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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Sep 1967, p. 9

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Galt, inth ill Doerfling had both of It's safeties, a single to open fifth and a double with two in the seventh. Mason fan- 1 five of the last six bat- s he faced, including all three the 9th. ack Sneddon singled in the it, Ray Suddard doubled in second and Pete Norris gled in the fourth and that s all Pams could get off Ec- ; until the bottom of the th fe struck out his first batter Sneddon worked Eccles for walk and just for a mom- , the Galt pitcher faltered, king Norris after Sneddon | gone to second on a wild- h steal. fith the Galt infield playing ight, Bob Solomon beat out infield single, a slow roller the shortstop, and all hands e safe. Eccles then fanned dard, for the second out but bons came through, to give awa the victory. eturn game in this series be played in Galt on Wed- day night. LEES:- 000 000 000 - 021 AMS:- 000 000 001 - 150 atteries:- Eccles and Hed- ; Mason and Solomon. ways here with pady cash aD. Pot more AGARA FINANCE /MPANY LIMITED 286 KING STREET W. 723-3487 ee ol Mt trip nd re- nd re- ols nn the s and nts (with their 0 to: (A 0450 IN ARE ipply ... aoe " BRUCE McLAREN (LEFT) AND DENIS HULME, DISCUSS RACE FOLLOWING ITS COMPLETION ('Times Photos by Bruce Jones) i. N FINAL L AP WITH CAR 1 Keon's Final Period Goal By THE CANADIAN PRESS The National Hockey League stepped up its exhibition pace Mi during the weekend as all 12 "teams played 12 games; seven ¥ Sunday. Highlight of the kend|1 5-1 at Quebec City, New York Rangers beat their Buffalo AHL farm club 3-1 and St. Louis Blues downed Rochester Ameri- cans of the AHL 6-2. In Saturday's other game, Montreal defeated New York 4- i ta shaded California ®chedule were back-to-back ames between Toronto Maple eafs, Stanley Cup champions, and Chicago Black Hawks, irst-place finishers in the regu- Jar season last year. The Hawks edged the Leafs in Toronto Saturday night when Bobby Hull scored with 56 econds remaining in the game. 'The Leafs won 2-1 Sunday night » on Dave Keon's goal at 16:15 of (the last period with his team a )man short. >) In other games Sunday night, *) Detroit Red Wings beat Boston Bruins 2-2 at Hamilton, Ont., California Seals and Pittsburgh Penguins played to a 3-3 tie at Port Huron, Mich., Minnesota North Stars shut out Los Angeles Kings 3-0, Montreal Canadiens defeated Quebec Aces of the American League SAMPSON WINS BOUT NEW GLASGOW, N.S. (CP) | -- Ronnie Sampson, 18-year-old} Canadian lightweight boxing} champion, scored a unanimous 10-round decision over Arnold Sparks of Montreal in a non-ti- tle fight before a crowd of 2,000 here Friday night. Sampson, a rugged battler from Sydney| River, N.S., weighed 145%, | eight pounds more than _ his Montreal opponent. y » Mi 4-3, Pittsburgh beat Philadelp- hia 7-3, and St. Louis edged Rochester 3-2. KEON GETS WINNER A crowd of 14,000 saw the Leafs-Black Hawks game at Chicago Stadium. Toronto's Mike Walton was serving a pen- alty when Keon stole the puck near the Toronto blue line and skated in to beat goalie Dave |Dryden with a 15-footer. Mike Byers had given Leafs a 1-0 lead on a backhander past Jack Norris, the Hawks' start- ing goalie. The Hawks tied the score minutes later on Bobby Hull's goal. Dean Prentice, Floyd Smith and Gordie Howe scored for Sinks Black Hawks 2-1 Detroit against Boston. Ken Hodge and Ross Lonsberry replied for Bruins. Billy Harris, Wally Boyer and Bill LeCaine scored Pitts- burgh's goals at Port Huron. Ab McDonald, Mel Pearson and Ron Boehm scored for Califor- nia. _ The Canadiens got two goals from Dick Duff in their game at Quebec City before 12,600 fans. Claude Larose, Jean Beli- veau and rookie Mickey Red- mond added the others. Que- bec's goal was scored by Bill Sutherland. Al Hamilton, Jean Ratelle and Red Berenson scored for New York against Buffalo. Den- nis Hextall got Buffalo's goal. Rejean Richer scored two first-period goals to pace St. Louis at Rochester. Bill McCreary, also with two, and Darryl Edestrand and Larry Keenan were the other scorers. Gerry Ehman and Bronco Hor- vath scored for Rochester. }McLAREN CARS SWEEP TOP THREE SPOTS IN SATURDAY'S "200" | By WAYNE WALTERS THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 23,1967 9 "Hulme Wins "200" In Record Time of The Times Staff Bruce McLaren, senior part- : ner of the McLaren-Hulme rac- '+ ing team, summed up Satur- | day's Player's 200 at Mosport i Park when he. said, "Next ' year it could be Hulme cars _ with Bruce McLaren driving." ' Denis Hulme had just com- _ pleted his third consecutive Canadian - American Challenge Cup series win capturing the "200" in a record time of 1.51:25.7 and adding over $9,000 to the McLaren-Hulme coffers. Hulme, piloting a McLaren M6A designed and built by his boss, broke from the pack on the first lap Saturday and held the lead to the finish line. En route to the win het set a new lap record of one minute, 20.7 seconds, beating the old mark held jointly by Dan Gurney and| Jim Clark by 2.7 seconds. | The New Zealander had his car in top mechanical condi- tion for the $35,000 race, He| completed the course without requiring one pit stop and en- countered trouble. only on the final lap. | His car spun. off the track and up, an embankment suffer- ing body damage. Hulme limp- ed across