Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jun 1963, p. 12

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5 POL NEE a ip ETE "4 12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 11, 1963 EESESPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' | = THIS MONTH of June should be, one would think, the + oy for devoting interests and attention to summer sports t the recent sudden switch by the weatherman brought ong with it, so it seems, a lot of interesting hockey news, me of which, since it was certainly expected, is not really ws -- but at least, now it's official. Toronto Marlboros ve applied for re-entry to the OHA "Provincial" group- the -- and that, my friendlies, either means the end of the "Metro Junior 'A' League" -- or at the best -- it will be- Gome a secondary, "Rural" group with Junior "A" rating, fr a top-notch Junior "B" circuit. In this, we see the fine nd of the professional clubs, the question of supply-and- pwd expenses vs receipts, or any other way you want to Ibok at it, but it's strictly business. As mentioned several months ago, in mid-winter season, we think Brampton, Union- Ville, Knob Hill and even Whitby, may end up in a Junior %B" group. Neil McNeil Maroons will not be back at all -- arlboros are going to the "big group". Oshawa Generals thay have to "mark time", either as a Junior "B" entry or as '"'a bye" -- for one season but when we get our new Osh- awa Civic Auditorium (and we're going to get it) -- then 6shawa Generals will be welcomed back to the OHA Jugnior "A" fold with open arms. x x x x IT HAD TO BE! The National Hockey League has an- nounced that it will operate a league in the central or middle- western United States area, next season -- but the four-year Hastern Professional Hockey League will fold. Last year, the EPHL operated with Kingston, Hull-Ottawa, Sudbury and St. Louis. What this will mean in terms of a possible Senior hockey league in Eastern or/and Northern Ontario, is hard to predict. At an yrate, it would appear that if "minor pro" iockey can not flourish in these centres, then senior hockey has a dim outlook. Word from Chatham is that they may rit play in the OHA Senior section this year, unless they can be guaranteed six Sunday afternoon dates, Looking it all over, like an orange -- it becomes fairly obvious that the NHL has almost wiped out "amateur" hockey. They definitely control the Junior "A" circuit -- and what else is left? The OHA and especially the CAHA had permitted the NHL to make the rules, call the shots and pay the shot-- but now, in the final analysis, we find: little left in true ama- téur hockey -- except in the strictly "Minor" ranks. Right row, the Allan Cup competition is not much better than a joke -- and it's going to be worse this year. When, oh when, are the "amateur" men going to realize that if they must erate for a while on a shoe-string basis -- they at least sould insist on what kind of a knot is to be tied? nee x x x } BRIGHT BITS: -- Publicity gimmick of the week -- 'toronto Leafs have invited two Swedish hockey players to attend their training camp in September -- but as yet, heaven't heard whether or not the Swedes will be on hand. Contrast this with the "C' Form currently in effect in our dwn domain. And what we boast about is democratic free- dom? . .. MORE OF SAME -- flaunting the boasted "free- dom of speech" phrase of the U.S. comes word that the YS. Auto Club has placed Eddie Sachs "on probation" for one year, for making comments it considered detrimental to rac- ipg. But they didn't bar him from their own USAC races. Now if the drivers stuck together -- what would happen to the USAC? . . . SUNDAY NIGHT baseball, as tried in Hous- ton, Texas, last weekend was a big success. The Colts drew r times as many fans as they had been getting for after- rfoon games. They got permission for a night game, to avoid Golf Coast heat. The experiment may prove a "financial Gscovery". . . . BIG LEAGUE baseball results yesterday dhly served to prove the point that this year's pennant races are wide-open affairs, in both circuits. Yankees whipped Senators, 7-0, but lost the second game, 1-0, while Cleveland Indians nosed out Baltimore, 3-2, Los Angeles halted Kansas ity 'A's and Tigers clawed the Red Sox. . ... GIANTS beat the Dodgers, 7-3, in the big National League tilt yesterday. Gther action saw Mets edge Redlegs, 3-2, while Phillies beat the Braves and Cubs nosed out Houston. . . . TORONTO LEAFS won a 1l-inning thriller, 4-3, over Jacksonville. They were tied 2-2 at the end of nine. Jim Coker homered to win it! SIX-STRAIGHT WINS \Cepeda's By MIKE RATHET Ends Giants' Skid Homer sive was only a vart of Giants' Times And Post Office Score Wins Associated Press Sports Writer|12-hit offensive against starter Professor Al Dark: Give Or-|Bob Miller and a long list of lando Cepeda another plus. | successors, Willie McCovey hit Maybe even two. |a two-run homer to get Giants For it was the big, powerful) Willie Mays stroked started, first baseman who got the job done for San Francisco Giants Monday night, shaking Giants out of a seven-game losing skid with a 430-homer in the eighth inning that snapped a tie and led to a 7-3 victory over the National League leading Los Angeles Dodgers. Cepeda hit .306 last year with 35 homers-and 114 runs batted in, but wound up on the wrong side of the ledger in a grading system of plus 'marks and mi- nus marks kept by manager Dark. Now Cepeda's out to jug- gle the books and erase his de- merits, Cepeda hit his game-winner off Dodger relief specialist Ron Peranoski leading off the eighth. The homer, Cepeda's 12th, to go with 40 runs batted in and a .308 average, broke a 3-3 tie and ended Dodgers five- game winning streak. The 'triumph moved the de- fending champion Giants, tied for |Cubs, to within one game of the front-running Dodgers with an- other clash to go in their two- game series. St. Louis Cardi- nals, rained out at Pittsburgh, jare in second place, now only |.002 points behind Los Angeles. CUBS WIN Elsewhere, Chicago edged Houston Colts 3-2 on Ken Hubbs' run-scoring single in the ninth inning, New York Mets downed Cincinnati Reds 3-2 and Phila- adelphia Phillies defeated Mil- waukee Braves 6-2 in a game held to 5% innings by rain. Cepeda's homer, though dec!- third-place with Chicago three singles to keep things go- ing until Cepeda connected and Ed Bailey wrapped it up with a two-run homer in the ninth) inning. | Hubbs delivered his decisive thit following a single by Dick Bertell and a sacrifice. The run was the. first earned off Colts' reliever Hal Weodeshick in 22 innings of relief work and tagged him with his second loss against five victories. Lindy Mc- Daniel, who came on for Chi- cago in the eighth, won it for a 4-1 record. Billy Williams hit a |homer for Cubs and Howie Goss |connected for Houston, NIPS RALLY Tracy Stallard, 1-3, picked up his first victory since Sept. 3, 1961, by checking Reds on seven hits and cutting off a ninth in- ning rally after Cincinnati had closed to within one run, Tim Harkness from Lachine, Que., hit a seventh inning homer off Joey Jay, a 21-game winner last year, for what turned out to be the deciding run for Mets and sent the Cincinnati right-hander down to his ninth defeat. He has won three. Ray Culp, Philadelphia's 21- |year-old bonus baby, won his eighth game by holding Braves to four hits in the rain short- ened game. One of the hits off Culp, 8-3, was a two-run homer by Ed Mathews. Mathews' er- ror in left field helped Phillies to two runs in the fourth inning and they wrapped it up with three more in the fifth. Bob 'Hendley, 4-4, was the loser, | By JIM HACKLEMAN |Associated Press Sports Writer | Al Kaline is throwing off sparks as the superstar slugger for Detroit Tigers, which hardly ranks as a surprise. But Tigers also are getting some batting fireworks from a less expected source -- Jake Wood. over his lifetime average and 75| points above what he hit last jseason. | Wood got Tigers started in a hurry against Boston's slump- ling rookie, Dave Morehead, with a leadoff single in the first jinning. He stole second, and \after a walk to Bill Bruton, Ka- \line clouted the 200th homer of |and he scored the winning run. 'Kaline-Wood Duo 'Ward's And Wins For Tigers Two of the Civil Service Soft- ball League games played last night were won in dramatic fa- shion -- late-play finishes, The third game played was not re- ported by the winners -- maybe they felt guilty? At Baker's Field, Reynold's scored four runs in the first) inning when they hopped on) Murray Birkett's pitching for a) big rally and they made it 5-2 in| the second and 6-2 in the third,' but it wasn't quite enough as they finally lost out 9-8. | sports, [Oshawa Green Gaels Swamp Hastings Jrs. CALENDAR TODAY SOFTBALL Oshawa City and_ District Assoc. -- (Southern Division)-- Oshawa Green Gaels is the had six players away for var- ious reasons. Tommy Conlin, THIRD PERIOD. 15. vanes + Davis MacLean's Esso vs Scugog/first 1963 club in the Ontario Cleaners, at 6.30 p.m.; Bad Boy| Junior Lacrosse Association to Appliance vs Heffering's Imper- score a hundred goals. Stinson, Dave Houston, Dwight Davies/16. Oshawa - and Kenny Thompson -were|!'- ials, at 8.15 p.m.; Both games at Alexandra Park. (Northern Division) --Genosha Aces vs Port Perry Merchants, at Port Perry, 8.15 p.m. and People's Clothing .vs Brooklin Concrete, at Brooklin Community Park 8.15 p.m. ' UAW League -- Kent's West- ern Tire vs Handy Andy's at Alexandra Park, west diamond, Oshawa Times couldn't get to/1.15 p.m. Courtney's slants for a long while, except for two runs in the first inning but in the sixth they splurged for five runs to go in front 8-7. Reynolds scored one in the 7th, to tie the score then in the bottom of the 7th, Sowles lashed a liner to right-field which was dropped and a wild BASEBALL Oshawa Legion Minor Assoc. (Pee Wee League) -- Bola- Pavilion, at Harmon Park; Po- lice Assoc, vs Houdaille Indus- tries at Eastview Park; Ideal Fish and Chips vs Firefighters, at Alexandra Park, north dia- throw to second resulted in Sowles going all the way around! to score the winning run. | Baker, Sowles, Birkett for: Times and Wendorf, Craggs| and Hedger were best at the plate for Reynolds. | WALKS IN WINNER | At Thornton's Corners, Post Office broke a 1-1 deadlock with a three-run rally in the fourth but had to score on the 7th to make it a 5-5 tie when the Firefighters rallied with two in a? sixth and two more in their With the bases loaded in the extra 8th inning, Joe Vasko worked the count to 3-and-2 and then got the benefit of a bad pitch, for a walk, to 'drive in" the run that won the game. Schram ("One M") had tripled to open the 8th for Post Office Karn's Drugs Win In UAW Two games played in the UAW Softball League last night saw Karn's Drugs defeat Osh. awa Quality Fuels 10-3 while Ward's Billiards extended their victory string with a 6-1 verdict over Dyett's Sports. Both games were played at Alexan- dra Park. Bergiven hurled the win for Karn's, a neat two-hitter in mond and Dairy Queen vs Peo- ple's Clothing, at. Kinsmen Sta- dium; All games at 6.30 p.m.. WEDNESDAY SOFTBALL East Toronto Ladies Junior League -- Oshaw Scugog Clean- ers vs Richmond Hill, at Cox- well, 8.30 p.m. Beaches Major Fastball Lea- gue -- Hamilton Smart's Clean- ers vs Oshawa Tony's at Alexandra Park, 8.15 -.m. UAW League -- Plaza Foods vs Oshawa Quality Fuels, at Alexandra Park, east diamond and Karn's Drugs vs Billiards, at Alexandra Park, 6.30 p.m. Civil Service. League -- Ex- celsiors vs City Hall, at Lake- view Park, east diamond; Osh- awa Times vs Reynolds, at Lakeview Park, west diamond and Oshawa Dairy vs Foley's at Cowan Park, all games at 6.45 .m, Pp BASEBALL Lakeshore Intermediate Lea- gue -- Oshawa Merchants | Peterborough, in Peterborough, at 8.00 p.m. Oshawa Legion Minor . Assoc. -- (Tyke League) -- South-east vs North-east, at Alexandra Park, north diamond and South- west vs North-west, at Harman Park; both games at 6.30 p.m.; (Bantam