THE DAILY T IMES-GAZETTE TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1951 _-- l IE In case you're interested--Oshawa Merchants are playing Staffords @p at Millen Stadium this evening, in the second game of a Viaduct ' League doubleheader. Kingsway Lumber and Croftons will clash in the |i first game in Toronto tonight at 7:00 o'clock and then Staffords and Merchants will resume their feud. Tomorrow night, Merchants are to # play the Junior Transporters in an exhibition game at the Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium for the benefit of the Oshawa Legion Minor Baseball tion. Total proceeds of tomorrow night's game will go to the Legion Association which is working hard to promote baseball among the young {'boys of this city, Oshawa Victor's Juveniles this year finished in first place in the Lakeshore Juvenile League. Such players as Coggins, Stone, i Jeffs, H. Jozkoski and Mroczek are all playing with the Transporters now 3 all graduates of the Legion Minor Association. Juvenile stars a Bill Kellar and Hill have been up far brief stays with Juniors ood showings also. In the Bantam League, other Jue 4s stars asa Hage 3504 Palmer Knight threw a no-hitter and a one- _-hitter this season while Ron Norman and John Kemp are two more young pitehers in the Bantam ranks who should be heard from before long. The men who definitely deserve most of the credit in the Legion Minor ranks are the chaps who give up their time and spend three and four nights each week, acting as coaches and (4 Bantam, 4 Midget and 3 Juvenile) and the Oshawa sport fans owe it managers for the 10 minor teams to these men to turn out tomorrow night and give this benefit game at the Stadium: their support. + * Oshawa Merchants won their game over Toronto Staffords here . yesterday morning by the skin of their teeth. They were trailing 4-3 going into the sth and then Charlie Walsh walked. Four--in fact é--bunts in succession won the game for Oshawa. Jose Morales Io for a clean hit when he pushed the ball past pitcher Jimmie 'Barnes who was rushing in from the mound. Then Dick Berning spoiled his first two attempts by not staying right in the box and making sure he bunted fairly. He bunted foul twice because he was °' trying to get going towards lst bese at the same time. On the 3rd * strike--he had to make sure it was fair--and he did with a fine bunt. Staffords played the ball to 3rd and were too late so all hands were safe. Then Don Rope bunted for a squeeze play as Walsh tied the score. They were going to walk Sherry Rowland - intentionally so Morales stole home. Barnes (Jim) tried then to get his pitch in close for the catcher's benefit but Rowland protected Morales with a fine bunt and was safe himself when the play to the plate was much too late. Then Mike Mellis tried a bunt--the fifth-in-succession but he popped up foul and fortunately Berning got back to 3rd in time. Then ' Johnny Kitchen doubled and that clinched the d4-run rally to give Merchants their 7-4 victory. Prior to all this grandstand finish, Mike Mellis was hit solidly in the first four frames then pitched a 1-hitter for the last five innings. Oshawa had trouble with Jim Parnes and in addition Staffords made some sensational catches in #he outfield, Deans robbing Rogers in the 7th with two on and Windley making a brilliant going-away catch, 400 ft. from the plate in dead centre-field, on a mammoth clout by Sherry Rowland in the 4th. Dan Ralley's brilliant play at 3rd base was also outstanding for Staffords. A good crowd turned out:for the Civic Holiday morning game and saw a smart ball game, Flazed in 1 hr., 37 minutes, Ld * took in the Merchants-Kingsway game in Toronto last night and a disgusted! It ended 16-16 and Oshawa Merchants had little to be