8 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Fri., Sept. 16, 1966. | : SPORT ECHOES The Fredericton Vikings; a paSeball team ‘will be in lerside. on Saturday- ‘to play our Juniors in the first game of the N.B. — P.E.I. jun- jor championship’ series. These. Vikings should be a powerful team. In the summer of 1965 they went to Winnipeg to take part in the baseball tournament for Canadian junior teams, and won two of the games they play- ed. The age-limit for Juniors has ‘been raised a year since’ then, so the Vikings are expected to have about the same line-up as they had in Winnipeg. Prince Edward Island had a pretty strong team in that tournament . with, Mike Kelly pitching end the best players of Charlotte- town and Summerside on _ the squad, ‘but they failed to win a game though coming close in their game with Manitoba ‘which we happened to-see: Our present, junior club has ia great poten- tial. but are rather young, the most of them. They could hardly be considered in the same class as the Island team that. played in Winnipeg. What we're trying to say is that we personally wouldn’t bet a plu— no, that’s not what we intended to say — heaven forbid! — But our: jun- jors will have a real job cut out for them to top this classy Fred- ericton aggregation, don’t you agree? A large crowd is expect- BASEBALL RESULTS National League ‘Atlanta 000 000 101— 2 42 Chicago 000 000 62x— 8 92 = owertu eam Cloninger (13-1), Ritchie (7), - : Carroll (7), Niekro (8) and : . . ‘ ‘ Torre; Jenkins (5-7) and. Hun- Meeting Juniors s 2 New York 101000011— 4 82 . |San Fran. ° 302 130 10x—10 14 1 Shaw (10-13), Selma (4) By NORMAN MacDONALD |Gardner (6) and Grote, Goossen ; | (6); Bolin (10-10) and Haller. : HRs: NY-—Luplow (5), Hiller (2); SF—Fuentes 2 (7), Hart ‘action, and who knows, maybe (39). he American League jour boys might wallop them. Af- iter all, according to the song, a |Chicago 010 000 021— 410 0 hundred million miracles are | Boston 040 10x— 51232 happening every day, and what . Lamabe (7-9), { Higgins (2), a thrill that would be for Sum- Rojo (7). Wilhélim (8) and Jo- merside fans. Don't miss it, sephson, Martin (8); Brandon folks. Game time is 3.30 p.m. | (7.8), Wyatt (9) and Ryan. HR: FINAL GAME Chi—Agee (20). We watched part of the ff- pirct | nal game between Kinsmen California 000 000 000— 0 41) ° | and Y’s Men for the little lea- | Baitimore 000 002 00x— 2.70). | gue championship of Sum- Chance (10-16), Lee (8), and | > merside Wednesday evening, (Rodgers; Phoebus (1-) and which Y’s Men won by the (Fitchebarren. HRS: Balt — B. | score of 13-7. Kenny MeNeill | Robinson (23), Blefary (21). | (Gerry’s son) pitched for the {second | winners.and this was the third | California game he had won in that final | gajtimore best-of-five series. He helped |- M. Lopez, Lee (8), Kelso (0-1) | his-own cause with a home ((9) and Rodgers; Watt, Dra- 000 000 003— 3 50 re-wind-up motion, He sort | Pi | Etchebarren. HR: Balt—Blefary of bounces in his shoes. We (99). . |-were surprised at the speed of | 55. 2 | McNeill .and- also of Steve washington 32 000.000— 5 41 | | Kelly (Russ’s boy) who was ‘New York 100 010 101 4 90 | the opposing pitcher when we | “Richert (13-14) Kline (8) and | arrived. These little league (Goanova; Stottlemyre (12-18). | | pitchers concentrate on speed (pony (6), Ramos (8) and How- | and accuracy, ‘we understand, 314 HRs: Wash—King (7), Nen | and_a serious effort to perfect (5). jy Tresh (26), Boyer curves are moré or less taboo. (13) Maris (12). We hope our junior and juven- | Second ile teams won't get into the |Washington 010001 003— 5 71 pickle. Peakes Station midgets |New York 000 310 60x—10 13 0 did over the age-limit rule. Cer-| \iecormick (10-13), Humph- tainly all the Maritime provinces |».y, (5), Kreutzer (7), Baldwin should have the same age-limit | (7) and. Brumley: Bahnsen "(1-0)-} for all divisions which” plan tO 444 Howard. HRs: Wash—King |-(8), Brinkman (7), Nen (6); NY ed to turn out to see this team im jenter inter-provincial play. —Tresh (27). mners eens 100 000 021— 4 91 |) run, Kenny has | an_ original | bowsky (9). Fisher (6-6) (9) and [#3 | i f } } i¢ PRESENTS TROPHY Furrows at the Dundas Plow- presented the John A. Mat- ing Match. yesterday. The. tro- donald Memorial trophy by phy was presented for the Doris Hunter, Queen of the best all-round male _ athelete Paul McAdam, Morell was the Dundas Match. CEN- at TRE, looking on* is George MacDonald, chairman of the Queen of the Furrows contest San Francisco Rout Mets: Red Sox Down Chicago. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Two ers to Jim King, Ed Brinkman | home runs by Tito Fuentes and |and Dick Nen. | King and Nen walloped two | over Cleveland Indians Thurs- day night, extending the Ath- iwas placed when he quit the jteam a year ago. . ‘la pro, I-would ask him which e PETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP) George (Punch) Imlach, man- ager-coach of Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey ° League says ex - Leaf Carl Brewer will never play for him ‘pgain> “”* Imlach also said the mere mention of Brewer’s name has been banned from Leafs’ - train- ing camp which opened here’ Thursday. Brewer, 27, a defenceman, left training camp last fall and last week announced he is seek- in] reinstatement as an ama- teur to play for Canada’s na- tional’ team in the world hockey championships in Vienna next March, But to be reinstated he must be removed from the Leafs’ suspended list ‘where he “If he walked into camp to- day and said he wanted to sign a contract and be reinstated as of the other five National Hockey League teams he wanted to play for,’’ Imlach said:.‘'Then I'd attempt.to make a deal for ‘him.’ LEFT THREE TIMES Imlach said Brewer has walked out on the Leafs three times — first to play football for ~McMaster University in Hamilton, then out of last year’s Loney Predicts Good Season ’ d ANTIGONISH, NS.’ (CP)— Don Loney, coach in Maritime football his- tory, said Wednesday he ex- most — successful } George Punch Imlach = Lashes Out At Brewer training. camp and for the third: time, this summer. “This summer he walked into my office and offered me a con- tract,” Imlach said. “Then I offered him one. Next. I read in the paper he had decided to play for Canada's national team.” Imlach said he may have to remove Brewer from the stu- dent’s inactive list now that he has completed his studies for a bachelor-of-arts degree at the Universityof Toronto. “I will have to: move him to our reserve list if the other NHL teams make the request,’’ he said. “But his status remains the same—a suspended player." Imlach also said assistant manager - coach Frank (King) Clancy will negotiate players’ salaries this year, a task usually performed by Imlach. : “This is not a last - minute switch,” Imlach said. ‘We de- cided this last June." Clancy said the players will not find him easy to deal with. If any walk out unsigned, he will ask Imlach to suspend them. “And you can bet I'll back Clancy to the hilt," sald Im-~- lach, adding that last year Tor- onto players drew more. than $400,000 in wages. ; Clancy said bonus clauses will be granted the players. “If they want bonus clauses, I'll be happy to oblige. With me it will be produce and the sky's the limit.” , Imlach also plans to talk with winger Eddie Shack here next Tuesday. Shack a month ago was sent to Victoria of the West ern Hockey League for training and Imlach said only that the move was-a disciplinary one, “If he levels with me, he will stay in camp here in Peterbor- - ough,’ said Imlach, who last year- shipped Shack to the Leafs’ Rochester farm ¢lub in the American League at the be- ginning of the season: Shack re- gained a berth with Toronto and scored 26 goals. Same res © ROBINSON SUPPLIES LTD. 42 St. Peter’s Road Henderson & Cudmore Confederation Plaza s ee, : ’ ae one by Jim Hart led San Fran- 3 jletics’ winn streak to seven “ e : = om BP es te = Roneet S oe oe ek bi - cisco Giants to a 10-4 rout of |run homers in the first game as igames. i oy - poe Be en pee ‘i = ana a S am p Edgerton, Hunter (6), San- |New York Mets~ Thursday and. Mel Stottlemyre, a 20-game win- |” Campaneris’—fly to centre json this year.‘ Baie is ders (8), Grzenda (10). Stock |kept the Giants in the-thick of jner last year, suffered ‘his 18th scored John. Donaldson, who| Loney, whose St. Francis e cee (2-1) (1), Blanco (11), Handra- |the National League pennant |defeat. jhad drawn a lead-off walk and | Xavier X-Men meet Shearwater ome e es han (11) and -Roof, Talton (8); |T@ce. CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago leone to third on Tim Talton’s |Navy in an ‘exhibition, game in : : V r : Siebert: (16-8) and Azcue, Sims | The result moved third-place |cubs sent 10 men to the plate ingle — only the third hit off |Halifax Saturady, said the ee Ing (9), a st San” Francisco within 2% lin a six - run seventh «inning: |LOSeT Sonny Siebert (16-8). balance this season, He said us om : ; ‘Minnesota. _—‘-101 210 000— 5-81 |games off first place Los An-|Thursday for an 82 victory Steven Kansas City, pitch- | college league should show more |- a He didn't mark |Detroit. 102 140 00x— 8 91\geles Dodgers and left - the ae Cloninger of Atlanta |¢TS scattered 10 hits, Wes Stock |defending league champions St. - EDMONTON (CP)—Nearly a year after the—-event, George Chuvalo remains., unconvinced that he-ever lost to Ernie Ter- rell. “every time I hear his-name I can’t help losing my temper,” said the Canadian heavyweight boxing champion, who fights Bob Avery of Tucson, Ariz., in -———g-10-rounder here tonight. “You bet .I’m still convinced I beat him. Maybe I sounded off like I'd lost my mind after the fight-in-Toronto-but T knew that I had beaten him.” ‘Terrell, who holds the World Boxing -Association version of the- heavyweight title, won a unanimous decision over Chu- valo at Maple Leaf Gardens last November and the Cana- diam complained in his dressing toom that he had been robbed in his own home town. ’ Chuvalo- was virtually alone among the eyewitnesses of the fight in his opinion and some suggested that he saw less of -the contest than most since his vision was impeded by Terrell’s left hand for the greater pai of: the evening. ‘Thuvalo still disagrees. “I blocked almost all of Ter- rell’s jabs,’ he said. ‘He wasn’t reaching. »me. my face at all.’’ F He. had no complaints about the officiating in the same ring four_months later when he achieved distinction by going 15 rounds with Cassius Clay. It Was a one-sided victory for the generally. recognized world champion but the slow-moving Canadian was the first man to force Clay to go the distance. Chuvalo is confident that he'll get another shot at Clay if both keep winning. He said he wants six or seven tune-up fights first, against such opponents as third- | ranked Amos (Big Train) Lin- | coln, ,Sonny Liston and Karl | Mildenberger. But not Terrell: | “Nobody wants to fight Ter- | rell,”” he said.