10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, June 24, 1963 NATIONAL LEAGUE FANS SEE VARIETY OF ACTION, NOT ALL ORTHODOX LACROSSE | SCORES Ontario Senior Brooklin 10 St. Catharines 6 Ontario Junior Brampton 13 Alderwood 12 Geulph 15 Hastings 9 Ontario Senior Port Credit 14 Brampton 13 Hastings Coach And J. Armour Are Reinstated TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario Lacrosse Association suspended one man for a year, two others for two days, and an interme- diate team for the season at an executive meeting in suburban Long Branch Sunday. Jack Ashbee, executive mem- ber and trainer of Brampton of the senior series, was 'given a Oshawa Scugog Cleaners de- feated A; urt Seal-O-Wax girls 12-5, Saturday night at To- ronto's Monarch Park, in an East Toronto Junior Ladies' Softball League fixture. Sandra Paradise gave Agin- court only six hits, in posting! the win for the Oshawa girls. Linda Jarvis and Donna Jarvis got two of these in the first in- ning but Sandra fanned the next two batters to save that situa- tion. In the fourth inning, with one out, Louise Lehman singled and Linda McAughtrie drew a walk, then with two out, Bev Wil- liams and Pam Mathers hit back-to-back singles, to produce Agincourt's first run -- the only one they earned. They got two more in the sixth on two errors, a choice play and infield out and two in the 7th on Donna Jarvis' sécond hit, an infield out, Scugog Cleaners i Defeat Agincourt | an infield error and an out. Scugogs got two runs, on errors, in a weird frame. They added five in third on singles Pelow and Connie Lucas, a triple by Carol Germi along with a wild pitch, errors and a choice play, Scugogs scored twice in the fifth, once in the sixth and two more in the 7th with Lu Germond and Marilyn Schultg each having two hits. [me SCUGOG CLEANERS Pelow, c; Lucas, 3b; G 1b; Schultz, 2b; Paradise, pj Boddy, ss; March, rf; C i cf; Turner, If; Vandewalker, in 6th. ' AGINCOURT -- Adams, L. Jarvis, ss; D, ae Sing, c; Lehman, 1b; McA trie, If; Upton, 2b; 3b; Mathers, rf; P. btted in 9th, One-year suspension. He was found guilty of attacking a Port Credit player near the dressing REGISTRATION OPENS room during a game at Port Credit May 23. Bob Delahaye, coach of Hast- ings Legionnaires of the junior series, and Jack Armour, a player with Hastings, were each given two-game suspensions for participating in a near-riot at Hastings June 15. The OLA formally suspended Huntsville of the 'termediate series for the season for failing to appear for a regularly sched- Oshawa Legion's expansive, track-and-field program for this summer will be officially launched tonight, with the open- Ma 4 4 Oshawa Legion Launches: Track-And-Field Program trophy are being provided by Canadian Legion, Oshawa Branch No. 43. " A group of Oshawa athiétes uled game against Fergus. The association decided that Lorne Widess of Streetsville, who is under suspension, will remain so until he appears be- fore the executive. ing of registration this evening,| competed in the Aurora Kiwan- at seven o'clock, at Legion Hall,' is Championship meet on Satur. Centre street, for all boys and|"""* and »erformed in -credit. girls wishing to participate in able fashion. Joe Dearborn, the "Senior" section this sum-| MCVI, was second in the half- mer. jmile event and Wayne Mar. NOT QUITE! Los Angeles Dodgers' right-fielder Wally Moon (9) is tagged out at second base by Julian Javier (25) while trying to stretch a Jim Piersall And Warren Spahn In Limelight Again By JI MBECKER Associated Press Sports Writer|record. Zany Jim Piersall slammed) his 100th, Major League home Tun Sunday. He celebrated by waltzing around the bases back- wards. His club, New York Mets, celebrated the day with a dou- bleheader sweep ovr Philadl- phia Phillies that moved Mets out of the league basement into ninth place. : Piersall, sent to' Mets from the hapless Washington Sena- _tors of the American League, hit his 100th in the first game at New York as Carl Willey fired a two-hit, 5-0 shutout, his ' third shutout of the season and sixth win. 12 In the second game, Tracy Stallard and Al Jackson com- bined for a seven-hit, 4-1 vic- tory over Phillies. 