FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1948 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE NINE Spicy Bits From Other Sports Cols. ronto," Aug. 27--(CP) -- Ted (Toronto Telegram) Reeve, Coach of the Toronto Beaches Indians, both praises and criticizes the Cal- gary Stampeders, who defeated his football team 16-7 last Saturday. . Ted says: "It is the concensus among our players that (Calgary) will be the team to beat in the Prairie Conference." He praises the team's American professional style of blocking and its ability to work from the T-formation. But he thinks the blocking may result in "a good deal of penalty grief if referees . . ., decide that (it) comes under the heading of Marquis of Queensbury or Bowser Group code, rather than that of the CRU." He also warns Coach Les Lear of the Stampeders against "his habit of trying to play quarterback from the sidelines." * "Brimsek to Chicago Bill (Niagara Falls Review) Gay- non scouts the rumored trade of Frank Brimsek, Boston Bruins goa- lie, to Montreal Canadiens for de- fenceman Kenny Reardon, He 'sees little chance of Bill Durnan being replaced in the Canadiens' nets by a player of Brimsek's years when young Gerry McNeill, Montreal Royals' netminder, is owned by the Flying Frenchmen. Gaynon thinks Brimsek may go to Chicago Black Hawks for either Doug. Bentley or Billy Mosienko. Such a trade would cost the Hawks a top star, he says, but they "can be a powerful -factor" with Brim- sek in goal. Ottawa Needs Quarterbacks Bill (Ottawa Journal) Westwic® says the Ottawa Rough Riders of the Big Four are worried about their quarterback situation since Bob Paffrath, American star with the Toronto Indians last year, is suffering from a charley horse while Gerry Dawson, former Wind- sor star, is probably out for the season with an injured leg. Doug (Windsor Star) Vaughan comments on Dawson's injury with the hope the Ottawa Club "has sufficient insurance on him so that he won't suffer financial- ly . .. " He says Dawson stood to ake about $2,500 with Riders this ar. BROOKLIN JRS. OUST TRENTON TO MOVE ALONG "Twas all up for the Trenton Junior "B" team last night, when Brooklin Lynbrooks had a stand- up, slug-'em-out, hitting match with that club and beat them 18-12. The win, played in Trenton gave the local club the O.A.S.A. second round series in 'two straight and puts our boys into the next dish of playoff soup. Gord Hooker was on the mound for the Lynbrooks and though he + pitched 13 strikeouts, Trenton glean- ed eight safeties and with a few walks and some good baserunning théy moved 12 runs over the plate. Forbes and Lynn shared the big hill for the Trenton club and they were not so hot with the strikeouts, but managea to cool off the razor- sharp Brooklin late in the game. Errors helped the Brooklin club force over three runs in the top of the first, but in the last of the inning, the Trenton boys took the lead with a four-run rally. Forbes' home runs was the big blow of the last half of the frame. « , Brooklin finally broke out in the . top of 'the third in a scoring rash that left them in a lead which they never relinquished." Six runs trot- ted over the plate in that inning, and with two more in the fourth and five tallies in the fifth, they made up a goodly sum of 16 runs. The Trenton boys repled with 10 runs by that time and the game looked as if the locals could take it back home well-wrapped. When Trenton flipped in two more runs in the last of the eighth things took on a different hue, and the Lyn- A Gx were forced to get down to ork again in the top of the ninth. ey equalled that two-run out- burst and the final count was 18-12. Big ball slappers for the Brooklin club were Hooker, Fletcher and Nes- bitt. For the losers, Miron was the biggest and best batter. Brooklin ..... 308 250 002--18 15 4 401 212 020-12 8 5 : Gibson, If; Johns- ton, rf; Nesbitt, 3b; Hooker, p; Croxall, cf; Fletcher, c; Mackey, ss; Davidson, 2b, ahd Burt, 1b. RENTON: Flynn, 2b and p in 5th; Ryan, c; Mitts, 1f; Miron, ss; Istead, cf; Forbes, p and 2b in 5th; Jordan, 3b; Lawson, rf, and Jeffery, 1b. : Umpires -- T. Marks, Port Perry, bases, and Steenburg, plate. U.S. Imports Lead Montreal's 18-0 Wh Over Tigers Montreal, Aug. 27 -- (CP) -- Montreal's Big Four Alouettes sweated and dripped through 60 degree temperatures Thursday night to capture the Kiwanis Bowl exhibition game 18-0 from Hamil- ton Tigers of the Ontario Rugby Football Union. More appropriately dubbed the heat bowl or sweat bowl, a crowd of 12,000 limply watched Quebec's Big Four steamroller to victory power by bullet passed from ex- Notre Dame player Steve Nemeth. His performance paved the way for the Lark's first touch and ac- counted for the third. His accuracy was seriously rivalled, however, by Tiger's Frank Filchock who com- pleted nearly all the 12 out of 23 passes attempted by Tigers. Montreal's powerhouse was sparked by three American imports --Nemeth, Flloyd Wheeler and Norm Cox--who, combining with veteran Virg Wagner and lineman Herb Trawyck, did cartwheels be- hind a solid line. Tigers without Filchock were tao light and too young but when the versatile star was on the field--al- most the full game--he led them on march after march to Alouetle's line. The opening quarter was a tight battle centred in 'Tiger territory where Nemeth and Cox repeatedly led Alouettes dangerously close to the Hamilton line. All through the fourth quarter PFilchock rifled passes in a brave attempt to score but the final drive was lacking. At one point in the game he was the only man left on the field when Hamilton chang- ed the whole team. Sports Shorts From Britain By MICHAEL O'MARA Canadian Press Staff Writer London, Aug.' 24--(CP)--Two George Allisons live in London and cordially dislike each other. One is the burly, 190-pound ra- dio commentor and former man- ager of the Arsenal Football Club. The other is a Communist Party headquarter's official. "Pm tired a being mistaken for that Communist," says George No. 1. "On my trips abroad I'm al- ways being stopped by special I'm a Churchillian Tory." George No. 2 just snorts. He comes from West Fife, Scotland-- "where the real footballers come from"--and used to live outside the Arsenal ground, but never played soccer because "I never had the time." Lectures to fellow-anglers on how to catch carp are being delivered daily by George Draper of Ilford, Essex, who recently landed a mon- ster of 25 pounds, nine ounces-- just seven ounces off the Brit- ish record. a, Draper says carp are harder to handle than the gamest salmon. A salmon of 25 pounds or so generally takes a minute a pound to kill, once the hook is in. Carp take two min* utes a pound. If fishermen want to eat carp in- stead of hanging it over the fire- place, Draper recommends this re- cipe: "Boil in beer. "Serve on fried bread with pickl- ed onions, mushroom, prawns or shrimps, bay leaves, lemon, cin- namon and slices of gingerbread." More than 60,000 pounds ($240,000) has been returned to unsuccess- ful applicants for tickets to the series of five Test Matches against Don Bradman's Australians--For- ty-year-old Tom Fletcher, playing in a club game at Nottingham, col- lapsed of a heart attack and died at the wicket. His brother had died in the same way on the same field 10 years ago--Damages for an. .un- disclosed amount were awarded John Collins, 25, who was struck on the head by a cricket ball as it sailed majestically out of a Stoke- on -Trent, Staffordshire, ground--sSaid Dr. R. Downey, Arch- bishop of Liverpool, to a Lancashire County Cricket Club luncheon: 'If Stalin had learned to play cricket, the world might now be a better place to live in." W. 8. Holter of Eastbourne, Sus- sex, found out that lightning can strike more than once in the same place. Last September, he won £3,000 (812,000) in a football pool. Sev- eral months later he won $12,907 in another pool. Just by-way of var- iety, between the two coups, he heavily backed Sheila's Cottage, 50-1 winner of the Grand National, Try a Times-Gazette ad today -- You car. be sure it will pay. FOOT ACTION IN GOLF By ALEX J. MORRISON "The title should be 'Dancing, instead of 'Waggling Bob Hope'," said the famous screen and radio comedian when I showed him an article I had written about him. We met at a driving range in Palm Springs, Calif, so that I could make some action pictures of Bob's latest golf swing. Like all golfers Hope keeps changing everything from socks and stances to facial expressions. These changes are mainly mental. Physically, his swing differs little if any, from the one I photograph- ed years ago. During the session at Palm Bob did make an obser- 'ation of constructive value to all fers. g that the camera was making a positive and accurate record of his positions and move- ments, he took stock of things or- dinarily overlocked during a game. One of these was the position of his right foot as he swung down to 5 the ball. "My right heel jumps up before impact," he said, "and I've noticed that most of the leading pros have all of the right foot on the ground as they strike the ball." I explained that a jumping right foot indicated the wrong body ac- tion for the downswing, a rotation that forced the player to cut across the ball and lose power as well as direction. Then I demonstrated the proper foot action which found the right foot with heel on the ground, rolling over toward the inside This, I explained, helps to keep the body moving parallel to the line of play, makes the body work in harmony with the hands, force and accuracy. Each and every time Bob kept his right heel down and moved this hips straight to the left in the downswing he added 40 or 50 yards to his long shots, : The improvement is not surpris- ing because the body worked with, instead of against, his hands. branch police and cross-examined. | Now International League Action By The Associated Press Jersey City . Giants, defending pennant winners in the Internat- jonal League, are beginning to play ball like the champs they were once, Eliminated from any chance of winning the pennant this year, the Giants, although in seventh place, have a good opportunity to land in the first division and a playoff berth. They ran their victory skein to six games Thursday night by tak- ing a twin bill frem the high-fly- ing Montreal Royals, 9-2 and 3-2. It was only the second time this season that the Royals have drop- ped a doubleheader. Hub Andrews coasted to his third straight triumph in the first game as the Giants scored all of their runs in the first three innings. Lefty Jack Kraus stopped the Roy- als on six hits in the nightcap. The twin triumphs enabled the Giants to pull to within six games of the fourth-place Rochester Red Wings who dropped a 10-6 slugfest to the. tail-end Baltimore Orioles. The third-place Toronto Maple Leafs moved two games ahead of the Wings as a result of their 3-2 triumph over the sixth-place Syra- cuse Chiefs. Young Lou Possehl, with help from veteran Nick Stringevich in the ninth, gained credit or his 11th victory. Frank Fanovich was the losing Syracuse pitcher. Newark's runner-up Bears humb- led Buffalo Bisons 10-1, to extend Buffalo's losing streak to eight games. Staddings INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE WwW. L. ret Montreal Newark Toronto Rochester Syracuse .... Buffalo ... Jersey City Baltimore Baltimore .. Toronto 3 Syracuse ... Jersey City .. + 9 wnonuerl First game of doubleheader. Buffalo at Newar., Dlgu. game. Wednesday's Night Results Montreal .... Jersey City Syracuse Boston Brooklyn St. Louis Pittsburgh ew York .. Philadelphia Cincinnati Chicago .... 48 70 Thursday's Results Chicago 5-5 Boston Pittsburgh ....11-4 Philadelphia Brooklyn ....... Cincinnati . St.Louis ........ 7 New York .. . 2 First game of afternoon-night double header. Wednesday New York ........ Philadelphia Detroit . 8t. Louis . Washington 40 p Thursday's Results 8 Cleveland k 68 Chicago .. Philadelphia .... 4 Detroit ... a St. Louis at Washington, night game. Wednesday's Night Results Washington .... 14 St. Louls Major League Leaders By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting--Williams, Boston, .373. Runs batted in--DiMaggio, New York, and Stephens, Boston, 114. Runs--DiMaggio, Boston, 94. Hits--Boudreau, Cleveland, 155. Doubles--Henrich, New York, 33. Triples--Stewart, Washington, 13 Home runs--DiMagglo, New York, 28. Stolen bases--Dillinger, St. Louis, 23. Strikeouts--Brissie, Philadelphia, 113 Pitching--Kramer, Boston, 14-4, .778. NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting--Muslal, St. Louis, .379. Runs batted in--Musial, St. 101. Runs--Musial, . St. Louis, 108, Hits--Musial, St. Louis, 180. Doubles--Musial, St. Louis, 34. Triples--Muslal, St. Louis, 13. Home runs--Kiner, Pittsburgh, 35. Stolen bases--Ashburn, Philadelphia, Louis, 29. "Strikeouts--Blackwell, Cincinnati, 112. yaching=Chesnes, Pittsburgh, 10-3, FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By The Associated Press New York--Billy Graham, 139, out- pointed Terry Young, 138, both New 10rg (10). Syracuse, N.Y.--Lee Oma, 188, De- troit, knocked out Howard Chard, 224, Toronto and Scranton, Pa. (1). Brooklyn--Joe . Belfiore, 135, Phila- delphia, outpointed Solly Cantor, 134, Toronto (8), Waterville, Me. -- Lester River, 155, Boston. outpointed Al Eavns, 154, Mon- treal (8). New York--Ernie Leboeuf, 144, Mon- treal. knocked out Tony Tenore, 140%%, Hoboken, N.J. (1). New York -- Jack Ougan, 164!5, To- ronto. ontpointed Mike Carney, 160%, New York (4). (TIT: AUTOMATIC BOOKLET CSS BSS ea Football on Their Minds Head of both the baseball and football Brooklyn Dodgers, Branch Rickey (left) stands with Bob Zuppke to watch the grid Dodgers practise at Plattsburgh, N.Y. Zuppke, former Illinois coach, is serving in an advisory capacity to Head Coach Carl Voyles of the Dodgers. --Central Press Canadian fy Shooting an even 300 for four rounds, Mildred Babe Didrikson, of Fern- dale, N.Y. cops the women's national golf tourney at Northfield, N.J., and another trophy to add to her big collection. Grace Lencyk (right) won tourney amateur division, As She Won Yet Another Cup --Central Press Canadian SPORT SNAPSHOTS new programs, it will mean that they will have lots of new equipment to play in. The equipment shortage is always the biggest bugbear with It takes almost five years for a club to pile up enough back issues of the shells, pants, cleats, harness and helmets to be able to dress every whosit from Jukesville when he appears at a practice . Toronto Leafs won again last night. They seem Whether it is the team doing well under their beloved "Piggly-Wiggly" or vice versa is not known, but the change is almost killing the Toronto It will certainly spoil them in years to come. the way the teams used to lose night after night and expect big things This win streak has even got old Tim Daly. Too many wins they say . . . a new team. tonous. fandom. of the Maple Leafs. retired last night officially, you know. Marvin Nelson, "Iowa Flash," from Fort Dodge, splashed through choppy Lake Ontario waters 18 years ago today to win the 15-mile Canadian National marathon swim in reecord-breaking time of 7:43:36.2. placed first in the 1933 and 1934 Toronto swims. «ge SCISSORED SPORT-- (By The (Continued frem Fage 8) to be doing well under Manager 2, ge , whether his former coach is handing him the double-cross. rently sweating out practice sessions with Alouettes had promised to release him so he could join the Dominion champions this season. Durno said the promise was made by Joe Ryan, Alouettes business manager, three months ago but now the Alouettes won't give it to him until Argos send down a replacement for him Boston Bruins' Bill Cowley was conceded in Vancouver sport circles today to be "just about in" as the new hockey coach of Vancouver Canucks of the Pacific Coast Hockey League. He would Colville of Edmonton, former New York Ranger star. top contender for the Canucks coaching spot, announced here 'he has accepted a contract to coach St. Paul of the United States Hockey Lea- gue. Last year Smith coached Tulsa in the same loop. game of the 1948 football season in Toronto may well go down in | Toronto gridiron annals as '"operatin sweat." Indians learned Thursday from the weather man that they can look for temperatures in the 90's for their exhibition charity game here this . Jack Solomons, British fight promoter, announced Thurs- day at London that Lee Oma, 31-year-old American heavyweight, will fight Bruce Woodcock, British heavyweight champ, at Harringay Arena, This will be Woodcock's first fight since he was de- feated by Joe Baksi at Harringay in April of 1947 , . . Joe O'Brien, the New Glasgow, N.S., reinsmen, scored two wins and a place in Thursday's events at the Grand Circuit harness racing meeting at Milwaukee. won the three-heat $25,000 big Five Spot, the class 22 pace and placed second in the $1,500 class 15 race , National Hockey League will begin training for the 1948-49 season at the Olympic Arena in Lake Placid, N.Y., September 21, manager Frank Boucher announced Thursday. Boucher said 41 players would be taken to the training camp . . . Little Joe captured second division of the two-year-old Supertest race at Ridgetown, Ontario, Thursday, with a one-two finish to feature the final éard of harness racing at the Ridge- 'town Fair. Saturday . . September 21. Argonauts Gad this is getting mono- They'll forget + : Canadian Press) --President Ford C. Frick of the National League Thursday at New York upheld the protest of the Pittsburgh club involving its game Wednesday with Brooklyn at Pittsburgh, and ordered the game replayed from the point of the rule violatign and with the same players. Wednesday's game, with Brooklyn leading 11 to 9 and Carl Erskine pitching for the Dodgers with two men out, Erskine ran