~ Feels Satisfied {the provincial direttor of physi- ‘eal education,“ to strive to get. Vy ST | “Local Delegate @ @@ organization that will ~ By JIM CULLEN Editor Sports Charlie Ryan returned to Charlottetown last night, .rom - Montreal where he attended a: art \director of .physical education three day baseball conference as_a Prince Edward Island dele-. gate to the National Federstion | vince at, the Montreal meeting of Amateur Baseball. In a tele- phone conversation with Mr. Ryan last night he told us he came away from the Moutreal meeting with a very energetic feeling towards his duties in the coming baseball season on the island : Charlie has been elected as the P.E.I. delegate to the ° Nz- tional Federation of Amateur Baseball which is a newly to-m- at- témpt to give Canadian >aseball a type of uniformity similar to the type which the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association provides for the amateur , nec- key teams in this Dominion. Charlie said: “‘Our orgaiza- tion” doesn't wish” to interfere” with the policies or practices of any of the provincial governing baseball bodies which -have, al- ready been established, but we will attempt to create a form of unity between the programs in the respective provinces.” Mr. Ryan informed us that the NFAB has obtained a~ ¢rant of $9,000 for a clinic that vill be conducted in Montreal on June ° 26. This clinic will serve similar purposes as the hockey ‘‘Irsti- tutes” which have been coaduct-, | total of 61 minutes in penalties ed across this country recently. There will be three »ersons from this province selecied to attend this clinie and the indivi- | duals that are chosen to atiend his clinic will be over 21 years of age and be potential coaches for the local ball system. idea being that. these versons will be instructed by profession-' al men and when they return to their respective communities they will be expected to pass on their -knowledge to. the mem- bers of the local baseball teams. The clinic will be staged Montreal this season, but in fu- ture years the clinic will be Staged in various centres’ across _ SUNIOR TOURNEY PLANNED Charlie ‘told us: ‘“Marfcell ° Raine, president of the NFAB, |prior to the contest: He injured | period at Rochester. The. this organization off'on the mght foot. ae 3 David M. Boswell, provincial) arid alcoholic studies selected Mr. Ryan to represent this 2FO- | and Charlie was elected as deligate while attending ference. Hershey Bears Top Rochester HERSHEY, Pa. {AP) — Goalie Claude . Dufour, . despite, a “frozen” left hand, turned in a remarkable performance here Saturday night’to backstop Her- shey Bears to a .52 decision : + SECTION SECTION over Rochester Americans in| © 7 the third game of the American | Hockey League Calder Cup final MONE Se a The ‘win was Hershey's fi against the, Americans, who! took the opening two matches! | on.their home ice. ~ Dufour, who fended off 38) shots, received an injection of | novocaine in his left hand just) it Friday night in the second Three of Hershey's tallies came with a Rochester r in the penalty box, twice with a pair sitting it. out. Referee Frank Udvari handed out a in the rough-house game which took_three hours and 45 min- utes to play. LEAD BY TWO GOALS The Bears jumped into a 2-0) lead by 4:54 of the second pe- riod, when Mike Nykoluk and Pete Conacher each talled with ‘two Rochester skaters sitting out a minor infraction. Ed _ Litzenberger’s 50 - foot screen shot midway in the sec- ond period shaved Hershey's. lead to a goal before the two, clubs traded another pair of ‘goals. Mike Harvey put the| \Bears up 3-1, but Red Arm-| strong cut it to a single goal | again at 15:44. | Hershey, capitalizing on Ro- | chester errors in the closing 20 has laid plans for a National | minutes, put the game away on junior baseball tournament to be | back-to-back tallies by Chuck in, “and the association is hopetul ____to have a representative from _.The fourth game_of_the- —— €ach province at the tourney. ‘of-seven series will be played | club set. There is a grant available to help finance this venture, but - the figures were not available for olf meeting.” 4 Charlie conveyed the idea to this writer that as a director for this newly formed organization he will be working very close With the commissioners of base- Gall, the advisory council and this season Hamilton ‘and Bruce i 1 Cline within a three-minute span. 1 here Wednesday and the fifth | in Rochester Friday. REINDEER GROW STRONG | The most nourishing milk in | the world is that of the rein- deer, with 171 parts per 1,000 of fat and 109 of protein. 7: fat and 109 of protein. 5 | clubs, Fred Stanfield, left, of Chi- cago Black Hawks shoots puck behind Montreal goalie Char- By SID MOODY Press Writer. : is David Francis Marr, Jr., He dwells around country plays around country lubs and earns his daily bread —lots of it—around country bs. He is a professional tourna- ment golfer. : To him the office is an end- less ribbon of green fairways stretching from coast to coast and across oceans. How well he eats depends on how well he DEFENCE CONSTRUCTION ___|2tts, ‘evens, on how, well he (1951) LIMITED tion of Runway 12-0. and Taxi- | i P. E. I. PROJECT: _Re-construc’ RCAF Station, ‘ tracks, i b File: 700-S2-20 ‘ 2 SEALED TENDERS, marked as to conteni addressed the undersigned will be received until 3:00 p.m. E.D.T. THURSDAY, May 27, 1965 and tender forms will be on view Halifax, Sydney, i *) ~ at Builders’ Exchanges at Moncton, Saint John, N. B., ».. DCL Halifax Branch Office and may be cbtainéd by Gen- * eral Contractors only from DCL Plans Section, Ottawa, at the address below on deposit of $100.00 payable to Defence a * Construction (1951 Limited. 6 Security. deposit as called * must accompany tenders. ~ v 225 N. J. SMITH, Secretary. 6th Floor, Kenson Building, Fredericton, shoots each year as he makes his way along those well- trimmed alleys bordered with palms in the south, pines in the ‘north and everywhere people watching him work at one of the most disciplining frustrating, insecure ‘ pastimes man has inflicted on himself. “It's the only game you lose more than you win,” says Marr | | who took $42,000 in purses last year but hasn't won a tourna- ment in three years. “It’s hum- ’ _ | la t : They would approach a _pub-— ran 1S Oe vay The | icity - minded winter resort or Charlottetown, P. E. 1. and ling.’ The average fan seeing « |golfer tanned as a_ catchers for in the Tender Documents Metcalfe OTTAWA 4, Ontario. CAMP TAL A) \gets to say “hi” © Pi ° aA) Ga ~ JOIN NOW and HEAR | mitt smash a drive far down the course with the air-sucking |rush of an artillery shell is apt E ; to shake his head in envy, poke | to film a -TV golf show. his wife and say: “And they. .eall that work.” | SALARY UNCERTAIN a" Gin dae ice Monday morning knowing his pay cheque will be there Friday even if he for- dollars if a putt misses by a grass blade...A drive out of bcunds can mean. goodbye to the weeks’ new fur coat or private school for junior. At the Na- tional Open several years ago @ woman spectator turned to'staring at TV Marrs wife, Susan, and said: Be that your husband? He’s so cute.” “I wish he'd stop being cute and sink a few putts,” she re- plied. Win or lose, golf is a game Marr loves. But it is also his livelihood. When the putts stop dropping and the drives don't rocket far and Straight, there's : “Is it going? Have “You stand on that first tee of the winter tour and you're opening a brand new store and who's to say you're not going to start shooting 80s and you think of Ken Venturi and Bob Goalby (who had prolonged slumps) and talk about being scared. In this business its only a step from who's who to who's that.” The Revelers on May 4th The Irish Singers and Dancers Next Season and ‘ 2 Other Fine Concerts. TO JOIN, PHONE ---_ : : A. R. MaciNNIS. 