'The win "moved Mets a full game ahead of Houston Colts who dropped -a doubleheader to Cincinnati ~Reds, 4-0 and 8-1. Warren Spahn, enjoying one of bis best starts.in years, won his 10th victory of the season, a . 10-4 win over San Francisco Gi- ants that gave the Milwaukee Braves left hander his 337th major league win. HITS 33RD HOMER Spahn featured the Milwaukee hitting attack also, slugging his single off Bill White's glove, into a two-bagger. This action came in the 8th inning of yes- terday afternoon's game in St. Louis, at Busch Stadium, when Dodgers finally won {33rd career home run, a League| Bob Purkey threw the first 4-3. Cardinals' shortstop Dick Groat is backing up the play and umpire Henry Crawford has leaped into the air, while giving the "Out" signal. --(AP Wirephoto) jgame shutout for Reds over Spahn's win kept the second-|Colts, the first complete game place Giants from moving up|this season for the sore-armed on the league-leading St. Louis} Cardinals who lost 4-3 to Los Angeles Dodgers. Cincinnati's wins moved Reds to within one game of St. Louis and half a game behind San! Francisco. Pittsburgh Pirates defeated) Chicago Cubs 7-6 in the other| league game. Saturday, Mets lost 2-0 to Philadelphia, San Francisco de-| feated Milwaukee 3-0, Cincin-| nati blanked Houston 3-0, Pitts- burgh shut out Chicago 3-0 and St. Louis nipped Los Angeles 1 Willy's win Sunday put him) in a umique class--the only Met starter with as many wins as losses. Mets had been last! since May 10 and were in the same spot from May on last! year. STARTS BIG INNING Spahn gave up homers toé Harvey Kuenn and Tom Haller and trailed 3-2 after Hank Aar-| on's 21st home run for Braves. With one out in the fifth, the fantastic 42-year-old left hander homered off Jack Sanford to tie the score, That set off a seven- run inning. Yankees' Jim Bouton Blanks Red Sox 8-0 . By JIM HACKLEMAN "Associated Press Sports Writer From s30-so finisher to super ~starter-finisher in six weéks-- "that's the success story of Jim Bouton. The hefty youngster wrote an- other winning chapter Sunday in the New York Yankees' 8-0 romp over Boston Red Sox, fir- ing a four-hitter that helped the' Bombers edge a bit further in front in the American League "race. It was victory No. 10 for Bou- ton, a routine reliever until pressed into the starting: rota- 'tion six weeks ago. He's nailed Twins. Detroit Tigers broke, loose for eight runs in the! eighth inning and crushed Kan-| sas City Athletics 11-2, and Tom! Cheney pulled the bebo ofa Senators out of a 10-game losing |mark, and the sixth straight vic- right hander who won 23 games last year. It as» the fourth Straight' shutout defeat for Colts, tying a major league tory for Reds. They made it seven in the sec. ond game behind Joe Nuxhall and Don Zanni, who pitched the last two innings. Houston finally scored in the second inning, after 40 scoreless innings. Johnny Edwards hit a three run homer for Reds in the opener and Bob Skipner, Vada Pinson and Jesse Gonder hom- ered in the second game. Jim Gilliam's three run homer off Ernie Broglio car- ried Dodgers to victory and to within 1% gantes of the lead. The winning pitcher was Bob Miller, who took over for starter Johnny