Transporters Win 1st Game OBA Inter "A" Semi-Finals The scoreboard read 4-8 for Oak- ville Oaks over Oshawa Transpeort- ers in the top of the sixth. No one was out and a man was sitting on first, when Bill McTavish was called upon to work in relief for starter Jack Durston. Bill tossed his warm-up pitches sand disposed of the first batter on strikes. He got the second on a fielder"s choice, and then forced the third to pop out to the thirdbaseman. Bill walked in to the dugout. Per- spiration streamed from his face. He mowed down the enemy in the seventh, the eighth and then in the ninth for one of the really fine victories of his career. A magnificent no-hit, no-run fire- man job! Bill fanned five batters and walk- ed but one in a truly brilliant show. INSPIRED TEAM The McCallum crew were for three big runs in the last of the sixth to win the game 6-4. The victory for the Transporters 1-0 lead in the 2-of-3 Association gives them a ntario Baseball The in the first ng off Ross Paton when Ted Barnes sin- 3 ana moved i 5 third v3 's-power drive Maeson grounded .out, but Jo Jozkoski singled to right' and run scored. George Brabin walked with one out in the bottom of- the second inning. He stole second and scored when Frank 'Varga pummeled a double into deep: centre. That made it 2-0 for Oshawa. SHOWED WEAKNESS Oakville rallied when Durston showed a moment's weakness in ed by his performance and CHECKING J SPORT By BOB RIFE After viewing the stark dun- colored walls of the Oshawa Arena silhouetted against yel- lowish-black smoke rolling uj .in a backdrop of the most e nature we could see but one thing . . . the ruin of a dream. Ab Hambly, the owner of the Arena, had this dream - sorae 25 years ago and started the foundation of it then. Today he saw fire gutting that +s « & real-life nightmare. .Gerry Brown, coach of the Generals who make their home at the Are n a said after see- ing Ab bow his head and start for home. "We lost everything, all our equipment, but that's nothing to what Ab lost." Asked just what would the Generals do now, Ge said, "I was thinking of moving ov- er Aid the Scarboro Afeta as a temporary measure, per- haps we'd be invading Maple Leaf Gardens' territory." ""The school is over of course, I imagine that the boys who looked most promising will be asked to go down to the Her- shey school which opens this weekend." ; Wren Blair, manager of Osh- awa Senior Trackmen, look- ed grim as he saw the fire damage. We lost . everything too. And for a team that has been running close to the line, uipment complete- ly gone p us out of busi- ness." a "We may be able to Taise enough to replace the equip- ment...we Could play our home games, in Bowmanville, or we could play them on the road at the other team's home arena...but that's a lot of. travelling with no receipts." Both Brown and Blair 1o0k- * ed to an emfiergency of the Ontario Hockey Associa- tion to help unsnarl the tangle. the mean. time, Oshawa * hockey fans will have to keep the spirit of their teams in mind ...to pull for them to come - through this dark time 0 support them in every way. One of the closest see-saw battles in some time is the way one fan described last night's game between the .nsporters and the Oakville Oaks. . The Oshawa gang came hy with some great.comeback stuff to pull it out of the fire after Bill McTavish stepped onto the slab in the sixth to toss a no-hit, no-run relief job. They scored three runs to win 6-4 and head into the second game of the best-of-three series as the favored geam. That 2cond game of these Ontario semi-finals, will be played in Oakville Wed- Besday night at .30 p.m. (Yes, they have lights!). Manager Ab "7alker won the toss and so the third game, if neces- comihg Friday night at 7.30 p.m. Note the earlier hour of start « +... for the Sutvenienes and comfort of the ans. : As far a. can be seen from this particular corner, the two coaches were holding back their "other top hurler' for the second game, ark "No-hit" Pollack -| warmed up briefly for the Daks, but at no time did h. get down to serious business. Ted 'Double No-Hit"" Stone did just the same for Oshawa. The Transporters seem to be in a liftle better position in the «pitching department now, what with 'he great return to form of Bill McTavish. It saved Stone's cross-fire stuff for the big tussle Wednesday. . In talking with Ab Walker and the manager of the Oaks, it seems that this series is definitely an Ontario semi-final. Stratford of the Intercounty League and CrowlanC of the Western Ontario loop are said to be involved in a set-to and the winners are ex- Jeeta to meet the