F _. By PIUS CALLAGHAN . The Generous Dodgers SAN Francisco Giants are now in the world Series with New York Yankees and an the tears of Los Anaeies Dodgers and their Importers cannot change that- » Giants won the crown the in ninth York Giants-did back in 1951. As much as we would have the National League in the world better. team won this post season chance to cop things easily in the palgn but blew sky high. Giants lire themselves but the Los Angeles gang co-operated by winning oalyfiine of their final six games in once-friendly Dodgzer Stadium. 0 rniatfm how you look t. tadts that shmved Los Angmcs to-’_the Giaints on a silver plain-r. l PERSONALLY. we don't think that any team who can't win at deast two of their last six games at home deserves a pennant. Dddgers couldn't play this .333 ball required of them resuitthey wound up in a tie with their neighbours from San Francisco. . They continued their horrible SPORTS inning of the final game. much the same as the New RONT hard way, battling from behind liked to see Dodgers represent series, we must admit that the playoff. The Dodgers had their final week of the lcgular cam- were not exactly any ball of you can’! avoid the cold hard Dodgers handing the pennant and as a battling slump in the first game of'the playoff but appeared cured when they thumped Giants in the second game. However just when Giants looked like runners- up. in that third contest, the Dodgers once again decided to start handing things away. Alvin Dark’s boys got only two hits ir that eventful ninth but walks and errors did the rest and gave them four runs and the National League flag.‘ Wills" Was Great THINGS seemed to be going in the ninth. Giants were ready open in the sixth when they load Dodgers’ way until that break to blow the whole affair wide ‘ed the oases with none out. In came Ed Roebuck and he got the side retired without a runner crossing home plate. It was a great effort and big Ed looked like the playoff hero ’ hen Maury Roebuck’s great clutch pitching mance went in vain. Dodgers couldn't hold the 4-2 ctlfle they enjoyed entering the ninth. The Second THE second guessers had a whale of a time after this one fiinished Wednxesri-ay night. In the runner on second and the Dodgers leading 3-2. Alston ordered the utting the go-ahead run batter walked. thereby got out_ot' the situation but we ti indeed if the batter had doubled ainrl scored Some were maintaining that pinch hitter for Roebuck in the el two_.out. As it turned out it would But Roebuck had been terrific up holding a 4-2 lead. He stayed with his ace rcliefer and we didn't blame him. But his handling of his pitchers in the ninth and hislordering Wtlliaxns to walk the basses full. did-n‘t go down well with us. In a tense situation ( and it was a 4-4 ball game then) the chance of Williams forcing in a run was great. That‘; what happened and the Giants were ahead to stay Come On, Giants Wills ran the Giants crasy. He got four hits. stole three bases, scored a pair leading the Dodgers into the series against the Yankees. of runs and appeared to be But and Wills’s all-around perfor- Guessers‘ l Giants‘ centrefielder Willie i Mays. left, and pitcher Billy ' Picrce are happy pair after 0 UI-LANT PAIR San Francisco won the pen- nant at Los Angeles Wednes- day afternoon. Pierce put the Dodgers down in order in the ninth and Maya snared the last two outs in the outfield. lToronto «Hassle Threatens By BILL MACDOUGALL TORONTO (CP) The Na- tional Hockey League All-Star game. annual prelude to the pro- fcssional hoc key season, is turning into the focal point of a hassle between Toronto man- ager-coach Punch Imlach and the Maple Leaf players. seventh. with two out and a 0:. base. I~lc iink he would have