““That's why Clay, has passed him-up again for , Cleveland Williams. Terrell isn’t | the kind of fighter people’ want 1B to-pay to see._He drapes all National League over you, backs - away. Pittsburgh (Veale 14-11) at The Canadian. was happler to. Angeles (Koufax 23-8), (N) about his prospects tonight| New York (Fisher 9-14) at San against the unranked Avery, & |Francisco (Sadecki 5-8), (N). Grant, Pleis (1-2) (5), Boswell (6) Cimino (8) and Battey, Mit- terwald. (7); Podres, »Wicker-- sham (7-3) (5). and. Freehan. PROBABLE PITCHERS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Probable pitchers. for today’s major league games: American League Cleveland (Bell 14-12) at De- jtroit (Wilson 18-10 or Aguirre , (N). : Kansas City (Krausse 13-8) at Washington (Moore .3-3), (N)? Chicago (Horlen 8-12) at Bal- timore (McNally 13-4), (N). Minnesota — (Boswell rritt 5-13) at New York (Bou- ton 2-7), (N). : : California) (Newman 47) .at oston (Stange 7-8), (N). six-foot-two 225-pounder who has philadelphia (Short 18-8) at 11 knockouts and only four de- /Houston (Cueller 10-9), .(N). feats.in 23 fights but has been) Cincinnati: (Maloney 14-7). at knocked out himself in his last |Atlanta (Jarvis 41), (N). three outings, ‘ St. Louis” (Gibson 19-10) and “T like big opponents,” Chu- |Jackson 12 - 13) .at Chicago valo said. ‘The kind who will |(Koonce 5-4 and Simmons 56), stand up and fight." ; (2). : Varsity Football Team. Have Surprise For League The largest training camp in SDU history is in full swing at | St.. Dunstan’s University with more than 36 athletes competing for the 32 positions available on this year’s squad. Head coach Ed Hilton, who |g starts his seventh season as grid mentor at St. Dunstan’s, says that he has hedged optimism on the clubs chances. A big factor | is the extra |, Jack | % Kane, a versatile athlete in his | ~ own right, is on staff as assis- |: in this, he notes, coaching help this year. tant coach and. full time hockey coach, and Colin McMillan, SDU Rodes Scholar and year veteran of the old A.F.C. league with the Saints, will be with the team until, his depar- ture for Oxford at the end oft he | month. Kane has been working on the backfield while McMillan has been: helping out on the line. Hiltow has an even dozen play- ers back from last year’s: team, which ended last season with a disappointing 1-6 record. The club was short on bodies from the start of the season, and mid- way through the year, the ros- ter was down to 18 men. Now, however, Hilton figures the team will be in -better shape; with more depth and experience where it counts. ‘‘This year,"’ he notes, ‘‘we have as many as three players fighting for some positions and this makes for a good training camp. We hope to field ah offensive and defensive ‘club this year, something un- heard of in the last few ycars At SDU.last year, starting the season, we used as many as 10 men going both ways.” About half of this year’s club will be Islanders. Back from last year are Bob Hickey, most im- proved player, guard; Clarkson, guard,, Cyril MacDon- ald, top scorer, half back; Len Gaudet, center, Frank Ke ily, tackle; Ken Hubley, guard; Ai- lan Connolly, tackle; and Joe McGuire, tackle. : Other retournees include John Driscoll, quarterback; Saugus, Mass.; Warren Harvey, tackle, Montreal; John Rodgers, tackle, Norristown, Penn.; Bob Fellows, tackle, Sarnia, Ont.; John Grant, four |: « Steve | squad cut down a bit to prepare for next week’s opener. The Saints open their schedule a week Saturday against U.N.B. and make their home debut against Dalhousie Oct. 1. Other games are against Acadia, Mt, Allison, St. F.X., and St. Mary’s. After last year’s effort, it’s dif- ificult to make any predictions, but the new spirit and enthus- liasm being engendered on the lcampus together with a solid j\team effort, could go a long way towards a winning season. ‘Clay Signs To | (Meet