at London, but he gave up track| Laing McKay of Lambton 2 up {and field in 1937 to sign a pro. While Miss Evans ousted 17- fessional hockey contract with|Year-old Sue Hilton of London Hunt 2 and 1 Toronto Maple Leafs of the : * NHL. Proof that he made the| Needing only a half on the : heirs ' ;- (final hole to cinch a vicotry,! starting the rally after there ight decision be oe oh Miss Helleur fired a seven-iron| were twg cut. Neil McMahon 5 feo shot from about 150 yards out. was safe on an error, so was|he was voted this year. The ball rolled onto the green| Gary Copeland and then] and into the cup for an eagle "Squib" Eiliott drilled a single] BUY PLAYER three. to complete this rally. CLEVELAND (AP) -- Cleve-| Miss Hilton, who conquered The winners got one in the land Barons of the American tournament favorite Gail Har- third and three more in the Hockey League Thursday an-\vey of Scarborough on Wednes-| fourth, with two walks, O"Con-|nounced the purchase of Dick|day, won the first hole in her nor's double, McMahon's single(Van Impe, a forward from Ro-|match with Miss Evans with a| and a walk to Copeland ending chester Americans in a straight|birdie, but never took another| |White's stay. Danny Peters|cash deal. Van Impe, a 24-year- birdie until the 16th. By this] {took over for Scugogs in thejold right winger, had 21 goals/time Miss Evans had a three: UXBR A Full Day's POOLS -- PICNIC THE MAPLES PARK IDGE Fun For All TABLES -- GOLF ARCHERY -- HORSEBACK RIDING -- Also -- FULL COURSE MEALS Served At Restaurant {fourth and ended that rally,|and 35 assists last year. up lead. with the score 7-5. ------ In the fifth, D. Weldon got| on via an error, Courtney sin-| Weldon scored on| {Boyce's sacrifice and Larry! {Weldon's single, In the sixth, | {McMahon got a single with one ont and Copeland followed with {a mammoth home-run to com- {plete MacLean's total. Peters {held them after that. "Butch" McMahon with four singles in five trips to the plate, was the big hitter for the win- {ners with Tom O'Connor hav- ing a pair of safeties. Scugogs got to Moore, Mac- |Lean's starting pitcher, for {three runs in the third inning, {Sneddon singled with one out and then with two out, Lloyd | Mapes and Ray Suddard smash- ed back-to-back homers. Jackie en singled and that end- ed it for Moore, Bob Boyce fak- |ing over the pitching chores. A couple of errors and single produced two Es Don't take it for granted that your tires w forever. Have them checked by the man w your Dominion Royal dealer. |Maples' dard smacked his second homer, in the seventh. In the 8th, Har-| {vey Burke walked and Jack |Sneddon homered .with one out, {to make it 10-8. Scugogs got a |coupie of runners on in the 9th {but MacLean's held on to win. should buy new Dominion Royals... the t Check now! Trade now! Be dollars ahead! don't know of any manager bet-| 0: Tuzminski, if; Sarnovsky, cf; |three hits, Suddard with two ter than Lopez," he said. i FIGHTS LAST NIGHT | | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the second game. Both starting|Burke, 2b and ss; White, p;| Los Angeles -- Iiddie Pace,|pitchers were shelled from the Peters, p in 4th; March, 3b in| 147, Los Angeles, knocked out{mound and Scugog Cleaners out-|2nd. Frankie Ramirez, 147, Los An- geles, 3. Bangkok, Thailand -- Samart Sorndaeng, 1484, Thailand, out- pointed Fumio Kaizu, 154'4, Ja- Cleaners and MacLean's got to rf; Moore, p; Boyce, p in 3rd; Lt middle-| him for inning, 12. (For Orien Fielder, rf; Shearer, 2b; Jones, rf, batted in 8th; Stark, 3b, bat- ted in 8th. BATS RING LOUDLY Both teams had their bats booming when MacLean's and Scugog Cleaners locked horns in hit MacLeans by 12 to 11, but |still had to take the short end|Wills, 2b; of the 10-8 count Reg. White started for Scugog three runs in the first with Tom O'Connor {homers and Sneddon with a {homer and single, were the best at the plante for the Junior squad. SCUGOG CLEANERS -- Sned- |don, 1b; Wilson, ss; Mapes, rf; | {Suddard, 3b and If; Cole, c; |Young, cf; Wright, If and 2b; | =| ill last ho knows tires... He can quickly spot the unsafe tires and tell you why you ires that give extra safety, greater performance, longer mileage. "* be safe...be sure... Y) DOMINION ROYAL TIRES! OUT OF 5 CARS | RON NY FAWCETT "" White Rose 480 PARK ROAD S. RA 8-5221 N fine) "MOTOR mes! SALES 140 BOND W,, OSHAWA RA 5-6501 ONTARIO MacLEAN'S -- IL. Weldon, ss; O'Connor, 3b; Mec- Mahon, cf; Copeland, 1b: El- liott, If; D. Weldon, c; Ulrich, Courtney, rf in 3rd; Keenan, If PLEASU £ ny RE DOMINION WAY VALLEY TIRES STATION 1600 SIMCOE NORTH RA 5-3441 Hi DOMINION \hes/ Tire Stores 48 Bond W. (corner.of Church) RA 5-6511 in 8th.