- BEAT BROCKS 8-5 Cincinnati's Win Streak Continues Against Bums By BEN PHLEGAR Associated Press Sports Writer Rogers Hornsby, reported on the kids as manager of Cincinnati as recently as a week ago, was ri high today with a five-game win- ning streak and the sluggingest club in the majors. With the advent of June, the hit- happy Redlegs have busted out all over. They've pulverized opposi- tion pitching for 65 hits in their last five games, producing 46 runs in their longest victory string of the season. On their current road trip the Redlegs are pl. at a .750 clip, winning six of eight including an 8-5 verdict Monday night over Brooklyn ers. Cincinnati's success was a bitter pill for the Dodgers, who sli a full game behind Milwaukee Braves. The Dodgers had started the day' only seven Derceniage points back of the rampaging W consin outfit, but the Braves plast- ered New York Giants 12-8. St. Louis Cardinals, who had lost five straight, battled 12 innings against P ttsburgh Pirates, winless in their last four starts, before picking up a 5-3 victory. Philadel phia defeated Chicago 7-3 in the other National League game. In the only American League contest the Detroit Tigers finally won a game after 13 setbacks in- terspersed with two extra-inning ties. The Tigers scored four runs in the seventh inning to whip Bos- ton, 6-3, their first success since May 22. A single by Walt Dropo brought home one run and two more scored on a triple by Matt Batts in the victory rally. Ned Garver was the winner. Cincinnati got ahead in a hurry at Brooklyn, scoring twice in the first inning on Bell's two run homer and then adding five more in the fourth on five singles, in- cluding a two-run blow by bell, and a pair of walks. The Giants and the Cubs both suffered fielding collapses that would have looked pretty bad in a class D league. At the Polo Grounds the New Yorkers, ahead 2-1, presented Mil- waukee with four unearned runs in the sixth inping on three errors and one lonely hit. The Braves poured in sevem more runs in the next two frames to move ahead 122 before the Giants quite re- covered. Eddie Mathews hit his 17th home run. At Connie Mack stadium the Cubs committed four errors in the second inning which permitted the Phillies to score four jfuns-=shoir eventual margin of victory. Steve Bilko doubled home Red Schoendienst with the tie-breaking St. Louis run in the top of the 12th at Pittsburgh and rode in 'on a single by Rip Repulski. Bisons Edge Springfield By THE CANADIAN PRESS I! Everyone seems to pick on the | tail-end Springfield Cubs. This time ! Buffalo is having its turn collect- a mess of wins. } Bisons, currently holding down fourth t in the Interna- tional Baseball League, Monday night nabbed their third triumph over the Cubs 4-3 and extended their winning streak to four games. Buffalo gets another crack at the cellar-dwellers tonight. It Springfield now is 15 games back | g¢ of the pace-setting Montreal - als. The Cubs have registered only . 12 victories in 41 starts. Rookie Frank Lary, pitching one- - hit ball until Springfield set off a three-run spurt in the seventh, gained c t for Monday night's victory--his fifth against three set- backs. He was given a hand by veteran Milt Jordan. The Royals, who hold a 3%- game lead over Rochester, edged Ottawa Senators 2-1 in the second of three scheduled contests. Tom Lasarda was credited with the win his sixth against two losses, but he needed help from Ed Roebuck in the ninth. Lasarda allowed eight safeties and fanned seven. Roebuck faced only three men out one and watching the others pop out. Howie Fox of Baltimore Orioles Stopped the -place Toronto . Maple Leafs 6-2 with a seven-hit pe ance. | SOCCER VISITORS WIN NEW YORK (AP)--A late rally in the second half enabled the English All-Stars to defeat the United States select team 6-3 at { Yankee Stadium Monday night. { England led at the half, 1-0. friendly challenge! | MAKE THE