*gcored six ANYTHING HAPPENS THERE Brave Milwaukee Braves Move Into Ebbets' Field By BEN PHLEGAR ted Press Sport Writer It takes a brave team to invade Ebbets Field these days so Mil- waukee opens a four-game series in the home of Brooklyn Dodgers tonight This is another of those 'do or die" clashes that keep popping up all season. Dodgers feel they've got the Braves on the ropes by now with a 5%-game lead and the season moving rapidly toward the two-thirds mark A four-game Brooklyn sweep would write an unhappy ending to the first iin of Charlie Grimm's Milwaukee f tale. Both Brooklyn and the Braves were rained out Thursday so they'll go into tonight's game with a wel- come day of rest, The Dodgers were supposed to play Chicago and Milwaukee was scheduled at Phil- adelphia. The rain also cut short St. Louis Cardinals' series with New York Giants. Cincinnati beat Pittsburgh 7-0 in the only National League game played. The big noise in the American League was the collapse of New York Yankees in Cleveland for the third-straight game. This time the world champions looked like real country bumpkins as they were swamped 10-2. Chicago White Sox muffed their chance to close in on the Yanks when they bowed to Boston 4-3. The White Sox trail by 4% games. Detroit's slumbering Tigers pop- ped up with a four-game winning streak, taking a pair from Wash- ington, 9-6 in 10 innings and 5-4. The victories moved the Tigers within half-a-game of the seventh- place St.. Louis Browns who lost to Philadelphia 7-4 in 14 innings. The Yankees tried a Couple of their young pitchers aga eve- land a the Indians battered them for 14 hits and 10 runs in the first six innings. Tom Gorman made his first start and lasted into the fifth inning. Art Schallock toiled two and gave up five runs, four of them une: because of an error by first baseman Don Bollweg. Home runs figured strongly in the Cleveland victory. George Strickland hit one with two on and Al Rosen another with the bases empty in the fifth. Luke Easter drove in two runs with a homer and a single ' At Chicago Hector (Skinny) Brown came back to haunt his old White Sox team mates with a four- hitter for his seventh straight vie- tory. He pave up two runs without a hit in the second inning when he walked three men. Brown pitched hitless ball from the fourth until Jim Rivera hit a home run in the ninth . Ray Boone hit a three-run homer in the 10th inning for the Tigers' first-game victory over Washing- ton. Home runs by Jim Delsing and Bob Nieman, and a timely two-run single by Gerry Priddy helped Ted Gray win his fifth game in the nightcap. The Athletics cashed in on Satch Paige's relief efforts for four hits and three runs in the 14th to win their marathon at St. Louis. Eddie Robinson brought home two of the tallies with a triple. Harry Perkowski, who has been improving steadily after a bad start, won his eighth game for Cincinnati as he scattered eight hits for the shutout. The loss was the 13th for little Murry Dickson. Top International League Baseball Clubs Are Beaten By THE CANADIAN PRESS Buffalo and Montreal, the two top contenders for first place in the International Baseball League, both Jost their games last night. The Bisons dropped a 5-4 count to Ottawa Athletics. The Athletics scored the winning run in the 10th inning when rightfielder Emil Res- taigo misjudged a fly ball and al- lowed the winning run to score. Ottawa won the six-game series Fred Gerken led off the bottom half of the 10th by taking first on shortstop Buddy Hicks' error. He went to second as Gerry Scala walked and came home on Res- taino's bobble. Buffalo