Stafford Hurls Yanks To
Tilt of World Series for
Three Runs
Put Across
In Seventh
New York -H'PU- Bill Staf
ford was great and dead-game,
too. but the Giants always will
regret the big double play
they didn't make.
Stafford, 24-year-old flame
thrower from Athens, N. Y
showed lots of talent in his
four-hit 3-2 victory over the
Giants in Sunday's third game
off his left shinbone in the
the Yankees out front in the
Series, two games to one.
And he showed plenty of
moxic, the way he shook the
pain of a sizzling line drive
by Felipe Alou that cracked
of his left shinbone in the
eighth inning. He hobbled
about and needed a dash of
pain-killer and a whiff of
smelling salts to go on, but
won the game despite Ed Bai
ley's two-run homer with two
out in the ninth inning.
But Bailey's homer made
an almost overlooked play in
the Yankees' game-winning,
three-run rally in the seventh
inning all-important.
Pitchers Duel
Stafford and veteran south
paw Billy Pierce of the Giants
were matching zeroes at that
point and Tom Tresh's single
to center to open the New
York seventh ws only the
third hit off Pierce.
Mickey Mantle then lashed
a single to left and Felipe
Alou, playing the ball on the
first bounce, bobbled the high
bound. Tresh whipped into
third and Mantle legged it
into second on the error.
Pierce and Bailey held a
hasty conference and decided
to give Roger Maris nothing
really good to hit. But Billy's
first serve was "right down
the middle" and Maris ripped
It into right field for a single
RE-ELECT
U.S. SENATOR
KEEP THIS GREAT
DEMOCRAT
WORKING FOR
OREGON AND YOU!
IN 1957 SENATOR MORSE GC.
FUNDS FOR THE JOHN DAY
DAM WHEN THE ADMINISTRA
TION PROPOSED NOTHING.
HUNDREDS OF OREGONIANS
ARE WORKING ON THIS PROJECT
TO PROVIDE FUTURE JOBS
FOR OREGON.
U.S. SENATOR LISTER HILL SAID
OF WAYNE MORSE:
". . . f CAN T FORGET YOUR
TREMENDOUS EFFORTS AND
LEADERSHIP IN THE BUILDINC
OF THE GREAT JOHN
DAY DAM."
MEET U. S. SENATOR
WAYNE HORSE
AND HIS FAMILY
KBES-Tl' Channel 5
8:25 P.M., Oct. 8
!
MONDAY. OCTOBER 8. 1962
that chased home both Tresh
and Mantle to put the Yankees
ahead, 2-0.
And when right fielder Wil
lie McCovcy bobbled Maris'
hit for the Giants' second er
ror of the inning, Maris went
to second.
Pierce went out then and
Don Larscn, who hurled his
famous "perfect game" in the
World Series for the Yankees
exactly six years ago today,
relieved.
Misi Double Play
Larscn got Eiston Howard
to fly out to Willie Mays,
but the drive was long enough
to enable Maris to tag up
and advance to third after the
catch. And when Larson hit
Bill Sknowron with a pilch,
the Yankees had men on first
and third with one out.
That's when the Giants
missed the big double play.
Larsen got Clete Boycr to hit
a grounder to shortstop Jose
Pagan. Pagan flipped to sec
ond baseman Chuck Hillcr for
the force play on Skowron.
Chuck bubbled the ball in the
webbing of his glove, just
long enough to miss getting
Boycr at first.
Marls scored on the play
the Yankees' third, and even
tually, winning run.
Sunday's H-2 Yankee tri
umph made the New Yorkers
4-1 favorites to win the Series
and they were 7' 2-5 to win
today's game in Yankee Sta
dium.
No Law Against
"But don't count us out,"
cautioned Manager Alvin
Dark of the Giants for the
umpteenth time. "I know it
sounds corny but tiie facts
are that we have been coming
up off the floor all year.
"There isn't any law against
us doing it again."
