14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, August &, 1760 Steelers Beat Argos Handily TORONTO (CP)--Money and misery ride hand in hand with the Toronto Argonaut Football Club. It has plenty of both. Club officials have foisted ex- hibition games with National Football League teams on sea- son-ticket subscribers the last two years. Each time the cash register has jingled, Argos lost the games by wide margins and then suffered through injuries to key players. Wednesday night Argonauts were walloped 43-16 by Pittsburgh Steelers of the NFL before 23,570 fans and came out of it with Tobin Rote, their high - priced quarterback from Detroit Lions, pursing a bruised right knee. I he is lost, Argonauts may as well kiss their chances goodbye of getting out of the Big Four cellar this season. In 1959, Chicago Cardinals of the NFL opened the Canadian National Exhibition Football Sta- dium with a 55-26 victory over Argonauts, It was the same story. dressing room with a sprained ankle. Word from team officials was that doctors weren't '"'too alarmed" by either Rote's or Carter's injuries, but further ex- aminations were to be made to- day. Argonauts tried everything possible to move the ball Wed- nesday night, including the old high-school smartie of the onside kick. It worked a couple of times but backfired once for a Pitts- burgh touchdown when, or other, punter, Dave Mann kicked the ball over his head and an alert Steeler defender grabbed it and ran seven yards tor a touchdown, It was one of the six Pittsburgh touchdowns. The game was billed as a duel between 34-year-old Bobby Layne of the Steelers and the 32-year- old Rote, Layne's one-time under- study at Detroit. It was no con- test. Layne, who played about 35 free! A PKG OF 12 PETER POWER rool A LOAF OF Special! | ® PETER POWER § {11-33 FTV. CITT 1 BREAD WITH THE PURCHASE OF 3-90z JARS OF KRAFT JAMS BLACKBERRY * PEACH-PINEAPPLE THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Doughnuts WITH THE PURCHASE OF A 10-0z JAR OF "PETER POWER INSTANT fe] dg: <1 A-crowd of 27,770 sat through the minutes, tossed three touchdown massacre and Argos lost first- passes and kicked four converts. string centre Norm Stoneburgh| Rote, who hobbled to the side- for the season, linebacker Don|lines a few minutes before the Caraway and halfback Boyd half, connected on only eight of Carter for several games. |16 passes and had two intercep- Carter also was hurt Wednes-|tions that resulted in Steeler day night. He limped into the'touchdowns. CANADA OUTDOORS Plan Bigger Buffalo Hunt By JIM WHELLY (gone to C.B. Brewster of Banff, Canadian Press Correspondent |Alta., holder of last year's single FORT SMITH, N.W.T. (CP)--|licence, and Stan Burrell of Sun- Spurred by the success of the|dre, Alta. first buffalo hunt of the century| rae in the Northwest Territories, of- FEE REFUNDED ficials are preparing for a sec- Burrell, who says it has never ond, larger open season this| been his policy to guarantee vear |game, declared that because of "So convinced is ome outfitter|the high licence fee, "if a hunter that the hunters will get plenty|stays a week without getting a of chances to zero their sights on| reasonable shot at a buffalo, his the big shaggy animals, he is|licence fee will be refunded." offering almost a money - back| Fees are $50 for resident Ca- guarantee. nadians, $200 for non - residents In a 2%-month season last fall,|and $25 for a bird game licence. | Special! PETER POWER + ICE CREAM 19: PINT BRICK DELICIOUS FLAVOURS PETER POWER BLUE LABEL COFFEE 1-LB. BAG the first since 1896, one outfit- ters' licence and 30 hunting Ii- cences were issued. Twenty-nine of the eligible hunters turned up and all bagged the limit of one. This year the season has been extended to three full months-- Twenty of last year's hunters replied to a government ques- tionnaire and reported seeing an average of 67 buffalo each. "As a result," says Bryant, "hunters can expect to be able to select their trophies from a Special! PETER POWER Speciall TREES TASTY good sample." COSTLY OUTING Sixteen of the 1959 hunters said they planned to go on an- other buffalo hunt in the area. Bryant figured the average cost for Americans last year was $1,500 and for Canadians about $900. The area in which the hunt DESSERT PEARS 2 29 ITS YOUR MOVE-STOCK UP NOW! from Sept. 1 to Nov. 30--and 100 hunting licences and two outfit-| ters' licences are being issued by the department of northern affairs. EASY GAME Joe Bryant, superintendent of game for the Mackenzie Dis- trict, says hunters will have an equal chance at record heads because "the cream of the