10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Scturday, August 4, 1962 YORKSHIRE CRICKETER DISP Freddie Trueman, Lae plays his bowling style. He shire's great cricketer, dis- has the happy knack of knock- 'Norman Beckett CONNAUGHT RANGES, Ont. (CP)--Winning big matches is nothing new for veteran rifle- man WO2 Norman Beckett of the Royal Hamilton Light In- fantry. : The Ancaster, Ont., cost ac- countant added to his string of victories Friday when he won the Lieutenant - Governor's match, main event of the four- day Ontario Rifle Association's annual competition. It was his fourth Lieutenant- Governor's title. He has been named to Canada's match three times in Dominion of Canada Rifle Association matches and won the Queen's match at Bis- ley, England, in 1961. Beckett got 142 of a possible 150 points Friday. L..Cpl. Larry Retains Crown Fish of Toronto, a member of the Queen's Own Rangers (mi- litia), was second with 139 points and Maj. R. W. (Dick) Hampton of the Royal Cana- dian School of Infantry, Camp Borden, Ont., third with 138. With the ending of the ORA matches, the spotlight now turns on the national handgun championships. The three day small bore meet got under way Friday and Gary McMahon of Dartmouth, N.S., took the lead by firing 834 points of a pos- sible 900 in the day's thre2 matches. The DCRA matches get under way Sunday. The top 18 com- petitors in. the matches will make up Canada's 1963: Bisley team. Bob Bedard In Semi-Finals | | QUEBEC (CP)--Canadian fa- LAYS HIS BOWLING STYLE ing down wickets with record- pire pays close attention. breaking regularity. The um- --CP Wirephoto SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' HOLIDAY HASH:-- There was "'soccer action"' last night at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium, the local lawn bowlers have a tournament going today and Oshawa Scugog Cleaners Junior girls have a softball game at Alexandra Park on Monday night -- and that about sums up the Civic Holiday week-end sports action around these parts .. . OSHAWA TONY'S (we just got the message) won a 2-0 decision over Eddie Black's last night at Kew Gardens, with Normie Bagnell in top form for Frank Foley's club and Joe Piontek getting two hits, to lead the attack .. . NO GAME here at Oshawa this Wednesday night, Tony's and Black's meet in Toronto, at 8:15 p.m., in the annual East Toronto General Hospital benefit game (there's a trophy) and it's a doubleheader, with NHL All-Stars playing Dependables-Randall Roy Combines in the first game, at seven o'clock . . . RANDALL ROY'S play here in Oshawa on Wednesday, Aug. 15... IF THING GO WRONG -- there are so many postponed games in the Beaches League right now, that if the "wrong team" keeps winning--they'll be playing for another two or three weeks, before they can settle playoff berths .. . N.Y. YANKESS clobbered Chicago White Sox yesterday and this could be pull-away time for the Bronx Bombers, because the Angels lost to Baltimore and the rest of the pack are "'killing each other" all down the line. . . NATIONAL LEAGUE action saw Don Drysdale win his 20th game for LA Dodgers and Pirates knocked off the Giants at the same time, which is a big help to Dodgers in their bid for the pennant... ATLANTA CRACKERS defeated Toronto Leafs last night while Jacksonville split a twin-bill with the Buffalo Bisons. MORE OF THE SAME:-- British Empire track-and-tield FRIENDLY GAMES | Oshawa Tennis Club _ Visits Credit Valley | Saturday the OTC travelled to,tournaments and each have a lthe Credit Valley Tennis Clubjnumber of championship titles for an afternoon of friendly|to their credit. vorite Bob Bedard will need all lhis 'ability today to beat Cali- fornia's Jack Frost and qualify \for the final round of the men's | singles of the Canadian tennis |championships. | Beddard Friday defeated |Harry Fauquier -- the only other Canadian who made his way to the quarter - finals. | Frost, second seeded among |foreigners, defeated Bob Man- \detstam, of Johannesburg, South Africa, 6-2, 8-6, 2-6, 6-4. The other semi - final will op- pose Juan Couder of Madrid, |Spain, and Jim. McManus of Berkeley, Calif. McManus, a 21 - year - old southpaw who took experts by surprise in defeating Francois Montreal's Eleanor Dodge and Benita Senn. In the semi-finals, the Tor onto women beat Brenda Nunns of Toronto and Faye Urban of Windsor, Ont., 6-3, 6-2. The Montreal team defeated Seg- linda Boeck and Ann Hyde, also of Montreal, 6-1, 6-3. TOP ONTARIO marksman, Norman Beckett, 53-year-old cost accountant from Ancas- NOT JUST FOOTBALL at the Ontario Rifle Associa- tion meet, at Connaught army ranges, near Ottawa. --CP Wirephoto ter, near Hamilton, receives the traditional "chair" tribute after winning the Lieutenant- Governor's medal, on Friday, Ronnie Knox And 'Cookie' competition. All who attended enjoyed themselves very much and look forward to playing with Credit Valley in the near future. Congratulations are due Miss) Gwen Roberts and Mr. Ron Cox) of the OTC who represented us at the tournaments 'held on Friday, July 27, at the Royal Canadian Yacht Club in Toron- to. Although they were unsuc- cessful in their attempts to bring home top honors, they) should be congratulated on their) splendid showing against far su- perior players. Thanks Gwen and Ron for representing the OTC so well 'and better luck| next time. | All members of the club are} reminded of the Dunlop Tennis Clinic which visits the OTC this Wednesday, August 8. The clinic will get underway at 7.30 p.m. SHARP so please be on time. Representing Dunlop will be Mr. Peter Dimmer and Mr. Derek Bocquet. Both Mr .Dim- mer and Mr. Bocquet are vet- erans of many international This is an excellent chance to get valuable instruction at NO CHARGE whatsoever, so don't pass up the chance -- be |there! Following the clinic there in the club- come and at the will be a dance house lounge, so make an evening of it OTC, Attention all Intermediate club members. There is to be a party held especially for you on Tuesday, August 7, at the OTC, so turn out and show your appreciation to those who are working especially for you by making this party a big suc- cess. All members are urged to re- member the two All-Ontario Singles Tournaments that are to be held at the OTC on Aug. ust 25, and September 8. These will both be very big days at the club and so all members| should plan to be present. | More information on this tournament will appear in this column as the dates for these events @raw closer, so watch closely. |Barclay and Mrs.. Brown and Godbout of Waterloo, Que., and Henry Crawford of Atlanta, Ga., will face the top - seeded Spaniard. In the women's singles, it will be an all -Canadian final be- tween Toronto's Louise Brown and Ann Barclay. It's tough to believe because Louise Brown defeated Mary|Knox was one of those long- Habicht of Santos, Brazil 7-9,/haired individuals who once 6-2, 6-1, while Ann Barclay beat|said that football is "'a game Montreal's Shirley Harit 6-3,|/for animals." He may have had 6-1. Cookie in mind when he made The women's doubles final 7 le oer statement bg re will be played betw i a iotaeice ty Phage eee ere Benen wesiwtien the tucks the ball into his vole body, lets out a_ ferocious |screech and heads hell bent into Sk would-be tacklers. eet TOWN. | _But, it appears, both like the \"finer things" in life. They've manded high salaries in pro Up For Grabs football and they've found it By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor People may not realize it, but Ronnie Knox (remember him?) and Cookie Gilchrist have a few things in common. There's a: big spread, of course, between what they mean about the 'Finer. things' in life. Knox, former University of California at Los Angeles quar- terback, turned his back on the game because he wanted to con- break into television or movies and finish a novel in Paris, Spain, Mexico! or Venice. SICK OF FOOTBALL That was in 1959 when he quit Toronto Argonauts of the East- ern Conference when he was gettting $1,250 a game. "Money isn't everything," the 24-year-old Hollywood glamor boy told Argonaut managing director Lew Hayman at the time: "I decided I just couldn't conti: : |tough to stick with any one Today's Final jclub. ST, JANVIER, Que. (CP)--| Two big. titles -- 12 - gauge open and the open all - round