14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, June 13, 1962 At the first glance, it looks as if Finnish athlete Timo Koskela is crawling from un- der a pile of fallen bricks, at a Helsinki sports meet. Ac- tually, the "bricks" are foam rubber blocks, to break a pole vaulter's fall, which is becoming quite a problem these days, since athletes are S7sPORTS MENU = * ; By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' A BOMBSHELL exploded in the OHA Junior "A" Council last night (this is a separate group of representatives of the various OHA Junior "A" clubs) when word leaked out -- a week or two before its scheduled release -- that Oshawa might apply for an entry in the OHA Metro Junior 6 League. -- to play their home games in Toronto this next winter -- but in the meantime, to be "'in" the OHA fold again -- ready for full-fledged participation, if-and-when we get our new Oshawa sports centre. Major objections came from "Hap" Emms and his Niagara Falls team -- long recognized as a Boston Bruins '"'tarm club". The proposed Oshawa entry would also be spon- sored by Boston and since the application is to the Metro League -- it would seem apparent at first glance that Toronto Maple Leafs are willing to waive that 50-mile radius rule which is the restriction privilege of any NHL club. Emms is worried that the Oshawa entry might get the talent available, via Boston "'C" forms, which otherwise would be headed his way. Actually, we doubt if there is any problem more serious now than when Boston Bruins sponsored Barrie Flyers and Oshawa Generals, There is the question whether or not any NHL team has sufficient talent to fortify two competent Junior **A"" clubs. We would think, for a starter, that Whitby's Junior Hockey Club might have some misgivings about an Oshawa entry, since they are next door and are also in the Metro League. The "Central Ontario" OHA Junior "A" group mem- bers, other than Niagara Falls, will.no doubt welcome the return of Oshawa to the fold -- because the Generals were always a good drawing card and meant money in the bank, to other teams. The "'official" announcement of a Junior "A" hockey team for Oshawa was to have been made about 10 days hence. Whether or not plans for this kick-off will go ahead now or whether the "beefs" will be investigated first is hard to say. As far as most Oshawa. sports fans are con- cerned -- we'd like to have a hockey arena here, big enough to accommodate the average attendance for a good hockey game -- and if we can have a good hockey team -- it will certainly help to pay the freight or overhead, of the arena. BRIGHT BITS: Last night's doubleheader at Alexandra Park gave the softball fans a combined treat, The first game was a slugfest -- 9-8 for only six innings with both teams hit- ting the ball hard and often. The other game was a real tidy 6-3 affair, with home-run blows producing almost all of the runs for both teams . . . BEACHES LEAGUE action here at Alexandra Park tonight finds Randall-Roy Metals visiting the ;Oshawa Tony's for the first time this season. . . TOMORROW NIGHT there's another doubleheader for City and District softball fans, with Cobourg Brokers here for the second game . OSHAWA INTERMEDIATES, this city's newest adult baseball club, scored a good win over Orono last night in Lakehore League action. Orono plays back here tomorrow night, at Kinsmen Stadium, 7.15 o'clock. Angels Hovering Close By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer Los Angeles Angels board of strategy, responsible for pluck. ing Lee Thomas from New York Yankees in a key trade last year, stood up today and took another bow. Up among the American League leaders in their second year of operations, the fourth- place Angels crept to within a game and a half of the first- place Yankees Tuesday night and it was Thomas who pro- vided the punch in a 7-5 victory over Minnesota Twins. The 26-year-old outfielder, de- veloped in the productive farm system of the perennial AL champs, hit his eighth and ninth homers against the Twins, connecting with one on in the third and tagging another with the bases empty in the seventh. Thomas came to the Angels along with pitchers Ryne Duren land Johmy James in the deal jthat sent pitcher Truman Clev- jenger and outfielder Bob Cerv jto the Yanks, He hit .285 with 24 homers and 70 runs batted in during 1961 and currently is batting .289 with the nine hom: ers and 35 RBI. | YANKS TAKE LEAD | The defeat of Minnesota) dropped the Twins from thel vaulting to greater heights than ever before--but they still have to come down. --(AP Wirephoto) Hale Ai By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer San Francisco Giants seem to Foley's, Aces |have ag gd _ -- ong swoon. u 408 ngeeis iod- Score Wins In| gers may be in a state of shock. | Inter - County Halting a June tailspin in which they dropped out of the Fernhill Genosha Aces won a sensational 1-0 decision over National League lead, the | Giants snapped their six-game Houdaille Industries, last night lat Alexandra Park and Foley's losing streak Tuesday night, sweeping a doubleheader from |Plumbing defeated Police Assoc. 14-4 at Lakeview Park, in the Cincinnati Reds 2-1 and 7-5 and moving back within a game of \Inter-County Softball. League | schedule. the first-place Dodgers. The Dodgers, rolling with seven victories in nine games jand 20 in 24, ran into a 17-hit, |five-homer Milwaukee outburst The game at Alexandra Park was a nip-and-tuck thriller all |the way with Bourdage for Gen- osha Aces and Earle for Hou-! jdaille each pitching a. great lin support of Lew Burdette's six-hit pitching and lost a game lgame, Bourdage gave up only |two hits, both singles and both and a half of their lead with a 15-2 clobbering by the Braves. The standings behind the leaders also were shuffled as the defending - champion Reds} |by Heron, Houdaille's 3rd base- man. In the 7th inning, a walk to Kuney and Bourdage's own error, put the tying and winning runs on bases, but Bourdage got fell from third place to fifth. Pittsburgh Pirates moved into the next two batters on infield outs--to win and end the game. third, 744 behind, by edging Chi- cago Cubs 4-3 and St. Louis Cardinals nipped Philadelphia Phillies 3-2 to take over fourth. Houston Colts defeated New Bourdage was the big hero-- he doubled with two men out in the fifth frame and scampered home on Phiper's single, to score the only run of the ball) York Mets 3-2. Juan Marichal (9-4) checked the Reds on seven hits in the |game--his own winner. \Giants. Marichal clinched it FOLEY'S WIN HANDILY with a single off Jim O'Toole In the tthe lnteesCounty Lae-|E 50) Ed Bailey" Big e g me, r ju , | Foley's Pleabine won handily|fice fly and Jose Pagan stroked over the Policemen, 14-4. ja double. The Reds scored their The winners got a run in the fun ie ie coleman on a homer irst frame on a walk and an : error, plus a single. In the| Orlando Cepeda drove in four second stanza, they scored five) runs "i go oe _ runs for a big 6-0 lead. They|caP w! wo homers. ree- added three in the 'third and|run shot in the first and a five runs in the fourth frame.|bases-empty job in the fifth |Police were weak in the pitch-|that eventulaly proved to be the ee, te ny 7; ickets'"' ing their undoing. an oiles hit a two - run Foley's scored seven of theirjhomer in the fifth for the Reds, j14 runs on walks--and in all,jwho chased Mike McCormick |they had an even dozen of free|(3-2) in the eighth and scored ones, two in the ninth off Stu Miller Maxwell, on the mound for|before Don Larsen came on to |Foley's, was stingy with walksjend it with the tying runs on briee the Police had few scoring ro Moe Drabowsky (1-5) was jchances. McHugh, Reid, Jen-|the loser. ; ad ikins, Mandryk and Jemison had| Burdette (4-4), recording his) opener and drove in the win- ning run in a two-run seventh inning that put it away for the SPORTS CALENDAR To Yanks snapped a string of 25 score-| less innings compiled by the! Yankee right - hander. MARIS HITS HOMER Roger Maris hit home run No, 11 in the third inning after the Yanks had moved ahead in the first on Phil Linz' single, 'a sacrifice by Bobby Richard- son and Johnny Blanchard's single. The loser was Yankee Nemesis Frank Lary (1-4) now 28-11 lifetime against New York. Wickersham, reliever turned \starter, won his fourth against one loss as a front-liner with a three-hitter for the Athletics took a three-run outburst in the;and brought his over - all rec- sixth inning to snap a 33 tie'ord to an impressive 7-2. White and subdue the Twins. Felix|Sox starter Juan Pizarro (3-5), Torres' single drove in the tie-|who allowed only eight hits, lost breaker as the Angels got the it when a single by Manny Jim- benefit of four walks in the in-'enez, Gino Cimoli's triple and ning. la single by Joe Azcue scored Los Angeles managed only two runs in the eighth. five hits off starter Joe Bonik-| Frank Malzone drove in the owski (5-5) and his successors. first three Red Sox runs with Don Lee (5-3), acquired fromja single and tworun homer Minnesota last week, won it in|while Carroll Hardy knocked in his first appearance against his|the clincher with a double in former teammates with relief|the third and robbed Jim Gen- help from Art Fowler and Jackitile of a grand-slam homer by league lead into third place. The Yankees took over the top spot with a 2-1 triumph over Detroit Tigers while Cleveland Indians,. rained out at Washing- ton, moved percentage points ahead of Minnesota into second place. Both are a half-game be- hind New York. Kansas City Athletics edged Chicago White Sox 2-1 on Dave Wickersham's three-hitter and Boston Red Sox squeezed by Baltimore Orioles 4-3 in other games. Although Thomas provided the fireworks for the Angels, it Beaches Major Fastball League -- Randall-Roy Metals vs Oshawa Tony's at Alexan, dra Park, 8.00 p.m. UAW League --Karn's Drugs vs Corvair, at Alexandra Park, east diamond, and Ward's Bil- liards vs Plaza Food, at Alex- andra Park, west diamond, both games at 6.30 p.m. East Toronto Ladies' Junior League Oshawa Scugog Cleaners vs Agincourt, at Agin- court 7.45 p.m. South Ontario County League --Port Perry at Pickering, 8.15 .m. Oshawa Minor Association -- (Kiwanis Bantam League) -- Zion at Valleyview; North Osh- awa at Woodview; Rundle at Lake Vista; Fernhill at Sunny- side; Storie at Kingside; East- view at Southmead; Nipigon at Connaught; all games at 6.30 Cardinal dressing room Tues- day night squeezing the handle|ing room during of a bat with his right hand,|sometimes I sit at home. 1 trying to build up the muscles/pinch-hit in my head--not that in his injured wrist. / good place to die." ning and catching balls, but not 'Minoso May Play, In 2 Weeks Time ST. LOUIS (AP) -- "'It's toojbatting. "The doctor told me late for me to be afraid of the not to swing yet, just tighten wall, to be afraid of the ball," |up on the bat." He expects to said Minnie Minoso. "'It will) start batting five to 10 minutes a happen, I could not be'a day this weck. afraid." He hopes to be able to play He sat in the empty St. Louis in 10 days to two weeks. "Sometimes I sit in the dress- the game, I think I do better than other The 40 - year - old veteran men--but it is hard not to play. fractured his head and his wrist It makes you mad that you last month when he hit the con- can't do anything for the team crete left-field wall in Busch|--just practice and hope for Stadium while chasing a ball.' them." He is on the disabled list. In his 12 years in the majors, "I got hurt on the job,'"" he Minoso compiled a batting av- said in broken English. "There erage of .304 prior to this year. is nothing I can do, That is des-|He pulled a rib muscle early tiny. |in the season and never hit his "If I die on the field, it is a\ stride. When he was injured his average was .194. Minoso would not make any prediction on how well he will Minoso said he has been run- pm. . BASEBALL Oshawa Legion Minor Assoc, (Pee Wee League) -- Rough-| ley Ins. vs Firemen's Assoc. at Alexandra Park, north dia-| mond; Houdaille Industries vs Dairy Queen, at Harman Park; Spring. leaning back into the seats in Bill Stafford (6:3) held the the sixth to grab a long drive| Tigers to three hits until the|by the Orioles' slugger with the) ninth when singles by Rocky|bases loaded, preserving the| Colavito, Vie Wertz and Chicojtriumph for Ike Delock (1-0). Fernandez scored a run andiJack Fisher (1-2) lost it. Giants Halt Slump, Take Two From Reds |beat the Dodgers at Milwaukee| relief ace Elroy Face. Glen for the first time in 11 deci-|Hobbie (1-8) lost it. sions since July 13, 1956. He} Rookie Fred: Whitfield tagged retired 19 in a row at onea two-run homer off Paul stretch while the Braves were| Brown (0-5) in the eighth inning pounding Johnny Podres (3-5)\to win it for the Cardinals. and two successors. Hank Ar-|Brown had opened the seventh ron, who had three hits, and Ed|with a double and scored to put Mathews each hit-home run No.|the Phillies in front 2-1. He al- 11 as Gus Bell, Frank Bolling|lowed only four singles until and Tommie Aaron also con-|Julian Javier worked him for a nected. Mathews' homer was|walk and Whitfield connected. the 38ist of his career, tying)The victory, the eighth in nine him for eighth place in the all-'games for St. Louis, went to time list with the Yankees'|former Phil Don Ferrarese Mickey Mantle. (1-2). Outhit by the Cubs 11-8, the) Joe Amalfitano's single drove Pirates scored two runs in the|in pinch runner Roman Mejias fisrt and two in the second for|with the winning run and cli- their fourth . straight victory.!maxed a two-run uprising in the Singles by Bob Skinner, Dick|last of the ninth that gave the Stuart and Roberto Clemente|Colts their victory over the plus George Altman's error ac-|Mets. An infield single by Billy counted for the first - inning Goodman and Pidge Browne's runs, The next two came acrossjpinch-hit triple off Craig And- on doubles by Don Hoak andierson (3-6) preceded Amalfi- Bill Virdon and Dick Groat's|tano's game-winner. Ken John- single. The Pirates then held on|son (4-6) was the winner with a behind Harvey Haddix (5-2) and' five-hitter. Wings Blanked -- By Suns Again By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vic Davalillo of Jacksonville Suns, who has been making a mess of the International tled home on Larry Brown's double. Buster Narum, ace of the Red Wing staff, was the victim. |Lovell Drugs ¥s Ajax Lions, at |SOCCER |(1st Round of Challenge Cup) League batting race, now has turned his attention to home runs, He has hit two in the last two games and has five for the sea- son. He's still six back of Pancho Herrera of Buffalo Bisons, and Steve Demeter of Toronto Maple Leafs, who share the league lead. Davailillo's homer Tuesday night was all pitcher Ron Tay- lor of 'oronto needed. The Jacksonville righthander shut out Rochester Red Wings 2-0. It was Taylor's second straight four-hitter and the eighth shut- out tossed by the Suns' staff this year. Davalillo's homer was a 385- foot clout in the third inning. The other Suns' run was scored Atlanta Crackers belted Syar- cuse Chiefs 4-0 in a rain-curtail- jed game, Columbus Jets edged the Bisons 9-8 in 11 innings and the Leafs dealt Richmond Vir- ginians their seventh straight defeat with a 6-5 triumph. The Leafs lost Demeter for about a week when he suffered knee gashes while sliding into home plate in the third inning. Atlanta has won four games in a row and Cracker right- hander Bob Sadowski hasn't al- lowed a run in the last 16 2-3 jinnings, But he was in trouble jwhen rain started to fall with two out in the top of the eighth inning with runners on first and third. Ronnie Plaza tripled and scored on Joe McLain's single in the sixth to break a 0-0 dead- |the most success at the plate,| second complete game in a row|in the fourth when Tony Curry|lock and give Sadowski all the |for the losers phesatioecteok tet im | jand fourth consecutive triumph, walked, stole second and hus-'runs he needed. | Rundle Bantams | BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS | Upset Woodview | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Taylor; Johnson (4-6) and Ra National League WL Pct. GBL 43 20 .683 42 21 33 25 | 32 25. Rundle Park Bantams played| their Kiwanis Bantam Softball League postponed game with |Woodview Park, last night at ithe Rundle diamond and upset Los Angeles San Francisco Pittsburgh St. Louis jnew,. Probable Pitchers Today Los Angeles (Koufax 7-2) at Milwaukee (Spahn 6-6) night. | San Francisco (Sanford 6-5)| Probable Pitchers Today Detroit (Mossi 6-5) at New |York (Sheldon 4-2). Baltimore (Estrada 3-7) at |Boston (Schwall 1-7) night. Cleveland (Donovan 8-2 and Ramos 3-2) at Washington (Os- Palmer Favorite | In Second Stanza OAKMONT, Pa. (AP)--Arnold/| Palmer, his confidence booming like his drives, is a 5-to-1 favor- ite to gain the second leg of professional golf's grand slam in the United States open cham- pionship beginning Thursday at the rugged Oakmont Country Club course. "I'm out of the slump with my irons, if that's what it was, and my finger isn't bad at all," the Masters champion from Lat- robe, Pa., said Tuesday night after firing a two-under-par 69 in his last major warm-up on the 6,894-yard course he has played on and off since he was a youngster. "You could say I'm optimis- tic,' he said. "My irons are back in shape and I'm driving and putting pretty well. And if my finger doesn't get any worse, it's not, going to restrict me at all. The only time it really hurts is when I'm signing autographs." Two stitches came loose Tuesday in the inch-long gash Palmer suffered on the ring finger on his right hand Sunday night while he was putting lug- gage into the trunk of his car. "T pulled them out and it's a little tender, but I don't think' the visiting Woodview boys 3-2 jin an extra inning thriller. Woodview scored two runs in the first inning and then, thanks to fine pitching by Graham, they failed to score again. Leaming it'll need to be sewn up again," held Rundle off until the fifth he said. when Morrison singled and scor- Support a pokey to ed on a wild pitch. In the 7th, defending champion Gene Lit- trailing 2-1, Rundle tied it up Saapaay eel = ee par $F Ak, when Rivers singled and Lloyd mont layout Tuesday--and such' doubled. other tournament - tested stars) Rundle scored the winning run as Billy Casper, Gary Player, in the 8th inning, after one out, Dow Finsterwald, Mike Sou-),. ; chak, Doug Sanders, Doug| ¥en Stuart, Gray and Rivers Ford, Jack Nicklaus and, of/ll connected in succession. course, Sam Snead, who will) make his 22nd try for his first Open title. Three Canadians are in the 72-hole event--Stan Leonard of YESTERDAY'S | Vancouver, Al Balding of Tor- STARS onto and Adrien Bigras of Mont- (eicuni an ___ By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REMEMBER WHEN... ?).,2tits -- Dave Wicker. **/sham, Kansas City Athletics, By THE CANADIAN PRESS |won his fourth in five games as Jimmy Braddock, onetime | ae relief recipient, gained the 2 Starter after beinning season world heavyweight boxing |as relief pitcher, limiting Chi- title 27 years ago tonig' when he dethroned Ma Baer on a 15-round decision at New York, The New Jer- sey battler, who had been in dire financial circum- stances, scored one of the ring's biggest upsets in years, Braddock lost the ti- tle two years later to Joe Louis. |2-1 victory. Batting ~-- Hank Aaron, Mil- waukee Braves, went 3-for-3 jwith lith homer and two Singles, pacing 17 - hit attack jthat overwhelmed National | League - levding Los Angeles) 'Dodgers 15-2. ¢ bo }HR: Cin--Coleman (9). |cago White Sox to three hits for P 31:25. 28 31. 25 34 24 34 Cincinnati Milwaukee Houston Philadelphia Chicago 20 40 .333 21% New York 16 39 .291 23 Los Angeles 100000010- 2 60) Milwaukee 533 200 02x - 15171) Podres (3-5) Ortega (2) Roe- buck (8) and Roseboro; Bur- dette (4-4) Crandall. HRs: Mil-- Bell (2) Mathews (11) H. Aaron (11) Bolling (5) T. Aaron (2). San Fran. 000000 200- 2111 Cincinnati 000 100 000- 1 70 Marichal (9-4) and Bailey; O'Toole (4-7) and Edwards. 414 16% San Fran. 320010001- 7 81 Cincinnati 000 020 012- 5 83 McCormick (3-2) Miller (8) Larsen (9) and Bailey; Drab- owsky (1-5) Klippstein (4) Sis- ler (6) Wills (8) and Foiles. HRs: SF--Cepeda 2 (17); Cin-- Foiles (1). Pittsburgh 220000000- 4 81 Chicago 000 200 010- 3112 Haddix (5-2) Face (8) and Burgess; Hobbie (1-8) Schultz (8) Elston (9) and Tappe, Thacker (9). hila. 000 001 100- 2 80 St. Louis 001 000 02x- 3 51 Brown (0-5) Baldschun (8) and Dalrymple; Broglio, Mc- Daniel (7) Ferrarese (1-2) (8) and Sawatski, Schaffer (9), HR: StL--Whitfield (2). | New York 000001100- 2 52) Houston 010 000 002- 3.62 { Miller, Anderson (3-6) (6) and|(8); LA--L. Thomas 2 (9). | at Cincinnati (Purkey" 10-1) teen 2-5 and Stenhouse 4-1) night. night. New York (Hook 4-6) at Hous-| Minnesota (Kralick 5-4) at ton (Bruce 4-1) night. Los Angeles (Chance 4-3) night. Philadelphia (Bennett 2-1) at Chicago (Buzhardt 6-5) at; St. Louis (Gibson 7-4) night. |Kansas City (Bass 2-5 or : Walker 6-4) night. Pittsburgh (McBean 5-3) at Chicago (Koonce 4-1). International League WL Pet. GBL American League Jacksonville 38 16 .704 WL Pct. GBL Buffalo 31-21 596 6 32 22 .593 Toronto 28 23 549 814 31 22 585 1% Atlanta 27 27 500 11 34 25 576 = 4% |Rochester 24 27 471 12% 31 24 .564 1% |Columbus 21 30 .412 154% 28 27 .509 414 |Syracuse 20 32 .385 17 29 30 492 514 |Richmond 21 34 .382 17% 28 30.483 6 |Richmond 020.000300- 5 74 26 33 .441 814|Toronto 103 001 Olx- 6111 23 32 .418 914 | Lasko, Wieand (3) Blaylock 19 36 .345 13% |(7) Kipp (8) and Hall; Ridzik, 600 000 001- 1 61|)Heman (9) and Thompson, New York 101 00000x- 2 pei : ante. 9162 Lary (1-4) Nischwitz (8) and| Buffalo 012 140 00- $100 Brown; Stafford (6-3) and How-| Parsons, Priddy (7) Black- ard, HR: NY--Maris (11), burn (8) and Brand; Locke, Chicago 010 000 000- 1.3 | Ricketts (1) Birrer (8) Lopez Kansas City 000000 02x- 2 80/(8) Surkont (9) Seward (11) and j . | Lipski. Pizarro (3-5) and Carreon;|p.)... 4 Wickersham (7-2) and Azcue. || Rochester peop spay 4 ? Jack' ville Baltimore 000 002 010- 3100 , Boston 103 000 00x» 4120 Narum, Luebke (8) and Kra-| : jvitz; Taylor and Jones. Fisher (1-2) Hall (3) Stock! Syracuse 000 000 0 51 (7) and Landrith; Delock (1-0)| Atlanta 000 0013 62 Sad- New York Cleveland Minnesota Los Angeles Detroit Chicago Baltimore Kansas City Boston Washington Detroit - 6 - 4 Radatz (7) Earley (9) and Till-| (Called after 7, rain) man. HR: Bsn--Malzone (7). McLain and Coleman; Minnesota = 020 001 002- 5 71 owski and McCarver. Los Angeles 102003 10x- 7 51 Games Today Bonikowski (5-5) T. Sadowski) Columbus at Buffalo (N) (6) Stange (7) and Battey; Lee) Richmond at Toronto (N) (5-3) Fowler (7) Spring (9) and) Syracuse at Atlanta (N) Rodgers. HRs:: Minn -- Green| Rochester at Jacksonville (N) People's Clothing vs 'Oshawa Auto-Trim, at Eastview Park; Bolahood's vs Whitby, at Whit- by; all games at 6.30 p.m. (Bantam League) -- Jury and Ajax, 6.30 p.m. | Oshawa and District Assoc.-- -- Rangers vs Kickers, at 8.00 p .m, LAWN BOWLING Men's Doubles Tournament (Brading Trophy) at Bowman- ville Lawn Bowling Club, 1.00 p.m. THURSDAY SOFTBALL Oshawa City and District "Major League" Doubleheader: Heffering's Imperials vs Mac- Lean's Esso, at 6.45 p.m. and Cobourg Brokers vs Tony's Ven- dors, at 8.15 p.m., both games at Alexandra Park. Inter-County League: Fo- ley's Plumbing vs Fernhill Gen- osha Aces, at Alexandra Park, west diamond; Police Assoc. vs Ukrainian Aces, at Bathe Park; both games at 6.45 p.m. Southern Ontario County Lea- gue -- Mount Zion vs Brooklin at Brooklin, 8.15 p.m. UAW League -- Body Shop vs Kent's Western Tire, at Alex- andra Park, west diamond, 1.30 p.m. BASEBALL Lakeshore Intermediate Lea- gue -- Orono vs Oshawa, at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Sta- dium, 7.15 p.m. Oshawa Legion Minor Assoc.-- (Bantam League) -- Jury and Lovell vs Oshawa Dairy, at Eastview Park and Victor's Sports vs Whitby, at Whitby; both games at 6.30 p.m. Yankees returned relief pitcher Hal Reniff to the active roster Tuesday after he had served six months of military service. Re- ey a 23-year-old righthander, last season. a highly regarded two-year-old, won her second of three starts at Woodbine Tuesday and, in defeating Miss Britannia, set up the second smallest quinella in = history of Ontario thorough- $2.10. and $2.10, through the mud and provided for a $3.90 quinella. was May 30, 1959, when Victoria Park defeated Royal Wyn and Master Bill. Master Bill dead - heated for second place, accounting for a $3.50 quinella. a won by more than five lengths. Janshar was third. furlongs in 1.00 1-5. noon was the Toronto and Dis- trict Curling Association purse for $4,500 claimers, Falsun won the mile grass-course event and returned $16.60 to win. She de- feated Swap Off and Falls View. 2 |play when he returns to action. | "I'll be doing my best. If |God was tough on me, maybe now he will figure my punish- ment is over." Half Reniff Back On Hurling Duties NEW YORK (AP)--New York! Baltimore Has AHL Franchise CLEVELAND (AP) -- Balti- more was admitted Tuesday as vt ata 24 . ~\a member of the American wise ' Hockey League. The vote of the Stitchnsew league's board of governors was not announced, but Baltimore jneeded six of the eight votes Wi F tur least in the closed session, Ins ea e | Baltimore becomes the ninth # jmember of the league and the At Woodbine |16th city to hold a franchise in TORONTO (CP)--Stitchnsew,| ad a 2-0 record with the Yanks the league's 26-season history. | Later in their three-day ses- sion which opened Monday, the governors will consider sched- uling for the coming season. Last winter 70 games were played, and: there was talk the new schedule would call for 72 games. Other teams in the league are Quebec, Buffalo, Cleveland, Hershey, Pittsburgh, Prov- dence, Rochéster and Spring- field. As yet no name has been chosen for the new club which will be the first professional hockey team for Baltimore since 1956 