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Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Sep 1967, p. 7

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[ALLEY ANGRY -4 eep them in the game early stages." gry Fred Whalley said, couldn't believe what We took some of the ntastic penalties I've en. It was strictly a not letting us play our ne. It's tough to score aying a man short for the whole game, but n't given up yet and t our backs are to the ybe we'll start to roll." in's Sandy Doberstein was amazed at the coming to me on the er stopping play and ie to take it easy, Im- ay didn't call a penalty me to take it easy." anna stated, "Remem- kes four games to win and it's a long way ir. We'll be back Wed- nd we'll be a lot tough- ithdraw Trio apture 'Hobbs' threesome from Toronto row Park captured The Hobbs' Memorial Trophy, he annual mixed trebles jament here at the Oshawa 1 Bowling Club on Satur- gh Aitken, Mrs, Anne Cul- nd Tom Cullen, skip, from row, scored three wins and al of 53-plus-2 points to cap- the top honors. nners-up were three Osh- Club members, Mrs. Glad », Mrs. Elsie Biddulph and ze Read, skip, with three and a total of 50 points. » Port Hope entry of id Garrard, Mrs. Lillian it and Jos, Brown, ski, three wins and 48-plus-14 ; captured the third prizes ourth prizes went to the va entry of Ewart Clem- Mrs, Lillian Clemence and Cooke, skip, with three and a total of 47 points. h two-win prizes went to hawa entry, Gordon Pirie, Mary Pirie and Jack Hun- kip, with 58-plus-1 points 'unners-up were Margaret ield, Mrs, Freida Highfield 'ic Highfield, skip, of Port with two wins and 55- points, 'd prizes, in the two-win yn, went to the Oshawa of Ernie Cay, Mrs. Flor- Litster and Cec Litster, ith 54 points. tby came into the picture high one-win section, with Lovelock, Mrs. Sadie Mac- d and Burton MacDonald, scoring 49-plus-6 points. t in line was Mrs. Jean ll, Mrs. Muriel Judge and Judge, skip, of Whitby, 6 points. mia TOWN To Toronto Taxi, you Get Another | Town", 'OBER 10th 125-4771 3th -- Miss Donne Lovell, --_ nore cers Rise 2 Pa of Hamil- na Lon- n Instant | @ pack- y like them. +? the ninth inning at Anaheim ate aes ze their 11th National League Pennant by beating the Philadelphia Phillies 5-1 be- hind the three hit pitching of Bob Gibson. (AP Wirephoto) This was the scene in the Cardinals dressing room after the team captured = Red Sox And Twins Win To Grab Share Of First By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS |Baltimore's Frank sangre,' 's Dalton Jones and|With a .314 mark. | he 1 Gianeana's ie 'Saat are sit. Jones' homer was his third of| ended a three-game tailspin. ting pretty today, but it's still the year--and second at! The White Sox managed just The Red Sox outslugged;; Detroit Tigers 6-5 on Jones' 5 oe eene homer, | equeezed past Kansas City Ath- " ; letics 2-0 on Kaat's 10-inning for me," he said. six-hitter and California Angels unseated Chicago White Sox 3-2 in Monday night's renewal of the Great Race. When the dust settled, the Red Sox, Tigers and Twins all/Mayo Smith, the Tigers' pilot. had a piece of first place. It) 'But I'll tell you one thing. » was a four-way deadlock until|Boston didn't win the pennant - Rick Reichardt's RBI single in| tonight. F two unearned runs for a 2-2 tie. "Everybody will tell you he's; But Don Mincher singled Locker with one out in the ninth "We spot Jones here and,and pinch runner Roger Repoz there,' said manager Dick Wil- |tagged up and made second on this ball park." jtre. Reichardt then came over the years," countered|centre. Dave McNally, first start relievers in a month, John Buzhardt sent the White Sox reeling all/ mill." the way to fourth place--one- fray delivered the Oriole runs. for the seesaw in the|Detroit. He beat the Tigers 1-0/one hit against California rook- | wd League pennant play-|!ast May 24 with a homer and|ie Ricky Clark until the eighth | ground " |six of his 18 career blasts have|inning, when Jim Fregosi' : |been hit against Detroit pitch- | error helped them push over} the Twins) sot a favorite park--this is it|against Chicago relief ace Bob liams. "He always hit well in|Jimmie Mall's long fly to cen- "Sure, Jones has hit this club through with the winning hit to | making his and | and |Bill Dillman combined to blank | "This race is just a tread-|the Yankees on six hits. Singles | by Dave Johnson and Curt Ble- St. Louis Wins Pennant! Defeating Phillies 5-1 By HAL BOCK | Associated Press Sports Writer, and third since recovering from Red Schoendienst| his broken leg. He said his arm was the picture of serenity as|still wasn't at its best. 