Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jul 1967, p. 7

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V 1 n as you lose discip- aid, "you lose respect you're just another ie league." r action last night ich defeated Hastings s 13-5. Tie Games, ird Minors Road Minor La- sociation action at rk, produced all kinds lus two tie games, to night's excitement. Tyke division, Blue Kendalwood Marine a 4-4 deadlock with le and Ken DeMille ig a pair for the Blue e Raymond Schroel ree goals for the id Billy Edwards got one. nes were played in ee League, with Osh- unt House and Gus tors playing to a 5-5 first one while Dear- ll defeated D-X Oil } in a free-scoring iebregts scored three Discount House with fammond and Chuck adding singletons. 9 scored twice for 1 Motors and team- bie White, Dan Mor- aul McLellan each one. fcGuigan and Mark ach had a big night orn's, scoring four e. Mike Flegel add- and Ed. Schroer got tally. ik was the big gun | Kings, with five ith Drew Armstrong and Wayne Gow a EET PO EET MARES \MPING LIMITED ne Road North lorth of King St. E.) 728-9942 amping Column in the ction for our ad. smsttarmamenanesaumenmaumss FOR LIKE ALEIGH ym BP HILL on on lelmet or a ce that goes ERY DAY. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, July 11, 1967 7 ] e Dean Given Chance pithy tykes | moo" | WINNIPEG (CP) -- Terry | More of Winnipeg won the Mani- Against Old League | Capture Two toba Amateur Golf champion ship Saturday by defeating Ken |Redfern, five and four, in the WHITBY (Staff) -- Whitby Cepeda of St. Louis at first, Tykes picked up a pair of wins has been one of the. stingiest|Pittsburgh's Bill Mazeroski a final at Southwood golf club, t pes hag densi in Eastern On- hurlers in All-Star competition,|second and Gene Alley at short|'@"0. Base' all Association play, having allowed just one earned|and Rich Allen of Philadelphia winning handily in each game. run in 11 innings for an 0.82/at third. Peterboro was the victim Sat- earned run average. Strangely enough, the only | Pact Hane tel ty ringer Pg j i : : ; | y an 11-4 mar- Kier, nck me Zack the Gist!) NSURIES PLAGUE AL cre" 7Riuh receive "in going Si" on Sunday. Chance, the controversial | thet s B0t te ony ae me: against Chance will come from| Cameron and Turner led Whit- |righthander who was a Call-lpock attempt. Bauer's forces|ETeehan, the AL catcher by Saturday with three hits \fornia Angel when the Angels oh | 6" 6was talking to Bob|°ach, while Parish and Conneily | ; ; have been decimated by in val g banwed out two hit h. § |became neighbors of Disneyland juries, primarily to Detroit's Al|Rodgers (California catcher)|, ged out two hits each. Single last year, was named by AllXating and Baltimore's Frank\and Russ Nixon (Minnesota) Mts went to Clark, Humphrey i i and Colley manager Hank Bauer to siart)poy) the two highest vote|catcher), and from what they |* y. | today's All-Star game against) Satters on the 25-man squad. |Said I guess it 'will be an ex.) Tucker picked up two hits for! the National League. Kaline fractured his right|perience catching Chance"|Peterboro, and Vasey,| Currently making a comeback|hand June 27 by slamming his Freehan said Monday at a news! Q'Donoghue, Watkins and East- after being traded to Minnesota| bat into the bat rack after strik-| Conference. |Twins last winter, the 26-year-|ing out, and Robinson has dou-| "They told me I'll have to be old Chance, 11-7, has received|pje vision as the result of a mildjon my toes when he's pitching. | the starting honor for the sec-| concussion he suffered the same| He'll probably be the toughest ond time in as many All-Star/day sliding into Chicago's Al|man on our staff to catch. He Weis at second base. has such a live ball it doesn't} ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)--Dean| The 29 - year - old Dominican Chance returns to the land of Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse today as the American League tries to transform itself from one of Snow White's seven Enquire About VIC TANNY'S CANADA'S LARGEST AND FINEST CHAIN OF HEALTH SPA'S OPEN SOON man got one hit each. | Cameron also Jed the way | Sunday with- three hits while | Parish and Sarichetti each hit twice. Single hits went to Con- appearances. ; In his 'All-Star debut in 1964,| Tony Oliva of Minnesota re-|do the same thing twice in ane MacCarl, Forbes and| he blanked the Nationals on two| placed Kaline in the lineup while|row." Single Port H hit: OSs H AWA hits in the first three innings.