14 kia6aka falls gazmi on - fultonhistory.comfultonhistory.com/newspaper 8/niagara falls ny... ·...

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14 KIA6AKA FALLS GAZmi , ,,w - fH4gy,.ltp,frwM» IV. 1*64 T on Almost 20 Local Area Boys On College Football Teams * * » ByBOB.WE&BER COLLEGE FOOTBALL begins this weekend for a few teams and for the rest next Saturday. Almost 20 local and area high school graduates will be perform- ing on the collegiate gridiron this fall. State University of New York at Buffalo, only W e s t e r n New York school playing football, has two local boys and another from Youngstown. Rich Condino, a UB senior who quarterbacked Bishop Duffy to a Catholic League title in 1960, is a fullback this year after earning a 1963 letter as a win g back. He WEBBER averaged 5.8 yards per carry and is a good defensive player. Also working at fullback for the Bulls is Willie Shine, the former Trott Vocational All-City player in three sports who t r a n s f e r r e d from Garden City (Kansas), Junior College. Willie is the tallest running back 4 6-3. One of the UB linemen is Bill Taylor, a strong 6-2, 213-pound tackle who played at Lewiston-Porter Cen- tral. He is a junior. DOWN S T A T E at Syra- cuse, wher« the Orangemen are being touted as one of the best in the East, is the fabulous Rich King, who will share the quarterback- Ing with: Walley Mahle. King, the former Lew-Port star from Ransomville, led the 1963 Syracuse team in passing. He and Mahle are both seniors. Also listed on the Syra-_ cuse squad is Herb Korthoff, 6-2, 225-pound junior tackle from Royalton-HarUand Cen- tral School and Harry Wien- ke, sophomore center from Nlagara-Wheatfield. ,- * * * DUKE GRKOVIC, senior at Cornell, is listed as a starting tackle.for thi Big Red. He now lives i- Des Moines, Iowa, but played his high school sports at Lewis- ton-Porter when his family lived in the area. Also with Cornell is Stuart Fullerton, highly-regarded sophomore end from Essex, Conn., who also played at Lew-Port, and impressed in a recent Cor- nell scrimmage. He started «t Tight end and caught a touchdpwn.pass. Two 60phomore halfbacks whom Cornell coach Tom Harp . had been counting on, John Zankowski from Niagara Falls and Rick Row- ley f r o m Tonawanda, are probably out for the season. Zankowski is sidelined with mononucleosis and Rowley has a torn knee cartilage. » » BILL BRUCE, a s e n i o r guard from Lewiston who played with- Lew-Port, is a starter at the Universit> of Rochester. He is among 20 lcttermen . . . LaSalle High graduates i n c l u d e tarkle Chuck Stavlns at D u k e, tackle Jerry Sertick at Rut- gers and center Don Rink at Columbia . . . Roger Hailey from Trott is a senior quar- terback at Michigan State, which is 10 deep at that po- sition . . . Hailey broke in as passing whiz, late in his sophomore y e a r . . . . Of course, Notre Dame has Brian Atamian, the fine senior guard from Bishop Duffy who earned an award for his downfield blocking last year and the injury- prone Jerry Tubinis, half- back f r o m Niagara Falls High who has two years of eligibility left. . . . At Thiel College in Pennsyl- vania, where freshmen are eligible for the varsity. quarterback Jim Magee and center Jeff Plumer from Niagara Falls High are run- ning second s t r i n g " . . . Two other Niagara Falls graduates, halfbacks Dennis Ormsby and Jim Smith, and LaSalle fullback Phil Sylva are freshmen at Dodge City (Kansas) Junior College.. By HAL BOCK AP Sport* Writar The bases are loaded and your best hitter is up. He bangs into a triple play, but you don't worry. A run scores on the play and that sort T>f1 thing happens only to win- ners. As long as Hank Bauer's Baltimore Orioles are win- ners, he can take the triple plays in stride. Especially if they p r o d u c e runs. That's what happened In the midst of Baltimore's 12-5 victory over Waship g t 0 n Thursday night. The Orioles had scored eight runs in the fourth inning and looked to be ready for some more in the fifth when Jerry Adair, Luis Aparicio and Boog Powell opened with consecu- tive singles loading the bases. Brooks Robinson, who had seven straight hits was the batter. First of Stason Robinson bounced to Sen- ator shortstop John Kennedy who relayed to Joe Cunning- ham to complete the seeming- ly routine double play. But when Aparicio tried to score too, Cunningham's throw to catcher Mike Brumley caught Aparicio and p r o d u c e d the American League's first triple play of the season. Four tri- ple plays had been previous- ly recorded in the National League. Yanks Beat Detroit The victory kept the Orioles one game in front of Chicago, which went 10 innings before nipping Minnesota 3-2, and \Vi up on third place New York, which used home run power to drop Detroit 5-2. In the only other American League game played, Cleve- land edged.Boston 5-4. Robinson had a big night except for the triple-play. He rapped three singles and a double in the 17-hit Oriole at- tack, scoring two runs and knocking in two. Sam Bowens contributed a three-run homer in the Or- ioles' big Inning and also had and Adair scored as Kennedy a run-scoring d o u b l e . Milt flipped to Don Blasingame. PaDoas narlavoH *.K« .... ingame,|Pappas parlayed the heavy support into his 15th victory and seventh in a row. Hansen Hits No. 17 \ Ron Hansen rifled his 17th homer of the season off los- er Jim Kaat in the 10th in- ning for C h i c a g o ' s victory over Minnesota Hansen's shot came on a 3-0 pitch. Sox starter Joel.Horlen and Kaat had d u e l e d through eight innings before Horlen left for a hitter. Hoyt Wilhelm finished up and won it for Chicago. Elston Howard crashed a three-run h o m e r and that was all Al Downing needed for his 12th victory as the Yankees kept pace. Joe Pep- itone also homered for New York. Downing limited the Tig- ers to five hits, one of them Al Kaline's 14th homer. Pitcher Sonny Siebert and rookie Chico S a l m o n hit home runs for the Indians and Don McMahon's tight re- lief protected the victory over the Red Sox. Dick Stuart belted his 31st homer and Tony Conigliaro got his 21st both with a man on for Bos- ton. RACING WARES—Junior members of Rodney Fairbahk, Bill Rogers, Andy the Youngstown Yacht Club show Hooker, Comm.. Frank Ripple, Jane, off their trophy winnings at Thurs- Rix, Junior Fleet Capri, John Hosmer, day's closing dinner. Left to right are Andy Feeney.