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Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Sep 1966, p. 30

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Day Supplies Punch, Argos Finally Taylor--and handed off to Bob Swift for the fourth. Dave Thelan scored the other Toronto touchdown, while John Vilunas converted four of the five touchdowns. SCORE FOR EDM pethidine co ee dell scored Edmonton touch- downs. Tommy-Joe Coffey con- verted both, The Rough Riders, victims of a 16-10 defeat at the hands of the Ticats last week, had scored only 74 points in their first five games compared to Hamilton's 86 points. But Ottawa carried the ball 100 yards farther than Hamil- ton in recording 239 yards rush ing Saturday and struck for 155 yards in the air, while holding the Ticats to 82. Whit Tucker, Jim Dillard and Rick Black scored the Ottawa touchdowns, while Moe Racine By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Argonauts and Ot- tawa Rough Riders of the East- ern Football Conference finally found hitherto elusive scoring _fayohee and played the role of spoilers in weekend football ac- tion, The Argonauts snappeda five-game losing streak Sunday, defeating Edmonton 34-14 in a Canadian Football League game that kept' the Eskimos from ining a first-place tie in the estern Conference. Meanwhile, the Rough Riders walloped Hamilton 27-16 Satur- day to break a first-place tie in the EFC with the Tiger-Cats. The Arhonauts, who had cored only 32 points and only three touchdowns in their five previous starts of the season, broke loose behind veteran quarterback Eagle Day. They outrushed the Eskimos 237 yards to 176 and piled up 214 yards in the alr to Edmonton's 58. . Day, released by Calgary Stampeders of the WFC last week, was the key to the Tor- onto attack, throwing three touchdown passes--a pair to Al} Irwin and another to Bobby! Friday, Thornton's Fall Costly, Riders Grab League Lead ONTON two field goals, Hamilton's touchdowns were scored by Willie Bethea and Dick Cohee, Don Sutherin kicked the converts and added two singles. Day, who signed with Toronto came into the game converted all three and added} Win late in the first quarter and left in the fourth with the Argos leading 27-0, Rookie Wally Gab- ler took over, handing off to Thelen for the final Toronto touchdown, ESKIMOS STRIKE BACK Gabler's effort boosted score to 34-0, but the Eskimos struck for two touchdowns late in the game, The Toronto defensive unit had been superb earlier in kill- ing three Edmonton scoring threats. Marv Luster _ inter- cepted a pass in the end zone, Jim Rountree recovered a fum- ble on the Toronto two yard line and the Eskimos were thrown for two losses after they reached the Toronto 12. Toronto also intercepted five of Randy Kerbow's passes, had 24 first downs to Edmonton's 15, and completed 13 of 23 passes. Edmonton had 11 completions in 23 attempts, The Rough Riders won the hard way, trailing 16-10 in the third quarter, Black scored the first touchdown on a 22-yard screen pass from Russ Jackson. Tucker caught a 33-yard toss from Jackson for the second and Dillard, who alternated at fullback with Black, ran wide to score from one yard out. Cohee scored the first Ham- ilton 'touchdown, going over from the four-yard line, and Bethea scored the other on a 38-yard -pass from quarterback Frank Cosentino. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Dick Thornton fell down on the job, Eagle Day impressed a new boss and Peter Liske, who got Day's old job, couldn't produce a touchdown, Those were the highlights of a weekend in which all five Western Football Conference clubs saw action. Thornton, defensive halfback for Winnipeg Blue Bombers, was supposed to cover Hugh Campbell, flanker for Sas- katchewan Roughriders. But he fell down--before @ sellout Winnipeg crowd of 21,655 and Campbell caught a touch- down pass with 64 seconds left to play for a 27-24 victory that moved Riders into first place. For Campbell, it was the sec- ond touchdown reception of the Gunday game and 12th in eight outings against Bombers. He has 13 so far this season, three shy of the Canadian Football League record set by Winni- begs Ernie Pitts in 1959. agle Day, discarded by Cal- Stampeders, turned up in Black was the leading ground gainer with 84 yards, while halfback Bo Scott added 49 and Dillard got 44 yards, Bethea ran 57 yards for the Ticats and Co- hee added 53, Jackson had three passes in- tercepted and completed only eight of 17 attempts. Hamilton was held to seven completions on 16 attempts. Cooper, back at his flanker} position after missing one game due to injury, threw a key block in Dave Raimey's 100-yard side- line dash for Winnipeg's first touchdown, Then he set up Thornton's score by catching Kenny Ploen passes for 50 and 12 yards, He also snared a 28- yard touchdown throw to put Bombers ahead 24-20 with two minutes and 39 seconds remain-' ing. RALLIES CLUB iL k h By Ron Lancaster brought) a es ore is club right back. . nae ~~ 45 yards to Alan Ties Hamilton 'ord, o plays later Lancas-; ter escaped a Winnipeg rush.| By THE CANADIAN PRESS As he scurried, Thornton fell) Lakeshore Bears gained a tie and Campbell stumbled but he/for first place with Hamilton regained his balance to make | Hurricanes by defeating Ham- the big catch, ilton 36-26 in the Ontario Junior Jack Abendschan provided| Football Conference Saturday. the rest of Riders' scoring) Qakville Colts moved into punch, kicking three field goals,| second place with a 22-19 vic- two converts and a a safety touch produced other points. Norm Winton kicked three converts and a field goal for Bombers, whose total offence of 383 yards was 69 more than/ Saskatchewan's. | Bombers lost Farrel] Funston, | who caught two passes for 31) seen monton # sharéjyards; in the late stages of the| or place but 10 points|second quarter. He apparently from nine games was good for pl a knee injury which} .. two points ahead|had kept him on the bench for) of Winnipeg. jthe club's three previous! ian - nm or games. | + caller who step into , | Day's boots in Calgary, had his USED GROUND ATTACK problems in Vancouver Satur-| A first - half ground attac day night. He had four of his|spearheaded by Larry Eilmes passes intercepted as British|and Bill Munsey provided the| 8 Toronto Argonauts uniform Sunday. He threw three touch- down passes as Argos collected their first win of the season, 94-14 over Edmonton Eskimos, LOST FIRST PLACE «| |scored In Toronto, Norm Luckey, ithe Lakeshore quarterback, jhelped lead his team to victory las he threw two touchdown Ipasses to Dennis Van Fleet. Ray Lancaster, Harold Martin and Jim Dimitroff scored three other touchdowns, Rob Ameli passed to Jona Iwasikiw for another. John Horton caught two) touchdown passes for Hamil- ton. Dan Zember and Rick Stacey also scored majors. Bill Rothe kicked two converts. In Oakville, Ken Clark, Bill Spurgeon and Doug Thomson Oakville's touchdowns, A convert by Stan Saltzman, a single by Clark and a safety touch rounded out the Colts' single. |tory over Sarnia Lakers in Oak- Ford's 74-yard punt single and| vite Saturday night. P the On Extra - Hole Playoff I the 16th hole set the stage for a dramatic three - with Jack Nicklaus and Al Gei- berger, dropped a 22-foot birdie putt in a sudden - death play- off Sunday that won the World| was of $50,000, ger missed an 11 footer. and Littler in the playoff when he whipped in a 16-foot birdie one from Ken Perkins of Eumonton Eskimos during their Canadian Football Léague game at Toronto POW! -- Quarterback Eagle Day (19), newcomer to Toronto Argonauts, ap- pears to be taking a stiff Littler Captures Tourney AKRON, jttler, whose two over par on Ohio (AP) -- Gene| But it