10 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, July 22, 1958 CAMPY'S COURAGE AND RELIGIOUS SPIRIT UH 2 By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer CARDIFF (CP)--People would think these British Empire 'Games belonged to the women. But this is likely to be changed today as the males take over in the track and field events and in rowing and sculling. The women gobbled up the at- tention by cracking two world tities in swimming. the only % |world marks to go by the boards, and then set the experts on their ears with an upset in the spring- board diving. Little-known Char- mian Welsh of England snatched victory from Canada's Irene Mac- Donald, acknowledged as the world's best until the tense, dramatic final Monday night. The males, who outnumber the {females by at least 3 to 1 on the {1,300-strong participating list, get their first big fling at Cardiff Arms Park, in the downtown part of this Welsh capital, and also at Lake Padarn, scene of the row- & i 4 a ne 2 i" undergoing a long and painful | is in his massive shoulders and | physical and mental rehabilita- | arms. A deeply religious man, tion program, learning tc live | Roy flashes his famous smile, with his handicap. The onlv | right reflecting his great cour- | muscle life left below his neck | age. sports page in his room at New York's Institute, of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Campy, critically injured in a car accident last January, is ON A SPECIALLY designed bed called a Stryker frame, pl Dodger - catcher Roy anella, paralyzed from waist down, reads the HIM REHABILITATE 'Women Swimmers Set ge Sica a, Two World's Records inches' ahead of Gary Chapman, Sydney sports store manager, in the identical clocking of 56.6. George Shipton. office clerk from Sydney, was third in 57.0. Devitt set the Games record of 56.5 in a heat Saturday night. CANADIAN MARKS It was a fairly profitable night for the Canadian swimmers and divers, led by Miss MacDonald, while . the weightlifters--Marcel Gosselin of Quebec and Adrien Gilbert of Bagotville, Que.-- picked up bronze medals for a Canadian haul of three medals for the day and seven for the Games so far. Canada had finalists in both {swimming events but they didn't {have a chance against the Aus- tralians. Margaret Lwasaki of Vancouver was sixth in the women's sprints and Cameron rout of Montreal finished a sur- prising fourth behind the Aussies in the men's event. Sara Barber of Brantford qual- by winning the individual foils| event as Canadian manager-| |finished fifth. | Other gold medalists weightlifters. Reginald Gaffley, a storekeeper from Capetown, South Africa, wiped out the 1850 record of 655 pounds in the bantamweight divi- were England's Ronald Brownbill hoisted 630 pounds for the silver medal and Canada's Gosselin took third with a total of 605. Blair Belnham of the Barbar- |dos took the middleweight crown with a total lift of 795 pounds. {Roy McArthur of Trinidad li the same total weight but'was dropped to second because of heavier body weight. Canada's Gilbert got the bronze medal with a total of 785. BOWLERS FAREWELL Canada's lawn bowlers fared well in the pairs when Alex [Houston and George Dewar fted coach Carl Schwende of Montreal | ' sion with a total lift of 660 pounds. | © Tao 1 SPORTS MENU | Roy Campanella Is Determined That URW Del's Lose ing 200 miles north of here. The finals of all rowing and sculling events are scheduled in the northerly resort spot with the ified for the women's 110-yard|of Vancouver won both their backstroke when she came third|Mmatches to move into a four-way in her heat but her time of 1:15.4|tie for first' place. But the cycl- Ps 'BABE' HIS ONLY PEER Stan Musial, St. Louis Car- dinais' famous slugger, shows the big bat he wielded in game against Milwaukee. He hit two homers and a single, batting in five runs. The second homer enabled him to pass Lou Gehrig for recond place among all major league players, past and present, in extra base hits, Dalhousie Club Host To Annual Yacht Regatta ST. CATHARINES (CP)--Lake Ontario's yachting classic, the Lake