THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 6, 1964 Phils' Sweep Series From San Francisco, Now In First Alone By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer The gusty wind that shook San Francisco over the weekend wasn't one of Candelstick Park's ordinary breezes. It was created by Philadelphia Phillies on their way past the Giants into first place in the National Le ; The Phillies, who failed, to place a man higher than third in the voting for the NL all- star team, looked like first stringers Sunday as they com- pleted a three-game sweep of the Giants with a 2-1 victory. There was Richie Allen, whose E five hits had sparked the first ¢wo victories Friday and Satur- day, making two putouts on one play as some loose base running broke the back of a Giant rally in the seventh Inning. There was Jack Baldschun completing his second save of Crandall dashed for second and Alou went to third while the Phillies were chasing Cepeda: Allen, attempting to get Cran- dall, fired to second and Alou suddenly broke toward the plate. The Giant rookie was caught in a rundown and even- tually tagged out by Allen, com- pleting a double play. In other NL games, St. Louis Cardinals topped Cincinnati Reds 3-1, Milwaukee Braves whacked Chicago Cubs 7-1, Los Angeles Dodgers blanked New York Mets 5-0 and Pittsburgh |Pirates smacked Houston Colts The Phils took 11 innings to jtame the Giants 5-2 Saturday while Chicago shaded Milwau- kee 4-3, Houston downed the Pi- rates 3-1 and the Reds and Dodgers took 3-2 decisions over the Cards and Mets. "I just made a mistake," Alou said of his dash which ended Sunday's Giant rally. "I don't know why I ran." Manager Gene Mauch, de- lighted by the sweep, had time to reflect on a remark he made following Saturday's victory which put the Phillies in first place on the pennant race. "Tt's nice to be in first place on the fourth," said Mauch. "But I'd rather be there on the fifth." Sandy Koufax won his eighth straight and 12th of the season as the Dodgers moved into a fifth-place tie with St. Louis. Koufax, who has allowed only six runs in 69 innings during the streak, got batting support from Willie Davis who drove in three runs with a homer and a dou- ble. Seventh-inning singles by Bob Skinner and Tim McCarver broke a_1-1 tie and gave the Cardinals their victory as Roger Craig allowed 10 hits in going the distance for his fifth vie- tory against four losses. Wade Blasingame won his first major league game, hurl- ing an eight-hitter against the Cubs. Mike De La Hoz ham- mered his first NL homer and Joe Torre clubbed a pair of doubles as the Braves routed all-star pitcher Dick Elisworth. Jerry Lynch clouted his 16th career pinch homer to start the Canadian Craft Ends Third In Yachting Race HALIFAX (CP)y-- Sitzmark IV, a 44-foot sl out of Rye, N.Y., Saturday won the second Bermuda-to-Halifax)ocean yacht race on corrected time. The craft skippered by her owner, Dr. Walter Newman, reached Halifax at 11:26 p.m. Saturday, about one hour and 10 minutes after Early Dawn, a 46-foot yawl out of Annapolis, Md. Early Dawn under C. Wilson MacNeeley placed second. First arrival was the 61-foot navy yawl Pickel, which sailed across the finish line at 3:06 p.m, Pickle, only Canadian craft | TO DET Tg ee Bite ENTERS THEATRE - Ray Walston of TV'e My Fa Ronald W. Bilsky, D.C. vorit Martian program broke ; into acing an Texas lay] Ser. ory gaia Pe house with a part that required Nervous Stomach him to speak one word: 100 King St. E. 728-5156 "Hello." Capture the Moment with -- é Bridal Portraits and Albums House, Church, Studio Reception © PHONE 723-3680 « in the three-boat race, finished third on corrected time. The yachts left Hamilton, Ber- muda, Monday after competing in the Newport, R.1.-to-Bermuda ocean race. TAKES CHAMPIONSHIP BROCKVILLE (CP) -- Jona- than Wyatt, 15, of Brockville, Sunday won the Canadian cham- pionship. for international 14- foot dinghies, winning four of BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS E the season, striking out Willie'gy qa ASSOCIATED PRESS|/All-Star game at New York Mays with the tying run on base i in the eighth. He also set the Giants down in order in the ninth, fanning four of the six ® batters he faced. And there was tight pitching. strong defence and clutch hit- American League w Pet. GBL 632 -- 595 592 y) 48 28 44 3 45 |Baltimore jChicago New York 3 National League | we Pet. Philadelphia 47 28 .627 'San Francisco 47 31 .603 GBL 42 35 545 6 | Jacksonville |Buffalo 14%4| Rochester International League W. L..Pet. GBL 49 44 42 43 33 33 34 35 8 -- 571 2% 553 4 551 |Syracuse |Toronto {Richmond ® jincinnatiC ' |Pittsburgh W%\Los Angeles |Minnesota 43 37 | Detroit 41 35 37 43 526 6 449 12 40 38 7 538 494 10 533 494 35 39 bat of Braves' first baseman Gene Oliver, as Braves' catch- er Joe Torre heads for third. He went on to score on the hit, in the first inning of Sunday's game in Milwaukee. NOT QUITE! -- Chicago Cubs shortstop Jim Stewart leaps, but in vain, as he couldn't stretch quite far enough, as he tried to spear a line-drive to left field off the ting to cool off the Giants, who had won 12 of their previous 14. 'The clutch play of Sunday's game came in the seventh with Dennis Bennett nursing a 2-1 Phillie lead after Jim Hart's leadoff homer. Bennett struck eut Orlando Cepeda but the slugger reached first when the strike got away. Alou followed with a moving Cepeda to third TAG CEPEDA OUT When Del Crandall bounced to Allen, the rookie third baseman |caught Cepeda in a rundown and eventually tagged him out. single, | MANNY JIMENEZ '481 11% 457 1344 447 14 | |Boston |Los Angeles j\Cleveland Kansas City 397 18 Washington 386 19% Saturday's Results {Minnesota 5-1 New York 7-2 Los Angeles 5 Boston 13 \Cleveland 0 Chicago 4 | Washington 3 Detroit 5 Kansas City 6 Baltimore 6 (Game called, curfew. Will be; replayed) Sunday's Results Minnesota 9 New York 2 /Kansas City 3 Baltimore 1 |Los Angeles 6 Boston 9 |Cleveland 0-0 Chicago 2-5 Washington 6-0 Detroit 7-3 | Today's Games |No games scheduled Tuésday's Game 39 38 40 40 494 487 \St. Louis 10 |Milwaukee |Chicago 36 38 486 |Houston 37 43 .463 iNew York 28 58 .284 Saturday's Results Chicago 4 Milwaukee 3 Philadelphia 5 San Francisco 2 St. Louis 2 Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh 1 Houston 3 |New York 2 Los Angeles 3 Sunday's Results St. Louis 3 Cincinnati 1 Chicago 1 Milwaukee 7 10% 12% 27 New York 0 Los Angeles 5 Pittsburgh 7 Houston 1 Today's Games No games scheduled Tuesday's Game All-Star game at New York |Columbus 10%) Philadelphia 2 San Francisco 1) 33 44 .429 13144 Atlanta 2% 53 .329 21% Saturday's Results |Toronto 5-3 Buffalo 6-4 Syracuse 2-4 Rochester 4-2 Jacksonville 0-6 Richmond 3-0 Atlanta 4-5 Columbus 9-3 Sunday's Results | Toronto 4 Buffalo 6 |Rochester 8-1 Syracuse 12-0 | Atlanta 5-0 Columbus 7-1 Jacksonville 7 Richmond 5 Today's Games Toronto at Rochester Syracuse at Buffalo Richmond at Columbus Atlanta at Jacksonville seven races in the two-day re- | gatta held here as part of Brock- vilel's first summer carnival. Second was Joseph Springer of ithe Trident Yacht Club, King- | ston. Pirates' late surge and Manny Mota smashed a three-run shot to end it. Dick Farrell failed for the fifth time to win his 11th |game. GOING WEST? GO PART OF THE WAY BY WATER! Break your rail trip west with a leisurely voyage across the Great Lakes! Enjoy a refreshing 2-day boat trip between Port McNicoll, Sault Ste. Marie and Fort William. By day: scenic beauty, cool, fresh-water breezes, deck sports and lounging in the sun! By night: dancing, promenading, CREAT LANES CRUISE, Sailings twice weekly from June 6th to September 9th. Westbound Wednesday and Saturday from Port McNicoll. Eastbound Tuesday and Saturday from Fort William. All inclusive 5-day Cruise--Georgian Bay-- Lake Huron--Lake Superior--from $90.00. Information and reservations from any Canadian Pacific ticket office FOR THE FINEST IN Custom Made DRAPES M. &G, Dry Goods & Draperies 74 CELINA STREET PHONE 723-7827 of your own travel agent For The Finest Meats and Pastries North American and European Style Lit @ SPECIALLY PROCESSED IN OUR OWN PLANT Locations: OSHAWA DOWNTOWN SHOPPING CENTRE 12 SIMCOE ST, N. "728-1111 728.5487 Takes Problems Out 'Canuck And Yank; On Leading Orioles Win Henley Pairs: fore . Jimenez HENLEY ON THAMES (CP); Club, the defending champion By MURRAY CHASS | : "tora tee : Associated Press Sports Writer|report to Dallas of the Pacific|t ird Sunday be! : ager | rhe Manny Jimenez, the ram-|Coast League, perhaps after re-|doubled. Rocky Colavito then| --Canada's big John Lecky and|Their time was 6:25, two sec- bunctious revolutionary stili|calling home as he left it in the|singled in Jimenez. Bob John-| an American partner won the| onds behind their record but! may have problems "put he|spring. That's when the out-json homered in the third for| silver goblets and a crew of/good enough to beat London by won't get- any sympathy fromifielder was fined $200 for re- Baltimore. Pero aang took the) 60 yards Baltimore Orioles. \porting late to spring training.