scored singles in the first, fourth, sixth and seventh in- pings, two of them homers by Frank Carswell in the sixth and Harv Zernia in the seventh. Ottawa pushed one run across in the eighth when pinchhitters Jack Spruill and al Bevan doubled and singled respectively. In the ninth pinch-hitter Bob Trice hammered out a three-run homer to tie the score. Toronto Maple Leafs shocked a Montreal audience, chalking up six runs in the eighth inning to defeat the Royals 12-10. The current five-game series now is tied at two each. ! Trailing 4-0 the Leafs scored five times in the fourth inning to move ahead. The Royals retaliated with three in the fifth, two in the sixth and one in the seventh. Red Fahr, one of five Toronto pitchers to appear. in the game, {was credited with. the win, It was | Fahr's sixth win against five de- | feats. : 3 | |" At Rochester, Baltimore Orioles land the Red Wings exchanged | three-run rallies in the ninth in- ning before Rochester copped the decision 6-5 and bounced back into third place. Vern Rapp's pinch double drove in the tying runs for Rochester in the ninth and with the bases loaded Charley Kress tapped a bunt single to the left side to score Rapp with the winning run after two were out. East Area Boys Whip Combines CRA Lacrosse In a lacrosse game at Storie Park on Thursday morning, the East Area beat a combined North- South team by the score of ten to five. The game was a wide open, high-scoring game which had plen- of action. Sixteen minor penal- & were given out, ten in the last quarter. The East team showed a smart ing attack with Taylor and EE rer Sr r set wu ve gO an y Pond ed on another. Price with two, Tilk and Newey with singletons completed the East scoring. Dave Kelley. had three as- For the Combines, the league's leading scorer, Stew Molloy added two goals and an assist to his total. Jerry Jackman had two goals and an assist also, which Pete Larush obtained a goal and an assist. Mouse also got an assist. Gord Boddy had four penalties to go with his seven points. EAST TIGERS: Goal, L. Kelly; defence, Newey, D. Kelly; for- wards, Taylor, Price centre, Tilk rover, - Boddy. NORTH-SOUTH COMBINES: goal, Mouse; defence, Molloy, Jackman; forwards, Larush, McCrimmond, Peterson; centre, Scott; rover, Craggs. FIRST QUARTER 1. North-South, MoHoy (Jackman) 2. East, Boddy 3. East, Boddy (Taylor) Penalties: Taylor. SECOND QUARTER 4. East, Newey (Boddy) 5. East, Tilk (Kelly ., Taylor) 6. East, Boddy 7. East, Boddy (Taylor) Penalties: Price, dy. THIRD QUARTER 8. North-South, Larush ) 10. North-South, Jackman (Molloy) Penalties: ey. FOURTH QUARTER 11. North-South, Jackman * (Mouse) R. East, Boddy (Taylor, Newes) SRE 18. East, Price (D. Kelly) 7.19 14. East 7.46 15. East, No penalties. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL | Chicago Cleveland Pittsburgh 0 O67 309% American League W L Pct. GBL 61 870 57 53 New York National League W L Pct. GBL 59 .648 53 50 47 49 42 31 Brooklyn Milwaukee Philadelphia New York St. Louis Cincinnati' Chicago Washington Philadelphia St. Louis Detroit 58 43 37 33 31 Friday New York at Detroit (night) Boston at St. Louis (2-night) Philadelphia at Chicago (night) Washington at Cleveland (night) OSHAWA - RACEWAYS Present STOCK CAR | CHALLENGE RACE OSHAWA vs. PICKERING 8:30 p.m., Saturday, July 25 | quickly with the Raiders Work This Sunday Oshawa's ORFU Inter- mediate entry, the Red Raiders, will begin serious scrimmages this Sunday morning at their McMillan Drive clubhouse site at 10:30 a.m. Coach Jack Wedley will have his two assistants, Alex Khinisky and Harry Robertson on hand and the | scrum should