proud of in that fiasco. They had a 5-0 lead and then gave up six runs in the 3rd inning. Wayne Grandcolas walked four men that inning ang gave up three hits. Tony DeLaurentis came in with the bases loaded and-he gave up a hit. Then in the 4th Oshawa got three runs to lead 8-6 but Kingsway got 4 runs on as many hits off DeLaurentis in their half of the 4th, Tony pitched hitless ball for four innings and Merchants piled up runs steadily to come from behind again and were leading 16-0 going into the 9th. But getting back to the 1st of the 9th (and in the meantime Kingsway was using their 8rd pitcher by this time) Ted Barnes doubled and when Rog. Wood singled to score Barnes, apparently DeLaurentis had promised to stand on his head at 2nd base if Wood connected. Wood called for time and Delaurentis went out to 2nd. The umpires couldn't figure what was happening--until too late to stop it--but Tony stood on his hands alright . .. Poni 03 " he should have "stood" on the bench! * * By: in wis a Weird game from start to finish but that little bit of "sireus" topped it all. Kingsway fans--and many Oshawa rooters too *Anboit Ralf {he total attendance was from Oshawa) didn't approve of the clowning but it turried into bitter entertainment when Kingsway got to DeLaurentis in the 9th. The first batter was safe on Kitchen's Poot throw to 1st and then the parade started. Kelleher walked and 'Stewart 'grounded out then the "bench jockeys" on Kinksway bench ~ got Tony to listen and he balked. That did it! He came in to object to the verbal barrage of remarks he was getting--and when he went 'Baok to the mound, two doubles and two walks followed. Mellis went "out twice (the limit in any one inning) but couldn't stem the parade. DeLaurentis fanned Robertson but pinchhitter Tommy Melady, who started the inning, then came through with a single after McLelland 'had singled and Oshawa got the 3rd out with the winning run perched om 3rd base. The game was called then because it had taken about three hours and one-half and was now 11:45 p.m. Oshawa outhit 'Kingsway by a geod margin and had less errors--but they didn't pull "together as 4 team and they took things too easily in spots. Dick had a tremendous night at the plate. He drove in seyen runs with a perfect night, two home-runs, one out of the park, a double and two singles and a walk in six chances. Ted Barnes was next in line as the entire Oshawa feam boosted their batting averages. Ted had {wo doubles and a single and two walks in. his six trips (four official) to the plate while Wood, Rogers and Rowland each had two hits, None of the Lumbermen had more than two hits but those three big rallies, wo at a half-dozen runs each and the other for four, gave them a tie and a moral 'victory, Petes Increase. Their OLA Lead Peterboro Petes increased their lead to 12 points in the Ontario senior lacrosse league during the holiday weekend while Mimico taineers and St. Catharines cs each won one to stay tied Last night in Peterboro the Petes scored a 16-9 victory over the Ath- letics leaving the St. Catharines crew one game out of a three-way tie for second spot. Mimico Mounties downed Bramp- ton Excelsiors 16-6 Saturday night at Brampton . while Hamilton Tigers, playing at home, defeated St. Catharines 13-8, The Peterborough-St. Cathartes contest was marred by an injury to Whitey Frick, St. Catharines goaltender. He suffered a slight concussion when struck in the face with the ball during the last mi- nute of play, Curly Mason scored four goals for the Petes. Ham Nel- | 8toc son netted three for St. Catharines, with Max Wooley, Frank Bird, Hank Teather, B. Melville, Tony d'Amico and Doug Smith scoring the others. In their Saturday match St. Catharines bowed to a sparkling Hamilton team led