League) -- Young's Fuels vs UAW Local 222, at Kinsmen Stadium; Jury and Lovell vs Winder's Esso, at Last night at the Children's| studying for exams while Frank) 1s, hood's Real Estate vs Jubilee) Ward's| vs! Arena, the "Gaels" knocked off jlast-place. Hasting Legionnaires 16-5 before 300 fans. The 16 tal- lies gave Oshawa a total of 105 goals, which is an average of 13.1 goals average per game, the best in the eight-team | league. Victory pushed the 'Gaels' back in contention for first place. They now trail first- place Brampton Armstrongs by two points, Brampton have won seven and lost one while Oshawa have a 6-and-2 record. Oshawa next sees action Sat- urday, back in Hastings, against the Legionaires. In other action, Long Branch Castrolites grabbed a share of fourth place with St. Cathar- lines Athletics, beating Guelph |Mohawks 8-3. ROUGH GAME | Hastings, last year's Cana- Wilkinson and Elmer Tran were nursing injuries. Other Oshawa scorers were Da ye Lough, Larry Ireland, Brian} Brady and John Davis, Lough also had seven assists, } Pete Shearer (the former Whit-| by Junior "A" Hockey player) | Larry Iles, Jim Gouldie and Jim Henderson scored one apiece. Last year, Pete Shearer played with the Cleveland Bar- ons in the American Hockey League. HASTINGS LEGION -- goal, MacDonald; defence: Kinmond, Grady, Armour; forwards: Hen- derson, Hickey, Mclles, Donag- hue, Hutcheson, Shearer, Mc- Mahon and. Gooley. OSHAWA GAELS goal, Marshall; defence: Lough, Gray; forwards: Hinkson, Da- For © astings, Jack Armour, ! 19. 20, Osha: 41. 6.15, Gooley atk as * 50, are © 17.45, Grady 18,25, Mohicans Whip Bantam Hurons In First Game Two games were played at the Oshawa Children's Arena on Thursday in the Oshawa Minor Lacrosse League, In the first game the Mohicans beat vie, Ireland, Stinson, Wieler, Davis and Brady. jdian Minto cup semi-finalists,| attempted to push around the smaller "Gaels" and were charged with 21 penalties, in-| jcluding two match and a mis-| }conduct and a major. Jack| Armour and Jim Cooley were! |tabbed with the match penal- | ties. | Don Stinson, Gaels' 14-year- jold rugged forward, also had aj match penalty, Oshawa had 11} penalties in this rough game.| | Stu Wuiler the Huntsvlile "na-| |tive"', sparked the Gaels' of-) west diamond; both games at/fence, scoring five goals and/8.39, Davis 8.39 |four assists. His five markers| gives him 13 for the campaign. Jimmie Hinkson snapped a three-game scoring slump, pick- ed up three tallies. Don Stin- son continue his goal-a-game clip, with two, as. did Gary| Davie with a pair. | Davie was elevated from the Whitby Juveniles, as Oshawa Officials Boyd Balkwill| from Orillia and Gerry Ravary from Whitby. FIRST PERIOD 1, Oshawa - Weiler (Davis 2. Oshawa - Lough tees 3. Oshawa - Stinson 4, Oshawa - Hinkson (Weiler, Lough) . Hastings - Armour . . Oshawa - Brady (Weiler. Davis) . Oshawa - Weiler (ireland, Gray) ... . 16.32 Hastings - Shearer (Hickey) 17.30 . Hastings - Hes 18.26 Penalties -- Henderson 2.31, Armour 3.00, Gooley 3.15; Shearer 3.15, Armour! Stinson 9.00, Gooley 8.39, Armour 11.07, Gray 11.07, Gooley 12.59, Davis 13.45. | SECOND PERIOD | 10, Hastings - Gooley (Armour) 1.54 11, Oshawa - Stinson (Lough, Davis) 12. Oshawa - Davie (Gray, Lough) wou 13, Oshawa - Ireland « 12,04 14. Oshawa - Weiler (Davis) ... 17.47 Penalties -- Stinson 0.15, Hickey 2.15. Stinson 3.15, Gooley 16.00, Gray 19.31 and Henderson 19.31. - 3.15 - 6.00 6.29) 11.14 . 14.47 + 16.01 6.30 + 10.30) Oshawa TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto Marlboros, who bolted from the Ontario Hockey Association's Junior A, provincial group two Being Considered Generals | received qualified acceptance) was from Oshawa, which is building a $1,000,000 arena, al- though ice will not be available The Kaline - Wood combine|his career. Kaline also homered | spearheaded the offense behind|in the fifth, then he and Wood lrookie Bill Faul's tight pitching|scored Detroit's final two runs Monday night as Tigers clippedjin the seventh on a double by the Boston Red Sox 6-1. Kaline|Dick McAuliffe. belted a pair of homers, knock-) Faul won his third in four de- ing in four runs, while the wiry|cisions with a three-hitter, while Wood tripled and singled twice,| Morehead dropped his fifth in a stole a base and scored twice.