2-1258 Gr STANFIELD HITS PAY Hodge to score in first per- iod of Stanley Cup game in Chicago last night. Also shown}, And tournament golf is bus- iness, a booming one. Marr and his spike-shoed_fel- | aerate ae iw wand playing for $3,500,000 in purses this year, seven times the 1950 total. The Professional Golf Association's | to have golf's first $1,000,000 gate considering pro- gram advertising, hot dog sales, admissions and TV income—a handsome $200.000 from the Na- tional Broadcasting Company. Seven years ago the PGA 30d — TV rights for exactly noth- Marr, golf's 1lth.money man over-all in 1964, won almost as much as Ben. Hogan did in three years when he was top | about $20,000 in endorsement | income from the companies | whose clubs and balls he uses, | whose shirts and slacks he wears and whose _ shoes wears. putter or his white brogans be- | come irredeem ably grass| stained, he just whistles and a/| shirt maker took him to Aca- | | pulco last year for 10 days for | | advertising photographs (this | year it’s Hawaii) and he’s gone to Europe twice, expenses paid, “You try to build up your en- dorsements as money in jbank,’ Marr said. ‘That's our j |PLAYERS CHANGED jhave the players. Golf, like | most sports, has its own “new | breed” of athletes. They are. (Marr attended Rice and the! University of Houston), stay | out of water holes and night | clubs, play golf 30 hours a! week, practise 10 more and | re characterized championship this summer is . ZF | HULL FIRES WINNER Hawks Blast a 26, 1965. me \ Pi ae Se i DIRT in photo are Montreal defence- man J.C. Tremblay and Chi- cago's Bill Hay (11). Young Golf Professional Explains Hazards Of Game the fun - filled the stick. of Richard Rose at set a 1:0 of i > the F days of yore when he bucket of golf balls ing the Flyers were _a_man_ short across the floor just as singer- Marooms~tried for the equai- PAGE NINE . Junior Series Swimming Team “als Deadlocked 'ToS man short. PICKED UP NO 9 AND 10 The 27-year-old Hull, who The contest was . — Canadier inal Seriés Ss |hard shots from close in by /¥van Cournoyer and John Fer- STATISTICS . guson , By THE CANADIAN PRESS Hall stopped 25 shots. FINAL SERIES wi. SUMMARY: |_ First Peried: }. Chicazo, Stan) Gamuem! x. 3. field 2 2:57. Penalties—Talbot| M450 1. oy | + - - a Beliveau, Pilole 11:14; Berenson 14:05; Beliveau, Mikita 26:00. Period— ‘2. Montreal. | " \pelivelu 5 (duff, J. C. Tre leas sees oie z either way until hay fired the blay) 6:29. nee = ae a . imsurance marker at 15:20. of the |3:03: Wharram 4:56, Talbot ; final frame. Hull, who had | (double minor) 4:56 Ravlich Thursday, April 29 Montreal at opened the period with his first |612; Harris 8:49; 18:25; Vasko. the night, counted again at | 145i. adi aaa 48 and was followed one Third peried—3. Chicago, Hull | = MONTREAL (CP) — Niagara in two second-period goals to take a ~ | 24 victory Sunday over Lachine Maroons in Memorial Cup |Eastern Canada final play, to ‘tie the best-of-five series at 1-1. ? series now shifts to Niagara Falls for the rest of the series with the first game slated for Wednesday night. Bill Goldsworthy led the Fly- ers attack with both goals. Goldsworthy got the [first goal | of the game at 8:08 of the sec- | ond period then followed | Unrough with another at 18:27 of Lachine was shorthanded Maroons only goal came off the final perigd while golfer Don Cherry came on-|izer in the thifd period when all stage to perform his nightclub act. Marr, no puritan, can dis- However, Bernard Parent tinguish a screwdriver (liquid) the Niagara Falls net was able from a driver (wood) but as to often as not he comes back ithree minor penalties were given to Niagara Falls. in turn the Maroons back. _ Parent handled 21 shots whi'e from the course, calls up room his counterpart Clifford Rose of service for dinner, “slips the Lachine was bombarded with wf mind into neutral” and watches shots. TV But Marr is also a highly ar- series Saturday the Maroons - In the opening game of the tieulate man of 31-who can talk dumped in three third period about narcissus complexes with g0als to. take the game 3-2 a straight face and is trying to find time to read The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. earner just before the Second’ When he’s home in New Ro- World War. Marr also made chelle, N.Y., Marr is a theatre- draw for Monday night goer. CIRCUIT GREW That's the new breed. The he Old breed dates back to the 20s When he needs a new | when the winter tour first took | The following is the curling at the Charlottetown Club. This is the “last fling” spiel with the losers paying for the steaks. Curling will-be--across the ice with ‘Red Stones competing i blue stones on a total sceks ‘Sadie shape. In those days the pros | 8.35pm. themselves often o what mts theré were hotel and offer to play there, up their’ own money for the purse. As winter fun in the sun grew, more pros, idled because their duffer pupils came |south and the Tour, like Topsy, |just grew. This year the PGA insur. ” 5 |has 41 tournaments. not includ- | - | ance policy,” said Susan. | 06 duck’ pet | Ice If the game ha: anged, so | vately sponsored, tournaments I s changed, the Bing Crosby and Bob = A often putting were shovelling snow, ing the Open Tournaments like the Thun- young, have been to college jderbird and the Buick Open are Fleming. J. MacDonald. F. run by auto companies for pro- MacInnes vs N. MacNeill. motion, the Masters by wealthy men who leve golf, the Doral T Alfred ling. H. MacKinnon. E_ Douzias, by real estate tycoon Ice 1 — D. Bell, H. MacDon- ~\ ald. G. Rodd, L. Vessey vs A. Liewellyn. P. Dalziel. G. Brook- ins, L. inessey. Ice 2 — A. MacDonald. M. Acorn, G. Schieyer. M. Blaken- ey vs K. Dalziel. M. Docken- dorff, H. MacLennan. K. Daffy. Ice 3 — B. Acorn, M. 0v- Rourke. G.. Gallant, B. Square- brizgs ts E. Gillespie. S- Mac- Millan, D. MacLean. B. Brook- ins. . — L. Blakeney, E. Rana- MacDougall. E. Schley- er vs H. Peters, O. MacDonald, H. Edwards. M. MacLean. Ice 5 — J. Squarebriggs. S. M Toole. L. Burke. H. Rossiter Spares — Harvey Douglas, L. urner. G. MacKay. M. Dow- | think about it even longer while |Kaskel who wants the world to F. Ressiter. M. Jardine. J. Hall. or the wall jin their motel room. |. “You ask these young guys | show the weather is and they'll| Canadian pros on the PGA ;tour— include Stan Leonard of and hooked a beauty around | Vancouver, George Knudson of | Toronto and Al Johnston of itell_ you they bogeyed- the 10th | eae trees on the 14th,” says’ old timer Jimmy Demaret who! back |know that he owns a hotel on M. Mullins. G- |Miami Beach called—surprise— | Cudmore. the Doral. Montreal. Red Sox Defeat By Baltimore Squad Arsenault. H | HOCKEY SCORES By THE CANADIAN PRESS Finishes Second 2 sru=., | ‘Lachine leads best - of - fiv- Eastern final 1-0) The ‘Charlottetown - YM(A4 ‘and 14 a; . I5'and 15 year oe , Allan Cup swimming team placed sec igirls received a third..in both : in the Maritime swimmingjrelays. Teams consisted of Warroad 3 Nelson 6 |meet staged last week in St.|Fran. Whitlock, Linda Bruce, |. ‘Nelson leads best - of - tive John, New Brunswick. Compe-|Maureen Coady, Betty George Western series 20) tition got underway at 9.30 a.m. | and Richey Curtis. Boys in this Amerizan League _ Halifax led the field with a | age group won a second and a Hershey 5 Rochester 2 2774 total in the age-group|third. Team members were _ ‘Rochester leads best-of-seven events and Charlottetown was | Bruce Roper, Mike Coady, Blair final 2-1) | im second spot with 113 points.