Podres-in the first after Dick Groat had hit a two-run homer. Roberto Clemente struck the major blow for Pirates, a three- run homer in the seventh in- ning. Cubs knocked out starter Vernon Law in a four-run first but frittered away the lead on some shabby fielding. Ron Santo homered for a 6-4 Cub lead but Glen Hobbie couldn't hold it. | Tito Francona, a hit batsman and an error. Smith homered, doubled and singled for Balimore, driving in' two funs, scoring one and setting up another. Miller slump allowing cnly four hits/turned back Twins without a in a 40 shoutout over Los An-/nit after replacing Steve Bar- geles Angels. Yanks, on the way to their 10th victory in the last 11) games, built up a 4-0 lead Sun- day as Bouton held Red Sox hit- less antil Dick Stuart's leadoff double in the fifth inning. Roger Maris helped put the finishing touches on the rout with his 14th homer im the eighth and a run- seight in his 10 starts and has scoring single in the ninth. lost just once since his bullpen oe FORCED OUT ber with the bases full and one out in the seventh. Barber won his 11th against five defeats, with Dick Stigman the loser. GET FOUR SINGLES Tigers managed cnly four sin- gles in its eight run eighth against Athletics, but also had the aid of Kansas City's wild pitching and inept fielding. ALWAYS . DIFFERENT -- Jimmy Piersall, of N.Y. Mets (34) would do it different and here he is, trotting backwards towards home plate, after clouting the 100th home-run of his career, at the , Polo Grounds yesterday afternoon. Piersall's wrong-field hit, for a right-handed batter, just cleared the right-field foul pole, about 260 feet from the plate. Jimmy reversed the usual procedure and cele- brated the eyent by circling the bases running backwards. Phillies' catcher Bob Oldie, left, and Tim Harkness, (3), next batter, watch Piersall's unusual antics. Mets won the game, 5-0. --(AP Wirephoto) BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS Registrations will continue! each night this week, from 7.00) o'clock until 9.00 p.m. A "Sen-| jor' is a boy or girl, 16-years- of-age, or over, or if a little younger, one who has had pre. vious experience in track and field sports. The "Juniors", those from 9-to-16, will commence register- ing, at the CRA Building, Gibb Pt. Credit Sailors Win In Overtime BRAMPTON (CP) -- Brian Ahearne scored twice in over- time to. give Port Credit Sailors a 14-13 triumph over Brampton Sealtests in an Ontario La- crosse A iation senior game By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WL Pct. GBL 40 24 625 -- 41 29 586 2 35 29 547 5 36 31 .537 5% 36 32 529 6 37 34 .521 6% 36 36 500 8 31°36 .463 10144 Detroit 27 39 .409 14 Washington 22 51 .301 22% Results Saturday Chicago 2 Cleveland 1 New York 6-3 Boston 5-2 . Baltimore 1 Minnesota 3 Detroit 3 Kansas City 2 Washington 4 Los Angeles Results Sunday New York 8 Boston 0 Baltimore 4 Minnesota 1 Chicago 2-0 Cleveland 1-2 Detroit 11 Kansas City 2 Washington 4 Los Angeles 0 Probable Pitchers Today Baltimore, Pappas (5-3) at Minnesota, Kaat (6-6). Cleveland, Ramos (3-1) or McDowell (3-4) at Boston, Heff- ner (1-0), N. New York, Downing (2-0) at Chicago, Buzhardt (8-3), N. Detroit, Mossi (4-4) at Kansas City, Rakow (6-5), N, New York Chicago Boston Cleveland Minnesota Battimore Los Angeles Kansas City Bill Crothers Wins, Equals Record Time ST. LOUIS (CP)--Bill Croth- ers of Toronto, the speedy pharmacist who enjoys running Americans into the ground lit- erally, did just that Saturday in the half-mile, winning the 880-yard championship at the 75th annual U.S. Amateur Ath- letic Union track and field meet in a breeze, But the 22-year-old University of Toronto graduate won't enjoy the