Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Aug 1962, p. 12

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, August 16, 1962 ord of 58 consecutive games of errorless ball. Starting near 2nd base (top photo) Hubbs moved far to his right, into shortstop territory trying for a backhand pick-up. He stopped it. Certainly he could not be accused of "staying on a dime"' KEN HUBBS, Ohicago Oubs' rookie second base- man, is shown above failing to field cleanly a_ sharp grounder by Chuck Hiller of San Francisco Giants in the 5th inning of yesterday's game. But the official scorer ruled it a hit and Hubbs set a new National League rec- SPORTS MEN By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR --AP Wirephoto 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' EDDIE McCABE, sports scribe for the Ottawa Journal, in a front page story this week, writes "If we're going to 'leak' things, let's have us a fine blowout' and continues to call for a complete airing of the rumours and facts concerning the big squabble in the Ottawa Rough Riders' camp, which in the main, involves general manager George Terlep and two injured players, Beattie and Desmarais, but apparently also touches other players and perhaps head coach Frank Clair and his mate, Bill Smyth. Now Barry O'Brien, club president, has a d that he will launch a full-scale investigation into the friction and that action will be taken if serious trouble exists. And the '"bookies" in Montreal have made Alouettes 12-point favorites over Ottawa for their game in Montreal tonight. The Riders will go without coach Clair, who is still confined to hospital with a strained back. Angela Mosca, ex-Rider, will no doubt be trying to provide a couple of roont-mates for Clair, in tonight's line action. HOME AND ABROAD: -- Bob Bradley was defeated in the Canadian Amateur Golf Championship yesterday, but made a good showing. . . . GORDIE MacMILLAN and his partner won their first game in the Seagram Trophy men's doubles lawn bowling tournament but lost out to a Streetsville pair in the second round and then dropped another one, 12-11, in the third event. . . . DICK ADAMS, of Whitby, is still very much in the running in this competition, he and his mate having won three games yesterday to advance to the fourth round. . . . PICKERING (East Woodlands) pee wee boys won the third game of their OASA series over Bay Ridges last night and will open the next round, in Port Perry tomorrow evening, six-thirty. .. . CONNAUGHT PARK Bantams won a 9-8 thriller over Storie Park last night, to qualify as Osh- awa's OASA Bantam representatives. They move into the first round on Monday night, hosts to Pickering Bantams. . . . OSHAWA TONY'S got a brilliant one-hit pitching per- formance from Normie Bagnell here last night and blanked Randall-Roy Motors 5-0. The same clubs go again tomorrow night, at Kew Gardens. . . . PETERBOROUGH Rock Havens won their first game of OASA Junior "A". playoffs over Belleville but the Belleville Juveniles eliminated the Liftlock City lads in two-straight. Oshawa Genosha Aces now meet Belleville, starting down there Monday evening. . . .