fanned the next id the same thing [ter O'Neill had clean single, the other safety. s produced cam? of the sixth in- time Scugog able to get more ner on base. nself opened the single. Drennen » down swinging +h was safe on an stop Kitson, with / to third and ond base. n then slashed a e infield, scoring and March. The e at the plate on when Drennen el- off" the throw ield to the plate relay toss to the just too late, as | had Oshawa's ngle in the fourth, 000 000 000 6 22 p00 001 OOX 231 Herriott; Landers I. prvice. | Sie ern ei s = J : ~ Tiger-Cats Outplayed But Stil By JOHN DODD MONTREAL. (CP)--Hamilton 'Tiger-Cats got their first win of the young Eastern Football Conference season Thursday night but the winless Montreal Alouettes outplayed them most of the game. The Ticats, who showed only sporadic flashes of any offence, edged Montreal 17-16.. The Alouettes displayed a superior running game and a surprising- ly strong defensive squad. "The trouble was the percent- ages,' Montreal coach Kay Dalton said after the game. The percentages should have given the Als at least one field goal in two fourth quarter attempts from the 10-yard line and the three and a chance to mark up their first victory of the season. But placekicker Ron Parson hit the post on the first try and went wide on the second. Dalton said he never consid- ered running the ball in the two crucial plays. MISSED 2 FG TRIES "All I wanted to do was win, and a field goal would have won it for us. When we went for and got a touchdown, we need- ed it and we got it. When we tried those field goals we need- ed only three points. We didn't get them ... but it was the right thing to try, no matter what anybody says."' Hamilton scored with the|!y walked in the 12th inning of| sixth ended a scoreless earned|>': game less than three minutes old in the Ticats only real burst of offensive power. Quarterback Joe Zuger moved the ball 57 yards in four plays from the opening kickoff, then passed 28-yards to Tommy Joe Coffey in the end zone for the touchdown, Montreal's much-maligned defensive unit then started to nail Zuger. George Bork, moved spark the offensive squad. Gerry Sternberg and Don Lis- Canada Win Rifle Match SOUTH MARCH, Ont. CP) »-Canada won the international Palma rifle match Thursday in the face of a wind that nearly blew its team out of competi- tion. Running into the last minutes of time, Canadian marksmen fired a total 4,136 out of 4,500 to finish six points ahead of Brit- ain and 11 ahead of the United States in the three-country competition fired in Dominion of Canada Rifle Association competition at Connaught Ranges, 20 miles west of Otta- wa. Winds gusting to 25 miles an hour across the line of fire dogged competitors as they fired a total of 45 shots each-- 15 at a time from distances of 800, 900 and 1,000 yards, with time and target restrictions. Waiting out big gusts and deceptive lulls, the 20-man Canadian team coached by Maj. Dick Hampton of Alliston, | the all-time great home run hit- Ont., came close to running out of time. When Mike Susick, a Bisley veteran from Summerside, P.E.I., came to the firing line on the 1,000-yard range, he had only seven minutes to fire his 15 rounds. Palma regulations, allowing only five men from each team to fire their rounds at one time, provide an average of 25 minutes per man on the range at each distance, PRESSURE STRONG Had Susick made an error and gone over the time limit, Canada's lead over the British could have disappeared. He would have Jost the points for shots fired after the time had expired. The competitors were shoot- ing at a 30-inch bulls-eye, with five points for a hit and counts of four, three and two, for the larger circles on the target. Under the guidance of Hamp- ton ang Lt.