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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jul 1964, p. 10

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i | | 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Priday, July 24, 1964 PHILLIES UP TWO ? Lew Burdett Giants a Beats Almost Alone delphia Phillies took the biggest, and Jim Hart but had little dif- bg THE Chicago edge jants that either|ficulty bringing his record to Lew Burdette from tales contender ty "sunivad in al7-2, It was his sixth victory last month, some|month by staggering to a 13-10)since he was traded to the wondered why in thelvictory over the Braves in 10/Cubs by St. Louis, wanted a 37-year-oldjinnings. The third-place Cincin-lawo ror JOHN pitcher who hart had 3 win-| nati Prasat y thaiieg Hew Johnny Callison hit two hom- mie _beat ap thir baling! York Mets $4.Pituceh Flor fgg and Gene Olive ; y ' jammer . ha At least the ouetime ace ofland Ios Angeles Dodgers|snd Denis Menke connected fot pon iy gm phage oar Teebeier geen pe vase sents mae times in the last j ; jams ai wo innings. night as he a homeleison also tagged Billy O'Deil] In th 0th, winning pitcher run, hay Sag two singles to) for homers as the San Fran-|Jack Baldschun singled and give the a 3-4) cisco starter was bombed for 12\Richie Allen, who had made triumph over Francisco} runs and 11 hits in seven in-two costly errors, beat out an that the Giants two|nings. Manager Alvin Dark ex-| infield hit. games off the National League Pare _ he _" a paso Dour sents vet teas baba ice, in re in hopes of sharpening|two-run double that snapped the P Taevitebiy, a re asked/him up as a replacement for ie i Burdette afterwafds when he|the injured Jack Sanford in his} The Reds beat the Mets with had last collected four hits in a] pitching rotation, the aid of sixth-inning Cy keg game. > Rod Kanehl and Charlie Smith, "In 1921," the pitcher dead- While O'Deli was laboring, sandwiched around bh single by ned i Burdette was breezing. He had hi di. that ted Aes a 120 lead before the Giants|John Edwards, that accounte WwID scored, eventually was tagged|!or the winning run. EN EDGE ; With Burdette's help, Phila- for homers by Orlando Cepeta Bob Bailey and Bill Virdon each collected a homer among their three hits as the Pirates 8 SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' PORTS EDITOR OSHAWA MERCHANTS are at home to Belleville Joyces, in an Eastern Ontario Senior Baseball League game, tonight at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium, scheduled to get under- way at 8:15 p.m. Early this week, these two clubs staged a sizzling diamond tussle in Belle ning out in one of the best games of the season. With Oshawa Tony's playing away-from-hom Stadium As the only scheduled "home'"' attraction and a better- than-usual crowd is expected. x x St. Louis Cards, was dealed to lines yesterday, but not as a pitcher, although he won his game 13-4 over the faltering San Francisco Giants -- but Burdette earned the big type and black ink with his prowess - gs a batter. In winning his seventh win of the season -- sixth with the Cubs -- he smacked a h If he can keep hitting like that, they'll start grooming him for the first base or right field. the Giants, Phillies were able to boost their National League lead to two full games -- most race, since a month ago, Phils won 13-10 over the Braves and had to go 10 innings to do the trick, with the lead see-sawing about four times in the last snapped out of it and nudged whipped the Cards and Dodgers nosed out Houston Coits, also 5-4... AMERICAN LEAGUE fanfare yesterday centred around a Cuban named Bert Campaneris, called up by Kansas City from Birmingham, to replace injured shortstop Wayne Causey. The rookie hit the first ball pitched to him, in Major x BASEBALL NEWS from the Major Leagues yesterday ranked in the sensational class. Lew Burdette, the former Milwaukee Brave ace, who after an unimpressive stint with ville, with the homesters win- e tonight, this game at the x x Chicago Cubs, hit the