Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Jul 1964, p. 10

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f 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, July 20, 1964 'BOBBY NICHOLS Wins PGA Tourney With Record Score COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)--If Bobby Nichols had fallen off a cliff he'd have won the high- flying championship on the way years. Bu good enough." Mason Rudolph shot a 69--wit Open ished with a 33 on the bac! 4 for his 288. While Nicklaus was chargin, refusing to fold. , credible six-under-par 64 by de- gs N "It was a great break to b fending champion Jack Nick- laus, who was playing before home folks. Nicklaus made up five strokes on Arnold Palmer in the final ¥ mous gallery. They tied for sec- ond at 274, three strokes back That was the best finish yet *for Palmer in the PGA, the tonly major title he has never won, SECOND BEST AGAIN It made three runner-up fin- » ishes this year. for Nicklaus in * major championships, the Mast- ers, the British Open, and the PGA, and meant that big Jack j.will not be around for the ultra- -rich television world se-ies that appeared to have ruine his athletic career in 1952. Hogan had recovered from BEN WROTE HIM LETTER "A high school "T still have the letter." Nichols certainly played lik a man inspired. which he won the last two "It was probably the finest round of golf I ever played," Nicklaus said. "It just wasn't So torrid was the pace that nine threes on the card--and faded to fourth at 276. U.S. champ Ken Venturi fin- nine|Mine for 69 and 279, tying Tom Nieporte, a club pro from Lo- cust Valley, N.Y. George Knud- son of Toronto picked up $800 and Palmer was putting to- gether a 69 in front of him, Nichols strode along behind, paired with Ben Hogan, Nichols said. "He was an inspiration to Hogan--who didn't know him --wrote an inspirational letter when Nichols was recovering from an automobile accident similar accident shortly before. teacher of mine wrote to Hogan, and Ho- gan wrote to me," Nichols said. He knocked in putts from all over the greens. On the second hole his tee short was headed out of bounds, crashed into a tree and wound up in the mid- dle of the fairway. He made a birdie three. At the 10th hole, when he was temporarily tied with Palmer and Rudolph, Nichols went ahead for good with an eagle putt from 35 feet. : "When I made that putt, downhill, I knew I couldn't lose,"' Nichols said, But there was more to come. At the 15th, Nichols drove into 'the rough,. and produced "'my best short of the tournament," a four iron that ran clear of h k an 18-footer for a birdie That was the way things had ond at 274, three strokes back. again during the toursiament, Nichols made par or birdie from deep rough, sand traps or the wrong fairway. Once he hit the flag stick when he couldn't even see it. e the green. He promptly dropped) By THE CANADIAN PRESS When Lou Jackson hit 31 home runs for Toronto Maple Leafs last season, he had hopes of leaving the International League behind for good. But Baltimore Orioles, who bought him from Toronto, found him less of a terror to American League pitching and the 28-year-old outfielder is cur- rently "doing business at the old stand, this time in a Ro- chester uniform. After a modest start, Jackson is coming along with a rush for the Red Wings. His three-run homer in the second game of a doubleheader against Buffalo Sunday started Rochester away to a 10-2.romp that made up for a 5-3 loss in the first game and brought his total to three in two days and'12 for' the year. The other six teams in the split their Sunday s. The | 4 lead ing Jacksonville Suns bounced back from a 3-2 defeat in 10 in- nings to blank the tail-end At- lanta