MILE ROAD TEST uy pe 1 ye} | NE is 4 ways better It's a promise! You'll drive longer for less with new Reliance gasoline. New Reliance is the best we've ever mar- keted. Not just an improved soline . --but an all new gasoline. Make the 500-mile road test--you'll be con- vinced new Reliance gives you-- EASIER STARTS --New, rigidly controlled volatility factors mean | easier "cold engine" starts . . . | greater freedom from vapor lock. | FASTER ACCELERATION-- 41 the reserve power of your engin when you need it is yours with new : Reliance gasoline. QUICKER WARM-UPS--A thor- | oughly warmed-up engine in far less time . . . greater economy and Yess | nsk of "engine strain." | LONGER MILEAGE--You travel | farther for less with new Reliance. Start proving that now. Tank up | with new Rehance-- 4 Vice-President and General Manager New, more than ever YOU CAN RELY ON RELIANCE MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL By THE CANADIAN PRESS | American League {Boston 002 010 000--3 8 1 Detroit 002 000 40x--6 13 0 Grissom, Freeman (3) Kinder | (7) and White; Garver and Batts. LP -Freeman; HRs: Boston-- ; Detroit-Nieman. Byers WwW L PS GBL Fy ¢ 636 5% 551 9 531 10 510 11 .429 15 .388 17 229 24%: New York Cleveland Washington Chicago Boston : Philadelphia . Louis Detroit Tuesday Philadelphia at Chicago Boston at St. Louis New York at Detroit Washington at Cleveland Wednesday Philadelphia at Chicago Boston at St. Louis New York at Detroit Washington at Cleveland National eagle Milwaukee 000 014 1213 1 New York 000 110 042-- 8 12 3 Surkont, Burdette (8) and St. Claire; Maglie, Corwin (8) Ken- nedy (9) and Westrum. WP-Surkont ; - ; HRs: Milwaukee-Pafko, Mathews. Cincinnati Brooklyn 100 210 010--5 12 1 Judson, Smith (4) and Landrith; Meyer, Hughes (4) Podres (5) Branca (9) and Campanella. - WP-Smith; LP-Meyer. HRs: Cin- cinnati-Bell, Kluszewski. Chicago 001 200 000--3 10 4 Pi Iphia Minner, Kelly (8) and Garagiola; Miller, Ridzik (4) and Lopat. WP-Minner; HR: Chicago-Smal- ley. St. Louis Pittsburgh 001 001 010 002--85 10 0 000 002 100 000--3 6 2 Mizell, White (6) Brazle (11) Miller (12) and D. Rice; Lapalme, Het (12) and Sandlock, Atwell WP-Brazle, LP-Hetki; HRs: St. Louis-Musial, Schoendienst. Milwaukee 31 15 .674 Brooklyn Philadelphia St. Louis New York Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Tuesday Cincinnati at Bruskia Milwaukee at New York Chicago at Philadelphia St. Louis at Pittsburgh Wednesday Cincinnati at Brooklyn Milwaukee at New York Chicago at Philadelphia St. Louis at Pittsburgh INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ottawa 000 000 001--1 8 2 Montreal 000 000 11x--2 10 1 Ditmar and Shantz; Lasorda, Roebuck (0) and Thompson. Fox and Tabacheck; Hogue, Fahe Overmire (4) and Keller. Sp! eld Buffalo Fear, Lary, Jordan (7) and Lakeman. -Lary; LP-Fear. Montreal 28 15 Rochester 22 Toronto 24 Buffalo Ottawa Syracuse Baltimore Springfield 12 Tuesday Ottawa at Montreal Baltimore at Toronto Springfield at Buffalo Syracuse at Rochester Wednesday Montreal at Toronto Springfield at Buffalo Syracuse at Rochester McNulty Ties Gear For Boxla Scoring TORONTO (CP)--Jim McNulty n 21 of Orillia West Yorks and Do Gear of Fergus Thistles are tied 200 500°010--8 10 1|had three hi 040 110 01x--7 12 0|& for the position of leading scorer in the Senior # Ontario Lacrosse Association. They both have 41] points. » Standings rele.sed Monday b | the association, including games up | {to June 7, list McNulty with 26 goals and 15 assists and Gear with |14 goals and 27 assists. | [ Ken Croft of West Yorks and Ike Hildebrand of Peterborough Trailermen , are tied for third place. Croft has 21 goals and 16 assists for 37 points; Hildebrand | has 18 goals and 19 assists for id n | points. | Bob Dobbie of Fergus Thistles | holds down fifth place with 26 | 'goals and eight assists for 34] points. Leo Teatro of West Yorks | follows with 16 goals and 14 as- | {sists for 30 