= CU paler even cues ey Te eae or AFTER THE BRAWL was over! There were two big fights. at Madison Square Garden in New York last night and the above photo shows the scene of devasta- tion that existed after more than 20 minutes of free-for- all rioting, which was finally broken up when the police turned the fire hoses on the hothead fans. Flash Elorde FEW HURT Riot Erupts In N.Y. After Disputed Bout By MURRAY ROSE NEW YORK (AP)--Parts of Madison Square Garden looked like a disaster area early today following what old-timers called the worst riot in the 40-year his- tory of the famed sports arena. Only a few people were hurt in the 25-minute riot. It came after a controversial split decision awarded the world junior lightweight champion, Flash Elorde of the Philippines, over 1l-to-5 favorite Frankie Narvaez, a. Puerto Rican-born New Yorker, in a non-title 10- rounder Wednesday night. Police said five spectators, two policemen and a fireman were taken to hospital. The fire- man was hit on the mouth by a brick, one policeman was struck on the head by a fire q hose nozzle, and the other hit ¥ in the back of his neck by a other objects, first at the of- ficials and then into the quickly deserted ring, and of Manila was awarded a split-decision over New York fighter Frankie Naravaez. chair. Five New Yorkers were ar- rested and booked on malicious mischief, a misd . One of the five--Jesus Valez, the al- leged brick tosser--also © was}! booked for felonious assault. Another was charged with en- dangering public health for al- legedly attempting to throw a fire extinguisher into the crowd. Cries, of "robbery" and "thieves" from irate Narvaez backers in the crowd of 6,918 rang out after it was announced two officials had voted for|t Elorde five rounds to four with one even, giving the Filipino underdog the decision. The other official voted for Narvaez, |i 7-2 with one even. The Associated Press score- card had it even, five rounds for each, after a lively, bloody fight in which no knockdowns were scored. A ringside poll showed a 13-9 edge for Narvaez with four writers calling it even. It was a difficult fight to score because of the contrasting styles of the right-handed, 24- year-old Narvaez and the left- handed, 30-year-old champion. the fans started throwing paper cups, other light objects. Started flying and smashing and part of the crowd went berserk. tossed onto the ring floor. Fire axes and fire extinguishers, bulbs, sections of metal rail- heaved into the ring-side sec- tions. : 25 minutes inside the arena and then spread to the lobby, the Streets and the subway below, before being quelled by police and firemen. age, John F, X. Condon, the Garden's boxing publicity direc- tor, said; "Offhand, it looks like more than $10,000," THE OSHAWA TIMES, Yoong: Augut 5, YESTERDAY'S STARS with his 19th homer, leading the By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS|_"Ulies to a 72 victory over Pitching Sonny Siebert, Chicago Cubs. Cleveland, pitched a four-hitter for his 12th victory Rose six} SUNFISH BREED FAST defeats as the Indians defeated) Within three years, 127 blue» Detroit Tigers 41. gill sunfish introduced into an --Dick Stuart, Phila-|Ilinois lake multiplied to about delphia, drove in four runs, two/67,700. The riot went off like a de- layed bomb explosion. Some of coins, cigar butts and Then the whisky bottles Five-chair sections were like matchsticks from he mezzanine and side arenas light ngs, and wooden slates were The rioting went on for about Asked for an estimate of dam- ANN After the decision was an- nounced on the 10-round, non-title lightweight bout, the fans heaved chairs and they also tore out railings, to use as weapons. Several of the fans were bloodied in the wild riot. INCREASE LEAGUE LEAD Dodgers, Braves Split, Bragan Persuades Umpire *3.i:%:° | | Pittsburgh By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer Bobby Bragan, Milwaukee Braves' manager, helped the umpires decide they hadn't geen what they thought they'd seen in the second inning of Wednesday night's double- header opener against league- leading Los Angeles Dodgers. Bragan's persuasive