by Jack Piett. Plett, sub-goalie for Dundas inter- mediates, replaced the Tigers re- gular goalie, Doug Favelle. Five Five Hamilton players scored two goals apiece -- Merv McKenzie, Barney Welch, Jack Dormey, Jack Gair and Tommy Glove. Singles went to Les Digby, Red. Howell and Al Doyle. Pat Smith scored twice for St. Catharines, while Tony d'Amico, Steve Oneschuk, Doug Smith, Max Wooley, Hank Teather and Don Finch each scored one. Mimico led Brampton from the start in their Saturday game. The quarter scored read: 3-2, 7-2 and 12-4. Scorers for Mimico were Don McPhail and Denny Peterson with three goals each, Al Chard, Archie and Ken Dixon with two apiece and Ben Pritchard, Ed San- ford, Vince Gilkinson and: Buddy ks with singles. EZZARD history! TUES. & - WED. JOE CHARLES ° WALCOTT FIGHT PICTURES See the most stunning up- set in heavyweight boxing nal investigators of baseball turned today (10 a.m. EDT) to sgmething of a mystery witness for ¢ in- formation about the game. Chairman Celler (Dem.N.Y.) of the House judiciary committee identified the scheduled witness only by his name -- Ross C. Horn- g. He declined to tell newsmen connection is or has been with or- ganized baseball. Neither would he indicate what tack his testimony might take. Veteran sports' writers on the scene were at a loss to place him. But the memory of yesterday's testimony by A. B. (Happy) Chand- ler, the recently unseated high commissioner, lingered on. Rep. Herlong (Dem .-Fla.), one of | the backers of legislation to exempt baseball from anti-trust laws, told a reporter he thought Chandler "made a pretty good witness for baseball." "I wish he had come out flat- footed on the need for legislation for the game," he said. "I know that he thinks it is necessary also." Herlong, former president of the 'HAPPY' CHANDLER TAKES A FEW 'POT SHOTS'--BUT REVEALS VERY LITTLE Washington (AP) -- Cougressio-| where Horning is from or what his | Florida State League, will' testify on Friday along with other spon- sors of similar bills. Chandler side - stepped endorsing any particular alteration: of the laws for baseball's benefit. But in a shouting-from-the- housetop manner, he said "the in- tegrity of baseball must be pre- served." He also took a few pot-shots at LEFT IT NEARLY TOO LATE... 'The bunt -- a. tricky bit of base- ball batting technique which can be very valuable when properly ap- plied, for the runners from 3rd base in what is commonly known as the "squeeze" play, was employed with brilliant effect by three successive batters as Oshawa Merchants staged a 4-run rally in the 8th inning here yester- day morning to defeat Toronto Staffords 7-4. Leaving it almost too late, the Merchants looked very mueh like a beaten team in the holiday morn- ing tilt as the visitors, with only nine players in uniform, played a sparkling brand of defensive ball behind Jim Barnes' steady pitch- ing, to keep the Oshawa hitting power in check right up until the last, of the 8th. BO TEAMS SCORE EARLY Staffords opened the scoring in the first frame when Bill Weir singled. He was forced out by Wally Bevington and then Don Ralley hit. a double down the left-field line which scored Bevington all the way from 1st base. Merchants came back with two runs in their half of the first in- ning only to have Staffords take the lead in the 3rd when they bunched three hits for a pair of runs. Pitcher Mike Mellis hit Frank Glazier with a pitcher ball to start off the 3rd and pitcher Jim Barnes then advanced Glazier with asacri- fice hunt, Weir went down on strikes but Bevington dropped one in front of Barnes for a single, Ralley poked one through shortstop and then Ralph Hosking dropped a two- bagger in short centre which Barnes failed to block completely as he tore in, in. adesperate