Crackers 3-2, Toronto Ma- league also Pheer 'Anastil Ex-Toronto Leaf Clouts For Wings GIANTS CLOSE IN ~ SPORTS CALENDAR ple Leafs downed Syracuse Chiefs 4-2 and lost 3-1 while Co- lumbus Jets shaded Richmond 1-0 after losing to the Virginians 6-1, SHADE ATLANTA In Saturday's games Jackson- ville shaded Atlanta 4-3, Toronto outlasted Syracuse 6-5 and Ro- lumbus and Richmond were rained out. Willie Horton's two-run homer gave the Chiefs the rubber game of their- five-game set with Toronto after J, W. Porter and Jim McKnight connected to give Toronto. Sunday's opener. Randy Hundley's 10th - inning homer broke up the first game at Atlanta but Johnny Lewis salvaged the second with a two- run shot for the Suns. Earl Francis stopped the Vir- ginians with a tidy one-hitter after the Jets managed only four: safeties against Mel Stot- tlemyré in the opener. Ted Ka- zanski hit a two-run homer for Richmond. BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS With the pressure deepening, Nichols hit into a trap at 16, . 15-footer for a par. And on the short 17th he knocked in a putt that he stepped off at 51 feet. The victory was worth $18,000 in prize money for Nichols, plus twice that. in immediate extra benefits. Some of the money will go to a shrine to St. Jude. "I sort of promised that I would build one if I won," Nichols said. St. Jude is the patron. saint of the impossible. e By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' SPORTS MENU | Wildey Succumbs | To Heart Attack TORONTO (CP)--Ed Wildley, | 88, a junior hockey coach in the 1930s and 1940s who sent 29 players to the National Hockey| |League, died Sunday, He had) been in hospital since suffering a heart attack three weeks ago. | ED. WILDLEY is dead! To the modern Junior "A" hockey "fan, this probably doesn't mean a thing! To the Junior OHA » hockey fans of a few years ago -- like about 20 years ago -- it means a great deal! When Ed. Wildey ran the Young Rangers -- and believe us, he really ran them -- they were just about the fightenest crew that ever happened along that or any year. If you played for Ed Wildey -- you had to have guts! He used to give all his tryout players their first chance in the dressing room -- with a pair of boxing gloves, Old Ed wasn't sadistic -- he just believed in fundamentals. We could tell of dozens who played for Young Rangers. George Parsons, one of the best but he lost an eye in minor-league play; Gordie Drilion who went on to be one of the best "snipers" the NHL had in those days; even "'Punchy" Imlach played for Young Rangers and in those days, he was caled ""Punchy" -- not "Punch" current mentor of the Stanley Cup Champions); Norm Allen, local golf-curling luminary, he piay- ed with Ed. Wildey's Young Rangers too. So did a lot of » Juniors who later came to Oshawa Generals and made weir neme in OHA Junior ranks, Harold "OHA" luke, Neil Hezzei- wood, Matt Leydon, we could name a lot of old-timers who knew and respected Ed. Wildey. We could name a lot, who have gone on before, ready to welcome Ed in the Valhalla of Junior hockey, Back in 1938, we tossed a coin with Wildey, as to where the tie-off game between Oshawa and Young Rangers was going to be played. We won. Oshawa won the OHA title that year and went on to win it for seven- straight seasons. You might think you know something about hockey -- but you haven't lived, if you didn't know Ed. Wildey when he was his canny, fiery best. A great competitor, a booster for youth, hockey, in general, and Maple Leaf Gardens in particular, has lost a real asset. You had to fight with Ed. Wildey -- because he always played to win -- but he played fair -- and so, God Rest You, Sir! BRIGHT BITS -- The annual GM holidays always puts a crimp