Yacht Racing Associations annual regatta, will be held off Port Dalhousie near here Aug. 2-4, For the first time in the as- sociation's 70-odd year history, the Dalhousie Yacht Club h been selected host club for the three-day regatta. From 400 to 500 yachtsmen are expected to take part in racing events on the course out from the Port Dalhousie waterfront and the 140- Freeman Cup race from Preshue'lle, Ont., to Port Dalhousie. Executive members of the LYRA met Saturday with regatta committee members of the Dal- housie Yacht Club here to come plete plans for the event. About 120 boats, ranging in size from the international ' 14s to some of the largest cruising yachts found on the Great Lakes, will compete. Regatta officials expect the most popular single class of racer to be the dragon. The Montgom- Musial now has a career total of 1191 extra base. hits. His ery Cup is awarded to the en- RN AC RE RR Ta was well off the best of the night|ists Were eliminated "and only trant receiving the highest num- | In Hamilton6-3 Canadians in the eights, fours Oshawa UAW Del's dropped a With and without cox and the . me vived tet ongland's Judy Grinham. + | ; 65 decision when they travelled double sculls. At the same time Eng han aaett : ls Jeane iy Jareyed he to Hamilton's Woodlands Park in Cardiff seven track and field] Peter Bell of Winnipeg was The night's last event--the div-| w 0 , Insists 3 vaix as iy ¢ ; " i wi i f the men's \N8--was the one with the most| yw . ' Sco Jast nig xhibit ame | finals--five of them for men--will|third in his heat o men's Vy | Everything From Soup To Nuts aeelh, with the help of the good ast Oight tol mo ahition gate be an the line, Taking part, are|220-yard breastroke but his time suspense. | ord. 5 The Los Angeles Dodgers' great ; p Rent rv Miss Mac y , | {team -of that city. two male world champions, Ger-|of 2:54.3 wasn't good enough to iss MacDonald, who recently TOMORROW NIGHT'S West Toronto senior baseball game at catcher, who barely escaped with 4 giete ica|reach the final. Terry Gathercole| Won the U.S. championships, had| Kinsmen Civie Memorial Stadium could prove the best of thelpis jife after a Jan. 28 auto crash |in thic one and gave up only six |i. iia's Albert Thomas in the|record for the event when he won meant the difference with the season. First place in the West Toronto Senior League standing |; ear his Glen Cove, N.Y., home, hits but Hamilton's three-run out- three miles 4 {his heat in 2:41.2. The previous will be at stake here Wednesday night. This comes about because|tellg his story in the first of a|burst in the second inning proved : ay | mark was 2:52.6 set in 1954. He'll Walk Again NEW YORK (AP)--Roy Cam- --1:13.1, a Games record--by | three of the eight boxers sur- 1% 31 By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "That was the worst dive of my over the twopart series appearing in thet the whole competition," she said in so now the Whitby Larry's are once again enjoying a|jyly 26 issue of The Saturday bottom singled with one out then| Most of the Games drama was|1954 Games champion, was sec- an interview. Upset and tearful, for top spot with Milanis--and the game to-|myening Post Reid drew a walk and all hands|packed into a couple of hours|ond after five heats in the men's|the Canadian girl said she "never gold and silver medal. yson-Fords took a 15-inning decision from Milanis too much to overcome, Hicking-| CRACKS WORLD MARK Bill Patrick of Calgary, only peer, Babe Ruth, had 1356. LEGION MINOR |ber of points in that class. | About 15 yacht clubs on Lake {Ontario are expected to be rep- |resented in this year's regatta, |approximately two-thirds of them BASEBALL {Canadian. Farthest points to be represented will be Clayton, N.Y.» and Kingston. Some of the yachts VICTOR'S SPORTS BEAT |yjll be sailed more than 150 HOUDAILLE INDUSTRIES |mjles to take part in the races. In an Oshawa Legion Minor| Columbia Best In Bantam League baseball game last night at Alexandra Park, Victor's Sports and Cycle defeat- ed Houdaille Industries 6-1. nes "the big one" for both teams. Coach Bill