EILEEN LEAROYD, a re- porter for the "Colonist" of Ottawa. This is her 13th year at the meet; she is entry No. Angels Soaring Again - By BOB GREEN Associated Press Sports Writer Those Los Angeles Angels just won't co - operate at all. They refuse to follow the script, just keep doing things their own way. "They'll never last," soberly pronounced the experts as Bill Rigney somehow placed his oddly assorted crew of heroes hot on the heels of the Ameri- can League leading Yankees. But they clung there, week after week. "See,"' chortled the pundits in an I-told-you-so sort of way late last: month when the Angeles went into a mild slump, the Yankees got hot and Los Angé- les quietly slipped back to third. But now, all of a sudden, the Angeles are back in second place, trail New York by 4% games and once again have to be considered a major factor in the race. , They regained second : @ doublehead sw a jnesota. The Yankees split a pai: hind Gene Conley's four-hitte: Washington, 6-5 and 10-3. cago errors helped the Angel Angels had loaded the bases. Don Lee (9-8) got credit fo by Chicago, 5-1, and 7-5 while Wed- nesday night Kansas City chalked up its sixth straight victory, a 4-3 triumph over Min. with Baltimore, winning the first 3-2 and losing the nightcap 4-3.) Boston beat Cleveland 6-0 be- while Detroit took a pair from) drove Botz to cover in the eighth. Charley Maxwell also homered for the losers. At Kansas City, Ed Charles t r Minnesota to thrd. season had tied it r/Twins in the top of the ninth. won the Baltimore, s|when Maris r|got credit in stole home with the wnning run with two out in the ninth in- ining as the Athletics dropped Harmon Killebrew's 30th homer of the for the Bill Skowron's two-out single in the ninth drove in Roger The Angeles won the opener|Maris with the winning run as on a four-run eighth inning inthe Yankees which they got only two singles. against Three sacrifices and two Chi-'/kees and Orioles were tied 2-2 drew a_ walk, break a 1-1 tie. Lee Thomas'|moved to second on a ground single drove in two after the|out and scored on Skowron's single. Marshall Bridges (5-0) Yor the victory after) the nightcap victory, but)taking over in relief needed help from Don Oskinski| ninth. and Bob Botz, and finally from, first The Yan- the Hot On Yankees' Heels pitching by veteran lefty Billy Hoeft. Hoeft came on in relief of Jack Fisher in the sixth with two on, two in and none. out. He got Maris on a pop up, Yogi Berra on a run-scoring infield out and retired them in order the rest of the way. Conley (10-10) struck out six, walked only two had retired 13 men in order over one stretch in pitching Boston past Cleve- land. Gary Geiger led the Red Sox attack with two singles, a double and three runs batted in. Detroit rushed in four runs in the first innings, built around Vic Wertz' homer, then got two more on Norm Cash's . 3l1st homer in the fourth in the first- game victory over Washington. A 15-hit attack made it easy for Phil Regan (6-8) to go the \distance for the Tiger triumph Baltimore won the nightcapjin the second game. Bubba Ryne Duren, who entered after on a four-run fifth inning and|Morton and Mike Roarke each {Sherm Lollar's two-run homer|four innings of no - hit relief had three hits. 13 and her DCRA ber- Victoria, B.C., is in no doubt about her number. She is com- peting at the Dominion of Can- ada Rifle Association meet, at the Connaught Ranges, near Crack Marksman Seeks Top Award CONNAUGHT RANGES, Ont,)match. Winner was WO2 C, W. (CP) -- Lt.