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Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 4 Jul 1958, p. 2

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Oshawe may have paved city parking lots operated by attend- ants with charges for night park- ing if plans discussed Thursday night at a joint meeting of Osh- awa Traffic-Transport Committee and the city's Downtown Mer- chants' Association go ahead. The first of these lots to be completed will be on Athol street west. It is expected to be ready by the fall and two or thre others, including the Rich d Simcoe street lot, may be in use within a year. These lots ill be attractively lighted, clearly marked with easy access and exit facilities with ac- commodation for up to 75 cars or more. JOINT STATEMENT A joint statement issued 'today by the Transport Committee and the Merchants' Association soid: "This plan envisaged by Ald. Par Smashed By 45 Golfers . AKRON, Ohio (CP) -- A field of 130 golfers took another crack at the Firestone Country Club to- day after the biggest scoring spree on the professional circuit. Forty-five of them smashed par in Thursday's first round of the $22,000 Rubber City Open. Twelve others equalled par 71. Heading the contingent were Ed Griffiths and Art Wall Jr., who fired six-under-par 65s. Toronto's Al Balding shot a 32- 34--66 for third place. Jerry Ma- Igee of Toronto and Rudy Horvath {of Windsor, Ont., were well be- (hind. Magee posted a 37-33-70 Retailers Get Many Calls Eiken: The Oshawa Police Depart-|Commerce has no part in this dry as tinder. The long hitters Oshawa Chamber of Com- business," he said. "We are not/Made a mockery of regulation fi- merce and both the - Downtown|in accord with this system of|gures and set up today's scramble Merchants Association and the|doing husiness." {to dtermine the 60 low profes- Shopping Centre Merchants' As-| "However, if the public feel |Sionals and 10 amateurs who will {sociation have been flooded with'inclined to purchase the book-|continue play Saturday and Sun- | EADERS LAY PLANS FOR UNION VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL A. Bathe and Mrs, E. Alward. | Church; Stanley Gomme, Mrs. Back row, from left: Lynn | R. Collins, Patricia Rice, Rose- Cuthbert, Judith Cutler, Mrs. | mary Bury and Betty Gabono, C. Lee, Mrs. R. Kirk, Mrs. B. | Absent wl icture was tak- | Jackson, Rev. F. swack- | en were s. E. Cooper, N hammer, pastor of st Bap- | A. Bakker, Peter McMurtry tist Church; Rev. M. A. Bury, | and Fred Britton minister of King Street United | Times-Gazette Photo Pl for School vs a week, in C Union Vacation | to be held five | from July 7 to | nial Hall at | Street ited Church, | in the operation | The leaders | co-operating of the project. a for beginners, primary and ju- | niors with Rev. W, G. Die y. minister of Centre Street Uni- | and teachers are: front row, ted Church, as dean. St. And- | from left: Mrs. H. Audley, rew's, Simcoe Street, King | Mrs. H. Blakely, Mrs. F. Brit- were laid a meeting of the | Street, Centre Street and Al- | ton, primary supervisor; Rev. school leaders Thursday night. | bert Street United Churches | W. G. Dickson, Mrs Clark, The school will offer classes | and First Baptist Church are | kindergarten supervisor; Mrs. at y | Milwaukee Goes Limp But Others Blow Chances TH LARKEK SPARKLES ilw Sam Jones (5-7) won the ugh giving up Rooke ment. E ASSOCIATED PRESS [Willey his first defeat ikee Braves have gone MAKING COMEBACK t the plate again, scoring| Bouchee was playing his first |opener, aith igh gi Ju wo runs in the 29 in-game since he was suspended,|Norm Larker's third homer. H nings, but St. Louis Cardinals |then reinstated in connection with [2eeded Larry Jackson's excei- and San Francisco Giants ha morals charge. He pleaded|'ent relief in the eighth, when blown. chances to close in on thelgyiity last February to an inde. |L:2rker's third hit scored a run By M ¥ 1 t A. V. Walker, his committee and Bob Richardson of the engineers' department will go a long way to