12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, August 17, 1961 T Maris Hits 47th & 48th By ED WILKS Associated Press Staff Writer When Wahoo Sam Crawford won the American League home run title in 1908 he did it with a total of seven. Among the other dead - ball champs, Nap Lajoe became the league's first home run king in 1901 with 13. Now Roger Maris, gunning for gold and glory,. has spurred his pursuit with seven home runs in six consecutive games and needs just 13 more to crack Babe Ruth's record of 60 set in 1927. Roger's pair of two - run shots] off southpaw Billy Pierce, as New York Yankees defeated Chicago White Sox 5-4 Wednes- day on the 13th anniversary of Ruth's death, Maris ran his sea- son total to 48, He is 15 games ahead of the Babe's record ace. While the Yankees have played 119 games, one was a tie and doesn't count toward a 154 - game limit set by base- ball commissioner Ford Frick. The ruling was made to equal- ize the league's 162 game ter Jim Landis' second home {run had tied the game for the White Sox in the sixth, the win- ning run was forced home when Warren Hacker struck Bob Cerv on the hand with a pitch. That gave the victory to Ralph Terry (9-1) and beat Turk Lown (6-5), both working in relief. Maris' sudden spurt tied the major league record for most home rups in six consecutive games held by George Kelly, Walker Cooper and Willie Mays, all of the old New York Giants of the National League. Mickey Mantle, Maris' team- mate and homer rival, failed to connect Wednesday. He has 45 round - trippers and is 13 games ahead of Ruth's pace. Jackie Brandt, Brooks Robin- {son and Jim Gentile backed Milt Pappas (9-6) with home runs as the young Baltimore |righthander stopped the Tigers on two hits. All three homers {were off Jim Bunning (14-9), {who hadn't thrown a gopher ball in 50 2-3 innings. A bases - loaded triple by Tito Francona drew the Indians KIWANIS BANTAM Fernhill Park Boys Win Sensational Final Game | Peterborough Boys & . . { Cop Twin-Bill Here PETERBOROUGH -- Peter- borough peewees and tadpoles i oi ires defeated blanked Oshawa Monday in wo|astings Logionnaltes det 7-5 minor lacrosse games in Osh- Wednesday night to take a two- awa. The peewees won 4-0. and| game lead in the Ontario La- the tadpoles 13-0. lcrosse Associaiton junior semi- 'Hastings Juniors 'Win In St. Kitts ST. CATHARINES (CP)-- Fernhill Park boys will repre- sent the Oshawa Minor Softball Association's Kiwanis Bantam League in the OASA provincial playdowns this year, thanks to their two-straight triumph over Radio Park, in the elimination finals. Last night's victory, at Fern- hill Park, against a determined and hard-battling Radio Park squad, proved one of the most exciting and best-played Ban- tam playoff games ever seen in Oshawa, with the Fernhill boys being actually outhit and trail- ing 1-0 going into the last in- ning--when they staged a two- run rally to win the game and end the series. Jim Spiers, pitching for Fern- hill, was again in good form and had eight strikeouts, not as many as usual for him, but Ra- dio nicked him for the odd hit, a single by R. Bennett to open the second and then in the {fourth, when R. Cullen got on |via an error, Dennis Bennett [hit a double. L. Cullen was safe the game, one by IL. Cullen in| side Park boys visited Rundle Park and won 11-8; Sunnyside Park won at home over Nipi- gon Park 5-2 and College Hill walloped Lake Vista 14-7. Strynatka opened the game at {Rundle Park with a homer and his mates added two more than| inning, got one in the third and then four in the fourth, with Zaroda hitting a homer. In the sixth they completed their total with the three runs that proved their margin. Dawe pitched for Rundle while Glecoff was the winning hurler. Rundle batted well in the sec- ond inning for three runs by Eggert, Blakolmer and Gray {while Nott and Dawe each scored in the third and fourth frames respectively. In the 7th, Rundle finished up with another three-run rally, Dawe, Shrigley and Nott crossing the plate. SUNNYSIDE WINS Black pitched the win for Sun- nyside. He gave up six hits in the 5-2 win with Nipigon getting Ken Cartwright notched