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The Oshawa Times, 31 May 1961, p. 18

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4 4 18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Moy 31, 1701 A. J. FOYT WEARS A WINNER'S SMILE AFTER | NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincy Reds By ED WILKS Associated Press Staff Writer It was a long climb back to the top, but Cincinnati Reds fin- ally made it .They rocketed out of the cellar by winning 20 of their last 26 games for a share of the National League lead in what amounts to a three - way jam with San Francisco and Los Angeles. The Reds had first place all to themselves back on April 20, then went into an eight - game losing slump that dropped them into eighth place just a month ago. Now they've tied the Gi- ants for first, .010 percentage points ahead of Los Angeles, by sweeping a Memorial Day dou- bleheader at San Francisco 7-6 and 6-4, The Dodgers, who have played four more games than the Reds|third in a row as a starter. and Giants, defeated St. Louis| The Reds then made it five Cardinals 5-3 in a night game. straight with a sweep of the Defending champs Pittsburgh|three - game set by scoring four Pirates stayed in fourth place,iruns in the third against Juan 13%, games behind, after drop- ping a pair to Chicago Cubs 5-3 and 10-0, Fifth place Milwaukee re- mained at .500, 4/4 games be- hind. The Braves split a double- the opener 3-1 but losing the nightcap 11-4, WON ON UNEARNED RUN The Reds and Giants slugged seven home runs in the opener but it was an unearned run that handed it to the Reds. The Giants just missed with four runs in the ninth, three oa homers by Charlie Hiller, Hobie Landrith and pinch - hitter Wil- lie Mays, who had been rested by manager Al Dark. Rookie Jim Maloney was the winner. He hit one of the Reds' three home runs. Sam Jones lost his Home Runs Galore In American shaved a game off Detroit's lead by beating Minnesota twice, 4-3 and 7-5, {By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Detroit Tigers came off with a 2% game lead in the Ameri- can League race Memorial Day, POLIS VICTORY INDIANA while the Back On Top Rung header at Philadelphia, winning| EE a I 'McLean's And Tony's 'Win Twin-Bill Set Maclean's Esso defeated Heffering's Imperials 8-4 in the opening game of the City and District Association's double- [Marichal in the second game. header, last night at Alexandra Bob Purkey, making his first re- Park and in the second game, lief appearance of the season, Tony's Vendors won a clean-cut |saved it for lefty Jim O'Toole|7.2 verdict over Scugog Clean- lin the ninth. The Giants nowl|ers Juniors. {have lost three in a row and hen |six straight at home. [MAKE HITS COUNT | Consecutive doubles by Jim MacLean's made their six | Gilliam and Willie Davis and anthits Sout. Bl Gdinge started lerror by Card catcher Halon the mound for Hefferings bu / v pon 4 | Smith brought the Dodgers fromthe newcomer was shaky in his{C; Boyce, p; Ulrich, If in 8th.| 'The score stayed at 3-0 until behind with two runs in the sev-/first start, walked two of the, HEFFERING'S Simcoe, Scugogs struck in the 7th, to |enth against loser Bob Gibson. first three batters and then Ken |b; Jordan, ss; O'Donaghue, c; make it 3-2 but Tony's clinched |Righthander Stan Williams and| Courtney singled. Ted Jones|Shearer, rf; O'Reilly, 2b; Buz-|the win with a four-run rally in |reliever Larry Sherry held theltook over the mound an d|minski, If; Hickey, cf; Carn-ithe 9th when White weakened. | Cards to three hits, one a homer |-pytch'* McMahon greeted him|with," Ib; Giddings, p; Jones, p Hits by Dan Tureski, Smith's {by Curt Flood. __|witk a long single, to make thelin 1st. double, another by Berwick The Cards had two on withicaore 3.1, in ; and singles by John Campbell fone out in the ninth. when | A walk to Gary Copeland and TONY'S HIT WELL and Rennick -- all in succession, Sherry saved it by striking outixon "0 connor's