move very| players | having been distributed | their equipment early this! week. Some players from To-| ronto are expected at the workout. FIELD READY TORONTO (CP)--A banner field of 164 athletes from 18 clubs are poised for the opening of the Cana- dian Track and Field Champion- ships at suburban East York Sta- dium tonight. the Toronto Track and Field Club Topped by the 32-man entry of the Toronto Track and Field Club but including representation from Montreal, Vancouver, Hamilton, Kitchener, Oshawa and Sudbury, Ont., and a single contestant from | New York, the championships will oben under floodlights and continue | all day Saturday. : CHECKING By BOB RIFE SPORT Quoting Lloyd Johnston of Kitchener on the matter of the dual rejection of Oshawa and Windsor in the "A" league, we find . . . "It was announced last night by a Windsor radio station that the OHA would con- duct a telephone poll of the clubs asking for them to re- Sousider Windsor's bit separat- ely." " . it would seem pre- posterous that such a vote could be requested on the Windsor application alone, but it was evident that the Border City del- egation received a more sym- pathetic hearing than the Osha- wa gentlemen, and Bill Butcher, Windsor Arena owner, was seen doing a lot of lobbying with the OHA president after the meet- ing ended." "Gregg (president of the OHA) had little to say on the Oshawa entry, but he went to the mat strongly for Windsor . = . He pointed out that if the Windsor application was turned down it would leave the city without hockey of any sort." In talkin with Manager Wren Blair yesterday, he admitted that he felt "if it came to a matter of allowing just one of the two clubs in . . . I would have with- drawn and allowed Windsor the spot. We still have that strong "B" league to back into." And now that looks like just about the only solution for the Smith Truckmen. According to Wren, the club will form a board of directors of responsible citizens to run the business of the team and give it a more stable foundation . . . one that . will set up Senior hockey as a thing to stay here in Oshawa. Wren said further that, '"'we'll bend every effort now in ob- taining the best aggregation of Senior players for the Truck- men." Which bodes well for the fan wot? CHECKLETS -- Rather rough on Windsor sports fans lately . . first they lost senior foot- ball, when the Royals dropped | from the ORFU picture for lack of funds. Then Lloyd Pollock | pulled his Junior "A" hockey franchise out and moved it to Hamilton. Now the Windsor Arena's ap- | plication for Senior "A" hockey has virtually bounced and the Border City is without big time sport as soon as the ball season ends. According to the bossman of the Arena, Bill Butcher . . .. "lI was given assurance that a poll spearate from the Oshawa application would be taken." | This after the meeting. Maybe that lobbying that Johnston spoke of above, paid Butcher doesn't feel that poll will have much luck, though . . . and admits he's not too, keen on delving into the Interna- tional Hockey League. Talking hockey reminds us that hockey play-by-play man for the local radio station, Gord Garri- son, is celebrating the birth of a daughter. Asked how he felt, Gord replied, "My wife and daughter are fine."" We're still not sure how he is. Looking at the Phillies' great pitching ace, Robin Roberts, we note he is somewhat ahead of his 1952, 28-game winning mound pace. Is it possible we'll see another 30-game winner? - The last one was OI' Diz Dean. And here's one for the young- er ball players. Jimmy Dykes, manager of the Athletics . a real cagey ball