'THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE MONDAY, JULY 30, 1951 ss PORT SNAPSHOTS €3)= By Gro. H. Campers was quite a successful week-end the Oshawa Merchants just They won twg Viaduct Major League games and meved up e game of catching the Peterborough Marines, who have held t place in the Viaduct League ra'/e ever since "opening day. Mike Mellis went to the mound here Saturday night and turned a masterful chore--after he got past that shaky second stanza, in which he yielded four solid hits--but kept the Marines to only two runs. Peterborough had runners on 2nd and 3rd and only one out but Mellis got out of that big hole then gave up only one hit for the rest of the distance and one walk anc pitched to only 22 batters in the last seven frames. His mates played errorless ball behind him wnd the team looked very powerful in walloping Marines 7-2. Bill Edger was hit solidly in the early stages and again in the middle of the game. Osh- awa got a run in the first frome when Charlie Walsh clicked with Rog. Wood in scoring position. Then Ted Barnes took over. He homered out of the park in the 2nd to tie the score, singled in the 4th and put an- other out of the park in the 6th. He received a tremendous ovatirn from the crowd of about 1800 fans who realized that the tow-topped hime- brew was celebrating his new status as a proud father. Ted was hand- ing out the cigars on Saturday--it's a girl--and he certainly celebrated in approved fashion. That "baby bonus" busines of home-runs looks like & good idea--maybe some more of our married Merchauts can stage a celébration in time for the playoffs, ih + + Oshawa Transporters came up with a fine win yeserday afternoon in Toronto. It was their 20th victory in the tough North Toronto League schedule this summer and was just as "sweel" as a playoff victory, with their old rivals, the Peter Pans a the victim. Young Ted Stone pitched a no-hitter for five frame and gave up only two hits all told. At that, a run scored via a couple of walks, infield out and "steal home" had Peter Pans leading 1-0 going into the last inning, Then Transvorters blasted loose with a 5-run rally-- after there were two out, with Sonny Hooper's tripple being the big blow. Pans came back with two runs in their half of the 7th and had the tying runs on 2nd and 3rd--whereupon young Stone pro- ceeded to strike out the next three batters in succession--one of them a pinch-hitter, to nd th gam at 5-3. New Toronto Silverts, who won over the Bruins yesterday when 17-year-old Cabot pitched a 3-hitter, will play here in Oshawa on Wednesday night. This is the last home game for the Transporters in league competition. They expect to open their playoffs here in Oshawa on Friday night, "August 10, * 8 Kingsway Lumber visi* the Oshawa Merchants tonight. We noticed this morning that while the streets appear somewhat deserted, there are still citizens who haven't left on holidays and no doubt the cool of the evening will bring out a fair-sized turnout to the Kinsmer Civic Mem- orial Stadium fer the game tonight. Kingsway Lumber has been playing a sparkling brand of ball this last couple of weeks. For instance, they are now in the Toronto zone Baseball Congress championship finals, against Mahers and having been knocking over all opposition en ioute to the final berth. At the same time, they've been handing Croftons and Staffords lickings in Viaduct League tilts. They'll be coming to Oshawa tonight determined to knock off the Merchants if possible--but they'll find that tough to do. + 4 * Merchants went up to Toronto yesterday anc whipped Staffords 20-5. Wally Bevington, Staffords' catcher, was hurt in the first inning, trying to tag out Rog. Wood at the plate. Bevington had to leave the game and the Staffords line-up had to be juggled. The result was that their defensive play suffered. On top of that, their pitching wasn't good enough to stop the Merchants. Napolitano and Rowland each had three hits, Bill Cook had two doubles in three trips and Oshawa simply piled up runs by making full use of walks ana errors. The win moved Oshawa that much closer to the Liftlock City Marines and the wins on Saturday over Peterborough here and yesterday in Toronto put Oshawa only one full game behind the Marines, who still have to play a couple of games here in Oshawa. That exhibi- tion game here on Saturday afternoon was a pleasant surprise too. They played it in one hour and 22 minutes--something of a record for a baseball game around theee parts--and the surprise was that the players showed so much hustle in the terrific heat. Bill Harper pitched a 1-hitter up until the 9th without allowing a run. He weak- ened in the 9th and a parkling play by Jose idorales, or the first batter, was the big factor in enabling Oshawa to get three men out before Oakville tied the score. Merchants only got two runs off Mark Pollock and certainly didn't impress at the plate against the strong Intermediate "Oaks." * + * BRIGHT BITS -- Oshawa City lost a 1-0 decision to the Macedonians in a T. & D. Major League soccer game at Greenwood Park yesterday afternoon and the win put the Macedonians in top spot in this league race. Oshawa had a goal scored but cahed back and appare=tly deserved a better fate than thé one-goal defeat . ., . Geny Kesselring won the Ontario amateur golf crown on Saturday over Nick Weslock, former title-holder. While this was going on, Lloyd Mangrum won his tourna- ment down in the States--with an armed body guard (police) in the gallery--because Mangrum had received a threat to his life, if he won the match , . , Charlie Gehringer, one of the greatest 2nd basemen of all time, will succeed Billy Evans as vice-president and general manager of the Detroit Tigers . . . Leafs lost a 15-inning duel 4-3 but came back to win the nightcap in Springfield yesterday . , . Jack Guest Jr. is Canada's new sculling champion, he beat Bob Williams in the final at the Cana- dian Henley at Saturday . . . The US. Hockey League may fold up®this coming winter, for at least one season , . . Joe DiMaggio hit a couple of homers, drove in five runs, as Yankees downed White Sox twice and that puts New York well in front again but Indians nipped the Red Sox and so these two hot clubs are tied for second andonly a couple of jumps behind the Yankees . . . Brooklyn Dodgers won their 9th straight yester- day and that wipes out the importance of Sal Maglie getting his 15th win for the Giants . . . And getting back to more monetary topics--*the lady in black" who has really been plunging at the Fort Erie, won about $11,000 in the past week. Now that's what we call nice work--if you can That get the winners! . Mgr. Al. Lopez Views Future In Confidence Boston (AP) -- Affable Al Lo- pez, Cleveland's freshman mana- ger, was as thrilled as a major battle - winning géneral today as he led his sturdy Indians into Washington. There, he hopes, they will begin a general massacre of the American League's second -di- vision clubs. "Our plans worked very well here," Al conceded. "We wanted to get two out of three from the Red Sox and we did. Now I don't feel 80 bad about Saturday's 16 -inning game that Clyde Vollmer stole from us with his grand -slam homer." But as far as Lopez is concerned, the pennant race is a wide open affair. . "I won't put my neck out by predicting the pennant winner," Al said. "The top three clubs, the Yanks, Red Sox and my own In- dians will be battling until the last week. The White Sox don't fi- gure to win, but they'll be trouble- some all the way." Much of the Lopez confidence stems from the fact his Indians have only five mere games to play with the Yankees and four with the Red Sox. They de have 12 more with the White Sox but their other 38 are with the sécond division clubs. "We've only beaten the White Sox three times in 10 starts to date," Lopez explained. "But we're bound to do much better than that against them." SENIOR TONIGHT - VIADUCT ADULTS 60c 8 P.M. KINGSWAY LUMBER vs. OSHAWA MERCHANTS CHILDREN 25¢ Port Dalhousie, Ont. (CP) -- A United States rowing club garnered two of the four-star events at the 1951 Royal Canadian Henley re- gatta which ended Saturday on the old Welland canal. Buffalo West Sides captured the team championship in the four-day meet to win the Maple Leaf trophy, and retained their supremacy in the Henley senior eights for the fifth consecutive year to retain the Ned Hanlan memorial trophy. But some of their success was shared by a couple of Canadian clubs Toronto Dons and St. Catha- rines Collegiate Institute. Jack Guest, Jr., of the Dons, stroked his slim shell across the finish line first in the champion- ship singles over the Henley dis- tance, one mile, 550 yards. His time was 8:18.4. Guest finished six open lengths of water ahead of his only rival, Bobby Williams, 20-year-old Hamil- ton Leander sculling star who won the United States national singles championship this year. Guest was beaten out in the first round of the singles at