—Gazette Photo. Short Hits, Hurls Phils To Win Over Cardinals In Tennis Battle By MURRAY CHASE AP Sports WrlUr "I feel I'm a better pitcher than the batter is a hitter," saya Chris Short. The Philadelphia ace proved his point again.Thursday but this time went one 6tep fur ther. He showed he was a better hitter than all of the St. Louis' batters combined by driving home the first two runsin tlie National League-leading PhiJ lies' 5-1 victord over the Car dinals. Short, in fact, belted two hits—a key triple and a sin- gle—in four times at bat, al- most doubling his season hit production, which had been three, and raising his average from ,063 to .096. The runs batted in did equal his pre- vious output. Pitcher Hits Trip!* The 26<year-old hurler came to the plate in the second in- ning with runners at first,and third and one out. He prompt ly lashed a triple to the right field bullpen, bringing in Tony Taylor and Ruben Amaro with the first two runs of a five, run outburst. Short's pitching, meanwhile, didn't suffer. He h e l d the Cardinals to six hits while striking out 12 and walking one. i he has seven Josses — tying him with Jim Bunning as the team's winningest pitcher. The southpaw's earned run average—1.89—is second only to Sandy Koufax' 1.74 among NL pitchers. Six-Gam* Lead v Short's over-all performance waj particularly vital because •the victory boosted the Phil- lies' lead to six games over St. Louis, Cincinnati and San Francisco. A defeat would have moved the Cardinals to within four games of the top w i t h the Phillies facin-g an important three-game series starting San Francisco tonight. No one has been as c l o s e a four games behind Philadelphia since Aug. 15. The Reds blanked Pitts- burgh 3-0 Friday night while the Giants knocked off Los Angeles 5-1. Milwaukee nipped New York 7-7 and Chicago edged Houston 4-3 in National League afternoon game. Johnny Callison's two-run homer climaxed> the Phillies early, but winning, rally, which was aided by errors by Ken Boyer and Dick Groat. The Cardinals scored their lone run in the second. On a walk to Boyer, a singie by Charley James and ^Bill White's double. The Reds scored all of their runs in the sixth inning. Bob Friend hit Pete Rose with a pitch, then gave up singles to Vada Pinson, Frank Robinson and Deron Johnson for two runs. The last came across on a force play. First Start of Season Billy Pierce, making his first start of the season, al- lowed-six hits before needing relief help from Jim Duifalo in the eighbh inning. Pierce, 3-0, singled across the last Giant run in the seventh. Jim I Hart cracked his 27th homer, ^a two-run blast, in San Fran- cisco's first inning. . Larry Jackson became the majors' second 19-game win- ner, scattering eight hits be- fore needing relief help from Lindy McDaniel in the ninth inning. The Colts rocked Jackson, who has lost 10 times, for three runs in the sixth, but the Cubs rallied for three runs in their half of the In- ning. Erne Banks doubled across two runs and later scored on a wild pitch by re- liever Sal Woodeshick. The Braves snapped a 4-4 tie against the Mets in the eighth inning in Lee Maye's fourth straight hit, a single, and Rico Carty's 17th homer Felipe Alou -doubled home Bob Purkey, 10-8, pitched a what turned out to be the The victory was his 16th—ifive-hitter against the Pirate, winning run in the ninth. TENNIS ••• FOREST HILLS, N.Y.—Top- seeded Roy Emerson of Aus- tralia beat fellow countryman Tony Roche 13-11, 8-6, 6-2 to reach the men's semi-finals of the National Singles Cham- pionships along with Chuck McKlnley of San Antonio, who defeated Roger Taylor of Eng- land 13-11, 9-7, 6-1. Carol Hanks, a scrappy St Louis miss, knocked out her second seeded player, No. 6 Ann Haydon Jones of Eng land, 7-5, 2-6, 8-6, and went into the semifinals against de- fending champion Maria Bue- no of Brazil, a 6-4; 6-1 victor over Australia. * HARNESS RACING WESTBURY, N.Y.—Robert Froner, a 22-year-old architec- tural draftsman from Brook- lyn, won the largest twin dou- ble payoff in history—$172,- 726.80—at Roosevelt Raceway, holding the sole winning ticket on a 4-1-8-8 combination. FOOTBALL PHILADELPHIA — V i n c e McNally, general manager of the Philadelphia Eagles since 1949, announced his resigna- tion. YACHTING HOUSTON — Ernie Fay of the Texas Corinthian Yacht Club retained his lead in the U.S. 5;5-meter championships with UV* points for the first two days. -~ LARCHMONT, N.Y. — The United States completed a 4-0 sweep over Bermuda in the International , Class competi* tion for the Anforifa Cup.. .*' * * WRESTLING ANNAPOLIS, Md.—Andrew Fitch, a French teacher at Co- lumbus University, Larry Lau- chle of Muncy, Pa., and Ron Finley, an Army lieutenant from Corvallis, Ore, were named to the Olympic Greco- RQman squad,;winning the fi- nal trials.- * * WEIGHTLIFTING NEW YORK—Gary Gubner of New York was named to the U.S.. Olympic squad in the heavyweight division. * * * GOLF EUGENE, Ore.—Mary Mills' of Ocean Springs, Mass., shot a two-under-par 70 for the first-round lead in the $10,000 Eugene Ladies' Open. Bills vs Chiefs Sunday Leaf s r Wings In Struggle For 4th Spot By th« Associated Press The battle between Roches- ter and Toronto for the only remaining spot in the Inter- national League playoffs — fourth place—is going down to the wire as if the pennant itself were at stake. Rochester, trailing Toronto by less than a percentage point, can only hope for a Toronto loss to second-place Syracuse Friday coupled with a Red Wing victory over Buf- falo. Jacksonville has already won the pennant, and Syra- cuse and Buffalo have clinch- ed second and third place. This leaves only fourth place to be decided. Rochester kept alive its hopes Thursday night with a 9-5 victory over Buffalo while Toronto stubbornly kept pace with a 74 trouncing of Syra- cuse. In other games, Jackson ville thumped Atlanta 11-5 and Columbus downed Rich- mond 