Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 5 May 1960, p. 18

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18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, Mey 5, 1960 TOO TOUGH TO HANDLE FOR NEW YORK YANKEES Tony | Detroit hits today at Yankee Kubek, left, and Gil Mec- but Dougald, right, go after two | them in. Kubek is stretching | Stadium just can't scoop sports MENU Howard's Homer Buhl Tough Beats Detroit ie By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' GRANDMOTHER'S FUNERAL, little Willie's tra- ditional excuse for missing school so that he can attend the opening ball game, must have been a pretty big event yesterday, in Toronto, with an attendance of 15,187 customers on hand to see Miami Marlins nudge Toronto Leafs 2-0 in the frst game of the season, at home, for the Queen City fans. Wes Stock of Marlins and Al Cicotte of Leafs waged a brilliant pitching duel for seven frames and then Marlins clicked after two out, aided by an error, to break the 0-0 deadlock and Green's homer in the 9th inning, concluded the game's scoring. Toronto fans had company in their misery vesterday also. Down in Montreal, in their "home open- er". the Royals suffered an 8-2 licking from Havana Sugar Kings. The International League standings, with Miami on the bottom, doesn't seem. to indicate that Marlins should win the opener in Toronto but the fact that they did just that, would serve to suggest that it's going to be a mighty tidy schedule scramble this summer. Speaking of baseball, Jim Shaw, former manager of Johnny Ryan in several of his age-limit minor base- ball seasons 'here in Oshawa, sends us word that Ryan made a very decent showing in his professional debut last week-end. Johnny was signed by Detroit Tigers and former major league performer Al Federoff is now his manager, with the Decatur club, in the class "D" middle- west circuit, Young Ryan rapped two hits in four trips, scored once himself and had two RBI's, as Decatur beat Kokomo 6-3 in their opening game, last Sunday The Oshawa youngster also received a special prize of $15.00 from the Decatur "Booster Club" for the first home= team player to collect an RBI. Monday night Decatur beat Kokomo again, 3-2 this time, but Johnny went hitless in three trips to the disk. He's playing at 2nd base for Decatur and they must like his batting-eye and base-running,. because they've got him in the lead-off spot, in their batting order. BRIGHT BITS: According to the U.S. Golf Associa- tion, exhaustive studies have proven that a normal "legal" golf ball can not be driven 300 yards. Now there's a statement that should provide an avenue for some king-size arguments before the season over, especially when some husky club-wielder smack off the tee and it goes to a point down the course that everybody, but everybody knows has always been at least 300 yards away. . . . OSHAWA "PUNTERS" had a chance to "build" up their summer's wager fund vesterday, when Sam Jackson's "Red Bric" finally came through with a winning effort at Fort Erie and paid a handsome $88.80. "Moon Reaction" paid $12.90 for third, in the second race of the card. BEAU PURPLE, who won the Derby Trial race on Tuesday and was promptly named one of the favorites for Saturday's Kentucky Derby, will not run for "The Roses" after all. He has been "scratched" due to a foot injury sustained yesterday. in training, . . . N.Y. RANGERS are going to buy the Guelph Biltmores Club, outright. Rangers have "sponsored" the "Hatters" now for several years. CHARLIE GRIM and Lou Boudreau have switched jobs. "Chollie", for the third time in his career has re- signed as manager of Chicago Cubs and Boudreau will take over the reins, while Grim will replace Lou as color announcer for the radiocasts of the Cubs' games. YESTERDAY, Dick Ellsworth, a 20-year-old-bonus rookie, pitched Cubs to a 5-1 victory over the league- leading Pirates. TIGERS lost to Yankees yester- day and Kansas City beat Boston--all of which leaves the Detroit club on the bottom of the American League