club . . . figures, "If you don't know how to pitch to a new hitter, pitch him low and inside or low and outside. Most hitters can't drive a low ball a long way." Which doesn't go for golfers like Ted Barnes or Bill Cook of the Transporters. They eat low pitches. + « . by Bob Rife. Frank DeGrazio Bests Detroit's Ken Hammer DETROIT (CP) -- Frank de Grazio of Niagara Falls, Ont. fought Ken Hammer of Detroit to a draw in a six-round televised | fight at Motor City Arena here Thursday night. The Canadian weighed 177, Hammer 190. In another bout on the same card, Ron McGilvery, 139, also of Niagara Falls, dropped a fourth- round decision to Kenny Lane, 135, | of Muskegon, Mich. Connaught Tigers Claw Rundle Juvs. In a UAW Juvenile softball league game at Connaught Park last night, Connaught Tigers de- feated Rundle Rockets 15-4. : "Rich" Wilson went the distance for the Tigers, giving up seven hits which were scattered over the distance. A pair of walks, an error in centre field on Comerford's single gave Rundle Rockets their first run in the opening frame. They didn't score again until 7th when Olinyk walked and acor- ed with the aid of an infield out, an error and another infield out. Comerford hit a homer in the 8th inning, for his third hit of the game, best showing of any batter on either team. A single by Taylor and an error in centre on Malloy's drive gave the Rockets their final tally in the 9th. - Tigers got three runs in their first with Nelson safe on an error, a' walk to Oldfield, a couple of wild pitches and the Knapp belt- ed a homer almost out of Con- naught Park. A 5-run splurge in the fourth in- ning, when Fenton hit a wild streak and issued four walks, plus a triple to Knapp and a' single by Peel, broke the game open. Tigers added singletons in the fifth and sixth frames and then scored five runs on a bunch more walks, topped off by Oldfield's grand-slam homer, in the 7th in- ning. RUNDLE ROCKETS:* Fenton .| p and If; Taylor, 1b; Malloy, 1f | and p; Hawe, 3b; Comerford, rf; Stire, cf; Smith, c; Olinyk, ss; Campbell, 2b. CONNAUGHT TIGERS:- Nelson, 3b; Wilson, p; Oldfield, ss; Knapp, c; Peel, 2b; Nichol, cf; Ulrich, If; aren, 1b; Peacock, rf; Ander- son, rf. HENLEY REGATTA TEAM STANDINGS PORT DALHOUSIE (CP) -- The following is the point standing after two days of rowing at the Royal Canadian Henley Regatta here: St. Catharines 88 New York A.C. Hamilton Leanders Toronto Argonauts .... Bufalo West Sides .. ' Detroit B.C. .........conve.. Detroit R.C. Wyandotte B.C. . Toronto Dons Ottawa R.C. Philadelphia Vespers C s Aa ROLLER SKATING TONIGHT ALSO SATURDAY NIGHT ARENA An Quist As Little As -- a 95 Down _ DELIVERS FOOD AND REFRIGERATOR : TO YOUR HOME anding Buy . . | Barons'! A NEW '53 PHILGO REFRIGERATOR COMPLETE WITH A Free SUPPLY OF FOOD! All this PHILCO JACOB'S 1 CHICKEN $5 PORK CHOPS 12-LB. BACON 2 QUARTS OF M YOU CAN GET For your old icebox . . . regardless of DOLE'S BLEND N = owt ood wt OO CANS LIBBY'S LB. BUTTER Quality Meats From 1 ROAST OF BEEF OR PORK 1 BRICK NEILSON'S FAMOUS ICE CREAM 5 PKGS. BIRDSEYE FROZEN FOOD (Peas, Beans, Corn, Strawberries, Raspberries) BOTTLES OF COCA-COLA LARGE WILSON'S GINGER ALE HEINZ TOMATOES BOTTLE LIBBY'S CATSUP JAR LIBBY'S MUSTARD JAR LIBBY'S PICKLES JAR LIBBY'S OLIVES LB. MARGARINE free with your REFRIGERATOR BUTCHER STORE ILK * ED JUICE EVAPORATED MILK THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, July 24, 10583 11 Dinghy Racing Is Bermuda's Sport HAMILTON, Bermuda:--One of the most exciting sports in 'Ber- muda - and it is natively Bermud- ian - is dinghy racing. This 14 foot sailing craft has no