Pun ace patie wanappe eee serie as Ward's opened with a five-!doubled and Keenan singled to run splurge on a barrage of five|score him with the sixth run. hits, plus a walk, Vernon led|They got their other run in the to start, Love doubled but hejnext inning, by Vernon, on his was forced after Norris had/single, a passed bal! and two in- SLIM MARGINS walked and Bryan grounded to/field outs. Robbins, who tad Three Close Games In ' ; the infield. Knox singled, Hodg-|taken over the mound duties, I t Ni ght s UAW Pl ay ie grounded out then Caverly| finished out the game nicely. the only batter for the winners, to get more than one hit. TERMS Bergiven went the distance for es TO SUIT. YOUR NEEDS the winners, with Dover's get- ting to him early but. finding PRs, SERVICE STORES You'll Enjoy Dealing With Specialists themselves stymied in the clos- SPRING & SUMMER '64... ing half of the game. They got two in the first on a walker to TIRE BUYING GUIDE Waller and hits by Laveck, ALL-WEATHER Bugkley and Tandem, They add- "qo ed two in the second, on an error, walk and ,Harman's single. In the third, two more 6.70/15 TUBE TYPE WITH TRADE crossed, on an error, Bird's single and a sacrifice fly. La- 125 7.50/14 TUBELESS WITH TRADE J "Roman Banquet Takes Feature s s Ri Woodbine TORONTO (CP) -- Roman Banquet, a five-year-old gelding which doesn't run too often but usually wins when he does, won '; the 337% Jacques Cartier| UAW Softball League last night all proved hard-fought with ap at Woodbine Wednes-| cise margins deciding the y. jissues, as Chassis Plant Mav- Roman Banquet raced head-|ericks defeated Lord's Jewellers and-head with E. Day for most 4-2 at Lakeview Park; Karn of the six furlong distance and Drugs nosed out Truck Line Dover's 9-8 and North Plant pulled away to win by a neck, carrying jockey Nick Shuk to Ward's Billiards won 6-3 over fek Parts and Service. his second victory of the after- noon, NOTE: to UAW League sec- Top Toggery closed ground retary. Since your original schedule was published, other swiftly in the stretch to dead. heat with E. Day for second teams have apparently been in- place. cluded in the league and also, some teams have secured a new Shuk had Roman Banquet up close right from the start, de- sponsor. In order that the "Sports Calendar" can give the spite having to start on the ex- treme outside of the 10-horse full information and also, so that the sponsors can have their jnames mentioned, a revised WARD'S TOP PARTS beg schedule, giving all these) ward's Billiards defeated] A rev gg Mage Sots joe would be appreciated./parts and Service 6:3, in their vi » Ts) 's |game at Alexandra Park, with) completing a $20.30 daily dou- ee Maxwell on oy mound for the| ble payoff with Yo te's Price,| In their game at Lakeview winners, getting out of bad the first race winner. Park, Mavericks --_defeated| 7 12 Barts rps, 3 'eo 'Sadia F Lord's 4-2, with the winners get- Al The quinella of Apache Dan- ecr end Falls Way, in the fifth, returned $30.70. The three games played in the GOODFYEAR veck homered in the fourth in-! ning and their final: run was| scored in the 6th when Talbot opened with a walk and made the circuit, on two wild pitches | and a passed ball, shows the close finish as Ro- man Banquet pulled away in the stretch, --(CP Wirephoto) ed in a dead heat for second place, The five-year-old geld- ing ran the six furlongs in 1.10:4. The above picture feature race at Toronto's Woodbine track yesterday, while Top Toggery (5-at left) and E. Day (2-at right) finish- 'ROMAN BANQUET" (10-in centre) was first under the wire by a neck, to win the $8,770 Jacques Cartier Stakes, SPORTS MENU Bob Grier's 5-Hitter By Geo. H. Campbell , ting three of their runs in the ee ae ear Arges first inning on singles by Hall|,"°Y 24 0 2:08 land Boivin, Campbell's sacri-thitd and two again in the fice and then alter Copelana| seventh. Their only successful) was cut Butler war date on anivie was the fifth, when they! error and he scored on a single idle their three Fung. Brown | by Mapes, plus a wild throw. as safe to start it off, oS Max- | Hent % got their other run, in well's own error, then with one; the fourth when he singled "gd-/OUt, Potts and Shearer each hit) vanced on a wild pitch and singles and with two out, Mc-) ecored.on' an error throw. Cabe connected to drive in Potts} Best of the lowest-priced tires SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' Blanks Stoney Creek Oshawa Tony's blanked Sto- iney Creek 3-0 here at Alexandra TORONTO LEAFS picked up two veterans in the NHL draft yesterday. Both were surprised! Dickie Moore, former Montreal left-wing scoring ace, who "'retired" from hockey last season, due to badly wracked-up knees, the old ligament and cartilage complaints, was their first pick and it was revealed that they went to the meeting intending to make him their first choice -- apparently prepared to talk the ex- Canadien into trying a comeback. They were going to claim Montreal's goalie, ""Gump" Worsley, too, but as it turned out, they grabbed off Terry Sawchuk, when Detroit left the Red Wing goalie off their protected list, Sawchuk's various in- juries and illnesses in recent years are well-known, including his periodic hospitalization sessions during the Stanley Cup playoffs, this past spring. Detroit's policy is hard to figure out and their actions yesterday had the NHL man- agers and coaches more than a little bewildered. Andre Pronovost, Parker MacDonald and defenseman Al Langlois were among those left unprotected by the draft yesterday as were Boston's Guy Gendron and Forbes Kennedy. Unless Sawchuk's health is worse than known, Leafs have got them- selves a great alternate goalie to go along with Johnny Bower and if Dickie Moore can get back into shape and his knees can stand the gaff -- Leafs will have more scoring power on left-wing. True, they are both of an age consider- ed to be "over the hill" in such an active sport as hockey but then Leafs have won the Stanley Cup the last three years with the oldest team in the league -- so until they are proven wrong, the stick-with-experience technique, employed by Staff Smythe and "Punch" Imlach, has to be accepted as successful. x x x x : BRIGHT BITS: -- Bob Grier chalked up 13 strikeouts last night and gave up only five scattered singles and not a single walk, to overpower Stoney Creek as Oshawa Tony's won a 3-0 decision last night, before.a shivering crowd... . ART PARRY, president of the Oshawa Legion Minor Base- ball Association, was appointed as representative of the Eastern Ontario ball group to the OBA, at a meeting held in Belleville on Monday. .. . AL LOPEZ, manager of the highfiying Chicago White Sox, currently setting a sizzling pace as the American League leaders, has been named to manage the A.L. All-Stars in the annual classic at New York on July 7. The chance came when Yankees' Ralph Houk . moved upstairs to the GM desk. . . . BOSTON had back-to- back homers, by Conigliaro and Williams, to beat out Yan- yees in the 10th inning yesterday, then the Yankees came back to win the second game, via the HR technique, Maris, Kubek and Tresh all doing the honors. . . . GIANTS split with Cards yesterday, Glen Hobbie holding S.F. to only two hjts, in the St. Louis win and Phillies stayed within a half- game of the leaders by beating Pirates. BIG RALLIES FEATURE Scott's-Foley's And Dod Civic League Winners Three of the four games |Park last night, in their Beaches |Major Fastball League inter- icity fixutre. | SPORTS | CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES | SOFTBALL | Oshawa City and District -- Scugog Cleaners vs A and W, at Alexandra Park, 8.15 p.m. UAW League -- Plaza Dixie jvS Kents, at Alexandra Park, 2 Oa. | BASEBALL Eastern Ontario. Bantam |League -- Port Hope ys Osh- awa, at Lakeview Park, 6.30 p.m, |} Oshawa Legion Pee Wee League -- Jubilee Pavilion vs |People's Clothing, at Alexandra Park and South-West at Auto |Workers Credit Union, Harman Park. Both games 6.15 p.m. |SOCCER | Oshawa and Distrct (First Division) -- Hungaria vs off losing pitcher Paul Jubb, but} Ukrainia, at Kinsmen Civic Me- }morial Stadium, 8 p.m. Second Division -- Napco vs Ukrainia, (Kinsmen Stadium, 6.45 p.m. LACROSSE Juvenile Junior League -- Joe {Bosco Real Estate vs Brooklin, jat Brooklin Arena, 8 p.m. | Oshawa Minor Bantam jLeague -- Lions vs UAWA, 6 p.m. and Jury and Lovell vs Ikinsmen, 7 p.m. Both games at |Children's Arena. | Oshawa Minor Midget League |-- Dairy Queen vs Genosha |Hotel, 8 p.m. and Royal Crown Colas vs People's Clothing, 9\awa Legionnaires a 4-1 victory) p.m. Both games at Children's Arena, FRIDAY'S GAMES BASEBALL Leaside Junior League -- Osh- awa Legionnaires vs Laurie's, --jat Talbot Park, 7.30 p.m. Eastern Ontario Bantam League -- Oshawa vs Bowman: ville, at Vincent Massey, 6.30 pm, Giddings, pitching for Dodd's, gave up only four hits. He al- lowed two runs in the fourth, |on Campbell's single and a walk to Milne, plus some bad throws by the catcher. They added Bob Grier was in top form, |with his drop working to perfec- tion and his control of the best. He allowed five hits, all singles and scattered over the distance with never more than one in an jinning. He struck out 13 batters jand didn't issue a single walk |to be in complete command, | The only one of the visitors to give Grier any trouble was centre - fielder Robin Jehnny, who took to Grier's offerings like "a cousin" -- he had four- istraight singles in four trips to | South-West Wins Slugging Contest In two Oshawa Legion Tyke} | baseball games last nig hi, {South-West edged South-East 14-12 in a slugging duel at Har- jman Park and North-West wal- \loped North-East 11-2 at Alexan- dra Park. SOUTH-WEST WINS South-West outlasted South- East: in a hard-fought slugging contest, in which winning pitch- er Vann struck out eight bat- ters Morris was the losing pitcher. ERRORS HELP North-West collected 10 hits were aided considerably by six North-East errors. Larry Mathews came in to pitch in the second inning for the winners and hurled shutout ball the rest of the way. John York hit a home run fer the losers, who had only two hits. | Oshawa's PeeWees Down Cobourg 4-1 A fine pitching performance by Allan Taylor gave the Osh- |over Cobourg Legion in an East- lern Ontario Inter-County Pee | Wee baseball game at Cobourg jlast night, : Taylor struckout 11 batters jand gave xp only five hits, |while his'teammates collected six hits-off Aosing hurler Bulger Scott Willson knocked in two jruns for the Legionnaires in the |third inning. Cobourg made three errors, while the Oshawa boys played perfect ball. > the plate. Rival pitcher Brian Bond got Stoney Creek's only other hit, in his first time up, in the third inning. Tony's pecked away at Bond's best for the early stages and then clicked for their first run in the fourth inning when "Butch" McMahon singled with one out and Tom O'Connor foi- lowed with a solid single, and aided by an error by the out- fielder, McMahon scored, The homesters got their other two runs in the third. Again McMahon started it off, again with one out. O'Connor also fol- lowed with his second hit of the night and Ray Suddard's solid |two-bagger scored both runners. | McMahon, with three-for-four, |was Oshawa's top hitter, 0'Con-| nor had a couple, with Jack Sneddon, Brent Oldfield, Jack Armstrong, Suddard and Ron Elliott sharing the other five safeties. STONEY CREEK -- McDade, 3b Yole, If; Johnny, cf; Men- |dyk, ss; Sutton, 2b; Fox, Ib; |Parker, c; Rosser, rf; Bond, p. | OSHAWA TONY'S -- Sneddon, lb; Oldfield, ss; Armstrong, 2b; Booth, c; McMahon, cf; O'Con- nor, 3b; Suddard, If; Elliott, rf; Mavericks got nine hits off pitcher Wilde of Lord's while) Phillips for Mavericks, gave up| 10 hits, but allowed only two runs, Lord's left too many run- ners stranded on bases, two in} the second, three in the fourth) and two in each of the last} three frames. The losers got one} run in the second when Hull) opened with a single, McPhee also singled and then with two out, Woods hit safely to score) Hull. Their other run came in} the fourth when McPhee opened] with a double and scored after) two out, on an infield error. KARN'S EDGE DOVER'S | Karn's and Dover's both had a) big night at the plate, with