70 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Jury &1, 1vwn ~* HOST CLUB, St. Catharines Rowing Club, captured both the club championship and the featured "'eights" race in the Royal Canadian Henley Regatta on Saturday and set a new total points record in the four-day meet. Above, President Bill Harahan (left) of Detroit Boat Club, congratu- lates Hudson Mossop, presi- dent of the St. Catharines Club, who is holding the cham- pionship trophy. In the centre is Charles Adams of Lachine, Quebec, 1st vice-president of the Canadian Association of Amateur Oarsmen. --CP Wirephoto | St. Kitts' Rowers Win Main Event To Clinch Regatta Point Trophy ST. CATHARINES (CP) St. Catharines finished the re-|1953 by Vespers of Philadelphia.|eights and the time was 6:29] Four records fell and history|gatta with 443 points, Detroit] Winnipeg Rowing Club, with compared with the previous was made Saturday on the last|with 340, and West Side Rowing|their first senior eights crew at mark of 6:33.4. day of the Royal Canadian Hen-|Club of Buffalo with 207.5. i An estimated 3,000 persons in|third in the race, beating De- Leaf for the last three years. ley Regatta. The history came when St. Ca-| the grandstand at the finish line|troit ithe Henley since the 1930s, was| by about half .a deck tharines Rowing Club won the went wild when St. Catharines|length. senior eights for the first time|went across with a length lead i Lt in the 79-year-history of the re-|over West Side. Flowers, banked others, was over a mile, 550- gatta--and thus won the Maple/along the front of the grand-|y. Leaf Trophy. The trophy, given stand, programs and paper cups | The race, and most of the ard course. In the senior 135-pound eights on total points, is the top prize were thrown down to the St. Ca- Detroit set a record by dashing in the four-day regatta and went to St. Catharines when the sen- for eights put the club over the top in points. Until the eights the winner of |M St. Catharines last won the aple Leaf Trophy in 1955. onds better than the 1953 mark {set by West Side. In the senior fours St. Cath Detroit has held the Maple Ranked behind West Side in the standings were Leander Boat Club of Hamilton, Vesper, Riverside of Cambridge, Mass., and Lincoln Park of Chicago. ST. CATHARINES (CP) nadian Henley Regatta: St. Catharines Rowing Club 443 points. The senior eights was one of |arines stormed across the line| petroit Boat Club 340 the Maple Leaf was still in|the records which fell during the/in 6:44, six seconds better than| yest Side RC Buffalo 207.5 doubt. Detroit Boat Club, al-| ways a strong contender in the | regatta--Canada's premier row-| ing event--would have won the] trophy had they won the eights.'previous time was 6:2 last day. SET 6:11 TIME St. Catharines staged a sprint finish for a time of 6:11. Best|set by their club in 1948. 0.3, set in'event was the senior 145-pound Lincoln Park BC, Chicago 46.5 e mark set in 1952 by Detroit. | St. Catharines set the other) breaking one| he th |record as 'well, Jerry Barber Makes 'Three Miracle Putts In Fantastic PGA Tie 'CHICAGO (AP) -- Jerry (In- . credible) Barber, a mighty, lit-| extra holes today for the na-| Barber, leading January and | On the last hole, with upwards) . tional PGA golf championship at|Doug Sanders by two strokes of 10,000 lining the fairway and| Olympia Fields in the wake of|after 36 holes, was considered ringing the green, Barber drove| "what Barber called "the most|too old and too short a hitter to|straight down the middle. Janu- +amazing finish of my career." |stand up through the 36-hole cli- ary pulled his drive into a trap Four strokes behind January, |max dictated by Friday's wash-|to the left, and hit a six - iron a Texan with a picture swing, |out. Young January seemed to|shot halfway to the green, Bar- 'with three holes to play, Barber|be upholding the experts when ber walked nearly halfway to "sank putts of 30, 40 and 50 feet|he shot a morning 67 and moved |the green from his ball, then =--two of them for birdies--and into the lead by two strokes, at trudged back and banged a four- ~forced a 72-hole tie at 277. Starting at 2 p.m., EDT the "55, 157-pound, 45-year-old Bar-| Barher, apparently wilting in|wedge shot stopped 15 feet to "ber and the reed-thin, 31-year-|the heat, was four behind Jan- the left of the hole. <old January will try to settle aj duel that carried through 36/16th hole of the closing round. «pressure-drenched holes yester-| + day over the 6,722-yard, par 35-| =. 