Ow 1ad Gaels impressed the am with their speed, y on the back checking ressure of playing with substitutes told on the junior box lacrosse Ss, ) men on the field at es, Cornell's bench told as the game pro- eld a 4-0 lead at one the first period but r to goalkeeper Merv cost the club dearly, irshall was recuperat- nell rammed in four when Marshall return- | held only a 5-4 lead, Gaels, besides having ccustomed to playing ger surface than they to, had to adjust to ootball cleats. o, their performance that Cornell players ing the club would be the Ivy League with nore experience. vill ight" when they meet Hawks at Civic Aud- 2 Oshawa tonight. nen will be admitted charge for tonight's S game, which starts rill mark the first ap- of Terry Stinson and obmpson against each ring their new uni- mn performed with nels the past three hough he's a native ie, Stinson joined the season as the clubs eases. | only two - brother be in action tonight, boast a combination Gaels have the Stin- 'y and Don, and the John and Phil, while has the Thompsons, Ivan, son, however, has his in a cast and won't | until some-time in gets the cast off June BOUT :30 p.m. TTORIUM Commission Johnny Valentine Pat Milosh Promoter 'AGE TANCE ment RAGE Crating for a) LTD. IZED VANS time EGION CLUB | by the Oshawa ion Department adian Legion Branch nd girls in the a , midget, juvenile, tend first meet esos ice ) new ion Build- Thursday, June. Ist, P.M. Presently per- it to use the track luding showers and ) of the local high day inclusive from ncing June 5th and 967, as a training Providing sufficient > membership every r round as opposed his club GHipeld bo s as well as sughout Ontario at about earn @ little * @ part Committee stage a special ALL TOGETHER -- Run- ning as one man, these high school track stars go over a hurdle at Hamilton Satur- day in Ontario high school HAMILTON (CP)--Three Ca downpour at the Ontario Fed. eration of School Athletic Asso ciation championships Saturday. high jumper from Oshawa Mclaughlin Col for a meet victory in the 120. yard hurdles and Canadian in terscholastic record of 14.5 sec onds. uttal of Thornhill, Ont., 960. ) Mays, a six-foot, two-inch, 185. found end with Oshawa Hawk- es junior football team last r, dropped out of the high p at the five-foot, 11-inch . But he said he was "just ppy"' with his hurdles vic- E IMPORTED TRACK were saved from from Trinidad. tar and chopped sugar cane. The rain had little effect on the track and did not hurt the ord in the open two-mile. Scorrar splashed his way to a nadian record of 9:12.8 held by Terry Dooley of Vancouver, and his own provincial and meet marks of 9:16.3 and 9:16.6 set in 1965. The pole vaulting duel be- tween Doug Morris and Dave Barrett, both of Toronto, had been touted as the highlight of the meet with both jumpers aiming for the 15-foot mark. EVENT DELAYED However, the rain delayed the senior vault event and cooled off the jumpers. Barrett failed in three attempts at the 13-foot nadian high school track and field records were trampled into the mud despite a two-hour Gerry Mays, a 19- year-old turned hurdler legiate, romped through the rain Winner of his qualifying heat in 15.1 seconds, Mays's final ef- fort was 2-l10ths of a second head of the mark set by ne new, all-weather track imported The track, called Grasstex, was made from a mixture of athletes' times, as was proved § by Doug Scorrar of Perth who 3 raced to a new Canadian rec- 9:12.4 victory, beating the Ca- track and field champion- ships. It was in this event, the 120-yard hurdles, that Oshawa's Gerry Mays, a Grade 12 student at Mc- GERRY « « » McLaughlin student level and Morris only made it over 13 feet, 9 inches. Both had beaten the old Ca- nadian mark of 14 feet in re- cent weeks. Another pole vault record was set Saturday when Bruce Simp- son of Agincourt went over the bar at 14 feet, one inch, shatter- ing the old junior mark of 12 Laughlin Collegiate and Vo- cational Institute, set a Can- adian high school record of 14.9 seconds, (Canadian Press Wirephoto) Oshawa's Gerry