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Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 10 Jul 1958, p. 12

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4 Ki @ (faced before walk. He had a no-hitter going In Clean-Cut Win third then Stone recovered his|8th and two scintillating plays by Ted Stone, Oshawa's home- a magic to strike out the next three|Oldfield, at shortstop, were the brew right - hander who had CRA NEIGHBORHOOD SOFTBALL SCORES BANTAM GIRLS Storie Park, 28; Harman Park, PEE WEE BOYS Southmead, 6; . Harman Park, 23. three seasons in minor pro ball, chalked up a total of 17 strikeout 7 victims when he pitched Whitby Larry's to a 9-4 triumph over! Stanley Park Playground here at Civic Mi ial Stad- ium last night. This was a West Toronto Senior League interlocking schedule game and the win enabled Lar- :|ry's to stay within a half-game of [the league-leading Milanis. [SIZZLING HOT UNTIL 9TH Stone had his blazing fast ball and sharp - breaking curve both working to perfection as he mow- ed down the first 11 batters he issuing his first with two out in the fifth and then ¢ lan infield error was followed by the first hit of the game for the visitors, rival pitcher Eddie Gro- gan smacking a clean single to centre, scoring Phil Waters, who had walked. Stone came right back into ~ [fotm again and it was a one-run, A + [that rolled in front of the plate, single by Rennick and a deep- three-hitter, until the 9th and the same trouble that Stone then experienced before this seaseX, %|getting through the last © [cropped up again. Another infield |g¢ inning, error started it and then Frank Crawford got a scratch single | |after which pinch - hitter Doug 5 '|Whiffen 'walked to fill the bases. Even then it wouldn't have |been too bad but catcher Jack |Litch "fanned" on two pitches land then on recovering the sec-|with two - for - three" including a|hits--MacDonald, Brabin, |ond one at the screen, he fired|triple and three RBI's was tops, | nick, batters and end the game. None of the visitors was able to get more than one safe hit in a tciz! of only a half-dozen. BROKE OPEN IN SIXTH Eddie Grogan gave up a double to Al MacDonald and a single to George Brabin in the first but it (wasn't until the fourth that Lar- ry's got their first run, on Bra- bin's double and a screaming foul-line triple by Len Yuill, Carl Kemp to open the sixth inning for Whitby Larry's and the end was in sight for Grogan. Brabin beat out a hit that ca- romed off Grogan's glove then Jack Litch caught the Stanley in field flat - footed with a perfect bunt, to load the bases. Yhills solid single gave him two mofe RBI's then Dave Kelly walked fill the bases again and Art Rgn- nick's double to deep centr ed all three of his mates. Ren- nick tried to score from 2nd on Brent Oldfield's hit to right, which followed but a neat relay play by Jim Young to Waters to Chick Kitchen and a pretty "tag" fy the catcher, nipped Rennick as he slid in. h and was greeted by Rennick's |double, gave up three more runs lin the 8th on a walk to Kelly, a | centre double by Stone, who ca home on Oldfield's single right. Brabin with three-for-five had the most hits while -|LARRY'S Bill Kay who came in in the| {highlights of the fielding play. Of Larry's 27 putouts, Jac Litch had 18 and MacDonald had eight at 1st base with Rennick getting the other one, on a pop fly. THE BOX SCORE STANLEY PARK AB R. Young, 3b J. Young, rf Kitchen, ¢ Stenoff, If Proncher, ss Waters, 1b Crawford, Newton, cf b-Whiffen Grogan, p a-Kay, p TOTALS 2b SA Oldfield, ss MacDonald, 1b Kemp, rf Brabin, Litch, ¢ Yuill, cf Kelly, 3b | Rennick, 2b Stone, p TOTALS 9 a-Replaced Grogan in 6th. b-Walked for Newton in 9th. If Mao RNAS m=O oc W=RONNWD~=N ONWONWOOOO~TN~~DOO0O0RO® 3 > ot RHE me| Stanley Park 000 010 003--4 6 1 to! Larry's W'y 000 105 03x--9 13 4 THE SUMMARY--Errors, Ren- nick, 2; Stone, Litch, Kitchen; Len Yuill| Three-base hits--Yuill; Two-base Ren- Kay; Stolen bases--R. " Kent's Tiremen {to Stone, covering the plate and with Rennick also having a single Young, J. Young; Put-outs - As- Beat McKeene's In a UAWA Softball League game played at Alexandra Park on Wednesday afternoon, Kent's Western Tire defeated McKeene's Service Station 11-9. McKeene's used three pitchers in a vain attempt to halt the neavy-hitting Westerns. Mullens started, gave up a run on Johns' double, a walk and an error in| the first inning and another in the second on singles by Bannon and McKnight and an infield error followed by a choice play. A walk, his own error and then a double ended Mullens' stay in tthe hird inning and Anderson took over but another error and a single by Johns followed, to make it a three-run raliy. Mathews doubled and singles by Hurst and Bannon plus a wild pitch made it two more runs for the winners in the fourth. In the fifth, Johns got his third hit, an infield error then Lupel's double ended it for Ander- son, Tutak took over and finished | out the game, giving up one run in the sixth on two hits, Lupel started pitching. for the Tiremen and was very good until the sixth, giving up only one run, on Hurst's single and an infield out plus Monaghan's sacrifice fly, in the first inning. In the 6th McKeene's got two runs on Wood- cock's single, a force hy Monaghan retired Woodcock but Ford singled and Jordan was safe | on an outfield error, two runs| t dent his young charges will end up in the challenge round.against cup-holders Australia. and exciting series of matches," geles conceded in an interview Tuesday night, agree with him, The U.S. team has been rated as one of the weakest in recent years and is virtually untried in Davis Cup competition, beaten the U.S. in 11 previous tries, Capt, Lorne Main of Mont- real has predicted a 3-2 victory for his team in the semi-final of the North American zone com- petition. main hope of American team, said 'earlier: "The pressure will be on us. Let's face it--we could lose." ONLY AMERICAN only American Canada And U.S. Stari Davis Cup Round Today TORONTO (CP) -- Tennis eye- brows have been raised over the makeup of the United States squad for its Davis Cup tie with Canada this week, but non-play- ing captain Perry Jones is confi- "But we anticipate a very close he tennis veteran from Los An- Most tennis experts would And although Canada hasn't Barry MacKay of Dayton, Ohio, MacKay is fifth-ranked in the U.S. tennis standings and was the to reach the bledon singles championships. He was beaten by Morvyn Rose, Australian Davis Cur player who teamed with MacKay to reach the semi-finals of the doubles competition. Besides MacKay, members of the U.S. team are Whitney Reed of Alameda, Calif,, Sam Giam- malva of Houston, Tex., Earl Buchholz, Jr. of St, Louis, Mo,, and Jack Douglas of Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. Reed is ranked eighth and Giammalva 16th, The others are unranked. Buccholz, 17, won the junior boy's title at Wimbledon last week, but has had no Davis Cup experience. Douglas, a star footballer at Stanford who g:adu- ated Phi Beta Kappa, is a dark horse. Cagada's Bob Bedard of Sher- brooke, Que., and Don Fontana of Toronto routed Cuba 50 in first-round play last weekend and will most likely carry the load against the Americans. The Canada-U.S. winner will meet Argentina in the zone final for the right to advance against the European zone victor. Play starts Thursday at the To- ronto Cricket, Skating and Curk ing Club with the first two singles matches. The doubles are sched- uled for Friday and the two con- quarter-finals of the recent Wim- cluding singles Saturday. Nino Valdes K.0's Carter To Regain Some Prestige SPOKANE, Wash. (AP)--Nino Valdes responded to a swat on the pants from his manager with a right to the chin of Harold main unconscious for another 60 seconds, then wobble out of the ring. "He was paralyzed. , .and he'd scoring. With two out in the 7th, Lupel walked Hurst then Woodcock hit a homer The next two batters walked and Parish then relieved Lupel. He lasted until the 8th when Parish was pulled for a have broken his neck if it hadn't been for the apron on the floor," said Dr. William Andersn, the ring physician. HIS SECOND TEST The fight, scheduled for 10 |Stone let the ball go through hisland an extra base blow Top Siste--stanley Park 24-11; Larry's |hands, so two runners scored on three RBI's while Litch and Old- ==. |this one. Then Bill Kay smacked field each had two hits. : IPH R ER BB 80 |a double to score Whiffen with) Defensively, a brilliant catch in| Grogan arys 7 65 8 4 the third run of the inning. Ray|centre by Ray Newton to rob| Kay, ; 3:6 83:3 1.0 Young singled, sending Kay to Brabin of his fourth hit, in the Stone (WP) 9 6 4 2 a: 3 as: Carter Wednesday night and jumped back into boxing's heavy- weight title picture. Valdes, behind on points, got the word from manager Bobby Gleason to get going in the ninth round. He laid Carter out cold ; Wild pitch--Grogan; balls--Litch 2; Left on bases-- FOX SAFE AT FIRST AS THROW TO STAN IS WIDE Stan "The Man" Musial of | from shortstop Ernie Banks, in | (Chicago White Sox 2nd base- the National League All-Stars, | the first inning of Tuesday's | man) is shown already safely looks back as he takes the ball | All-Star game, which the Amer- | across the bag. at first base, on a wide throw | ican League won 4-3. Nellie Fox --AP Wirephoto 'CRA Baseball SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell Is Under Way In the opening game of the SPORTS EDITOR {CRA Pee Wee Baseball League, |at Bathe Park, East Tigers de- |feated North Giants 6 to 4. David Mitchell went to the mound for the Tigers and spun a ; SA fo |aifty three - hitter, striking out TED STONE chalked up 17 strikeout victims in the ball game|j3 Hatters along the route. Er- here at Kinsmen Stadium last night as Whitby Larry's knocked rors payed the way for the four| off 'Pete' Hastings' Stanley Park Playground seniors 9-4. Don't| Giant runs that crossed the plate. | know of course, but it wouldn't surprise us much if this was close| A) pilkey was the Giants' start- to being a record for strikeouts in modern West Toronto Baseball|ar and was followed by Gillis and League records. The win kept Larry's right up there in second|armstrong, in an attempt to sil- slot, a half-otch behind the league-leading Milanis, who meetlance the Tigers' bats. Mitchell Simpson-Fords this evening, when a win for Simpsons would put pio, and Robbins ied the Tigers Larry's back up tied for first place. These two clubs meet again|a¢ the plate with Black playing a on Tuesday night and then Simpson-Fords come back to Oshawa|gtandout game in the field. | next Wednesday evening -- the next schedule date for Whitby| The nex: league game is sched. | Larry's. Ted has had more than a little trouble getting past the|,jaq for Radio Park on Thurs-| 9th inning this season and last night's game saw him breeze along|y,y July 10 at 9.30 a.m. when| with a no-hitter for almost five innings and a one-run, two-hit winlgonth Dodgers will play Ww est right up until the Sth. Then he couldn't get anybody out until cardinals: three runs had scored, after which he fanned three in succession to end the game. George Brabin had three hits while Len Yuill| PEE WEE BASEBALL and Art Rennick, each with a single and an extra-base hit, each : SCHEDULE had three RBI's. It was another good piece of outdoor entertain-| (Note -- All games are at 9.30 t, worthy of five times as many cash customers. lam.) ah Y y | Tues., Aug. 5--East vs North |at Connaught, Thurs., Aug. 7--West vs South ' 'Everything From Soup To Nuts Local softball fans, and there must be several thousand of them in this city and district, with leagues operating through- [first batter, Brewer, who belted was still defeated 8-2 by Beaton's|in |Stanley Park 9; Larry's 7; | Umpires--W. McKissock, plate ni >. Mi {walk and Newitt scored on a sac- In a Legion Minor Assoc. rifice fly by Coughlin, to tie the - Midget League game played on|score at 3-3. I ays ussia Ajax. He gave up a triple to Sud- Newitt hit his rival Kornylo with dard in the second inning but then| a pitched ball, Wasylyk sacri- the third, but with two out and he|come home with the insurance ©XPert Who has coached ali over "died" on the base. run. Ajax got the first two bat- the world says Russia will sur- on his single, stole second andienq the game. |uow," said Jim McGregor in an then he scored when Campbell {interview Tuesday. "If on't by Lyons' single and a wild pitch.|was in top form last night at/"0aching clinics in Africa, Judd started for Jury and|Alexandra Park as he struck out Eurore, Latin America and South form then until the sixth when| Wilson, Linten and Lutton spell-| 'They have amazing organiza- Kerton singled and so did Daze.|ed defeat for Reeson, in spite of fion," he said. "It's right down to ing chore. Claringbold was safe|was forced by Linton then with |sports are government subsid- on an error and an infield out a singled, an error moved them|techhiques and tactics, and you two more runs in the top of the|around then Lutton singled again have winners." 7th when Brewer walked with one out the city's neighborhood parks and other leagues in the county, have two special treats on the books this week. There's the exhibition game tonight at Whitby Centennial Park,, with the Towa "Colored Ghosts" visiting Oshawa Tony's. The "Colored Ghosts" are a top-ranking softball team of the travelling circus variety--they're not only good and can beat most teams they meet but they, also feature enter- tainment of the humorous vein, shadow ball, rowing mach- ines, "pepper" and some individual players who can look and act like professional clowns, in a ball uniform. The Ghosts will know they've met somebody tonight, with Normie Bagnell and Charlie Justice both capable of. giving the best of them a stern argument. Then on Saturday, here at Alxandra Park, there's the Junior softball tournament with a handsome new trophy (now on display in Mike's Place window) and special prizes donated by local merchants. There'll be eight teams here for this event, including several Ontario OASA cham- pionship-calibre entries from Burlington, Stoney Creek, Ma- doe, North York, Sarnia, ete. All games are to be played at Alexandra Park, with the first round and semi-finals in the afternoon, starting at one o'clock--then after a supper period, the final game will be played at 6.45 o'clock. |at Storie. | Tues, July 15 |North at Connaught. Thurs., July 17 West at Radio. | Mon., July 21 -- East vs South at Storie. Fri., July 25 -- West vs North! at Connaught. South vs| East at Storie. at Bathe. Tues., Aug. 12--South vs East Bathe, Fri, Aug at Radio. | PLAYOFFS--2 games out off 3:--Tues., Aug. 19--9:30 a.m.;| |Wed., Aug. 20--9:30 a.m. and| |Wed., Aug. 20--2:30 p.m. (if |necessary). jat Bports Legion Minor Assoc. Bantam team, struck out 19 batters Duplate when they met in'a In 7 innings in his league game on Tuesday night, two more than/UAWA League game on Tuesday | re the number Ted Stone fanned in 9 innings at the Stadium last night. night -- but there was one big difference. Wilson, Reeson's op- ponent pitched a three-hitter and so Beaton's Dairy won the game 3-2 in spite of Reeson's contribution . . . CASEY STENGEL, the records show, managed the American League to victory in the Duplate Glassers All-Star game twice before--and in those two seasons, Cleveland : . ' heat him out for the pennant one year and Milwaukee won the Beaten By Rebs World Series last time--so what about this year? . . . CORN-| WALL'S Intermediate football team will not operate this fall,| Oshawa Real Estate Board they couldn't raise the funds . . . PANAMA CITY baseball club|ioubled the score on Duplate ended its strike on Tuesday and agreed to continue under -the(WVhen they met in a UAWA newly appointed manager . . . CANADIENS have vicked up league Game on Tuesday