9-5. , Buffalo led 2-1 after the first inning but Rochester bounced back to take a 9-2 lead after five innings as pitcher Darold Knowles held the Bisons at bay. Toronto belted Paul Foytack and two other Syracuse pitch- ers for 12 hits while the Leafs used four hurlers to protect the victory. Ron Piche earned the victory—his 14th. Pancho Herrera and Jim- mie Price punched two-run homers and Columbus added a five-run inning to give the Jets a 9-5 triumph over Rich- mond in clinching sixth place. Jacksonville tuned up for the playoffs with eight runs in the first three innings to push Atlanta deeper into the cellar. Ties May Delay Start of Series By TED SMITS NEW YORK -UP)—The 1964 World Series will -be unique in at least one respect, and possibly in two. There will be no travel day <f ; if only Eastern.or only Mid- western teams are involved, breaking the pattern of re- cent years, and refuting, says Commissioner Ford Frick,_the contention that the travel day was inserted in the Series program just to assure a Sun- day television game. Thus, if the series is be- tween the Philadelphia Phil- lies of the National League, and the Baltimore Orioles or New York Yankees of the American League, the Series will start Wednesday, Oct. 7, in the Phillies' park for two games, and move immediately to the American League park for the next three games. If one team were to win four straight in the best four* out-of-seven the Series could end on Saturday. If the Series is between the Chicago White Sox and the Cincinnati Reds or St. Louis Cardinals there also will be no open day. Representatives of the three c l o s e l y bunched American League teams r- White Sox, Yankees, and Orioles—met in Frick's- office Thursday with the four National League con- tenders, the front-running Phillies, plus the Reds," Card- inals, and San Francisco Giants. Scheduled Optntr Oct. 7 These facts were fixed: The Series will open Oct. 7 in the National League park for the first two games, fol- lowed, by three in the Ameri- can League park, then two more if needed in the Nation- al League park; ticket prices will be $12 per game for box is so close there xoiild even be a Wiree-way tie for first. In that case there would be a round-robin e l i m i n a t i o n , teams dropping out after los* ing two games. This could run six days. Even if this could be started on Monday, Oct. 5, the day after the regular' seasoh closes, and there were no weather delays, it could run through Oct. 10. Could Start Oct. 12 \ Then there would ' be an open day, and the Series would start OCt. 12, by which time there could be snow in the air in such cities as Chi- cago, New York, Philadelphia and possibly Baltimore, and the college and professional football seasons would be ap- proaching the mid-way point If it is just a two way tie in either league, the winner would be settled by a best two-out-of-three playoff. Frick authorized .the Yankees", Ori- oles, White Sox and Phillies, to print tickets—an expensive procedure. Frick's office must pay for all tickets printed by clubs that don't make the Series. Last year this cost be- tween $35,000 and $40,000. Harness Driver Dies VAN WERT, Ohio CB—A 55- year-old harness racing driver from Wyandot County was in- jured fatally Thursday night during the first race at th§ Van Wert country fair. Barney Bell of Nevada, Ohio, was thrown from the BUFFALO UPt~ Lou Saban, coach of the Buffalo Bills, says he plans to alternate quarterbacks, if necessary, against the K a n s a s City Chiefs when the teams open their American Football League schedule here Sunday. "We'll start with Jack Kemp," Saban said. "If he can't get the team rolling, we'll switch to Daryle Lamon : ica. If Daryle doesn't come through we'll go back to Jack." The Bills used the system in their five pro-season games. For Kansas City, the quar- terbacking situation is cloud- ed by Len Dawson's sprained wrist. Eddie Wilson, Dawson's backup man, may get the start- ing call. The Bills plan to start only one rookie, right corncTback George Byrd of Boston Uni- verity. Fullback Cookie Gilchrist, halfback Wray Carlton and flanker Elbert Dubenion will be in the Bills' starting offen- sive backfield with Kemp. Kansas City Fullback Cur- tis McClinton, who missed the exhibition games because of a broken ri^vt hand, was re- Baseball Results, Standings INTIRNATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB JacksonvjJl* .80 62 .58& Syracuse 87 66 .569 3 Buffalo 80 68 .Ml 7H Toronto 80 71 .530 9 Rochester ...81 72 .529 9 Columbus ...68 85 .444 22 Richmond . . . 6 5 87 .428 24 V* AUanta 55 94 .369 33 T*»rMUVt HMVtH Toronto 7, Syr«cvt« 4 HGCM*!*- *. ftvtftto 5 Cftlwmbwi • , Rkhmood S Jftcktenvlllt 11, AHintt « T«4*V* «im«» Toronto »t Syr*cv»* ttbOmtm at Bufftio Richmond i t Columbv* JKktomVH i t A»l«nt« In Publink* Event* BUFFALO — Ray Neyerlin end his son, Ray Jr., will be Nitftra Falls representatives . in the annual western New ;tfork public Link* Golf As- eodatlon F a t h e r and Son , championship* Sunday at the Gretkaide Golf Club. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Philadelphia .84 66 ,600 .... St. Louis ... .78 62 .557 6 Cincinnati ...78 62 .557 fi San Frandsco.79 63 .556 6 Milwaukee ...72 68 .514 12 Pittsburgh ...71 68 .511 12H Los Angeles .70 70 .500 14 Chicago 64 76 .457 20 Houston 58 84 .408 27 New York . . .48 93 .340 36H » * Th«r»**V'« M»ult» PMItdttphl* 5. SI. Louli I Chktoo 4. Novttofl 3 Clrxkvwll i. Pimtxir«h 0 MlhiwkM 7. Ntw York « $M FriftClKa 5. Loi A«t«lti > TH«yi AIIAM ' Cincinnati (Mitonrv 13-*) »l Mil- w»wkH (t*m«»t*r 13-11), nUM. N»w York (Stoltord • • ) ! ) «t Lot An- t»lM (L. Mlliw 3-7), n W . l»ltttbvr*M (Low )MJ) at Hooiton (fWtobtrt o-lO), ntoht. f»nll«4«<ohlo tlwwott io-J) tt Ur\ Pr»i*e)KO (Morlcnol 17-o>. *toht. tt. Lovli (OKMOO \K)0) it Cnkoo (IrotliO.MlK Ittuniir** tomot Now Yorlc «t t o * Mt»lo», n*ht FhllotfolpflU at ton PronclK* ChKlnnoti *t Mllw*uk»« St. Uvta It Chlcooo Umbortn at HMrtfon, ntoht AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Baltimore ...85 57 .599 .... Chicago . . . 8 5 59 .590 1 New York ...82 57 .590 1V4 Detroit 75 68 .524 10W Los Angeles 74 70 .514 12 Minnesota ...71 71 .500 14 Cleveland .... 