Campanella now is able to sit|were safe on two successive sly have his strongest line-up available for this jn , . wheel chair, wearing a choice plays that missed and a and with the season's schedule rapidly drawing gnecial neck coliar. He is under- passed ball plus an infield out, [Monday night when pert Dawn|springhoard. |Fraser, the slim sun - bronzed miss from Australia, cracked her {own world record in the women's ch game becomes increasingly more important, S0/ going treatment at Rusk In. gave the Steelworkers three runs, n over Milanis at this point, might even be the deciding fac-/stitute part of the New York| They added two in . the fifth | 110-yard freestyle. The 20-year- n determining which team finishes in first place in the final ypjeyrsity medical centre. when Deas singled with two out,{old Adelaide clerk clipped one- g. Milanis have given Larry's their toughest opposition, by| «1 gm 'still paralyzed from the Hickingbottom also singled, then tenth of a second off the mark these two good ball aict down," he said into a tape Reid walked and a bad throw with a time of 1:01.4 while lead- recorder, "My spinal cord was olus a passed ball and a choice|ing the great Aussie team to a [not severed and I know I'll walk play scored the first two. What one-two-three finish. s season and every clash between s produces exciting action Australia's sensational swimming stars scored lopsided victories in 'the British Empire Games yesterday to vault Australia to first place in the "vnofficial point standing," with a total of 84 while England, with gold medals in fencing and diving, stayed within one point with 83. Canada is in third spot with a total of 40. Dawn Fraser set a new world's record for the 100-yard free.style swim yesterday, at 1:01.4, beating her own former world mark by one-tenth of a second. Terry Gath- ercole of Australia made the 220-yd. breasiroke in 2:41.2 and first (had dived so poorly," but quickly y added, "I have no alibi." CANADA 18 THIRD | She said she had "rubber legs" | Australia and England contin- since she came here and that she ued to dominate the unofficial became nervous when "every-| point standings with Canada al hody said I'd win." |distant third. Based on al Miss MacDonald entered the 10-5-4-3-2-1 count for the first. six final 'five dives of competition finalists in each event, the stand-|with a slight lead over Elizabeth |ings gave the Aussies a lead of a|Ferris, 17-year . old Middlesex single point with 84 to England's girl, but after the third dive was 83 second behind 24-year-old Miss| Canada had 40 Welsh. The gold medallist came | The over-all Aussie bag of gold up with a superb dive--a back- medals reached five -- four for|ward one-and-one-half somersault swimming--while the springboard |layout--to go ahead 104.07 points diving and individual men's fenc- against 100.93 and that was it. |ing increased England's bag to, The Canadian girl made a sen- |four. Apart from Jamaica, sith|sational last dive--a back one and |two opening-day victories in track one-half twisting somersault--by land field, no other 'country had far her best of the night but she | more than one. couldn't close the gap. "l guess Raymond Paul brought Britain you can't be on all the time," she her second fencing gold medal said. "I'm disappointed." again. It will take a long time. actual'y proved to be the winning The 100-metre Olympic cham- With nerves, you can't rush run came in the 7th inning when|plon took over as the Games title- them. But I can move my arms Marg Deas slammed out a home- | holder from Lorraine Crapp who and I have feeling in my thumbs run blow, with nobody on base. |placed second with 1:03.8 and 16- and chest now." : A walk tc Sagar, Luke's double | year-old Alva Colquhoun, whose EE ® and a bobble in the outf gave|main ambition is" to become a B T C d yel's their run in the second pojice dog Famer, Init Ly 1:04 3 raves 0 Aras nning but they never could get aj 41¢ Nome Dard email previous Games record was 2:52.6, Judy Grinham of Eng- | . P Jone rally Joling oainsl Loaf A She Au with an: land set a Games