nals er singled in the fifth. ive singles by Davis ig in the sixth sent out and Mason took yden greeted him with o score two runs but alk, Mason got out of g with a pair of in- ad taken a 2-0 lead in f the fourth on a walk 3ryant, a single by "key and an outfield sacrifice and a single Wilson. by Rich March. and ddon, plus an outfield ated another run for the fifth and they went 6-2 in the top of the and Tilk opened the with singles, Norris n an error, and Sned- ed March home, scor- If on an infield out by omered as the leadoff - Gales in the seventh s hit a two-run homer 3 in the top of the batsmen and three roduced the final run in the ninth innjng. ll, in claiming the ck out eight, walked gave up five hits. ylor suffered the de- ing up 10 hits and t nine. March, Sneddon, *key and Wilson each hits for Gales. had four hits for tile Mapes and O'Con- had two. Others with Davis, Rowden, Mc- Price and Taylor. 000 210 320--8 10 1 000 002 1014 13 3 ll, Mason (6) and Taylor and McDerm- 3" division game Jay- umed Mr. TV Towers id the two-hit pitching on. struck out 13 and is- y one walk. Only hits vere singles by Norris rd and B. Morrison in airnes had a pair of or Jaycees while Wil- | Graham and Wayne n each had two hits. eties for Jaycees went :rabko, Daryl Hudgin, ier and Andy Kono- 000 000 000-- 8 2 6 232 201 00x--10 12 4 s, Mitchell (3) and Wilson and Grabke. ed are nded drop ns ock. d get vith 2 it. ock hisky. . TORONTO aat Back On Beam or Minnesota Twins By MIKE RECHT | ssociated Press Sports Writer Lefthander Jim Kaat beat etroit Tigers 7-0 Wednesday ight with a five-hitter, his sec- d straight complete game vic- ry since new manager Cal rmer took over Minnesota last riday. The 25-game winner of last year had won only one game and lost seven under former manager Sam Mele and failed to complete any of his first 12 starts. Kaat insists it is just a coin- cidence--and it probably is-- but whatever the reason, he has Leafs Lose In 16 Innings; wo Wins For Rochester we Cleveland Indians 3-2 on By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Maple Leafs haye the ay off and they'll need it to ecuperate from Wednesday ight's 16-inning loss to Rich- nond Braves. Gil Garrido's single, his fifth it of the game, scored Dave icholson from second and gave Richmond a 1-0 verdict over the eafs in the longest Interna- jonal League game of the sea- on. In other games, league-lead- ing Rochester Red Wings swept doubleheader from Columbus Nets, 2-0 and 13-1, Toledo Mud ens blanked Syracuse Chiefs 8-0 and Buffalo Bisons and Hacksonville Suns were rained out. Nicholson walked to lead off he Richmond 16th. Then ex- eat Mike, Page walked and arrido singled, just out of ach of Toronto shortstop Al ehrer. Richmond starter Ed Rakow, another former Leaf, struck out 18 and yielded only five hits in 13 innings. Reliever Cecil Up- shaw worked the. final three in- Jerry Hudgins worked the first nine innings for Toronto and was relieved by Pete Ma- grini and Al Lyle, the eventual loser. Rochester, now 64 games ahead of the Leafs, beat Colum- bus in the opener on Tom Fish- er's four-hit shutout and ex- ploded for 10 runs in the second inning of the nightcap to give Gene Brabender the win an stretch their winning streak to eight games. Consecutive home runs by Dave May and John Scruggs off Columbus starter Dave Roberts in the third inning produced Rochester's runs in the first game. In the second game, starter Bill Knoch took the loss for Co- lumbus. The Jets were held scoreless by Brabender until Manny Sanguillen led off the seventh inning with a home run. Lefty Fritz Fisher threw a four-hitter and recorded his first victory of the season for Toledo against Syracuse. Don Pepper hit a home run and Lenny Green drove in two runs with a pair of singles to nings, giving up two hits and striking out six. By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League W iL Pet. GBL 39 23 .629 34 21 .618 1% 32 25 561 4% 29 25 537 6 29 25 537 6 29 28 .509 714 26 29 473 9% 23 36 .390 14% Los Angeles 22 35 .386 14% New York 19 35 .352 16 Wednesday's Results Los Angeles 4 Chicago 3 Cincinnati 0 New York 4 Atlanta 16 Philadelphia 7 St. Louis 7 Pittsburgh 4 San Francisco 4 Houston, 7 Probable Pitchers Today Pittsburgh (Veale 7-1 and Blass 1-1) at Philadelphia (Bun- ning 6-6 and Ellsworth 2-3) TN Los Angeles (Brewer 1-1) at Chicago (Jenkins 8-3) San Francisco (Marichal 9-5) at Houston (Cuellar 7-2) N Only games scheduled. American League | W iL Pet, GBL} 33 22 .600 32 24 1% Cincinnati St. Louis San Francisco Pittsburgh Chicago Atlanta Philadelphia Houston Chicage Detroit Baltimore Boston Minnesota Cleveland Kansas City New York California 28 3 Washington 25 424 Wednesday's Results Baltimore 2 Kansas City 9 Detroit 0 Minnesota 7 New York 7-2 Washington 1-3 Chicago 8-1 Boston 7-6 Cleveland 2 California 3 571 -509 -509 509 483 ATS 474 459 28 29 29 28 28 27 4 account for Toledo's scoring. "BASEBALL SCOREBOARD Kansas City (Nash 7-5) N Detroit (Sparma 6-0) at Min- nesota (Boswell 3-4) New York (Stottlemyre 5-6) at Washington (Bertaina 1-1) N Chicago (Howard 2-4) at Bos- ton (Waslewski 0-0) N Only games scheduled International League L Pet, GBL 7 16 .673 6% g} 33 ' 20.545 2 9% 24 22 24 23 21 Rochester Toronto Buffalo Richmond Jacksonville Toledo Syracuse 20 Columbus 19 26 .422 Wednesday's Results Rochester 2-13 Columbus 0-1 Syracuse 0 Toledo 3 Buffalo at Jacksonville, ppd , rain 22.500 26 .480 26 469 25.457 25.444 10 10% 11 12 Games Today Rochester at Columbus Syracuse at Toledo BASEBALL STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pitching -- Jim Kaat, Twins, pitched a five-hitter, struck out six, walked none and allowed only two runners to reach sec- ond base for his second straight complete game in Minnesota's 7-0 victory over Detroit Tigers. Batting--Clete Boyer, Braves, cracked the fourth grand slam homer of his career for a 4-0 lead in the fourth inning and then ignited a seven-run sixth with a single in a 16-7 Atlanta Probable Pitchers Today Baltimore (Phoebus 5-2) at victory over Philadelphia Phil- lies. SOC spectacular EINTRACHT Braunschweig GERMANY'S NUMBER ONE TEAM us L.K.S. of Lodz POLISH CHAMPIONSHIP CONTENDERS VARSITY Wednesday Night June 28, 8:30p.m. Reserved tickets: south end ($3.00 students under 16 ( rsity Stadium, Gate 3, Tickets Available in Oshawa at: JIM BISHOP SPORTING GOODS 151 King St. MAIL ORDERS: Certified versity of Toronto Toronto 5, Ont. cer STADIUM st side ($4.00); west side ($5.00); box seats ($6.50) 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily East, Oshawe der payable to the Uni- ito City Soccer Club, examine hair-worried men end wo- ladapted to the individual after a the once-sluggish Twins in a third - place tie in the Ameri- can League. They share third with Balti- more and Boston Red Sox after Kansas City Athletics belted the Orioles 9-2 and the Red Sox split a doubleheader with first- place Chicago White Sox, los- ing 8-7 before winning 6-1. New York Yankees split with Washington Senators in another twinbill, winning 7-1 and losing 3-2, and California Angels Bob Rodgers' two-run single in the ninth inning. RESUMES FORM Kaat resumed his turnabout before former Twins' pitching coach Johnny Sain, the man whose firing last fall at the re- quest of Mele prompted a con- troversial letter by Kaat prais- ing Sain and criticizing Minne- sota for letting him go. Sain, now the pitching coach at Detroit, felt Kaat "looked like the same old Kaat to me." Kaat struck out six and walked none as he allowed only two Tigers to second base. Har- mon Killebrew, Jerry Zimmer- man and Rod Carew supplied the power, each with two-run homers. Zimmerman also sin- gled home a run. Chuck Dobson, also coming strong for KC, stopped the slug- ging Orioles as one run before a jammed finger on his pitch- ing hand forced him out in the seventh in,ing. Entering the game with two straight shut- outs, he allowed only five hits in six innings to raise his rec- ord to 4-2. The White Sox won their opener on home runs by Tom- mie Agee, Dick Kenworthy and Walt Williams, but Wilbur Wood had to strike out George Scott with the bases loaded and \two out in the ninth inning to lend the game. Scott and Rico CARL BREWER ... back to pro? California Wants Brewer TORONTO (CP)--The Globe and Mail says California Seals, new entry in the expanded Na- tional Hockey League ap- proached Toronto Maple Leafs about a deal for defenceman Carl Brewer and were turned down. The paper quotes Barry Van Gerbig, president of the Seals, as saying: "Tt hear Brewer wants to re- turn to the pros, and we's like his return to be with us. I phoned Toronto with an offer to negotiate but got nowhere. "Imlach says he doesn't owe Brewer anything and wants to make him sit out as long as the NHL rules say he must. He told me: "Hell, no!'" Brewer, 28, quit Leafs' train- ing camp two years ago to spend the 1965-66 season com- pleting a bachelor of arts de- gree at University of Toronto. He was reinstated to amateur status Dec. 4, 1966, after sign- ing voluntary retirement papers from professional hockey. Last March he played for Canada's national team in the world |Petrocelli had homered earlier |for Boston. FINALLY WINS Scott also homered in the jnighteap, along with team-mate \Carl Yastrzemski, and Reggie |Smith's pinch - hit triple drove lin two more runs as Lee Stange 'won his first game with seven innings of five-hit pitching. Mike Epstein doubled in two first - innings runs and singled to set up the decisive marker in the fifth, giving the Senators a split on the five-hit pitching lof Phil Ortega. Steve Whitaker jhomered for the Yankee runs jin the ninth inning. | Al Downing hurled a seven- {hitter in the opener for New |Hork and was aided by Charlie |Smith's two triples. | Mickey Mantle broke Lou Gehrig's Yankee record for games played when he ap- peared as a pinch hitter in the second game, his 2,166th. Rodgers delivered the Angels with his hit off reliever George Culver, following one-out singles by Don Mincher and Jimmie Hall and a walk off starter Sonny Siebert. hockey championship in Vienna. A bylaw devised by the NHL 'last year during Brewer's fight \for amateur status states that any player desiring to return to the pros affer.signing voluntary retirement papers must abstain from the pros for two full cal- endar years. Brewer, under the bylaw, is not eligible to return to the NHL until Dec. 4, 1968. The Globe and Mail quotes Van Gerbig as saying he is ready to follow proper chan- nels to restore Brewer's profes- sional status before the De- cember date. "T asked Clarence Campbell (NHL president) how to go about it, and he told me the best way was to get the bylaw rescinded,'"' the Globe and Mail quotes Gerbig. WINS CUP ROME (AP) -- The Italian major - league soccer team, Milan, edged second - division Padova of Padua 1-0 Wednes- day night to win the Cup of Italy soccer tournament and Winners tournament. qualify for the European Cup {N 12 MONTHS OTTAWA, Ont. -- New home treatment methods for saving hair and improving its growth will be demonstrated In Oshawa, Firday, June 16th, 1967, at Hotel Genosha, | Specialist J. Alberti will be In charge representing the dynamic Roberts Hair and Scalp Specialists organizations. He will personally men from 1:00 to 8:00 p.m. This new treamtnt is neither "mail order'" nor "cure-all", It is personal examination and progress is checked at regular intervals by a Roberts Specialist. | Whe Can Be Helped P | Will the new Roberts treatment cure baldness? "No!" For we cannot help men and women who are slick bald atter years of grad- ual hair loss. But if you still have fuzz and your scalp is still creating hair, you can at least save and thicken what you have. Some con- ditions, such as "spot baldness" usually have complete coverage if caught in time ! Other conditions thot usually| THEY RE-GREW HAIR! Hair Specialist Here Friday Will Show Men and Women How to Save Hair and Prevent Baldness self, We do not accept cases that {N 3 MONTHS By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer Let's play baseball manager. It's early in the game, there are runners at second and third with a tough hitter at bat and a lesser threat on deck. You issue an intentional walk, right? Wrong. Harry Walker of Pittsburgh and Philadelphia's Gene Mauch played the obvious strategy of the deliberate base on balls Wednesday night and both re- gretted it later. Walker ordered Mike Shannon passed in the first inning against St. Louis and then watched Tim McCarver wallop a grand slam home run that {triggered Cardinals' 7-4 victory over the Pirates. Atlanta's Joe Torre got the intentional treatment from Mauch in the fourth inning and then trotted home behind two other runners when Clete Boyer unloaded a grand slam _ that helped the Braves to a 16-7 triumph over the Phillies. tion, New York Mets' Bob Shaw, shut out first-place Cincinnati Reds 4-0, Houston Astros downed San Francisco Giants 7-4, and Los Angeles Dodgers ended an eight-game losing streak with a 4-3 victory over Chicago Cubs. GIBSON WINS NO. 8 McCarver's homer, on an 0-1 pitch, was his sixth this season and his third career grand slam). Bob Gibson survived an ll-hit Pirate attack to go the distance for his eighth victory. Boyer'a slam was the fourth REMEMBER WHEN... | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Purchased less than 24 hours before post time, Fox- glove II, owned by Hon. Peter Beatty, won the Gold Vase, the first feature of the Royal Ascot horse-rac- ing meet in England 29 years ago today--in 1938. 