PAGE TWELVE THE DAtEY TIMES-GAZETTE SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1948 BY Geo. H. Campbell PORT NAPSHOTS This has been perhaps the busiest sports week this summer, here in Oshawa, and last night saw hundreds of sport fans enjoying diamond action at various parks in the city. Three games at Alexandra Park last night were all well attended while reports are that'there were big crowds at Harmony, North Oshawa, Cowan's Park, Connaught Park, King St. School. It's the same today, with crucial baseball and softball games at Alexandra Park this afternoon and one at Bathe Park, and a baseball playoff and a softball playoff at Alexandra Park tonight, * * * GM-Colts took a two-game lead in their City and District Inter- mediate "A" semi-finals with the U.A.W.A,, when they eked out a 4-3 win last night over Union, before a banner crowd. The 3rd game of this 3-out-of-5 series is booked for Alexandra Park tonight at 6:30 and, judging by the crowds that have been turning out and the brand of softball displayed last night, tonight's game should prove a real attraction. Colts were, minus "Wart" Barker, on the sick list, and Union were without 2nd b Johnny Bathe, For tonight's game, only Gord. Hanna of the Union team will be present of the "hard- ball" players. Bidgood of Colts and Romaniski and McMullen of the U.A.W.A, will be with the Oshawa Merchants, who are playing a dou- bleheader down in Kingston this afternoon and evening. Merchants must win at least one of these two games in the Limestone City to- day, * * Getting back to last night's game, it was a sizzling struggle and a real pitcher's battle between Preem Whiteley and Wally Samanski. Each fanned six and walked three, while the hits were 6 and 7, with Whiteley having the edge. Getting their hits at the right time, plus a couple of timely "outfield fly" drives to score runners from 3rd, was the margin or victory for Colts. They were alert on the bases and moved into scoring position at every opportunity, Both teams were brilliant in their infield defense play and the outfielders didn't get much work, only five catches out there in the entire game, Taylor, Nelson and Loreno, with two hits apiece, were the big hitters. Last night's game was anybody's verdict with 'Whiteley earning it by pitching his best in the tight Spots. The series is still a long way from being over and U.A.W.A. can be expected to make an all-out effort to avoid elimination in tonight's game. * +» LJ Just another reminder to local water "bugs" and sailing enthus- iasts, to take a jaunt down to the Oshawa Yacht Club and local har- bor this evening or Sunday, There'll be more sail boats, yachts, pow- or boats, etc., in the Oshawa Harbor than have been seen at one time since hot dogs were only a nickel. A real spectacle and worth seeing! Besides the Oshawa Yacht Club boats, there will be craft from R.C. Y.C. and Queen City Y.C., Toronto; and also from Olcutt, N.Y,, and Youngstown, N, Y. LJ + * * The Oshawa Minor Softball Association playoffs cut down the field greatly last night, with three of the series ending in two-straight. East- view Bantams lost on their home diamond to Victory Park while Con- naught Park suffered the same fate, at the hands of the Storie Park Bantams. In the Midget semi-finals, Nailers pushed Simcoe Hall into the discard with a clean-cut win at Cowan's Park and in the other bracket, Royals won the first game of their series, nosing out Victory Park Aces 8-7 in a 12-inning thriller at Alexandra Park. These two teams go right back at it again tonight down at Victory Park, with the 3rd and deciding game called for Monday night at Connaught Park. Um- pires appointed for last night's games were all instructed to keep strict discipline in the game and reports are that after their warning, the youngsters stuck to business. This is as it should be -- and is going to be -- for umpires, who are working these games for free just to help the boys have experienced officialing, are deserving of sincere appreciation and the Association executive intends that they stamp out any form of abuse. Storie Park and Victory Park Bantams will open their series at Storie Park on monday night. + L * Westmount captured the East