double, meant] Tony's won their game on the|plus an outfield error -- ac- {Ken Boyer and getting Stan|, v., "in the fifth for the win. Strength of their power at the|counted for the four runs. [Musial to line oul. It was the ners and in the sixth, Ron El-(Platc, a total of 11 hits with) 1oNy's -- Berwiek, If; | third straight success or | ®lliott singled, advanced on an Bill Berwick, Art Rennick, Bill c.amphei, 3b: Rennick, ¢; Var- Dodgers who scored their first) or by Jones and scored on Horton and Hank Snow each | - : indv, : ; |ga, ss; Horton, If; Solomon, 2b; J er a ig i Lindy |Simcoe's miscue, after two out, [Betting a pair. Jack Sneddon|snow ' rf; Tureski, Ib; Taylor, 1959 when Gil Hodges homered|to make it 5-4, breaking the tie. had two for Scugogs -- half of |. "Smith. p in 7th. ] en u MacLean's clinched the game !heir tota ; SCUGOGS -- Suddard, If; in the eighth. _lin the bottom half of the th, fon Taylor started for Tony's|prarch. 3b; Sneddon, Ib; Young, scoring three runs on Mc. and was in fine form. He struck)..." Mapes rf; Wright 2b: Mahon's single, a walk to Out 12 batters in less than seven|p vo gs: Fegan, c; White, p: Lucky Wills, another free ticket {Wl innings, gave up three hits |g qoweki batted in 9th, ' to Boyce, an error throw by and walked fe SRIDO™ Smith | __ tai mae Mark O'Donaghue and the whole |F¢lieved in the 7th and he struck | splurge topped off by Larry Wel- out four batters in two-and-a- REMEMBER WHEN? ia don's two-bagger. third innings : By THE CANADIAN PRESS Bob Boyce pitched the win Taylor weakened in the sixth,| (gear (Lefty) Judd of Inger- for MacLean's. He yielded a run walked three batters that inning soll, Ont, one of the few Ca- in the first frame, on a single Put got out of it without allow-\nadians to star in the major by Jimmie Jordan, O'Donag-|iNg @ run. But in the 7th, with leagues, was sold to the Phila- hue's sacrifice, a walk to Shear-{on¢ out, Jim Fegan belted one delphia Phillies by Boston Red er and a timely single by Ralph into right field, where it was|Sox for the waiver price 19 O'Reilly. muffed and Fegan reached 3rd, years ago today. Judd was later Climb Jones and Jordan, gave Hef- March drew a walk 'and Smith fering's three more runs in the replaced Taylor, Sneddon greet- second stanza and a 4-3 lead, |ed Smith with a double, to score but Boyce only gave up two hits White but that was the end of and no runs after that. |Scugogs' scoring success: Jordan, O'Reilly and Jones, White was the hurler for the each had a pair of hits for the Juniors. An infield error, a losers while McMahon had two walk and Bill Horton's first hit, for the winners. {meant the first run in the first MACLEAN'S -- Weldon, 3b; |inning, for Tony's. They added Copeland, 1b; O'Connor, ss;|@ couple in the third on hits by Courtney, rf; MacMahon, cf; {Berwick and Rennick, plus an Elliott, If; Wills, 2b; D. Weldon, [outfield error Loop | Orioles collected 15 hits with {Gus Triandos and Jim Gentile, who socked his 13th home run, 1sPORTS MENU Tall Texan By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' Sets Record In '500' Win INDIANAPOLIS (AP)--Texan HOME RUNS--The one commodity, which even more than a classic pitching performance, keeps cash eustomers streaming through the turnstiles, got a big play yesterday. Don't know whether it's just "the rabbit ball'--shorter fences--better long-ball hitters-- or poorer pitching--but-one thing is certain, there have been a flock of four-ply blows this season. Giants and Cincy Reds had seven between them in their first game yesterday, when Cincy won both games, by the way, from Giants and so climbed back on the top rung of the National League ladder----a three-way tie almost, with Giants and Dodgers. The Reds have won 20 of their last 26 games, But getting back to homers, Chicago Cubs had four yesterday, in a twin-bill sweep over the Pirates. And Ken Walters had a homer for Phillies yes- terday--which made an even dozen in the National