35-70 course. It is the first play- "off in the four years since the| PGA became a medal play meet | ~4n 1958. The windup will be tele- »¥ised (CBS) 5 to 6 p.m. EDT. ~8EEK MAJOR TITLE | = Each seeks his first major "within one stroke and two holes, ~of nailing this title two years «ago at Minneapolis. Then, lcad- ing by one stroke with two holes, «to go, the Californian lost by a; "stroke to Bob Rosburg. | January, six - feet and 165 "pounds from Dallas, has won| January got a routine foyr on/ing National Open champion ~only three regular tour tourna-'the 71st, but Barber salvaged his'Gene Littler -- at 282. 205 and 207, over Barber, who shot a one-over-par 71. uary when they came to the DRAMATIC FINISH wood that caught the left cor- ner of the green. January's SINKS PUTT Barber, peering through the |ausk, examined his putt for a Leander BC Hamilton 120.5 Vesper BC Philadelphia 62 Riverside BC, Cambridge, Mass. 50. Winnipeg RC 40 Argonauts. RC Toronto 39 Ottawa Rowing Club 30 Brockville RC 27 Wyandotte BC 23.5 Club Espana, Mexico City 20 New York AC 19 University Barge, Philadelphia 18 Minnesota BC 17.5 Lachine RC 16 Undine Barge Club, Philadel phia 12 Shrewsbury, Mass. RA 10 London, Ont. RC 8 ments. He was 16th in money|with a 40-foot sidehill putt after| Tartar Rowing Club Detroit 1.5 winning with $17,000 last year dubbing his drive under a tree,New Rochelle, N.Y., RC 1 tle bantam who didn't know and his best previous finish in a only 120 yards from the tee, and| when to quit, and shaken, un- major championshig was fifth taking two more shotts to reach believing Don January play 18|last year in the PGA at Akron..|the green. Getty Steers Eskies To Win Over Ottawa EDMONTON (CP)--Two pow- erful second-quarter touchdown drives quarterbacked by Cana- dian Don Getty gave Edmonton Eskimos a 17-3 victory over Ot- tawa Rough Riders in a Cana- dian Football League exhibition game before an estimated 11,000 fans here Saturday night. The victory, Edmonton's third straight in exhibition play, ggve Then began the most incred-|full five minutes, then hit it|the defending Western Confer- ible golf finish since Arnold Pal- boldly. It curled to the right, | ence champions a measure of mer's 70-65 last day finish in the caught the left corner of the revenue for the 16-6 defeat by 1960 auras National Open and the most natic since Palmer birdied the last two holes to beat Ken Venturi for the 1960 Masters championship. Barber 30 feet from the cup on the 16th--the 70th of the tourna- ment. While January took a five, Barber rapped in the uphill, troublesome putt for a birdie three. They were only two strokes apart. lcup and dropped in. January {shook his head wunbelievingly, then missed by two inches the putt that would have avoided a | playoff. {day was $11,000 for the winner |and $5,500 for the runner-up. | Doug Sanders of Ojai, Calif., {won third money of $3,600 with a 72-68 finish for 280, with Ted {Kroll next at 281 and Palmer |tied with five others -- includ- Orioles Halt Yanks But Tigers Lose Too By MURRAY ROSE Associated Press Staff Writer Fine pitching by Baltimore "New York Yankees' home-run ~thunder sound as loud as a cat "on a rug during the weekend. The Orioles not only damp- ered the Yankees' gun powder but moved back into contention in the American League race. Steve Barber and Milt Pap- pas, 22 - year - old stars, and reliever Dick Hall led Baltimore 40 4-0 and 2-1 victories Sunday. The league leading Yanks were lucky that Minnesota's Jack Kralick blitzed the second-place Detroit Tigers 4-0 with an