Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Jul 1967, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

nS ons itstanding teams of nce and the fine co- job performed by the ip of willing workers, eam managers and the City and District n, together with a 'f of competent um- t Ed Cornish, past- Bruce McArthur, for- ers "Wick" Northey, Jarvis, and "Wib" surer Tommy Lodge, ; Jack Bond and ley, together with nu- others, manned the carried out the nu- bs required. who donated their or the day, included 'ourkevich, Bill Your- nie Reid, Dave Kelly, ard, Larry Stapleton, tdmondstone, Gord ob Solomon, Doug eorge Moss, Joe Vas- \llen, Norm O'Reilly, n, Bob Gardian, Jim lerb Mackie, George and Norm Fraser of with deepest regret City and District of- tournament workers the sudden passing of arb Mackie, following "benefit dance" on evening. ipture ment first inning as Clean- he lead. They added the second, on Law- ye and Vie Grabco's In the third, Westfall id scored with two Gene Supryka trip- all and Supryka dup- s exaetly in the fifth inners got their fifth e sixth when Lyons mn an error and scor- ibeo's double. ward only gave up Wayne's scored a run cond on two errors wo in the sixth when rnon singled, Ray tripled and pinch-hit- eer singled. E TIME ILABLE ! Evenings er lays and Sundays, ental Information ie 668-2988 'BY ARENA e GO CING! NE: 7.45 NIGHTLY GH AUGUST 12 wheel bearings, | cylinders, com- 1 of present lin- 99 ANVILLE 'art McTavish Church St. 3-7111 Hodges Begins Making Some Baseball Magic By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer Two weeks ago, Leo Durocher ball's. miracle market nered. Now Gil Hodges, Durocher's antithesis in the manager's guild, quietly has begun making magic atop Capitol Hill. Hodges' Washington Senators, campaigning for a place in the sun after 20 dark years in the American League depths, eeled off their seventh succes- ive victory Sunday, trimming 'leveiand Indians 4-1 behind 'en McMullen, a_ .238 hitter, nd Bob Humphreys, a_non- escript relief pitcher making is sccond start in two seasons. Elsewhere, Minnesota Twins wept a doubleheader from Cal- ifornia Angels, 5-1 and 7-6, and 'limbed within one-half game of cor- r bowing -1 in the first game. Baltimore rioles edged New York Yank- es 2-1 in 14 innings and Bos- on Red Sox drubbed Detroit iger's 9-5. On Saturday, New York California downed Chicago 4-1, Boston took Baltimore 5-1 and Washington squeezed by Detroit | 3-2. and Chicago Cubs had base-| Humphreys, opening on the mound after 30 relief appear- jances this year, blanked the In- dians on three hits before giving way to Bob Priddy in the sev- enth inning. McMullen walloped a pair of homers--his seventh and cighth of the season--as Washington matched its record winning string as an AL expan- sion club. 'WORKED UP'--HODGES "I'm really worked up about this streak," said Hodges, who inherited a 10th place team half- way through the 1963 season, pi- loted the Senators to a ninth place finish in 1964 and has brought them in eighth the last two years. The victory left the Senators a half game behind Baltimore's Struggling 1966 champs and within 4% lengths of the first division. The last time a Wash- ington club finished in the top half of the AL was 1946, when the old Senators wound up fourta in an eight-team circuit. STROKES WINNER | run seventh-inning shot that tied) the nightcap 6-6 before Rich) Rollins' leadoff homer in the) ninth completed the Twins' sweep. Dave Boswell stopped the An-| gels on four hits in the first) game and reliever Al Worthing- ton was the nightcap winner. | Southpaw Paul Lindblad) earned KC a split at Chicago by} firing a three - hitter in his! first complete game of the year. | |The White Sox took the Wit behind first - time starter Wil- bur Wood, who scattered seven hits before Hoyt Wilhelm came| on to get the last two outs. | Bases - empty homers by Phil | Roof and Rock Monday gave Lindblad support in the night- cap. | Tony Conigliaro walloped a three - run homer in Boston's| five - run third inning and Carl) Yastrzemski ripped his Ist} hon.er--high for his seven-year career--in the seventh as the Red Sox handed Detroit its sixth straight setback. Curt Blefary's run - scoring double in the 14th lifted the Ori-| oles past the Yankees, whose only run came on a second in-| ning homer by Mickey Mantle. | 3 Bob Allison pinch hit a three-| Brooks Robinson tied it for Bal-| jounced Cleveland 4-1, Minne-|run homer for Minnesota in the|timore with a lead off homer in ota nipped Kansas City 3-2,|first game and smacked a two-/the ninth. Chicago Cubs Creep | On First Place Cards 'Will Represent Canada By ED SCHUYLER Jr. ssociated Press Sports Writer Ed Kranepool had a hot time| In St. Louis while Ernie Banks layed it cool in San Francisco.