ssinscilstth deh tah th. cesaithc daly sie. thcitadiiadihaiina dia ditt idl See ee ee ee ee THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, October 17, 1966 ony a. SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell » Associate Sports Editor a EXPERTS, a term loosely employed in speaking of fans who dare to be either critical or indulge in "Monday-morning quarterbacking," picked Montreal Junior as the team most for top berth in this ig their first weeken at, likely to succeed in the year's OHA Junior 'A' derby. d of activity, it's already hinted that this time 'the experts" may be close to correct. The Junior Habs played three games over the weekend and they captured three points, doing it 'the hard way." MONTREAL'S Junior 'A' team -- by choice -- play a particular rugged form of sch of playing two and often three often wil "on the road" and then back Playing on successive nights edule, They make a practice games over a full weekend-- the first two games, Friday and Saturday nights home for a Sunday game. is extremely demanding of taansve ninvers and coupled with travelling, over-night 8, etc., makes for a gruelling grind from Friday to y. To play this type of back-to-back schedule, requires both class, stamina and condition -- it also requires that valuable commodity termed "bench. strength." THEIR PERFORMANCE over the weekend suggests that the Junior Habs have just en that. coveted top berth. They 'Friday night, to meet a team ough of these assets to grab moved into Niagara Falls on that had a game under their belts and were waiting. Canadiens held the Flyers to a 5-5 tie. Then they moved to Oshawa Civic Auditorium on Satur- day night and grabbed a 3-3 tie decision in their tilt with the Generals. Last night, they tr Peninsula and played anothe Catharines. At this early stag avellied back to the Niagara r 33 tie, this one 'in St, e in the season, it's quite a feat to play three nights in succession, all in other guys' backyards -- and come out of OSHAWA GENERALS salvaged only their two-game stand over it with an undefeated mark. the one point in the weekend. Coach Ted O'Connor was perhaps disappointed here Saturday night bat it was really no cause for Generals were no better than deep regret. On the showing, a tie. Montreal fans (there were a few parents down from Northern Ontario, to cheer for their boys wearing Canadiens' uniforms) insisted that only a couple of soft goals enabled Generals to tie their - boys, It's early yet but on Saturday night's over-all showing, it looked as if we haven't enough players with the talent at their own position as goalie Ian Young; not enough players with "the drive' of hard-working Paul Cadieux and so far, not enough smooth-passing plays on our forward lines to make them truly dangerous. HAD 'A WORD with Harold "Baldy" Cotton, chief scout of the Boston Bruins, after Saturday night's game here, Ex- changing views, we opined that need of the Oshawa Generals right now the greatest seemed to be "a leader." What our club needs, suggested, is one of those red-headed buzz-saws up on a front line, leading the attack, setting the and in short, showing th e way, Cotton's comment -- "Don't forget you had a wizard leader for the last three =» you may have to get along Coach Ted O'Connor has changed his without one this season," reported late this morning that Chris mind about going to McGill University will join the Generals tomorrow. He will add some ex- perience and scoring punch to the front line. FINALLY, it's all over! Osha' Association started their "City wa City and District Softball Championship" playoffs back fm early August and they declared a winner yesterday after- noon at Alexandra Park. What with rainy weather and OASA playoffs, there had to be numerous postponements. Then "shift work" also interfered and they finally curtailed the final series from five games to a 2-out-of-3. Saturday afternoon, with Bad Boys leading 2-0, rain halted play for time in less than a half-hour and made the dia- greasy to continue. They went back at it yesterday Boy hom Appliances defeated Scugog Cleaners 3-1, er in the 8th and a two-run victory rally in the ninth, to claim the