eight- hitter that gave the Twins a all star game break, the Yankees were 14 games in front and 8) ahead of Balti- more, The 8%,-game gap doesn't look as formidable when you consider the year's 162 game schedule and mounting injuries for the Yankees and Tigers. Cleveland's fourth - place In- dians dropped 114 games off the pace on an 86 loss to the pesky Los Angeles Angels, as lefthander Ted Bowsfield, a na- tive of Penticton, B.C., picked up his seventh victory in 10 de- cisions. Bennie Daniels of Washington Senators whitewashed Kansas White Sox taking the ope 4-2 and then losing 9-8. NEW YORK WON New York edged Balitmore 5-4 Saturday as Minnesota de- feated Detroit by the same score. Kansas City edged Wash- ington 2-1 and Cleveland beat Los Angeles 8-3. The Orioles' took three of four games at Yankee Stadium starting with Skinny Brown's 4-0 shutout Friday night. | The Yanks won Saturday with | Whitey Ford on Yogi Berra's {homer. Yogi's blast was the {only New York home run in the ner Ottawa in th Grey Cup game in Vancouver last November. The clubs played evenly through the first quarter, each coming up with a three - point ~championship. Barber came| A drive and a four-wood put| Besides the title, at stake to-|field goal. The last two quarters were scoreless. By MURRAY ROSE Associated Press Staff Writer It's a lucky break for the rest of the National League that Los Angeles Dodgers are re- quired to stop with everyone else for a two - day break be- cause of the all - star baseball game. The Dodgers are rolling in high gear in the National League race. They beat Pitts- burgh Pirates 7-3 Sunday fo their eighth straight victory-- all on the road -- and their third in a row over the fading defending champions. This put them half a game in front of Cincinnati Redlegs, who split a doubleheader with Dodgers Climb Into Top Seat streak with two wins over the Cards in St. Louis, then added three straight over the Phils at Philadelphia and three more over the Pirates at Pittsburgh. They clicked for nine hits Sunday, including Tommy Da- vis" 15th homer of the season and two singles, and Duke Snider's two - run double in the sixth, off Joe Gibbon (8-6) and three other hurlers. Don Drys- dale (9-6), with help from Ron Perranoski in the ninth muffled the Bucs with six hits, Ed Bouchee's two - run homer in the second inning and Billy Williams' run - scoring double helped Don Cardwell (9-7) to his decision edge over the Reds Chicage Cubs, The Reds lost 3-2, then won 5-4. San Francis- co's third - place Giants stayed within eight games of the lead by defeating Philadelphia Phil- lies 52. Milwaukee Braves and St. in the opener. The Reds wrig- game on Jerry Lynch's two-run pinch single that climaxed a four - run rally in the seventh inning. Louis Cardinals divided a twin bill. The Cards beat Lew Bur- dettee (12-7) 53 in the opener but succumbed to Warren Spahn 3-2 in the 10 - inning windup as Spahn gained his 298th major league triumph. In Saturday's action, Los An- geles edged Pittsburgh 5-4, Mil- waukee defeated St. Louis 2-1, San Francisco edged Philadel- phia 4-3 and Chicago defeated Cincinnati 7-6. The Dodgers started their homer and a run scoring |single in San Francisco's win. |Jack Sandord (6-5) went all the way with a seven-hitter. | Bill White hit a pair of hom-|{ ers -- his 10th and 11th this year -- for St. Louis to beat {Burdette and the Braves. Re- lief pitcher Lincy McDaniel [(7-5) got the win. Spahn (10-12) |finally recorded No. 208 on {Hank Aaron's run - producing isingle in the 10th inning. The|& | veteran lefty yielded 10 hits. Misses N By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rudy Arias of Jersey City Jerseys will have to wait an- other day to pitch a no-hitter. A fifth-inning single by Harry Chiti of Rochester Red Wings spoiled Arias' bid for fame in the first game of an Interna- tional League doubleheader yes- terday. Arias won the game, however, 1-0, for his fifth vic- tory of the season. The Red Wings captured the nightcap 4-2. Syracuse Chiefs