Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Jul 1962, p. 18

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18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 25, 1962 } : | ; wow ww vw we ee eS ew YY Par To Take Licking, | Canadian Golf Open? A total of 99 players of Tues- day's field of 140 qualified to MONTREAL (CP)--The big- name, big-time pros take over today at the Canadian open golf championship for some practice|ble for Thursday's starting field) } with plenty of indications that/of 156, That field will be cut/Lopez, Marathon, Fla., 38-35-- they could rip. par to shreds|to the first 100 and ties Satur-| when the firing starts in earn-|day and then to the first 60 and/Glover, Florence, S.C., 34-39--| est Thursday. r ties for Sunday's final round, Par over the shaded Laval- sur-le-Lac course is 36-36--72,/U-S. PROS --, th lif but its 6,555 yards are not rated. Six U.S. pros led the qua fl as among the most difficult in "8 attack, three coming in wit | Canada. On the basis of the|tWo-under-par 70s and three at performances turned in Tues-9ne under par. ' day by a flock of golf's lesser| Chopping two strokes off the) lights in a. qualifying round, |Tesulation total were Ed Rubis| many observers were talking in|°f bing ge ove -- ios terms of a final score of 16 un-|Dolan of Worces a Bart ; | der par to take the first-place|arry Mancour of Berkeley.) $4,300 of the $30,000 prize|Calif. At, 71. were Don Byrd of| money. |Lake Wawasee, Ind., Tommy) Although only six of the qua ifiers broke. par Tuesday, the/Rule Jr., of observers were betting that the|/owa. long-hitting pros who were eli-| Other scores included (x de- gible automatically on the basis notes amateur): of their previous performances| Devlin, Australia, 36-36--72 would find the course to a. Old Westbury, N.Y.) 36-36-- Rapids, | Cedar Jr. Legionnaires Blank Hamilton | Oshawa Canadian Tire Le-|ning, but it came with two out gionnaires came up with theirjand Ron Bell flied to centre. \finest performance of the sca-|"Butch "Dowe singled in the \son last night at Talbot Park, injsecond and was thrown out at Toronto (Leaside) to shutout|/3rd, when Roger Reeson got on | Hildrop, Mount Hope, Ont., 38- 35--73 join the 57 automatically eligi-/Thomas, Durham, N.C., 38-35-- 73 73 73 xBrownlee, Toronto, 38-35--73 Homenuik, Winnipeg, 38-35--73 Bigras, Fort Lewis, Wash. 36- 37--73 Meyers, Daytona Beach, Fila., Periard, Boucherville, Que., 37- 36--73 xKindred, Peterborough, 36-38-- 74 Cazes, Levis, Que., 38-36--74 Arnold, Ste. Adele, 38-36--74 || Wulff of New Orleans and Jack|*Macgregor, Cornwall, 40-35-- [nter-County League 75 Dean, Cornwall, 40-39--79 SPORTS ALENDAR TODAY SOFTBALL Oshawa Minor Assoc. (Kiwan- is Bantam League Semi-Finals) -- Nipigon Park at Storie Park, and North Oshawa at Connaught |Park, 3rd game of 2-out-of-3 iseries; hoth games at 6.30 p.m, | (Midget League) Semi- \Final Playoffs Woodview Park at Radio Park, 2nd game of 2-out-of-3 series and Sunny- side Park at Southmead, 1st \game of 2-out-of-3 series; both jgames at 6.30 p.m. | Beaches Major Fastball |League -- Randall-Roy Metals |Oshawa Tonys, at Alexandra Park, 8.00 p.m. Civil Service League -- Wer- Iners vs Firefighters, at' Thorn- jtons Corners, 7.00 p.m. -- Fo- lleys vs Abner's Esso, at Whit- by, 6.45 p.m. 3rd game of 2-out-of-3 series,| Horvath, Windsor, Ont-, 41-38--| South Ontario County League Kuzmich, Port Arthur, 38-42-- 80 McCunn, Pembroke, 41-39--80 ~ David, Bowmanville, Ont., 46 41--81 Ouellette, Windsor, Ont., 81 Leeder, Orillia, 40-44--84 Zimney, Windsor, 84 Atman, Lindsay, Ont., 45-40--85 Grosart, Bowmanville, Ont., 44--89 The last six failed to qualify. dia 45- --Brooklin at Pickering, 8.15 p.m. West Darlingion Assoc. \(Atom League) -- Burketon