}New York Mets to a double-|their first - game victory. And the swinging times had y these two first baseman Sun- ay were too much for St. Louis} The 36-year-old Banks, who| Davis on during a five-run burst ardinals, who saw their Na-| ional League lead cut to two| ames over the second place hicago Cubs. | US. Optimistic | For Games MINNEAPOLIS (AP)--"This team will do very well in Win- nipeg, even without some good sprinters. Who's going to stop us?" That was the appraisal today by head coach Cornelius (Dutch) Warmardam of the United States track and field squad heading soon for the fifth Pan - American Games at Win- nipeg, July 23-Aug. 5. Actually, the 47 - men's squad and 23-member member s s cinens foam acermet | Centennial Canoeing versity of Minnesota won't get) into Pan - Am action until July) 29. "There weren't any real dis-| appointments in the trials--just some upsets, like Jim Greele failing to make it in the 1,500| metres." | Despite the asbence of sprint- | ers Tommie Smith, Charlie Greene and Jim Hines and miler Jim Ryun, this may be the strongest track array the U.S. has sent into the Pan-Am Games. | During the weekend trials, ex- isting Pan - Am records were handily surpassed in 13 of the 17 men's events and in six of the nine women's events. Most noteworthy was a world record - matching performance by Southern California's Earl McCullough, who Sunday won the 110-metre high hurdles in 13.2. McCulloch whipped National AAU champion Willie Daven- port by four: yards as he equalled the world mark set by Germany's Martin Lauer in 1959 and matched by the USA's Lee Calhoun in 1960. World's Champion ------ Jand a two-run shot to help the Reds 8-0 and Houston Astros swept Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1 and 8-2. downed Philadelphia 5-2, Cincin- nati dumped New York 6-1, Los Angeies rapped Chicago 5-1, San Francisco edged Houston 3-1 and Pittsburgh scored a 6-4 win over St. Louis. good year because I don't have that kind of swing for home "IT had a real cold spell after} the All-Star break," said Krane- pool after he turned hot with a} pair of two-run homers to lead header sweep of the Cardinals, | 2-1 and 8-5. | likes to play in San Francisco} because "the cool weather here) seenis to give older players a boost," hit a three - run homer Cubs beat the Giants 9-0 and 3-2. In other NL games Sunday, Atlanta Braves edged Pitts- Phillies trounced Cincinnati In Saturday's action, Atlanta "Fifteen homers for me is a r jthe nightcap. burgh Pirates 2-1, Philadelphia} runs," said Kranepool, who con- nected with Tommy Davis on base in the seventh inning for his sixth homer to give the Mets Kranepool singled in a run and then unloaded again with in the fifth inning- of the night- cap. | Banks sent a ball all the way over the fence with two aboard in the first inning of the opener and then did it again with a man on in the second inning of | the first game, Adolfo Phillips clinching it with a grand slam: here run in the sixth, but they had a real fight in the second game. Bank's homer was the only) hit off Ron Herbel until Don Kessinger singled to lead off the ninth with the score tied 2-2. Glenn Becker forced Kessinger, but Billy Williams singled Becker to third from where he scored on Ron Santo's sacrifice fly off reliever Frank Linzy. Harder Than ELY, Minn. (CP)--One pad- dier became mildly ill and the 10 canoes in the Centennial Voy- ageur Canoe Pageant ran into traffic jams during 3% miles of portage Sunday. d John Hazen, 20, of White- horse, suffered a mild attack of intestinal flu after the start of a 5\%-hour, 30-mile section of the 3,500-mile race to Montreal. Re- turned to Crane Lake, he ex- pected to rest for two or three days before rejoining the Yukon team. He was replaced by a spare paddler. The teams were camped at Campbell's trading post in Que- tico provincial park, 25 miles north of here, after they all successfully completed Sunday's run in the allotted time of 5% hours. : However, a spokesman. said the teams encountered difficul- ties over the portages in the popular vacation area which straddles the international boun- dary. "There seemed to be another 10,000 canoes in the park and we must have startled some of On Tuesday's Card Gene