swept a twin bill from Charleston Marlins 2-0 and € 1. Calumbus Jets and Buf- falo Bisons split a pair. Buffalo took the opener 3-1 and the tharines oarsmen as they rowed|across the line in 6:30, 15.1 sec-| pina] standings in the Royal Ca-|Jets rebounded with a 2-1 tri in to get their medals. {umph in the second game. Rich- mond Virginians defeated Tor- {onto Maple Leafs 5-3. The Jerseys were rained out in a scheduled game against the Red Wings Saturday. Buf- falo edged Columbus 5-4, Char- Rudy Arias Just o-Hitter win the nightcap. Gordon Jones won his fifth game and his fourth straight over the Jerseys. Bob Risenhoover was the loser. Fred Bruckbauer allowed only three hits for Syracuse in the opener, Sandy Valdespino swung the big bat for the Chiefs with two hits and two runs scored. Syracuse's Joe Altobelli belted a three-run homer in the third inning of the second game to overtake a 1-0 lead. Frank Leja added his 20th home run in the fourth. Winning pitcher Miguel Cuellar allowed the Marlins four hits. The Bisons scored three un- earned runs in their first game as Humberto Robinson regis. tered his sixth triumph. A 430- foot homer by Don Mincher was wasted in the second contest as the Jets rallied for a pair of runs in the eighth inning on three hits and an error. Dio- medes Olivo picked up his ninth victory in relief. leston defeated Syracuse 6-3 and Richmond beat Toronto 8-5. | Johnny Kucks absorbed the loss for the Red Wings in the| opener yesterday. He was touched for six hits, three in| the second frame, when the Jerseys scored their run. An inside-the-park homer by oe Durham with a man aboard Jesse Gonder's leadoff homer in the bottom of the sixth inning snapped a 3-3 tie and propelled Richmond to victory. Toronto's Fritz Brickell hit his third home run of the series. The Leafs tied the game with two runs in the sixth off winner George Ha- ney. Ron Negray lost. gled to victory in the second|P Willie Mays clubbed his 20th § QUEBEC (CP) -- Mexico was counting today on a well-rested Mario Llamas to wrap up a best - of - five North American zone Davis Cup tie against Can- ada on the clay courts of the Civil Servants Tennis Club here. Llamas, 33, in his 10th year in cup play, was to meet young Francois Godbout of Waterloo, Que., in a singles match start- ing at 2 p.m. EDT. with his country holding a 2-1 series lead following victory in a long and gruelling doubles match Sun- day. After the Llamas - Godbout match Canada's Bob Bedard was to oppose Antonio Palafox of Mexico in the series windup match. Rafael Osuna, 22, and Pala- fox, 24, shot Mexico into the series "lead Sunday when they came from behind to down Be- dard, 29, and Godbout, 24, in four sets, 10-12, 9.7, 8-6, 6-4. The match lasting three hours and 33 minutes on a poorly - condi- tioned court -- the result of ov- ernight thunderstorms. The doubles victory came af- ter the countries split two open- ing singles matches Saturday. Bedard won the first singles for Canada by beating Llamas 8-6, 6-4, 6-0. Palafox then evened the series with a 6-4, 2-6, 6-1, 6-1 triumph over Godbout. "I'm _ confident Mario can beat Godbout," said Pancho Contreras, playing - captain of the Mexican team. 'He has to because Bedard is going well and probably will beat An- tonio." Sunday's doubles match, played before a crowd of about 2,200, was a thriller. "A heartbreaker," moaned Lorne Main, Canadian team- captain, "but one of the best SPORTS CALENDAR J in the sixth inning enabled the Wings to come from behind and Only one is scheduled tonight --Toronto at Richmond. HALIFAX (CP) -- Loose-| |limbed Bruce Kidd, running ac-| |cording to breakfast-table stra-| {tegy, put on the speed in the| |final lap here Saturday to estab- |lish a Canadian record for the| junior one-mile run. | The slender 18-year-old Tor- onto schoolboy, briefed by coach Fred Foot, saved his power un- til the last of four laps. His late burst eliminated any chance of an upset as he fin- ished in 4:10.4, nearly 10 sec- onds better than the Canadian junior