head- ome, a triple and two singles. Thanks to Burdette "killing" anybody has enjoyed in that four frames. Cincy Redlegs the Mets 5-4 while Pirates League ball, for a homer, then added another one, to help the A's beat the Twins 4-3. Doc Edwards homered in the 11th for the winning run. Other AL action saw White Sox nip Angels 2-1 Orioles ended their slump and scalped the Indians 7-1 while Washington nosed out Yankees 2-1 and Boston nipped Tigers 4-3, x x x x x thumped Mike Cuellar and three successors, Pitts- burgh wound up the three-game series at S&. Louis with 46 hits and 31 runs, The Dodgers trailed 4-2 going into the ninth when Nate Oli- ver's single, a walk and Maury Wills' single produced a run | Willie Davis then beat out an) infield hit, loading the bases,| and Ron Fairly wrapped it up| with a two-out, two-run single. | HEAVY TRAFFIC -- or, how to take out "'the middle man'! Clay Dalrymple of the Phillies isn't given much running room as he gets bumped from both sides in an important ninth - inning rundown play, at Milwaukee County Stadium, yesterday afternoon. Shortstop Denis Menke (left) and second basé- man Frank Bolling (right) of the Braves, converge on Dal- rymple. But two runs scored before Dalrymple was ged by Rolling. Phillies went on to beat the Braves 13-10, in 10 innings. --AP Wirephoto | tag- BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS soccer. skill. | Kingston's hopes of a come-) back were wiped out when} Didanieli's hard shot caught} the far corner of the net, to} make it 4-1 and left - winger Zizzo rounded out the total with} in | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Chicago (Ellsworth 12-10) at the| the worst thing that. happened Lose Game In 10th The way things turned out,,the Bisons a few hours before, stopped Atlanta on five hits Tacoma 2 San Diego 1 lrain Portland at Hawaii ppd, rain {Dallas 14 Salt Lake City 5 Indianapolis at Arkansas ppd, TRACK TO CLOSE poh ge tally, late |to Toronto Maple Leafs Thurs- Second round opponents for|4@¥ night was that they got two Oshawa Italia, have not yet|men on base in the ninth inning been named. |}with only one out. BRIGHT BITS -- "Gay Frisco', owned by Jas. J. Phillips, of Oshawa, won the first race at Greenwood Raceway last night and paid a fine price of $17.80 for a win ticket... JEFF McGRATH, Oshawa,s sole qualifier in the Ontario Am- ateur Golf Championship, was eliminated in the first round yesterday at Weston Golf Club by Ken Thorpe of Toronto, . . YESTERDAY'S eliminations were featured by a flock of Tied 4-4 with Jacksonville a run. | the Chiefs after. the tail - end Crackers hammered five home runs to take the opener at Southpaw Doug Gallagher of rookie Billy Knoch of the Jets turned in stout pitching performances to grab the victories at Colum- bus. Buffalo and race of the LINCOLN, England Lincoln race track, in operation since 1853, will be closed imme- diately, The Lincolnshire Handi- cap, annually the first big horse season, transferred to Doncaster. (AP)-- will be LEADS A'S TO WIN tion. Cuban, ,made an emergency overnight trip to join Kansas City Athletics, who had lost shortstop Wayne Causey in a baseline accident. : Shortly after arriving Thurs- day, Campaneris clouted two homers and a single, driving in three runs, as the Athletics nipped Minnesota Twins 4-3 in 11 innings. The rookie also walked and stole a base while the Twins dropped their eighth consecutive game. As a child in Cuba, Campe- neris trained diligently to be- come a big league ball player. He even threw rocks with both tands to deveop dexterity. In his first time at bat Thursday, Campa- neris slammed Jim Kaat's first pitch over the fence in left. ONE OF SIX | That made him only the sixth player in major league history Berto. Campaneris had a rocky childhood, but his Amer- ican League debut went more smoothly than a Russian elec- ; _'jto hit two homers in his first Campaneris, a 21 - year - old major league|3-3 after Harmon Killebrew's Rookie Is Sensation In Big League De to hit a home run on the first to him, f