looked bad both base runners. Alston should have sent in a ghth with the bases loaded and have been the real thing to do. to that time and Dodgers were Golf Match ‘Goes Sat. A men's two-ball foursome 'nati~li will be held at the Char- lottetown Golf Club this Satur- day. club pro Cecil ‘Bu-bby' Dowlirg announced last night. Entries will be accepted at the pro shop and the draw will be made this evening (Friday). / BUT the Los Angeles' infield looked bad for the inst few weeks. They crumpled completely lowed on and Cardinals to in that last home stand and al- grab most of the wl..s. They ‘ 0,“. lacked polish and all the heroics of Wills couldn't atone for these miscues. The Giants proved a steadier club and in that third game of the playoffs they refused to panic with dnieat sharing them in the face in their last chance at bat The Dodgers can blame nobody but themselves for their blowing this penna't. They had things, all wrapped up but boot- ed it away. Giants were ready Angeles had pi"nty to hand out in the past few weeks. And now it's the world series to accept any favors and Los Bombers Place End On Waivers WINNIPEG (CP) — Winnipeg Blue ombers announced Thursday that offensive end Bob Deegan from the Univers- ity -of Minnesota had bee placed on waivers and picked up by Montreal Alouettes for the $350 waiver price. The NHL brass is stepping ' to the tcene Friday with special meeting here, just 24 hours before the game. NHL policy—-but not a regu- lation—has been that no un- ' player dons his skates for the game. if it is carried out, the Leafs, who as 1961-62 Stanley Cup champions earned the right to meet the all-stars, may ice a team of minor- leaguers. Imlach and a substantial number of his players-—the club won't say how many—have not yet come to terms for this sea- son and the Toronto coach has said he'll borrow from Roches- ter Americans of the American Hockey League, a Leaf farm club, it’ that is necessary to ice a team Reports are that Imlach, con- ducting Leafs through an exhi- bition tour of western Canada, has i been using the All-Star game as a b to help nail the Leafs into contracts. If you don't sign, you don't play, says Imlach Estimates vary on the num- her of men Imlach has signed. most of them settling around five or six. LEAFS PLACE THREE Toronto placed three men on the All-Star second team, de- . Our Dodgers will not be there us to cheer on but we can't leave the National League when they're playing_the Yankees. Come on Giants. lets go. Good Hunting Seen For N.S. Province ‘By IRA DRYSDALE HALIFAX tCP)~—The weather in Nova Scotia this year has been good to deer, and hunters, iankeepers, guides and the gov- ernment are looking for good hunting this fall. In recent years the lands and forests department has taken a hard- look at what the annual'hunting is responsible Oct. 15-No. 30 season means‘ to Nova Scotia. It big busi- ness. representing about $4.- 000,000 a .year. Clarence Mason. director of wildlife conservation, says this‘ is the amount spent by hunters, on guns. guides, accommoda-, tions, licences, special clothing.l liquor and food and all the para-,‘ pheraalia involved in a hunting‘: ,cxcu on. ' ' A few more seasons like lastl fall'd'.tould spell trouble. how-I ever. The total kill—about 14,-! 000. This compared with an av- erage of about 30,000 a year for the previous three or four years and a record 46,000 in 1954. IIBED OF WILL Guides and hunters found the ihunting districts indicate deer are fat and fairly plentiful ,through not as plentiful as they lwerc 15 to 20 years ago. ‘ Wildlife experts are not wor- tried about a gradual decline in the province's deer population ;slnce the Second World War, ,and they don’t think heavy They attribute it to a natural illaw of nature—that after an ‘animal is introduced to a new area he often multiplies faster }than is good for him for a few ,Schirro Loses Four Pounds During Flight U.S.S. KEARSARGE (AP) - Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr. lost only four pounds during his prolo ged voyage through space. A do for said it was “less than he would have lost playing a game of football.