City Championship for 1966. SPORTS IN SHORT * Packers Stymie Sayers, Bears Suffer Shutout By DICK COUCH Vince Lombardi couldn't keep Chicago Bears' Gale Sayers on the sidelines, so Lombardi's Green Bay Packers did the next dest thing. They kept Sayers in the mid- die of the field, stymied the Bears' flash and rolled to a 17-0 victory Sunday for sole posses- sion of first place in the Na- tional Football League's West- ern Division. Green Bay's bruising defence, led by veteran Willie Davis, held , the NFL's scoring champion and Rookie of. the Year last season, to 29 rushing yards while handing the Bears their first shutout loss in 27 games. Whitby Loop Opens Oct. 23 WHITBY -- The Whitby Mer- cantile Hockey League opens its 1966-67 schedule on Sunday, Metaher 92. The four-team league plays two games each week, for fifteen weeks, to de- termine the championship, and the subsequent playoff posi- tions. The league features well known Brooklin lacrosse play- ers, and participants of junior hockey from past Whitby -teams. The goal scoring champion- ship will probably be closely contested by Elmer Tran; John Vesters and Lloyd Seymour; with Terry Davis; Mike Gray; Lynn Middleton; Brian Fletcher and Ricky Switzer as added threats. Defensively, the Campbell brothers, Matt and Lorne, will be protecting the nets from the opposing marksmen. Three other Trans will add color and skill to one team, Herb, George and John. Sterling. performances also expected from the two Gordies; Luke and Piatt, the perennial Nick Dennis, and the are The Packers scored on a one- yard run by Paul Hornung, a 30- yard field goal by Don Chandler and a 20-yard interception re- turn by Willie Wood. Green Bay's fifth victory in six starts, coupled with Los An- geles Rams' 35-7 loss to pre- viously winless Minnesota Vik- ings, dropped the Rams one game behind the Packers in the West. St. Louis Cardinals and Dallas Cowboys, both unbeaten in the East, struggled to a 10-10 tie, while Baltimore Colts walloped Detroit Lions 45-14, San Fran- cisco '49ers drubbed Atlanta Falcons 44-7, Philadelphia Eagles whipped Pittsburgh Steelers 31-14 and New York Giants upended Washington Redskins 13-10. IN HOCKEY . . . Montreal Junior Canadiens earned their third tie in as many nights in Ontario Hockey Association Jun- ior "A" League activity with a 3:3 standoff at St. Catharines. Jude Drouin scored twice for Montreal" and Norm™ "Des- coteaux added the other. John Wickas Data Mara and Chava Latinovich scored for St. Kitts ...Jack McCreary scored three times as Kitchener Rangers downed London Na- tionals 9-7. Tim Ecclestone scored a pair with Wayne Gowing, Mike Robitaille, Walter Tkaczuk and John Barber addi- ing the others. London got two goals each from Moe St. Jac- ques, Jim Dorey and Gary Unger and Mac Westgate added the seventh . . . Toronto Marl- boros beat Niagara Falls Fly- ers 5-2 as Gerry Meehan scored twice. Terry Caffery, Mike Byers and Frank Hamill notched the others. Steve Atkin- son and Derek Sanderson re- plied for Flyers. The Saskatchewan Amateur Hockey Association will ask that the Canadian Amateur Hockey Asociation rescind a de- cision to outlaw the Canadian Major Junior Hockey League . . « Collingwood Georgians won Their sécond straight game consistent Pat Neal and Aime Rosseau. Ottenbrite's Men's Wear and the Royal Hotel have renewed their team sponsorship jin Ontario Senior competi- it ion by downing Guelph |Regals 3-1 Sunday. In other action, Toronto Varsity |Grads dropped a pair of week- Game times each Sunday, arejend games, bowing 5-3 to Galt 11:45 a.m. and 1:45 p.m. Each)Hornets Saturday and 3-2 one) Woodstock team will practice for hour Sunday. Prospective play- ers are welcome. to in overtime, Galt tied Oakville 4-4 and Kingston beat Barrie 7-5. | Bad Boy Appliances are the 1966 'City Champions" of the Oshawa City agd District oft- ball Association' Bad Boys won the honors, in a, finally-played third and de- ciding game of the city finals, yesterday afternoon at Alex- andra Park, when they staged a two-run rally in the 9th in- ning, to beat out Scugog Clean- ers Juniors 3-1, The two clubs had attempted this third game on Saturday afternoon' but were rained out at the end of three innings, with Bad Boys leading 2-0, Yesterday's crucial game was a hard-fought softball bat- tle, right to the last out, with Ted Jones pitching a four-hit- ter to limit the Juniors to one run while Don Calder allowed 2-RUN RALLY IN 9TH... 