heap. . . . CAL MeLISH got his first win of the season yesterday, also stopped Willie Mays' 16-game hitting string, as Cincy Reds nipped S.F. Giants 3-2. . . . CHA~ THAM MAROONS arrived home yesterday with The Allan Cup and their fans, along with neighbouring rooters from Windsor and other nearby centres, were on hand to give them a rousing welcome, complete with a parade, cowboy hats, bands, fire trucks, baloons, con- fetti, police cruisers, floats, speeches, gifts, etc FIFTH GAME (we almost hesitate to mention it) of the current Memorial Cup Canadian Junior hockey finals, will be played tomorrow night at Maple Leaf Gardens --and after what has gone on this week, with stunning reversals of form--it could be "the-game-of-games" or it could be another shocker! one "I don't know what Leclerc is talking about," St. Catharines manager Rudy Pilous shot back Wednesday night in St. Cathar- inés 'There have been many No Intent To Injure -- Teeps Tougher games in the OHA Lie TORONTO (CP)--The Memor- was deliberate intent to injure." jal Cup battle between Edmonton Oi! Kings and St. Catharines Tee- OIL KING HURT pees simmered today after a ver-| During a fight near the game's bal clash between club managers. end a blow from the stick of Tee- The debate centred around pees' Bob Maki open a five-stitch stick-swinging and rough play in cut on the head of Oil Kings de- Tuesday night's 9-3 win by Ed-|/fenceman Wayne Muloin monton which tied the best-of-' Talk of the stick swinging seven series 2-2. overshadowed the surprise win Voluble Oilers' manager Leo by Edmonton, which was badly LeClerc called it the most dis- beaten 6-2 and 9-1 after winning graceful hockey he had ever seenithe opener 5-3. Most fans thought and suggested Teepees had been the magic of the Oilers had worn 'sent gut to get" Edmonton. |off. . {Chicago McDOUGALD KUBEK AND bounced it off his shoulder. De- spite their troubles, the Yankees won, 10-3 ' CP Wirephoto for Frank Bolling's single to left in the fifth inning and Mc- Mvugald is caught with his back to the ball after Al Kaline | By ED WILKS second home run if the game, a Associated Press Staff Writer |one-on shot. Hal Briggs (1-1) lost The New York Yankees have|it in relief. decided the easiest way to sail' The A's broke a shutout duel into first place in the American between winner Dick Hall (2-0) League is to shake loose from the|and Tom Brewer (0-2) with three Detroit Tigers and Frank Lary.|runs in the fifth on Whitey Her- | They did just that Wednesday,|?08's single, a bases-loaded walk beating Lary for only the second|and an error. Hall then singled time in two years with a 4-2 de-/home the clincher in the sixth ne that Joan them a half- after reliever Al Worthington had Friend (3-1) Face () and Smith; Ellsworth (1-0) and Rice, GBL HR: Chi-Thomas (5) Phila 120 000 000-- 3 9 4 St. Louis 001 100 03x-- 5 5 1 Buzhardt (0-3) Gomez (8) and Dalrymple; Gibson, Jackson (2) Bridges (2-0) (8) McDaniel (9) and Sawatski, Smith (9) Milwaukee 010 000 001-- 2 8 1 Los Angeles 000 100 000-- 1 3 1 Buhl (2-1) and Crandall; Drys- Detroit 000 100 010-- 2 6 0 dale (3-3) and Roseboro. HR: Mil- New York 101 002 00x-- 4 8 0 Crandall (3) Lary (1-2) Morgan (7) and Wil- Today's Games son; Short (2-1) and Berra, ghow- (And Probable Pitchers) ard (4). HR: NY-Howard (3). Pittsburgh (Witt 0-0) at Chicago Kansas City 000 031 010-- 5 11 1 (Drott 0-3) Boston 000 020 010-- 3 10 1 Milwaukee (Burdette 2-1) at Hali (2-0) Kutyna (8) and Chiti; | Angeles (Podres 2-1) Brewer (0-2) Worthington (6) Cincinnati (Purkey 0-1) Chittum (8) Fornieles (8) and H. Francisco (Antonelli 1-0) Sullivan, Gile (9) Philadelphia (Owens 1-2) Chicago 100 002 100 Louis (Mizell 1-1) (N) Baltimore 000 200 40x-- 6 11 0 International League Wynn, Baumann (1-1) (7) w Pct. GBL Staley (7) and Lollar, Brown (1); 14 -- Wilhelm (1-1) and Triandos 643 1 Cleveland 101 040 000-- 6 13 0 Montreal 600 1% Wash 030 020 20x-- 7 8 1|Rochester 583 2 Latman, Briggs (1-1) (5) Perry Havana 429 4 (7) Klippstein (8) and Romano; Richmond 429 4 Lee, Woodeshick (1-00 (5) and Columbus 9 308 5% Battey. HR: Cle - Bond 2 (3); Miami 10 286 6 wash-Lemon (4), International League Today's Games Havana 205 010 000-- 8 10 3 (And Probable Pitchers) Montreal 100 001 000-- 2 5 0 Chicago (Shaw 1-1) at Washing. Cuellar and Azcue; Kunkel, ton (Lee 0-0) (N) Scott (3) Hoskins (3) and Teed. | Cleveland (Hawkins 2-1) at HR: Hav-Azcue (2); Mtl-Altobelli timore (Pappas 1-1) (N) (3), (Only games scheduled) Rochester 000 300 030-- 6 7 1 National League Columbus 000 020 100-- 3 7 1] w Pct Sadecki and Mateosky, Ricketts 706 (7); Jackson, Bauta (6), Williams 647 (8) and Tornay. 