at Courtice, 6.45 p.m. and (Pee Wee League) -- Courtice "A" at Maple Grove, 6.45 p.m. | East Toronto Junior Ladies League -- Oshawa Scugog Cleaners vs Sunnybrooks, at To- p.m, /SOCCER Ontario Cup Playdowns) -- Kickers vs Polonia at 7.00 p.m. and Ukrainia vs Rangers, at 8.30 p.m.; both games at Kins- if { | | Ont., 39-45-- onto Coxwell Stadium, 8.30) | SIX-METRE YACHTS, with Oshawa and District Assoc. their spinnarkers spread and | Ontario, | | | ballooned out, are shown skip- | ping over sun-flecked waves, | as the slim craft compete in the first of a three-day series ;pionship, yesterday, on Lake | off the Toronto | Island. In the foreground is Bussy IJ, owned by Tim Barber of the Royal Canadian | Yacht Club, Toronto, flying a | slots near the top, intended to improve its pulling power. Close behind is 'Goose', the winner, owned and sailed by Jerry Castle of the Rochester, N.Y,, Yacht Club. ~--CP Wirephote men Civic Memorial Stadium.) for the North American Cham- LAWN BOWLING SIX-METRE YACHT Lone U.S. Challenger the Canadian Open Golf Championship, which gets under way with official play on Thursday. Final round of the tournament is scheduled for Sunday. new-type spinnaker sail, with CHARLIE SIFFORD, of Los Angeles, the only Negro to register for the Canadian Open, is one of the 58 auto- matic starters who join the 98 successful players from yes- terday's qualifying round, for Hamilton Vikings 4-0 in their)via an error, Leaside Junior Baseball League) phat was all Mcqueen al- ngs omg iiohed ihe shut-| lowed until the 7th inning, when Lait tar Agawe splendid 'ho ae ae see |hit performance in which hej nun blow. Up to that point, Mc- struck out nine batters and his)Queen had struck out 13. bat- --o ae hepaol APOC ters, including six in succession ciation by 2 'in the 3rd and 4th frames -- less band of defensive ball be-\anq he added two niore vic- hind him. tims for a 15 total, before it Only Top Three All Winners In Big Golf Event NEW YORK (AP)--The $75,- 000 World Series of Golf cham- pions in September will be lim- (Daley Trophy) at Port Hope} Lawn Bowling Club and Mixed | Doubles Tournament, at Can- jnington Lawn Bowling Club. |SOFTBALL | Oshawa Minor Assoc. |(Midget League Playoffs) --CP Wirephoto SPORTS MENU! By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR \ 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' He was in trouble only three jtimes, He walked Marty Sear to jopen the third inning and then gave up a single to Al Me- | Queen. A passed ball put Sear on 3rd base and then Newitt struck out the next three bat- ters. In the 7th, Jack Sutton walk- DIAMOND DUST was glittering last night where most Oshawa teams were in action -- with the glaring exception of over at Ajax, where the local Lakeshores caught up with one of their rained-out schedule games, and came home thinking they'd been in the midst of another storm. Bob Beers and his boys caught the Ajax Merchants on a hot night and by the time Jim McCartney had silenced the Oshawa bats almost completely while he and his mates rapped every- thing three Oshawa pitchers could serve up, the final score was 17-1. But it was real karat-type diamond dust up at Leaside where young Newitt pitched in sensational fashion to help Oshawa Canadian Tire Legionnaires blank Hamilton Vikings 4-0, in a Leaside Junior League game--and they had no score until a homer in the 7th inning, because the Hamil- ton hurler was just as stingy as Newitt. SOFTBALL FANS enjoyed a real treat at Alexandra Park ed with one out and Bill Wel- don followed with a single but |Sutton. tried to go to third on ithe hit and was thrown out. That |cost Hamilton a run and caused jthe whitewash treatment be- jcause Doug Wagstaffe, next batter, also singled but Sear iflied out to centre to end it.!. In the 8th, after two out, Paul Palidwor singled and Wayne Grahn then walked but Newitt |forced Chuck Riley to pop up jto end that and in the 9th, he [retired three in order, to wind it up. That was the story of Osh- lawas fine defensive play but |the Hamilton Juniors matched jthem for six innings with Al jwas all over. ited to Arnold Palmer, Jack | It was Newitt who started off | Nicklaus and Gary Player. |\the rally in the bottom of the) Original plans for the 36-hole |8th inning, to clinch his victory.