7 0 71 .496 14V4 Boston 62 81 .434 23V4 Washington .56 88 .389 30 Kansas City .51 89 .364 33 * Thw»«"ty'» KMYMI §«Htmor» 1?, WnMrKrton S' Nrw York J, Dttrolt 3 CMc*oo }. Mtnnosot* 1, 10 lnnin«i Clmlond 5. Bolton 4 Only oorriM KM<*i!»d. Totfoy't Otm«t K*r\%*\ City (Sooul t-U »*4 0<Mnn ft-0) al Bililmor* (»unkrr 15-4 «nd Vlntyard ?-3), ?. Nrf-nlsM. Chicago (Ptttrt l«-l) at Ctovolino' (Knlkk 1M), nfcM. MVw>»»ota (ArrttO 7-K) at Now York (lov/ton 15-13). nk>ht. WainVMton (Oaniott 7-10) at Datrolt (WkkKHum 17-16). nloht. Lo» AnootM (N*wm»n 1M) at IOJL. ton (M<xMx*wu*1to «.13). niohi. Saturday"* ©am** Kantai City it fcaltlnw*. nl»ht VlnnMoti it Now York Lo« An**!*! at Boston Chkaoo at Cl*v*l»nd Wa»ninflton at Oatrolt [ported ready to go. At flank- er for the Chiefs will be Ab- ner Haynes; who caught 21 passes in pro-season play. Tight end Chris Burford, who tortured ,the Bill's sec- ondary last year, won't play. He has not recoverd from an operation on his left knee.. Start Fifth Season The San Diego Chargers and Boston Patriots, Amer- ican Football League division eTvampions in 1963 open de- fense of their crowns this weekend as the AFL moves into its fifth season. The Chargers, Western Di- vision defenders, are hosts to the rebuilding Houston Oilers in one of Saturday night's two games. Denver 'is at New York in the other. Boston, is at Oakland Sunday. Massive Attack San Diego unveiled a mas- sive running attack anchored by Paul Lowe and Keith Lin- coln, and meshed with Tobin Rote's skillful passing it. pro- duced an AFL title. The Chargers present virtually the same team this year but Lowe is unhappy with his surround- ings and may wind up else- where. Charger Coach Sid Gillman reportedly offered Lowe to Kansas City for Abncr Haynes, who's been shifted to split end by the Chiefs. K would be an interesting deal if com- pleted because the Chiefs, AFL champs in 1962 when they played in Dallas, could be San Diego's chief threat In th* \Ve*t. Denvor, rebuilding after a 2-1M season, could get a lift from quarterback Jacky Lee. But the Broncos have a long way to go. Teuflh Offans* Oakland, which was 10-i last year, has a tough offense with newly-acquired Billy Can- non and Clem Daniels han- dling the ground work and Tom Florcs throwing.to Art Powell and Bill Miller. The Raiders could make a three- way struggle of it In the West Boston won Eastern honors in a playoff against Buffalo- and it could.be just »$ tight this season. The Pats still dc-, pend on Babe PariHi at quar* ]• terback with Gino Cappelletti I adding valuable points a I placekicker. Larry Eisenhauer and Nick Buoniconti are the key men on defense. The New York Jets, with a 4-1 exhibition record, could be the surprise team of the East. Lanky Dick Wood at quarter- back makes the team move and in rookie Matt Snell, the Jets have a genuine ball-car- rying threat. Wood's favorite targets are Don Maynard and Bake Turner. Houston won three straight Eastern titles before skidding to third place last year. The Oilers are a bit green in the defensive backfield but still have George Blanda, always a threat, at quarterback. Texas League Pliyoff Stmitlnali Tulsa 6. Albuouerque 5, bcsf-of-5* « r i e j lied 1-1 > Jan Antonio 2, El Paw 1, besl-of-5 series tied 1-1 Three Teams Enter Softball Tourney Three teams have already entered the Pat Dillons Class A double-elimination softball tournament scheduled to start next Thursday night at Pro- zeralik Park in Swiezy's Grove. Entries may be made with Director John DeFranco at BU 3-0975 or at a meeting Sunday at 8 p.m. at the Old Heidelberg Restaurant. FREE Instruction in Piloting And Small Boat Handling OPEN TO ALL N«xt Clou Starts AT 7:30 p.m. Tues., Sept. 15 LaSalle Yacht Club CALL BU 3-3940 FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ATTENTION AH Junior, Senior and Bantam Bowlers—There will be a registration of all interested boys and girls from ages 7-18 at Pine Bowl for the 1964-196? season, Saturday, Sept. 12th, 11 A.M. BOWL IN A B.P.A. MEMBER ' HOUSE AND BE ELIGIBLE FOR ALL Y.B.A. TOURNAMENTS PINE BOWL For Information Call Jay Martine* at 297-4700 «f>at« <;« few v«c««„-^i r-t . u '" u i "«" uu own irom tn« unrL $ ±i 0T rr; ved : * f ° r *** *** ^m P m by two unreserved and standing room, and. $2 - for bleachers, in all cases tax included; all games start at 1 p.m., local time; there would be a travel day between changes except in the situations listed. The second way this Series could be unique is this: The American League race horses in front of the packed grandstand. FRESH CIGARS BY THI IOX DOp CIGAR 202* DOCD STORE MAIN ST. RESERVATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR FATHER & SON LEAGUE 2 Fathers, 2 Sons on each teem * You must enter by Sept. 19 BEVERLY LANES PHONE 297-4595 Needed ... to fill learn openings * 1 Team Tues., 9 P.M. Men's Handicap * 1 Team Thurs., 9 P.M. Men's Handicap * 2 Teams Wed., 9 P.M., jyUn'ft'H'dlcap * 2 Teams PH., 6:45 P.M., Men's H'dlcap FRONTIER LANES Uwiston, N.Y. Phana PI 4*7300 PINE BOWL Individual and '5 Man Teom Openings For the Following Leaguer Monday Nfte—M5 P.M. • 3 Teams Nttdid Wednesday NJte—9 P.M. MWHII i. 0fl u.. 2 Teams Needed Thursday Nite Ladies—9 P.M. •••••••• 2 Teams Needed Sunday Morning 3-Man~-11:30 A.M. • 2 Teams Needed Alto openings in the new 3 man scratch league Mon-. day nite 9 P.M.. $600 guaranteed 1st place. All in- terested parties phone Jay Martinex, 297*4700. i fi_ n»i g^ggaeg^sgej—j==Sj~jjj ' " "" gjgggjgjscgjSBSS DfaiV D61IA6 Saturday, Sept. 12tn T p.m. to 6 Uldg l l d U G o p.m. at Niagara Raceway Park ' S|»«nt«r*4 fcy Hintofk air tt c«mpl*t« 4*ttrv<tt«n. A6MIMION HATURINC SUICIDE INC. THI CAASH eaivtiu or MUL MOMU ImSS 1 /mwi. mttefrWwWWi&s Tiexm AVA1U1U AT CATS. OH •*•» H««M *•«., 7400 MM A*k I T*M M«Crt» 1 iwi.iinwin 111 1 11111 ii 1 mi HIM 11 milium ma w hum, in i *.%s * •MMftl tfftHUM-MM*. •MMM •^^^JM^^A* Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: 14 KIA6AKA FALLS GAZmi on - Fultonhistory.comfultonhistory.com/newspaper 8/Niagara Falls NY... · high school sports at Lewis ... last year and the injury-prone Jerry Tubinis, half