award -- are up for grabs to- | day, last day of the 1962 world tinue writing his far-out poetry,| of 13 years now and I'm sick to the teeth of it. It's a game for animals and I like to think I'm above that. The better htings in life interest me more." With that, Knox disappeared into the wild blue yonder. His puzzling goodbye meant the end a football career that started in grade school in California when he was 10 years old, took him to half a dozen high schools, three colleges and four Tiger - Cats, Calgary Stamped i Bears and Argo- nauts. And he didn't stick with any for very long. Cookie is another story. Back in 1959, just before Knox quit, Cookie was talking about his problems in football, He's a inue. "T've been playing football for good player with a bad reputa-) Don Drysdale Wins professional teams -- Hamilton di Have Other Similarities tion and he was saying that a reaiey didn't food im. LIKES GOOD LIFE "I have no education to fall back on when I'm through hurt," he said at the time, like good or " eek Hayman aR . | Susi ba skeet shooting championships. N y 0 ' J | my | jon the block for the $350 waiver | Ten gunners, includi: Ot- O oO O 4 e S lors trials, at East York Stadium, this afternoon and evening, | Yankees Continue. yn wastes, | . T IT Pte pared recail, Monday morning and afternoon, are expected to make a Ichrist ap- | peared to be the only ones in al |P i yet. And it, too, is a ker. jfield of 435 with a chance of By MIKE RATHET 11-3 innings without issuing alsingle by Ken. Hubbs, Ron| For a guy who pd shambles of Canada's record book. Today's action includes the women's half-mile final; men's and women's 100-yard dashes, men's mile and the six-mile run. There are so many stars on hand, from coast-to. coast, that nobody can really predict the results but at least, for a change, this track-and- field meet should be a financial success--and that in itself, will be something of a record for Canada .. . GREEN BAY PACKERS had to go all-out last night but they finally turned back the College All-Stars 42-20 .. . BARNEY HARTMAN, Canada's top shotgun star, can capture the World's All-Round title, if he can click today . . . WILLIAM LUKE, stock car driver died of injuries suffered in a race last night, at Fulton, N.Y. . . . CANADA'S rowing champions will be de- clared this week-end, at St. Catharines. Columbus Jets Gain On Mapleos big eighth frame 3-3 tie. Anderson, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS in the Columbus Jets, sidetracked broke a briefly, have resumed their Jobn drive for se * place in the intern: Léarse **7 Th: ws te4 qa 1° came winning string s-----* bu day, regai their ways Friday night by edging Syracuse Chiefs 4-3. The Jets trail the faltering Toronto Maple Leafs by only 1% Richmond. The shutout 14th home. drove in winners. that Yankees have won them about} Rochester |in extra innings, by one or two righthander, tossed a four: runs and by several. They've} hitter, struck out four men and/won: with Mickey Mantle andj,, . fy walked only two as Rochester|without him. The constant Melee he ata cere continued its dominance over|tor hag been the big blow and pigtticed a fi | Seite jand a solo shot by Bubba Mor- wasithe responsibility for this has} on Rochester's 16th victory in 20)been scattered liberally around),. 2 she : ' games with the Virginians this|the roster, big gun for the Twins with a year. Jo. Durham collected his} of the season and) TWINS DUMP TIGERS A ge . t-ree runs for the! Below the Yankees, Minnesota|¢ighth inning brought the tie- 'Winning Tactics By JIM BECKER 1-0 and Washington Senators Associated Press Sports Writer defeated Boston Red Sox 2-1. If you get eight runs, they'll Shortstop Tom Tresh, with a get nine. If you get two, they'll|homer and a double, and left-| get three. If you don't get any,|fielder Hector Lopez, with four they'll get one. hits, were Friday's stars for the And sometimes, to vary the| Yankees as they launched a 14- \script, if you get only a couple|hit attack off Juan Pizarro ang) birds in the .410, 28. 