'Managerial Strategy Fails In Two Big League Games In other National League ac-in his career and his 'ninth home run this season. Hank Aaron added his 17th later and Tito Francona, traded by Phil- adelphia to Atlanta only Sun- day, socked his first against his ex-mates. Shaw scattered six hits and Tommy Dayis drove in three runs as the Mets defeated the Reds. Houston jumped on Gaylord Perry for five straight hits and five runs in the first inning and then held off the Giants. Jim Wynn's two-run triple and a two-run single by Bob Aspromonte were the key blows in the Astros' spurt. Ron Perranoski, the Dodgers' fourth pitcher against the Cubs, got Lee Thomas to ground into a bases - loaded double - play --choking off a Chicago rally in the ninth inning. Lee Gabrielson and Dodger starter Claude Osteen homered in the fourth while Ernie Banks and Ron Santo connected for Chicago. DRYER ONE DRY Corby's EXTRA DRY GIN IN THE NON-SLIP BOTTLE _PITTSBUR druff, itching, over-oiliness or dry- ness, follicle clogged with sebum or seborrhea--can be corrected by the Roberts home treatment if! caught in time. "Don't Wait Until It's Too Late" Baldness won't wait for doubters to be convinced, you're going to keep right on losing hair 'til you're bald--aunless you get your scalp in healthy, hair-growing condition again. Examine You Free We want to make it cleor that you incur absolutely no charge or obligation by coming in for an examination. Your only obligation is to yours- will not respond, Guarantee Satisfaction The Roberts Specialists will give, you @ written guarantee that you) must be satisfied within 30 days! or it will cost you nothing. | For a free examination and dis-| cussion of your hair problem ask| the desk clerk for J. Alberti's room| number. He does not make ap-| pointments, so come in at your convenience. | Examinations GH'PAINTS fc HOUSE PAINT ON ANY / j GALLON ANY QUART ERNIE CAY LUMBER * THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, June 15, 1967 9] Toronto Trims Brampton Club TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto Maple Leafs reclaimed second place in the Ontario Lacrosse Association 'Senior <A series Wednesday night, defeating Brampton Excelsiors 14-11 be- fore 2,200 fans, The Leafs are only one point behind the pace-setting Brook- lyn Redmen. Ron Roy, the league's top: goal scorer, tallied four times for Toronto, giving him 19 so far this season. Ron MacNeil added three and Grame Gair and Wally Hutzel scored two each. Ross Othem, Paul Henderson and Dave Hall each scored once. Brian Aherne scored three times for Brampton. Don Arth- urs, Jim Richardson, John Me- Auley scored two each. NYLON ¢ SUN-PROOF LATEX Stretches and shrinks with your house, so it lasts years longer than ordinary paints. Easier to use: brushes and hands rinse clean with water . . . quick drying ... needs no primer. Attractive matte finish. Suggested .85 qt. ONE COAT WONDER WHITE Easily the finest house:paint money can retail $11.25 gal.; $3.60 qt. SALE PRICE $8.50 gal.; $2 buy. One coat gives a dura white finish. Saves time, money, labour | (and save even moreduring our Giant Sale). | Suggested retail $92.75 gal; $3.85 qt, SALE PRICE $10.00 gal.; $3.10 qt. *SUN-PROOF OIL BASE Special pigments protect against discolora- tion by smoke and fuel fumes. Stays brighter, fresher longer. Gloss finish. Suggested re- tail $11.25 gal.; SALE PRICE $8.50 gal.; $2.85 qt. CEMENTHIDE For brick, stucco, concrete block, ase bestos siding and shingles; Rubberized. Re~ sists sun and moisture, Dries quickly, Suge gested retail $11.25 gal; $3.60 at. SALE PRICE $8.50 gal.; $2.85 qt. HURRYIGIANT SAVINGS at your PITTSBURGH PAINTS dealer. *Sun-Proof trim colors are slightly higher In price, ERNIE CAY LUMBER COMPANY LIMITED ble, dazzling $3.60 qt. " SAVE ON TWO ALL-WEATHER TIRES 49 7.784 TUBELESS BLACKWARE, one ag SSSKERERLELEREET pt 302020 ee Set Sale Prices On Other Sizes-- Whitewalls Too! i Similar savings are also avaiable on other * famous Goodyear lines. Drive in today! dé @ Miles ahead of other economy tires. , i @ Built with Goodyear's own TUF- SYN RUBBER for longer tread ' life. @ Meeis or exceeds all Government *« and Industry highway safety stan- dards. GOODYEAR' GUARANTEE O S NO LIMIT N EVERY TIRE GOODYEAR SERVICE 162 King St. E. STORE 725-5512 EASY CREDIT TERMS 725-1121 A-WORLD CLASS PRESENTATION OF THE TORONTO CITY SOCCER CLUB bring on excessive hair-loss -- dan-| private, are given " 53 ALBERT ST.