Whitby Township Intermediate "B" League championship last night with a 14-11 victory over North Oshawa, in the 3rd and deciding game, at Alexandra Park. This was another siz- zling softball tussle with Al. McKee pitching his team to victory, West- mount will now enter the O.A.S.A. Inter. "B" playdowns, meeting Whitby Legion in the first round, with the first game in the County Town next Thursday night. + * * This evening there's another playoff game at Alexandra Park, in the Juvenile baseball eliminations. Rexalls have been named as the local O.M.B.A. representatives and they'll meet the Oshawa Mo- tor City Cab Juveniles, who had a bye into the 0.B.A, playdowns, due to the fact that the Lakeshore League couldn't take them in and the O.M.B.A. wouldn't. Actually, it's a 2-out-of-3 series with the first game this evening and the second one on Monday night. We doubt if the Rexalls club can even make it interesting against the strong Mo- tor City Cab team, but the Cabbies have a few players likely to be absent on holidays, so the result may be closer than expected. The winner of this series will represent Oshawa in the O.B.A. Juvenile playoffs and will likely be drawn against Peterboro's Juvenile 0.B.A. entry, in the first round. - * k 4 When a fish hooks a man it's really news! Down near Gananoque the other day, Ted Maybee of Toronto hooked a 'lunge and got it in the boat, from where the fish leaped overboard and threw the spoon (hook) into Maybee's leg and it had to be removed by a doctor. Here in Osha- wa, Jack Meagher is. claiming the biggest fish of the season, his first cast the other day hooking his 180-lb. partner, Now Nick is talking about the hunting season -- figures it's safer! * + * Ralph "Farmer" Mackie got his name in the hole-in-one club last Sunday at the Oshawa Golf Club, potting his tee shot on the 18th hole. Congratulations are in order -- and if he followed tradi- tional custom of "setting em up" for the gallery, he probably also needs sympathy, for he must have suffered. Ed ke * Congratulations to the Oshawa lacrosse team. We'd almost con- cluded our column for today when we got word that the Motor City gut- (Continued on Page 13) LACROSSE TUESDAY, AUGUST 17th HUNTSVILLE = OSHAWA WRESTLING "1 MON. AUG. 16th : 8.45 P.M. SHARPE vs TALUN FLANAGAN MASKED MARVEL VS. "Irish" Tom Collins vs. , y "Strangler Bob Wagner The MASKED MARVEL DSHAWA ARENA | JIM THORPE, GREATEST OLYMPIC ATHLETE, WANTS HIS MEDALS BACK By ROBERT MARX Canadian Press Staff Writer New York, Aug. 14--(CP)--Jim Thorpe, the great American Indian athlete, is on the warpath. He wants his trophies back. Thorpe, now 60, was the stand- out of the 1912 Olympics at Stock- holm, winning gold medals in the five-event Pentathlon and 10-event decathlon -- a performance never matched -- gnd special awards from Russia and Sweden. 0 But no sooner had he won them than they were taken away. A blot on his amateur record was discov- ered and he had to return the tro- phies to Olympic headquarters at Lucerne, Switzerland. He Wants Them Back Now, 36 years later, Thorpe is trying to have his tokens returned. His plan is simple: he wants Avery Brundage, president of the United States Olympic committee and vice- president of the International Olympic Association, to take up his case. J "If Brundage tells 'em to give me the trophies, they'll give 'em to me," old Jim frowns. The problem is to ge: Brundage to "tell em." Neither Thorpe nor Brundage is a mild man. Brundage has a reputation for interpreting amateurism to the letter. Yes--and If So? "I'm sort of afraid Jim will hang one on him," says Mrs. Patricia Thorpe, who married Jim in 1944, after knowing him for 29 years. Cause of the original furore was discovery that Thorpe played base- ball for pay in 1910 with the Rocky Mount Club of the Eastern Carolina League. He admitted it readily. He had merely played during a sum- mer with a group of friends while on vacation from Carlisle Indian school. They had had a lot of fun and made spending money -- about $60 a month. Amateur Status Changed Today's interpretation of Ama- teur standing countenances far « more than Thorpe's minor infrac- tion. As much as $600 in expenses has been allowed tennis players for a