CROWDED ISN'T IT? -- There's. not much room on first base as Pittsburgh Pi- rate pitcher Don Cardwell puts the tag on New York's Jimmie Schaffer (17) to complete a double play, at New York's Shea Stadium, last night. Schaffer's grounder forced teammate Gary Kolb at second. Card- well took the toss from Pi- rate catcher Jim Pagliaroni, who had backed up Andre Rodger's wide throw from second base, in time to catch Schaffer, rounded first and Dodgers' 6-3 triumph over Mil- who had | then | couldn't make it back to the bag, Cardwell went on to hit a three-run homer in the 7th inning, to spark Pirates' 11-3 victory over the Mets. BASEBALL LEADERS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 'European Body | American League AB RH Pet, Yastr'mski, Bos. 286 48 95 .332 Whitfield, Cleve. 280 31 86 .307) Mantilla, Boston 343 34 105 .306) Oliva, Minnesota 438 82 133 .304 Hall, Minnesota 368 60 112 .304 Runs -- Oliva, 82; Versalles, |, Minnesota, 79. Runs batted in -- Colavito, Cleveland, 75; Horton, Detroit and Killebrew, Minnesota, 70. Hits--Oliva, 133; Richardson, New York, 119. Doubles -- Oliva, 28; Yastr- zemski, 27. Triples -- Aparicio, Baltimore) ay Campaneris, Kansas City,! 0 Home runs-----Colavito, Horton, and Killebrew, Minnesota, 22. | _ Stolen bases -- Campaneris, | 38; Cardenal, Los Angeles, 34.) Pitching -- Grant, Minnesota,! 13-3, .813; Pascual, Minnesota, 8-3, .727 National League AB RH Pet. 0) Will Endorse | Hockey Format MELVILLE, Sask. (CP)--Ca | nadian proposals for revampinj | e world ice hockey champion | ships have been endorsed by th st. Louis |European executive committee Chicago |of the International Ice Hockey | Houston Federation, Gordon Juckes said New York Thursday. Juckes, secretary-manager of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association said the proposals would change the championshit into a double round-robin con test between five teams. At present, eight teams forn} the championship pool and mee each other only once. Juckes said such-an eight-team pool in eludes three crews that are not f championship calibre. Juckes said the proposals will leome up before the IIHF next BAS By THE CANADIAN. PRESS | Cleveland National League w Los Angeles 64 San Francisco 58 Cincinnati Milwaukee Philadelphia Pittsburgh 46 46 48 47 50 53 53 60 61 34.74 Los Angeles 6 Milwaukee 8 San Francisco 18 Cincinnati Houston 1 St. Louis 3 -582 558 -556 552 528 518 509 459 425 315 Thursday's Results Pittsburgh 11 New York 3 Chicago 3 Philadelphia 4 --AP Wirephoto | EBALL SCORES, STANDING L Pet. GBL Chicago Ne 3 3 3% 8 1344 17 29 7 Mays Clubs Two HR's; Koufax Wins His 19th By MURRAY CHASS Associated Press Sports Writer Willie Mays found the. cow milking contest an-easy act to follow, and Sandy Koufax came on with the same old routine. Performing on separate stages, Mays and Koufax put.on typically glittering shows Thursday night. i Mays clouted two homers and drove in four runs as San Fran-| cisco Giants battered Cincinnati 18-7, while Koufax picked up his 4a@th victory in Los Angeles t i burgh Pirates In other National League games, Philadelphia Phillies)mente raised edged Chicago Cubs 4-3, Pitts-|.345 with a single, double and bombed Newhome run while pitcher Don York Mets 11-3 and St. Louis|Cardwell added a three-run ho- Cardinals stopped Houston As- mer tros 3-1. Philadelphia nipped the Cubs on Rich Allen's two-run triple in/fifth straight game. he fifth inning. Allen also sin- gled and scored on Adolfo Phil-\triumph against eight defeats lips' single in the fourth, Relief/with a four-hitter against the pitchers Gary Wagner and Bo| Astros. Tim McCarver drove in Belinsky snuffed out Chicago the first two St. Louis runs with) threats in the eighth and ninth\a sacrifice fly and an infield innings, WHITEY FORD WINS THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, August 6, 1965 7 Roberto Cle- | Lepene peeing A is average to Pittsburgh's attack. Cardwell brought his record to /10-5 as the Pirates won their | Bob Gibson picked up his 14th jout. | waukee Braves. } Mays came to bat minutes after team-mate Jim Davenport won $50 in a PD -pame milking competition. men were on base, and the Giant slugger) promptly connected for his 26th} home run. He batted again in| the second 'inning and this time unloaded his 27th. | Koufax scattered seven hits, struck out 12 and walked two.