local winners the OBA Intermediate "A" final. A very interesting ball schedule . . and a great series ahead . Tight ere) hids for batt last night went to threé members of the local McCallum crew , . . George Brabin, John Jozkoski and Ted Barnes. For the nemy it was centre-fielder and lead-off man Jim Johnson along with left- fielder Brian Scott who made the ball lose itself most often. missed the story in terday's edition . . . won the Transporter team batting title over the regular season with a 478 average. With it goes the Blanche Norton Trophy. Peterboro Trailermen Take VICTORIA (CP) --Peterborough Trailermen, backed by a superb §otie and strong defensive play, efeated Victoria Shamrocks 13- Monday night to take the first game of the best-of-seven Canadian senior lacrosse championship ser- ies here. The defending Mann Cup cham- pions hipped a fourth-quarter Vic- |ing ria ra y that saw the western champions even the score at 10-10 at one stage. A full house of 5,500 watched Victoria, hard hit by first-period litters, make gl defensive apses to end up tr. Traller- men 4-1. The Shamrocks fought a game uphill battle for the next three uarters but acular netmind- by. Moon Wootton and a tight defence held them down, The Trailermen beat the Sham- rocks in the Wajorsty of faceoffs. Twice trailing our goals the westerners came within one goal four times and tied the game once. But Peterborough always came _ right back to regain the lead. Victoria capitalized with four tallies when Peterborough was Shorthanded as a result of penal- es. 'a During the first period when Trailermen dominated the play. completely, Victoria's only goal came while Nip O'Hearne was off with a high-sticking penalty. Russ Slater scored twice and Ross Pow- less and Harry Wipper, scored the others in the first. J Victoria capitalized on a. penalty Mann Cup Opener 13-12 again in the second after playing coach Bob had made it 8-2. Larry Booth ght the score fo 5-4 with two goals while Curly Mason was in the Jepally box but Peterborough came back with a goal by Mason to make it 6-4. Roger. Smith's alty in the third again gave Victoria an open- after Trailermen had run the score to 9-5, scored while Smith Duff McCaghie picked uw his own rebound to score and Bill; Bam- ford slipped in a surprise shot to make the score 98. Mason slipped through the Vietoria defences to finish the quarter at 10-8. O'Hearne's penalty in the last minute of the third helped put Vic- toria in the game agein in the Fergus Sy he from Sever. rguson a pass ver- son to cut the lead to ome goal then Harry Irwin whipped a shot in at. 3:27 to tie the game. slammed a screened shot ast Victoria goalie Jim Hether- on fo make it 12-10. Jackie Northup pulled the bat- tling Shamrocks within a goal of Trailermen again O'Hearne score the c Peterborough. Norm Coates' goal in the last. 10 seconds could not help Victoria. The two teams meet again Wed- fesday for the second game and Friday for the third. Six-Man Lacrosse Aprroved by CLA VICTORIA (CP) -- Six-man la- crosse was officially approved Monday by the Canadian Lacrosse Association. 3 Delegates attending te - annual association meeting feid in con- junction with the Mann Cup play- offs ed to drop the rover po- sition during the current series for the Canadian championship be- Peterborough and Victoria Shamrocks. Following the session delegates said there was "little doubt" the association will adopt the six-man game across C. next season. The six-man game which allows a team to field three forwards two n and a goalie has been played all season on the Pa- cific coast. In eastern Canadian la- crosse clubs used a seventh player --ocalled a rover--for the greater part of the year. However the Ontario association gave "the six- man game a trial run in August delegates said the clubs liked -sider | visburg grounded tle third. He walked the first two men {> face him and then gave up a hit down the thirdbase line to load the sacks. Ken Pollock laid down a perfect squeeze: bunt to b in one run. Durston played the to first- base . . . with no one covering . + . and another run scored. Brown flied dut to third and Sal- to shortstop Frank Varga wh. tossed to Mec- Arthur at the plate for the second out. Brian Scott singled into right and the third run of the inning was the | plated. Thompson flied to Yared a 30 end the rally with Oakville ahe: Neither team scored in the fourth, but Oshawa came back to knot it up in the fourth. Brabin singled to left and made third when the left-fielder booted the ball. Durston laid down a great squeeze bunt « « » almost in retaliation . . . and