record of 1:13.1 in the 100-yd. backstroke | In Little League f eld $ steady pitching. © other one-two-three finish in the event, and the world's record mark was 1:13.2, They get into Spin fifth, - Thompson singled and | short sprint. some of the major track events today and tomorrow, run- Braves defeated the Cardinals did Leask. Nesbitt forced Thomp- |* John Devitt, world record ning races, and the current assault on British Empire Games |6-3 last mght in their K. of C. son, but an infield out and a wild!, der in the 110, touched just records is expected to continue. Lie Big Lasgue Baseball action 'pitch scored Leask. mil 2t Alexandra Park. si uke singled with | BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa UAW Del's dropped a 65 exhibl-|" Brady picaed the first three| oo co Sixth, Luke singled with . tion game up in Hamilton last night to the Local 1005 Steelworkers|innings, fanned six batters and |p infield error and a choice play Gordie e team. This Thursday night, the Del's are host to the Trenton|didn't issue a walk, but was nick- eoted Luke. Sagar was safe on| RCAF Jets, in a return exhibition game at Bathe Park. Jets won ed for two singles, by Dionne and |, infield error in. the 7th and} out when they met in Trenton, a couple of weeks ago . . . TWO Gallant, in the second inning. In|ceored on singles by Luke and! hd GAMES are on tap tonight in the local City and District Major the fourth inning, Wysotski open-|Govne to ky be the Srore 45 at ea S 1€ League softball action, with Oshawa Merchants visiting Radioed with a double and Mowat [ipo De mate 3 Park for a game with Radio Juveniles at six-thirty and up at|cingled and that ended Brady's Del' rol Iv 'one more run; in Alexandra Park, Scugog Cleaners meet Maple Cleaners this|stay, Dulinski coming in to th iy Be Apson Was safe evening. On Thursday night, Merchants and Scugogs play at Al- pitch. He failed to stop the two e a oa ompson. 3 car oro exandra Park . . . MAJOR LEAGUE ball pitchers are having a runners scoring, two infield outs on an in i wih Hovey o 2 tough time this summer getting to that coveted 20-game mark and Rospond's single taking care Re t Touer bri Seo thro gh TORONTO (CP) -- The last and at the moment, Warren Spahn of Milwaukee and Bob Turley|of this but Dulinski gave up only [itn hits Fice also singled hat|chance for a qualifying berth in and Whitey Ford of the Yankees, are the only three who look to one run after that, on walks to|pep dnt S the one Tore the Canadian amateur golf cham- be within comfortable reach of the prized goal. Ford had 19 in Hanowski and Wysotski in the he 4 coy anf go tie Lr ie |pionship was up for grabs today *56 and lost his final game 1-0 but neither he nor Turley have|fifth and a single by Mowat. me hey hy x hit "iy Nes. [2nd the scramble for many was ever had 20 wins in one season yet, Spahn has done it eight times| Hraynyk started the pitching Sri e r Toe s 2h e fo still wide open. in 13 seasons and he is the only "repeater'" this year . VIC| shore for Cardinals but he was Dit hu 2 couple, ere op of Of the 171 golfers who com- WERTZ, who broke an ankle in spring training, has been puting wild to last. He walked Moth- Del's while De or the pleted Monday's first 18 - holes } by qualifying round, 67 shot scores 76 or better. The man who showed the way was 34-year-old Gordie Ball of| back on Cleveland's active list : . . DOW FINSTERWALKD, US. il NM r the in- ter PGA champion, will enter the Canadian Open next month . iy au An pon but homes ora UAW DEL'S: Leask, 0: GENE KINISKI, pro wrestler, is being sued in Montreal for|yiothersill was nipped at the plate 3h: Nesbitt. ©; Suttors. 