solving the vexacious problem of parking in downtown Oshawa. "It marks the fulfillment of a real dream which has been well and carefully developed by Alder- man Walker and his committee and given moral and financial support by the downtown mer- chants, "We intend to really merchan. dize our parking lots and make them just as clean and attractive as any lots in any city in Can- ada." REVENUES EXAMINED The joint statement continued: "Revenues frgm the various lots were examined on the basis of an analysis made by the engineers' department a few weeks ago, and it was felt that patrons using city lots after 6 p.m. should be re- 'Charge For Night Park Seen Possibility In City quired to pay a nominal parking charge. "This fact was particularly evi- dent when it was considered that many private operators of 16ts in the downtown area were being well patronized each night by paying customers, "It was also felt that if the city was prepared to offer more and better parking facilities to its citizens, they should be en- titled to make an evening charge for this service which is just as valuable and important by night as it is by day. "Interesting figures as to fu- ture parking needs were given by Mr. Richardson based on studies presently being carried out on a provincial level in respect to automobile populations. MORE AUTOS FORESEEN "He stated that the next 20 years wil: see an increase in num- ing bers of cars in Oshawa of two and a half times the present count, This indicates the need for a yearly addition of 80 car spaces to the present parking facilities in order to just keep even." Continued the statement: "Ald, Hayward Murdoch told the meet- ing that rhe money for paving and preparing the parking lots would be available from the Parking Meter Fund which was started sbout five years ago and which provides that all net revenue from parking meters shall be expended in the interests of more and better parking for Oshawa," Council representatives at the meeting also included Mayor Lyman A Gifford, and Alderman R. C. Bint. Downtown merchants {present were Murray Johnsto: president, Stanley Lovell, Hare Walmsiey and A. H, Dancey. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jus: a year ago, it seemed only manager Al Lopez thought a thin rookie outfielder named Jim Lan- dis ever would become a hitter for Chicago White Sox. Now it's a new season and a new Landis, coming along at .294 at the mo- ment with a .381 average for the {last month. Landis hit an amazing .429 at Colorado Springs in 1956 to get his shot with the White Sox last "eason. But he was only a .212 swinger in the American League { ors. Now Landis has hit in 30 of his last 32 games, driving in 22 rums. He was 2-for-4 Thursday, ining a two-run double that provided the clincher in the seventh inning and adding a two-run single as the White Sox defeated Kansas City Athletics 7-2 and finished the year in the min. | Athletics 10% games behind New York Yankees, who walloped Washington Senators 11-3. Balti- more Orioles defeated Boston Red Sox 7-5 in 15 innings--the longest game of the year in the majors-- and skidded the Red Sox into a third-place tie with Detroit Ti. gers. WINS SEVENTH Righthander Jim Wilson won his seventh game for the White Sox, breezing with a five-hit shut- out before the Athletics counted their two in the seventh. The Sox, who had a 3-0 lead on Earl Battey's third homer and Landis's double, then scored four in the eighth on a pair of bases- loaded walks and Landis's single. Ray Herbert (34) lost it. The Yankees rapped four hom- ers, all two-run blasts, off loser Spring, Mickey Maatle hit Russ Kemmerer (47) and Jack| ) his | Boston That dropped the second-place/!7th and 18th. Norm Siebern hit |Baltim Landis Is Big Producer For Chicago White Sox his sixth and Yogi Berra his 13th im support of southpaw Whitey Ford (10-3), who won his 101st in the majors and 12th in a row over Washington since Sept. 20, 1954. He gave up six hits, including two by Rocky Bridges, who hom- ered for the