600 Buffalo 000 000 000-- 0 6 2 563 Richmond 100 000 01x-- 2 6 2 44 Green and Lonnett: Monrie 389 and Shantz 353 Miami 000 000 011 2 4 333 Toronto 000 000 000-- 0 5 Stock and Green; Cicotte, He-| 8 Oman (9 and Jones. HR: Mia- 4 0 Green game lead over. Chicago's White followed a walk with two wild Sox. Baltimore. dropped the Sox pitches. Marty Kutyna saved it to second by beating the de- for Hall by fanning Marty Keough fending champs 6-4° Wednesday With the bases loaded in the from a second place tie with a M8 victory over the Indians: The Kansas City A's beat Boston 5-3 and jumped free of the cellar as . Detroit plunked in with an eighth g straight loss rainin ar - ard's two-run homer in the sixth For Olympics inning made it two in a row over Seba % : # Detroit for the Yankees, Howard, VANCOUVER (CP) Frank nursing a sore hand, entered the Read has started trimming for game when catcher Yogi Berra the stretch drive to the Olympics. was tossed out by plate umpire The University of British Co- Lary (1-2) gave up six hits. men Wednesday night to bring ; the number in camp fo 23-30 TWO-RUN SINGLE oarsmen and three cox. The Orioles rapped the White, "It's a Jifficult and arbitrary| Sox with a four-run seventh in- thing," Read said of the cutting,| ning capped by Brooks Robin- '"'but time is very short, finances Birds to tie it four-all. Frank The 32 remaining men, back in Baumann (1-1) was the loser in|training since Monday following relief of Early Wynn, who missed @a month off for examinations, on his fourth try for his first moved into a campus fraternity victory but became the 12th ma. house where some (raining ex- jor league pitcher to strike out penses will be underwritten by total of 2,003. eT App ig) . PORT DALHOUSIE MEET Hoyt Wil elm fb was the ib The UBC fours, with and with, ner. al I NS 6 nie se out Cox, must defeat eastern gan gave ca cher aus Fane 5 Canadian oarsmen in July's na- t ouble, Triandos set an AL rec- {iona] trials at Port Dalhousie to ord with three passed balls in one make the summer trip major league record for passed startled rowing circles when his halls in one inning was set by Ray crew defeated England in the Katt of the then New York Giants British Empire Games here, in 1954---with Wilhelm the pitcher. won't be required to attend the Jim Lemon drove in Washing-| trials, However, three clockings ton's last four runs, bringing the must be excellent or they won't Hal Woodeshick (1-0) was the Beach, Calif. against Stanford, winner in relief, coming in on a| Washington, Oregon State, UCLA, four-run Cleveland fifth that was California and Southern Califor- triggered by rookie Walt Bond's/nia Universities, May 21 BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS 8 615 -- 8 Ya 9 vs 114 1% 2 night. eighth. Washington barred Cleveland UBC 0 A six-hit pitching job by rookie Bill Short (2-1) and Elston How- John Flaherty for disputing a call lumbia rowing coach, who works iu the fourth inning his crews 4-6 hours daily cut 11 son's two - run single after -Al are limited and we've got to do Smith's error had enabled thelit." 