full fruits of his victory since the first two finishers in each of the events won a trip to Moscow to compete against the Russians this summer. Crothers wasn't eligible be- cause he is a Canadian. Crothers, running for the East York Track Club, chalked up the best time of the year in the 880 with a clocking of one min- ute, 46.8 seconds, eclipsing the AAU record of 1:47.1 set here l@#t year by Jerry Sieberg and equalling the U.S. record set by Andy Bathgate |. Washington, Osteen (1-5) at |Los Angeles, Turley (2-5), N. National League WL Pet. GBL 41 29 586 -- 41 30 577 1% 40 30 .571 1 -39 30 565 1% 535 3% 493 6% 38 33 34 35 478 7% 31 40. | | | St. Louis ;San Francisco | Cincinnati |Los Angeles. , | Chicago | Milwaukee | Pittsburgh 33 36 Philadelphia |New York 28 44. Houston 27 45. Results Saturday |San. Francisco 3 Milwaukee 0 | Philadelphia 2 New York 0 | Houston 0 Cincinnati 3 | Pittsburgh 3 Chicago 0 |Los Angeles 1 St. Louis 2 | Results Sunday Philadelphia 0-1 New York 5-4 Houston 0-1 Cincinnati 4-8 Pittsburgh 7 Chicago 6 | San Francisco 4 Milwaukee 10 Los Angeles 4 St. Louis 3 Probable Pitchers Today San Francisco, Marichal (11- Ry at St. Louis, Burdette. (7-5) | Houston, Brown (1-2). at Mil- | waukee, Lemaster (3-4) N. Los Angeles, Drysdale (8-8) at Cincinnati, Jay (3-10), N. | (Only games. scheduled) | International League Northern Division | WL Pct. GBL | Syracuse 41 29 586 -- Rochester 40 31 563 1% | Buffalo 39 31 .557 2 | Richmond 33 31 .516 5 | Toronto 29 41 .41412 . Southern Division 41 28 594 -- 35 36 .497 7 33 36 .478 8 Atlanta | Indianapolis |Little Rock | Jacksonville 29 40 .420 12 | Columbus 26 43 .377 15 | Results Saturday Syracuse 5 Toronto 10 | Rochester 1-1 Richmon! 0-4 |Columbus 2 Little Rock 3 {Buffalo at Atlanta. ppd, rain Indianapolis at Jacksonville ppd, rain Results Sunday Buffalo 2-4 Atlanta 4-2 Columbus 4-0 Little Rock 8-1 Indianapolis at Jacksonville 2 ppd, rain Rochester 2-0 Richmond 4-3 Syracuse 3-5 Toronto 2-2 Games Today Columbus at Jacksonville Indianapolis at Atlanta Buffalo at Little Rock Syracuse at Richmond (Only games scheduled) Tom Courtney in 1957, Peter Snell of New Zealand holds the world record of 1:45.1. The Canadian outdistanced Jim Dupree of the Southern California Striders, who was second in 1:47.3. Third was Morgan Groth of Oregon State in 1:47.5, HAS STRONG TEAM Over-all, it was a record. smashing show and assured the U.S. of a strong team for the Soviet meet next month. The first dead heat in AAU meet history and a sensational, mile race topped the closing day program Saturday. Arizona State's Henry Carr, who has a pending world mark of 20.3 seconds in the 220, and defending champion Paul Dray. ton of Philadelphia finished in a dead heat in the 220 at 20.4. Of- ficials first picked Carr, then changed their minds _ several hours later reviewing pictures of the finish.: The time was under the meet and listed world mark of 20.5, but won't be submitted for rec- ognition because the wind was over the allowable limit of slightly more than four miles an hour. Late Saturday the AAU track and field committee picked a 50- man team for four major for- eign meets, starting with Mos- | | street, starting tomorrow. The Junior program will start on July 2 and will run daily, Mon- day to Friday, in both morn- ing and afternoon sessions, at Alexandra Park. The Seniors will also Jaunch their program, on July 2, but their training will be at the Mc. Laughlin Collegiate track and will be evening sessions, start. here Saturday. Ahearne finishel with five goals on the tally sheet. George Kapasky, Bob Hanna, Leo Teatero and Bill Allan each scored twice for the winners with Gene Petroff adding a single. Brampton's