Washington runs. PINCH HIT BEATS SIX Joe Ginsberg's pinch single acored the winner for the Orioles in a two-run 15th at Boston, Billy Loes, who lost his first seven de- cisions. won his second in a row with 4 2-3 innings of five-hit, shut- out relief. Murray Wall (3-7) was the loser after southpaw Duane Wilson had cianked the Birds on six hits for ¢ix innings in his major league {debut. Chuck Beamon and George, Zu- verink shut out the Red Sox on two hits for 8 2-3 innings before re' onged it by mate" ag threé-run 10 Russia Wins Four Races HENLEY - on - THAMES, Eng. (Reuters) Mighty - muscled so n- the } | Panasiuk Canin am conan 10: L@AAS Field Main, now confidently predicting | a clean sweep as Canada| g7 CLAIR BEACH, Ont. (CP) achieved over Cuba in 1951, willl givteen-vear-old Bob Panasiuk of rely on Bedard and Fontana for Roseland Golf Club, two-time On- his doubles pair today Antoniofiarig juvenile champion, Thurs- Diaz, Cuban playing captain, also dav led a field of 64 in the dis- decided to stick with Minoso and|yict qualifying round for the On- Joe Christian homered Bisons one and fanned seven LEAFS WALLOPED k the 1 1-0 id to defeat 9-2 and edged Ha Richmond Miami Mar Rookie lefthander Cal Brown Y. Russian oarsmen won four races at the Henley Royal Regatta | Thursday. | In the premier race of the re- |gatta, the Grand Challenge Cup for eights, the Leningrad Trud |Club won by a comfortable 1% lengths over the University of {Washington crew from Seattle, | Racing in torrential rain, thun- der and lightning, Trud got away brilliantly. Rowing powerfully, Trud led by half-a-length at the quarter-mile post and never was headed over the one-mile, 550 yard course, In the second win, Vasilyev Ivanov, Russia's Olympic scull- ing champion, was gripped by a cramp in his Diamond Sculls race {against T. S. Allen of Britain, but {still won comfortably in nine min- utes. | I. Buldakov and V. Ivanov, two- time winners of the Silver Goblets {for pairs, notched the third So- |viet win. The fourth Russian vic. [tory came when the Trud club |four beat Trinity College of Cam- [bridge University by 3% lengths lin the Stewards Cup. PARLIAMENT AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS Thursday, July 3,1958 he eight-day Commons budget debate ended with a 146-to-47 vote |carrying the routine motion ap- proving the budget. Opposition Leader Pearson said Progressive Conservative election promises have led to a budget deficit that does not meet the problems of the times. Paul Martin, former Liberal health minister, accused Prime Minister Diefenbaker of hiding a government economic forecast because it contradicts the budget. Revenue Minister Nowlan said struck out 10 men as he CITY AND WIN IN TORONTO Oshawa rink composed of S 8 Mrs. G. W. I v and Mrs. Dewland won the prizes with two wins in » West Toron- lub Thursday ing, 20 | | | | south, Gib Mire will win the Walker pring from the Ameri- SMOKING WASHER I A cireui washing ort a machine motor in a residence on ' CAPSULE NEWS that of some European eountries of the consulting board of the On tario Agricultural College, says European methods mists, a body of farm experts Thursday. six-month tour of northern Eu rope to investigate suggest improvements in Cana dian farm methods. CHARGES TO BE LAM Dr. R. K. Stratford, a member should be introduced here to increase yields on field and animal products, he told the annual meeting of the Quebec Corporation of Agrono- Dr. Stratford suggested that a Canadian farm delegation take a|superintendent of the DRB chem- - Farm Production Per Acre Lags, Expert Says ST. HYACINTHE, Que. (CP)-- a guaranteed number of hours of Canadian farm production per|work. acre and per animal lags behind Workers now receive $1.20 an hour and are on a day-to-day call system, CHIEF SUPERINTENDENT OTTAWA (CP) -- Dr. N. J. B. Wiggin, 37, has been named chief superintendent of the Defence Research Board's medical labor- atories at Downsview near To- ronto. The board announced that Dr. Wiggin, previously deputy chief -lical laboratories here and im conditions! Kingston, has been appointed to there. This would enable them to/succeed Dr. E. A. Sellers. I LABORER DROWNS THOROLD (CP) -- Adolfo Ped- about 65, a laborer, was |ina, MONTREAL (CP)--The Crown|drowned Thursday in the Old | | | extortion and making threats wil be laid next Tuesday agains Mrs. Greta Goede, 46-year-old housemaid who already charges of kidnapping. Mrs. be arraigned on vertently left in jail by police. two-year-old Joel Reman son of weeks ago. The boy turned up safe in Ottawa. He had been left by a woman with an Ottawa taxi- | driver. COMMITTED FOR TRIAL TORONTO (CP) Thomas Charles Kerr, 52, of Harwood, Thursday was committed for trial on 11 charges of theft totalling $17,800 from the Toronto broker- age firm where he formerly worked. Albert White, president of the budget has stimulated the leconomy to a "very great de-| the prel gree." Trade Minister Churchill an-| nounced a new policy of holding] Prairie feed grain stocks to meet drought emergencies. | Senator Wishart Robertson (L| --Nova Scotia) sald Canada al-| ways has been "conspicuously| laggardly" in helping Canadian] legislators meet legislators of other countries. | Friday, July 4, 1958 The Commons meets to consi- der expenditure estimates. The Senate is adjourned until 8 p.m. Tuesday. Sun Valley Crescent caused a fire alarm for the Oshawa Fire Department at 11:20 a.m. Thurs- day. © 'v the motor of the ma-| chine was damaged. The depart-| Wal-| TORONTO (CP) -- A repre- centative of the Street Railway Employes Union (CLC) says the union wilt strike against the To- ronto Transit Commission if the :ommission buys Canadian-built Brill buses rather than General Motors buses, 0 va street Saturday venue, from of rain. in. land st Gene earlier l were would sald «it 3 t i e Br e dri arazen Open ation mer <Q ) ers Robin Roberts, who had lost (two young girls. cut. Stan Filiame (33) Jost} |days. [nothing that can be done. The three in a row, knocked off the| pg poric gow 6.8 with his 195th a Rookie gona 3 A | Most of the phone calls have|choice is up to them." Braves 3-1 Thursday for Philadel-| "10506 victory, gave up six| ace combined for a s been complaints or enquiries] Oshawa Police Chief Herbert| ara e 0 {A i ree > he Red- Y i i tained a me spread over| ..' i... nite 28 innings with. |00d in three games for the Red- oq {30ugh a phone campaign!approve of the methods being| the second- Cards, who split on 28 Piiched 20 nuings. legs. Witt (2-1) won it, giving; Oshawa residents. ~ |used by some of the staff of the a doubleheader at Los Angeles, yi o {five hits in 6 2-3 innings. A company called Preferred business. "They appear to be| fo 0 0 u rs went over the 1,000,000/8ame with a pair of unearned off loser Joe Nuxhall (44) and|which is in Hamilton, has been| Both the Downtown Merchants| pow von re TH mark in home attendance {runs in the seventh on a walk,|two relieters, but got three of making the calls, in which alAssociation and the Shopping She iad le mained three games behind with| Former Dodger Sal Maglie | double, Bob Skinner's single and Tew McConkey, secretary of have been receiving calls about Regiment ky 2 Dehava a a 43 defeat by Chicago Cubs,|(%1) went all the way for the de- Ted Kluszewski's double. the Oshawa Chamber of Com-|the operation of the company. jiead, a parade Wiig a ] pa. who regained fourth place from |feat in the second game while| Emie Bank's 2ist home run merce, told The Daily Times| They both wish to reiterate theSunday. The parade will precede e beaten 2-0 by Pittsburgh bis losing string at three for an|y.j tie in the eighth against loser [received 150 telephone calls Times last week in which they|mark the conclusion of the week- wan 7 i i i 1 centennial program Pitates 8-7 record. Paul Giei (1-3). Glen Hobbie (6-5) [from complaining Oshawa resi- pointed out that neither associa.