single tournament. But officials in 1912 went the limit to enforce the then existing rules. Thorpe's double victory was removed from the records and the names of the runners-up were substituted. As Joe Williams of the New York World Telegram wrote recently: "You'd think Jim murdered some- body in Stockholm that year. All he did was knock the opposition dead." GM-COLTS EDGE UAWA. & IN SECOND TILT -- Whiteley and Samanski Stage Keen Pitching Duel As Colts Take Another In Semi-Finals Winners Gain Edge By Alert Base Running And Timely Blows To Lead Series 2-0--Rival Hurlers Each Fan Six Batters -- Both Teams Make Brilliant Infield Plays in Tight Struggle GM-Colts took a two-game lead in the City and District Intermed- jate "A" semi-final series, when they nosed out U.AW.A. 4-3 last night at Alexandra Park, in the second tilt of the round, a keenly- fought contest that had a large crowd on edge from start to fin- ish. "Preem" Whiteley and Wally Samanski hooked up in a pitch- ing duel that proved a gem, all the way. Each hurler struck out six rival batters and each issued three free tickets. Whiteley allowed six hits and Samanski gave up seven safeties. Alert base-running, taking full advantage of opportunities to ad- vance on stolen bases or choice plays plus Whiteley's best efforts in the tight their slim margin in the closely contested struggle. Both teams fielded in sensational fashion, es- pecially in the infield, which in both cases, bore the major share of the defensive work. Verne Mc- Laughlin had three putouts in centre, for the winners, one a brilliant running catch to take a hit. away from Gilbert, while Union had only two putouts in their out- field, McMullen and Romanski dividing the small chore. U.AWA. Scores First Union scored the first runs of the game, after threatening twice. In the first, Jimmie Loreno opened with a single and moved to sec- ond when the ball was juggled a little. He got to 3rd on an infield out but was held there while White- ley forced Hanna to ground out and then got McMullen the same way. In the 2nd, McLaughlin robbed Gilbert at the very start. Then Taylor drew a walk and moved to 2nd when Williams singled but Ko- vacs fanned and Samanski forced Taylor at 3rd. In the 3rd, Loreno opened with ad ouble into left, moved to 3rd when Gilbert grounded out. Hanna popped up for the second out but Andy McMullen smashed the first pitch into left-centre for a beautiful homer, to make it 2-0 for U.AWA. GM-Colts had Taylor on 3rd in the second, on an error and passed ball but couldn't score. In the 4th, they wiped out Union's two-run lead with a neat 3-run rally of their own. Bidgood started it off with a wayk and Taylor singled, after Bidgood had advanced on a passed ball. Taylor took 2nd unmolested and then Gilbert made a bad throw to 1st on Little's grounder. Bidgood scored on a play and Little was safe in a spill at 1st base. Little Jubenville as a runner) moved to 2nd, without .a play made and the second run scored when Whiteley flied to centre and Taylor sprinted home after the catch. Barnes then grounded high to short; almost beat Loreno's throw to 1st while Jubenville crossed the plate easily, to make it 3-2. Dave Gilbert singled with one out in the 6th and moved to 2nd on a wild pitch. Taylor fanned but Gil- pert scored when W. Taylor thew wild to 1st on Williams' grounder, which tied the score at 3-3. Colts Get It Back The Colts came right back in their half of the same inning to get the run back and it proved the final and winning run of the game. Billy Taylor opened with a single to right. Little popped out on a bunt try but "Preem" White- ley slashed a double over 3rd base and Taylor scored after the catch, when Barnes flied out to Roman- gki in right. The winners loaded the bases in the 7th on a single by Nelson, Hall's sacrifice and Jubenville's in- field single, which was followed by a walk to Taylor, after Bodgood had struck out. Little flied out to end the inning. U.AWA, had a chance in the 7th, when Samanski opened with a perfect bunt but Loreno grounded out and so did Romanski and Hanna. In the 8th and 9th, White- ley turned back the Union batters in 1, 2, 3 order. Loreno, with two hits, was the only UAW.A. batter to get