Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jun 1966, p. 22

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22 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, June 24, 1966 THE ART OF DISDAIN seems typical of many Poles in his apparent dis- dain for Communist values. This young artist, with his outdoor show. of ab- stract _art _in Warsaw, WOODBINE RESULTS TORONTO (CP) bine race track First--Purse year-old fillies, Malestic Sal Cleonia (Hale) Phantom Royal Time: %40 3-5 Maebest, Caballo dette, Fair Solastra, also ran. Results at Wood-, Flinger Thursday. | Eevee $2,400, maiden three-| FifthPurse $2,500, 1} mile lyear-olds and up, | (Barroby) 3.90 3.10 2.80|Try Brandy Gomez) 14.60 7.50/Fabison (Barroby) 6.20|Mighty Patrol Time: 1:45 45 Market Bid, Win-T-Bird also ran also ran claiming, four 1-16 miles. 3.60 2.60 4.90 Werry) Be Gitt Baha, Lady Acceptable - ~ Sixth--_Purse $2,600, three-year-olds, 6 furlongs i Second--Purse $2,000, claiming, three-|Spike C. C. (McComb) 13.40 3.90 2. end four-year-olds, 6 furlongs. Quick Response (Fitzsimmon) 2.50 2. Boston Mills (Ditffach) 5.80 3.80 3.20|Nearctic Myth (Parrott) 3 Sweet Trouble (Walsh) 12.60 7.90) Time: 1:12 1-5. Berolina (Maxwell) 8.01} Ablegate, Money Galore, Time; 1:13 1-5 B., Chopmar, Royal Miss Orono, Caniris, Nearco,|eous also ran. Prince Guard, London W' m, --_-- Le Mique. Neptune's H. y Bip, Magic Queen, Needlin AT aiso ran a 0 a Encounter, Right ar Exactor: $29 $3,000. furlongs Boy) 35.60 10.20 §.20 (Hale) 490 3.60 Northern Doli Harrison) 47 2.90 2.80 2.50 1:17 3-5, 2.80 2.50 Warrant, Regal Image Lazy Rhythm, Garden's also ran Baby also ran Seventh Purse four-year-olds, 6' Birthday three- and Daily Double: 12.10 Third--Purse $2,200, maiden two-year elds, about § furlongs Ring Francis (Gomez Wormwood Serubs (McComb) Time Payment (Hale) Time: 1:00 25 Speedy Redbird, Fast Fare, Blue, Toge Sea, Famous Tour Chineo Ace Eighth_Purse $2,200, claiming, year-olds and up, 1 1-16 miles Hoss's Pick (Harris four Fourth--_Purse " 100, claiming, four ear-olds and up, 6'2 furlongs |Bonnie Zenith (McComb) 'ake Notice (Turcotte) 19.70 7.60 $.40/Centores (Griffo) Triple Alliance (Werry) 12.70 z 80; Time: 1:47 45 meme: Connell) 3.40; Dumelie, Communicate, Time: 1:19, North Woods, Li'l Eddy, Gay Pageant, Chinese Sabre, Tanwood, Maytown, Ringer! WOODBINE ENTRIES SATURDAY, JUNE 25 osmic Grey, Bell X06 Lorirst RACE -- Purse $2,200 Claiming) Definitely Right, No Boy 114 $8000 Four-vear-cids and up. One and|Doubting Thomas, Fitzsimmons 119 one 1éth Miles on Turf Course (19) Doniands, Admiral Armbro, Hale 113 Margabelia Thomas 8B. Good, Heim 113 Day We Sail, Jet invader, Barroby 116 | Caideon Star, Cenadian Zenith, No tg 113 | Snow Time, T reotte | Northern Miner All FIFTH RACE Purese $10.000 added No ad 18 Highlander Stakes Handicap" Three. Werry Xi08 year-olds and up. 6 Furs (7) 116 |Rright Object, Gomez A120 and of Canaan, No Boy 116 9.90 Systems Go. Inferes also ran, Attendance: 6,198. Handle: $422,331, Dittt Winning Score, Hernandez 116 Red Purse, McCMomb 113 Royal Tara, Walsh } Le' on Bid, No Boy 8113 Brockton Boy, No Ann's Reply, Dittfach | Or Maxwel Wanless, Kornblum 108 Whistling Sea, Fitzsimmons Also Eligible: Royal Doctor, Steve a-Gardeiner Farms and Hil 108; Miss Blackhawk, No Boy 108) Mas (EXACTOR WAG , No Boy B Direct Ac Mr. T. F. Harris A SIXTH RACE Smithers and W. Moldow | sand' Allowances Bn entry, BT. F. King, W. T. Mason and Fos Meadow Acres entry b SECOND RACE F ' $3000) four-year-olds and up © $2,000 Cla 6 Fur Peaches Reward Goiden Bubb Virginia Queen, Rig Mount Market Cretaceous Rocky, Walsh 117 5 SEVENTH RACH Purse $50,000 add The Queen's Plate' Three-year-olas SEVENTH RACE Purse $50,900 add The Queen's Plate Foaled in Canada One and Echo Lad, Barroby 126 Grille BX106. the Hangman, Turcotte 126 Cairnarct 6 Bright Monarch, Bare 126 Arclic Troops, Dittlach 126 Titled Hern, Gomez 126 Famous Monarch, Zivkovic, A126 Radiant Colors, No Boy 126 ve and Near, McCMomb Holarctic, Fitzsimmons Als Jive, Potts % en e4 Three year-olds No Boy Alls 4 Miles (13) No Boy 1" Valecrast Broom, Kornblum AF M Maxwe ; So Park, Harris 121 Merrill Jr. entry, BJ, Wright and J./A-F. A AND F H Sherman entry Stork entry a: 2 h EIGHTH RACE Purse $2,300 Claim ng (84000 and one 16th Miles (10 Fleet to Air, Dittfach 