in local sports schedules, and this is not to be criticiz- ed, since most of the performers work at GM and so, are away for the next couple of weeks . . . HOWEVER, the Wildey was coach of the Na-| jtional Sea: Fleas and Young! |Rangers. Among his proteges |were George (Punch) Imlach, | now coach of Toronto Maple |Leats, Gordie Driion, George |Parsons and Jimmy Fowler,| |who played with the Leafs. When about 90 of his players jand others turned out to honor| |Wildey in 1961, Imiach said:| Ed Wildey had this game fig-| jured out 30 years ago." | | | NEW ARENA PLANNED? came out strong and made a) |By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League | Saturday's Results |Cleveland 6 New York 4 W L Pet. GBL| Washington 6 Boston 12 Philadelphia 2 36 .591 -- |Los Angeles 3 Minnesota 2 San Francisco 54 38 .587 -- |Detroit 1-3 Baltimore 6-0 Cincinnati 50 41 .549 314 |Kansas City at Chicago ppd, Milwaukee 47 43 522 6 rain Pittsburgh 45 44 517 6%) _ Sunday's Results St. Louis 47 44 .516 61%4|Detroit 4 Baltimore 5 Los Angeles 45 45 .500 8 | Washington: 10-5 Boston 11-4 |Chicago 44 45 494 814|Kansas City 2-3 Chicago 3-4 | Houston 41 52 .441 1314|Clevelang 2-3 New York 6-0 New York 27 66. .290 2714|Los Angeles 8-4 Minnesota 6-0 Saturday's Results Philadelphia 4 Cincinnati 14 Houston 2 San Francisco 1 Chicago 1 Los Angeles 3 New York 7 St. Louis 15 Sunday's Results Chicago 8-9 Los Angeles 2-1 New York 3-6 St. Louis 2-7 | Philadelphia 4-4 Cincinnati 7-3 Pittsburgh 2-4 Milwaukee 6-5 Pittsburgh 8 Milwaukee 2 | | Houston 2-0 San Francisco 4-1 | Probable Pitchers Today | Philadelphia (Bennett 9-6) at Cincinnati (Nuxhall 7-4} (N) Houston (Owens 3-6) at Los Angeles (Moeller 5-7) (N) | Chicago (Broglio 4-9) at San} Francisco (Bolin 3-4) | (Only games scheduled) Tuesday's Games | New York at Cincinnati (N) | Philadelphia at Milwaukee | (N) | Pittsburgh at St. Louis (N) | Houston at Los Angeles (N) | Chicago at San Francisco | (N) | American League } W iL Pet. GBL | EDMONTON (CP) -- The/Baltimore 56 34 622 -- Journal says a new. $4,000,000|Chicoga 45 34 614 1 | arena on the exhibition grounds|New York 53 34 609 1% jhere is under study and will be|/Minnesota 47 45 .511 10 placed before city council July|Los Angeles 47 47 .500 11 77..The newspaper adds the|Detroit 45 46 495. 11%) 7,000-seat arena would replace|Boston 45 48 .484 1214) the 50-year-old Edmonton Gar-|Cleveland 39 50 .438 16%4| dens and would end plans for a| Washington 36 60 .375. 23 |9,000-seat downtown arena. 'Kansas City 34 58 .370 23 By MURRAY CHASS game. Associated Press Sports Writer|opener 6-2, One thing you have to say|STOCK'S STREAK ENDS Probable Pitchers Today Los Angeles (McBride 2-11 at |Chicago (Talbot 2-3) (N) | |Detroit (Regan 4-8) at Boston Heffner 5-2) (N) | Only games scheduled) Tuesday's Games) ~ Kansas City at Minnesota | (N) Los | (TN) | Cleveland at Baltimore (N) be aaa at New York (N) Detroit at Boston (N) é WL Pet. GBL Angeles at Chicago International League Jacksonville 58 37 611 -- notice that it may have an- Syracuse ere ae ad other Rod Laver in its ranks. ochester . j i Buffalo 48 41 49. 6 | TORONTO (CP) -- Kay Hel-| ,, AUS capiain Many tine Toronto 47 45.11 7 (leur of Toronto, with one point|,n4' stingy on compliments Toronto 47 45 .511 9%|more than Sue Hilton of Lon-\pr%,. deen Sunday wand ad. Richmond 42 49 .462 14 don, will take fourth spot on On-| Vitteq that 19 eat ain Tony Columbus 38 53 .418 18 |tario's inter - provincial golf/M\°¢ © fe Aus- Atlanté 32 62 340 2514|team. Roche may be the weapon Aus: Saturday's Results Toronto 6 Syracuse 5 Buffalo 4 Rochester 6 Columbus at Richmond pdd, rain Jacksonville 4 Atlanta 3 Sunday's Results Toronto 4-1 Syracuse 2-3 Buffalo 5-2 Rochester 3-10 Columbus 