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The Oneonta Star from Oneonta, New York • Page 16

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The Oneonta Stari
Location:
Oneonta, New York
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16
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16 Oneonta Star Monday, June 22,1964 Phillies' Running Throws Perfect Game Against Mets Second No-Hit Effort For Ex-Detroit Hurler Perfect! NEW YORK (ff) Philadelphia's Jim i pitched a perfect game against the New York Mets Sunday, retiring all 27 batters he faced in the Phillies' 6-0 victory in the first game of a doubleheader. The Phillies won the second game 8-2, increasing Iheir Na- lional League lead lo two games over San Francisco. Bunning, who became the firsl lo hurl a winning no-hitter in both the National and American Leagues, also became Ihe first in 42 years to pitch a perfect game in regular season play and win. Charley Robertson hurled a perfect game for the Chicago White Sox, defeating Detroit 2-0 April 20, 1922. Don Larson of the New York Yankees pilched a perfect game in 1956, but it came in a World Series game against the Brooklyn Dodgers on Oct.

8. Flrll Gome PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK Brioos cf I 0 0 Hick Allen 3b 3 0 1 1 Chnit ob bl cl 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Ib 3 0 0 0 ri 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 If 3 0 0 0 it 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Stcph son ph 1 0 0 0 Lurens Nips C'town E-NoneV 5, New 2B-l'riemdos. Bunning. HR-Calllson. Roios.

ER sq Reds Split Twin Bill With LA CINCINNATI (AP) Deron Johnson's two-run brought Cincinnati a 2-1 victory over Los Angeles Sunday after Sandy Koufax won his sixth straight game in the Dodgers 4-2 triumph in the opener. Koufax became the second pitcher in the Nalional League to win 10 games. He has four defeals. The ace left-hander was forced out of the opener afler pitching six innings because of the torrid heat. He gave up bolh of the Reds' runs while allowing seven nils and slriking oul six.

Frank Howard drove in two runs and scored two for the Dodgers. He hit his 15th homer in the second inning, then singled in a run and scored on Nate Oliver's single in the sixlh. Johnson's homer in Ihe mght- cap followed Vada Pinson's Iwo- out double in the first inning. The blow supported Ihe seven- hit pitching of Joey Jay who made his first start since May 4. The Reds' big right-hander won his fourth game against two defeats, slriking oul six and walking none.

The Dodgers' run came in Ihe fourth when Tommy Davis doubled and scored on Howard's sinslc Los Angeles 010 002 010-4 10 0 Cincinnali 001001000-2 9 0 Koufax, Miller (7) and Roseboro; Purkey, Duren (8) and Edwards. W-Koufax, 10-4. L- Purkey, 3-4. Home run--Los Angeles, Howard (15). Second Game Los Angeles 000 100 000-1 7 1 Cincinnati 200 000 OOx--2 8 0 L.

Miller, B. Miller (7), Per- ranoski (8) and Camilli, Roseboro (7); Jay, and Smilh. W-Jay, 4-2. L--L. Miller, 0-1.

Home run--Cincinnati, Johnson (7). Nats Halt KC Streak KANSAS CITY (AP) Rookie Al Koch, wilh ninth-inning relief help, pitched Washington to a 5-2 victory over Kansas City Sunday after the Senators mauled Ihe Alhlelics 13-2 behind Ihe hilling of Don Lock and Jim King in Ihe first game of the Sunday doubleheader. The double victory halted the Senators' four game losing streak and cooled off the Athletics, who had won eight of nine games. Koch allowed three hits before Ed Charles homered with one out in the ninth. Ron Kline came on and ended the Ihreat.

Koch singled home what proved to be the winning run wilh a fourth inning single. Chuck Cottier Iripled before Ihe hit Lock drove in five runs wilh Iwo homers in Ihe opener. He connected wilh Iwo on in Ihe four-run Ihird and gol another homer with one aboard in the four-run eighth. King went 4-for-4, getting two doubles and driving in a pair of runs. Don Zimmer also hom- ered for Ihe Senators.