"I'm not predicting we are
going to finish the Series
here," N. Y. Manager Houk
said with a smile, "but we arc
in a pretty good spot."
After today's fourth game,
Y:
Irs V
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STRIKE THROWN New York Yankee
pitcher Bill Stafford throws strike by San
Francisco Giants' Felipe Alou in the third
game of baseball World Series on Sunday
Ihe fifth game is scheduled
here, loo, with the sixth and
seventh games if necessary
shifting to windy Candlestick
Park in San Francisco.
O'Dell On Tuesday
Dark said his 19-game win
ning southpaw, Billy O'Dell,
would start the fifth game
here Tuesday. Houk did not
go beyond today's pitcher but
is expected to start Ralph
Terry, the 2-0 loser to Jack
Sanford in the second game
of the Series in Frisco, against
O'Dell.
If the Series goes beyond
the fifth game here on Tues
day, there will be a day off
for travel on Wednesday with
the Series resuming in Frisco
on Thursday.
New York lUPIl The box score,
nf Ihc Ihird Kame l the World
Scries:
San rranilsri) All H II 111"
K Ainu. II . 4 0 II 0
III I lor. 21
Mays, of
I
I
MoCovc.y, rf
C'epedn, ll .
nancy, c
Davenport, 3h .
Paiian, ss .
Pierre, p
Larncn. p
a M Alou
Bolln. p
Tatall
N'nv York
Ktihi'k. s
Hichjii'rfson, 2
Tresh H
Miiiilk'. vi .
Mnris. r(
Hiwrt. c
Skowron. I h
Huvit. .'Ui
Slnflord. p ....
It It m
i o i
n n I
i n
i n i
1 i
..... 3 n n n
. 29 1 3
Totals
Iltl Into force mil for Larson
San Franrmco . . 000 ODO (W22
New York (MM) 000 30x 3
E Ilitvenport. Boycr, F. Ainu.
McCiivi'V. I'Cl A S a n Kranclmo
U, New York a7-!. DP Dhvph
pint anrl Hlltcr. I.OH-San FrHn
ciaeo ?, N-vv York ;t. 211 Dnven
porl. Kubt!k. Hovtul. Mays. Hit
ilailrv
I'lUtitiiB tp h r rr hh so
Pierce L) H S 3 2 U 3
Lumen I0O000
nnlm 10 0 0 0 1
Stafford (Wi .0422 2
IMeiTi pitched to three hatters tn
7th
HHP Hv Larsrn, Skowron. I'
Laitdm i Nl.t. Plate. Honorhick
iAI.i, IH. HirlUk tNl.i, 211; llerry
(Al.i, :tH. Iliiikhnrl iN'Li. I.P; Soar
tALt. HF. T 2:ii. A 71.434.
Judy Kimball
Tourney Victor
Los Visits - 'ITli .htriy Kim
ball. 24. Sioux City. Inwa,
found the way to make mon
ty in tins Kumblitin city. She
itayed on the uolf course and
out of the casinos.
Ot ctiur.se, Ihc fact thai she i
1m played 12 holes of nolf
four Mrukcs heller than any .
other woman in the $15,000
Ladies I'rofessioiiiil Goiters
A:sociatton Championship had
a lot lo do Willi it.
J Miss Kimball came in with
,i one-over par 7U Sunday for i
: 7'J hole score of 282 that was
' j'iod enough for her first tour- '
tthineiH victory of the season, t
1 'it si place prize came to a
! f-2.:i(U.
j The "ZWZ score retained the !
liotir-slitike martim she held'
ever second -place Shirley
Spock, Palm Desert, Calif., for i
l!ie past two d i Miss Spork,
.No with a 711 Sunday, had tt i
' JiUi total and won Sl.Hall,
Varriors Nick i
lLakcrs 118-117 1
I Portland. Ore UTIi - Tom
: Ciola scored a field Ht;t! m
ihc final four seconds of play
I Sunday niht to $wv the San
I Francisco Warricus a llil-117
ictory over Ihc l.os Angeles
Lakers in a National Haskel
hall Association exhibition
name.
San Francisco's Wilt Chain
hcrlam led all scorers with
a. points, w hile Kltn Baylor
was huh for the Lakers with
37
Chamberlain scored
poinls in Salem Saturday
niyht. as the Lakers won. 32-
l-a The two teams meet in
another ehitiition i;amo to.
nu:ht m Olynipm, Wash
Triumph in 3rd
Lead of 2 to 1
x . warn
at New York. Catcher for Yankees is Eiston
Howard and home plate umpire is Stan
Landes. (UP1)
MedfordJWtribunk
Lcvorante
Condition
Unchanged
Los Angeles - IUPII - Argen
tine boxer Alejandro Lavor-
ante, 25, whose condition since
Sept. 21 has shown little im
provement, began another day
today in a coma and in serious
condition.
The heavyweight's condi
tion was "unchanged," a Cal
ifornia Lutheran hospital
pokenman said. Last week
physicians had hoped Lavor
I'litc might come nut of the
coma.
Dr. J. DeWitt Fox, the neu
rosurgeon who performed two
oncrgency brain operations
on the stricken fighter, voiced
concern that the longer Lav
orante remained unconscious
t'ic greater the possibility for
extensive brain damage.
Lavorantc was knocked out
n the sixth round of a sched
uled JO-rounder by Johnny
Itiggins. San Francisco, at
Olympic Auditorium.
Sonny Picked Up
By Park Guard;
No Charge Filed
Philadelphia - HIPP - A Fair
mount park incident involv
I n K heavyweight champion
Charles (Sonny) Liston for the
second time in 15 months di
vided him and the police into
two camps today.
Tho luijio boxer, who won
the title from Floyd Patter
son in Chicago Sept. 25, claim
ed police discr i m i n a I e d
against him by halting his
1(2 Cadillac Friday night,
taking him to a guardhouse
on suspicion of intoxication
and then releasing him with
out placing any charge.
The two policeman who
handled the case and their
superior scoffed at complaints
that police were "picking on'
Liston.
Fairmounl Park G u a r d
Supt. Francis Deegan said any
driver moving about 15 miles
an hour on a remote park
drive, as Liston was, would
have been stopped by an of
ficer. Decgan said the incident
had been handled properly by
Aaron Smith, the park guard
who slopped Ltston's auto,
and Lt. Kdwnid Kelley, the
cfficer in charge.
"Aren't they going to let
that guy Liston alone?" was
the reaction of Alfred Klein,
a member of the Pennsyl
v a n i a athletic commission,
which had laid plans to confer
Willi Liston to aid his rehabili
tation He described the incident
as "pure harrassment. unless
they can show me that he was
drinking ''
Mort Wukin. l.iston's attor
ney, said Liston "n ever
touches a drop. Somebody
must be picking on him "
i
CHIEFS CUT SIX
Long Bench. Calif.-'ITt Rny
Felix and Bob Hopkins, for
mer National Basketball as
sociation players, have been
cut by the Long Reach Chiefs
of the American Basketball
league. Also dropped were
Johnny Green of I'CLA. La
vrrn Benson of Miami of
Ohm, and Bill Florentine and
Pave Jones of Long Reach
State. i
MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MKDFORD. OREGON
JOHNNY PESKY
Will Manage Boston
John Pesky
New Pilot
Of Red Sox
New York - IUPII - Johnny
Pesky isn't wasting any time
in his new job ns manager of
the Boston Red Sox.
Minutes after the 42-year-old
former Red Sox infielder
took over the Boston reins
from Mike Higgins Saturday
night, he started laying plans
for Ihe l!IB;i season.
"I can't say what the club
needs," said Pesky, "but I will
sit down with Mike and go
over the whole team man-for-man."
Pesky and Higgins attended
the Ihird game of the World
Scries together Sunday at
Yankee Stadium and they
spent most of the time dis
cussing the entire Boston club.
