Be henbam uy <4 WINS FIRST RACE AT FORT ERIE MEET A crowd of over 9,000 race fans braved the hot and humid Fort Erie's 42-day summer meeting opened. Ridden by jockey Noel Turcotte, 'Sultan Ruler" was easily the best of his field in the first race and is shown above charging down By THE CANADIAN PRESS For the first time since they won the pennant in 1961, Cin- cinnati Reds are stamping themselves as a power in the National League. While Philadelphia Phillies and San Francisco Giants, who have batled for the lead all season, have turned to an ap- parent contest for slump-of-the year honors, the Reds are com- ing like gangbusters. They: knocked off the first- place Phillies 6-2 Monday night while Chicago Cubs took care of. the Giants 6-4 and moved within' 24% games of the top. That's just four games closer than the Redlegs were two Giants, Phils Falter weeks ago at the All -Star break. Currently, Cincinnati has won seven games in nine starts while the Phillies have dropped nine out of 12 and the Giants six out of eight. Three percent- age points separate the top pair. Only one other game was scheduled in the National League. In that, Houston Colts whipped Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1, dropping the defending world champions below the .500 mark again. The Phillies led 2-0 when Cin- cinnati began to battle back. Tommy Harper's two - run homer in the fifth off Dennis Redlegs Set Sights On First Place As Hitters Thrive As Chiefs Beat Columbus 13-1] By THE CANADIAN PRESS Olivares did most of the dam- age in a five-run seventh inning that gave Atlanta the verdict over the Leafs as Bob Sadow- BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League W iL Pet. GBL 52 584 -- 54 581 -- 51 554 2% 47 522 544] 45 517 6 47 516 6 45 500 7% 45 495 8 Houston 42 447 12% Ne wYork 27 66 .290 27 Monday's Results Chicago 6 San Francisco 4 Philadelphia 2 Cincinnati 6 Houston 4 Los. Angeles 1 (Only games scheduled) Probable Pitchers Today Chicago (Buhl 11-5) at San Philadelphia San Francisco Cincinnati Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago Los Angeles the stretch, followed by Glens- cott Miss, which was second and Queen's Day, which fin- ished third. --CP Wirephoto Don Buford Shines As Chicago Gains On Leading Orioles By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer Little Don Buford is growing into his White Sox uniform al- most as fast as the patched-up Chicagoans are growing on the American League. Buford, a pre-season rookie- of-the-year candidate who fiz- sled during the early going, continued his recent surge Mon- day night, driving in four runs with a homer, triple and single as the streaking Sox shelled Los Angeles Angels 9-0 and climbed within one-half game of the breaking single carried Detroit to a 7-5 victory over Bos- Sox in the only other scheduled. Sox have won five nine in 11 games. rst-place Baltimore four percentage Buford, a S-foot-8, 175-pound AL game has hit safely in 10 of his last 11. games, with two homers, a triple and four doubles. SECOND SHUTOUT His three hits Monday sup- ported rookie righthander Fred Talbot, who evened his record at 3-3 and lowered his earned run average to a_ sparkling 2.16. Talbot scattered nine hits enroute to his second shutout. Bill Skowron, recently ac- quired from Washington, and Montreal-born Pete Ward each chipped in with two hits and Tom McCraw drove in three ~game winning string. The White Sox now have won 55 and lost 24 against eight AL clubs for a .696 percentage, but have lost 10 of 10 to New York Yankees, who they head by one game in the standings. McAuliffe's 17th home run, in the eighth inning, pulled Detroit even at 5-5 before Wert doubled home Bill Freehan, who had Francisco (Perry 7-6) N New York (Stallard 5-13) at Cincinnati (Jay 4-7) N Jacksonville Pittsburgh (Gibbon 6-3) at St. Louis (Sadecki 10-7) N Philadelphia (Mahaffey 8-4) Houston (Nottebart 3-8) at Los Angeles (Drysdale 12-8) N American League wWwtL 622 618 609 51L 500 495 Baltimore Chicago New York Minnesota Detroit Los Angeles Boston Cleveland Washington Kansas City Centre-fielder Thomas made an unassisted double play in the first inning, grabbing a line drive and running to second to retire baserunner Tony Coni- gliaro, who had fallen on the baseline. at Milwaukee (Blassingame -_ N | Pct. GBL Monday's Results Los Angeles 0 Chicago 9 Detroit 7 Boston 5 (Only games scheduled) International League Pet. GBL 604 574 3 544 6 543 «6 505 9% 467 13 38 413 18 33 347 24% Monday's Results Atlanta 8 Toronto 2 Jacksonville 3 Buffalo 5 Syracuse 13 Columbus 11 Rochester 4 Richmond 5 Today's Games Rochester at Richmond Atlanta at Toronto Jacksonville at Buffalo Syracuse at Columbus (2) WwW 58 54 49 50 47 43 Syracuse Buffalo Rochester Toronto Richmond Columbus Atlanta Willie Horton's fifth hit of the night, a two-run double in the ski, the Leafs' second baseman,|for Saturday's running flandh committed three of their Cae ar « top of the 12th inning, ended a long evening for 10 assorted pitchers Monday night. But as far as the hitters were con- arm gg Mh Pag Mag fp Plage cerned, it could have gone on dawn. the clinching runs on a walk to When all the retums were in, Don Pavletich, Leo Cardenas' double 'and a triple by. Steve|S77acue, Chiefs had beaten Co- Boros. Pavietich wrapped it up with a two-run eighth. inning homer. up 43 hits between them and benefitted from a total of 13 NUXHALL bases on balls. Joe Nuxhall started for Cin-| Elsewhere it was underdogs' cinnati and paved the way for|night as the first-place Jackson- poth Philadelphia runs by issu-| Ville Suns fell 5-3 at Buffalo, the ing walks to Cookie Rojas, Ro-|tail-end Atlanta Crackers ham- jas scored in the first on a sac-|mered Toronto Maple Leafs 8-2 rifice fly by Tony Taylor fol-|and the seventh-place Richmond lowing a wild pickoff attempt|Virginians scored an unearned by Nuxhall and came around/run in the 10th inning to nip again in the fifth on singles by|Rochester Red Wings 5-4. Johnny Callison and Taylor. Mack feng who os The Giants scored three runs|8@me's only home run, ma in the fifth inning on consecu-|Horton's five-hit output at Co- tive homers by Orlando Cepeda|!umbus as the Chiefs came and Del Crandall and went into|ffom_ behind three times and he ninth i 4 the Jets vainly put together a reg ---- ann anee vret seven-run third inning. The Bisons survived four er- When Doug Clemens reached| or, as 92-year-old Ron Locke base on Hal Lanier's error and) ..attered five Jacksonville hits Billy Williams beat out an in- ; 2 to boost them into third place, field hit, Bob Shaw replaced Bob Bolin on the mound and a a points ahead of was immediately tagged for a NU-WAY RUG OSHAWA'S MOST RELIABLE RUG | By NU-WAY RUG CLEANERS, the largest broadioom dealer and rug cleaner in Eastern Ontario. 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RUTHERFORD (Oshows) LTD.--14 ALBERT ST. » \ \ / IN CHAIN LINK The finest jr Frost FENCING vet ececcrx. ritersices follows, GREEN COATED 36" 42" CHAIN LINK 19.15 22.50 25.80 GALVANIZED CHAIN LINK FENCING ew By Frost. 13 gauge price 13 80 16.15 18.45 per 100 ft. as follows, COMPLETE EINE OF HA! DESIGNS IN WOOD FENC- NDSOME ING ALSO AVAILABLE , . . complete in 8 ft. sections with one post, from & Building MILLWORK soptest North 728-6291 Open Daily 7 A.M. till 6 P.M. -- Fri. tit 9 P.M. © Bob Bradley Gets Chance In Tourney TORONTO (CP)--A total of 204 entries have been received for the 42nd annual Ontario Amateur golf tournament which starts here Wednesday. Five former champions will be in the field, including five- time amateur champion Nick Weslock of Toronto, three-time infielder, has hit at a .375 clip|singled, with the deciding run. during the current Chicago) Red Sox manager Johnny spurt, raising his batting aver-|Pesky was ejected for disput- age 23 points to .263. The 27-\ing the call on a two-run homer year-old speedster, under the|by the Tigers' George Thomas "220 mark until early in June,!in the seventh. winner Jack Nash of London, Bill and Dave Morland of North pig and Ray Coole of Bramp- 'on. Wednesday's 18-hole qualify- ing round will count in the com- FINAL ALLOTMENT IS HERE! ATTY petition for Ontario's Willingdon FORT ERIE RACE RESULTS Copyright 1964 by McMu fray Publishing Ce., Ltd. (Daily Rac