-Col. W. J. (Bill)|Clarke of Ottawa. He and four Strachan of Ottawa, who has/others had scored 48 of a pos- won just about every honor that!sible 50 in the regular match. Canadian rifledom offers, seeks) A cadet trades training camp the biggest prize of all today|team from Camp Borden, Ont., when the opening stages of the/fired 264 of a possible 280 points Governor-General's match will/to win the Otter Cadet team be fired. provincial match over nine Only 330 of the 600 enteredjother teams. Team members will survive the first round of}were Erling Kohn of Sarnia, the match, the main event of|Kenneth Dearborn of Hamilton, the week-long Dominion of Can-|Brian Fuller of Clarkeston and ship card is No. 13. She's shown above posing at No. 13 target with her fingers crossed. --CP Wirephoto "BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS Former 'Younges By THE CANADIAN PRESS |H ouston (Woodeshick 4-12) American League WL Pet. GBL 67 43 .609 64 49 566 414 63 50 .558 514 58 56 .509 11 55 56 .495 12% 56 58 .491 13 54 57..486 1314 52 62 .456 17 50 61 .450 17% Washington 42 69 .378 2514 Wednesday's Results Baltimore 2-4 New York 3-3 |Cleveland 0 Boston 6 |Minnesota 3 Kansas City 4 Los Angeles 5-7 Chicago 1-5 Detroit 6-10 Washington 5-3 Probable Pitchers Today Baltimore (Brown 5-3) New York (Ford 11-5) night. Los Angeles (Grba 6-6) at New York Los Angeles | Minnesota |Baltimore Cleveland Chicago Detroit Kansas City Boston at jnight. | International League WL 39 5 49 54 54 56 59 Jacksonville {Toronto Rochester Columbus Buffalo Atlanta 5 Richmond 373 .371 Syracuse 42 75 .359 Wednesduay's Results Columbus 1 Toronto 3 Richmond 0 Buffalo 4 Rochester 3 Atlanta 7 Syracuse 7 Jacksonville 8 | Games Today | Columbus at Toronto (N) | Richmond at Buffalo. (N) Rochester at Atlanta (N) Syracuse at Jacksonville (N) American Association 652 570 534 518 -509 496 16 17% 32 33% Pct, GBL By MIKE RATHET his knickers for a major league uniform. Now, 19. years and some grey hairs later, the knuckle - balling left - has turned into somewhat of a phenom again for' Cincinnati | Reds. The veteran, reclaimed from the minors recently, hurled 7 1-3 innings of shutout ball Wednesday night before giving Joe Nuxhall Is : New Veteran Star jclosed out the scoring when|bourg -- Associated Press Sports Writer|Murray Wills singled, stole sec-|their City and District Major At 15 Joe Nuxhall exchanged |ond and eventually scored on a League schedule last night, with sacrifice fly by Willie Davis.|@ postponed game at Cobourg, |Wills has stolen 60 bases, more|that resulted in a brilliant 1-1 Leaguer |tie. As a win or loss had no hander Since. Max Carey pilfered 63 in| bearing on the final standing \than any National Radio, game of 2-out-of-3 series, 6.30 p.m. : SPORTS CALENDAR NHL All-Stars, TODAY 30FTBALL East Toronto Junior Ladies' League--Agincourt vs Oshawa Scugog Cleaners, at Alexandra Park, 8.00 p.m. Inter-County League -- Gen- osha Aces vs Ukrainian Aces, at Bathe Park; Abner's Esso vs Foley's at Alexandra Park, west diamond and Police Assoc. vs. Lakeview Park; 6.45 p.m. LACROSSE OLA Senior League -- Brook- lin Hillcrests vs Port Credit Sailors, p.m. Houdaille Industries, at Port Credit, FRIDAY SOFTBALL Oshawa Minor Assoc.: 30 p.m, at and Woodview vs Radio Park, 2nd +. Pic-0-Mats Play 1-1 Tie In Cobourg Oshawa Pic-O-Mats. and Co- "Brokers" |the teams called it off at the CRAIG GOES ROUTE Frank Thomas and Felix |Mantilla each hit a two - run! homer in the fifth inning and} tha. was enough for the Mets! jas Ro; rai way to relief ace Jim Brosnandistance and checked the | end of nine innings. Jim "Sleep" Dawe pitched the |game for Cobourg, with Rollie Campbell taking over in the 7th inning while Ron Taylor was on' at all games at (Mid- get League Semi-Final