In the seventh inning he hit another, Kaat pitch over the same fence and became only the second in modern history game, y Bob Nieman did it with the old St. Louis Browns in 1951. One of the other five players to hit a first-pitch homer wa: Hoyt Wilhelm, now of Chicago White Sox. The veteran pitcher got a key single Thursday in Chicago's 2-1 victory over Los Angeles Angels in another I1- inning contest. : Elsewhere in the AL, Wash- ington Senators edged New York Yankees 2-1, Baltimore Orioles trounced Cleveland In- dians 7-1 and Boston Red Sox trimmed Detroit Tigers 4-3. Campaneris' second homer, |with a man on, tied the game | 34th homer with two aboard gave the Twins a 3-1 lead in the sixth inning. Doc Edwards |won it for the Athletics with a BROKE STRING The White Sox broke Dean fag strigg of 97 taniaga wilh ¢ ig string with a run in the first but had to wait 10 xs innings for the tri- umph. A double by' Felix Torres and Bobby Knoop's tied the game in the Angels' Then in the 11th, Mike berger walked, went to second on Wilhelm's single and scored on Tom McCraw's sing!e. The Yankees held a 10 Ie: until the eighth when pinch-hit ter Jim King lashed a bas loaded single, driving in two runs, 2 The Orioles moved within five percentage points of the first- place Yankees as Robin Rob- erts pitched a five-hitter for his eighth victory against four de- feats. Sam Bowens drove in four runs with a two-run single in the first inning and a two-run homer in the third while Dick Brown smashed solo homers in the sixth and in the eighth. Boston edged Detroit on Felix Mantilla's sixt - inning home run. Bullpen ace Dick Radatz preserved Dave Morehead's |homer off Gerry Arrigo in the l1ith, sixth victory in 16 decisions. Eastern Pro Clubs Get Million Dollars For Their TV Rights The television contract for the current season, worth $401,000, is shared by the CBC and prt- vate CTV networks. But now they'll deal with the ad agency for the privilege of telecasting eastern football. Jean - Paul Champagne, a partner in the agency, ex- plained the firm's plans for the TV rights: "First, it goes without saying, they are for sale," he said. "Second, we plan to improve the quality of the football image on television, We do not say it is bad now, but we feel im- provement can be made ang we are going to try and do it." ARE MAIN CONCERN Technical improvements are s | Minnesota (Grant 7-6) at Chi- Oshawa Italia National League lagen ga' 1-9) 7 cago (Pizzaro 13-4) night | W L Pet. GBL| Pittsburgh (Friend 8-9) at) Boston (Heffner 5-3) at Cleve- CP)--The East- Ousts Kin ston Philadelphia 55 37 .598-- |Cincinnati (O'Toole 10-4) night|/1and (Tiant 1-0) hight enn Fesibenl" Coakerencs has g San Francisco 55 41 .573 2 American League Los Angeles (D. Lee 5-1) at/sold television rights to its 1965- . Cincinnati 52 43 347 4% W L Pct. GBL|Eansas City (O'Donoghue 6-4)'66 games to an advertising In Ontario Cup Stemi i New York 55 35 .611 -- (night agency for $1,000,000. - : ; ; Baltimore 57 37 606 -- | Washingt e | "It's the most money we've Oshawa Italia scored an im-|Chicago 5 8'4\Chicago 56 37 .602 _%4|/Rudolph 1a), eae iS an lever received for our television pressive 5-1 victory over King-|St. Louis 505 9 |Los Angeles 50 49 .505 94|ker 10-2) and (Vineyard 0-1)\rights," EFC president Barty ston Dunbrik, in the first round|Los Angeles 47 47 .500 9 'Minnesota 47 48 495 10%|twi-night O'Brien told a press conference of the Ontario Cup soccer play-|Houston 43 54 443 1414|netroit 47 48 .495 10% Thursday. "It's a great step for- offs, at Kingston's Megaffin|New York 29 67 .302 28 |Boston 47 50 .485 11% International League ward in the history of the oe es agen gi cgi ume o Results Cleveland 42 51 .451 14% W L Pet. GBLi game." Angelo Bressan and M ario/Philadelphia 13 Milwaukee 10 (Kansas City 37 58 .389 20%) Jacksonvi -- | O'Brien said the agency also |Zizzo each scored twice for|Chicago 13 San Francisco 4 Washington 37 62 .374 22% ca Cc 4 oa 3 |will have an option Ps the Grey Cohan, ae And oe pee. Pittsburgh 8 St. Louis 5 Thursday's Results Buffalo 51 43 .543 614|Cup games for the two seasons. att Wale tay setualdce fac Poet Washington 2 New York 1 + [Rochester 51. 