more than, one safety while Ron Nelson and Billy Taylor each had two hits for GM-Colts. The infielders on both teams all played standout games. UAWA.: 002 001 000-36 2 GM-Colts: 000 301 00x-4 7 2 U.AW.A~--Loreno, £35; Romanski, rf; Hanna, ¢; McMullen, cf; Gil- bert, 3b; Taylor, 1b; Williams, 1f; Kovacs, 2b; Samanski, p; Mullens, batted in 9th, GM-Colts--V, McLaughlin, cf; Nelson, c¢; Hall, 3b; Jubenville, 2b; Bidgood, 1b; Taylor, ss; Little, If; Whiteley, p; Barnes, rf. Umpires--""Buzz" Bennett, plate and Reg. Fair, bases. Harmony Girls Tie Up Serious With N. Oshawa Harmony defeated North Oshawa 22-12 last night at Harmony in the second game of the East Whitby Township Ladies' League semi- finals, to tie the round up at one win apiece. The game went 10 innings and 1.en the North Oshawa pitcher faded and the Harmony team scor- ed 10 runs in the 10th inning, to! turn a hard-fought battle into a one-sided victory. Up until then, it was a see-saw struggle, R. Powers hurling good ball for Harmony and proving able to stay the distance. Harmony scored two in the first, three in the third, added two more in each of spots, gave the Colts the 4th and 6th frames, one in the 8th and two in the 9th. North Oshawa didn't do much. Single tallies in the 2nd and 3rd innings and one in the 6th, but in the 8th inning they scored 7 runs to tie up the score at 10-10. Each team scored two in the 9th. S. Johnston, B, Powers and R. Powers were the big batters for the winners with B. Simpson, N. Bor- row, B. Alexander and B. Hodgson the best for North Oshawa. The Parkhill sisters, who paced North Oshawa to victory in the first game of the series with homers and hits galore, couldn't do much at the plate last night. HARMONY--W, Smith, c¢; 8. Johnston, 1b; B. Powers, 2b; R. Powers, p; D. Price, cf; H. Nookes, 3b; J. Huxtable, If; H. Giesberger, rf; B. Rouston, ss. NORTH OSHAWA---L. Borrow, B. Parkhill, B. Parkhill, B. Simpson, R. Lockwood, B. Crandell, N. Nor- row, B. Alexander, B. Hodgson, How Canadians Garnered Points London, Aug. 14--(CP)--Canada went through the 1948 Olympic Games with a total of 35 points in the unofficial national standing. Here are the int winners: Track and Field Viola Myers, Toronto, fourth in women's 100-metre dash--three points. Pat Jones, New Westminster, B.C. fifth in women's 100-metre dash--two points. Women's team (Miss Myers, Nancy Mackay of Oshawa, Ont. Diane Foster of Vancouver and Miss Jones), third in 400-metre relay--Four points. Men's team (Don Pettie of Calgary, Jimmy O'Brien of Toronto, n Mc- Farlane and Ted Haggis of London, fifth in 400-metre relay--Two points. Doreen Dredge, Kelvingston, Sask, Sifih in women's high jump--Two n Art Jackes, Toronto, sixth in high Jum e point. Total track and field--14 points. Weight Lifting John Stuart, Verdun, Que. fifth in lightweight class--Two points. Jerry Grat Montreal, fifth middleweight class--Two points. ton, in Jim Varaleau, Ottawa and Trenton, Ont., sixth in light-heavyweight class | e point. Total weight Jitsing Five points. Canoe ng Doug Bennett, St. ambert, Que., second in 1,000-metre Canadian singles --Five points, Normun Lane, Toronto, third in 10,000-metre Canadian singles -- Four points. Bennett and Harry Poulton, St. Lam- bert, Que,, fourth in 1,000-metre Can- adian pairs--Three points. Bill Stemenson and Bert Oldershaw, Toronto, fifth in 10,000-metre Canadian pairs--Two points. Total canoeing--14 points. Yachting Paul McLaughlin, Toronto, fifth in firefly class--Two points. (Points are given on a basis of 10 for first place and 5, 4, 3, 2 and 1 for the next five places.) OLYMPIC STANDING United States .... ve Sweden France . Naly ... Hungary Britain Denmark Netherlands Finland . Turkey Switzerland Australia ..... Czechoslovakia Norway Argentina Belgium Austria ... Egypt .. Canada .... South Africa Jamaica Yugoslavia Mexico ... 