2b Fice, $15,000 by a spectator who claims he suffered the Injury when ,nq4 Brady forced Dionne after id Sin Hs L ke ">: Goy : Kiniski was fleeing from chair-throwing fans, after he had in-|ara,ur had been caught trying to 3; oor poi ss : nike, Pp; Segue, e ring, during a bout in which he was not one of the geal 3rd H OLLION Loenped ' 1005: 3 Spelitors Fh MENTION this at this time, sincé| Hraynyk wasn't as fortunate in|yoycer 9b; Woods, 1b; Coltys, Club's par 71 to finish with 67. "The ee Dar awa, og » 3DDe Snne Sgainst Iau the second inning. Newell opened 3, \ripermott, ¢; Rowbottom,| If the ideal weather of the first ard. at Kin Sr ol n . na ay of the Weekly vith a double then Andison walk-| ¢/ fone" pf: Hickingbottom, If; round holds throughout today, a ray jo the po re ing Lakes Ai m ed and Atherford singled. Ros: piiq Pp: Wright, 55. [qualifying score of 150 to 152 for ed of all blame at the Inquest held last night Into tHe death|P°0d came to the mound then) _ - [the 36-hole test is likely. There friend Stanley Martin, who wa fatally injured Friday ight and fanned the next two batters ' were 14 scratches Monday in the RY ' s 'ata'y 'njurec *ricay nightl,s Mothersill and Mazur both Black's Men s Wear original field of 186 and one le backed a car out of a driveway, following a wel- x oo : come home party celebration after his win over Mike Holt drew walks then Dionne doubled golfer picked up. ; | Ball was in a class by himself. y - . ¥ i 3 - LJ LARRY FERGUSON of Peterborough is the leading scorer in the 30,30 700 B00 iver' cor. Win Over Kent's ber 'of Ontario' JLA senior race with 55 points ey : in He was a member of ] led again, as Rospond fanned ij Black's Men's Wear defeated| Willingdon Cup team which won STORIE PARK MIDGETS DEFEAT NORTH OSHAWA th wa Midgets visited for a league game night, with Storie winning the decision a ced vae eafe on p Garrow {batters and was real good for the ygonivc 4.1 in their UAWA Soft-|the interprovincial team title Sat- OSHAWA MINOR SOF IBALL rest of the distance, but the half-|, a) League game at Alexandra|urday and his first-round effort dozen runs were enough to give p,iy jact night was two strokes better than any-| Braves the win. Welsh pitched the win foribody else. a half-dozen in the 7th, to com- ae {Black's and received great sup-| Three Americans were alone in plete their one-sided total, with port to back up his own good|ipe 69 bracket. They were Jack Bradley, Flegg, Bickle and Hobbs Larry Ferguson work, in earning the win, | Penrose of Miami Beach, Fla., all having big nights at the plate Kent's werent able hi get A: Robert Brue of Milwaukee and runner across home plate until|ogg. Martin Stanovich o SOUTHMEAD BANTAMS \L d OLA R the 8th when Legree opened with 240.pourd Asin | LOSE TO SIMCOE HALL ea S ace a walk thea Jannon and Johns| Ball and Stanoyich supplied the| 1 pitched the win for| Southmgead and Simcoe Halll 7 y sano. 8180 walked, Legree was caught|.yira thrills with eagles, the To- "He gave up three|tangled at Cowan Park on Mon. Ey Tern going to 2nd and Lupel forced|yonio golfer also recovering bril cession in the third|day night in their Kiwanis Ban-i'seaq in the Ontarlo Lacrosse As.|'Clns:; but Bannon scoPed on aljiantly to get a par after driving Hill at the fam League game and it proved| .iation senior scoring race but wild throw to 1st. Then Hurst| + of hounds at the seventh hole outfield free hitting affair and a seven Welland 1a ers ore hot ont walked but Mech grounded out Par was broken by 13 in the rough night for the pitchers, asiy;cyoels I to statistics|!®, nd, the inning. field, seven Canadians and six the Simcoe Hall boys took a 28-14.) d Te Mindy... oie, Black's got a run in the first|sericans lecision re ease ere Win ay. inning when Sutton walked, Mar-| "gix Canadians were among the { en P Simcoe Hall scored .runs in Retguson bas scored 35 goals | hail singled, Gedge forced Sut group of nine who finished with was forced by Rich-/every inning except the third and 25d thi 3ssists or 3 ojnts id ton but Csuha) hit safely with two|gne.yunder-par 70.. Five of them Then Kay walked and Wil-{Sixth, to double the total against ro aur ~ piace t 4 oroueA out to score 'Marshall. Kap walk-| cnt 35s on each nine, against it a double, after which /Southmead, a 10-run parade in eam n games ap Do ¥ 9. led in the second and scored after|36.35 par. They were Doug Bajus Iked and Hill was safe the fourth featured by Shody's| OoloWIng Long y ain : are (wo out on an infield error andor vancouver, John Munroe of . play