"It was like a bolt out of
Ihc blue," Pesky said of his
appointment. "They called me
into a room and told me 1 was
the new manager if I wanted
the Job. This is something 1
have looked forward to
something any guy In base
ball would look forward to."
Higgins, who was serving
this second hitch as Boston
manager, will remain with the
club as an executive vice
president.
IM&W
I SI NIIAV S'HIIITKRS
Hutte KaHer. 112-41 1. Shrrlev
Mntrhrr 2. Csnnonballii ffi-fi. i.
I M.e Attertuirv 4.VT
I Kmir J,' ni-.1i a. Hr Matthrwn
Ifln. The Rookie, ul-11) I, Vince
Dol'drll 444
1 S.-mter I'mis itl-.1t .1, Bud Nel
son Vlrt Kour Hs ilD-t 1, Don
H 'oth 4Kti
ll.Tos .10-Ki .1. Tlo th-an 4H0.
Howled Over, 1. Lloyd Rob.
en.
Friend. hip 4 (T-'li
hiet- 4!t Kour H
AHee Case
12' 0. Bill
Mai rm 44.1
llouhle Trouble ifi-lu
: Pu-krtu 4n7, Team Sin
Ken
16-10.
Clint Si'hnl lenhurg .vjr.
! Sherlcy tl.iU'her Jort Clint Sehol-
lenlnirK IH!'. I.lovd Roberla 11)11.
' Unite Faller, I7!li
MiiiiT II K i t ii:i f;
Mel.atublin Plumbum il.l-.l
Counted .100: PieoU Wiititly N
I.
ber tine 1 7 j -1 1 , i .1. Fowler .111
Triancle Market tl.1-.1i 4. Howell
.118 Oregon Food Number One. '
itio.lili 0. Champion .1-.V
Woodland Hei.-ht. Mkt 113.71 2. '
Vtn.on 478. PiKitl WiceH Number
Tim' 1 4 ' - -t .1 1 j 1 2 R.trmnn .170
Phoenix Food Mart (1J-7' 4. Caa.
ter .118. Oregon Food Number !
Ihree iti-!4i 0. Putnian 4H7. I
Harts Hitehery ill-l 4. Ftvrne.
40t. Oreuon Food Number Seven '
-9-1 1 0 Kurf 417
Champion .24. Ftarmim '2, How
ell 201. Triangle Market .188. 1883
B M l ( II tlN 1.1: I'll I! I
Four 111 1 18.81 1. Harold been i
Sport 4jk
Parade
New York - OJPU - A line
drive started big Bill Staf
ford's pitching career and he
felt fortunate today that an
other one hadn't ended it.
That first one was eight
years ago, when Stafford was
Series Facts
New York (UPIl Facli and
figures on the 1962 World Series:
Opponents New York Yankeei,
American League champiom, vs.
San Francisco Giants. National
League champions.
Winner first team to win four
games in best-of -seven game series.
Results this far 1st game, New
York 6. San Francisco 2: 2nd game.
San Francisco 2. New York 0; 3rd
game. New York 3, San Francisco 2.
Remaining games 4th and 5th
games at New York. Oct. 8-9; 6th
and 7th games if necessary at San
Francisco. Oct. 11-12.
Odds Yankees favored 4-1; 4th
game odds, New York favored
Ti-5.
lime of games local, I p.m. in
New York, noon in San Francisco.
Managers New York, Ralph
Houk; San Francisco, Alvin Dark.
Fourth game pitchers New
York. Whitey Ford; San Francisco,
Juan Marichal.
Stadium capacities New York's
Yankee Stadium, 67.000; San Fran
cisco's Candlestick Park, 42.500.
Television and radio National
Broadcasting Company.
Financial figures for first three
games: attendance 159.196; total
receipts $1,210,998.50: commission
er's share $181,649.78; players'
share (players share in first four
flames only! $617,609 29: clubs and
eagues share $411,739.48.