'Bad Boys' Softball Champs tered until Bad Boys finally clicked in the late innings, NO RUNS UNTIL EIGHTH Neither team scored until the eighth inning. Jones walked Dave March, his first batter, He walked Wil- Houghby to open the third and Howie Bryan followed with a single but with two on and none out, Jones tightened up to leave them stranded, Willoughby opened the fifth with a walk but was a force-out victim on a double-play. In the 8th, Willoughby was again the first batter and this time he doubled, and scored when Bryan singled and an error followed, Calder then walked and March forced Cald- er and Paul Gibbens popped up, to make it just the one run for Scugog Cleaners. 'ugh ye ... DEFEATS. SCUGOGS 3 - 1 That run made it 1-1, Bad Boys had scored the first run of the game, in the top of the eighth inning, when Roger Ree- son singled, was thrown out try- ing to steal second base and then "Rich"? March homered, Prior to this, Bad Boys threatened in the first inning when March and Jack Sneddon had back-to-back singles with one out and Ray Suddard was walked, to fill the bases. But March couldn't score on Dave Kelly's fly-out to centre and then Calder got Solomon to pop up, ending the inning, Kelly singled in the fourth but was nipped at the plate, trying to score on Gordie Wil- son's double. Suddard and Kelly both drew walks in the sixth, but that happened after there were two out. CS Stan By ERIC WESSLBY, Times Sports Editor Peterborough "TPT Petes waited three games before their holdovers started punch: ing goals but John Vanderburg, Gary Monahan and Mickey Redmond produced in style Sunday afternoon, Oshawa Generals are still awaiting for their holdovers to start producing. Petes, scoring four goals in the third period, claimed a 7-2 winyover the Generals at Peter- borough Sunday afternoon for their first Ontario Hockey Asso- ciation Junior "A" League victory. Generals, who battled from behind to tie Montreal Junior Canadiens. before 2,973 Oshawa fans Saturday night, lost their first game in three starts, The other:game was a 3-0 win over Kitchener, --~ Vanderburg, foiled time and again by Generals' goalkeeper Ian Young through the first two periods, broke through for a pair of third period goals 'Sun- day and added three assists. Monahan scored the Petes' first two goals, and his first of the season, in the opening period, and Mickey Redmond scored his first goal of the sea- son in the third, Gord Tucker and Joe John- ston tallied the other Peter- borough goals. Bob Clarke, a rookie from Corner Brook, Newfoundland, making his first start in junior "A" company, scored both Osh- awa goals, both on 'shots along the ice, from in front of the net, on setups by Bill White. As in Saturday's game in Oshawa, Generals fell behind 2-0 in the first period, came back to tie the score with a goal in the first and another in the second but dropped back. 3-2 by the end of the second. Instead of staying with Petes in the third period, as they had with Canadiens, Generals wilt- ed in the third, following a goal by Vanderburg, and Petes coasted home the winner. Two outbreaks brought Gen- eral rookies O'Donnell and Joe Robertson to the fore. O'Donnell and Petes' Trevor Conn staged a brief ene-round- ef in the second period, both drawing minors, but Robertson and the Petes' Paul Curtis held a prolonged three-rounder in the third period. Robertson jumped the Petes' defenceman after Curtis had high sticked Bill Little, and it was five minutes before order was restored, with Robertson and Curtis earning majors, 10- minute misconducts and game misconducts. Curtis escaped a high sticking penalty but Little and Redmond both went off for roughing. There ere two big plays in the game\One was turned into a goal, other wasn't. With the Generals two men short. and Peterborough one in the third period, and Petes ahead 3-2, Monahan had_ the puck in the corner to the right of