| «- victory set the stage for the 29-year-old southpaw to be- come the season's first 20-game winner. Koufax is ahead of the pace he set in his two previous best seasons. In 1963, en route to 25) victories, he won his 19th game; Aug. 17 and his 20th 12 days later. Last year he picked up Iwo. 19 on Aug. 16 but never had) a chance, for the 20th. An el-| bow injury took care of that. MATCH FELLER? | He also is maintaining a pace} that would make him the one-| iseason strikeout xing in mod: ern history. His major league- leading total of 253 is only 95) away from Bob Feller's record| of 348. His average of 10 strike-| outs a game could give him the record in 10 more starts, 61 58 57 54 48 46 40 44 47 48 56 58 581 614| 552 914 543 10% '491 16 453 20 422 23% Detroit w York Los Angeles Washington | admitted THESE UMPIRES NO DOUBT GLAD BRAVES ARE MOVING By JAMES R. POLK MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Spit- balls, gumballs, dancing base- runners and angry, onrushing players who weigh 205 and tower above 6 feet... . This was the menagerie for the lonely, sleepless mid- nights with which umpire Frank Secory and his crew left Milwaukee today. Los Angeles Manager Walt Alston offered balm for the poor, embattled umpire: "They do a hell of a job and | they do a thankless job." But Secory and company did more than that. In just one week they came close to setting a record in rhubarbs, Milwaukee Manager Bobby Bragan accused San Fran- cisco's Bob Shaw of throwing the banned spitter last Friday night. When the charge had | no effect, he ordered four of his own relief pitchers to un- cork the sodden. sinker and later they threw about 75 to 80 illegal offer- ings. Plate umpire John Kib- ler said he had seen none. On Monday night the Braves accused the Giants' Gaylord Perry of adding a new wrinkle to the wash-and- wear pitch and throwing a spitter doctored with a gummy substance. That pro- test was also denied. Milwaukee won the first | game of a crucial double- header with the Dodgers Wednesday night when Woody Woodward danced away from a_ basepath tag | and turned an apparent dou- | ble play into a throwing er- ror that allowed two runs in a 4-3 Braves' victory. After a lengthy rhubarb, the consensus in the two dressing rooms was that both umpire Ken Burkhart at first base and Lee Weyer at sec- ond thought the other one had ruled Woodward out, but neither had seen the tag and made the actual call, The four - man umpiring crew alammed the door to its dressing room and refused to comment after the mixup. SUNS SHUT OUT Boston 65 .381 27% Kansas City 35 67 .343 31 | Thursday's Results Minnesota 8 Washington & New York 3 Chicago 0 Detroit 2 Cleveland 5 Boston 1 Kansas City 5 Probable Pitchers Today /Boston (Monbouquette 8-11) at) |Minnesota (Merritt 0-0) (N) New York (Bouton 4-12) Detroit (Lolich 11-6) (N) | Washington (Ortega 11-10) at Los Angeles (Lopez 10-9) (N) Phil Regan Leafs Beat at| By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Mike Page homered in the Syracuse|fourth for the Leafs to tie the iChiefs won his own gamegame after Dave Wissman's Phil Regan of Chicago (Jackson 914) at New. York (Parsons 1-8) (} Pittsburgh (Friend 5-8) a Philadelphia (Bunning 12-7) (N) San Francisco (Perry 7-9) at St. Louis (Sadecki 2-9) (N) Los Angeles (Podres 4-5) at Cincinnati (Jay 8-3) (N) Houston (Cuellar 1-8) Cleveland (Terr Baltimore (Pappa Kansas City (Sheldon 4-6) (N) International w 71 69 Columbus Toronto Atlanta y Chicago (Horlen 9-9) s 10-4) 10-4) League 4 47 67 5 Pet. GBL',,; 8 yi Pr a ty in the 5-0 victory with), omers to lead the Wings over '585 563 4% at against Jacksonville Suns in In- jternational Baseball League ac- atition Thursday night. Regan shut out the Suns on five hits and drove in the win- la sacrifice fly in the fifth in- ning. In other league action Tor- Is Big Chief; Leading Jets jsolo blast in the first. Toronto |went ahead to stay on Stan | Johnson's two-run single also|onto. jin the fourth. | | Joe Altobelli hit two two-run | Fred Talbot Hurls No. 10 YESTERDAY'S STARS Pitching--Whitey Ford, New York, pitched a five-hitter for his 13th victory against eight defeats as the Yankees shut out For 10th-Place Athletics |, By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer They've been passing over Fred Talbot pretty regularly this year but the young Kansas City right-hander keeps winning just the same. Talbot became the Athletics' first 10-game winner Thursday night when he limited Boston to six hits and got help from John Wyatt fot a 5-1 victory over the Red Sox. The American League's 10- ame club is not a terribly ex- lusive place these days