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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1963)
r 1 STABS TO VICTORY Willie Pastrano, right, carries the attack to defending light heavyweight champion Harold Johnson in the I Oth round of their title bout at Las Vegas Convention Center Saturday. Pastrano stabbed and ran his way to a split de' cision to become tho new light-heavyweight champion. UP) Telephoto Willie-The-Wisp Wins Title; To Defend In Europe Soon LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPH Hap py Willie Pastrano said today there was a '"strong possibility" he might make the first defense of his newly won light-hcavy-wcight championship in Europe in about 90 days. Swarthy, black-haired Willie, who wrested the 175-pound crown from veteran Harold Johnson Sat urday night on an upset split 15 round decision at the Las Vegas Convention Center, mentioned these three possible European challengers: Chick Calderwood of Scotland, who outpointed Willie in Glasgow on Sept. 16. 1W0. Lennart Risberg of Sweden, who held Willie to a draw Stockholm Aug. 6, 1961. at I Giulio Kinaldi of Italy, cur rent champion of Europe. Better Financially Smiling Willie, 27. explained that, right now. a fight with any one of those three European box ers seemed a better money match than any that could be made in the United States. He emphasized, however, that CHARLOTTE, N.C. UP1 1 manager Angelo Dundee would, Fre(i lonn nursed his out-of-pick the opponent, site and date. Las Ford (r tlree laps' around Dundee flew to New York Sun-I,he charlotte Motor Speedway day to help his welterweight :and Bidc( across the finish inc champion I.AI1S nnnnguez, wii" Rodriguez Favored Over Emile NEW YORK (UPI 1 - Luis j.; i rk. Miami Fla t,rii m ripfoat Fmilpilcad In Junior Johnson at thejand $5,675; David Pearson of Griffith of the Virgin Islands and Olli lap and trailed the Chcvro New York City at Madison Square ' j'key. By "dragging" behind Garden next Saturday night and I Johnson he conserved fuel, retain the welterweight champion-! But this still wouldn't have ship of the world. ibeen enough. It took a stroke of The 15-round. nationally tele- i luck to turn the tide. Johnson vised title bout scheduled to be-j gin at 10 p.m. EDT will be the feature bout of the week's boxing schedule. Rodriguez will be seeking to repeat his March 21 victory over Grilfith at Los Angeles. Calif.. r.hhM him he fee s has been withheld him l tiw -.,i n,iri CIMIIipillll. nit iu,.. ....... guez has won 50 of his 52 pro fessional bouts and has scored 21 knockouts. Griffith, who has held the title tw ice. could become the first man to hold the welterweight cham pionship three times. Griffith won the crown the two previous times with victories over Benny Mfl Parol the second of which re sulted in injuries that cost Paret his life. Kmile, who (iglits in furious flurries, has w-on 35 of 39 pro bouts and scored 12 k.iyoes. The rules calling for eicht .... i. .. ,.l.,i- i,.hr- count on knockdowns and (he' 5 Tr,-City 2 Ihrce-kmK-kdown rule will lie in! Saturday's Results eflect despite the fact that it is aiTri-l'iiy 6 Salem 5 championship match. Grilfith is Yakima 3 Eucene I assured of $.17,500 w hile Rodriguezllx-wislon 4 Wcnatchee 3 is guaranteed $40.0(10. Tonight's Games The Week's Boxing Schedule Includes: Tumdav: New York 'Sunnysido Garden' - Floyd McCoy vs. Dave Russell; Philadelphia - Len V.at thews vs. J. D. Ellis; Louis Molina vs. Doug Vaillant. Wednesday; Oakland. Calif. Rotor Fischer vs. Kirk Barrow- Thursday Miami. Fla. - Tony Mamarelli vs. Santos riores: l-osi Angeles - Prince Rudy vs. Frankiej Nihlett Friday: Rome. Italy Sandro Santini vs. Tony Mnntano. Saturday: New York 'Madison Square Garden' - Luis Rodriguez ns. Emile Griffith 'welterweight championship - TV'. GETS ALL-STAR Bill CHICAGO 'LPI' - Junious Ruchanan of Gramb'.ing. a 6-ioot, i 7-inch. 2'0-pound tackle signed by tlie Dallas Texans mow the Kan sas City Chiefs' of the American Fnolhall Ikjiiii- hit hern invit a . .. .. ' -vwi. .,.,! i'i. '-i mi um mi lur .win .iiiin.1.1 .... Star foot'hall clae AuC 2. in h!cfi coTc MUSiars .!! plav l io lirwn Hay Packers of t h c; .National Knot hall Loa.-uo. "V. , As n 8. -iTj41k. his final grooming for Saturday's first defense against ex-champion imile Onllith at New York. Dundee said Sunday he was not interested in a return bout with Johnson, who had accepted Pas trano as a second substitute chal lenger only after iMauro Mina of Peru and Henry Hank of Detroit had withdrawn from the Las Ve gas match because of training in. juries. "And besides," said Dundee, "Johnson is not a drawing card." Saturday's rainy-night fight, in doors at Convention Center, drew only 2.1170 paid fans and about $35,0(10. In addition, the television money was $60,000. Johnson was. guaranteed 17,500; Pastrano, $21,250. Result An Upset Pastrano's victory was a ten Lorenzen Nurses Enfry To Win Stock Race Title at 30 miles kt hour Sunday tu:zle. win the World 600 late model j stock car race and $26,250. The lead-footed North Carolina! native, who now lives in Elm- hurst. III., combined cagey slrat- Finishing in third place was an egy and a lot of luck to set a other Chevrolet, piloted by Rex blistering mark of 132.417 miles white of Snartanburo. S C. who Ian hour and boost his total earn ings this season to well over $75,- Ho-j00"; ...... He purposely relinquished the blew a lire three laps before the finish and Lorenzcn's scat-back Ford whizzed past, Kor tlie next three laps, he r(Kked his car to feed the last .,, o Rasnlne in lhe tanks jnt0 his cn(,jne Johnson finished second despite 1 I'he hlnwnul and won $11,410 in Standings Northwest League Standings By United Press International W. I.. PCT. GB Lcwistnn 26 15 .643 .600 .5! .561 .436 .143 Yakima 21 2.1 21 Salem Tri-Cily Wcnatchee Eocene Sunday's Results Iwiston 21 Wcnatchee 1-0 Eugene 8-2 Yakima 19 Tn-('ity at Yakima Eugene at Wcnatchee Salem at lwislon Hawks Open Play The Klamath Falls Hawks' , snnrfav at -Merrill . .,,, Jk. Tr, r. . m tuice. Only the firl game counted in' league standing-, and in that one. 'the Hawks turned in a 6 to 3 nine-inning victory. Tlie nightcap1 was a 6-0 five-hit shutout win. ( The oiiener was a battle with lhe Gems were unahie lo score the Hawks pulling out lo a 3-ol although Brad Slezak and Bobs',',""' 1,1 edge alter four inning, nnlv to Mooie rapped hack-tn-back sin- c.arar. ti ... , .", I, i.jj L , Ktfl'l. 'ti haie TrM itv mil oacx un a threc-nin barrage in the fifth in- ning to tie up the game. Alter seven, with tlie score still snniteo. me game ro..eu imUv.vu, . i ., . ...ii . J ... nnings untli a inier-nin umiv ir.r bv the Hawks in the ninth , , . put I ho fidme aa. prim and i rum -dividing t h Marvin runnuicham opowH Owi mound choir, fhutun? nut tho ninth with a triple. oonac on ajTn-Otians and Riving up throe iild pitch. Krrnon sma'.ed. McNf'tiits. J rific upset. He had gone into the ring a 5-1 underdog against a champion boasting 19 straight wins. Pat Oliveri, manager of the de feated 34-year-old Johnson, ar ranged with attorney Alfred Klein of Philadelphia to make a formal request Tuesday to the World Boxing Council to order a return title fight with Pastrano because of the controversy over the split decision. The split decision favored Pas trano on a five-point-must basis as follows: referee Jimmy Olivas, 69-68; judge John Romero. 68-69; judge Harry Krausc, 69-67. Only Romero favored Johnson. The United Press International had Johnson ahead, 69-68; and a UPI poll of H sports writers at the ringside favored Johnson. 