Williams. HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)—Cas- ius Clay, boasting he would re- ‘tire anytime he was whipped, ‘Thursday signed a contract to and Bobby meet Houston’s Cleveland Wil- liams in a world's heavywéight BOB HICKEY halfback, Ottawa; [Driscoll, halfback, Saugus 4 Among the rookie backfielders ‘championship. fight in the Astro- ane dd full- 'dome Nov. 14. An- | Both Williams and Clay signed John \at the stadium where they will ‘in camp are’Les Affleck, back, Charlottetown; Chris nett, ~end, Charlottetown; \Kinsella, halfback, Ottawa; Eu- \fight gene MacDonald, end, Souris, | ; : - | ‘P.E.1.; Leon Berrouard, half- |. The champion signed: the con- | jtract as Mohammed All, The Astrodome seats ‘66,000 for boxing and Earl Gilliam, jhead of Texas Boxing Enter- back, Indian Orchid, Mass.; Jim |Russell Gallant, halfback, Tig- | nish, P.E.J.; Owen Jay, half- |back, Quincey, Mass.; and Sar- ry Puiia, end, Rumford, Me. New linemen at camp include. /fight, predicted it would set an Cletus Dunn, guard, Morell, )indoor record in attendance. The P.E1.:-.Mike Howell, _ tackle, \record is 23,306 who pated to see New York; Herb Murphy, cen-|Henry Armstrong and Fritzi ter, Georgetown, PEL; iPierce, tackle, Souris; Brian Me- |17, 1941. \Intyre, tackle, Charlottetown; | Gilliam also said it would \Bill Berrigan, tackle, Saugus; |smash the indoor gate record. of jand Ron Jackson, tackle, Sarnia. |$422,918 set by Rocky Graziano Hilton and his coaching o- and Tony Zale: July 6, 1947, at \ciates think that with the» re- |Chicago Stadium. jcord number of students regis-| From the live gate Clay will |tering at SDU this week, there is | get 50 per cent, Williams 20, the ja good possibility that a few sur- | Astrodome-1714—and-Texas-Box- iprises may show up in camp. jing Enterprises 1214 /Two or three more players are Clay, 24, has had 26 pro fights jexpected regardless, so there's |and won them all, Scoring 21 jlots of material to work with. | knockouts. ‘Says Hilton: ‘‘We have some} Williams, 33, has had 71 \good talent in camp — more ma- jfights, won 65, lost five and had terial than in quite awhile. In ajone draw, He has scored 51 ‘few days we should have the |knockouts. 12-5 or ~ |Sox will meet the Twins of the iprises, which is promoting the™ Bob Zivic fight in New York Jan. Giants 1% games back of Pittsburgh. Pirates..The Pirates met the Dodgers in Los Angeles Thursday night. - Fuentes’ first home run ig-: nited a three-run. Giant — first against Met starter Bob Shaw. Fuentes connected again in the fifth with winning pitcher Bob Bolin on base: = the third and opened a 5-2 lead for the Giants, Al Luplow and. -Chuck Hiller homered for the Mets, before 6,072 fans, smallest crowd in Candlestick Park: this year. BOSTON (AP). — Carl Yas- trzemski drove in a run with his 1,000th major league hit tn a four-run second. inning Thurs- day in helping the Boston Red Sox to a 5-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox in an Ameri- can League baseball game. Yastrzemski’s line single to right centre capped the decisive uprising and enabled the Red Sox to post their eighth straight home triumph over Chicago with a sweep of a tree-game series. : Boston has a 10-6: season rec- ord against the White Sox with two games left in Chicago. Rookie — right-hander Darrell Brandon surrendered a run on doubles by Duane Josephson and Jerry Adair in the top of the second and gave up. two -|more~-runs: -in- the eighth:-~ mt NEW YORK (AP) — Rookie Stan Bahnsen pitched a seven- hitter and kept New York Yan- kees from dropping into last place in the American League Thursday by beating Washing- ton Senators 10-5 in the second game of a doubleheader. The Senators won the first game 5-4 