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Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Sep 1967, p. 7

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xES FOUR ad 1eT ve Krasnaj and Bob added the remainder. lies' only goal was yy Charlie Hardy. ; with his goal and ts was the top points ne game. Phil Clayton nd with three goals » assists, followed by 23 with four goals and * outshot New West- 11-38. Attendance was at 2742. Davies made his first e last night, after he last half of the re- edule with an illness. hile' still working him- ; into shape, didn't of place. n Seniors Argos Left Limping After L By THE CANADIAN PRESS oss To twisted knee. Hamilton. Tiger-Cats seemed : far from' ferocious Monday as they mauled Toronto Argonauts 12-9, but the effects of the mauling may hurt Toronto for at least 30 days. Hamilton remained tied with Ottawa Rough Riders for first place in the Eastern Football Conference as each club posted a Labor Day victory. Toronto held third place, but lost middle Cleveland Nips Twins By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS At least three clubs in the merican League are grateful o Cleveland Indians today. Ottawa's victory was a 1 conquest of Montreal Alouette! of 24,647 fans. damaged by the Ticats, tradi- EFC. Defensive tackle Mike Wadsworth and offensive back Jim Dillard were sidelined with ankle injuries. Wadsworth could miss a game with Hamilton at Toron- to's CNE stadium Sunday, but Dillard, who continued to play Monday, was not harmed severely. Andreotti may be -- on the 30-day injured ist. Toronto yielded a touchdown jto Dick Cohee, a 25-yard field goal and a convert by Tommy- Joe Coffey and two singles by linebacker Jim Andreotti with i before a record Ottawa crowd At least three Argos were tionally the toughest club in the icats 'wo, touehdowns on passes from Russ Jackson. Tackle Moe Racine converted both and| added a single on a wide field goal attempt. Ottawa's other points came on a safety touch when Montreal punter Dave} Lewis fumbled in the end zone and conceded the points. A 45-yard field goal by Ron Parson .and two singles by, Lewis provided Montreal's scor- ing. Tucker's touchdowns came on strikes of 29 and 92 yards, His; first score, the pevarder, clic! maxed a 95-yard march. | Jackson completed 14 of 28) passes for 296 yards and Otta- wa gained 142 yards rushing. Montreal's George Bork and Lewis 'teamed for 10 c le- tions in \26 attempts? ie ground attack was handled eas- ily by the Ottawa \ defenders. At Hamilton, neithér quarter- back got enough protection to THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdoy, September 5, 1967 7 Pigeons Race Home Chatham - Oshawa 1,079; Grant, R. Irwin, 1,123; F. Cowle, 1,212; L, Kinsman, 1,107; L. Prescott, J. Strachan, 1,055;~ S. 1,050; R. Horner and Sons, 1,026 and S. Bak, 1,018 The General Racing Pigeon Club of Oshawa held its seventh "young bird" race of the season on Saturday, from Chatham to Oshawa, an air-line distance of 200 miles, Following is the list of time finishes, in yards-per-minute: J. and R. Irwin, 1,146; John Askew, 1,144; G. Goodall, 1,141; Al Kellar, 1,141; J. and R. Irwin, 1,140; F. Cowle, 1,140; F. Cowle, 1,139; J. Shewchuk, 1,139; J, Shewchuk, 1,136; Wm. i Bowden, 1,133; S. Grant, 1,128; D. Bijkowsky, 1,127; A. Szczur, 1,125; L, Kinsman, 1,123; J. and RUNS UP GRUB BILL --- An adult elephant can eat, 94 pounds of food a day. Hippos eat 49 pounds, milking cows 45 pounds and the camel con- sumes 38 pounds of food. oy LEWIS . OPTICAL Established for over 30 yeors 10% King Street West 725-0444 n N HOURS t Tyrone Brewers Retail The Indians scored on Fredidown by Mel Profit, a convertimanufacture a consistent feated Tyrone 2-1 on night, in the third and ed the deciding game Whitfield's infield hit in the 10th nniig of the second game to posi a 2-1 victory over league- leading Minnesota Twins and |Joe Zuger. | ee for a touch- and a single by John Vilunasjoffence. Zuger of Hamilton and a single by Dave Mann.|completed 11 of 16 passes for Mann, using a kick formation,|203 yards and the Tiger-Cats passed 39 yards to Profit onjcompiled 165 yards rushing. OTTAWA ROUGH RIDER follow the leader as he takes Montreal Alouettes and one day. The Als are Bob Mini- | 257 Wentworth Street arlington Senior Soccer estrict Minnesota to a split of/third down for the score. Gabler of| Quarterback Russ Jackson off on one of his patented official after him, during hane (60), Billy James Doss semi-final playoffs, four points on two his win. 