Kiniski, world profes- | geant canoes suddenly bearing sional wrestling champion, headlines next Tuesday night's wrestling show at Civic Audi- torium, when he will meet the | current No. 1 challenger, Tiger Jeet Singh, in the main bout of the card. The semi-final bout arranged by promoter "Pat" Milosh brings "The Assassin" against "Sweet Daddy" Siki. Tuesday's show is a four-bout affair, with two preliminary bouts of extra-special attraction. Fred Atkins meets Kitchener's Dewey Robertson in the opener and "The Beast" tackles Lorenzo Parente, in the other them with the long 25-foot pa- It Looks jon the Henley course here S Baltimore Orioles' Dave Johnson slides into New York Yankee second base- man Horace Clarke trying B.C. - Ontario ST. CATHARINES (CP)-- A!Catharines while University of 32-man team of oarsmen from! Victoria trailed British Columbia and Southern Ontario will represent competition at Winnipeg next! month, The team, selected in tria first North American St. Catharines St. Catharines, a double from ers. of the Canadian squad. Frank Read, who formerly coached UBC rowing crews which won old medals in Olympic and ritish Empire Games compe- titions, will go along as techni-' cal aaviser. | Saturday's trials were domi-| nated by western crews. An eight and a four from UBC captured their events and pair oared entries from Burnaby Lake, B.C., Aquatic Association had no difficulties in their races. WON SINGLES Lief Gotfredson of Toronto Canada jlexx four as ¢ in Pan-American Games rowing|over Toronto Argonauts by five 7:23.4. turday, will compete also in the /naby Lake, a member of Can- N rowing !ada's Gold Medal Olympic pair championships a week later at'in 1964, led for the first 1,500 Selected were an eight and a|Gotfredson and Claude Saund- four from the university of Brit-|ers of Hamilton Leanders. Gary . lish Columbia, two pairs from|White of Winnipeg finished The Cubs had no trouble in|Burnaby, B.C., a dox four fron. fourth. Toronto Argonauts and a single | noug Clark defeated Jackson sculler from Hamilton Leand-| and Darry! Sturdy in the dou- | Waynne Pretty, the Univer-|¢jat. - sity of British Columbia head) 'phe winning Burnaby -- pair coach, was named head coach/hag three lengths on Vancouver to break up a double play attempt in the 14th inning yesterday. Clarke got' the throw off in time to double Rowers | It was the same in the cox- Vancouver won lengths. Gotfredson had to come from behind in the singles to win in Roger Jackson of Bur- metres, then fell behind both An hour later Gotfredson and bles sculls in seven minutes THAT UPSETTING FEELING up Andy Etchebarren who grounded to third starting the play. The Orioles had the bases loaded at the WIN CANOE RACE LA TUQUE, Que time at dium. FIGURES DON'T LIE BUT 2-1, The Orioles won, in the 14-inning game played New York's Yankee Sta- (AP Wirephoto) {Quebec City Sunday, They were | Maurice and Paul Lafortune of! (CP)--Two | St. Roch de l'Achigan. The win-| brothers won a 28-mile canoe/ning time was six hours, four | race in this area northwest of| minutes and 32 seconds, LIARS CAN FIGURE That's an old July -- lot of MONEY. saying that is even older thon of fine clothing starts on and we guarantee to do a figuring with your budget. Clothes --- Look Better Figuratively and SAVE our 50 years of friendly trading in Oshawa. And speaking of figures--or, figuratively speak- ing--Murray Johnston's HALF YEARLY SALE MONDAY, 17th, lot for your figure and at the same time save you a Buy fine 1 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 17, 1967 7 'United States Dominates Powerboat Competition By AL McNEIL | points earning the various posi- VALLEYFIELD, Que. (CP)-- \It was billed as the Expo 67} tions, However, this complicated 'World Powerboat Regatta, but;system didn't bother Johnson, jit might have been more aptly|who ran three straight firsts for named the U.S. Open. By the time the buzz of angry |his weekend's work. Johnson averaged 74.782 miles inboard engines subsided Sun-|an hour for his $1,000 Sunday jday night at picturesque St. |Francis Bay, American power- prize money. {boat jockeys had made off with |seven of the nine trophies at |stake--with Canadians captur- jing the other two, | Only two records were broken | as a west wind, gusting up to | 20 miles an hour, made the }1 2-3- mile course choppy and cornering at the open end of the |bay treacherous. Theses conditions gave the | record-keeper a relatively easy | |time of it as only two marks/ were shattered--both