222 181 117 2 162 15 1 131% tat" FL RL LE ~ Bad Luck, Punctures Prevent Oshawa and Canada Riders From Finishing Bike Race Lance Pugh And Other Canadians Forced Out Of Long Race By Tire Punctures -- French- man Wins First Place . And Belgium Best In Team Score Windsor Park, England, Aug. 14. --(CP)-- J. Beyaert of France won the long olympic cycling marathon of 120 miles, 1,647 yards in the grounds of great Windsor Park, on Friday. G. O. Voorting of Holland, lead- er for part of the long grind, was second and L. Wootens of Bel- gium third. Less than half the starting field of 95 finished, most of them out be- cause of tire punctures. A few had bad spills, Florent Jodoin of Montreal was the last of Canada's starting four to leave the race. He was bumped accidentally by another rider on the ninth lap, about half way through the race. Jodoin fell heavily and injured an arm. He remounted his bike and went on for another half-lap when he suffered stomach cramps and had to quit. At the time he was less than three minutes behind the leaders. Lorne Atkinson of Vancouver, Lance Pugh of Oshawa and Lau- rent Tessier of Montreal were all out by the end of four laps be- cause of tire punctures. It was horeless for them to try to over- take the field. Beyaert's winning time was five hours, 18 minutes, 12.6 seconds. L. Delathower of Belgium was fourth, Nils Johannsson of Sweden, an early leader and contender throughout, fifth, and R. Maitland of Britain 6th. Beyaert, who shot out .of the bunched leaders just before the finish. won by only 20 yards. G. W. Thomas of Britain, who halfway through the race, finish- ed eighth, behind J. P. Hoobin of Australia in seventh race. : The team prize, based on times of four riders from each country, was won by Belgium, with Brit- ain second and France third. The United States, like Canada, had nobody riding when the race finished. held the lead for a while about | Bathe Park Flyers Beat Out Teenettes In C.R.A. Playoff Bathe Park Flyers defeated the Westmount Teenettes in a C.R.A. Bantam girls' softball playoff-game last night at King Street School, 20 to 14. It was a good game, for the first few frames but in the 4th Flyers staged a 6-run rally to take a 9-3 lead. Teenettes came back with a 5-run splurge on their own behalf. After. that, the winners added singleton runs in the 5th and 6th to match the couple Teenettes got in their 5th. This left the score at 11-10 and the payoff inning proved to be the final 7th. Bathe Flyers scored 9 runs in this frame as they batted right around and the best Teenettes could do in their half was four runs. BATHE FLYERS -- Burley, ss; Polas, 3b; Dart, ¢c; Wight, cf; Pal- mer, rf; Baluk, 1b; Metcalfe, If; Fair, 2b; Collins, p; Speirs. TEENETTES--Donevan, ¢; John- stone, 1b; Elliott, 2b; Health, 3b; Haines, p; Booth, If; Joyce, cf; Rennie, rf; Read ss; Gilmore. Umpires -- J. Anderson and B. Joynt. FIGHTS FRIDAY NIGHT Hollywood, Calif.--Turkey Thompson, , Los Angeles, knocked out itey Berlier, 18315, New Orleans (1). San Diego, Calif.--Bobby Seamon, eles, outpointed Bert 15813, Los Wo | Mendoza, 161, San Bernardino (10). OZARK IKE MIND IF 6. 365% | With a good team, you have at | least one player shooting top form | at all times, and that was the way the Oshawa Lacrosse club played up in Peterborough last night to down the Petes for the second time |in a row The final count was 8-6. The Liftlock City crew who up to | the last two times that they have {met Oshawa, were the unbeaten untied first place team, have now had the string broken but good. Oshawa was playing it rugged last night with every player hanging on to his check as if he were a vine on the edge of a high cliff. Speaking of cliffs, Cliff Chambers i was again outstanding and with his defensive strength embodied in Tom Murphy and his offensive strength in Gord Cooke and Jack Sutherland, the team was really | hot. | Before a sell-out crowd in the | Peterborough oval, the locals took a 13-2 lead in the first period, and | never were headed in the game. Oshawa Lacrossers Triumph Over Peterhoro Team 8-6 In Hard Checking, Exciting Tilt lost that important item, and with the locals keeping cool, the sin bin final standing showed Oshawa with a total of 16 minutes to Petes 21. Not bad at all. The third quarter was Peterbor- ough's, they slammed in on our net and collected three counters to our one for a total of 7-5, heading for the last quarter T'was at this point that our boys were saving them- selves for the Peterborough last frame "putsch". That splurge nev- er came, as the locals had the re- | serve power this time, and