- DU- PLATE, Oshawa's Inter. Industrial entry, opens in Peterbor- ough tomorrow night. . . . SCUGOG CLEANERS meet Scar- boro, second game of their series, here at Alexandra Park tonight and tomorrow evening, it's Heffering's Imperials and Pic-O-Mats, in the second game of their City and District semi-final sefies. . . . BROOKLIN beat Port Perry Tuesday night in "Port" and they go again tonight in Brooklin, sec- ond game of their OACA Inter. "C" round... . . PETERBOR- OUGH Midgets defeated Port Perry there last night and the second game is right back tonight, in the Liftlock City. Osh- awa Midgets are scheduled to open the next round with the winner, this Saturday. . . . OSHAWA "Lakeshores" and Orono Orphans, in OBA .Major "A" playdowns, meet here at Kinsmen Stadium tonight, second game of the series. Rookie Ken Hubbs|Connaught Park Boys Sets New Record Errorless String {his 22nd victory. lost his sixth By JIM BECKER Associated Press Sports Writer Today is an anniversary that is marked in Los Angeles with little enthusiasm. When Aug. 16 dawned a year ago, the Dodgers were in first place in the National League race for the last time in the season, and all was not well. The attack was stalled, the pitching shaky, the fielding fumbling -- and Cincinnati Reds were onrushing. When Aug. 16, 1961, was over, the Reds had shut out the Dod- gers twice to complete a three- game sweep and take over first place for the rest of the. year. When the returns were in, the Dodgers had gone 26 innings without a run, and had lost four straight games. They went on to lose 10 in a row. Meanwhile, in the Redlegs camp Frank Robinson was ham- mering the ball at a furious clip and Bob Purkey, Joey Jay and Jim O'Toole were pitching mas- terpieces. Anything sound familiar? Well, the Dodgers lost their fifth straight battle last night, 6-3, to Pittsburgh Pirates, as their fielding collapsed and their big hitter, Tommy Davis, went hitless for the third straight game. The Reds Braves 4-3 behind Purkey, who won his 18th game of the sea- son, and Robinson, who drove in three runs with two homers and|out in the ninth inning when took over the league batting| Bill White, Minne Minoso and| lead with a .342 mark. In their|Julio Gotay hit singles. last 30 games the Reds have posted a 24-6 won - lost mark San Francisco Giants re- mained 14% games back in sec- {ond spot as they dropped a 7-5 | decision to Chicago Cubs. Hous- ton Colts defeated St. . Louis Cardinals 3-1. Philadelphia Phil- lies trimmed New York Mets in a doubleheader 9-3 and 8-7 in 13 innings. beat Milwaukee|They were Nos, 28 and 29. | ro |up seven hours and 48 minutes }and have climbed to within 544) jn playing 22 innings. The Phils games of the slumping Dodgers.| were The Pirates jumped on Don} Drysdale for five runs in the| tan and Hickman first three innings, with Bob/ score with a three-run home Clemente and Bill Mazeroski contributing key blows. Drys- dale, making his second try for. Cancel Meet lakes ashi At Mosport | TORONTO (CP) tion of a racing meet this Sat- jurday at Mosport Track near |Bowmanville, Ont., has forced the Canadian Automobile Sport 1962 to deciding the | championship eight. seven from The Sports Car Club of Tor-| runner-up called off the. weekend| $9 59, onto meet '"'due to contract difficul- ties with Mosport." Four of the championship races have already been held and so far Francis Bradley of| Toronto leads with 24 points to 23 for defending champion Lud- wig Heimrath of Toronto, The three remaining races will be at Calgary Sept. 2, at | Mosport a week later and again 'at Mosport Sept. 22. The last race will be the Canadian Grand. Prix. EASIER THAN 'FINDING THEM | | BRIDGE WATER, N.J. | (AP) A judge levied penal- ties on two New Jersey men accused of splashing their way to a golf ball business by wearing frogman's suits. Authorities told this story: Fred Martino, 47, of West Orange and Nicholas Pao- lello, 54, of Orange wore rubber suits the night of July 7, dived into a pond at the Green Knolls golf course and emerged with some 1,000 golf balls, They planned '9 sell the hoard, They were arrested by po- lice who said the pair ad- mitted retrieving golf balls in a similar fashion from courses in other states. Both pleaded guilty to charges of illegally taking the golf balls, entering the course after dark and using illegal entrance. Magistrate John Macko fined Martino $195 and Pao- lello $165. BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Houston (Farrell 8-14) night. National League (Only games scheduled) WL Pct. GBL American League 79 42 653 77 43 642 73 47 .608 67 50 573 65 55 .542 Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsbutgh St. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston 14 |New York 51% |Los Angeles 19 | Minnesota 131% | Chicago 64 57 529.15 | Detroit 57 66 .463 23 | Baltimore 43 74 368 34 '| Cleveland Chicago 4476 .367 34% |Boston. _ New York 30 89 252 48 | Kansas City 54 450 1914 Wednesday's Results Washington 45 74 378 28 Philadelphia 9-8 New York 3-7 Wednesday's Results San Francisco 5 Chicago 7 _--{ Baltimore 1 Detroit 3 Los Angeles 3 Pittsburgh 6 |Chicago 10-2 Cleveland 2-3 Milwaukee 3 Cincinnati 4 New York 9 Minnesota 3 St. Louis 1 Houston 3 Washington 4 Kansas City 8 Probable Pitchers Today Boston. 4 Los Angeles 5 72 68 66 5 62 59 59 58 58 56 5 615 3 562 6 550 71% 512 12 496 14 483 15% 483 1514 ATL 17 WL Pet. GBL International League WL Pet. GBL 78 43 .645 71 53 67 58 . 64 60 . 61 61. 62 63 . Jacksonville Toronto Rochester Buffalo Columbus | Atlanta Richmond 48 78 . Syracuse 45 80 3 Wednesday's Results Toronto 11 Columbus 10 | Buffalo 4 Richmond 3 Jacksonville 5-3 Syracuse 4-1 Atlanta.3 Rochester 5 Games Today Toronto at Columbus (N) | | Buffalo at Richmond (N) Atlanta at Rochester (N) Jacks'ville at Syracuse (N) |rison aboard Reluctant Deb had)port Perry at Brooklin, both) Qharryin Spenceley also singled n jtwo wins, giving him a total of|games at 8.15 p.m.; d Club to cut the number of races!96 and a tie with Ron Turcotte! Canadian for leading riders. 1 | Woodbine Futurity Pace before Connaught Park boys nosed out Storie Park 9-8 last night at Storie Park, to take the Oshawa Minor Softball Associ- ation's Kiwanis Bantam League OASA special playoff series in two-straight games. Connaught Park will now represent the city in OASA pro- vincial playdowns, opening the first round against Pickering, here at Connaught Park on Monday evening. In the meantime, also start- ing on Monday night, the top 10 teams (including Connaught) will .commence their Oshawa Minor Softball Association Ki- wanis. Bantam League cham- game of the year. Wally Moon and Willie Davis homered for all the Dodger runs. Moon's camp with a man on. The Cubs snapped a five- game San Francisco winning streak as Dick Bertell's bloop single with the bases loaded in the seventh inning broke a 5-5 tie. Willie Mays' 37th homer with a man on, followed by Matty Alou's homer in the third inning, built a 5-2 giant lead. Ernie Banks crashed his a 4 he To oe |pionship playoffs. Connaught Cub rookie Ken Hubbs set|Park games will be '"'fitted in" two league records for second|9 available dates. basemen as he completed 58) BANTAM PLAYOFFS consecutive games and 321 Kiwanis Bantam. League chances without bagel dag Championship Playoffs: (First Purkey's 18th was a career Round) -- Monday, August 20-- high. He had a shutout until the Ginn at Siode Bad" Rundia ninth, when a walk and three Bark at" Nowth Gatawa: rake singles scored two runs and Vista at Nipi : i pigon Park; Fern- brought on Jim Brosnan. Bros Hil Park st Kingside: all nan fanned Tommy Aaron, gave ue, up a pinch single to Del Cran-|82mes at 6.15 p.m. (9 innings) dall for another run ard then|With visiting teams to supply got Amado Samuel go hit into| Plate" umpire. Return games a force