|Mayne, Delmar Newman‘ nd SUNDAY 7 Teams that finished bebind the | Bob Jewell. Allan Cup i entry included: | In the individual events Ste- Woodstock 2 Sherbrooke 5 | Fredericton, 87; Moncton, 62; | phen Wonnacott placed first in| ‘Sherbrooke wins Eastern | Dartmouth, 35 and St. John withthe 13 and 14 years freestyle; |Allan Cup best-of-seven final 31. j | Fran Whitlock got a third in the | 40) In the open meet Halifax 15 and 16 girls’ freestyle. In the | again proved to be the power-|backstroke events Pat Jewell house and topped the field with| placed third in the 11 and 12 a 68 total, Dartmouth was se-| year age group; Betty George = Borden Leag Holds Banquet *cond— with 46 while Charloite-; third in the 13 and 14 town and Fredericton were tied years, and Richey, is plac- eee i hird—with~29—-peints-each=———ed= thir inthe id 16-year “it Was a Most successful Mi-— Linda Bruce of Bunbury set a group. nor H-oc key Banquet on Sat- new record in the 80 yard jn the: breaststroke evenis |urday night in Borden for the breastroke event for 15 and 16 s,05 Evans placed second in girls. Her time of one nies 5.7 seconds shaved 28° |boys 10 and under; Ralph Ross ‘classifications of minor Hockey off the record set by N. Likely | placed first in 11 and 12 years: | from Borden, Albany, Cape Tra- of Saint John in Charlottetown Linda Bruce es with | verse and Carleton Siding areas last year. Ralph Ross of Char-| Fran. Whitlock placing second! were thrilled by the presence of lottetown tied a record in the 11 im the 15 and 16 year age group. guest speaker Forbes Kennedy and 12 year old boy 40 yard with Bruce Roper placing first of the Boston Bruins. breaststroke with a time, of 32.6 im the same age group for boys.; Kennedy impressed upon the seconds. : | Im the butterfly stroke Pat youngsters the all importance of The following are the awards Jewell placed third in the 1} end | firstly, acquiring an education if obtained by other members of 12 year age group, with Ralph! they were.to make hockey a ca- the Charlottetown representa-: Ross placing third in the boys reer “because not everyone-can — tive attending the Maritime event. Maureen Coady also piac- be in the N.H.L.” meet: : ed second in the 13 and 14 age He urged the kids to empha- Relay Teams — 10 and under group. : | size skating. “When the scouts girls consisting of Ellen Wil-| In the open events Bob Lively come looking for you they will liams, Debbie Atkinson, Sandra placed first in 100 yard breast-|teach you the rest”. Kennedy +Simmonds and Norah Curtis | stroke: Fran Whitlock placed then reminded the boys that placed second in the Medley = ee in the girls’ event, with some of the stars playing in the lay and’ first in the Freestyle! Linda Bruce placing first. Bob N.H.L: today are~ from . small Relay. Lively also placed third in the areas across Canada. Boys in this age group receiv-| individual medley. Charlotte-| Mayor Gilbert Bell of Borden, ed two seconds. Team consisted town Y” picked up a third in | Mel Arsenault, President of the of Alan Larabee, James Evans,'both the men’s and women’s Constable Alan Burchill of the ‘Tore Grude, Callum Beck and freestyle relay of 400 yards. Borden RCMP, Director of Bor- ‘Alan White. 11 and 12 year, Frank Roper, the only diver |den Mirior Hockey. and-Corporal girls relay team received «wo entered from the Island, placed | W.J.R. MacDonald of the -Bor- thirds. Team members consist-' first in ‘the diving events for 13;den RCMP, emcee of the even- ed of Sheila Mayne, Pat Jewell, and 14 age group, beating © out) ing’s program and coach of the Ruth Wonnacott and Janice his nearest competitor by two Borden Mosquitos, — Island George. Boys relay teams of points. : Champions, all addressed the Ricky Garrett, Gordon Betk,| Thirty-five members of tne youngsters. s Ralph Ross and Kerry Webb Charlottetown Swim Team took Coach MacDonald whose team placed first in the freestyle and part in the events, under the | won 14 games, lost two and tied second in the medley relay coaching of Dave Mills, Assis- one during season play was pre- Charlottetown girls. Betty tant Secretary. Charlottetown George, Maureen Coady, Wan-|/ YMCA. Chaperones for the trip da Ross and Diane Taylor plac-' were Mrs. Paul Williams: and’ ed third in the meglay for 13 Mrs. Ron. Atkinson. Warren Spahn Topples Giants By THE CANADIAN PRESS walked three and struck out Mosquito