V D. D. IN BRITISH GOLF -OPEN South African Shoots 63 For A New Course Record ry TOM OCHILTREE ,HOYLAKE, Eng. (AP)-South Alrican Gary Player carved a course record of 68 out of tough Hoylake Monday in qualifying play for the British Open golf c-hampic ship. The 20 - year - old player - a shooter of great promise e- pro- vided the only genuine sensation In a day of high winds and even higher scores. His three-under- par round included a magnificent 32 on the homeward nine. Player's 66 broke the course re- cord by one stroke. Dancing with joy off the last green he said: "It was the great- 53! round of my life. Everything I tried came off." Englandls Charlie Ward. who was regarded as a fading player, ' gged a G9 on the easier Wal- lasey course where half the re- cord field of 330 played for qual- ifying scores. Belgium's Flory Van Donck. a real threat to take this title. also shot 69 st Wallasey aannmo run.-:3 7: Al Balding of Toronto posted a 87-35-72 at Wallasey. Stan Leon- ard of Vancouver and Lachute. Que., went round Hoylake in 74. "I played well most of the way but had two sixes-at the third a.d 14th," Leonard said. He took 37 both out and in. Player, Ward and Van Donck were the onl, golfers to break up. Mostly, the scoreboard presented a frightening aspect. Figures for the field as a- whole were the poorest posted for years. Australia's "ete. Thomson winner of this title the last two years. breezed around Wsliasey in a .par 71. He played an easy, relaxed game, serving notice he probably will be a difficult chain-S pion to unseat. . Bruce Crampton. a 20-year-old cc")atrlot of Thomson's, racked up a 70 at I-ioylake. Gene Sarazen. the American who won this title in 1932, got a 77 at I-loylake, and as he finished he said: "1 never putted so badly." Frank Stranahan. the for- mer amateur from Toledo, Ohio, messed up his l-loylake 'round with a seven at the sixth hole and finished with a 78. Entries who played their first qualifying round at Hoylake Mon- DAILY CROSSWORD DAILY CBYPIYJQUOTE - I-loso'a how to trlr it: A I. spread arm! (rm to 6. Flower dry 9. Job 5. Persia 10. Dwarfod 6. Covered mum, with rust 12. Domino 1, To put In 13. KI,& W I (2.50 "gm 8. mmsoo :4. Metallic tend-r rock 9. Group of 25. Amount ch!-lfcll taken in -Insert 18. lnsklrno ll. severe houses 15. Tharo are 19. Belgian VIII!!! 01 g-Iv" than in 10. Sella Illa St. . .g.In liawrenco 31. Sea eama r ver' (sum I1. Ovor (post) 33 l.4ughi!Ig 25 Ferry host (Va) 28. American Indians 32. Kind of bomb 84.'l'o axilo 35. Buahl 81. Gaul. 80. coat with tin-load alloy 89. Engine as. Projoo tlona. as broken I) 42. Fat (8. Narrow aporturo 44. Tho rise and fall of oceans Bowl 2. Aocuao 1. Inns in Part of "to Do" A X Y D I. lo I. 0 N 0 I one iottsr simply stands for an (or the three L's. X for the two 0's. ate. alng trophies. tho Inglis and formation of the words are all hints. Iaoh day the code letters are dllarant. 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I'VE MADE A ' EXHAUASTNE sruov OF ,.,.: - - ”J1Vxz”,,,-7 4 MA1TER'l'D smo HIM t-seek-r cssssa no you Know day will shoot Wallasey today and vice versa. Then the 100 low sc rers will go forward into the first round of the championship proper Wednesday witli all the qualifying scores rubbed out. ...D......L..D.j..... Mcliluslley Draws with Simon To llelain'Crown- 1 NEW GLASGOW - Although held to a draw in 10 rounds. Cobey Mccluskey. 153. Dart- mouth, retained his, Maritime middleweight boxing title here against Gary Simon. 155. New Glasgow. Mccluskeyled in the early rounds but Simon made a strong come” Ir, .1. though he lost the 9th on ac- count of a low blow. The three judges voted as fol- lows: l)an Macllllllan. 5 ,Simon, 3 McCluskey. 2 even; Reg Collie, 6 McCluskcy. 3 Simon. 1 even; Dave Melanson. 4-4-2. , in thc six-round semi-final veteran Bob Leadiey. 160, Dart- mouth. gained the unanimous decision over Johnny Griffiths. 1561&. Halifax. Bobby Duff, 130, Stellarton. knocked out Bobby Burns. 135. Halifax. at 41 seconds of the first round. Donnie Hughes, 142Vz, Thorburn. deci- sioned Allie MacDonald, 143. Steilarton. .Ranlda (R. MacDonald, tonsolulmsoownouaol-n.ruauasy.JuIr8.1966 1 Rain Halts S'side Race Card After. Four Dashes Saturday Rain halted the race card at Time:-2.12 Summerslde Raceway Saturday Parl-mutuel - 33.00. 2.30. 2.10: night after half the dashes were 33.3). 2.10; 32-10. completed. Two heavy rain show- 3 PACE ers ocurred after the third race 3 and it took a fleet of forty odd cars traveling around the track for about three-quarters of an hour to get the surface in shape for the fourth race. Further rain conpelled the officials to call the meet off. Tho daily double paid 511.50. The best racing of the card occurred in the third dash when Miss Knox taking the lead at the in pole. outfooted the field to the wire with the rest of the horses bunched yery closely behind. Miss Knox (Sobey) .... .. Bob Ciegg (Bernard) . I'll Conto (Cole) Eva Budlong (Hughes) . Chocolate Dip (Whalan) . Real Joe (Lowery) Esso (Poulton) Time:-2:15 2-5 Pari-mutuel - 37.90. 3.80, 8.40; 57.50. 5.60; t5.20. JUNIOR FREE-F011-ALL nor: Peter Federal (Robinson) Yuta (J. MacGregor) CC PACE Gay Spirits (M8Cl78dY9lll ' Taurida Bay (Smllhi . Sllllklsl J99 lwhalml llleg (Art Rogers) . . . . . . . . . . .. Lusty's Lass (Matthews) . 1-ime.,2.15 4.5 Canadaire (Art Rogers) Pari-mutuel m Wlll. S500- Lanadale (Bernard) I 2 3 4 Owner; of winning horses: Sun- -5 klst Joe, Keith Mulligan; Jerry 6 A, Hanover, H. R. Bevan; Miss 7 Knox, George Sobey; Peter Fed- eral. Mapco Stable. Officials: starter on gate. Alan Mannlster Direct (R. Dewar .. Lee Cavallero (Arnold Rogers) . Time:-2:16 2-5 Pari-mutuel - 2.10, 2.10, 2.10; 2.70, 2.10; 2.10. Wedlock; announcn. Boll: Schur- man; judges, Cliff Ran In. pre- AA TROT giding judge; Dick Steele, Edgar Jerry A. Hanover( Llewellyn) .. I Houghlon: timers. llalpll D0055: Airlock (Smith) . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2 James MacGregor. Jim Razavet, Waymark (J. MacGregor) . .. 3 clerk of the course, Claude Hark- Sir Francis Drake (Willis) 4 ness. AT WIMBLEDON WIMBLEDON, England (AP)- Diabetic Ham Richardson and ageing Vic Seixas, sure bets for the American Davis Cup team again this year struggled through to shaky victories Monday in quarter-finals of the Wimbledon tennis championships. Seixas weathered out an hour and N minutes first set against young Allen Morris of Atlanta, to win 13-ll. Morris pulled up lame in the second set and Selxas took the match 13-11. 6-0, 6-3. Richardson appeared to be on PROBABLE PITCHERS NEW YORK (AP) - Probable pitchers in today: major league games (won and lost records in parentheses): American League Chicago at Detroit: (10-4) and Hncfl Ill-5) Kansas ('iiy at Cleveland; Dit- mar (6-ii) vs Garcia (5-7) Boston at Washington: (3-3) vs Ramos I4-7) Baltimore ht New York; Wight (3-7) vs R. Coleman I2-2) Wilson Slsler National League lllilwaukce at Cincinnati: Bur- dette (7-4r vs Nuxhail (5-7) St. Louis at Chicago; Mizell (8-5) vs Davis (2-3) ' Philadelphia at Pittsburgh Sim- mons (3-G) vs Law (3-ii). Regula- tionigame to be preceded by con- cluding innings of suspended gain. in which Meyer (5-3) and Kline (6-8) will pitch. That's Ike Moreside driving Jol- lity George to a new mark of 2.15- JOLLITY GEORGE TAKES NEW MARK but there is not much bewleen the next three horses. On the in- Pace on the race card at the Dri- vlng Park Thursday night. Ike had some room to spare at the wire side placing is Myone and drlverlls Jolly Bud. lvan O'Brien. Showing is Dal 3. who won the scond dash of th .same race. and