-Col. Steve Johnson of Calgary, the team comman- dant, Susick alternated fire on two targets--to save the sec- onds required for marking between shots--and finished with three consecutive bulls- eyes and less than a minute to spare. "T just did what the coach told me," said the exhausted Susick after his dramatic fin- ish. Two members of the U.S. team shot 217 of a possible 225 to tie for top individual honors in the match, They were Lau- rence Moore of Cinnaminso, N.J., anc Middleton Tompkins of Long Beach, Calif. Norman Beckett, 58, of Ancaster, Ont., was third with 214 and top Canadian in the match. Doran Westhead of Cal- gary, only woman among the 60 competitors, was 17th with 211. 15] 1 Win Game bon scored the Montreal touch- downs while Parsons added two singles on attempted field goals . Dick Cohee scored the other Hamilton touchdown after a 92- yard pass-and-run play in the |third quarter. that brought the Ticats to the one-yard line. He carried over on the next play. Coffey booted a field goal and moving ahead 14-7 near the end of the quarter. Al Ecuyer set up the touch- down by intercepting a pass at the Hamilton 42 and lateralling to Larry Fairholm who bulled his way to the five. Lisbon went over on the next play. Cohee's touchdown in the third quarter and a 24-yard field goal by Coffey in the sec- jtwo converts for Hamilton's|ond quarter put Hamilton other points, jahead 17-15. Parson's two close-in field SHOWS OLD FORM Bork, who had seen only lim- ited action in the Als' three exhibition games, regained some of his old form quickly and fired a sharp 12-yard pass to Sternberg in the end zone. The convert tied the score. The Als continued their drive, goal attempts failed and that was the game. Montreal rolled 175 yards along the ground and 58 by passing while Hamilton's main offence showed up in the air where they picked up 216 yards. On the ground the Ticats could muster only 80 yards. With Late Homer By HAL BOCK 'ning 6-5 and then losing by the Associated Press Sports Writer same score in 14 innings. Leo Durocher kicked the 1 ona girth Jenkins, \sleeping dog, and it nearly bit|!00king for his 17th victory, | ie lac took a 21 lead into the ninth loff his leg. : wot ureeh 'ay but singles by Johnny Callison, | urocher, playing the per-\cjay Dalrymple and Gary Suth- centages, jcent ordered Philadelp-|eriand, tied it for Philadelphia. hia's Tony Gonzalez intentional-| 'phe 'phillies' first run in the |Thursday night's game to pitch! ,. 'isdn ob 9 ; A \te Rich Allen. a at 25 innings for Jen Now ordinarily that wouldn't; Giusti scattered eight | qualify as a terribly safe move. against the Dodgers and Ron But Cub pitchers had retired|Davis' three-run double drove Allen four times and, with/in all the runs he needed. Cookie Rojas on second car-| Bud Harrelson's first major jrying the winning run, a walkjleague homer, an_ inside-the- to Gonzalez did set up a poten-|park shot that eluded Pitts- {tial double play that could get' burgh rightfielder Al Luplow, ithe Cubs out of the inning. Allsn Beate Cubs | GORD CHRISTIAN of Hamilton Tiger (72), - Cats seems to be sailing over BASEBALL SCOREBOARD By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WL Pet. GBL Louis 74 44 .627 oT 'p Mere y e onlan lous finals as | . or ' VICTORIA (CP) -- Only two|Runkle of Los Angeles, turned | quarter inals as he took Atlanta Cincinnati hits| 54" Fran. Chicago | Philadelphia Pittsburgh Los Angeles |New York | Houston 2 53 55 56 59 56 63 10 12 17 12 471 440 415 408 2 Thursday's Games broke a 4-4 tie in the eighth|New York 6-5 Pittsburgh 5-6 Instead, the strategy gotlinning of the first game and|Philadelphia 5 Chicago 2 in to|them right out of the balljhelped the Mets to their victo-|Ho' ame, ry. 