mark of 4:20.3, held since 1957 by Jim Irons of Toronto. The race, watched by 2,000, highlighted the two-day eastern Canadian age-class track and field championships--a record- shattering affair which brought Bruce Kidd Sets Junior Mile Mark Scotia, New Brunswick, Ontario and Quebec. Kidd praised the efforts of Walter Williams of Minto, N.B., who led for about a lap and "kept me honest." Williams took the lead after the first lap and held it until the start of the third. Kidd moved up, apparently effort- lessly, and took a 30-foot lead. Kidd and three Toronto team- matés, David McClure, Bob Pat- terson and Paul Gaudet, sét a Canadian record for the one- mile relay with a time of 3:22.2. The mark had been held by the Toronto Track Club with a time of 3:26. Patterson, whose 21.9 tied the 220 Canadian open record set in 1952 by J. Lea of Seattle at Van- couver, was judged the best rots abliinta ab dha Han male-athlete at the meet. together athietes from Nova BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Collision In Home Stretch Decides Race TORONTO (CP)--Take Com- mand of the ABC Stables won the $3,500 feature event in the final strides at Old Woodbine Saturday night after the lead- ing horse was involved in a col- lision 100 yards from the wire. With favorite Baron Atom ap- parently headed for its sixth straight win in the stretch, a trailing horse, Gene Putney, {made a determined bid. It hit the sulky of driver Neil Mec- Crann as he was urging Baron Atom home. The back - end collision broke a wheel in McCrann's bike, throwing Batom Atom out of contention. The accident ap- parently injured a foreleg of Gene Putney for it pulled up while. driver Ken Galbraith leaped to the track. Out of this jam-up Take Com- mand burst to the wire in 2:03, equalling the season's best time for the mile, while Ambitious, | set as injury - hampered Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle were| owned and driven by Gordon Gilbertson of Burford, Ont., and three - game cleanup over the!City Athletics 4-0 and Boston cooled off. Maris has 40 round-jArgyel Duke, with owner Dunc ers. |Red Sox and Chicago White|trippers this season and Mantle As the clubs took a two - day,|Sox split a doubleheader, the'has 30. ~ Pe I Campbell reining, charged into the second and third positions. American League W L Pet. GBL 6536 .644 6438 .628 1% 58 46 .558 81% 5549 .529 1115 5153 .490 15% 47 58 .448 20 4556 .44620 4556 .446 20 Los Angeles 4557 .441 20% Kansas City 37 63 .370 27% Results Saturday Cleveland 8 Los Angeles 3 Baltimore 4 New York 5 Minnesota 5 Detroit 4 Chicago at Boston ppd, rain. Results Sunday Baltimore 4-2 New York 0-1 Chicago 4-8 Boston 2-9 Minnesota 4 Detroit 0 Washington 4 Kansas City 0 Cleveland 6 Los Angeles 8 Games Today All-star game at Boston National League W L Pet. GBL 62 38 .620 6340 612 % 5446 .548 8 50 48 .510 11 4548 .48413% 4752 4751414 Chicago 43 56 .434 1815 Philadelphia 30 66 .313 30 Results Saturday San Francisco 4 Philadelphia 3 Cincinnati 6 Chicago 7 Los Angeles 5 Pittsburgh 4 St. Louis 1 Milwaukee 2 Results Sunday New York Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Chicago Boston Washington Minnesota Los Angeles Cincinnati San Francisco Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis Cincinnati 2-5 Chicago 3-4 San Francisco 5 Philadelphia 2 Los Angeles 7 Pittsburgh 3 Games Today All-star game at Boston International League W L Pct. GBL 6540 56 47 5447 . 