goals. Jack B'onda of iBrampton Excelsiors has 15 goals | and 14 assists for 29 points. | CKLB Lakelanders Edge Accurettes In Exhibition Tilt Oshawa CKLB Lakelanders nosed out Toronto Accurettes 11-10 in a girls' exhibition softball game played at Bathe Park on Sunday afternoon, before a good crowd of spectators. The visitors broke in front with three runs in the first inning and got one more in the second, then didn't do very much with Kele- men's pitching for the rest of her stay on the mound. In the 7th inning, with the score 8-3, Lyons took over the pitching chore for the Lakelanders and ran into trouble. Two walks and her one error loaded the bases with only one. out and then with two out, Hamburrow singled, Lee walk- ed and O'Grady singled and a couple of p d balls pleted the 6-run splurge for the visitors, putting them ahead 10-8. In their own half of the 8th, Lakelanders scored three runs with a fine fighting rally. Bartell sparked it by hitting a homer. Al- ison walked, moved around on a passed ball, scored on a single by Shestowsky who also scored before the inning ended, on a stolen base, wild pitch and infield out, to put the Oshawa girls back in front. Bartell"s homer was Oshawa's second of the game. Kehoe who ts for the homesters, hit a homer in the 4th inning. Shes- towsky had three hits also while Allen and Lyons with two safeties apiece were other big hitters for the Lakelanders. ACCURETTES -- Lee, 1b; O'- Grady, p; Dick, ss; Tasch, c; riffin, 3b; Lang, rf; Hall, 1f; Ross, cf; Hamburrow, 2b; Me- Garvy, 1f; Tustin, cf. LAKELANDERS -- Peters, 3b; Allen,- c; Bartell, ss; Allison, 1b; Wyatt, rf; Shestowsky, 2b; Kele- men, rp and cf; Kehoe, 1f; Lyons, cf and p; Mann, rf. Umpires; N. O'Reilly and D. Stauffer. SIGN FOR TITLE FIGHT NEW YORK (AP)--Carl (Bobo) Olson of San Francisco and Paddy Young of New York signed con- tracts Monday for their 15-round fight for the American middle- weight championship at . Madison Square Garden June 19. TS FUN... VACATIONLAND ;60ROIAN gAY RANGER BREWING CO. LIMITED The Transporters' pitching staff is proving itself to be just as potent as the rest of the club in the matter of offense. Last night in Whitby, the Mc- Callum crew blanked the Coun- ty Town outfit 3-0 on the two- it tossing of Big Bill McTav- sh. It was Bill's first start, and a highly successful one it was. He struck out 10 batters in the six-inning game (... called on account of darkness) and the two hits he gave up were beat- out infield rollers ... real scratchy jobs. He now has a.won-lost re- cord of 1-0 and an earned-run average of .000. Ted Stone, cross-firing right- hander on the staff has a 30 won-lost record, and hasn't al- lowed an earned run yet! His mark . . . .000! .Jack Durston has a 1-0 re- cord and an ERA of 1.99 and Bill Gingerich has a 1-0 record and an ERA of 2.25. Which makes them look mighty tough to touch ...'and there is still one man untried as yet, Ab Gilbert! The team's win last night was no cinch. And neither was that 3-2 battle Saturday night. Last night, Lefty Don Crawford looked unbeatable until the fifth when his support caved in. The centrefielder committed two errors on successive hits ... one for three bases! The win puts Oshawa alone in first place, a game-and-a- half ahead of Cobourg in sec- ond spot. Whitby are now third and the fast-moving darkhorse entry out of Colborne jumps into fourth place. Colborne Dodgers (with all those ex-Belleville Redmen sen- iors starting to click) are just three games back of the Trans- porters and have two games n hand! . And just as an added treat ... guess who are the visitors at the Stadium tomorrow tomorrow night? Right! ... Cr'horne. The gam begin at p.m. in line with the Trans- porter maneouvre to keep the fans warm and happy. Wed- nesday night should A a big one, wot? Vv CHECKLETS -- Comes the morning mail and a note to remind one and all that track and field activities for the Pub- lic