that let Williams homer, being one big outburst|5€Ven ers of the oat Marshall's single Sydney, N.S., Boh Kidd of Van: \6 with the fifth run for and then they came right back running sand team , Allan In the 6th, Welsh walked,| ouver. Ward Weltlaufer of Buf-| rth Oshawa. with 13 runs in the 5th. Shody Foul with » BOR eginie or moved on a passed ball then/galo N'Y., and veteran Jack Nash started pitching for North{having another homer in this in- 4 Sg iy : esr wi 3 Atkinson and Lyons both hit safe-|o¢ [ondon, Ont 3 ond gave wav, to Bulmer) NE | goals, 34 assists for 47 points, Ted |y georing Welsh. The final run| pgryee Castator of Toronto 4 *3 2 Bare NAY ic For Peters hit a homerun for Howe, Doug Smith and Don wag also scored by Welsh, on al-{an4 Wilf Homeniuk of Winnipeg od , C oning : ib Southmead i nthe first inning, |Paker with 46 points; Ron ROY most exactly the same combina-| ni hed their 34-36 nines with BL HD runs at je Sry and another in the third inning|With 45 points and Jim McMahon tion, by the same three players,(Nejl Croonquist of Minneapolis B SiaTTo Sg OC nd while Leffen, Siblock and Dove|With 41 points. : a walk and two singles. Black's|,nd Jack Nicklaus of Columbus » sale nan nag €0 all hit well for the losers. Cros-| Hamilton's Tony D'Amico and |joaded the bases in the 9th but|ghio with . one ou, Yilllamson i ; mos, Campbell, McKnight, Pilkey Brampton's Revis Bennett are didn't score. Nick Weslock of Windsor, 1957 singe, Henderson Mrquhart 2 and Bourdage were the best with tied for ninth with 38 points, BLACK'S: Sutton, cf; Marshall,| champion, came in with an even Evans all drew walks i en ar¥-lihe bat for Simcoe Hall. | Welland's Doug Smith leads In if; Gedge, ss; DePratto, 2b; par 71 late in the day and Joined jg Sil "ERN > ; penalties with 84 minutes |Csuhaj. ¢; Welsh, p: Atkinson four others in that bracket oa ed FE din PARK hARTAMS Gary Moore of St. Catharines |ib; Lyons, rf; Kap, 3b. Among them was Dick Chapman winners added DE bg Bing a DN oaks io Fi pe Tg So -- Sr,, of Osterville, Mass, WhO oon ond and two t fernhi jtace w uv polals on st goals) 'anadian amateur In 1949 a tond 3rd wo fame last nigh! at Fem Park, and 11 assists. Brian Ahern of REMEMBER WHEN...? He ohn. N.B. then f ed « eight more le ot opie Tg Ci Con-Long Branch follows with 22| By THE CANADIAN PRESS A mixed bracket of eight Amer uns in the almost entirely] ony, 8 t WS goals and 15 assists for 37 points.| A Canadian army cricket team|icans and Canadians came in PS re i ? ¥] Connaught got:away to a good = = = linvaded Lord's cricket ground 14|with 72 and nine more finished on Walks aud errors tart wiih four rune in the finst| with 73. In the 73 group were two WOODVIEW PARK BANTAMs (Inning by Bellingham, Dobbin! 0 cored later on a wild pitch Montrealers, Mike Darling and Ww IN 31 NORTH OSHAWA ce down after that. with one in the/and Hraynyk doubled in 'the lish cricket stars. The Canadians|Ray Zabowski, 17-year-old junior Mountain doubled in the second|Years ago today to play an M.C.C. {eleven that included several Eng- lost by 213 runs. M.C.C scored|player who had the best score 329 for five wickets, declared, the|among the eight provincial Junio Canadians replying with 116 lehampions competing, OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITY Service Station for lease with high - established gallonage. Large lubrication and T.B.A. volume. fifth, another in the sixth in. fourth, Nichols walked and ning then a five-run rally in the Single by Wilkins brought them " home. King hit a homer in the Norris, McNaught, Elmhurst, ied au then i Je 7a, oni 'i h i and Planke all crossed the plate|dard and Cooper both walked anc ils puch Pi Same erlin the second inning before there|With one out King doubled. Nich- trouble. He lost his shutout when|" 2% anybody out and before there lS Sitgled after ig gut, bo ny Bay alk to Cook to open| ere three out, Vernon, Gaskell, | King horne with the final run. he issued a walk d. then with| Flintoff and Norris again had| Barnoski pitched a good game I a aonnected to|scored for an eight . run rallyffor