two finals. markers for the peewees and| The third game of the best- singletons went to John Cara- of - seven series will be played vaggio and Brian Webb. in Hastings Saturday night. In the tadpole contest, Dave| Hastings led 2-1 at the end i "lof the first period, 5-3 after 40 Conver rapped in four Jim Was | uimues then scored two quick i i ch Forestall and Gord Floyd each|Z031 early in the third to ein got two. | Grant Heffernan scored two {goals for the Legionnaires, Ken |Ruttan, Dave Drummond, Gary [Curtis, Bob Stickle and Roger Grant getting one each. Japanese Swimmer Brian Thomson, Gerry Cheev- Breaks Own Mark ers, Pete Berge, Ted Buchanan TOKYO (AP)--Kiyoshi Naka-/and Tom Teather scored for St. gawa bettered a world record|Catharines for the fifth time in the three| days of the all-Japan college|in 1:11 for the 100-metre breast- swimming championships Wed-| stroke. . nesday. This time the Waseda, The listed mark is 1:11.5 by University athlete was" clocked W. Minaschkin of Russia. ¥ A DAY TO REMEMBER! SATURDAY, AUGUST 19 four of these in the fifth inning, for their first run. Salter's hom- FOR THE 11th ANNUAL schedule with the 154 - game| schedule in use until this year's| ¢ expansion to 10 teams. Maris has 36 games (decisions) in which to get 13 homers. New York moved three games ahead of second - place Detroit even with Boston in the fifth|When the catcher missed the|er in the sixth was the other inning and Johnny Romano's third strike but he recovered| one. homer won it in the sixth for the ball in time to tag.out Cul-| Dervent singled and Bradley| Jim Perry (9-10). Tracy Stal-|len, trying to score from third. walked to open the second for| lard (1-2) lost Radio Park finally broke the|the winners and both scored on| Two errors on the same play, | exciting 0-0 deadlock with a run|Fred Mitchell's double. In the| when the Tigers lost. 8-2 to Bal. by Eddie Yost and Albie Pear-|in the sixth 'inning. R. Bennett next inning, Cockerton opened| timore Orioles. Cleveland Indi- son, gave Washington two runs/2ot his second hit of the game, with a single and romped home| ans defeated Boston Red Sox| that moved the Senators from a single. He was forced out by ahead of Black, who homered. .4, Washington Senators beat|behind in the ninth inning and March, who then advanced fo|In the sixth, Bradley got a walk| Los Angeles Angels 3-2 and|beat Ken McBride (9-10). Dick|second on a wild pitch. R. Cul-|and scored on a wild pitch. Kansas City Athletics belted| Donovan (9-8) won with a four-|len drew a walk after McDonald| COLLEGE HILL UP | Minnesota Twins 12-7, hitter. |flied out and then Dennis Ben-| College Hill boys were in a Despite Maris' slugging, it| The Athletics got 13 hits, in-/nett got his second hit of the | hitting mood to whip Lake Vista was a hit batter with the bases cluding home runs by Deron game to score March. Lr Cullen|14-7, at Lake Vista diamond. loaded in the ninth inning that| Johnson and winner Norm Bass| Loo hit by a pitched ball to load| The winners broke out with gave the Yankees victory. Af- (7-8). Pete Ramos (9-14) lost.|;yo phases but Spiers found his four runs in the third with bearings again to strike out|Locke starting it with a double '301 FOR SPAHN Stapley and end the threat. {and Wrights triple being a big Meanwhilé, R. Cullen was help. They added two in the became widely known in the SPORTS CAR CLUB TROPHY RACES MOSPORT PARK Canada's New International Road Circuit (13 miles north of Bowmanville) IS WELCOMED AT HOME PLATE BY MICKEY MA! ROGER MARIS SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR Harry Balogh, Boxing Voice, Dies Of Cancer NEW YORK (AP) -- Harry Balogh, 70, a boxing announcer for both radio and television died Wednesday in hospital. Balogh, a former amateur| fighter and manager of a gym,! ® Thrilling, Keen Competition © North America's ® High Speed Top Drivers Racing Cars 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' 8 Events For All Classes LUIS ARROYO, N.Y. Yankees' brilliant relief pitch- er, the lefty who has saved a lot of games for Whitey Ford, especially this season, received a threatening letter yesterday, in which the writer said he was going to shoot Luis the next time he stepped out on the diamond at Yankee Stadium. The police have the letter now and no doubt it was a message from some crack-pot. He must just dislike pitchers or Arroyo in particular--because if it was the Yankees he was after--he would be apt to send a parcel bomb to Roger Maris. Roger, who in recent weeks has been quoted as saying he doesn't bat too well against "lefties"--cranked a couple of Billy Pearce's First Race: 11:00 a.m. Admission $2.00 FREE PARKING {a double to Spiers in the third) Solomon and Taylor each had {and not another Fernhill Park|three hits, off Christie. | batter was able to even get on| Lake Vista got to Solomon fin- first base, other than these two, |ally with a four-run rally in He created a stir when hedown and brushed off by Los|their 19th consecutive defeat,| Hornsby opened. with a single|in the 7th, by Wallace * * wound up an announcement Angeles Dodgers as contenders tying the modern league record,iand Sills doubled and then| i : : with: "And may the superior|in the National League pennant|in a 9-5 loss to Chicago FEA lien singled for the third- contestant emerge triumphant" race, are back on top again al-| rhe Reds, in first place after|straight hit, scoring Hornsby right up until the 7th inning.|their fourth inning, but it took Cullen had struck out six bat-/two errors, a walk and then a instead of the usual "May the ter giving the Dodgers a flog-/5 19 . day stay in second, made and Sills with the tying and best man win ging. it in a breeze as their two top| h pitching splendidly for Radio|fifth, three in the sixth and then Park. He gave up 2 walk to|finished up with a five-run rally {Densham in the third inning and|in the 7th. Throughout all this, 1930s when he announced most By ED WILKS burgh Pirates 2-1 as Warren tern . 1] 9} es ters himself. h by J § of Joe Louis' heavyweight cham-| Associated Press Staff Writer Spahn won victory No. 301. In the last of the 7th, the par bY Sankowski, 18 do the pionship fights. Cincinnati Reds, knock e d Philadelphia Phillies suffered Fernhill fans went wild as|sixth by Krasnak and another! ; : : : . ) | winning runs, to end the game. He was the top announcer for Right in the Dodgers' own| Dodger killers, Frank Robinson It ing a heart-breaker for the years at Madison Square Gar-'yard and in front of the larg- and Gene Freese, went to work|,, Radio Park lads to lose den. He was replaced in the late est crowd (72,140) in young : se Buy The Things You'll Need For Next slants out-of-the-park yesterday, to not only help Yankees beat Chicago and boost their lead as Tigers were losing, but they gave Mr. Maris No. 47 and No. 48 in his home-run total. He now is only 13 homers away from Ruth's long-standing record and he has 36 games in which to get 'em. At the start of the week, Maris needed about one homer in every two games--he's hit seven in the last six games--and now he needs only one in each three games, to tie Ruth's mark and an extra one will do the big trick. Incidentally, it was home-run day again in the American League yesterday, with Tigers losing to Orioles, who had three homers, including another by Jim Gentile. And Robinson got one for the Cincy Redlegs also yesterday, his 34th, as a couple of hurlers named Bob Purkey and Jim O'Toole blanked the Dodgers, before a record L.A. crowd of over 72,000, in both ends of a doubleheader, to put Cin- cinnati back in first place, in the National League race, PLAYOFF PATTER:- If Oshawa Tony's meet Eddie Black's in the Beaches League semi-finals, it could be a mighty lively series. Last night's game here in which Meulemeester pitched his best win of the season and Tony's outhit Black's by a wide margin to deserve the, win, had its wild--and-wooly moments when Mgr. Roy Lepelley made "a big thing" of the ball being used. He made such a big thing of it that the Oshawa batters hit it with ease after the hassle and pounded out a 4-1 win. It was 0-0 when the spice-pot was spilled . , . TONY'S VENDORS, the Oshawa Inter. "AA" entry in OASA. playoffs, scored a clean-cut 9-2 win in Peter- borough last night. Second game is here tomorrow night PETERBOROUGH Juveniles play Willis Motors here at 8:15 this evening but as far as Oshawa softball fans are concerned, it's a doubleheader at Alex- andra Park tonight and we advise them not to miss the first game, at 6:15 p.m. It's Woodview Park and Fern- hill Park, two Oshawa Midget teams who not only are two of the best-dressed teams in the city and are also two of the smartest Midget teams to show around here in some time. They had over 400 people at Fernhill Park last night to see these teams meet for the third night in succession and it ended 4-4. Monday night it was 3-3 in 10 innings and on Tuesday, at Woodview diamond, the home team eked a 6-5 decision. Fernhill Aces have to win tonight to force another game and the winners of this series go into OASA Midget playoffs against Peterborough, next week . . . FERNHILL PARK fans are just about softball crazy right now. On their other diamond last night, their Bantam boys scored two runs in the last inning to nose out Radio Park 2-1 and win the Kiwanis League OASA finals. Fernhill Bantams meet Port Perry in OASA playdowns, here on Satur- day evening . . . HEFFERING"S won their Senior "B" opener in Whitby last night, while over in Pickering, the homesters beat Port Perry in the first of their Inter. "C" series . . . GIRLS SOFTBALL fans get action tonight at Bathe Park as Woodyiew Metcalfe Realtors take on Imperials of Toronto, first game of their PWSU Junior "A" playoff series, at 6:30 o'clock. night lat the plate while Purkey (14-7) 1940's in a dispute over his sal- league hisiory, the Reds made and O'Toole (12-9) exetnded Los ary. Balogh resumed boxing an- nouncing in the 1950s for tele- |vised bouts. His last major job was for heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson's successful de- fence against Tommy (Hurri- cane) Jackson at the Polo Grounds July 29, 1957. Dittfach Pilots | Windy Ship Home FORT ERIE (CP) -- Windy Ship, four - year - old colt ran 1 1-16 miles in 1:43.8 at Fort Erie Wednesday to win the fea- tured Philos Club purse. Windy Ship, owned by Max Cristall of Edmonton and rid- den by Hugo Diftfach, was scor ing his second victory in six |starts Jockey Louis Olay broke his left wrist when his mount, Dim- ple Dip snapped a leg during the first race. Dimple Dip was destroyed by the track veterin- i SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES SOFTBALL Provincial Women's Union Junior "A" Toronto Imperials Softball vs Oshawa Metcalf Realtors, at Bathe Park, 6.30 p.m.; 1st game of 2-out-of-3 series, Oshawa Minor Assoc. (Midget off with a sweep of a three- game showdown by beating Los Angeles 6-0 and 80 Wednesday |night. | The Dodgers, who have been | firing knockdown pitches at the Reds all season and making pointed talk of the pennant threat from San Francisco Gi- ants and Milwaukee Braves, hadn't suffered a doubleheader shutout in 26 years. That was when they were in Brooklyn and Carly Hubbell and Clyde Castleman pitched shutouts for New York Giants. Righthander Bob Purkey, al- lowing four hits in the first game, and lefthander Jim O'Toole, giving up two hits in the nightcap, paired for the vic- tories. San Francisco, in third place 7% games behind the Reds, de- feated St. Louis Cardinals 4-3 and Milwaukee, nine games back in fourth spot, beat Pitts- OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES LONDON (Reuters) -- Results of Wednesday night's Scottish League Cup soccer games: Aberdeen 3 Motherwell 4 Airdrie 2 Thd Lanark 2 Arbroath 1 East Fife 4 Brechin 0 Queen of S 4 Celtic 0 St. Johnstone 1 Playoffs -- Cowdenbeath 2 Ayr U 3 Dumbarton 0 Falkirk 1 {Dundee U 0 Dumfermline 0 {Hamilton 3 Clyde 2 Hiberniarn 2 Patick 1 Kilmarnock 1 Hearts 2 League Championship Finals)--|Morton 2 Forfar 1 Woodview Park vs Fernhill Park, at Alexandra Park, 6.15 p.m. sharp. 3rd game of series. {Queens Pk 1 Albion 3 Raith 0 St Miren 3 Rangers 4 Dundee 2 UAW League -- Horne's Esso Stenhousemuir 1 Montrose 4 Station vs Town and Country, at |Alexandra Park, 1.00 p.m. Inter-County daille vs Merchants, at Lake- view Park; Crawford's vs Dodd's, at Alexandra Park, west diamond. Both games at 6.30 p.m OASA Juvenile "A" -- Peter- borough vs Oshawa Willis Motors, at Alexandra Park, 8.15 p.m.; 2nd game of series. OASA Inter. "A" -- Oshawa MacLean's Esso vs Brooklin Stevenson's Motors, at Brooklin, 8.15 p.m.; 1st game of series. West Darlington Pee Wee League -- Zion at Courtice "A", 6.30 p.m. SOCCER Brampton Jrs. | TITTIES Defeats Fergus | STARS Oshawa and District League-- Kickers vs Thistle, at 6.30 p.m., and Strila vs Hollandia, at 8.00 p.m.; both games at Kinsmen Civie Memorial Stadium. FERGUS (CP) -- Brampton| Excelsiors, defeated Fer gus/By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Thistles 10-6 te take a 2-0 lead) pitching: Bob Purkey in their best - of - seven On yy, wpogle Cincinnati Reds tario lacrosse association jun-| jor A semi - finals Wednesday handed Los Angeles Dodgers night. The third game is scheduled for Brampton Friday. Don Arthur and John McCau-| ley scored three goals each for|had a two - Brampton, Barry Fendley | since 1935. Purkey fired a four hitter in and| Final {their first doubleheader shutout {hitter in the opener and O'Toole second game for a 6-0, 8-0 sweep that LACROSSE OLA Senior League (Semi- Playoffs) Brampton Ramblers vs Brooklin Hillcrests, at Brooklin Arena, 8.30 p 2nd game of series. GAMES FOR FRIDAY SOFTBALL Beaches Major Fastball League -- Oshawa Tony's vs De- ipendable = Caterers, at Kew League -- Hou- Stirling 4 Berwick 2 Stranraer 1 Alloa 1 Angeles' shutout slump through 26 innings. Robinson hit his 34th 'home run of the season, the sixth against the - Dodgers, in the opener and drove in four runs in the doubleheader for a season total of 24 runs batted in but they congratulated their ri- vals--and warned them that things might be different later on, in the "City Championship" playoffs. RADIO If; Summer -- NOW! During PARK--R. Bennett, March, ss; McDonald, 2b; R. Cullen, p; D. Bennett, 3b; L. Cullen, cf; Stapley, 1b; No- against Los Angeles, Freese/wak, rf; DeMille, c. drove in four runs in the sec-| FERNHILL PARK -- Spiers, ond game with a pair of hom-|p; Bryan, cf; Hornsby, ¢; Sills, ers. He has hit eight against the|1b; Stevason, If; Cole, 3b; Grif- Dodgers. fin, ss; Parsons, 2b; Densham, Cincinnati beat Larry Sherry(rf; Morrison, batted in 6th; (4-3), making his first start in|Bonnetta, rf in 7th. more than a year, with four LEAGUE SCHEDULE GAMES runs in the first inning of the! In Kiwanis Bantam League opener. schedule action last night, King- | Eddie Kasko started the rally | | with a single and scored on Don| Blasingame's triple. Vada Pin-| son of the Reds was hit in the back of the head by a pitc {from Stan Williams in the sev- |enth inning. He went to hospital for x-rays, then returned in time to hit an RBI single in the nightcap as the Reds collected 12 hits off loser Johnny Podres (15-4) and two relievers. WINS FOURTH SHUTOUT Purkey, gaining his first shut- {out of the season, and O'Toole | picthing his third, gave up noth- ing but singles. The Dodgers {haven't had an extra - base hit in 37 innings. Two - run homers by Orlando Cepeda and Felipe Alou won for the Giants against Ray Sadecki (10-6). Jack Sanford (9-6) checked the Cardson on seven hits and had a shutout until the eighth inning. Spahn (13-12), fop winner among living major league pit- chers, gave up 10 hits but had it in the clutch against the Pirates as the Braves won their sixth game in a row on a home run by Frank Thomas .and an RBI double by Ed Mathews off Bob Friend (12-14). BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League W L Pet. GBL 78 40 661 7543 636 3 68 53 .562 1114 61 57 .517 17 60 58 .508 18 57 65 467 23 51 67 .432 27 51 68 .492 2714 Washington 49 67 422 28 Kansas City 4375 .364 35 Wednesday's Results Chicago 4 New York 5 Los Angeles 2 Washington 3 Kansas City 12 Minnesota 7 Boston 4 Cleveland 6 Baltimore 8 Detroit 2 Today's Probable Pitchers Chicago (Baumann 9-9) New York (Stafford 9-6) Baltimore (Fisher 5-11) at De- troit (Foytack 7.7) | Boston (Delock 6-7) at Clev land (Hawkins 6-8) (N) Los Angeles (Duren 5-10) at Washington (Daniels 7-8) (N) National League W L Pet. GBL 73 46 .613 New York Detroit Baltimore | Cleveland Chicago | Boston {Los Angeles