the finish line in a car that was belching.smoke and running gn only three wheels, as one had been slash- ed 'by the bent body metal, He said after the race that his ear couldn't have gone any farther than it did. Once Hulme had-built up a healthy lead, attention was switched to the battle for sec- ond position between McLaren and Dan Gurney. ~ ai DRIVING DISPLAY McLaren gave a- masterful display of driving as he started) the race one-half lap or approx-| imately 40 seconds behind the! rest of the field. He discovered} a cracked gas tank in his car) while it was on the starting line and by the time his me- chanics had repaired it the race was already half a lap) gone. | McLaren sped after the pack | and pushed his car to the 13th} | position in the 26-car field after| ten laps. At the end of 30 laps| he was in sixth spot and had worked himself into fourth 4 after 50. Gurney who stationed him- self in second place after the second lap finally felt Mc- a | CROSS CANADA PAVING has 3 YEARS also 6- 12-18-20 + No P For 2 M GUARANTEE -36 month to pay hs After Completi y @ FREE ESTIMATE... Call 728-9292 Oshawa DAVE KEON BUS SERVICE 7:00 p.m. -- 7:30 p.m. -- 7:45 p.m.--Return after gome N.H.L. EXHIBITION HOCKEY WEDNESDAY, "See Last Year's Stanley Cup Winners" Toronto Maple Leafs Rochester Bob Pulford, Tickets on Sale -- Auditorlum Box Office Another greot action packed evening of -H.L, Hockey, Great N.H.L. stars in action -- John Bower, Tim Horton, Frank Mahovolich, Allen Stanley, Brion Conacher and others -- Reds Yellow Blue 2.50 2.00 1.75 Children 1.00 SEPTEMBER 27th ~~ 8:00 P.M. Americans George Armstrong, ge cos Located Between Whitby on Highway No. 2 PLEASE -- NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS nd Oshawa Laren's challenge on the 57th. The two drivers dueled for ap- proximately 12 laps before Gur- ney was forced to retire from the race when his Lola Mark III developed engine trouble. McLaren moved into the run- ner-up spot and finished that way behind Hulme, followed by Mike Spence also in a McLaren and Peter Revson driving a Sunray DX Special. Pre-race experts expected John Surtees, last year's Can- Am overall winner, to provide the main competition for the McLaren team. But Surtees was plagued with engine trouble for the short time he was on the track. He lost five laps when he made a pit stop because of car- buretor troubles early in the race, and never fully recover- ed, He dropped out of the run- ning with a misfiring engine on lap 17, The only serious accident oc- curred when Brett Lunger's McLaren Mark II came out of the last turn too wide and spun into the protective wall in front} of the pits, The car suffered! éxtensive damage while Lunger walked away unhurt. HIGH CANADIAN accumulated points after the six) races will win $31,500 from the $90,000 championship fund, plus additional accessory awards and a new car. This is added to the large purses won during the individual races. A disappointing crowd of 23,978 was on hand Saturday, of which only 16,478 were pay- ing customers. Next three races in the Can- Am series are at tracks in Cali- fornia and Nevada. If Hulme can hold his lead he stands to win up to $90,000 of the $460,000 in prize and accessory money jat stake. High Canadian driver was| John Cordts of Barrie who was eighth among the 15 finishers. Eppie Weitzes was 11th while Nat Adams finished 14th. ~John Cannon and Ludwig Heimrath were both forced out of the race with mechanical problems. | In the preliminary races, Don| Jayes of Oshawa drove his} Mini -to first place in the 15-lap touring car event. Gerry Dodds, | piloting a Huron, placed 20th in| the formula event while Dale! Neil was 11th in the sports rac- ing car event. | Hulme now has" wd Denis points after three races in the Can-Am series with three races remaining. Bruce McLaren fol- lows with 12 points, with John Surtees third with seven. The driver with the most PLANNING A .+, © BANQUET | © CONVENTION ¥ © MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR PUNCTION NOW! 723-4641 ¢ | HOTEL | Cpe oth CL 1 ' i} 1 SALES - BATTERIES - CORDS REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES OF AIDS HOME APPOINTMENTS BUDGET TERMS Canadian HEARING AID '2 Consultants 10 BOND ST. E, 725-2771 SALES - SERVICE - PARTS - ACCES. Pe ey aXe A Y Repairs to All Makes of Shavers and Clip-crs OSHAWA SHAVER SERVICE & SUPPLIES 39 PRINCE ST. OSHAWA 728-4284 HON. JOHN ROBARTS Costs; Free Trade Welfare Programs; Low Incomes; Admi OSHAWA: [ee OSHAWA: TEAM FOR @ Municipal Taxpayers and Educational Agreement; Regional Planning and Government. ~@ Health Programs; Public Housing; Indus- trial Re-training; Injunctions; Legal Aid; Medicare; Families on nistration of Justice. Is the fastest growing city per capita in Ontario. ~ Must have.a contin government of Ontario. TO ASSURE Albert WALKER X Good Government Deserves Your Support! A TS WORKING THAT YoU AB WALKER, M.P.P. AT QUEEN'S PARK AB WALKER HAS BEEN A STRONG AND EFFECTIVE VOICE! AT QUEEN'S PARK AB WALKER HAS SPOKEN FOR YOU ON THESE IMPORTANT ISSUES: @ Labor-Management Relations; Workmen's Compensation; Minimum Wages; Commu- ter Trains; Sales Tax. @ Labour Legislation; Civic Employees and Collective Bargaining; Changes in our Taxation Structure; and numerous other matters of importance. uing STRONG, effective voice in the THIS RE-ELECT

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