Mays Sets Canadian Record MAYS Doug Vine of Ottawa won two events, the midget long jump and triple jump. His long jump performance of 20 feet, 3% inches broke the Ontario record of 20 feet, three inches. In the junior high jump, Mac Smith of Richmond Hill high school cleared six feet, two inches to break the Ontario rec- feet, 11% inches. ord of six feet, 1% inches. Parnelli Jones Favored To End European Trend By DALE BURGESS INDIANAPOLIS (AP) American auto race drivers, who have watched a Scotsman and an Englishman wheel into|Ford Victory Lane for two straight years, have sound hopes of enduring the trend Tuesday in the 5ist 500-mile Memorial Day race, Parnelli Jones, a former win- ner, was virtually conreded his second victory in the event if his revolutionary STP-Pratt and Whitney turbine car holds to- gether for the distance. Italian-born will start from the No. 1 posi- tion and carry No. 1 on his car. He earned the numerals separ- ately--the pole start with a rec- ord 168.982 qualifying speed in a Brawner Hawk Ford; the one painted on his car by winning the U.S. Auto Club champion- ship last year. The front row will be rounded out by Dan Gurney in one of his own Eagle Fords, and Gordon Johncock, who finished third last year, in a Gerhardt-Ford. NEW 'CHOPPER GEARS Although Jones' qualifying speed earned him only a sec- ond - row start, he had been babying an ailing. gear box on the 10-mile trial run. After a new transmission was built by an Indianapolis firm specializ- ing in helicopter gears, Jones showed in practice he could pass anybody in the field. Jones, 1963 winner, will share Mario Andretti /y lap pileup in 1964 that killed MacDonald. The track has 500 races of 1909 and 1910. Jr., the 1962 and 1964 winner, and Foyt's team-mate, former motorcycle champion Joe Leon- ard, in Foyt - designed Coyote 'ords, The third row lineup will be Lloyd Ruby, who led in the Tace-connected events ranging from a gin rummy tournament to the Governor's Ball, reached its climax Sunday with the na- tionally - televised festival pa- tive of Ridgeway, Ont., By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer Reggie Smith has made a quick round trip from outfield to infield and back--with a stop- over on the Boston Red Sox' bench. But the versatile rookie still looks best to manager Dick Williams when he is circling the bases. Smith, an early - season dis- appointment at bat for the hard- hitting Red Sox, broke loose Sunday by stroking three hits and flashing his speed to score three runs in a 4-3 Boston vic- tory over Baltimore Orioles. Elsewhere, Detroit Tigers trimmed Washirigton Senators 3-1 and climbed within one-half game of the American League- leading Chicago White Sox, who were blanked by California 5-0. New York Yankees shut out Cleveland Indians 5-0 and Min- nesota Twins divided a double- header with Kansas City Ath- letics, winning the first game 4-3 and dropping the nightcap 7-2. In Saturday's action, Wash- ington drubbed Detroit 8 - 1, Cleveland dumped New York 53, Chicago took California 3-1, Baltimore slammed Boston 10-0 and it was Minnesota over Kan- sas City 4-1 in a rain-shortened seven-inning encounter. RECOUPS SLUM Smith, a .320 switch - hitter and all-star centre fielder for Williams' Toronto club in. the International League last year, followed his manager up to the Red Sox this spring. He doubled in the first inning Sunday, tagged up and raced to third on a foul pop near the first base dugout, then scored when the Orioles tried to nail Carl Yastrzemski on a delayed double steal of second. Smith singled in the fourth, zipped to third on Mike And- rews' single and beat the throw home on Yastrzemski's sacri- fice fly to centre. In the sev- enth, he doubled again, took third on a bunt and tallied on a wild pitch, That run enabled right- hander Jim Lonborg to gain his sixth victory against one loss despite a two-run homer by Frank Robinson, who leads the majors with 13. With three hits in five trips to the plate, Smith boosted his Grubb Fails Extend Streak TORONTO (CP) -- Jockey