1-1 Richmond 6-0 Jacksonville 2-2 Atlanta 3-0 Today's Games Atlanta at Toronto Jacksonville at Buffalo Syracuse at Columbus Dean Chance Blanks Twins On Four Hits As LA. Takes Pair The Yankees won the! jabout Dean Chance is he's pax Not so fort ate as Chance " Oshawa Civil Softball League, comprised mainly of teams ~ who are not obliged to take off, at this time of year, will carry "on. They have a doubleheader at Alexandra Park tonight and ~as the Sports Calendar shows, a couple of other games, ' "along with four scheduled dates for Wednesday .. . OSHAWA y games each Wednesday night, at Alexandra Park. . . CITY * AND DISTRICT teams have cancelled their schedule for the i. next two weeks, however, if a mutual agreement can be * reached, they may try to clean up one or two of their former » rained-out games . . » Lacrosse team, in the meantime, is carrying on. They need , only two more wins -- or one win, plus a Brampton defeat, to clinch their League Leadership . . . "PAT" MILOSH will also carry on his weekly wrestling show, at the Oshawa Child- ~ ren's Aréna, on Tuesday night, so even tough things may look a little skimpy -- there's still plenty of activity available for * local sports fans . . . SINCE THIS next two weeks is a little + "off schedule' -- we would suggest you pay attention to the © daily "Sports Calendar" -- where we'll try real hard to xeep * you informed of just what is going on -- when, where and what time! \triotic, The 23-year-old pitcher for Los Angeles Angels paints the town red, whitewashes the op- {position and makes them feel blue. |1962. ~ TONY'S will carry on through this holiday period. They have | The ace righthander piteched| Chicago also won the second jhis third straight shutout and |sixth of the season Sunday as jthe Angels stopped Minnesota |Twins 4-0 for a sweep of their| |doubleheader and moved into} . GREEN GAELS, Oshawa's Junior (the American League's first di-|"ipped Boston Red Sox 5-4 in 10 {vision for the first time since| jthe first week of the season. The Angels won the first game} 8-6. Chance, whose nights on the town with teammate Bo Belin- |ski threatened to become a| jlegend-in their time, hasn't al-| lowed a-run in 27 innings. | While increasing his record to! 8-5, he has reduced his earned jrun average to 1.76, best in the |majors, i 'Moe Norman Wins _ The Millar Trophy TORONTO (CP)--Moe Nor- man, the clown prince of Cana- dian golf, turned up with a red- hot putter Saturday and won his first Canadian professional match play .golf championship after seven attempts in his eight * years as a pro. The 34-year-old Toronto golfer defeated Jerry Magee of Tor- yard Pine Valley course. 1 if } t t { He c joe for Norman. ; gee in the final match. golfer, had been eliminated Fri- day as the big names fell in a rush of upsets over the 6,540- The victory was sweet con- had been defeated in the Ontario Amateur nine years ago by Ma- Norman turned professional onto 3 and 2 in the final to win the Millar Trophy and the $1,000 first-place prize money, then promptly credited his hot streak t ( t the following year and was thus prevented from ever getting his name on the Ontario amateur trophy. One other major trophy has thus far eluded Norman, Only Whitey Ford, 12-3, has more shutouts this season. The Yankee veteran has seven, but he has four more starts than |Chance. Meanwhile, Ford and his New York teammates were the vic- tims of another shutout by Cleveland Indians' /Luis Tiant, a 23-year-old Cuban righthander, stopped the Yankees 3-0 on four hits in his first major league cold Saturday, won $550 and the Harold Kalles Memorial Trophy. He is the first winner of the trophy since it was do- nated after the death of Kalles in a freak golfing