loop. N. Y. Yankees had seven of their own, Mantle, Maris and Skowron each getting two and Yogi had one. Bob Allison of the Twins had one, Norm Cash had a grand-slammer for Detroit; Norm Siebern had two; Jim Landis had one and Jim Gentile hit his 13th as Orioles took two games from Chicago White Sox. That makes a total of 25 home-runs yesterday in the two Major leagues. ' FRANKIE CARBO, the man who has'for many years been named as the real secret boss behind boxing, was found guilty of conspiracy and extortion, in court in Los Angeles along with four others deep in the boxing bin. The other four were Frank "Blinky" Palermo, a former fight manager; Truman Gibson Jr., former head of the International Boxing Club and Joe Sica and Louis Tom Dragna, a couple of lesser boxing lights, from Los Angeles. They were accused and con- victed of trying to "muscle in" on former welter champ Don Jordan's contract, by threatening physical harm to his manager, Don Nesseth and fight promoter Jackie Leonard. They are to be sentenced on July 20--and stay in jail until then--and Senator Estes Kefauver has seiz- ed on this conviction to aid his long fight to clean up professional boxing. BITS OF SPORT:- Young ball players with any team in any section of the Oshawa Legion Minor Base- ball Association, afe reminded that their season's sched- ules appear in today's issue and should be clipped out and saved, for future reference . . . OSHAWA TONY'S meet Dependable Caterers tonight at Alexandra Park, eight o'clock .sharp, in their second game of the Beeches Major Fastball League schedule. Caterers are currently leading the league with two wins, both over Blacks, the 1960 champions BROOKLIN Hillcrests pushed the Mann Cup champs, Port Credit Sailors, into over- time last night before losing their senior lacrosse game at home, 11-8 . .. . MacLEANS AND TONY'S won ver- dicts in last night's softball doubleheader at Alexandra Park, defeating Heffering's and Scugog Cleaners respect- ively. Tomorrow night, it's MacLean's vs Scugogs in the first game with Heffering's taking on Tony's in the nightcap . . . LAST NIGHT'S "lucky attendance number" at Alexandra Park was 430221. There's a voucher for gasoline, five bucks worth, waiting to be claimed by the owner of this ticket . . . JOHNNY CALDWELL, the 22- year-old undefeated Irishman, dethroned France's Al- phonse Halimi, in a bloody 15-round bout last night « for the European version of the world's Bantamweight title. He plans a return bout with Halimi, to prove it was no accident and then a fight with Eder Jofre, the Brazilian, recognized in U.S. as world's bantam champ . . . SOUTH KOREA'S entry in the Canada Cup Golf matches, had to withdraw. Due to the revolution there, the young Korean golf pros couldn't get visas for the trip to the U.S. MEMORIAL DAY CROWDS DOWN FROM LAST YEAR (A. J. Foyt, who sits mighty tall {in a race car seat, won't know {until tonight's victory dinner how much he won Tuesday by {a 6-0 and 2-1 sweep over Chi- but Baltimore moved into third place, four games behind, with cago White Sox. The Orioles did it as southpaw Steve Barber {won his seventh with a three- hit shutout and Skinny Brown |and Hoyt Wilhelm combined for a four-hitter. Second place Cleveland Tigers split with Kansas City, winning 5-3 before the As came back for a 9-3 decision. New York belted seven home runs and beat Boston 12-3, and Wash- ington beat Los Angeles Angels 51. Barber walked six and struck out three while blanking the White Sox on three singles. The Pitchers Put Jets each driving in two runs. Bob Shaw (3-4) was the loser, Brown (5-1) then won his fourth in a row, shutting out the Sox on two singles for eight in- nings. Wilhelm retired the first two in the ninth, then gave up a homer by Jim Landis. Billy Pierce (1-4) lost it on Dick Wil- liams' home run in the fourth inning. | CAME FROM BEHIND The Tigers came from behind in the opener on a grand-slam homer in the eighth by Norm Cash, the first man faced by An epidemic of errors, three Scoring from there on Reg|sold to Toronto Maple Leafs of of them all told, plus singles by! White's single. With two out, R.