Henley, England, this year but he made no mistake Saturday as he took the lead and never ran into trouble. St. Catharines Collegiate Insti- tute's crew of eight retained pos- session of the Calder Cleland me- morial trophy for the .third suc- cessive year when their third school eights came nome ahead of two U.S. crews, De La Salle High School, Detroit, and Canisius High School, Buffalo, who finished in that order. The $5000 Calder Cleland memo- rial trophy, put up for competi- tion in 1945 by the late W. B. Cle- land in memory of his son who was killed in the Second World War, is the richest amateur rowing prize. In winning the team title. West Sides racked up a total of 328 points, 171% more than their closest rivals, Toronto Dons, sec- ond with 156% points. Detroit Boat Club placed third MGR. MIKE BEATS ,Oshawa Merchants moved one step closer to overhauling the league- leading Peterborough Marines in the Viaduct Major Baseball League race, when they defeated the lift- lock City club 7-2 here on Saturday night before nearly two thousand customers in one of the best league games of the season. The game was a well-played af- fair with tight defensive play feat- uring the fast action throughout as Bill Edger of Bowmanville took the mound for the Marines against Manager Mike Mellis of the Merch- ants, making his first start of the Sonton against the Liftlock City ub. Only one error--and that an error of omission rather than commission, was chalked up in the game that was run off in exactly two hours as each hurler issued only one walk. Strikeouts were scarce, Mellis having only a half-dozen and Edger half of that total. Manager Mellis weathered the only serious Peterborough uprising in the first frame when George Bra- bin, Oshawa homebrew, opened the inning with a clean single . Joe Stewart fanned but Joe Lowery poled a double to centre and Al Menzies and Andy Milne each singled in succession, into left,. Those four solid clouts gave the Marines a pair of runs and had runners on 2nd and 3rd with only one out but Bill Edger went out Tommy Melady Leads Kingsway To Beat Croftons Toronto--Tommy Melady came up with a four-hit effort as Kings- way Lumber edged Croftons, 3-2, Saturday night. Sunday afternoons, Oshawa Merchants crept within one game of the league-leading Pe- terborough Petes with a 20-5 trouncing they handed Staffords at Millen Stadium. Both were Viaduct baseballl loop fixtures. Lonnie Doolittle and Don Hat featured the Lumbermen's attack with two hits. Tommy Huntley was tagged with Croftons' loss. Safeties by Doolittle, Rusty Wallace and Buzzer Malloy coupled with an in- field misplay led to the Lumber- men's three runs in the fifth frame. Huntley's single and successive doubles by Art Boynton and Jim Scott gave Croftons a 2-0 lead in the fourth, Saturday afternoon in the first of an Oldtimers' series in Toronto, London upset the locals, 13-7, in a game that was close for five in- nings. Kingsway Lumber 000 030 0--3 91 Crofton y 002 000 0--2 4 2 Melady and 'McLellan; Huntley and Gleed, MARINES . .. i TED BARNES on a short fly into left, which per- mitted no advance and Bill Hunt- ley grounded out to the shortstop to end the rally. A brilliant double- play when Fred Garvey hit a screaming liner at Rog Wood after = oe a PETERBOROUGH Huntley, rf Garvey, 2b Golden, ss ... Brabin, If ... Stewart, 1b Lowrey, cf Menzies, ¢ .... Milne, 3b Edger, p Totals MERCHANTS Napolitano, ss Wood, 3b Rogers, If Walsh, ¢ .... Berning, rf .. Morales, 2b .. Rowland, 1b Barnes, cf Mellis, p Totals aonvoommno~Tvoooromooo® Ranmcomnhoots ENconuraanuiNoossoronscd Hhowormvvurn Avorn nonoool 020 000 000--2 5 OSHAWA .. .. .. 112 001 20x--7 14 Errors: Stewart; Runs tted in: Lowery, Millne; Walsh (2); Berning. Morales (2) and Barnes (2). Earned runs: Peterborough, 2; Oshawa 7. Two-base hits: Lowery; Walsh, Berning. Home runs: Barnes (2). Stolen bases: Napolitano, Barnes. Sacrifices: Rogers. Double plays: Wood-to-Rowland (Oshawa, Left on bases: Peterborough, 3; Oshawa, 6. Bases on balls: Off Mellis, 1; off Edger, 1. Strike-outs: by Mellis 6; by Edger, 3. Hit by pitcher, by Edger (Morales). Winning pitcher: Mellis of Oshawa. Losing pitcher, Edger of Peterborough. Umpires: W. Borland, MARINES .. .. orEgcconcoonw PO uHMccONN HHP Peterborough and J. Hobbs, Oshawa. Time 2 hours. Ted Barnes' "Bahy Bonus Homers" Pace Attack Bill Edger had walked to open the 8th gave Mellis the fine record of pitching to only 22 batters in the last seven frames. George Brabin's second hit, a single in the 6th after two out, proved the only other hit given up by Mellis after he got past the 2nd inning rally. Vie Napolitano opened with a single for Oshawa in the 1st inning and Rog. Wood drew a walk. Jim Rogers sacrificed nicely and Char- lie Walsh's single scored Napolitano t Dick Berning grounded to the Xx and Jose Morales fanned. Ted Barnes, who prior to the game was busy handing out cigars to mark the blessed event in his family (it's a girl) carried on with the celebration by banging one out of the park in the 2nd for a homer. That was only the start of home- brew Barnes' big night at the plate. he didn't get a catch in the out- field all night but he hit a solid single and another out-of-the-park homer, before the night was over, for a fine three-for-four record, two of them homers. Barnes' one - man - show was | enough in itself to give Oshawa the win after his homer tied the score in the 2nd but four more solid hits, by Wood, Rogers, Berning and Morales, gave Oshawa two runs in the third inning. They got at least ong hit in each of the next. three frames, Barnes' hitting his second circuit clout in the 6th and then in the 7th Merchants bunched four more hits for another pair of runs. Napolitano, and Rogers each singled while Walsh and Berning hit suc- cessive doubles to complete the rally. THREE FOR ROGERS Jim Rogers, with three singles and a sacrifice, had a perfect night at the plate, Barne's three-for- four was next best while Vic Nap- olitano, Charlie Walsh and Dick Berning each had a pair of safeties, as did Georgie Brabin of the Marines. Defensively, Jose Morales was the star of the game with brilliant fielding plays to rob both Al Men- zies and Edger on hard-hit ground- ers, handling a half-dozen tough chances, ANOTHER WIN FOR MILLER... Merchants Thump Staffords Oshawa Merchants continued their climb towards first place in the Viaduct Major League baseball scramble when they whipped To- ronto Staffords 20-5 on Sunday afternoon at Millen Stadium. Lanky Stan Miller went to the mound for the Merchants and the speedy righthander came up with another victory as he kept Staf- fords' hits well-scattered except for the second inning. Walks to Vic Napolitano and Rog. Wood to open the inning, followed by Rogers' sacrifice, a walk to Berning with two out and then a bad infield error, gave Oshawa two runs in the first frame. Don Rope walked to open the second, Napolitano singled, Wood walked and Rogers was hit by a itched ball. P Wally Bevington, Staffords' catcher, was injured in the first in- ning trying to tag Rog. Wood on a play at the plate and he had to leave the game. This meant a shake-up in the Staffords line-up and it didn't help their cause a bit. Three more walks and another hit-by-pitcher (Jim Rogers again) plus hits by Morales and Rowland, gave Oshawa five runs in the fourth inning and sent starting pitcher Heyes to the showers. Don Couch took over as pitcher but he couldn't stop the merchants either and was hit very hard in the 7th and 8th frames. In the 9th, he gave way to Dan Windley, who retired Osh- awa without a hit in the last frame. Merchants got two more runs ae SHERRY ROWLAND in. the 5th and in the 7th. four hits netted Oshawa five runs (aided by two walks and an error plus Walsh being hit by a pitched ball. Bill cook, who went to left in place of Rogers in the 6th, click- ed for a double in the 7th and again in the 8th he hit another. Three hits gave Oshawa four runs in this frame with pitcher Stan Miller opening the 8th with a homer. Cook's pair of doubles drove in four runs and Walah had three RBIs. Four hits °f Miller gave Staf- fords three runs In the second in- In one of the best exhibition games ever played here and the fastest game played this season, Oshawg Merchants nosed out Oak- ville Oaks 2-1 here on Saturday afternoon -- before a handful of fans. There werent many customers on hand but those who did brave the heat were rewarded with a brilliant piece of baseball entertainment. Bill "Lefty" Harper went to the mound for Oshawa and up until the 9th inning had pitched to only 25 bat- ters and had allowed only one hit. A brilliant double-play, Napoli- tano-to-Morales-to-Rowland cut off Denny Camm, who singled to open the 3rd inning for Oakville and two . others that got on base, one via an error and the other on a walk, were nipped trying to steal 2nd base when Jim Rogers made perfect throws to the bag to make the tagout a simple matter. POLLOCK IN FORM TOO Merchants