20 and 12- lof runs, they'll clobber you with|three successors. /10. Significantly, Tresh and Lopez That's the year-in, year-out are considered likely candidates story of New York Yankees and|to move out of the lineup to their American. League com-)make way for Tony Kubek, the ~ petitors. The pattern is seldom|league's all-star shortstop last {broken and is being stitched|year, who reports to the Yan- jagain this season. kees from the United States | The Yankees bombed Chicago! Army today. ie caus wad patsy Rovers, Kubek iolaht ne bat b ; S-'centre field to replace Mantle, : -- ninth victory in their) who was forced to leave Friday asl games. : in the third inning when an Seven different pitchers have|injured knee began troubling recorded the nine victories. The|him again. : s | Ralph Terry got his 15th win every way a game can be ee ae the year for the Yanks. r the Twins, giving up only Harmon Killebrew was the homer and a run-scoring single. Lenny Green's single in the second-| breaking runs across. games, The Leafs lost their fourth straight game, 5-2 to Atlanta Crackers. The league-leading Jackson- ville Suns split a pair with LACROSSE SCORES Buffalo Bisons, winning the first, 15-0 and losing the second 2-4. Rochester Red Wings blanked : Richmond Virginians 7-0. Port Credit 12 St. Catharines 11 Tex Johnson, four-for-four at, Ontario Junior the plate, helped the Jets to an|Long Branch 9 Brampton 15 early 4-0 lead, but it took eighth-| Brampton leads best-of-seven inning. relief help from Bob/semi-final 3-0) Priddy to make it stand up SADOWSKI WINS " H b Atlanta righthander Bob He L tsy er ert dowski got 7% benefit of a 13-) s " hit attack, including five) W F doubles and Phil Gagliano's Ins uturity home run, in helping the Crack- TORONTO (CP)--The Herbert ers past Toronto. horses of London, Ont., long Jacksonville pounded out 17|time leaders in Ontario harness hits and 15 runs in the first-\racing, scored with another game rout of Buffalo. Lefty Ed| winner at Old Woodbine before Donnelly threw a five-hitter anda ¢rowd of 7,643 Friday night got all the support he needed! when Betsy Herbert, three-year- from Harry Chiti, who drove snjold filly, won the $5,000 Stand- xix runs and had two homers.) arqbred Futurity Trot. In the second game, however,| Bill Herbert kept his filly in Buffalo erupted for six runs in|the lead almost from wire ts the eighth inning and broke its|wire.. Van Bars was second, five-game losing string behind|with owner Jack Gordon of the seven-hit pitching of Joe!/Coldsprings, Qnt., in the sulky Gibson, Dan Cater's two-run|Earl Rowe drove his own cult, single and Bob Morgan's two-|Riddell Gold, in the third poui- tun homer were the key blows'tion By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Senior Twins battled into a place tie with Los Angeles An- gRigLES EXPLODE lll Fon dumped Detroit oe Orioles, held scoreléss oellyad ¢ ie _ through six innings by lefty Ken ae aoe a inane MeBride of the Anges to run i on attan City Athleti | McBride's scoreless string to 27, 00P ASa8 y_ AMMMCNCS) erupted for six runs in the seventh frame. McBride (11-4) suffered his first loss since Hooker Scores April 27. He had won 10 straight = ' i games. Third Straight McBride left with a run in and the bases loaded. Dan FORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)--| Osinski walked a run home and | Hooker, a five-year-old gelding, | Served a two-run single to Russ ran one of his best races this|5"yder. Bob Botz came on and year to register his third con-|8@Ve. another two-run hit' to jsecutive victory in the feature|Ja@ckie Brandt. at Fort Erie Race Track Fri-|, Dick Donovan, 34, a right- day. hander having a great year for The winner was timed in 1,43} Cleveland, ran his record to 15-4 2-5, which equalled the fastest}@8 he recorded his fourth shut- 1 1-16 miles of the current meet-/OUl of the. season, scattering ing. jeight hits against the hard- Blue Croon, a four-year-old,|hitting Athletics. matched stride for stride with) Jack Kubiszyn hit his first the winner throughout the first}major league home run in the mile. It was not until the pair|seventh inning off Bill Fischer, was wihin the last sixteenth|who went all the way for the that Blue Croon gave ground) Athletics. Hooker, which was