'uzenko and Bernard ach scored a goal for e Ross Hall notched yrone 'tally. | now meet Solina in ionship finals, a 3-out- , first team to win six ing the winner, with ng game on Wednes- ng, 6:30 o'clock, in TONIGHT LAST NIGHT ROLLER SKATING @ SUPERVISED PROGRAMME @ CHECK ROOM FACILITIES @ LADIES' LOUNGE @ BOOT RENTALS LIVE ORGAN MUSIC ADMISSION 75: OSHAWA CIVIC AUDITORIUM O 'Y DAY RN 2.25 3E 1967 -TORONTO NO. 7 DDED hawa ronto AT. Y DONALD LTD, : Street Est, ne 668-3675 T DAVIES ies No. 41 ISSION 1.50 - $1.25 00 Under 14 Pintenticnally and Max Alvis "open the game with a two-run Fe doubleheader. | All other contenders--Boston| TUCKER LEADS Rei Sox, Chicago White Sox eres id Detroit Tigers--also split. Harmon Killebrew slippe vhiie fielding Whitfield's rounder behind first and the eavy-footed Cleveland first aseman won a race to the bag. illebrew slammed his 35th ome: in the first game to park a 4-1 triumph. The second place Red Sox pwed to Washington 5-2, then ounced back for a 6-4 victory Sand remained one half game off he pace. The third place White ox edged New York 3-2 in 10 ings after bowing 3-2 in the pener and stayed one game ack. And fourth _ place Detroit's 8-4, 2-4 split with Kan- is City left the Tigers 1% gths behind. N IN 12 INNINGS altimore and California fol- ved suit, the Orioles taking bir twi-night opener 4-2 and le Angels rebounding 5-4 in the sinning nightcap. e Twins, held to one hit by tht-hunder Sonny Siebert until seventh inning of the night- , tied it at 1-1 on Tony Oli- s one-out double and Bob 'son's run-scoring single. It stayed that way until pinch itter Hinton drew a walk from liever Al Worthington to open he 10th. Vic Davalillo sacri- iced, Lee Maye was walked lied out before the runners 5 ag up a base on a passed all. Whitfield then bounced to Kil- lebrew about eight feet behind first base. Killebrew slipped, then regained his feet and sprinted for the bag--only to lose the race by an eyelash as Hinton scored the- winning run. Killebrew belted a two-run homer in the ninth inning of the opener after Rod Carew tripled in the sixth and scored on Oli- va's single to break a 1-1 tie. OWARD IS A STAR Lumbering Frank Howard azzied the Red Sox in the/jers. Bil! Goods converted four, ashington opener, breaking omer after legging out a pair f infield hits that contributed 0 run-scoring innings. He also robved Carl Yastrzemski of a first inning homer before the Boston star hit his 36th of the year in the sixth. Boston erased a 4-2 Washing- on lead in the sixth inning of he nightcap when Rico Petro- elli's infield hit, a walk and an rror by relief pitcher Dick Lines set the stage for pinch itter Jerry Adair, who singled ome two runs and scored on a ingle by Dalton Jones. Duane Josephson's run-scor- ing single with two out in the 10th inning earned Chicago a split with the Yankees after the White Sox gave away the first game on errors by Don Buford and Rocky Colavito. FIELDERS COLLIDE The Yanks scored two runs on Bvford's wild throw to the plate in the fourth inning and tallied the winner in the fifth when right fielder Colavito slammed into Buford and knocked the ball loose after the second baseman had gloved Charlie Smith's high fly. Kansas City's Dick Green, who hit a three-run homer in the first game at Detroit, drilled another three-run shot in the seventh inning of the night- cap, lifting the A's from behind. Jerry Lumpe knocked in three Detroit runs in the first game with two singles and a homer. Curt Blefary's two-run homer in the eighth inning of the first game carried Baltimore past K * |tions Whit Tucker led Ottawa,|yards. Toronto rushed for 130) 4 defending eastern champs, with A Quarterback Wally Toronto managed five comple- in 14 attempts for 66 yards. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Grey Cup champion Saskat- chewan Roughriders and Cal- gary Stampeders, the best next-vear club in Canadian foot- ball, turned the Western Foot- ball Conference into a two-way race Monday by scoring con- vincing wins. The Roughriders turned in a defersive show to defeat Edmonton Eskimos 18-6, and the Stampeders avenged an earlier loss to Winnipeg Blue Bombers by shellacking the Bombers 39-0. The wins left Calgary and Saskatchewan tied for first place in the WFC with 10 points each. Winnipeg and Edmonton are nex! in line with four points each, and British Columbia Lions have two points. The Eskimos have played seven games; all other clubs have played six. : The Stampeders haven't won a Grey Cup since 1948, and last played in a cup game in 1949. Since then, it has been "wait til next year" for Stampeder fans. This season they are rolling along with just one defeat, and have scored more points--143-- and given up fewer - 51 - than any club in the West. Monday, they rolled up quar- ter Jeads of 3-0, 11-0 and 25-0 on their way to the conquest over Winnipeg. EVANSHEN SCORES TWO Terry Evanshen scored two touchdowns for the Stamps. Gerry Shaw, Lovell Coleman and Peter Liske scored the oth- kicked a field goal, and added two singles on wide field-goal attempts. The Roughriders trailed the Stamps And Roughies Win, the fourth quarter was. score- less, Hugh Campbell scored both) Saskatchewan touchdowns. They were converted by Jack Abendschan who also kicked al field goal. Al Ford kicked a sin- gle to round out the Roughrider scoring. For the Eskimos, Peter Kempf kicked two field goals. _ Winnipeg's loss was expen- sive. Regular quarterback Kenny Ploen has already missed two games because of a) shoulder injury, and _ his| replacement, Bill Van Burkleo,| injured a knee early in Mon- day's encounter. He played the rest of the game, but by the time he reached the dressing room afterwards, he was unable to move the knee. The Bombers also lost end and flanker Laurence Barrett, thought to have at least two broken ribs. And Ed Ulmer missed much of the game with a knee injury and Cornell Piper with a hurt ankle. GROUND GAME STALLS The Bombers gained only seven yards rushing and 183 passing for a total offence of 190 yards, plays his own version of bootleg plays with three CFL action at Ottawa Mon- (52) and John Baker (77). (CP Wirephoto) Casper By BOB TRIMBEE WOODBRIDGE, Ont. (CP)-- It was described as a monster golf course by others, but Billy Casper found the Toronto Board of Trade Country Club little) more than a jolly green giant. The San Diego, Calif., pro beat Al Geiberger of Carlton Oaks, Calif., on the first hole of sudden-death play Monday to win the $35,000 top prize in the fourth annual Carling World golf championship. Geiberger, the third-round leader, and Casper finished the regulation 72 holes in three-un- der-par 281. South African Gary Player, who finished third and won $8,500, was the only other entrant with an under-par final score, Player, the leader at 36 holes, finished with a one-under 283. The other 80 players who made the 36-hole cut could not better, par on the 7,024-yard par 35-35--71 layout, featured b expansive and undulating greens. In all, the field was able to produce but 45 18-hole scores of less than par. It was Casper's second victo- ry of the year and both have come in Canada. He captured Calgary picked up 112 along the ground and 420 passing for 532 yards, Van Burkleo clicked on 12 of 28 passes. Liske hit on 22 of 34. Both teams had two passes intercepted. Winnipeg had 12 first downs,| Calgary 20. In Regina, Saskatchewan picked up 16 first downs on 151 yards rushing and 187 passing. Ron Lancaster and Jesse Kaye} combined to complete 10 of 25) passe: Edm @ktan picked up 91 yards) Eskimos 3-1 after the first quarter but edged into an 8-6 lead at the half. They scored 10 points in the third quarter and rushing and 200 passing for 17) first first downs. Frank Cosenti- no completed 14 of 24 passes and had two intercepted. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It was Labor Day for every- one else and Labor Week for Chicago Cubs. The Cubs split a holiday dou- bleheader with Los Angeles' Dodgers Monday, winning . the first game 2-1 on Ernie Banks' 11th inning home run and drop- ping the nightcap 8-6 when the Dodgers rallied for five runs in the ninth. The two games ended a string of four doubleheaders in as many days for the Cubs. Chicago split three and swept the other. And if the Cubs thought a Cubs' String Of Twin Bills Ended By Dodgers' Rally game for Chicago and had a 1-0 lead with a three-hitter in the ninth inning. Then Lou Johnson ripped a two-out homer, tying the game and sending it into extra innings. Banks' 2ist homer of the year, leading off in the 11th, broke it up. The Dodgers, trailing 5-3 in the ninth inning of the nightcap, scored five runs with Wes Par- ker's two-run double the big hit. Manny Mota, Maury Wills and Bill ip gon were the big guns for