14 KIA6AKA FALLS GAZmi , , , w- fH4gy,.ltp,frwM» IV. 1*64

• T

on Almost 20 Local Area Boys On College Football Teams

* * »

ByBOB.WE&BER

COLLEGE FOOTBALL begins this weekend for a few teams and for the rest next Saturday. Almost 20 local and area high school graduates will be perform­ing on the collegiate gridiron this fall.

State University of New York at Buffalo, only W e s t e r n New York school playing football, has two local boys and another from Youngstown.

Rich Condino, a UB senior who quarterbacked Bishop Duffy to a Catholic League title in 1960, is a fullback this year after earning a 1963 letter as a win g back. He WEBBER averaged 5.8 yards per carry and is a good defensive player.

Also working at fullback for the Bulls is Willie Shine, the former Trott Vocational All-City player in three sports who t r a n s f e r r e d from Garden City (Kansas), Junior College. Willie is the tallest running back 4 6-3.

One of the UB linemen is Bill Taylor, a strong 6-2, 213-pound tackle who played at Lewiston-Porter Cen­tral. He is a junior.

DOWN S T A T E at Syra­cuse, wher« the Orangemen are being touted as one of the best in the East, is the fabulous Rich King, who will share the quarterback-Ing with: Walley Mahle. King, the former Lew-Port star from Ransomville, led the 1963 Syracuse team in passing. He and Mahle are both seniors.

Also listed on the Syra-_ cuse squad is Herb Korthoff, 6-2, 225-pound junior tackle from Royalton-HarUand Cen­tral School and Harry Wien-ke, sophomore center from Nlagara-Wheatfield.

,- * * * DUKE GRKOVIC, senior

at Cornell, is listed as a starting tackle.for thi Big Red. He now lives i- Des Moines, Iowa, but played his high school sports at Lewis­ton-Porter when his family lived in the area. Also with Cornell is Stuart Fullerton, highly-regarded sophomore end from Essex, Conn., who also played at Lew-Port, and impressed in a recent Cor­nell scrimmage. He started «t Tight end and caught a touchdpwn.pass.

Two 60phomore halfbacks whom Cornell coach Tom Harp . had been counting on, John Zankowski from Niagara Falls and Rick Row­ley f r o m Tonawanda, are probably out for the season. Zankowski is sidelined with

mononucleosis and Rowley has a torn knee cartilage.

» » •

BILL BRUCE, a s e n i o r guard from Lewiston who played with- Lew-Port, is a starter at the Universit> of Rochester. He is among 20 lcttermen . . . LaSalle High graduates i n c l u d e tarkle C h u c k Stavlns at D u k e, tackle Jerry Sertick at Rut-gers and center Don Rink at Columbia . . . Roger Hailey from Trott is a senior quar­terback at Michigan State, which is 10 deep at that po­sition . . . Hailey broke in as passing whiz, late in his sophomore y e a r . . . . Of course, Notre Dame has Brian Atamian, the f i n e senior guard from Bishop Duffy who earned an award for his downfield blocking last year and the injury-prone Jerry Tubinis, half­back f r o m Niagara Falls High who has two years of eligibility left. . . . At Thiel College in Pennsyl­vania, where freshmen are eligible for the varsity. quarterback Jim Magee and center Jeff Plumer from Niagara Falls High are run­ning second s t r i n g " . . . Two other Niagara Falls graduates, halfbacks Dennis Ormsby and Jim S m i t h , and LaSalle fullback Phil Sylva a r e freshmen at Dodge City (Kansas) Junior College..

By HAL BOCK AP Sport* Writar

The bases are loaded and your best hitter is up. He bangs into a triple play, but you don't worry. A run scores on the play and that sort T>f1 thing happens only to win­ners.

As long as Hank Bauer's Baltimore Orioles are win­ners, he can take the triple plays in stride. Especially if they p r o d u c e runs. That's what happened In the midst of Baltimore's 12-5 victory over Waship g t 0 n Thursday night.

The Orioles had scored eight runs in the fourth inning and looked to be ready for some more in the fifth when Jerry Adair, Luis Aparicio and Boog Powell opened with consecu­tive singles loading the bases. Brooks Robinson, who had seven straight hits was the batter.

First of Stason Robinson bounced to Sen­

ator shortstop John Kennedy

who relayed to Joe Cunning­ham to complete the seeming­ly routine double play. But when Aparicio tried to score too, Cunningham's throw to catcher Mike Brumley caught Aparicio and p r o d u c e d the American League's first triple play of the season. Four tri­ple plays had been previous­ly recorded in the National League.

Yanks Beat Detroit The victory kept the Orioles

one game in front of Chicago, which went 10 innings before nipping Minnesota 3-2, and \Vi up on third place New York, which used home run power to drop Detroit 5-2. In the only o t h e r American League game played, Cleve­land edged.Boston 5-4.

Robinson had a big night except for the triple-play. He rapped three singles and a double in the 17-hit Oriole at­tack, scoring two runs and knocking in two.

Sam Bowens contributed a three-run homer in the Or­ioles' big Inning and also had

and Adair scored as Kennedy a run-scoring d o u b l e . Milt flipped to Don Blasingame. PaDoas narlavoH *.K« W».. . . ingame,|Pappas parlayed the heavy

support into his 15th victory and seventh in a row. Hansen Hits No. 17 \

Ron Hansen rifled his 17th homer of the season off los­er Jim Kaat in the 10th in­ning for C h i c a g o ' s victory over Minnesota Hansen's shot came on a 3-0 pitch.

Sox starter Joel.Horlen and Kaat had d u e l e d through eight innings before Horlen left for a hitter. Hoyt Wilhelm finished up and won it for Chicago.

Elston Howard crashed a three-run h o m e r and that was all Al Downing needed for his 12th victory as the Yankees kept pace. Joe Pep-itone also homered for New York.

Downing limited the Tig­ers to five hits, one of them Al Kaline's 14th homer.

Pitcher Sonny Siebert and rookie Chico S a l m o n hit home runs for the Indians and Don McMahon's tight re­lief protected the victory over the Red Sox. Dick Stuart belted his 31st homer and Tony Conigliaro got his 21st both with a man on for Bos­ton.

RACING WARES—Junior members of Rodney Fairbahk, Bill Rogers, Andy the Youngstown Yacht Club show Hooker, Comm.. Frank Ripple, Jane, off their trophy winnings at Thurs- Rix, Junior Fleet Capri, John Hosmer, day's closing dinner. Left to right are Andy Feeney.—Gazette Photo.

Short Hits, Hurls Phils To Win Over Cardinals

In Tennis Battle

By MURRAY CHASE AP Sports WrlUr

"I feel I'm a better pitcher than the batter is a hitter," saya Chris Short.