scored Brabin for a 3-3 tie. It was a scoreless fifth, but Oak- ville made trouble in the sixth. Brian Scott slapped a shoulder - high triple into right - centre and scored * when Thompson singled past the shortstop. ' That made the score 4-8 . .. and brought in Bill McTavish. . Billl stopped 'em cold and with his mates rallying in the bottom 'of the inning to win 6-4, he became the game's winning pitcher. MROCZEK STARTS IT . Nick Mroczek started that win- ning rally with a long high double to right centre. McArthur walked and then Brabin wrapped it up with a crashing single to centre. The fielder missed the pick and the ball rolled back to the wall. Mroczek scored and so did Mec- Arthur. Brabin pulled up at third with the score 5-4. McTavish flied to. the second- baseman, but Varga walked. Coach Willson called for the double steal. Varga slid safely in at second as the shortstop cut-off the catcher's toss for the relay back to the plate. It was a fine peg . . . in time V4 , TED BARNES + vv" 4 « Hot on Bases and everything, but the catcher dropped it to make the score 6-4. Varga continued to third on the play. Barnes got to first on a bunt and they tried the double steal again. This time Varga was out at the plate. Etcher flied to sec- ondbase and the inning was over. Neither team put up much of a threat after that 'and the game ended 6-4. McTavish topped his great pitch- ing show by striking out two pinch- hitters in 'the top of the ninth to quell any thoughts of a rally as the game was stuffed away in the bag. Les 4 ewe + 1a ves oe uno » Hot at Plate FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bi Wallace (Bud) Smith 138%, Cincinnati stopped Arthur King, ' , 5. ww, Mich.--Al Andrews, 152, Superior, Wis., decisioneo Chuck Davey 147 Lans! Mich. 10. - New Orleans--Ralph Dupas, 139, New Orleans, Sutpeited Marcel | | Brisebois 145 Montreal 8. GEORGE BRABIN Oakville .... 008 001 000--4 7 5 Oshawa .... 110 103 00x--6 10 1 OAKVILLE OAKS cf; Pollock, ss; Brown, 3b, Salvis- burg, 2b; Scott, If; Thompson, c; Redshaw, 1b; Kerluk, rf; Paton, p Anderson, ph for Redshaw in 9th; and Bailey, ph for Paton in 8th, OSHAWA TRANSPORTERS Varga, ss; Barnes, rf; Etcher, 2b; Maeson, 1b; Jozkoski, 3b; Mroczek, cf; McArthur, ¢; Brabin, If; Dur- ston, p and McTavish, p in 6th. Umpires -- N. Allen (p) and A. Barnes (b). BUMS NOT SCARED By BEN PHLEGAR Associated Press Sports Writer The record-breaking New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers will meet in the world series starting two weeks from Wednesday with the Yanks slightly favored to make it five straight two ways--over the Dodgers in five meetings and five in a row over the National League. Cagey Casey Stengel who man- aged the Yankees to five consecu- tive pennants says he he has a good chance of continued success in the fall classic. "This is a real good club with | real good players" Casey said as he relaxed after Monday's flag- clinching 85 victory over the Cleveland Indians. "But I don't think those fellows 'enth. Yogi Berra broke the, tie %n Dodgers Meet Yanks Again In Baseball's Big "Serious" (the Dodgers) will be scared of the Yankees. They've been in the series before." Both Yankees and Dodgers clinched with 2 games left to play. Brooklyn played 142 games to win its flag the Yankees 140. Monday the Indians got five runs off Ford in the first three innings on five hits four walks and a hit batter. But against the combined relief efforts of Tom Gorman Bob Kuzava and Johnny Sain the In- dians got a hit and run total of zero. Meanwhile the Yankee hitters solved Early Wynn with a ven- goante in the fourth inning scor- g four runs and then caught up and sealed the decision against Bill Wight in the sixth and sev- the seventh with a two-run homer. Billy Martin drove in four of the Yankees' rung' with two doubles and a single. Brooklyn continued to suffer from a p t-winning letdown, losing its second in a row to Chi- Sago Ri ho Jan | their inning streak to 10. Jo pste! gave the Dodgers pe ive hits in the. 3-1 victory. He stopped Duke Snider's hitting streak at 27 games one short of the all-time Brooklyn record. In other action Monday Chicago White Sox beat Boston Red Sox 10-6 despite a three-run pinch hit home run by Ted Williams, Wash- ington Senators whipped Detroit Tigers 6-1 and Philadelphia edged St. Louis Cardinals 6-5. Williams' homer was his 12th since returning from the Marines. By JOE REICHLER NEW YORK (AP) -- Manager Casey Stengel and his world cham- pion New York Yankees made baseball history Monday clinching one ILRelf Mont ons o® their fifth successive American An , for