"]4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, September 17, 1962 A KEY PLAY in yester- ~ day's Canadian Professional * Football, Eastern Conference ~ game, at Toronto's CNE Sta- * dium, when Argonauts scored * their first victory of the sea- = on, @ 16-10 triumph over Ottawa Rough Riders, is shown above. Jim Rowntree of Toronto Argos makes a spec- tacular goal-line interception to foil a forward pass scoring attempt by Ottawa. The pass was intended for Riders' end Bob Simpson, who makes a futile attempt to catch the ball. No. 11 of Argos, coming in from the left, is Ron Mor- ris ' CP Wirephoto Argos Upset . " . ' By PAUL RIMSTEAD * TORONTO (CP) -- Long-sut- "ering Nobby Wirkowski broke "into a smile Sunday. It seemed 'as big as a football field, . Wirkowski finally coached "Toronto Argonauts to victory in "the Eastern Football Conference a 16-10 win over Ottawa *Rough Riders before 24,721 ans, 4 Nobby had reason to smile. "He had watched Argonauts drop Rhree straight games as assist- vent coach, then two more when 'he took over as head coach with "the firing of Lou Agase. s Three hungry newcomers andjerals to the wrong team and sses of| Rote had a pass intercepted. short Tobin "the bul Jquarterba gave sArgos the spirit they had lacked/ror when Ron Stewart scored a ' touchdown after the Riders in- 'all season. Rote, although still hampered by a swollen finger «on his throwing hand, com- pleted 20 of 29 passes "yards and two touc! . Lancaster and Russ Jackson of 19 passes for 54 yards. helped cover up for gambles sive team. Argos gambled four eral on the Argonaut three-yard for 177) line. and are three points behind the Als. The Alouettes returned home during the weekend after dropping two battles on a West- ern Canada tour, The new-look Argo defence was such that quarterbacks Ron Ottawa completed only four of The Argonaut defensive team which went awry for the offen- times on third-down situations and three times they lost. Twice they gave away the ball on lat- Ottawa capitalized on one er- tercepted a Joe Hernandez !at- Rough Riders irst Win First - half touchdowns by Menan Schriewer and Dick Shatto and a last-quarter safety touch pulled out the win for Argos. Bill Mitchell converted both touchdowns. Stewart's tqucbdown and a 36- yard field goal by Moe Racine were the only Ottawa scoring plays. Schriewer scored on a nine- yard pass play and Shatto took a lateral from halfback Dave Mann to romp 16 yards for a touchdown. The safety touch came when Shields pinned Jackson in the Ottawa end zone after Argos failed to score on three plays from the three-yard line. Stewart scored by scampering La between the goalposts and ram- ming his head into Jon Rech- ner's mid-section as he hit the line. hdowns. ' & Gerry Wilson, Zeke Smith and "Lebron Shields, all late cuts - "from National and American FOOTBALL SCORES, STANDINGS 4oined the Argonauts last week, "were standouts. 4IOPE FOR PLAYOFF The Argonauts' revival gave them hopes of making a playoff spot in the East. They have eight games left in the regular schedule, one more than the third-place Montreal Alouettes, Wolves Held To 1-1 Draw LONDON (Reuters) -- Wol- verhampton Wanderers main- tained their unbeaten record this season but dropped a point in a 1-1 home tie with Notting- ham Forest in English League soccer today. The Wolves retained top spot in the standings but only on the strength of a superior goal av- erage--Everton drew even with them on points by winning 2-0 at Bolton. Both have 14 points, though the Wolves have a game in hand, On a slippery pitch, the young Wolves--they have five teen- agers on their team -- played their usual quick-striking game with drive and determination. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian Football League Conor 2333 2383 oo Montreal Toronto GH wae eo oP ae IS oper ° Sry | alll eed eli ool Winnipeg Calgary B.C. Edmonton Sat urday's Result Montreal 7 Calgary 17 Sunday's Result Ottawa 10 Toronto 16 Games Tonight Hamilton at Vancouver Regina at Winnipe Game Tu Toronto at Hamilton Games Thursday Edmonton at Regina Vancouver at Calgary -- Friday Calgary at Ottawa SATURDAY American Football Denver 25 Buffalo 20 ORFU Senior wenot coonros BSS weaw 2SSar Ontario Junior Conference Lakeshore 13 Burlington 0 Atlantic Conference Shearwater 7 Stadacona 12 SUND. National Football League Minnesota 7 Green Bay 34 Los Angeles 27 Baltimore 30 New York 7 Cleveland 17 Pittsburgh 7 Detroit 45 St. Louis 27 Philadelphia 21 Washington 35 Dallas 35 Chicago 30 San Francisco 14 American Football League New York 14 San Diego 40 ston 21 Boston 34 AST .- Miami 23 Pitt 14 Villanova 31 West Chester 6 SOUTH Wm and Mary 3 Virginia Tech 0 Florida State 49 Citadel 0 MIDWEST Louisville 21 Wichita 20 Tulsa 39 Hardin Simmons 0 Col State 35 S Dakota 26 Iowa State 14 Drake 7 Western Mich 28 Central Mich 0 FAR WEST Wyoming 13 Montana State 0 Pacific 26 Brigham Young 7 Sarnia 12 Windsor 12 Utah State 29 San Jose 18 Two Runs In 9th Give Heffering's 3-2 Over Midland Oshawa Heffering's Imperials pushed two runs over the plate in the 9th , to nose out (Midland Flyers 3-2 here at Al- exandra Park on Saturday aiter- noon and thus even up their OASA Senior "B" series. Third and deciding game will ibe played in Penetang on Wed- nesday evening, 5.30 o'clock. Reg Hickey, pitching for Hef- fering's, gave up & run in each of the first two frames, on a shaky start and then settled down to allow only three more hits the rest of the distance, for a total of five during the game. Barry Bywater opened the game with a walk, advanced on @ passed ball and took third when the catcher's throw got past O'Reilly, Bywater scored on Murray Yorke's single. Midland's second run was a softie -- Don MacDonald singled to centre with one out and when Shearer treated the hard drive a little too casually, it went right past and MacDonald went all the way. around, to make the score 2-0, Midland threatened twice after that. Bob Grier and Aurrel Ley hit back-to-back singles in the fourth. MacDonald was safe when Hickey bobbled his short gromnder, to load the bases. ene Rouselle then grounded to O'Reilly, who threw to the plate to force Grier and when Ley tried to come on in behind, Palmer Knight tagged him for the second out and Gord Blake grounded out to end it. Two errors on Ley, in the sixth, by O'Reilly and Knight, the latter,having a bad throw to second, put Ley on third but MacDonald flied out for the third out In the 9th, MacDonald was safe on another error at second base. Then Rouselle was safe on Hickey's error and Blake singl- ed, to load the bases but By- water grounded to the infield, forcing MacDonald at the plate and Hickey fanned Gary Keiller to end the inning. Big Bob Grier held Heffering's off until the bottom of the sixth, when Jack Shearer opened with a single and went to second on a wild pitch. Jordan ground- ed out and Shearer moved to third on Knight's single. Then with two out, Batherson ground. ed and Grier fell, try' to field the tricky roller and Shearer scored, In the 7th, Cole walked with one out, took second on a passed ball but was thrown out at the plate, trying to score on O'Reilly's single, The pent-up excitement broke into exultant cheering for the Oshawa fans in the action-filled bottom half of the 9th, Larry Batherson started it off with a two-bagger and moved to third when John Carnwith grounded out, "Mo" Bryan beat out an infield roller as the de- fense hesitated, watching the runner, then Cole's slow ground- er, of similar variety saw Ba- therson make a brilliant slide home, for the tying run and Bryan advanced to third. Ralph O'Reilly's grounder.to Yorke at third produced the winning run when he "held" Bryan for a fraction then made a_ hard throw to first base, which Ley fumbled and Bryan was across the plate with the win- ickey, who claimed two hits off Grier in the rained-out action on ht, was the only player not to get credited with a hit on Saturday. In fact, Grier got him first on an easy pop-up and then fanned his|fs rival the next three