Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Sep 1965, p. 8

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@ THE CRHAWA TIMES, Mondey, September 27, 1965 MARICHAL LOSES ACRIN Drysdale Wins 22nd, L.A. Tied For First and Pagliaroni in the 10th off against Cincinnati tonight, then | YESTERDAY'S STARS |L2 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting Zoilo Versalles, Twins, scored the first run after ague pen Washington Senators 2-1, Pitching -- Don Drysdale,|St. Louis Dodgers, posted his 22nd victory/San Francisco for the National nant by edgingjextended: its win nine games in 5 1-0-vietory Cardinals and ae with a five-hitter as Los Angeles|League lead. 3 pve smacking a triple and drove in the last run with a seventh- inning sacrifice fly as Minne- sota clinched the Arerican Worry of FALSE TEETH Seon Hn : saint DAY --WEEK--MONTH --4 a em sie By JIM HACKLEMAN Juan Marichal can't win. Don Don Drysdale can't do anything else. So San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dogers go into the final week of the National League season all even. While Milwaukee Braves were handing Marichal his third straight loss Sunday, 3-2, Drys- dale won his fourth in a row and pitched the Dodgers to their Ted Abernathy -- making his 80th appearance of the season-- won it for Pittsburgh. Charlie Smith's single in the top of the 10th put the Mets ahead 4-3, then Dick Stuart's single tied it for the Phils and Gonzales cashed in the winner with his double. $5.00 PER DAY ~ juttits'2uance . _ 725-6553 RUTHERFORD' CAR AND TRUCK RENTA 725-6553 bad re hal nlays four aga: st Milwaukee. In other NL action Houston Astros kept Cincinnati three games behind, trimming the Reds 4-2 on rookie Chuck Har- rison's three-run homer in the last of the ninth; Pittsburgh Pi- rates overcame Chicago Cubs 5- 3 on run-scoring doubles by Wil- lie Stargell and Jim Pagliaroni in the 10th inning; and Tony Slipping or Irritating? Don't be em' teeth slipping, when ee eat, ta vo pr doves on your plates. pleasan: vi remarkable sense of Le hice Hoke nd security by holding plates more a firmly. No gummy, 'i ity taste t's alkaline (non-acid)- or feeling. Get FAS' at any drug counter. See ~ JUBILANT TWINS CELEBRATE PENNANT WIN VERSALLES THE KEY Minnesota Twins Clinch A.L. Flag By MIKE RATHET Associated Press. Sports Writer The phone jangled in Minne- gota Twins' dressing room un- der District of Columbia Sta- dium. : "Get that, I'm busy," yelled a champagne-soaked Sam Mele. At Baltimore, the Twins' score was posted on the score- board, letting the Orioles know they had been eliminated. But they rallied for 'wo runs in the bottom of the ninth inning and their seventh straight victory. Elsewhere in the AL, Chicago "It's the vice-president," said/write sox defeated New York an aide. |Yankees 5-3, Kansas City Ath- | So Mele went to the phone |ictics edged Boston Red Sox 2-1 and accepted congratulations from Hubert Humphrey after the Twins had cinched their first American League pennant by edging Washington Senators 2-1 Sunday for their 99th victory of the season. | "By gosh, it's great, Sam,"| said Humphrey, a former sena- tor from Minnesota. 'You've done a great job. Give my best wishes to all the players, I couldn't be happier." Neither could the Twins. Iron- ically, they wrapped up the pen- nant in Washington, the city they left after the 1960 season. Zoilo Versalles, the sparkplug shortstop making a strong bid for Most Valuable Player hon ors, was the key as the Twins put it out of reach of Baltimore Orioles, their last challengers. Versalles tripled in the sixth inning and promptly scored on a passed ball by catcher Don Zimmer. Then, in the eighth with the score tied 1-1, Frank Quilici doubled, took third on a wild pitch by Pete Richert and scored on Versalles' long fly. TALKS ABOUT SERIES Some 15 minutes later, Mele