9-5. prize money and $6,050 for lead ing the race for 291 laps. About 60.000 persons witnessed the accident-free race, marred for a short time by a slow driz- Despite the rain, Lorenzcn's ,jme was aDout in miles an hour faster than the previous track record. won $8,290. Joe Weatherly of Norfolk, Va., last year's NASCAR champion, piloted his Pontiac to fourth place Spartanburg, SC.. finished fifthj in a Dodge for $4,425; and Nel son Stacy and Marvin Panch. both from Daytona Beach and driving Fords, finished in sixth. and seventh places. USC Defeats Beavers 2-1 For BB Title CORVALLIS (UPI - Southern California captured tile NCAA Dis trict 8 baseball title Saturday by defeating Oregon Stale 7-5 in the second game of a doublchcader after losing tlie first contest 8-6. The win gave Southern Califor nia a 2-1 series victory and ad vanced it into the NCAA cham-j pionship tournament at Omaha June 10-14. Southern California wrapped up tlie nightcap with two runs each in tlie seventh and ninth innings. Willie Brown hit a two-run single in tlie seventh. Bud Hollowell hit his second home run of the dav and Brow n scored on a throw ing error in tlie ninth. In the first game. Oregon State scored six runs in the first inning on seven walks and a two - run 'moved to third on a passed ball single by Jimmy Jarvis. Dickson was walked and Prang- Dennis Straub went the nine- hofer rapped out a double scor inning distance for the Beavers, ing both runs. striking out 15. I Young was safe on a fielder's! choice and an error on tlie sec LnH hyiua thai uvmI Kenvon. After Curt Coleman flied to right and Rich Hath struck out. Tom Schiff singled and John Lrume singled witn two more runs scoring. Vern Petrick struck out to retire tlie side. gies. oui o;ea on oasc c m Steve Young went the distance!". 'for tlie Hawks giving up only in three hils and striking out 14. ',v''" Ii ., a II. 'I l...ln.l Hut :ma,... ..... a am. mucins i. 'i ..I... The wrnnd same found Tom Vi- fJlays National League W. L. Pet. GH 31 19 .620 ... 30 22 .577 2 27 22 .551 3' i I 27 2.1 .540 4 24 23 .511 5' j 24 24 .500 6 23 27 .460 8 22 27 .419 8'2 21 30 .412 10', 20 32 .385 12 San Francisco St. Louis Los Angeles Chicago Cincinnati Pittsburgh 31 j I Philadelphia Milwaukee Houston New York Sunday's Results Philadelphia 5 Chicago 2 list) Chicago 3 Philadelphia 2 (2nd) New Wk 2 Pitts I. 1st, 10 inns New York 4 Pitts. 3. 2nd, 10 inns. Cincinnati 5 Los Angeles 2 Houston 3 Milwaukee 1, 17 inns. San Francisco 6 St. Louis 4 By JOE SARGIS ITI Sports Writer Look for the San Francisco Giants to break the National League race wide open any day now. Why? Willie Mays, that's why. When Willie gets into one of his hitting streaks he literally car ries the Giants, even with all those other muscular hitlers, on his back. He gave evidence that he has shaken off his most re cent slump Sunday by ramming three homers as the Giants de feated the St. Louis Cardinals, 6-4. They were homers No. 8. 9 and 10 for Mays, who hadn't hit one since May 17. During that period the Giants won seven games and lost six. and. even though they held onto first place in the NL race, it hardly was a pace befit ting a contender, let alone the de fending champion and favorite. lilts In Streaks Throughout his major league career the 32-year-old Mays has been a streak hitter, and this year doesn't seem any different than the other 11. The thing about Mays hitting streaks, though. that they sometimes produce awesome results such as Sun day's three homers. The first homer came with Har TThiffViTP&riTI Monday, June 3. 