ing Form). FIRST RACE -- Purse $1900. Claiming. bg and four-yeer-olds. 6 Furiongs 1 12-Sultan Ruler, T'cotte 1-Glenscot Miss, Harrison 3-Queen's Day, Harris Start good, won handily Also Ran in Order: Maple Jan, Artista, Espaieris, Midway Blue, Bive Poppet, Little Monkey, Page Copy and Peyton Lad. Winner, b g, 3, Sultan Mahmoud -- Men Ruler by Menetrier, Trainer D O Brown. Pool 28,633 Double Pool 53,765 13.70 6.10 3.50 4.00 3.10 6.00 Four-year-olds and up. 6 Furlongs. &P Service, Walsh 4.90 3.10 2.70 1-Willhooks, Harris 5.0 3.80 TCartersville, Turcotte 5.20 Start good, won ridden out Also Ran in Order: Rock Age, Grifter, European Flight, and Malajar. Late Scratch--Dudio, Econ. DAILY DOUBLE, 12 and 8, PAID $36.70 Winner, b g, & Bull Page -- ice Badge by Case Ace. Trainer D D Cardetia Pool 43,210 THIRD RACE -- Purse $1900. Claim- i Four-year-olds and up. 6 Furlongs () ( 9-indian Line, Gomez 5.50 4.30 3.20 5-D@-Hidden Hope, Dittfach 11.00 6.30 3Ocean Pearl, Fitz'ns 3.80 Start good, won driving in Order: Our Johnie, Dutch French Cartoon, ing. 7) Queen, Late Scratch--Our Interview. DQ--Finished first, but was disqualified and placed second Winner, b g, 6, Bull Page -- Flirt by Menetrier. Trainer F H Merrill Jr. Pool 55,273 FOURTH RACE -- Purse $2000. Claim ing. Three-year-olds. 6 Furlongs (11) 1-Hannibra, Dittfach 14.60 9.50 6.20 21.10 10,30 4. Start good, won driving 4 Also Ran in Order: Mr. Flirt, Marina Maid, Lady Domain, Popey, Rampart Street, Blow Your Top, King Rip and Sign Play. Late Scratch--Black Coral. Winner, bik f, 3, Hannibal -- Brazado Maid. by Brazado. Trainer G A Stallwood. Pool 53,187 FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2609. Two-year-| olds, foaled in Canada. 5 Furlongs (7) 2Lucky Marine, Shuk 5.80 3.70 3.50 1A-Sun Velvet, Turcotte 5.20 3.60 3 -Machavoine, Fitz'ns 3.0 Start good, won «asily Also Ran in Order: Folk Singer, Bing- ham, Bush Flight, ard A-Battle Order. A---C E and J D Simmons and View Hulloa Farms Entry. QUINELLA, 2 AND 1A, PAID $33.40 Winner, ch c, 2, Call Me Lucky -- Jet Marine by Jet Pilot, Trainer C F Chap- man. Pool 27,916 Quinetia Pool 30,009 SIXTH RACE -- One and one-sixteenth Miles. Four-year-olds and up, Purse $2100 (7) T-Arctic Swirl, Parnell 2-Third Eye, Gomez $-Black Raven, Dittfach Satrt good, won easily Also Ran in Order: Lavelia, find. Chief. 10.70 5.10 3.90 3.90 4,00 5.40 Ramsay Winner, b g, 4, Iceberg 24 -- Ammo by War Admiral. Trainer J C Meyer. Poo} 58,210 SEVENTH RACE--Purse $5000. "Vire- |land Handicap", Three-year-olds and up. One and one-sixteenth Miles (7) 1A-Puss N Boots, Gomez. 3.90 2.30 2.20 3 -Lord Quillo, McComb 2.80 2.50 5-Sunny, Dalton Start good, won handily Late Scratch--B-Broadway John W. Entry B--J J Gregory and Audiey Farms Entry by Bull Lea. Trainer F H Merri Poo} 66,053 sixteenth Miles (8) 1-Brigitta Skol, Fitz'ns 2-Crystal Fire, Shuk 3-Stromaway, Gomez Start good, won driving Also Ran in Order: More, Raven Wing, Batuan and Ridge Road. Winner, b f, 4, Royal Gem 2nd -- Bridal Toast by Milkman. Trainer W Thurner, Pool 63,556 Total Pool 479,817 Attendance 9,068 2.40 Also Ran in Order: A-Gran Califa, a Man, Whiteborough and B-Recita- t COND RACE -- Purse $1900. Claim- _ sky A--R and W Gian and North Star Ranch | Winner, b h, § ,Solar Slipper -- Cat Key J iM Jr. Tipont, Money | Cup team which will play in inter-provincial matches. So far, Weslock is leading in the race for a spot on the four- man team. He has a total of 208 in three 18-hole rounds in earlier tournaments. Gary Cowan of Kitchener is second with 214. Bruce Brewer and Ken Thorpe, both of Toronto, are third and fourth with respective scores of 219 and 221. Three players are tied at 225 --Mike Whitney of Kitchener, defending Ontario Amateur champion Bill Morlang and Bob Bradley of Oshawa: ° rvyAMES wer ct ren socom! O MALLEY ! Ing. Four-year-olds and up. One and one- Construction Ltd. 723-7122 | @ Homes @ Additions i ! @ Offices @ Remodeling, GRRE ARSE ES SR NA OES 'McLaughlin C Faster 24-Hour DELIVERY oal & Supplies Delivery Service -- With our Fleet of -- RADIO-CONTROLLED TRUCKS! ! 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