Play- offs) -- Southmead vs Sunny- side, at Sunnyside Park, 3rd and deciding game of series, completed Oshawa Tony'sOn Short End Of It Over $800 was raised lastiloser. Eddij2 Shack, Toronto night at Kew Gardens in To-|Maple Leaf .gightwinger, played ronto in the annual Beaches|a stand-ouli game for the Major Fastball League East) 'stars'. Toronto General Hospital Bene-| Eddie Blasck's exploded for fit double-header. A capacity)/six big runs off Oshawa pitcher crowd took in two exciting con-/Norm Bagnéril in the 5th tests, which saw Randall - Roy|ning in nailtig down their vic- Metals and Dependable Cater-jtory. Andy Anderson finished ers combines upset the Nation-jup. al Hockey League All-Stars 3-1| The Combos of Bagnell and in the lid-lifter and EddiejAnderson alfowed seven hits Black's down Oshawa Tony's|with Bobby 'Hopper collecting 6-2 in the nightcap. a pair for Bhack's. Jack Rain- Normie Mackie and Ab Deas-|bow, Eddie Black's veteran, ley,shared the mound duties for| was victor with a nifty five-hit- the Combines with Mackie gain-|ter. Oshawafs Jack "Red" ing the vetory. Al Sullivan, an|MacDermaid 'had two of Tony's ex-Oshawa pitcher, was the/five safeties. Post Office Nips Houdaille Tie Eaton Commanders Abner't- Esso At Whitby League game, last night at Houdaille Industries and Cowan's Park, Post Office de- feated Eaton Commanders 9-8 Abner's Esso played a_ hard- fought 2-2 tie 'hy their Inter- The "'Posties" got an early) start when they scored three County Softball League game, last night at Whidby Community runs in the first inning and four Park. more in the second stanza, but after a ag f a * -- for a pair in the fourth. They came close in each of the last three}. Houdaille got @heir two runs innings but just couldn't quite|in the second stanza when make it, in spite of some good| Shearer opened vith a single, hitting by Horton, Mann, Nan-| Hanna sacrificed then Crosmos tais, Goreski and Loscombe. | belted a homer. Fi:om that point on, right through an "overtime" 8th inning, Ing meld the Hou- daille team in chyeck, strongly Eaton's got a pair of runs in the first frame on Hutcheson's supported by an tefficient out- field department. homer. They added two more in Henderson, pitctting for the the fourth and Noaks hit a two- visitors, had a total of 11 strike- run homer in the fifth. In the 7th inning, Long and Noaks both outs. He gave up his two runs in the fourth inningg when Mc- scored and Menzies and Arm- Lean opened wit a_ single, strong were on base, seeking |Fletcher singled wiith one out and then with two out, Hemer the tying run, when the game ended. singled and a bad throw let Fletcher cross the pate. Whitby came closte again in the fifth when Momroe walked with one out and Thorndyke doubled with two ou%&~> HOUDAILLE INDUMSTRIES -- Elliott, 1b; Kuney, 3tg Marchut, If; Cairns, rf; Shearer, 2b; YANKEES GATE OVER MILLION NEW YORK (AP) -- A crowd of 29,137 watched the Baltimore - New York dou- bleheader Wednesday, push- ing the Yankees home at- Chicago (Fisher 3-4 or Buzhardt the| 6-9). Minnesota (Kaat 12-9) at Kan- sas City (Pfister 2-9). Detroit (Koplitz 2-0 or Foy- tack 8-4) at Washington (Che- ney 4-6) night. Cleveland (Perry 8-9) at Bos- ton (Monbouquette 9-11). ada Rifle -Association's annual!Neil McKellar of Glencoe. matches. A second team from Cpl. A. D. Brown of Regina) Camp Borden school was second) won the Macdonald match Wed-| with 252. nesday, breaking a three-way) The 18-member British cadet tie with Strachan and FO R. om won four of the first five} Bennett of the British rifle team|places in the Gooding Junior; in a shoot-off. All three had 121/Aggregate based