those who League pennant. In becoming the first manager ever to win five . straight flags Stengel conquered a jinx that had defied three great managers be- fore him--Charlie Cominskey, John McGraw and Joe McCarthy. These three were the only ones ever to pilot a club to four straight cham- pienships. Comiskey won four straight American association, then a ma- jor league, pennants with the 1885-6-7-3 St. Louis Browns but was beaten 4 Brooklyn in 1889. Mec- Graw's New York Giants captured National league flags in 1021-2-3-4 but finished second to Pittsburgh in 1925. McCarthy's Yankees won the American league title in 1936- og hg wound up a close third to Detroit Tigers in 1940. This Yankee team may not rate with the greatest of all time but it is doubtful if any other cham- pionship club ever boasted a stronger bench. So well manned is this Yankee machine that Hank Bauer rated one of the best out- fielders in the majors is forced to alternate with Irv Koren in Stengel's two-platoon system. Veteran pitchers Allie Reynolds Vie Raschi and Eddie Lpat who have been the mainstays of the four previous flag-winners again lead staff. A valuable fourth member however was added this ear in Whitey Ford the little fthander. On the regular squad there is e Yogi Berra easily the best catcher Yanks Make History Fifth Straight Fling ; in the circuit Phil Rizzuto a bit slowed at 34 but still the top shortstop in the league Gil Me- Dougald a dangerous batter and a dependable third baseman and Scrappy Billy Martin a brilliant defensive second baseman and a good hitter. The regular outfield of Mickey Mantle, Gene Woodling and either Bauer or Irv Noren is the best in the American league. All can hit field, run and throw. Last but not least is Stengel himself. A master manipulator the wrinkled skipper is the most un- orthodox and the most daring strategist in the game. He thinks nothing of going against the book by summoning a soullav from the bullpen to pitch to a lefthanded batter or Sending up a lefthanded hitter to pinch hit against a south- paw pitcher. And he usually gets away with it. In a sense this was the easiest of all five of Stengel's pennants, A spectacular 18-game winnin streak just one short of the Ameri- can league record only six weeks after the start of the season all but wrecked the race then and there. It was the earliest clinching for any of Stengel's teams since 1949 when the veteran pilot first took SUPERTEST (3 1:7. 1187.13 43 King St. W. 'bl Buy the coal that outsells all others Discover for yourself why more people buy 'blue coal' than any other hard coal. For the world's finest anthracite plus the town's best service, CALL LANDER COAL pp" DEALER Phone 5-3589 OLD COUNTRY SOCCER LONDON ' (AP)--Results of soc- cer games played Monday in the Unite * Kingdom: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Aston Villa 3 Sunderland 1 Division IT West Ham U 4 Swansea T 1 Stoke C 2 Leicester C 2 Oldham A 1 Lincoln 0 Div III Southern Coventry C 2 Bournemouth 0 Div III Northern Barrow 3 Bradford C 0 Halifax 1 Rochdale 1 Mansfield T 2 Chesterfield 8 York 1 Gateshead 1 over the Yankee reins. Nore of his first four flags was clinched before | Butler, BOWLING MAYFAIR LADIES LEAGUE Attention all members of May- fair Ladies Bowling League. Wed- nesday Sept. 16th. will staid our Please 3 joan ren follows; 0. j= Mag). at than, Nancy art.n, Josie Hurrie, Virgin Elsie Mann. arion Harding, Esther No. 2: -- Ethel Freeman, Ev. Marion Harding, Esther Adair, T'elen Duffield, Susie Van Bolkenburg. No. 3:--Sadie James, Bert. Wight, Dot Dowe, Jean Taylor, Marg. Norris, Nroma McKinstry. No. 4:--Polly Blackler, Kay Brown, Marj. Harris, Marj. Free- Marie Martin, Irene Sev- ers No. 5:--Madeline Morrison, Kay Pollock, Cele Johnson, Susie Greer, Rose Dale, Vera Jeffries. No. 6:--Louise Spratt, Gertie Jones, Myrtle Waite, Vera Wood, Dianne Buzzell, Violet Taylor. Wagar, Blanche Norton, Frances 'No. 7: -- Marj. Ward, Ethel eciiall, Theresa Dennis, Dorothy ile, -- Johnson, | DeM No. 8: -- Vi. Taylor, Mae Sloan, Daisy Malcolm, Annie Simpson, Helen Johnstone, 'lice Armstrong. No. 9:--Peggie Fayle, Celia Wigg, Lil. Wright, Muriel Hainer, Mary Wright, Pearl Ho. shy. No. 10:--Hazel Weddup, Rath Teno, Carrie McLean, Lou Mecls- aac, Lorraine Mercer, Bessie 0X. \ No. 11:---Mary McConnell, Isa- belle Johnson, Eva Brightman, 4 ith McKee, Flo. Brooks, Kay No. 13:--Mary Thompson, Phil. McFeeters, Isabelle Creamer, Ella Long, Marion Wilson, Ada Me- ur. No. 18:--Audrey Keys, Lois Bur- don, Hazel Dunn, Carrie Spencer, Mable Blow, Vera Horner. No. 14:--Hazel Bannon; Edna George, Edna