|medal-play competition, sched- jHe singled with one out andjuled Sept. 8-9 at Akron, Ohio, |advanced on a passed ball as\were to match the winners. of |Ted Lutton was drawing a walk, the four major world champion- Then Bob Reid was safe on a) ship tournaments -- the U.S. costly throwing error by the)Open, Masters and PGA and shortstop which let Newiti|the British Open. Since Palmer jscore. Etchells walked to fill|won both the Masters and the; \the bases and Al Terwilliger|British tournament, there was| |singled to drive in Lutton and|Speculation that another top pro | Reid, completing the scoring. |would be invited to join the | No player in the game col-|threesome. 8 llected more than one hit. lcalones talee i oe ee s a *hic elev is ucer, HAMILTON VIKINGS -- Pal- and tha POA unnouneed Tua day that they and the sponsors jhad decided pao to the -- brdiggers cept of only champions partici- ha Cipolla, 2b. \pating in the new challenge |. OSHAWA LEGIONNAIRES --! match. |Lutton, 2b; Reid, lb; Etchells,| Player qualified by winning jc; Bell, lf; Terwilliger, 3b; Mc-|the PGA Sunday, Nicklaus by jidwor, ss; Grahn, 3b; Riley, cf;) |Sutton, Ib; Weldon, c; Wag- |staffe, rf; Sear, If; McQueen |Southmead at Sunnyside Park, }2nd game of 2-out-of-3. series, 6.30 p.m.; Radio Park at Wood- game of 2-out-of-3 series, if ne- cessary, 6.30 p.m. Oshawa City and District Ma- jor League (Exhibition Game) -- Scugog Cleaners and Mac: Lean's Esso, at Alexandra Park, 6.30 p.m. Inter - County League -- Hou- daille Industries vs Foleys Plumbing at Lakeview Park; Whitby Abner's Esso vs Ukrain- jian Aces, at Bathe Park and Police Assoc. vs Genosha Aces, at Alexandra Park, west dia- mond; all games at 6.45 p.m. South Ontario County League -- Pickering at Brooklin, 8.15 p.m, West Darlington Assoc. (Atom League) -- Maple Grove at Burketon, 6.45 p.m. and |Conkey, cf; Dowe, ss; Reeson,|beating Palmer in a playoff for nt; Newitt, p. ithe U.S. Open last month. | (Pee Wee League) -- Maple Grove at Courtice 'A', 6.45 p.m. yeSterday's leading boat for nearly nine miles over the 18- mile Seawanhaka Gold Cup course, placed a disappointing fourth. Carin II of RCYC and four Royal Hamilton Yacht Club boats, Gallant, Bibis, Stork and Totem, brought up the rear of ithe fleet. Ever since it was rebuilt from her keel up in 1957 by Her- man Whiton to regain the Sea- TORONTO -- Goose, the lone} |U.S. yacht challenging for the North America six-metre sailing championship and The Globe and Mail Trophy, sped past eight Canadian boats to capture |the opening race of the three- race series on Lake Ontario yesterday afternoon. | The U.S. yacht, owned and sailed by Jerry Castle of Roch- ester Yacht Club, maintained its record of being a slayer of;wanhaka Challenge Cup for the Canadian six-meters by cross-/United States, Goose has en- ing the finish line ahead of Edjjoyed considerable success Barker's Titia of Koyal Cana-|against boats north of the bor- dian Yacht Club and Buzzy III,/der. Goose won the cup in 1957 janother. RCYC yacht, sailed by|by beating Titia and Mr. Good- |Reg Dixon. Goose had a lead/erham in light weather in Lake of two minutes, five seconds| Ontario, over Titia, which had veteran] Last