Tebbets
To Manage
Cleveland
By MILTON RICHMAN
San Francisco-tUPB - Birdie
Tebbetts fulfilled an old "debt
of gratitude" by taking over
the Cleveland mangership Sat
urday and the Milwaukee
team he left Immediately went
after Leo Durocher as its No.
1 choice to succeed him.
The florid, 50-year-old Teb
betts agreed to a three-year-contract
to manage Cleveland
Friday, explaining that he
made the sudden switch from
Milwaukee "only because of
a long-standing debt" he felt
to President Gabe Paul of the
Indians.
Even as Paul and Tebbetts
were shaking hands on terms,
Milwaukee officials were
making every effort to speak
with Leo Durocher in Los An
geles about the possibility of
his taking over the Braves.
Cam About Suddenly
"This thing came about so
suddenly that I didn't know
anything about it until yester
day morning," said Tebbetts,
who worked under Paul as
manager at Cincinnati from
1954 until he suddenly quit
in mid-season of 1958,
"Gabe called me on the
telephone and asked me to
meet him at Candlestick
Park," Birdie said. "I did and
we talked for about two hours
while the Giants were playing
the Yankees.
"It was a terribly difficult
decision for me to make be
cause the people in Milwaukee
treated me magnificently and
I love Johnny McHale (presi
dent and general manager of
the Braves)."
Tebbetts was so torn in his
decision that he telephoned
his wife for help at Braden
ton, Fla., finally contacting
her In a beauty parlor.
"She told me the choice was
strictly up to me," Birdie said.
"Believe me, I did an awful
lot of soul-searching. But in
the final analysis I agreed
to go with Gabe because he
gave me my start as a major
league manager."
As Cleveland's new man
ager, Tebbetts succeeds Mel
McGaha, who was fired last
Sunday after finishing sixth
in his first year at the helm.
PREP FOOTBALL
SATl'ROAY ClA.MKS
North Eugene 13. Springfield 0
Hend 44. Madras 13
North Cathoiic 60, Banks 0
Concordia 2ft. Rainier o
Klmira 19. St. Fr.im-is 0
CJIide 2ti, Dmiglas 13
M Mtry s 45. S.ic ed Heart 13
Monroe 33. Crow 0
Ontario 2i. Psyette ildahoi ft
ilium;
111: Doubles Aces 1 13 1 ,-10', 1. Ken
Howard .118.
Pin Ticklers 1I6-81 4. Don Har
mon .117: Altblera 18-I8I 0. Skeet
C.Httls 488
FSKheads (11-ill 4. Morris bv-ne
411.1. Spare Rtbi t3-21i 1). L'dv Mm
418
Haloa iu-IOi 4. Warren Havie
.103: Lueky 7 16-161 0. Torn Anoir
Ion 102
Black Kats (13-Ui .1, Bob 1'rie
4H6; Four Pina 1 1 1 1 j -1 2 1 1 1. Ver
non Robertson .138.
Pintukles U3-1I1 2 Al Pcsentt
4.18: K-Medleya 1 1-13 J. Ellis
Feinstem .100
Ken Howard 218. Warren Hayse
211. Vernon Robertson 203, jan
l.ovett Itt'i, Jo Ann Thompson 184,
Jess Howard 180: Halo a 11149
SIMI IV TH II K.lllHtl
Guxs At Dolls .!l-9
Skundrick 484. .ooferi
Jake Swinrilee 448.
0. Walt '
lt-9i 4. !
l.oalet-s tl2-8i I. Ann Tavlor 536;
Pindownera ilO-IOi 3, Al Flora 499
Sundowners '12-fl. 2. Ear Bren
ton .122 (in, pice . 10-10 1 2. Vern
Collins .1.13
Lett Rights .9-11. . C,!en Wil- I
kens .103. Jackpots ilo1,-',! 3
Karl Manlev .149
Choppers 8-12. 1. Al Starkev ;
412. Pinheads ill-9. J. Jake Walch
482
Toppers .9 '.-loi,. , 3 Frank I
Berghnid 497 Attdenlals ,6. 14, i. i
Vern M.C..1I 494 '
Farl Brenton 2no. Vern Collins
208 H.iriy LaFevcr 210; Plndown- i
eri 2170. I
By
OSCAR FRALEY
United Press
International
a 16-year-old bigh school short
stop in Athens, N.Y.