1963 PAGE HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. No -Cal League Opens; Medo-Bes Dropped 7-3 S. Valley Dunsmuir Weed K. Falls Mount Shasta 10 1-0 1-0 n-l o-i. Happy Camp 0-1 Scott Valley, Dunsmuir and Weed chalked up first game vic tories in Northern California League play over the weekend. Scott Valley opened play Sat urday night as tliey doleatcd tlie L'L- i L. U-.I. t Lnm Cl...m 7 I ivr ,IH.WW;I3 ai VJI.I mauium t I to 3 behind the eight-hit pitching ol Jiggs Sage. Dunsmuir nipped Mount Shas ta Sunday as Bill Marske turned in an airtight two hitter while his mates belted Jim Lemos for 11 to chalk up a 3 to 1 triumph. Weed entertained and defeated Big Y, Hal's Winners In Suburban LL Games In Saturday games in the South Suburban Little League, Big Y whipped Daren 9 to 1 while Hals downed Western Oil I 11 to 4. only extra-base clout of lhe game. Dickson went the six innings! ays hunched up five runs in for Big Y, limiting Darco to only(he (jrsl jnnjng flCainst Western four hits, giving up the single oj) , Xae a they never run in the first inning when he L.(V(, u) Herbert hurled the first gave up a sincle to I). Hart. Iead-lhre(, jnnjn(,5 and Warren the oil hitter, wno tnen wok seennn an error and scored on a sincle oy Buehler. Big Y struck for two runs in the first inning Allred was hit hy a pitched ball, stole second and Big Y added another in the! With Double Win HP Hcwkl (I) AI It M tl Piirjfim. if SehiH. c' Crumt, Jft Tottlft " Tiiiii 11 1 1 Ik) Gam m 61 (WJ 00-0 I ' Mas Haps 3 vey Kuenn aboard in the first in ning and was a typical four-base blow not too long a drive but no cheapie by any means. The second hit the scoreboard at St. Louis' Busch Stadium in deep left-center, a drive of about 400 feet, and came with the bases empty in the eighth. The third reached to the loot of the score board in the ninth and gave the Giants a 6-1 lead. Willie showed signs of coming nut of his hitting slump on Satur day when he got three hits in four at-bats. He finished tho three-game set against the Cardi nals with six hits in II at-bats and raised his average 18 points to .254 far below his career average of .315. The victory enabled the Giants to salvage one game against the Cardinals and widened their lead . to two games over second-place St. Louis and 3'j over the Los Angeles Dodgers, who lost to the Cincinnati Reds, 5-2. In the other NL games, the New York Mets swept a double header from the Pittsburgh Pi rates, 2-1 and 4-3, the Houston Colts nipped the Milwaukee Braves, 3-1, in 17 innings, and Philadelrjhia and Chicaeo SDlit. the Phils winnini! the oucner. 5-2. and the Cubs taking the nightcap. 3-2. In the American League, the Cleveland Indians defeated the New York Yankees, 2-0 and 7-2; the Los Angeles Angels downed the Baltimore Orioles, 8-2; tlie Washington Senators won over the Kansas City Athletics, 6-4 the Detroit Tigers shaded the Minnesota Twins. 7-6. and Boston and Chicago split, the Red Sox winning the opener. 11-9, and the White Sox the nightcap, 10-0. Wins Ninth Game Jim O'Toole picked up his ninth victory in beating the Dodgers, but it took some weird doings to achieve as the Reds scored three runs on a bunt during a five-run second inning. A double, infield hit and a walk loaded tlie bases alter two out in the second. The Happy Camp 6 to 3 Sunday Dave Lemos pitched good ball but had to have help from Son ny Dixon in the ninth. Chick Sat- cliffe hurled the first six f o r. Happy Camp and Ted Beck fin ished up. This week's schedule finds tlie .Medo-Bcls meeting Mount Shasta at Dunsmuir on Saturday night, and tlie Sunday slate pairs Duns muir at Weed and Happy Camp at Scott Valley. SCO" Vllv. Stgff ! CMvfM. Mclntyrt U). Mtdo-Ben, 3-t-l. Munsfitld and 0ingi. Mount Snil'a, 1-3-2. LmM and Wood!. Dunsmuir, 3-11-1, Mafikt and Blavant. Haooy Cumo. 344, Satcliflt. Bach til and Hockadav. Weed. . Lemo. DIon HI and Paul- aim second, two in the third, three in the louilh aim anrancr in fifth. pranghofer's double was the "iat thrPe Dossett hammered out a home run and a double to lead the hit-! ting for Hal's He had three for four for the day, adding a double