crop|takes place is north and west of has hardly been touched." Wood Buffalo National Park, set "Larger trophies will undoubt-|aside in 1922 as a haven for the edly be obtained this year. There| bison which had received total is a good chance the world's rec-| protection in this area since 1893. ord trophy will come from this| Fort Smith is about 2% air hours area." {from Edmonton. Largest buffalo shot in 1959) One of the purposes of the had a maximum outside horn|hunt is to kill off some of the spread of 31% inches, only four|2,000 buffalo that stray from the inches short of the world record. park which juts into the North- Only a few of the hunting li-| west Territories from northern eences have been awarded so|Alberta and contains about 15,000 SALAD DRESSING 29 Plus POWER GOLD BOND'STAMPS 1602 JAR 15-02 TINS far. The outfitters' permits have buffalo. BRANCH RICKEY READY FOR SUDBURY'S SUMMER CHICAGO (AP) -- Branch Rickey, his glorious days in baseball apparently ended, was packing his suitcase Tuesday night when a bystander noticed what appeared to be a bomb. "Are you packing an explo- sive?" the 79-year-old patriarch was asked. Rickey chuckled and replied: "This mechanism is really why 1 came to Chicago. It's more important now than the Contin- ental League, which obviously is dead." Rickey, the Continental's president, took the contraption cut of his bag and placed it on the bed of his hotel room. ""This is a condenser coil for an electric saw. Chicago was the only place I could get it replaced. . . . "I've got 14 of my 19 grand- children waiting for me at my island summer home near Sud- bury, Ont. It gets cold up there at nights and the only heat we have is from the fireplace. Well, this power saw. broke down because of a bad con- denser coil. Now we can start cutting wood again for that fire- place. I'm heading up there as soon as I can." The Continental went out of- business Tuesday when the Na- tional and American leagues d~cided to expand to 10 teams from eight. The Continental agreed with the move. Rickey is a diehard in base- ball. "In 10 more years there will be eight more cities ready to apply for major league status and I'll be there after this big expansion to apply for a job," he said, smiling. U.S. Officials Are Shunning Shot Put Ace COVINA, Calif. (AP) -- Bill Nieder's chances of competing in Rome with the United States|; Olympic track team? Slim--but far from non-exist- ent. The towering army lieutenant. who holds the unofficial world put mark of 65 feet, 7 inches, is only an alternate. He flopped at the Olympic trials and came in fourth after Parry O'Brien, Dal- las Long and Dave Davis. There are those who say that Cold War At Olympic Games ROME (AP) -- The Kremlin and its Italian followers em- barked Tuesday on a campaign to squeeze cold war propaganda out of the Olympic Games. The| main targets were the Italian government and the Vatican. Leading the campaign is the| talian Communist newspaper L'Unita, It has been running al- most daily attacks on some as- pect of the Olympic organization. The paper even issued a threat Tuesday that the name of Benito Mussolini might be forcibly re- moved from an obelisk near the Olympic stadium if the govern- ment authorities refused to do so. On Sunday the paper claimed folding when the pressure's on is Nieder's big fault and that US. | Olympic officials are unlikely to| move him ahead of the others,| even though he's been going| great guns. | Big Bill trimmed the trio at| Eugene, Ore., in a trial meet last| week with a mighty heave of 64] feet, 9 inches Monday he had a sensational] workout at the team's training| grounds. O'Brien holds the official world| record of 63-4. Long's best is 64 6% and Davis, 62-8%. | Nieder admits he tightened up at hte Olympic trials. "I've just! got to learn to be completely re- laxed the way I am in prac-| tice," he says. a Vatican commission had been especially organized to prepare "tons .of leaflets and pamphlets" | attacking Red China, Russia and| other Communist countries.| "There is grave danger of polit-| ical and diplomatic repercus- sions," it said. Radio Moscow repeated many of the paper's allegations. REMEMBER WHEN . . ? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ralph Guldahl, putting on one| of his famed "stretch" finishes, | won the $5,000 Milwaukee Open golf championship with a 16- under-par 72-hole total of 268 at the North Hills course 20 years| ago today. |} } \ Special! No.1 + IMPORTED - CARDINAL RED GRAPES 2°2 c DUR MC i al ) 4 Special! ONTARIO * No.1 GRADE NEW POTATOES 10 - LB. 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