i Johnny Ryan, third base star of the Syracuse Chiefs, is shown here chatting with Frank McCallum, of this city, between games, at Sunday's doubleheader at Maple Leaf Stadium. An Oshawa boy, Johnny played for the "McCallum Trans- OSHAWA FAN CHATS WITH BASEBALL STAR porters" during his Juvenile and early Junior baseball career here, Frank, who himself came to Oshawa to play baseball, is a director of the Toronto Community Baseball Club, Prior to the first game, Frank Me- Callum, on behalf of an Oshawa contingent of two hundred fans on hand, pre- sented an initialed brief case, to the popular player, only Oshawa homebrew to play in the International League. Photo by Graphic Artists, out was made. Delaney opened Oshawa Gale's Lumber chalk- ed up a 5-1 victory over Peter- borough 'Georgie's", here at Alexandra Park, last night, as the two teams opened their first round of OASA Senior "B" play- ofs, but Gale's margin was not early as impressive as the score might indicate, The game opened at a whirl- sind pace, Brady, first batter in the game, slashed a single through the third-base corner, then Thompson followed with a bunt-hit, Haig also bunt ed, this one for a sacrifice with Brady scoring on the play, That gave Peterborough two of the five hits they. collected off pitcher Reg White -- and their only run, They threatened a couple of times, Fife opening the third with a single and reaching third base, on a sac- rifice by Thompson and Haig's single, just before the third put- the fourth with a walk and got to third base while Haig, who singled to open the sixth, also got around to third, but there was no more scoring for the visitors, INFIELDERS SPARKLE Sparkling infield plays by Ralph Davis, Ralph O'Reilly and Jim Rowden served to re- strain Peterborough's hitting at- tack while both Ray Seabrooke and playing-coach Joe Piontek came up with important catches for the third out, to end the in- ning -- with Peterborough base- runners already across the plate, Haig had two of the visitors' five hits, a sacrifice and a walk, for a perfect night at the plate, Reg White claimed eight strike- outs, Gale's Lumber got all other runs on a pair of key blows, They roared right back in the bottom half of the first inning to take a 21 lead and it all hap- pened after there were two out, Joe Piontek singled off pitcher Jim Fife, so did Jim Rowden and then Red'. McDermaid brought them home with a slashing double through the mid- die of the diamond, with the throw-in being too late to-eatch Rowden and permitting. McDer- maid to go to third, The homesters got their other three runs in the third inning. Ralph O'Reilly opened with a single and Joe Piontek also) clicked. Rowden . grounded, forcing O'Reilly-but McDermaid got an infield single, to load the bases. Palmer Knight's looper, just inside the foul line, back of first base, fell in for a triple, with the three Oshawa base- runners all scampering over the plate. NO WALKS BY FIFE There was no further scoring BOTH DISQUALIFIED Andy Robin, 'the happy Scot", jwould likely have been the pop: jular winner of the main event on last night's wrestling card, at Oshawa Civic Auditorium, be- cause he was certainly mad enough to "moider da bum" and on what he had displayed earlier in the bout, was appar- ently capable of carrying out his intent, 'Scugog Cleaners Win Over Dobby's Oshawa Scugog Cleaners ehalked up an important 7 - 4 victory over Dobby's Sports of -North York, to open the second 'round of OASA Junior "A" play- offs, at North Toronto's Kins- 'men Park, last night. Second game of the 2-out-of-3 series is scheduled for Alexan- "dra Park, this Saturday after- noon, at 4:00 o'clock. | Bob Mason came up with one "of his better mound displays to 'earn this win, as he limited the NYSA champs to only four hits ~and claimed a total of 18 strike- out victims. Mike Hutcheon's homer, with 'two out in the fifth inning, was }the first run given up by Mason. "In the 8th inning, his support 'faltered and following success- 'ive errors at second base, to put two runners on, Garry Marsh caught one of Mason's slants for a solid homer and "three runs, to complete the los- ers' total, Jym Letler was the starting pitcher for Dobby's Sports and stayed-around--until_the _ fifth, when Scugogs bombed him for four hits and a five-run splurge, that concluded their scoring. | FUR SAFE BUT NO RUN Gary Peck took over from . Letler, in the sixth inning and 'REMEMBER WHEN By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada's first 'Powder Puff Derby," a race for women jockeys, drew the largest crowd in years 25 years ago today--in 1940--at Chinook Park, Calgary, The winner was Falermain, rid- den by Mrs, D. K. Yorlath, who thus won a trip to Cali- fornia to represent Canada at the Coronada Town Plate, the' most important North American race for women riders. Claims 'Amateur' Athlete Given Bag Full Of Money in AAU day, Sept, 9, at Oshawa. WASHINGTON (AP) -- Track coach William J. Bill Bower. man of the University of Ore- . gon has told investigating sena- tors that one United States am- ateur athlete secretly received an "airplane bag full" of money to compete in a track meet in Ireland, He did not estimate how much the money totalled Bowerman said "one of our own Oregon athletes' was of- fered an automobile as an in- _ ducement # compete in a meet sponsored by the Amateur Ath: letic Union but turned down the/petition athletes who defy the| Seven series three games to one! with the next contest on Osh- the) Weken's home rink in Hagers- r Ville, Ont., Wednesday » gift. Such payments and gifts are strictly forbidden by amateur ' rules, 2 At the committee's request,icommerce committee is trying|@@vance, to the final against Bowerman gave no names injto determine whether the ca.|Persus. Thistles, aa this or later testimony. But he agreed to give the committee in confidence names, dates and other data. But there was just one big he didn't give up any runs.al- though the Oshawa boys should have scored, They provided one of those baseball mysteries for the book when they had two singles and then a two-bagger, all in succession and followed immediately by a walk -- yet didn't score a run, Actually the solution is simple. Ron Siblock singled, with one out but was thrown out, trying to stretch his hit into a double, Tony Zarowny followed with a} single and then Al Tilk doubled, Paul Gibbens was walked to fill the bases and then Peck struck out Norris, to end the inning, without a run, | Tilk had a triple, double,| single and walk in six trips to) the plate, to lead Oshawa"s 12.) hit attack, Ron Siblock also had) three hits, all singles, in five chances, Tilk's triple opened the ball game and then with two out, K.C. SHORTSTOP PLAYS 9 SPOTS KANSAS CITY (AP)-- Campy Campaneris, Kansas City Athletics' shortstop, will play all nine positions--one for each inning--against Los Angeles Angels Sept. 8 in a regular American League game, Campaneris, the league's stolen base leader, was a catcher in Cuba before the Athletics signed him, He was shuttled between left field and shortstop early this season, As a youngster, he pitched both left-handed and right- handed, Said Kansas Charles Finley: "So far as I can find out this has never been done be- fore in the majors, I found an instance of a player playing each position during the sea- son but not all nine positions in one game," Finley said he cleared the idea with Joe Cronin, the American League president, City owner catch -- Andy couldn't find his rival -- Apache Pete vanished into thin air, during the third- fall action and with the villain- ous redskin nowhere to be found and the irate Scot out on the chase, it meant that neither one was in the ropes and referee Pat Flanagan, official for the special main event, had no op- tion -- he counted them both "out"? -- out of the ring, that is and declared the bout a draw, at the 28:25 mark, Andy Robin took the first fall with a blazing opening rush, pinning his rival in just one minute and 28 seconds. Apache Pete took quite a bit longer, 19:28 to be exact, but he equal- ized the bout, Robin was the rugged aggres- sor, in the quest for the third fall, Apache Pete kept escaping! out of the ring, with Robin in hot pursuit each time, Several times, Robin appéared to have his rival "lined up for the kill" but the wily renegade managed to slip out of the hold and then slip right out of the ring, He was outside the ropes more than in- side, during the quest for the |third fall, |DOES A FADEOUT | Robin finally resorted to Bryan Gaskell homered, to make it 2-0- for Scugog Clean- ers, before most of the fans had settled in their seats, BIG-FIFTH_INNING Not much happened after that juntil the fifth inning, when Ron jSiblock opened the rally with jthe: second of his singles Zarowny drew a walk and then) Tilk singled, to score Siblock with a single, Gaskell was safe) jon an error and then, after {Mason grounded out, Dave |Hickey singled, to complete the! by Sweeping the quarter-finalsieree, he pleaded with the fans against St, Catharines 4-0 and/and he pleaded with promoter gs|'Pat" Milosh finally -- in the ifive-run parade. SCUGOG CLEANERS -- Tilk,|{2@ semi-finals against Hastin 3-0. Mimico, kell, 1b; Mason, p; Hickey, rf;|®PPearance in the final in 10/against Apache Pete -- but next gb; | Years, eliminated Toronto Town-|time, Zarowny, ¢; March, 2nd in 8th |ship 3-0 in the semi-finals andlaround the ring, so that Apache DOBBY'S SPORTS -- Smith, noe Branch 4-1 in the quarter-/Pete can not run-and-hide -- ef; id iif; Gibbens, ss; Norris, cf; Gas- 'Pipher, 2b; Siblock, inf; Thompson, Hutcheon, 3b; 1b; Hartley, Marsh, ss; Bloom, ¢; Hammill, If; Punch- tories, one tie and one Joss, is;more pieces of steel bar are ard, 2b; Letler, p; Peck, p in favored to defeat Mimico, which/Smuxgled into the action, finished in second place in the OTHER BOUTS nine-team league. 6th, jathletes to compete meets. The NCAA has been hoy-| jeotting AAU competition as a jdevice to force agreement to its demands for co-sanctioning |rights for meets in which col- lege and non-college stars com- pete. AAU RECIPROCATES The AAU, on the other hand, reportedly is boycotting meets'Qntario | . Rotherd 21 | age acrosse Association ame 2 Leyton Or 2 jStaged by NCAA's U.S. Track Senior R semi - finals Tuesday DIVISION Tt jand Field Federation, night. ~ Bournemouth 2 Swansea 1 The rival boycotts are backed by threats to bar from com-| orders. Bowerman testified at Start of the second week o hearings in which the Senate Sept. 7, Boxla Dates jopponent, How he did it was a re ange lmystery, but Apache Pete was TORONTO final Monday night Oshawa qualified for the fina making its firs Oshawa, finishing with 18 vie Other dates in the OLA fina are Tuesday, Aug. 31, at Mim.|0atled to a 20-minute draw. in jico; Thursday, Sept. 2, at Osh-| awa; Saturday, Sept. 4, at Mim. |i the second session, "Seaman" ico; and if necessary Monday Sept. 6, at Oshawa, Tuesday,|¢" "The Great", at 15:38. Thurs at Mimico, and Streetsville Tops Oshweken Seniors STREETSVILLE, Ont. (CP)-- x Streetsville defeated Oshweken| Bury 1 Coventry 1 |22-16 to avoid elimination in the| Hudersfield 1 Ipswich 0 Oshweken leads the best-of The winner of the series wil reers of young amateurs may be hurt by the jurisdictional battle, whether it impairs U.S hopes in the SIGN QUARTERBACK PHILADELPHIA (AP)--Phil 1968 Olympic|adelphia Bulldogs of the Con- He made the allegations Mon-|Games, and whether legislation] tinental League Tuesday signed|175, Brooklyn, stopped Jimmy) : (CP) -- Oshawa} |Green Gaels and Mimico Mount- Givbens' eacrifice fty scored les open the Ontario Lacrosse Zarowny and Norris followed Association unior Aug. 30 at Oshawa, A best-of- chasingApache Pete out of the ring and it was on one of these hunting trips that Apache Pete disappeared, Even with the help of fans, Andy couldn't find his finally discovered, skulking in his dressing room, In the meantime, referee Pat Flanagan had declared the bout a draw, counting both competi- tors 'out'? when neither was in- siside the ropes inside the time jolt, Robin pleaded with the ref- tilast instance, for a return bout Andy wants a_ fence and he also wants the "Bad .Injun" searched, so that no In last -night's other action, ;/Tony Manous and Bob Leipler the first preliminary bout and Art Thomas won over Alexan- | SOCCER SCORES LONDON (AP) English League soccer results Tuesday DIVISION I +Rurley 3 Blackpool 1 Nots F 4 Man United 2 DIVISION I Bristol R 3 Shrewsbury 2 Grimsby 3 Brentford 2 | Walsall 1 Workington 1 Watford 1 Hull City 1 DIVISION IV Barnsley 1 Port Vale 0 '| Bradford 1 Rochdale 2 Doncaster 4 Hartlepools @ FIGHTS LAST NIGHT - By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York -- Johnny Persol,| day to bolster his assertion that/is needed to restore the peace }quarterback Sonny Gibbs, for-'Dupree, 174%. New York, 9% the National Collegiate Athletic withhold its sanction for eollege Col AAU officials get their chance| mer Texas Christian ace. Gibbs , Association is justified in de-jto testify today, with NCAA offi.|was recently dropped by De- mos, Cuba + manding the right to give oricials scheduled to foligw Wed-|troit \ | Football League. nesday, « Lions of the Nationa Tijuana, Mexico -- Sugar Ra stopped Raul Sori Ijano, Mexico City, 6. Light: weights. j Nobody Minding The Store So Main Bout Ruled Draw The semi-final bout, a 2-out-of- $ oitalr saw Tony Marino win being sidelined for two months! "|Lebon M, Oshawa Gale'sLumber'Seugog's And iWin First Of Series. ; for Oshawa, in fact, they man- aged only two more hits off Fife, in the last five innings -- and he didn't issue a_ single walk, in his well-pitched game, Fife gave up nine hits and struck out 10 batters, for a very creditable performance, . Osh- awa's bunching of safeties in the first and third frames -- plus the fact they got 'the big hit' in each case, with two out -- gave them their decision, Piontek, Rowden, McDermaid and Knight, all had two hits with O'Reilly picking up the other safety, Second game of this 2-out-of-3 series, is scheduled for Friday night in Peterborough, at 8:15 o'clock, P'BOROUGH GEORGIE'S" -- Brady, cf; Thompson, ss and 1b; Haig, 3b; Rowe, If; Delaney, rf; Amer, 2b; Gurney, ¢; Mar- chen, 1b; Fife, p; Batley, 'batted in 7th; McCue, ss in 7th, OSHAWA GALE'S LUMBER-- Davis, 88; O'Reilly, 2b;, Piontek, cf; Rowden, 3b; MeDermaid, 1b; Knight, c; Seabrooke, If; Hickey, rf; White, p. ullen's Win and Garry Davies, led Scugog mark of the middle stanza. Other goals for the winners were scored by Rick Lack and Joe Krasnan with a pair, and Ian Smelko with one, In the only other Junior: Juvenile contest played, Tom Cullen's got a pair of goals each from Chris Brown and Bob Goulding, and went on to down Joe Bosco's 8-5, Roy Fisher, Larry Corneal, Bill Robinson and John Jonkowski rounded out the scoring for Cullen's, The winners romped to a 4-0 lead after the first period, and held their margin at 7-3 after 20 minutes, French Gelding Wins At Erie FORT ERIE, Ont, (CP) -- L., a french-bred |gelding making a comeback -af- \ter knee and ankle ailments |slowed him down, scored an |impressive victory in the fourth race at Fort Erie Race Track 'Tuesday. | Lebon M, L, was ridden by Jim Fitzsimmons of Calgary, also making a comeback after MEAT package of family | protection, Our high | value, economics Family Protecto: over Mike Valentino, in the cru-|by @ broken ankle, cial fall, at 23:30, "Tiger" Tasker was the ref-|d'Ore 2nd, won by 2% lengths! eree for the first three bouts ofjin the 6% furlong $6,500 claim-| last night's card, with "Pat" jing race, the specialiand King of Flanagan handling main event, The six-year-old son of Cote Second was Winkie Maryland was third, See me today." : ZEN : eer to Pay WARENYCIA ear Guarantee CALL monn nn! ocuawa 1202154] | STATE Pane PAVING Bogen gg COMPANY lee an Mass. (AP)--Lead- the 79 = hole. ca Cleaners to an li-t trouncing elle a" oa nn ae of Gus Brown's Tuesday night,Gary Player $6,850 283 All Cores Carry in a Junior - Juvenile lactosse|naye Marr $5,500 --284 Our GUARANTEE 'World's Golf' Loot Was Shared By 25 Wee Bia Sr hie Mike Souchak $1,430 Mason Rudolph $1,430 Jim Ferree $1,430 ey-winners in\Jack McGowan $1,430 tig $260,000 Near-flawiess goaltending by ' : Gary Lopak, and a~irio of Tons time one saul --79 it goals each by John Johnston! arnoid Palmer $17,000 --281 MyOUR SATIPAETION TA Harold Henning $2,062 - Bruce Devlin §2,062 Bobby Nichols $2,062 Gardner Dickinson $2,062 game played at the Children's}tiomero Blanca: isne game pia 8 $5,500 284 The winners led 3-0 after one wry oo, Le hs se a J Relly D y period of play, 41 after 40 min-ljack Rule Jr, $3,350 --286 Used Cars utes, and they turned on the|jacky Cupit $3,350: --286 bed heat in the final frame to score\charies Sitford $3,250 26 f seven. unanswered goals, Hideyo Sugimoto 7) 062 287 Brown's only goal came from|Ray Fioyd $2,062 --287 G, MacDonald at the 15-minutelRoberto di Vicenzo $2,062 --287 287 --287 287 Ajax, Whitby, Oshawa COMMERCIAL @ INDUSTRIAL DRIVEWAYS AND PARKING AREAS NO DOWN PAYMENT incited come' and have fun.... 1500 cabriolet Ina 706 26- You'd expect a luxury sports car designed by Pinin Farina, incorporating an all-syncromesh five-speed gearbox, disc brakes and a sophisti cated suspension system, to be ex- pensive. 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