year the sleek, white- skipper Bill Gooderham at the/hulled boat, with its new owner helm. jat the helm, won three major | Tim Barber's Buzzy II of|sixemetre events on the lake, |RCYC, a pre-race favorite and|taking the George Cup, Alarm a nrnntneeenenenreees (Trophy and. Castiés: Cup. | Wins Opening Race view Park, 3rd and deciding) periority. But once the Roches- ter yacht cruised past Buzzy II on the third leg, it was evident that no boat in the fleet could catch her. Much of Mr. Castle's success was due to two decisions he made on equipment. Minutes after the 10-minute preparatory gun had been sounded, he haul- ed down his light weather main- sail and put up a heavier main. At the time it did not look like a good move, as the winds were below 10 mph, but. when they picked up halfway down the second beat, Goose sudden- ly shot out of its runner-up spot behind Barber's Buzzy II and passed the RCYC boat a quar- ter mile from the weather buoy. Another factor in Goose's sud- den spurt was the heavier jib that Castle decided to put up after using a light weather jib on the first beat. where Heffering's nosed out Cobourg Brokers 2-1 in a 10- Sailing in excellent weather, inning thriller, a pitcher's battle all the way between Reggie with winds higher than 12 miles an hour, it took Goose nearly | McQueen pitching in sensation-) al fashion, He gave up a triple) to Al Etchells in the first in- Heffering's Capture White for the Imperials and 'Sleep' Dawe, the Cobourg chucker with the blacksmith's arms. This was a replay of a rained-out date -- and the final game of the schedule for Heffering's. They had to win it to avoid finishing tied with Scugog Cleaners, in the bid for first place. Cobourg scored one in the first inning and there wasn't another runner cross- ing the plate until Larry Batherson homered in the bottom of the Sth, to save the game. Then because he liked the fine fit of the hero's robes, Matherson banged out his third hit of the game, to drive in the winning run, in the 10th in- ning -- thus giving Heffering's first place in the final stand- ing of the City and District Major League. MacLean's and Scugog Cleaners are playing an exhibition game tomorrow evening, 6.30 o'clock. KIWANIS BANTAM Softball League semi-final rounds were both tied up last night. North Oshawa's ace pitcher left for a holiday in Florida (why didn't he go in the winter, the same as the rest of us would like to do -- was what we heard) and with their other hurlers lacking control, Connaught scored eight in the first inning and went on to win handily-- stay alive in the series--and force the third and deciding game, back at their own diamond, this evening. And Storie Park did the same at Nipigon Park, although the opposition was much sterner. They won and evened up the other semi- final and their third game is also this evening, at Storie Park diamond. In the event of rain cancelling the games to- night -- they'll play tomorrow night, since the semi-finals must be cleaned up this week. The finals in both Bantam and Midget playoffs, will be held after the GM holidays. | SIMPLE FOR HIM PITTSBURGH (AP) -- John Quinlan, 15, who says he learned to play golf by read- ing books, wrote a record of his own at the Penhurst golf | course recently--three holes in one on the same course | on the same day, two of them on consecutive holes. Heres how it went on the par-61 course, which has 11 | par-three holes: Quinlan knocked his No. 8 | iron tee shot into the hole on | | the 129-yard 13th. | He scored a second ace on the 145-yard 14th with a No, 6 iron, | On his second round, aced the 13th again } The youngster had 68 and | 63 for the two rounds. All the aces were witnessed by club employees and Quinian's goif- partner, he In 