the Pirates, who wore out seven Cardinal pitchers in the doubleheader. | Wins In Sudden ices at a Mormon gathering that lasted well beyond mid- night. Saturday his golfing for- tunes turned for the better and in the final three rounds he shot, | 68, 70, 69. It was a heart-breaking loss for Geiberger, 1966 PGA cham- pion and widely known for the | ae } Death' presudent Eisenhower used to with a two under 69 and won | calla knee - knocker and my/|$985 as one of six players tied| knees were really knocking,"|at 291. | said Casper. | The vietory by Casper} oe players na el yd allowed him to shatter the| place at even par--Randy: Glov-| | er of Sanford, N.C., oP hla padre ag Ade Doug Ford of Perdide Bay, | 4 q gat Fla., and Jerry Steelsmith of| is now open 10 am - 6 pm daily open to 9 pm Fridays bg Brewers Retail peanut -- butter - and-jam sand- wiches he eats to maintain his! $6,500. | Santa Barbara, Calif. Each won| 5. |year. | Geiberger now has won $79,- 5. Operated by Brewers Warehousing Co. Ltd. stamina while in competition. Four others were one shot LOSES BY AN INCH jover par and won $4,325--vet- Rejecting one challenge after |°™2" Julius Boros of Mid Pines, another on the final 18 holes, N.C., Tony Jacklin of potent Geiberger had a chance to win England, ee aeriue Lee tree the tournament on the last hole |"° of El Faso, Tex,, and first. but his 18-foot putt for a birdie round Jeader R. H. Sikes of stopped an inch shy. OIA Balding of Toronto, the| , the Both players drove poorly on|jow Canadian with a four-over- the extra hole and Geiberger|par 288, won $1,568. The best said each might have reached sai ge by a Canadian the water, but was turned in by Moe Norman stoned iy 7 gy sec of Gilford, Ont., who closed along the fairway. | Both missed the green with| their second shots and Geiber-| ger chipped eight feet past the| hole while Casper dropped his chip shot three feet from the flag. When Geiberger missed his try for a par and took a five | Casper stepped up for what! Proved the winning putt. the Canadian Open , trounc- ing Art Wall Jr. 'of Ridius Calif., in an 18-hole playoff at 'That was the kind of p Montreal earlier this summer. The first of Casper's 35 tour- nament victories came in 1956 in a tournament at Quebec City. 'MUST GET INSPIRED' "I must get inspired here," said the 36-year-old American. "I'm looking forward to coming back to defend the Canadian Open next year." Casper's earnings from the World and the Open totalled $65,000. REMEMBER WHEN? . . By THE CANADIAN PRESS Australia's tennis team made a thrilling comeback 28 years ago today--in 1939 --when it beat the United States in both singles matches to regain the Davis Cup, The Aussies went home directly after the match because of Brit- ain's declaration of war the previous day. CANADA'S LARGEST AND FINEST CHAIN CF HFEAITH SPA'S Look to MAJOR POOL EQUIPMENT Corp. (Can.) Ltd. For Everything for your Swimming Pool @ Steel Pool Kits @ All Steel Pools @ Block Pool Kits @ Aqualock Domes @ Aqualock Covers @ Multiport Valves @ Above Ground Pools @ Sand Filters @ Dictomite Filters @ Aluminum Coping (@ Vecuumatia i All' Pool Accessories and Pool Maintenance Low Cost No Down Payment FINANCING AVAILABLE TROPICANA a. division Major Pool Equip. Corp. (Can Ltd. Call BRUCE CAVERLY. of " 690 Drake St. Call 728-8609 -- Evenings 576-2287 eal es Installed in 3 Days for 'Nominal Charge a@partan STEEL MAJOR POOL CORP. (can EQUIPMENT ada) LTD. The slim shotmaker, who fol- lows an exotic diet of shrimp for breakfast, buffalo meat, hippopotamus steaks and vegetables that have not been exposed to insect sprays because he has an allergy prob- lem, took a first-round 74 Fri- ay. That night he attended serv- ne BUYING, SELLING: or TRADING SEE KEITH KAINE FIRST 1051 King St. West GUS BROWN MOTORS CALL 728-7375 were worn out, t. fered through a 32-hit 10-8, 9-3 doubleheader loss to Pittsburgh Monday. : Elsewhere in the National League, Atlanta swept a pair from Philadelphia, 8-2 and 8-1, Cincinnati nipped New York 2-1 and San Francisco edge dHous- ton 4-3. Young Rich Nye pitched six perfect innings in the first Califorrfia, but the Angels came from behind in the 12th inning of the nightcap. Bob Rodgers, who had poled a_ three-run homer earlier, hit a bases-load- ed sacrifice fly and Rick Rel- chardt also scored when Brooks Robinson flubbed the throw to Need An Oil Furnace? 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