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The Oshawa Times, 28 Jul 1961, p. 11

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4 Horse Cartersville .... FORT ERIE RACE CHARTS Copyright, 1961 by McMurray Publishing Co. (Daily Racing Form) THURSDAY, JULY 27, 191 First Race 5% Furlongs, Purse $2,000, 2-year-old WLPP St % 19 1 3 1.3 13 114 4 5 4% 2h 104 81210.h 91 11°11 11 8-1 6-1 119 10° 1 51% 41% 2 4 2h 32% 3 6 7nk 52% 2 lo] 0 Kessava Isle of Roses Dezory Eagle Bask Epic Acco Land of Masia i 7 610 11-1 11- 113 8 8 91% 10.% 10912 7 6% 7-% 112 9 9122 12- § [Winner br g ? Dark Armor--Thumb Start good, won easily CLEAR AND FAST 10.90 6.40 6.30 20.20 13.30 11.10 1-C ART Thay ILLE 4-KES 8- ISLE or ROSES maidens, claiming all $5,000. Str. Fin Jockey Owner 1-3'% Gibb--H A Lure -3%3 2-4% Rob'son--M D Greatrex 3-12' Parnell-G C Hendrie 4-2 Morreale--C E Simmons 5-nk Remillard--R Gian 6-3 Fitzsimmons--C Taylor 7-13; Cosentino--G Groves 8-nk Gomez--Mrs Fishman 9-312 Brown--C Bordonare -1% Gubbins--Willow Down 11-4 113% Dittfach--J Edwards 12- 12- Olah--Triple H Sta Tack. Trainer C F Chapman Pool 18,625. + Double Poel an, a ¢ | Hickory - i |New Turbine Second Race 8% Furlongs, parse Sh 800, 4-year-olds . tPP St % a . . hi! 311 82 71 Go Rippey ...... 113 9 1 71 Kingwood «. 118 8 9 10h Double Spurs A Little Welch Gullfaxi Arrowette Sultop . 08 11311 8 9.21% 9.15 118 10 10 11-11. 118 2 7 51 6h 118 6 2 1h 31 Bill Loose Lip Crown Marble Winner ro f 4 The Sultan--Kleetop, Trainer E. Craigie. 3-8U LTOP 9.GO RIPPEY 8-KINGWOOD and up. claiming all $2,500, Str Fin Jockey Owner 1-244 1-6% Dittfach--H L Lam 3-2%3 2-%2 Despirito--C E Allan 3-1%Gordon--Leroy Tobey 42 Nash--R E Munson 5-1 Olah--F W Russell 6-12 Hale--G Matoff -0k 7h P"n'll-Edm't"n--LaPlante 8-2%4 McComb--Hickory Park 9-nk Gibb--Pattison, Strasberg 1 10-13% Gubbins--J J Sheahan 91 11 Potts--W E Stable hin anor FF THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, July 28, 1961 TT OLD COUNTRY SOCCER English Clubs Buy Top Scottish Stars Leslie Lawrie, Airdrie to West Ham, $50,400; Bert Auld, Celtic to Birmingham, $40,000; Doug Moran, Falkirk to Ipswich, $33,- 600; Jim Conway, Celtic to Nor- wich, $28,500; Ian Crawford, Hearts to West Ham, $19,600. At least another $280,000 is being dangled as bait before Scottish clubs in return for oth- By M. McINTYRE HOOD Special London, England Correspondent to The Times LONDON -- With training in full swing on the football grounds of English and Scottish soccer clubs, the shape-of- things to come in the 1961-1962 is beginning to take form. There has been more than the usual number of important transfers since the close of last season, and big money has changed hands in the market for star players. One of the big features of the transfer season has been the migration of top-ranking Scot- er players wanted in England. Arsenal are offering $112,000 for Ranger's Bill Stevenson. Dun- can Mackay, Celtic's interna- tional back, wants a transfer, and this involves an $85,000 fee. Fulham have offered Partick Thistle $40,000 for left-winger David McParland, and Man- tish players to English clubs, at chester City are ready with the Start good won easily. + pasar cso eat cn higher fees than ever before. cheque book to pay a big price Some 10 of the top Scottish for Third Lanark's David Hilley, DAILY | pou BLE 1 1 and 3 PAID $32.00 SOME NEVER THROW ONE BACK Paul Oederkerk, of South | ginner's luck" won him a Bend, Indiana, got himself | wager with his friend, Roy stamped