Richard Grubb failed Saturday to extend his Canadian record of seven consecutive thorough- bred victories at Woodbine Raceway but the day wasn't a complete. loss. Grubb, who set his record by Reggie Smith Stars As Sox Trip Orioles batting mark 15 points to the .228 mark. He has hit .326 since returning to the lineup. California's Jim McGlothlin stopped the White Sox on six hits for his fourth victory in five decisions while two Chicago er- rors contributed to three Angel runs. Don Mincher's double and Al Weis's boot produced a run --the lar; in the fourth and Ken Berry's misplay on a single by Jim Fre-| § gosi helped the Angels push over two more in the eight. Denny McLain, with last-out relief by Fred Gladding, hurled the Tigers past Washington be- fore a crowd of 52,357 at Detroit st in the majors this ick McAuliffe's sacri- Hamilton Man Wins Feature HAMILTON (CP) -- Nat Adams, ¥, a Hamilton garage operator, won the feature 20- lap race of the National Cen- tennial races Saturday at Jar- vis, 30 miles southwest of here. Adams completed the 38-mile race in 31.5 ménutes driving a Canadian-built Chinook. About 4,000 watched in pouring rain. In second place; 58 seconds behind, was Frits Hockreuter of Toronto in a Gold Star Formula Vee. A similar car driven by Toronto's Harvey Craig placed' third, 72 seconds behind Hock- reuter. George Fejer of Toronto, who to finish the race after he sur- vived a spectacular spin on the third lap, He also drove a Chi- nook, The race was the third of 18 leading to the Alitalia cham- pionship awarmied to the top driver. fice fly and run-scoring singles by Willie Horton Northrup capped the, Tigers' de- ciding against loser Pete Richert. hitter, Mickey Mantle crashed his ith homer and Charlie Smith hit his first homer of the season as the Yankees throt- tled the Indians at Cleveland. Stottlemyre squared his record at 4-4 with his third shutout of the year. double in the seventh inning, took third on an infield out and scored on a wild pitch by Chuck Dobson, keying the Twins' first- game victory at Kansas City and helping Dean Chance be- come the first AL pitcher te win eight games. built the sleek Chinooks, failed/lison in the nightcap couldn't prevent Jim Kaat, a 25-game winner for Minnesota, in 1966, from taking his sixth loss in seven decisions, The Athletics tagged Kaat for three runs in the third inning, Mike Hersh- berger's two-run single climax- sports car driver and sedanjing the burst, and added four wrapup runs in the eighth. sixth - inning flurry Mel Stottlemyre fired a five- Bob Allison drilled a two-run But two more doubles by "Al- 4 LARRY IRELAND ».» here tonight Four Goals For Huntsville Star Huntsville Hawks moved into a first-place tie with Oshawa Green Gaels in th. Ontario La- crosse Association Junior A se- ries during the weekend, defeat- ing Toronto Township 15-9. Hastings Legionnaires tied with Mimico Mounties for third Place, downing St. Catharines) Lakeside 18-11. Larry Ireland scored four goals for Huntsville and Tim Kelly and Brian Thompson got; three each. Terry Watson and| Ivan Thompson added two} apiece and Bob Strano picked! up one. | Jore Hore and George Wilson scored two goals each for Tor- onto. Dan Russell, Bob Chan- dler, John Anderson, Ron Wan- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Mey 29, 1967 7 namaker and Brian Wilson{with five goals and Daryl Scol- added one each. lard, and Jim Grady fired four Ken Henderson led Hastings/apiece. Why "keep 'em waiting?" Suspense may be fine on TV -- but when you want cash, Benefiel knows you want it right now. That's why we make every effort te give the fastest service in town -- Big 0.K. service --often te minutes, Friendliest, too! Call up and find out! Beneticial ae FINANCE CO. OF CANADA - Loans up to $5000 -- Your loan ean be life-in AA 42 month contracts on loans over sigan €xp067 OSHAWA -- 2 Offices WL RMR cies 28-4687 e King St. East, East Mali Shopp. Centre .. .723:8134 OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT -- PHONE FOR HOURS ee7nise? winning the last seven