Busier Narum went the distance, winning his sevenlh game in 12 decisions. Firsl Game Washington 104 200 141--13 17 0 Kansas City 101 000 000- 2 7 1 Narum and Brumley; Pena, Sanliago (3), Slock (4), Drabowski (5), Grzenda (S) and Bryan, Duncan (7). W--Narum, 75. L--Pena, 7-0. Home runs--Washington, Lock 2 (10), Zimmer (R).

Kansas City, Green (5). Second Game Washington 200 110 010-5 11 0 Kansas Cily 001 000 001-2 5 2 Koch, Kline (9) and Leppert; Bowsfield, Wyatt (5) and Edwards. W--Koch, 2-2. L--Bowsfield, 1-2. Home run--Washington, Leppert (1).

Kansas Cily, Charles (9). Macs Maul Stamford, 30-10 Sunday was a day of wild contrasts in the Tri-County Baseball League. Fans at Cooperslown's dignified Doubleday Field were treated to an old fashioned pitching duel between Cooperstown's Al Marsh and Laurens' Dick Lyons. Lyons won the game, 3-2, on a five-hit effort. Meanwhile at Milford, the league-leading Macs rampaged for 30 runs in a wild-and-wooly 30-10 trampling of Stamford.

The 30-run total was a Tri- County record, as was the Macs' 16-run splurge in the fifth inning. THE LAURENS-COOPERS- STOWN game matched Marsh's speed against Lyons' i change-up and breaking stuff. Bob Bostwick, who timed the change for a sixth-inning rbi double, was the only Indian hitter to solve the tricky deliveries of the Norwich native. Dave Null accounted for the first two Laurens runs with a Harvey Haddix of Pittsburgh lurned in 12 perfect innings May 26, 1959, against Milwaukee but lost the game in the 13th, 1-0, on an error, a walk and a double by Joe Adcock. Bunning, acquired by Ihe Phillies in a Irade wilh Detroit last winler, also had a no-hitter with the Tigers, when he shut out Ihe Boston Red Sox 3-0 July 20, 1958.

Tom Hughes was the only other in modern limes to pitch a no-hilter in both the American and Nalional Leagues. Hughes accomplished Ihe feal wilh the New York Highlanders in 1910 and Boston Braves in 1916. Hughes, however, lost Ihe first one 5-0 in 11 innings to Cleveland. Bunning, who has a record of 7-2, slruck out 10 baiters and had a three ball count on only two bailers. A great defensive play by second baseman Tony Taylor in the fifth inning, protected Bunning's perfect game.

Jesse Gonder drove a wicked grounder into Ihe hole belween first and second. Taylor made a spectacular diving stop and while on his knees, tossed to John Herrnstein for the out. In the fourth, Ron Hunt smashed a long drive to right but the ball curved foul by several feel. The Mets hil only four balls to the outfield. Bob Taylor went to a 3-2 count with two put in the eighth, but Bunning fired a third strike past him.

Bunning also starred at bat, smashing a two-run double in the Phillies' four-run sixlh. "It's a wonderful feeling. 1 still can't believe it," said Bunning, a ifather of seven who couldn't have received a more appropriate gift on Father's Day. "I had everything going for me. My fast ball was working good, but the slider was my besl pilch.

Just like the no-hit- er I pitched for Detroit six years ago. The slider was my best pitch Ihen loo." Easily Ihe mosl exciled spec- lalors in Ihe crowd of more lhan 40,000 at Shea Stadium were Bunning's wife, Mary, and their oldest daughter, Barbara, 12, who came in from Philadelphia lo watch him pitch. "I was so excited I losl my sunglasses twice," said Mrs. Bunning. The lension mounted lo a fever pilch in Ihe ninlh inning as everyone in Ihe park knew lhat Bunning needed three more outs to make baseball history.

The 32-year-old right-hander got the first batter, Charlie Smith, to foul out lo shorlslop Bobby Wine. George Altaian batted for Amado Samuel and struck out. Now only John Stephenson, a pinch hitler, stood in Bunning's way. Bunning got two quick Irikes on him, then threw Iwo called balls before slriking oul the left-handed batler wilh a curve ball. The Mels finally got a base- runner in the second inning o.f Ihe nightcap when Jesse Gonder walked with one out.

They didn't get a hit, though, until the third when Joe Christopher belted a run-scoring single with two out. Starter Rick Wise and relief- er Johnny Klippstein held the Mets to Ihree hits in all. John Briggs and Johnny Cal- iison each homered for Philadelphia while Tony Taylor and Clay Dalrymple each drove in two runs. Caliison also homered in the opener. Bunning, a 6-foot-3, 190-pound- er, came to Ihe Phillies last Dec.

5 wilh catcher Gus Triandos for pitcher Jack Hamilton and outfielder Don Demeler. Triandos was Bunning's calcher in Ihe perfecl game, belling a single and a double and driving in Iwo runs. Second Game Philadelphia 301 130 000-8 11 4 New York Oil 000 000--2 3 0 Wise, Klippslein (7) and Dalrymple; Lary, Slurdivant (5), Hunter (6), Wakefield (8), Cisco (9) and Gonder. W--Wise, 1-0. L--Lary, 02.

Home runs Philadelphia, Briggs (1), Caliison (10). JIM BUNKING 'This Was Something Special' NEW YORK (AP) "I knew this was something special. I sensed it from, the fifth inning on." Those were among the first words spoken by Jim Bunning, the tall Philadelphia Phillies pitcher, after he made baseball history Sunday pitching a perfect 6-0 game against the New York Mets, first in regular season play in 42 years. "I feel wonderful, just wonderful," exclaimed the 32-year-old right-hander acquired by the Phillies in a trade with Detroit last winter. "I knew I had good stuff all the way," he said.

"I threw most sliders but I also threw lots of curves. The ball was moving." Flanked by his wife, Mary, and 12-year-old Barbara, the oldest of seven children, who had come from Philadelphia to see Jim pilch on Father's Day, Bunning gave credit to Tony Taylor, Philadelphia second baseman, for prolecling his perfect game. "What a play lhat Taylor made," Jim shouted. "What a play." It came in the fifth inning. Jesse Gonder hit a shot into the whole between-first and second.

Taylor made a spectacular diving stop, and while still on his knees threw to John Herrnstein for the out. "I was aware I was pitching a perfect game from the'fifth inning on," said Bunning. "I even kidded about it on the bench and the boys kidded right back. Jinx? I don't believe in jinxes." Gus a os, Bunning's calcher, who came with him in Ihe Detroit deal, also was the calcher the aflernoon Hoyt Wilhelm pitched his no-hitter against the New York Yankees in 1958. Which was tougher? Triandos was asked.

"Have you ever tried to catch Wilhelm's knuckler?" he retorted. "No no-hitter is easy, though," he added. "I had lo be careful I didn't call for a wrong pitch. Jim was extra careful, too. He shook me off at least 10 times.

"He didn't make a wrong pitch all afternoon. His curve has a habit of hanging in the lale innings but not today. He struck out the last hitter (John Stephenson) on three curve balls." The Dancer Won't Wait TORONTO was looking for Northern Dancer, with the thought I might go with him when he came by. But when he did it was no contest." "I waited for the Dancer. But he wouldn't wait for me when he went by." Those two statements, Uie first by Jim Fitzsimmons, rider of third place Grand Garcon, and the second by veteran Avelino Gomez, pilot of fifth place Pierlou, best describe Northern Dancer's 7V4 length victory in the 105th running Saturday of North America's oldest horse race the $74,075 Plate at Woodbine.