try for the catch and failed. A walk to Don Windley with one out in the 4th gave Staffords their 4th run when Jimmie Barnes doubled down the right-field foul line to score Windley all the way. After that, Manager Mike Mellis pitche steady ball all the way, in fact he faced only 16 batters in the last five frames, Billy Hayes getting a single in the 9th for the only break in Mellis' ho-hit hurling during the last half. BARNES HOLDS MERCHANTS DOWN : A walk to Rog. Wood with one out in the firs inning was followed by a scratch hit by Jim Rogers. Charlie Walsh flied to deep centre and then Jose Morales rifled a single down the left-field line which scored Wood. Dick Berning was safe on an infield fumble by Hosking and that, enabled Rogérs to score, making it two runs for Oshawa in the 1st frame. They didn't score again the 5th when Mellis opened with a single. Johnny Kitchen laid down a nice sacrifice bunt to move Mellis to 2nd. With the 8rd baseman, Dan Ralley fielding the bunt, Mellis made a fine try to go right around to 3rd but Ralley was just as alert and got back in time to take the return * from 1st baseman Billy Weir, and tagged Mellis out as he slid for the bag. Rog. Wood then singled and scored from 1st when Jim Rogers doubled to left. This made the score 4-3 and it GET SET FOR HOCKEY The Maritime Major Hockey League, with five teams in compe- tition, will start the 1951-52 season at Sydney and Charlottetown, Oct- ober 15. The five clubs -- all of which have posted bonds of $1000 are Charlottetown, Sydney, Halifax, Moncton and Saint John. At the completion of league play- offs, the winning team will meet the Quebec League winner in a series for the Alexander trophy. of scoring | # JOSE MORALES (Three hits in morning game) stayed at that with Oshawa getting runners to 2nd and 3rd in the 7th hut failing to get the one more hit needed. BUNTING PAYS OFF . Charlie Walsh opened the 8th inn by drawing a walk, only the second free ticket issued by Barnes in the entire game. From that point on there were four succes- sive bunts and when those had all been made, Oshawa was leading, Morales bunted with a "pusher" that went past pitcher Barnes as he tore in , . . and all hands were safe, Dick Berning fouled his first Merchants Stage 4-Run Rally In 8th 'two attempts and then bunted fair- ly on the 3rd strike and all hands were safe again as the play was made to 8rd . . . but too late for the force-out. Don Rope then sacrificed on a squeeze play with the bases loaded as Walsh came across the plate te tie the score . . . with Rope being thrown out at 1st. Sherry Rowland was next up. Staffords were going the bases but when Morales came tearing home on a "steal", the pitcher threw in close to give the catcher a chance .'. . and Row- land promptly dropped down a nice bunt and was safe at 1st him- self . When the play to the plate was too late to get Morales. Mike Mellis tried the 5th suc- cessive bunt . . . but he popped up foul . . . fortunately far enough back that no double-play could be made and then Johnny Kitchen drove Berning and Rowland across the plate with a ringing double in- to right-field, to complete the game's scoring. HEADED THE HITTERS Morales with three hits in four trips, was the big hitter of the game with Kitchen, Rogers and Mellis each getting a pair for Osh- awa. Dan Ralley, besides turning in a brilliant game at 3rd base for Staffords, also paced his team at the plate with two-for-four includ- ing a double, Hosking and J. Barnes also hit two-baggers as did Kitchen and Rogers. The fielding in the game was brilliant in spots, with Ralley's fine stops at 3rd, a sparkling catch by Ralph Hoski and running outfield snags by Eddie Deans, Dan Windley and Rogers also to the fore. to walk him intentionally to