power paid off in a 4-3 National League victory for the Braves and Walt Alston didn't stop seething until his Dodgers had salvaged the nightcap 3-2 and protected their first-place foot- hold. ' The Los Angeles pilot lodged a protest -- later withdraw-- after Bragan and the umpires contributed to a zany play dur- ing Milwaukee's decisive three- run second-inning rally in the first game. Gene Oliver's homer had tied the score 2-2 and the Braves had runners on first and third with one out when pitcher Hank Fischer bounced to second base- man Jim Lefebvre. THROWS WILD Lefebvre swiped at Woody Woodward as the Braves run- ner passed him on the "base- path, then threw wildly to first 'as Frank Bolling scored the go- ahead run. Both first base um- pire Ken Burkhart and second) base umpire Lee Weyer ap- peared to have signaled Wood- ward out of the play. Bragan rushed onto the field to dispute the call and, after a huddle with all four umpires, jinnings, striking out 12 and al- ninth. with a fourth-inning double and singled home another run in St. Louis' five-run eighth, powering| the Curt Simmons past Houston. second--and awarded third base on the overthrow. He scored the deciding run a moment later on Felipe Alou's infield out, The Dodgers took the night- cap, breaking a 2-2 tie in the eighth on Lou Johnson's run- scoring triple. Second-place Cincinnati Reds dropped a 4-3, 10-inning verdict to San Francisco Giants and fell two games behind the Dodgers while Pittsburgh Pirates blanked New York Mets 3-0, St. Astros 9-4, and Philadelphia Phillies drubbed Chicago Cubs} \7-2 in other games. op P ba Jim Hart doubled in the 10th|Milwaukee, Blasingame (13-7) /Buffalo and scored on Hal Lanier's sin-| cinnati and enabling Juan Mari- chal to gain his 17th victory} while giving up 12 hits. DRIVES IN TWO Andre Rodgers drove in two runs with a homer and squeeze! bunt as the Pirates shut out the Mets for the second straigh day. Bob Veale pitched eight lowing five hits, before giving way to Don Schwall in the Ted Savage broke a 2-2 tie By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS| Los Angeles Cincinnati Milwaukee Chicago Louis Cardinals rocked Houston| Chicago, Elisworth (12-7) at| Jacksonville gie, lifting the Giants past heaeegl CP Francisco,' Herbel (7-6) at|Atlanta 6 Buffalo 1 Cincinnati, Tsitouris (8-3) j/Houston, | St. Louis, Gibson (13-8) (N) || t| Minnesota Baltimore Cleveland Detroit Chicago New York Los Angeles Washington ansas City "BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS Wednesday's Results |Detroit 1 Cleveland 4 Boston, 5 Kansas City 1 Waslifngton 3 Minnesota 4 |New York 4 Chicago 3 2'4|Baltimore 6-8 Los Angeles 5-0 3 | Probable Pitchers Today 6 |Washington, Richert (8-8) at 7 |Minnesota, Kaat (9-8) National League W iL Pet. GBL .578 A ae | .558 553 524 514 -505 464 429 St. Louis 8 | 124%|New York, Ford (12-8) at 16 |Chicago, Horlen (9-9) 28 Houston . New York .318 Wednesday's Results Pittsburgh 3 New York 0 Chicago 2 Philadelphia 7 Los Angeles 3-3 Milwaukee 4-2|Detroit, Aguirre (10-7) at San Francisco 4 Cincinnati 3 |Cleveland, McDowell (11-7) (N) Houston 4 St. Louis 9 | International League Probable Pitchers Today | Ww Pet. GBL Pittsburgh, Cardwell (9-5) at)Columbus 607 -- New York, Jackson (5-14) (N)/Toronto 581 3 |Atlanta 568 4% 526 9% 509 11% 461 17 | 63.457 1714] 83 .291 37 Wednesday's Results Jacksonville 1-2 Toronto 2-1 |Boston, Lonborg (6-12) at lansas City, Talbot (9-6) (N) 46 49 7 51 55 56 62 Philadelphia, Burdette (1-4) (N)|Syracuse |Toledo Los Angeles, Koufax (18-4) at)/Rochester Toledo'4 Rochester 0 |Syracuse 5 Columbus 8 0 Mei cc eramena cca coupe cr Gibson Shines As Leafs Split Russ Gibson came close to defeating Jacksonville Suns Bruce (7-13) American League Pct. GBL 636 590 5 577 614 558 84 548 9% 68 62 60 58 57 TWINS WIN By MURRAY CHASS |Associated Press Sports Writer| American League. Sonny Siebert has swept the dust under the carpet and now he's cleaning up in the Ameri- can League. The Cleveland Indians' ace recorded his 12th victory Wed- nesday night, pitching a four- hitter as the Indians defeated Detroit Tigers 4-1. After Don Demeter