The victory, achieved with an effortless 2:02 1-5 clocking for 1V4 miles, earned (lie pride of E.P. Taylor's Winficlds Farm of Toronto a deserved resl. He will leave the rural almosphere of Woodbine within a few days for his metropolitan home at Belmont Park on Long Island in New York. There his daily exercises will consist of long gallops until trainer Horatio Luro starts sharpening him up for the Trav- crs at Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Aug.

22 when he will probably again meet the other stars of 3- year old division Quadrangle, Roman Brother and Hill Rise. Jock Bill Hartack told Luro the ride was an easy one, but most of the crowd of 31,228 who made the Dancer the 1-15 choice, plainly were worried until the Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner started his move midway of the backstretch. Solovitch Wins 3rd Cup Tourney Waving Ihe President's Cup in front of George Solovitch is a little like the traditional red flag in front of the bull. The Cup, emblematic of the handicap golf tournament championship at the Oneonta Country Club, is resting again on the Solovitch mantel after his resounding 5 and 4 triumph over Jim Sampson in the final match Sunday at the OCC. In the final match Solovitch Ithacans Score Doubles Aces ITHACA, N.

Y. (AP) The cheers for a hole in one at the Country Club of Ithaca golf course had hardly faded when a player in the next foursome stepped to the tee and duplicated it. Howard Rose of Cortland made the first ace Saturday on the 140-yard fourth hole. Rose, 50, used a No. 5 iron.

The ball hit short of the cup and rolled in. Lou Barnard, 49, of Ithaca, hit past the pin with a No. 7 iron but the backspin on his ball sent it, too, rolling into the cup. It was the first hole-in-one for either man. They were playing in a match between the Ithaca club and Cortland Country Club.

Colts Kick Milwaukee Into Ninth MILWAUKEE (AP) The Houston Colts sent Milwaukee reeling into ninth place Sunday, winning the second game of a doubleheader 5-4 after Rusty Staub's hitting spree paced their 5-2 victory in the opener. The double loss extended the Braves' losing streak to six games and gave the Colts a four-game winning string. Staub collected four straight hits, including a pair of homers, in powering the Colts in the opener. Ken Johnson and relief ace Hal Woodeshick combined lo slop Ihe Braves in Ihe nighl- cap, which was delayed 39 min- ules by a heavy downpour. Staub, a 20-year-old first baseman who started the day with a .198 average, led Ihe assault on Warren Spahn and two successors.

Spahn was rapped for 10 hits and four runs in 5 2-3 innings as he failed to go the distance for the seyenlh slraight time. The 43-year-old southpaw has a 5-6 record. right-hander Bob Bruce, 7-3, scattered 11 hits, one Joe Torre's llth homer, in the first game. Johnson evened his record at 6-6 with Woodeshick's relief help in the second game. First Game Houston 100 201010-5 13 1 Milwaukee 020 000 000--2 11 0 Bruce and Grote; Spahn, Blasingame (6), Hoeft (8) and Torre.

W-Bruce, 7-3. L-Spahn, 5-6. Home runs Houston, Staub Milwaukee, Torre (11). Second Game Houston 100 110 200--5 9 0 Milwaukee 000 010 210--4 10 0 Johnson, Woodeshick (7) and BaLman; Lemaster, Smith (5), Hoeft (6), Blasingame (8), Tief- cnauer (9) and Bailey, Torre (9). W--Johnson, 6-6.

L--Lemater, 7-5. Home runs--Houston, Johnson (1), Gaines (2). Neves Finishes Riding Career INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) -Ralph Neves, the sixth winning- cst jockey in horse racing history, is hanging up his tack. Neves, who will be 46 in August, advised Hollywood Park officials Sunday that he is through riding.

He put it this way: "I won't say I've retired from racing because it and everyone in it will always be close to my heart. Just say I won't ride any more." He has scored 3,771 victories. was 3 under par on the front nine and stayed at that figure through the 14th where he closed out the victory over Sampson, one of the best golfers at the club. Solovitch eased in over the last four holes with the pressure off and wound up with a one over par 72 for the day. Sampson closed with a 73.

Sort of anti-climactic was a "just-for-the-fun-of-it" turned in by Solovitch in the afternoon. He toured the course in a 32-35 for 67 figure, lowest ever for him and lowest round of the year at the OCC. Solovitch got into yesterday's final match the hard way, scoring a narrow 1-up victory over Alan Gould in Saturday's semifinal match. Gould gave the new champion a real tussle all the way. Sampson had defeated Neil Nielsen in the other semi-final match a week ago.

The victory for Solovitch, who plays the short game as if he invented irons, was his third President's Cup victory in four years. He won the title in 1961 and 1962, bowed out of the picture in 1963 when Ed House won and came back this season to take the prize again. As after his 1962 victory, Solo- vitch is now figured as a real contender in the forthcoming club championship tournament, particularly if he continues to flash the game he is currently showing. Wickersham Tames Twins ST PAUL MINNEAPOLIS (AP)--Dave Wickersham continued his mastery over Minnesota but needed ninth-inning relief help from Ed Rakow as Detroit defeated Minnesota 4-2 Sunday. Wickersham checked the Twins on three singles until the ninth.

Tony Oliva homered before Don Mincher walked and Bob Allison and Jerry Kindall singled for another run. That brought on Rakow, who retired Joe McCabe on a game-ending fly out. The victory for Wickersham was his, fourth of the season against the Twins and his llth in 14 decisions with them in his career. He now is 9-5 over-all. Detroit got three runs off loser Dick Stigman in the first.

Jake Wood singled, Al Kaline walked and Bill Freehan doubled Wood home. George Thomas' two-out single scored Kaline and Freehan, Bubba Phillips socked his first homer of the year before Stigman departed in Ihe seventh. Detroit 300 000100--4 7 0 Minnesota 000 000 002--2 6 0 Wickersham, Rakow (9) and Freehan; Stigman, Perry (9) and Zimmerman, MacCabe (9). W-Wickersham, 9-5. L-Stigman, 3-6.

Home runs Detroit, Phillips (1). Minnesota, Oliva (13). fourth-inning homer with Al Davidson on base. Cooperstown tied things in the sixlh. Cal Munson walked, stole second, and scored on Bostwick's two-base shot.

Jack Seiler's singled drove in Bostwick. Davidson walked to lead off the ninth for Laurens, stole second and continued to third when the catcher's throw got through second base. Davidson scored winning run on a passed, ball, though Randy Isler's double seconds later would have brought him home anyway. Fielding for both teams was excellent, with Cooperstown third baseman Slu Collier turning in eight sparkling assists. THE MILFORD-STAMFORD game started as a pitching duel between Dave Erbe and Stamford's Dan Zeh.

Erbe allowed only one solid hit over the first five innings, a triple by Stan Sutton, who later scored. Then came the Milford fifth, which saw 21 men go lo the plate. The Macs slammed 10 of their 24 hits in Ihe inning and scored 12 runs before a man had been relired. Richie Weir had a single and double in Ihe inning, while Howdy Cornish stroked a pair of singles. Cornish and Dick Leach each batted Ihree times in the frame.

Tired by Ihe heat and base- running, Erbe gave up three walks in the sixth and saw Stamford score twice withoul benefit of a hit. Al Camp came on to pitch the eighth. THE STANDINGS W. L. Pet.

Milford 5 1 .833 Stamford 2 3 .400 Cooperstown 2 3 .400 Laurens 2 4 .333 Laurens 000 200 001--3 6 2 Cooperstown 000 002 000--2 5 2 Lyons and Null; Marsh and Tompkins Stamford 0001 0 2411-10 10 6 Milford 0010(16)1 57x-30 24 3 Zeh, Wininger (5), Meade (5), Cowan (7) and Meade, S. Sutton (5); Erbe, Camp (7), Clough (8) and Leach. IAJOR LEAGUE standings AMERICAN W. L. Pet.