|!0N8 centennial prog . Hemus and Ed Bouchee bagged |joining Charlie Neal in a back-to- {or Phillips failed to hold a 2-2] "The Oshawa Chamber offtion. ex-service organizations, includ- it for Phils in the eighth in- {back homer show in the fourth. lead built on Dale Long's two-run E-------- _-- pr p---- I VARY Canadian Legion ning and handed rookie Carl|Boyer hit his 15th for the Cards. homer. . {branches throughout the district, Lake E Canuck Davis Cup x gui vin & ke aster Puts WEATHER of the most colorful of the cele- {their colors and will wear their | | medals. h WwW {sued by the Dominion public | The salute will be taken by Lt. ne- an | weather office at 4:30 a.m. EDT: By WILF GRUSON |combined their greater skill of|Col. ; | Synopsis: Showers are occurr-| (Canadian Press Staff Writer [many years in international ten-|officer of the Ontarios. A good If age is supposed to be a sign! Leafs scored five times after twojthis morning. Elsewhere over theldom musters a team that could|courts to display overpowering pected for the parade. of slowing down, someone forgot were out in the ninth against alprovince skies are mainly clear. he rated as invincible in a Davis superiority. The Cubans are more! - jit to tell Luke Easter about it. tiring Browning. {The cloud and showers are fore-|Cup round, but for this year's{accustomed to clay courts and with Buffalo Bisons in the Inter-\poarce in a four-run second in-| Across the lower Great Lakes | pears the case. The Latin Ameri-|ponents with the power and var- national League put on a one-|, ng, getting five more runs off{@rea today Warm and moreican country's team is so weak|iety of sirokes of Bedard and ing the league-leading Montreallf ur. {southern Ontario Saturday, bring The evidence is being supplied Rovals 3-2 . for|\N8 scattered thunderstorms. Cooly the two top-ranking players. The Royals scored single runs upny weather will continue to-| Husky Bob Bedard of Sher- a i} oli h | take 2 24 lead gn Mg Boing Wy tario. Afternoon temperatures will Fontana of Toronto, gave every the Buffalo fourth, Easter|. => > be near the 70 mark. indication Thursday that Canada ome run of the season, Ihe Jets Wiped out a 2-1 Hav {midnight Saturday acy over Cuba as they crushed » came up again in the ana ad in We eiguih mung 4% Lake Erie, Lake Huron regions, two youngsters in the opening seventh there was a teammatelthey scored eight times against|windsor, London: Cloudy with matches in the first round North himself. 2 Ahr inder-par 69 over the s Faster planted Bil Causion led the attack with|today and Saturday. W rmer and Canada, winner over Cuba in| The $x fool JFoatana won a love Black Grove course. in the right field|three hits {more humid Saturday. -Winds|five of their previous seven meet Bamms to bre arman's servicel wine hoys qualified for the {ir he Rip Coleman pitched a six-hit-|first start of the year for theiday. trounced 22-year-old Raul ar-{roke tarougn in the third game|roronto's Islington Golf Club the He walked Marlins and pitched a three-hit-| Western Lake Ontario, Niagara man 6-2, 6-2, 6-3 in the opening to take a 4-0 lead and followed July 11. Three qualified in the Virginians used onelregions, Toronto, junior division fer boys 16, 17 and again breaking the Cuban's fourth inning tojday. A few showers today. Show-|Adolfo Minoso, 6-0, 6-1, 6-0. delivery in the first and third{ham, who shot 76 and Tom Pen- him He walked Boblers and thunderstorms Saturday. DOUBLES TODAY dlebury, Beach Grove, and Syd The Canadian team can clinch|terms in the third set until the Winds light today, southeast 15 the round today and advance fifth game when Fontana broke|each Thomas singled Oldis|Saturday. against the United States here|through after it went to deuce| poh Williamson Jr., Roseland, run of the, FEastern Lake Ontario, Georg also carded 79 but was elimin- game. Bob Chal Lake reglons, doubles. The two concluding] iits for the Virginians. North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny to-|singles of the best-of-five seriesihis own way in his match and. playoff with Pendlebury and day. Slougy with a few showers will be played Saturday. like Fontana, never once