fill |Dean to Win Bok SSore STAFFORDS ol O=uOoOoOoOoONS HOOOM Hmmm cccoowmonP Walsh, ¢ .. Morales, 2b Berning, rf . Barnes, of . Rowland, 1b Mellis, p .. (x) Rope, cf CN GOP Orman onINS » at EL EEE 3 -- ® --- OCNOoCOwWON Nm - 4 4 3 4 3 2 3 4 1 cwe Nf como L NO y -- = 32 2 (x) Batted for Barnes in 6th. RHE Errors: Hosking, Glazier; Runs batted in: Bevington, Ralley, Hosk- ing, Barnes; Kitchen (2), Rogers, --- - Morales, Earned Runs: Staffords, 4; | Oshawa Merchants, 6, Two-base hits: Ralley, Hosking, Barnes; Rogers. Stolen bases: Morales. Sa- crifices: Barnes; Kitchen, Berning, Rope, Rowland. Double plays: Ral- ley to Weir to Ralley (5th). Left on bases: Staffords, 4; Merchants, 7. Bases on balls: Off Barnes, 2; off! Mellis, 1. Strike-outs: by Barnes, 3; by Mellis, 9. Hit by pitcher, by: Mellis, (Glazier). Winning pitcher: Mellis, of Merchants; Losing pitcher: Barnes, of Staffords. Umpires: A. Barnes, plate and W. Harmer, bases both of Oshawa. Time:.1 hr. 37 mins. | Kitchen, | "some' major league club owners, saying the game would be better off if they got inte some other field. He didn't identify them. Chandler said he didn't want to pass on "the character' of some owners, intimating, however, that they are more interested in base- ball as a business than a sport. Aware that baseball's high mo- guls meet today to name his suc- cessor, he suggested they also make these changes in the rules: (1) Give sthe commissioner com- plete authority; (2) elect him on the basis of a simple majority vote instead of requiring 12 of the 16 votes; and (3) let the commission er have the right to fire the sec- retary - treasurer of baseball as well as hire him. Who Is Mr. "X"'? That's Big Question New York (AP) -- Who is the "Mr. X" the club owners refuse to identify as their dark horse can- didate for baseball commissioner? As the 16 big league executives convened today to elect or get a closer line on their next commis- sioner, "Mr. X" appeared to be the possible choice over the "big five" in the fore of the speculation. The five are Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthur, the tremendous national figure; James A. Farley, the busi- ness man; and George Trautman, Ford Frick and Warren Giles, the baseball men. Others on the slate containing some 30 to 35 names include Gov. Frank J. Lausche of Ohio, Sen. Edwin Johnson (D.) of Colorado, and chief justice of the Supreme Court Fred M. Vinson. But the identity of "Mr. X" re- mains a deep, dark secret. One owner, who didn't want his name mentioned, agreed the big five were out front. He added, | however: | 'But there is one other name so | highly placed that it would em-| barrass him if it were to be] known." BRAMPTON WINS JUVENILE CROWN Brampton--Practically the same | Brampton team that won last year's Ontario midget laurels, walk- | ed off with another trophy Satur. | day, trouncing Milton 12-3 in the | second game of a best-of-three fin- | al for the Halton County juvenile! { baseball crown. YOU HAD TO SEE Kingsway Lumbermen scored six TO BELIEVE... their wood to work for six tallies. Six Runs In 3th Give Kingsway 1 runs in the bottom of the ninth last night to tie Oshawa Merchants, 16-16, in one of the wildest scoring affairs ever played in the Viaduct Major loop at Millen Stadium, Dick Berning's perfect 5 for 5 at the plate, including two homers and DICK BERNING (Five hits, two home-runs) seven runs batted in, did not save the Merchants in the Millen scor- ing bee. Starting pitchers Wayne Grand- colas, Oshawa, and Bev Bourke, Kingsway, were not around at the end. The former was lifted in the third when the Lumbermien put [J Liftlock City ALF POPE WIELDS BIG BAT... Cricketers Spoil Local Home Stand A forceful 71 from the bat of Alf: Pope, former Derby County