when fire destroyed Carlin's Park and cost Balti- more Clippers of the Eastern League a home rink. The Clip- pers' Eastern League franchise then moved to Charlotte, N.C. The Baltimore AHL entry will need to assemble player talent from the ground up, but it is understood negotiations already are well along for a working agreement with New York Ran- gers of the National Hockey League. Jim Balmer, general man- ager of Pittsburgh Hornets for 7 years, was renamed league red racing. Stitchnsew,. which paid $2.60, won easily The smallest quinella payoff Royal Wyn and Stitchnsew, sent to the post S$ 3-to-10 favorite by 6,063 fans, Stitchnsew travelled the five The co-feature of the after- (Midget League) -- Whitby vs Ajax, at Ajax and Beaton's Dairy vs UAW, at Alexandra Park; both games at 6.30 p.m. Leaside Junior League --Osh- awa Canadian Tire Legion- naires vs Laurie's Sports, at Talbot Park, 7.30 p.m. Larry Elliot clubbed his sec- ond homer of the game to en- able the Jets to whip the Bisons, who had battled back from. a seven-run count to send the game into overtime. The Bisons used six pitchers and they were battered for 16 hits. PILE UP MARGIN The Leafs piled up a -52 mar- gin over the Virginians in the first seven innings. But in the eighth Gary Thomas tied it with a three-run homer, The Leafs scored the deciding run in their half of the eighth on Ted Ka- zanski's single, a wild pitch by losing pitcher Gary Blaylock and Lou Johnson's single. Demeter was hurt during na attempted' double steal. Dem- eter, who was on third, and Sparky Anderson, on first, both tried to steal. Pitcher Ted Wieand threw to second but was too late to catch Anderson. The return throw to the plate was high and catcher Alan Hall leaped into the air to grab the ball. He came down heavily on the sliding Demeter, gashing the Leaf star with his spikes. Dem- eter suffered cuts that required 14 stitches to close. Molinas, former Columbia Uni- versity and professional basket- ball star, surrendered at Dis- trict-Attorney Frank §. Hogan's office Tuesday with a basketball bribery indict- ment in North Carolina. living free on $5,000 bail pending trial in connection with basketball bribery charges in New York. ment in North Carolina where he was named with five other cya In the North Carolina case e Aaron Wagman, Joseph Green, Joseph Hacken, David Goldberg and Steve Lekemetros in the Bribery of Don Gallagher, a North Carolina State player, to shave points against Wake For-| est Dec. 5, 1959. charged Molinas with heading a ring that allegedly conspired to bribe 22 players at 12 colleges to fix 25 basketball contests. have pleaded guilty in New York and are awaiting sentenc- president. Jack Molinas Turns Himself Over To D.A. NEW YORK (AP) -- Jack! in connection Molinas, -year- in' Brooklyn, 'has. been| CAMADIAM WEEKLY .. .@ bright and lively new magazine supplement for thewholefamilyin the SATURDAY DAILY STAR He faces a three-count indict- allegedly conspired ' with In the New York case, Hogan) plus 16 pages of COLOR COMICS Wagman, Green and Hacken THIS IS WHY ALL CONTRACTORS CHOOSE McCullough Lumber As Their Source for Building Supplies @ PRICES ARE RIGHT! Volume buying from top distributors and manufacturers pro- vide contractors with best prices @ MECHANIZED LOADING -- 3 TRUCKS For fast, efficient delivery where and when the contractors went it. @ TOPS IN SERVICE Contractors receive finest service before, during, and after materials are purchased. @ FREE ESTIMATES Call our office (728-4688). estimates at no extra cost. We provide building material "A CUSTOMER IS THE MOST IMPORTANT PERSON IN OUR BUSINESS" 7 sd LUM BER COMPANY. Uo. 728-4688 Comte BUIL 'NG MATERIALS "WHERE Service Comes First" LE, Lis IN