behind Pete Richert and clinched their first season's series against New York since 1933. '~ The split left New York tn eighth place; one-half game in front of Boston and one game Hart’s 32nd homer came in |. picking up the, Indians went down to their straight loss. - STANDINGS y THE ASSOCIATED PRESS American League Braves had retired the first 16 men he faced. a Ferguson Jenkins of ‘Chatham, Ont., snapped: the Braves’ eight- game winning streak with a fou¥hitter: = Cloninger gave up a single to Adolfo Phillips in-the.sixth, the fifth . i 1B: Rookie Tom Phoebus, making his first major league start in the opener, blanked—the “Angels 2-0 as the Orioles edged closer to their first American League | pennant. After being temporarily | Drop Players stalled by a_ four-game _ losing . streak, the Orioles reduced their |. HALIFAX (CP) Peake’s pennant -. clinching number to Station, P.E.I. has been ordered seven, P iby the Maritime Amateur Base- | 5 baH Association to drop its 15- | A combination of seven Orl- year-old players for the remain. | ole tories or losses by sec- ling games in the Maritime Ban- ond place Detroit. Tigers will |tam . semi-final series against | assure Baltimore of the flag. {Saint John Metro All-Stars. | Brooks Robinson opened the/ At the same time, MABA pre; | Oriole ninth with a single but |sident A.D. Chalmers of Halifax | Sam Bowens forced him at sec- /said the P-E.I. champions have | ond. Bowens stole second and |been granted permission to add moved to third on infjeld out. |14 year-olds to replace the nine Russ Snyder was purposely jover-age players. walked before Lau delivered. Age-limit for bantam baseball | Brooks Robinson and Curt in PEI. is 15, against 14 for Blefare™ whacked conservative. New Brunswick and Nova Sco- homers in the sixth inning of the |tia. opener, helping Phoebus to the’ Peake’s Station won the series victory. opener 13-10 last weekend in Phoebus, making his first ma- P.E.I. “This win still belongs to’ jor league start since being re- |them,"’ Chalmers said. called from Rochester of the| Remaining games in the best International League, struck out, |of-three series will be played | 1 eight and allowed: only four Saturday in Saint John. hits. al two California ran- ners reached second against the youngster. i Sandy Koufax | CLEVELAND (AP) — Bert Campaneris’ runt - scoring sac- rifice fly in the 11th gave Kan- Heads L gue sas City Athletics a 1-0. victory NEW YORK (AP) — Sandy ahead of last-place Washington. The Yankees broke the sec- ond game open with a six-run seventh inning with a two-run homer by Tom Tresh and a two- run single by Joe Pepitone the | key hits. | Bahnsen, making his-first ma- | jor league start, gave up hom- MINOR BASEBALL Coach Carl McQuaid has | called a practice for his midget team for 6:00 o’clock at Mem- lorial Field tonight. If weather | conditions make it impossible to | practice the players are asked to lattend as coach McQuaid in- | tends to have a meeting. Weather permitting, the Red Farm League in their deciding game tonight. at.6.00. If the wea- ‘ther is adverse, the game will tbe played Saturday morning at | | 10.00, | | SOFTBALL There will be a practice for | the juniors of the city softball | |league tonight at 6 o'clock at | | Vietoria Park, Vern Blanchard; junior’s coach, urges all players to be present for this workout. This will be the last practice. for the juniors before they meet Point Edward at Victoria Park ‘|Leonard Munroe |Koufax has :taken a solid lead Shoot Results in the National League earned- run competition while shooting Are Released | for a record fifth straight-cham- pionship. . The following are the results|. The pitching ace of the of the “Montague skeet shoot league - leading Los Angeles Dodgers heads the league with 95 a 1.81 average, figures compiled 93 |\by The Associated Press showed 23|Wednesday.. Gary Peters of held recently. Clarence Richards Arthur Clements Kenneth Clements George Nicholson Keith Collins Paul Collins Roy O'Connor Wendell Crane Bert Haneveld Preston Nicolle Harry Vuzzo Clem Campbell Saturday at 2:00- o'clock. Satur-. day's game will be the second game in a best-of-three series for the N.S.