|/row and now is 3-5 _In other American League ac-| Downing, called up from the| tion, New York Yankees and| minors last week, posted his| Washington Senators trade djrirc pig league victory with his| which Malloy homered in the|Alexandra Park, west diamond second inning for the losers'}@od Oshawa Dairy vs Whitby first run. Arnold walked to open| Legion, at Whitby; All Games the fourth and eventually scor-|&t 6.30 p.m, peboaneg ee ee seteonred LACROOe OLA Senior League Brook- later on two passed ballsii.. merchants vs St. Catharines an infield out th ; 1 ; bogey ield out, for elr = at St. Catharines, 8.45 Mullen, pitching for Fuel, gave up three runs in the first} LAWN BOWLING years ago to help form the Tor-|until 1964. However, league onto Metro group, have changed) councillors do not want Oshawa their minds. |playing in Maple Leaf Gardens Monday night, at the annualjin Toronto, even for one sea- OHA Junior A council meeting,| $0, which would be the case if the Marlies made it official by| OShawa is accepted this year. iformally applying for re-entry; The final decision on all four the Hurons 9-to-3, in the opener of the Bantam Schedule. The second rame saw the Bantam All-Stars defeated by the Midgets by the score of 5 to 1, Mohicans were led to victory in their game by the sharpshoot- ing of Roy Fisher and Terry Brady, who each scored four times, Joe Marks scored the other goal and added three as+ sists, for a good night's work, For the Hurons, it was cen- tre Bob Goulding scoring two and Tommy Vann adding the other, to complete their total. The second game saw the Bantam All-Stars battle the Midgets to a one-all tie, at the end of the first period, only to bow finally by a five-to-one total. The Midgets scoring was done by Mike Lewis and Buddy Caine with two each and Ron Sutton with one. Terry Brady scored the lone Bantam goal. Because of exams in the high schools, next Thursday's games have been cancelled. There will be a practice for the Peewees from 6.00 to 7.00 and for the Bantams and Midgets for 7.00 to 8.00 o'clock. : JOCKEY SUSPNDED MONTREAL (CP)--Stewards at Blue Bonnets flat - racin; track suspended jockey Fre Ryan Saturday for the rest of the Blue Bonnets season, charg- ing him with attempted bribery. The suspension automatically bars the Tewksbury, Mass., jockey from riding at any track in North America until his case is formally settled. The stew- ards said they will recommend |to the provincial group. | applications will be known Fri- | The council seemed anxious) day after another meeting: in to have them back, They are, to the board of the Mount Royal Jockey Club, Inc., that it, sus. Niagara Falls, | pend Ryan for life, in fact, the only one of four ap- shutouts, Yankees winning 7-0 on recently-promoted Al Down- ing's two-hitter before being uimmed 1-0 by left - hander Claude Osteen; Barry Latman's clutch pitching and home run enabled Cleveland Indians to nip Baltimore's sagging Orioles 3-2; and Los Angeles Angels bombed Kansas City Athletics /13-3 with 18 hits. Chicago's front-running White Sox and Minnesota Twins were idle. For a ninth-place team, Ka- line and Wood present some im-| |pressive credentials. Kaline has whacked 13 homers, tops the |two-hitter against Senators. | The 21 - year - old southpaw, whose only other decision in the majors was a loss to Washing- ton in 1961, struck out nine. Clete Boyer had three Yankee hits, including a homer, and El- ston Howard smacked a homer and double. Osteen's victory was his first against four defeats. He gave up six hits, two in the ninth) jwhen Yankees got men on sec-) ond and third with one out but} were turned back. | Senators pushed the game's league in runs batted in withjonly run off Jim Bouton