accident last year when a club shaft broke and slashed his throat. "T think I should have taken a few lessons from Alvie my- self," Magee said after he j14 innings. The Athletics were ' to Alvie Thompson, last year's winner. x "T took a lesson from Alvie Friday night and it sure helped. He claimed I was moving my the Canadian Open. golf who shoots without consid -- ees no good." jgallery, to win the Millar. Thompson, another Toronto < It took six rounds of golf for Norman, the non-conformist of head and shoulders too much ering the shot and frequently when I was putting and this was|carries on a discussion with the Magee, whose putter turned and Tiant wases Stock, a re- liever whose 12-game winning streak was halted by. Chicago White Sox 3-2 in 13 innings. rg hadn't lost since July 12, game 4-3, moving into second place, one game behind the league-leading Baltimore Ori- oles, who edged Detroit Tigers 5-4 while Washington Senators innings after losing the opener) -10. | Baltimore split a double- header with Detroit Saturday, winning 6-1 and losing 3-0, while Cleveland outlasted the Yankees 6-4 in 15 innings, Boston ham-| mered the Senators 12-6 and the| Angels edged the Twins 3-2 in rained out at Chicago. Chance walked one and per- mitted only one runner. past first base in Sunday's nightcap. His main support came from Joe Adcock, who slammed two bases-empty home runs, J.ou Clinton homered following Ad- cock's first blast in the second inning. DRIVES IN FOUR RUNS Adcock drove in four runs with a double and a single in the opener. Rich Rollins hit his first career grand slam for the Twins and Harmon. Killebrew added his 33rd homer, a two- run blast Tiant, brought up>by the In- dians only last Friday, allowed only a bunt single by Tom Clete Boyer and Tom Tresh drove in two runs in the opener for New York while Roland Sheldon scattered seven hits, in- cluding homers by Tito Fran- cona and Larry Brown. Stock, who had won four games this season, was the vic- tim of a _ two-run pinch-hit homer by pitcher Gary Peters in the 13th. Athletics' starter Diego Segui gave up a bunt sin- gle in the first, then held the White Sox hitless until he left after walking the leadoff batter in the ninth, Dave Nicholson's two - run homer and Ron Hansen's soio blast offset Rocky Colavito's bases-empty homer and Jim Gentile's two-run blast for the Athletics in the second game, Baltimore got solo homers from Boog Powell, Sam Bowens and Charley Lau in the only single game. on the majors' busiest day of the year. Rookie Wally Bunker won his 10th game against two defeats, Jerry Lumpe, Dick McAuliffe and Bill Freehan homered for the Tigers. Mike Brumley's two-out sin- gle in the 10th inning gave the Senators a second-game vic- tory. Don Lock drove in six Washington runs in the double- header with two homers in the opener, two doubles and a sin- gle. his first-game hitting was overshadowed by Ed Bres- soud's three-run homer, two-run homers by Tony Conigliaro and Felix Mantilla and solo blasts by Carl Yastrzemski and Dick Stuart, all for the Red Sox. chester downed Buffalo 6-4. Co- 6.4 |Brooklin vs Tom Cullen's Esso|and 5-4, and climbed from a the team are Marlene Stuart Streit of Toronto; Gail Harvey of suburban Scarborough and Betty Stanhope Cole of nearby Woodbri the fourth place finisher after the Ontario Ladies' Open golf |championship at London, Ont., \Friday. Reports said Miss Hil- ton and Miss Helleur were tied. However, Golf Union official Sunday Miss Helleur had won the fourth and final place on the team. condition of Aubrey (Dit) Clap- per, 57, was reported unchanged Sunday in hospital. hockey players, fered a heart attack last week. He is in fair cndition. | members of the Hockey Hall of Fame located