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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Apr 1964, p. 12

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES Friday, April 10, 1964 HOCKEY SCORES Dave Keon Fires Three Goals Leafs Oust Habs MONTREAL (CP) -- You needed a periscope in the Tor- onto Maple Leaf dressing room to see the little guy, there were that many people around him. It was almost as crowded around the old guy too. And when the reporters and photographers got through with them, there were a few play- ers waiting to say thanks. The little guy was Dave Keon, who finally got enough time off from penalty-killing duty to do some offensive work. The old guy was Johnny Bower, who would probably rather have Leafs a man short 100 times than go through another third period like Thursday night. The two of them got together to beat Montreal Canadiens 3-1 and put Toronto in the Stanley Cup final, hockey's annua!) normally the tightest defengiv across his goalmouth, rifled int his pads and boomed toward: corners he agility that belied his age. SCORES FOR HABS Only one man, was able to beat him--and tha was only after several trated attempts. riods in which, thanks to Mont- real goaltender Charlie Hodge, Toronto scored only two goals. Frm the start of the third period, the Canadiens put on an amazing display of skating and checking that had the Leafs, club in the league, in a izzy. That's where Bower came in. Somehow he managed to keep his sanity as the puck skittered blocked with an supposedly one of the walking wounded, frus- Ralph Back- strom, who suffered a double|up most effectively for the first charleyhorse in the series' sixth|two periods. | STANDINGS HISTORY REPEATS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League Hershey 1 Cleveland 5 (Cleveland leads best - of- five semi-final 2-0) Memorial Cup Brandon 2 Edmonton 9 (Edmonton leads best - of- seven Western semi-final 3-1) Ontario Junior B Waterloo 7 London 5 (London leads semi-final 3-2) As best-of-seven CHICAGO (CP) A fine a Red Wings Again Knock Off Hawks and are shooting for the $2,000 j ? + blending of old pros jand a bunch of kids who can skate right up their opponents' backs, have propelled Detroit Hodge, at 30 not a youngster but a stranger to Stanley Cup play- off action after several years lost in the minors, made 32 stops, 11 in the first period and 13 in the second. Keon, who in the series' pre- vious games had been too busy killing off the record number of penalties to worry much about scoring, had only one assist be- fore Thursday night. "Our line was working well, and I knew that sooner or later I would have to get the goals," the five-foot-nine centre said. TIE UP POWER PLAY The Leafs cenire scored his second goal at 11:15 in what might be. described as the crowning insult to the Montreal power play, which. Toronto tied Barons' Take 2-0 Lead In AHL Series CLEVELAND (AP) -- Cleve- straight American League playoff victory. t meet again Saturday at shey. Winner of the series will meet Her- land Barons stunned Hershey 5-1 Thursday for their second Hockey The Barons need only one more triumph to eliminate the Bears and sweep the best-of- five semi-final round, The two Red Wings into the Stanley Cup final. And for the third time in four years they're making monkeys of National Hockey League pundits who said they couldn't do it. The Wings went into the best- of-seven playoff series with Toronto Maple Leafs by defeat- ing Chicago Black Hawks 4-2 in the. decisive seventh game of their best - of - seven semi- final Thursday night. This is old redshirts. They managed to latch onto fourth, the last playoff place in the NHL standings, in four of the last five seasons and went stuff to coach Sid Abel and his|® ir inst Leafs who went to a seventh game before dis- posing of league champion Montreal Canadiens 3-1, Script writers couldn't have come up with situations Wings had to face. USE JITTERY ROOKIE They used Bob Champoux, a jittery kid out of junior B ranks a year, to win 5-4 after Chicago had opened the series with a 4-1 victory over Sawchuk. Then, in RESULTS FORT ERIE RACE ' v (Daily Racing Form). FIRST RACE -- 5 Furiongs. 