Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Sep 1962, p. 10

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a fin te dhe ie as de Wee a aes ) HE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, foot hor 1S, 19-7 As 'Hastings Stars !Pace Brampton i To Second Win | at Toronto's CNE Stadium. Menan Schriewer (7) of Ar- gos, grabs for Carphin's sweater to haul him down. go up in the air and stretch their hands for the ball in this play, during yesterday's Ca- nadian Football League game UP FOR GRABS! Ron Mor- mis (11) of Toronto Argonauts and Jim Carphin (dark sweat- 'er) of British Columbia Lions, 'FIFTH LOSS FOR ARGOS 'It's Nobby's Turn Cry Double Blues ' Senge: fd ki took over as\touchdowns for the Lions and) gate intercepted three passes. Nobby Wirkows foach of Toronto Argonauts of the Eastern Football Confer- nce, the team had lost three tase in three starts. ' Said Wirkowski: "The season is about to begin." ed " Today, two games later, Ar- gos have lost five in a row.) Nobby is still waiting for the! Gary Schreider socred a touch-/Schreider was a. defensive down, kicked a field goal and standout. three converts. Bob Schloredt' 'Toronto kicked a 's Beamer and Tom scored the other touchdowns. For Argos, Dick Shatto scored) took over, Rote, who missed a two touchdowns and rookie Joe) game, because of a broken index Hernandez scored the other./finger on -his passing hand, Bill Mitchell kicked all three) mustered a Toronto attack in started with geason to open. eonverts. * British Columbia Lions socked) 'Argos 37-21 in a Canadian Foot-| ARGOS LOOK BAD ball League interlocking game| The most talked about play ere Sunday before 22,254 fans| was the last pl who weren't often excited. feed whe the Lions leading 8-7. * The loss almost killed Tor-| Schreider, f 0 pnto's playoff hopes. Argos are|goal, hit the upright. Argos| the Lions romped eng for a five points behind the third-| stood around watching as| touchdown stich re mo Jace Montreal Alouettes. The|Schreider swooped in to grab B.C, quarterbac : pp Lions moved from the Western the ball on the Argo three-yard) passed for two touc KcovNs, is Conference cellar to a third-|line and carry it over for the| yards to Larscheid and 16 yards place tie with Edmonton Eski-| touchdown. to Fleming. mos, only one point behind the; Defensively, the Lions were; Rote tossed a long pass down too late. | led the team. to two touchdowns {the fourth quarter but it was big eights which At one point, Rote completed of British Columbia, finish sixth lay of the first)seven passes in succession and and last. trying for a fieldj}on consecutive sequences, but brotee VICTORIA (CP)--Two players who performed ren Bramp- ton Armstrongs during the regular season and league play- offs have contributed greatly towards the club's 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven Canadian junior lacrosse final. Forward Grant Heffernan and defenceman Ken Ruttan, re- cruited from Hastings Legion- naires for the Minto Cup series, proved invaluable again Satur- day night when each scored three goals as Brampton edged Victoria 13-12 in overtime. A crowd of 2,200 saw what was easily the best game of the series as Brampton rallied from a three-goal deficit in the fourth quarter and won on a pair of spectacular overtime goals. Brampton rebounded from a 23-7 lacing in the second game. They won the opener 13-10. | The teams meet tonight in the) fourth game. Fifth game will! be Wednesday. MAKES WIN POSSIBLE Heffernan, who has_ scored) eight goals in the series, made) Brampton's third-game win pos-| sible. His goal at 6:35 of the fourth) quarter cut