Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Oct 1963, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Sen eer ers eeres cme 300 players of the "'Little Lea- gue' and their fathers were guests at the annual Father- and-Son Banquet, put on by the sponsors, the Oshawa Council Knights of Columbus, at the K. of C. Hall, to wind up their past successful sea- DETROIT TIGERS won the championship of the 1963 Oshawa Knight's of Columbus "Little League" Minor Section | and the above picture shows them garbed in their new car- digans, which they received on Sunday, when more than sa ee PIRATES captured the cham- pionship laurels in the "Ma- jor League" section of the K. of C, Little League Baseball Association, this summer. They are shown above, decked in their new sweaters. Left-to- right (seated)--Mike Black, Billy Cannon,' Doug Kirby, Brian Ferris and John Bru- Proznowski, John Boivin and Jack Dalby, manager; (rear row)--Mike Murphy, Danny Dalby, John Duquette, Eric White and Ricky Corbett, Ex- treme right is Doug Bryant, Asst. Commissioner of th? Minor League. son, Left-to-right, the Tigers are: (seated)--Chuck Lepine, Feter Forestall, Anthony Mer- inger, Grand Knight, K. of. C. 2671 Council; Tom Dalby and Robert Riordan; (middle row) --Joe Riordan, coach, Joe Sawyer, Mat Masternak, Jan wal PROUD FATHER, Frank Shine, admires the trophy his | son Steve received, when ¥,| voted "the most valuable play- =|can't Skater , Surprised | eats er" in the Minor League svc- tion. Clancy Barrett was name the 'most valuable player" in the Major section of the | K. of C. Little League. At Olympics Ban Norway (CP-AP)--'I it," said: Paul OSLO, believe is not opposed to |Enoch to compete at a meet in 4\Enoch, 29-year-old speedskating Canada this coming winter. If siace after receiving a letter| successful, he could become a #|which he said virtually bars him)member of Canada's team, re ' =|from representing Canada in the|placing one of the four speed giheld ry, Donald Berry nem, Mike Brady, Vince Sa- varino. At extreme left is Bill dek; (middle row)--Cliff Leh- man (coach), Morris St. Pierre, Armand Mackey, Ron Black, Brian Robinson, Clancy Barrett and Len Byrne (man- ager); (rear row)--Bruce Ber- Baseball Commissioner, SPORTS MENU Oshawa Man SPORTS By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' OSHAWA GENERALS, who performed with distinction * over the weekend, in their second and third games of this "still early OHA Junior "A" schedule, face a stern task tonight von their home ice in Bowmanville Community Arena, when "they play hosts to the Toronto Marlboros. Currently, Mont- real. Junior Canadiens are undefeated and they've been held to a tie only once -- Oshawa Generals did that on Friday «night, right in Montreal. Then on Sunday, the Generals un- Z leashed a scorching attack in the second and third periods of their game in. St. Catharines, good for 19 goals and'a final i 11-3 decision over the Black Hawks. That win must have = sounded out like a tocsin to the rest of the Junior "A" clubs, Respecially if they hadn't noted that tie score in Montreal. x x 4 x GETTING BACK to tonight's game against. Marlies, at Bowmanville, the Generals are all '"'pepped up" for this one. They would welcome an opportunity to remind Staff Smythe that his hand-picked 'Metro All-Stars', now wearing. Marlboro sweaters, are not really the lead-pipe cinch to win the Memorial Cup that he has proclaimed, However, the Gen- ferals have run into a lot of tough luck, via injuries and iil- mess, in the past week and Coach Doug Williams isn't going to be able to dress the line-up he would have preferred, On "the other hand, those who do get a chance to play tonight, who otherwise would have been on the sidelines, will likely wgive it that extra-special effort, just to prove they really be- 'Jong. This is their big chance. Mike Dubeau, one of the sea- ton's performers, suffered a dislocated shoulder in the game at Montreal and will be out for about six weeks. Terry Lane suffered concussion in the opener last week, Art Hampson is out with a "'strep" throat and Wayne Cashman suffered a shoulder separation, just as the schedule got under way. Dun- nell's release is still being held up by the St. Mary's club, so this