The Philadelphia ace proved his point again.Thursday but this time went one 6tep fur ther.

He showed he was a better hitter than all of the St. Louis' batters combined by driving home the first two runsin tlie National League-leading PhiJ lies' 5-1 victord over the Car dinals.

Short, in fact, belted two hits—a key triple and a sin­gle—in four times at bat, al­most doubling his season hit production, which had been three, and raising his average from ,063 to .096. The runs batted in did equal his pre­vious output. Pitcher Hits Trip!*

The 26<year-old hurler came to the plate in the second in­ning with runners at first,and third and one out. He prompt ly lashed a triple to the right field bullpen, bringing in Tony Taylor and Ruben Amaro with the first two runs of a five, run outburst.

Short's pitching, meanwhile, didn't suffer. He h e l d the Cardinals to six hits while striking out 12 and walking one. i

he has seven Josses — tying him with Jim Bunning as the team's winningest pitcher. The southpaw's earned run average—1.89—is second only to Sandy Koufax' 1.74 among NL pitchers. Six-Gam* Lead v

Short's over-all performance waj particularly vital because •the victory boosted the Phil­lies' lead to six games over St. Louis, Cincinnati and San Francisco.

A defeat would have moved the Cardinals to within four games of the top w i t h the Phillies facin-g an important three-game series starting San Francisco tonight. No one has been as c l o s e a four games behind Philadelphia since Aug. 15.

The Reds blanked Pitts­burgh 3-0 Friday night while the Giants knocked off Los Angeles 5-1. Milwaukee nipped New York 7-7 and Chicago edged Houston 4-3 in National League afternoon game.

Johnny Callison's two-run homer climaxed> the Phillies • early, but winning, rally, which was aided by errors by Ken Boyer and Dick Groat. The Cardinals scored their lone run in the second. On a walk to Boyer, a singie by C h a r l e y James and ^Bill White's double.

The Reds scored all of their runs in the sixth inning. Bob Friend hit Pete Rose with a pitch, then gave up singles to Vada Pinson, Frank Robinson and Deron Johnson for two runs. The last came across on a force play. First Start of Season

Billy Pierce, making his first start of the season, al­lowed-six hits before needing relief help from Jim Duifalo in the eighbh inning. Pierce, 3-0, singled across the last Giant run in the seventh. Jim

I Hart cracked his 27th homer, a two-run blast, in San Fran­cisco's first inning. . Larry Jackson became the

majors' second 19-game win­ner, scattering eight hits be­fore needing relief help from Lindy McDaniel in the ninth inning.

The Colts rocked Jackson, who has lost 10 times, for three runs in the sixth, but the Cubs rallied for three runs in their half of the In­ning. Erne Banks doubled across two runs and later scored on a wild pitch by re­liever Sal Woodeshick.

The Braves snapped a 4-4 tie against the Mets in the eighth inning in Lee Maye's fourth straight hit, a single, and Rico Carty's 17th homer Felipe Alou -doubled home

Bob Purkey, 10-8, pitched a what turned out to be the The victory was his 16th—ifive-hitter against the Pirate, winning run in the ninth.

TENNIS ••• FOREST HILLS, N.Y.—Top-seeded Roy Emerson of Aus­tralia beat fellow countryman Tony Roche 13-11, 8-6, 6-2 to reach the men's semi-finals of the National Singles Cham­pionships along with Chuck McKlnley of San Antonio, who defeated Roger Taylor of Eng­land 13-11, 9-7, 6-1.

Carol Hanks, a scrappy St Louis miss, knocked out her second seeded player, No. 6 Ann Haydon Jones of Eng land, 7-5, 2-6, 8-6, and went into the semifinals against de­fending champion Maria Bue-no of Brazil, a 6-4; 6-1 victor over Australia.

* • • HARNESS RACING

WESTBURY, N.Y.—Robert Froner, a 22-year-old architec­tural draftsman from Brook­lyn, won the largest twin dou­ble payoff in history—$172,-726.80—at Roosevelt Raceway, holding the sole winning ticket on a 4-1-8-8 combination.

FOOTBALL PHILADELPHIA — V i n c e

McNally, general manager of the Philadelphia Eagles since 1949, announced his resigna­tion.

YACHTING • HOUSTON — Ernie Fay of the Texas Corinthian Yacht Club retained his lead in the U.S. 5;5-meter championships with UV* points for the first two days. -~

LARCHMONT, N.Y. — The United States completed a 4-0 sweep over Bermuda in the International , Class competi* tion for the Anforifa Cup..

.* ' * * WRESTLING

ANNAPOLIS, Md.—Andrew Fitch, a French teacher at Co­lumbus University, Larry Lau-chle of Muncy, Pa., and Ron Finley, an Army lieutenant from Corvallis, Ore, were named to the Olympic Greco-RQman squad,;winning the fi­nal trials.-

• * * WEIGHTLIFTING

NEW YORK—Gary Gubner of New York was named to the U.S.. Olympic squad in the heavyweight division.

* * * GOLF

EUGENE, Ore.—Mary Mills' of Ocean Springs, Mass., shot a two-under-par 70 for the first-round lead in the $10,000 Eugene Ladies' Open.

Bills vs Chiefs Sunday

Leaf srWings In Struggle For 4th Spot

By th« Associated Press The battle between Roches­

ter and Toronto for the only remaining spot in the Inter­national League playoffs — fourth place—is going down to the wire as if the pennant itself were at stake.

Rochester, trailing Toronto by less than a percentage point, can only hope for a Toronto loss to second-place Syracuse Friday coupled with a Red Wing victory over Buf­falo.

Jacksonville has already won the pennant, and Syra­cuse and Buffalo have clinch­ed second and third place. This leaves only fourth place to be decided.

Rochester kept alive its hopes Thursday night with a 9-5 victory over Buffalo while Toronto stubbornly kept pace with a 74 trouncing of Syra­cuse. In other games, Jackson ville thumped Atlanta 11-5 and Columbus downed Rich­mond 9-5. ,

Buffalo led 2-1 after the first inning but Rochester bounced back to take a 9-2 lead after five innings as pitcher Darold Knowles held the Bisons at bay.

Toronto belted Paul Foytack and two other Syracuse pitch­ers for 12 hits while the Leafs used four hurlers to protect the victory. Ron Piche earned the victory—his 14th.

Pancho Herrera and Jim-mie Price punched two-run homers and Columbus added a five-run inning to give the Jets a 9-5 triumph over Rich­mond in clinching sixth place.

Jacksonville tuned up for the playoffs with eight runs in the first three innings to push Atlanta deeper into the cellar.

Ties May Delay Start of Series

By TED SMITS

NEW YORK -UP)—The 1964 World Series will -be unique in at least one respect, and possibly in two.