Schools of the city are un- derway. This Wednesday down at Ce- dar Dale P.S., the boys and girls will | compete for that school's top honors and the right to represent the school in the Oshawa Public School's big annual meet scheduled for Alexandra Park on Tuesday June 23rd. That last is one of the big events of the year ... certain- ly the biggest track and field show ... bar none! By the by, a moment here to pay tribute to the tennis star of tennis stars, Big Bill Tilden. His sudden death at the age of 60 came as he was packing his bags for a sche- . duled tennis trip to Wichita Kansas. He was playing out the string ... no retired pro, he! Have you heard the latest quote from Burleigh Grimes, manager of Toronto baseball Leafs? He says his present pitching staff is the best he ever handled ... and that in- cludes the 1939 Brooklyn Dod- gers. On that Brooklyn club were Waite Hoite, Luke Hamlin, Van Mungo, Fred Frankhouse and Fred Fitzsimmons. Durocher played on that club. And guess where Ed Kalski, Oshawa Merchants first-sacker is playing baseball now? A quote from Don Mackin- tosh in the Sudbury Star is very revealing ... "we like the work so far of big Bobo Kalski, bespectacled first sack- er for the Frood Tigers. He looks like a candidate for the batting championship honors." '"'After watching Kalski r- ing through 'his dark oe a fan at last night's game (which Frood won 7-2. over Creighton while Kalski hit 2- for-5, a double and a single) cracked, 'Maybe he wears them to give the other club a bit of a handicap advantage.' "' by Bob Rife Anne Sharp Lowest In Golf Team Trial TORONTO (CP)--Four out-of- town golfers played Monday in trials for the Ontario interprovin- cial team and Anne Sharp of Font- hill's Lookout Point Club fired the day's low score--a one-over-par 78. It gave her 11 points in the team competition. She had previously picked up 11 points at Toronto St. George's a week ago and five more in winning the Hamilton and dis- trict title. The other test players and their scores were: Mrs. Lionel Ross of Cobourg, 88, Rose Kampman of Kitchener Westmount 91 and Donna Noble of Hamilton Glendale 96. Aussie Cricketers Defeat Hampshire LONDON (Reuters)--Australia's confident cricketers defeated Hampshire within two days at Southampton Monday and thus earned themselves an extra day's rest before the opening test match against England Thursday. The Australians won by 158 runs after declaring their second in- nings at 169 for five." Hampshire's first innings closed guickiy for 181, leaving them 137 behind. The home team needed 307 to win after Aus- tralia declared. In London, the county cham- pions, Surrey, appeared to be coas- ting to another easy victory when they forced Northamptonshire to follow on. But Northamptonshire, with a 160 first innings, rallied to 105 for two and are now only 76 behind Surrey's declared total of 341 for nine. Close of play scores: Australian tourists 268 and 169 for five declared, Hampshire 131 and 148. Australian tourists won by 158 runs. Middlesex 364, Yorkshire 228 for five. Surrey 341 for nine declared, Northamptonshire 160 and 105 for WO. Cambridge University 355 for eight declared and 39 for one, MCC 375 for five declared. Glamorgan 187 and 169, Derby- shire 214 and five for no wocket. Gloucestershire 505 for five de- clared, Kent 331. Leicestershire 3871 for eight de- clared and 103 for two, Sussex 262. Worcestershire and 208 for |five, Nottinghamshire 176. Peterboro Trailermen Edge Out Hamilton HAMILTON (CP)--Russ Slater scored five goals as Peterborough THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, June 9, 1953 11 LONDON (AP)--Randy Turpin, olden boy of British boxing, fights harles Humez, former coal-min- ing lion of Picardy, tonight for Britain's version of the world mid- dleweight title and an autumn shot at the full-scale world crown. Their 15-round fight, before a sellout crowd of 54,000 at White City Stadium, should