play. of 2-out-of-3 series, on Wednes- Robinson homered in the,4a4y, August 22, Third games (if necessary) on Friday, August fourth. After Don Blasingame| A jn|24--at Storie, North Oshawa, doubled. anothér run home in fotawn and Winesile. i 1 the fifth, big Frank blasted a ests, Ace fh & Welk two-run home run in the sixth. view Park at Connaught Park and Thurs., Aug. 23, Connaught Park at Woodview Park. Third game, if necessary, on Friday, Aug. 24 or Saturday, Aug. 25. Quarter-finals will start on Monday, August 27, draw to be announced, CONNAUGHT RALLIES Connaught Park scored three runs, all on homers, in the 8th inning last night, to come from behind a 7-6 deficit and take a 9-7 lead, which in the final accounting, meant victory. Storie Park's Chmlousky hom- Hal Smith and Carl Warwick hit solo homers for the Colts. Hal Woodeshick lost his shut- The Phils and the Mets used paced by two homers by Don Demeter and one by Johnny Callison, good for a to- tal of six runs, in the opener. In the nightcap, manager Casey Stengel of the Mets sent In OASA Bantam Play singled with one out then Tay- lor homered. Taylor, on the mound foi Storie Park, had retired the first nine batters he faced, five of them strikeouts but B, Reid opened the fourth for Con- naught with a single and then with two out, John Dick doubl- ed to score Reid, making it 4-1. Storie came right back with three more runs. Clark walked with one out, was forced by Locke, Logeman singled then Solomon homered, to make the score 7-1, In the fifth inning, Connaught got three. Grieg singled, so did P. Dick and then Brack doubl- ed and Gardner's sacrifice fly scored Brack, to make it 7-4. \In the. sixth inning, Glendinning isingled, J. Dick was safe on' an error but Glendinning was re- tired. Clapp doubled and Grie singled, then P. Dick sacri- ficed to score Clapp, making it 7-6, Meanwhile, John Dick had tightened up and Storie Park's bats were silent. HECTIC EIGHTH ~ | The game was won and lost| in the 8th inning. Glendinning} opened for Connaught with a home run, to tie the score at 7-7. At this point Solomon took over the pitching from Taylor and he was greeted by John Dick, with a homer that put Connaught ahead for the first time, 8-7. With one out, Grieg clout of the inning, to put Con- naught ahead 9-7. Storie Park lads came back in the 8th with one run. Chmlou- sky opened with a single. Dick fanned the Wright brothers but Clark doubled to score Chmlou- sky, then Dick fanned Locke to end that inning, with the scote 9-8. In the 9th, Connaught went down in order. Solomon sin- gled without one for Storie but he Was forced by Taylor and then John Dick struck out Cam- eron to end the game and series. Chmlousky and Solomon each had a homer and two singles} for Storie Park to lead their attack -while Taylor had a homer and single. Dick allowed 11 hits all told and struck out 13 batters. Taylor gave up nine hits and) § struck out nine batters while Solomon allowed three hits in| two innings and fanned one.|" Grieg was Connaught's big nit-|" ter, with a homer and two); singles. John Dick had a homer] and double, Glendinning had aj) homer and single while Brack); had a doubje and single. CONNAUGHT PARK --Reid, ef; McQuade, c; Glendinning, %; John Dick, p; Clapp, 1b; W. Grieg, 2b; P. Dick, rf; Brack, lf; Gardner, ss. STORIE PARK -- Logeman, 2b; Solomon, 3b and p in 8th; Taylor, p and 3b; Cameron, c; Chmlousky, If; E. Wright, cf; G. Wright, 1b; Clark, rf and ss connected for the third circuit and lf; Locke, ss and rf. OVER THOMSON'S Oshawa Gir In PWSU Pl Choo Choo Coleman tp to pinch ered to open the second inning) BOB JAMIESON, of Peter- borough, puts effort