-P.E.1. Junior soft- ball championship. The third game, if necessary, will be play- ed immediately following the first. The Juniors lost the first game 6-1, 19| The leaders were based on 17 \and tied the major league rec- 13 ‘tive year. Lefty Grove paced ® '1929. Gallivan Sees This year, the Dodgers’. south- five shutouts. He has won 23 broadcaster Danny Gallivan said cisco Giants is second with a York Rangers should have a*e. has a 1966 record pf 46 Gallivan, visiting his former | Steve. Hurgan of | Cleveland after last season and Barkley is MACHINE Gallivan said the Rangers-will Wringer Washers ed to the Rangets this summer | Just Dial first Cub hit, but was thased in WL Pct. GBL | the seventh. ' = ; Baltimore 91 55 623 — | | Detroit -558 BALTONORE. (AP) — Pinch tamsents octet ie hitter Charlie Lau singled home |Chicago 76 73.510 the winning run in the bottom | California 73 73 .500 of the ninth as Baltimore Ori- \Cleveland 73 “768 490 oles nipped. California Angels 43 |Kansas City 69 80 .463 Thursday night and completed |New . York 66 83 443 a sweep of a twi-night double-.| Boston ~ 67 85. .441 baroes | Washington 66 85 437. 27% victory as the |Mary’s Huskiés are still strong, While Acadia Axemen and Dal- jhousie Tigers should be improv-’}~” ied. | He deséribed his own club as ‘interesting."’ SATURDAY SEPT. 17th, 1966 | 8 P.M. cl NO. 1 | 1—HURRICANE_ JENNIE S2—CHIEF PLAY 3~JOLLY POLLY 4—STARRY NIGHT SS—CLOVER KING 6—ASKET 7—JERRY’S TAG RACES 2-6 1—ADAMS TOM 2—LUCKY LARK 3—HANDSOME LADY 4—JENNY MOZELLE 5—BOB’S GIRL * 6—SHELBY KNIGHT 7—DONALDS PRIDE 8—RUSH HAL RACES 3-7 1—LORD ADIOS 2—DR. W. A. 3—SECURITY SCOTT 4—LAKEBURNS PRIDE 5—TRUE LADY LOU 6—BROWN BUDLONG RACES 4-8 1—BRENDAS FLAME 2—KNIGHT WAY 3—BOLD DEBBY 4—EMILY HAL 5—FAR STRIDE 6—JO ANNA LYNNE RACES 5-9 1—ROSE ROBIN 2—ARMONDS BUDDY 3—OZARK PETE 4—DONNA WAY S—WHIRL A WICK 23 |Chicago White Sox is the Amer- 22 ican League leader with 2.02. 18\the minimum of 140 innings. 18| Koufax broke the NL mark 13 lord last season by leading in 13'.R.A. for the fourth consecu- ithe American League four Istraight times starting with \paw has allowed 56 earned runs Closer League: 279 innings, and has pitched | games and lost eight. SYDNEY (CP) ~— Montreal} Juan Marichal of San Fran- Thursday Detroit Red Wings 2% E R.A. Peters, who won the “could be in trouble’ and New |AL title in 1963 with a 2.33 aver- better National Hockey League |eatned runs in 205 innings and season than they did in 1965-66, 2 12.19 won-lost: mark. home here, said in an interview |!dians ts the runner-up with a Detroit will suffer from the loss \2-°7 average. e. defencemen Bil Gach a ———_—_—_—_———_—" oug Barkley. Gadsby retired) , JENKINS WASHING finished as a player because of | an eyé injury. | Parts - Sales - Service get a lift from the return of Rod @ Service on all makes of Gilbert and Jean’ Ratelle, both injured last, season. He said Al | @ Selling completely rebuilt MacNeil, a Sydney native trad-| washing machines : jby. Chi Black Hawk i 892-3837 y. Chicago Blac awks, will. Charlottetown help the New York defence, Kemt &., ‘Crafted == ¢ Suit | _ gmoriginal creation by - Savile Row \4 featuring the International Mark of Quality PURE VIRGIN WOOL . 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