3-year-old aren Fillies. Cdn. foaled. Purse $2100 (12) |éMarina Maid, FIFTH RACE -- § Fu a-year-olds and up Claiming all $6000, $2200 (7) 2Nothing Sacred, Rogers 13.10 3,20 2.90 12.20 4,80 3,40/3-Fast-n-Fleet, Parsons 2.40 2.30 &-Menette, Walsh 5.30 5.30)7-Rococo Rogue, Potts 4.90 5-Chinese Pagoda, Gordon 4.60 Start good, won driving § Start good, won driving | Also Ran In Order: Swift Chariot, Mix'n} Harrison Also Ran In Order: Tardy 180 » Vi gel's Victor, Neale. . Sky Spark and Nadia. Match, Diesel | Fleet, ratty, A-Sinner's) | QUINBLLA 2 and 3 PAID $23.60. |, Da jisper, Maple jeen, Sek x Plume, and Chinese Deal, A-Coupled. |yyamer oh @ 4 Battlefield --~ Princess Kiss positional man - to - man game|winner b { 3 Our and -- Mazarine,| , after the opening two goals, |treiner 6. |Pool 14,536. Quinella Pool 15,418, checked the Hawks to frustra-|Poo! 13,674. Double Pool, 2251, ch ae St See it ¢ n. SECOND RACE -- 5 Fi Sibi ee tsk . Hawks had tried to rough up|0!ds: Canadian foaled, cletming. al $2500,|-Kinosey, eCernb 19.00 'n 399 the Red Wings and for their rire tbs gal Hilla, Rogers "5.70 4.00 3.40) RIN#r Von Kar, Walsh 260 pains drew seven of the 12 pen-|zasnwar, Walsh agp 3.40| Start good, won driving 4Arm Crest, Robinson Start good, won driving. Also Ran in Order: Northern Scot, Fieldglass, Our Property, Snow Candy, Round Chance, Eldermill Luck, Linscott, and Caledon Bive. | Poo! 31,088 alties called by -Udvari, includ- ing majors to defencemen Al MacNeil and Hillman. "You know," Abel reflected 4,60) Also Ran in Order: Parade, Hum- |ber Broom, Star Tok ee Smart, and |Green |, Citation --- Honeysuckle 'Winner, ch g. 4 2nd, Trainer &. Mann, after the game, "the Hawks' ry DAILY DOUBLE 6 AND 8 PAID F strategy of going out and hit-|winner br ¢ 3 By Curry -- Sane Mae] SEVENTH RACE -- 5 Furlongs. 4year- ting was a complete reversal of|Trainer C F Chapman jolds and up, fillies and mares. Allow- Pool 20,601 lances. Purse $2800 (7). a dramatic third game appear- ance, Sawchuk walked out of] hospital and blanked Chicago 3- | He finished a little more than} two periods of the fourth game before going back to hospital and: Crozier, up from Pittsburgh of the American League, | dropped a_ heartbreaking' 3-2) on to jam words down the gul- lets of unbelievers: who said it couldn't be done, by advancing} |to the final on three occasions. | They haven't won the trophy overtime decision. Crozier played a full fifth gamé with Sawchuk still in hos-! pital and lost amother 3 - 2 event that means prestige and/game and, some said, was. a} Andy Bathgate was in the the winner of the Quebec Aces-|in that period but, as Abel likes|squeaker. That one cost Abel a not a little bit of cash for the! doubtful starter for Thursday|penalty box for hooking Jean- Pittsburgh , Hornets semi-final|to say, they'll "make it one of/$500 fine for directing highly) inight, found an open corner injGuy Talbot. Right winger] for the Calder Cup. playres involved. jthese times.' | at uncomplimentary remarks "They came in handy," said/the first half of the third pe-\George Armstrong passed to| Joe Szura, 24-year-old Cleve-| People should start believing) referee Frank Udvari. |Keon at centre ice and Keon|!and centre, came through with|him, Wings, who lost in five| The Wings down 3-2 in games, | Keon of his three goals in aj riod. gem of an understatement. He was the Leaf's sole scorer as\Keon, a 24-year-old native o Leafs won the best-of-seven|Noranda, Que., who easily rat Stanley Cup semi-final games to three. WILL GET $1,500 And Bower, when he's not busy counting the extra $1,500) that goes to each player on the} , winning semi-final teams and|%°sctibed Bower as dreaming of the $2,000 he can get if the Leafs win the. final against Detroit Red Wings which starts in Toronto Satur-| day, will probably be having nightmares about Canadiens'), ific,"" fierce, last-ditch fight. | Orteeie, The Leafs, Stanley Cup cham-/BSY THIRD PERIOD in a game. jaccolades for the elderly goal tender's Montreal counterpart. "Don't that little pions for the last two years,| Bower, officially listed at 39) '4! t years of age but rumored to| minutes. started Thursday night's game as if they were going to skate Canadiens out of the Forum. That's how it was for two pe- have already taken-a chunk out of his 40s, Saves in the third period. SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' TORONTO LEAFS and Detmit Red Wings will again meet in the Stanley Cup finals and while the majority of the fans have it figured out that the result will. also be much the same as last year, one thing is certain, there's been quite a difference leading up to this year's title round, Most of the difference can be summed up in the fact that the two semi- final rounds both went to the seven-game limit and then on top of that, you can add that Montreal Canadiens really gave it the old qollege try, before they succumbed. The first 10 minutes of last night's game in Montreal was about as fast as any hockey ever played in the NHL. The second period was about the closest to a perfect 20-minute session that you'll ever see--with both teams going at top speed and nobody--certainly not either of the goalies--making any move that even came close to being a mistake. In the third period, Canadiens went down like a bunch of batiling gamecocks. They made Johnny- Bower. perform puck-stopping miracles in order to keep Leafs ahead. Both Bower and Hodge were miraculous most of the time. And in the goal-scoring de- partment, Davey Keon finally snapped his slump to score all three of Toronto's goals. Canadiens' blistering attack in the third period made the rock-like Toronto defense depart- ment finally crack--in fact, they were badly disorganized, but veteran Johnny Bower filled the breach with an Horatio stand. We thought Canadiens deserved at least one or two miore goals, especially in the third period--but then Leafs did also--so in the final analysis, Leafs were the better ail- round team, with Bower, Keon, Kelly, Stanley, Bathgate, 'Pul- ford, Baun, all playing standout games. None of them had a bad game--not even Shack, cause he didn't get a chance. xX x x xX IN CHICAGO, history repeated itself. Just as last year, the Black Hawks suffered elimination at the hands of the Detroit Red Wings, when once again they headed the league race for most of the season, were knocked off the top rung in the last two weeks of the schedule and then were elimin- ated in the Stanley Cup semi-finals. Chicago's Reg Fleming charged Terry Sawchuk in the second period and the De- troit goalie had to be replaced for the final frame by Roger Crozier--who promptly turned in another sensational per- formance. Wings took a 2-0 lead, Alex Delvecchio scored 23 seconds after Chicago had made it 2-1, to re-establish , the two-goal lead and then in the final frame, Wayne Hillman crashed Larry Jeffrey into the boards and drew a five- minute major--and while he was off, Parker McDonald pot- ted the clincher. Gordie Howe and Delvecchio were both sensational, along with Sawchuck, Crozier, Gadsby, Ullman and a few others. Now it's Detroit against the Leafs, with the first two games in Maple Leaf Gardens Saturday night and again on Tuesday, = -% x x BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa Minor Hockey Assoc. declared three of their four 'City League" championships for the 1963-64 season, last night. The Juvenile title, also hinging on a sudden-death game, will be played Saturday noon and should attract a big crowd. . . . WHITBY hockey fans have a major attraction tomorrow afternoon also, when their good Bantam "A" team meets Leamington, at four o'clock in the Whitby Arena, in the final game of the All-Ontario Ontario Minor Hockey Association championship finals. It's a total- goal affair and Leamington won the first game 6-2. nay SPORTS FANS in Oshawa and Bowmanville, especially hockey and golf-types, are pulling hard for 'Bob' Watt to make it. He has been in critical condition, following a severe heart at- tack, a couple of weeks ago. A top-flight golfer and a mem- ber of the OHA executive, the popular executive of Good- year's (Bowmanville) has a host of friends in this area, all of whom are wishing him a full and speedy recovery. .. . CLINTON captured the Eastern Hockey League chaimpion- ship this past weekend; to claim their second league title since Wren Blair took over as their general-manager, some four years ago. While Oshawa Generals made a fine show- ing, the parent Boston Bruins didn't and Minneapolis had a good year, Clinton's win gave Blair his best success of the season--and they did it the hard way. Twice, in early play- off rounds, they Jost the first two games in 3-out-of-5 series and came back to win. Pete Babando and Jack Cain, former Whitby Dunlops, scored. winning goals in overtime, for two of the key wins in their championship playoff campaign. "I'm happy I got three," said/skated to within about 25 feet|{wo goals, Ray Brunel also four|tled off in French for report-| lers of that language. It was the \first time in his four-year NHL, career he had scored that many Toronto coach Punch