on matches! of a possible 125 points in the/fired Monday and Tuesday. as ee third - place Reds made/Giants on seven hits. ° : jit three consecutive whitewash|Thomas' 27th homer. Indianapolis 3 Dallas |jobs against Houston Colts with|Cepeda hit a for San Worth 2 | Omaha 7-4 Oklahoma City 2-2 |? £9 triumph. NEW YORK METS Denver 8 Louisville 1 Pic-O-Mats got their lone run ;On errors in the second inning | when Snow was safe on an out- field bobble, advanced when Orlando - Fort ; Francisco and Harvey Kuenn uxhall's second start -- and|chipped in with his sixth but it ( jsecond impressive performance|wasn't enough for Bob Bolin Melaies_ was 0p pate. - "4 --extended the woeful Colts') (6-2). | . he ? 'choice play. Oshawa got run- scoreless innings streak to 34) Gibson (14-8) - walked onl j aad Gees Ge Tea? hey O08. (14-8) nly| ners as far as third base in the match fired at 300 and 600 yards. Another tie - breaking round was needed to decide a winner in the Alexander of Tunis Kohn placed first in the ag- gregate based on total cadet scores. in tyro, Bankers and) Macdougall matches. He had 237 points of a possible 250. | +SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' PORTS EDITOR SPORT CAPSULES:--Oshawa doubleheader to Eddie Black's, Gardens. In the other section Hospital Benefit Night twin-bill, Tony's lost their half of the last night at Toronto Kew of the annual East General the National Hockey League All-Stars were beaten by the Randall-Roy and Dependable Caterers "'Combines" . . . 'FLEMINGTON'S FIRST' a two- | year-old trotter owned by Jack Reid of Orono, will be in action again tomorrow night in the Old One of the favorites to beat in Chance' (winner, last time out) the horse that was won in a 50-cent ticket raffle, a year ago . ardent members of the Oshawa Racing Pigeon Club, is this year having his birds compete for the first time and is enjoy- ing rare success. This past week-end his loft took top honors in the club's second "young bird" race of the season, from Washago. Karssing's loft also owners high in the finish list were such well-known fanciers as Johnny Shewchuk, Ray Bevan and Ken Young . . . GEN- OSHA ACES and Ukrainian Aces play the second game of their Juvenile "A" 2-out-of-3 championship finals, tonight at | Bathe Park. Genoshas. won the in 12 innings. MORE OF SAME:--Home-Run leaders in the major leagues this year are not likely to set any records but at the moment, | Willie Mays of the Giants leads the National League with 34 while Norm Cash of the Tigers paces the American League with 31... NY METS set an ' out of the running this year on the early day of August 7. Meanwhile, NY Yankees are yesterday they passed the million mark in paid attendance --for just 45 home games . . . GRANNY HAMER, 35, former Phillies shortstop who tried a comeback with Kansas City as a pitcher, has told the club he STEVE BARBER, Baltimore Oriole pitcher, is out for the rest of the season. Doctors have confirmed that he is afflicted PRESS Woodbine Raceway Futurity. this classic will be 'Niagara . . E, KARSSING, one of took 3rd place while other first one Tuesday night, 1-0 'elimination' record by being National League WL Pet. GBL 78 37 .678 72 42 632 5% 67 46 .593 10 63 49 .563 1314 | 64 50 561 13% | 60 54 526 1714 51 64 .443: 27 42 72 .368 3514 ouston 40 71 360 36 | New York 30 82 .268 4614 | Wednesday's Results Philadelphia 1 Los Angeles 3 New York 5 San Francisco2 | St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 0 Chicago 12 Milwaukee 4 | Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia Chicago Cincinnati 4 Houston 0 Probable Pitchers Today Philadelphia (Bennett 4-7) at