43.543 614|. The record price, paid by the goal. Bill Witjes' tally saved|New York 4 Cincinnati 5 Cleveland 1 Baltimore 7 Toronto 49 47 .510 9%4|Montreal firm of Bouchard, the Kingston eleven from a shut- Probable Pitchers Today lLos Angeles 1 Chicago 2 Richmond 44 50 .468 1314|Champagne, Pelletier Limitee, Oi bal" aad ean et banat & pone 'Columbus 39-56 .411 19 |means a healthy increase in Bressan, inside forward, beatiadelphia (Short $5) night | | \xanses City 4 Minnesota Atlanta 34 65 .343 26 |revenue for the four EFC goalie Lendrun Bennett clean-| San Francisco (Marichal 13-5)) ¥ teams. Each club will receive ly, twice, to give Oshawa a 2-0\at Los Angeles (Moeller 5-8) Probable Pitchers Today | Thursday's Results apr $25,000 a season for the lead at the end of the first/night | New-York (Ford 12-3 and Shel-|Rochester at Richmond ppd, A hts : half. Zizzo's first counter made! Milwaukee (Fischer 7-5) at/don 3-1) at Detroit (Aguirre 2-5|wet grounds phe " it 3-0, 15 minutes after play|New York (Fisher 6-9) night land Lolich 9-6) twi-night |Syracuse 2-3 Columbus 0-4 had been resumed. | - ------------| Atlanta 6-1 Buffalo 2-4 ona eg vl en acare,| ' |Jacksonville 7 Toronto 4 Don Drys when Witjes heade e ball) ; into the net, on a fine piece of| Leafs Miss In Oth latte hoki Danny Cater Hurt | NEW YORK (AP) -- Right hander Don Drysdale of Los An- geles Dodgers received the news Thursday on his 28th birth- day that his right thump is frac- tured, which will keep him idle for about 10 days. It was one of five serious injuries that sidelined key personnel: in the major leagues. Philadelphia Phillies lost .300- hitting Danny Cater for at east dale And the chief concern, he said, and "also we want to give a better football package to the sponsor because, after all, they pay the tab." A better package meant, among other things, a better quality half-time show. The, contract, agreed'on after near - secret meetings, was signed July 17 in Ottawa by O'Brien, Ottawa president, Jake Gaudaur of Hamilton, Lew Hay- man of Toronto, Montreal's Ted Workman and Sam Berger, league trustee. O'Brien, whose low - budget team will stand more solidly in the black, was an elated spokes- man for the league. "By selling our rights to an advertising agency," he said, "we are doing what the Na- tional Football League in the United States has been doing for years, and which has been very successful for them." rates. X-rays showed calcifica- tion of his right shoulder joint. Caysey, hitting .200, hurt his left elbow in a collision . with} first-baseman Bob Allison of) Minnesota Twins. | CAVE DWELLERS Animals that live in caves| and never venture out are} called troglodytes; most are) blind and colorless. | Closed circuit television, rights were retained by the teams. The agency hopes, however, to acquire radio rights as well. SERVICE STATION AVAILABLE EXCELLENT opportunity for right. man. gallonage, god locotion. All Replies Confidential WRITE BOX 43 Oshawa Times six weeks and possibly the rest CALENDAR | So Marshall Bridges, who had |been mowing down the Suns for \three innings, was replaced in surprises as many of the higher-rated contestants were elim- inated, including several former holders of the Ontario title, | including London's Jack Nash, who won it three times; son sent two successive pinch TODAY'S GAMES |the 10th by. John. Anderson. MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS |And the roof fell in on him. the Morland brothers of North Bay, Dave, who won the title | in 1960 and Bill, who won it last year. Ernie Bentley, Weston's club champion, ousted Paul Williams, the Burlington college student who shattered the course in the qualifying round on Wednesday . . . ST. CATHARINES Rowing Club is making a runaway race of the Royal Canadian Henley Regatta and following yesterday's events, had piled up more than three times as many points as their next nearest rival, the