night. "Bull" Elik, of Cleveland Barons, in exchange for Eddie Mazur., The "Rebs" were in a hitting Cobourg Inters. Defeat {game played last evening at Har- Tues., July 29--North vs South | man Park, Houdaille Industries | defeated Ajax Bantams 5-3 in a Thurs., July 31 -- West vs East [tussle that featured good pitching 15--North vs West When Wright walked then Hentig|the latter's third run BRIGHT BITS: -- Young Reeson, pitcher for the Victor's/doubled the score, 20 to 10, on jugs but his team now trafledibe gave up only four bits and {of the sixth, Ajax came to life both, Duplate picked | cleveland up 10 runs on only six hits, due|New York chiefly to walks. Two walks and | McLish, Mossi (8) and Porter; d C. March, bases. Time of AJAX MIDGETS BEAT (ed for a triple, Andrews drew a|5ame--2 hrs., 25 mins. JURY AND LOVELL BOYS Tuesday night, Ajax Midgets de-| 1t wasn't tied very long. Hou- feated Jury and Lovell 6-3. daille came right back in their Will T McCartley pitched the win for half of the sixth to score two runs 1 op jy = - Hey Jo. Be Plate fe cate Sud iced, Pleau walked then Carey| In Athletics dard trying to steal home. Later pit a solid single to score Kornylo| + Wright singled, Lyons tripled in| and : double-steal on Pleau] LOS ANGELES (AP)--A track Jury and Lovell got two runs in|ters on bases in the 7th but| 225s the United States in athletic the fourth when Suddard drew a Kornylo and his mates tightened 2Chievements in another 10 years. walk with one out, Judd was safe|yp to retire the next three and Ve Should sound the alarm and Suddard both singled.| VICTOR'S PITCHER HAS [we are in for a terrific walloping losers got their final run in the| 19 STRIKEOUTS IN LOSS {before wa wake up." 7th on a walk to Higgins followed] Reeson, Victor's Sports pitcher, McGregor, who has conducted Lovell and gave up a run to his|a total of 19 batters but his team America, recently spent 10 days Russia observing training a homer. Judd went along in fine| Dairy, in a 7-inning game. methods. Hill flied out to centre but Shear-|his impressive strikeout total. He the block level. They have greater er doubled scoring both his mates couldn't fan any of these bays. Participation than any country in and Suddard took over the pitch-| wilson singled to open the game,|the world. And financially all {one out, Lutton singled to score ized. Combine that with good followed, to let Shearer score the Linton, Wilson opened the third| coaches who have had the best of third run of the inning, put Ajax|inning with a hit, Linton also|training in conditioning methods, in front 4-2. They pushed over |to score them both, to take the] McGregor said the United out, was forced by Kerton butijead 3-1. In the fifth inning, Wil-|States will beat Russia in their Daze walked then Hill came|son started it again, he was safe|dual track meet in Moscow later [through with a timely three-bag-lon an error this time, Linton!thi th VS. ger to make it 6-2, at the time. 3 month singled and scored Wilson then| "But you can bet they will Lutton grounded out, but Linton|take reels of films and they'll {came home on the play. |duplicate the form of our best In the 6th, Beaton's Dairy add- athletes, just as they have ed three runs. Michael was on|adopted Hungarian techniques for via a walk to start then Cornish |distarice running. They're out to was safe on a bad error. With two [become the best." out, Wiison was hit then after a| To meet the Soviet competition in the early stages. passed ball had moved him|McGregor suggested more Amer- Newitt pitched for Ajax and|around, Linton got his third hit|can teams should be sent abroad gave up a run in the first frame|of the game to score Wilson with|and more invitations issued to 0) ogame. | athletes from other countries to hit a double with one out. In the |Lutton doubled in th for his|come here, second inning, Hentig opened with third bit off Beeson t the next| a single and scored when Pl ree batters went down. fter two MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS came up with a homer, after two| Wilson was the winning pitcher. out. In the meantime, Newitt had|He only struck out nine batters struck out 11 batters in the four|but he was stingy with walks and By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS American League look and for five innings, he gave two out, Ferriés was safe on an : AB R up only two singles and fanned alinfield error then Johnson con- Fox, Chicago 297 39 half-dozen batters. But in the top|nected for a hit to s | Power, Cleveland 279 49 P 8 J 10. store them} 0 Kansas City 260 54 aided by another error. : when Claringbold got on base tolC vel" singled in the s Kuenn, Detroit 248 33 79 .319 [<9 Shigled. 1 Ws sorond but Vernon, Cleveland 191 28 61 .319 start it off, via an error. was doubled off when Bourrie : Arsenault singled and then with) flied out and Reeson got his other| Runs--Mantle, New York, 56. one out, Newitt himself connect-|hit in the third, after two out. Runs batted in--Jensen, Boston BASEBALL SCOREBOARD By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League 000 100 074-12 19 3 010 000 010--2 6 1 HOUDAILLE INDUSTRIES DEFEAT AJAX BANTAMS In a Legion Bantam League| 0. |Reeson had two of these. Victors Kornylo's fine pitching was the got their two runs in the first ason for Ajax's whitewashed frame when Reeson singled with H Pet 97 327 91 .326 84 .323 { Hi Fox, 97. Doubles--Kuenn, 24. Triples -- Tuttle, Kansas City, and Lemon, Washiggton, 6. Home runs--Jensen, 24. Stolen bases--Aparicio, Chicago By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League l17 W L Pet. GBL |. 48 2 649 | Pitching--Deiock, Boston, 74, 38 37 507 10% [1.000 New York |Kansas Cit y Strikeouts--Turley, New York, pinch-hitter and Legree pitched the 9th inning, giving up four {runs on three walks and a bases- {loaded triple by Norman, follow- led by a sacrifice. This was Mec- (Keene's only big rally. McKEENE'S: Hurst, 3b; Wood- cock, cf; Monaghan, c¢; Ford, ss; Jordan, If; Darling, 1b; Norman, 2b; Gaudet, rf; Mulleas, p; An- derson, p in 3rd; Tutak, p in 5th; Sharp, rf. KENT'S: Johns, 2b; Legree, cf| and p; Lupel, p and 1b; Keenan, ss; Mathews, rf; Hurst, 1f; Ban- non, 3b; McKnight, ¢; Stevenson, | 1b; Parish, p; Macintyre, cf. OSHAWA MINOR | SOFTBALL ASSOC. RADIO PARK BANTAMS BEAT SOUTHMEAD BOYS Southmead and Radio Park Bantams met Tuesday night at Radio Park in a postponed game and the home club came out on top 18-7. Leffen and Kidd opened with walks for Southmead then Peters hit a homer. Then Goring walked and Maynard hit a homer, all in the first inning, to give South- mead a 5-0 lead but they bogged down after that. Peters, on the mound for Radio found the mark and came through- with 12 strikeouts, after the score was 50. He fanned the first two bat- ters in the second then Goring walked, and scored on singles by Maynard and Rohn. The losers got their final run in the 7th on a single by Peters, a double by Gor- ing and an infield out. Radio Park tied the score in the second inning with a five-run rally of their own, on walks to Gutsole and McDonald and hits by Cairns, Lee, Stapley and D. March. Stapley walked, D. March singled and Peters hit a homer in the fourth, to make the score 8-6 for Radio Park and right there, Wright and his Southmead mates collapsed. Four walks, a triple by Me- Donald and a homer by Lee, gave Radio six runs in the fifth and they added four more in the sixth as they batted around the batting order. Senators Remain In Washington WASHINGTON * (AP) The board of directors of the Wash- ington baseball club voted Wed- nesday against shifting the team to Minneapolis or anywhere else. Dallas, Houston and Toronto were also mentioned as possible new sites, Only two days ago Senators' president' Calvin Griffith had talked with his fellow American League ciub owners about mak- ing a move. Wednesday, he himself an- nounced that the board now has adopted a resolution saying none in 1:40 of the round after drop- ping him for an eight count sec- onds before. Referee Joe Agust didn't even bother to count as Carter went down on his face and rolied over on his back. He raised Valdes' hand, then scrawled "TKO" across his scorecard. It became an official technical knockout at thatemoment regard- less of what Carter did. It de- veloped he did nothing but re- Use Bathroom Scales And With Difficulty SPOKANE (CP) -- With only little bathroom scales available for the ceremony, Nino Valdes weighed a ques- fionable 216 and Harold Car- ter 192 for their 10 - round heavyweight match Wednes- day night. A bench reserved for offi- cials coilapsed as it was pushed over to the scales. The scales had been moved because in one part of the room they tilted 10 pounds off. Spokane doesn't have many professional fights. rounds, was the second test for the 24-year-old Carter since his army discharge last winter. He had been slightly favored on the strength of a 10-rourd decision June 13 over Willi Besmanofi and was ahead on all three offi. cial score cards. Carter, ranked the No. 5 con- tender by the National Boxing Association, was a dejected, cut and bruised battler in the dress- ing room. "I saw the right coming," he said. "But not soon enough." It was the right that started Carter out. Valdes, 33, followed with a solid left hook and Carter went down near Nino's corner. He was up and willing to go at eight but was obviously in trouble. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Spokane -- Nino Valdes, 216, | Havana, stopped Harold Carter, |192, Linden, N.J., 9. | Porthcawl, Wales -- Dick Ri- chardson, 202, Wales, outpointed Bob Baker, 224, Pittsburgh, 10. AT... Gal. -- 4.95 kK) e¢ HARDWOOD ® Free D EACOC LUMBER CO. 328 RITSON RD. NORTH Specials e 4-SEASON WHITE PAINT eo HOLLMAR SILENT GLIDE SASHLESS WINDOW e COTTAGE PLANS PH. RA 3-9811 S elivery © a double by Bass in the first|Ford, Trucks (8) and Berra. gave them two runs. Two more | HRs: Cle-Colavito (14), Vernon walks, a double by Gardian then (7), a sacrifice fly by Villanue gave Only game scheduled. them three runs in the fifth and National League they picked up four in the next Milwaukee 020 010 000--3 4 1 inning on an error, a walk, tripie 1,o¢ Angeles 432 100 60x-10 10 1 by Klimuk and another sacrifice | Willey, Conley (2) Trowbridge fly, this one by Gardian. Villanue|(9) johnson (7) and Crandall: singled in the 9th and scored | Williams and Roseboro. > 'ater on an infield out, for Du-| HR: LA-Bilko (5). nlate's final run. {Only game scheduled. The winners scored three in International League the first when Bunny Maeson hit| Toronto 021 100 0--4 4 a three-run homer after two Buffalo 000 011.13 7 4 walks Six hits produced five| Blake, Tieferauer (6) and Han- runs in the second and then a|nah; Coleman and Noble. | Boston Detroit Cieveland Chicago Baltimore Washington 38 37 37 38 40 36 39 507 10% 500 11 487 12 k 480 12% | 35 40 .467 13% |Musial, Sv Louis 31 45 .408 18 {May®, a Fran. 7 iDark. Chicago National League Skinner, Pgh 268 48 87 .325 L o: Flood, St. Louis 179 24 57 .318 36 532 Runs--Banks, Chicago, 63. 35 514 Runs batted in--Thomas, Pitts- a5 507 burgh, 67. 29 "500 Hits--Mays, 109. a 37 493 Doubles--Hoak, Cincinnati, 23. 41 "468 Tripies-- Virdon, Pittsburgh, 9. 42 447 Home runs--Thomas, 22. : Stolen bases--Mays, 14. League _ Pitching -- McMahon, Milwau- L - Pct. GBL kee, 6-1, .857. 31 635 Strikeouts--Jones, St. Louis, 98. 