There will be no travel day <f ;

if only Eastern.or only Mid­western teams are involved, breaking the pattern of re­cent years, and refuting, says Commissioner Ford Frick,_the contention that the travel day was inserted in the Series program just to assure a Sun­day television game.

Thus, if the series is be­tween the Philadelphia Phil­lies of the National League, and the Baltimore Orioles or New York Yankees of the American League, the Series will start Wednesday, Oct. 7, in the Phillies' park for two games, and move immediately to the American League park for the next three games.

If one team were to win four straight in the best four* out-of-seven the Series could end on Saturday. If the Series is between the Chicago White Sox and the Cincinnati Reds or St. Louis Cardinals there also will be no open day.

Representatives of the three c l o s e l y bunched American League teams r- White Sox, Yankees, and Orioles—met in Frick's- office Thursday with the four National League con­tenders, the front-running Phillies, plus the Reds," Card­inals, and S a n Francisco Giants. Scheduled Optntr Oct. 7

These facts were fixed: The Series will open Oct. 7

in the National League park for the first two games, fol­lowed, by three in the Ameri­can League park, then two more if needed in the Nation­al League park; ticket prices will be $12 per game for box

is so close there xoiild even be a Wiree-way tie for first. In that case there would be a round-robin e l i m i n a t i o n , teams dropping out after los* ing two games.

This could run six days. Even if this could be started on Monday, Oct. 5, the day after t h e regular' seasoh closes, and there were no weather delays, it could run through Oct. 10. Could Start Oct. 12 \

Then there would ' be an open day, and the Series would start OCt. 12, by which time there could be snow in the air in such cities as Chi­cago, New York, Philadelphia and possibly Baltimore, and the college and professional football seasons would be ap­proaching the mid-way point

If it is just a two way tie in either league, the winner would be settled by a best two-out-of-three playoff. Frick authorized .the Yankees", Ori­oles, White Sox and Phillies, to print tickets—an expensive procedure. Frick's office must pay for all tickets printed by clubs that don't make the Series. Last year this cost be­tween $35,000 and $40,000.

Harness Driver Dies VAN WERT, Ohio CB—A 55-

year-old harness racing driver from Wyandot County was in­jured fatally Thursday night during the first race at th§ Van Wert country fair.

Barney Bell of Nevada, Ohio, was thrown from the

BUFFALO UPt~ Lou Saban, coach of the Buffalo Bills, says he plans to alternate quarterbacks, if n e c e s s a r y , against the K a n s a s City Chiefs when the teams open their American F o o t b a l l League schedule here Sunday.

"We'll s t a r t with Jack Kemp," Saban said. "If he can't get the team rolling, we'll switch to Daryle Lamon: ica. If Daryle doesn't come through we'll go back to Jack."

The Bills used the system in their five pro-season games.

For Kansas City, the quar-terbacking situation is cloud­ed by Len Dawson's sprained wrist. Eddie Wilson, Dawson's backup man, may get the start­ing call.

The Bills plan to start only one rookie, right corncTback George Byrd of Boston Uni-verity.

Fullback Cookie Gilchrist, halfback Wray Carlton and flanker Elbert Dubenion will be in the Bills' starting offen­sive backfield with Kemp.

Kansas City Fullback Cur­tis McClinton, who missed the exhibition games because of a broken ri^vt hand, was re-

Baseball Results, Standings INTIRNATIONAL LEAGUE

W L Pet. GB JacksonvjJl* .80 62 .58& Syracuse — 87 66 .569 3 Buffalo 80 68 .Ml 7H Toronto 80 71 .530 9 Rochester . . .81 72 .529 9 Columbus ...68 85 .444 22 Richmond . . . 6 5 87 .428 24 V* AUanta 55 94 .369 33

• • • T*»rMUVt HMVtH

Toronto 7, Syr«cvt« 4 HGCM*! * - * . ftvtftto 5 Cftlwmbwi • , Rkhmood S Jftcktenvlllt 11, AHintt «

T«4*V* «im«» Toronto »t Syr*cv»* ttbOmtm at Bufftio Richmond i t Columbv* JKktomVH i t A»l«nt«

In Publink* Event* BUFFALO — Ray Neyerlin

end his son, Ray Jr., will be Nitftra Falls representatives

. in the annual western New ;tfork public Link* Golf As-

eodatlon F a t h e r and Son , championship* Sunday at the

Gretkaide Golf Club.

NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB

Philadelphia .84 66 ,600 . . . . St. Louis . . . .78 62 .557 6 Cincinnati ...78 62 .557 fi San Frandsco.79 63 .556 6 Milwaukee ...72 68 .514 12 Pittsburgh ...71 68 .511 12H Los Angeles .70 70 .500 14 Chicago 64 76 .457 20 Houston 58 84 .408 27 New York . . .48 93 .340 36H

» • * Th«r»**V'« M»ult»

PMItdttphl* 5. SI. Louli I Chktoo 4. Novttofl 3 Clrxkvwll i. Pimtxir«h 0 MlhiwkM 7. Ntw York « $M FriftClKa 5. Loi A«t«lti >

T H « y i A I I A M ' Cincinnati (Mitonrv 13-*) »l Mil-w»wkH (t*m«»t*r 13-11), nUM.

N»w York (Stoltord • • ) ! ) «t Lot An-t»lM (L. Mlliw 3-7), n W .

l»ltttbvr*M (Low ) M J ) at Hooiton (fWtobtrt o-lO), ntoht.

f»nll«4«<ohlo tlwwott io-J) tt Ur\ Pr»i*e)KO (Morlcnol 17-o>. *toht.

tt. Lovli (OKMOO \K)0) i t Cnkoo ( I ro t l iO .MlK

Ittuniir** tomot Now Yorlc «t to* Mt»lo», n*ht FhllotfolpflU at ton PronclK* ChKlnnoti *t Mllw*uk»« St. Uvta I t Chlcooo Umbortn at HMrtfon, ntoht

AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB

Baltimore ...85 57 .599 . . . . Chicago . . . 8 5 59 .590 1 New York ...82 57 .590 1V4 Detroit 75 68 .524 10W Los Angeles 74 70 .514 12 Minnesota ...71 71 .500 14 Cleveland . . . .70 71 .496 14V4 Boston 62 81 .434 23V4 Washington .56 88 .389 30 Kansas City .51 89 .364 33

* • • Thw»«"ty'» KMYMI

§«Htmor» 1?, WnMrKrton S' Nrw York J, Dttrolt 3 CMc*oo }. Mtnnosot* 1, 10 lnnin«i Clmlond 5. Bolton 4

Only oorriM KM<*i!»d. Totfoy't Otm«t

K*r\%*\ City (Sooul t-U »*4 0<Mnn ft-0) al Bililmor* (»unkrr 15-4 «nd Vlntyard ?-3), ?. Nrf-nlsM.