'I need St. Louis Cardinals bathed each! another outing and it will be all other in champagne after right." The Cardinals were held hit-|perez cracked home runs and innings bY|Ted Abernathy saved his 25th Manager clinching the National League} pennant Monday with a 5-1 vic-|less tory over Philadelphia Phillies.| Dick Ellsworth but busted loose} same as Atlanta. Mel Queen worked the|Bus Mosbacher, crossed the fin-/ first six innings for the Reds/ish line three minutes, 35 sec-)was expected to be followed jonds ahead of the Australian} quickly by a bid from a French '12-metre entry, following up on|syndicate, led by Baron Marcel victories of 5.58, 3.36 and 4.41 in| Bich, "T don't get excited," said the) cool redhead after watching! Bob Gibson throttle the Phillies on three hits to clinch the flag.| "T told only uy in the/in their 11th World Series. They cat © pene sine to|lead all National League clubs * Schoendienst|in Series play with seven victo- Danny] Ties in their 10 previous tries. spring that we win the pennant,' continued. 'That was Murtaugh one day when we layed the Pirates in Fort) 15th game for the Mets, scatter-) Sivers, Fla. I told him not to|ing eight hits as New York) tell anybody but we were going, to win." LEAST-KEPT SECRET The Cardinals didn't keep Schoendienst's secret very wel! They soared to the top of the league in mid-June and have been in front ever since, Keys to the pennant victory) were pitchers Dick Hughes,| Steve Carlton and Nelson} Briles, who picked up the slack) when veteran Gibson broke a leg in mid-July, and the acqui- sition of sluggers Orlando Cepe- fda and Roger Maris through | trades. | Cepeda leads the league with 108 runs batted in and is bat-| ting .330. | In other National League} games Monday night, New) York Mets pounded Laos} Angeles Dodgers 7:2, Houston} Astros rapped Pittsburgh } cattered three hits until the|Pirates 14-4 and Cincinnati) Wills, th, was the loser as the Twins |Reds blanked Atlanta Braves|Houston, 28 Pitching: Briles, St. Louis,\ |4-0. | half game off the pace. ee on ge shai i j " astrzemski S ninth-inning Pegs song paid age $ shot against Fred Lasher gave other game on the AL schedule, |t"e Red Sox a lift after Norm HITS 40TH HOMER Jones, a former bonus baby making only his third start this month, beat the Tigers with his BASEBALL STARS Detroit and Jim Northrup's run-scoring double in the eighth gave the Tigers a 5-4 edge. Kaat, who went into the Kan- pulled Boston even in the ninth. |place Athletics, held them in|place in the American Leagu It was the Red Sox' first victo-|check-and struck out 12 before|pennant chase. ry in four starts. Ted Uhlaender's single and an Yastrzemski, who paces the|error by centre fielder Joe Nos- league in homers and RBI, also|sek sent two runs home in the drilled a double and single to} 10th. wrest the batting lead from! Jim (Catfish) Hunger, who - The people who brought you "Kwai", "Exodus" and "The Robe" invite you to another WORLD TELEVISION PREMIERE Marlon Brando Trevor Howard Richard Harris. Mutiny on the Bounty co-starring Hugh Griffith . produced by Aaron Rosenberg directed by Lewis Milestone screen play by Charles Lederer A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Presentation 34 hours of Adventure and Romance a Sunday September 24th 8 p.m. Channel 9 CTV /Television in Colour |Cash poled two homers. for|By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Batting -- Dalton Jones, Red Sox, lashed four hits, including a 10th inning homer that gave Boston a 6-5 victory over fourth hit of the night after|sas City game with an 0-4 sea-|Detroit Tigers, lifting the Sox Carl Yastrzemski's 40th homer|son record against the last-|into a three-way tie for first Pitching -- Bob Gibson, Car- dinals, fired a three-hitter as | St. Louis clinched the- National | .