Young. Paul Cadieux started towards the Peterborougn piay- er, but changed his mind and Monahan put a perfect pass out front to the uncovered Vander- burg, who beat Young. In the second period, with Generals a man short, O'Don- nell broke away, made a smart move to get around goalkeeper Brian Caley but was tripped by Vanderburg. As he_ fell, O'Donnell got a weak backhand shot away which was just wide of the open net. Referee Gus. McAuley of Brampton issued 39 penalties, 20 to Generals. Saturday night, defenceman Barry Wilkins brought the Gen- erals their tie with two goals. O'Donnell added the other while Bernard Cote, Don Liesemer and Robin Burns scored for Montreal. Wilkinst#ying goal, at 8.27 of the third period, came with Montreal playing a man short. Wilkins took the puck at the Canadiens' blueline, worked his way in for two shots, then had the puck go off his skate and goalkeeper Ted Ouimet's skate into the net. -- Ron Sussiaume had a chance} to win it for Generals with 30 seconds remaining when waltzed in along on Ouimet but | the gentie's node: enerals Lose In Peterboro Tie Montreal SHORT SHOTS: Ian Young was the busiest General on the games, .. . Coach Ted O'Con- nor dropped Jim Whittaker and Bryan Slywchuk for Sunday's game, replacing them with John Clayton and Bob Clarke The move paid off as Clarke scored twice and Clayton drew an assist... . "Some of last year's players might not make this club," O'Connor said fol- lowing Sunday's game, Generals travel to London Tuesday for a game with the Nationals, who make the return trip here Saturday. MONTREAL 3; GENERALS 3 First Period: 1. Montreal, Cote (Bordeleau, Bouchard) 4,35; 2. Montreal, Burns (Stew- art, Sutherland) 5.04; 3. Gen- erals, Wilkins (Robertson, O'Donnell) 10,23, Penalties -- Morenz (G) 1.42; Baudoin (M) 6.22; Sandford (G) 6.54, 10,50; Burns (M), Little (G) 10.01; Roberts (G) 11.47; Ouimet (M) 13.07; Wilkins (G) 13.49; Rob- erts (G) 16,28; Drouin (M), Dussiaume - (G) 17.57; Robert- sor (G), Sutherland (M) 19.40. Second Period: 4. Generals, O'Donnell (Robertson, Little) 15.36; 5, Montreal, Liesemer (Bordeleau, Cote) 18.32, Penal- ties -- Drouin (M) 0.28; Burns (M) 4.21; Bannatyne (M) 7.35; Dionne (G) 10.10; Chanyon (M) 14.05; Beverley (G) 17.22; Gag- non (M) 19.22. Third Period: 6. Generals, Wilkins (Scott, Black) 8.27, Pen- alties -- Dussiaume (G) 4.55; Descoteaux (M) 6.53; White (G), Bouchard (M) 9.06; White (G) 11.84, PETERBOROUGH 7, GENERALS 2 First Period: 1. Peterborough, Monahan 7.43; 2. Peterborough, Monahan (McLeish, Curits) 14.29; 3. Generals, Clarkd (White, Dussiaume) 17.28. Pen- alties --McLeish (P) 0.55; Black (G) 5.56; Shirton (P) 8.52; Clayton (G) 9.18; Hunt (P) 10.24; Robertson (G) 14.50; Chittick (P) 19.10. Second Period: 4. Generals, Clarke (White, Clayton) 4.50; 5. Peterborough, Tucker (M. Red- mond, Vanderburg) 9.56. Pen- "om x Monahan i 1.10, 4.13; ilkins 10; Dus- siaume (G) We: Scott (G) 6.47, 10.45; Vanderburg (P) 7.05; D. Redmond (P) 7.05; Tucker (P) 12.03; O'Donnell (G), Conn (P) (majors, fight- ing) 12.23; Hunt (P) 13.22; 18.35; Oshawa 18.35. Third Period: 6. Peter- borough, Vanderburg (Mona- han) 1:45; 7. Peterborough, M. Redmond (Vanderburg, Mur- ray) 6:39; 8. Peterborough, Johnston (Vanderburg, Camp- bell) 14:08; 9. Peterborough, Vanderburg (Monahan, M. Red- mond) 19:01, Penalties: Curtis (P) (major, misconduct, game mis¢enduct), Robertson (G) (majot, misconduct, game mis- conduct), M. Redmond (P), Little (G) 1:01;- Murray (P) 1:06; Dussiaume (G), Hunt (P) 4:26; Roberts (G) 5:27; Scott (G) 12:13; Wilkins (G) 13:34. ONTARIO WINS VANCOUVER (CP) yario defeated British Colum- bia's first team 1-0 Sunday to win the Canadian field hockey On-/ weekend, playing well in both | ee Bad Boys won the 1966 title their 'ninth inning. Dave Kelly opened with a double and Bob Solomon followed with an- other two-bagger, He moved on an infield out and scored after two out, on a two-bagger by pitcher Ted Jones, Those three doubles produced rod runs and the winning mar- gin, BAD BOYS -- Reeson, ef; R. March, 3b; Sneddon, ; mon, c; Wilson, ss; Tilk, If; Jones, p. SCUGOG CLEANERS -- .D. March, 2b; Gibbens, -- 8s; Suddard, rf; Kelly, 