“ Dr. Richard Pollard of Jack- son, Mich., and Dr. Max J. Traumer of Springfield, Pa.. said Thursday a preliminary medical examination of Schirra turned up no ill effects as a re- sult of the nine-hour, 13-minute orbital flight Wednesday. The physicians said they found: 1. No change in Schirra's con- dition from his last checkup at Cape Canaveral, Fla., just be- fore his space voyage. 2. No evidence of cosmic rays immediately detectabl fenceman Carl Brewer, centre Dave Keon and left winger Franl. Mahovi' h. They'll line up with Leafs Saturday night. The first team consists Jacques Plaute of Montreal Ca- nadiens in goal. defencemen Jean Guy Tablot of Montreal and Doug Harvey of New York Rangers, centre Stan Mikita of Chicago Black Hawks, right a York NHL All-Star Game Sat. winger Andy Bathgate of New and left winger Bobby Hull of Chicago. Other members of the second team are goaltender Glen Hall and defencemani Pierre Pilote of Chicago and right winger Gordie Howe of Detroit. Red Wings. Mikita won't be dressed. He suffered a sprained ankle in an exhibition g a m e Wednesday night at Hull. Que.. against Hull-Ottawa Canadiens of the Eastern Professional League and will be out of action for about 10 days. Players have been drafted from other clubs to bolster the all-stars. They include Bernie Geoffrion, Ralph Backstrom and Claude Provost from Mont- real; Alex Delvecchlo and Norm Ullman from Detroit; Doug Moiins, Don Mclfenney and Leo Boivin from Boston Bruins, and Dean Prentice and goaltender Gumip Worsley from New York. Races Staged At Fredericton FREDERJCPOIN (CF) — rastway and Homestretch Linda posted dou-ble-dash wins in an eight-dash harness racing card at I-‘i-edericton Raceway Thurs- day night. Single dash winners were Bank Song, Diamond Dillard. Flo Direct and Concrete King. Homestretch Linda_ Diamond ‘ ard and Concrete Kin; shared fastest time of the night honors, with times of 2:11. PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)- Former heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson was placed be- hind Eddie Machen in the list of heavyweight contenders the World Boxing Association iur ay. The WBA’s monthly ratings had Machen, of Portland, Ore., as the o. 1 contender to freshly crowned heavyweight Patterson Drops In WBA Ratings 3. Terry Downes, England. Curvls. W es. _ Junior‘ welterweight; Cham- pion, Eddle Perldns, Chicago. Lightweight: Champion. Car- los Ortiz. New York. 1. Kenny Lane,‘ Muskegon. By JACK RAND . SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Steadv Whitey Ford rose to the occasion once again Thursday, settling own after a aky tart. and won his 10th World the series opener at Candlestick bander who has won more se- s a w streak broken after 33 2-3 lags but calmly set down the Giants while scattering 10 hits along the way. Only Willie Mays, his tormen- ‘ tor in all-star games. and Jose Pagan gave Ford trouble eon- sistently. Each collected three . singles. Against Ford in aikstar and series play, Mays now has nine hits in 11 bats. The American League cham- pions. who have won 19 of 26 previous series. went about this in methodical fashion against the~Ginnts, who Wednesday fin- ished a wild best-of-three play- off with Los Angeles Dodgers for the National League pen- nant SNAPS TIE , Clete Boyer, the fielding mem- ber of the baseball family from