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Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jun 1963, p. 10

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"hl THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, June 7, 1963 THREE 'BIG' CUBS -- no connection with the Three Little Bears--are shown above. This trio helped lower the boom on the San Francisco Giants yesterday, as Cubs nip- ped Giants, 3-2, and moved into a first-place tie in the National League race. Lindy McDaniel, centre, was brilliant as a 10th-inning relief hurler and won his game with a home-run, as first batter for the Cubs in the 10th inning. Ken Hubbs, left, doubled in the 8th inning and Billy Williams, right, followed with a home- | run, to tie the score at 2-2 in the 8th inning. --(AP Wirephoto) 'The Trade Of The Year' Pays Off Big For Cubs, Now Tied For Top Spot By BOB GREEN coach Bob Kennedy| season. 1-| pea fed the trade of the year,"| Their victory over Giants was|bleheader from Pittsburgh Pi-|finished 15 games. a share of the National|their 11th im 13 games andjrates 7-5 and 10-5 on the bomb-| more than five years. }top spot. In the only other |the first division in 17 years,jrun in St. Louis' 5-4 triumphyin as many days. McDaniel now) Associated Press Sports Writer|they're making a determinedjover Philadelphia Phillies andjis 3-1 for the season, with a 1.73) »Chicago Cubs, triggered by|grab for all the marbles this/lifted Cards into a share of thejearned run average, has a p- dou-|peared in relief 19 times and Altman's pinch double scored| gue lead for the first time/seventh in 10 starts against Sanjing of Frank Robinson and/Ken Boyer with what proved to Francisco this year. McDaniel/Gordy Coleman, | . vy Paha wlll reached the lofty status/nailed it down with a sparkling} Jackson, who has a 7-5 rec-jfor Cards, Bobby Shantz fought vi when Larry a aekeos|roliel performance and a 10th/ord and a sparkling 2.06 earned|off a Phil rally in the sixth and) |be the winning run im the eighth Ralph Houk Says Yanks Can Win It Without Mickey BALTIMORE (AP)--"We can;timore has a good club. I still Mantle." a better one . . . If I didn't I ' Yankee pe id Ralph Houk ought to be fired." red this cl ge at the rest) of the American League after| GIVES DIAGNOSIS learning the broken bone in the) Earlier, hopes that Mantle left foot suffered by Mantle here|Might return to action sooner Wednesday night will keep New|Were squashed by the diagno- York's $100,000 centrefielder out / Sis made by Dr. Sidney Gaynor, of action for at least five weeks.| ¥@nkee club physician, which "T can't see why we shouldn't showed an "undisplaced slightly be able to beat those clubs with- _ out him," Houk said. 'This|™etatarsal," a small bone run- might raise the club up." ning across the top of the foot. He reiterated his opinion) This confirmed a diagnosis Thursday night after the Yank-/made after the accident which ees lost 4-2 to Baltimore Orioles 9Ccurred in the sixth inning of for their fourth defeat in five Wednesday's game with the Or- games and fell out of first loles when Mantle was chasing place. a home run by Brooks Robin- "Hell, yes, we're going to win|S0n. the pennant," Houk said. "'Balti-- Mickey crashed against the more ain't going to beat us, I'lllwire fence and his spikes guarantee that. I said when we|caught in the mesh as he top- |came in here that I thought Bal-|pled to the ground. Three More H.R's For Bob Burda Bob Burda couldn't make the|ers in the past nine days. major leagues with St. Louis} Another noted spray hitter, Cardinals as a spray hitter, so| Howell Bedell of Toronto Maple he has decided to bid for a/Leafs, turned on the power in Pittsburgh berth with a power/the ninth inning with a two-run display. homer that gave Maple Leafs a The five-foot 11-inch outfielder/5-4 triumph over Jacksonville who hit only 10 home runs all|5uns. Syracuse Chiefs beat At- last season for Atlanta Crack-|!anta 3-1 for the first time this ers, boosted his 1963 Interna-|S¢ason, Rochester Red Wings tional League totai to 12 Thurs-| beat Arkansas Travelers for the day night when he slugged/first time 6-1 and Indianapolis three homers and drove in six Indians slugged Buffalo Bisons runs during Columbus' Jets 11-1 8-2. rout of Richmond Virginians. |HITS TWO HOMERS Re okt dealt out of the St.' There was plenty of power rganization during the/around the league, Larry Elliot jhomered twice for Columbus, | Si 0 h T ie Don Buddin's homer off Al | ick rted hutout fi 1X t ers 0 | Richmond, Desese Jones "hit 5 Try Wi Ou i | aot and Page in = gg log pe ndianapolis runs a' alo. C. d ' andy Spots Gene Stephens and Charlie Smith also homered for Indians. | Harry Chiti hit his fifth home runs for Jacksonville, oblique fracture of the third By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS| winter, has powered eight hom- and a| win the pennant without Mickey think that, but I think we have j | DOUBLE TROUBLE for the N.Y. Yankees, Pitcher Jim Bouton is armed off the dia- mond, in the 4th inning of last night's game in Baltimore, which Orioles won, 4-2. Bou- ORIOLES BACK ON ton was felled by a vicious drive off the bat of Oriole Jack Brandt. The ball opened a 1%-inch cut on his face, which required 12 stitches, TOP By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer American League managers jwere set today to try a new |game. a cut on the right. side of his face and also a severe bruise of |the right shoulder. | X-rays showed no fracture of! fourth inning. Bouton of his and he also suffered a bruised shoulder blade, Shown with Bouton are trainer Joe Seares (left) and an _ unidentified teammate, --(AP Wirephoto) Plague Of Injuries Hits American Loop longest winning streak of the season. Conley was relieved in the third inning. Dave Stenhouse was the win- ner with one-out relief help in Lindy McDaniel, acquired] inning home run. run average, was lifted for a/Ed Bauta and Ray Sadecki/ an off-season trade with St.| Kennedy put the "trade of the| pinch-hitter in the eighth when the ninth inning from Ron Kline, Orioles snapped a 2-2 tie in the eighth inning on run-produc- jing singles by Brooks Robinson and Jim Gentile to take the se- It's played with nine men, but either the jaw or the re some of your best players have/but 12 stitches were required to vipa out of another jam in} NEW YORK (AP) -- Owners |420-foot drive by Gates Brown to be seriously injured. First\close the 14-inch gash on his| i dinals, pitched them/year" tag on the swap that/Cubs tied it 2-2 on Billey Wil-|the eighth. | ; } | ; Saar frualien Giants 3-2| brought McDaniel and Jackson|liams' two-run homer. Robinson hit two homers for|eive California's 9 tt ie a redid we run s jet into a three-way tie for|to Chicago and sent George Alt-| Barney Schultz got into trou-|the second night in succession, |r4n for the money ah ithe esth Only the Hociestor Matasiees sk sak pe pct face. paige og Houk anid i Cardi .jman and Don Cardwell to St.|bel in the top of the ninth and|powering Reds to their first! 4:4; : sig : j ain erasures he was hopeful Bouton cou fg ig ge ig sot pel Cardinale probally would| McDaniel oe ch ea the| game victory; Jercy Lynch, | edition of the pave Belmont) game failed to produce a home|--gets a three-week vacation in|take his regular turn on the ant t Gentil s had been on the top rung|agree. |\bases loaded and one out. He|Smokey Burgess and Bill Maz- prnasngl eg wk aid acta pox) Tun: a foe gp 1 mound, jie drove in the Post be Hale ' May 7, 1958. And, even| It was Altman's pinch-hit dou-| promptly picked Willie Mays off|eroski connected for Pittsburgh.| "7, A | Syracuse pulled to within a/ Taat ry rd the h bie d|,,At Washington, manager Gilltimore runs, Dick Hall, working haven't finished in'ble that drove in the winning! second base and then struck out|Coleman took over for Reds in| t's put up or shut up--$250 to) half-game of Buffalo in the close|Come rest cure for the harried) Hoqges of Senators lost his hot-\ "ean : ough they haven't aisid | i i iyi ta wh -| ho watched thei i jin relief of Robin Roberts, got Ed Bailey. the nightcap, driving in five enter colts officially, with an jnorthern division race. Atlanta|managers' who che elT/test hitter when Don Lock was! : y " | He broke up the game with/runs with a bases-loaded triple, |ther $1,000 to start in the| maintained a seven-game bulge|Players mowed down Thursday|rorced to Jeave the game in the|(Teuit for the victory. Stan Wil- hi ' | i soy jjrugged 1/4-mile test for three-|in the southern division despite night on a two-game program) i.) jan: jliams lost it. his homer in the bottom of the|a single and a_ bases-loaded | ; |sixth inning. Lock, who had 20! SPORTS MENU year-olds Saturday at Aqueduct. |its loss. which saw Baltimore Orioles re-|nits in 40 atbats aod four hom: By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 10th, winning hi id | walk. TS ; winning