2b; Solo- Cheesman, 1b; Parkinson, ¢; Siblock, $b; Brack, cf; Wil- loughby, rf; Bryan, If; Calder, p; Cullen, ef in 8th. IAN YOUNG HOCKEY SCOREBOARD By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Junior A 2s Toronto Kitchener 2 St. Catharines 1 Niagara Falls 1 Hamilton Montreal Oshawa London' Peterborough Ontario 17 & cot urnm™Moo't 29 0S C0 CO CO 60 ae te de ty > sae ond wO we B ewRr oH One 1 0 1 1 1 Sei L 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 2 = Collingw'd Woodstock Galt Kingston Guelph Oakville Orillia Belleville Barrie Toronto eeceowmmenwt coeoorosHoo4 ~ wets acts au~sw8:H coocorwnwws & SUNDAY American League Buffalo 2 Quebec 6 Hershey 2 Rochester 5 Pittsburgh 6 Providence 5 NHL Exhibition Toronto 2 Chicago 2 Montreal 0 Boston 3 Exhibition New York (NHL) 7 Long Island (EHL) 1 Drummondville (PJHL) 6 Hali- fax 10 Western League San Francisco 3 Portland 3 OHA Sr Kingston 7 Barrie 5 Collingwood 3 Guelph 1 Galt 4 Oakville 4 Majer Junior Weyburn 2 Estevan 7 Edmonton 3 Saskatoon 1 Calgary 4 Moose Jaw 6 OHA Junior London 7 Kitchener 9 Niagara Falls 2 Toronto 5 Oshawa 2 Peterborough 7 Montreal 3 St, Catharines 3 Manitoba Junior St. James 7 Winnipeg riors 4 Provincial Junior Quebec 3 Sore! 5 Sherbrooke 7 Shawinigan 4 Central Junior Ottawa 2 Cornwall 13 NOHA Junior North Bay 3 Sault Ste. Marie 6 SATURDAY AHL War- Hershey 11 Providence 1 Pittsburgh 3 Rochester 1 Springfield 6 Baltimore 3 Cleveland 2 Quebec 2 NHL Exhibition Toronto 0 Detroit 3 Chicago 2 Montreal 5 Central League Houston 5 Tulsa 1 Western League Seattle 4 San Diego 2 Portland 5 Los Angeles 1 Victoria 2 San Francisco 0 OHA Junior Montreal. 3 Oshawa 3 OHA Senior Galt 5 |Toronto 3 Exhibition ---- (PJHL) 1 Hali- ax PAUL REID Hawkeyes Season En Oshawa Hawkeyes Ontario Eastern Conference Junior Football League season ended on the same note as it started Saturday, a loss to Weston In- victus Redmen. : Redmen, defending eastern Canadian /Aunior . champs, romped to a 40-7 win in the rain at St; Joseph's High School field, Hawkeyes, with only 18 play- ers in uniform for the final game, trailed 14-1 at the end of the first quarter, 21-1 at the half and 27-7 after three quar- ters. Greg Verner hauled in two passes from quarterback Dick Sadecki for touchdowns while 'Terry Snow, Jim Searle, Peter Fairgrieve and. Chris Vansteen added the other majors for Weston. Renato Sabadin, who continually kept Hawkeyes hemmed in their own zone with booming kicks, kicked three converts and a single to com- plete Invictus scoring. Ziggy Szepansky booted a single for Hawkeyes in the sec- ond quarter and Jerry Mays hauled in a pass from Barr for the Oshawa touch- down. ° TODAY HOCKEY Canadian National Centennial Midget Playoffs -- Bowman. ville vs Oshawa, at Civic Audi- torium, 6:00 p.m. General Motors Office League -- at Civic Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. TUESDAY HOCKEY OHA Junior 'B' Metro League --Whitby Lasco Steelers at Tor- onto York teelers, 8:30 p.m, OHA Junior 'A' League -- Oshawa Generals vs London Nationals, at Treasure Island Arena, 8:30 p.m, FOOTB ALL Oshawa High Schools Junior League -- Donevan at Central and O'Neill at Eastdale; both games at 4:15 p.m, Lake Ontario District Junior 'A' League -- Whitby Anderson at Bowmanville, 3:00 p.m. Lake Ontario District Junior 'B' League --Clarke at Whitby Henry, 3:00 p.m. REMEMBER WHEN ...? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Lionel Conacher was ap- pointed chairman of the On- tario Athletic Commission 27 years ago today--in 1939. Canada's sportsman of the century, then a member of the provincial legislature, became director of recrea- tion for the RCAF in 1942 and later went into the House of Commons. [ eLECOrE'S spcamancr | Shop Gleocoff's for the best Service and Weekly Specials championship in a def ve duel that saw the lone goa scored on a penalty shot. Ron Aldridge blasted home the win- ning Ontario tally midway through the first half. Increase Your BABY BONUS 10% BONUS See Wed. Paper the Oshawa forward shot iato/ \ ALL POPULAR BRANDS CIGARETTES $3.49 HAMBURG 2'2 |b. $1,00 LARGE CELERY STALK > 19° GLECOFF'S sureamanxet 174 RITSON ROAD 8. Buy your Canada Savings Bonds at