Chicago (Ptttrt l«-l) at Ctovolino' (Knlkk 1 M ) , nfcM.

MVw>»»ota (ArrttO 7-K) at Now York (lov/ton 15-13). nk>ht.

WainVMton (Oaniott 7-10) at Datrolt (WkkKHum 17-16). nloht.

Lo» AnootM (N*wm»n 1M) at IOJL. ton (M<xMx*wu*1to «.13). niohi.

Saturday"* ©am** Kantai City i t fcaltlnw*. nl»ht VlnnMoti i t Now York Lo« An**!*! at Boston Chkaoo at Cl*v*l»nd Wa»ninflton at Oatrolt

[ported ready to go. At flank­er for the Chiefs will be Ab-ner Haynes; who caught 21 passes in pro-season play.

Tight end Chris Burford, who tortured ,the Bill's sec­ondary last year, won't play. He has not recoverd from an operation on his left knee.. Start Fifth Season

The San Diego Chargers and Boston Patriots, Amer­ican Football League division eTvampions in 1963 open de­fense of their crowns this weekend as the AFL moves into its fifth season.

The Chargers, Western Di­vision defenders, are hosts to the rebuilding Houston Oilers in one of Saturday night's two games. Denver 'is at New York in the other. Boston, is at Oakland Sunday. Massive Attack

San Diego unveiled a mas­sive running attack anchored by Paul Lowe and Keith Lin­coln, and meshed with Tobin Rote's skillful passing it. pro­duced an AFL title. The Chargers present virtually the same team this year but Lowe is unhappy with his surround­ings and may wind up else­where.

Charger Coach Sid Gillman reportedly offered Lowe to Kansas City for Abncr Haynes, who's been shifted to split end by the Chiefs. K would be an interesting deal if com­pleted because the Chiefs, AFL champs in 1962 when they played in Dallas, could be San Diego's chief threat In th* \Ve*t.

Denvor, rebuilding after a 2-1M season, could get a lift from quarterback Jacky Lee. But the Broncos have a long way to go. Teuflh Offans*

Oakland, which was 10-i last year, has a tough offense with newly-acquired Billy Can­non and Clem Daniels han­dling the ground work and Tom Florcs throwing.to Art Powell and Bill Miller. The Raiders could make a three-way struggle of it In the West

Boston won Eastern honors in a playoff against Buffalo-and it could.be just »$ tight this season. The Pats still dc-, pend on Babe PariHi at quar* ]• terback with Gino Cappelletti I adding valuable points i» a I

placekicker. Larry Eisenhauer and Nick Buoniconti are the key men on defense.

The New York Jets, with a 4-1 exhibition record, could be the surprise team of the East. Lanky Dick Wood at quarter­back makes the team move and in rookie Matt Snell, the Jets have a genuine ball-car­rying threat. Wood's favorite targets are Don Maynard and Bake Turner.

Houston won three straight Eastern titles before skidding to third place last year. The Oilers are a bit green in the defensive backfield but still have George Blanda, always a threat, at quarterback.

Texas League Pliyoff Stmitlnali

Tulsa 6. Albuouerque 5, bcsf-of-5* «riej lied 1-1 > Jan Antonio 2, El Paw 1, besl-of-5 series tied 1-1

Three Teams Enter Softball Tourney

Three teams have already entered the Pat Dillons Class A double-elimination softball tournament scheduled to start next Thursday night at Pro-zeralik Park in Swiezy's Grove.

Entries may be made with Director John DeFranco at BU 3-0975 or at a meeting Sunday at 8 p.m. at the Old Heidelberg Restaurant.

FREE Instruction in Piloting

And Small Boat Handling OPEN TO ALL

N«xt Clou Starts AT

7:30 p.m. Tues., Sept. 15 LaSalle Yacht Club CALL BU 3-3940

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

ATTENTION AH Junior, Senior and Bantam Bowlers—There will be a registration of all interested boys and girls from ages 7-18 at Pine Bowl for the 1964-196? season, Saturday, Sept. 12th, 11 A.M.

BOWL IN A B.P.A. MEMBER ' HOUSE AND BE ELIGIBLE FOR

ALL Y.B.A. TOURNAMENTS

PINE BOWL For Information Call Jay Martine* at 297-4700

«f>at« <;« few v«c««„-^i r-t . u ' " u i "«" uu own irom tn« unrL$±i0T r r ; v e d : * f ° r *** *** ^mPm by two unreserved a n d standing room, and. $2- for bleachers, in all cases tax included; all games start at 1 p.m., local time; there would be a travel day between changes except in the situations listed.

The second way this Series could be unique is this:

The American League race

horses in front of the packed grandstand.

FRESH

CIGARS BY T H I IOX

D O p CIGAR 202* D O C D STORE MAIN ST.

RESERVATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR

FATHER & SON LEAGUE • 2 Fathers, 2 Sons on each teem * You must enter by Sept. 19

BEVERLY LANES PHONE 297-4595

Needed . . . to fill learn openings

* 1 Team Tues., 9 P.M. Men's Handicap

* 1 Team Thurs., 9 P.M. Men's Handicap

* 2 Teams Wed., 9 P.M., jyUn'ft'H'dlcap

* 2 Teams PH., 6:45 P.M., Men's H'dlcap

FRONTIER LANES Uwiston, N.Y. Phana PI 4*7300

PINE BOWL Individual and '5 Man Teom Openings

For the Following Leaguer

Monday Nfte—M5 P.M. • 3 Teams Nttdid

Wednesday NJte—9 P.M. MWHII i.0flu.. 2 Teams Needed Thursday Nite Ladies—9 P.M. •••••••• 2 Teams Needed Sunday Morning 3-Man~-11:30 A.M. • 2 Teams Needed Alto openings in the new 3 man scratch league Mon-. day nite 9 P.M.. $600 guaranteed 1st place. All in­terested parties phone Jay Martinex, 297*4700. i fii_ n»i g^ggaeg^sgej—j==Sj~jjj ' " "" gjgggjgjscgjSBSS

DfaiV D61IA6 Saturday, Sept. 12tn T p.m. to 6 U l d g l ldUGo p.m. at Niagara Raceway Park '

S|»«nt«r*4 fcy Hintofk air t t c«mpl*t« 4*ttrv<tt«n.

A6MIMION

HATURINC SUICIDE INC. THI CAASH eaivtiu or MUL MOMU

ImSS 1 /mwi.

mttefrWwWWi&s Tiexm AVA1U1U AT CATS. OH

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1 iwi.iinwin 111 1 11111 i i 1 mi HIM 11 milium ma w hum, in i

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