leaves the Generals short four or five regulars. "Ricky"' Gay, who held up his end nicely in Montreal and St. Kitts, will be dressed tonight and some other "help" may be sought from the "Dunnies". x x x x OSHAWA CITY and District Softball Association officers were in a happy frame of mind on Saturday. This year's "City Championship"' finals -- due to the fact that their teams were very busy in OASA playoffs this year--didn't get played until the third week of October and it might have been cold and wet weather would have created a serious problem. However, the extraordinary summer-time weather of last week enabled them to clean up their City Championship finals and now ihe season has' been successfully concluded. Heffering's Imper- jals won the fifth and deciding game over "Bad Boys" but, as might be expected, the final fifth game was a real cliff- anger, anybody's game until the 7th inning. It marked the » third-straight win in the 'City title series for Heffering's but = the Bad Boys gave them a real scare and with just a hit or ™ two, in the right place, it could easily have gone the other. way. ~ Bad Boys have the honor of' bringing the only OASA cham- = pionship to Oshawa in 1963, so both clubs.can look back at the = season with pride and satisfaction. Other City and District = teams who entered the OASA playdowns all made a creditable » showing, good enough to once again prove that Oshawa's soft- "pall sintus ranks with the highest in the province, On Special OHA Board . TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario Marlboros vs Oshawa Generals |Hockey Association has estab-|at Bowmanville' Community lished a welfare fund to aid|Arena, 8.00 p.m. jclubs in providing assistance to |OHA players who may suffer) FOOTBALL CALENDAR TODAY OCKEY $11964 Olympic Games. Enoch, from Toronto, has | been working in Norway as an 'architect */staying in speed-skating trim by for two years and training with Norway's Olympic skating candidates. Enoch said he had received a jletter from the Canadian Speed Skating Association which said: "You cannot qualify for the 1964 jOlympic speed skating team be- }cause you did not return to Can- jada to take part in four meets in Canada in February, |1963."" four meets in Canada skaters already picked. Enoch said West's letter did jnot name the present team. "The letter. does not where or when this meet scheduled," said Enoch. "It sounds unreasonable and im- practical to me that I should have to spend $500 to go back to Canada just for one meet. "I'm here in Europe now-- not very far from Innsbruck Here jlent training conditions, At the traditional New Year meet 1S "Nobody ever told me those best opportunity to prove my/fenceman Howie Young " were abilities. That's the only thing|iMg victimized to a certain ex- Small MONTREAL (CP)--Stan Mi- kita gives his hockey sticks the same rough treatment he dishes out to Chicago's opposition in the National Hockey League. He runs through some 240 sticks a season. That's more than three a game on the av- erage and roughly twice as many as most regulars. Sticks go at perhaps $3 apiece. But you won't hear the Chicago front office complain- ing about the bill for Mikita's stick-busting habits. Official league statistics re- leased today show the slim- bellicose kid they call Stash, at the top of the scoring list with six goals and four assists for 10 points, with five years experience at 23, is the centre and propellant of the Black Hawks Scooter Liné and the statistics indicate che unit has been hustling. WHARRAM NO. 2 His right - wing mate Ken "'Wharram is in the No. 2 spotifive goals with two goals and seven as- qisists while Ab McDonald, pa- Geoffrion potted two trolling the left side, is in a five-way tie for fifth spot with jsix points tie for fifth spot with ___. and five assists. Another line, Montreal's Jean Beliveau Bernie Geoffrion- |John Ferguson trio, is right be- |hind the Chicago threesome with a 22-point total--against 25 for the Scooters. At five - foot - nine and 155 }pounds, Mikita is not built as robustly as many around the allowing league. He employs a lighter-|York's 5-1 win over the Bruins than-conventional stick, perhaps for that reason, and the wood tends to crack easily. But his penalty record bears out that Stan is a hard man to deal with on the ice witha stick!cian, said later that Goyett BILLY REAY Young Fall Guy! Hull Only Great! in Norway I have excel-! CHICAGO (AP)--Billy Reay, new coach of Chicago Black in Oslo Jan, 1-2, I'll have the| Hawks, said Monday that de-| 'Rocket Richard (Montreal's and "is be- meant ds. final qualifications,"|I want--a chance to prove I'm|tent by officials." \he said-in.an interview; Power, K. of C. Little League | He recalled that in February, | 1963 he still was recovering --Oshawa Times Photos. |from two broken ankles and the} emotional shock of seeing his pretty, young wife, Eva, die in jan automobile accident in Swe- den, the accident in which his ankles were fractured. OFFERED CHANCE |good enough for the team." |PLACES HIGH | eral European meets, and has flirted with the 3,000 metres se minutes, 37.2 seconds at Hamar, Norway, two years ago is the sixth best time ever recorded for the event. "Young can do as much, or more, on defence than any player in the league," Reay Enoch has placed high in sev-|tolq the quarterback club of the|@ tremendous team man and newspaper, Chicago's Ameri- world record for|can. "But he has a little habit}Combination of both, He can veral times, His|of blowing his top and we are|Slap the puck harder then ei-| 'working on curtailing that." | Young last year with Detroit |Red Wings was the most-pen- jalized player in, the National Enoch said the letter, signed) One of his two coaches here, Hockey League, rolling up a to- |by K. A, West of Saskatoon,|Knut Tangen, said Enoch row|tal of 273 minutes in the 64 president of the Canadian Speed |Skating Association, did offer jhim another chance to qualify, OHA Junior "A" -- Toronto|but intimated he is unlikely to/him on the long dista jaccept the opportunity. He said the letter reported West had presented Enoch's case to the Canadian Olympic Association, and that the COA is at the top of his form | "Even the best Norwegians jhave difficulty in i nees this winter," said the coach. "I sincerely hope the Cana-\defenceman, who became Chi-|V4!cvtt® and Kralover. dian Speed Skating Union and|cago property between seasons,| secoND RACE -- 7 Furlongs for 3-|way. Trainer, the COA will think this over)was so steamed up over the|year-olds. Claiming all again," said Tangen. |games in which he appeared, | Earlier, Reay reviewed following) Young's charging infraction inj4Miss Peanuts, Leblanc |Stinday night's 5-3 victory over Montreal Canadiens, The fiery Stan Mikita NHI Scoring Race ¥ ighty Tops But M infis hands, anyway, and he gives the wood a rough going. In Chicago's two games dur- ing the week, Mikita collected four goals--three in one game against Boston Bruins. It was effort at best equalled a mark by Detroit's Joe Carveth - 19 years ago. Carveth picked up four as- sists in the third period when the Red Wings thumped New Mikita, an NHL journeyman) his fourth three-goal effort since making hockey's big time in 1958-59 and goalie Eddie John- ston of the Bruins has been the victim of three of them, CZECH BORN Mikita bears the distinction, among NHL performers, of Czechoslovakian birth. He came to Canada at the age of eight to live with his Uncle Joe in St. Catharines, Ont. Since his first full NHL sea- son, his goal-production has risen from eight to 19, then 25 and last year to 31. The scrappy Wharram grabbed off five assists in the Nevin, Tor two Chicago games, meanwhile,| Howe Det jand McDonald added a pair to| Horton, Tor his total. Mahovlich, Tor Geoffrion and Beliveau are Oliver, Bos bracketed with eight, points in Hay, Chi third place, the Boomer with Bucyk, Bos and Beliveau with MacGregor, Dt one. In Montreal's three games, Rousseau, Mtl goals and Jeffrey, Det Beliveau collected three assists. Faulkner, Det Their left-wing linemate with| Williams, Bos the Canadiens, rookie John Fer-|Duff, Tor suson, is among those at the|Vasko, Chi six-point level with McDonald. The others are Bobby Hull of the Black Hawks, Bobby Pul- ford of Toronto Maple Leafs and Phil Goyette of New York | Rangers, |FOUR ASSISTS Goyette piled up four assists the first. period of New York Rangers 15-0 Jan. 23, 1944. Phil Watson also collected four assists in one period while playing with Montreal Canadi- ens arch 18, 1944, against New York, where he later coached. The leaders; Mikita, Chi Wharram, Chi Geoffrion, Mtl Beliveau, M tl Ferguson, Mtl Hull, Chi \McDonald, Chi Pulford, Tor Goyette, NY 29 C0 BO ht ht he OO CO HH ORR we me 2 to OS BORD RDN IH eH Coe RN eee es 1 ~ Aw PONY UN SSW SD HNN N OW OO ~1 wo. OO _ i acd tk thighs ie eee ee -- bh ein l | | | | Danny O'She 'Fourth In Jr. OHA Scoring in and it was believed _ initially, . lthat the performance was TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto Y 4 Marlboros a team which record of som A A which has "bet hin \odsowes the Mis reget al Legh oe | Ae ese : 'e.| a tie for the lead in publicity director and tit, (the Ontario Hockey Association _|Junior A circuit, has no players jin the league scoring leaders. | Veteran Peterborough Pete forward Ron Naud has six goals and three assists for a leading |nine points. This-is one better than teammate Jim Paterson and Yvone Coumoyer of Mont- real Junior Canadiens, Paterson has four goals and Cournoyer three. | Danny O'Shea of Oshawa Gen- jerals is next with seven points, \comes, he knows what to do|including three goals, followed labout. it, by four players with three goa's - three -- ~~ oy yee lrecord-setting scorer who re-| They are George Vail of Osh- tired as a player after the 1959.,awa, Fred Stanfield of S' "atn- 0 season) was the most explo-/arnes Black Hawks, «nd Bob |sive scorer I ever saw and the\Charlebois and Andre Boudrias greatest in the clutch, Howe is|°f Montreal. : the greatest all-around player--| Doug Favell of Niagara Fails Flyers is the top goaltender with a 2.67 average on eight goals allowed in three games Chuck Goddard of Peterborough jis second with a 3.25 average. skater. Our Bobby Hull is a jther and is a faster skater." "GREENWOOD RACE RESULTS FIRST RACE -- 7 Furlongs for maiden) FIFTH RACE -- 7 Furlongs, 3-year- 2-year-olds, Canadian foaled. he Be lyst pace ~ up. Claiming all $7500. Purse 8-Turkey Joe, Bohenko 7.90 4.10 3.50) $2300, A i » Clemes .... 7.30 5.20/3-Bala Roman, F'simmons 8.30 4,20 2.70 (einer ea Clos 4.70|1-New Member, Walsh 4.0 2.70 |5-Quintain, Rasmussen . 20 Bellachop,| Start good, won driving. Miss,| Also Ran In Order: Winsmanship and Credit Curb Winner, b g 4, Roman Patrol by Bala- G. V. Howell. $22,500, _Quinelia pool $30,547. Quinella 3 and 1 Paid $39.20 |Start good, won easily. | Also Ran in Order: Mr. |Tag Day, Tell Anna, Glenscott $2500, Purse $1800.| Pool 19.60 9. |3-Cluny Miss, H'son i 14.20 serious injury either playing in| or travelling to a game. Harold Ballard, owner of Tor- onto Marlboros of the OHA Junior A circuit is chairman of the fund committee, established) jat the last annual meeting of |the association. Other members president C. G. Patterson Guelph, Matt Leyden of Osh- awa, Jack Devine of Belleville, Frank Buckland of Peéterbor- jough and Bill Baksi. Bill Hanley| lis business manager. | A sum of $5,000 has been set! 'aside by the OHA to start the 'fund, and member clubs have are OHA of COSSA Oshawa District "A" |penalties he received that hely., | and| -- Donevan CI Seniors at Cen- tral CI Seniors, 4.00 pm. O'Neill CVI Seniors at Mc- Laughlin CVI Seniors, 4.00 p.m.; Central CI Juniors at Donevan CI Juniors, 4.00 p.m. | COSSA Lakeshore District) "B" -- Courtice Jrs. at Bow-| manville Jrs., 3.30 p.m. WEDNESDAY No games scheduled. Shatto Is By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Argonauts may lower their eyes at mention of their two - victories - and - 10 - losses record, but they're heads-up as far as halfback Dick Shatto is concerned, HOCKEY SCORES Argos Are Proud! threw his stick on the ice,|2c telling off Referee' Vern Buffey. | gon (During the third period, |50° Young was given a minor pen- alty and a game misconduct.) V-AS DSAPPOINTED jly. Reason jArgos look respectable. He's jthe leading pass: receiver: in the circuit with 52 receptions for a total gain of 563 yards. Dixon is gradually running away from the rest of the league in rushing. He has car- Young did, said Reay. |was antagonized to a certain ex-} |tent. Why don't the officials} treat him the same as everybody |¢>, stood there staring at Howie a though he were saying: "Well ripped off his gloves and started tii) Sor in °Grder: Blue Shutter, Tag-|7-Forest Rover, F'simmons Guiding Wave,|3Corinthian, Terry |Pool 21,657. "I was disappointed in what/winner, ch #, 3, Ferd -- Quibble. Trainer| Winner bf 2, Woodchuck by Blue Frock. "But he W. Waterman. "| Pool $42,335. $2100, else? When Buffey called it, he|6Ati Seasons, Walsh g|4Pencil Sketch, Dittfach 2-City Boy, Armstrong ............. »|Start good, won ridden ouf Also Ran in Order: apie Lou, Lanoway ardens Win, Armstrong t good, won driving. nell, Argo Bound, th Shore, Espalaris, Prince Jeannie Doo, and Robust Girl. DD NOS. 8 AND 3 PAID $90.90 Trainer, W. L. Sayles. Double pool 39,358. 2-year-olds, (9). 4.90 3.50 8.00 Esprit Gai, 1 Beau|6-Boy Lost, THIRD RACE -- 7 Furlongs. For maid} Canadian foaled. Purse) year-olds. 2, 4, 50 3.30 Mr. STANDINGS Shatto leads the four-team been asked for suggestions on By THE CANADIAN PRESS how they may contribute to its; Nova Scotia Senior expension. | . Players and game officials in| Halifax 2 New Glasgow 5 every association under OHA Saskatchewan Senior jurisdiction are eligible for/Moose Jaw 2 Yorkton 13 benefits, an OHA official said|Saskatoon 8 Regina 0 |Monday. The association incldes theu Northern Ontario Hockey Asso- K. Vaughan Hurt ciation, the Ontario Minor Hockey Association, the Toronto} H Hockey League and the West-| But He Will Play ern Ontario Athlet Associa-| tion. ne ORSOC'| OTTAWA (CP)--Guard Kaye esos ve ---- | Vaughan of Ottawa Rough Rid- ers broke his right hand in Sat- US G . ] urday's Eastern Football Con- | a. Tl 0 ference game against Montreal | Alouettes. Now 14 D d But coach' Frank Clair, taking | ea |dead aim for first place in the ge: : # Big Four, said Monday that _GAINSVILLE, Fla. (AP)-- Vaughan and four other riders | With about a month of the sea-\with less serious injuries will son over in the US., 14 foot-play against Hamilton Tiger- jball deaths have been reported,/Cats Saturday. jane three in as goed we go down there (to Ham. | 'In 1962 there were 26 football| and never mind the wavs ame fatalities and 37 in 1961, ac-/have @ week to rest then," said jcording to figures compiled by|(jair. Les |Dr. Floyd R. Eastwood of Los ee p jAngeles State College. He bial aouaiton peas" wad Picea nan gpg records on football |» ict place and havea week off jdeaths: for 32 years "s P . The latest football: victim of proved cig ey ene place 1963 was Wayne Pridgeon, an|*©@ts play the semi-final game. 18 - year ~ old halfback from : |Gainesville's Chiefland Highjior varsity game Wednesday at Schoo}. He died Sunday frém| Rome, N |head injuries suffered Friday; Of the 14 fatalities. reported night in a game. for 1963, nine have been high Robert C eel, Jr., 18, died Fri- school players. There have been day at New Orleans of a brain/two college deaths, one junior Eastern Football Conference in |scoring with 66 points, almost half of the team's total of 137. |Shatto's touchdown Sunday in Toronto's 11-10 loss to Hamilton Tiger-Cats was his llth of the season, | George Dixon of Montreal |Alouettes picked up two in Montreal's 27-21 loss to Ottawa 'Rough Riders Saturday and now has 60 points on 10 touch- downs. | Shatto, leading scorer in the jhistory of the Big Four, eclipsed |the lifetime points mark of \former Montreal sfar Virgil Wagner early this season. But Wagner fans argue that Shatto played after the touchdown be- came a six-point scorer. Wag- ner played most of his days in the five-point era. THREE TO TIE Any day now Shatto should clean this one up, too. He now has 76 touchdowns. Wagner scored 79. And this isn't the only depart- ment in which Shatto makes the Twin-Double Payoff Proves Fatal To Man WESTBURY, N.Y. (AP)--An unidentified man, who hit the jtwin doutfle for $10,899 on a $2 bet last Saturday at' Roosevelt |Raceway, died of a heart at- jtack Monday night as he was jabout to cash the ticket, After the man fell, a specta- ried 169 times for 1,121 yards --an average of 6.6 yards a carry. Ottawa's Dave Thelen is next with 805 yards on 130 carries. The man many in the East seems to be touting as the outstanding player in the coun- try--Hamilton's Garney Henley --is the worst enemy of oppos- ing passers. Henley has inter- cepted six, two in Sunday's game, and teammate Joe Zuger five. Ottawa's Ernie White is still I finally caught you, didn't) oe King City, Regal Fashion, Xalapa |Curry, and Pot o 70) 60| , SIXTH RACE -- 1 Mile for 2-year-olds. Allowance, Purse $2700, (9). McComb Start good, won easily. Also Ran in Order: Master Mait_ ty |Mail Ceasar, A--Rustic Gentleman, Care- |Winner br c 2 Dutch Lane -- Miss Chopp-\iess Kate, A--Marathon Runner, and Full Honors. |A--Coupled. T. Trainer, R. Barnard. Pool $48,191. SEVENTH RACE -- 1'4 Miles. For 3 Purse $10,000 added. Gross $11,475, (6). 