Daily Times-Gazette, 7 Jul 1950, p. 11

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FRIDAYgIWLY 7, 1950 2 THE: DAILY: Tt MES.GAZETTE PAGE ELEVEN HIT OR MISS G55 5 Hh i ---- - ~ NaN Cope. 19%. Sum sad Times, Cn 7-7 AN rights rhver ed re by Sixta "--The showers again!--He may not be so good, but I betcha he's the cleanest player in the league . . ." pl. hh. A et ht LSP OP CHECKING WITH BOB RIFE Oshawa Pedlars suffered one of their odd games the other night, a defeat no less. i This should put them up in arms when they meet Pyrene Firefighters here tonight. Rea- son: Pyrene were the club to take the locals, The taking took the form of a 12 inning 3-2 loss. Pedlars figure they can't do it here, Firefighters think they ean. One hopeful sign for the Osh- awa team is the fact that ..Normie Bagnell is slated to do the mound work for them. Whether the Pyrenes will make Alfie Dyett, the winner of that last one, try an ironman stunt and work again tonight isn't known. : If he does, things should be extremely interesting. That is of course if it doesn't rain. Pedlars you'll remember have had 'their last three games rained out here on- Friday nights. Makes it hard on the eash customers, and harder still to find time to re-schedule the games involved. (7 4 Cobourg gets its second chance to play at home to the Oshawa Transporters tomorrow afternoon, and that could mean more than Just a ball game. True, the last time there, our guys did take a win, and a large- scoring variety one at that, but. one' must remember the way in which it was won. Lots of enemy errors. Had there not been those, the tching was fine enough to cause plenty of trouble, and the. .Osh- awans weren't exactly having a gay picnic in the field. They blooped a few themselves. Of course our boys are rolling along merrily in first place now and playing a much better brand of ball. Of course. And that's just the kind of thing that makes the hat manufacturers happy. What do we mean . . . well, think. If a guy expands around the upper storey, his old hat won't fit him. If his old hat won't fit, he buys a new one. 'The hatter gets rich . . . and our team might lose on ac count of said expanded domes. Cobourg Ghosts are cooking up things in a football way in their town, having already had talks with Argo officials. To add to the fun they have rel d their schedule for the coming season in a four-team league Including Oshawa, Peterborough, Orillia and Co- bourg. The schedule gives the ON SPORT Ghosts nine games in a peculiar two away and one at home set- up. . The only club on which this procedure is reversed is against the Oshawa Red Raiders. With us, Cobourg makes on trip away and plays at home on two oc- casions, This one-and-a-half schedule leaves some open dates, anu : Ghosts expect to fill these with exhibition games with teams from outside the league. One of those will of course be the annual battle against Queen's in Cobourg on Thanksgiving weekend. What president Bob Moran had to say with the Cobourg outfit isn't known. A connec- tion in a player way isn't too likely for there has been talk that the Red Raiders were in on the ground floor in that de- partment. Anyway, the Ghosts are out of Toronto territory ac- cording to league rulings. We imagine it was more of a good relations visit than anything. M2 cruens -- Gussy Moran, one of the more colorful women figures in the tennis world at the present time, has been offered $50,000 to turn pro with the touring outfit which featured Jack Kram-®r and Pancho Gonzales last season. Gussy said, "So far I haven't heard any figure which interests me." Bowmanville has the shortest left field fence