54 53 50 51 50 52 Columbus Buffalo Charleston Rochester Jersey City Toronto Richmond 46 56 Syracuse 4170 . Results Saturday Buffalo 5 Columbus 4 Toronto § Richmond 8 Syracuse 3 Charleston 6 Rochester at Jersey City ppd, rain. Results Sunday Toronto 3 Richmond 5 Buffalo 3-1 Columbus 1-2 Syracuse 2-6 Charleston 0-1 Rochester 0-4 Jersey City 1-2 Games Today Toronto at Richmond (N) (Only game scheduled) Games Tuesday Toronto at Charleston (N) Jersey City at Buffalo (N) Richmond at Rochester (N) Columbus at Syracuse (N) American Association Results Saturday Denver 3 Louisville 4 Dallas-F. W. 0-3 Houston 4-5 Indianapolis 2 Omaha 7 Results Sunday Dallas-F. W. 5 Houston 13 Indianapolis 9 Omaha 4 St. Louis 5-0 Milwaukee 3-1 Denver 6-0 Louisville $s TODAY'S GAMES BASEBALL Oshawa Legion Minor Assoc. (Bantam League) -- Whitby vs Victor's Sports, at Alexandra Park, 6:30 p.m. LACROSSE OLA Junior League -- Whit- by Red Wings at St. Catharines, 8:30 p.m. Oshawa Minor Assoc. --Whit- by Woods vs Oshawa Comets, at 6:15 p.m. and Whitby Rotary vs Oshawa Rockets, at 7:15 p.m. Both games at Oshawa Children's Arena. SOFTBALL Exhibition game -- Whitby Abner's vs Heffering's Imper- ials, at Alexandra Park, 8:00 p.m. GAMES FOR TUESDAY SOFTBALL Inter-County League--Merch- ants vs Houdaille Industries, at Lakeview Park; Dodd Motor Sales vs Crawford Construction, at Alexandra Park, east diamond doubles matches I've ever seen in Canada." The match was in doubt un- War Eagle Is Named Winner Spite Protest FORT ERIE (CP) --- War Eagle, Peter del Greco's gal- lant old gelding, raised his life- time earnings to $128,366 Satur- day when he won the $9,000 Fair Play Stakes at Fort Erie. The one - mile run produced a wild finish and War Eagle had to survive a claim of foul be- fore he was credited with his first victory of the season. War Eagle beat Grey Mon- arch, the bridesmaid horse of Canadian racing, by a head. As soon as the horses crossed the finish line, Al Coy, who rode third - place Amber Morn, claimed foul against the win- ner. However, after viewing the films the stewards disallowed Coy's claim and War Eagle paid $10.90 to win. Bedard's Singles Win Keeps Canada 'Alive' til the Mexicans broke Bedard's service in the ninth game of the fourth set. Bedard and Godbout grabbed the first set when they broke Osuna's service in the 22nd game, and reached set point in the 12th game of the second set. Palafox, by far the best player on the court, finally de- cided the second set in Mexico's favor in the 16th game when he dropped a shot out of the Ca- nadians' reach. The third set also was nip and tuck until Godbout lost his ser- vice in the 13th game. MADE BIG TRY In the final set, Mexico built up a 4-2 lead in games before Canada came up with a last- ditch stand. The Mexican pair reduced the deficit to 4-8 on Godbout's service and then broke Palafox's service in a love game to tie it at 4-4. For Saturday's first match, Bedard constantly adjusth his game to Llamas' play, ha a tough time until the fifth game of the second set. "I was trailing 3-1 in games and behind 40-15," he explained triumphantly. "I gambled with a shot to Mario's left. He couldn't get it and that sort of spurred me on." Senior Athletics Upset Brampton BRAMPTON (CP) -- St. Cath- arines Athletics upset Bramp- ton Ramblers 12-11 in Ontario Lacrosse Association Senior A action here Saturday night when Doug Smith broke a tie, scoring his second goal of the night at 19:41 in the final per- iod. Gary More led St. Catharines with four goals, Barney Roy hit in three and singles went to Ted Howe, Rus Powless and Gary Carr. Bert Naylor scored five goals for Brampton. The others went to Bill Castator, Jack Madgett, Dave Foster, Bob Dobbie, Gord Thompson and Joe Caruso. and Willis Motors vs. Foley's Plumbing, at Alexandra Park, west diamond. All games at 6:30 p.m. BASEBALL Leaside 'Junior League: Osh- awa Leigionnaires vs Peoples, at Talbot Park, Leaside, 7:15 p.m. LACROSSE OLA Seninor League--Bramp- fon vs Brooklin Hillcrests, at Brooklin Arena, 8:30 p.m. WRESTLING Exhibition of professional wrestling, at Oshawa Children's EMPIRE TITLE Tuesday, August st 8:45 p.m. OSHAWA ARENA WHIPPER BILLY WATSON vs STASIAK 236 Ibs. TORONTO STAN SPECIAL TAG TEAM EVENT IVAN ond KAROL KALMIKOFF 3 S. TONI MARINO and TIMOTHY GEOHAGEN TOM COLLINS vs PRINCE NERO 225 Ibs. HAMILTON 240 Ibs. ROME WHIPPER WATSON ICKETS--Ringside 1.50, General 1.25, On Sale at Casino Rest. Pat Milosh, Promoter Children 1.00 723-9721 Arena, 8:45 p.m. now. Beautify your home the modern, func- tional way; clean, durable ASPHALT DRIVEWAYS last a housetime. Inquire