116 Brief Wind; No Boy 11! Elim Wood, No Boy 113 egend, Ferro X110 No Boy 113 No Roy 116 No Boy 116 Harris 113 s Hope, No Bov 116 Ramsay 2nd, Gomez 123 r\X-5 Ibs AAC: XX-7 Ibs AAC )AAC. Post Time 2 p.m THIRD RACE wood' Allowances Purese $2,600 "Holly Twoyear-olds, § Furs Level Jay, 4 Fleet Age Pousse Cate, Right Page, Turcotte {14 Crimson North, No Boy |!7 Pine Point, Nob Any 117 Bell's Corner, MeCMomb 117 Fitzsimmons No Boy 172 Dittiach 119 FOURTH RACE Purese "Tweed Plate' Allowances olds. Foaled Canada GARDEN CITY RACEWAY piney RACE -- | Mile $800 XX-10 Ibs in Pace urse;4-Sam The Man © &Danny Bee Volaw 2.70) 3-Davie Blue, Norris 2.40 Also Started: Single Goose,. Unique Richard, Tonke G, Ida Howard, and trish Blue Bilich 13.30 §.80 4.50 McKinley 4.70 3.60 + Red es Beitlich bApatche Grattan 14.60 Knight 410 2.60 SIXTH RACE $800 (8 1 Mile (Pace), Purse SECOND RACE -- Senator, Duford €.90 5.20 2.80 en 0 G Express, Galbraith 11.30 3.60 5-Vital 2Glendaie Jos, Varcoe 2.70 éCherry Freeze Also Started: Andy Byrd. Mighty Mid BRiddell Gold 3.10 night, Major's Missey, B. Direct and Sun: Also Started Lee M Wayne Hall, and Who's Scratched, Captain Ridde DAILY DOUBLE, 3 AND §, PAID $77.20 CONSOLATION DOUBLE, 3 AND 2. PAID $12.80 Vietory,. Robinson SEVENTH RACE -- 1 Mile (Pace 2 $900 (7 Crowe 1480 7.4 4.50 9.60 9.20 Hie 4.80 rish Ensign and Captain Dillon, Misty Cap Mile Also Started ¥ Bob. Arth ) ako} Scrate nley THIRD RACE -- 1 $900 é-Nan . SArmbro Gladiator Silver P Also Started " Magic, DQ--Marcelia's Silver @harce, and Who's Hat BQ--Finished 3 disqualified and placed 4h for a lapped on break at the wire hed Mek ' EIGHTH RACE -- 1 Mile (Pace Debora $90 3.40 2.70 7.40 4.10 Wellwood 3.00 Also Started: Piper Boy, Oneida. How. ard, Watson & Friseo, Attorney's Bob, and Ambrose Abbe Oxford Abbe, FOURTH RACE -- 1 Purse $800 (7 Wjarmite, Feagan }-Tom 7 Smit Mile (Pace 2.10 2.90 2.30 NINTH RACE 00 280/$1.400 (7 - 1 Mile (Trot). Purse 10.70 480 4.00 3.30 tarted Meadow (ates Scratched, Suverior Brooke PUrse| Attendance 2.435 PIPTH RACH -- 1 Mile (Pace ooo (8) Total Poot $147,400 i be a blend of (CP Photo) West still Poland; country Culturally, the sets the pace for economically, the Full-SIZED WIGS HELP - KEEP MODERN GEORGE HAPPY NEW YORK (AP) -- Keep your eye on Modern George. He's as changeable as a appears to both systems 40} (Harris) ria savings. Busy men who match theirs to their own current hair color can go under cover Once Grim Scene By CAROL KENNEDY the wet Flanders weather. 'Quiet Back Garden Woods launched @ brave counter-at- tack as the Germans swept up to their section of the line. Buller was killed urging his men on. Sanctuary Wood cost the Patricias 400 casualties, including 150 dead. FAILED TO FOLLOW UP This was the only time dur- Of Battle fles and a trench mortar bat- backed by the RCR, they fr lowed orders issued before the battle and dug in about 700 yards from their original line. The newly appointed Cana- dian commander-in-chief, Lt.- Gen, Sir Julian Byng, a Brit- ish cavalry officer destined to become governor - general of A cheap cafe, loud with jukebox music, marks the site now. Outside. a signboard in English, French and Flemish informs the tourist who ~ toiled up ihe iong rise f the Menin Road, main iresy of the First World War Ypres salient, that this was onne the immortal battlefield of Sanctuary Wood." The battlefield, or what is left of it, is in the back gar- den. For five francs and a touch of imagination, you step back 50 years, into grass- grown trenches and dank dug- outs, past sad heaps of rusty, bullet-torn tin hats and the antiquated weapons of 1914-18. It is oddly quiet in the little | wood at the end of the garden. Scarred, dead stumps of trees loom ghostly amid young green foliage above what was | once the Canadian front line. Here on June 2, | the Canadian | mowed down by the heaviest 1916, men of Corps were artillery bombardment seen up to that point in the war. After 12 days of heroic re- sistance and counter - attack, during which Canadian artil- lerymen were reduced to defending their guns at re volver - point, total Canadian casualties numbered about 9,000. Never was a hattlefield named with more bitter irony. FORMED KEY BULWARK By 1916 the Ypres salient was the most dreaded part of the Western front for the fighting men of both sides. A | broad semicircle of low-lying clay fields around. the gabled, medieval city of Ypres, it formed the Allied bulwark be- tween the advancing Ger- mans and the Channel ports The war here had become almost static, with the op- posing armies crouched in a web of trenches that turned to water-logged death - traps in , der Lt.-Gen. M. §. Mercer, Thousands died each day for the gain or defence of a few hundred yards of shell-torn By June, 1916, the Germans held most of the ridge of low hills around the salient, giving them a commanding field of fire. Only one part of the crest was in Allied hands, Held by the Canadian 3rd Division un- it formed the most easterly pro- jection. of the salient into enemy territory and guarded one of the main approaches to Ypres. The chief Canadian vantage points were a flat knoll called Mount Sorrell and two higher rises known as Hills 61 and 62. Northwards the ground fell away to the Menin Road, the long straight highway to Ypres down which men and machines were funnelled to the front lines. From Hill 62 a broad spur named Observa- tory Ridge thrust westwards between two small woods, Armagh Wood and Sanctuary Wood. EXTENDED TRENCHES During May, Canadian pa- trols reported German recon- naissance trenches being pushed towards Hill 62. The Germans also appeared to be bringing up more heavy artil- lery, but weather conditions made continuous observation impossible. Opposing the Canadian 7th and 8th Brigades at this cru- cial point in the front line were two division of the Kai- ser's crack Wurttemberger Corps. The Canadian 7th Brigade included two of Can- ada's most famous infantry regiments, the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light In- fantry and the Royal Cana- dian Regiment: the 8th Brig- ade comprised five battalions of the Canadian Mounted Ri- tery. The fact that the clash was between two proud national ty oueugunen the "determination of each side to win, The morning of June 2 dawned clear and sunny. At 6 a.m. Maj.-Gen. Mercer and rig. - Gen. Victor Williams, commanding the 8th Brigade, set out on a tour of inspection. They had just reached the frontline trenches of the 4th Canadian Mounted Rifles when 'the air exploded with the heaviest shell barrage any Allied troops had encountered in 22 months of war. ALMOST WIPED OUT For four hours a torrent of gunfire ravaged the Canadian positions, with the worst brunt falling on the 8th Brigade. The 4th Canadian Mounted Rifles were practically annihilated, with 89 per cent casualties. Mercer was killed, Williams wounded and taken prisoner. At one point the air was so thick with flying shells a sur- vivor recalled hearing two shells meet head-on "with a shriek like a woman in agony." Private Gordon Jarrett, an Englishman who jvined the Patricias in Canada and who believes he was the last man taken prisoner at Sanctuary Wood, recalls the German in- fantry advancing with a confident, almost leisurely air in perfect. line forma- tion," towards the Canadian trenches. Fierce hand-to-hand fighting followed, in which the Ger- mans used flamethrowers when they met particularly tough resistance. In a few hours the Wurttem- bergers had seized Armagh Wood. The surviving Patricias un- der their popular commanding officer, Lt. Col. H. C. Buller, scocmmenmanianid held by Canada, ordered all ground lost to be retaken in a coun- ter - attack early the navt morning. Two brigades of the ist Division moved in to re- nlace the heavy Insses af the 3rd Division. The Canadians advanced 1,000 yards but the operation was only a partial success, A second counter-attack was set up for June 6, then post- poned for a week because of bad weather. war that em The road to Ypres now lay open to the Germans. But, as in so many cases during the Flanders campaign, they failed to take full advantage of the situation, apparently taken by surprise at their suc- cess. Instead of attempting to roll up the Canadian left wing the Patricias and Unmatched DID YOU KNOW... that --Sinplicity. . offers this Exclusive . . . CHROME WRINGER TOP AND HAND RESTS @ Quality Controlled @ for cleen, clean washes. naa «<7 TERMS AVAILABLE BEFORE YOU BUY... ... GIVE STARR A TRY STARR Furniture and Appliance 723-3343 491 Ritson S. OPEN FRI, TO 9 P.M. 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