10 Innings, Heffering's Imperials had to} Getting three hits, never mind }go to their 16th and final game|both RBIs in the 2-1 decision, of the season's regular schedule|/was in itself a worthy feat as in the Oshawa City and District|Jim "'Sleap' Dawe, the Cobourg |Major League, before they could| hurler was mighty stingy as he jclinch first place and they didjand Reg White waged a scorch- it in a thrillspacked 10-inning/ing pitcher's battle. |sizzler, last night at Alexandra| Cobourg got their lone run in Park, when they nosed out Co-/the first inning and might easily bourg Brokers 2-1. have had more. Dick Turpin The game, previously rained! singled with one out and Sharpe out, had to be played when Hef-|was safe on an error. Dawe fering's and Scugog Cleaners|grounded out and Robinson Hoeonels First Place Honors 2-1 Meanwhile Dawe was tagged for safe hits in the 2nd, 4th and 5th but couldn't get a runner off the plate until Batherson opened the 9th with his homer. Doug Cole singled next, was sacrificed along by Carnwith but Dawe fanned White and got O'Reilly to end that threat and force the 10th inning. Both pitchers were tiring, but after Mitchell got on via an error and Turpin singled, with got to this point, tied with 20) points each, and the winners} 'snatched a sensational victory) jfor their 22-point total, when |Larry Batherson smashed a |wrong-field homer in the 9th in-) jning, to force overtime and ther') the same player got his third hit! of the night to drive in the win-| | Ajax | Merchan ning run. i singled home Turpin with two out, then Lingard walked to load the bases but Dechamp was put out to end if. From that point on, Reg White pitched no-hit ball for the next six innings. He gave up single safeties in the 8th, 9th and 10th frames--and that's all. Turpin had two of Cobourg's five total. ts Defeat Lakeshores Ajax Merchants handed Osh-)both singled, Art Rennick was|league standing. one out, White fanned Sharpe to ease the pressure and got Dawe to force Turpin at second. | In the bottom of the 10th, Dawe struck out Bryan but he gave up a walk to Marty Jordan and Palmer Knight's sing!e put Jordan on 2nd, where he was replaced by Ralph Jones, as a/ runner, Dawe struck out Reg Hickey. but a wild pitch let the runners advance and then with two out, Batherson clipped his |guided Denny's Young Drivers half the race to show its su- Bill Crothers Emulate Dads TORONTO (CP)--Noted sons of notable fathers handed them. selves belated birthday congrat- ulations before 5,899 patrons at Old Woodbine Raceway Tuesday night when Bill Wellwood and |Wesley Coke drove the winners of the first and second races: The double payoff was $18.20. Bill Wellwood, whose . father Harold has long been one of Ontario's top drivers (in fact, he won the third race Tuesday night with the gelding Billy Hal) turned 21 Sunday and was in the sulky in the first race when four-year-old Danny Wilmac came down in front. Wes Coke, whose father Cecil led Old Woodbine drivers through most of the 1960 season, Counsel, 13 year-old pacer, in the second race to complete the double. Wes turned 19 a week ago Mon- day. Wind Song, 6-to-5 favorite, won the seventh race, taking its third consecutive win at Old Woodbine. The horse is an eight- year-old gelding owned by Al Leverington of St. Thomas, Has To Watch Thigh Injury TORONTO (CP) -- The risk of reinjuring a back thigh mus- cle has become the dominating factor in deciding what events top athlete Bill Crothers will try for in Canada's British Empire Games trials here Aug. 4 and 6 : JESS WILLARD WANTS MILLION LOS ANGELES (AP)--Jess Willard, world heavyweight boxing champion from 1915 to 1919, is seeking more than $1,000,000 in damages on grounds that 47-year-old fight films 'were