in Toronto. He is the only man ever to play 20 TODAY'S GAMES SOFTBALL : Civi Service League -- Rey- nold's vs Foley's at Alexandra Park, 6.30 p.m.; Rundle's vs Thompson's, at Alexandra, 8.30 p.m.; Chickenvilla vs Wood's, at Thornton's, 6.45 p.m. and Dodds vs Ontario Steel, at S. Radio, 5 p.m. By DICK COUCH 'Associated Press Sports Writer John Bateman dnd Johnny Callison played give-and-take with the National League lead but Milwaukee Braves made their mark playing leap-frog. Houston catcher Bateman flubbed a two-out third strike in the first game of Suday's dou- bleheader against San Francisco and two pitches later Jim Ray Hart homered for a 4-2 victory over the Colts. The Giants also won the nightcap 1-0 and had the league lead in their grasp until Phila- delphia Phillies took it away from them, The Phils had dropped their doubleheader opened to Cincin- nati Reds 7-4 and were trailing 2-1 in the second game when the Giants-Colts final was posted on the scoreboard. Then Callison duplicated his All-Star game heroics with a three-run ninth-inning homer. LACROSSE The Phils held on for a 4-3 ver- OLA Junior League -- fast-|dict and a first-place margin of ings Legionnaires vs Oshawa|four percentage points over the Green Gaels, at Oshawa's Chil-/Giants. | dren's Arena, 8.30 p.m. The torrid Braves trimmed Juveniie -- Junior League -- Pittsburgh Pirates twice, 6-2 Toronto Beaches Major Fast- ball League -- Oshawa Tony's vs Seven-Up Shopsy's. BASEBALL Eastern Ontario Senior Leagiic -- Oshawa at Belleville, 8.15 p,m. Eastern Ontario Midget League -- Ajax at Whitby, 6.30 p.m. Eastern Ontario Juvenle League -- Little Britain at Cour- tice, 6.15 p.m. Eastern Ontario PeeWee League -- Oshawa vs Bowman- ville, at Yincent Massey, 6.30 p.m. Eastern Ontario Tyke League -- Oshawa vs Orono, at Orono! Park, 6.36. p.m. at Children's Arena, 6.30 p.m,|tie for sixth place into fourth, OLA Juvenile League -- Osh-|six games off the pace. They awa at Alderwood, 8.30 p.m, |now have won 10 of their last 13 games and 16 of their last 22. TUESDAY'S GAMES BASEZALL CUBS BLAST DODGERS | Eastern Ontario Midget; Elsewhere, Chicago Cubs League -- Cobourg vs Oshawa,|pounded out 27 hits for 8-2 and Dodgers while St. Louis Cardi- nals rallied for four ninth-inning runs and edged New York Mets 7-6 after the Mets won the opener 3-2. On Saturday the Reds clob- bered the Phillies 14-4, Houston the Giants 2-1, Sandy Koufax and the Dodgers tamed the Cubs 3-1, St. Louis over- whelmed the Mets 15-7. and Pittsburgh thumped Milwaukee 8-2 with the second game of a scheduled doubleheader being rained out, "That passed ball changed ants manager Alvin Dark said after the double victory, 'We had gone bad, there's no doubt about that." The Giants had lost five in a row and were tied 2-2 in the eighth inning of the first game. With two out, Colts' pitcher Dick Farrel] fanned Orlando Ce- peda but the ball eluded Bate- man and cepeda Ceached £rst. Hart followed with his 13th homer, a. 450-foot wallop. SCAMPERS HOME Willie McCovey beat out a first-inning bunt, took second on an error and scored the only run of the second game on Wil- lie Mays's single. Callison's 15th homer; off re- liever Bil] Henry, followed a single by Olay Dalrymple and a walk to Cookie, Rojas, Vada~ Pinson's second triple, a single by Deron Johnson and Don Pavletich's two-run homer at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Sta.