be followed by an offer of a trip to New York in September. Harry Markson, managing direc- tor of the International Boxing Club, is here for the fight and almost definitely will offer the win- ner a September date against the winner of the Paddy Young-Bobo Olson elimination fight. Young and Olson meet in New York June 19. Even though odds and most Brit- ish sentiment were against him, the French middleweight was far from discouraged. Humez said he thought he would win because, he said: "I'm the hungry fighter. Randy Turpin is rich now. I'm the hungry man. I need the victory and the money." Strang stories have leaked out of Wales about Turpin's training "| program--how he has been eating 20 grapefruit daily, his "mean" state of mind in which he pounded hard on sparring partners just as he did in July, 1951, before he up- set Sugar Ray Robinson and won the world's middleweight title, the personnel shuffled among his train- ers, and his inability to find worthy sparring partners. Similar stories have come from Boulogne and the Humez camp. He has battled through an astorish- Sparring rounds. He also had trouble finding sparring oppo- Randy Turpin Meets Picardy For British "World" Title nents; has done hundreds of miles of road-work and spent the re- mainder of his time fishing. Estimates on the gate vary be- tween £50,000 and £85,000 ($140,- 000 and $238,000). The fight was scheduled for $3 p.m. EDT. Ralph "Tiger" Jones Decisions Laurent BROOKLYN (AP) -- Ralph "Tiger" Jones pursued a willing, but outclassed, Mickey Laurent from post to post Monday night to take a unanimous 10-round de- cision in a middleweight bout in Eastern Parkway Arena. Jones weighed 153%, Laurent 158. The rugged Yonkers, N.Y., pere former pressed the attack all the way, opening a cut over Laurent's left eye in the first round. Laurent, who has lost only to Randy Turpin and Charlie Humez in 30 fights, sent Jones spinting across the ring in the second roun with a terrific right to the jaw, but that was the only time he had the better of it. Argonauts Sign Up McKenzie And Roberts TORONTO (CP)--Toronto Argo- nauts of the Big Four Football Unio have signed veteran Shanty McKenzie and rookie Jack Roberts for the 1953 season, coach Frank Clair said Monday. Red Ettinger, all-star centre, signed earlier. Trailermen came from behind four times to edge the winless Hamilton Tigers 13-11 in a Senior Ontario Lacrosse Association game Mon- day night. Backed by at goal-tendin, Joe Hickson, Peterborough en minder borrowed for the game, the Tigers held the lead through three quarters before giving way in the last period to the second-place Trailermen. Other Peterborough scorers were Mason with three, Ross Powless with two and Lou Nickel, Don Asibee and Nip O'Hearn with one each. Bill 'Rankin, Ronny Welch and Tony Kapula each scored two goals for Hamilton. Ron Brown, Boug Davidson, Ron Parker, Bute Guthro and Al Doyle scored singles. WHITE S80X SELL CLARK CHICAGO (AP) -- Outfielder Allie Clark was sold Monday to Rochester of the International League by Chicago White Sox for an undisclosed sum. The Sox bought Clark from Philadelphia Athletics May 12. In 15 turns at the bat, mostly as a pinch-hitter, he made one hit. ER RTI new ideas... «oto brighten our lives h plastic products. A new i coment-like material mends * inflatable children's toys, rain. © coats, shower curtains, etc. ~N Owvr standards of living are among the world, becouse we are constantly improvement. Be glad you're a Conodien. .» <BROBWERY LTD, OTTAWA, ONTARIO * £ Our 50-50 30-DAY WARRANTY OK SPECIAL! 1951 CHEV. COACH $1,495.00 OK SPECIAL! 1950 FORD SEDAN Radio and Heater $1,395.00 OK SPECIAL! 1947 PONTIAC SEDAN Radio and Heater $1,025.00 OK SPECIAL! 1951 CHEV. SEDAN Whitewalls Air Conditioning Heater $1,695.00 OK SPECIAL! 1950 OLDSMOBILE 5-Passenger Coupe Radio & Heater, Hydramatic $1,595.00 GOOD VALUE! 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