shown on network television without his consent. Willard, 80, of suburban La Crescenta, filed two lawsuits in superior court Tuesday. The films are those of Wil- lards historic 26th round knockout of Jack Johnson by which the famous 'white hope" captured the heavy- Crothers, 'United States in- door 500-yard champion, this week will make a crucial deci- sion, one which could keep him out of the 16-man team for the Games, in Australia in Novem- ber: Whether he should run his specialities, the 440 and 880, and weight crown. Willard lost it in 1919 by a knockout to Jack Dempsey. Defendants in the suit al- leging invasion of privacy and infringement of the right of publicity are the Columbia Broadcasting System and the Schlitz Brewing Company, Jimmy Jacobs and Turn of oT Fights, Incorpor- ated. third hit of the night, this one a single through the middle, to send Jones over the plate with BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS | the run that won the game and jgave Heffering's undisputed! claim to first place in the final National League W L Pet. GBL Los Angeles ... 35.657 By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Kansas City | Washington 43 56 434 = 16 35 59 .372 214% Tuesday's Results -- Boston 3 New York 5 risk reinjuring the . muscle which kept him out of the U.K. championships in the speed bursts; or concentrate on the mile, an event which he's run only once, but which would pose less strain on his. leg. "We want to make sure he qualifies--the events don't mat- ter, said Fred Foot, East York Track Club coach, said Tues- day, "Once he's on the team he can run whatever he chooses in Australia. Crothers, who posted a 4:07.83 in'his first mile after only a week of serious training follow- ing a two-week lay-off with his leg injury, may have to face |wonderboy Bruce Kidd, who ran awa Lakeshores a 17-1 shellack-\safe on an error, Reg Daze} ing last night in the Ajax Town walked and so did Finnigan but) se Park, in a previously rained-out|McCartney flied out. Six runs} Dawe gave up seven hits and San Francisco ven 'walks and fanned nine|Pittsubrgh 66 4:01.4 Saturday, if he tries for 36 .647 1 |Chicago 6 Washington 0 jthe mile. 39 .606 54 Detroit 4 Minnesota 3 YOUNG TRAPSHOOTERS READY ern zone championships start ing Thursday. Left to right are: David Dawson, 1961 On tario Junior ghampion; Dimitroff, Junior trapshooters are shown checking their guns be- sides piles of clay targets, at the Hamilton Gun Club, where they compete in the east- Brian 'Junior cham- | |Lakeshore Intermediate Base- ball League game. The Oshawa team was simply jnever in the picture after the {second inning. They scored their, jlone run in the opening frame |when Jack Fisher got a walk off| |Jim McCartney and went the! jrest of the way to score when! Finnigan and Brewer each hav-| |Ted Whiteley's single into right field was muffed by the fielder a homer in the 5th, with the Knight, c; there. After that McCartney struck Fjout 10 batters in the 7-inning | s fF . a TO TEST SKILL pion of Canada and Rickey Mc- Garry, present 'holder of the Ontario Junior title. All three lads are from Niagara Falls: --CP Wirephote ABR @Qée Aah bda du 4 fb 4d ed |game, didn't give up any more | free tickets:and allowed only one more hit -- a 'single by Jack [Fisher to open the 7th, when |Lakeshores, aided by an error jand a hit batter, loaded the | bases with none out -- then Mc- |Cartney struck out Harding, |Richardson and Hall, to leave all three stranded. Ted Whiteley struck out two of the first three batters he faced and then after getting the firs batter in the second inning, went sky-high, Bill Finnigan and McCartney each singled, {Tom Brewer walked. Bob Boyd struck out and Whiteley might still have got out of it