571 5% 2 9s |- YESTERDAY'S STARS .478 13% [460 15 442 16% 364 24 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hitting: Vic Power, Indians-- Had five hits in six trips against Yankees as Tribe routed AL League leaders 12-2. Pitching: Stan Williams, Dodg- ers--gained fourth victory with a | tour-hitter over Milwaukee, strik- of its officers or directors "shall hereafter engage in any negotia- tions or discuss any offers, either oral or written, regarding 2) transfer." |Win in handy fashion over the| Scugog Cleaner Juniors glass . makers. In a peppy exhibition game burst, Fisher walked with one out played last night at Alexandra then B. Hart as safe on an Park, Cobourg Merchants de- error, Alexander singled and so! feated Scugog Cleaners Juniors did Edgell. Hornsby relieved to 9-5. fan pinch - hitter Rollins but Tur- Scugogs sent Phillips to the pin singled scoring Alexander mound to start and he stayed with the third run of the inning around until the 7th, when the and Cobourg's 9th and last of the visitors struck for their big/game, on a total of 10 hits. rally and in this inning, Hornsby! Scugog Cleaners hopped on came in as relief. Campbell's slants for two runs in Singles by B. Hart and Edgel, the very first frame. Ron Simcoe| plus an infield out, gave Cobourg|opened with a single, Tilk was their first run in the second in-{Safe on an error, a series of : ping and in the third, J. Hart Passed balls as Wilson was being|S€Ven-Tun parade in the fourth Toronto 100.200 030--6 12 0 + i linched the win. They Buffalo 000 013 010--5 9 3 led and then went all the/Walked, scored Simcoe and Tilk|'nPing c | A tint when the ball got past the|then Bob Simcoe singled later,|2dded five more before it was| Soaullenury, Tiefenaner (5) and left fielder. In the third, Edgell/but there was no more scoring Ver: : {ShompsoN, Hupnab ASL walked with one out but was|in that inning 5 Shearer with a homer, (FICK, rune ohnson an 'orced by O'Brien then Turpin| Buzminski opened the fourth double, two singles and a walk, |p eter 000 001 0--1 slasted one into. right field for a|with a single and with two out, 12d 2 big night at the ; 5 1/Richmond : Plate}, trea! 000 102 x--3 5 riple and scored himself when/Ron Simcoe homered to tie the while Locke, Sarnovsky, Maeson, | aa Greason (6) Browning| Havana he throw was bad. |score at 4-4. He homered again to nd K J Harmon and Ferguson all hit| . | Buffalo 32 57 In the top of the 6th, Cobourg open the 7th but that one proved|"¢. for the winners. J{&5 ng Raw: a a Teen! Today's Games sroke a 4-4 tie with two runs|the last counter for the Oshawal = . [Montreal 200 100 00x--3 7 0|Toronto at Buffalo (N) scored on a single to Alexander|téam, although Simcoe got an- hits Turpin with three hits, Alex-| Lovenguth and Watlington; |Rochester at Montreal (N) and a walk to Edgell, followed by other hit in the 9th; to ke it ande. and Edgell with two apiece, Valdes and Friol. "| Columbus at Richmond (N) O'Brien's sacrifice bunt, a sacri-|{a perfect night at the plate, with!paccl the Cobourg attack. Havana 000 000 000--0 2 3 Havana at Miami (N) : fice fly by Turpin to score Alex-two homers, two singles and a| COBOURG -- Turpin, ss; Bon- Miami 000 000 02x--2 10 2| ; y Friday's Games ander and Boncardo's single to walk : carco, cf; J. Hart, 1b; Campbell,|, Cuellar, Sanchez (8) and Izqui- Buffalo at Montreal score Edgell Bob Simcoe had a and a p, Fisher, 2b; B. Hart, If; Alex-|erdo; Cardwell and Bucha, Coker F ochester at Toronto National League AB R H Pet. 252 37 91 .361 305 62 109 .358 249 28 83 .333 w GBL Milwaukee 40 San Francisco 41 St. Louis 37 Philadelphia 36 Chicago 39 Cincinnati 36 Pittsburgh 36 Los Angeles 34 International w LOOK! NEW REDUCED PRICES Effective Immediately On Premium Quality FURNACE FUEL OIL NOW 16 C OF OSHAWA REDUCED HR TO GAL. AND WHITBY WHY PAY MORE? For Prompt Delivery By Our Fleet Of Metered Trucks Phone COMPANY VIGOR OIL hy RA 5-1109 OSHAWA MO 8-3644 WHITBY- % 2 2% 3 3% 4 5% 7 54 48 46 46 44 40 | Montreal Toronto Rochester Columbus 2 o|Miami 36 39 42 48 47 38 48 3 2 ingle In the 7th, the visitors clinched|double which gave th S Six ler, he win with a three - run oul-l of their team's total eight Rollins, rf in 7th, ' ¢: 'dgell, 3b; O'Brien, rf;|(3) : Columbus at Miami Columbus at Richmond, ppd rain Richmond at Havana ing out four as Dodgers beat Braves 10-3. © OIL BURNER SERVICE DEPT. @ AUTOMATIC FUEL OIL DELIVERY @

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