coming in fourth 3-5 in the first dash of the B Fists fly as Dave Philley. left, Chicago White Sox outfielder. squares off on pitcher's mound with Yankee hurier Bob Grim dur- in sixth inning of recent game in Chicago. The fight occurred aft- English Channe QUEBEC ICP) - A Ill-year-old Quebec swimmer. nicknamed ”l.a Corvette" because of the powerful steady stroke. leaves today for Calais. France. where he will try to swim the English Channel. Jacques Amyot. hefty, blue-eyed veteran of long-distance events in the Quebec area. has tentatively scheduled his attempt for the third week in July when the Channel waters are expected to reach is temperature of 80 degrees fahren- hell. Amyoi ricscrlbr-s the projected swim as the "ambition of my life." it was made financially pos- sible by contributions to a fund organized by Qucbcc business i men following the swimmer's im- pressive performances in this ' area in the last few years. Accompanying Amyot on the trip will bc his coach. Joseph La- chance. Amyot's brother Philippe, and another swimmer. Raymond liny. Lachance thinks Amynt can keep up a pace of 50 strokes a minute during most of the swim. IN GOOD SHAPE Amyot is described as being in er Philley was struck by a hall pitched by Grim. Phllley was ous- ted from the game and Grim re- sumed his pitching. White Sox won. 2-0. and swept their four- game series with Yankees. Out Our Way "top shape” and ready to face oven colder water temperatures than 60 degrees. He's been train- ing in the cold waters nf Lgkg 59, Joseph in the Laurenllsl Mount- lllns. 30 miles north of Quebec Cll.V. and in the St. Lawrence River for the last few weeks, He has been oi i to m sy J. R. Williams Quebec Swimmer To Attempt I From Calais . St Lawrence River at Ste. Anne- de-Beaupre St. 19 and swam the 21-mile. upstream distance to Quebec City in seven hours and 21 minutes. The swim was care fully planned to take advantage of the tide. From Cap (iris Ncz. Fnince. in Dover. England. the straight-line width of the channel is 21 miles. The long-distance factor itself offers no lnsurmountablc diffi- culty for Amyot, who has two gruelling swims to his credit. He crossed Lake St. John. 145 miles northeast of Quebec. July 23 last year. He covered the 21- mlle distance between Peribonka and Robcrval in 11 hours and 25 minutes in spite of high winds Richardson Ancl Seixas Eke Oui Tennis Victories "'9. Way to a beating when he rallied strongly in the third set to delmt Australia's power hitting fthander, Neal Fraser, 6-3. 0-11 7-5. 6-4. The "My of America's poten- "31 .Da"5 CUP team into the semifinals of the 70th Wimbledon champmnshln was matched by ill! Potential Australian Davis Cup team. HOAD, nosnwau. wm w iioad struggled home over fellow Australian Mal Andegson. 445. 6-l. 6-1. 13-11. Ken Rosewall. Australiats No. 2. was the only semi-fianlist with an easy pas- sage. Slie won with supreme case over weden's rising young star. uu Schmidt, 61. 5-3, 6-2. Wednesday's semi - final be- lween llflati and Richardson in the loll oi the draw and between Rosewll (and Soixas in the bot- l0m- 15 DI'acii(:ally a certainty to he Slaned l'lll('P again in Adelaide. Australia. Doc. 26-27-28 wheri Aus- tralia defends the Davis Cup. Anl9FI('H Is an overwhelming favorite in reach the challenge round. Tcnru captain Bill Talbert said.Rlcbardsnn and Seixas are certainly lhc top two players right now. They look like our Davis Cup (cam to me." For the first time in living mEm0FY -- probably since the First World War-each semi-Iin- alist at Wimbledon has reached his spot in the last four without meeting a seeded player. UPSET FOR PAT WARD Only one women's singles match was played Monday Ang- eia Mortimer of Britain lost to Pat Ward, another Briton. 6-3. 