was being sprayed with cham- pagne while talking about the World Series. "T don't care who we face, we're ready for them," he said. "We've got pitching for them *We've got the ball club for them." Then he ticked off his first three pitchers for the series-- Jim Grant, who became a 20- game winner Saturday, Camilo Pascual and Jim Kaat, who pitched the pennant-clincher. Kaat, bringing his record to 17-11, surrendered a run in the third inning on singles by Ken McMullen and Frank Howard and his own error, then shut the door the rest of the way. GRAMPA SATCH FOOLS EVERYONE KANSAS CITY (AP)--Leroy (Satchel) Paige flouted father time Saturday night by shut- ting out Boston Red Sox on only one hit over the three in nings he pitched for Kansas City Athletics The amazing veteran of al- most 40 years of baseball came back to the big leagues after a 12-year absence and throttled all the Sox hitters except Carl Yastrzemski who bounced -a pitch 390 feet off the left field fence for a double. The Negro right - hander's home - town audience cheered him on as he befuddled eager Sox hitters with his famous hesitation pitch and a surpris- ingly live fastball. Satchel, about 60, was re- placed by Diego Segui, the Athletics went on to lose the game 5-2. REMEMBER WHEN... By THE CANADIAN PRESS The British - built yacht Endeavour I, unsuccessful challenger for the America's Cup in 1934, was reported safe with all hands 28 years ago today--in 1937--after be- ing adrift for two weeks with 19 men sboard The tow-line had parted in a hurricane while her Ameri- ¢an purchaser was having ber towed to Newport, R.1. and Cleveland and Detroit split, ing to the Indians 7-1. WON DOUBLE VICTORIES The Twins and Orioles both| won double victories Saturday, | Minnesota defeating Washing-| ton 5-0 and 5-3 while Baltimore| downed the Angels 2-1 and 2-0. The White Sox took two from the Yankees 3-1 and 2-0, Detroit | whipped Cleveland 4-1 and Bos ton tripped the Athletics 5-2. | George Brunet of the Angels) and -Dave McNally of the Ori-| oles each had three-hit shutouts through seven innings, then Cal- ifornia broke through for a run| in the eighth. | Bu the Orioles won it in the! ninth consecutive victory, over St. Louis Cardinals. Drysdale fired a five-hitter at the Cardinals and made a first- -linning run--produced on Maury Wills' base-runiing and Jim Gil- liam's single--stand up. hard - throwing right - hander, now 22-12, has accounted for one-third of the nine victories in the Dodgers' streak, which has lifted them from 4% games back into a tie for first. At San Francisco, Gene Oli- ver's bases-loaded homer in the sixth inning gave the Braves a 3-0 lead and provided the clincher against Marichal, who jhas lost 13 and won 22. The Giants, who zoomed. to the top with a 14-game winning string, have dropped five of nine since--with Marichal los- ing three of them. Both clubs have seven games ieft--all at home--before the regular season closes next Sun- day. The Giants open a three- game set against St. Louis to- day, then conclude with a four- game series against the third- place Cincinnati Reds, Los An- geles starts a three-game series PENNANT RACES AT A GLANCE National League 1-0 The ane Gonzales' double in the 10th gave Philadelphia Phillies a 5-4 victory over New York Mets. In Saturday's games the Gi- ants downed Milwaukee 7-5, the Dodgers blanked St. Louis 2-0, Cincinnati shaded Houston 1-0, the Cubs whipped the Pirates 6-3 and the Mets and Phillies split two 4-1 decisions. Wills led off the Dodgers' first against Ray Sadeci.i with a bunt single. When the St. Louis left- hander attempted a_ pickoff, Wills stole second, and contin- ued to third when Bill White's throw to second was wild, Gil- liam's single scored him with ithe game's only run. Drysdale did not walk a man jand allowed only three runners las far as second. | Singles