two-goal scorers were John Spicer, Bill Wahn- chant of McEwen P.S., was 'ourth. Mel Densham and Ray Werry, both of MCVI, were 3rd and 4th respectively in the Junior men's 220-yard dash. Jim Lawrence, also of MCVI, was second in the Juvenile 440-yard race. Tim Dittmar, Jim Pearse, Dennis Delorme, Andrew Strec- cycke, Mike Planke, Tom Walmsley and Christ Stones, all of McLaughlin CVI, were other competitiors. YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS less, Jim McClure and Harry|ing at 7.00 o'clock. Benham while singles were) This Wednesday, counted by Joe Caruso, Mikejough will send a Finegan, Dave Foster and/field team to Oshaw: Peterbor- track-and- 'a, to com- Pitching--Carl Willey, Mets, |recorded two-hitter for his thi | shutout of the season in opening jgame as Mets swept double- |header from Philadelphia, 5-0 Bruce Wanless. jpete at McLaughlin Collegiate,|and 4-1, and climbed out of Na- a twilight session, getting under|tional League cellar. |the championship and an inter- Lacrosse Association junior la- crosse game Saturday night. fired three goals for Guelph. Bob Brown added two apiece with singles going to J. Homer, John Richardson and Don Me- Kenzie. opints including five goals for Hastings. Jim Goldie, Dannie Hopcross, Bill Livingston and Tan Barrie. way at 7,30 p.m. This is the first of a series of inter-city| meets that are planned for Osh-' awa athletes, Harold. Mitchell Top Blind Golfer Batting -- Roberto Clemente, Pirates; -hit game -. winning three-run homer 'n seventh in- throughout the|ning and two singles in 7-6 vic summer months. Medals and altory over Chicago Cubs. ANCASTER, Ont. (CP)--Four Hamilton golfers led the field Sunday in the second qualifying round of the Canadian Blind Golfers Association competition. Harold Mitchell was top fin- isher with a round of 109. The third round will be played July 13 at Guelph followed by TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's greatest outdoor track and field meet in nine years was assured Sunday with the announcement that two of the world's fastest men over 220 yards would com- pete in Tuesday night's Toronto international meet. Henry Carr of Arizona State and Paul Drayton, former Villa- nova star who hit the tape in a photo finish in 20.4 seconds-- one-tenth under the world stan- dard--in the U.S. national AAU championships at St. Louis on Saturday, have been signed to compete here. The two sprinters had an national competition at Hunting- ton Golf Club in Woodbridge Aug. 10-11. The international match will feature the four top Canadian golfers against the four top U.S. golfers. Guelph Mohawks Win In Hastings HASTINGS Guelph Mo- hawks defeated Hastings Le- gionnaires 15-9 in an Ontario World's Fastest To Race In Toronto of Toronto pharmacy graduate and the fastest man in the world this year over the 880-yard lis- tance. Crothers whipped a classy field at St. Louis on Saturday with a time of 1:46.8, the third fastest half-mile in history, Another headliner is C. XK. Yang, the world': round athlete who recently scored a fantas.ic . in setting a world decathlon rec- ord. Yang, a citizen of Nation- alist China who attends the Uni- versity of California at Los An- geles, depending on the meet schedule. eight-mile-an-hour aiding wind, too strong.to merit record rec- ognition, but meet officials said) international rules would be checked to determine if there are any exceptions for wind for a 220-yard run on a curve in which the field may have run against the wind for a certain distance. Canada hasn't had an outdoor track meet of international cali- bre since the 1954 British Em- pire Games in Vancouver and meet director Lloyd: Percival predicted Sunday that records Bob Mulvey and Cec Denny Ed O'Keefe, Bryan Johnson and Bill Armour collected seven cow, July 20-21. Some were picked on a tentative basis be- cause business and family com. would fall in wholesale bunches. Athletes from Canada, the SPORTS BRIEFS N24 "Coquetel Cerise... Galil U.S. and Britain will compete. mitments may rule out the trip. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rochester's strange inability One of the headliners is Bill WANT LIONS BOYCOTT Crothers, 22-year-old University Syracuse Chiefs Clip Leafs Twice VANCOUVER (CP)--A_boy- cott of all home games played by the British Columbia Lions has been called for by the Van- couver Labor Council. The move, proposed at a council meeting Tuesday night, followed the announcement that the Western Football Conference club had given its program con- tract to strike-bound Mitchell Press. cuse 10-5, Arkansas nipped Co- lumbus 3-2 and Rochester and| Jim Fitzsimmons Fitzsimmons' Two Big Wins Please Backers TORONTO (CP) Jockey of Calgary Wins Tourney jto beat Richmond Virginians, days--by a 14 score. | For Yanks, it was the third consecutive victory after an opening game loss in the set at Boston and it pushed the once surging Red Sox five lengths off the pace. Next on Yankees' agenda is 'a four-game stand at Chicago starting tonight against the sec- ond - place White Sox, who slipped two games behind Sun- day in a split with Cleveland In- dians. Pete Ward's two run single in the eighth inning gave Chicago a 2-1 decision over Indians be- fore Cleveland right hander Barry Latman tossed a five hit 2-0 shutout at White Sox. | TIGERS BREAK LOOSE Elsewhere in American League, Al Smith's key hits and Stu Miller's neat relief highlighted Baltimore Orioles' | Bubba Phillips had a triple and three singles in Detroit's 10 - hit offense. As_ clipped Mickey Lolich for 11 hits, but the rookie southpaw went the distance as Tigers beat Kansas City for the third time in a Bouton, 10-2, recorded his sixth complete game and low- ered his earned run average to 2.06. Earl Wilson, forced out with mimor shoulder injury suf- fered in a first inning collision: with teammate Ed Bressoud,/row. Detroit had lost 10 was the loser. straight before taking on the As, Lefty Jack Kralick blanked/who've dropped seven of their jan outfit they humbled 18 times HAMILTON (CP) Andy jin 22 meetings last year, has Bathgate, National Hockey League star with New York Rangers, left top amateur golf- ers in his wake Saturday to win the annual Adam Brown Memorial golf tournament. Bathgate won the event with a birdie four on the first extra White Sox until two were out|last eight. in the eighth inning of the first! -- game then singles by Al Weis and Floyd Robinson and a walk loaded the bases, sett'ng the stage for Ward's" deciding hit. Ray Herbert won it, with strong two-inning relief from Hoyt Wilhelm. Latman struck out seven and did not allow a walk in the Tribe's second game victory. Cleveland got its two runs in the first aganst towering rookie Dave DeBusschere, combining PIRATES SIGN THREE ' PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Pitts-! burgh Pirates said Saturday) they have signed three young players from the Pacific Coast} region to 1963 contracts with the jclub's Kingsport, Tenn., farm team in the rookie Appalachin League. The three are catcher Alan J. Fabro, 18, of Kimberley, B.C., outfielder Major J. Mar- '4-1 victory over Minnesota singles by Willie Kirkland and/Salem, Ore. hole of play. He had shot 71 over 18 holes to tie for first with Greg Paterson of Hamilton. Among top golfers beaten by Bathgate, an assistant pro in the summer, were Phil Brown- lee and Ray Coole, both mem- bers of Ontario's Willington