a seemingly - com- fortable Victoria lead to 11-9. Heffernan passed to John Mc- Cauley who scored at 12:20. He} tied the game at 11-11 by} | scoring from a tough angle with just over a minute remaining in regulation time. Breakaway goals by Norm Bignell and McCauley won it for Brampton in the 10-minute over. time. McCauley, in the penalty box when Victoria tied the score at 12-12 just 25 seconds earlier, scored the winner at 7:59. Bob Haw and McCauley fol- lowed Heffernan and Ruttan, who were with Hastings when they won the Canadian title last year, with two goals each. Davis, Bignell and Don Arthurs had singles. SCORES FOUR TIMES Bill Munroe scored four times for Victoria, Nirmel Dillon and John Surinak had two each while Bill Robinson, Pat Mul- cahy, Rod Kilduff and Grant Jordan added singles. Gary Drysdale replaced reg- ular Brampton goaltender Pete Kitto Saturday and turned in a brilliant effort with 27 saves. | Shamrocks scored on their first three shots and led 4-3 after the first quarter. The | jteams were tied 6-6 at half-time and 8-8 after three quarters. Brampton received 32 of the game's 50 minutes in penalties. But Victoria could score only two power-play goals while Brampton managed one. German oarsmen captured five gold medals at the world row- new-| ing championships which wound! ingle and. Nub comer Pete Hall calling the sig-/wp Sunday while the Soviet! Larscheid nals, but Hall couldn't get the/Union and France collected one| rolling and veteran Tobin Rote apiece. The strong German contingent won gold medals in the coxed and coxiess pairs, the coxed| German Oarsmen Dependables Sweep Five Wins In Championship (CP) -- When Willie Fleming scored two strong. Linebacker Norm Field-|) LUCERNE, Switzerland (CP) |5:57.10, Australia in 5:58.85 and! Canada in 6:00.15. Rowing in the eights for Can- ada were Trevor Wilson, Peter Hewlett, Rodney Browne, Don- ald Dewar, Richard Bordewick, Max Wieczorek, Marc Lemieux, Daryl Sturdy and coxswain Ash- ley Lucky, The United States finished fifth in the coxed pairs and "SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY SOFTBALL Oshawa Minor Assoc, -- (Ki- wanis Bantam League Cham- pionship Finals) -- Storie Park vs Connaught Park, at Con- naught Park, 8.00 p.m; Ist game of 3-out-of-5 series. (Note -- if a 5th and deciding game is necessary, it will be played on a neutral diamond.) UAW LEAGUE Oshawa Quality Fuels vs Ward's Bil- liards and Kent's Western Tire vs Engel's Clothing, both games sat Alexandra Park, 6.15 p.m. Oshawa City and District Assoc. -- (City Championship Playoffs) -- MacLean's Esso vs Scugog Cleaners, at Alexandra Park, 7.30 p.m.; 1st game of 2- out-of-3 semi-final series, LACROSSE OLA Senior League -- (Cham- pionship Finals)--Brooklin Hill- crests vs Brampton Ramblers, at Brampton, 8.30 p.m.; 5th game of 4-out-of-7 series, TUESDAY SOFTBALL OASA Intermediate "AA" Playoffs -- Toronto Lynards vs Oshawa Pic-O-Mats, at Alexan- dra Park, 8.00 p.m.; 2nd game |0f 2-out-of-3 series. | Inter-County League Playoffs |-- Houdaille Industries vs Gen- }osha Aces, at Alexandra Park, |west diamond, 6.30 p.m.; 3rd jand deciding game of semi-final series; Ukrainian Aces vs Foley's Plumbing, at Lakeview Park, 6.30 p.m.; 3rd and decid- jing game of semi-final series. | as winner of the 'World Series of Golf" at Akron, Ohio, Nicklaus scored a four-stroke victory over Arnold Palmer and Gary Player, with 65-6 134, Palmer and Player finish- ed tied. --AP Wirephole JACK KNICKLAUS gets con- gratulations from his wife | Barbara, after he captured | top prize of $50,00 yesterday, Nicklaus Combines | | Driver And Putter, Not Exactly - Dependable Caterers failed to show here Saturday afternoon for their scheduled OASA Senior "A" playoff game with Osh. awa Tony's, so.the home club was awarded a 9-0 default vic- tory and it is fully expected, that in keeping with OASA procedure jthe Oshawa team will also be 5 AKRON, Ohio (AP) -- Jack declared winners of the series.' Nicklaus coupled his booming On Friday night, at Kew Gar-/drives with some fancy putting dens, Dependables pounded out/over the last nine holes Sunday 13 hits of Tony's Andy Ander-|to defeat Arnold Palmer and json to score a 6-2 Beaches|Gary Player and win the in- | League decision. The win clinch-|augural world series of golf ed third place for Dependables. |with its top prize of $50,000. and coxless fours and in the saw Canada, jrepresented by the University third in the single sculls. | Tony's must now win their final) The U.S. Open champion The Soviet Union got three|postponed game, against Ran-|from Columbus, Ohio, quickly silver medals and two bronze|dall-Roy Metals, which has been|wiped out Palmer's one-stroke medals in addition to the gold|Scheduled for Oshawa this Wed- /first-round lead, going in front medal while France also got|nesday night. Tony's need thejafter three holes. Then he bir- two silver medals and a bronze|Win to break their first-place tie|died the 10th and 11th holes to medal, : with Eddie Black's, who have|pull safely in front in the $75,- Canadian oarsmen Tohn| Completed their schedule, 1000 exhibition. From then on he Leckey and Herbert Challier of| Norm Mackie pitched Fri.|played steady golf, challenging the UBC team finished ninth|4ay night's win for Depend. jhis rivals to catch him. jearlier Sunday in the coxless|ables, giving up just two hits) Nicklaus, 22, fired a 37-32-60 pairs to determine the placings| for Oshawa's two runs, an open- and finished with a 36-hole total |in the seven-to-12 position. Their|ing double by Nick Mroczek injof 135 after an opening round |the fifth inning, which was fol- The Germans also took a medal in the double |sculls. The Soviet Union won jthe single sculls when Olympic jgold medalist Viatcheslaw Ivanov set a Rotsee Lake rec- ord in 7:07.09, bettering the jprevious time of 7:11.7 made by | Switzerland earlier this year. 66. Player shot a 69-70--139 |They finished in a second-place jtie, earning $12,500 each. | Palmer, the Masters and Brit- jish Open champion, simply couldn't get his putter working jafter shooting a 65 Saturday that tied the par 35-35--70 Fire- stone Country Club record. Where he needed only 25 putts Saturday, Palmer three-putted three times on the front nine where he took a fat 39 and found himself all but. out of con- tention after Nicklaus opened the final nine with his two bir- dies on putts of 12 and 18 feet. Nicklaus didn't exactly take command early in the round. He was in trouble on the first hole, hitting two traps, came out of the second weakly and two- putted from about 35 feet. the sidelines and Hernandez,! time was 7:13.64, French crew of Rene Palmer, in position to widen his Calgary Stamped- erent gary P who had been used on defence the last three games, spun ers. * When the Lions had saad th Argos, Wirkowski accused) ome of his men of being '"'too He, FOOTBALL SCORES| STANDINGS around a defender and com- pleted a 2-yard scoring play. Kapp completed 2 of lat and too well paid." d that sweeping changes| will be made after g practice) fonight. + 'We' go with the pads,"| 'obby said. "No more sweat its. Some of these fellows @ren't hungry enough any- more." MAY MAKE CHANGES * The rookie coach also called h workout for Tuesday morn- ing. The team hasn't held morn- ing practices since training camp. king in the background re six hulking recruits from le National and American foot- ball leagues. All were late cuts ho are trying for jobs with ronto, * Several Argos are said to~be pn thin ice, including such for- mér stalwarts as halfback- nker Dave Mann and tackles illy Shipp and Walt Radzick.