crick- eter, was the main factor in the first home defeat of the season for Oshawa Cricket Club at Lakeview Park on Saturday. Peterborough CC. administered the defeat to the tune of 126 for seven, to 65. Fielding 'a team weakened owing to several of its best players being away on vacation, Oshawa, fieldt ing first, took the first three wick- ets chaply., Pop and R. Rollwagen batting themselves in cautiously, tired the bowlers and started slam ming all round the wicket for a fourth wicket stand that put on nearly 100 runs. Oshawa's "tail," which started at about the fourth wicket, refused to wag and lanky Pope again shone for Peterborough as he took four wickets for 15 rums, Its first home defeat left Oshawa's league stand- ing at four games won and four lost. PETERBOROUGH C.C. . Roberts, b Hobbs .. Arklay, b Harris ...... . Booth, b Tunstall ..ecevee.. 3 Pope, Sr., b Tunstall .,....., T1 . Rollwagen, b Tunstall 23 Dibben, ¢ Tunstall, b Cluff... 9 Dyer, Not Out .... Dyer, b Tunstall . Fraser, Not out . Extr w HEHE net bat. OSHAWA BOWLING Tunstall four wickets for 29; Har- ris one wicket for 16; Hobbs one wicket for 20; Cluff one wicket for OSHAWA C.C. J. Cluff, ¢ & .b F. Dyer L. Harris, b' A. Pope E. Howard, b. F. Dyer . R. Brimmell, ¢ Booth, b PF. Dyer J. Huband, b A. Pope A. Hemingway, b F. Dyer ...,.. R. Tunstall, b A, Pope ......... J. Hobbs, Not Out ....eeiv00sss. N. Baker, b A. Pope ............ J. Tolly, b A. Pope .. 20 "seein cesestanns Rrcowowvowl PETERBOROUGH BOWLING A Pope, sr, four wickets for 15; F. Dyer four wickets for 11; A. Pope, Jun, two wickets for § | Tony Delaurantis took over, and after struggling through "the fourth, sailed along until the final frame when the lid fell on him, Stan Courtney came on for the locals and gave way to Bert Bell in the eighth. Tommy Melady, batting for Bell, started the ninth-inning fireworks, getting a life on an error. Al Kelleher walked, Doo- little and Wallace followed with doubles. Two more bases on balls and singles by steve McLelland and Tommy Melady evened the contest before the final out. Teddy Barnes chipped in with three safeties for the Merchants, Rog Wood, Jim Rogers and Sherry Rowland added two bingles. Craig Robertson saved the game fot Kingsway, robbing Jose Morales of a homer with a running catch in left field. Dick Berning's splendid showing was easily the bright spot of the game for Merchants. Ted Barnes had a pair of two-baggers and a single and two walks but Dick Rog. Wood Leads Viaduct League Batting Stakes Wood, Oshawa ..,.... Huntley, Petes. ...... Scott, Croftons Heyes, Staffords ..... McMurray, Kngs. ....1 Brabin, Petes. 2 Hosking, Staffords Cook, Oshawa ,.. Rowland, Oshawa Rogers, Oshawa .. Bourke, Kingsway Stewart, Petes. | Anderson, Croft. | Dadson, Petes | Morales, Oshawa Golden, Petes Ashbee, Croftons .... Garvey, Petes. ....,.. Wallace, Kingsway . Haddleton, Croftons .. Berning, Oshawa .... Barnes, Oshawa Kitchen, Oshawa { Milne, Petes. | McKillop Kingsway .. | Home runs--Wallace, Kingsway 6; Runs batted in--Wallace Kingsway, 33; Stolen bases--Lowery, Peterboro, 31;' Leading pitcher, Dadson, Peter- boro, 70. SR&@ RIRKSRSAIBBERNBYY EN 2RE* 3 5] SnElaksoRally gE3BEES - &@ - ~~ ~~ oo Bww ® 2 55588 ux BREE ERE NB BENE R ERE, HEL FIVE-RUN SPLURGE GIVES HOPE WIN Sharon -- A five-run unrising in the second earned Hope a 5-4 win over Zephyr here Saturday night in a Lake Simcoe Softball League game. The win moved Hope into a tie with Zephyr for fourth place in the league. WRESTLING! YUKON ERIC THE ZEBRA No Time Limit MASKED MARVEL ATKINS vs. FLANAGAN vs. MASKED MANAGER WAYNE GRANDCOLAS (Didn't have it last night) Berning drove in seven runs, with a pair of home-runs, one out-of-the- par and the other a long drive to deep centre, and in addition he