into his swing as he takes his second shot on the 18th fairway, at London's Sunningdale Golf Club. He won the hole to beat ls Win First ayoff Round Lou Moiner of Toronto 'one up" in the first round of the Canadian Amateur Golf Championship, yesterday. --CP Wirephote Cowan, Weslock hit in the sixth inning and he hit. a two-run homer. In the eighth, trailing 7-4, Casey sent Jim Hickman up to hit for Cole- tied the for the first run of the game and in the next frame, Storie scored three runs for an early 4-0 lead. Locke opened the third with a_ single, Solomon Oshawa Scugog Cleaners opened their Provincial Wom- en's Softball Union Junior play- off campaign last night at To- ronto Coxwel}l Stadium with an run. In the 13th, Callison blooped a double to left to drive impressive 11-4 victory over Thomson's Brokers. Second game of this 2-out-of-3 series June Suddard started it off with a walk, Carol Parker singled, Schultz drew a walk and Ger- mond singled, then Vaillancourt} walked, a couple of wild pitches followed and Boddy completed the big rally with her timely triple. Big Match Today By W. R. WHEATLEY 1958 and Weslock won by the LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Five in-|/same margin in the 1961 quar- ternational matches in the sec-/ter-finals of the Canadian Ama- ond round of the Canadian ama- teur. in the winner. Has 26th Winner FORT ERIE, On. (CP)--Re- luctant Deb ran 1 1-16 miles in 1.44 4-5 to capture the featured --Cancella-| Philos Club Purse at Fort Erie Wednesday. Apprentice jockey Jerry Har- SPORTS | CALENDAR TODAY | SOFTBALL OASA Junior "A" Playoffs-- \Searboro vs Oshawa Scugog |Cleaners, at Alexandra Park, \8.15 p.m.; 2nd game of 2-out-of- 3 series, 1st round. | | OASA Inter. "C" Playoffs --| |Pickering at Markham and| will be played here at Alexan- dra Park on Saturday night. Marilyn Schultz, on the mound for Oshawa, was in fine form for this playoff tilt, giving up only six hits. Darryin Spence. ly doubled in the first inning but was nipped at the plate; trying to score after Mary Coling was safe on an error. In the third inning, Spenceley singled with two out, after Hea- ther Ramage had walked, then 2nd gamesicso did-Mary Coling and that Once in front, the Oshawa girls kept on the pressure, scor- ing one by Sandra Paradise in} . , the fifth, another by Boddy in| Standing Canadians. / the sixth and then three, all on| The meeting of Gary Cowan of walks and errors, not a hit, in| Kitchener and Nick Weslock of the 8th inning as Coling ran|Toronto was heralded as __ into a wild streak. grudge affair. There were whis- Carol Germond had two hits|pers and implications that each and Linda Boddy was best of| would like to pin back the ears all with three, including a tri-|Of the other--preferably wilh a ple, to pace the Oshawa attack.| wedge. OSHAWA -- Suddard, c; Par-| Whatever the reason for the ker, 3b; Schultz, p; Germond,| build-up, the match promised to Ib; Vaillancourt, cf; Boddy, ss;|be an outstanding _ struggle. of 2-out-of-3 series. Lueas, If; March, rf; Para-|Cowan, 23, is defending cnam- teur golf championship became Hyper onnn minimized temporarily today by BEATS VETERAN popular agreement because of a head-on clash 'between two out- From an international stand- point, with 10 Americans still in the chase, the big upset was a 3-and-2 win by 20-year-old Jim Scissons of Saskatoon over vet- eran Bill Campbell of Hunting- ton, W.Va., twice runner-up in {the Canadian Open. Phil Brownlee of Toronto had little trouble disposing of David Lowry of Windsor, Ont., 3 and |2 and Richard Siderowf of New- lington, Conn., won 2 and 1 over Bob Bradley of Oshawa. Don Cherry, 1953 Canadian - | Inter-County League -- Fo- deb paid $6.20,/jey's Plumbing vs Ukrainian $2.40. Shogun, in the! Aces, at Bathe Park; Abner's spot, returned $3 and/fsso vs Police Assoc.; at Al- : Pa . |exandra Park; Genosha Aces vs Harrison counted his first win|Houdaille, at Lakeview Park; on Chinese Bandit in the sixth.