Missouri. contributed the big hit, a 365-foot home run off loser Billy 0’Dell thatsnapped a 2-2 tie in the seventh. Not content with that slender margin. the Yanks kept snap- ping and snarling at 0‘Dell. Don Larsen and S Miller until they had stretched their lead to four runs. The big Candlestick Park crowd of 43,852 seemed unusu- allv quiet for a city seeing its first World Series game. Appar- ently- they had celebrated so long into the wee small hours after Wednesday's victory in Los Angeles that they were all worn on In sharp contrast to the tired Giants. who had to play 165 games to decide the pennant. c Yanks were well rested. They clinched the flag Sept. 25 and did nothing but tune up for the series until the season ended Sunday They worked out Wed- nesday in Candlestick to famil- iarize themselves with the tricky yind currents. However, the wind-‘was not a factor Thurs- 8)? SHOWS YANKS’ POWER Roger Maris. the 61-homer hero of 1961 but a .256 batter this season, gave the Giants a quick taste of Yankee power with a long blast to the right field fence in the first. the ball to the fence. Felipe Alou jumped high into the air and managed to keep the ball from going over the barrier for a homer but couldn't hold it. It Yankees Favored I-n Second Game ' NEW YORK (AP)-New Yorl: Yankees were made 6‘/2-5 favorites Thursday to win the second game of the World Series over San Fran- cisco today, when the Yanks’ Ralph Terry faces Jack Sanford Broadway bookmakers es- blished the Yanks, 6-2 winners in the 0 her be- hind Whitey Ford, 13-5 fav- orites to capture the World ries. . The odds were 4-1 against the Yanks winning the next three you sweep the series you put up 31 to win . The odds against San Francisco winning the next four straight were 20-1. weary San Francisco Giants in with ar. glc by Jim D The stocky 33-year-old left nks Top 2 a two-run-gled with one out. 0’Dell » ml with I bounced away for double. If the Yanks had any ideas that the Giants would roll over and play dead after that first] loci-'. of their power, they had. another guess coming. l he Giants scrambed back a run the second 0 Mays‘ first single, another sin-| ' venport and a Maya home I m - . Fordknew he was in for trou- ‘‘ ‘in came Mays into centre that scored I-llller and tied the score at 2-2. Ford and 0'Dell. the latter overworked in the Giants’ bitter pennant fight, struggled along until the seventh with Ford blunting Giant threats in the fourth, fifth and sixth. CLEARS FENCE Boyer led off the Yankee sev- enth by rlding a_2-2 pitch over the wire fence in left about 365 eet away. It was the t World Series homer for Boyer’ 10 games. Maris started the Yanks off again in the eighth when he sin- SAN FRANCISCO (AP) “That guy's a pretty good pitcher. He's the one that beat us today," San Francisco man- ager Alvin Dark said in com- plimenting New York Yankees’ Whitey Ford for the 6-2 triumph in the World ‘Series opener. Then with characteristic determination. D a r k added, “We'll get ‘em tomorrow. You can't throw two guys at us as good as he is." . Dark appeared gloomy only ~ 2 Key Players by Curtis Cokes. Dallas; 3. Brian On McGi|l Team Play With Casts MONTREAL V (CP)—Two key FACTS, FIGURES By THE ASSOCIATED rags? c . New York (AL) 1 0 1.000 San Fran (NL) 0 1 .000 First Game, Thursday. Oct. 4, at San Francisco . New 200 000 121 - 6 ll 0 San Fran. 000- 2100 Bailey. Orsino (9). W-Ford 0‘Dell I-IR: Nyk-B yer. Remaining Schedule Second game, Friday, Oct. 5 at San Francisco Third game, Sunday, Oct. 7 at ew ork Fourth game. Monday. Oct. 8 at New York Fifth game (if necessary), Tuesday. Oct. 9 at New York Sixth game‘ (if necessary) Thursday, Oct. 11 at San Fran- cisco Seventh game (if necessary) Friday. Oct. 12 at San Fran- cisco. Financial Figures First Game Attendance-43,852. Net receipts-$355,838.48 Commissionerjs share - $53.