G.B. 37 23 .617 39 25 .609 25 31 30 34 33 37 34 33 30 32 28 29 29 25 .576 .516 .500 .485 .459 .439 .426 .391 11 12 14 New York Baltimore Chicago Minnesota Cleveland Boston Detroit Los Angeles Washington Kansas City 25 39 Yesterday's Results Boston 9, Baltimore 6 Los Angeles 4, Cleveland 1 New York 2-2, Chicago 0-1, 2nd game 17 innings Detroit 4, Minnesota 2 Washington 13-5, Kansas City 2-2 Today's Pitchers New York (Hamilton 4-0 or Sheldon 1-0) at Chicago (Buzhardt 5-4), N. Cleveland (McDowell 3-0) at Minnesota (Pascual 9-3), Washington (Rudolph 1-0) at Los Angeles (Latman. 2-5), Only games scheduled. Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago St.

Louis Houston Los Angeles Milwaukee New York .548 .532 .500 .492 .485 .484 .469 .299 2 NATIONAL W. L. Pet. G.B. Philadelphia 38 23 .623 -San Francisco 37 26 .587 34 28 33 30 32 32 31 30 20 BASEBALL GLOVES! Rawlings Reg.

Low Price $19.95 SM-6 MUSIAL MODEL Spec. $14.95 Rawlings Reg. Low WS-300 SPAHN Model Spec. $12.95 Othtr Rowlingi Gloves $2.95 up JIM KONSTANTY Yesterday's Results San Francisco 7, St. Louis 3 Chicago 2-7, Pittsburgh 1-2 Philadelphia 6-8, New York 0-2 Cim tnnati 2-2, Los Angeles 4-1 Houston 5-5, Milwaukee 2-4 Today's Pitchers Los Angeles (Ortega 3-2) at' Milwaukee (Sadowski 2-6) or Blasingame 0-0), San Francisco (Marichal 8-3) at Cincinnati (Tsitouris 3-4), games scheduled Yanks Unravel Chisox In 17th, Take AL Lead Giant Rookie Cuts Cards In NL Debut ST.

LOUIS (AP)--Rookie Hal Lanier collected four hits and drove in three runs as the San Francisco Giants whipped St. Louis 7-3 Sunday. Willie Mays followed Lariier's first major league homer in the ninth with his 22nd homer of the year. Orlando a slammed Ihree doubles and drove in a run and Jose Pagan also galhered three hits and a run batted in as the Giants pounded loser Curt Simmons and reliever Roger Craig for 13 hits. Lanier singled home a run in the first and scored on Cepeda's double.

The son of former major league pitcher Max Lanier drove in Pagan with a single in Ihe sixth. Lanier's other hit was a double in the fourth. San Fran. 202 001002--7 13 0 St. Louis 201000 000-3 9 1 Sanford, Perry (7) and Crandall; Simmons, Craig (7) and McCarver.

W-Sanford, 5-7. L- Simons, 7-6. Home runs San Francisco, Lanier (1), Mays (22). St. Louis, Brock (3).

Hawks Defeat Hartwick, 14-12 LAURENS The Laurens Hawk parlayed a fifth-inning rally into a 14-12 win over Ihe Hartwick Little Leaguers here Saturday, Ihe second straight win in the series for Laurens. Peet of Laurens led his team's nine-hit attack with three doubles in four at-bats. CHICAGO (AP)--Heclor Lopez raced home with the winning run on Al Weis' error in the 17lh inning Sunday, giving the New York Yankees a 2-1 victory over Chicago and a 2-0 first-game victory. The Yankees moved into first place in the American League, jumping eight percentage poinls ahead of Ballimore, which lost to Boston 9-6. The sweep also gave the Yankees a 9-0 record with the White Sox this season.