| ay games at 6.45 p.m. It was Chinese Bandit's third) Reluctant $3.20 and meant a_ three-run rally for) |Thomson's, They got i jrun in the 9th inning when Col-} leen Cooper opened with a sin- gle, advanced on an infield out |and scored on Lou Sharpe's sin-} gle. Darryin Spencely was the only jone of the Brokers to get to dise, 2b; Pelow, cf,in 8th. their other) THOMSON'S -- Lowe, 2b; D. Spenceley, cf and 3b; C., Spence. ley, 3b and cf; Coling, lf and p; Cooper, ss; Cook, tb; . Sharpe c} Burns, rf; Ramage, p and ion. Weslock, 44, won the title Amateur winner, came into the ; 1957 and has won lesser titles)second round through a 3-and-2 almost by the dozen. {win over Ernie Hauser of Kit- Cowan and Weslock have metichener. Cherry, from Whichita twice before in match play. Falls, Tex., lost a three-hole Cowan won 4 and 3 in the On- lead but won three in a row tario Amateur semi-finals in along the last mine. | | straight victory at this rack, |BASEBALL OBA Intermediate "A" Play-| Safe hits. 'Lynden Chief' p.m.; 2nd game of 2-out-of-3 series. Leaside Junior League | Oshawa Canadian Tire Legion- jnaires vs Laurie's Sports, at |Leaside Talbot. Park, 7.30 p.m. Has Best Time Futurity Pace ossws terion Minor asic: TORONTO (CP)--Max Web- Ajax vs Oshawa Dairy, at East- ser's Lynden Chief won the old View Park. 615 p.m.; 2nd game of 2-out-of-3 series. FRIDAY 5,978 here Tuesday in 2:09. _. SOFTBALL ' The stakes, worth $8,000 with Oshawa City and Disirict As added money, was divided into so¢, -- (Major League Semi- three divisions with an entry|Finals) -- Heffering Imperials list of 25 two-year-old pacers. |ys Pic-O-Mats, at Alexandra Webster, Brantford owner of|park, 7.30 p.m.; 2nd game of the Lynden Hill Farms saw his series. . colt:score the best time in three rs ¥ a divisions by more than one sec Pivcgg bi Bal -- hdl ond as he won by more than) Derr 6.30 6 Ist ft four lengths over Beverly Dil-\) a 3 Pm.; 15 game 0 lard, owned and driven by Earl) "OUl-O!s Series. Shea of Bethany. Beaches Major Fastball Jasper Herbert, owned by|League -- Oshawa Tony's vs Bill Herbert of London and/Randall-Roy Metals, at Toronto driven by Jack Herbert, and|Kew Gardens, 7.30 p.m. Herry Johnston, owned and; QOASA Inter, Industrial -- Osh- driven by Lorne Johnston ofjawa Duplate at Peterborough, Dresden, won the other heats./8.15 p.m.; Ist game of 2-out-of-3 7 eis # z i series. LACROSSE | OLA Senior League -- Brook- |lin Hillerests at St. Catharines, |8.30 p.m. | SOCCER | Toronto National League -- /Toronto Hungaria vs Oshawa Hungaria, at Kinsmen Civic {Memorial Stadium, 8.00 p.m. night Young Birds Race | From Parry Sound The first annual young bird race was held by the Oshawa Racing Pigeon Club, from Parry Sound, last Saturday, an air- |tine distance of about 120 miles. | The results in yards-per-min- jute, were as does |Karssing, 1180.00; 2nd. J. Shew- jchuck, 1161.81; 3rd. R. Bevan, |1151.03; 4, J. Shewchuck, 1146.- 1/98; 5. S. Grant, 1140.63; 6. E. |Karssing, 1139.98; 7. J. Issel, | 1137.22; 8. R. Bevan, 1135.13; 9 iM Korbij, 1134.57 and 10. R. |Bevan, 1133.13. WIN QUEBEC TITLE MONTREAL (CP) --_Valley- HOCKEY GREAT Donald H. Bain, 88, ranked offs -- Orono Onphans vs Osh.