2.000. The big right-hander fanned the university and the students' six in 6 1-3 innings for a career council. inning and tied the AL game high' he eights, dominant in Can- with four for the third time. The ada since 1954 when Read first Senators from behind with a two-/go to Rome run homer in the seventh ' The erews will row in Long American League W'L Pol 3 3 New York Chicago Daltimore Cleveland Washington Boston Kansas City Detroit 7 7 6 6 5 American League PE SCRE PEP Los at San at St 410 1 Buffalo Toronto EE EE a Bal- Ct Pittsburgh 12 San Francisco 11 Milwaukee 9 St. Louis 9 Los Angeles Cincinnati Chicago Philadelphia 2 National League Cincinnati ~~ 000 201 000-- 3 San Fran 100 100 000-- 2 McLish (1-2) and Bailey; San. Today's Games ford (2-1) O'Dell (7) and Land- Buffalo at Richmond (N) rith. HR: SF-Kirkland (3) Rochester at Columbus Pittsburgh 000 100 000-- 1 5_0 Havana at Montreal 000 100 13x-- 5 8 ™9,(Only games scheduled) 6 3 6 1 N) | games below .500 | Wrigley Openers Lost By | SPORTS Canadian Teams | CALENDAR T , | By THE CANADIAN PRESS an infield out. The Vees got an- socees' > GAMES The two Canadian teams in the other in the eighth on Bill Shantz') (Oghawa and District Soccer |Internationa! Baseball Lea gue single, a sacrifice and an error|Assoc, --Hungaria vs Peterboro |drew good crowds in beautiful by Bison shortstop Bob Wine. UEW at 6.45 p.m. Game at Kins- {weather to their home openers Monroe struck out nine and/men Civic Memorial Stadium. Wednesday and both lost, walked only one. : Toronto had the league's larg. Easter, who won the season's lest 1960 crowd, 15,178, and lost opener at Havana with a homer, 0 to Miami Marlins, Havana bit his game-winner alter singles Sugar Kings spoiled Montreal by winning pitcher Ray Sadecki Royals' home opener before 10,. and Charlie James in the eighth 000 with an 82 victory. inning, off losing reliever Don The Richmond Vees appear, Williams. Ben Mateosky and Jim) meanwhile, continued to get fine Hickman also homered for Roch-| pitching from their New York! ester. | : Yankee farm hands, An unearned run in the eighth Zack Monroe hurled the second and Gene Green's homer in the . ™ consecutive shutout over league. ninth accounted for Miami's scor-| 5 P T leading Buffalo Wednesday, beat.|ing. Wes Stock (1-1) held Toronto - in 1 e ing the Bisons 2-0 on a repeat of to five hits. Al Cicotte allowed a six-hitter that Eli Grba hurled|only three hits in eight innings| Oshawa Jets rolled up a 3387 Tuesday. In Wednesday's fourth for Toronto, with Green's homer total to top the Toronto Headpins game, Luke Easter smacked a coming off reliever Russ Heman.\by 123 pins in winning the men's three-run pinch homer to break Cicotte is 2-1. (team championship of the On. a 33 tie and give Rochester a, Mike Cuellar allowed Montreal tario Slovak five-pin bowling con- 6-3 victory over the Columbus|only five hits and used a five-/gress tournament. Jets. {run third inning, topped by Larry) The champions, Les Kudla, | Novak's two-run double, to get John Hrico, Alex Borovsky and DALLAS GREEN LOSES Havana's victory. Jose Azcuethe Sarnovskys, John and Monroe (1-2) bested Dallasihomered for Havana and Joe Al-|Henry, had little trouble after the |Green, who gave a run in the |tobelli hit one for Montreal. Billi second game. Henry Sarnovsky {first on Jack Reed's triple and Kunkel (2-1) lost. rolled a single of 322. ---- -- ---- ---- West Enders of Toronto, Joe Win Slovak Dodgers Find { | |me."' Harvey received an honorary membership in the local Kinsmen | Club. H I _. |added to the noise and glitter of _!Slreets (GOOD START " Hole-In-One Opens Season's Golf News "Bill" (Wink) Gummow got the|Eric at golf as well as gin {golf season off to a good start/Tummy. last Friday, when he Kot the | Young Toby Wolter, who grew 4 a ' two inches and gained 15 pounds 180-yard, par 3, 5th hole at theoyer the winter, knock Oshawa Golf Club, the golf ball out of sight when Wink's 4% wood shot bounced he nis his game into shape. | | ith a new golf clu once in front of the hole and) 4 some expert coaching from rolled into the cup to score a per- jeff McGrath, Barbara Workman fect hole-in-one. Wink's playinglyil| certainly give the senior partners, George Bellis, Ken Mil-\adie5 something to worry about ler and "Dunc" Brodie witnessed |this summer. the event. 3 Captain, Tom Kidd, is working Jack Germond, Jr., is getting/on a new handicap system, which ready for a golf safari to the he hopes will give the players a southern United States, alongmore accurate and uj te with three other Ryerson stu- handicap. This new system in |dents, Their schedule includes cludes the last 25 games played {rounds at Pinehurst, North Car-|and even allows for rounds |olina; Myrtle Beach, South Car-|completed: |olina and if possible, the Mas-| The club house dining room ters' Course in Augusta, Georgia. opened Sunday, May 1, with a Bob Wolter and Eric Henry new chef, Theo. Achtzehnter, as have resumed their feud from|host. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Heffer- last fall and Bob claims that|ing, one of the early diners, said |with a little practice he will beat!the food was excellent, Chatham Greets Dominion Champs CHATHAM (CP) -- Chatham |cade was swelled by cars travel made the winning of its first ling out to meet it. Some 300 Allan Cup the basis for the big- waited at Tilbury, 18 miles west gest celebration this city of 30,000 of here, where the team tempor has seen since VE-Day in 1945. |arily broke off from the proces- | A ticker-tape parade along the sion to turn down the town's main main streets lasted two hours street and be greeted by Tilbury |after the 1960 Canadian senior) Mayor P. J. Corry. amateur hockey champions ar- rived home from British Colum. BANNERS HUNG bia, where they won out over At Chatham's western outskirts Trail Smoke Eaters, western/traffic chaos developed, giving champs, in five games. | the Players plenty of Sittie 1 bor Balloous, confetti tice huge Welcome Home, . flutt 3 ook B,D ne hes Jame roons banners strung in front of through the city factories in the industrial area. open convertibles with their| A temperature that climbed to wives and children. Coach John[80 under a blistering sun made |Horeck and team captain Ted the slow trip a trying one for the Power provided the centre of at-fbone-weary Maroons. Autograph tention as they held the trophy|scekers mobed them at points |aloft. along the parade route, and at | I riders the Memorial Community Centre H k S i pa eback riders, floats, three ore than 1,000 children inun- {bulances and police cruisers| aM-| jated the procession as the par- ade ended. A dinner and dance were held ednesday night with surprise gifts to players. YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pitching -- Bob Buhl, Braves, kept Milwaukee in fourth place | with three-hit 2-1 victory over the Dodgers Hitting--Bib Lemon, Senators, scored twice and drove in last {the hastily-arranged celebration. Ww SCHOOLS CLOSED Most stores and offices and all schools in the city closed for the afternoon, Crowds lined the! five and six deep i places. The giant welcome followed a 70-mile trip from Detroit's Metro- |politan Airport, where the team {flew in from the West. After a civic welcome in Wind- sor, where they were greeted by Mayor Michael Patrick and their! old foes, Windsor Bulldogs, the [Fear motorcade was joined by| vzens of fans for the tri Chatham. p All along the route th two-run homer in caval-iseventh, PROVINCIAL RIDING OF OSHAWA Progressive Conservative Association | ANNUAL MEETING | Friday, May 13, 8:15 p.m. | TOWN HALL, WHITBY | Speaker: THE HON, KELSO ROBERTS, Q.C., Attorney-Generel of the Province of Ontario ELECTION OF OFFICERS . IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND! * THE PUBLIC Captain Cariboo Cassiar Cayzor Cheskirk Chester Chib M Chime Chrom & br) os § pa c c c Con C Mogul! € Morri ¢ Con « Nic! North) ¢ Con Sud Conwest S-------------- Cop-Man Coprand Coulee Cournor Craigmt Croinor Crowpat Cusco ° Daering 11% L 7% 0% Deer Delnite Denison Dome Donalda Duvan " 64 Ragan, Marge Kapsa, Gus Kapsa, | Welland won the women's By ED WILKS tive singles by Frank Torre, Del of Toronto were second with 2832 have found Bob Buhl to be just Ellsworth, a $70,000 bonus lefty OLD COUNTRY Los Angeles 'Wednesday night Thomas hit his fifth home run, in the ninth, who 'skippered three American English League in his third tour as Bruin man- Fourth Division unaware they were playing record in the National League, blew a chance for a first place| cio was hitless for the first time Doug Harvey, Montreal Cana- beating Philadelphia 5-3. out single in the sixth "He said he "wholeheartedly" eight decisions against the Dodg- arvey said, "but for a reason. scored in the second on consecu- mores of the Ontario Hockey As- By THE CANADIAN PRESS precedented baseball switch, for- Norman (Mickey) McMillan, | Championship, died four years In effect, Boudreau handed a ny; Patrick. Negotiations have youth was 12 years old. McLar- Cubs after a typically abrupt de- | ,,cv'* to keep running the club, ey named Grimm as Cub boss, de wners, Cubs have won six and lost 11| * Aqked what would happen to City in 1957, said it was a good SIXTH-PLACE CLUB team with a lot of problems. The bert ended up with the Ranger Grimm remains as Cubs vice. pros rather than return to Bilts. me to take the beating he thought] Mr. McMillan said he did not Is Dyke Lament Ms Nn It was exactly a year ago Wed- for Dykes and the Tigers ever an de lost 15 of their first 17 games moaned Dykes. 'Not just one or a Jura Ragan, Helen Ragan and [Mark Tonkovich, rolled 3777 to {beat the Strikers of Welland by {championship with a score of |3077, compiled by Helen Kanuk, {Anne Hrin, Sue Kemko, Mary ed Press Staff Writer Crandall and Johnny Logan. total. If things weren't bad enough al- The Cubs handed three - time| John Jursa of Toronto turned ready for the Los Angeles Dodg- winner Bob Friend his first loss|in a 348 count for the tournament as tough as ever. : in 1958. Ellsworth, recalled from | The bushy-browned righthander Houston Tuesday, walked none pitched Milwaukee's Braves to a and struck out four for his first SOCCER SCORES beating the Dodgers for the third in two days, in a three-run fourth time in a row as Del Cran-|eighth against reliefer Elroy LONDON (Reuters)--Results of dall singled home a run in the Face, soccer. matches played in the It was the Dodgers' ninth de- League clubs before hecoming a B Third Division feat in their last dozen games 'color" announcer for Cub Fourgemoi) 1 Halifax 0 and their fourth straight, drop- games, swapped jobs with|SWindon Town 2.Conventry 0 ager Darlington 2 Doncaster 2 PIRATES STAY AHEAD McLish (1-2), the righthander Cillingham 0 Crystal 0 Pittsburgh retained a one-game| 1, became an ace in the Amer-| H » naw arvey Admits their final game under manager|pianked the Giants on one hit Charlie Grimm--dealt the Pir-| eon willie Kirkland's solo home He Does S ear ates a second consecutive defeat, |...» in "the fourth. The big right- P t:e, losing 3-2 to Cininnati as|inic season. but who hit a .sacri-| die Ary Sig y Cal McLish won his first with age, vg 0 a firstuinning Giant GO a eat, ah four-hitter. Fourth place St.|pun The Reds beat Jack Sanford sionally spears a hockey oppon- Buhl (2-1), now 21-8 lifetime ae he wr aE . A against the Dodgers, had to duel DITOR) Wits sharges eating Hh g . . 2 ast seas y And - Don Drysdale all the way for Biltmores Fate of the Now York Reger: ers over three seasons. Drysdale| > . (3-3) gave up eight hits while! any forwar. rou going the distance for the fifth) ay £ 0 ; » 5 I A : r sociation Junior A series may be ' f oy Cubs Manager sold within the next few weeks] Charlie (Pop) , Foster, who to New York Rangers, a club of.|teered Vancouver's Jimmy Me. mer American League pilot Lou gna of the four Guelph citizens ago today at Glendale, Calif, Fos. Boudreau today took over from who operate the club, said he ex-| te 2 at his death, was man. Charlie Grimm 'as manager of pects a decision in about two ager, friend and counsellor of radio microphone to the 62-year-|, aon going on with Patrick for 30 woa fe tile fom Yomg Cor- old Grimm in exchange for {wo vears [Det in 1933, then lost, won and managership of his . {lost again in three famous fights cision by Cubs owner P. K. Wrig-|said Mr. McMillan, general man- ley. lager of Biltmore Hat Company.!|"% The unpredictable Wrigley, who|He and Arnold Somerville, also cided he didn't want to see Jolly, wr McMillan said he will re- Cholly "take a beating" andiport on the negotiations to the named Boudreau, 42, manager as| monthly meeting of the junior so far this season. |Bilts coach Eddie Bush if Rang. 3 GLAD TO DO IT ers take over, Mr. McMillan said: Boudreau, replaced by Harry "I don't think they (Rangers) feeling to gel back into uniform | Coach Bush figured in a recent again, player revolt after Bilts finished "The Cubs are a great organiz- the season in sixth place. High team will have to be overhauled, farm team in the Eastern Pro- but it will be done slowly." fessional Hockey League, Trois-|' He was to meet with the play-|/Rivieres Lions president. He said he and owner Six other players were reported "are very, very good to have refused to stay with the friends. Our friendship is so Guelph team if Bush continued ~ 1 was taking for the showing of know whether this was true. the club." | "Patrick said that," he added. NEW YORK (AP)--Nothing is|hitter in the sixth inning with two going right for Jimmy Dykes| runners on base and Detroit trail- these days. Not even an anni-/ing 5-3. He struck out. nesday that Dykes took over as since they weit inte reverse afer q manager of Detroit Tigers. Onn ng e lirst lve games ol 33, May 3, 1959, he supplanted Bill|*1¢, Season. a h {two but everybody. We were bat- 595 Dykes' debut was spectacular. ting .400 as a team after the first |; The Tigers whipped New York|eek, Now we're hitting exactly 102 1 {17 pins in the mixed-team event, Hrin and Anne Sivak. The Dolls ers, the world champions nowon the five-hit pitching of Dick high single. 2-1 victory with a three-hitter at/major league victory. Frank! second inning and then homered After the game, Lou Boudreau, United Kingdom Wednesday: ping the fifth-place champs two| Grimm, who lasted just 17 games| "Wrexham 1 Queen's P. R 1 iead, although the Chicago Cubs jcan League after only an 8-21 5-1. Second-place San Francisco pander also blanked Willie Mays, STURGEON FALLS (CP) Louis made it nine out of 11 by|(9.1) with Roy McMillan's two- ent this one, his seventh success in "Sure I spear occasionally, time in six starts. The Braves GUELPH (CP) -- Guelph Bil: REMEMBER WHEN. 5 J? CHICAGO (AP) In an un-|fiojal said Wednesday night Larnin to the world welterweight Chicago Cubs. weeks from: Ranger manager McLarnin since the Belfast-born hometown he Guelph operators are 100] agains Barney Ross. on three separate occasions had|.¢ Guelph, represent the four "just plain common sense." |council next Monday. Craft as manager of Kansas will want him." ation," he said. "It's a young|scorers Jean Ratelle and Rod Gil- ers 'and Grimm today. Both asked to be made Ranger strong, Mr. Wrigley didn't want as coach Ti y : » LJ igers Hitting versary - helps. That's the way it's been going Dils Norman after the Tigers had e just stopped hitting," ," Yankees in a doubleheader. Out-| 999 p've tried everything." 17h Frobishes n --- F 4 Ms as and D aS fielder Charley Maxwell came off| the bench to wallop four home HITTERS NOT HITTING runs in the twin bill. The Tigers] Dykes didn't single out any 15% went on to win 28 of their nexi/players. He didn't have to. Steve *% 42 games to zoom from last Bilko, the ponderous first base-| 1m place to within a half game of man, hadn't gotten a hit in his 2 the lead [last 27 times, Maxwell is 3 for 30. 57 Rocky Colivito is slightly over! 100 DIFFERENT STORY NOW [200 with 10 for 48. Even Al Ka-| 27 The Yankees were the oppo-|line, the team's best hitter, is nents again Tuesday. But historv|well below .300. 75 did not repeat. This time the, Despite the slump which = Yankees walloped the Tigers 10-3,|dropped the Tigers from first to| aso in a game that stretched De-|within a hair's breadth of the by troit's losing streak to seven. basement, Dykes still thinks his Maxwell, again on the bench for team will be a contender all the non-hitting, came in as a pinch'way. A "5 15% = 25 188 n 75 950 300 a? 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