in the} inning, on a bad combination of two errors, a walk, two wild pitches, a sacrifice and two hits. fourth then doubles by Woods, Kirk and DeGray put two runs over the plate for Karns. They %He held his own until nel Men's Double Tournament, for Brading Trophy, at Bowman- |ville Lawn Bowling Club, 1.00 m. YESTERDAY'S romped after that with three in the fifth and two more in the sixth. ANOTHER FOR WARD'S Talbot pitched the win for Ward's, over Dyett's. He gave up six hits and kept them scat- STARS Pitching--Al tered, except for Georgoff's homer, to open the second} game of twi-night doubleheader. |plicants who can be fairly as- |sured there is a place for them jin the league. | An application on behalf of /Toronto Neil McNeil Maroons, \formerly St. Michael's College, |was submitted along with the Marlboro request by the Tor- onto Maple Leaf organization. However, the National Hockey |League Leafs will apparently By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|not be too disappointed if the) | Downing, Yan-|Maroons are turned down, And) kees, limited Washington to two|the mood of the meeting was) hits for first major league vic-|that they would be. tory, 7-0 over Senators in first), ppLICATION DOOMED? Is your house running a f | | stanza. That proved the losers' |) 9 Washington won the nightcap| Another application which ap- |peared doomed was from Kit! | 's Score 5-0 Sh hoes oe pl 45, and is batting a smart .337./fifth on Ed Brinkman's single! only run rl rans | y A | RAKES Thist ae? " | onl} . | hener, The problem there is) ony S$ ore utou Wood ge! hits bag ied Ere Br iry Hinion's triple Bou-| Ward's got to Foster for a) Batting -- Al Kaline, Tigers, slayer coccinea as Kitchener| average to .291, some 40 pointsiton FS /-2. run in the third when Clark/hit two homers, driving in fourjhas not worked out an agree-| Over R an d all R oy Metals BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS opened with a double and Tal-lruns in 6-1 triumph over Bos- ment with any NHL club, bot brought him around, then|ton. Harmon sacrificed. Two walks): = = TORONTO--Those "Red Hot" | Transporters, has just recently} and two hits produced two et | | Tony's from Oshawa "dood-it"| returned from school at the Uni- po last night. At Kew Beach, versity of Michigan, "Jackie"' By THE CANADIAN PRESS (San Francisco 7 Los Angeles 3\runs in the fourth and Ward's American League Chicago 3 Houston 2 |were away. Hodgson and Bryan| | WL Pet. GBL'St. Louis at Pittsburgh ppd, rain;\doubled behind Morden's sin- 33 23 .589 Probable Pitchers Today gle, for two more in the fifth, 32 24 571 1 'Cincinnati, Nuxhall (4 - 3) at) they got their final in the 7th} Py: immie" Loreno's squad chalk-| formerly played hockey with St. ed victory number six in a row,|Michael's College Majors, help-| ing them win their last Memor- ON GRR tas gt 5 ahaha blanking Randall Roy Metals 5-0. ial Cup back in 1960, He was in- It was Tony's fourth shutout) stalled in right field. His hockey in the last six games. Their sea-| buddy, Charlie Burns, didn't son's mark now stand at six|/play. However, both Charlle victories and only two setbacks/Buins and Jackie Cole will be and now seem to be run-away in the line-up tomorrow night. leaders. _ With "Bev" Smith pitching In other action, in Hamilton, |'*goose-eggs" at Randall-Roy's, Smarts Cleaners and Alexanians Tony's opened the scoring in the battled to a 3-3 stand-off in 115th. with two runs. Bev Smith innings before the "rains" halt-jopened up with a single and ed the game. Tomorrow night,)Danny Price 'homered' to Smart's, the leaders in the "Big/make it 2-0. Another run was Four" league in Hamilton, play plated in the 8th when Jack Tony's at Alexandra Park.|'Red" MacDermaid doubled, Game time is 8.15 p.m. Pre-/moved to third on Jack Arm- viously in Hamilton, Tony's|strong's sacrifice bunt and! ar the Ambitious City! scored on "Sonny" Hill's three- club, 3-0. bagger. Tony's completed the "SMIDDY" WINS scoring with two more tallies in Bev Smith, the "good looking' the 9th. Danny Price and Jackie blond bomber, hurled Tony's to|Cole delivered back - to - back the win, spacing five hits and he/singles and both scored on Bob- registered eight strikeouts in|by Booth's long single. the nine-inning full pitching job.