Eastview, having 14 strike- North Oshawa's| hat made the score 9-4 Fivelouts. He also hit a three - run 1aWA 5! more runs in the fourth shook off|lomer in the first inning to ge Thy : _|the Connaught Park threat and|his team started off right. They Voodview scored four runs in|GGaskell's homer in the bottom of added five runs in the second on the 'first inning and - added six|the 6th, complete Fernhill's total, [Walks to Fleury, Chute and Lyzon more in the second stanza, | and singles by Sydlowski, Adams Bickle"s homer and a double by EASTVIEW PARK BOYS and Landry. A double by Adam: Rvan being the big blo S BEAT STORIE BANTAMS n the fifth topped off another rd In another last night, at good rally, this one for four ers were held off in the East Par and Chute tripled in the ar 1» but came back with|won a 13-7 dec Fr 5tk ion over the visit- scored later on an infield out ERT EW ine Rory BC ved Monday night wa diamond, the visit- ng Woodview Park b-ys chalked!' up a one-sided victory, 23-1. For Details Write to: mn BOX 626 TIMES-GAZETTE H-- er int th game ran ew the home team 6th and 'eA™ _ _ _ |Eastview's final run, | Toronto Weston who wrenched|--Williams (6-8) vs Kline (9-9). |, four strokes off the Scarboro Golf| San Francisco at Philadelphia] Pete Coughlin pitched the win for Victors and was in charge all the way. He struck out 11 bat- U.S. Yacht Tests NEWPORT, R.I. (CP)--Colum- ters and issued four walks, and|Pia, with three victories, holds as many hits. Wright singled in|the edge in a series of yachting the 5th for Houdaille, with one|competitions to select a defender out, stole 2nd base and moved to| for the United States for the 3rd on a wild pitch, scoring when|America's Cup in September. Hentig came through with al The latest series of trials con- single, after two out. |~luded Saturday and the next Kornylo, pitching for Houdaille, | reries opens off here Aug. 17. gave up only three hits but walks| Vim. a 19-year - old vessel, proved more costly. He fanned! scored a convincing victory over the first three batters he faced newcomer Weatherly and Colum- and got a total of eight altogether. nia defeated Easterner in the MacDonald was safe On an er- Saturday races to choose a con- ror to open the 2nd inning for tender to meet Britain's Sceptre. Victors, then Watt sacrificed. Ko-|All the 12-metre aspirants for the lesnik singled to centre, scoring honor but Vim kK have been MacDonald, Bourrie walked and|jaunched since June. ussell was safe on a catcher's| rw y error, to load the bases but they Sat irday was he first dsy I couldu't econ dig 1 {eight that the New York Yacht J score again. Rornylo rane) p's race committee was able | BASEBALL SCOREBOARD By THE CANADIAN: PRESS |Rochester at Columbus National League Buffalo at Richmond | W L Pet. GBL |San Francisco 50 38 : [Milwaukee 38 558 1 -|Chicago | Chicago 45 5% [Cincinnati 011 400 30x--9 9 2 |St. Louis 42 43 61% | Drott, Solis (2) Hobbie (4) Cincinnati 46 8% |Fodge il and Neeman; Haddix 14 [am alley. Pilladelphia pi le HRs: Chi = Neeman (9); Pittsburgh © 47 466 9 {Thurman (2. | Today's Games Li ows | And Probable Pitchers | Chicago at Cincinnati (N)-- Hillman (2-1) or Solis (0-0) vs Nuxhall (6-5) St. Louis at Milwaukee Mabe (0-1) vs Rush (6-4). Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (N) National League 010 002 001--4 10 1 Cin- Milwaukee 300 000 100 000 --4 16 4 McDaniel, Brosnan (1) Paine (N)-- (Only games scheduled) American League (N) -- Antonelli (10-7) proch (11-6); also completion of Havana suspended game of June 2 An- (suspended game of June 23rd) tonelli vs Roberts 03) San Fran-| johnson, Richards (8) and Han cisco leads 1-0 in 6th. |nah; Cuellar and Izquierdo. Toronto 000 000 110-2 7 0 Chicago at Cincinnati (N) Havana 210 000 20x--5 10 0 St. Louis at Milwaukee' (N) | Pearce, Dixon (6) Tiefenauer San Francisco at Philadelphia (7) and Thompson; Cueche, Pena (N) |(7) and Grandcolas. Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (N) |Rochester 010 000 1-2 6 2 Today's Games | Columbus 000 112 x--4 9 0 And Probable Pitchers Gibson and Katt: Douglas, Pep- Baltimore at Chicago (N)-- per (7) Arroyo (7) and Rand. Harshman (7-7) vs Pierce (9-6).|Rochester 310 000 010-5 8. 1 Washington at Cleveland (2,|Columbus 001 100 000-2 6 3 twimight)--Romonosky (1-1) and] Kuzava, Lovenguth (5) and] Pascual (5-5) vs McLish (8-5) and Oliver; Swanson, O'Donnell (7) Woodeshick (1-0) and Pepper (6). New York at Detroit (N)--Tur- Buffalo 200 000 010-8 7 1 ley (14-3) vs Foytack (7-8) Richmond 101 301 10x---7 9 2 Boston at Kansas City (N)--| Newkirk, Nagy (6) and Noble; Brewer (4-8) vs Dickson (6-4), |Weisler and Oldis | Montreal 000 000 200-2 7 0 Miami 000 000 03x--8 5 0 | Valdes and Teed; MeDermott, {McCall (9) and Coker | CRA NEIGHBORHOOD SOFTBALL SCORES (Saturday's Results ROYS' ATOM LEAGUE Thomion's Cnrs 19 naught, 7 's Sem- VS Sem: imoronto Wednesday's Games International League W IL. Pet. GBL 610 576 515 505 10 500 11 465 141% 465 14% 369 24% Montreal 61 39 Toronto 5 42 Rochester 51 48 Columbus 51 50 Miami 53 5 Richmond 6 5 Havana 44 5K3 Buffalo 3m 65 Today's Games Toronto at Havana Montreal at Miami 3% 9 Con. 001 001 101 000 01--5 10 2|inning (5) Wight (8) and Landrith; Bur-|cials and the Ajax coach result- dette and Crandall. {ed in the latter pulling his team No games scheduled. | forfeited, Beaton's International League | matically winning 9-0. | 00 000 000--0 5 0| 020 000 11x--4 10 0|third into serious trouble in the third] : however when he walked Clapp, {10,SrEy GUL 3 PORTO, Satie |Reeson and MacDonald to load|y, oo" victories, Weatherly with |off the field. { The umpires declared the game| Dairy auto-| Ajax loaded the bases in the inning and then got two runs on Newitt's hit but it proved the bases then Bob Watt singled, | § stole second and that three-run One by default and Vim with an splurge meant the game. honest win from Columbia. The winners added two more in [the 6th when Bourrie walked, | Russell singled, Coughlin. was T t [safe on a choice play and a wild oron 0 ea | pitch scored Bourrie, with Rus- PA A el scoring later on an infield nnouncer BEATON'S D. : pearons pamvnny | Is Fined $100. Beaton's Dairy were leading 0 --- Ajax 52 in the top of the fifth MONTREAL (CP) --- The To Yast night: at Harmani oD,c Mape .ea's Clb ha n | |fined $100 for remarks by its |Park, in their Oshawa Legion blic-add n r in th Minor Bantam League game, 0 i A eiiaad when a dispute between -the offi- with Montreal July 18, Interna- tional League President Frank |Shaughnessy announced Monday. He said the public-addréss man told the crowd Lou Kahn, Toronto coach, had been ejected from the game by umpire Frank Guzzeta for protesting Guzzeta's decision in calling fair a-home-run hit by their only scoring success against|Sully Drake, Montreal outfielder Nicholishen when everyone in the park knew Beaton's Dairy scored their| Was fou. except Guzzeta. five runs in the second inning on This office will not allow a pub- two walks, three errors: a stolen |/ic-address man to make any dis- base, one wild throw and two|Paraging statements about ume singles by Nicholishen and Gold- Pires,' Mr. Shaughnessy said. smith, plus a sacrifice by Smith, |The announcer is -an employe of the Toronto club and we must CATCHER TO LEAFS Ihold the club responsible." SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--The San Francisco Giants sold right-| In Toronto Rudy Schaffer, gen- handed pitcher Ray Crone to To- eral manager of the Leafs, said ronto of the International League |' guess we'll have to accept the aturday. punishment and pay the fine." CASE HISTORY t plain * Health in general | certainly slusgih, tied w t eight, ' | wes overw 9 , ime. ears, wired al he \ didn't lose any ¥ Studio § young ™ A HAPPY MAN, TOO ith mo oblige! 20 PER MONTH FOR A COURSE ion. for Free Trial Session WV REG. 10.00 NEXT 25 MEMBERS AT ONLY Almost every man enjoys WHITE 10¢ Suggested price SPECIFICALLY FOR YOU AND WE GUARANTEE RESULTS ® WEIGHT LIFTING go BGDY CONDI TIONING « WEIGHT LOSS s BODY BUILDING ¢ STEAM BATHS o WEIGHT GAINING ® MECHANICAL MASSAGE oe SPOT REDUCING OSHAWA HEALTH STUDIOS 1323 KING ST. EAST RA 3-7742 on bus line Free Parking i