and a single to the roundtripper. IK. Western Oil had nnlv four hitsicomplcte games but were aided bv six walks.' B. Kuhn and B Ernst did the hurling duty for Western Oil. FREE SHETLAND PONY EVERY TUESDAY GET YOUR FREE TICKETS AT Jay Hawk PETROLEUM 2135 So. 6th or So. 6th and Crett I Homers As Dodger infield then threw the ball around, two runs crossing on an error by Dick Traccwski and three on a wild throw by Don Zimmcr. The Mets gained their first game victory when Bill Virdon and Jerry Lynch collided chasing a fly ball in the 10th inning as Lefties American League W. L. ICT. Gil New York Baltimore 26 17 .605 30 29 25 24 23 24 19 20 17 .600 .592 .543 .511 .511 .471 .432 .426 Chicago Kansas City Minnesota Boston Los Angeles Cleveland Detroit Washington .327 13'vi Sunday's Results Cleveland 5 New York 0 (1st I Cleveland 7 New York 2 (2nd) Boston 11 Chicago 9 (lsti Chicago 10 Boston 0 (2nd) Detroit 7 Minnesota 6 Washington 6 Kansas City 4 Angeles 8 Baltimore 2 By JOE SARGIS Ul'l Sports Writer Memo to American lLcaguc managers: If you want to beat tlie New- York Yankees, save vour left Bonus Baby Belted; Herbel Wins Sixth 1'1'L Standings By L'nlted Press International Northern Division W. L. Pet. , GB Tacoma 30 19 .612 Spokane 27 25 .519 Seattle 23 23 .500 5'i Portland ' 23 26 .469 7 Hawaii 23 27 .460 7ij Southern Division W. 1,. Pet. GB Dallas Ft. W. San Diego 29 22 .569 28 24 .538 V 24 25 .490 4 24 27 .471 5 16 29 .356 10 Oklahoma City Denver Salt Lake City Sunday's Results Denver 6 Tacoma 2 list game' Tacoma 3 Denver 1 2nd camel Spokane 11 Portland 3 (1st game' Portland 1 Spokane 0 (2nd game Hawaii 9 Dallas-Ft. Worth 8 list game I Dallas-Ft. Worth 9 Hawaii 5 Oklahoma City 4 San Diego 3 Salt Lake City at Seattle. 2 games ppd , rain. United Press International Boh Garibaldi gets the headlines but Ron Herbel writes the scripts for the front - running Tacoma Giants of the Pacific Coast League's northern division. Unheralded Herbel, a 25-year- old righthander from Brighton. Colo., was signed to a contract by the San Francisco Giants for prac tically peanuts while it took bonus loot in excess of $130,000 to lure Garibaldi off the Santa Clara Campus. Now it looks like the Giants might have given the bonus stip end to the wrong pitcher. Gari baldi received rough treatment from Denver yesterday and end ed up losing 6-2 to the Bears. He was relieved by John Pregenzer in the seventh after giving up live runs. In the nighlcap, Herbel pitched the full seven innings and scat- tered four hits in downing the, Bears, 31. It brought Herbel's re cord to 6-5 while Garibaldi was losing his second game after winning six. But records don't tell the full storv. Seven Complete Games Tie came was Herbel's seventh route-going jierformance of the PCL season. This is t h e best in the league. Herbel also owns an earned-run average in the vicin- ity of 2 60 Garibaldi's ERA is 4 .30-plus and he has pitched five Denver unleashed I i hit at- tack on Garibaldi, Pregenzer and two other Tacoma pitchers in the ofener. Outfielder Ethan Blackahy DATED FOR FRESHNESS WIS WITH GREAT UuREBFATsf ' CKllir-P COPCWHAGCfJ, I FLAVOR SMOKING t I BtFCPE J I S0M I M FOR.RFAL W . jZ. S ' TOBACCO 'fc ,..ffilEMtNrJ., b pinch-runner Rod Kanchl scored from second, and they gained their second win on a 10th inning homer by Jim Hickman. Reliever Elroy Face was charged with both defeats. Four consecutive singles in tlie top of the 17th produced the mar gin of victory for the Colts, who Baffle Yankee handers for the world champions. And if you need proof of that statement just take a look at what Jack Kralick and young Sam Mc Dowell of the Cleveland Indians did to the Yankees on Sunday. Kralick, who seems to have re gained his 1962 form since being traded by the Minnesota Twins, stopped the Yankees on two hits in the opener as the Indians won, 5-0, and .McDowell, the 20-ycar-old flame-thrower from Pittsburgh beat the champs in the nightcap, 7-2. The Yankees have lost only 17 games thus far this season in 43 starts but eight of those setbacks have been to southpaws, including one to the departed Bo Belinsky, who had just that lone victory over tlie New Yorkers this season in eight decisions. Yields Two Singles Kralick. who won 12 games for tlie Tunis in 1962 including a no hit, no-run game over the Kansas paced Denver's attack with three' safeties which ran his hit streak to seven in a row against Ta coma. Denver leftfielder Corky Withrow swatted a two-run double. In other games, Moe Drabowsky of Portland threw a three-hitter at Spokane for a 10 victory after Spokane won the opener 11-3; Ha waii scored three times m tliel eighth to nip Dallas-Ft. Worth 9-8 but the Islanders dropped the nightcap 9-5, and San Diego re liever John Flavin walked in the winning run for a 4-3 Oklahoma City victory Rain caused postponement of the' Salt Lake City at Seattle double neaacr. Drabowskl Iooklng Up Portland s Drabowsky. aiming lor another shot at the major leagues, struck out seven to pick up his fourth win against a single loss. Dick Green's sacrifice fly brought in the winning run fori Portland. Rod Grabcr's two-run homer in the first game for Spokane helied Howie Reed get his fifth win Mike Bmmley and John Werhas collected three hits for Spokane while Manny Jiminez hit a solo. homer for Portland Eight home runs were hit in lhe Hawaii-Dallas Ft. Worth double- header. Hawaii's Bobby Knoop. headed the singles! with a three- run homer and a solo blast. Dick Simpson's three-run homer in the eighth gave the Islanders their up hill victory in the first game. The Rangers led 6-1 at the end of five innings. In the second game, home runs hy Joe Christian and Tony Oliva highlighted the Rangers winning. attack. Other first-game homers were hit hy Carlos Bernier of Ha waii and Cesar Tovar and George Banks of Dallas-Ft. Worth. Freeze Belts One Gene Freese's two-run homer put San Diego one run behind Oklahoma City at the end of live innings. Bui in the sixth, the 89cr tallied on two singles and a pair of walks. Padre reliefer F'avin walked an 8!ier with the bases loaded to force in the winning run. Three singles gave San Diego its third run in tlie seventh. In Saturday's games, lhe 89ers and Padres split a twin bill with Oklahoma City winning the opener 4-0 and losing the nightcap -4: Dallas-H. ttnrlh downed Hawaii 7-3, Spokane deleated Portland 7- 4. Tacoma overpowered Denver 9-3 and Salt Lake City took 12 innings before ending a 16-game losing streak by edging .Seattle 3-2. TRY A PINCH OP REAL 70BACCO TASTE 9 SF Wins 6-4 struggled our hours and 36 min utes before beating the Braves. Hal Woodcshick, who pitched six innings of shutout relief ball, was the winner, and Ron Piche, who worked the last two, took the loss. Between them, the Colts and Braves left 30 runners stranded. Veteran Cal McLish. given a City Athletics, gave up a single to Clete Boycr in the third inning and a single to Mickey Mantle in the seventh. Joe Adcock's tlirce-rtin homer in the sixth inning decided the is sue for Kralick over Bill Stafford. It was Jack's fourth victory in nine decisions and third since coming to the Tribe on Way 2. McDowell didn't pitch nearly as well in tlie nightcap, but he had more to work on as the Indians opened up a 6-2 lead in six in nings. Fred Whitfield, who took over for Adcock in the second game, was the hitting hero with three runs batted in on a double and homer. Orioles Lose The second-place Baltimore Or ioles ailed to gain ground, though as they bowed to the Los Angeles Angels, 8-2. The third-place Chi cago White Sox climbed to within 13 percentage points of tlie lead by splitting a doublchcader with the Boston Red Sox, winning tlie nightcap, 10-0, after dropping the opener, 11-9, while in other games the Detroit Tigers shared the Minnesota Twins, 7-6. and tlie Washington Senators won their' second straight, 6-4, over Kansas City. In tlie National League, the San Francisco Giants defeated tlie St. Louis Cardinals, 6-4; the Cincin nati Reds downed the Los Angeles Dodgers. 