was a big blowup at) |No. 16 where Littler took two) lover par after shaking like a duffer to enable Nicklaus to climb into a tie with a birdie. | Geiberger and Nicklaus were) two behind and Billy Casper | four shots away. | way playoff |BLEW CHANCE After Littler and Nicklaus) blew their, chances for victory in 18 holes and Casper failed to nall a birdie that would have) pained him a playoff berth, | \Geiberger knocked 16-| | footer that set the stage for the | dramatic three-way playoff. | Bet etree Chest an leitttacs een tne an a | STANDARDS OF PRACTICE | IN ADVERTISING | The Oshawa Times never knowingly publishes misleading, fraudulent or bait advertising. All advertisements are accepted for publica- Series of Golf and its top prize Littler, whose victory in the | 1965 Canadian Open got him a in 'the tournament, first playoff hole before Geiber- Geiberger joined Nicklaus putt on No, 18. THE OSHAWA. TIMES; Monday, September 12, 1946 7 George Blanda led the Oilers, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lee Roy Caffey plays line- backer for Green Bay Packers and hide and seek against Bal- timore Colts, Caffey swiped a second quar- ter pass and rambled 52 yards for the touchdown that triggered the Packers' 24-3 victory over Hl | the Colts Saturday night. Sunday, Day sparked Argos to a 34-14 win over Edmon- ton, (CP Wirephoto) with 70s and Geiberger and Littler at 71, Littler had a final round of 35-37--72, Nicklaus at 37-36--73 and Geiberger a 36-36--72 for 143 totals, Casper shot 38-36--74 for 144. Nicklaus and Geiberger shared second and third money, with each getting $11,250, Cas- per earned $5,000. Tournament officials had to dig deep to get Littler a berth in the World Series, ordinarily limited to the winners of the big tournaments. The National roowali Veague opener matched the opponents in last season's Western Confer- ence playoff and the Packers, who squeezed through last De- cember with quarterback Johnny Unitas sidelined, won easily this time, They did it by embarrassing Baltimore's peerless quarter- back, with three interceptions, two of them providing touch- downs in the final moments of the first half, "T guess Caffey was hiding behind someone," said Unitas, In Sunday's other NFL openers, Cleveland Browns ripped Washington Redskins 38- 14, Los Angeles Rams spoiled Atlanta Falcons' debut 19-14, Detroit Lions upset Chicago Bears 14-3, St. Louis Cardinals outlasted Philadelphia Eagles 16-13, Minnesota Vikings. rallied to tie San Francisco '49ers 20-20 and New York Giants and Pitts- burgh Steelers battled to a 34-34 \deadlock. Caffey In Hero's Role As Packers Trim Colts completing 17 of 34 passes a soven-yard.rus with fi and Don Trull on a@ s over the Eagles, Bakken con- nected from ards out min- utes after Sam r's second field goal tied the game for Philadelphia. needed a 4i-yard run, The Chargers int Parilli Pittsburgh field goal by Mike Clark with less than three minhtes to play to tie the Giants, who had oth wiped out a 31-17 Steeler lead in the fourth quarter, Clark's 36-yard attempt in the iast nau minute of play fell short. Fred Cox' 31-yard field goal gave the Vikings their tle} against San Francisco as the '49ers lost a 20-7 halftime lead. Bert Coan put on the best per- formance of his five-year ca- reer Sunday as he ripped off 101 yards rushing in 11 carries and scored two touchdowns in the Chiefs' 42-20 victory over the Bills, O10 WORLD TRADITION SWIMS TO RECORD BLACKPOOL, England (AP) Bobby McGregor of Scotland bettered a pending world record by swimming the 110-yard free- style event in 53.5 Saturday night at the British national meet, Zac Zorn of the United States clocked at 53.6 in Van-! couver Aug. 25. | In the American League, Kan-| sas City Chiefs whipped Buffalo Bills 42-20 Sunday. Saturday night Houston Oilers blanked Oakland Riaders 31-0 and San Diego Chargers