with 15. other pitchers joining the ranks before Talbot made it. But none of the other members toils for the last-place Athletics, who've managed just 35 victories all season, Talbot was passed on to Kan- sas City in the aftermath of the & c Chicago -- 92 degrees worth -- and the Yankee southpaw re- sponded with his 13th victory./18-7 Whitey, who has trouble on cool days because the ation on his left shoulder last winter him with a circulation problem in his pitching hand, was in charge all the way. Catcher Ejston Howard whacked a two-run homer. MeDowell ran his American League-leading strikeout > total to 211, fanning 10 Tigers. It was the 12th time in 23 starts this season that the tall left-hander| has struck out 10 or more bat- ters in a single game, Leon Wagner and Rocky Col- avito drove in two runs apiece for the Indians with Wag- ner stroking his 19th homer of the season. YOUR SATISFACTION iS OUR AIM : All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE Kelly Disne a hevng complicated three cornered trade which sent Rockey Cola- vito to Cleveland and John Ro- mano from' the Indians to Chi- cago. With a 10-6 record earned run average for 140 in- jnings, the 24-year-old pitcher is} \the top pitcher on the Athletics | | 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS staff TWINS WIN Eisewhere in League, Minnesota its lead to 544 games over idle Baltimore by whipping 'Wash- ington 8-5. New York blanked | Chicago 3-0 behind Whitey and 3.48) the American | lengthened | ENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH *5.00 PER DAY 725-6553 PLUS Low MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST. Oshawa Ford's five-hitter and Cleveland) defeated Detroit 5-2 for Sam) McDowell's 12th victory. Joe Nossek and Zoilo Ver-| salles provided the home run) punch for Minnesota against Washington. Nossek's three-run shot built a five-run Twin lead) in the third inning and Jim) Kaat coasted to his 10th vic-| tory. Relief ace Johnny Klipp- stein finished up. It was Ford's kind of day in Olympic Sprinter Moves To Toronto VANCOUVER (CP) -- Irene Piotrowski, Canada's fleet- footed Olympic star, is moving to'Toronto this month. | The 24-year-old schoolteacher and her husband and trainer, Heinz, will leave Aug. 14 for Toronto where Heinz plans to take a nine-month course at Toronto's College of Massage and Hydrotherapy. Mrs. Piotrowski said Wednes- day she will continue teaching and running while living in Tor- In her third season of run- ning, she is co-holder of the Ca- nadian 100-yard record of 10.7 with Yvonne Breeden of Van- couvtr, and holder of the Cana- |Atlanta. His second blast came lin the eighth inning off reliever} dian 100-metre record of 114. She also holds British Columbia SUBSCRIBERS TICKETS AVAILABLE following the game, NO INCREASE IN ADMISSION Buses leave Simcoe and Bond Sts. et 7:30 end 8 p.m. Return PEP TLE O.L.A. JR. "A" PLAYOFF LACROSSE (3rd games -- 4 out Querter Finel OSHAWA GREEN GAELS of 7) SUPERTESTS TO-NIGHT 8:30 P.M. UP TO 8 P.M, --~ SERIES Ne, 12 Pitts, 403 64 139 .345/Year. With the backing of. bot! | Aaron, Mil. 872 75 120 .323/'he European and North Amer- Rose, Cinci 447 85 144 .gag,ican executive commit- Clendenon, Pitts. 421 66 125 .321/tees, there is little doubt they eb Allen, Phila, 392 58 125 319|Would be approved, he said. Minnesota 7. Runs--Harper, Cincinnati, 93;,. The CAHA proposal--rejected|Baltimore --_82 43.590 5Y4 Rose, 85. '""\py the IIHF last March--also| Runs batted in--Johnson, Cin-/4usgests two subsidiary eight- cinnati, 89; Banks, Chicago, 79,/'eam pools be formed. Fach Hits -- Rose, 144; Clemente, ¥®", the top teams would move 139. '\up for future competition and Doubles -- Williams, Chicago,|the bottom teams down, ; Rose, 25, If more than 21 teams were Cl , ce teas lemente \Chi Chi Olivo and erased a 4-3 jonto Maple a moved wile Cracker lead. lrecords in the 220, 440 and at eague-le g) ' , 31,\yards. {Columbus Jets with a 69. Ditm ehhander Cer WE Sue ran her fit race in May tory over the Jets, Rochester!) 1 soven-inning first ame|1953, just two days. after she [Red Wings edged Atlanta) oi wiley ailawed cae 'Ar.