Buffalo West Sides. . . . EASTERN CANADA'S four professional football clubs have sold their television rights to a Montreal firm for a cool one million bucks. That's a lot of frog-skins for a bunch of guys in mole-skins, playing around with pig- skin, to collect, yes ? A & W. Drive-In Blanks Brooklin | Oshawa A and W Drive-In scored a 7-0 shutout over Brooklin Concretes, last night in Brooklin, when the two clubs cleaned up a regular schedule game that had been rained out earlier this month, Brooklin ran into Reg. White on a "hot night" -- both' the weather and White were more than merely warm -- with the A and W hurler pitching no-hit, no-run ball for the first seven innings and giving up only three hits all together. Brooklin loaded the bases in the second stanza and V. Fer- guson drew a walk, D. Mitchell was safe on an error at first base and then with two out, B. Petch walked, to load the sacks, but White struck out Bruce Campbell, to end that threat. J. Hill's single through short- stop, in the eighth inning, was Brooklin's first hit. In the 9th, the Mitchell brothers, Don and Bruce, each drilled one through the centre of the infield, but White tightened up to protect his shutout. The second inning was the big} one for A and W, when they| struck for six runs on six hits. | Ron Simcoe beat -out an infield) grounder to start it off, then Palmer Knight and Mapes each hit safely. Bill| Kornylo grounded but the throw to the plate was late. With one out, White singled, Ralph! O'Reilly doubled and Bob Keen-) an singled, to complete the six-| run splurge. Ron Jones replaced Campbell) as Brooklin's pitcher in the third] inning and although hit hard, for three safeties in that inning,) he got out of it without allowing | a run, The winners got their|borough vs Brooklin, at Brook- seventh and. final tally in the/lin 8:45 p.m. fifth, on back-to-back singles by| Kornylo and Doug Cole, follow-| ed by an infield bobble and Joe} Piontek's single, with two out. | A and W hit better than in| most games this season, having} a total of 15 safeties and every| member of the team had at; least one hit, with Doug Cole| leading the way, having three-| for-five. O'Reilly, Simcoe, | Knight and Kornylo each had a pair, OSHAWA A and W--O'Reilly, 2b; Keenan, rf; Piontek, cf; Simcoe, 3b; Knight, c; Mapes, If; Kornylo, 1b; Cole, s3; White, | Pp. | BROOKLIN -- D. Ferguson,| 1b; Hill, ss; Warner, if: Till,| 2; Ferguson, 3b; D,! Mitchell, cf; Cornish, rf; Petch, ¢; Campbell, p; R. Jones, » in Lloyd|3rd; M. Jones, cin 4th; Simp-|eral entries rated as good bets son, rf in Ist; B. Mitchell, bat-| ted in 9th. hitters against the International League leaders but couldn't get SOFTBALL Toronto Beaches Major Fast- ball League -- Oshawa Tony's at New Toronto, 8.15 p.m. BASEBALL Eastern. Ontario al Stadium, 8.15 p.m. Leaside Junior League Park, 7.30 p.m. Eastern Ontario Midget League -- Peterborough at Orono, 6.30 p.m. | LACROSSE OLA-Junior- League--Oshawa Athletics, at St. Catharines, 8.30 p.m. } SATURDAY'S GAMES | BASEBALL Leaside Junior League -- Laurie's Sports vs Oshawa Le- gionnaires, at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium, 2 p.m. Eastern Ontario PeeWee League -- Port Hope vs Osh- awa, at Alexandra Park, 2 p.m.! | By THE CANADIAN PRESS When it was all over, the} Williams, Chi 368 64 127 .345 of the season, pitchers Chuck Estrada of Baltimore Orioles and Ray Washburn of St. Louis Cardinals were placed on the disabled list and Kansas City Athletics lost shortstop Wayne |defeat in 10. decisions. In other league games, At-|ajlison. Minn. Senior|lanta Crackers split with Buf-|p Robinson, Balt 352 44 112 . |League -- Belleville vs Osh-|falo Bisons, winning 6-2 and los-| Fregosi, 1. Ang. 284 53 89 .313 |awa, at Kinsmen Civic Memo-|ing 4-1, Ol 7 jedged Syracuse Chiefs 4-3 after| J -- being blanked 2-0 in the opener. |i on 82: jOshawa Legionnaires vs Rich-| Rochester Red Wings and Rich-|,,' ' jardson's Sports, at Talbot!mond Virginians were rained Suns had a 7-4 victory and An-| derson went down to his