of eight races on May 16, finished last with Hurry Man in the first race Saturday but came back to win! four races and place second twice on the remainder of the card. The 18-year-old jockey, a na- had been suspended for 10 days un- til Saturday for reckless riding. Grubb, who was an apprentice} jockey when he set the Cana- dian record, became a full- fledged jockey Saturday. He's A Smoothie, owned by Bill Beasley, won the $11,250 Eclipse stakes handicap and set} a Canadian record with the time| of 1:42 2-5 over the 1 1-16-mile distance. Victorian Era, last year's horse of the year, was third--behind Bye and Near. Grubb, after a disappointing showing in the first race, won the second with Chillicoot, the fourth with Satin Son, the fifth with Avant Charge and the sixth with Dreamalot. He placed second in the third race with Rip Rhobar and second in the eighth with Fast Answer. The daily double of Tomboy Pete and Chillicoot paid $20.10. The exactor of He's A Smoothie and Bye and Near paid $126.30. The humming bird makes up to 200 wing strokes per second, while the wild duck makes only OMSIP needs to know... | in your family ?. new rade, eight. 1966 race until his engine failed, and brothers Bobby and Al Unser of a famous Albu- querque, N.M., racing family. Mechanical troubles and late qualifications left the five for- eign starters far back in the field. Jim Clark of Scotland, 24th, Jackie Stewart of Scotland 29th; 1966 winner Graham Hill lof England 3ist and Jochen Rindt of Austria 32nd. AGE-YOUTH LINEUP Al Miller of Roseville, Mich., oldest starter at 43, will take off beside Rindt, youngest at 25 but No, 2 ranking Grand Prix driver last year. Hulme currently leads this world road racing cir- cuit. The drivers were assembled at noon today for their final instructions and review of the rules, with emphasis on a clean start. Sixteen cars tangled last year only yards beyond the starting line, eliminating 11 but causing no serious injuries. The worst wreck recently in the speed event was a second- drivers Eddie Sachs and Dave taken 57 lives, including pre- the second row with A. J. Foyt SALES - SERVICE & SUP 39 PRINCE ST. The "500" festival, a series of OSHAWA SHAVER SERVIC OSHAWA - PARTS - ACCES, pers PLIES 728-4284 ad dress Those important events in your fomily interest OMSIP too! The Ontario Medical Services Insurance Plan needs your help in keeping your file up-to-date... so that, for instance, you get instant coverage of age when you furn even reduced rates if you should lose your income! We suggest you tear oot this checklist and keep # hondy--and do let us know alist Ioan dhtegentasiier lai. % A Change of Address. Meviacoobeey tine, butplecseialenaintotodenpee aline. Marital Statvs. When you get mortied, you'll want to pet your wile on your own OMSIP contract. ' Birth. Please advise OMSIP within 30 days atter the is bora, or adopted, so you'll get effective coverage immediately. Otherwise, 's a 3 month wait- ing period after notification. Turning twenty-one. When a dependant comes of age, he is no longer covered wit ody saber ond most take out his own coverage. Again, let es know within Or continvows coverage, or you must a3 month period after notification. -- _--s Loss in Income. If your income is reduced or stopped because of illness, disability or retirement, you may be eligible for a Please make special application to OMSIP. Old Age Pension. If you are receiving Federal Old Age Security, you do not re- ceive OMSIP coverage avtomatically. So if you wish to foin OMSIP, please apply. Death. Upon the death of a contract holder, the new head of hoesehold should notify OMSIP. Please let us know as well if a dependant dies. This information, kept vp-to-date in your file, helps make sure your OMSIP claims are settled fast. But whenever you write OMSIP, be sure fo include your nome, and contract number: Address all OMSIP correspondence to: OMSIP, 135 St. Clair Ave. W, Toronto 7, Ontario. OMSIP helps pay your doctor bills..OMSIP pays 90% of O.MA. scheduled fees. your new baby...or your own cover-