|the International League. F rankis Carbo | ' And Four More Found Guilty LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Frankie Carbo, long reputed to| be boxing's secret boss, was convicted Tuesday with four others of trying to cut in on a champion's earnings. GET YOUR CAR READY | capturing the golden annivers- | ary 500-mile auto race in a rec- Back On Beam {ord 139.131 miles an hour. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS lefty Al Jackson put some mile- | Strong pitching seems to have | halted, at least momentarily, | the Columbus Jets' age behind only nine Columbus hits in the two games against backward Richmond. Francis struck out| lefty Bud Daley, in relief. Bill Fischer (1-1) was the winner in| i relief. Reliever Bill Kunkel, who| lost his first in the opener, then saved the second game victory {for Jerry Walker (2-2). Norm | Siebern belted a pair of 400-foot |plus homers and drove in five runs for the As. His first, with A federal jury, after a 13-| week trial and three days of| |deliberations, found the quintet] |guilty of conspiracy and extor- (tion charges. All five face pos- |tencing is set for July 20. The defendants were accused] sible long prison terms. Sen-| FOR SUMMER Wheel Alignmen NEW YORK (AP)---Memor- ial Day attendance for ma- jor league baseball dropped some 20,500 from last year's figures despite an added site on the schedule due to the American League's expansion to 10 teams this season. Although first-place Detroit pulled in the day's top crowd, 51,71, for a doubleheader with Kansas City, the Ameri- can League's total of 128,071 was 7,578 below the 1960 fig- ure of 135,640. The two new clubs in the AL, Los Angeles and Washington, drew 14,277 at Washington. The National League at- tracted 119,926, a drop of 12,- 948 from last year. The first- place battle between Cincin- nati and the Giants drew the NL's top attendance, 41,693, at San Francisco, where a mob of 20,000 stormed the gates and crushed three ticket booths in pursuit of 6,000 tickets. The two - league total was 247,997, compared to last year's attendance of 268,523. | What he does know is that the {$100,000 or so almost slipped| |through his fingers in a fero- |ciously contested race that jlmoeked out 21 Je 5 san march in the International Base-|10 Virginian batters and Jack- flag fell. And because of a tim-|ball League. 4 {son nine, the latter winning his ing breakdown, he didn't learn| The Jets, who had slipped fourth in a row with a six-hit- until Tuesday night that he'd|from first place to three games ter. set a record instead an almost. |behind the league - leading. noc our 10 It was a three-car race in the Charleston Marlins in the past | Sh (Roadblock) Jones' last stages among Foyt, 26, of|tW® Weeks, swept a Memorial i Ta ¥ po : hip Houston, Tex.; charging Eddie|Day doubleheader from Rich. ive RE ef sopra arr Ults Sachs, Center Valley, Pa., and|mond 3-1 and 2-1. n 5 had five RBI for the 1959 winner Rodger Ward. And| The double victory moved the ares Ta Iv the nightca it finally was decided in the|Jets back one game closer to/7erseys, |e '8 a¢ WEF CAP. |pits. [the top as Charleston had a|George Dlivarst' tiple wit yo Foyt made his third and sup-/S¢ven - game winning streak on in the i ; Aphis Ye, posedly last pit stop for tiressnapped in the second game of FPRECR, Tots 3 vy Ye jor Me and fuel, but the connection on|a doubleheader by Jersey City, Marlins' vic ory. the pressure fueling system|3-1 after the Marlins took the | Steve Demeter's 11th homer, {wouldn't work. His crew bor- opener 5-3. Jersey City is theja two-run drive, sparked Tor- rowed a refueling rig and called /only club to beat the Marlins-- onto's first game victory, aided | Foyt back in for an extra stop.|twice now--since their transfer by winner Rip Coleman's solo | lve i from Puerto Rico. |blast. Rochester hit Bob Smith [AWAY GOES A TIRE : Ir other IL action, Syracuse |in the nightcap for six runs in | Meanwhile, Sachs was flying peat Buffalo twice, 6-2 and 10-7|the sixth inning on only three jane looked like a sure winner while Toronto beat Rochester hits. But the Wings also got after jayne hg Aish in four|sy in the opener of a double- four walks and a hit batsman previous = BIlS: aah = Hight header and Rochester took the|from Smith and reliever Raul had to Te TagRen Hui with | mghtcap 7-0. : (Sanchez. Herb Moford was the lonly three laps--7% miles--to| Righthander Earl Francis and winner, Bo. Foyt passed Sachs as the [Pennsylvanian was gunning his BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League V L Pct. GBL |car out of the pits. The hand-| {some Texan beat Eddie to the| | finish line by 83 seconds. With| four pit stops apiece, Sachs | spent 8 2-5ths seconds longer off|Detroit [the track. Cleveland Foyt, drove the Indianapolis| Baltimore Bowes Special, Sachs the Long|hcW YOI |Beach, Calif., Dean Special. Washington Ward, having handling Noe le, : trouble with a new type Watson|pocion car, was less than a lap behind Los Angeles {in third place. gtr | Jack Brabham of Australia, the world road racing champ- {ion, drove a shrewd, smooth | race to ninth place but he never {was in contention. His little {English Cooper simply didn't Tuesday's Results Milwaukee 3-4 Phila. 1-11 Chicago 5-10 Pittsburgh 3.0 St. Louis 3 Los Angeles 5 Cincinnati 7-6 San Francisco 659 605 214 68 4 56d 414 500 7 A474 8 isan Francisco (O'Dell 1-2) A442 9% | Cincinnati (Jay 5-3) at 722 436 9% |Angeles (Drysdale 3-3) (N) 1525 37612 | Milwaukee (Spahn 5-3) Chicago 1527 35713 |pittsburgh (Gibbon 3-2) (N) Tuesday's Results Chicago (Drott 0-2) at Phila- New York 12 Boston 3 delphia (Roberts 0-6) (N) Baltimore 6-2 Chicago 0-1 Kansas City 5-3 Detroit 39 International League Minnesota 3-5 Cleveland 4-7 hs Los Angeles 1 Washington y Charleston (have enough oomph on the| Probable Pitchers Today [rol ods | straightaways. Kansas City (Nuxhall 2.1) at | Jersey hy Brabham said afterward he Detroit (Lary 7-2) (N) B . id er thought more powerful Euro-! Minnesota (Kaat 1-4) at Cleve- pt! 12 0 d pean cars, such as the new|land (Perry 24) (N) To. mon | V-6 Ferraris, could win the 500) Baltimore , (Estrada 2-3) at §2ronio Ru Hi |--and probably would next year. |Chicago (Baumann 2-4 or Kem. >Yracuse has {But the American Offenhausers merer 0-2) (N) | still were kings of the speedway New York (Sheldon 0-2) at for the 15th straight year. Boston (Brewer 3-2) (N) S---------- - Los Angeles (Moeller 0-4) at Washington (Sturdivant 2-3) (N) National League W LL Pct. GBL 2516 .610 2516 610 27 18 600 2018 .526 1919 500 41% 1821 462 6 1426 350 10% | 1226 .316 1114 | 29 15 26 17 2519 2217 222 18 20 19 24 17 22 Probable Pitchers Today St. Los 2514 | AY . 1816 . 1917 . 1818 | 1920 . 1521 Tuesday's Results Buffalo 2-7 Syracuse 6-10 Charleston 5-1 Jersey City 3-3 Toronto 5-0 Rochester 1-7 Richmond 1-1 Columbus 3-2 Games Today Toronto at Rochester (N) Buffalo at Syracuse (N) Charleston at J. City (N) Richmond at Col. (N) American Association Tuesday's Results Dallas-F. W. 3 Omaha 3 Houston 2-3 Denver 5-7 Indianapolis 2 Louisville 3 Canada Tennis Championships On Sept. 11-17 MONTREAL (CP) -- The Ca- Philadelphia Cincinnati San Francisco Los Angeles Pittsburgh Milwaukee St. Louis Chicago --- 34 nadian Tenniss Championships -- two on, beat Paul Foytack (2-3)(of trying to muscle in on the in a five-run third inning. contract of former welterweight A pinch single by Don Dillard[champion Don Jordan, by broke a tie and won the first|threatening physical harm to| |game for the Indians against|Nis manager, Don Nesseth, and| [Camilo Pascual (4-5), Wynn|to Hollywood fight promoter Hawkins and winning reliever|J2ck Leonard. 2 | The defendants are: Carbo, a/ reputed member of New York's| {Frank Funk (6-3) stopped "Murder, Inc.,"" known as the| [Tile Green's hitting streak 24 Gor i : 3 at games--longest_ in the underworld boxing commis-| sioner, who once served time | majors in two years. In the | nightcap, the. Tribe scored in for manslaughter: Frank { a SPECIALTY Louis (Simmons 12-3) at! {three-run bursts in the first and third innings, with half of the |runs unearned, against Pedro Ramos (3-5). Mudcat Grant (5-0) won it with three innings of two-hit, shutout relief by Barry Latman after Bob Alli- son's homer had triggered a (Blinky) Palermo, a Philadel- phia fight manager and alleg- edly Carbo's front man; Tru-| man Gibson Jr., who headed the] now defunct International Box-| ing Club; and Joe Sica and] Louis Tom Dragna, Los Ange-| les men with police records. five-run sixth for the Twins. Minnesota has lost five in a row and 10 of 11, Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris and Bill Skowron each slugged a pair of homers for the Yan- |kees, tying the major league {record for most players hitting {two or more in a nine-inning {game, Relievers Bill Stafford Hastings Juniors Win Over Mimico MIMICO (CP) -- Hastings| scored six goals in the last pe-| riod to defeat Mimico Moun-| SPECIAL ECONOTREAD ATTENTION SPRITE OWNERS 750 x 14 With Trade In {and Jim Coates blanked the Red |Sox on three hits over the last| six innings, with Stafford (1-2), uic winner, retiring all 12 men| | he faced. Gene Conley (2-4) was| the loser, giving up four| |homers, the fourth by Yogi| | Berra. | The Senators reached .500, for | the first time since their second game of the season, behind the| six-hit pitching of Ed Hobaugh| (3-2). Singles by Jim King and| | Willie Tasby broke a 1.1 tie in the third off loser Ned Garver| |(0-3) as Washington won. | |for Hastings, taineers 13-6 Tuesday night in a| rough-and-ready Ontario junior| lacrosse game here. { Bruce Marlett suffered a head injury and was taken to hos- pital. His condition was not be- lieved serious. Joe Todd scored four goals| Grant Heffernan three and Roger Grant two. The| rest went to Curtis, Paul Can-| non, Ken Ruttan and Dave! Drummond. Julian Kowalski sparked Mim- ico with two goals. Singles went | to Harris Hunter, Dave O'Brien | Len Hopper and Wide Lillie. We can now retread your tires in our famous racing design. Hambly Tire Lid. "Safety Through Quality" 534 RITSON RD, S. RA 8-6221 THURSDAY NIGHT ( AMAZ// © IIT {have been tentatively scheduled {for Sept. 11-17 at the Toronto {Lawn Tennis Club, it was an-| nounced Tuesday. The date was among 97 tourn- (ament dates listed by the Cana- |dian Lawn Tennis Association. Also announced was a Tor- onto competition Aug. 18-19 in {which Canadian and United States seniors--players over 45 |--will compete for the Gordon { Trophy. Major events in the junior-- under-18--category are the Ca- nadian Closed Junior Cham-| pionships Aug. 4-6 and Open| Championships Aug. 7-12, both at Ottawa. The Ontario provincial cham |pionship tournament is slated {for Toronto, Aug. 12-20 A Canadian-U.S. inter - {tional team match is set for July 122-23 at Lake Placid, N.Y. a | ARRANGE NOW FOR AUTOMATIC WEATHER CONTROLLED DELIVERY OF McLAUGHLIN'S FURNACE FUEL OIL ® 10-MONTH BUDGET PLAN NOW AVAILABLE For Full Information Call . . McLAUGHLIN HEATING A Division of McLoughlin Coal and Supplies Ltd. 104 KING ST. W. OSHAWA RA 3-3481 S00. 6 P.M. 9 P.M. ) SPECIAL! "iin OFFER)! (3. FOLaLUE Se HE 595 SN COLES DOES IT AGAIN! This ic Special (for 3 hours only!) regu- JUST LOOK AT THESE FEATURES-- REEL eo A LJ Hi eo H 8- fi Rust and Corrosion Proof Li Gear to | Take Obtainable only from 6 p.m, to 9 p.m. THURS. DAY, 1st June ot OLES SPORTING GOODS OSHAWA larly sold at 13.40 at a price unsurpassed even at COLES! ROD ! e & Solid glass, 2 pric take down o Composition cork handle ® Aluminum Rings LINE e 100 yords 6-Ib test Shakespeare Monofilament nti Reverse Down andle old 200 yards Ib. test Mono lament arge Bail Ratin SHOPPING CENTRE

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