\9-1 decisions over Los Angeles overcame a 4-3 deficit for the dium, 6.30 p.m. LACROSSE A « N Ontario County PeWee League -- Markham at Oshawa ussie and Whitby at Brooklin. Both) games 7 p.m. WRESTLING ling (three bouts), at Oshawa's| Children's Arena, 8.45 p.m. Helleur Takes | Final Position MONTREAL (CP) -- Austra- lia has passed the first mile- stone en route to the Davis Cup challenge round and_ served tralia needs to recapture its po- The three other members of tennis sition as the world's power. "This boy could be another |Laver or better," Hopman said after the Aussies swept. their Davis Cup tie against Canada in five straight matches, "He's versatile and has all the na- \tural' ability and, as you saw, he can play brilliantly.' The Aussies lost only one set |in the 16 played over 'the three- day North American zone semi- final, but didn't spend much |time savoring the sweet taste jof victory. They left immedi- ately for Mexico City, where the finals will be played against Mexico. CLINCHED IT The Aussies clinched the tie Saturday with a 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 dou- bles win by Wimbledon champ Roy Emerson and Roche over ridge. There was some doubt as to a Canadian Ladies' said here Dit Clapper Still _ In Fair Condition PETERBOROUG H(CP)--The etters Exhibition Professional ia! Deal Canada Of In Biff-Bang Do In the other match, John Newcombe defeated plucky Rei- der Getz of Vancouver 6-3, 6-0, 6-4. The 20-year-old Aussie gave Gets a rough introduction to Davis Cup play, leaving the Ca- nadian exhausted with his well- placed shots, It was the first time Roche and Emerson played as. a team in doubles and, in fact, it was --* debut in cup competi- ion. "It's not hard to play against anyone when Emerson is cover- ing three-quarters of the court," said a modest Roche. Emerson played at half-speed because of a slight muscle pull in his left side that took the power out of his serve and forced him to rush the net. He found no difficulty at that posi- tion, however, as he intercepted shots aimed at the Canadian pair. The injury kept Emerson out of his slated match against God. bout on Sunday, but the 28-year- old tennis whiz said it wasn': serious. En yO Penh Fag eer meee TS anttheiiiatdnnanaiedan this club's whole feeling," Gi-|/hom: ry Phillies Hold Lead On Callison's Clout Reds in the eighth inning of the Frank Bolling drove in three Milwaukee runs with two sin- gles in the first game and dou- bled in two more runs in the nightcap, Dick Ellsworth pitched a £ve- hitter against the ide spe my site including a' dozen , two-run homers by Ernie Banks and Billy Williams. Lew Bur- dette allowed six hits in the second game and Ron Santo went 3-for-5, including his 17th er. ' Dick Groat's fourth hit of the. second game scored Ken Boyer . with the: winning run and capped the Cardinals' ninth-in- - ning explosion. Boyer had dou- _ home Lou Brock for a 6-6 tie. All three Met runs in the opener were unearned. Jack Fisher scattreed eight hits for the victory. Bisley Shooter Uses Snowshoes In Off-Season BISLEY, England (CP) -- Running five miles on "snow- shoes is all in a day's play for Lance - corporal Robert La- brecque, here with the Cana- dian Army team at the Na- \tional Rifle Association Com- monwealth shoot July 6-18. The 27-year-old 'soldier from St. Hyacinthe, Que., won the half-mile and one-niile races at the international snowshoe championships in Quebec City in 1962, H's also a consistent winner of the 10- and 12-mile cross- country races at Camp Gage- town, N.B., and Camp Valcar- tier, Que., but those events are run in summer without hin- drance of three-foot-long snow- shoes, von a silver medal for placing second in the en Mary two- stag' match. He'shot 348 out of a possible 400 in the rapid-fire event in which the -- standard 303. - calibre service rifle is used. Labrecque, stationed at Camp Valcartier with the Royal 22nd | Regiment, is accompanied here by his wife Pauline, also of St. Hyacinthe. F > Your . Satisfaction Is Our Aim All Cars Car Our GUARANTEE KELLY DISNEY USED CARS Ltd. 1200 Dundas E. Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS DROP IN Canada's Francois Godbout and Keith Carpenter. They added salt to the wound Sunday with rapid-fire victories in the exhi- bition singles. Roche turned in the most im- pressive performance of the tie, taking only 52 minutes to de- molish Godbout in straight sets One of Canada's most famous Clapper -- suf- Clapper is one of the original |Port Credit, Ont . seasons in the National Hockey of 6-2; 6-1, 6-1. League and was. with Boston Bruins from 1927 until 1947. WEEKEND STARS Waples Drives Four Winners At Greenwood TORONTO (CP) Keith Waples drove home four win- ners, including Panama Han- over in the Canadian Juvenile Stakes final, before 8,055 Satur- day night at Greenwood Race- way. Panama hanover was a two-| length winner in the $3,994) event that attracted 10 of the country's outstanding two-year- old pacers, covering the mile in 2:06 1-5. Co-owned by Waples, of Vic- toria Harbour, Ont., and Jacques Giard of Montreal, Pa- id e 0! Cc c SS) jday .as Los Angeles swept a |doubleheader Twins 8-6 and 2-0. shut out New York Yankees 3-0, four-hitter league debut after Yankees de- feated Cleveland 6-2 in opening game of twin bill. World heavyweight boxing ing a member to his training work in the champ's corner in his next fight Clay said, By THE CANADIAN PRESS Batting--Joe Adcock, Angels, rove in six runs with two hom- rs, a double and a single Sun- over "Minnesota Pitching--Luis Tiant, Indians, utpiching Whitey Ford with a Sunday in major CASSIUS ADDS COMIC | LOUISVILLE, Ky, (AP)-- | hampion Cassius Clay is add- amp, former movie comedian tepin Fetchit. Fetchit will 5 Year Guarantee made by Eeatty. Free food plan. Free delivery. PRICED FROM BAD BOY berinit 7 SELLS FOR LESS! FREEZERS-21 CU. FT. Built-in filter, 1/5 horse power cu. value DEHUMIDIFIERS-G.E. ft. capacity, swift operation, 5 year gaurantee, automatic shut-off. Reg. 159. 4 19,000 With trade 2-DOOR REFRIGERATORS By Beatty, full cutomatic defrost, sep- arate zone freezer. 5 year guarantee. 199% WE ARE OPEN weonespay 0 Ake _ FOR YOUR. SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Everybody Knows the Place--Bad Boy--King St. E. ' 728-4658-4659 EVERY NIGHT 9:30 P.M. nama Hanover was followed across the finish line by Paladin Pick, owned by J. Miller and W. Reynolds of Morpeth, Ont. In third place came the 4-to-5 choice, Adios Watts, owned by Andre Mercure and Roger Garon of St. Hyacinthe, Que. The Waples touch dame up again in the $3,000 Invitation Pace, as he won with Muddy Hanover, owned by his brother Murray and Ernest Russell of Tresh in the first five innings He. struck out 11 and walked four as he outpitched Ford The Yankee southpaw exhibited un- usua] wildness, walking three Indians in the first inning, the last one forcing in a run. missed three short putts, includ- ing a four-foot shot on the 16th hole. Bot Rose of Toronto. lost 'to -|Norman 6 'and 5 in the semi- finals. Norman had taken the lead from the first hole and scored four birdies en route to the win. A. E. JOHNSON 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 14% King St. East 723-2721 "23 Ski Low ILIO DI Tickets for these fine dial 723-9721 1.50 1.2: WRESTLING -- Oshawa Arena Tuesday, July 21, 8:45 p.m. RAY VILLMER vs PROFESSOR HIRO MIDGETS TAG TEAM TINY TIM & PANCHO LOPEZ PAOLO vs BIG IKE EAKINS ow Low & Vito Ganzales ai the Casino Restaurant 73 Pat Milosh Promoter ( ( HE Of PROUDLY EXPORTED TO MORE THAN 50 COUNTRIE ANADIAN WHISKY ( canada. r) C woe Vhhiskee j Ss ° DISTILLED, MATURED AND BOTTLED IN CANADA BY CANADIAN SCHENLEY LTD At Bisley this year Labrecque / cteneisssttncrnennscttetmet

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