shut out Boston Patriots 24-0, Friday New York Jets defeated Miami Dolphins 19-14. Frank Ryan pulled the Browns together with three touchdown passes and Cleveland turned three interceptions and a recovered fumble into touch- downs for the victory over Washington. | Bruce Gossett kicked four' field goals for Los Angeles and} the Rams held on to beat) \fledgling Atlanta. Detroit, winless in five ex- hibitions, stunned Chicago, scor- ing both its touchdowns in the second period. Tom Nowatzke wiped out a 3-0 Bear lead with a six-yard run and then Milt Plum hit Pat Studstill on a 25- yard pass for another score. Jim Bakken's third field goal of the game, with five seconds remaining, lifted the Cardinals with the flattering, ASSES ONE LOW PRICE | ALL GLASSES ONE 65 STYLES, SHAPES AND COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM SINGLE VISION BIFOCALS $12 85 $1995 A paratroop soldier was training for CS a Stntle LOY YOU ©. thet big first jump ond asked his inst tructor thet BIG question: "What happens, sir, if my parachute fails to open?" "Around here soldier," replied the in- structor, "we eall thet jumping te « conclusion," @ Roxy Veriety, Rosslynn Plexe STORES: @ 92 WOLFE @ 170% MARY S&T. @ 12 BOND E. @ 924 SIMCOE N, AGENTS: @ United Texi, 143 King St, Hest COMPLETE WITH FRAME, LENSES AND CASE PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES AT SAME LOW PRICE @ FOR MEN @ FOR WOMEN @ FOR CHILDREN @ BUY DIRECT FROM THE LABORATORY AND SAVE @ BROKEN FRAMES REPAIRED: OR REPLACED WHILE YOU WAIT We fill olf P.8,1., Oculiete' iptions @t same ovtate & Op low prices, HOURS: 9 A.M. to 5 P.M, Daily CLOSED ALL DAY WED. 17 BOND STREET, EAST tion on the premise that the product, the service, or the offer is properly and honestly described, and is not worded or designed to mislead the readers in any respect. 2nd Floor Phone: 728-1261 Advertising accepted for publication must not contain false or exaggerated claims, or ex- aggerated comparative prices and if any reader encounters anything less than faithful compliance with conditions, as described in any advertisement, we would appreciate know- ing of it, Just write or call L, B. Leith, Ad- vertising Director The Oshawa Times, or the Chamber of Commerce, of which this news- paper is an active member. Eastern Conference WL F APts 5 1101 48 42102 76 3-4 Si HS 1 5 66 109 Conference Pee Ae 2 213 138 4135 148 3 106 101 5 98 103 6 68 123 Advertisers who deliberately violate these standards will not be permitted to use cur adverticina nanee «re The Oshawa Times "ONTARIO COUNTY'S NO. 1 ADVERTISING MEDIUM" = | Ottawa | Hamilton | Montreai | Toronto Western Harman Park at Lake Vist and Storie Park at Southmead; both games at 6.00 p.m.; 2nd games of 2-out-of-3 semi-fiinal rounds. OASA Junior 'A' Playoffs-- 12 |Oshawa Scugog Cleaners vs.) 10 |Scarborough Glass at Blantyre 8 |Park, 8.00 p.m.; Sudden-death 4 |game, to clear up protest and 4 'settle series, 10 8 6 ALL GENERAL MOTORS LAID-OFF WORKERS On Thursday, September 15th, a special meeting along with your regular General Motors unit meeting will be held at Local 222, UAW Hall, 44 Bond Street East, at 3:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. PURPOSE: Government representatives from the Department of Labor, National Employment Service, and Department of Education will be in attendance to advise you of your necessary steps in order to get in the re-training program. 