|Tony Conigliaro of Boston Red| ae = s '01 ope hits came he . fe her tas k Robinson's place,|NO LA SUPPORT from Johns, Freeman, Clayton The NL eventually erupted for a 7-4 triumph. LOSE ALL-STAR LEAD | Oliva will play centrefield, Con-| Chance wasn't a favorite of|and Gilmer. { igliaro in right with Boston's|the Angel fans last year. nia Carl Yastrzemski in left, r About 46,000 were expected to first baseman Harmon Killibrew of Minnesota reinjured his groin during the weekend, but both agerial spot by leading Balti- bahia expected to play. more to the 1966 pennant, said Rounding out the AL team are of the pitching assignment, "If Rod Carew of Minnesota, sec-| Jim Lonborg (11-3 with Boston) ond, Brooks Robinson of Balti-|hadn't pitched Sunday, it would more, third and Detroit's Bill|have been between him and|/ Freehan, catching. Chance. | P ' "Now I probably won't use) ah rig ili gga Na-|Lonborg. I don't like to make aj 8 " w. |pitcher come back that soon. | p.m. PDT (7:15 p.m. EDT) Bauer, who earned the man- ¢ j , eee The loss for the Americans ; ; watch him pitch this game * oar , ae was part of a skid that has seen sete Pepe pol eegepee EE will be televised na- sate ] " ] * ; iS them plummet from a 12-4 All- an |tionally NBC starting at 4:15 Star lead to a 19-17 deficit. The |National League has won 15 of ithe last 21 games, eight of the last 10 and the last four. Before denting the National's |superiority, however, the Ameri- jean League must get past Juan ees |Marichal, San Francisco Giants' (AP Wirephoto) |prijliant righthander who was {named to start for the NL by manager Walter Alston. HE'S BIGGER THAN PICASSO IN CHICAGO perimposed a picture of Banks with his foot on dug- out steps on a picture of people in the Civic Center with this humorous result. IT DOESN'T COST IT PAYS Give your home maintenance free beauty for about the cost of having your house professionally painted three times. Controversy rages in Chica- go over Picasso versus Banks. heroic statue of Ernie Banks, veteran player with Chicago Cubs of the Nat- ional Baseball League. So the Chicago American su- Miffed at a metal struct- ure designed by Spain's Pa- blo Picasso for Chicago's Civic Center, a Chicago al- derman suggested instead a {Engine Trouble The winningest pitcher in the jtional League lineup are Ro- . a oot get a break out 4 tournament. The price is By MURRAY ROSE of the 'eight-man heavyweight elimina- © right. It will be free for most ke everyone. By signing Floyd Patterson, the former two - time heavy- weight king, for the World Boxing Association - approved tourney, Monday, Sports Action, 'top men in the WBA's rankings. | Eight Top Heavyweights Ready For Eliminations |Stops City Man Engine trouble knocked Gerry Dodds of Oshawa out of com-| phia and 10th ranked George|mine a sucessor to defrocked| petition Saturday at the Mid- pion from Toronto, who will bat- | tle in a 12-rounder at Madison| Square Garden July 19. That fight is not part of|the tourna- ment, since Frazier prefers to make one match at a time. But it will be telecast into} homes by MSG-RKO. General |ter-finals and semi-finals on the | Presentations. The four quarter - finals, the Inc., lined up eight of the 10|GET HOME TV | | | The only exceptions are un-|semi-finals and the final of the 'eaten Joe Frazier of Philadel-jelimination tourney to Wings And Leats Split: Jets Stop Braves On H-R By THE CANADIAN PRESS Rochester Red Wings and Tor- onto Maple Leafs split a double- header in International League baseball action Monday night but the first-place Wings still gained a half-game on runner- up Richmond Braves. Toronto won the seven-inning opener 5-0 on Jerry Stephen- -son's six-hit pitching but Roch- ester scored four runs in the seventh inning of the second game to defeat the Leafs 6-2. Meanwhile, pinch-hitter Jesse Gonder hit a three-run homer in © the eighth inning to break a 6-6 tie and give Columbus Jets a 9-7 victory over the Braves, their fourth successive loss. In other IL games Monday, Syracuse Chiefs shut out Buf- falo Bisons 3-0 and Jacksonville Suns and Toledo Mud Hens split /one hit batter, two wild pitches !removed in the