his second game) w A field of seven was expected) gain first place by downing] ,s in four games, suffered an YESTERDAY'S . ' 'Everything From Soup To Nuts triple crown, but it took a lot of manoeuvering. In midweek it looked as if only five might winning streak to four games Johnny Pesky came up with fol WANT 70 SHORTEN fby beating Boston Red Sox 2-1. me C p ' additions to his medical list--| THE WINTER ,-- YOUR OLD WAS TOP TR AINER for the final leg of the Kentucky ew York Yankees 4-2 and sng cornih! see STARS Orioles, except for a $eDCe ther Gen Coaley. wal JUST SIGN A N ° A Derby - Preakness - Belmont Washington Senators stretch its Wesuwhdie, Ret tox seunnner 9 IF You Johnny Passero John W. Galbreath's Chateau-|8Y THE ASCOCIATED PRESS silently donied by Mickey ea athe Russ Nixon. Nixon, who tle, came out of the three-day . 4 war games with Yankees injhad just won a starting berth, } THE RAINS CAME, at exactly the wrong time, last night, nd as a result all but one of the numerous diamond attrac- Dies Of Cancer gay, who upset Candy Spots in| Pitching -- Lindy McDaniel, the derby May 4 but ran second|Cubs, came on in relief with to Rex Ellsworth's California-|>ases loaded and one out in 10th |bred colt two weeks later in the|Ming, picked Willie Mays off Preakness, heads the opposi-| Second base and struck out Ed good shape. But Yankees wound up With another wounded mem- ber im the series finale that gave Orioles a 1%4-game bulge! wrenched his back and is sched- uled for a session with the doc- tors today. Conley's condition, however, | concerned Pesky even more.| NINETY-DAY NOTE over the world champions. Pitcher Jim Bouton, who had TORONTO (CP) -- Johnny|winner, Camadian Champ, for Passero, an ex-jockey who be-|Beasley in 1956. came one of Canada's top thor-| Passero began working oughbred trainers, died early|around tracks when he was 14 gd ag a ~-- bastleiat Fort Erie, and began his wecahis sani i ; fe ' ; : : A jwith lung cancer. He was 49.| joc . in| Wheatley Stable's Insurrection, lected a series of solid and weird wrong-field hits, which Passero, given only six weeks ca mcrae ve 19 Patrice" Jacobs' Bonjour and| Batting -- Jim Gentile, Ori- led by the odd walk and a fumble or two, enabled them to | to jive in May, 1962, refused to| Passero leaves his wife|Louis Lee Haggin II's Choker.|oles, drove in three runs in 4-2) score seven runs in the first half of the opening inning. But (quit and last November clinched/Marge, and two sons, John Jr.,| All carry 126 pounds, and with| triumph over New York as Bal- after that, it proved quite a ball game and Dave Wills had |money-winning honors for the|90, and Wayne, 17. |seven starters the purse would|timore regained first place in jyear among Canadian trainers, |--------_--_--_____-- --_----lgross $145,450. The winner gets|the American League by .017 A native of Fort Erie, Ont.,| | $101,700, 'points over Yankees. |Passero contiaued pir s routs ge gee NALS Acquire --> rT scones, STANDINGS Three P layers By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Results Thursday he was confined to bed here. American League San Francisco 2 Chicago 3 From Boston Last year was the third in which he was the country's leading money-winning trainer. When he was told he had can- hoa ete ag aby Seve cer, Passero decided he would WL Pet. amt, Cincinnet # Ab ncn ag Peg be better off mentally to con- 32 21 .604 = : (Only gates scheduled) tinue training while taking im| SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--San a ae i Probable Pitchers Today bes 'wad Wil bf decides Francisco Seals of the Western ah tei 4 Hee, Aneries, Tiree ee Hockey League Thursday ac- ' Chicago, Koonce (1-2) or Tot ue trained horses each morn- quired three Players from Bos- 2 a = ug (1-2). ; : ing at the Toronto bgrarscn ge penalty-killing spe- . = etd LL Pe an nomen BNC espe before shige Poi treat,(¢ialist Charlie Burns, was with Cleveland 31 28 409 97 (St. Louis, Washburn (9-3) at or a 30-minute cobalt treat-\the Bruins last season in the|Detroit "359 1344 |. New York, Jackson (4-5), N. ment. Then he drove back to/National League. Washington ----19 35-352 13% | syiiwaukee, Shaw (2-3) at Pitts- ot Se oveegpecirs Cliff Pennington and Pete Results Thursday burgh, McBean (6-1), N. Saar ae tor mentor at the close|Panagabko, other players in the|New York 2 Baltimore 4 Cincinnati, O'Toole (9 - 3) at oe eae e at oeccery deal, were with the Boston-spon-|Boston 1 Washington 2 Philadelphia, McLish (5-2), N. S -- oe he yee 2 rces sored Kingston Frontenacs in) (Only games scheduled) International League "a $264,932, That represented the Eastern Professional; probable Pitchers Today Southern Diyision 000 more than winnings of|°28ue. Pennington started last! poston, Monbouquette (6-4) at Pct. GBL $22, more than winnings ©'|<eason with Boston but spent iy Betreda (3-2), N. 35 19 .648 -- his nearest rival, Frank Merrill 4 ; . | Baltimore, a ), p only 27 games in a Bruin uni-|/New York, Stafford (2-4) at De- 25 23 521 7 form before heing shipped to} - troit, Aguirre (4-5), N. | Indianapolis 29 27 518 7 Kingston. : |Minnesota, Kaat (4-4) at Los Jacksonville 23 32 .418 12% Burns, who was born in De-| Angeles, Chance (5-4), N. _ | Columbus 19 33 .365 15 troit but learned his hockey in/cjeveland. Donovan (w - 4) at the Toronto area, was drafted by Boston from Detroit Red Jr. For 10 years he was trainer Northern Division Washington, Duckworth (2-2),| Buffalo 9 Syracuse Wings im 1959. The 29-year-old) centre scored 12 goals and had| for Bill Beasley of Toronto. He N, | Chicago, Pizarro (4-2) at Kan- Rochester 10 assists with Boston last sea- saddled his only Queen's Plate ' *wWe Ward's Billiards : F i 1), N. | Richmond 21 22 .488 3% wig aod he apenan | Toronto 22 29 431 64% on in 68 games. National League Pennington, a minor | eague Score Fourth Win Results Thursday whiz who never made it big in/San Francisco Ward's Billiards turned back W L Pct. GBL! Indianapolis 8 Buffalo 2 Handy Andy's 7-3 at Alexandra 31 23 574 -- Richmond 1 Columbus 11 Park Wednesday night, to reg-/the NHL, wa acquired by Bos-|Chicago 31 23 574 -- | Rochester 6 Little Rock 1 ister their fourth-straight vic-|ton from Montreal Canadiens in|St. Louis 31 23 574 -- {Syracuse 3 Atlanta 1 tory in the still young UAW|19¢1 A centreman, Pennington,|Los Angeles 29 23 .558 1 | Toronto 5 Jacksonville 4 Softball League schedule. 23, a native of Winnipeg, is| Cincinnati 26 25 510 3% Games Friday Lyons, pitching for Wards,|known for his hard shot, | Pittsburgh 26 2% 500 4 | Jacks'ville at Rochester, N limited Handy Andy's to five| Panagabko has spent all his| Milwaukee 24 27 471 5%4| Atlanta at Toronto, N hits. Two of them came in the!professional hockey career in| Philadelphia 24 28 462 6 Little Rock at Syracuse, N first inning, a single by Weales|the minors, the last three sea-| Houston 22 32 .407 9 Richmond at Buffalo, N and double by Edmondson,/sons at Kingston. New York 20 34 .370 11 Indianapolis at Columbus, N which followed by an_ infield); -- woes | be i MOAR sO TEE error, gave the losers their first two runs. Edmondson tripled in| the 6th and scored on an infield) out, for his team's final tally. Knox's homer in the second) inning was Ward's first run off| Halik. In the next inning they) bunched four hits, along with a couple of walks, two choice plays and an error, for six| runs. That big splurge proved to be their final successful effort but it was enough. Hit- |ters in the big rally were Mor-| ns scheduled in the various baseball and softball leagues, ere "washed out". Up at Alexandra Park, however, the dia- ond dried in excellent fashion and permitted the second game the City and District Assoc. doubleheader to proceed as arded. It proved a bit unusual in that Bad Boy Appliance tion Bailey to end een. then hit Y vore|fomer for a 3-2 victory over Pisacova 7. ig "Gar.|5an Francisco that moved Chi- Lp Ub AR Ag NE de ead ols abel into tie for National x ; , mnt (CAO lant, C. V. Whitney's Tom Cat,| Teague lead. Conley, who has a 2-4 record @ 7-1 record, followed Mantle|and has been soundly whacked, into a hospital after he was hit|was to undergo x-rays on the jin the face by a line drive offjright ankle he injured playing |the bat of Jack Brandt in the/basketball for New York Knicks treat: jof the National Basketball As- sociation. The wobbly ankle ap- parently has been keeping him off stride, He was off stride right at the start against Sena- |tors, giving up a two-run homer to Larry Osborne in the second inning that provided all the runs Washington meeded to post its [OPEN 7A.M.-12P.M. DAILY | DOCS GARAGE & TUNE-UPS Sn ee 24HR. TOWING ROAD SERVIC! 728-7781 728-3346 1600 KING ST Kent's Tiremen Top; Quality Fuels 8-4 In their UAW Softball League game at Alexandra Park Wed- nesday, Kent's Western Tire doubled the score on Quality Fuel, 8-4. Shearer started on the slab for Quality Fuel but hit a wild streak in the second inning and gave way to Michaels, who fin- ished it out. Kent's had some solid extra-home blows to spark their attack and they scored in every inning, with Short having a homer and triple while Brown had three singles, to lead the way. Dan Kornylo pitched the win for Kent's, Quality Fuels scored two in the third, Michaels hav- ing a double and Woodcock a single, folowed by an error. Singles in the fifth and sixth completed their total, Conboy and Malloy doing the hitting that counted. | RELIEF TO PAKISTAN OTTAWA (CP)--Canada will send $10,000 worth of relief sup- plies immediately to East Paki. stan where a cyclone and tidal wave devastated a huge area last week, it was announced Wednesday. ' to go all the way and all-out to hold his advantage for a 10-1 decision over MacLean's Esso. Other than the one-sided st inning, MacLean's were much better than the score indi- tes. Several times in the piece they threatened to break gut with a rally, only to have stellar defensive plays thwart @eir efforts, with "Solly" Soloman at shortstop for the Bad ys, being the big "'robber", with his sparkling plays. The 'y and District teams will clean up a couple of postponed es this weekend. Brooklin Concrete go to Port Perry to- morrow night for a floodlight game, one that was rained out couple of weeks ago. People's Juveniles and Genosha Jr. es will play their game of last night, over at Bathe Park, Sunday afternoon, at two o'clock. 2 x x x x '@ MICKEY MANTLE'S sojourn on the sidelines with a token bone in his left foot, has been set at five weeks, which he'll miss the All-Star game. With their ace slugger le-lined for more than a month, New York Yankees man- er Houk has not yet disclosed what steps he'll take to fill | the gap. He admits that they'll miss Mickey's booming bat | t hastens to point out that they've been without him sev- Il times before and always managed to survive. This is , but then again, this particular season finds at least r clubs taking dead aim at top spot in the American Lea- race and in such a gruelling grind, it's certain the Yan- s are going to lose some of the games they would ordinar- have won, This can prove very embarrassing in a tight race. Baltimore New York Chicago Kansas City « Minnesota Boston Los Angeles | Atlanta |Little Rock MACHINE WASHABLE x x x x BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa Legionnaires have called off their Sunday game with Aurora, tb have been played here at Lakeview Park, due to school exams. Their Monday night is also cancelled for the same reason. . . . OSHAWA MER- CHANTS, who play in the Limestone City tonight, a floodlight fixture, are not scheduled for a home game this weekend, so this means here'll be no action at Lakeview Park on Sunday afternoon. . . . CARLING'S CUP soccer play, two games in the 1st Round, are scheduled for tomorrow night at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium. . . . ERNIE BANKS' recent hitting hitting splurge, following a bad slump, is credited to a doctor who discovered Banks was taking his eye off the ball, a func- tional disturbance, or bad habit, likely caused by mental fatigue. They don't tell us what the Doc did to cure the fati- gue bit but certainly, this week, Ernie has had his eye on the ball, raising his batting average 28 points. .. . CHICAGO CUBS, via two home-run blows, a two-run blow in the 8th that tied the game and one by relief pitcher McDaniel in the 10th, defeated San Francisco Giants, 3-2, yesterday and moved up into a first-place tie at the head of the National League fscramble. . . . BILL ZOCK, who coached Oshawa's Junior "Football Club for their first two seasons, has returned to Toronto Argonauts, with whom he starred for many years as 4a lineman. The big, likeable plumber has been hired as "assistant coach, to line coach Cliff Speegle. Zock was with 'argos when they won the Grey Cup in 1937, '38, '45, '46 and as with Témenton Eskimos when they Jost the final in pr with a double, Hodgson, | * ryan .and Lyons, each with a 1952 but won it in '54. . Iaingle. ! alll RUMS NAVY RUM PALM BREEZE WHITE CAP (Very Light) SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 WANTED Cricket Players for the Oshawa Club League and friendly fixtures; Practice Thursday Evenings; 6:30 p.m. at Lakeview Park, For further information contoct:-- M. MacKINNON PHONE 728-9057 J, HUBAND -- PHONE 723-7725 --

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