with | Sutherland and Christie leading the | parade, they tore apart the Petes | offensive and laid the path for a single goal. i Petes got the one back, but the i final whistle went and the read 8-6 for our boys. Pete Grice, and Willie Vipond were the other Oshawa marksmen. score For Petes, Lou Vitarelli got two. ; and | | while Chute, Foote, Dundas | Connelly each had one. | But Gord Cook's three goal bar- = SPORTS CALENDAR SATURDAY Lakeshore Junior League Peterboro Kiwanis vs. Oshawa Hunters, at Alexandra Park, 2.30 pm. (Final league game, will de- cide "league leaders" and winners of The McCallum Trophy). Junior "A" Playoffs (3rd and Deciding Game of Semi- Finals). Sharp's Motors vs. Fittings Lid, at Bathe Park, 3.00 p.m. Inter. "AA" Playoffs (3rd and Deciding Game of Semi- Finals). Skinners vs. Duplate at Alexan- dra Park, 3.30 p.m. City & Dist. Inter. "A" Playoff (3rd game of 3-out-of-5 series) GM-Colts vs. UAW.A, Alexandra Park, 6.20 pm. Midget Semi-Finals Royals vs. Victory Aces, at Vic- tory Park, 6.30 pm. (2nd game of series). Oshawa Juv. Baseball Finals 'Rexalls Drugs vs. Motor City Cab, Alexandra Park, 6.30 pm. Pirst game of 2-out-of-3 series. MONDAY City and District Inter. "A" Playoffs (4th game of Semi-Finals, if ne- cessary) U.AW.A. vs GM-Colts, at Alexe andra Park, 6.30 p.m. OR (1st game of 3-out-of-5 Finals) GM-Colts vs Pedlars, at Alex- andra Park, 630 p.m. Inter "AA" Finals (1st game of 2-out-of-3 series) Winners of Skinners-Duplates vs Canadian Legion, at Bathe Park, 16.30 p.m. ! Junior "A" Finals (1st game of 2-out-of-three Sere | ies) | Winners of Sharp Motors-Fite | tings vs Stoneys Car Market, Ra« 'dio Park, at 6.30 p.m. 0.B.A. Juvenile Playoffs (2nd game of 2-out-of-3 series) | Oshawa Motor City Cab vs O.= | M.B.A. Rexalls, at Alexandra Park, Christie and McAdam teamed up | rage was the thing of the night.|6.30 pm. { for some beautiful efforts in that | frame, but it wasn't till big Red {hand of his that | paid-off i The second stanza saw our boys | take the attack with a bang, and this | without "Bun" Hill working over- | time in the Petes twine, He was always to the forefront i | heading the attack and getting in- | {threw in that unlooked-for back- |to a pesition where he could let | teamwork | that blasting side-arm shot of his | | flash into the net | Oshawa was without the services of Bob Hilson last night. OSHAWA--Goal, Chambers; de- there | fence, L. Vipond, P. Grice; centre, | | Oshawa Minor Softball Association Bantam Finals (1st game of 2-out-of-3 series) Victory Aces vs Storie Park, at | Storie Park, 6:30 pm. ! Midget Semi-Finals (3rd and deciding game, if he- cessary) Victory Park vs Royals, at Cone | would have been an over-whelming | Christie; rover, DePippo; homes, naught Park, 6:30 p.m. | score right then. He was good | though and the score was 6-2 at the {end of the half. Tom Murphy was checking Du- | Ban, that fire-pot who can usually | Ines a few into the strings in a | McAdams; G. Cook; Alts., W. Vi- | pond, Murphy, Bush, E. Haney, A. Haney, and J. Sutherland. PETERBOROUGH -- Goal, | defence, Magee, Chute; | Creighton; rover, Dugan; Hill; centre, homes, | night, but with old "Moiph" doing | Foote, B. Breakspeare; Alts.,, Hor- | the work there was none of that. | ton. J. Breakspeare, L. Vitarelli, D. | Tom bumped and unnerved that in. | dividual with great dexterity, and | in so doing kept his temper and | stayed on the floor. | Some of the Peterborough guys REAR 67 KING ST. E. | Vitarelli, and Dundas. Smith, Connelly, | Try a Times-Gazette ad today -- | You can be sure it will pay. | Wrestling Professional Wrestling Exhibition, at Oshawa Arena, 8.30 p.m. | ---------------- YESTERDAY'S STARS By The Associated Press Batting--Ed Waltkus, Cubs--Smacked | three doubles and a single to lead the | Cubs to a 10-4 victory over Ewell Black= well and Cincinnati Reds. Pitching--Satchel Paige, Indians-- Scattered five singles in pitching Cleveland to a 5-0 shutout over Chicago White Sox. He struck out one and did not issue a base on balls, Myla qn? When a manufacturer builds a tire to sell at so- called "cut-rate'" prices, he is compelled to cut quality and mileage too. 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