times, Ba- therson was the only player in the ge to get two hits, Grier fanned eight all told -- Hickey had seven strike- outs, » MIDLAND -- Bywater, 2b; Keiller, cf; Quinlan, rf; Yorke, 3b; Grier, p; Ley, lb; MacDon- elle, ss; Blake, c, -- O'Reilly, 2b; Shearer, cf; Jordan, 3b; Knight, c; Hickey, p; Batherson, If; Carnwith, lb; Bryan, rf; Cole, 8s, ald, If; Rous OSHAWA . Hamilton Alex's Eliminate Sarnia SARNIA -- Hamilton Alexan- jans eliminated Sarnia New Democrats from the Ontario Amateur Softball Association Senior B- playoffs Saturday night when they won the third and deciding game of their series 1-0. Hamilton will meet the win. ner of the Midland - Oshawa series, in the Southern Ontario finals, which starts on Satur- day in Hamilton. A home run in the sixth in- ning by Fred McCusker broke up a pitching duel between Carson Little who struck out 15 Sarnia batters, and Gerry Price, who fanned a seven. SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY SOFTBALL Beaches Major Fastball Lea- gue--Oshawa Tony's and Eddie Black's at Kew Gardens, 7.30 p.m.; sudden-death game to de- cide 1st and 2nd positions in final league standing. Oshawa Minor Assoc, -- (Ki- wanis Bantam League Cham- pionship Finals) -- Connaught vs Storie Park, at Storie Park, Park, 5:45 p.m.; 8rd game of 3-ut-of-5 series, TUESDAY SOFTBALL Inter-County League Cham- pionship Finals--Foley's Plumb- ing vs Houdaille Industries, at keview Park, 6.00 p.m.; 2nd game at 3-out-of-5 series. Win 3rd Game PWSU Series Oshawa Scugog Cleaners de- feated Brantford Westdale ro ge say in an exciting third an leciding game of the PWSU Junior "A" semi-fials, on Saturday afternoon, at Dixie, Marilyn Schultz was tagged for eight hits while her mates only collected six but she kept them well-scattered and the Pic-O-Mats Win Deciding Game On Taylor's 1-Hitter For the second crucial play- off game in succession, Osh- awa's Ron Taylor came with. in one notch of a no-hit, no-run victory but his brilliant one-hit performance here on Saturday night was still the important factor as Pic-O-Mat Vending nosed out Toronto Lynards 1-0 in the third and deciding game of their OASA Intermediate "AA" series. Oshawa Pic-O-Mats will now meet St. Catharines in the Southern Ontario softball finals, first game to be played in Osh- awa on Saturday. ' Taylor was sensational in again blanking the classy To- ronto champions. He struck out 17 batters and didn't issue a single walk, F. Winn got the lone hit, a single with one out in the fifth inning. Winn and McClenaghan were the only two of the visitors who -avoid- ed the strikeout treatment. Successive errors, with one out in the fourth inning, when Sneddon and Brabin both com- mitted miscues, was the only time Lynards threatened but Paul Bawden (right) of To- ronto, was the champion Sporting Rifle Championships held at Norwich, 30 miles east of London, Ontario, on Satur- day. He had 978 points for the TORONTO MARKSMAN WINS RIFLE TITLE grand aggregae title. At left is Keith Budd of Stratford, who was second, --CP Wirephote Vikings Win First Start Oshawa Vikings captured their league opener in the Intermediate Northern Rugger' Conference by squeezing past Peterborough 5 to 3 in a game played at Morrow Park, in the Liftlock City, Saturday's game was a close rough and tumble battle which featured very tight defensive action on the part of both teams, Oshawa's "heavy" scrum did dominate the Peterborough opponents on many occasions but Peterbor- ough managed to hold their de- fence when the Vikings moved Taylor then fanned the next batter, Petrelli and got Mc- Clenaghan to pop up to Nelson. Taylor had to be just that good to claim the win as -he was given a stern battle by rival pitcher Gary Nolan. He only had five strikeouts but he didn't give out any free passes either and only two hits. The two hits came in the fifth and produced the only run of the game. Bill Horton singled with one out. He was forced by Harry Snow but the second baseman's try for a double-play resulted in an error throw and Snow moved to 2nd base. Then "Tim" Nelson came through with a two-bagger to score Snow with the orphan tally of the hard-fought tussle. TORONTO LYNARDS -- R, Reid, 1b; I. Reid, 2b; Cloutier, rf; Petrelli, c; McClenaghan, ss; Hiscock, 3b; Winn, If; Reid, cf; Nolan, p. OSHAWA PIC . O - MATS -- Sneddon, 1b; Berwick, cf; Tur- eski, ss; Melnick, c; Brabin, 2b; Horton, If; Snow, rf; Nel- son, 3b; Taylor, p, Brantford girls were able to score only three singletons, The first came in the second stanza when "Sandy" Belantz was safe on an error by Linda Boddy. The runner stole sec- ond, went to third on a wild pitch and scored when with two out, Sandra Paradise error- ed on Sheila Firth's grounder. Brantford's second run came in the fifth on an opening two. bagger by Firth, followed by Diane Ranson's 'sacrifice and a single by Andrea Pedley. In the 7th, Pedley drew a walk, with one out, stole sec- ond and then Linda Wadding- ton walked with two out and Dale Waggoner followed with a single to score Pedley. In the 9th, Waggoner and "Sandy" Belantz both singled, but these hits came with two out and OLD COUNTRY SOCCER But og | were up against a strong Forest defence and no goals came in the first half. Forest struck first on a goal by Colin Addison. Wolves 'snatched the equallizer nine minutes from time when Terry Wharton netted after a series of all-out attacks, Everton also scored its goa!s in the second half ot break an away-from-home jinx. It won only two away matches last season and recently suffered pe succ sive defeats in Lon- n, SPURS MOVE UP Tottenham Hotspur moved into. third place today with a 4-1 home win over Blackburn Rovers. They now have 12 points, the same as Forest, but their better goal figures give ffiem the e. « The 43,014 fans at White Hart Lane were surprised when lackburn shot into an early lear, but Spurs hit back to tie the score by halftime and pile in the second half "Arsenal Manager Billy Wright's policy of banking on youth to get team out of the @oldrums paid off at Fulham with a 3-1 win. "» Arsenal paved the way to Yictory with two goals in the {12 minutes through wingers LONDON (CPp -- Results of sdecer matches paved in the United Kingdom Saturday: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division 1 Aston Villa 1 Sheffield U 2 Bolton 0 Everton 2 Burnley 2 Leyton Or 0 Fulham 1 Arsenal 3 Leicester 1 West Brom 0 Liverpool 1 Ipswich 1 Man United 2 Man City 3 Sheffield W 5 Birmingham 0 Tottenham 4 Blackburn 1 Wolverkampton 1 Notts F 1 Division 11 Cardiff 5 Swansea 2 Charlton 1 Scuhthorpe Grimsby 0 Newcastle 1 Leeds 2 Chelsea 0 Norwich 2 Walsall 1 Plymouth 2 Derby 1 ortsmouth 1 Huddersfield 1 Preston 0 Middlesbrough 1 Rotherham 1 Bury 5 Sotke 3 Southampton 1 Sunderland 3 Luton 1 Division 1 Bournemouth 1 Millwall 1 Bradford 2 Port Vale 1 Bristol R 1 Bristol C 2 Colchester 2 Northampton 2 Coventry 0 Shrewsbury 0 Crystal P 0 Swindon 0 Halifax 2 Brighton 1 Hull City 3 Peterborough 2 Notts C 2 Southend 1 Queens P R 2 Barnsley 1 Watford 4 Reading 0 Alan Skirton and John Mac- Teed. Division IV Aldershot 0 Oxford 0 Barrow 2 Lincoln City 1 Chesterfield 1 rentford 1 .... Darlington 2 Tranmere 3 Doncaster 1 Gillingham 0 Exet37 2 York City 1 Hartlepoolsnh£oruay 3 Rochdale 1 Oldham 1 S.n; 4%WIFO£Bradford C 3 alid08f EWPORT % Workington 3 Chester 0 SCOTTISH LEAG' Division I Aberdeen 4 Dunfermline 0 Clyde 1 Celtic 3 Dundee U 1 Dundee 1 Falkirk 2 Queen of 8 2 Hearts 6 Airdrieonians 1 Kilmarnock 2 Thd Lanark 2 Motherwell 2 Hibernian 2 Raith 0 St. Mirren 1 Rangers 2 Partick 1 Division 11 Albion 2 Artbroath 0 Alioa 1 Ayr 1 Berwick 2 Stirling 0 Forfar 2 HAMILTON % Montrose 0 Dumbarton 2 Morton 4 Stenhousemuir 0 Queen's Pk 6 Brechin 1 St. Johnstone 5 E Stirling 2 Stranraer 6 East Fife 1 IRISH LEAGUE City Cup Ards 3 Linfield 4 Coleraine 2 Glenavon 5 Crusaders 2 Bangor 1 Distillery 6 Ballymena 2 Glentoran 2 Cliftonville 0 Wrexham 2 Carlisle 1 Portadown 3 Derry City 1 Beckey Lamb popped up to Paradise, to end the game and series, Dale Waggoner