as "'a pot hunter" the | Roelke, also of South Bend, very first time he tried his | who last year boated a 46- | luck at fishing. He is shown | pound trout from the same above proudly displaying the | lake. Novice Oederkerk bet he 51-pound, four-ounce lake trout | could do bet'er -- and came he pulled from God's Lake, in | up with this monster Northern Manitoba. This "be- | --CP Wirephoto ANGLER'S DREAM i Third | Race 5'z Furlongs, 32.000 Horse Lavella purse wi Castle Walk Marchena {Choppy Gale La Canadienne | Costafortune Kilcarn Street 107 1 Winner br f 2 Ball Page--Dress Cirele. Start Start good, won handily Fourth Race 1 Mile and 70 yards, $2,500 Wt PP St % 110 11 11 11 Horse Brown Ensign Royal Bolero Silly Set Peterboro Peel Express Little Dame Calipso Bob Elinor's Girl Win Dick 2 Jean Sirdar 10 6 5.nk 6-1%4 Impelo 113 6 8 93 9.1% Winner br g 3 Sir Pennant--Fildee, Start good, won driving Fifth Race 62 Furlongs, purse $1. id 4-year-olds Horse Wt PP St % 3 Chinese Bandit 109 > /! 2-2 Choppy Waves Switch Off Compactor | Bold Brigand Sleepy Dutchm"n 109 Rhythm King 10 21% 51 adonell, Start Kood, won driving Sixth Race § furlongs. Purse 32.500, 3-year-olds angup: fillies and mares, Allowances. wt Horse PP St % (A)DH-Chic Miss 121 6 § 51 DH-Peggy Page 12BROWN ENSIGN _ purse 31,900, 3- 3 PEGGY PAGE sin K R Marshall D'pirito--N. Amer, F' Euteman- H N Eads D'fach--Viscount Hardinge Ya Potts--Tedoreen Farm Harrison--Gormley Stud Trainer A MacMurchy 20.00 8.20 4.90 2-ROYAL BOLERO 6.10 5.80 4-SILLY SET 7.40 year-olds, Canadian foaled, claiming all Str. Fin Jockey Owner 1-2 Parnell-G B Heintztnan V2 2-13 Gomez--Red River Sta 3-1%2 Rob'son--E B Seedhouse 4-3 D'fach--Lanson Farm 5-14 McMullen--M J Hawking 6-6% H'rison--Mrs R C 7.no--Coy--A R Craig 8-94 Coy--Mrs S Cosentino 9-5 9-414 Brown--McMacken Sta 10-5 10-5% Desp'to--Dew Valley F'm 11 Olah--R E Ross J hy Meyer w Neuman a ody oh HOR RO os BANDIT 9.90 5350 4.30 5. C HOPPY WAVES 8- SWITCH OFF and up, claiming all $3,500 Str. Fin Jockey Owner 1-h Despirito--S Rotenberg 3 23% Dittfach--Red Hill Sta 3nk 30 Gomez--M J Badzmierski/duck hunt this year. 1 1} 1 4-1 Fitzsi'ns--Mrs A H Trudell % 52% Brown---G Taylor 6-n0 Olah--W N Walker 4 7.h Potts---Janley Sta -3 8-54 Parnell--J B Lauder 9-3 9-25 Adams--J Saliba 10- 10- Robinson--C G Uteck Frater F H Merrill Jr. Pool 56,200 1A-CHIC MISS (entry) (Deadheat) 50 2.60 260 mile nesting area 2.60 2.80 2.80 Canada produces 70 per cent of 250 260 260 North America's annual hatch| {bag limits" of wild ducks. F. H. (Hughie) Schultz, biolo-| British Columbia and Ontario, gist with the Canadian Wildlife, Mr. Schultz said. 235 (deadhead) 1-BLONDOLL (entry) Fin Jockey Owner AH 1 Dittfach--Gian and Tosch 1 1-14 Coy -- Seaway Sta 3-242 Robinson --- Mrs H A Lure ling Prairie region at point on record. Young ducks/gists now are working on new are dying by the thousands for(bag limits as a result of the _ lack of water the 220,000-square- in Western ened but there will likely be a DROUGHT TURNS 11960 DUCK SLOUGH INTO 1961 Hunting To Be Poor Drought On Prairies Killing Young Ducks OTTAWA put a pected as experts report duck- {southern Manitoba, survival on the Normally (CP)--Drought 480 370 the Canadian Prairies--the con-|destructive for ducks tinent's major breeding area for|crops, wild ducks--will crimp into North America's fall| he severe tive of Hespeler, Ont., the parched|wan and Alberta. on| thumbed through {from the Prairies. The sprawl- reports erfowl. Saskatche- lowest] Federal and provincial biolo- Schultz reported. | drought. The season may not be short- reduction in the{cent from last year. in most of the prov- inces, especially in the Prairies, 'substantial HAYFIELD "The weather has been as|last winter and little rain this|Henley regatta 32 years ago to- as for{spring produced very little run-/day at " said the 34-year-old na-|off into sloughs and potholes--|Jack Guest went on to win the today as|the main nesting areas for wat-| Diamond Sculls at the English The result has been that the| Reduced bag limits are ex-/ing nesting area covers most of "production of ducks in the area|an unsuccessful bid. normally considered the conti-| inent's duck factory is the low-| est it has been on record," Mr. In southern Saskatchewan, |chusetts Boxing Commission "the heart of the duck country," Wednesday granted a licence to an aerial survey indicated the population will be cut by 37 per Some 3,253,800 of the spirited game birds such as mallards and pintails flew from that prov- |to Manchester City, stars have gone south, and in return for them, over $680,000 of good English money has gone into the coffers of Scottish clubs. Here is the line-up of this se- lected list of players now in the Anglo-Scot category: IMPRESSIVE LIST Bobby Kennedy, OFFER MORE MONEY Much of this situation is due to the higher terms being offer- ed to players by English clubs. Scottish clubs cannot match these figures, hence the rash of transfer requests and transfers. Blackburn Rovers have trans- ferred their Irish international centre forward Derek Dougan to Aston Villa at a fee of over $42,000. Dougan would not ac- cept Blackburn's terms, and will receive more money from Villa. Paul Richards. Denies Report: Going To Texas BALTIMORE (AP) -- Man- ager Paul Richards of Balti- more Orioles Wednesday denied reports that he would quit the team next year to take a base- ball job in his native Texas. A report from New York said he would take over as general manager of the new Houston club when the Colts enter the expanded National League next year. Another report, published Hy the Baltimore News-Post, sald Richards, 52, would become manager, general manager, or both of the Dallas-Fort Wor, team in the Class AAA Ame ican Association. Kilmarnock, $126,000; {John McLeod, Hibernian to Ar- {senal, $112,000; George Herd, {Clyde to Sunderland, $112,000; (Ian St. John, Motherwell to Liv- {erpool, $98,000; Ron Yeats, Dun- {dee United to Liverpool, $62,000; REMEMBER WHEN . . . By THE CANADIAN PRESS Joe Wright Jr. of Toronto, the Diamond Sculls winner in 1928, was beaten by Jack Guest, also of Toronto, by two lengths in |the singles final of the Canadian St. Catharines, Ont. {Henley the same year and later coached his son Jack, Jr., in OBTAIN FIGHT LICENCE BOSTON (AP) -- The Massa- Championships Sports Incorpor- ated to promote a heavyweight title fight betwen world cham- pion Floyd Patterson and Tom McNeeley. Al Bolan, one of the partners in the corporation an-|} ince into the sights of hunters nounced Oct. 23 as the tentative "I'm not going to Dallas, Houston or anywhere else," Richards said. "The stories age baseless and have no foundati of fact. I have not been offe the kind of job they describe" "It's embarrassing to tum down jobs that haven't been of- fered," Richards said, "byt what else can I do." Richards reiterated a previ- (A)Blondoll 107 2 date for the bout. Bolan said the actual con- tracts have not been signed yet. dite said they will be submitted number of|5 the commission within about the lowest|iyw, weeks. He said the bout wil be tele- vised 'probably on home TV, with the Boston -New England area blacked out." The fight will staged in Boston Garden with a $100 top. across North America in 1960. The nesting season in Alberta was 10 days behind normal this year with "'serious results" an in Manitoba the water areas was since 1952, - 450 320 3a! The number of ducks in Mani- 0 |toba will be cut by 27 per cent from 1960 with both pintail and mallard showing "notable" de- -24 12 Gomer Nein "sta clines, he said. ous statement that he would % 24 Dittfach J L Levesque | "The "number of waterfowl not manage another club after 41% Despirito -- J W Smallwood Produced in an area is in direct he leaves Baltimore. His cur. 31% Parnell -- D G and P Sta | proportion to the number of aquatic insects, molluscs and Tent contract has two years fo 6nk Fitzsimmons -- Janley Sta | " available water areas," sa id) grain, To Now York report pe. A 7-1% Coy -- Davies, Montgomery | isn't water most| Shortly after the hatch in|Richards would be the generdl snk Harrison -- Stafford Farm |Mr. Schultz. Fix Wining], Pra 1% Morreale--Mts Fw Mert | If there itz'ons -- 0! -- it ti fly groups, complete with lawn | effect of keeping the bluegill ¥hxteborough | 106 7 6 &nk 3h 1 De on int Reamer, | Rom nail: oy Gordon -- G M Claxton ducks won't nest and those that|June the young scramble for|manager at Houston with the 1 4 p ldo lose their young because ofwater for food and protection.|possibility that Fred Hutchinson, H . population in check while in-|Charocative 12011 3 2h 22 11-13% Dittfach -- Roymar Sta |Peterman 10.34 12. 12- Potts -- Hellenic Sta furniture and umbrellas. Others Poot |lack of food. Without water they die--as they|now at Cincinnati, would be the o i : Lit A d 103 3 7 7 B2 2- 12 Parnell Maynard Wii 1] » TH Ri --- ita, Trak A. Hickling. are children, left for the day|C ¢25ing the size and worth of oe Php TRE TE IR eh gods wi Lite out. ruulta Trainer "Pool 64,0. Total | by mothers who have found that|the bass. Ducks live on water plants,/are dying now--by the flock. [Colts field manager. Start good, won driving Pool 54.834. 417,546. Attendance 8,184. fishing can beat a babysitter) any time, And when they leave with stringers of largemouth bass] and bluegill at the end of the day, it's doubtful whether any of them give a passing thought to the part they're playing in a scientific experiment There was more behind commission's decision to open y * EJ 4 1 o . ' > Raa TI Md the ponds than just a desire to] } . . < J 3 : gre wl y let fishermen try their luck in| §8 :. ; ie i 7 - ; 2 y 02 3 ) waters known to be teeming a! " % : $ 3 . Xi Nae J 3 4 with fish. The main idea was to " . 7 TR SO, he 4 ™ ¥ PI 4 3 LJ see whether a theory held by fish experts on the commission's staff couldn't be proved WOULD LIMIT SIZE The theory is that fishing will be improved if anglers limit themselves to taking largemouth] Magnifico ! That's the word these days for O'Keefe Ale, People say it's great because it fights the smallest to the fiercest thirst, Next time your throat gets a little dry or scratchy, wet it with the natural flavour of pure ale. And just this once, don't say OK --say OLE for O'Keefe. | Service and one of the men re-| Cuts in limits will also be con- [sponsible for setting Canadian |sidered by game authorities in {water-fowl bag limits under the| {the United States--where the |annual migratory bird regula- (limits already are below those Ir.|tions, says the situation looks|set in Canada. {serious. | A combination of light snow #-NOBLE ROMAN JSALEING JOE FH 0-FORMAL TRUST . 5.3 Pate 4-year-old and up. Giaiming. all Hatchery Pond Fishing Tried As Experiment FRONT ROYAL, Va, (AP)--| Juay re inaking Blo angler S|taking home the intermediate] ream come true here, and ev- size bass--those between 10 and erybody is turning out to dip a Seventh Race I0FLIGHT PRINCESS line in a fish hatchery pond. (14 Honey San bi wba 1 mile, turf dourse. Purse 32,400, 3- andt-year-olds. Allowances. Bo ulation of stunte uegills an Horse .WtPPSt % oo Str. Fin. Jockey Owner Noble Ri : gi ee I mi: [the eventual ruination of good, [hat onelind 17 9 2 31 834 20k lnk B'menke -- PJ McGarry | Apne Roman Bay 117 510101 %h 31% 2% Remillard -- W D Hatch |p I Trost ries opened 10 of its 28 ponds fishing ponds. 4 Princess 11310 3 1% 1k 1% 3k Potts -- E C Pasquale Pe Pay to all comers July 10, 120 to 250 2 . 1-1 Piagal 1 - - 4-34 4.4% Gomez -- Bill Beasley Lady Golconda 110 . 6-1 5-1%Cochlin -- Mrs H Trotsek Queen's Tour 5 6 6. Gibb -- W D Latimer (A) Coupled -- Blondoll and Chic Miss DH Dead heat to win Winners: Chie Miss, b f, 4, by Tribe -- Dashing, Trainer F. H. Merrill Peggy Page. » m. 5. by Bull Page -- Faithful Ally, Trainer P. MacMurchy. |Start ood, won A driving. Pool 24,627, Quinella Pool 26,307. These fish experts say that EN i |QuINELL AS - w 1 snd ' PAID | 1.10.3 10. 3 and | 1 PAID $6.80. : Eh = i Eighth Race S.WHAT'S BEHIND .. $1.7 5-NORTH BAY Bo 300 ome. 15.40 WtPP St % Fin, Jockey It is these intermediate size Remcant Deb 4-3% Morreale -- J Simon Yola 2nd persons a day have trooped onto|bass, they say, which are large ¥erne the once-sacred soil. |enomsh to tema on Je jargon Son Hash ' sub Many of them come in fam.| wegills, producing the two.fo hiteborough .. 12 2 4 6.% 61 ul 1 1 81% 7h 4 . 11512 8 51% 4% 4h 106 8 9 92 103% 7-1 17 41212 12 5.1% Gomez ---- Bill Beasley Qitick Prince ¥% 62% Coy Seaway Sta et Turbine McComb--Mrs FF W Merrill pl o' Gold Robinson -- S§ J Langill [Trust Him the| bass of over 14 inches. If the| theory is borne out during the| three-year experiment the com- mission will recommend to all private pond owners in the state! * that they voluntarily impose the size limit on themselves and| their guests | St. Kitts Juniors | Clinch 4th Place ST. CATHARINES (CP)--St. Catharines Athletics Wednesday night virtually assured them- selves the fourth and final play- off position in the Ontario La- crosse Association Junior A Se- ries when they defeated fifth- place Mimico Mounties 9 5. The Athletics hold a six-point edge over Mimico, Bill Thorne and Brian Thom- son scored three goals each for St. Catharines, Jim McGrath two and Art Graham one. Dave O'Brien scored two for Mimico, Bruce Marlatt, Widge Lilley and Harris Hunter one each. Senior Athletics Top Niagara Falls NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) St. Catharines Athletics, paced by three goals from Ted Howe and Gary Carr, defeated the Ni- agara Falls senior lacrosse] " team 12-7 Wednesday night. Frankie Benedek was top scorer for Niagara Falls with three goals. Ed C rogan | had | two. 4 photograph taken at the "Plaza Mexico," a bufiring in Mexico City WINS GOLF CONT CHICAGO (AP)--George Ba- yer of Miami drove 297), yards Wednesday and won $100 for first place in the long ball con- test a preliminary to the pro-| ns fessional golfers association] tournament. |

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