the count to three balls and one strike on pinch-hitter Eddie Brockman. point manager Burt Shotton sent in Hank Behrman to pitch, and Brock- man grounded into a force play to end the game. based on a rule which provides that a pitcher coming into the game shall continue to pitch until the player at bat has either been put out or has reached first base, or the side has been retired . . . Don Durno, husky lineman with Lew Hayman's Montreal Alouettes for the last three football seasons, said Thursday night at Toronto he is wondering In the last of the ninth inning of The protest was Toronto Argonauts, . . The New :York Rangers of the Dick Porter. He He At this Durno, cur- said succeed Mac Clint Smith, The opening and Beaches He Big League Basehail Yesterday By JOE REICHLER Ralph Kiner, making his second stab in two seasons at Babe Ruth's record of 60 home runs, is ahead of his pace of a year ago when he crashed 51 round-trippers. The slugging Pittsburgh outfield- er Thursday banged his 35th homer in 115 games to help the Bucs sweep a doubleheader from Pnila- delphia Phililes, 11-4 and 4-1. The twin triumph enabled the Pirates to regain fourth place in the Na- tional League from New York Giants by a full game. Last year Kiner hit 32 home runs in Pittsburgh's first 115 games. A strong finisher, Ralph has an out- side chance of catching the Babe, but he'll have to travel at an extra- ordinary pace. He must hit at the rate of five home runs every eight games. In the opener Thursday, Wally Westlake belted a grand-slam homer to highlight a six-run sixth inning which enabled the Bucs to overcome a 3-0 deficit. Kiner added a triple to his second-game homer and drove in two runs to help Mel Queen gain his third victory. Boston Red Sox recaptured first place in the American League from Cleveland Indians in their tense struggle for the flag, defeating the tribe 8-4. A five-run eighth inning rally, which included Bobby Doerr's three-run homer, snapped a 3-3 tie and shoved the Red Sox half a game in front of the Indians. Traiiing 2-1 in the last of the eighth and held to two hits, New York Yankees pounced on relief pitcher Glen Moulder for five runs to defeat Chicago White Sox 6-2. A two-run triple by Billy Johnson with two out drove in the winning runs, In winning, the third-place Yan- kees moved within half a game of the Indians, and one game out of first place. The fourth-place Philadelphia Athletics turned back Detroit Ti- gers 4-3, hanging the 10th defeat upon Hal Newhouser. Trailing 3-2 in the eighth, the A's drove New- houser from the mound, scoring two runs on a double by Pete Suder to give Joe Coleman, former Toronto pitcher, his 12th victory. The A's are 3': games out of first place. Ed Stewart squeezed home Al Ko- zar with the run that gave Wash- ington Senators an 8-7 victory over St. Louis Browns in the only night game in the American League. The "National-L_eague race tight- ened considerably when the cellar- dwelling Chicago Cubs upset the Braves twice, 5-1 and 5-2, to reduce their first place lead to 2'2 games over St. Louis Cardinals. The Redbirds moved into second place, half a game in front of Brooklyn Dodgers, by sweeping a day-night . double-header from the Giants in St. Louis. The Cards won the afternoon portion of the twin bill 7-2, then came back to win the arclight tussle 7-5. Joe Hatten pitched Brooklyn to a 6-1 triumph over Cincinnati. It was Brooklyn's ninth victory with- out a loss at Crosley Field. 'Wib' Hall And Doug Keel Vie For Golf Crown A large gallery is expected to follow "Wib" Hall and Doug Keel in the finals of the Club Cham- plonship to be played on Sunday, August 29, at the Oshawa Golf Club. These popular and accomplished golfers will play two 18-hole rounds, one in the morning at 10 o'clock and the other at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. The pro, Mr. Jack Rob- erts, expects the course to be in fine shape and all divot diggers of Oshawa and district are invited to witness a display of fine golf. Other tournaments are progress- ing with Art McKay winning the President's Trophy, after defeating Doug Keel in the finals. The Scratch Tournament was won by Harry Mi- chael after a torrid match with Earl McMaster, The Four-Ball Tourna- ment has Rae McMaster and Clive File in the finals awaiting a playoff between Jim Daniels and Oak Craw- ford and Harry Michael and Norm Hall for the other final position. TO TEST BOAT Detroit,--Achilles Castoldi, Ital- ian owner of the Gold Cup entry Sant Ambrogio, arrived in Detroit and said he would test his beat on the Detroit River, Two Top Women Golfers Meet In C.L.0. Today Riverside, N.B.,, Aug. 27 -- (CP) --The Newington miss, Grace Len- czyk of Newington, Mass. defend- ing Canadian Ladies Open "golf champion, today meets her tough- est opposition in the four-day title battle when she tees off for 18 holes against Toronto's Miss Ada Mackenzie, five-time tournament winner, Miss Lenczyk Thursday disposed of Mrs. Hugh O'Callaghan of Van- couver 8 and 7 in a quarter final match while Miss Mackenzie met Stronger resistance from Mrs. J. B. Seawright of Toronto who carried her 20 holes before dropping out one down. Mrs. Graeme Pyke of Hudson Heights, near Montreal, and Mrs. Cecil Gooderham ~ of Toronto, whacked out four extra holes be- | fore the Quebecer stroke margin, Mrs. Eddie Bush's match agatnst Mrs. J. C. Whitelaw of Montreal was decided on the short 18th.hole where the Wilmington, Del, wom- an dropped her tee shot nearly on the green while. her opponent zoomed out of bounds for a ore stroke penalty which made all the difference. Tee shots played an important part in the marathon battle between Mrs. Pyke and Mrs. Gooderham. Mrs. Pyke banged an accurate tee to green stroke on the 22nd hole of the day after her opponent splashed into a sand trap. Mrs. Gooderham took two unavailing digs at the sand-bound ball then conceded the match. Miss Mackenzie's steady game wasn't enough to subdue quickly Mrs. Seiwright, who missed a five- foot putt on the 19th which would have given her the match. Miss Mackenzie got her eye in on the 20th and sank her putt for a par four and victory. Mrs. Bush handed her opponent a stymie on the 17th to draw one ahead and Mrs, Whitelaw dubbed her tee shot to lose the match on the 18th. The Montrealer had come from behind to even the count on the 16th after dropping three be- hind to the 13th. In the second round of match play in the championship consola- tion flight Miss Jo Anna of Wel- land defeated Mrs. J. H. Todd of Victoria one up. gained a one Sports Roundup New York, Aug. 27--(AP) -- The prizefighters never had it so good as in these happy days, since a brash new promoting firm wint out to get the scalp of Mike Jacobs, the old champion. Nobody can say for sure which side is going to win the war of the promoters, though a -decision might possibly be reached late in September. The only thing certain is that the boxers, themselves, can't lose. > Dumb Dan Morgan, one of the most celebrated of the oldtime fight managers, gave an accuraae summing-up of the situation the othe~ dav at the multiple signing of the gladiators who will appear on the tournament of chamnions all-star card at Jersey City Sept. 21. Morgan, a bird-like, elderly litt'e fellow who does the best he can these days, had just returned frrm New York airport, where he and other fight figures had extended a reception to Marcel Cerdan, the battle-scarred little Frenchman who meets middleweight champion Tony Zale in the feature browl. Picture For The Movies Look at him, growled Dan, "Gets ting his picture tock for the move ies. And we been out there two days waitin' while he made up his mind to fly over from France. Back in the old days a guv like that would've been around knockin' on our doors with his hat in his hands." Dan wasn't exaggerating much, at that. Let's look over, first, Cer- dan, and then a couple of others of the quartet whom the T. of C. pas guaranteed $270,000 for appearing on its big "break Jacobs" program. Cerdan, 34, lest his European middleweight title last May to a Belgian youngster, practically a novice, named Cyrille Delannoit, in Brussels. He won it back July 10, tut the Belgian boy gave him a good argument, and Marcel was cut and tired and bleeding when the referee lifted his hand. Logical Challenger This isn't to imply that Cerdan isn't the logical challenger for Zale's crown. Probably he is. But he is a mighty lucky Frenchman to be getting a guarantee of $50,000 in the circumstances. Tony likely will belt him out in four or five rounds. Come in and see us for a NEW KIND OF RIDE on a New Kind of Tire "Tommy" GOCH 437 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH -- OSHAWA Ain Ride Dominion Royal AIR RIDE com- bines more air at lower pressure ... gives you a new kind of riding comfort--new effortless steering --new safety and mile- age. 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