lost! Menard. | Saturday. iz uke % " DISTRICT tperature. Winds light today, south Panasiuk's 69 was the lowest | east 15 Saturday y i : 4 Haliburton Timmins-Kapuskas written finish to American dom the district event. : esser tars ination in international golf. In the juvenile division for boys closed from Tennyson ay-|Saturday. Little change in tem "Look what the Britons, South |14 and 15, Mike Kane and Norm ; oN verature. Winds light. enue to Hoskin avenue, and Nipi perature . A T Drouillard. Lakewood oh 7 ¥ as | been doing this week to this great|T erry roul ard, ' gon closed from Rossland Rd orecast Temperatures ea ie old course," he mused, "They | Were the qualifiers. They shot 87, north, closed from Annapolis/ Windsor | have torn a championship layout (87 and 88 respectively. avenue to Louisa street. {London 3 Venue wo | Wingham of the lesser known stars of in| «pritain {division for boys 13 and under ACCOUNTS PASSED {ternational golf led a field of 40|cyp next sp {made the grade. They were Ron Trenton _ {over the spongy fairways of the ang» Sandor, Roseland, who had 97, lington township council, at St, Catharines -- ere Hampton, general accounts were Hamilton course today for the final 36 holes {had 99. | of the British open golf champ Ls 80. Roads accounts amounted to Killaloe .. ionship. | 0 ers et i [Earton Si JA | reaten 0 . va {Sudbury splashed a three-under-par 68 in OSHAWA PAIR WIN - ------------ | Thursday's second round for a 36-hole total of 135 and a one. for bulances in the last 24 Hunter, of the Oshawa Lawn S R M nd | IOW al ambular I ele ivr ih : mrs Bovis Club, jeatmed wl oa ugar ay d {Argentine champion. pod e¢ Centennial Men's Doubles But Ruiz, completely over- : +! Be anville club Wednesdas looked in pre-play forecasts, stole [ter O'Malley was planning to put ne drunk was locked up by Bowmanville club Wednesday the day's glory with a brilliant 152.000 seats in his new dream TFhawa Police Thursday. He BAND PLACES TH'RD six-under-par 65 -- matching the (stadium at Chavez Ravine here, ay + night in a police: de- } LACES ( Lae spent the night in a polic | The General Motors Pipe Band, NEW : | ¥. ) tav Robinson may decide tolago. |something bigger than that REAR-END CRASH {McLelland, placed third in the|fi8ht again this year after all.| Veteran Peter Thomson of Aus-| Take Thursday night, for ex- rear-end collision between| Strathspey and Reel for middleweight champion has|tralia, first - round leader and |ample. With the Dodgers in last fio automobiles occured at 962["B" Bands, at the 22nd Annual|{fsked Truman Gibson, ) f dimcoe street north at 9 p.m.|Zorra Caledonian Society Games, tional Boxing Club president, for|British Open title, feil back into a {on cupied most of the season, | po regular 'meeting of the To- Thursday. The cars were driven(at Embro, on Dominion Day. -|# meeting Tuesday to discuss fu-|ije for third with youngster Dave|66,487 fans were at the Coliseum 'onto ant District Labor Council - Thomas or Wales. Ito watch the Dodgers clash with, q+ foal : 4 852 Windermere avenue, To-| SCRAMBLED EGGS The IBC in Hobinson vii not jumped his feet during the a y Marian Kinarz,| ire 77a ._. |necessarily discuss a third match|7a for a 136 total. Thomas had al The turn second largest i i hoa | nto, I street. Damage| TORONTO (CP) -- Scrambled |with ex-champion Carmen Bas-|gg en i w, scond Saget old If they (the TTC) bought those ©, of 2 T { res {National League history, pushed) pari) buses and put them on the greeted provincial police Thurs-|gust date in Los Angeles with|CQURSE WET the attendance count for 35|ctreet our men 'would strike. STREETS CLOSED day at the scene of a minor acci-|Art Aragon. However, it is be- inv wi i ' : ' : i Pue to construction the follow-|dent on Highway 2 west of here. [lieved that only a Basilio mateh|*8Y) with pools of Water in traps | Dodger officials said they are| Motors.' : 8 the [on the fairways following a week more than 158,000 fans ahead of| Council president William Jen | io} 1 The gree Ore Yard} rok