had three of her team's eight hits and pitch. er Belantz had two. Scugog Cleaners got a flying start with three runs in the bottom half of the second in- ning. Connie Lucas drew walk to start it, Linday Boddy walked next, Bev March flied out but Paradise singled, so did June Suddard and Carol Park. Genosha Aces Edge Preston, 1-Hit Thriller Oshawa Genosha Aces scored sensational 2-0 victory over Preston, here at Alexandra Park, in the first game of the OASA Southern Ontario 2-out-of- 3 Juvyenile finals, when both young pitchers turned in sens: tional performances, and each claimed 10 strikeouts. Doug Sawaniga got the only hit off Oshawa's Bob Mason, a solid two-base blow to open the second stanza and he was thrown out at 3rd base when he tried to stretch his hit into a triple. Mason didn't issue a sin- a gle walk, his mates played errorless ball, Davis at short- stop and Seneco in centre-field, both starring. The result was that Mason only faced 27 bat- L.| defensive work on the part of into scoring territory, | Vikings built up a 5 to 0 half- |time lead by scoring early in |the opening 15 minutes. Harry |Boyd, Oshawa's hardworking |backfielder, got credit for the |season's first try and . three |points by pouncing on a rolling |ball in the Peterborough end |zone, after Oshawa had march- led down the field. The convert, |by Terry Kelly, kicking at a tricky angle, was good for two more points to end the scoring for Oshawa. Peterborough scored their, three points early in the sec-- ond half when Jerry Hall dash- ed over from ten yards out. Their convert attempt, which was in a crosswind, was wide by a couple of feet and pre- served Oshawa's slim two-point lead. The remainder of the second half featured some excellent both teams, Peterborough and Oshawa each penetrated their opponents' scoring territory three times but were outguess- By ALLAN BAILEY SCARBOROUGH: -- Oshawa Hawkeyes were soundly trounced 18 to 0 by the Scar- borough Rams at the Cedarbrae Secondary Schoo] Athletic field here Saturday. The loss left the Hawkeyes at the bottom of the standings in the seven-team Ontario Jun-' for Football Conference, with three defeats in as many starts, The Rams, coached by ex- Toronto Argonaut stars, Uly Curtis and Shanty MacKenzie, monopolized the play through- out most of the game, They got the jump on the hapless Hawkeyes early in the first quarter when fullback Larry Burridge, a Queen's Uni- versity "Golden Gaels" star last year, plunged through the Oshawa defensive line from the 10-yard line for the Rams' first touchdown. Halfback John Atlee missed the convert, but less than 10 minutes later, he caught a pitchout pass from quarterback Dennis Pendlebury, and ran 50 yards for the second touch- down, He missed the convert again, There was no scoring in the Scarboro Blanks Junior Hawkeyes 'although the Hawkeyes came close to the Scarborough goal- line several times, they could not break through the strong barricade the Rams' defensive line put up. Halfback Bob Cowan scored the Rams' third TD in the fourth quarter. Attlee again missed the convert attempt. The score was not indicative of some of the Hawkeyes' q Some of them came up a standout game, but of with a "devil may care" attitude, spoiled the team effort that migh have turned the tables. Hawkeyes' head coach Tony Andrejicka isn't ready yet to give up the ship. In fact, he feels that his team will come up with one of its best perfor. mances of the season Sat- urday morning when it meets the league-leading Lakeshore Bears at Kinsmen Civie Stadium. Manager Joe Bosko came up with a novel suggestion after the game, "maybe we should change our name to Argos," By this, he inferred that the Hawkeyes, like the Argos, have the potential, but can't seem te second and third quarters, and win ball games, Hespeler By GERRY BLAIR ed by some strong goa! line stances. In the dying minutes Vikings' big Tom Olinyk scamp-' ered for two long 25-yard dashes but Peterborough con- tinued to hold. ; The next conference game for the