hit two singles and a double and walked once. R. H. E. OSHAWA 032 302 231-16 17 3 KINGSWAY 006 400 006--16 13 6 Bowmanville In First-Place Tie, Win In Lindsay Lindsay Bowmanville Roses moved into a first-place tie with Lindsay Merchants by humiliating the locals, 11-4, in a Lakeshore Intermediate Baseball League game here Monday afternoon. The Roses picked on three Lind- say hurlers, Junior West, Doug Loucks and Bill Shill, banging out 13 hits for the decisive victory. Bob Williams smashed out three successive hits for the winners while Lindsay's Hank Debois hit three for four, and Dean Tompkins clouted a double and triple. Bowmanville 222 300 200--11 13 2 Lindsay .... 120 000 100--4 9 7 Furey and Brooks; West, Loucks, Shill and Widdis. 6-16 Tie MERCHANTS--Kitchen, 3b; Wood, | 2b; Rogers, 1f; Walsh, ¢; Berning, rf; Morales, ss; Rowland, 1b; Barnes cf; Grandcolas, p; De Laurentis, p | in 3rd. ! KINGSWAY LUMBER -- Kelleher, | 1b, Stewart, cf; Doolittle, rf; Wal- | lace, 2b; McKillip, ss; Hall, 3b; Rob- ertson, 1f; McLelland, c¢; Burke, p; | Courtney, p in 6th; Bell, p in 8th; | Melady, batter in 9th. | Umpires--Carm. Bush, plate and | Ed. Schreider, bases, both of To- ronto. {11 { 12: SPORTS CALENDAR Today EX. MEN'S SOFTBALL NHL All-Stars vs. Whitby Stokers at Whitby Town Park, 8:00 p.m. VIADUCT SENIOR BASE L Oshawa Merchants vs, Toronto Staffords, at Millen Memorial Sta- dium, 8:15 p.m. . WRESTLING Professional wrestling exhibition, 8 bouts, at Oshawa Arena, 8:45 p.m. Wednesday EX. SENIOR BASEBALL Oshawa Jr. Transporters vs. Osh- awa Sr. Merchants, at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium, 8.00 p.m. (Exhibition Benefit Game, proceeds to Oshawa Levon Minor Baseball Association fund). Expect Mob Scene In Hambletonian Pitching: Tom Morgan, Yankees scene which is expected to be the 1951 edition of the Hambletonian classic will be clarified today for the owners of the country's top three -year -ald trotters post their $500 starting fee. A field of 23 horses, largest in the history of trotting's Kentucky Derby, is expected for one of the most wide-open Hambletonians of them all. The 26th Hambletonian algeady is assured the richest, sinc the gross value will top $90,000 if only 15 face the starter for the first heat tomorrow (3 p.m. EDT.) Oshawa Pigeon Club Holds First Race for Their "Young Birds" The Qshawa Racing Pigeon Club held its first young bird race on Saturday, Aug, . 4, 19851, Streetsville, Ont. This is an airline distance of 49 miles to Oshawa. There were 201 birds from 10 lofts competing. The following is the results in yards per minute. 1. Manila & Mandziuk ... 1272.02 2. Manila & Manila & Mandziuk . Manila & Mandziuk .... 1269.79 . Shewchuk Bros. ........ 1263.68 . L. Richards 1256.79 . Shewchuk Bros. . . 1250.46 . R. Woolacott 1245.49 . FP. Cowle .. . 1244.28 . R. Woolacott cv 1242.43 . Wm. Cowle . 1242.33 10. F. Cowle .....ce0ne . 124183 Wm. Cowle .. 1238.41 1234.67 1227.16 1226.63 1222.67 «os 122138 weees 1210.13 13. 14, 15. 16. 18. J. N J. E. E G 19. G | Thirst knows no season DRINK For maximum tire performance and sati DUNLOP TIRES" "Dunlop Tires have been magnifies cent." That was the further state. ment of Alan Hess, Austin of England, while in Toronto on his record globe-encircling trip. Mn Hess and his team drove an Austin Stock Model Car Hot desert sands : ; : gruelling mountain roads... tough jungle paths . . . Dunlop Tires took them all in their stride. sfaction, always buy DUNLOP Tires and Tubes 1951 FORD TUDOR a new S An exceptionally fine car. This car was traded in on ISSON'S GARAGE 1948 CHEVROLET OLDSMOBI SEDAN SEDAN Cadillac, ! Fully equipped $795 1940 FORD 1-TON PANEL Excellent motor and tires. 4 speed transmission, $493 MILE SOUTH OF ORONO HIGHWAY 35 LE i from ° § i J