restrictions as to the amount of sail it can and the Bermuda fitted can manage more sail than ay other craft comparable to its size. courage, and a quick sense of tim- ing. Visitors marvel at the skill with which Bermudians can maneuver these boats. In a stiff wind, a8 dinghy may go 13 or 14 miles per hour. Each summer the Bermuda dinghy races are held. This is a local sport with rules that fre- quently differ from other yacht racing. The whole race is in generations of traditions and customs. A hy clubs is main- tained in Hamilton, and Bermuda sailors look upon the dinghy and the club as an American polo play- er would look upon his Saddle Club. Sailing dinghies requires skill, BASEBALL TONIGHT KINSMEN MEMORIAL STADIUM BRANTFORD RED SOX vs. OSHAWA MERCHANTS SATURDAY NIGHT -- 8:00 P.M, GALTTERRIERS--0SHAWA MERCHANTS ® This is Ladies Night © Ladies admitted FREE if accompanied by escorts BIG! Forged from selected steel and heat treated. Set in- cludes universal joint, valve grinder, speeder handle and popular size sockets. e+ 10.85 AS ABOVE--but in useful tal box 12.38 6-PC. WRENCH SET Extremely tough, lightweight box- end wrench set; cleanly broached 12- point socket openings. 45 deg. off- set. 12 openings. --- Open-End Wrench Set 6-pc. set; drop forged, milled and tempered from selected steel. Excel- lent general purpose set. MOTO-MAsTER PERFECTLY MATCHED SHOCK ABSORBERS BRAND NEW (NOT REBUILT) 98 Save Up Por Vat. To 50% Smoothly polished alloy steel piston rod, large fluid ca- pacity and quick-acting valves absorb road shocks. Give "new car" ride con- trol. Replace worn shock absorbers 1.89 dai 1d i to half the Valve Silencer ow Moments to In- es your 1920-53 Chevrolet than ever before. creas 1.89 ENGINE WELD -- "MOTO-MASTER" MOTOR CONDITIONER Get rid of power- stealing and carbon with this "10 - minute engine ." Restores power and improves ce of slug- Enjoy A BARGAIN! § Thrifty Buy BIG VALUES! %" SQUARE DRIVE 33-PC. SOCKET WRENCH SET 7-tools-in-1--powerful double lever action Sra 2000-1b. bulldog grip. Holds shapes, round, square or irregular. SOCKET WRENCH SET 7-pe. set; 14" hexagon drive, includ. ng six_12-point sockets from 34" te . Offset handle, @ metal container 1.38 s i ° Leaky Mufflers Are Dangerous --serracz wire MOT0-MASTER Original Equipment Quality MUFFLERS and PIPES save you up to MUFFLERS 1929-32 o 1933-36 Master 6.38 1937-52 (most) 5.860 Chrys, DeSoto 1836-52 (most) 9.18 Dodge 1935-38 (most) 5.28 1939-52 9.18 Ford "A" (comp. ass'y) Ford "V8" 1632-52 Didsmobile 1936-52 (most) 7 Plymouth (many models) 0.08 TAIL and EXHAUST PIPES Chevrolet 1929-32 1933-52 (most 1935-39 (most, 1940-48 1949-52 ord V8 Olds. 6 Pigtind 2.38 a. Dodge 4. 935. 4.08 1940-52 (most) 4.80 For cars and trucks not listed enquire for prices "Nollywood Type Boom-Boom" "DYNATONE MUFFLER" 5-60 to 688 rn ERR most popular © cars. HOURS MONDAY TO SATURDAY -- 8:30 AM, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY --~ 8:30 AM . TO JAR MIRACLE WHIP MAYONNAISE PKG. VELVEETA CHEEESE LB. JEWEL DOMESTIC SHORTENING LB. PACKAGE PRUNES 0 TENDER LEAF TEA BAGS CARTON TOMATOES JAR STRAWBERRY JAM JAR GOLD MEDAL PEANUT BUTTER PKG. LEMONS BUNCHES CARROTS DOZEN ORANGES HEAD LETTUCE DOZ. GRADE "A" EGGS THIS OFFER FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY ® FREE DOOR PRIZE © condition at BARONS' BARONS' "Largest selection in Oshawa" 426 SIMCOE ST.S. ---- - - DIAL 5-4822 1 A new gleaming Electric Range The first 1000 people will receive e cof of Conadion Speed Special FREE! id "a 50 BOND ST. EAST Oshawa TAUNTON RD. E., OSHAWA tt ND dt ot nt OF wd dd dt \ Dial 3-2332 Earl Smith Sammi