| Harmon Killebrew ~clouted|"7#nd "fa enge Cup on the fis MAN TO BEAT |" have to fight in revolu-|his 30th home run and added| 2! day Saturday of the Royal ' liane powered. te lout ion." ne explained atte time three -inges as" tbe Twins Samer, Tata, ede Brand ee Vancouver, sow victory over the American! Jimenez also survived Dallas.|stopped Whitey Ford's 10-game| .). i, shan ionships swe "| studying at Cambrlé e Thier: os 4 Sunday less|!" fact, he's hitting .283 since/winning streak, handing the ace| ,,, 8 sp aici tie les : 8 League leaders Sunday less)).. return to Kansas City. lsouthpaw his first defeat since! The bulk of the nine titles|Sity, emerged as one of the men | : open to overseas competitors|!0 beat when the Olympics open) than 24 hours after he ripped) A 1 Baltimore pitching for ee caktes, Mane ne ee : |went to Americans, They won|&t Tokyo in October. home runs in ifve innings. _ [ZOnIS | ad Now York Yan-|; 10°, White Sox increased thelr/the Diamond Sculls, Thames| He and Kiely, also a student The 25-year-old native of the}, .2¢ 9.9 Chicago White Sox eurout mastery over the Indians) Cup, Princess Elizabeth Cup forjat Cambridge, set a record of Dominican Republic dou-\snut out Cleveland Indians 2-0\,, three straight games. Juan| schoolboy eights and a half-|7:38 Wednesday. On Saturday bled home two runs and scored|.nq 5.0, Detroit Tigers ate scattered seven hits in| share in the silver goblets for|they did 7:53 for an easy two- the third as the Athletics!wasnington Senators 7-6 and 97.9| the opener as Mike Hershberger! paired oars contributed by John|length victory over Mike Hall climbed out of the cellar for|.nq Roston Red Sox downed Los |2"4 Pete Ward slammed con-| Kiely, Lecky's shell-mate and Robert Napier of Britain's only the second day in more! anceles Angels 9-6 secutive homers in the first in-| put it was the red-shirted So-| Leander Club. Lecky and Kiely than a month : : P ning. Jack Kralick allowed only! viet eight rowing 'for the Lithu-|Were also rowing for Leander. Jiminez has experienced as-/YANKS BEAT TWINS TWICE |W more hits the rest of the) anian Club Zjalghiris Viljnjus|) The North Americans jointly a |that was the most spectacular|weight 359 pounds and out- sorted difficulties since) The Yankees downed the| ¥ M f his rookie season in 1962 when\Twins 7-5 and 2-1 Saturday| Joel Horlen came back with) at this quiet hamlet on the|weighed their opponents by 'Athletics'. owner Charles O. Fin-|while Detroit whipped Washing-|4 four-hitter in the nightcap, pet-| Thames River, 30 miles from|nearly 30 pounds ley rodered him to hit home|ton 5-3, Chicago blanked Cleve-/mitting the Indians just two hits! the centre of London It took them only a quarter-| 8. [land 4-0 and Boston clobbered|fter the second inning. | In the semi-finals the Soviets|mile to open a half-length lead His latest problem came early|the Angels 13-5. The Kansas) Joe Sparma hurled a four-hit- .yoeq majestically up the one-|and the struggling Britons last month when he threatened |City-Baltimore game was halted|*€! for the Tigers in the second) mije, 550-yard course to break|couldn't catch up. By the half game. He also led the offensive|the eyent record of 6:30 by/their lead was two lengths and to quit because the Athletics|by curfew with the score tied) : r a decided to ship him to the mi-/6-6 after nine innings. jpunch. against the Senators,| seyen seconds they dropped their stroke to 32. The Britcns hurried along at Errors by Don Blasingame| the University of London Boat! lengths until the race was won and Jim King helped Detroit ito y |driving in two runs with a triple; "i 3 ee i Pitches Jenn ©'Dosgaue 6n8 in the fifth and scoring on Billy) on Saturday aay result nds PR ; Pnitona Aouble. |predictable: They overwhelmed) 36 but the gap remained at two e Bisons Take