Vikings is next Satur- day, in Oshawa, against the Toronto "Banks" squad. OSHAWA -- scrum: Pringle, Derry, Merlin, Shepherd, But- Jer, Voege and Olinyk; back- field: Kelly, Boyd, McArthur, Watson, R.. Williams, K. Wil- lidms, and Lockwood. ters and the game was played in less than 50 minutes. Gerry Hopcraft, on the slab for the Preston boys, was al- most as good. He also had 10 strikeout victims but he gave up only three walks. As it turned out, both Osh- awa runs were unearned. Talk got on via an error to start the fourth inning. With one out, Jim Rowden singled. When he stole second, the catcher's throw went out into the field and both runners crossed the plate. Oshawa threatened with two out in the 7th, on an error, choice play and walk but Zar- owny was out at the B gerne try- ing to sore on.a wild pitch. § d game in this series er grounded to the infield and the play at the plate was too late as Paradise scored the BOWLING NEWS third run of the rally. Boddy walked to open the sixth frame, advanced on a solid hit by Paradise and scor- the pitcher's error. Sandra Paradise had two of Oshawa's six hits. In the 8th, March opened with a single. Paradise flied out to centre and Suddard forced March at second base' but '!Carol Parker singled to right and when Waggoner fumbled the ball, Suddard went all the run. BRANTFORD -- Pedley, cf; way to score Oshawa's fifth 4 NEIGHBORHOOD LADIES to take will be played in Preston, on Saturday. The winner of the round will represent Southern Ontario, in the All-Ontario fi- nals, to be played in Northern snajOntario, on the Thanksgiving ed when Suddard was safe on|Marg Daniels Dareed '242,/Tucker, cf; Bowman, ss; 642 Clapp 633 (252) and Kay Marilla 605 G5). Single honors go to Dolly botinyed 256, Lori Foster 254, Mary G DePratto 231, Bea Alexander 225, Mary Hobbs 222, Ev. Broadbent 221, Filo. Lit- ster 220, Myrtle Waite 15, Flo Bracey 214, Phoebe Mullen 213, Phyl Barnes 208 nd Chris Collins 200. 's 1, Collins 0, and DuGuay's 0, 't forget bowling starts at 1.30 Susie Belantz, c; Waddington, |? ss; Waggoner, rf; "Sandy" Belantz, p; Lamb, 1b; Sharron Belantz, 2b; Firth, 3b; Ranson, If. OSHAWA -- Suddard, ¢; Parker, 3b; Schultz, p; Ger. mond, 1b;° Crossman, cf; Lucas, lf; Boddy, ss; March, THREE DIE BRISBANE, Australia (AP)-- Three elderly patients burned to death in a fire that destroyed a convalescent home in subur- ban new farm today. The staff 244, May Jones,: 235, Molly 9 weekend, PRESTON -- Grirchow, If; Sa- waniga, Ib; Hopcraft, p; Fis- cher, 3b; Grant, 2b; Kovats, c; a" rf; Gillpen, batted in GENOSHA ACES -- Pipher, 2b; Tilk, If; Davis, ss; Rowden, 3b; Hickey, rf; Gaskell, Ib; Za- ,| rowny, c; Zeneco, cf; Mason, p. of the home guided tie other rt; Paradise, 2b. . dents to safety. a -- \ WEEKEND FIGHTS Engel's Defeat Kent's Tiremen Engel's Clothing defeated Kent's Western Tire 7-3 on Satur- day afternoon in their UAW Soft- ball League round-robin playoff, game. } Wallace, pitching for Engel's, walked three batters in success- sion, to fill the bases in the second inning. At this point, Al McKee came in to take over. Malloy greeted him with a single, to score Skea and Weeks but he fyanned Stovin, got Legree and Willis to both pop uP, leaving .two runners stand- ed, After that, McKee was in great form. He gave up only one' more run, in the fourth, on a sin- gle by Howes, with one out, then Stovin was safe on Campbell's error after two out and Legree's single plated Howes, for Kent's last tally. Anderson went the full distance' for Kent's, Zedi#@foubled to open the third and moved to 3rd when the outfielder miscued on the play. He scored on an infield out. Engel's trailed 3-¥ going into the fifth and then exploded for'| three runs on four hits. McKee started it off himself with a two- bagger. With one out, Campbell also hit a double, then singles by Harmon and: Wallace and a sac- rifice fly by Romanski, com- pleted the rally, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Philadelphia -- Kenny Lane, 139%, Muskegon, Mich., stqnped