Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Nov 1964, p. 8

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November 13, 1964 § THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, - SIGN FOR MIDDLEWEIGHT TITLE FIGHT Middleweight Champion Joey Giardello, right, and challenger Ruben "Hurricane" Carter pretend to wrestle over the contract they signed in Philadelphia yesterday. The two will meet in Philadelphia's Convention Hall on Decem- ber 14. It will be the' bout postponed from October 23 when the two were scheduled to fight in Las Vegas. Giar- CANADA OUTDOORS Sportsmen Paradise Near 'Le Domaine By JOE DUPUIS LE DOMAINE, Que. (CP)-- You can fish for pike, hunt or camp in the wilderness and wine and dine in luxury -- all without straying far from Le Domaine, Le Domaine is a collection of unpretentious white frame buildings set on the banks of Lac des Loups (Wolf Lake) 35 miles deep in La. Verendrye| Park in western Quebec. At first glance the region looks wild and lonely. "Ah, but here in Le Domaine one savors real Quebec hos- pitality," says Lionel Bertrand, Quebec's minister of tourism, game and fish. : "The cuisine, c'est parfait," he says, referring to the em- phasis on such French-Canadian dishes as hog's hocks, pea soup or la tourtiere (a meat pie) in the government-operated chalet. Industrialist Herb O'Connell built the chalet in the early 1950s as a place to entertain his friends, many of them flew into the area in small planes on a landing strip he laid out two miles away. workers he hired to build the first dirt. road through the do- main. "A one-room building he put up a short cast from the chale* became a sort of Las Vegas- style night club with slot' ma- chines but without strippers. It now houses the park's biological laboratory. BECAME PARK The provincial later turned the area into a 5,000-square-mile park, named after the discoverer of the Ca- nadian Rockies, Sieur de la Ver- endrye, and took over operation of the chalet, although Mr. O'Connell's name in big faded white letters can still be read on the red-shingle roof. The Outdoor Writers of Can- ada, meeting in Quebec for the first time, got an opportunity to see the park when Mr. Bert- rand played host to the organiz- ation this fall, The Indian summer weather prompted the writers to journ their meetings early an try their hand at fishing. Guide Eddie Warner took one party government He put up some large cot- tages for his friends and for GREENWOOD RACE RESULTS FIRST RACE -- Purse $2000, Claiming. Two-year-olds. 7 Furiongs (9) S-trish Joe, Walsh 75.30 4.00 3.10 \-Lucky Bean, Gomez 2.60 2.30 4&Silk'n Saphires, Turcotte 5.50 Start good, won ridden out Also. Ran in Order: Maytown, Colour Her Fleet, Mandolas, Scotty K., Five Loves and Wee Annie Dory. Winner, b ¢, 2, Trojan Monarch -- Canni- kin by Pompey. Trainer W © Chris, Poo! $29;145 Double Pool $46,886 SECOND RACE -- Purse $1900. Claim-| ing. Three-year-olds and up. 7 Furlongs 2) | S-Seek and Find, Maxwell 5.10 80 7-Prilynn, Walsh x» 1-Our Interview, Gordon 30 Start good, won driving Also. Ran in Order: Gum Swamp, Am- brose Gal, Feverzauber, Currytown, Suc- cesso, Pay Parade, Silverette, Highest Reward and Gallumphant DAILY DOUBLE, $ AND 5, PAID $47.10 Winner, b og, 4 ,Law and Order -- Hide and Seek by Alibhai, Trainer F H Merrill 4.60 3 N00 7 9 dr. Pool $42,848 THIRD RACE -- Purse $2000, Ciaim- ing. Two-year-olds. 7 Furfongs (9) 3To The Victor, Gornez 4.50 3.20 7-Moon Base, Elliott 8.90 @Lucky Draw, Leblanc Start good, won handily Also Ran in Order: A-Dark War, A Saratanga, Gaisin Thru, Georgia St., Win Dixie and Bingham. A--Mrs D Krever Irwin Entry. Winner, dk b or br c, 2, Roman Tread -- Susan Cherrill by Southern Pride. Trainer JC Meyer. Pool $54,024 6 60 40 and Mr and Mrs E FOURTH RACE -- Purse $1900. Ciaim- ing. Three-year-olds and up. 7 Furlongs @ @-Jessie B. Good, H'son 28.70 8.80 4.70 TArtista, Gomez 3.60 2.70 2-Friend Willie, Robinson 3. Also Ran in Order: Falsun, Plucky , Magic Shan, Last Hurrah, Mister by Boss Hoss. Trainer J Drexter. Pool $56,617 FIFTH RACE -- Purse $2000, Claiming. Three-year-olds and up. 7 Furlongs. 6Popsaysno, Cuthb'son 4.10 2.60 2.20 24sland Flag, Harris 2.80 2.30 5-Skip Over, Gordon 2.70 Start good, won handily Also Ran in Order: Superior Parent and Bronze Turkey Winner, b h, 6, Ambiorix -- Diesel Power by Polynesian. Trainer F H Merrill Jr. Pool $28,277 'Quinella Pool $35,222 QUINELLA, 6 AND 2, PAID $10.60 Three-year-olds. One Mile (8) 4-Poppy Talk, Walsh 18.00 7.00 4.00 6-Sept Erin, Gomez 7,00 4.00 3-Fieldglass, Dittfach 3.40 Start good, won driving Also Ran in Order: Barbara Bain, Gay Van, Prime Princess, Falls Way and Sign Play ' Winner, ch g, 3, War Poppy -- Elcee by Sgt. Spence. Trainer J Higgins. Pool $67,194 SEVENTH RACE -- Purse $2400. Claim- ing. Three-year-olds and up. 7 Furlongs (9) 3-Milator, Dittfach 17.10 9.20 5.80 9-Reap The Wind, Armstrong 19.50 10.60 8-Arthur H, Leblanc 1 Start good, won driving Also Ran im Order: Out of Credit Curb, Nona's Charger, Swoon Star and Thule. Winner, ch g, 4, Vibrator -- Mil Mor by Peace Chance. Trainer R E Fisher. Pool $63,978 Pocket, Acouchi, EIGHTH RACE -- Purse $2000. Claim ing. Three-year-olds and up. One and one- sixteenth Miles (9) 4-Sauvagette, H'son 7-Crucial Hit, Fitz'ns 6Gentle Queen, Start good, won handily Also Ran in Order: Shere Khan, 13.00 6.20 4.20 4.10 3.20 6.80. Hash, Bonnie Bird, and Enlyn Lad. , Winner, ch m, 5, Ferd -- Avona by Four Freedoms. Trainer M Friend. Pool $71,561 Total Pool $495,762 Well Now, Falpala Parkham and Penepop' ie. Winner, b m, 6, Wild Drift. -- Supervisor Attendance 7,273 ark ale SIXTH RACE -- Purse $2100. Claiming 4.10 1 Sun} dello walked out at that time when the promoters were un- able to come with his $55,000 guarantee, --(AP Wirephoto) hours, long enough for each member to snag his quota of five walleye--still - fishing with minnows. > Nick Karas, a free-lance out- doors writer:from New York, was the _ convention's guest spéaker. He was first on the lake and got his five fish quickly, including a fat four- pounder. | Ron J. Cooke, a Montreal!) magazine publisher, was ~one delegate who has been fishing the lake for years. "There are still lots of fish here," he said, "but I can re- member a few years ago when you could drop a line just off the pier and get enough to fill a boat in no time." Today guides take anglers to | BRITISH SOCCER Player Transactions Feature Active Week LONDON (Reuters) -- It was an active week for buyers in '~p-flight British soccer. the League's first division, has shelled out £62,000 ($186,000) for two players from Scotland. Glasgow Rangers, languishing in eighth place among the 17 first-division teams in the Scot- tish League, entered the trans- fer market to purchase inside- forward Thorof Beck from St. Mirren's Icelandic. The Sunderland club paid a Scottish first-division club, Hi- bernian, £36,000 for Irish full- back John Parke, Then Harry Hood, Clyde's inside - forward, joined Sunderland at a price of £26,000. Sunderland won promotion back to the first division last season after being relegated in 1957-58. SOUGHT BY OTHERS Hood, a promising 20-year-old who is equally effective as cen- tre-forward, had been sought by two other clubs within in last week, First, transfer talks with line Scottish club Celtic broke down, and then Stoke City failed to sign him. Parke is a member of the Northrn Ireland team _ that mee's Switzerland in a World Cup qualifying match Saturday, and reports at Sunderland after thet came. dasgow Rangers, cock of the walk for so many years in Scot- tish soccer, signed Beck in an attempt to boost the effective- ness of their attack. Beck, who cost them in the region of £20,000, is the second Icelander to play for Rangers. The other was right winger Al- bért Gudmundson, who ap- peared with Rangers just after the Second World War and then joined Arsenal, ; Beck signed for St. Mirren from Reykjavik three years ago and has made several appear- ances for the Iceland interna- tional team. FAiD TOP PRICE of the week Thursday by going to £40,000, an English third-di- vision record, for Ken Wagstaff, 2l~year-old Mansfield town cen- tre-forward. Hull beat a num- |ber of English first - division Remember When? ... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Torchy Peden, Victoria's six-day bicycle rider, estab- lished a world's one mile speed mark at Minneapolis 33 years ago today--in 1931. Paced by an automobile, Peden pedalled the distance in 48 2-5 seconds--16 sec- locations several miles from Le Domain's pier. : | onds better than the pre- vious mark set in 1917. Hull City paid the top price; clubs to get Wagstaff, who was the country's leading scorer with 41 goals in the 1962-63 sea- son when Mansfield won pro- motion to the third division. Hull, ohe of the richest clubs in the country, has recently spent £53,000 on a new gym- inasium and practice field and £48,000 on floodlighting. An in-form Wagstaff should help Hull make certain of vic- tory over nondleaguers Kidder- minster in Saturday's first round of the Football Associa- tion Cup. In the English first division, interest will be centred on two clashes: first-place Manchester United at Blackpool, and sec- ond-place Chelsea at home to Everton, 'United slammed Borussia Dortmund 6-1 in the Inter-cities Fairs Cup in West Germany Wedriesday but is likely to find Blackpool a tougher proposi- tion. Chelsea, a point behind United in the standings, won through to the quarter-finals of the foot- ball league Wednesday by down- ing Swansea 3-2. It will be hop- ing to maintain its recently im- proved form against Everton, which has.won four of its nine Crippled Horse Takes Feature . TORONTO (CP) -- Milator, improving despite a broken bone in his right hoof, led all the way in winning the featured $2,400 Lion d'Or Purse at Greenwood Race Track Thurs- day. Owned by Frank Junger of Burlington, the four - year - old was a length better than F. W. Hewbrough's Reap the Win over the seven furlongs. Third in the field of nine was Arthur H., owned by C. Currie and N. Hilson. Milator, with Hugo Dittfach in the irons, was four lengths in front with a furlong to go and was pushed to hold off Reap the Win. The winning time of 1:25 2-5 was a second off the track record. Milator had the bone injury when he was claimed six weeks ago. He was running in-a $3,500 claiming race at the time and finished second. "The injury doesn't seem to bother him much," said trainer Bobby Fisher. "It's right in the hoof and apparently calcium has formed around it to hold it firm." Trainer Frank Merrill, a Brantford native, saddled two winners to increase his meet- leading total to 16, nine more than Lou Cayalaris of Toronto and Andy Smithers of Vancou- road games this season, FIRST RACE -- 1 mile pace for all ages, Purse $600 (8). 4Paper Doll C, Coke 4M 2.50 2.10 1-Miss Angela Mary, Feagen 3.10 2.30 6Mary Lyn, Madill 2.30. Start good, won easily. Also Ran in Order: Galie's Jet, Go Far Broke, Stormy Grattan, Countess Byrd M, and Sam The Man, SECOND RACE -- | mile trot for 3 year-olds and up. Purse $600 (7). 5-Gay Gill, Wellwood 4.60 3.30 2.60 7-Wind Song, Madill 4.60 3.60 6Chub Hanover, Fillion 3.40 Start good, won handily. Also Ran in Order: Brown Wolf, Tim's Lad, Buckaroo, and Rose Oveimo. DAILY DOUBLE, 4 AND 5, PAID $9.50) Late Can.,, My Grandson. } THIRD RACE -- 1 mile pace for + year-olds end up. Purse $600 (8). |1-C'maron G'tan, McRann 4.20 2.60 2.30 |4-Gait Way Express, Filion 2.90 2.50 |8-Success Don, Reynolds 2.60 | Start good, won driving, Also Ran in Order: Hieland Direct, Highland Gien, Hal Spirit, Doctor Blackie, and Shy Counsel. FOURTH RACE -- | mile trot for 3 year-olds and up. Purse $700 (7) GARDEN CITY RACEWAY jLady G, Attorney's Bob, Harmony Chips, jand Favonian Grattan, ver who are tied for second. 4Allan Wilmac, W'wood 4.80 2.70 2. l-Success Yankee, Dufty 3.00 6-Sparky Bars, Stillar Start good, won driving, Also Ran in Order: Countess Clay, Joan's Commander, Dell Humes, Victor High C, and Jerry Direct C. QUINELLA, 4 AND 1, PAID $11.20 40 2.80 3.50 SEVNNTH RACE -- 1 mile pace for 3 year-olds and up. Purse $800 (8), 4-Royal Bunter, Gagon 6.90 3.70 2.70 6Wee Governor, Campbell 3.20 5-Miss Vera Grattan, Hayes 2.60 Start good, won driving. Also Ran in Order: Meadowview Champ, Brenda Dillard, Doris Adios, Boston Wick, and Hal's Bomb. 4.70 EIGHTH RACE -- 1 mile pace for 3 year-olds and up, Purse $1,100 (8). 4-Superior Dale, T'pson 7.10 4.20 3.00 &Gina Guinea, -Beitlich 8.80 6.10 1-Virginia's Boy, Gordon 3,20 | Start good, won. driving. Also Ran in Order: Prince Locust, NINTH RACE -- | mile trot for 4year- olds and up. Purse $1,000 (8). 2-Clement Hanover, W'er 12.20 5.40 3.60 3-Diana Hunter, Feagan 10.40 6.70 6Saber, K'ston 8.70. 5.00 3.40} 3-Kintutica, Ingles 6.20 3.80) 4-Titan Scott, Beitlich 4 Start good, won driving Also Ran in Order: Tootsie Doll, Sis- ter Matt, Willow Brook Happy, end Mr, Twist. Late Can., Royal McLean, FIFTH RACE -- 1 mile pace for 3-year- olds and up. Purse $600 (8). 8-Butch Z, Feagan 2-Baron Hal, Brown DQ-6-Shadow Stone, Wellwood Start good, won driving. Also Ran in Order: Rocky Senator, John Brent, Direct Vista, Jimmy Bel- wyn, and Melody Song. DQ--Finished 2nd, disqualified and placed 3rd for a lappe on break at the wire. SIXTH RACE -- 1 mile pace for 3% year-ols and up. Purse $700 (8). in or out of snow QUILTED ad-/ | | fits the action | handsomely } | 1 Our popular, new qui the slopes or the roads in high style. Picks yours from light, warm fabrics and blends in bright outdoors colours. Door ike a pro, dress to "'go". out.on the lake for a couple of SKI PARKA Ited ski parka takes PRICED FROM 9-99 © BOYS' SKI JACKETS -- 6.88 © No Down Payment Necessary DUNN'S 5-Prince Cope. Gordon 6.10 Start good, won driving, | Sues Owner For Damages HALIFAX (CP) -- James (Jim) MacLean, former de- fenceman with Halifax Tartans of the Nova Scotia Senior Hockey League, Thursday sued former team owner Ignatius Kennedy of Halifax: for dam- ages resulting from the loss of of MacLean's right eye. MacLean lost his eye in an accident in a game in Monct USSR Soccer Fans Losing Interest MOSCOW (AP) -- Soviet soc- cer fans, among the. world's most avid, are losing interest team suffered In Madrid and the Olympic team in Warsaw" last summer, it said Thursday. "And this is understandable-- the national teams' class of play is determined by the play of the club teams." in the game, says the newspa- per Izvestia. The reason, it said, is the football heroes' inability to win important matches abroad. "We'll be frank--interest in the games fell after the defeats which the U.S.S.R. national WESTERN OIL CO. @ FREE © last Dec. 21. against Moncton Hawks. Kennedy later gave up the team, which was taken over by new sponsors and re-named the Halifax Schooners, Chief Justice J. L. Isley ad- journed the case for decision. MacLean, who said he was being paid $150 a week by the Tartans, testified that Kennedy had said players would be 'looked after" in case of in- jury. MacLean and Bill Hanson, the team captain, both said that Kennedy told them his lawyer was looking aftér the players' |insurance. About $1,000 was raised for Maclean by the team in a ben- efit game. Toronto Hosts Sr. Grid Final MONTREAL (CP) -- St. Lam- bert Saints are hoping for good weather to take advantage of their strong passing game when they meet East York Argonauts Sunday in Toronto for the East- ern Canadian senior' football title, Using a twin-quarterback sys- tem, the Saints have averaged almost 45 points a game in go- ing undefeated with 11 wins this season. Pete Rylander, first - string quarterback with the University of New Brunswick during his college days, is St. Lambert's eeamaamamaae 1 YouR WEW i SPEEDY, ace signal-caller, noted for his ability to throw a long ball. © wae" ACE 723-5241 OSHAWA'S Newest Taxi Offering Sofe, Courteous Service 46 King St. W. Oshawa Also Ran in Order: Johnnie Laird, King Tony, Diller A Dollar, Silk Boy W, and Parlay 1 i Micsonves installed FREE in MINUTES at Oshawa's newest and finest MUFFLER INSTALLATION CENTRE | SPEEDY MUFFLER KING| 206 KING ST. WEST TEL. 728-6268 RA HAE ie AA GRE OREN OR ER A Open Mon. thru Sat. 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. 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