Minnesota at e- | Cincinnati | Wednesday's Results | Philadelphia Chicago 9 | Pittsburgh 1 Milwaukee 2 | St. Louis 3 San Francisco 4 Cincinnati 6-8 Los Angeles 0-0 Today's Probable Pitchers St. Louis (Jackson 8-9) at San Francisco (McCormick 9-11) Philadelphia (Roberts 1.9) at Milwaukee (Buhl 9-8) (N) Pittsburgh (Mizell 6-8 and Sturdivant 2-0) at Chicago (Bre- wer 0-5 and Hobbie 7-12) (2) International League W L Pct. GBL 78 48 .619 6852 .567 7 67 58 .536 101% £3 63 .500 15 61 66 .480 1714 57 65 .467 19 Richmond 57 67 .460 20 | Columbus | Charleston | Buffalo {Toronto {Rochester |Jersey City Black's Edge 'Kam's Drugs Black's Men's Wear nosed out Karn's Drugs 10-9 in their UAW Softball League game yesterday {afternoon at Alexandra Park. | McKee started on the mound for Black's and was replaced by Maxwell in the sixth inning when Karn's rallied to tie the score at 9-9. Maxwell shut off their rally and pitched to only two extra batters in the last three frames, with Pettes and Harmon getting singles, as Black's held Karn's off. Karn's struck for five runs in the first inning on singles by Marshall and McPhee, an error play on Hodgson and a two- |bagger by Wallace. McKee's er- |ror on Nash's bid and then' a {passed ball and Pettes' single completed the five-run outburst. Brooks doubled in the third | |and scored on an error. In the | fifth, Brooks opened with a sin- |gle, McKee bunted and was safe jon an error and Pettes tripled to score them both but was thrown out at the plate himself, | lon a good relay-throw, when he tried to stretch it to a homer. | In the sixth, McPhee singled | and so did Hodgson, the former scoring on a choice play that| missed, to make it 9-9. | Black's got a run in the sec-| {ond on singles by Clark and {Morden behind Garrow's walk. | In the third, Bryan was safe on | an error, McMullen tripled and | came home on a sacrifice fly by | Knox. | Black's had their big inning in the fourth when they shelled Lyons off 'the Karn's mound. Morden and McKee each sin-, gled, then Sutton doubled. ; Price also singled and was forced by Bryan. Then after! McMullen fanned, Knox, Gar- row, Clark and Morden all} walked in succession, as Wal- Summer Merchandise! "gi REDUCTIONS ~ 30% --- ON - eo BARBECUES! eo GOLF SETS! eo LIFE JACKETS! eo LAWN CHAIRS! ® Folding PICNIC TABLES! eo CAMP STOVES! e FOLDING STOOLS! eo WATER SKIS! e PICNIC JUGS! e FISHING TACKLE! eo GARDEN HOSE! eo LAWN SPRINKLERS! eo BASEBALL GLOVES! eo GARDEN SWINGS! Buy Now and Syracuse 48 80 375 31 Wednesday's Results {Toronto 34 Jersey City 2-2 Syracuse 0 Richmond 2 Buffalo 5 Charleston 6 {Rochester 8 Columbus 1 Thursday's Games Syracuse at Columbus (N) And hundreds of other summer itmes all SLASHED IN PRICE! ' lace, who took over the pitching, had trouble with his control. Sutton homered to open the | fifth and that made it 9-8 at the | time | Black's got their winning run in the last of the 9th. Morden Rochester at Richmond (N) opened with a single, his fourth- scored two with Bob Haw and|Putt he Reds back in first place Beach Gardens, Toronto, 8.15/Los Angeles . Bob Ronald adding singles. |in the National League race. .m. . San Francisco For Fergus Gary Landoni,| Hitting: Roger Maris, New OASA Inter. "AA" -- Peter- Milwaukee Walter Mitchell, George Clay|York Yankees, drove in four borough Shell Oil vs Oshawa|St. Louis Tohn Roberts, Jim Mackenzie runs with his 47th and 48th hom- Tony's Vendors, at Alexandga| Pittsburgh wind Barry Redwood were the ers of the season in a 5-4 vic- Park, 8.00 p.m.; 2nd game of Chicago narksmen. Itory over Chicago White Sox. [2-out-of-3 series. | Philadelphia 69 44 62 50 60 51 57 57 54 56 17 65 308 611 1 554 7% 541 9 .265 40 Buffalo at Charleston ( Toronto at J. City (N) | American Associatios 500 1315 N) n Wednesday's Results 491 14% | Denver 1 Omaha 6 -420 22% | Houston 0 Louisville 4 |Dallas-F. W. 2 Indianapolis 3 straight hit of the game. Max- {well sacrificed and both were safe on a late play. Sutton's sacrifice aflvanced Morden and | he scored when Price's grounder |to the second baseman was bob- | |bled--and the game was over. | TIRE & AUTO SUPPLY CO.--ASSOCIATE TORE PHONE 728-1607