rg | I an r 4 tomo July hot high when trucks|ring. The greens were soaked {the pace Milwaukee Braves set|gue: pounded the table with his | A@napolis y en by Ron Haywood of tobinson A |vavel and vice-president on and Georg itnell of To-|come tax : year-ole for J y a 4% eee of s aiish ne alArcher said "That's the part we char n whao!le: allendance recor l4idn't w 3 Fd [didn't want mentioned. ed n in 19 jucked under the h: ay cutoff | The Cards won Thursday nigl erew title from Ba March 25, mn road A AVS National League leaders. cent exposure charge involving | 2nd put two men on with none telephone calls in the last few lets," he continued, 'there is|day. phia Phil But the Braves re Robin, usually hurt by hom. | Shutout over Cincinnati--the sec-|a10.¢ 2 business being conduct-| Flintoff, stated that he does not | winning 4-2 then losing 3-2 as the The Cardinals won the first/ The Pirates had only five hits sqvertising, the head office of high pressuie," he said. i The third - place Giants re-|error and two sacrifice flies. [them in the sixth--Bill Virdon's gift" hooklet is mentioned. Centre Merchants Association|tario Regiment and the Ontario Cincinnati Redlegs, The Redlegs|*0uthpaw Johnny Podres ended won jt for the Cubs, cracking a|that yesterday his office had statements made in The Daily|@ drumhead service which will Consecutive home runs by Solly| Dick Gray drove in two runs, |won it in relief after starter Tay- dents. tion is sponsoring the organiza-| A large number of service and ------ will take part in the parade and . bration as the veterans will have om aren eam Seems Cinch { F. S. Wotton, commanding By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |pitched Rochester to victory.|ing over southwestern Ontario] TORONTO (CP) -- Canada sel-\nis and experience on grass|turnout of the regiment is ex- The 37-year-old first baseman| Rochester chased starter Jim cast to spread slo eastward matches ' against Cuba that. ap-|have seldom come up against op man show Thursday night in beat-| Tom Richards for a 9-1 lead after{humid air will move back into| Canada's squad looks unheatable.|Fontana in the third and fourth innings to Rochester, e Rocky Nelson) 1, across most of Northern On-hrooke, Que., and lanky Don » margin to 2-1 with his JETS SPLURGE Regional forecasts valid untilizgain will maintain her suprem- Karman rather than intervene, io junior golf championship on first base. That spelled finish|Vicente Amor and Jose Santiago.|chowers and few thunderstorms|American Zone tie Mickey McDermott made hislight today, southerly 15 Satur- ings, took a 240 lead as Fontana opening game. He also|.yampionship test to be held a Hamilton: [singles and Bedard sailed to an|the procedure in the second set in back of two|Mainly cloudy today and Satur-leyen easier win over 16-vear-old|by 1. They were Brian Peifer, Chat- i games, They battled on even and Deron Johnson on eight|Little change in temperature Menard, Essex, who had 79 home with the 1 ) next week with a victory in the twice. es gave up six ian Bay, Kirkland Bedard had things even more |ated in a three-way sudden-death Little change in tem-| Bedard, 26, and Fontana, 27,|service. 5 | qualifying score ever recorded in ing: ' r+ clouding ov to Wolfe str et: Harmony road ing: Sunny today, clouding over Africans and Australians have |Martin, both of Roseland, and W. to Wellan. ave.; Park road Lows tonight, highs Saturday vines A y LYTHAM, England (CP)--Two apart | Two youngsters in the bantam Toronto At Thursday's meeting of Dar {Royal Lytham and St. Anne's and Bob Brown, Roseland, who! jassed in the amount of $2.396-| Muskoka Christy O'Conner of Ireland | @ent also received three caMls| Charles Peacock and Jack nt also receiv of | |stroke lead over Leopoldo Ruiz, | ! LOS ANGELES (AP) ood ONE DRUNK Lawn Bowling Tournament at the Fi ht This Year | g | | | Af YORK (AP) --- Sugar record for the Open set 24 years but he may have to dream up pry nt ce! garimont ce. of Oshawa, directed by Donald fA Class| The | : y : Interna- early favorite to win his fourth |place, a humble station they've John Graham, TTC delegate at by Charles William Mellon, 20 |= eee | UPR DOMES, my &t Louis Cardinal | 3 Posed : Thomsor was one over par at| ouis Cardi meeting Thursday and said: das estimated at $180 |eggs--more than 1,000 of them---|ilio, who already has a late Au- Was es ted at $180. The course was still wet Thurs- (games here to 1,016,287. They can't compare with Genera: ng Os will be clos The eggs were scattered across|could lure Robinson back into the | | " 1 10V i last son while the, in| David | to collided were unprofitable { his| ghts | Chicago, mark of 147 by one stroke, said [first game 4-2 and dropped the hig sireeticleaned Wa (CONSIDER RESOLUTION up play in the Open 30 far has second 3-2. 'On Bus Purchase {and cumulative nature. The council had just conmsid- culty with Canadian buses, Strike White and Company testified at iminary hearing that Kerr was employed in 1950 as secre- tary-treasurer and had authority to sign cheques and securities, CONSTRUCTION HALTS PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- Con- struction along 66 miles of the Trans-Canada Pipeline between Port Arthur and Nipigon was halted Thursday as a strike of 150 members of the International ond day. Company officials are awaiting the arrival of a union negotiator. Employees left their jobs Wed- nesday in an effort to obtain a 15-cent an hour wage increase and a stabilized work week with She is accused of kidnapping a wealthy Montreal couple, three has announced that charges of (Welland Canal in the centre of 1/this town, near St. Catharines. t| Police said Pedini sat down on lla wooden bench which collapsed faces|and fell into eight feet of water, His body was recovered. WOMAN DROWNS ATIKOKAN Ont. (CP)--Mrs. Carol - Davies was drowned in Dismal Lake one mile west of here Wednesday night when the home-made boat from which she and her husband were fishing capsized. Mrs. Davies who was unable to swim, was towed to shore by her husband. New Fishing Area Is Predicted TORONTO CP) The new St. Lawrence seaway lake--still [without a name--could become a great fishing area as well as one of the nation's finest. parks, a wildlife expert says. Dr. W. J. K. Harkness, wildlife {chief for the department of lands and forests, said Thursday the 35-miie lake would be ideal fof |muskellunge, pickerel, pike and [bass. ® | Although these fish now exist {'n the St. Lawrence River, the {province may plant additional Goede was scheduled to the additional charges Thursday, but was inad- [Laborers Union entered its sec. Stocks if a study shows they are {needed. | "The flooding should make {better conditions for a wide var- jety of fish," Dr. Harkness said. "There will now be a lot more bay area, and this should be es. pecially good for bass." ered a resolution from Local 28, United Automobile Workers (CLC) at Fort William, presented for the council's executive ap- proval. The Fort William workers whe work in the plant of Canadian Car and Foundry Company, pro- ducers ot the Brill bus, said un- employment in Canada is still serious and any solution must necessarily be of a co-operative The TTC, by purchasing buses from General Motors Corporation in the United States, was indi. rectly contributing te unemploy- ment at the Lakehead. They asked that a committee irom the Toronto Labor Council meet with the TTC to protest this action Mr. Archer said this had al ready been done and the T1C| had said it hac too much diffi- Ss i114 11 7 hme pe mx CA Af our 41.95 COMPLETELY INSTALLED COLONIAL ALUM. DOOR SPECIAL Positive Tight Corner All weather Stripped Z Bor Heavy Picture Window Insert Bug-proof Screen Included Concealed Heavy Duty Hinge Heavy Inch Construction Adjustable Sweep BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED WITH MANY EXTRAC LIMITED OFFER COLONIAL ALUM, ecurity Knob-Latch Set trony Kick Plate i now BA 8-8571 ter Hours Coll RA 8-1062 289 PARK RD. SOUTH

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