| OSHAWA TONY'S -- Oldfield, "Smiddy" is now unbeaten in ss; Price, 3b; Cole, rf; Booth, three games and his record now |c; MacDermaid, 1b; Armstrong, stands at 3-1 on the campaign. 2b; Hill, cf; Gilbert, Mf; and His pitching mate "Andy" An- Smith, p. : derson will draw the pitching); RANDALL ROY METALS chores tomorrow. "Andy" has|Foley, c and If; Scott, 2b;| fn identical 3-1 win-loss matk. |Singieton, cf and 1b; Barker, ; Only veteran sacker, Fraser/1b and if and c; Maik, ss; Sul- Bcott, gave "Smiddy" much/livan, 4; Anderson, If in 5th; Boer, bern singte a aid hat vad Brown, rf; Wright, 3b; Marshall ows, singles. Fran ar-|p; and Quance i : shall was the loser. r $ diecites * Danny Price sparked the vic- Tony's tory, "smacking" out two hits.! Randall's including a two-run home-run. E RHE 000 020 0115 9 1 000 000 000----0 5 2 29 22 .569 114 New York, Jackson (5-5) 28 25 528 314 |Milwaukee, Burdette (5-5) 27:26 508 44 |Snyder (0-0) at 25 25 500 5 24 26 480 6 (St. Louis Taylor (3-1) or Wash- 28 31.475 6% |burn (5-3) at | Detroit 2429 453 714 Pittsburgh, Francis (2-1) night Washington 20 39 .339 1414 San Francisco, Fisher (3-7) at Results Monday Los Angeles, Drysdale (7 - 6) New York 7-0 Washington 0-1 night. Cleveland 3 Baltimore 2 Chicago, Jackson (7-5) or Toth Los Angeles 13 Kansas City 3 (1-3) at : Boston 1 Detroit 6 Houston, Johnson (3-8) night | Probable Pitchers Today International League Los Angeles, Chance (5-5) at Northern. Division Kansas City, Wickersham (4-4) WL Pet. GBL night Syracuse 32 23 .582 Minnesota. Stigman (4 - 5) at Buffalo 32 26 552 1% Chicago, Herbert (5-3) night Rochester 30 28 .517. 3% Boston, Wood (0 - 1) at Richmond 24 25 490 5 Detroit, Bunning (4-5). Toronto 26 31 .456 7 Cleveland, Grant (3 -. 6) at Southern Division Baltimore, Roberts (4-5) night! Atlanta 38: 22 .633 National League Indianapolis 31 30 508 714 W.L Pct. GBL Little Rock 25 29 .463 10 32 24 571 Jacksonville 25 36 .410 13% 33 25 .569 Columbus 22 35 .386 1414 32 26 552 1 Results Monday 32 26 552 1 Atlanta 1 Syracuse 0 28 27 509 314 |Little Rock 3 Rochester 4 28 28 500 4 |Columbus 5 Buffalo 3 26 30 .464 |Indianapolis 4 Richmond 8 Philadelphia 26 30 .464 Jacksonville 3 Toronto 4 Houston 25 33 .431 } Games Tuesday | New York | Minnesota |Kansas City Boston Cleveland Los Angeles or Los Angeles St. Louis Chicago San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsburgh Milwaukee 6 6 8 0% New York 23 36 .390 1 Jacksonville at Toronto Results Monday Atlanta at Syracuse Cincinnati 2 New York 3 | Little: Rock at Rochester Milwaukee '2 Philadelphia 6 | Columbus at Buffalo (called after 514 innings, rain)| Indianapolis at Richmond | "Lake Vista, 12; Bathe Park, 113 when scored Hodgson tripled and) on. Bryan's _ sacrifice | fly. |Philadelphia, Short (1-6) night) KIWANIS MINOR BANTAM SCORES LAST NIGHT'S SCORES Woodview, 0; Nipigon Park, 13 NOTE -- To all Kiwanis Ban. tam League managers. The winning team must turn in their scorebook at the end of each game, in order to receive a credit for a win, in the league standings. LAWN-BOY ONLY POWER MOWER WITH FINGER-TIP STARTING BROWN'S | LUMBER & SUPPLIES | LTD. "DO-IT-YOURSELF HEADQUARTERS" NEW HOMES & HOME IMPROVEMENTS FULL LINE OF BUILDING MATERIALS 725-4704 436 RITSON N. (Where Pavement Ends) efending batting champion ack "Red" MacDermaid also) had a pair. "Sonny" Hill, play- Ing with a badly swollen left! ankle, turned in yeoman work fn the outfield and. drove in one run with a mammoth triple. He Probably would have had a "homer", however didn't have his full speed. * Bobby Booth, Bev Smith and) pewcomer Jackie Cole, signed! yesterday morning by manager "Frank" Foley, collected the| other Oshawa safe knocks. 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