didn't,do too much at the plate either. They got a run in the initial frame when Johnny Kitchen opened with a single. He was forced by Rog, Wood, who in turned stole 2nd and moved to 3rd when Jim Rogers grounded out and scored on a single into left b; Charlie Walsh, : ONE HOUR AND 22 MINS Oshawa Nips Oakville 2-1 Mark Pollock, on the mound for Oakville, yielded a double to Don in the second and a single to Wood in the 3rd and then in the 4th inning, Jose Morales doubled with one out, advanced to 3rd when Sherry Rowlana flied to deep left and scored when Don Rope singled through 2nd. That proved to be Oshawa's sec- ond and last run of the game and a screaming single to open the 5th inning by Bill Harper was the only other hit Merchants collected off Pollock for the rest of the dis- tance. OAKVILLE'S GREAT BID The Oaks made a great bid for victory in the 9th inning. A pinch- hitterr, Wilson, was the victim of a sensational fielding play by Jose Morales to open the inning, when he went far to his right, behind 2nd base and fielded a back-hand pick-up and threw to 1st in a whirling motion to get the runner by a half-step. That play probably saved Harper's game. As it turned out, pinch-hitter Charlie May fol- lowed with a single and after Paul Gillam had popped out, for the second out, Harper gave up his sec- ond walk of the game to Ken Pol- lock and Eric Toletzka followed with a single to left that scored ning, Heyes, Deans, Couch and Weir getting the blows. Windley singled to open the 6th and scored on ,a double by Spragge for Stafford's 4th run. Vic Napolitano changed places with Miller in the 9th. Shortstop Napolitano walked one batter and was nicked for three singles, all of which gave Staffords their 5th and final tally. Vic Napolitano with three hits, Bill Cook with two doubles, and Sherry Rowland with three hits, were e best for Oshawa--not for- getting Miller who had a homer and a single and two walks in five chances. Al Prentice and Dan Windley each had two hits for Staffords. R HE Merchants 220 520 540--20 12 3 Staffords 031.001 001-- 5 11 7 OSHAWA--Napolitano, ss; and p; Wood, 3b; Rogers, If; Walsh, c; Berning, rf; Morales, 2b; Rowland, 1b; Rope, cf; Miller, p: Kitchen, 3b in 5th; Cook, If in 6th. STAFFORDS--Weir, 1b; Beving- ton, c; Prentice, 2b; Wilson, rf; i . | Heyes, p; Windley, ss and p; Deans, 3 anv TE AR ES aw, 2b; If; Spragge, 3b and c¢; Couch, cf luk, If; Carter, 1b; Rutledge, 3b; [4nd P: Ralley, 3b in Ist; Glazer, Camm, rf; Kirkwood, ¢; M. Pollock, | © in Fast Ex. May and Pollock went to 3rd on a wild pitch. With the count 3-and-2, Alex Kereluk was called out on a 3rd strike--to end the game--and the call was criticized severely by the visiting players, especially by Kereluk. Don Rope with a double and a single in three trips was the only player to get more than one safe hit in the speedy game that was played in one hour and 22 minutes. Morales, Kitchen and Rogers were standouts along with Harper in Oshawa's defensive play while right-fielder Denny Camm and Ken Pollock, shortstop (who is headed for pro ranks next year) were the standouts for Oakville, who played errorless ball as a team. 'R. H. E. OAKVILLE: 000 000 001--1 3 0 OSHAWA: ....100 100 00x--2 7 3 JACK GUEST JR. WINS CANADIAN SINGLES TITLE OVER BOBBY WILLIAMS with 113, one more than St. Catha- rines, fourth with 1:2. Toronto Ar- gonauts were fifth with 109 points. Buffalo had the team title clinched before Saturday's card was completed when their senior eights finished two open lengths ahead of Detroit Boat Club, who placed second in front of Lincoln Park, Chicago. Besides their championship in the senior eights, West Sides had two other firsts in the final day's card, in the senior 155-pound eights and in the senior 145-pound fours. Fort William was disqualified from the latter event although they came home only feet behind West Sides. No reason was given for the disqualification and St. Catha- rines, finishing a poor third, were conceded second place. St. Catharines, Undines Rowing Club of Philadelphia, and Dons each won two of Saturday's finals, while Seattle and De La Salle each garnered one. Closing out the point standing were Hamilton with 44; Seattle 29%; Fort William 25; Philadel- phia Undines 25; Wyandotte, Mich. 20%; Chicago Lincoln Park 20; Ecorse, Mich., 14%; Philadelphia Vespers 12; Minneapolis 11%; De- troit Rowing Club 11; Brockville, Ont., 9%; Winnipeg 5; Philadel- phia Fairmounts 5; Philadelphia Bachelors' Barge 4; and New York