Los Angeles (Richert 1-2 or Or- tega 0-2) night. New York (Jackson 6-13) at San Francisco (Sanford 14-6), Chicago (Buhl 8-8) at Mil- waukee (Cloninger 2-2) Cincinnati (O'Toole 11-12) at YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 10 while walking only two. gels, stroked singles, double and Sox that moved Angels back League. | American League. ARE 'OUT' EARLY SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-- The record books can add a new line next winter: Earliest date for pennant losing--New York Mets, Aug. 7, 1962. When the Mets succumbed 7-5 Tuesday night in Los An- geles they reached the point of no return. It was their 82nd defeat. Even if they won all the rest of their games--a fantasy that staggers the imagination--they have to fin- ish below the .500 mark in a} 1962-game season. Because it is that all clubs finish below -500, the 82nd defeat meant mathematical elimination al- though they trailed the Dod- gers by 45 games with 51 to play. The Mets have a shot at the modern record for most lost-- 115 by Boston in 1935, a Na- tional League mark, and 117 by Philadelphia in 1916 in the The all- time mark is 134 defeats by Cleveland in 1899. impossible | jder an eye-lifting 0.82 earned jrun average, He allowed six |hits before Brosnan finished up with hitless relief. The shutout brought the Colts within range of the major jleague record of 48 straight jscoreless innings set in 1906 by the old Philadelphia Athletics of the Amercan League. The Colts haven't crossed the plate since the sixth inning of the second game of a Sunday doubleheader with St, Louis Cardinals. |/DODGERS ADVANCE Meanwhile ,the National League - leading Los Angeles Dodgers moved 5% games in front by making the most of Philadelphia Phillies while New York Mets used the home run to subdue the second-place San Francisco Giants 5-2. Elsewhere in the NL, Bob Gibson's fourth shutout, a three- hitter, gave St. Louis a 2-0 triumph over Pittsburgh Pir- ares and Chicago Cubs belted Milwaukee Braves 12-4. PREPARE FOR JUMPS BOSTON (AP)--Teams from Pitching -- Bob Gibson, St.!eight nations arrived Wednes- Louis Cardinals, blanked Pitts-|day to compete in the sixth burgh Pirates 2-0, on three hits world sport parachuting cham- for fourth shutout, striking out pionship at Orange, Mass., | starting Saturday. A chartered Batting -- Felix Torres, An-| airliner brought the teams from five .hits--three|The Netherlands, Ireland, Eng- triple--in|land, Be] gium, Switzerland, |5-1, 7-5 doubleheader sweep by| West Germany, Spain. and Po- |Los Angeles over Chicago White|land. Austria, the Soviet Un- ion, Yugoslavia, Czechoslova jinto second place in American|kia, Bulgaria, Rumania, France and Israel are also entered. Nuxhall, who became the youngest player to perform in the majors when he joined the Reds in 1944, was taken out in the eighth after Joey Amalfi- tano singled and Roman Mejias was hit by a pitch. Brosnan stopped the threat. The Reds put it away against Bob Bruce (6-7) with two in the second on a walk, Vada Pinson's triple and a single by Leo Cardenas. The Dodgers went ahead to -|stay in the second when Johnny Roseboro homered after a sin- gle by Frank Howard, and TOUR DU ST. LAURENT headed for another record-- is retiring from baseball. . . with m leosis (a mild case, he must avoid exercise and rest. He had a 9-6 record when he pitched last, on Ottawa Rough Rider coach has Ron. Stewart after all, "as long The Big Four season opens tonight, with Tiger-Cats in Ottawa. r infection) and while it's a July 28... FRANK CLAIR, relented--he"s going to keep as he's the best for the job'. OTTAWA (CP)--Le Tour du} CLOSE