| « The newcomers are, ioe ack Don Fuell, 23, from "Hous- Oilers: and Tom Maudlin, , from Los Angeles Rams; Bipore Aubrey Linne, 23, Bal- ore Colts; Lebron Sheild, 25, innesota Vikings; Zeke Smith, , New York Giants, and Jerry By THE CANADIAN PRESS t| Was 11 for 1 " Injuries? Hiaaliton "We didn't hit anybo Montreal Toronto Western Conference | WLT F Apt} 510 81 96 10) 3.4 146156 7 q 0 138 128 6 0123 145 6 62107 5) 3.01113 75 7 inv 2 2 1103119 5\enough to get hurt, 0 5 0 980153 0/ disgusted Wirkowski. Winnipeg Calgary BC, Edmonton Sask. Kent's Whip Plaza Foods Kent's Western Tire defeated 4 4 23 ORF WL 30 Senior F APt 81 317 1 1 2 64604 22 0 47 75 4\afternoon, in their UAW Softball 1 3 0 36 62 2\League round - robin. playoff Games this week |game, at Alexandra Park. Saturday: Oakville at Toronto.) Anderson, pitching for Ken Saturday's Result was in good form and got fine Calgary 17 Edmonton 12 |support from his mates, espe- Sunday's Result cially Short at third base. B.C. 37 Toronto 21 Game Tonight Winnipeg at Hamilton Sisurday's Games East York 24 Sarnia 24 London 9 Oakville 21 Other scores: Ontario Junior Conference Oakville Sarnia East York London ilson, who arrived Friday, from the Buffalo Bills. | © The way Argos looked Sun- Ray, they can use help. ~ | 'Ron Stewart Making His | Move Today * OTTAWA (OP) -- Halfback Stewart's status with Ot- a Rough Riders of the East- Ben Foote Conference will be known today. ® Stewart is to enrol for third- r legal studies at Osgoode all in Toronto today despite Frank Clair's stand that he cannot commute between the diron and law. school. + Clair said at the start of the feason that Stewart must drop is studies this year if he wants play the full year with Rid- . Or he could play until he enrolled in school and then sit qut the rest of the season. » Meanwhile, former Rider half) ary Schreider of British Co- itizen in a telephone interview 'om Montreal Friday that he il article for a law degree in .C. and play the.full season | | Cees eV eR ET EES ON Oshawa 7 Buriing:on 40 ORFU Junior |Bergiven popped up and Davis Sarnia 19 K-W Dutchmen 7 NOFU | was safe on an error but Malloy |was nipped at the plate trying Ito score, on Breau's grounder. | Eldridge singled to score Davis a but Breau was also out at the B K dd And plate, to end the game. i ruce 1 | Bergiven, pitching for Plaza) : |Foods, gave up back-to-back Bill C th ldoubles to Wills and Murray | ro ers jin the' first inning and then| S i N M Jordan's single score: HALIFAX (CP)--Two Torpnto track stars did the expect: for a 2-0_lead. Bruce Kidd set a Singles by open and native reco {and Howes,, produced another| {run in the third then Kent's| 5,000-metre event cor of 14:06.4. He also won |salted it with a home-run rally in 4:18.0. ' in the fourth frame. ne Malloy started it off with a é mile} Bill Crothers, a clubmate of Kidd in Toronto's East York Track Olub, -set a provincial open records with a time of 1:50.2 in the 88-yard dash and 48.4 in the 440. The previous Canadian mark in the 5,000<metre was 14:29.8|" by G. Earlse of Vancouver, es- tablished in 1960 at a Saskatoon meet. Sudbury 0 Kirkland Lake 9 the score to 7-0. ay, all after Stovin was safe {completed the winners' total. Murray, with a double and Wills had a double and two sin- WARD WINS ANOTHER gies while Legree and Jordan SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) .