the Royal Ask for application form at your nearest branch. Buy for cash or by instal- ments, Canada Savings Bonds never fluctuate in value, can be cashed any time for full face value, plus interest, -ROYAL BANK Paste iat Sh z ee ry i EE Be NT ROE ae Gh Be RE gh Be al Bake air aehge gil gin ian aera beta gin RICHI Gin in oi an nln Gi Markham Stops Steelers, Reid Scores Two Goals _ league at Whitby Arena last 4 night. Roy Hewitt sparked the Mark- ham attack with a pair of and played a standout Single markers were garnered by Barry Hawton, B Me- Cutheon and Gil LaFlamme. For. manager Ivan Davie it was the ever-dangerous, Paul Reid who scored two goals, This young man, a recent-cut from the Oshawa Generals, has to be the biggest find in Junior "B" hockey to date for Mr. Davie. managers and coaches dream of finding but never come up with the right solution. The game started off fast and furious, with Markham team determined to knock the Whitby DOYS right OUl OF We luce ice palace, They found out quickly that their rough house tactics did not get them 'oo far, as referee Stan Westfall, ruling «with an iron fist, handed out five penalties to the visitors in the first five minutes, Despite the man advantage, and sometimes two, the best Steelers could do was one goal at the 3:05 mark of the initial stanza. It came on a neat three- way passing play, with Thomp- son dropping a pass to. Taylor, who in turn flipped the puck over to Reid, who was right on the doorstep of the Markham goal and pumped it home. Markham knotted the count at one all at the 10:28 mark as Hawton beat Moore from close in and picked up a loose puck after Moore had made a brilliant save from close in, The period ended at one all despite the fact Whitby had a one and two man advantage on humerous occasions, The smooth skating, hard checking Markham team scored three unanswered goals in the middie frame and thus proved the margin that manager coach Frank Bonello, a member of the world champion Whitby Dun- lops, needed for the margin of victory, : Both teams scored once in the final frame, with Reid bag- ging his second marker. Markham finished up the 17:46 mark on a rather odd net chance. in| Blanks Scugogs Reid is the kind of fellow that|the Toron scoring for the night at the goal that deflected off a Whitby player into the corner of the with Moore having no Steelers will get their 5 gue action hoe ag night as they tangle with Tor- onto Marlboro "York Steelers." Sunday night they aro at home to the Etobicoke Indians. Ginn Cartage. ve + bowing club a at mes Cartage in Willowdale Major competition, Both clubs had trouble wi the lanes in the first can be very noted in scores, 1073--~1039 in favour to entry, Jim Ginn led his club to win in tha saennd game some neat for Arnold veaik, woot had mu trouble in the first through with 290 to ~ 2at8 2atA OHS Vauuvagy avar -- amave army Reynolds with $13 was best in this game, ar Scugogs battled hard in third game in an effort to make a wi Bs ge with Alex Don- aldson 273, Dave Reynolds 264 Bob Gallagher 260 and Cassells ps pecig the locals to a 1281 otal, ; pin ga- Ginn Cartage retaliated with their best effort, 1396 to take the third game and complete the sbut-out for a seven - point pick-up, Sponsor Ginn was the shooter for his club with (282); A. Brown 756 (288); Bert Sheehan 701 (260); Arne old Vesik 692 (200); Barry Mitchell bowled two games for 545 (208), Dave Reynolds was best for Scugog with 761 (813); Gallage her 699 (260); Cassells 680 (242); Sel Himes 667; Donald- son 640 (273) and Larry Piper 627, In losing this series, the Scu- gog Cleaners missed a golden opportunity to move up on the leading Rusty Starr club, which dropped a five-to-two decision to their opponents. Available for this week's sche- duled league play at Willow Bowl for Scugogs, will be Jim Cassells, Larry Piper, Sel Him+ es, Alex Donaldson, Dave Rey- nolds and Eddy Moody, . The Oshawa club is now 11 points off the pace and must win to stay in contention. whisk sreat, ageu ies are gently blended into every of Adams Private Stock.. P Don't spill it to just anyone. Private Stock is the 29-whisky whisky. | 4 THOMAS ADAMS DISTILLERS LTD, TORONTO