ngsangsn NNN NB a Bt BE IE EE MENGE ERE BBE EB ASAE IE HARMON KILLEBREW, veteran third baseman of the Minnesota Twins, lost his hat but he got his man, easily nabbing Cleveland's Fred Whitfield, in the 6th in- ning last night, in Cleveland, when the Indians' first base- man tried to go to 3rd base eee tesa LEADERS FALTER By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Staff Writer Say hey, Willie's really clout- or ot Willie Mays this time, nor Willie Horton, Detroit Tigers' fearsome rookie. The name is Stargell, an out- fielder with Pittsburgh Pirates who takes his glasses off to play baseball. Without visual aid, he slammed three home runs and a double Tuesday night, driving in six runs against Los Angeles Dodgers as the Pirates crushed the National League leaders 13- 3. That brought his homers for the year to 20, just two behind the league-leading total Mays has clubbed for San Francisco Giants. Stargell, at 24 Mays' junior by 10 years, is only in his third full year in the majors. He has given ample evidence of his left-handed power since he en- tered the Pirate organization in 1959, but his highest major league output of homers was 21 last season. Against the Dodgers, Stargell on Joe Azoue's grounder. Bernie Allen _ handled Azoue's grounder and tossed the ball to Killebrew, for the out. Indians won the game 3-1. That's Harmon's hat, showing just under- neath Whitfield's armpit. --AP Wirephoto Indians Win, Close Gap On League Leading Twins By BOB GREEN Associated Press Sports Writer Mickey Mantle is out, Roger Maris is out and Whitey Ford pitches only when the weather is right. New York Yankees are 10% games back with a team bat ting average of .224 and mana ger Johnny Keane says every- thing is fine and dandy. Which should make Mr Keane the optimist of the year. "We have as good a team of this league, when we're able to get the regular team in there," he "We just need to get You know, win five, then maybe drop one and come back with five or six better than anyone in Bays. straightened out. in a row." Which makes good sense. There's just the problem of (1) getting the regulars in there and (2) winning five in a row. Or four. Or even three. With the M and M boys on the sidelines again--Mantle with pulled left hamstring and Maris with bruised fingers--the Yanks dropped a 6-2 decision to Kansas City Athletics Thurs- day, snapping a two-game win- binge and marking their eighth loss in 12 games. The leaders, meanwhile, The National Association of Yankee Haters is having its grandest time in two decades. The Yanks, everybody's choice to win their 15th pennant in 17 years and a record sixth in a row, have had problems in bunches. -| There have been injuries ga- lore, principally to Mantle, Maris and Elston Howard. No- |body is hitting much. They're losing the close ones. And the lop-sided ones. And it must have been rub- bing salt into a profusion of bleeding wounds when Roland Sheldon, who went to Kansas City for catcher Doc Edwards earlier this season, pitched a strong six-hitter against his old mates. He was supported by a three- run homer by Ken Harrelson and a three-run burst in the eighth. Joe Pepitone had a homer for the losers. Ralph Terry, another ex-Yan- kee, won his seventh of the sea- son in pitching tlie Indians past Minnesota, allowing only five hits before leaving in the eighth. Sleepy Boston - manager Billy Herman said he fined an undis- closed number of Red Sox for missing an early morning bed- Los Angeles Cincinnati Milwaukee San Francisco Pittsburgh Philadelphia St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati (Ellis 11-3) at) Kelly 0-1) (N) New York Houston (Dierker 1-4) (N) Pittsburgh (Friend 3-5) at Los Angeles (Koufax 11-3) (N) Philadelphia (Belinsky 2-3) at San Francisco (Shaw 6-4) (N) Minnesota Chicago Cleveland Baltimore Detroit BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WL Pet. GBL % 4 4% 6% 7 i 11% 13% 19% A488 Houston 423 New. York .333 Thusrday's Results Philadelphia 5 San Francisco 1 Chicago 3 Milwaukee 1 St. Louis 11 Cincinnati 4 New -York 2 Houston 4 Pittsburgh 13 Los Angeles 3 | Probable Pitchers Today Chicago (Buhl 7-6) at St. Louis (Purkey 5-4) (N) Milwaukee (Sadowski 4-2, or| (Spahn 4-9) at American League WL Pet. GBL 39 609 -- 603% 603 ~% Los Angeles New York Washington Boston Kansas City Columbus Toronto Jacksonville Syracuse Toledo Rochester Buffalo 32 38 .457 30 37 .448 27 40 .403 26 39 .400 19 42 311 Thursday's Results Kansas City 6 New York 2 Los Angeles 2 Detroit 3 Minnesota 1 Cleveland 3 Boston 1 Baltimore 4 Probable Pitchers Today Kansas City (Hunter 0-0) at Clevelanc (McDowell 8-3) (N) Los Angeles New York (Downing 5-7) (N) Washington (Narum 2-7) at} Boston (Bennett 1-1) (N) Baltimore Bunker Chicago (Horlen 6-5) (N) Detroit (Wickersham 1-5) Minnesota (Boswell 4-3) (N) International League W L Pet. GBL 48 26 .649.-- 43,29 .597 4 41 28 .594 36 32 .529 9 36 34 .514 10 Atlanta 29 41 .414 14 20 52 .278 27 Thursday's Results Toronto 0-3 Toledo 1-2 Buffalo 1 Columbus 2 Atlanta 0 Syracuse 1 Jacksonville 5 Rochester 3 Friday's Games Buffalo at Toledo Toronto at Columbus (2) Jacksonville at Syracuse Atlanta at Rochester 591 1 578 2 Aaron, Mil. BASEBALL LEADERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League AB R 212 42 H Pet. 73 344 NHL To Decide On Franchises NEW YORK (CP) -- The Na- (Chance 4-4) at (4-2) at at 4 30 41 .423 16% homered with the bases empty in the first and with one on in the third against 1l-game win- ner Don Drysdale, struck out in the fourth, then connected for SG OT ENON OI CELE NIE SCC IOV EIEN SED, Stargell's Three HR's Jolts L.A. Dodgers gles by Cookie Rojas, Callison and Tony Gonzalez, Dick Ellsworth scattered six Milwaukee hits as he brought his record to 8-3 with his fifth straight victory. He has not lost since May 15 when he pitched a one-hitter and was beaten by the Dodgers. The Astros put it against the Mets with a three- run second inning helped along by New York pitcher Jack Fisher. Fisher wild-pitched one run home, made a throwing er- ror that let in another and failed to cover first ona bunt Tun. Claude Raymond of St. Jean, the first Toronto game, Que., was the winner. his third homer against reliever, John Purdin with two on in the sixth. He came up in the eighth against Mike Kekich and shot a line drive down the left field line that fell two feet short of the stands for a double. CARDS BELT REDS While Stargell was leading a 15-hit attack, St. Louis Cardi- nals belted Cincinnati Reds 11-4 with a 12-hit offensive, Philadel- phia Phillies downed San Fran- cisco 3-1, Chicago Cubs de- feated Milwaukee Braves 3-1 and Houston Astros whipped New York Mets 4-2. Stargell was joined in homer hitting for the Pirates by Bob Bailey and Jim Pagliaroni. Wes Parker drove in all the Dodger runs with a sacrifice fly and a two-run homer. The Cardinals, gaining only their eighth victory in 29 games did most of the damage against Jim O'Toole as Phil Gagliano rapped a three-run homer and Lou Brock and Bob Uecker each stroked two-run singles, The Giants scored in the sec- ond inning on singles by Len Gabirelson, Tom Haller and Hal Lanier but the Phillies moved ahead to stay with a two-run sixth built on a walk and sin- By JERRY LISKA CHICAGO (AP) -- Chicago White Sox, fighting for the American League pennant, and Chicago Cubs, just trading National League water, are plagued with pitching myster- ies. The Cubs' Larry Jackson, who had the most wins of any major league pitcher with a 24-11 record last season, just can't win. The White Sox' Juan Pizarro, 19-game winner last . season, hardly is in a game long enough to lose. Jackson, bowing to the Braves 6-2 at Milwaukee Wed- nesday night, is the majors' heaviest loser this season with 4-10. ; JUST IN AND OUT Pizarro also went to the post Chicago's Cubs And Sox Have Pitching Problems "We've never said anything about trading him, so he couldn't mope about that. He likes it here. 'LET HIM THROW' "We're just going to let him} throw on the sidelines until he) convinces us he can fire his| fastball." Jackson's sad case also has Cub leaders stumped. "There is nothing wrong with him as far as I know," said head coach Lou Klein. Pitching coach Mel Harder thinks it's a streak of bad Jackson luck. "I don't see anything mech- anically wrong with him to cor- rect," said Harder, once a star Cleveland Indian hurler. 'You can't change those bloop hits, you know." Wednesday and -- for the sev- enth time--was through before he hardly got out of the start- ing gate. Washi s k out Pizarro in the second in- ning of a twin-bill opener, leav- ing Juan with a misleading 1-2 mark. , It's misleading because Pizarro has yet to pitch beyond five innings and has allowed 31 hits in 19.2 innings. Manager Al Lopez, who made a winner out of Pizarro after the Braves gave up on him five years ago, is perplexed, if not ton & + kaa YOUR SATISFACTION 1S OUR AIM All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE Kelly Disney Used Cars Ltd. 1200 Dundes E. Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS DROP IN i : é Z Ss F Pa alu ¢ oe es F2os i re & li i E ! Z 3 away f ep Ea F ~ E Repoz picked up the first walk CITY OF OSHAWA Recreation Department Final registration for Special Interest Groups-- June 29th - 2- 4 p.m. 7-9 p.m. June 30th -10-12 am. 2-4 p.m. July 2nd --10-12 a.m. 2-4 p.m. RECREATION CENTRE, 100 Gibb Street July Day Camp .. $3.00 August Day Camp $3.00 Track & Field ... $2.00 Soccer ......+. $1.00 Gymnastics ..... $1.00 Golf ......+.%+ $1.00 Hiking ......... $1.00 Field Hockey ... $1.00 Tennis ......+. $1.00 Archery ....... $1.00 Crafts ....-... $1.00 Droma ....00.. $1.00 Girls' Club $1.00 Sketching, Drawing & Painting ..... $1.00 7 weeks commencing July 5th PLAYGROUNDS (Ne registration required) Trained leaders will organize and supervise a variety programme in- cluding arts and crafts, games, sandbox play. Programmes will operated from July 5th to August 20th; 9:00 a.m, to 11:50 a.m.; 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday to Friday. Playground will be operated at the following parks and school grounds. WEST AREA--Rundle, Radio, Thornton's, Valleyview, Fernhill, Nipigon, Glent Stewart. NORTH AREA--Brockside, Sunset Heights School, North Oshewe, Northway Court, Conneught, end Dr. S$. J. Phillips School. EAST AREA--Woodview, Baker M ial, Bathe, Eastview, Victory, Sunn King- side, Veterens Tot, Cowen. : : : = SOUTH AREA--Hermen, Southmeed, Lake Viste, Storie. For further information contact Oshawa Recreation Department 100 GIBB STREET tional Hockey League's board PHONE 725-1111 made things even tighter. Gleveland Indi '4 d Min- nesota 3-1 and moved within a half game of the leading Twins. The idle Chicago White Sox also moved within a half-game of the top. Baltimore Orioles, 4-1 vic- tors over Boston Red Sox, climbed within one and Detroit Tigers edged Los Angeles An- gels 3-2 to trail the twins by two. out of patience, over the Puerto Rican lefty's slump. "We've asked him if he has a sore arm," said Lopez, "and he says no. And he doesn't throw like a man who has a sore arm. YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting -- Willie Stagell, Pi- rates, hammered three homers and a double, bringing his sea- son homer total to 20, and driv- ing in six runs as Pittsburgh jerushed National League lead- jing Los Angeles Dodgers 13-3. Pitching -- Dick Ellsworth, Cubs, checked Milwaukee on six hits, posting his fifth straight victory as Chicago defeated the Braves 3-1. 80 .342 Mays, San Fran. 234 50 67 .337 Tvrre, Mil. 199 32 Clehente, Pitts, 228 37 75 3.29 Allen, Phila. 248 42 81 .327 Runs--Harper, Cincinnati, 54;; NHL president Clarence Rose, Cincinnati, 51. ;Campbell said Thursday night Runs Batted In--Banks, Chi-|that a statement will be issued cago 59; Stargell, Pittsburgh,|at the end of the meeting to- | day. Hits--Pinson, Cincinnaty@@e7;| The league announced its in- Williams, Chicago, 83 tention to expand following a | Doubles--Williams, ;| meeting of the'team owners in \Milwaukee, Santo, Chi | New York two months ago. Bosox And Philadelphia =: Fae et Players Fined; Long List Triples --. Callison, Philadel-|two among those to be chosen |phia, 9; Clemente, 7. |for the new six-club division Home Runs--Mays, 22; Star-| will be revealed. By MIKE RATHER Associated Press Sports Writer It's a fine year for baseball of governors is holding a spe- cial meeting called to process applications from 12 groups seeking league franchises. check -- couldn't handle Milt Pappas, who spaced seven hits in going the distance. A three- run homer by Brooks Robinson and a solo shot by Luis Apari- cio gave him more than enough margin. Denny McLain's five-hit pitch- ing and a two-run double by Jerry Lumpe won for . Detroit. gell, 20. : Among the cities most prom- Stolen Bases--Wills, Los An-|inently mentioned in an ex- --more players are getting fined every. day. ing basketball during the win- geles, 44; Brock, St. Louis, 27.|panded NHL are Vancouver, The oston and Philadelphia when Schoendienst, whose de- fending world champion Car- dinals are languishing in sev- 786. | Strikeouts--Koufax, 147; Gib-| son, St. Louis, 113. | and Minneapolis. SEEK ASSURANCE REMEMBER WHEN... ter. Pitching -- Ellis, Cincinnati,| [os Angeles, San Francisco, St. Round 2 ended late Thursday|and Koufax, Los Angeles, 11-3,),ouis, Baltimore, Pittsburgh stay-ups and the St. Louis sleepy-heads are the latest to be enth place, said he had fined Boyer and Gagliano -- "not much, just to keep them alert" --for mistakes at Milwaukee, | Boyer was hit for straying off second base when he lost count PHILADELPHIA (AP)--The American Football League said Tuesday it will award a fran- chise to Philadelphia if assured the team can play in the pro- By THE CANADIAN PRESS Because of poor attend- ance, Toronto Maple Leafs moved their hockey farm club, Invaders, out of Den- American League AB R 83 .353 61 .330 72 .329 59 .324 added to a list that already in- cluded the whistling New York Yankees and the basketball- playing New York Mets. Davalillo, Cleve. 235 29 Horton, Detroit 185 29 Hall, Minnesota 219 36 Bos. 182 33 The latest developments came/on the number of strikes on a Thursday when about a half-|batter and Gagliano for stop- dozen Red Sox players were| ping at second base on a hit- fined for missing an early-|run single. morning bedcheck and it was) At Baltimore, manager Billy reported that several members| Herman revealed that he had of the Phillies had been hit in| made a telephone bedcheck and the pocketbook for similar cur-| found some of his players out. few violations. "We have a most liberal cur- Also joining the club that is| few of three hours, more than fast losing its exclusivity were) most other teams," Herman ex- Ken Boyer, the most valuable player in the National League last season, and Cardinal team- mate Phil Gagliano--both fined for not being alert by freshman} th, than generous. I started calling at 1:50 a.m., and those I didn't get, I called again at 2:30." Meanwhile, in San Francisco, ; there -was-no word from Gene Mauch, whose Phillies made a run at the National League pen- nant last season and currently, are running in sixth plage. The latest fines -- outfielder Tony Gonzalez was fined two weeks ago for lackadaisical play were assessed in Houston m Red-Se ns In both the Boston and Phil- adelphia cases the players in- volved were not named. How- ever, it was indicated that the levies against the Red Sox stay- outs would run about $100 each, while the reported after-hours activities of the Phillie players would cost them about three! earlier this week. days' pay each. For a player) The Phillies' curfew, enforced ory in the neighborhood of| only on the road, is midnight $10, for the six-month base-| after a day game, and 1:30 plained. 'Three hours is more|Y Ystr'mski, Mantilla, Boston 228 21 73 320 Runs--Green, Boston, 50; Mc- Auliffe, Detroit, 47. Runs Batted In--Mantilla, 52; Horton, 48. Tresh,| Hits -- Davalillo, 83; New York, 74. Doubles -- Versalles, Minne-| sota, and Yastrzemski, 18. Triples--Campaneris, Kansas City 8; five players tied with Home Runs--Colavito, Cleve-| land, and Horton, 16. oe Stolen Bases -- Campaneris.| 23; Cardenal, 20. Pitching -- Fisher, ~ Chicago, 8-1, .889; Buzhardt, Chicago, 7-1, .875. | Strikeouts--McDowell, Cleve-| land, 124; Lolich, Detroit 83. | RONALD W. BILSKY, B.¢. CHIROPRACTOR 100 King St. E. -- 728-5156 }} bal! season, that would be about! a.m., following a night game $133. -- Sas The Yankees started the fin-| ing binge June 8 when they re-| vealed that three unidentified players -- reporters travelling with the teams said they were outfielder Mickey Mantle and pitchers Pedro Ramos and Hal Reniff _--had been fined $250 each for breaking training. That included drinking and whistling at waitresses. 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