ridden by; Runs were scarce at Boston Evan Anyon. as the Senators got their pair Axeman, favorite with thejin the fifth inning on a walk crowd of 7,944, was third. and three singles. The Red Sox Hooker, the third choice, najdjscored a run off starter Don $8.90, $3.60 and $2.20. Bjie|Rudolph in the eighth, but Jim Croon returned $2.90 and $2.40)Hannan relieved to end the and Axeman $2.19. threat Jack Kralick went the route} winning the 12 - gauge open. Associated Press Sports Writer Each have perfect 200 scores} It's 20 down pan to go for Rag ni Anal ~ round: of 5/ dazzling Don Drysdale, who has Hart 46. RC given Los Angeles Dodgers their artman, 46-year-old RCAF |jargest bulge atop the National squadron leader, was in League race this season while strong position to capture the/taxing another step toward be- open all - round title which| coming the major leagues' first goes to the gunner who fas}aq_ i har iva missed the fewest number of gee winters Ave: DE gauge events. He has missed| Drysdale, 26, a fireballing only four of 500 shots and one in|Mighthander who had never won the 20-gauge event. One target) more than 17 games and had back was Larry Smith of Birm-|only nine victories at this point ingham, Mich. in higher vidi shaky first Among the six Canadians|inning Friday night, went on to with scores of 199 in the 12./defeat Chicago Cubs 8-3 and gauge event were Stuart Shea|became the first 20-game win- of Peterborough and Maj. J. S. Boyce of Kingston. Drysdale also entered these - pertinent statistics in his log:) REMEMBER WHEN 9| He is ahead of the pace set) «« *|by the last two pitchers to close By THE CANADIAN PRESS jin on the 30-game mark Phil Edwards of Hamilton |achieved by Dean in 1934. Don set a blistering pace in the |Newcombe of the Dodgers 1,500 metres at the Los An- [reached the 20- victory mark} geles Olympic Games 30 | Aug. 23 en route to a 27-7 season} years ago today, but wound jin 1956. Robin Roberts, 'who| up in third place. Luigi |posted a 28-7 record for Phila- Beccali of Italy won in the |delphia in 1952, won No. 20 Aug. | then record time of 3:51.2. |19 | The present Olympic record | of 3:41.2 was set by Ire- | land's Ron Delaney in 1956, Drysdale has won 10 straight battles, tying the longest streak lof the season. He has gone 46| ner of the season. |games back in third place by | walk, STRIKES KEY BLOW The man who helped Drysdale achieve No. 20 was the Dodgers' chief executioner--Frank How- ard. For the fifth time in the last six games, Howard struck the key blow, putting the Dodg- ers ahead to stay with a run- producing single in the third inning that broke a 3-3 tie. The triumph gave the Dodgers a five-game lead over the second-place San_ Francisco Giants, who lost their fifth in six games, 5-2 to Pittsburgh Pirates. Cincinnati Reds remained 84 outslugging New York Mets 8-6 for their 14th victory in 16 games despite two homers by the Mets' Frank Thomas. Thomas' 24th and 25th homers, giving him six in three consecu- tive games, tied a major league record. | Houston Colts belted St. Louis Cardinals 8-3. The Philadelphia- Milwaukee game was rained out, The Cubs tagged Drysdale (20-4) for three runs and four hits in the first inning on a double by Don Landrum, a BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WL Pct. GBL 65 39 625 -- 60 47 561 614 60 47 .561 6% 55 53 .509 12 53 52 .505 1214 51 53%, .490 14 52 46 .481 15 48 57 .457 1714 Kansas City 46 62 .426 21 Washington 40 64 .385 25 Friday's Results New York 10. Chicago 2 Kansas City 0 Cleveland 1 Los Angeles 3 Baltimore 6 Minnesota 7 Detroit 4 Washington 2 Boston 1 Probable Pitchers Today New York (Stafford 9-6) at Chicago (Baumann 3-3). Minnesota (Collum 0-1) at De- troit (Mossi 8-10). Kansas City (Segui Cleveland (Perry 8-8). Washington (Burnside 5-8) at Boston (Conley 9-10). Los Angeles Lee 8-7) at Balti- more (Fisher 3-5) night: Games Sunday New York at Chicago Los Angeles at Baltimore Minnesota at Detroit 2 Kansas City at Cleveland 2 Games Monday Baltimore at Chicago (N) | Detroit at Cleveland (N) | Kansas City at Wash, (N) Minnesota at New York (N) Los Angeles at Boston (N) National League Pet. GBL! 670 -- | 