4-Dr. Giddings, D'fach ... 2-Etimota, Hernandez .... 3-Johns Champ, Walsh Start good, won driving Also Ran in Order: Brother Leo, Bofjac, and Cesca. Winner, b c, 3, Paper Tiger by Feature Time. Trainer, J C Meyer. 64 4.20 3.60 -. 7.20 5,00 .00 "They don't do that to any- one else. They just call the penalty and skate off." | Black Hawk general manager| Tommy Ivan denied reports) that he charged into the refer-| ee's room after the game and| chewed out) Buffey. "I didn't enter the room," he) said. "I stood by the door.) Words were exchanged, but| they were not as serious as the report indicated, It was no more jin a class by himself in return- ing kickoffs.He's handled 19 for 665 yards--an average of 35 yards a return. Rookie Netminder Sets Torrid Pace NEW YORK (AP) -- Roger Crozier of Pittsburgh Hornets, a 150-pound goalie with only eight games in the American |Hockey League in four previ- ;ous seasons has turned into the |league's top goaltender. Crozier, a graduate «of St. Catharines juniors, played a full 70 games with St. Louis Braves last season in the now- defunct Eastern Professional Hockey League, posting a 4.27 goals against average. This year he was ticketed as only an: emergency goaltender with Pittsburgh. Crozier, only | 21, got jsen became a_ holdout. He's {played all of Pittsburgh's five | Black Hawks is Reg Fleming. | ling star) is. not a clean player, his* chance when veteran Hank Bas-} than usual." In answer to questions, Reay made these observations: "The 'roughest ptayer on the /The roughest in the league is |Bobby Baun of Toronto. "Gordie Howe (Detroit's scor- but he doesn't go into a game looking for trouble. When it GOYETTE TIES WATSON'S MARK NEW YORK (AP)--Phil Goyette didn't set a Na- tional Hockey League rec- ord with his four assists in one pericd against Bosien Sunday. The New York Ranger only tied the record. Jhil Watson, former Ranger player and coach, established the mark with his four assists when he played with Montrea! Cana- diens. It happened on March injury suffered in a high school/college, one sandlot and one pro-|tor picked up the ticket and was games so far and has allowed game the week before. On Sat-'fessional -- Olympic sprinter urday, Thomas Warren Jr., 16, Stone Johnson of Kansas City of New Hartford, N.Y., died of|Chiefs of the American Foot- ja head injury suffered in a jum-'ball League. abcut to go off with it when he was tackled by a special peiice- man, The valuable ticket was |retrieved. jis under the 3.00 'average. jonly'11 goals for a 2.20 goals against average. No ofher goalie in the league | 18, 1944. 3 check of NHL arch.vas; skowed Menday And who was Watson's victim thaf night? New York Rangers. |Winner gr ¢ 2 Bull Page -- Sunburnt. id. Pool $64,836. EIGHTH RACE -- 1 Mile. For jear- olds a up. Claiming all $2500. Purse $1900, (8) 10.00 5.60 4 Trainer W. H. Moorhead, Pool 44,422 FOURTH RACE -- | Mile for three- year-olds and up. Claiming all $2500. Purse $1900. (9) 9-Buc Fever, Smith 19.00 10.60 7.50 2-Oshawa 2nd, Dittfach +: 8.50 5.40) 7-Swampscot, McComb Start good, won driving Also Ran In Order: Brierama, Toronto Street, Copper Cliff, Last Dividend, Malu- cina and Plin. Winner dk b or br g 4 Royal Note-- Flying Start. Trainer J. W. Hunter, Pool 51,584 y TT MONEY EARN dh 4 ON TERM DEPOSITS 1-Split the Loot, Fitz'ns . 10 $10 6.10 5-Scoot Joe, Walsh Start good, won easily : Fiddlestick, Sassie Maid, Vee Gee Cee, Fort Strome, and Nearali. Trainer, S Caplan. Pool $64,578 Total Pool $430,008 2-Sun and Wind, Dittfach 4.20 Also Ran in Order: Winner, br m, 5, Fairforall by Midterm. Attendance 7,977, GUARANTY TRUST CANADA'S LARGEST INDEPENDENT TRUST COMPANY \ 32 KING ST. E 728-1653

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy