Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 5 Jul 1961, p. 14

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Ln EE EE ITT TER sion of "rock-and-roll". He is shown going through the "tummy tickler" conditioning Frank Rigney, veteran of 2 the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, « seems to like the football ver- ROLL! ROLL! OH, HOW THOSE POUNDS ROLL AWAY! 4 Houdaille Puts| SPORTS : Whitewash On | CALENDAR i | Foley's Squad | TODAY'S GAMES |SOFTBALL : In one of the best-played Inter- Beaches Major League -- De- {County Softball League games pendable Cleaners vs Oshawa of the season, Houdaille Indus-|Tony's, at Alexandra Park, tries blanked Foley's Plumbing 8.15 p.m. |4-0 last night at Lakeview Park.| UAW League -- Horne's Esso "Early" Earle pitched the ys Black's Men's Wear, at shutout for Houdaille and limit- Alex. Park, East diamond and ed Foley's to only three scat-/Town and Country vs Kent's tered hits, all singles, to turn|western Tire, at Alex Park, the trick. Wallace singled in the west diamond, both games at first inning and again in the|§,00 p.m. sixth and Maxwell got the other) South Ontario County League safety, in the second stanza. _. Pickering at Whitby Abner's, Earle struck out three battersiat 8,00 p.m. and Markham vs early in the game and then got Port Perry Intermediates, at great support from his mates Port Perry, 7.00 p.m. after that. His appreciation was| West Darlington Pee Wees -- shown in giving up only one Courtice "B" at Maple Grove, walk -- and Wallace got that 6.30 p.m. too, | Oshawa Minor Assoc. (Midget Ken Beer was the losing pitch-| League) -- Bathe at Woodview er. He also pitched well and had|and Fernhill at Southmead; good support but Houdaille|both games at 6.30 p.m. bunched their bingles. In the] (Kiwanis Bantam League) -- first frame, Woods opened with| Southmead at Lake Vista; Run- a single, Jones walked and|dle at Kingside; College Hill at Kuney singled. An infield error North Oshawa; Sunnyside at let Woods score. |Nipigon and Radio at Fernhill; In the third, Tutak belted a|all games at 6.30 p.m. homer, to make it 2-0 and the] Neighborhood Assoc. (Pee winners doubled their total in|Wee Girls) Woodview at the fifth, when Woods singled,| Rundle, 6.30 p.m. (Bantam Jones again drew a walk and Girls) -- North Oshawa at Har- Kuney again came through with|man; Sunnyside at Nipigon; a long single, to score Woods|Radio at Connaught and South- and Jones came home on mead at Zion. All games at 6.30 Ci io exercise at the Bombers' train- ing camp, which opened Mon- day. Rigney is grinning at the SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' REAR EPR BIRR RI RR GY CHARLIE JUSTICE -- the Satchel Paige of soft- Jball--is expected, by manager Frank Foley, at least, to "be on hand tonight to pitch for Oshawa Tony's against "Dependable Caterers, in that crucial Beaches Major "Fastball League schedule game at Alexandra Park, the 'winner of which takes over undisputed possession of first place in the Beaches League standing. Foley was very hopeful--but far from positive--when we spoke *to him last night. Tony's and Dependables will draw a "big crowd tonight anyway--they've been drawing well wall season (we almost said "all summer"--b-r-r) but 'even if Charlie does appear in uniform--he's got a "tough job ahead of him, if he wants to rate "pitcher of 'the week'--after that performance Ray Judd turned sin last night. TUESDAY'S City and District doubleheader saw "MacLean's Esso end their slump with a good win over iHeffering's, in the first game last night and it was a "very entertaining tussle too, but for top-drawer enjoy= struck out at least eight of theljors. 11 with the slider." March got on via an error and| He said: "The slider is a new | Wright walked, in the fifth, but pitch for me. I developed it this|jt all occurred after there were| |spring and I've been using it a|two out and nothing more hap-| {lot this year. Johnny Sain, our|pened. Wilson got Scugogs' first| pitching coach, helped me. Ifhit, a single in the 8th, after| experimented with the slide ritwo out and then in the 9th,| {once before, but I stopped when after two out, Mapes got on via| cameraman, through the legs of coach John Michaels. --(CP Wirephoto) ER A utal's sacrifice fly, to conclude|p.m. . the scoring. | or fC | BASEBALL Geo. Chuvalo Must Nickel Curve | Foievs: ese ct cine masERAL Nn Asa H 3 {Knox y Maxw . ma.l--(Pee Wees) -- Gower Realty Defend His Title one ite i My Maxwell, Ea |vs Canadian Tire, at Harman UDAIL AEs » P| Park, 6.30 p.m QUEBEC (CP)--Gene Letour- Y HOUDAILLE: Woods, If; (Bantam League) -- Jury and neau, national commissioner of " Jones, 1b; Kuney, ss; Tutak, 3b; | veil os Ajax. at Ajax .and the Canadian Boxing Federa- or itey Milne, cf; Elliott, rf; Cairnes, ii Saw Day. ot tion, said Tuesday Canadian ¢; Hrico, 2b; Earle, p. { Alexandra Park, both games at heavyweight champion George, NEW YORK (AP) -- The 6.30 p.m. Chuvalo of Toronto must defend slider, scornfully referred to by| "Lakeshore Minor Assoc. (Pee his title against Montreal's Bob baseball minds as "a nickel Peter IO UEW | wee League) -- Bowmanville Cleroux. curve," has become Whitey | at Cobourg, 6.30 p.m. "Chuvalo, as heavyweight Ford's new money pitch which {LACROSSE champion, should defend within may carry him to the greatest an cugogs |" Junior League -- Whitby Red six months like any other cham-|season ever recorded by a New | Wings at Mimico Mounties, 8.30 pion. We don't care where he} york Yankees lefihander. Peterborough UEW gave Osh-|p.m. defends it as long as he does," e brilliant southpaw Tues- awa. Scugog Cleaners a - 5-0 Letourneau said. day pitched a five-hit 6-2 Amer- "cleaning" in their Inter - City] GAMES FOR THURSDAY Letourneau said he has re. ican League triumph over De-|Softhall League schedule game, | SOFTBALL a | ceived a letter from Al Bach. troit Tigers. It was Whitey's/last night in the Liftlock City.| City and District Assoc. = man, manager of Cleroux, the Ninth straight victory, giving] Keating pitched the win for| Scugog Cleaners vs MacLean's number one contender, asking him a season mark of 15-2. He the Electrical Workers, going|Esso, at 6.30 p.m. and Hef- that Chuvalo be "forced" to fanned 11 and permitted only all the way with an impressive | fering's Imperials vs Tony's meet Cleroux. one earned run two-hit performance and giving) Vendors, at 8.15 p.m. Both Chuvalo's last championship My slider was working beau-|up only two walks, while strik- games at jlssandra Park. as fight was against Clefoux in tifully," said Ford. "T'll bet Iling out 16 of the Oshawa Jun:| Mg EH pr Montreal, Nov. 29, 1960, when and Mount Zion at Port Perry| he regained the crown. Juniors, 790 pm. | League -- Karn's Drugs vs Oshawa Real Estate, Real Estate at Alexandra Park, 6.00 p.m. Inter-County League -- Hou- daille Industries vs Dodd Mo- tors, at Lakeview Park; Mer- | chants vs Willis Mofors, at Alex. MacLEAN'S WIN Ray Judd Brilliant In Farewell Display Ray Judd, Peterborough's "Mr. Softball" of the past few years, made his farewell ap- pearance in Oshawa last night and turned in a performance that will long be remembered by the large crowd of fans who turned out for the regular Tues- day night doubleheader. Judd pitched his Lakefield Merchants to a 3-1 victory over Oshawa's own league - leading Tony's Vendors and did it in masterful fashion. He struck out a total of +23 batters didn't issue a single walk -- hit one batter with a pitched ball-- allowed only one hit, and faced just 31- batters. His catcher errored on one strikeout pitch. Joe Melnick had the only hit to rob Judd of his no-hit, no- run goal. Melnick's safety was a wrong-field drive that landed right on the right-field foul line, making the chalk fly -- Mel- nick went to third when the ball got past the fielder, but he didn't score. "Sambo" Smith, veteran Osh- awa hurler, who gave Judd a tidy duel, scored his team's lone| run -- by alert base-running.! He was hit with a pitched ball, to reach 1st base and when Berwick grounded, Smith was safe at 2nd, when the force- play attempt was a high throw, pulling the fielder to the first- base side of the bag. Smith, noting third base uncovered, never even hesitated, but tore on| to third base. He was rewarded by being able to score on a high, wild-pitch strike -- that catcher Cam Wasson couldn't get. This one happened in the third inning. Lakefield got their first run on the first pitch of the ball game, Neil Wasson tagging Canadian Team Expecting Win At Bisley Meet BISLEY, England (CP)~The Dominion of Canada Rifle As- sociation team, the official Ca- nadian team in the Bisley rifle shoot, is confident that one of its members will retain the Queen's Prize -- the top indivi- dual award at Bisley. Smith's opener, into right-centre, for a homer. They made it 2-0 in the third when N. Wasson singled, advanced on Glenn Padgett"s sacrifice and a wild pitch and scored when Cam Wasson grounded out to Bill Solomon. It stayed at a great 2-1 soft- ball battle until the 9th, when Judd got a hit past Campbell, who blinked as part of Judd's broken bat came flying in his direction. A passed ball and a wild pitch got Judd to 3rd base and he scored on N. Wasson's single to left. Neil Wasson, with a homer| and three singles was the big hitter for Lakefield, getting half of their total of eight hits. LAKEFIELD -- N. Wasson, ss; Padgett, 2b; C. Wasson, c; Amer, 1b; D. Wasson, 3b; Ball, If; Foley, cf; Eakins, rf; Judd, TONY"S--Berwick, cf; Camp- bell, 3b; Rennick, rf; Varga, ss; Brabin, If; Melnick, ¢; Solomon, 2b; Tureski, 1b; Smith, p; Snow, batted in 9th; Horton, batted in 9th. MacLEAN'S END SLUMP In the curtain - raiser, Mac- Lean's Esso came out of their slump with an overdue display of hitting power and good pitch- ing, to defeat Heffering's Imper- ials 6-3. Bob Boyce pitched a four-hit- ter to win the game and wasn't exactly propped up in the way of support either, as! his mates committed five field- ing errors. He gave up a line- drive single to Ralph O'Reilly in the sixth, for the first hit allowed and he had a one-hit, shutout going until the 9th in- ning. In their last chance, Imper- ials scored three. Ted Jones opened with a single and Ray Buzminski was safe on Boyce's own 'error. A choice play was hobbled at 2nd base, when Bob Simcoe grounded, then O', got his second hit, to Jones and Jim Jordan's fice fly scored Buzminski. Si coe came home from 3rd on Hickey's line-drive to right but Benny Hubble's throw to the plate, nip O'Reilly trying to score 2nd base. Jack Shearer drew a walk, to prolong the ly but Boyce got Sammy Stark to ground out, ending the game. MacLean's got to starting pitcher Ted Jones for two runs in the second inning, George Ulrich walked after there were two out. Dave Wel- don singled and so did Boyce and Larry Weldon and the three successive singles scored Ulrich and D. Weldon. i In the next inning, Tom O'Con- nor opened with a single and "Butch" McMahon also con- nected. With one out, Gary Copeland bunted safely, scoring O'Connor then with two out, D. Weldon and Boyce again put together back-to-back singles, to score McMahon. Hubble walked in the fifth, advanced on a passed ball and scored on Dave Weldon's third- straight hit. In the 7th, it was Hubble again, with a single after one out. He went to sec- ond on a passed ball and scored on Copeland's single. Dave Wel- don had three-for-four, Boyce and Copeland each had two. MacLEAN'S -- L. Weldon, 3b; Wills, 2b; Tom O'Connor, ss; McMahon, cf; Hubble, rf; Copeland, 1b; Ulrich, If; D. Weldon, c; Boyce, p. HEFFERING'S -- Buzminski, If; B. Simcoe, ¢ and 1b; O'Reil- ly, 2b; Jordan, ss; Hickey, cf and p; Shearer, rf and cf; Stark, 3b; O'Donaghue, 1b and ¢ in 4th; Jones, p and rf, in 5th. | l | Nips Kamn's, {I found it put a strain on my an error and Suddard singled | Park East diamond and Foley's +ment, the big crowd of softball fans got their treat in "the floodlight tilt. Ray Judd pitched Lakefield Merch- "ants, of the Peterboro League, to a 3-1 victory over ~Tony's Vendors. This was as good a softball game as "has been seen here this season, with "Sambo" Smith "pitching a fine game to make a real duel of it, against ~Judd's brilliant performance. Judd struck out 23 bat- 'ters--he didn't issue a single walk--he faced 31 batters, fA couple of errors, one of which enabled Sam Smith "to sprint from 1st to 3rd, on what should have been a "routine force-out play, the other a missed third strike "by the catcher--accounted for two of the four extra "batters. Judd hit Smith with a pitched ball--that was ~a third one and the other was Joe Melnick's foul-line "single in the third inning--if it had landed two inches "more to the outside--Judd would likely have had a no-hit, no-run game. The big thing about it is that -this was the last time Oshawa softball fans are likely "to see Ray Judd--and they'll not likely forget him for 'a long while either, after last night. Judd leaves this "week, after about a seven-year stay in the Lindsay- "Peterborough area, to pitch for Providence, Rhode "Island, in the U.S. Atlantic Seaboard Softball Associa- *tion--against such clubs as Clearwater, Florida; Hous- ston, Louisville, New Orleans, etc. Judd has averaged Jabout 16 or 17 strikeouts every game he has pitched in "the past six years and gives up only about five or six "walks in an entire season. Last year he issued only Jour, while pitching Peterborough to another OASA ichampionship. He won three Ontario titles for Peter- 'borough teams. BRIGHT BITS:- Junior lacrosse results, of special sinterest to Whitby Red Wing supporters, saw St.-Cath~ *arines defeat Long Branch 13-9 last night while Mimico «finally got a win over Brampton, 9-8--all of which "tightens up the standing and leaves Hastings all alone in Stivst piace 5. Ls MakWab Rb BIAVED paid "for Johnny Antonelli, back in 1948 (Braves were in "Boston then) and yesterday they bought him back off Cleveland Indians, to try and bolster their floundering "pitching department. Antonelli was traded by Giants "to the Indians, . . . R. C. STEVENS, Toronto Leafs' "Tower-like first baseman, hit three homers in his first "three times to bat, in the new Buffalo stadium yesterday *as Leafs took a pair from the Bisons , . . CINCY RED- {LEGS won over the Pirates yesterday; Dodgers beat 'the Braves; Giants split with Cubs and Cards divided 'with the Phillies . , . AMERICAN LEAGUE action saw «Detroit Tigers hold to first place, with a split in their stwin-bill with Yankees, in New York, with 74,246 fans %on hand, biggest crowd in 14 years there. Whitey Ford swon his 9th-in-a-row . . . TWINS took two from White "Sox, which hurt Chicago and Angels climbed out of the cellar, beating Kansas City twice. PLUG shoulder. I used to snap it off but Keating struck out Cole, to| : Face Protest {with a short follow - through. |end the ED |Plumbing vs Crawford Con. Sain showed me how to follow| Reg White was the losing|Struction, at Alex PE Oshawa Real Estate nosed out through without strain." | pitcher. He gave up three rups| H13mON._A)) gemes 9 3 p.m. Karn's Drugs 87 in their UAW/| Ford was the complete mas-|in the second when Brady open-|, West Darlington Pee Wee -- 8 ter, although he pitched withled with a homer. McDougall Zion at Courtice A", 6.30 p.m. Softball League game on Tues- only three days' rest, a sched-|singled with one out then|, Lakeshore Juvenile Girls day but Karn's lodged a pro-|ule he is following for the first! O'Brien singled into left, where Le28U¢ -- Oromo Pp Oshsya test, on the grounds that play- (time in his long career. The 32-|the ball was misplayed, for an|\ ocdview, at Bathe Park, ©. er Gary Judd was ineligible yojvearold ace, despite the best unearned "homer". lav Tor iBe winders |won-lost record among active| In the fifth, Fitzgerald opened pay pitchers, never has won 20|with a single, then Allen walked Jackson pitched the win over games in a season, largely be-|and Keating's single scored | Lyons for Karn's. The Realtors|cause he usually pitched every Fitzgerald and Allen, to con-| | Neighborhood Assoc. -- (Pee |Wee Boys Leagues -- Radio at Nipigon; Connaught "B" at Lake Vista; Southmead at Run- dle; Storie at Fernhill; Wood- view at Connaught '"'A"; Har- man at Eastview; Kingside at North Oshawa and Bathe at Sun- nyside Park. All games at 6.30 2 4 {pete against the University of| The trophy was won last year! by Sgt. Gunnar Westling, 53, of | New Westminster, B.C., also on 21-man team. "We came over for the Queen's Prize" said Brig. George Hendersen of Burling-| ton, team commandant, "but |we're also out to win the team |events too." The team arrived | | Monday. | | The adjutant, Maj. B. E. Bes-| CAR TOP BOAT REG. 249.60 nadians are stronger than they have been in recent years. i Slashed fo The team will take part in two| practice matches before the of-| ficial competition begins July| MARINE SALES 14. Today they shoot against] |other Commonwealth entries in| 20 RAY ST., OSHAWA 728-8853 Corner 209 Bond E. and Rey St. Can Be Fun With This 12'6"" ALUMINUM a match organized by the Royal | Marines. Friday they will com-| Cambridge team. | The 13-man Canadian cadet] team under Col. J. M. Dela-| mere of Ottawa is expected in| about 10 days. The cadet com- petitions are a separate Bisley event. got a run in the first on doubles five or six days. |clude the scoring. White had 11 by Davis and Malloy. In the| At his present pace, Ford has|strikeouts and Danny Peters fifth, O'Neil homered, Welshja chance to surpass Vernon|who pinch-hit in the 8th, claim. singled, so did Davis then (Lefty) Gomez's 26-5 mark in|ed two strikeouts in two frames. Campbell doubled. In the 6th, 1934, best by a Yankees left! SCUGOG CLEANERS: Sned- McLinton doubled and scored hander. don, 1b; Burke, c; Mapes, rf; |P™% : later on an infield out. |Suddard, 1f: Cole, cf: March, (Pee Wee Girls) -- Zion at Trailing 7-5 going into the 7th, . 3b: Wright, 2b: Wilson, ss; | Singside; Riis oi Soutiimead; Real Estate scored three runs UAW Midgets (White, p; Peters, p, batted in| < i] at Woo View and. Nip; on five hits by Davis, Campbell, 8th. gon at Storie Park. All games Ld Malloy, MeLinton and Jackson, |" PETERBORO UEW: O'Brien, |8:30 P-m. 0 take the lea -7 and they B L d |3b; Kane, ss; Fitzgerald, 2b; | held on to win. eat ea ers Allen, c; Keating, p; Brady, ug Minor Assoc. The losers got two runs in UAW Midgets defeated the Farley, 1b; McDougall, c; Wil--- (Midget League) Bea- their first with Marshall open- league-leading Beaton's Dairy ams, rf. {ton's Dairy vs Ajax, at Ajax; ing its a Sitgle, then McPhee team 15-9 last night at Alex- | Whitby Canagisn Tire vs UAW, oubled and wi wo. out, andra Park, to tighten the stand- at Alexandra Park. Both games Brooks doubled. Hodgson's ing in the Fish) Legion Minor FIGHTS LAST {at 6.30 p.m. single and another two-bagger Baseball Assoc. Midget League. Leaside Minor Assoc. -- (Jun- by Brooks gave them a run in PWLT PTS. NIGHT {ior League) -- Oshawa Legion- He fourth aud 2, is ; the peaion's Dairy 11 3 11 | naires > Moores Druss, at ifth, ey staged a big four: ,: : Vii | Talbot Park, Leaside, 7.15 p.m. run splurge to take the lead Ajax Lions In BY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lakeshore Minor © Assoc. 7-4, McPhee walked, Terwille- Sacramento, Lal. = ory ger and Hodgson both followed with singles then Brooks was walked and Harmon had a hit- error blow to clear the bases,! but was nipped himself at the nlate Jackson stopped Karn's in the last two frames, in spite of a walk to Terwilleger and a single by Hodgson, to open the bottom of the seventh. The tying and winning runs "died" on the bases when the next three bat- ters went down in order. | Neighborhood Boys Pee Wee Softball In the Neighborhood Assoc. |Pee Wee Boys' Softball League | schedule action last night, Lake | Vista defeated Radio Park 13-4 {and Woodview Park won over Eastview Park by exactly the |same score. Hudgin, pitching for Lake three singles by Mitchell, Hickey Minnesota = son. In the fourth, Fair singled Whitby g 8 0 2 Smith, 159, Sacramento, stopped Dicesaro started for UAW but Govan Small, 159, Sacramento, a walk to Brady, his own error,|7. Fred Roots, 158l3, Sacra- another walk to Plews, then two mento, outpointed Dave (School- more errors, followed by a walk|boy) Brown, 158, San Fran- with two out, a lone hit hy Me. cisco, 8 error, gave Beaton's Dairy five! PLANS CHANNEL SWIM runs. By this time, Tullock had! FOLKESTONE, England replaced Dicesaro as the UAW|(Reuters)--~A New York man itcher. Tuesday disclosed plans to at- Tullock gave up three runs in tempt Thursday to swim the 21- the third inning, on four hits in- mjle English Channel under- cluding Fair's triple and singles water, Fred Baldasare, a for- by Cover, Cheeseman and Jchn- : (Pee Wee League) -- Kendal at Bowmanville, 6.30 p.m. (Mid- get League) -- Kendal vs Osh- jawa, at Lakeview Park, 6.30 [LACROSSE _ A AE --] {Brampton Excelsiors vs Whit by Red Wings, at Whitby Arena, | 18.30 p.m. | mer documentary film producer said he hopes to swim the dis- | tance in about 30 hours. | but was picked off first, then Cover tripled, and scored later BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS on an infield oul. Mitchell was doing the pitching ia the fourth inning. He finished out the game and had the right stuff to halt the Milkmen, who' didn't score Detroit in the last three frames. New York Meanwhile, UAW had got one Cleveland run in the first, a home-run blow| Baltimore by Mitchell. In the fourth, they|Chicago By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League W L Pet. GBL 50 28 .641 4828 .632 1 4535 .563 6 4336 544 7% 30 41 48812 Tuesday's Results Pittsburgh 0 Cincinnati 2 Los Angeles 6 Milwaukee 5 | San Francisco 19-2 Chicago 3-3| Philadelphia 7-10 St. Louis 10-6 Today's Probable Pitchers Cincinnati (Hunt 84) at San got to Johnson for five runs on one walk, three costly errors and 3840 48712 Francisco (McCormick 7-8) (N) 3544 443 15% | St. Louis (Gibson 5-5) at Los 3346 418 17} | Angeles (Podres 8-1) (N) Boston Washington . ¥ La . I COULDN'T STAND GUYS 'LIKE ME' - JIM PIERSALL BALTIMORE (AP) -- Fiery Jim Piersall of Cleveland In- . dians, who charges umpires, . opposing players and outfield fences with equal fervor, says "'there's no other way to play the game." * "Too many guys play a scared kind of baseball' he told a meeting of the Balti- more Sports Reporters Asso- ciation Monday. "But there's only one way to play. That's the way I play, and the way Nellie Fox (Chi- cago White Sox second base- man) plays." : Plersall is currently side- lined with an injured knge, suffered last week when he ran into a Cleveland fence while chasing a line drive hit by Dale Long of Washington Senators. : The - 31-year-old outfielder also is nursing bruised feel. ings and a sore wrist since being hit June 25 by a pitch thrown by Jim Bunning of De- troit Tigers. '""He's going to get it some day, if he doesn't quit throw- ing at the hitters," Piersall said. Recalling his brief tussle with Bunning, Piersall said "that was the first fight I had a chance to win, and then the catcher knocked me down from behind." Piersall, who had a nerv- ous breakdown in the early 1950s, said he was happy to be able to "blow my top" and let off steam. "I leave my problems at the ball park," he said. "I let the baseball writers and umpires get the ulcers." "I could never be an um- pire. I couldn't stand guys like me." Vista, gave up Radio's first and Tullock. In the fifth. | ./Los Angeles 3248 .400 19 ran by weeks an the Tour thd Tullock. In the fifth. John, 0 oc®City mer 20019; | inning. Simon and Mathews combination of three walks, Tuesday's Results crossed the plate in the 5th, three errors and Hickey's Detroit 2-4 New York 6-3 aided by Woods and Ryder and|double and Tullock's single. It/Kansas City 5-5 Los Angeles [then in the 7th, Matthews scored added up to seven more runs 127 {again, Ryder and Weeks adding and gave UAW a 13-9 lead. They Boston 3 Washington 7 |the punch, added singletons in each of the Chicago 4-2 Minnesota 6-4 Lake Vista got one by Kram!|last two innings, to complete Cleveland 1 Baltimore 5 |in the second stanza and staged their total. Today's Probable Pitchers | four-run rallies in each of the, Cover and Fair for Beaton's, Cleveland (Stigman 2-1 or) {3rd, 4th and 6th frames. Cran-| Mitchell, Hickey and Tullock for Bell 5-8) at New York (Stafford | At Woodview Park, Tole was quette 7-6 and Muffett 2-8) |plate twice, in the third and STARS Minnesota (Kaat 3-7) (N) | Barnoski pitched for Eastview. gles, giving up two walks and ¥ 1-PaGBL finishing up with six in the sixth. oles, drove in first four runs Bh ams 2348 32422% | at at Cincinnati Los Angeles San Francisco Pittsburgh Milwaukee St. Louis Chicago Philadelphia |ston, Bremner, Hudgin, Kram, the UAW team, were the game's 6-3) i : 8 ! | Wallace, Myers, all hit well for big hitters. Detroit (Bunning 7-6 and [the winners. Bruce 1-0) at Boston (Monbou- L | : 2 4 Baltimore (Barber 8-6) the winning pitcher. Jenkins YESTERDAY S Washington (Daniels 4-4) (N) and Luke scored in the second . Los -Angeles (Grba 5-8) {stanza and Bowen crossed the . Chicago (Pizarro 4-1) at Kan- [fifth frames. Along with these/gy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS sas City (Shaw 4-7) (N) |three, Tutton was their other 'pyiching -- Joey Jay, Reds, National League {good hitter. shut out Pirates on three sin- T 49 29 628 He was tagged for three runs striking out three, for 2-0 vic- 47 31 .603 2 in the third and Woodview add-|tory. 43 34 558 5% {ed to their total in every inning,| Hitting -- Gus Triandos, Ori- | 3437 479 1115 | McNamee, Andrews, Bradley, with pair of homers in only two 3241 438 14%, | |Kalenowski and Osborne were at-bats in 5-1 victory over In- 31 43 .419 16 |best at the plate. dians Pittsburgh (Friend 8-9) at Chi- cago (Ellsworth 3-5) Philadelphia (Mahaffey 7-9 and Owens 1-1) at Milwaukee) {Spain 8:10 and Burdette 8-5) International League W L Pct. GBL 50 28 .641 4431 587 44 4236 .538 8 3834 528 9 | 37 36 507 1014 | 3537 .486 12 Richmond 3245 416 1714 | Syracuse 2455 .304 261% | Tuesday's Results Toronto 6-5 Buffalo 0-4 Syracuse 0-5 Rochester 5-11 Charleston 0-3 Columbus 5-2 Jersey City 5-4 Richmond 7-5 Today's Games Toronto at Buffalo (N) Syracuse at Rochester (N) Jersey City at Richd (N) Charleston at Columbus (N) American Association Tuesday's Results Dallas-F. W 1.0 Indianapolis 2-2 Denver 1-4 Houston 2-0 Columbus Charleston Rochester Buffalo Jersey City Toronto TOMORROW, JULY 6th, 1:30 TO 4:00 P.M. - 6:00 TO 9:00 P.M. AT ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM, SIMCOE ST. N. WE DID NOT MEET OUR GOAL OF 400 AT THE LAST CLINIC, SO IT IS IMPORTANT THAT WE EXCEED IT THIS TIME, SO THAT WE CAN REPAY FOR THE AMOUNT WE HAVE OVERDRAWN . . . PLEASE DO YOUR BEST TO ATTEND IF YOU HAVE MADE AN APPOINTMENT AND IF YOU HAVE NOT.MADE ONE, COME ANYWAY! Louisville 7-16 Omaha 10-3 |

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