but he ihimself errored on Gary Des- {roches bid and the parade was on, Bob Kerton and Ron Pope a | had crossed to make it 6-1. Colin Cairns pitched in the third inning and Fraser relieved him before it was over as Ajax got one in the third, four runs in the fifth and staged another six-run parade in the 6th, Ker- ton had three hits for Ajax with ing two, the latter getting bases loaded. Seven errors didn't help the Oshawa cause a bit. OSHAWA LAKESHORES Fraser, 2b, 3b and p; Fisher, ss; Whiteley, p and 2b; Cole, c and cf; Lutton, 3b; Richard- son, lf and 3b; Hall, rf; Beers, cf; Wood, 1b; Cairns, p, 3b and If; Harding, c in 2nd, AJAX MERCHANTS -- Ker- ton, 2b; Pope, rf; Rennick, ss; Daze, If; Finnigan, c; McCart- ney, p; Brewer, 3b;, Boyd, 1b;/and Jed San Francisco to a 3d Houston (Johnson 5-11 or ( Desroches, cf; Chomey, If in 5th; Brett, Ib in 5th; Roland, 1b in 6th. SOCCER SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS National Soccer League 'Macedonia 0 Croatia 9 batters while White walked five, | jallowed five hits and struck out! | seven. | COBOURG -- Quigley, 3b;/ |Turpin, ss; Sharpe, lf; Dawe, p;| |Robinson, cf; Lingard, 1b; De-| jchamp, rf; Chase, c; Mitchell,' |2b; Ewart, cf, batted in 6th. HEFFERING'S O'Reilly, rf; Jordan, 3b; Hickey, cf; Bather- |son, If; Cole, ss; Carnwith, 1b; White, p; Bryan, rf in 8ih; Jones, ran for Jordan in 10th. YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS| Hitting--Willie Mays, Giants, hit his 30th and 31st home runs! |2b; Buzminski, | \victory over Houston; pulling the Giants within one game of the National League leading Los Angeles Dodgers, Pitching--Early Wynn, White Sox, stopped Washington on five! Cleveland singles in Chicagos 6-0 victory, 'the 297th of his career and the 49th career shutqut for 'aging right-hander, r the} Detroit Cincinnati St.. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston 41 577 8% (C 44 560 49 510 56 451 36 62 367 Chicago 36 65 .356 30% New York 24 71 Tuesday's Results Philadelphia 3 Chicago 5 New York 4 Milwaukee 5 Los Angeles 2 St, Louis 3 Pittsburgh 4 Cincinnati 6 San Francisco 3 Houston 1 Probable Pitchers Today Philadelphia (Bennett 3-5) at Chicago (Buhl 6-8). New York (Roger Craig 5-15) Milwaukee (Hendley 15 | 21 | ( al at St. Lotis (Jackson 9-8 or Washburn 8-4) night. Pittsburgh (Law 8-5) at Cin- cinnati (Purkey 15-3) night. San Francisco (Pierce 8-3) at den 5-8) night. American League W 56 3 55 53 56 50 50 4h 48 44 51 ( New York Los Angeles Minnesota 602 2 .567 5 .541 5 526 9 .505 505 484 463 51 Baltimore Chicago Boston .253 39% 'nesota (Kralick 6-8) night Schwall ae, Jacksonville Tina eine csiied Toronto Los Angeles (Drysdale 17-4) Rochester B Columbus Atlanta Richmond Jol. SYracuse , Pet. GBL Richmond 3-5 Syracuse 2-1 -- |Toronto 6 Jacksonville 2 3 Buffalo at Atlanta ppd, rain 'leveland 5 Kansas City 4 10 /Baltimore 3-5 Los Angeles 2-8 Probable Pitchers Today Chicago (Pizarro 9-8) at | 29 Washington (Osteen 4-7) night. Detroit (Mossi 8-10) at Min- Cleveland (McDowell 2-3) at Baltimore (Fisher 2-4) at Los Angeles (Lee 7-7) night. Boston (Wilson 6-3 and 4-11) at Terry 13-8 and Sheldon 6-5) night. International League L Pct. 3 33 .656 5 42 .567 3-45 541 45 531 48 .489 52 .469 61 .390 37-64. Tuesday's Results 'olumbus 8 Rochester uffalo 6 Games Today Columbus. at Rochester (N) Richmond at Syracuse (N) pronto at Jacksonville (N) Buffalo at Atlanta (N) | |Kansas City (Segui 6-5) night.) © ™" "TRACK MANAGER | Erwin Dygert, 66, of Chi- cago, was yesterday named }-general manager of the Cartr- ton Raceway, in the Ottawa suburb of Gloucester Town- ship. The track, now. under eenstruction, cnens. Sept. I for a 70-night meeting. --CP Wirephote | ,

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