FINISH! Austrian Frank Gerhard (right) and Victor Mapitonov, a Russian, push their bikes to the finish line of the Le Tour de St. Laurent 9th lap? Gerhard won ban Rockcliffe Village, Park. by a wheel's length, covering the distance from Montreal to Hull at an average speed of Police Wednesday night en- |St. Laurent, an international bi-| forced a ban that prohibits rac-jhours after the 48 cyclists from |eyele race that has _survivedjing in the picturesque park and|15 countries had completed a jnearly 600 miles of Quebec's|a 25-mile closed - circuit race,|gruelling 122 - mile lap from hills and curves,. has bogged|scheduled as part of the seven-| Montreal to nearby Hull. Frank down in the serenity of subur-| day 1,015-mile classic, was can-|Gerhard, a slim Austrian had celled. place from 16th. Bike Riders Barred From Ottawa Tracks It was to be run off just four lunged home the winner, a wheel's length in front of Rus- sia's Victor Kapitonov. The tour was met at the park by members of the RCMP, pro- vincial police and Ottawa city police. The OPP, which patrols most of the park, said racing was not allowed, The RCMP, which patrols the area con- trolled by the National Capital Commission, said the same thing and city police said it oe be allowed in city lim- ts. The group moved off to a Na- tional Capital Commission area where there happens to be a paved circuit exactly one-mile long. An' RCMP constable 'was waiting to inform the racers that this road -couldn't be used. Officials announced the can- cellation and also said that to- day's Ottawa-Montreal leg, via Cornwall, would start from Hull) city hall and not from the Par- liament Buildings as originally scheduled, + At the end of the nine com- pleted laps, Russia's Aleksei Petrov was still leading the field with his time of 25:09:56 with 25:11:25. four hits for a 3-1 triumph over two while striking out 10 in |beating the Pirates and Al Mc- |Bean (11-8). The Cardinals pushed across the game's lone runs on an error in the sixth. A 14-hit attack, including |home runs by Ernie Banks and |Ron Santo did the damage for |the Cubs while len Hobbie |(14-11) limihome runs by Ernie jseven hits. The loser was Bob |Hendley (8-8). | Genosha Aces Win Opener 1-0 Inl Innings C:nnsha 4 aut Ukrainian Aces 1-0 in < 12-inning |thriller, Tuesday evening at |Alexandra. Park, in the first | District Association's Juvenile "A" championship finals Sec- ond game of the 2-out-of-3 set goes tonight (Thursday) ac Bathe Park, 6.30 p.m. Ukrainian Aces, had an eight- inning stretch of no-hit, no-run performance. He gave up the first hit, a single to Tilk, first batter in the 9th inning. A single by Zarowny in the 10th, one by Rowden in the 11th inning and then three-straight in the 12th, told the story. Gaskell opened the 12th for Genoshas wiih a single and Hickey followed with a two-bag- ger. The Ukrainian infield moved in close, in a bid to cut off a runner at the plate and Zarowny ,tot his second hit, a) looper just behind the infield, | which scored Gaskell with the! only run of the game. Bob Mason, pitching for Gen- osha Aces, gave up only two hits. over the entire distunce An error, then u walk with one out and Wright's single wih two out, loaded the bases for Ukrainians in the second inning but Mason fanned Yahn to get out of that hole. The only hit Mason gave up was a single to Kocho in the 8th inning, that "™ two out and constituted no threat.. US NEAR AS Yahn, p; Kocho, If; King, 3b; Spencer, ss; Hraynyk, 1b; Barnoski, 2b; Hooper, cf; Campbell, c; Wright rf. GENOSHA ACES -- Pipher, 2b; Tilk, rf; Davis, ss; Rowden, 3b; Norris, If; Gaskell, 1b; Seneco, cf; Zarowny, c; Mason, p; Hickey, cf