--|each had a pair of safeties, Mal- Rodger Ward, winner of this|loy of Plazas had two for the year's 500-mile classic at Indi-| losers. anapolis, roared to victory Sat-| urday in record time in a 100-|ss; Murray, rf; Short, 3b; Jor- 'mile U.S. Auto Club champion-|dan, Jf; Howes, 2b; Anderson, | 2 Germans third, passes. Hall, who ran well, com-| pleted only four of 10 and Rote! They managed to reach the dy hard), ' 4 ' | aie he finals in the big eights only. -------- eights final in 5:50.88, followed |Plaza Foods 9-1 on Saturday| New York t's, | Chicago Shearer tripled for Plaza in| Boston the first but here were two out. | Kansas City Malloy singled to open the sec-| Washington ond but was a double-play vic.| tim when Bergiven lined out to) Minnesota 9 Detroit 2 Short, Maeson singled in the| Boston 1 New York 6 |fourth but he also failed to get! Washington 3 Chicago 6 far. In the 7th, Malloy got his| Kansas City 2 Cleveland 3 second hit, an opening double.| Los Angeles 2 Baltimore 1 | Los Angeles 3 Baltimore 4 |M d Murray) 'roit (Aguirre 14-6) N. Murray, Jordan| Chicago (Herbert 15-9) N, | : i homer. Stovin walked, Legree|San Francisco jand Wills hit safely to load the| Cincinnati |bases. Next Murray grounded, | Pittsburgh forcing Stovin but Short's double} St. Louis scored two and Murray came|Milwaukee home on an infield out, to boost! Philadelphia | Houston Two more runs in the fifth, on| Chicago hits by Legree, Wills and Mur-| New York on an error, after two out' --' Chi _| three singles, led Kent's attack. | KENT'S -- Legree, cf; Wills, | | ' Also finishing ninth in 6:30.49) lowed by Bob Booth's home-run |Duhamel and Bernard Monner-|in the coxless fours were UBC| Smash. while Palmer shot a 74 Sunday. 'World Series Win lead to two strokes, three-putted from 20 feet. Nicklaus' booming shots got him to the green on the 500- yard No, 2 hole in two shots. Then he-.three - putted while Palmer also three-putted for a one-over par six, enabling Nick- laus to pull into a tie. Palmer, putting one of his shots in the water on the third hole, scram- bled to a one-over-par five while Nicklaus took the lead with a par four. Player, went one over par on the fourth and fifth and ap peared to be out of contention until he birdied the sixth and ninth to pull even with Palmer and within one stroke 'of Nick+ laus after 27 holes. Player then proceeded to match par over the final nine. jeau won the double sculls, with the Soviet Union second and the| UBC oarsmen were entered in three events in the champion- ships--the big eights, the cox- less fours and the coxless pairs. The German crew won the| by the Soviet Union in 5:53.56, France in 6:55.36, Italy pair to break the seve: in|barrier on the lake, oarsmen Roy McIntosh, Thomas Stokes, Thomas Gray and Eldon Worobieff. With the exception of the big eights, new course records were set for the Rotsee, one of Eu- rope's finest meet lakes. The best time was made by Ger. many's coxless pairs crew, who also were last year's European champions in '6:54.54--the first n-minute BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WL Pet. GBL 85 61 .582 82 63 566 21% 80 64 .556 4 75 70 517 9% 73 69 .514 10 71 74 .490 1314 775 48614 | 68 76° .476 16 63 81 .488 21 | 56 91 .381 29% Saturday's Results lacs | Minnesota |Los Angeles | Detroit | Baltimore | Cleveland Sunday's Results Boston 9-5 New York 3-4 Washington 3-2 Chicago 4-3 Minnesota 9 Detroit 10 Kansas City 7 Cleveland 12 Probable Pitchers Today Los Angeles (Chance 12-8) at innesota (Stigman 9-4) N. New