|League pennant with a 5-1 vic- tory over Philadelphia Phillies, | | | | | | e | Gibson won his through five for four runs in the sixth. NL SERIES LEADERS The Cards will be appearing Rookie Tom Seaver won his MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS ~ By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League AB RH Pet. 539 98 192 .356) 464 71 159 .343) 515 82 176 .342| 507 63 169 .333 Cepeda St L 539 88 178 .330 Runs: Aaron, Atlanta, 107; Santo, Chicago, 106 Runs batted in: Cepeda, 108; Clemente Pitts Gonzalez Phila M, Alou Pitts Staub Hous Wynn, Houston, 105 Hits: Clemente, 192; Brock, St. Louis, 191 Doubles: Staub, 42; Aaron, 35) Triples: Williams, Chicago,| Pinson, Cincinnati, 12; Brock,| 11 : Home runs: Aaron, Wynn, 37;| Santo, 30. | Stolen bases: Brock, 48; Pittsburgh, Morgan, and won his 14th game. hits and drove in four runs as Houston walloped Pittsburgh. Jimmy Wynn scored four runs 13th gamejended a seven-game losing streak.. Ken Boswell, his first big-league appearance,|<went the best-of-seven drove in two runs with a sacri-| America's Cup series 4-0 from| American craft pulled away. fice fly and a double. Deron Johnson and Tony Cincinnati Doug Rader smacked four as the Astros unloaded a 15-hit attack for their sixth straight victory. 13-5, .722; Farrell, Philadelphia, 10-4, .714 Strikeouts: Bunning, Phila- delphia, 227; Jenkins, Chicago, | 207 American League AB RH Pet. Yastrz'ski Bos 539 100 169 .314 F. Rob'son Bal 449 77 140 .312 Kaline Det 417 86 127 .305} Scott Bos 523 67 157 .300 Blair Bal 504 68 151 .300 Runs: Yastrzemski, 100; Kil-| lebrew, Minnesota, 94. | Runs batted in: Yastrzemski,| 107; Killebrew, 102 | Hits; Yastrzemsk!i, 169; Tovar, Minnesota, 164 | Doubles: Tovar, 31; Oliva, Minnesota, 30 Triples: Blair, 12; Buford,! Chicago, 9 Home runs; Yastrzemski, 40; | Killebrew, 39 } making ys. Pattie, continuing American domination of the 116-year-old sailing event. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, September 19, 1967 7 Inirepid Sweeps Fourth | To Retain America's Cup NEWPORT, RI. (CP)--The yacht Intrepid Monday Australian challenger Da me| three races last week. | Undaunted by the Sogneing | the Australian crew suffered, the Royal Dorset Yacht Club of| Weymouth, England, entered a challenge for the 1970 edition of the cup. Cmdr. Percy Chubb of the New York Yacht Club announced the British challenge as the crews of the two sleek 12-metre craft returned to cheering crowds in flare-lit) Newport harbor. Intrepid held almost a half- mile lead at the end of the sixth leg of the race--twice post- 23 wins out of 24 races so far this year, including trials to represent the U.S. against the blanked| The Intrepid, skippered by) Australian challenge. Status, certainly not to any foreign country." In hilarious scenes on the Intrepid dock, the winning crew ently catching Intrepid fn cal- mer winds, narrowed the gap tu about 400 yards before the! The victory left Intrepid witn The British challenge for 1970 All challenges received in the next 30 days will have equal The powerful French syndi- cate has three 12-metre yachts at its disposal: Constellation, the 1964 defender, Kurrewa and Sovereign, the 1964 challenger. Baron Bich plans to name the French challenger France. He was thought to have made an offer for Intrepid, but Wil- liam Strawbridge, Philadelphia businessman who heads the) American syndicate said: "She| is not for sale at this time and! hauled Mosbacher |place at the helm and hurled him into the water. from his poned and almost delayed! again Monday because of foy-- over the 24.3-mile course. CLOSE IN 5TH LEG The only bright spot for the Australian crew, led by skipper Jock Sturrock, came in the fifth leg when Dame Pattie, appar- Stolen bases: Campaneris, | Kansas City, 52; Buford, 33 'Pitching: Horlen, Chicago, 17-6, .739; Lonborg, Boston, 20- 8, .714 Strikeouts: Lonborg, 226; McDowell, Cleveland, 2181 ---- CROSS CANADA PAVING has 3 YEARS GUARANTEE also 6- 12- 18-20-36 month to pay No Payment Fer 2 Months After Completion @ FREE ESTIMATE... Call 728-9292 Oshawa KEEP LOOKING SORRY, but this is all we can show you of the exciting new '68 PONTIACS until Thursday, Sept. 21st. But when you see It, you'll agree It was worth waiting for! The beauty of the powerful new '68 models will take your breath away! Keep your "cool" until Thursday and then turn on the heat to get down and see these stunning new automobiles. Better bring the family, too. It'll be a treat they'll never forget! CLIFF MILLS MOTORS PONTIAC, BUICK, ACADIAN, BEAUMONT 266 KING W, _ 723-4634 ry

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