the! winners scoring three runs in their final seventh inning, to) eke out the 9-8 victory. Talbot, for Dover's, received wretched support, as Karn's earned their first run in the second inning on| a walk and Breau's double and} another in the fourth, when Ber-! given homered, to open that frame. They scored two in the third, another pair in the fifth and three in the seventh and in each of these' three. innings, errors, usually at the start, put Talbot in trouble and made things easier for Karn's. Le- Grier, p. | | and Shearer. Burgess started for Parts but failed to survive the first inning | Remember When?... | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Swaps set a world record of 1:40 2-5 for the 1 1-16- mile distance in winning the $100,000 California handicap at Hollywood Park nine years ago today. Owned by Rex Ellsworth, the three- year-old finished a length ahead of the four-year-old Determine, the Kentucky Derby winner of the previ- ous year. (DEMOLITION | 80 WILLIAM W. All. Materials FOR SALE J. A. 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But after\iwo in the sixth on walks and that pitcher Nicholls for Foley's|errors and two more in the found the range and the "'Steel-|seventh inning, when Danford " , . inl doubled and Campbell homered. ers" couldn't score again. He Adam Goreakl with ticket No. 534, was the winner of the} Dodd's "lucky draw". ! INTRODUCTION to SAILING BRAKE ADJUSTMENT SPECIAL LOW PRICES NOW IN EFFECT AT JOHN'S GARA 226 Celina St. 723-4233 played in the Oshawa Civic Softball League last night saw the winning teams feature their} scoring punch with at least one) big rally as Scott's Chicken|fanned 11. Villa defeated Rundle's Garden|. Ken Brovener started on the Centre 7-2; Foley's Plumbing! mound for Ontario Steel, gave won 11-4 over Ontario Steeljup a run in the second on a Products and Dodd's Motors!double by Woods and a "steal whipped Thompson Plumbing)home". In the third, Foley's 16-6. exploded for a six-run rally. No scorebook or report Of|They got moving again in the the game at Radio Park, be-|fifth and picked up three more! tween Wood Transport and De-|runs, with Loople relieving Hart's Excelsiors was fre-/Brovener in this inning. They ceived. }got their final run in the sixth WON IN FIRST INNING Woods and McAvoy each had At Lakeview Park, Scott's/a pair of hits, with Rowbotham, pounced on Perkins, the Run-| Kellington, Long and Cairns all dle pitcher, for a total of six|adding timely safeties. Walks) hits and as many runs in the|and errors were also a big first inning. Salter opened with help. a double, Cosburn singled, so| STRONG FINISH DOES IT did Wallace and Bradley. Then; In the game at Cowan Park Richardson was safe on an|Thompson's were leading 2-1 at error. Pettitclerc and Terry|the end of four innings of play were retired but Kunke, doubled) byt Dodd's clicked in the fifth and so did Harry Gillard, to| inning, on three walks, Skura- complete the parade. Richard-|tow's triple, doubles by Stog-| sn got their only other run.|wyn and Giddings and singles| in the fifth, when he walked)py McGuire and Giddings, to} and scored on Terry's single| make it a seven-run parade. | and an error. : | Thompson's tried to find a de- Harry Gillard pitched the win) fensive combination but failed for Scotts, scattering nine hits.}as Dodd's added four runs in Hickey tripled to open the/the sixth and four more in the fourth inning for Rundle, san final 7th. rell tripled with one out and) stoowyn with his homer in scored himself on Peeling 5! the ah a triple and double sacrifice fly to centre, for the! was the big hitter for the win- losers' only two runs. |ners, while Griffin, Skuratow, COME FROM BEHIND _[Soules, McConnell and Giddings In another game at Lakeview! ali contributed to the attack Park, Ontario Steel took an |with good work at the plate early lead, with a run in the/ Earl started on the mound for first inning and three in the)/Thompson's, had to give way \second frame, as "Ike" Loop,e,'to Connors in the third and Trowsse.. 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