5-2; tlie Houston Colts nipped tlie Milwaukee Braves, 3-1, in 17 innings; tlie Now York Mets swept Uio Pittsburgh Pirates, 2-1 and 4-3, and Philadelphia and Chi cago split, tlie Phils taking the! opener, 5-2, and the Cubs the nightcap, 3-2. Drop Fifth Straight Tlie Angels handed the Orioles their fifth straight loss as Dean Chance gained his fifth victory. stopping the Birds on six hits. He needed relief help from Julio Na - varro t0 Rci the final out. Little I ,lbio Pearson nrovided the nunch 1 ram iniiac r lht II Cf i u ' m service y I .Liivi' nrren II U S. f l iTS wrrcn I ft,. BalTnce ! 1 1 AIM CTikTlIir wneeis i 1 1 fl )lrZ7JIII jfcZXrtQ ,.. mTU American NHSW 7.. i Jail s-rwa If"... II '' s I T.H. monlh. lo p.. II .ay j ff-,y. Align Adjust Brake. J-tEndV v V and Repack Front V 'tinST mrn Wheel Bearings finstom NEW TREADS APPUtO ON SOUND TIM BO0IES Oft ON YOU") OWN TIKIS WHITEWALLS-ANY SIZE NARROW OR wot OCSlSN TUSCLESS OR TUBI-TVPI mi m laZfitLfS . .iuii Ui iUi iSli AL tlM .laU iltl" Our New Trtadt, iHtntifirH by Medallion and $hop mark, art GUARANTEED 1 A i rut tfeferti in workmanship and malriU rturinf lif trrf 1 Afainf normal marl haurr (tfrl ipairiM punClurtHI ncour Irrtrt in fvarvrlev Mfifr far um (nr 2 mortlhi nplarfmni prnraiH on IrtatJ Nt and baatd on Hat pttem current ai I in nf arliutlnrnit. what rout dollar by STORE 6th & Pin Ph. TU three-run lead at the start, coast ed to his fifth straight victory as the Phils won their opener, but Cal Koonce and Barney Schultz combined on a five-hitter to gain the Cubs a split. Art Mahaffey, who won 19 games last year, suf fered his seventh loss against only two victories. Hitters with three runs baited in. includ ing his fourth homer. Lee Thomas also homered for tlie Angels. Juan Pizarro shut out the Red Sox on just four hits in the sec ond game and aided his ow n cause with a two-run double during a seven-run outburst in the sixth in ning. Carl Yastrzemski's two-run homer in tlie eighth provided the margin of victory for the Red Sox in tlie opener. Dick Stuart also homered for Boston while Ron Hansen, Floyd Robinson and Pete Ward stroked round-trippers for tlie White Sox. Singles In Ninth Rocky Colavito's ground single in the ninth drove in the winning run for the Tigers after the Twins had rallied to tie the score at 6-6 in tlie eighth on a double by Jim Hall and a single by Rich Rollins. Colavito homered earlier In the game as did AJ Kaline. Chuck Hinton's two-run homer in tlie 10th inning led the Sena tors to their victory over the A's. Don Lock's eighth home run in the seventh tied tlie score after tlie A's had taken a 4-3 lead in the sixth. Jim Coates was the winner in relief and Dale Willis, who took over in tho 10th, was tlie loser. WIDENER HORSE WINS TAR1S (UPD Spy Well, owned by Mrs. Alec Widener and ridden by Roger Poincclet, won Sunday's $24,000 Prix Jean Prat horse race at the Longchamp track. Fast Dip was second and Mandcrlay was third. WINS BOARDWALK MILE ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (UPD Vern Morgan of the Delaware Valley Athletic Association won the annual Boardwalk mile Sun day for tlie third consecutive year and broke the record he set last yeur. His time of 4:03.9 broke his previous record of 4:04.6. Do Your Brakes Grab? Squeal? Pull to Lett or Right? 4 FOR Plus tax and 4 trada-ln tlrat r. OPEN TO SERVE YOU 7:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. TI MtUS mora 4 8109