seventh. deter- helped Stephenson to his win over Rochester. The Leafs scored a run in the first inning after loading the bases with none out. In the third inning the Leafs scored three runs on four singles, a wild pitch and a sac- rifice fly. ROHR GETS TAGGED With the score tied 2-2 and one out in the seventh inning of the second game, the Wings put seven consecutive batters on base before Frank Peters grounded into a double play to end the inning. Toronto pitcher Bill Rohr yielded three walks, and three singles before he was Richmond fought back from a 6-1 deficit: to tie the game against Columbus before Gon- der hit his three-run homer. Bill Henry pitched a three-hit nationally by ABC-TV. New York will be blacked out of the Frazier - Chuvalo tele- cast and sites of the tourna- ment bouts also won't get the live telecasts. ABC-TV will show the quar- Wide World of Sports program on Saturdays, starting about 5 p.m., Eastern time. The final, at the Houston Astrodome, in| second race with a first place} January or February of 1968, will be shown on prime even- ing time over ABC. Patterson, ranked sixth by the enth ranked Jerry Quarry of Los Angeles in a return bout. They fought to an exciting draw a month ago in Los Angeles. The other three quarter-finals | were set up previously. The tourney kicks off with the Aug. 5 doubleheader at the Ast- rodome matching Ernie Ter- against Thad Spencer, No. 5, San Fran- cisco, and Jimmy Ellis, No. 8, Louisville, Ky., vs. Leotis Mar- rell, No. 4, Chicago, tin, No, 9, Philadelphia. USE EARLY BIRD Then, Sept. 16, at Frankfurt, Germany, Karl Mildenberger, NEW YORK (AP)--Fight fans|Chuvalo, the Canadian cham-|Cassius Clay, will be telecast! summer Trophy Races at Hare-| ;wood Acres. | | Dodds, driving in the For- {mula V class, found faulty ig-| | nition wires prevented him from 'entering the second race of the! day. He placed fifth in the first) jrace and 8th overall. Fred MacDonald of Whitby,| |driving a Mini Cooper, placed jsecond in his class in the first |race Saturday, and finished the | showing. In the production sports com- petition, Ray Gray of Whitby, driving a Triumph __ Spitfire, | WBA, probably will meet sev-|nlaced first in his class in two races and ended up third over-| jall in his division. \second place finishes in two races in the sedan class. A Mini Minor driven Don Jeyes of Oshawa placed gine trouble and did not finish the second. The next race at Harewood Acres takes place July 22 when the Harewood Centennial com- petition will be run. No. 1 and the European cham- pion from Germany, will meet Oscar Bonavena, No. 3 of Ar- gentina. This will be beamed to the United States via the Early Bird satellite. ABC said the semi-finals are tentatively scheduled: for Nov. 11 and Dec. 2. Mike Malitz, president of Sports Action, Inc. and organ- izer of the tourney, said con- testants will receive a mini- mum of $50,000 for the quarter- finals. The semi-finals, will pay Lawn Bowling Loot To Highland Creek The Highland Creek Lawn Bowling Club produced two winners in recent competition against the Whitby Lawn Bow- ling members. Winning the women's event was Kathy Clossen of Highland Creek, while Bob Waldock, also of Highland Creek captured the race, but was stopped by en- majors with a 12-7 record, Mar- ichal is making the second start in six appearances and seeking his third victory against no de-/left in the outfield, Atlanta's| feats. berto Clemento of Pittsburgh, Hank Aaron of Atlanta and Lou Brock of St. Louis from right to Joe Torre catching, Orlando} Minnesota Heads For Top With Ermer At The Helm CHICAGO (AP)--Cal Ermer, mild-mannered and still relat- ively unknown, has Minnesota Twins moving toward what jmight be the American League pennant. Ermer would replace Sam Mele as manager of the Twins early last month, the mously was "Cal who?" cry unani- Ermer has, since taking over) shut them out 1-0 on three hits. | Griffith, who shocked the) |baseball world by naming the|change--the insertion of Willie! When Cal Griffith announced 43-year-old Ermer to replace|Mays into the lineup. The San| Francisco ace is not starting for| "I made the switch because 1\the first time since 1957, but he| é undoubtedly will be in the game} enough to win the pennant and before many innings go by. | Mele, says: good| thought our club was |Sam