Anderson, Flore Singouin, Jeannette Page, Nellie Smith. No. 15:--Elsie Smith, Flo. Me- Callum, June Pollard, Eileen Feg- an, Madeline Bowman. Little, Lois Johnston, Marie Snel- grove, Irene Smith, Marg. O'- Reilly. Anyone wishihg to join this league please phone Ethel Wagar Secretary, 5-081, Quebec Hockey Loop Opens Play Oct. 10 MONTREAL (CP)--The newest addition to the ranks of profes- sional hockey the Quebec Hockey League w start its 70-game 1953-54 schedule Oct. 10 it was announced Monday night at a gen- eral meeting, of team representa- tives. Springfield Indians only new entry in the eight-team circuit, which turned professional last year after a squabble with the govern- ing Canadian Amateur Hockey As- sociation will open the campaign Oct. 10, in Ottawa. Each team will play 35 games at home and 35 on the road. The league play-offs will be curtailed this season to have a winner ready to travel west to oppose the cham- pions of the Western Hockey League in an East-West classic. Eddie Shore president of the No. 16:--Mary Nichols, Martha |} » THE DAILY TTMES-GAFETTE, Tucsdey, Geplonsher W, W080 99 Governor Cup By THE CANADIAN PRESS 'The semi-finals playoffs for the International League's Governors' Rochester and Montreal--the home clubs favored to meet in the finals. who won the 1954 flag in dramatic style, take on Baltimore Orioles, fourth-place finishers. yals, under the guidance of Wally Alston, are hosts to Buf- falo Bisons: The Royals finished behind Rochester in the league standing and the Herd third. Their positions weren't decided until the ast day. Both playoffs will be best-of- : |seven affairs. Besides the pennant, the Wings also got $10,000. They fin- ishéd seven games ahead of Mont- real in a late drive that saw them lose only two of Lames. Rochester, which has won 14 of 22 games from Baltimore in the Pilot Harry Walker's Red Wings, [12-1 Semi's Open For IL Teams Cup get under way tonight at|Te: 0. Howard Fox, also a will the son is 15-10. Alston plans to open tonight with Tom LaSorda, who's never been beaten by the Bisons. a, who ended the season with a 17-8 ree- ord, defeated the, Herd twice this season and holds a 6-0 record against them, >. Ken Johnson will probably be Buffalo manager Jack Tighe's. choice to open against the Royals, He has a 12-13 record for the season. / Thé Royals defeated the Bisons 18 times in the regular season, while dropping only seven games. By GALE TALBOT NEW YORK (AP)--It was the next to the last game of the year for New York Yankees that first day of October, 1927. They had scored 108 victories and were a mile in front. Yet 10,000 fans had paid their way into Yankee Stadium on the chance that they would see a burly young fellow n George Herman (Babe) Ruth break his own record of 59 homers set six years before. Lefthander Tom Zach one of the best of the era was Washing- ton's choice to halt the Babe short of his goal. Tom bore down Lgeimly not wishing the distinction serv- ing up the record pitch. So_carefully did he work that the Babe walked on his first trip to the plate. Each of the next two times he singled. Twice the great man scored and when he pigeon- toed to the plate in the last of the eighth the count was tied at 2-2. Shortstop Mark Koenig was on third having tripled. The Babe swung viciously at Zachary's first pitch and missed. The second was a ball. The third was a smoking fast ball low and inside. The resulting "whack" was heard throughout the park and the crowd rose in thunderous ac- claim as the ball streaked almost on 'a line for the seats in the rightfield bleachers. It passed about 10 feet inside the foul pole landing halfway up the stands and the Babe had his 60th omer. As the Babe trotted around spik- ing each bay carefully, Zachary flung his glove to the ground and looked toward his teammates for Springfield club announced that veteran centre Doug McMurdy will coach the Indians and 'play centre. Other teams in the league are Quebec Aces, Montreal Royals, Shawinigan Falls Cataracts, Val- leyfield Braves Chicoutimi Sague- neens and Sherbrooke Saints. Fans Came To Watch George Swat That Ball some sign of consolation. He found none, The applause from the crowd continued to the end of the inning and swelled anew as the moon- faced slugger trotted out to his place in right field giving a nappy military salute every few ps. CHEER UP! THERE'S HOPE YET Things can look pretty grim at times when you are not feeling too good. There's nothing like a sluggish system to get you down . . . make you feel that life is hardly worth the effort. 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