Athletic Club 3. Gerry Kesselring Is Ontarios' New Golfing Champion London, Ont. (CP) Gerry Kesselring, golfing pride of Kit- chener who at 22 plays with the poise of a seasoned veteran, won his second Ontario amateur golf championship Saturday. Kesselring, who plays out of Kitchener Westmount course, came from behind in both morning and afternoon rounds to defeat Nick Weslock, veteran from Windsor Essex, one up in 36 holes. Weslock, the defending cham- pion, started out as if he were going to make a runaway of the final. He was three under par and leading by four holes at the end of the 10th hole in the morning round. But Kesselring, playing with a slick putter and cool determina- tion, rallied to pull even at the end of the first 18. He dropped one down on the first hole of the after- noon round, tied it up on the 27th, went one up on the 29th and held on that way to the finish. Kesselring wound up with a 72 for the par -70 course at the Lon- don Hunt Club. Both he and Wes- lock had sub -par 68s for the morn- ing 18. Putting was Weslock's chief diffi- culty after the promising start. Kesselring, down four holes, ram- med in a 20 foot putt to take a birdie three on the 11th. Then he swept the 12th, 13th and 14th to tie it up. They battled on even terms for the rest of the round. Weslock took the lead again on the 19th when Kesselring's putt apparently hit a bump and curled away for a one -over -par four. On the 27th, Weslock's second shot looped around a trap to the left of the green. He missed an easy chip, leaving himself a 25- foot putt for par. It missed and Gerry drew even, taking two putts for par after getting on in two. On the 29th, Weslock missed a four -footer to score one over par and give Kesselring the lead for the first time. From there on, Weslock's putter acted badly and he failed on the 30th, 31st, and 32nd with short ones that could have given him birdies. 2 Today VIADUCT SENIOR BASEBALL Kingsway Lumber vs. Oshawa Merchants, at Kinsmen Memorial Stadium, 8.00 p.m. CRA MINOR LACROSSE North Area vs. West Area, Con- naught Park; South Area vs. East Area, Bathe Park, 7.00 pm. Tuesday WRESTLING Professional wrestling exhibition (three bouts) at Oshawa Arena, 8.45 p.m. MINOR BASEBALL MIDGET--Coca Colas vs. Rexalls, at Harman Park; St. John's Ambule ance vs. Beaton's Dairy, at Alexane dra Park, both games at 6.30 p.m, Suspend 6 Ball Clubs Claim Red Workers Montreal (CP) -- City and police officials said Sunday that six base- x ¥ 'ball teams allegedly affiliated with Communist organizations have been suspended and, if proof is found, others may be suspended from playing in Montreal's parks and playgrounds. This action followed complaints that members of the teams were openly distributing Communist pro- paganda at Jeanne Mance park. These teams were affiliated with the Fur and Leather Workers Union. The Association of United Ukrainian Canadians, the Slovak Sporting Club, the United Jewish Peoples Order and the United | Electrical Workers Union. Scores Ace Saturday Does It Again Sunday Baltimore (AP) -- Frank Goss- man, who hadn't shot a hole-in-one in his six years of gold, sank two of them on successive days. What's more, he potted them from the same tee, on the 125-yard sixth hole at Mount Pleasant course here. Gossman made his first ace Saturday, then followed up with an- other yesterday. Irvin Schloss, pro at the club, said chances of shooting twe straight holes-in-one on the same green are about a million to one, maybe more. BACK TO EDMONTON Tucson, Ariz.--(AP)--Steve Pape roski, a 240-pound lineman from Edmonton who played freshman football at the University: of Arizona last year, is returning to Canada. Paproski was a member of Edmonton Eskimos in the Weste ern Canada Football League in 1949. gli uy Roller Skating ® TONIGHT ® WED. NIGHT WRESTLING TUES. NIGHT ALcun OSHAWA Cr 8.45 MAIN WAT Tommy Sonny WRESTLING! JULY 31st -- OSHAWA ARENA ""WHIPPER" --y, -- he LEBRA|# Semi-Final \ Chief Suni i Preliminary 1 Gi Scott oorge . co | P.M. SO BOUT | War Cloud S O'Toole L 1] Kurgis p; May, batted in 9th; Wilson, bat- ted in 9th. OSHAWA MERCHANTS: Kit- chen, 3b; Wood, ss; Rogers, c; Walsh, rf; Berning, If; Morales, 2b; Rowland, 1b; Rope, cf; Harper, p. Umpires. Ray Pleau, plate; and Jack Hobbs, bases, both of Oshawa. 1941 BUICK CONVERTIBLE Small Series New Tires end Top. Low Mileage. Fully equipped. 1946 DODGE Redio and Heater immaculate Interior. Re- conditioned. 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