York (Terry 20-10) at De- Kansas City (Fischer 4-8) at Boston (Wilson 12-6) at Balti- more (Roberts 9-8) N. a National League W L Pet. GBL 51 .646 51 .643 57 .607 5% 60 .583 9 67 .535 16 72 503 20% 75 486 23 56 85 .392 36% 52 92 .361 41 35 109 .243 58 Saturday's Resulls cago 2 San Francisco 7 os Angeles 93 92 88 84 17 73 71 | fniladeiphie 6 Milwaukee 4 San O'Dell 16-12). | Jacksonville Toronto Atlanta Rochester Columbus Buffalo Richmond Syracuse Syracuse 2 Rochester 4 Buffalo 2 Toronto 5 Atlanta 9 Columbus 5 ¥ | Jacksonville 3 Richmond 10 Syracuse 6 Rochester 4 Atlanta 4 Columbus 5 Jacksonville 5 Richmond 2 ew York 3-5 Houston 4-6 St. Louis 5 Cincinnati 4 Pittsburgh 1 Los Angeles 6 Sunday's Results St. Louis 5 Cincinnati 3 New York 7 Houston 7 (Called after 8 innings, cur- few) Philadelphia 4 Milwaukee 2 Chicago 4 San Francisco 5 Pittsburgh 3 Los Angeles 5 Probable Pitchers Today Milwaukee (Cloninger 6-3) at New York (Hook 8-16) N. Cincinnati (Nuxhall 5-0) at St. Louis (Broglio (11-7) N. Chicago (Ellsworth 8-17) at Los Angeles (Drysdale 23-7) N.| Pittsburgh (Haddix 9-5) at Francisco (Perry 2-1 or| | International League | Final Standing WL Pct. GBL| 94 60 .610 jand fly back to Winnipeg Wed- | Claudia Will Likely Yield | Channel Swim | LONDON (CP)--Claudia Mc- herson will probably return to Canada Wednesday without making a second attempt on the English Channel. The 16-year-old St. James, Man., schoolgirl was set to go Saturday morning but 30-mile- |an-hour winds whipped the wa- ter into an ugly: swell, "The pilot of our boat refused) to take us out," said the swim- |mer's father, Claud McPherson, |by telephone from Dover Sun- day. "He said we just wouldn't have a chance." In her first attempt Aug. 13 | Claudia got within seven miles |}of the English shore before prone weather forced her to }abandon the swim. | "Unless there's a break in the weather, and it doesn't look as if we can expect it, Claudia and I will go up to London Tuesday PORTPATRICK, Scotland, (CP)--Beaten by icy water and) huge, stinging jellyfish, Toronto| swimmer Helge Jensen asked to) be taken from the Irish Sea Sat-| urday after five gruelling hours) and 11 miles. Willie Pastrano Stumbles But Not Down Yet MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-- Willie Pastrano of Miami dodged Rudolfo Diaz of Argen- tina for 10 rounds and landed enough punches to gain a split decision Saturday night. Pastrano preserved his rec- ord of never having been knocked down in 74 fights, al- though he became tired in the late rounds and stumbled badly in the ninth. The 26-year-old second-ranked light-heavyweight came into the | | nesday,"' McPherson said. Had she succeeded, Claudia would have become the youn- gest person ever to swim the 21-mile channel. That record now is held by Britain's Margaret White, who crossed a year ago when she was 17 years, eight months. 91 62 595 24 83 71 .539 11 82 72 .532 12 519 14 477 29% 383 35 344 41 Saturday's Results Sunday's Results Buffalo at Toronto, cancelled, rain. Games Today Atlanta at Toronto Rochester at Jacksonville ring at 184, nine pounds above his usual weight, and it slowed him down. However, he bounced around YESTERDAY'S "STARS | the ring, while keeping his left in the 186-pound Argentine's The 24-year-old native of Den-{ mark thus gave up his attempt to swim the 22 miles from} Northern Ireland to Scotland. He didn't seem to understand what had happened. He sat shivering uncontrollably in the pilot boat as it sped towards this coastal town and repeated "cold, cold, cold" again and again. When he had_ recovered slightly he steadied himself in the bow of the rolling fishing boat and told a reporter: "I seemed to get heavier and my arms were numb. It was s0 cold. I've never felt cold like that." 