by Frank Bolling in ithe second and Mack Jones in the third drove in Milwaukee runs against Marichal, then Ol- iver homered in the sixth. Willie McCovey tagged his 29th homer in the bottom of the sixth. Harrison's homer, his first in jthe majors, came off Billy Me- ICool, who had replaced Joe Nuxall at the start of the As- tros' ninth with Cincinnati hold- ing a 2-1 lead, Pagliarnoi's three-run homer jin the sixth gave the Pirates a 13-0 lead and Don Cardwell blanked the Cubs on five hits edged California Angeles 2-1 for ninth against reliever Bob Lee on a walk and singles by Curt Blefary, Jerry Adair and. Dick Brown. Shut out on two hils by Whitey Ford, the White Sox tied the score with a three-run seventh in which Pete Ward hit a two- run homer, then won it with two in the eighth. Bill Skowron ; Los | Milwaukee, Sept. 30 (N) , ¢ é | St. Louis, Sept. 27, 28 (N) 29; singled in the tie-breaking run.| Cincinnati, Sept. 30, Oct. 1 (N) The Athletics broke a 1-1 tie} in the seventh on Jose Tarta-| WL Pet. GBL TP until the ninth, when they tied ee ig e ry god KS zit. But the doubles by Stargell Cincinnati 88 67 .568 3 7 Los Angeles--At home 7; Cin- cinnati, Sept. 27 (N) 28 ( "LISTEN HERE: home (N) (2) 3. San Francisco--At (2) 3. Cincinnati--Away 7; Los An- the Tigers winning 2-0 and los-|bull's single and a double by|geles, Sept. 27 (N) 28 (N) 29;| \Bert Campaneris. Rollie Shel-| San Francisco, Sept. 30, Oct. 1) jdon got the victory, his 10th. -|(N) (2) 3. FIRST TO YOUNG AGES then... For quality, selection and value... styles for boys ond girls, from infants to size 14.... "The Best Costs Less At" violulNn|cfalcie|s OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE featuring all the lotest : Gordon Sinclair seco eA atRCEE "KEEP Lots of people seem to think that Bell is a Margaret Reed. BELL So if some people think Bell is foreign-owned -- well, they'd better not let Mrs. Reed, or any of those ' 203,000 other Canadians hear them say so. a Built, operated and owned by Canadians foreign-owned company. What's foreign about Mrs. Reed of Oshawa? Bell is owned -- by far the biggest | part of it, anyway--by people like When we counted up recently, there were some 208,000 Bell shareholders. Over 203,000 of them were Canadian residents. And altogether, they held 93.6°/o of the total shares, That's how it has been for a good many years now. \ INFORMED..." | Some people disagree with | "§inc", not many miss his | twice daily assault on injustice, | hypocrisy and anything else | that comes into the sites of his | news blunderbuss. Like the | best baseball umpire, Sinclair | calls 'em as he sees 'em and if toes are trod on... well, that's life. The comment you | hear most about Sinclair is "! can't afford to miss him be- | cause | never know what he's going to do next." He's heard at 11:50 a.m. and 5:50 p.m. (as if you didn't know) -- and with his "Let's Be Personal" at 11:45 a.m. and "Show Busi- ness" at 5:45 p.m. CERB | 21010 ONTARIO'S FAMILY STATION What's your stand on life insurance paying for a college education? Mrs. Powell f Mrs. Powell I've never connected the two-- life insurance and college, I mean. Interviewer You really should be talking to my husband about this. Where could he find out all about it? Interviewer Thousands of Canadian parents have provided college educa- tions for their children this way through The Mutual Life. Mrs. Powell Some kind of special insurance policy? I still don't see how... Interviewer A policy purchased when your child is young guarantees that --come what may--the money will be available when it is needed. Have him call The Mutual Life of Canada representative near- est you. 145-8 MJ The Mutual Life ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA HEAD OFFICE: WATERLOO, ONTARIO/ ESTABLISHED 1868. 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