6 5 4 2 2 | Calgary 4 ™ REMINDER TO MOTORISTS IMPORTANT CHANGES IN THE ONTARIO HIGHWAY TRAFFIC ACT Columbia Lions won 14-3 before|difference in Vancouver, Mun-| 27,147 fans to pull alongside Cal-|sey and Eilmes combined for gary in fourth place. |177 yards as Lions pulled ahead | Scoring. | For a good portion of the con-|10-3 in the first 30 minutes. Sarnia touchdowns were test in Winnipeg, marred by| Liske connected with 15 of his|scored by Kevin McLellan, | six fumbles and four intercep-|33 pass attempts for 192 yards|Steven Johnson and Rossano tions, it looked as if Thornton|but couldn't find the. target|Tius. Bill Mathieson kicked the might share the hero's mantle}when it counted and Calgary convert. with teammate Billy Cooper. {had to settle for a 25-yard field reecaaan : Thornton, helped occasionally|goal, by Larry Robinson | PORTS by Ken Danchuk, knocked down| Joe Kapp, Lions quarterback, $ one pass to Campbell, inter-jhad nine completions in 18 at- cepted another and grabbed a\tempts, good for only 72 yards. CALENDAR 16-yard touchdown pass. Dan-| Eilmes got the B.C, touch-| e chuk recovered two fumbles|down, Bill Mitchell kicked two| TONIGHT and made an end-zone inter-jfield goals and a convert and coppRALt ception, 'Neal Beaumont got a single, | ccocgr Civil Service League Play- lofts -- Wood's Transport vs. FOOTBALL SCORES, STANDINGS guatity, Fuels, at _Alexandra| . /Park, 6.30 p.m.; 2nd game of By THE CANADIAN PRESS | 3-out-of-5 championship finals. | SUNDAY Kiwanis Bantam Boys League Canadian League | Saskatchewan 27 Winnipeg 24 Edmonton 14 Toronto 34 Netional League New York 34 Pittsburgh 34 Cleveland 38 Washington 14 Minnesota 20 osan Francisco 20 sack. Los Angeles 19 Atlanta 14 Edmonton Detroit 14 Chicago 3 | Winnipeg St. Louis 16 Philadelphia 13 B.C. American League. 'ansas City 42 Buffalo 20 Continental League Charleston 21 Richmond 10 NORFU Senior | Kirkland Lake 10 North Bay 9 ORFU Senior East York 41 Sarnia 13 St, Catharines 7 London 65 Manitoba-Lakehead Sr. St. Vital 40 Port Arthur 0 Atlantic Conference Dartmouth 0 Dalhousie 62 Sherwater 0 St. Mary's 27 Alberta Junior Edmonton Wildcats 7 Calgary Wranglers 5 : Calgary Colts 2 Edmonton Hus kies 2 STOP BOTH WAYS FOR SCHOOL BUSES When a school bus is stopped and its red lights are flashing, a motorist approaching the school bus from the front or overtaking it from the rear, must stop and must remain peng fy until the red signal lights on the bus are no longer flashing. EFFECTIVE NOW. CLEAR VIEW The windshield and the windows on either side of the front seat must afford a clear view of the roadway and vehicles ahead and to the sides, The rear window must afford a clear view of the roadway and vehicles behind, unless there is an outside rear-view mirror which does afford this clear view. EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1, 1966, UNNECESSARY NOISE A person who drives a motor vehicle and causes it to make an unnecessary noise commits an offence, EFFECTIVE NOW. INTERNATIONAL DRIVING PERMIT Any non-resident of Ontario, who Is the holder of an Internationa! Driving Permit, may operate a vehicle in Ontario, EFFECTIVE NOW, SIGNAL LANE CHANGES When changing lanes, you must signal such change. EFFECTIVE NOW. ' " COMMERCIAL VEHICLE LOADS The gross weight of a trailer, other than a semi or pole trailer shall not exceed 32,000 pounds; and the weight on one axle shall not exceed 18,000 pounds; and if the axles are jess than 8 feet apart, the weight shall not exceed 14,000 pounds. EFFECTIVE NOW, All loads on trucks must be secured, covered or loaded in such a manner that no part of the load may become dislodged. EFFECTIVE NOW. PEDESTRIANS A pedestrian walking along a highway must walk facin; the traffic and as close to the left hand edge of the ent as possible. EFFECTIVE NOW, ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT Hon, Irwin Haskett, Minister SATURDAY PLAN TO ATTEND THIS VERY IMPORTANT MEETING Brooklyn 14 MonNeal 24 ORFU "ABE" TAYLOR PRESIDENT, LOCAL 222, U.A.W. Sarnia 19 Oakville 22 Ontario Jr. Conference Hamilton 26 Lakeshore 36 Man.-Sask, Junior Winnipeg Wildcats 3 Regina 18 Saskatoon 9 Winnipeg Rods 21 Exhibition RMC & University of Calgary 13) U. of Manitoba 39 U. of Sas katchewan 14

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