"1 don't like to think about
it." he recalled reluctantly.
"Our pitcher was struck over
the heart by a line drive and
died of it some time later."
Stafford was drafted to fin
ish the remaining five innings
of that game, struck out all
15 men he faced and be
came a pitcher.
Then came Sunday in Yan
kee stadium when the tower
ing Yankee righthander had
a two-hitter going in the
eighth inning and San Fran
cisco's Felipe Alou lashed a
smoking line drive straight
back to the mound. It crunch
ed against Stafford's left shin
and, while he leaped forward,
recovered the ball and threw
out Alou, he had to receive
first aid.
Feels Lucky
"I feel real lucky," he said,
"when I think of where it
might have hit me. For a
couple of minutes I was so
dizzy I couldn't see the catch
er." Shortstop Tony Kubek ran
over to Stafford and asked
him how he felt.
"I'm okay," he replied. "I'll
make it."
He did, although just bare
ly. Stafford got Chuck Hiller
to end the inning and cling
to a 3-0 lead. Then, when he
returned to the bench, they
put an ice pack on the shin
bone and gave the white-faced
Stafford a few sniffs of smell
ing salts.
"When I went out for the
ninth inning," Stafford relat
ed later, "the leg hurt like
blazes. But I didn't have any
doubt that what I'd finish
and I simply concentrated on
the hitter."
It wasn't easy. The throb
bing in his leg wouldn't be
ignored and Stafford's pulse
hammered when Willie Mays
led off with a double.
"I just put the pain out of
my mind," big Bill said.
Popped Up Cepeda
Mays went down to third
when Willie McCovey ground
ed to Bobby Richardson and
stayed there as Stafford got
the second out on Orlando
Cepeda's shallow fly to right.
Now he needed that last big
out and catcher Ed Bailey
waited menacingly at the
plate. Stafford uncorked his
fast ball and "put it right
where he wanted it."
"I don't know what it was,"
Bailey said later. "I couldn't
see anything he threw me all
day."
' But Bailey cracked it into
the right field stands for a
home run which scored Mays
ahead of him and now Staf
ford was down to a slender
one run lead.
"I had two pitchers warm
ing up but it was just a pre
caution," said Manager Ralph
Houk. "I asked Stafford if he
could finish and he said 'yeah,
you don't see any blood, do
you?' "
Got Lait Man
So Stafford got Jim Daven
port on a fly to left and
thereby put the gilt edging on
a career which began back
there in 1952 with somebody
else's line drive injury.
He worked hard lo make
it.
"My dad was a semi-pro
pitcher and slaved all his life
in a brickyard," big Bill re
lated. "He gets up every morn
ing at 5 a.m. and it's tough
work. He wanted me to have
something better. So he fixed
up a canvas with holes in it
out in our back yard and after
1 started pitching it was his
help that gave me my con
trol." He had it Sunday, allowing
only two hits and two walks
while striking out five Giants
before that line drive struck
him in the eighth inning. The
pain turned his face chalk
while.
But an eight-year-old mem
ory had something to do with
it. too.
Football Scores
S.1TIRI1AV GA1IKS
Brlgham Young 28. Colorado St. 7
Portland St. 21. Oregon Coll. 6
l.inlteld 47. Coll of Idaho 0
Willamette 40. Pacific U. 7
Cal Poly at Pomona 14. U. of
Redlanda 8
Whltller 40. Calif. Annies 7
Riverside St. 20. Calif. Tech 8
Sanla Barbara 23. I.A St 13
Laverne 1.1. Calif. Western 14
San Diego SI. 36. Long Beach
St 8
Humboldt State 27, San Francisco
State 7
Chlco State 21. Nevada 7
t'niversity of Pacific 17. San
Diego Marines 7
Occidental 19. Santa t Lira 6
Clar.Mnont-Mofl-J 21. Pomona 6
Cal Poly .1 S.in Lui- Obispo i'8.