624 5 594 8 63 45 583 9% 60 49 .550 13 55 53 509 17% 51 58 .468 22 39 66 .371 32 Chicago 40 68 .370 32% New York 26 79 .248 45 Friday's Results Cincinnati 8 New York 6 Philadelphia at Milwaukee ppd, rain Houston 8 St. Louis 3 Chicago 3 Los Angeles 8 Pittsburgh 5 San Francisco 2 Probable Pitchers Today Philadelphia (McLish 7-2 and Green 4-3) at Milwaukee (Hen- dley 7-7 and Curtis 2-4 or Spahn 10-11), Houston (Bruce 6-5 o¢ John- son 5-11) at St.. Louis «(Wash-! burn 9-5). | Chicago (Hobbjé 3-10) at Los} New York | Los Angeles Minnesota Baltimore Cleveland Detroit Chicago Boston WL 73 36 68 41 63 43 Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston 7-5) at Angeles (Williams 9-7) | Washington at Boston 2 Pittsburgh (Haddix 7-5). at San Francisco (Sanford 13-6). Cincinnati (Maloney 4-4 and Klippstein 3-1) at New York Santo's triple and a single by|to '"'make money," he certainl Ernie Banks. But Drysdale al-jhasn't helped the cause i lowed only four harmless hits/last few yeams by openly the rest of the way. ing club rules and sticking hi The Dodgers finally went|neck out for stiff fines. ahead in the third frame when} Ron Fairly doubled home one SPORTS run and Howard followed with TODAY his single off Cal Koonce (9-4).| Maury Wills stole home as the! Dodgers scored twice in the fourth. It was his 54th steal of the season. GETS BIG HIT LACROSSE The Pirates, who wound up i with 16 hits off four Giant piteh- i "Wilerests "ae Brampton ers, started early, getting to amb' Juan Marichal (13-8) for single * lers, at Brampton, #.90 7 » : mM. runs in the second and third LAWN BOWLING innings. Howie Goss' two-run| , homer was the big hit as thelate ©, ig ---- Pirates put it out of reach with! : fae B up) an b AH three runs in the fourth frame.|,c00, a" Bowing "lud an |Mixed Doubles Tournament, at Al McBean (11-7), who gave! up a homer to Willie McCovey, oe awn Bowling won with relief help from Diomedes Olivo and Elroy Fate) : over the final four innings, | Toronto National League -- 'Thomas' bases-empty homers Oshawa Hungaria vs Toronto came off Joey. Jay (16-9) who|Uktainia, at Toronto Stanley needed help from relief special- Park Stadium, 8.00 p.m, ists Jim Brosnan and Bill Henry, SUNDAY to move within four victories of No games scheduled. the 20-mark, Thomas' run salvo| MONDA tied the mark held by Tony SOFTBALL Lazzeri, Gus Zernial and Ralph|. East Toronto Junior Ladies' Kiner, League -- Agincourt vs Oshawa Marv Throneberry and|Scugog Cleaners, at Alexandra Clarence Coleman also homered|Park, 8.00 p.m. for the Mets, while Gordie Cole--LAWN BOWLING man and Don Blasingame con-| Mixed Trebles Tournament nected for the Reds. Gordie's|(Dr. Phillips Trophy) at Osh- came in the fourth inning as @wa Lawn Bowling Club. the Reds tagged Jay Hook (7-11) TUESDAY . SOCCER (Craig 5-17 and R. L. Miller 0-7). : Games Sunday Cincinnati at New York 2 | Philadelphia at Milwaukee Houston at St. Louis ? Chicago at. Los Angeles 2 Pittsburgh at San Francisco Games Monday Chicago at Milwaukee (N) Cincinnati at Houston «N) New York at Los Ang. (N) Phila, at San Francisco (Only games scheduled) International League WL Pet. GBL 69 37 651 -- 59 48 .551 10% 57 49 .538 12 59 51 .536 12 55 53 .509 15 54 5° .491 17 42 69 .378 29% Syracuse 30 72 .357 32 Friday's Results Jacksonville 15-4 Buffalo 0-9 Atlanta 5 Toronto 2 Rochester 7 Richmond 0 Syracuse 3 Columbus Games ~ ">" Atlanta at Toronto Jacksonville at Buffalo (N) Rochester at Ri °_ nd (N( Jacksonville Toronto Columbus Rochester Buffalo Atlanta' Richmond for five runs and the loss. SOFTBALL Carl Warwick turned on his) Inter-County League -- Police former Cardinal mates and led/Assoc. vs Foley's Plumbing, at Houston's 15-hit offensive with) Lakeview Park and Ukrain- a 4-for-4 performance at thejian Aces vs Genosha Aces, at plate, including a two-run|Alexandra Park,' west diamond; homer and four runs batted in.'both games at 6.45 p.m. GO KART TRACK OSHAWA KARTWAY CANADA'S FOREMOST 1'/2 Miles North of Whitby On Highway (2 | ® BRING THE KIDDIES © OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 6-9 P.M, SATURDAY 9 A.M. -- 9 P.M. SUNDAY 1 P.M. -- 6 P.M. Syracuse at Columbus (N)