Cup team, The field was divided evenly between top amateur golfers and top names from hockey, in honor of the late Adam Brown) Club. cost the Red Wings the north- ern division lead in the Inter- national League. The Vees, who snapped Ro- ichester's winning string after 12 games Saturday night, swept a Sunday doubleheader with Red Wings, 4-2 and 3-0. Rich- mond has heaten the Baltimore farmhands five of seven games in 1963. Syracuse Chiefs grabbed the northern division lead by sweep- ing Toronto Maple Leafs 3-2 and 5-2. Arkansas Travelers wen a pair from Columbus Jets 8-4 and 1-0, and Buffalo Bisons swapped a pair of 4-2 verdicts with Atlanta Crackers, the southern division leaders, Indi- anapolis and Jacksonville were rained out, Saturday, rain stopped two tin, 19; of Fresno, Calif., andja former NHL star and mem-|doubleheaders, Buffalo at At- pitcher James Strobel, 19, ofjber of the host Glendale Golfilanta, and Indianapolis at Jack- sonville, Toronto defeated Syra- Richmond split two games, Ro-| chester winning 1-0 and Rich- mond 4-1, BLANKS THE WINGS Ed Merritt end lefty Luis Ar- royo blanked Red Wings on five hits in the second game after Wings wasted most of their eight hits and scored only two runs in the opener. Bill Roman drove in two runs in each game to lead Syracuse to its twin triumphs over Tor- onto. Arkansas, riding a four-game winning streak, swept its first doubleheader of the season. Rich Quiroz yielded only three hits in 6 1-3 innings of sparkling relief in the opener, end Paul Brown pitched a three-hit shut- out in the second game. Howie Bedell, fresh from To- ronto, belted two oubles and ond round American zone Davis Cup competition involving the the Canada-Mexico matches will be played at the Los -Angeles Tonis* Club Aug. United States Lawn Tennis As- Mexico-Canada series will be be determined. won both the $13,275 King Ed- ward Gold Cup and the $9,290 Woodstock Stakes at Woodbine race track Saturday. In the day's top feature, the King Edward Gold Cup, Fitz- simmons rode Burnt Roman, a four-year-old gelding owned by Mrs. G. Keane of Toronto and Mrs, Hal Waggoner of Hamil- ton. At the wire, Burnt Roman had two lengths to spare over irs. Les Lear's Wise Com. mand, Jo-Ann Stable's Prompt Hero, claimed last Wednesday for $7,500, was third. Burnt Ro- man paid $8.20, $4 and $3.40 In the Woodstock Stakes, Fitz- simmons rode Shy Bride, a three-year-old filly owned and bred by Max Bell of Calgary SET TENNIS DATES NEW YORK (AP)--The sec- United States and the winner of 16-18, the sociation said Wednesday. The played Aug. 2-4 at a site yet to ESKS OPEN TRAINING EDMONTON (CP) -- Edmon- ton Eskimos open their 1963 training season here Monday with a two-hour evening work- out. Twice-daily practice ses- sions start Tuesday. Esks fin- ished last in the five-team West-|to win by a little more than a tantalise!" It is true, mon ami. The sweet heady Cherry flavor of Brights COQUETEL CERISE is in truth, tantalizing. As you sip this excellent COQUETEL apres le diner, you will say: Merveilleux! And on la table this wine it looks so distingué in its decanter, and its price is so raisonable. Why do you not try COQUETEL CERISE shortly? IME CAWADIAR ance 9 Brights Wines ern Football Conference lasti/length over Charles Taylor's idrove in two runs in Atlanta's first game victory over Buffalo, Two run singles by Elio Chacc- and Joe Hicks sealed the ver: dict for Bisons in the nightcap. year, The club this year ex-|Muskeg. Mrs. Gordon McMack- pects about 20 new imports andjen's Your County finished third, many Canadian recruits in addi-|Shy Bride, almost overlooked in tion to a nucleus of last year's|the mutuels, paid $41.90, $18.40 veterans, anl $9.40,