wasn't doing the job "Yve had my eye on Ermer the Twins, directed them to 20), ion time and felt he could do Ed Skakie of Oshawa drove|,; gH : cag ant victories in 31 games. The surge his Mini Minor to fourth and has lifted Minnesota into third place, a half game behind De- troit and only 2% games behind by|the American League leading Chicato White Sox. first in its class in the opening! ye Twins did it with a double victory over Chicago Sunday, 7-4 and 5-1, as pitchers Jim Kaat and Dave Boswell came through with key hits. can win the pennant." The loft of J. and R. Irwin clocked the first and the third | "What a difference those two|birds home, when the General games make," ers. out. Now we're only 2% out. It doesn't take much." RIDING A STREAK When the Twins came to Chi- cago they were riding an eight- game winning streak. They Jost 2-1 Friday night when the Sox scored both of their runs with McGOWAN WINS LONDON (AP)-- Walter Mc- Gowan, the British Empire ban- murmured Erm-|Racing Pigeon Club of Oshawa "If we'd have lost those/held its 11th "Old Bird Race" two we'd have been 64 games/of the season, from Peru, a dis-| tance of 440 miles. Following are the results and| the speed of the birds, given in | yards-per-minute: J. and R. Irwin, 1,271; D. Bej- kowsky, 1,256; J. and R. Irwin, 1,255; C. Bennett, 1,251; F. Cowle, 1,250; S. Grant, 1,250; A. Kellar, 1,148; J. and R. Ir- win, 1,144; J. Strachan, 1,124; A. Kellar, 1,119; L. Prescott, \1,106; A. Szezur, 1,102; F.} Cowle, 1,098; S. Grant, 1,074; | L. Kinsman, 1,070; J. Shewchuk, | Alcan Aluminum Siding is guoranteed in writing for 20 years against blistering, flaking, peeling and checking. Joe Horlen and Steve Harban also pitched Sunday. "But the other five pitchers have rested since Friday. I'll have to see how the game is go- ing, but my second pitcher prob-| ably will be Jim McGlothlin of the Angels." Bauer also has Gary Peters of Chicago, Jim Hunter of Kan- sas City and Al Downing of New York. Alston, a seven - game vet- eran--he has a 5-2 record--said: As a selected Alcan distributor, our workmanship meets the strict standards of quality laid down by the Aluminum Come pany of Canada Ltd. CALL US FOR A FREE ESTIMATE Centennial Home Improvements 368 PARK RD. SOUTH ithe job. Now I'm certain we! Wins Peru Race, "After two out in the ninth on a boot\who Ill by shortstop Zoilo Versalles. | way The following day Tommy John! came goes." how Al use, I'll just feel my} : i Wong and see' how thel Aluminum Products Shingles : PATIOS FLAT ROOFS It will be interesting to see) REC, ROOMS CHIMNEY SERVICE PHONE 576-2360 Marichal I don't know ston handles ALUMINUM STORE FRONTS and ii ions with 10 years experience at ine stalling Alcan materials. Manager, Roy Burten Prop., Paul Osmok WRESTLING TUES., JULY 11th. 8:30 P.M. ' Oshawa Civic Auditorium SWEET DADDY SIKI AND DICK the BULLDOG BROWER FRED ATKINS & TIGER JEET SINGH LORENZO PARENTE vs. JOE KILLER CHRISTIE THE ASSASSIN vs. PAT FLANAGAN Tickets for these exhibitions et the CASINO REST. DIAL 723-9721--Pat Milosh Promoter. Prices -- 1.50 -- 1.25 Children 75¢ NRE x = RRR BAT SR a doubleheader, the Suns win-|shutout for Syracuse against|each fighter $75,000 against 30|men's prize. tamweight champion, outpointed|1,051; J. Shewchuk, 1,048; J.) OSHAWA OSHAWA ning the opener 8-3 and drop-|puffalo. Bill Bryan hit a two-|per cent of the receipts with] This was the first of a number|French champion Antoine Por-jand R. Irwin, 1,034; C. Cowle, | ping the nightcap 5-3. run double in the first inning|the final worth $125,000 against|of events planned by the Whit-|cel in a 10-round non-title bout/994; C. Bennett, 972; F. Stuart, | SHOPPING SHOPPING Outstanding defensive support}for the Chiefs. 30 per cent of the receipts. by Club for the summer. Monday night. 928 and C. Bennett, 928. | raed oe co CENTRE CENTRE \ semi-annual Now in a Flip-toP-box! <a STOREWIDE SALE |e begins . THURSDAY at 9.30 A.M. for bs 3 DAYS ONLY | DOVER'S ENTIRE STOCK OF FINE QUALITY MEN'S WEAR 1 | Matinee Canada's mildest king size ) Switch for the money, stay for the mildness! Look for the coupon in every pack of Matinée, If it's a lucky number, and WILL BE SPECIALLY PRICED FOR THIS 3 DAY STORE- WIDE SALE. Here are more recent winners in this area: Mrs. A. 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