homered in the fourth inning, Siebert al- lowed only one baserunner-- Don Wert on a fifth-inning walk --and retired the final 14 bat- ters he faced. Thus, the Tigers didn't have a chance to. raise the dust against Siebert, who had troubles with dust at the start of the season. "For - the first couple of months of the season," Siebert explained, "'they treated me for colds, and nothing helped. But one day I was talking to a fur- niture dealer who noticed my trouble. He told me it sounded ike the same dust allergy he had." Siebert went to an allergist, who agreed with the furniture dealer's diagnosis and pres- cribed shots. singlehanded in International League action Wednesday night. | The 195-pound slugger gave) Toronto Maple Leafs a 2-1 vie-| tory in the first game of a dou-| 53 48 46 40 64 34 «67 486 16 453 1914 426 22% 385 2614 337 31 oston Cardinals and southpaw The Phillies trimmed the Cubs behind Chris Short's eight- hit pitching and the hitting of Dick Stuart, who drove in four runs with his 19th homer, a dou-|| Woodward was declared safe at ble and a sacrifice fly. Sue Hilton Eliminated From Ladies' Open Play By JIM CRERAR KITCHENER (CP)--Sue Hil- ton of London, Ont., a graduate in physical education at the University of Western Ontario, was the only major upset vic- tim in the first round of match play in the Canadian women's open golf championship Wed- nesday. Miss Hilton, 21, took a lesson} in golf from a 27-year-old Aeacher of physical education and mathematics at.a private school for girls in Ottawa, Mary Ellen Driscoll. she defeated Marjorie Burns of Curtis Cup player. All three U.S. competitors in the championship division were knocked out. Mrs. Ann Gregory of Chicago lost to Canadian junior champion Sandra Post of Milton, Ont., 3 and 2, Mrs. Frank Stranahan of Toledo, Ohio, bowed 3 and 2 to Kay Helleur of Toronto and Helen Reynolds of Manchester, Conn., fell 2 and 1 to Joan Riddell of Montreal. . Miss Driscoll, who plays out *of Saint John, N.B., upset Miss 'Hilton 2 up. Otherwise the favorites ad- In other top matches Marlene |Stewart Streit of Fonthill, Ont. jwon 7 and 6 over 17-year-old Jane Kirkpatrick of Toronto; Minnesota Twins as solid 3-5 fa- vorites to win the American|The homer was Gibson's ninth League pennant. | quoted at White Sox and Detroit Tigers were rated 5-1 and the defend- ing champion New York Yan-|hys Jets downed Syracuse| kees, far behind in sixth place, |Chiets 8-5. were tabbed at 20-1 to win. |bleheader, driving in the win-| Twins Are Favored ning run with a two-out pinch! Single in the 12th inning. To Take Pennant! He also age the only Tor- jonto run in the nightcap with a LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)--The|solo home run and added an- atest odds Wednesday quotedjother hit before the Suns went on to a 2-1 win in 11 innings. of the season. Baltimore and Cleveland were| The shots have helped Siebert compile a 12-6 record with a 2.21 earned run average. The victories are the most for the SKIERS TO TRAIN NELSON, B.C. (CP)--Fifty of Canada's best skiers Saturday begin training aimed at produc- ing a world-competition skiing team. The program of the Ca- nadian National Ski Association will run until Sept. 5 at the 7,000 - foot' level Glacier near Nelson. Siebert Wins 12th For Cleveland Club |Indians and second best in the WESTINGHOUSE MOBILAIRE 5000 Compact, whisper-quiet, hghtwoight -- only 59 Ibs, The Mobilaire 5000 hos a powerful 5000 BTU cooling capacity Two-Speed Fon provides ideal night-time cool- ing, It can be installed in minutes, (Zip-Kit FURNITURE & APPLIANCES. 