Lopez ignited the winning rally in the league's longest game Ihis season wilh a one-out double. The bases then were loaded on an intentional pass to Elston Howard and a walk to Phil Linz. Relief pilcher Bill Stafford grounded lo shorlslop Weis, who fumbled the ball, allowing Lopez lo score Ihe unearned run. The Yankees took a 1-0 lead Oliver Leads Morris Drivers MORRIS Harold Oliver of Norwich dominated stock car action here Sunday at Mid- Stale Speedway. Oliver drove to victories in the second heat and the first semi-final, and then roared to victory in the main event.

Chuck Brady of Glen Aubrey captured the first heat, finishing ahead of Ralph Moon of Norwich. Barney Barnhart of Sidney trailed Oliver in the sec- nnd 'heat. It was Oliver and Barnhart first and second again in fhe first semi. Gordie Smith of Oxford took the other semi, with Oneontan Jim Mott second. Smith wound up second lo Oliver in Ihe final.

Molt escaped injury when his car flipped and hit the fence on the third lap of fhe main evenl. The car was completely demolished. The Oneonta Star Phone Number is GE 2-1000 in the fifth on singles by Joe'- Pepitone, Lopez and The While Sox tied it minutes later in their half of the inning-' on Ron Hansen's single, a wild pitch and Tom McCraw's sin- gle. The run was Chicago's firs.t'.' after 27 scoreless innings. Yankee slarler Al Downing, pilched Ihe firsl 12 scattering seven hits, four and striking out 13.

Horlen went nine innings for the While Sox, giving up seven hits, walking none and fanning six. Howard and Mickey Manila: homered in Ihe opener. Jim 1 Bouton had a two-hitter until- J. C. Martin singled with two out in the eighth.

Pete Mikkelsen took over and preserved the shutoul although he yielded two hits in Ihe He retired Joe Cunningham for- Ihe game-ending oul wilh ners al second and Ihird. First Game New York 010 000100-2 4 Chicago 000 000 000-0 4 1 Bouton, Mikkelsen (8) and Howard; Pizarro, Wilhelm (9) and Martin. W-Bouton, 5-6. L- Pizarro, 8-4. Home runs--New York, Howard (6), Mantle (13).

Second Game New York 000 010 000 000 000 01--2 11 1 Chicago 000 010 000 000 000 00--1 10 3 17 innings Downing, Reniff (13), Mikkelsen (13), Stafford (16) and Howard; Horlen, Wilhelm (10), Fish- 1 er (13), Mossi (17) and Me-' Nerlney, Martin (10). W--Stafford, 4-0. L--Mossi, 1-1. Be Sure With Bill's "Personal Service" For the Best in Auto Insurance-Ask about Our Custom- Rite Auto Insurance with the "SPEEDCLAIM" Feature. William L.

Martin Insurance Agency 22 MORGAN AVE. GE 2-2103 Representing AETNA CASUALTY SURETY Hartford; Conn. TWIN DOUBLE 5th, 6th, 8th 9th RACES 9 RACES EVERY NIGHT MONDAY Thru SATURDAY DAILY DOUBLE CLOSES 8:10 POST TIME 8:20 CALL VERNON TA 9-2201 CLUBHOUSE TURFSIDE TERRACE DINNER RESERVATIONS VERNON DOWNS 178 MAIN ST. SPORTING GOODS GE 2-1731 ONEONTA, N. Y.

PRE-GAME SHOW AT 7:30 P.M. Again at End of 5th Inning! THE SCREEMING EAGLES" Drill Team MILFORD "MACS" vs. "UTICA CITY STARS" Tues. Nitt, Junt 23--Neahwa Park 8 P.M. Adults $1.00 Children Under 15 75c "Support The Best Baseball In Central New York".

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About The Oneonta Star Archive

Pages Available:
164,658
Years Available:
1916-1973