in the Lakeshore Intermediate league, some 265 feet, and it was over this barrier that George Brabin parked the Trans- porters first homer of the year the other night. He didn't hit it over at that mark, the ball landed some 100 feet towards centerfield from that mark, and we imagine that the fence would be about 290 or 300 feet at the point where his blow sailed over. The Jackie Robinson Stery, cur- rently showing at the Plaza Theatre here in town, shows a lot | they | of fine baseball shots. True, glorify the guy a bit, but this speed- ball with the Brooklyn Dodgers is the kind of player legends grow around. Its a bit of celluloid well worth seeing . . . both for its ball and for the color-line argument it presents. JUNIOR HOCKEY IMPORT IS INJURED AT GALT Galt, July 7--(CP)--Ted Mitchell, 17, of Timmins, is recovering from a serious hand injury suffered when lowering a jacked-up automobile. Mitchell, who moved here recently to play Junior "A" hockey next winter for Galt, is employed at a Stoney' Car Market Will Remain -- > R_ | | CLOSED |! Times-Goodfellow Edge Alger Press, . Industrial Tilt : . roms Times-Goodfellow nosed out Alger Press 9-8 last night at Als exandra Park in an' Industrial League softball struggle 'that saw Algers rally for five rufs in the 7th inning, to almost snatch victory from defeat. . Yeo, on the mound for Algers, got away to a bad start, walking a total of five batters, which added to an interference move by the catcher on batter Densham with the bases loaded, forced across a total of three gift runs. In the second Moss and England both walked but Dean forced Moss at third, then Pattifield walked to fill the bases and Jeyes came through with a timely hit to score two runners, making it 5-1. Algers had got one in their first frame when Wiltshire walked and scored on a hit by Dervent, The score stayed at 5-1 until the fifth when Clayton was safe on an infield error and- Sundin got a sim- ilar "break". Hits by Brooks and a triple by Dervent scored two of the runners, after two out, to make it 5-3. o In their 5th, Times-Goodfellow added one run, Griffin opening with a single, advancing on 'a passed |if ball and scoring on Campbell's double. In the 6th, the T-G boys added three more runs: and as it turned out, they needed them all. Dean opened with a homer ito deep right. Pattifield singled and Jeyes was safe on an infield bobble. Griffin grounded out and so did Densham but Pattifield scored on the out with two out, Jeyes scored on Campbell's single. Algers roared back in the 7th as Moss weakened on the T-G mound. He issued walks to Sundin and Mc- Intyre with one out then Brooks hit a mammoth homer to centre, making it 9-6. Dervent singled and so did Corrigan. LePage grounded out but the runners scored on a bad return throw to the plate. MeGillis was safe on an infield throw but Yeo grounded out to the infield, ending the game with the tying run on 2nd. Dervent was the big hitter of the night, with three of Alger's aalf- dozen hits. The winners also had only six safeties, Campbell getting two with Dean's homer, Pattifield, Jeyes and Griffin the other hitters. ALGER PRESS -- Sundin, ss; Wiltshire, c; Brooks, 1b; Dervent, 1f ant p; Corrigan, 3b; LePage, 2b; McGillis, cf; Yeo, p and If; Clay- ton, rf and ¢; McIntyre, rf, TIMES-GOODFELLOW -- Moss, p; England, ¢; Dean, If; Pattifield, 3b; Jeyes, rf; Griffin, ss; Densham, 2b; Campbell, 1b; Shields, ef. Umpires--R. Waddell, plate and D. Claus, bases. Severs Triumphs By 17-3 Score Over Bryants Severs Plumbers took a wide-open 17-13 win from Bryant Motors last night at Bathe Park. Magee was the starter for "the winners, lasting till the 8th inning when he was pulled for Welsh. That hurler finished the tilt hold- ing the Motors squad scoreless in the last of the ninth. Bryants sent Parish to the mound to start, He was relieved by Green in the fifth and he went the rest of the way. Severs counted three in the first, five in the second, four in the third and one in the fourth. They added two inthe fifth on MeDonald's homer with a mate aboard. Singles were scored in the seventh and ninth to make the final score. Bryants tallied two in the first, singles in the second and fourth, three in the seventh and six in the eighth for their total. SEVE PLUMBERS -- Jay, cf; Saxby, ss; Porayko, 3b; Myles, If; Magee, p; Perry, 1b; McDonald; rf; Zarowny, 2b; Hurst, ¢; and Welsh, p in 8th. BRYANT MOTORS--Pollard, If; Corbett, 2b; Pallister, ss; Richards, 3b; Parish, p; Hollman, ¢; Martin, If; J. Hollman, rf; Loople, 1b; Tip- pett, ss in 5th; Green, p in 5th; Topham, If in Tth and Clarke, rf in 8th. Thornton's Corners Wallop Columbus Unleashing a vicious attack in the first inning that netted them an even dozen runs, Thornton's Cor- ners went on to defeat Columbus 20-8 last night in an East Whitby Township game, at Columbus. That first inning was disastrous for Columbus, as the Thornton's Corners team batted right around almost twice and the first time, all but one of the team scored on his first trip to the pate, After that it didn't matter much but one run in the fourth, a big 6-run splurge in fhe 6th inning and a lone tally in the 7th com- pleted their tdtal, with the Pipher brothers, Henderson, Blair, and Allan being the best at the plate, Columbus got a couple in the first by Chandler and V. Powell, one in the fourth and then two in the. 7th by Werry. and. Cochrane, completed their scoring for the night. x The Powell brothers, Werry and Cochrane were best -for Columbus. THORNTON'S CORNERS -- K. Pipher, 1b; Henderson, cf; Blair, 2b; Allan, p; B. Pipher, c; Hogel, 3b; Smith, rf; Scott, If; Cypta, ss. COLUMBUS -- Chandler, 1b; V.° Powell, cf; Scott, cf; R. Powell, p; Werry, 2b; Cochrane, rf; Camp- bell,.ss; Jepson, 3b;- R. Werry, cf; Swartz, cf. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By The Associated Press Cheyenne, Wyo.--Lee Bald, 158%, Donora, Pa., knocked out Ron Whittle, 161, Salt Lake City, 1. Syracuse, N.Y.--Joe. Dejohn, 161, Syracuse, knocked out Reuben Jones, 169, Norfolk, Va., 2. . New York (Dexter Park)---Charlie Titone, 126, Brooklyn, outpointed Art Llanos, 121, Puerto Rico, 8. Philadelphia--Honeychile Johnson, 14715, Philadelphia, outpointed Joe Bonadtes, 155, Philadelphia, 8. . feated Woodview Par CRA. - SOFTBALL HARMAN PARK MIDGETS BOW TO SUNNYSIDE GIRLS In a Midget Girls' League game at Harman Park 'last' night, the home club wege defeated by Sun- nyside Park girls-7-5: x Sunnyside got a run in the first frame, when Walker opened with Sunnyside added Harman "Park | the third inning when they got a le of runs.on an error and some cl singles. In the 5th, they add- ed three more to make the total score 6-5 but, that was as close as they could get. . SUNNYSIDE. PARE -- Walker, c; Price, p; Spencer, 1b; Gamble, 2b; Black, 3b; Mason, ss; Beavis, 1; Poloz, ¢f; Johnson, rf; Cheet- ham, ef, HARMAN PARK -- Moore, 1b; French, c; Jones, cf; Howard, p; Marshall, 3b; Parsons, 2b; Chap- pell, ss; Hennings, rf; Anderson, RUNDLE PARK MIDGET GIRLS WIN OVER WOODVIEW PARKERS Rundle Park Midget Girls. won a handy 26-8 decision on _ their home diamond Jast night, when they tangled with the Woodview Park girls in a Neighbourhood As- sociation Midget Girls' League fix- ture. Woodview got.three runs to start off and added one in the second. another in the fourth, two in the sixth and one in the 7th. Rundle Park got a half-dozen runs in the opéning frame, added three in each of the next two frames and then broke out with a 10-run session in the fifth inning. Four more ing the 6th completed their total. Milosh, Godfrey, Ristich and Grant were all potent at the plate for the winners. WOODVIEW PARK Heatn, ss; Johnston, 1b; Elliott, 2b; Booth, cf, Rennie, 3b and p; Joyce, ¢; Cole If; Myers, p and 3b; Polos rf RUNDLE PARK -- Clark, cf; Milosh, c¢; Godfrey p and ss; Yons, 88 and p; Ristich, 2b; Bull, 1b; Grant, If; Cornish, rf; Terry, 3b, Umpires: P. Robinson and D. Linton. BATHE PARK BANTAM GIRLS TRIUMPH OVER N. OSHAWA Bathe Park Bantam girls won at home last" night over the visiting North Oshawa Bantams, 22-9. North Oshawa did fairly well al the start, with two runs in the first inning after two out and four in the second but after that they couldn't do much with Beevor's of- ferings and they didn't 'do anything until" the 5th, then- they got one run in each of the last three frames Bathe Park started off with three, added five in the third but broke the game up with a 7-run splurge in' the. fourth, ining. as Karpinski: got. into sezious trouble. Two in the fifth and a quintet of tallies in the sixth made. up the balance of Bathe Park's big total. Bottomléy, Rae, Shelenkoff, Bee- vor, Fair and Dart all hit well for the winners. , ' Ey , NORTH OSHAWA £ Hodgson, | 1b; Hendershot, 2b and c¢; Richards, If; Karpinski, p; McNally, Rorabeck, ¢ and 2b; Strutt, Reader, ss; Fice, cf. BATHE PARK -- Bottomley, If; Rae, 1b; Shelenkoff, 3b; Beevor, p; Taylor, rf; Fair, 2b; Dart, c; Frost ss; Price, cof; Bennet, cf; Leswick, cf. . Umpires: W. Rusnell and D. C. Olmstead. 4 SUNNYSIDE PARK BANTAMS TOO GOOD FOR WOODVIEW In a Bantam Girls' League game at Sunnyside Park last night, Sun- nyside Park Bantams whipped the Valleyview Spitfires 50-2. Ten runs in the first frame was bad enough, with Nosel hitting a homer but in the second stanza, the homesters staged a 25-rum rally and the game was as good as over right there. All of the winners hit well shared in the victory. Valleyview gals started and fin- ished well -- but the gap between 2b; rf; and was nt so good. They got one run | in the first inning by Cement and helped by' Peters and the other run came in the Tth when Anderson singled and scored on a hit oy Smith, VALLEYVIEW PARK -- Cle- ment, 3b; Mepstead, rf; Beaton, 2b; Petre, p; Norris, of; Clark, If; Anderson, ss; Brown, c; Smith, 1b. SUNNYSIDE PARK -- Follest, 2b; Ward, 3b; Peacock, 1b; Nosel, ss; Liscero, c¢; Legere, p; Parish, If; Zarowny, cf; Sabo, rf, : CONNAUGHT PARK BANTAMS EDGE WESTMOUNT FLYERS In the best Bantam Girls' League game of the night, Connaught Park nosed out Westmount Fily- ers 12-10 last evening at Radio Park. <Two rums in the first inning and four in the third when Cardinal Tripled and Powless hit a double, got 'Connaught Park out in front but they had to come from behind with four runs 'in the 5th, séoréd chiéfly on infield errors and thén in the 7th, they got two more runs on two bad outfield fumbles and an infield bobblé, to win the game. Westmount for two in thé second, added four in the" third "when Thomas tripled and Thompsol and Shéstowsky both oubled. Three runs scored in the 4th when Thomas hit a homer and it was Thomas who got Westmount's final run in the 6th inning, on an error and double by Cole. CONNAUGHT PARK -- Smith ss; Brain, 1b; Cardinal, 3b; Pow- less, p; O'Connor, ¢; Blake, 2b; McVeity, rf; Lyons, cf; Dionne, If; Sriudden, rf. - WESTMOUNT -- Hale, p; Cole, c; George, 1b; McMillan,.2b; Tho- mas, 3b; Thompson, 1f; Shestow- ski, cf; MclInroy, if; Peel, c¢. . HARMAN PARK BANTAMS WIN AT WOODVIEW PARK Harman Park Bantam de-. | da 115 ]| last night at the latter team's dia- mond. : A T-run rally in the first inning: as the Harman Park bats rattled off asuccession -of solid hits, 'won the game almost before it was started. Paced by Bilenduke, who got on base every time up, the winners went on to add two.in the 5th and singletons- in - the. last two :frames. Woodview staged one good rally, a 4-run effort in the fourth and then got one run 4n:the 7th, in their last-minute effort. \ "HARMAN PARK O'Reilly, Peters, Judges, Bilenduke, Jacula, Cunningham. i G. Valentine and J. SIMCOE ' HALLERS BLAST STORIE PK. Simcoe Hall Pee Wee boys' soft- ball squad handed out a rough 23-4 defeat to Storie Park at Storie Park last night. : \ Horton threw for the losers and he saw the Simcoe Hall club click for six rums in the first, five in the third, three in the fifth, four in the sixth and one in the seventh for the win, Kocoj, who threw for the sécond straight night for the winners and picked up another. win in the pro- cess, gave up two runs in the fourth, one in the fifth and one in the seventh for the loser's total. Tetlock led the Storie club at bat while Lyons and E. Kolodgie topped the Simcoe Hall squad. STORIE PARK--Adams, cf; Gar- row, 2b; Clark, If; Tetlock, 3b; R. Fry, 1b; A. Fry, ss; Barta, rf; Craggs, ¢; Horton, p; and C. Gar- row, rf in 4th. SIMCOE HALL--J. Kolodzie, 1b; Lyons, 2b; E. Kolodzie, c; Gorycki, 3b; Pidwerbeckie, lf; Lappa, cf; Kocoj, p; Hercia, ss; and Clarke, rf. CONNAUGHT PEE WEES DEFEAT VALLEYVIEW At Valleyview Park. last night, Connaught Pee Wees rapped out a 21-14 win over the home diamond crew. Brain pitched for the winners and faced Kellar on the mound for Valleyview. The winners forged from behind, scoring one run in the first, four in the second and three in the third. They added four more in the fourth, five in the fifth and four in the seventh. Valleyview counted two in the first, five in the second, three in the third, one in the fourth, and three in the sixth. CONNAUGHT -- Cole, c¢; Fisher, rf; Bentley, ss; Taylor, If; Mec- Clellan, cf; Brain, p; Westfall, 2b; Skea, 3b; G. Westfall, 1b; and Findlay, 3b in 4th. VALLEYVIEW--Urie, c; Kellar, Pp: Buckley, 1b; Rorabeck, 3b; Dun- can, ss; Mosier, cf; Love, rf; D. Mosier, If; Irwin, 2b; Frances, ss in 4th; Mountney, c¢f in 4th; and Arnold, 2b in 3rd. Al Menzies Leads Marines In Hit Race 3 3L 4 4 Ta Peterooro, July 7 -- Al Menzies, hustling catcher for the Petes in the Viaduct Major Baseball League, Is leading the local hitters by a hefty margin, batting a nifty 414 for the full 15'games the team has. played to date. In 58 plate, appear- ances he has belted out safeties two dozen times to compile that fine mark. The next closest is Howie Dalton -- former COBL batting champion -- who has hit .360 in a dozen games. 'Gunner Ed Whitehill has .333 in four games, and Mana- ger Ed Murphy a perfect mark with two hits in two official times at bat. Following are 'the team marks: Av, 414 360 333 .288 286 273 250 250 250 .188 .186 182 p 125 Buimigprunke i A11 (Ed rphy was in 3 games as a pinch-hitter and had 2 hits in 2 official times at bat for an average of 1.000.) Phils Attendance Shows Big Surge Philadelphia, July 7 -- (AP) -- National League cities note: here come the Phillies! Philadelphia Phillies embarked on an 18-day trip today, their sights set on first place. Right now they're in second, a game back of the pace- setting St. Louis Cardinals. The "Whiz Kids" piled up an en- viable record during the last home stay, winning seven and losing. two. A 10th, game, with Brooklyn, ended in a tie and must be replayed. The most heartening results of the current upsurge are: (1) Bril- lant pitching, especially by ace re- Hefer Casmir (Jim) Konstanty; (2) A huge increase in gate receipts and (3) Heavy hitting, - The attenadnce is surprising in this season of slumping box offices. The Phils' mi ent reported that 520,138 persons have witnessed the clubs' first 38 home games. Dur- ing the same stretch last year, the Phils drew only-384573. That's a 87-per-cent increase, ' cLBEESBaBETAY : ------ is Tiverton, Devori, England -- (CP) -- Mrs. Susan Gregory, 108, says that nowadays people rush around and worry too much to en- Joy long life, CKLB Wildcats Wrestle Win "From Whitby Oshawa's entry in the Lakeshore Ladies Softball loop came up with an 8-5 win over Whitby Cleaners last. night at Radio Park. Pitching for the OKLB Wildcats was Beamish and she showed but two bad innings on the book with a four run burst in the fourth and a two-run uprising in the fifth for all of the Whitby team's runs. : Moore threw for the County Town club and she allowed the Wildcats one run in the first, three in the second, one in the third, and three in the fifth. Hyrcarfuk's homer in the fifth wiht two mates aboard proved to be the winning blast for the Osha- wans, McRae and Moore got the only hits off Beamish. OKLB WILDCATS -- Peters, 3b; Attersley, c¢; Russell, rf; Beamish, p; Bourne, ss; Hyrcanuk, 1b; Kutasienski, 2b; Bilenduke, If; Cut- ler, cf; and Shackleton, cf in 4th. WHITBY ' -- Shiere, 3b; MoGuire, 2b; Bartell, ss; Moore, p; Adair, ef; Church, lf; McRae, c; Mayne, rf; Crozier, cf in 6th; and D. Moore, 3b in 4th. Harvard Eight In Semi-Final At Henley Royal | Henley, England, July 7--(Reu- | ters)--Harvard University Thursday nosed into the semi-finals of the Grand Challenge Cup, premier eights event of Henley Royal Regatta. Harvard's strong bid to recapture the Cup, which it won in 1914 and 1939, was a heartbreaker t6 the opposing crew, a strong entry from Lady Margaret's College, Cambridge, which has been a consistent winner in this year's English rowing. Dartmouth Rowing Club, only other United States crew in the Grand Challenge, was smartly dis- posed of by Leander, present holders. Oshawa City Ready, Waiting For Sat. Game Oshawa City Soccer Club had | their final work-out last night for | their coming Cup Tie with Carib- beans. The locals should give a very | good account of themselves if one can judge by their form at practice. The team which will represent | Oshawa this Saturday' afternoon will be picked from the following: Cluff, Sutherland, W. Nemis, R. Gow, C. Buett, Moneyman, Walters, J. Kelly, M. Nemis, T. Kelly, Har- rison, Vangus, McCantney, Tarlton and McRod. Frankie Filchock Seeks Re-Instatement National League Philadelphia, July 7 -- (AP) -- Frank Pilchock, who was indefinite- ly suspended from the National Football League in 1947 for failure to report a bribe offer, today ap- plied to NFL. Commissioner Bert Bell for reinstatement. Filchock, along with New York | Giant teammate Merle Hapes, was | suspended Bell for "actions! detrimental to the welfare of the | National Football League. and pro- fessional football" Neither of the | players accepted a bribe but were | punished by the League for not | reporting the offers. Alvin J. Paris, 28-year-old official in a novelty concern, was convicted and sentenced to jail for the un- successful attempt to bribe Filchock and Hapes to throw the 1946 N.F.L. playoff game between New York Giants and Chicago Bears. Filchock played in the game won by the Bears 24-14 at the Polo Grounds in New York. Filchock appeared before Bell today along with Leo Dandurand, President of Montreal Alouettes Football Club, with which -the former Giant star has been playing. Dandurand presented the Com- missioner with letters from prom- inent Canadian officials including a former Ambassador from the Dominion to the United States, a Director of a Canadian College, a Clergyman and other prominent citizens attesting to Filchock's standing in the community. Dan- durand said Filchock has been an outstanding player and leader of young men. Bell told Filchock and Dandurand he would render a decision within the next week or 10 days. London--(CP)--Author L. A. G. Strong has been elected president of the Dickens Fellowship. MINOR SOFTBALL Bantam & Midget FIREFIGHTERS DOWN COCA-COLAS 6-5 Firefighters of the Legion midget baseball loop, eked out-a 6-5 win over Cokes at Fernhill Park last night. Wallis was the winner for the Firemen and showed his form in the late innings when it counted. He gave up three runs in the first, and singles in the fifth and sixth. His mates meanwhile pounded out the winning rally, a' three-run job in the bottom of the seventh to send Lack, pitcher for the Cokes, back home with a loss. Lack had allowed the Firemen one run in the first and two in the second and until the last of the seventh seemed to have victory within his grasp. Bemis with a four-bagger was tops for the losers at the plate while Woodcock with a triple led the winning: batsmen. COKES--MCcHugh, rf; Pascoe, ss; Lack, p; Cole, 1b; Bemis, cf; Mar- shall, 2b; Barnes, 3b; Patterson, If; Comerford, c; Mallett, If in Tth. FIREFIGHTERS -- Walsh, rf; Polis, 3b; Parry, ss; Snow, 2b; Branch, 1b; Woodcock, ¢; Petroni- shon, cf; McTavish, If; Wallis, p; Yeo, 8s in 6th; McGregor; cf in 4th. Umpires--W. Harmer, plate and: R. Pleau, bases. REXALLS DEFEAT BEATON'S DAIRY Alexandra Park last night was the scene of an 8-4 win for Rexalls over Beaton's Dairy of the Legion midget baseball league. Brodie started for the losers, but tossed over the hurling chores to Oldfield in the fourth, when he allowed six runs, enough to give the winners the victory margin. alls and gave up but threé hits in registering the triumph. Beaton's took a 1-0 lead in the second when Haxton scored. Rexalls tied it and took the lead in the bottom of the third. Three walks Oliver was the chucker for Rex- and a single sent over two runs. Beaton's knotted the count at 2-2 in the first of \the fourth but saw all their hopes blasted when Rex- alls boomed out their six-run rally in the last of that inning. Arm- stead with a homer was the big hitter in the rally. Beaton's came back with a pair of runs in the fifth on more walks and one hit, but it wasn't enough and the game was called. BEATON'S DAIRY -- O'Connor, 3b; Richards, ¢; Burr, ss; Mec- Eachern, cf; Matthews, 1b; Haxton, 2b; Jack, rf; Gallas, If; Brodie, p; and Oldfield, p in 4th. » Ri L8--Brown, 2b; Hurst, ef; Kornie, c; Scero, 3b; Armstead, 1b; Wilson, If; O'Reilly, ss; Litch, rf; Oliver, p; and Shestowsky, c¢ in 5th. Umpires--R. Graham, plate and D. Mitchell, bases. Hamilton Tigers Whip Weston 21-10 Weston, Ont., July 7 (CP)--"Look out for Hamilton" -- that's the cry around the Ontario Senior Lacrosse circuit these days. The Tabbles, last year's champs, moved up into a third-place tie with St. Catharines Athletics and Peter- borough Petes last night when they scored a convincing 21-10 victery over Weston Lions, Old reliables Blain McDonald and Tommy Love again paced the Tigers' offensively by scoring five goals apiece. Jack Downey also sparkled and netted three goals for the night's work. 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