(Was married. A year later she [Crackers 5-4 and Buffalo Bis-|1i. Moore's leadoff single in|Was running for Canada at the ons won the opener of double- tis rss oth t tanning hi Tokyo Olympics where she was lheader with Toledo Mud Hens stabs n registering 1S) ranked ninth out of 94 nations | second win of the season & He but dropped the wenee : nlp competing in. the 100-metres. Milwaukee (Cloninger 14-8) (N) American League . Pet. GBL Jacksonville 9} Syracuse Rochester Toledo 54 Buffalo 35 P Thursday's Results Toronto 6. Columbus 2 Atlanta 4 Rochester 5 Jacksonville 0 Syracuse $ Toledo 6-6 Buffalo 3-3 | Friday's Games Toledo at Buffalo Cassius Clay In Stockholm STOCKHOLM (AP) -- World Dan Napoleon hit a two-run) Mrs, Piotrowski has been homer in the first inning for|troybled this year by inflamma-| the cellar-dwelling Bisons. |tion of tendons behind one knee.| | Jack Lamabe won his seventh| $1 game against no defeats as he Triples -- Callison, Philadel-| phia, 13; Clemente, 11. Home runs--Mays, San Fran- entered, separate playoffs, would be held to select the five) championship teams, Juckes heavyweight Clay talked about a champion ( arrived Thursday possible sius nd title Jacksonville at Syracuse Toronto at Columbus ipitched the Leafs to victory. iLamabe allowed the Jets only __ |six hits, struck out eight and cisco, 27; Callison, MeCovey,| sid. ae} 4 of the E San Francisco, 24. e said he learned of the Eu- ' "att ie Stolen bases--Wills, Los An-|ropean committee's support in Pee tata bo enna geles, 14; Brock, St. Louis, 44,|8 telephone conversation with), |: 'he said, "provided trans- Pitching -- Koufax, Los An-|JJHF president J. F, (Bunny)| antic 'satellite TV. coverage geles, 19-4, .826; Jay and Nux-|Ahearne of London, England. | ood 46 arranged." hall, Cincinnati, 8-3, .727. Juckes said Canada will wel: Clay was vague ee ee come the change because "we rangements for a tour which have always felt two meetings) " . Bs 4d, Mets Sell Cowan between each team was fairer." oF as game pc oe T, Butt ] . The 1966 championships will)*t0Une * eg ' fe] alo Bisons be held in Yugoslavia. ranged by Swedish promoter NEW YORK (AP)--New York) ~ about ar- asthe __.|Edwin Ahiquist, was to start to- \day. with an appearance in Mets sold outfielder Billy Cowan OPTION OUTFIELDER Stockholm. The champion will to their Buffalo farm club in the LOS ANGELES (AP)--Balti-\continue his European tour in International League Thursday more Orioles announced Thurs-/England after he leaves here. to make room for second base-\day that they have optioned out-, Cjay was accompanied by An- man Ron Hunt, who was 're- fielder Sam Bowens to Roches- gelo Dundee, his manager, who stored to the active roster ter and have recalled centre-<aid that one of the reasons for Hunt had been on the disabled fielder Paul Blair from the Imthe visit was to talk to Ahlquist list since mid-May when he suf- ternational League farm club. \bout a possible title fight with fered a shoulder separation in|/RBiair was optioned to Rochester|Patterson, who has fought here a basepath collision with Phil|July 3. He hit .336 for the Redjon a number of occasions and Gagliano of St. Louis Cardinals.;Wings in 32 games. is popular. Go where the action is siaterasemmnd tel SATURDAY! *15,447 TROT * STANDARDBRED FUTURITY STAKES © fight in Stockholm with former)~ GREENWOOD POST TIME: 7:45p.m. . | Atlanta at Rochester Galt Youngsters | In Ball Tourney FREDERICK, Md. (AP)--The} |\Middle Atlantic regional Babe! 'Ruth baseball tournament, fea-) turing teams from seven US.) States and Canada, opens Saturday with eight of the 10 teams in action, The host Frederick team plays Clarksburg, W.Va., in the opener. New Castle, Del., meets Galt, Ont., in the first - day windup Saturday night. The double elimination tour-| ney will take eight days to com-| plete. The teams are composed of all - star selections from the Heagues in which they compete. | } | | | e,! ® ts iat ieee ' é i i if jwalked only one. | The Hens won thelr 14th) |game in 19 starts against Buf-| ifalo with a 6-3 triumph in the! isecond game She hopes to be in top phys-| ical form for the British Em-| pire Games in Kingston, Ja-| maica, next August. envoy | see your | chevrolet/envoy | dealer Epic/*1,778 The Tough Little Car from General Motors *Suggested mvaximum retail delivered price of an Epic standard 2-door sedan with heater and defroster af Price quoted includes delivery and and Excise taxes. Provincial and local taxes and licence are not included. * 60... and automatic delivery, Call Today. 60... Use the BEST OIL in Your Furnace WESTERN customers get their furnaces cleaned FREE this summer. FREE 24-hour burner service .. 725-1212 WESTERN Oil Co. OSHAWA - WHITBY handlling charges and Federal Sales EP206SA3 IBAD BOY perinitevy SELLS FOR LESS! food plan. 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