Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Jun 1963, p. 21

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loser, pitching the first three and leaving 11 runners strandedjended the scoring with another Muskeg Captures N 0 rth ern Pik e gg Pen Ee THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, June 5,1963 2] h n a 4-0 victory. Centrefielder| double in the fifth. Red Sox, Pant ers sd SLs aby uu tae Starter Eric Lomax was the Woodbine Feature Almost 39 Lbs. Sie talian mae toe Jack Nicklaus ed Za- ae nye sere Mays innings. TORONTO (CP)--Muskeg, a 3 tta with a sparkling catch of Scor e Shutouts Guelph's Mike Castagnola's} Aanatta put the first two men|brown colt which just last. fall WINNIPEG (CP) -- Heimut|Vious pike was 38 pounds, long belt. on in three separate innings,;was dropped from Queen's starter and loser for Guelph. jcame out of the gate on top northern pike. The biggest pre- ; , it pitchi cant Strong pitching and two stel-/Ron Stead's three-hit pitching|;.-. anq didn't issue a walk. then fought tooth and nailjend fishing trip to Slave Falls|4¢ pounds two ounces, caught in By FRITZ HOWELL lar hitting performances|with three doubles and a home|Two of the three hits off him throughout the seven furlong|on the Winnipeg River in east-|c daga Reservoir, N.Y., in run in four trips, driving in all) were infield singles SETTLED IN LONDON marked shutout wins at home distance to win the featured United States open and master: Brantford Red Sox and/the runs in a 6-0 win over Galt) Reeves staked Brantford to a| American painter James Mc- race at Woodbine Tuesday. |Blue, a choice for the Queen's|°" Peter Dubuc. champion Jack Nicklaus is tchener Panthers in Inter-| Terriers. quick three-run lead in the first) Neill Whistler settled in London Owned by Charles Taylor,|Plate, was third. : ' in the 1850s and lived there on|Muskeg defeated Bridal Music| Muskeg, with Hugo Dittfach|tis pike with a six-pound test|a bit of rest and relaxation. saddle, returned $12. line using minnows for bait. The hiatus wil be short, how- county Baseball League} And in Kitchener, Gene Za-jinning, when he cleared the action Toesesy night. Sot \natta went the distance for the|bases with a double. He hit a At Brantford, third baseman|Panthers, scattering seven hits!two-run homer in the third, and and off for the rest of his life.|in a photo-finish, while Sonljin the Klug is reported to have taken home from the golfing wars for >», oe > | ae | _ a v ~~ - --- } " er; A =, , . SAVE CASH AT A:P q°sh CLARK'S BEANS = 4-49: TOILET TISSUE 2 ~-2-29: KRAFT DINNER "™ 4=47: CREST TOOTH PASTE '27 = 59 FACELLE TISSUE -=~ PABLUM2%. = =43 ANACIN TABLETS OLD CHEESE STICKS :2: = 43: VEGETABLE OIL oa ==65: NESTLE'S KEEN = 55: CAKE MIXES 2" 26% CHINESE FOOD "t8":"" =59: JAVEX quip BLEACH 9-45 ALL PRICES IN THIS AD GUARANTEED THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 8th, 1963 Fresh Fruits & Vegetables FLORIDA, WHITE, FLUFFY COOKERS, NO. 1 GRADE New Potatoes 10 POUND BAG 9: GEORGIA, YELLOW FLESH, NO. 1 GRADE PEACHES one 2? 9: Imported, Curly Leaf, Washed & Trimmed, No. 1 Grade SPINACH 2: -:aicis 2 Imported, Fresh, Green, Firm Heads, No. 1 Grade CABBAGE 7 Ontario Grown, Hothouse, Firm, Ripe, No. 1 Grade TOMATOES 2% Ontario Grown, Hothouse, Long Green Slicers, No. 1 Grade CUCUMBERS 2.25: NATIVE GROWN OUTDOOR HEAD LETTUCE, GREEN : ONIONS RADISHES, RHUBARB AND ASPARAGUS ARRI Z omen. Be US ARRIVING FRESH DAILY FROZEN FOOD FEATURES Ventura Fordhook Frozen Reg. Price pkg 330---SAVE 7o LIMA BEANS 2:20:10 59 Pennywise, Beef or Veal Frozen Reg. Price pkg 55¢--SAVE 18¢ STEAKETTES rst Q 5c SPECIAL THIS WEEK! MARVEL BRAND ICE CREAM Y sallion Reg. Price 89¢ .urton C SAVE 20¢ Dalton's Good Reg. Price jar 2ic--SAVE 2c MUSTARD 2eorin | Qe Jubilee, Mild CHEESE SLICES Wsorrta Qe 'THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY LTD. FOOD STORES A&P MEANS DEPENDABILITY : backed thpaw| Stead, in his first start of the|but pitched his way out of trou- Plate eligibility because he hc gy "eran Z beng t in Lake Winnipegosis in R e sts F or Open By THE CANADIAN PRESS |Jim Reeves bac! sou season, struck out 12 Galt bat-\Dle each time. Kovac was the|}wasn't thought good enough, |no a, w $ & . salen The North ios cuceee ever, for he's ready to start hon COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) --] ng