Four score three runs and break a 4-4 tie in the fifth inning of the opner. From Maple Lea 5 Boston won a slugfest from jthe Angels on Tony Conigliaro's ithree-run homer in the eighth. three| Willie Smith's run-scoring sin- igle had given the Angels a 6-5 lead in the seventh, but Dick Stuart tied it minutes later with By THE CANADIAN PRESS |series from - Richmond Up to Friday night, the chief} games to one thing holding back Buffalo Bis- Jack Hamilton pitched six in- ons in their International|nings of no-hit ball for Syracuse), home. rin League campaign was their in-|in the ae ice nightcap} 4 ability to cope with visits by| against the Red Wings but three sei Maple Lents. From now] Singles cost him the decision af-| BREAKS OWN RECORD on, the Leafs can do the worry-|ter the teams totalled 29 hits in| MOSCOW (AP) -- Tatyana) ing, ithe free-swinging opener. ho of Russia, a ---- i r four) At Columbus, the Jets scored|cular television engineer from) Peg ity May te bah Tor. their winning runs in their Jast/Leningrad, bettered her own| onto 6-4 and completed a four-| turn at bat in both games, pick- world record in the women's, game sweep that transformed|ing up three runs in the bottom broad jump Saturday with a) their inglorious 0-3 home record| f the eighth to take the opener mighty leap of 21 feet, 11% against 'the Leafs to a 3-3 mar-|4Nd picking up the only tally of inches in a track and field meet. | gin arid consolidated Buffalo's the second on two singles, a sac-/The 27-year-old Russian girl's| hold on. second place rifice: and a wild pitch, lola record was 21-8%. Jacksonville Suns maintained a 1%-game edge over the Bis-| ons by outslugging Richmond Virginians 7-5. Rochester Red Wings and Syracuse Chiefs pre- served their virtual third-place tle by splitting their second straight doubleheader, the Chiefs winning 12-8 and losing 1. Columbus Jets won a pair from the last place Atlanta Crackers 7-5 and 1-0 . The Bisons nipped Toronto 6-5 in 10 innings and 3-3 in Satur- day's Fourth of July double- header while everyone else split, Syracuse and Rochester traded 4-2 decisions, the Suns downed Richmond 6-0 after los- ing 3-0 and Columbus whipped Atlanta 9-4 before losig 5-4. Dick Smith, Cleon Jones, Pumpsie Green and Norm Sherry hit the homers at Buffalo Sunday as the frustrated Leafs outhit the Bisons for the third time in a row without a victory to show for it. Green's eighth-| inning blow off reliever Frank Funk was the :ame-winner Harry Fanok won his seventh of eight decisions as the Suns staked him to a four-run lead in the first inning to take thei gg R FIFTY ALEIN LABATT'S SUMMER STIVAL OF FLAVOUR & be " MR. AND MRS. MALCOLM C. BARNETT, owners of the Oshowo Business College, pictured above, wish to take this opportunity to express their sincere ap- preciation to the Principals and Teachers of 14 Second- | ary schools and 74 Elementary schools in this district for their co-operation in bringing to the attention of young people the Summer School Program at the Oshawa Business College. A capacity enrolment of over 100 students are attending Summer School sessions ot the Oshawa Business College. Summer School ends Friday, August 28th, 1964 Registrations for the August sessions are now being accepted on a very limited basis. Scarcity of 'Summer positions plus a heavy carry-over from regular day school has placed the number of desks available at a premium. Young people, unable to. find summer em- ployment, are urged to moke a reservation for the August session of Summer School so thot their summer will not be a total loss FALL TERM COMMENCES TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER IST, 1964 Registrations now being accepted Oshawa Business College 10 Simcoe St. North Dial 725-3375 FREE LITERATURE AVAILABLE ON REQUEST » OBLIGATION airery FABRICS. 3000 COLORS TO CHOOSE "FROM! By The Yard At HARLEIGH SUPPLIES (Oshawa Ltd.) Oshawe Shopping Centre 725-3012 €&s | ' YOOU00000000000 HN, OUUUU DOR) vy RAD O00 NYO UO yy) ; Summer Festival of Flavour with a retresh- ing bottle of "50" Ale--one of four great 60" is the ale to start with d stay te ot ate srioty ir ira 5k be ; with... an reatest taste variety in beer, look no with! See for yourself, Celebrate Labatt's es than Labatt's. . 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