Len Matthews, 135, Philadel- phia, 9. Tokyo -- Takeshi Nakxmura, 112%, Japan, outpointed Ka- chonsak Lukupiskanes, 113, Thailand, 10. Out in front 4-3, Engel's added Hespeler Jokers, taking advan- tage of loose play by Whitby Ab-' ners Esso, took a 1-0 lead in their best-of-three All-Ontario Juvenile "B' softball final, with a 13-8 victory over Abners on Saturday afternoon in Whitby. bners committed eight errors, five in the first three innings which enabled Hespeler to score nine runs, Jokers moved in front 4-0 in first half of the opening inning. Three runs were gcored after two men had been retired, Er- rors played a major role in Hes. peler compiling their early mar- gin. Back-to-back miscues by second baseman Jim Christie and rightfielder George Clarke allowed Hespeler three unearn- ed runs, Abners fought back deter- minedly with four runs in their) half of the second inning on only two hits. Bill McBride, first. man at bat was hit by pitcher Bob Kitzman. Ted Thorndyke dropped a_ perfect bunt in front of the plate walked to load the hases, -and Doug McLean received a "'life" when Hespeler catcher Doug From missed a third strike. Mc- Bride scored from third and the bases were full again. ' Thorndyke scored from third on another passed ball, and Ron- nie Moore tripled to scure Chris- tie and McLean. Hespeler again capitalized on careless fielding by Abners and counted five runs in the third frame. As in the opening inning, the major damage p£revailed with two men retired. Centre- fielder Ken Zayette misjudged balls it to him by Ed Butler and Bob Craig, and they scam- pered all the way home on gg normally classed as sin- gles. Hespeler's Don Parks put the game well out of reach for Whit- by when he clouted a towering home run to centrefield in the 4th with his pitcher, Kitzman on board, to increase their mar- gin 11-4. Abners counted three in the fourth, one in the fifth, but were three: more runs in the sixth, on a walk to McGarry and then with the next out on sacri- fices, Zedic doubled, Capbell singled. and Harmon doubled, jhis third hit of the game. KENT'S -- Legree, cf; Wills, rf; Weeks, If; Howes, 2b; Mal- loy, Ib; Stovin c. , ENGEL'S -- Campbell, 3b; Harmon, ss; Wallace, p and Ib; Romaniski, cf; Gedge, 2b; Mc- Garry, c; Lawson, Ib and rf; Mc- ss; Anderson, p; Short, 3b; Skea, Kee, rf and p in 2nd; Zedic, lf. Whips Whitby Abner's held to only a si runs for the game, Meanwhile Hespeler collected single runs in the 7th and 9th in- nings. Doug McLean with a walk, two singles, and a missed-third strike scored three runs to lead Abner's at the' plate, He failed to reach first base only once in five at-bats. In all, Abners managed only six hits off sidearm hurler Kits man The return game goes in Hege peler on Saturday afternoon, NSL Officials To Investigate Oshawa Fracas Officials of the National Soc. cer League announced in to yesterday, that they will con- duct a full-scale investigation into the Oshawa. Italia-Oshawa Hungaria game, played in Ogh. awa's Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium, on Friday night. The game was halted five minutes from the finish when 8 ead invaded the playing eld, Referee Jack Craig ordered five players, three from Italia and two from Hungaria, to the showers before he finally called the game when some of the 500 fans ran on the field. Craig has reported to league officials that Italia's centre-half, George Berini, ran almost the length of the pitch to attack a Hungarian player. "TI ordered him off, but. be. fore he left, the fans ran on the field and attacked the player," said Craig. The other players banished were Marie Pedretti and G. Cucinato, Italia, Tibor Ko. mondy and Tibor Budai of Hungaria. Italia was ahead 3-3 when the game was called. ingle hit and ae balance of the HOLDINGS DROP Canadian cold storage stocks of meat at Sept. 1 totalled 49,- 461,000 pounds compared to 52,- 436,000 pounds the previous month. This compared with 58,- 495,000 pounds in cold storage at the same date last year,