'Allen hammered his 20th, Juan Pizarro, loser in the fence giving the Phillies a 5-2\ and picked up the second game victory. | In the only other National League games, Houston Astros jblanked Los Angeles Dodgers 14-0 behind Dave Giusti and New | York Mets split a doubleheader|t he with Pittsburgh ' Pirates, win- gled Roberto Clemente across inning. doubleheader--seven of |\them by Cleon Jones. Mathews Leaves Houston For Hitters' Ball Park By BOB GREEN Eddie Mathews was gri League as he sat in the Houston dress-|day. ing room. "Pye never seen the Detroit| BACK AT THIRD ball park," he said, and the} Mathews, 36, who has 503 grin stretched. "But I hear it's|Career home runs, had played first base most of the season at ood hitters' ball park." Detroit manager ps Smith| Houston, but has no chance of was grinning even more. He'd|moving Norm Cash out of that just moved into third place in| Position at Detroit and will play the tight American League pen-| third nant race and found, in| Cash was key to Detroit's vic- Mathews, the ideal replacement) tory over Boston, driving in the |for injured third baseman Don/winning run with a two-out tri- | Wert. | The trade of Mathews, one of before the Red Sox tied it with a three-run rally in the eighth, Gene Brabender pitched a ters, from the Astros to Detroit,| was engineered late Thursday |nist arrived home from a 7-4,|support /10-inning victory at Boston that)leading |put them back in third place, Yankees three games back of leading} Vic Davalillo's Minnesota Twins. Cleveland Indians from Paul Blair in the Orioles bases-loaded outlasted|five-run, 16th inning rally that linnings and Baltimore Oriolesjingtor. Player Leads At Hartford International League Des : L. Pet. GBL|, 20% Pocharski of Marble- Mf" REGULAR and KINGS , ' LJ Rochester 68 52.567 head, Mass., holds down third ? ". tl res. arm Richmond 69 53.586 spot with 180 points etter shaty | Toledo sy ck ote giziing the lead with Goldsmith in iT rp "37 60 487 gig the first three races. WEATHERSFIELD, Conn.|Palmer, and U.S. Open cham-|;r000. On oe ate dete into AP) --: "I can't believe I shot|pion Jack Nicklaus and PGA| Cor a 3 ou ae a a 65," said Gary Player ofjwinner Don January skipped| oo etine 4 ae a South Africa after becoming the|the Greater Hartford Open. Eattalo 59 64 "448 14 EX PR ESS first round leader at six-under-| par in Hartford open golf tournament. "T've been cutting trees, rid- ing horses, driving a tractor on my farm for four weeks with Among those off to a good Also at 67 was Lee Trevino, an El Paso, Tex., club professional er said. described how his putter in the U.S. Open in June. Associated Press Sports Writer,in the onl th A i SS pi ' in e niy oO ner a Thuss.| Detroit Cincinnati (Fisher (Pappas ston 4 Los Angeles 0 Probable Pitchers Today Chicago (Ellis 0-1) at Phila- --\home run, over the right field opener, came out of the bullpen|delphia (L. Jackson 8-11) N New York victory when Manny Mota sin-| Pittsburgh (Veale 13-5) N Atlanta (Lemaster 8-6) at Los with the winning run in the 14th/Angeles (Drysdale 8-12) N 8-13) 12-7) The Mets collected 34 hits in| San Francisco (Sadecki 4-4) N A St. Louis (Carlton 10-6) at|champion, 2 and 1, and Vancou- Houston (Cuellar 11-8) N | Saturday's Games Chicago at Philadelphia |New York at Pittsburgh {St. Louis at Houston N | |stopped New York Yankees 4-1|Minnesota Chicago Boston California Washington Cleveland Baltimore New York Kansas City L 65 50 63 51 63 54 SL Atlanta at Los Angeles Cincinnati at San Francisco American League Pet. G 565 553 538 534 525 487 479 453 440 429 Thursday's Games Detroit 7 Boston 4 Baltimore 4 New York 1 Cleveland 8 Washington 3 7 | _ Probable Pitchers Today Baltimore (Richert 7-12 andj} |ple in the 10th. Willie Horton hit|Hardin 1-1) at Chicago (Horlen two homers and Al Kaline one/13-3 and Howard 3-9) (2) TN (O'Donoghue 6-4) Cleveland at Detroit (Lolich 6-12) N Minnesota (Kaat |triple was the highlight of a/Boston (Bell 7-10) N od Kansas City (Hunter 10-12) night shortly after the Tigers|four-hitter and got key hitting|Washington (Bertaina 3-3) N 9-11 over the Merritt 9-3) at New York (Tal- bot 5-4 and Barber 8-13) (2) TN California (Hamilton 6-2) a falo, Saturday's Games Washington Senators 8-3 in 16|carried the Indians past Wash- Raltimore at Chicago Cleveland at Detroit - |Kansas City at Washington Minnesota at New York California at Boston Thursday's: Results the $100,000 Greater|start Thursday was 22-year-old | puffalo 3 Toronto 0 Bob Lunn of Sacramento,/Rochester 5 Syracuse 4 Calif., with four-under-par 67.|Toledo 8 Columbus 5 |Jacksonville 6 Richmond $ | Today's Games only one practice round," Play-| who learned just how attractive, Toronto at Buffalo pe \the pro tour might be when he| Rochester at Syracuse "Fantastic" was the way he\earned $6,000 for finishing fifth Columbus at Toledo |Richmond at Jacksonville 10% 12% = Same score. 55 A 30-year-old lawyer, Dickj é" Allen Wins «| Sailing Race and | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, August 18,1967 7 Power Shortage Drops Leafs Lower By THE CANADIAN PRESS /for Wings. Ted Dillard suffered A power shortage continues| the defeat, his third in five to drop Toronto Maple Leafs) decisions. toward the depths of the Inter-| Buddy Booker lined a bases- national League. |loaded triple in the eighth The Leafs absorbed their|inning to provide the margin in fourth straight loss Thursday--| Jacksonville's victory. Booker's 3-0 to cellar-dwelling Buffalo| drive followed a pair of two-out Bisons walks by Ron Reed, who took Aubrey Gatewood and Jack/his eighth loss against 12 wins. Baldschun shared a four-hitter, A three-run homer with two as Buffalo defeated Gary Was-|out by Chris Cannizzaro in the lewski with a run in the sixth) ninth inning propelled Toledo to and two in the eighth. its fourth win in a row. The defeat left Toronto tied with Jacksonville Suns in fourth place, three games behind Tole BASEBALL STARS {do Mud Hens. | Toledo defeated Columbus|By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jets 8-5 and Jacksonville Suns) Batting--Cleon Jones, Mets, jbounced Richmond Braves 6-3 smashed seven hits in a double- to allow Rochester Red Wings)header and scored three runs to regain first place. as New York split with Pitts. > Cet burgh Pirates, winning the first gs wines clipped 'Syracuse |24me 6-5 and losing the second \Chiefs 5-4 in 11 innings: on aj" the same score in 14 innings. : jleadoff home run by Curt Mot-| Pite hing--Dave Giusti, lton, his 15th. Rochester now|Astros, scattered eight hits and Montreal Alouette, Don Lis- ern Football Conference "* Montreal 17-16 jleads second-place Richmond hurled his first shutout of the bon (24) as he blocks a kick game in Montreal Thursday (CP Wirephoto) | by one percentage point. season as Houston beat Los by Dave Lewis in an East- night. Hamilton defeated John Scruggs had three RBIs| Angeles Dodgers 4-0 Two Canadians Survive Cut In Amateur Golf Tourney 1967 AMBASSADORS A Canadians remained as quar-|out to be the hottest shotmaker|medallist Bill Britten, the 1966 4\ter-final match play began|on the course, firing three sub-! Australian champion and then 1,|today in the Canadian amateur) par rounds in match play. ran into the hot putting of Ben /2\oolf tournament, and they are, Runkle advanced to the quar- Kern of Cooksville, Ont. % both from the same club. ter-finals by downing Bob Bou-)| Murray handled Britten 2 and Surviving two rounds Thurs-| chier of Pebble Beach, Calif., a day were Bob Wylie and Keith| 20-year-old pre-law student, 2 Alexander of the Calgary golf and J. 1 and then beat Kern 2 up when the 20-year-old university stu- dent pushed three tee shots into WHILE THEY LAST! and country club In the second round he ag trees that line the fairways of Iwi ' handed South Africa's Odithe 6,507-yard, par 35-35-70 Wylie tangled today with 20- sta dpstibeecl pacts. , : year-old Johnny Sale from ery ae 4. eNeY déorks can Royai Colwood golf course. 