his usualy fault-free game for defence of the open crown starting June 20 at Brookline, Mass. Nicklaus, 23, thinks he "has @ chance to win at Brookline-- since I've been playing fairly well." In shooting for his second straight open title--he won it last year in his first. professiona? --Jack figures the top oppo- silion wil be "those same two-- Gary Player and Arnie Palmer --with Gene Littler right up there, too. And then, some dark horse might take it all, you never know." Nicklaus knows Brookline fairly well and has written a magazine article about the ex. acting par plant. As a 17-year- old in 1957 he won three matches in the U.S. amateur there, before shooting a 69 and losing in the fourth round to Dick Yost of Portland, Ore. The course has been closed, due to some winter havoc. Jack describes Brookline as having a fairly short front nine, a long back one, and smaller- than-usual greens. "And with the course having been closed, they'll have a chance to grow a nice, thick batch of rough for us," he grinned. He says his own game will need a slight adjustment, and that he will concentrate in practice by hitting more "'left- to-right shots for they are what Brookline requires." Asked why, at 28 and in ro- bust health, he felt he needed @ rest, Jack replied: "Well, you get tired, both mentally and physicaly." Jack, who took more than $100,000 out of last year's tour-° naments as a rookie, and is up to over $57,000 this year, said he spends plenty, too. "A single fellow on the tour, by skimping a little, can live for $200 to $250 a week," he said. "But if you take your family along, as I do much of the time, the cost goes away up. I'd say that Palmer, Player and I, who usualy are up among the top winners, pay out an average of $1,000 a week on the tour." Asked whether he had any re- grets about turning pro, after a brilliant amateur career during which practicaly everyone tagged him as the 'new Bobby Jones," he said: "Absolutely not. I have no re- grets at all." Bob Breen And Murray Tucker Pace Preview TORONTO (CP)--Rosedale's Murray Tucker and Bob Breen of Pine Valley, both Toronte aiea clubs, each shot a 69 to lead a field of 29 professionals and 25 top amateurs in an On- tario Open preview tournament at Pine Valley Tuesday. They barely edged out Moe Norman of Pleasure Park, who burned up the first nine holes with a 32 but went over par on the final three holes to finish with a 70. Ken Duggan of Cedarbrae fim . ished fourth with 71, and Vie Whibley of Guelph followed with a round of 72. A strong field of amateurs was led by Nick Weslock, de- fending Open champion and One tario's amateur titlist last year, who shot an even-par 71. The tournament was held as @ warmup to the Ontario Open, to be played at Pine Valley June 14-15. Three Games Go Extra Innings In Inter. Loop By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Extra-inning games proved to be the rule rather than the ex- ception Tuesday night as three International League contests went overtime. Arkansas Travelers edged To- ronto Maple Leafs 4-3 in 12 inn- ings. Rochester Red Wings nipped southern division leader Atlanta Crackers 6-5 in 11 inn- ings, and Syracuse Chiefs slipped by Jacksonville Suns 5-3 in 10 innings. In regulation length games, Columbus Jets blasted Buffalo Bisons 2-1 and 16-8 in a double- header, trimming the lead of the northern division leader to one game over Syracuse. Richmond at Indianapolis was rained out. Lee Elia scored the winning run for Travelers on Johnny Upham's bases-loaded clout to center-field with two out. Maple Leafs pulled ahead 3-2 in the top of the 12th on a leadoff triple by Neil Chrisley and a sacrifice fly by Howie Bedell. But Richie Allen scored the tying run on Elia's double. Relief hurler"Sam Jones suffered his second loss against four triumphs. Both losses were to Travelers. END WIN STREAK Rochester snapped a five- game victory string for Crack- ers, their first loss in six extra inning games. Ron Kabbes dou- bled in the llth inning and scored the winning run on Sam Bowens' single. Harry Fanok, the fourth Cracker hurler, took the loss. Syracuse overcame a 3 - 0 Jacksonville lead after two inn- ings on Legrant Scott's two-run homer in the 'fifth and Scott's single in the seventh which drove in the tying run.

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