ninth) Oliva, Minnesota 400 71 133 . Mantle, N. York 257 49 8. and Columbus Jets) out, GETS TRIPLE Anderson's troubles began, when former Leaf Neil Chris-| ley led off the 10th' with a long|ton, and Versalles, Minnesota, triple and scampered home on|8 |Green Gaels ys St. Catharines|g single by a Cox. Relief | pitcher Barney Schultz even-| tually singled Cox home and the} third run counted on a Danes: loadeq error by second-base- man Bob Sadowski. Back-to-back homers by Don} Dillard and George Kopacz of) the Leafs in the sevent hinning! had set up the extra-inning sit-| ation. Bunky Warren, who joined|Clemente, Pitts. American League ABR H Pet. Runs--Oliva, 71; Allison, 64. Runs Batted In--Stuart, Bos Killebrew, Minnesota Hits--Oliva, 133; B. Robin 'son, 112. | Doubles -- Bressoud, Boston, 25; Oliva, 24. Triples -- Yastrzemski Bos Home Runs -- Killebrew, 34 Powell, Baltimore, 26. Stolen Bases---Aparicio, Balti- more, 35; Weis, Chicago, 16. Pitching--Bunker, -800. Strikeouts -- Radatz, Boston, 122; Pascual, Minnesota, 116. National League AB RH Pet. 59 58 125 .348 Mays, San Fran. 348 76 113 .325 Causey for 10 days. 318 Aaron, Mil. adelphia, 69. Hits. --_ Williz : : i dante 124, a his left wrist Wednesday night " Doubles--Clemene, 25: wil-|in a collision with Joe Torre of 'liams, 24, |9; Santo, 8. liams, 24. Eastern Ontario Tyke League -- Welcome vs Oshawa, at Alex- andra Park, 2 p.m. LACROSSE OLA Senior League -- Peter- LAWN BOWLING Mixed Trebles Tournament (McBride Memorial Trophy), at! Whitby Lawn Bowling Club, 1 p.m, Men's Doubles Tournament (Lawn Boy Trophy), at Peter-| borough Lawn Bowling Club, 9 Age-Limit Groups | Track-Field Meet SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. (CP)) About 260 athletes from five! provinces are expected to be on| hand today for the Eastern Ca-| nadian age-class track and field! championships. Athletes from Ontario form! the largest contingent with sev- SWIM MUNICIPA REGISTRATIO (payable at to break Canadian midget, ju- venile and junior records. MING INSTRUCTION Openings are still available for swimming instruc- tion in all levels during the August series and late registrations will be accepted at the Somerset and Municipal pools on the folloying schedule: L POOL - Tuesday, July 28th - 9-12 A.M. SOMERSET POOL Wednesday, July 29th - 9-12 A.M. . N FEE $1.50 registration). .|Santo, Chicago 333 327 334 64 107. .320 346 59 112 .324 369 61 117 .317 Runs Batted In--Santo, Boyer, St. Louis, and Mays 67. Drysdale, Los Angeles, 151, Batimore, | etter |10-2, .833; Ford, New York, 12-8, | BAD BOY perinitety SELLS FOR LESS! FREEZERS-21 CU. FT. Runs--Mays, 76; Allen, Phil- 69; -| Triples -- Pinson, Cincinnati, Home Runs--Mays, 29; Wil- -| Stolen Bases--Wills, Los An- geles, 31; Brock, St. Louis, 21. | Pitching -- Koufax Los An- ;|geles' 15-4 .789; Bruce Hous-|trada has pitched only 52 in- jton 11-4, .733, nings for a 3-1 record. Strikeouts -- Koufax, 168;| Washburn complained of pain Drysdale suffered the harline fracture while shagging flies Wednesday. night before the game against Houston. Six weeks is the estimate of inactivity for Cater, who broke Milwaukee Braves at first base. Estrada, a 26-year-old right hander who won 18 games in 1960 and 15 in 1961, underwent an operation last year to re- move a bone spur and calcium deposits from his elbow, The arm has not responded and Es- while pitching against the Pi- 5 Year Guarantee made by Beatty. Free food plan. Free delivery. PRICED FROM value DEHUMIDIFIERS-G.E. Built-in filter, 1/5 horse power, 19,000 cu. ft. capacity, swift operation, 5 year gaurantee, automatic shut-off. Reg. 159. With trade 199.8 | WE ARE OPEN EVERY NIGHT weonespay 2 Mls FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Everybody Knows the Place--Bad Boy--King St. E. 728-4658-4659 2-DOOR REFRIGERATORS By Beatty, full cutomatic defrost, sep- arate zone freezer. 5 year guarantee. 'Al 6 SINGLE VISION COMPLETE WITH FRAM @ FOR MEN @ BUY DIRECT FROM THE @ FIRST QUALITY LENSES... 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