6-0. It was considered a jarring upset. Miss Ward is the first Briton to reach the women's singles semi-finals of Wimbledon since 1939. Last summer she was ggjgjiggijg GRIM MEMORIES BERLIN (Reuters) - Berliners were seen crying as they left a West Berlin movie theatre after a special screening of Night and Fog. a French documentary film on Nazi concentration camps. CALM AFTER RIOTS J01-IANNESBURG. South Af- rica (Reuters) - More than 200 police armed with machine-guns GOOD WAGES. TRA . ADVENTURE OOMRADESI-11'? Operate and service tho sauna room ooulsanent that as-tvoa Can- fleialu ads'a modern gun, Learn more abota your own trads 13 modem IMP! and schools with most unto-date equipment, an, joy adventure. hovel, comrade. ship while you oarn , good pg, and servo your country in tho Royal Canadian Navy. 'rha'e's security too-with a fine pengioj plan. Age limits: 17 to 25 (or IQ to 29 with trade qualifications). Investigate today the fine oppor- tunities for you. See. write. or phono your NAVAL RECRUITING OFFICER, IIMC5 QUEEN CHARIKYITE, CHARIX)'l"I'E'l'OW'N. Phone 4918 a finalist in tho American na- tionals, losing to Doris Hart. Miss Mortimer. seeded third. failed to carry her service one time and for a Wimbledon seed. that too is probably a record. In other women's quarterfinals today flu-stricken Beverly Baker Fleltz of Long Beach. Calif., meets Angela Buxton, Brigslng Althea Gibson of New York. alm- ml to be the first Negro to win the Wimbledon title, is favored to defeat Shirley Fry of St. Peters- l"1l”ll- Fla..' and Louise Brough, Beverly Hills, the defending champion. Is the pick over Brit- lsh Shirley Bloomer, ileoll-fin Smosli-IIII lakes ioilier of In Wwow and Children Receive 510,000 on 35,000 Policy On his way to spend the week with his family, a young businessman was the victim of a highway smash-up. llin death came only a few months after he took out a Confederation Life Policy for 35,000, with an Accidental Death & Disrnembenneu; clause. He chose this policy because of its low cost Double Indemnity guarantee in case of accidental death. it was a wise choice because Confederation Life promptly paid his widow twice the face value of the policy, 810,000 instead of 85,000. This substantial sum of money was a godsend to the bereaved family. A 35.000 policy with Confederations Aociden ' Death and disi meniberment Benefit pays: ' I Liberal cash payments for non-fatal dismsmbe rucul accidents and Sunday night patrolled the Afri- can townshlp of Evaton. 30 miles south of here, where five people were killed in riots this week. The riots followed a bus boycott by the townspeople. Refrigeration Repairs To All Makes APPLIANCES SALES & SERVICE MOTORS Rewinding and Repairs ELECTRICAL Repairs Palmer Electric Phones I548 I544 yaw xs 7-75 we ro 09052 NE W Underwood "I50” TYPEWRITERS All In for a Moi in your own oM:s - no obligation. Underwood limited and a brief electrical storm. 48-MILE SWIM Probably his most amazing demonstration of endurance was his swim around the island of Orleans. in the St. Lawrence river, near Quebec City. On Sept. it last year he coverccl the es- timated 48-mile distance in 14 hours and Ill minutes. Three Canadians. two of them women, have completed the chan- nel swim: Tom Parks. former resident of Hamilton, 0nl.. now residing in California: Win- nie Roach Leuszler of St. Thomas 0nt.. and Marilyn Bell of Toronto who last ycar became the young. psttperson ever to accomplish the ea the swim across the Ch ' ever "M'5”W NEW SUPERLINIJR NEW YURK (AP) a. TI... NW, York Times says Congregg win he asked for funds to (mild a wirer liner as a sister ship for the United states. to givg the American merchant marina the fastest pair of ships in the world. Cost of the new luxury liner was estimated at 30,003.11!) to 8100,- 000.000. 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