in 8th. "Buddy" Yahn, pitching for 6th and 7th frames, but couldn't score again. Cobourg tied the game in the 8th when Robinson homered. This was his second hit of the home team's total of only three. Ewart had the other one. OSHAWA PIC-0-MATS -- Nel-| son, 2b; Berwick, cf; Tureski,| 1b; Snow, If; Melnick, c; Mack- ness, rf; Solomon, ss; Campbell, 3b; Taylor, p. COBOURG BROKERS--Quig- ley, 3b; Turpin, ss; Dawe, p; Hastings, 2b; Sharpe, If; Lin- gard, 1b; Robinson, champ, cf; Chase, c; Campbell, p, batted in 7th; Ewart, If, bat- ted in 5th; Mitchell, c, batted 2 8 n 8th. De- tendance over the 1,000,000 mark for the 17th consecu- tive year. New York now has drawn 1,015,346 for 45 home dates. It is the 26th time the Yankees' attendance ha gone over 1,000,000. . Hanna, c; Crosmos, g:f; Brown, ss; Henderson, p. yc aged oa Ro oscpr ss; Thorndyke, c; er, 3b; Christie, cf; Tener, If; Mathews, rf; Kennedy, 2b; Ing, p; Monroe, 1b; Townsend, 1b, batted in 7th. OPENER DRAWN BISONS SIGN RE AY CHICAGO (AP) -- Dukla of| BUFFALO (AP)--Butffalo Bi- Czechoslovakia and America of|sons of the American, Hockey Brazil played to a 1-1 tie Wed-| League Wednesday signed nesday night in the first of a/coach Billy Reay to awéwo-year two-game series for the Ameri-| contract. Reay, a formier player can Challenge Cup. Dukla is the| with Montreal Canadie ms in the 1961 champion and Brazil the| National League, joined the Bi- 1962 champion of the Interna-| sons last fall as coach «after the tional Soccer League. death of Frank Eddolls. - 20%. ALL SUMMER LINES! All Sales Final--N DOMINIO! TIRE STORES TIRE oman STORES Vines} Lowi & > Even SANTA Couldn't Compete With This Give-Away! ~ DOMINION o Returns -- BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE TENTS GYM SETS , x 5% x 7%. Were 79.95. Picture Window WALL TENTS: Size 9 x 9 LARGE SIZE DELUXE MODEL -- Complete with slide. Were 34.95. LAWN MOW ERS SLEEPING BAGS POWER LAWN MOWERS & TILLERS BIG TWO -- with full zipper. Large size: Were 7.95. NOW 25% OFF 5.99 CHAIRS APPLIANCES Large Size Folding ALUMIN CHAIRS. Were 7.95. NOW ... SILEX TOASTERS -- Were 12.95. NOW ... SILEX STEAM AND DRY IRONS -- 9,99 8, UM For Erie Feature FORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)--Ra- ven Wing finally lived up to ad- vice billing and won the feat- ured fifth race at Fort Erie Wednesday. Raven Wing defeated Reluc- tant Deb and Stormy Morn to pay $3.20, $2.20 and $2.10, | A crowd of 8,816 fans saw Ra- ven Wing run the 1 1-16 miles in 1.44 2-5, The quinella of Raven Wing and Reluctant Deb paid $17.70. | Raven Wing First | | NO QUESTIONS | ATIKOKAN, Ont, (CP) -- No one came to the township office here after a question period on municipal affairs was adver- tised in the local paper. Reeve |S. G, Hancock, councillor Harry Walden and clerk-treasurer D. 24 miles an hour. The win {for the 598 miles. Behind him|R. Buie sat by themselves for boosted his standing to fifth |was Adolf Christian of Austria|two hours but no ratepayers ap- peared. GAMES Were 12.95. NOW with net, poles, etc. Were 1.98. NOW BADMINTON SETS -- 2 player, C RADIOS Transistor Portable RADIOS -- Model ST600. Were 29.95. NOW 22.22 BASEBALL GLOVES LAWN SPRINKLERS BASEBALL GLOVES. Were 4.95. NOW DOMINION TIRE STORES Model E55 LAWN SPRINKLER -- Full controls. Were 4.95. NOW ... Model E85 LARGER SIZE -- Full controls. Were 7.95. NOW 3.88 Your Guarantee @ Merchandise and prices exactly os odvertised. @ Convenient Budget Terms @ No red tape -- We do our own @ Goods completely satis- factory or money refund- ed, 4 financing DOMINION. TIRE (Corner of Church) STORES LIMITED 725-6511 A 40% Off |