- 37‘? 77 Players‘ share-$181,477.63 New York club's share-$30; M627 San Francisco club’: share- American League’: share - National League‘: share-$30; 246.27 I’ . and he delivered another single Harv / plnked pitch and manager Alvin Dark came t to converse with his tiring efty. _ Af r a short econaultatlnn. _ stay with it handed ba mins next in Dale Long. who had re- placed the aching Bill Skowron. to gling into right field. scoring I Don Larsen, the Yanks’ per- ‘fect game pitcher of the 1956 series. came in to face his old mates under _series éonditlqns - lifted a fly to abort shortstop Pagan collided with ey Kuenn. Pagan held the ball but was knocked off balance. His throw to the plate, trying to get the slow-moving Howard, came in on a bounce and catcher Ed Bailey couldn't handle_it. Ho- ward scored on the sacrifice fly. N0 ERROR ON PLAY .. 'It appeared Howard might have been out if Bailey held Pa- n's throw but there was no error scored on the play. st hungry for more rims with Ford always a question mark in the latejinnln s, the Yanks picked up a sixth run in the ninth. After Tresh singled Giants Blame Ford For First Setback when asked about his erstwhile power hitting first baseman Or- lando Cepeda, who continues in K the throes of a terrible slump. “He's swinging the way he always has," Dark declared. "Orlando has played 260 games this year and is worn out as far as I'm concerned. I'm not in favor of winter ball for fel- lows who play regularly in the majors." Cepeda plays winter ball in his native Puerto Rico. Today in the third inning, with the Gl- ants threatening to pull ahead, Cepeda bounced into "an easy double play ending the inning. The big fellow who led the Na- tional League in homers and runs batted in in 1961, didn't get the ball out of the infield Thursday. There was no air of dis- couragement ln the Giants’ dressing room as the losers calmly discussed the game. .Bllly 0'Dell, the losing pitcher, said he thought he had good stuff and wasn't red de- spite tour mound appearandea in the last wc_k. Dark was asked if the Giants were overly tired at the hec- lFord RisesTo O.cc«a:sio’n"‘..ol g Giants -6-2 with one out, Dark called in Stu Miller to replace Larsen. Mic- key Mantle, who went hltless, flied out but Maris walked after Tresh stole econd. and Howard singled to - Tresh.’ Manager Ralph Honk of the Yanks nflmed Ralph Terry, 3 on both sides," said Honk. Honk reported Skowron did not feel right when’ the game started and had complained of a back ache. He said Skowron, ron, who has a long tory of back ailments, suffered a slight injury in a workout Wednesday and aggravated it in the sixth inning Thursday. “They can't threw two pitch- ‘crs like Ford at us in two straight‘ days." said Dark fol- 'lowing the game. “We'll be all right We bounced back many times and we'll do it again.” Dark said he would send Wil- lie Mccovey to first base today and would play Matty Alou in left field. benching Orlando Ce- peda and Harvey Kuenn. Tom Halter, spiked in Tuesday's playoff game. will catch San- ford. as always. The Giants’ biggest disap- pcda, wh was hltless in five at bats. BOX SCORE SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—The box scores of the first World & . Blller and Cepeda; Boyer, Rich- ardson and Long. LOB-New York 10, San Francisco 8. 2b- Maris, Hiller. HR-Boyer. SB- tic National League season Mantle. T"°‘h' sF'3°¥el‘- which ended only yesterday 11’ H R I33 when San Francisco rallied for Ford 910 2 2 four runs in the ninth and beat 0'Dell (L) 11-3 9 5 5 Los Angeles . Larsen 1 1 1- 1 He replied emphatically, “No. Miller . 2-8 1 0 0 No. Ford just pitched a real BB-Ford 2 (Davenport 2). good 9 e." 0'Dell 3 (Skowron, Mantle. A mlxup provided t.lr:'mYan- Bowajd). Larsen 1 (Ford). Mil- keeswithoneoftheir slnlei-1(Marla).S0-Fordo the eighth. t'Kuenn. Cepeda, Killer. 1'‘. Alan When Clete Boyer popped in 2, Maya). O'Deil 8 (Kubek. short fly into left. shortstop Mantle 2. Boyer, Ford 2, Maris. Jose Pagan drifted back and Skowron). HBP - a 0'DelI left made the catch while Kuenn tried to fielder Herve call him off. The two bumped. (N) second base. Hoaochick Pagan had to whirl and throw .(A)_ mm b , m-um-t ( too latetn catch Elston Edward. left field. Soar (A) right field. who raced in from third. ‘ .233, A.43_ wet gecelpp “I knew Ruenn could make ;355,333_4a_ the ow better, but I just didn't hear him," Pagan ex- plained. HUNTER'S CORNER. Local ‘Black Duck Hunters _ Th 1 ' ' , . 9' champion Sonny Liston of Phil Mich.: 2. Carlos Hernandez. » th M Gill R I . m I ' {§f,f5,.,,.,§ 5??“ am" declines g" E‘; §:;:‘eg°si‘c'Ln§g:“lb’i“m~ adelphia. Patterson, of ew Venezuela: 3. Doug Vaillant,. l)9l:gybe:1s1' ‘.’§,,,,,° en: pm, $3 Mr. Mason figures the level_ 5: N0 difficulty in asking. Yr};-ilcé xfingrsanked second. Culflmor Hghwewm Chm. aha tackle Andy Conner. will fl ten th t th d I ‘hoot M ling off has begun in some _5- N0 8b110|'m8l bodily 5050* Heavyweight: Champion. pion. Flash Elorde, Philippines. :13" ‘Etch ffgatnsegn thetiruhiand‘ date the l;na'ttie ofuglulloden Mo; gr years. It?! in thvd. vac’ areas of Nova Scotia. notably “ms” . sonny Liston, Philadelphia. Featherweight: Champion. guy of Western Onnfiri nitlrm. was fought was the blackest d a sort of black duck mecca. To in the southwestern counties. In digzfiyagefigglgd gsocozhxall con 1'. Edd?‘ Machfsér P°rtl§:d' Dailey '“M::re' spflngflgg; _°"'° fans in London Saturday "3: 1” °“ NW3?‘ the we“ ‘ ‘cut ” “' Cape Breton there are still too A further examination was York;-'3. Ingemar Jilindnssodl Raiiu Kging. Nlg';:l$- 3. llthzuo we" the sew" I“t°’°°“°““‘ iii’ §.'.'{.l’1i§~“l.?°“ mginnemy an '.'l.';.°.'§’§.'r"i.§" E Down! 3 many deer. he Says. and in made to determine if there were Sweden. akayama, Japan. ’ ' '°h°d“]°' 13¢ 1953 Wu] 1, H, mm.’ '3 1- mu: Ty some parts 0HhBtiS18fldth€re'S any “subt'-1 changes" in Schir- Light heavyweight: Cham- ta weight: Champion T"y1°" ' m'V°'""°ld M°'“‘ mémo old flmg hung. meats“, mm, “fin 0 man,‘ 3, not Enough food to 80 around. ra's condition. cion, Harold Johnson, Philadel- Edcr Jofre, Brazil. "filer ‘”l‘° ‘"5 bee“ 3 ‘"8110 er, “rygh, aw in Mug” gen 119 um . ' d ‘M: 1. 5,. This is part of a theory held "We found none.'' and Dr. rh - 1- Ismael I-Isunn. Panniha: '"““' '°" -“"1"” ‘‘‘’° "3" " out of our black duck Old Home Lake To the’ east by Dr. Donald Dodds, a wild- pong;-d, 1. Eddie Cotton. Seattle; 2. 2 Mundo aspma. Mexico; 3. ‘ Pfilwlfchins end. broke his ham, me, ..-e mi .11 ‘on... was van. . mu . life conservationist who spends Willie Pastrano, Miami Beach; Alphonse Halimi, France. 5 l“ M¢9m'| 13-3 eXh|bl- . yew 9.11;-y umuungg my‘ be “ gucfi “.1 wk. most his time studying Nova 3. Doug Jones, New York. I-‘lywelght: Champion. Pond “"1 ‘"3 W9’ 3'» F‘'“¢l5 KW‘ aeezrwell offshore in the safety ~ner's. the opening morning Scotia’s deer. From it comes M"'u°"°l8lIt: ChimPl0|I. . Tha . V H’ 98 - .5", [mg wing ‘re the, ‘non.’ Mm. of ' ".1 "0 this advice: if you want‘ to be Y Gem’ 1"“11m¢I'- West -iordm 1- Salvatore Burrunl. Italy; 2. 3“! 3019!. W811 of the Red- so many duck hunters. I'll any close my bio - sure of a kill your best bet is 1- ma‘ T1395 Nl3“'l‘3 1 P35‘-'“'“ P‘’-‘‘'“- “'39”-“"33 3- '39- “mm” 3'Th‘n"dlY TI? offhand the hunters ” will .0 mm, Cape 3,,,,,,,, ,5,,,,,,,_ but Named Paul Pcnder, Brookllne, Mm; at-mm Carabello, Colombia. lot-‘I injury would cut down on gut local mm mm s 1, at A 1- ‘if you want to shoot a big deer /, ' . I I van receiver the moment. . " - 1 In the Nor’aaIt lies rtry southwestern Nova Scotia OTTAWA (CP) —— Hart)’ '1'- ,, '3'“ \7I're.lnfnt to u him Adel? limit of 1! not hard Pond I format where there is plenty of food '- 8“ rintendenl 0*! II I blocker." said. “And to angling;-I .. be In . -' - the for the smaller number. Y°h° N3“°"3l ‘:”'l‘- 3-C--' m We probably. veghlm in there “'1' V, ll “#0” ml! l|¢,lIC llhhd Ip we ,.0,_ The bag nmn is two deer (or Thursday was apro ted super ‘ on defence for the w and is the helm. ‘rap first, but the distant nnnhlo of (aa- Cape Breton and one go, we Pgeg ex}: Bot flFunn:s;“oNItioI‘I_:l ‘ game _ half is the time to score‘ this. as the dawn broth. vu- mainland except for Yarmouth ‘ e t an need 9 ' Connor. 1 9-pound Pflncetan ‘N 3' l3¢l“¢P~mll!9§ HI flrlt IIIIIIIII o|Il’&II 4! bar. - County where no deer hunting -“fire” % B"&ucFu.' _ graduate. brains I bone in his ‘' 7° species ‘"11 be P°1'ml“°d- nee “cc w:,o' , 5; Y ‘ ‘Em .“"""37- . . I I cliaigemdf tlié4Ne'w Brunswick . ' \ . 7 .l‘IIt't his ayi; :_ °' ° r ce . 'SANFBANClSCOtAP)-N no¢sr'uu-tr ’ ~ . . - ....... Wlllles Adios "‘ “ ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,. ,,.,,...,.3 am ....... ....";'.'..‘.".f ;":.‘ti any "r -:-='- &-,,,--e 1 - - ' 3.,“ 50..., . Frlleatoa r.’ Flflfllifii 204 Co-Ops Receive **°°"*'°“*'c_,m';o'"““u_e,, ;;“';h°°"'m page 3: «to.» "".' "' .-W ;‘fl':¢g_i-3“-hm to : ’ riot! - ' . on ones. 5A1-F-M,N-H- (OP) —-Willie" PM’; G;-‘fling; over San Francisco Giants In ' M F 199 A ‘ .AdiosownedbyW.EI'icawd . umsofmadoaba|lnvaptayoit_*ITll.,t_|U0|i!I‘llllI0ltntoasu.,= Hurry web!» of Dartmouth. (r1‘TAWA(CP)--Prlmeniata-.th.I‘.,W Series. thought ttwu mac. rhtlni , _ctuinpt A =~”*- '~ r.;'*.:fr:-':.~...-:.r*..'.--...:-. ...r.:.-...-.*. em-:.r.t We mt... .. ‘*‘sut'a'rna-sauynwataocu.limo-co-opnuvu_ncusdsa¢¢:nnpnaauk,lualctouiy. ‘llciuatinuonnluttin ti ‘ - . ' ‘ Park. lnconnectlO|witb.tl|IobilI'v- "tgotstronua-uIweatls¢leye»toeurent,bst, the 3‘; wmv. Mi... me. his mm ace of co-opwaaoet. 14-II. ialong." said pitcher winuy up at gypsum ~ 1 rm, .5, ram}, ,,.,¢ .¢ nu, Taemeauge, atiikmsedtolts. hrd. "It must Ii: the weather down and n.‘xe-was ‘ma po|¢,wuu.g¢i.. ltapies.pI-enldunoftheco-lei-‘ispandmnayl. asaclaanykitbocaacaottba 5. .....g. M n..;.,..¢,-4..., gpemiveunimacusaauys. Itwa__-the thriller! g,..m..., ttisfittingtbatawaekshould myllfe, um gloyerof + bwpetauauayantortboflsunpuniu; y mam , an m a-.."*!..-:-.".*:.r.':n.:;r'...*%°-‘t’ “"-it. -3-. t .°° “nu .. A r mu .¢ thtsjlsla." « ; ---. ~--««------ «- -m - ..s.:.,-.:»...'~* *' --x.:*«.':.-me. ...* .“"'.'°'.'.'.': ~ - . - * . . I- Ibeiflthh etwmment -1 Iiaanuiocnann «stairway . aivneautoaulu I -ll$TI'VI¢If$lltOtl’O¢dllIVGl.~I‘CO-OXI&.v,’ lew|York.‘,; . _. ~ - gm E"l°Y an Trouble-Free SHE!-l . g move I. OIL , tom» 'R.C.BtARWlSE om‘.,4-4315 Aahu-lad Shall Ali!‘ '0" .auuu&on III West of ~ Bhadsfipwa BOX SCORE . New York AB R H RBI PO A ubek ss 5 0 2 0 3 4 Richardson 2b 5 1 1 0 4 2 Tresh if 52 2 0 0 0 Mantle cf 4 0 0 0 1 0 Maris rt 4 l 2 2 2 0 Howard c 3 1 2 1 6 it Skowron lb 20 0 0 7 0 Long lb 2 0 I 1 3 0 Boyer 3b 3 1 1 2 1 2 Ford p 3 0 0 0 0 4 Totals 36 611 6 27 12 San Fran. AB R H RBI PO A Kuenn If 5 0 0 0 6 0 Hillel‘ 2b 4 I 1 0 4 4 F. Alou rt 4 0 1 0 1 0 Mays cf 41 3 1 1 I Cepeda lb 4 0 0 0 6 0 Davenport 3b 2 0 1 0 0 2 Bailey c 4 0 0 0 8 0 Miller p 00 0 0 0 1» Pagan so 4 0 3 1 1- 2 0'Dell p 3 0 1 0 0 0 Larsen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Orsino c 10 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 210 2 27 9 New York 200 000 121 -6 San Francisco 011 we 000-— 2 E-None. DP-Richardson. Ku- k and Skowron; Davenport,