7.5 amps... it plugs in like @ lamp, Reedy to install. Only Other Models from $269.00 STARR A bunt single by pitcher Dave of Kokanee Morehead brought in Jim Gos- Elsewhere, Minnesota Twins ger with the run that put Bos- included) and it operates on 115 volts -- 491 Ritson Road S. Call 723-3343 jedged Washington Senators 4-3 tor their fifth one-run victory in jsix days, New York Yankees nipped Chicago White Sox 4-3 in 13 innings, Baltimore Orioles ton ahead of Kansas City to stay. Bert Campaneris set an Athletics' club record by steal- ing his 38th base. KKKKKS swept Los Angeles Angels 6-5) and 8-0, and Boston Red Sox! defeated Kansas City Athletics 5-1, The Indians backed Siebert; with three runs in the fourth in-| ning. Max Alvis ignited the out-) burst with his 17th home run, and the other runs came across on an infield grounder. Jerry Kindall's leadoff, pinch- hit homer off Howie Koplitz pulled Minnesota into a 3-3 tie in the ninth, and minutes later Jimmie Hall singled in Zoilo Versalles with the winning run. The Yankees edged the White Sox on Tom Tresh's leadoff homer against Eddie Fisher in the 13th. Tresh earlier singled in a run. | Jerry Adair's run - scoring single climaxed a four = run, eighth - inning uprising that gave Baltimore the first-game victory. Brooks Robinson drove out starter Dean Chance with a two-run double in the inning. Robinson and Dick Brown each rapped two doubles, sup- porting Dave McNally's five-hit- ter in the nightcap. RONALD W. BILSKY, 0.6. CHIROPRACTOR 100 King St. E, -- 728-5156 SEE OUR THE FOLLOWING . . TONLY -- 9' x 12' : Elsewhere, Toledo Mud Hens) The Chicagojshut out Rochester Red Wings| 4-0, Atlanta Crackers defeated| Buffalo Bisons 6-1, and Colum-| 5-2. George Kernek singled in the Through 'Tuesday's games,| winning Jacksonville run in the| 4 yp ge hae |the Twins were in first place by|11th inning of the second game. Greensboro, N.G., United States 5% games over second place g U.S. LOSES OUT |Baltimore: Horace Womack and Lou) |Vickery combined to pitch the | Toledo shutout, allowing only five hits. Paul Blair of the Red Wings hit safely in his 19th con- | secutive game: | | Righthander Arnie Umbach) |pitched six-hit ball against the |Bisons, and Bob Perry hit a {three-run homer to climax a dramatic 11th inning comeback REMEMBER WHEN... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Harold S. Vanderbilt's Ranger won her fourth straight victory from T. 0. M. Sopwith's Endeav- our II 28 years ago today-- in 1937--at Newport, R.I. It |¢n F was the end of Britain's fa ae | 16th unsuccessful bid for the Sohn. Ovens 0.0. return of the America's | Cup, trophy of ocean yacht | OPTOMETRIST 8 BOND ST. E,, OSHAWA racing, which the United States has held since 1851. Three more attempts have NOW AT... MODERN DRY CLEANERS THE ULTIMATE IN DRY CLEANING AT BIG SAVINGS IF YOU ARE CARPET SHOPPING AREA RUGS ARE IN STOCK -- IMMEDIATE DELIVERY All Prices Include Felt Pad Underlay 'Chestnut' Marvel Viscose ~--< OF -- 2 ONLY -- 9 x 12' 'Cactus' Marvel Viscose Above. three Rugs ere manufectured for Light Traffic Arees ere |} $ $ $ SAVING VALUES 99 Each TONLY -- 6'x 9' TONLY -- 9' x 12' "Beige" Celes "Blue" Celeste Viscose $34.95 Above four Rugs have a 3-yeer Weer te Viscose $69.95 d for Medi per Traftie TONLY -- 6'x 9' "LEAF GREEN" MODERN LEAF a 'vanced into the second round|Mary Gay: of Kitchener sur- "which began at 9:30 a.m. today.|Yived wasp stings on both The championship flight will be ankles Tuesday to defeat Judy! been made since 1958, none PH. 723-4811 successful, FILAMENT NYLON. . $54.95 reduced to the four semi-final- *istg after two rounds today. KWAYS IN FRONT iss Driscoll won the first 'Niple and was never behind. Miss Hilton, normally strong '4n match play, won the Cana- 'dian close and junior titles in innipeg in 1962 and was sev- 'eth in last week's close cham- -pirship here. She was low @rer with a one-under-par 74 pr the first 18 holes of the 1 qualifying round Monday. ss Driscoll, who said she about an 81, said only one ¢ victory compared to this . That was in the 1963 wom- s open in Hull, Que., when (One of Canada's 3 Great Whiskies Darling Evans 5 and 4; Betty) Stanhope Cole of Toronto elim-| inated Rae Milligan of Calgary | |3 and 2; Canadian Close cham- | pion Gail Harvey of Toronto won 8 and 7 over Patricia Claw- son of Sarnia in the day's most one-sided match and Jocelyne | Bourassa' of Trois - Rivieres, Que., playing with a sore right | wrist wrapped in tape, defeated) Mrs. Ted Homenuik of Winni- peg 3 and 2. FIND OLDEST VASE British archeologists dig-| ging in Libya have found the) world's oldest dateable Iron Age Greek vase. 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