by Cana- dians. | | The most important race of the day was the world limited inboard championship for the Maple Leaf Trophy, This event went to Skeeter jJohnson of Cambridge, Md., who piloted William Ritner's| Pennsylvania - registered Wa- Wa-Too a distance of six laps-- 10 miles--for the victory. The Maple Leaf or seven- litre class was run in a series of three heats--two on Saturday OPEN SOON OSHAWA VIC TANNY'S CANADA'S LARGEST AND FINEST CHAIN OF and one of Sunday--with total | Municipal Pool -- C OSHAWA RECREATION DEPARTMENT Announces Adult Swimming Lessons Register at the Poo! of your choice Somerset: Pools Tuesday evening July 18th, < 6:30 P.M. Somerset Pool -- Commences 6:30 P.M. Wednesday evening July 19th, WREST LING- World Title uesday July18th 8:30 p.m. Oshawa Civic Auditorium ~~ GENE KINISKI _... -- TIGER JEET SINGH '4 The Assassin vs Sweet Daddy Siki Lorenzo Parente vs The Beast Gene Kiniski Fred Atkins vs Dewey Robertson 4 -- BIG BOUTS -- 4 Tickets for these exhibitions at the Rest. 723-9721. Admission $1.50 ~ $1.25 « .75. Pat Milosh Promoter. Casino in 7:18.2 while the cox pair covered the 2,000 metres in| 7:51.5 as the only entry. | RESULTS Cox Fours: 1, St. Catharines; 2. Toronto Argonauts; 3. Van- couver. Time 6:36. Pairs: 1. Burnaby Lake, B.C.; 2, Vancouver. Time 7:18.2. Singles: 1. Leif Gotfredson, Toronto Argonauts; 2, Claude Saunders, Hamilton Leanders; 3. Roger Jackson, Burnaby Lake; 4. Gary White, Winnipeg. Time 7:23.4. | Cox Pair: Burnaby Lake (rowover), Time 7:51.5. | Argonauts won the singles, then combined with Doug Clark to} take the double. A St. Catha- rines cox four won the day's other race. The smooth-stroking Vancou- ver eight covered the 2,000, metres in a fast 5:56.7 for a Manitoba 289.38: 5944 B.C. 291.36:38 Alta. 293.16:5344 Ontario 294.52:18% N.B. 297.05:12% Sask. 298.21:1244 Quebec 299.55:5444 N.W.T. 302.09:01% Yukon 306.01:47 N.S. 318.38:19%4 Need An Oi] Furnace? CALL PERRY 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT two - length' victory over St.! When did Niagara come into the picture? | 7 KAMPING | | UNLIMITED Townline Road North (1 Mile North of King St. E.) PH. 728-9942 Check the Camping Column in the Classified Section for our ad, ST, CATHARIN THE BEST ENTERTAINMENT IN TOWN "GO WITH THE GAELS" Monday, July 17th, 8:30 P.M. E'S LAKESIDES vs. OSHAWA GREEN GAELS ADMISSION PRICES Adults ..... 1.25 Students 78 Children 50 BUS SERVICE 7:30 -- 8:00 -- 8:30 ll ~ ror OC). Rll THORNTON RD. SOUTH Tom and Jane checke' found they were short family holiday have to youngsters disappointed? Definitely not. Tom dropped in to see the manager of the nearest Niagara Loans office. He outlined the problem to him, found him very understanding and helpful. In privacy, they discussed the cost of loans, A repayment plan. (And payment terms to suit the family budget.) Within 24 hours Tom had the money in his hands. And the family was headed for a fun-packed vacation. When you need extra money for any good reason, you can expect the same courteous, quick service at any o NIAGARA d their finances. They of money. Would the be postponed? The ne of 300 Niagara offices. FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED Member of the (ac) Gr 'oup of Companies | °286 KING STREET W. reas) WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - 1967 RAMBLER REBEL 52694.00 lincluding Licence --- Gas -- Permanent Anti-Freeze wn J ' 8 RAMBLERS = BRAND NEW AND READY FOR THE ROAD b> cs) <= > |. ° yg y ff Puts You in This 1967 Rambler Tudor Sedan = Including Licence --- Gos ---- Permanent Anti-Freeze = > $2969 1967 AMBASSADOR lincluding Licence --- Gas -- Permanent Anti-Freeze 9 YR./50,000 MILE WARRANTY TOP TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE $25 down if you qualify Easy 1.A.C. Financing PERSONALIZED AFTER SALES SERVICE 1963 MERCURY MONTEREY CUSTOM SEDAN Fully Equipped. Lic, 146241 $1594.00 SUPER 88 TUDOR HARDTOP Tutone, Fully Equipped. Lie, 349004 $1194.00 USED CAR SPECIALS 1961 OLDSMOBILE 1963 PLYMOUTH TUDOR SEDAN V-8, Auto., Radio. Lie, 239104 $1294.00 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA CONVERTIBLE Full Power. Lic, 20841L $1594.00 NICOLS MOTOR SALES LTD.--WHITBY 668-3331 ~ STOOIN - AGLIHM - SIODIN = ASLIHM =~ STODIN ~ ASLIHM ~ SIODIN = ABLIHM == SIODIN - ASLIHM - SIOOIN - F JHM =WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - 723-3487, HITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS - WHITBY - NICOLS -

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy