ne up Spearn, who . his Runny- score of 12 among the e was Jeff shawa team 4. W. Hard- - and Stan followed by cFadden, R. acdonald, of had a score e red its first inning when out a double home by Car- yke loose for sixth when ) hit singles cDonald and on base via y in Scarbor- , in the sec- ; OASA sec- pitching for it 15 batters *n walks. Co- zh, struck out ly one walk, nal ton id a hit by and Marsh- inning with ing a homer. ig, Bob Solo- on an error iome run by ms added a sventh inning id an error. mered for in on and Dale Drake scored a single and unt for Tren- arshall had ' Pam Inter- 'ch, Sneddon, and Gibbens each. is and Jim ties for Tren- NADA INTS. al } Jackson attempt at the Hamil- Bs Krouse in the fourth quarter damaged Ottawa's chances! "moved the Riders HAMILTON (CP)--Some unu- sual things happened in Thurs- day's night's Eastern Football Conference game, not the least of which. was Hamilton Tiger- Cats' 22-17 victory over Ottawa Rough Riders. The victory and the unex- pected antics on the field delighted 25,482 fans. For three quarters, with Hamilton trailing 7-0, 14-4 and 14-13, the crowd had little to cheer about. The Riders started quickly with an 88-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Russ Jackson to Whit Tucker in the first quarter and Tucker added another on an eight-yard pass in the second. Moe Racine con- vertea both and added a 49- yard fourth-quarter field goal. Hamilton was kept in the game to half time by the prodi- gous punting of quarterback Joe Zuger, who wound up with eight kicks for a 50-yard aver- age, and the field-goal prowess of Tommy-Joe Coffey. back Dick Cohee scored a two- yard touchdown in the fourth quarter. Coffey booted field} goals of 11, 41 and 29 yards and/ scored a 15-yard touchdown on} a pass from Zuger in the third quarter. | 3 TME FOR FIRST | The victory moved Hamilton) into a tie for first place in the) conference with Ottawa and) Toronto Argonauts, each with) two wins and a loss. | Among the unexpected devel-| opments on the field were two} blocked convert attempts and a pair of interceptions by Hamil- ton. The first interception was routine with Hamilton defensive half Ted Page pulling in a ton 44 and racing to the Ottawa 35 before Ronnie Stewart pulled him down. An interception by Bob | more severely. Trailing 22-17 with six min- utes remaining, Jackson had from their wn 35-yard line to the Hamil- ton 14 with passes to ends Tucker and Margene Adkins, a BASEBALL SCOREBOARD National League WL Pct. GBL Stl Louis 77 47 ~«~«(621 Cinci. 67 58 .536 10% Chicago 68 61 .527 11% San Fran. 65 59 .524 12 Atlanta 63 58 .521 12% Phila. 63 59 .516 13 Pitts. 61 64 .488 Los Ang. 56 66 .459 20 Houston 52 74 .413 26 New York 49 75 .395 28 Wednesday's Results San Francisco 6 St. Louis 0 Philadelphia 3 New York 2 Pittsburgh 2 Chicago 1 Atlanta 9 Houston 3 Cincinnati 0 Los Angeles 8 jgame. He leads the conference) assed the quarterbacks. Ticats Upset Riders With 22-17 Victory nine-yaré rush and a four-yard drive by fullback Bo Scott. Krouse sniffed out an Jackson after the halfback took a handoff The interception left Hamilton in control. A nullified touchdown with moments remaining did nothing but cre- ate confusion and give the Rid- ers a last chance. Bill Cline took a punt and attempted a pass to Don Gil- jbert. The pass went astray and Ted Watkins raced into the end zone with the loose ball. RULED INTERFERENCE Referee Al Dryburgh of Win- nipeg ruled Cline's pass an off- side lateral and decreed Hamil- ton had caused illegal interfer- jence He called the play back and gave the ball to Ottawa. Stamps CALGARY (CP)--Jim Thomas of Edmonton Eskimos spurted for 100 yards in 14 car- ries Wednesday but Calgary Stampeders controlled his teammates and walked off with a 16-( victory that propelled the Cowboys into first place in the Western Football Conference. Thomas, nicknamed Long Gone throughout the WFC, did most of his running in Edmon- ton territory as Calgary defend- ers produced an_ outstanding in scoring with 42 points. The victory left Calgary two points ahead of Saskatchewan Roughriders, Winnipeg Blue Bombers and the Eskimos. British Columbia Lions remained in the conference basement. Calgary jumped into a 15-0 first-half lead and was never in} trouble the rest of the way. Edmonton quarterback Frank Cosentino had his troubles. He was relieved briefly by flanker Randy Kerbow in the second half, but Kerbow was rendered ineffective by the tenacious Cal- gary Gefence, Five pass interceptions har- | Peter Liske threw touchdown passes to Herm Harrison and Lovell Coleman. Bill Goods was successful on both converts and scored a single in the fourth quarter on a wide field goal attempt. Jim Furlong lofted the ball 71 yards for a single early in the first quarter. attenipted pass from Stewart to! The Riders tried to capitalize on the unexpected opportunity, but ran out of time. tistics, including 18 first downs to Hamilton's 12, Jackson and Stewart were good on 17 of 26 pass attempts for 292 yards compared with eight of 13 for 188 yards for Zuger. Hamilton held a slight edge in rushing, 156 yards to 126. Tucker took six passes for 174 yards and Adkins three for 49 while Coffey set the pace for |Hamilton with four receptions for 76 yards. On the ground, Hamilton half- yards in 12 rushes and Cohee 65 in 14, Fullback Rick Black paced Ottawa with 41 yards on nine carries. Defeat Eskimos _ witteta aura t| Despite Thomas' Running more to wind than to exciting football. North winds with gusts to 26 miles an hour whipped through McMahon Stadium. Harrison almost missed Liske's 10-yard pass into Edmonton's end zone in the first quarter but snapped it out of the air with one hand as he fell. He later described the catch as '"'something I've done a lot in practice." Harrison also set up Cal- gary's second touchdown. His catches in the second quarter led the Stampeders downfield before Coleman plunged over from the six. Goods got his single after an interception. Jerry Keeling stole Randy Kerbow's pass. After Goods' 32-yard kick, Joe Hernandez conceded the point. Liske was good for 14 pass completions on 26 throws for 151 yards and had two inter- cepted. Calgary picked up 105 yards on the ground. Cosentino and Kerbow com- pleted nine of 23 pass atttempts for 107 yards. The Esks collect- jed 146 yards rushing and had 12 first downs, one more than Cal- gary. Kerbow picked up 442 yards on 1] punts. Furlong had 643 yards on 14. Thomas was the leading ball carrier and Cole- man was next with 11 carries for 56 yards. Calgary visits B.C. Sunday The 21,435 fans were treated and the Eskimos play host to Ottawa led in most of the sta- & back Willie Bethea charged 94 F OTTAWA ROUGH RIDER Billy Joe Booth leaps in back Willie Bethea. Joe ! THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, August 24, 1967 -@ ¥, Washington Edges Red Hot Red Sox: » #\By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)Car!] Yastrzemski's 32nd honter, ; || Bob Priddy. of Washington|out Ed Stroud put the Senators |Senators has had little success|ahead with his first major \as a starter in his major league|league shot. career but he shackled the red-| The Sox tied it up in the sev- hot Boston Red Sox Wednesday|enth. but Casanova came after many better-known hur-|through after Hank Allen dou- , |lers had tried and failed. |bled in the ninth and moved. to Priddy, who came to Wash-|third on an infield out = \ington in the off-season, went) Ken Berry hit key singles: in the distance as the Senators a pair of two-run rallies for the squeezed out a'3-2 decision on a White Sox, who made. their ninth-inning sacrifice fly by Icague lead a little less preca- Paul Casanova, rious but still plenty close. The Janky right-hander had Fred Klages turned in a five-hit never won as a starter in the pitching job tntil the seventh National League with San Fran-|and Don McMahon and Bob cisco Giants, and he won only|Locker came in to finish up. one game previously as a| starter this season--against the TIE FOR THIRD ' Red Sox in June and Twins fell efiad The Tigers Priddy's triumph was impor- into a third-place tie, 114 games é tant tc Chicago White Sox, sadn the das Sox after the ee: ee Detroit Tigers and Minnesota/Tigers got four-hit pitching a 2 Twins--Boston's rivals in the from Sparma and four-hit hit- . torrid American League race. ting from Dick Tracewski in ; : : The White Sox stretched their 'he opener. persuit of Hamilton halfe Poirier is about to maké Hamilton won the game 22- |lead to one game by defeating) But the Twins got a homer the tackle in action from 17. New York Yankees 5-2 and from Harmon Killebrew that On McBean"s Al McBean of Pittsburgh| gest boosters Wednesday to protect a 2-1 victory over Chi- the National League season. McBean, normally a_ relief) standout, protected his slim edge by robbing Cub captain Ron Santo with the tying run on third base in the eighth inning. "He's good and cocky and he |gets the job done," Santo says. "He's as fast as anybody in the | league and he almost dares you to hit the ball. Hitless in his first three at-| bats Wednesday, Santo smashed the ball through the middle with Don Kessinger| representing the tying run at} third base. McBean made a} leaping stab of the ball and! threw out Santo to quell the! threat. | Mike McCormick of San Francisco Giants became the} first pitcher in the league to| win 17 games as he blanked the league-leading St. Louis Cardi- nals 6-0, Atlanta Braves rapped Houston Astros 9-3, Philadelp- hia Phillies edged New York Mets 3-2 and Los Angeles Dodg- ers pounded Cincinnati Reds 8-0} in other games. | McBean scattered eight hits! for his fourth victory in seven decisi pitcher Bill Saskatchewan Wednesd Leafs Continue Plunge. Lose Game To Columbus By THE CANADIAN PRESS The most determined critics of Toronto Maple Leafs must concede that the International League club is consistent. American League | The Leafs slipped into sixth W L Pet. GBLiplace in the eight-team league Chicago 69 53 .566 |by dropping the 13th of their Boston 69 55 .556 1. |last 17 decisions. Columbus Jets Minn. 68 55 .553 114\rode a two-run triple by Elvio Detroit 69 56 .552 1%4|Jiminez to victory after Toronto Calif. 64 61 .512 614|jumped into a 4-2 lead in the Wash. 60 65 .480 1914/opening inning. | Cleveland 59 67 .468 12 At the top of the league, 57 68 .456 1314|Richmond Braves regained a} 70 .435 16 | 72 424 17% y's Results | New York 2 Chicago 5 | Minnesota 0-4 Detroit 10-3 California 16 Cleveland 5 Kansas City 0 Baltimore 1 Washington 3 Boston 2 Friday's Games Detroit at Kansas City N Boston at Chicago N Minnesota at Cleveland TN New York at Washington TN | California at Baltimore TN two-game margin by battering| PEI SELECTED TORONTO (CP)--Officials | announced Wednesday that| Summerville, P.E.J. will repre-| Rochester Red Wings 6-1. Syra- cuse Chiefs thumped Jackson- ville Suns 4-0 and Buffalo Bisons downed Toledo Mud Hens 2-0 in othre games. A two-run triple by Al Yates and a two-run single by Tony Torchia sparked Toronto's early burst against starter Fritz Ackley. Asa Small took over and controlled the Leafs until the Jets could regroup. Jiminez hit his triple against loser Billy Rohr, 3-4, who jopened 1957 by pitching an American League one-hitter|~ against New York Yankees. A classic pitchers' duel between winner Jim Britton and rookie Mike Adamson broke open in the ninth inning at Rochester when the Braves {sent the Atlantic Provinces in|scored four runs. Two unearned the Canadian National Exhibi-|runs put Richmond ahead to tournament, which opens here ing Monday. \tion little big league hardball|stay in the seventh inning. Phil Henderson's four-hitter |Aug. 30. The Ontario represent-|halted Toledo and a three-run lative will be decided at the|homer annual CNE tournament, start-|provided the victory for Syra- by Frank Fernandez icuse. Losing Hands' fifth-inning single deliv- ered the Cubs' run. McCormick beat the Cardi- nals for the third time without a loss this season. Willie Mays helped with his 16th -homer, a two-run blast in the third. BASEBALL STARS | Pitching--Fritz Peterson, Yankees, stopped Chicago on two hits in a 2-1 victory that gave New York a doubleheader split with the American League | leaders. | Batting--Dick McAuliffe, | Tigers, smashed a two-run homer in the first game, then tripled and scored the winning run in the llth inning of the nightcap as Detroit swept a twin bill from Minnesota 7-3 and 2-1. | REMEMBER WHEN? . .| Marilyn Bell of Toronto, then not yet 19, swam the dangerous Juan de Fuca Strait between Vancouver Island and the mainland 11 years ago today--in 1956, It took her 10 hours and 38 minutes for the 10.3 miles. The year before she became the youngest per- son to swim the English Channel, The Good Old Days are Back at ROBBIES THIS SATURDAY -- AUG. 26th -- 11 A.M. to 2 A.M. BUY ONE SINGLE R BEEFY BURGER and GET A SECOND FOR ONLY 5c Give Yourself and Family a Treat -- Low Cost at... Robbies King St. W. -- Across From K-Mart -- Fast Car Hostess Service Pirates Outlast Chicago Pirates retired one of his big-|patting leader, had three of the cago Cubs in his second start of |17-6. |Minnesota and Detroit split ajmade the difference in the (CP Wirephoto) twin-bill. The Tigers rode Joe/ finale last night's CFL action. Sparma's four-hitter for a 10-0' Rick Reichardt's grand-slam na knocked in four runs each in York's losing skein to seven, yictory in the opener and home run was the big blow in Atlanta's comeback victory,{longest of the season for the| Minnesota held off a late rlay! the Angels' 25-hit attack, the . . which snapped a five-game los-|Mets. Johnny Briggs rapped ajfor g 4-3 triumph in the night-largest in terms of hits and Eight Hitter ing string. aor tad yo gts ae cap runs in the league this season. Aaron drilled the first of two|Worth combined with Dic a Leet : Jim Fregosi had four hits for : Fil doubles in the event 19 scatter 11 hits. ANGELSN?.B INDIANS California Orlando Cepeda, the league|sending the Braves ahead 4-3.) Southpaw Claude Osteen. In other American League! Pete Richert scattered eight Francona socked a two-run| blanked Cincinnati on three hits)games, California Angels bat-jhits among the Kansas City Cards' five hits off McCormick,|homer in the first and a two-|for his 15th victory against 11 tered Cleveland Indians 16-5)batting order and Frank Robin- {run single in the Braves' five-|losses. Wes Parker drove injand Baltimore Orioles blanked|son's run-scoring single irun eighth. three runs to pace the Dodgers' | Kansas City Athletics 1-9. accounted for the game's only Hank Aaron and Tito Franco- The Phillies extended Newlattack. | Boston took an early lead on' score. Carling Red Cap Forever. | A Weekend Reminder Sponsored by The Carling Red CapForever Association