5-Year--50,000-Mile Warranty Woodland, Me. Sale, because) \2'C) Play medal sve '- Stuart Jones, 42-year-old New| ; ; 13 "ap{only be approximated because his home club is affiliated with) ie golfers are permitted to the Royal Canadian Golf Asso-|( O) ; ciation, was permitted to play yet peels ; "4 5 Se a ugh Baiocchi of South Afri- for the New Brunswick-Prince| , fae it {0 th arter-finals | UP: Edward Island Willingdon Cup} ©? made it to the quarter-linals| "Parlier, he defeated Seattle's| team although he had to survive 4) piwin Fanning 4 and 3 to meet! playoff to make the low 64 qual- his countryman, Sale reached the quarter-fi-|itiers Tuesday. ; Sent at nals by knocking off Mike Bon-|" ce : ct yea' hin Connon Today Jones met cg allack England's: amateur| Paoccht beat his Common itane Bennett from Pebble} | wealth golf team-mate Comrie|Beach, Calif., who has elimi-| Du Toit 2 up after fashioning a|nated three other Americans to} narrow, 1 up victory over|reach the quarter-finals. | Wyli 4 4 to Harry White of Vancouver. ylie advanced to the quar- ' nae ter-finals 4 and 3 over Tom| KERN CHALLENGES Hunter of Richmond, B.C., and|, Ross Murray of New Zealand 2 and 1 over clubmate Silver- had the toughest route to the | berg. Caer eS Me Alexander's met two interna- tional amateur stars--defeating BL | New Zealand's Bruce Stevens 4) 'and 2 and South Africa's Dave) 114|Symon 2 and 1. Zealand veteran, also continued) to advance but he had to side- line team-mate Boris Vezich 1 RAMBLER King St. E., Bowmanville / "Nobody Undersells Trent" ver's Art Donaldson by the | = TORONTO CP)--Don Allen} of Clarkson won the fourth race in the six race Lightning class world sailing championships Thursday. | The win was Canada's first in the competition. United States' sailors contin-| ue to dominate the competition and enter the fifth race today at holding the first six positions|a and 10 of the top 11 placings in : | oe EXP 0 RT : the standings. Second was Tom Allen of Buf- the 1965 world champion. PLAIN or FILTER: TIP CIGARETTES |He moved into second place in} jthe standings. | Over-all lead in the standings} was taken over by Bruce Gold-| smith of Chicago, who placed) ninth in Thursday's race. Gold- smith has a four-race total of 138 points, Allen has 132 points, BUSES Greenwood Saturdays worked over the greens of}! Wethersfield Country Club as it) jgave him a one stroke lead) over Terry Dill of Austin, Tex. | Player sank birdie putts from) |35, 30, 20 and 18 feet during his| round, and three others in the |8-12 foot range Thursday. Dill) {had similar putting luck in his) 66, getting six birdies on putts) jranging from 15 to 35 feet. | | Dill ignored a request to tell | more about his round at the! press tent, saying: "Every time| I have shot a good round this | year anc then gone to the press room, I've shot a 76 or 77 the| next day." Several of the major stars of| golf, including this year's lead-| ing money winner, Arnold) SALES - SERVICE @® VOLKSWAGEN AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE FULL LINE OF NEW AND USED CARS COMPLETE PARTS DEPOT PICKERING CAR CENTRE, AJAX, ONT. BASELINE 1% MILE EAST OF HARWOOD OPEN TILL 6 P.M. -- SALES TILL 9 P-M, TELEPHONE 942-1881 e | 39 PRINCE ST. - PARTS - AGGES. es ' ~ : Repairs to All Makes of Shavers and OSHAWA SHAVER SERVICE & SUPPLIES OSHAWA : lip--rs 728-4284 19th, 26th and Sept. 2nd. Direct to the Treck | Aug. LV. OSHAWA 12:00 noon i LV, WHITBY 12:10 p.m, i Ly, AJAX 12:20 p.m, Return Fores OSHAWA $2.85 WHITBY $2.55 AJAX $2.45 Includes Admission Return After Leat Reece Tiekets and Information ot Oshowa Bus Terminal 18 Prince St. 723-2241 Whitby--Horry Donold Ltd., Telephone 668-3675 Ajex (North) Ajox Coffee Shop, Telephone 942-3390. Ajex (South) The Coffee Cup, Telephone 942-2940, the ; real centennial ale (Maybe we should have called it Labatt's Hundred?)