'FREEZING UP' After four hours in the 46-de- gree water, during which he swam an average of 68 strokes a minute, Jensen suddenly stopped and said: "I'm freez- ing up." : Coach Steve Mellors leaned far out over the water to hear. "I don't want to go on," Jen- sen said. "'How far?" "You're~ nearly half way," Mellors- said. Jensen stroked again. He swam for another 15 min- utes and then asked for food. Mellors handed him a paper cup filled with liquid food at the end Batting -- Carl Sawatski,|face.. Diaz, whose face was Cards -- Hit pinch grand' slam| puffed badly in the final rounds, homer with two out in ninth as| kept flailing after Pastrano and St. Louis came from behind] landed some hard hooks to the with five runs to defeat Cincin-| body, Several times the referee nati Reds 5-3. warned him about hitting low. Pitching -- Dick Radataz, Red; Referee Jimmy Peerless! Sox -- six-foot, five-inch relief] scored the televised bout 97-95 pitcher, hurled nine innings, the! for Pastrano and judge Bunny last eight scoreless, to receive) Lovett concurred, 99-97. Judge credit for Boston's 5-4, 16-inning| Gus Jackson's card showed 97- | triumph over Yankees. 94 for Diaz. (Best-of-seven semi-finals) TAG TEA WRESTLING "sour & T BRUNO SAMMARITINO M OSHAWA ARENA Tues., Sept. 11th 8:45 p.m. ONY MARINO STANLEE BROTHERS ap cal 725-6566 FREE pick-up and delivery on all of a stick. Jensen paused for an extra minute. Icy Water, Jellyfish Force Helge Jensen Quit Irish Sea Try "Stroke, stroke," Mellors yelled. "You've got a lot to lose." Jensen tried once more but as the searchlight stabbing the blackness picked up an ugly, brown jellyfish more than two feet across, he stopped and said firmly: "No, no, no. I don't want to swim any farther.' "It's your decision," Mellors said quietly, and many pairs of hands grabbed Jensen. He flopped into the boat. Goggles oo cap slithered to the eck, COMFORTS HIM The coach rubbed Jensen with towel and comforted him: Okay boy, you're all right ow. : " ni ; A little later, Mellors seized the red swimming cap and threw it as hard as he could into the sea. "I've always had a respect for the Irish Sea," he said bit- terly. "It's a real killer." Englishman Tom Blower came within 200 yards of shore in 1947. More than 100 others © have tried the distance, and none came close. "We'll not try it again," Mel- lors said, "It's too much." He said he. and Jensen will return to Canada early this B<KKKKKKKKKY PATENTED 2:'SOLE car service Firestone | STORES ith Lions of the Western Con-|ship race at the state fair-|p; Malloy, Ib; Stovin, c. rence. : | grounds, The veteran Indiana-- PLAZA FOODS -- Eldridge,| « Schreider, who had been Ot-| polis driver averaged 95.71 lf; Boivin, 2b; Shearer, c; Mae.| fawa's defensive captain, also/ miles. an hour, bettering his) son, Ib; Malloy, 3b; Bergiven, | je under Clair's ban on com-|own track record of 95,09, p; Judd, ss; Breau, cf; Stalker, |which he set in winning the| rf; Pettets, rf in 5th; | event last year: fin 2nd. ___._ Stave and (Bob 6/9" 300 Ibs.) - | _DONEVANS vs KNOBBY MasDONALD __| S _BULE JOHNION vs PAT ELANAGAN CALL: 725-6566 190 ING EAST OSHAWA Wonderfully comfortable! Knit in two separate layers so that the smooth side of the knit is against the sole of your foot. ew Ped Pin 3 Bind P evant "i '@sino Rest. Ringside 1.50, General 1. Js ning studies and football, and ven 7Se. PAT MILOSH---Promoter. Davis, 6s) Was later' traded to the Lions. 4 'MARINO

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