San Fernando Valley State 7
ZENO HONORED
San Francisco-ITI -UCLA's
sophomore quarterback Larry
Zeno earned Ihe AAWUs
"back of the week" award in
his first collegiate football
game, it was announced to
day. Zcno guided the Bruins
on a 70-yard march in Ihe
last seven minutes of UCLA's
upset of Ohio Slate Saturday
and capped the drive with a
24-yard field goal that won
the game for the Bruins 9-7.
Felipe Alou Finds
Left Field Tough
By STEVE SNIDER
New York - lUPD - You'd bet
ter believe it when they tell
you left field in Yankee Stad
ium is a tough spot to play.
Ask Felipe Alou of the San
Francisco Giants.
"There's sun. there's haze
and there are shadows."
groaned Felipe, who had his
first shot at it in the third
tame of the World Series Sun
day in a loser against the New
York Yankees. "I had a rough,
busy afternoon out there."
But even there again to
day as the Giants struggle to
even the series in the fourth
game because manager Al
Dark is convinced Felipe
"played it as well as that tield
can be played.
Yanks Complain Too
Normally a right fielder,
1 elipe moved to left for the
third game and almost imme
diately got his baptism on a
long ball hit in the second in
ning by Eiston Howard, and
which he caught sensational
ly. In each of the next two in
n.'ngs he had long shots in his
direction - one that went for
a double by Tony Kubek and
another by Mickey Mantle
which he caught. But he was
charged with an error while
trying to field a single by
Mantle in the seventh.
Even Tom Tresh of the
Yankees complained about
left field Sunday, so Felipe
wasn't alone.
The Giants were only slight
ly downcast after losing the
Ihird game, after which sec
ond baseman Chuck Hiller and
pitcher Billy Pierce readily
shouldered the blame for lap
ses that left the Yankees with
p 3-2 margin at the finish.
Couldn't Grip Ball
Hiller blew a "routine dou
ble play" that should have
ended the Yankee seventh in
stead of allowing Roger Mar
is lo score from third with
Emeralds Sign
White Sox Pact
Eugene-IUPII - The Eugene
Emeralds of the Northwest
league have signed a working
agreement with the Chicago
White Sox of the American
league for next season.
SCORES TWO GOALS
Boston-IUPD-Veteran winger
johnny Bucyk scored two
goals lo lead the Boston
Bruins to a 6-1 win Sunday
over the American Hockey
league champion Springfield
Indians.
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Robert F. Kyle, Mgr.
what proved to be the win
ning run. And Pierce admit
ted he served a fat pitch ear
lier on which Maris knocked
in two runs with a single to
light.
With Bill Skowron on first
and Maris on third. Clele
Boyer hit a routine ground
er to shortstop Jose Pagan,
who fired to Hiller at second
lo force Skowron. But Hiller
was slow getting the ball
away to first and Boyer was
cafe, Maris scoring.
"I bobbled the throw from
Pagan a couple times and
couldn't get a grip on it to
make a good throw to first,"
said the crestfallen Hiller.
"We should have had him
easy. It was a routine double
play."
Pierce said he was faster in
the first playoff game against
the Los Angeles Dodgers last
week but still felt strong in
the seventh when the Yankees
clipped him for three straight
singles in their scoring spree.
The top-prize winners at Amer
ica's First National Newspaper
boy Convention tell about their
recent round-the-world trip as
Family Weeklysalutes the news
paperboys of America on their
big day October 20th. Read
about these citizens-of
tomorrow.
OCTOBER 14th ISSUE
JFlatznfZy
W&Glcly
WITH YOUR
MEDF0RD
MAIL TRIBUNE
witfs TfiririBitirfT.'iW rr B"HI
mm
Investment made
by the tenth earns
as of the first
fc'Wit-v" '
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