captain Bernie Kig- gins. Roddie MacDonald, son of the coach was the team’s leading | goal scorer, with eight. The Borden Mosquitos each received trophies, crests -and Pictures. The players receiving | them were: Peter MacDonald, | Lowell Curtis, Dean MacDonald, | Fras Segsworth, Alan Howatt, | Gerald MacDonald. Paul 0 "Connor. Rodney MacDonald, Walter Cheverie, Bernie. Kig gins, Tim Noonan, John Flem- ing, Chris MacCormack, Derick BASEBALL SCGRES National League Second New York 610 010 620— 4 806 | Sdn Fran. 000 000 621— 3 70 | Spahn (2-0) and Cannizzaro: Bolin (0-2). Herbel (7) and Bailey. HR: NY—Swoboda (4). SF—Mays (4) Phila. 010 200 G06— 3163 Leos Angeles 621 006 00x— 9 161 Warren Spahn pitched hitless seven. ball for 5 2-3 innings. but had to The Yankees won the opener sweat out a San Francisco rally on Mantle’s infield single. lead- in the ninth before escaping ing off the sixth, and Howard's with a 43 victory over the double. Roger Maris and Tony cont anda split of the New Kubek homered for the Yankees, fork Mets National — dou- both off starter Marcelino Lopez, bleheader Sunday. while Joe Adcock smashed a Woodstock Squad The Giants won the opener 5-0 two-run Los Angeles homer in behind Juan Marichal's five-hit the first. « : SHERBROOKE, Que. ‘CP)— | pitching. In Los Angeles Dick Stuart Sherbrooke Beavers tallied St. Louis at Cincinnati and drove in four runs with a double ‘three late goals in the third Milwaukee at Chicago in the Na- and home run as Philadelphia period to take a-5-2 victory over tional League. were postponed by Phillies conquered Don Drysdale Woodstock Athletics here © Sua- rain. American League post- for the ninth straight time and day. to take. the Allan Cup ponements were Boston at Balt- snapped Los Angeles Dodgers’ Eastern final series. more: Minnesota at Detroit; four-game winning streak in a The Beavers. took. the -desi-nf- Chicago at Washington: Kansas 64 National League victory. seven series in four straight City at Cleveland. WON FIRST GAME games Spahn held the Giants hitless Ray Herbert won his first Na-~ Roh Dupre led the Beave-s until Orlando Cepeda singled tional League game but needed attack scoring two goals while with two out in the sixth. The ninth - inning relief help from simon Nolet, Dino Mascotto Irving, Alan White, Alan Mac- Kinnon and Lloyd Oatway. Beavers Defeat 44-year-old lert-hander still had Jack Baldschun after the Dodg- anq Bob Chevalier ot siazie: a shutout until the Giants scored ers rapped him for 15 hits in the — Scoring for Woodstock vere twice in the eighth on a single game. Baldschun came on with jack Macintyre and Gerry by Jack Hiatt, Cap Peterson's’ two on and two out and got Wes Strinzle : double and Harvey Kuenn's sin- Parker on a foul pop. Dupre got the first gle. Drysdale, 2-2, was. shelled for Mel Stottlemyre pitched a ¢ight hits and six runs in five three-hitter and Mickey Mantle innings. smashed a home ‘run, giving Rookie Joe Morgan. drove in New York Yankees a 10 victory the winning run with a bases- and a sweep of their double- loaded single in the ilth inning header with Los Angeles Angels. 25 Houston Astros edged Pitts- YANKS WON FIRST ourgh Pirates 54 in a Nationa. The’ Yankees won the first@teague game Sunday, in the game 32 on Elston Howard's first test of the tinted skylights goal at the Beavers up front »> 5 re- bound shot. Three minutes late >trinzle tied it up lifting a screened shot past Beaver goalie Serge \u- bry Mascotto. an import for the’ playoffs. made it 21 <or the Beavers | Young hockey players of all sented a gift, unexpectedly, by - 1:22 of the second period to put ° at 8:12 of the same - THE CANADIAN PRESS | waukee Braves. 31. and —New Belinsky.. +2). Recheck = Frank Malrane and iee|York Mets defeated San Fran. Sccems (© Wagner Ut) & Thomas each slammed four hits |cisco Giants 7-6. nk a ee ee and Dick Radatz limited Balti-| Houston Astros blanked Pitts °F A— . more Orioles to one hit in six|burgh Pirates 5-0 behind Dick aon ae Bo es work as Boston | Farrell's seven-hit pitching and the Orioles 7-5) home runs by Bob Asprcenonte : in 12 innings Saturday. and Jim®’ Wynn in a National STANDINGS Malzone and Thomas put their | League night game. By THE ASSOCIATED. PRESS fourth hits together in a three-| jn another National League WL Pet. GBL ‘}Pun 12th that got the job done night game, first-place Los \v- Minnesota .... 6 2 70 — for the Red Sox, Malzone get- geles Dodgers erupted for six Chicago 7‘3 7 GW ting things started with “a lead- runs in the sixth inning to deat Detroit claw % off double and Thomas even-' phiadelphia Phillies 93. The Boston $ 3 65 1 ually finishing off the rally with ‘victory was the Dodgers’ fou:ta Cleveland 2 oa a three-run homer into the right in a fow. New York $64 es % field bleachers. Baltimore 4 5 444 2% In other American League CHANCE GETS HELP | Los Angeles 46 @) 3 baseball action, Dean Chance. Chance, who pitched fcur Washington 3.8 2773 4% and Los Angeles Angels de-| shutout against the Yarkee Kansas City 2. 7 Za & feated New York Yankees 6-3,|last season, needed help. this National League Cleveland Indians downed <an-/time and received ample bat- WoL Pct. GBL sas City Athletics 4-1, Detroit' ting support from a trio of Los Angeles 7 3 7 | Tigers stopped Minnesota Twins Angel rookies — Jose Cara:nei, Chicago 3 a4 74 and Chicago White Sox Paul Schall--and Costen Shock- Cincinnati 6 4 9 1 whipped Washington Senators ley. They chipped in with a total Houston 6 6 2 62. of six hits. Philadelphia 5 5 500 2 In the National League, Frank Fred Whitfield singled in the New York 67a % Robinson hit two homers and tie-breaking run in a three-run Pittsburgh 5 6 45 2% Vada Pinson one as Cincinnati eighth-inning’ uprising that won San Fran. $° 7.4m 3 Reds beat St. Louis Cariinals it for the Indians. Ralph Terry Milwaukee 7 awe Ss (6-3, ,Chicago Cubs edged Mil- got his second victory. | St. Louis ie ee A rurscoring double in the sixth inning and Pedro Ramos clutch relief pitching. The victories snapped a four-game Yankee losing streak and were the first for the American League cham- Pions at home.” Stottle . 21, allowed only doubles by Bob Rodgers in the fourth inning and Julio Gotay in the seventh and a single by Willie Smith in the ninth. Me ° ‘ bd at the $31,600,000 domed sta- dium _ There was no‘indication dur- ing t game that the glare problkmh preiously placning outfielders in the park still ex- isted. now that the 5,496 sky- lights had been painted : The Astros pushed across the winning run in the llth after Rov Face took over as the Pi- rate pitcher. period. Macintyre opened the scoring early in the third period to tie the game up the second une Sherbrooke then put on the , Pressure tallying three more goals. The Beavers now meet the winner of the Eastern final be- ing played between Minnesvta Wartcad Lakers and Nelson, ' ' B.C, Maple Leafs or JERRY GLADMAN minute and nine seconds later 9 (Pilote) 0:26; 4 Chicago, curiae (CP)—Two - third- \by Jarrett’s tally. _ |Hay 3 (Stanfield) 15:20; 5. Chi- - - period goals by explosive Bobby | | The goals were charged cago, Hull 10 (Maki) 18:48; 6. - Sunday night gave Chi-| |against Charlie Hodge, as a|Chicago, Jarrett 1 (19:57. Pen- cago Black Hawks a 5-1 triumph | last - minute replacement for alties—Hull 2:11, Roberts (mi-_ over Montreal Canadiens and | Gump Worsley, who injured his/nor and 10-minute misconduct) enabled the Hawks to tie their | thigh in the pre-game warmup. (6:35, Talbot, Maki 9:00, Beli- best-of-seven Stanley Cup series |Hodge stopped 23 shots, but/veau 1}:51 Harris 13:26, Vaske at two games apiece. €ould have been faulted on at ' 16-17. . The win, before a crowd of least three of the goals. . a io More, than 20,000, sends the | Veteran ‘goalie Glenn . Hall | ,|¢elubs back to Montreal for a proved the difference for the Hodge 10 9 4-2 ae Grae Tues ae ee |Hawks through the first two : mate periods as he came up with