| Heather Ramage started as} awa Lakeshores, at Kinsmen pitcher for Thomson's and gave |way to Mary Coling after Osh- awa had staged a big rally in ithe fourth inning. | In the third, Carol Germond |was safe on an error, Crystal | Vaillancourt drew a walk and |Linda Boddy's single scored Germond with Oshawa's first run. Trailing 3-1, the Scugog Clean-| ers moved in front with a five-| |run rally in the fourth frame.| Genosha Aces Thump Abner's Genosha Aces visited Whitby jlast night for an Inter-County Softball League schedule date | with Abner's Esso and the Aces came out on top 16-4. | Mason pitched the clear-cut |win for Genosha's, giving up only one hit, a home-run blow |by McLean in the 7th inning for, . aT MISSISSAUGUA |Whitby's final run. They got |their other three on walks as |and struck out 12 batters. | In the third, Christie walked, stole two bases while McLean was getting a walk and then an \infield error with two out, scor- jed Christie, for Whitby's first run. They got two more in the fifth on walks to Monroe and | McLean, plus a catcher's throw- jing error, a stolen base and Fletcher's sacrifice fly. Townson pitched at the start for the home club but he gave up two runs in the second and four more in the third, so Ing | took over.in the fourth. He had |trouble-getting the range also and in the fifth, Genosh's piled jin five more runs to complete their total. ' | Singles by. Gaskell and Mo- |sier, behind Vernon's walk, and \then two infield errors, meant jthe two runs in the second. Rowden and Norris both ho- jmered during the four - {splurge in the third inning. |Gaskell's homer completed an- }other four-run parade in the fourth. Rowden doubled home Zarowny's walk in the fifth jand then in the 7th, Genoshas scored five runs on three walks, {three errors and just one hit, 'a single by Norris | GENOSHA ACES -- Zarowny, ; Tilk, cf; Davis, ss; Rowden, SEE THE TOP CANADIAN GOLF PROS COMPETING FOR The Seagram Shield ano £10,000 prize Money AT THE 50"* ANNIVERSARY -- =& CANADIAN PROFESSIONAL GOLFERS' ASSOCIATION -- CHAMPIONSHIP GOLF s COUNTRY CLUB AUGUST 23-24-25 a PRO-AM AT =sCELEBRITY MATCHES | A) Vgh itl AUGUST 22 | | TICKETS AVAILABLE AT GOLF CLUB PRO SHOPS { 4 { \field won the Quebec Province (3b; Vernon, 2b; Norris, If; Gas-| Little League baseball cham-|kell, lb; Mosier, rf; Mason, p. pionship by edging Montreal Ki-| ABNER'S ESSO -- McLean,| wanis East 5-4 Monday night.)ss; Zayette, cf; Fletcher, 3b; Thursday night Valleyfield|Hemer, lf; Thorndyke, c;! plays in Dundas, Ont., a sud-|Clarke, rf; Townson, p; Chris-| den-death game for the Eastern|tie, 2b; Monroe, lb; Ing, p in Canada title against the Ontario\4th; Mathews, rf in 5th; Ken- champions, still to be decided.|nedy, 2b in 5th, A 3 Probable Pitchers Today San Francisco (Pierce 11-3) at be ae Chicago (Cardwell 5-11). Chicago (Fisher 4-4 or Buz- hardt 7-9) at Cl Grant Los Angeles (Williams 11-8) atiggy) >t leveland (Gran Pittsburgh (Law 9-6 or Gibbon! 2-3) night. Milwaukee (Shaw 14-8) at Cin- cinnati (Jay 18-9) night. St. Louis (Jackson 9-10) at) as one of the greatest ama- teur players in Canadian hockey history, died at his Winnipeg home yesterday. An all-round athlete, he played with Winnipeg Victorias when the team won the Stanley Cup in 1001, CHOOSE TEAM EDMONTON (CP) -- Alberta} will be represented by 10 ath- New York (Stafford 10-7) at letes at the Canadian age-class | Minnesota (Stigman 7-3). track and field championships| Washington (Osteen 6-9) at in Waterloo, Ont., Aug. 24 and) Kansas City (Rakow 10-13), 25. The team is coached by (Only gamts scheduled). 'Alex Geczy of Edmonton, + ' UNDER THE AUSPICES of THE CANADIAN PROFESSIONAL GOLFERS' ASSOCIATION ano MISSISSAUGUA GOLF s COUNTRY CLUB Ry ---OP Wirephoto

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