Imlach "the big lguy in there," but saved some take anything away son-of-a-gun : Hodge. He was great. He was|John Ashley called only eight| Hershey scored first, at 2:27 made 17 of his 38 flof the Montreal goal before|Whacked in a pair, and Cecil beating Hodge with a rising shot| Hoekstra added another. to the upper corner. | Hershey goalkeeper Ed Chad- Backstrom scored his goal at|Wick put on a brilliant display 7:27 of the third period from|!" the scoreless first period, the edge of the crease. Keon's|@king 18 saves, some of which |third goal came at 19:49, a few appeared close to impossible. seconds after Red Kelly had|He wound up with 35 stops for worked his way up the boards/the night compared with 15 by and missd the empty net. |Cleveland's Jean - Guy Moris- The game was the cleanest|Sette.- Morissette has allowed of the series, in which both/Mly six goals in four playoff clubs rewrote most of the play-|84Mes against Hershey and Ro- off penalty records. Referee|Chester. |minor infractions, split evenly.|°f the second period, when de- 'They brought the combined to-|fenceman Marc Reaume con- tal for the series to 125, or 322/nected on a low liner from just inside the blue line. Then the |Barons mounted a strong attack jand Brunel faked Chadwick out of the net for an unassisted goal to tie the score. Five Tied For : Remember When?... By THE CANADIAN PRESS British soccer officials Jaunched an all-out drive seven years ago today against unauthorized pay- ments to players by sus- games to the Leafs in the skir- mish for the cup last year and| in six to Chicago in i961, have the equipment to surprise a lot) of folks. | SAWCHUK AILING Look what they did to the Hawks this time. They man- aged to get only two full games) out of Terry Sawchuk, their} scarred and ailing goalkeeper) who has more miseries in his 180-pound frame than probably any man in the NHL, and they came up with the big ones to send the Hawks pecking. He started in six games and last night, for the third time, failed to last the full 60. min- utes, He was knocked cold in a second period collision with Chi- cago's Reggie Fleming at 12:39, had double vision for the rest of the stanza and then shed his pads between periods with Wings ahead 3-? | They took the lead on goals) by Floyd Smith, Gordie Howe) and Alex Delvecchio against} had Sawechuk back in the nets in Tuesday's sixth encounter and his fired-up mates walloped| } Chicago 7-2. | Then came the showdown) with Udvari again, the man with the whistle. Before they knew it, the Hawks were trailing 2-0 on Smith and Howe goals -in the| first six minutes,. Hay put! Hawks back in the game mid-| way through the second period) and Delvecchio scored what) proved to be the winner 23 sec-| onds later, | Hull again put Chicago back/| in contention late in the second} period, the 16,543 fans who had) razzed Chicago throughout most} of the opening periods, rocked| the Stadium with their cheers.) Hull scored three seconds after) Fleming had returned to the ice} after spilling Sawchuk. | GETS INSUANCE GOAL | Both clubs missed big scoring} opportunities in the opening} minutes of the third perod and) | | pending two directors of the Sunderland club for life, suspending two others indef- initely and fining the first division club £5,000. Under league rules, clubs were not allowed to pay players more | than £15 weekly, plus speci- fied bonuses for wins and draws. | Pastrano Rated Even Choice In Title Contest NEW ORLEANS, La.. (AP)-- |Argentina's Gregorio Peralta |hopes to make ring history to- night by dethroning light heavy-| jweight champion Willie Pas- jtrano and. becoming the first |South American big man to win \a world pro boxing title. Conqueror of Pastrano in a non-title 10-round bout last Sept. First Place In Masters Event AUGUSTA, Fa. (AP) -- Ar- nold Palmer mustered the de- |serters back to Arnie's Army |today as he opened his biennial jcharge at the Masters golf tour- ape title with a first-round | It was good for one-fith-of the jopening-round lead, as the five itied for first place composed the |largest bunch at the top since jthe tournament began in 1934. | Gary Player of South Africa, |who won the Masters in. 1961 jand lost to Palmer in a playoff ithe next year, also had 69, So \did Kel Nagle of Australia, who nosed out: Palmer for the Brit-| jish Open title in 1960, | The other two in the five-man |Cluster were Bob Goalby, a tour veteran who said he has '"'been in a slump for a year and a half," and Davis Love Jr. Jack Nicklaus, defending champion and favorite to be the 2%, the 28-year-old South Amer-|;. ° 7 rele igi | lican heavyweight champion js| first man ever to win twice in a \confident he will be able to re-|"°¥: finished with a a. : lpeat his success in the 15-|_ Gary Cowan, | the Canadian rounder at the municipal audi-\#™@teur champion from Kitch- torfam ener, tied Nicklaus at 71, along Although |with Bob Charles, the New Zea- this 3K Pastrane say southpaw who won last native city, the 28 - year - old) counters by Red Hay and Bobby|MacDonald made sure of the Hull. trip to Toronto for the opening) Roger Crozier, a minor|two final games Saturday and| leaguer, went into goal for the Tuesday when he beat goal-| second time in this set, Parker/keeper Glenn Hall. Hawk de-| MacDonald scored a power-play|fenceman Wayne Hillman was! goal and that was it for the|sitting out a five minute major Hawks. Wings picked up $1,500\for boarding Larry Jeffrey. a man for their semi-final win| The Wings, who had played a Scotland Seeking 3rd Straight Win In 8lst Meeting GLASGOW (CP) -- The foot-|then ball wars between the Scots and) chance. |the Sassenachs will be resumed| The consensus is that Eng- {Saturday with the clansmen|land looked better a few months |confident the enemy from the|jago after winning six interna-| lsouth will be beaten. tionals in succession, including | Some 134,000 fans are ex-|victories. over Ireland, Wales, pected at this frankly "fitba)Czechoslovaka and East Ger- daft" city's Hampden Park for| many. we've an even better what I thought they would do. | : * . " 6-Ontari , Gomez 3, This was the most important) THIRD RACE -- 2 Furlongs. Two-year- by De ad ay ead 4 4 game of the series and I was 7 Fi ai Cdn. foaled. Cimg. | 1-Faultessa, Rogers 3.90 sure they would try to stay/DH- s-miss Warlou. Gomez 3,00 3.40 3,20\S!®"t Good, won ridden out away from penalties that can|®H-1!-Royal Sitch, Robinson 11.60 11.20 6.40) Also Ran in Order: Fast Affair, Bianca kill yo | 2-So War, Gordon 5,30;|\Mano, Bright Reward, and Golden ut you, CY Start good, won driving | Turkey. "Remember, we've got old), Also Ran In Order: Siy Eyes, A-The Ro-lwinner, br {, 4, Selector guys like Gordie Howe, Saw-| dent, A-Andrea Inez, Niagara Miss, Jam-| trai i C ke ¢ |my Doll, Gay Chant, Red Shield, Smart|pool's3,009 ne chuk, Bill Gadsby, Marcel Pro-|and Lucky and Swan Park, | novost and Delvecchio. Then, |A-Coupled. DH-Deadheat for First | EIGHTH RACE -- 5 Furlongs, syear- there's our kids who just keep) folds and up. Claiming all $3500. Purse right on skating." | FOURTH RACE -- § Furlongs. 4-year- -- Ceremony. $1900 (8). 5 lolds and up. Claiming all $2500. P 2-Nancy"s Return, Barnett 4.90 3.70 2.30 'And Leafs can't afford to take|sigo. () see Toronto Street, McComb "1070 3.40 5 ' lop. hy ' e 79| DH-8-Lavahot, Stadny' 2 then GNM ae wilt bel PRO, Sat nos nde Lares, wae is é mks SAWC bad ©) DH-5-Bleu Burner, Barnett 259 280| Start good, won driving ready for the final opener. |start good, won driving Also Ran in Order: Diamond Pete, "Jeffrey might have a concus-|_ Alse Ran in Order: A-Penepopie, B-|D-Seven Deal, Zenarchal, and For A ' ' |Cathy Yates, t Star, A | Time. sion, we don't know yet, but Cathy Yates, Secret Star, Merry Madcao,| Time. jand Fair Johnny. |DH -- Deadheat for third. he's a tough little guy, It might|A-Couples B-Couples DH-Deadheat for 2nd|Winner, b {, 4 Pinebloom -- Nancy's take more than that to keep him out of a game." |Winner bm 7 Tahitinn King -- Side Road.| Baby. Trainer G Hemmerling, |Trainer G. E. Goodwin. Pool 34,699 Total Pool 232,307 Pool 24,458 |Attendance 3,584 PLAY-OFF TIP OSHAWA BEERDRINKERS Don't risk being in the kitchen when your FOR team scores a goal. Use the intermission to fetch a cool bottle of | O'Keefe Blended | (You might miss a commercial, but never mind.) Ah! O'Keefe Blended. It's a blend of two great ales for a deeply satisfying flavour that no single ale can possibly match, Full name O'Keefe Extra Old Stock Ale--Popularly known as O'Keefe Blended. BL-26648 the 81st Scotland-England inter-|-- national in which the Scots are) shooting for their third straight win. After a workout at Ayr, the England team visited Hampden - |8&Stormy Lee C., Weilwood champion was rated only even) money in the first defence of} the crown he won on a close} decision over Harold Johnson at |Las Vegas last June 1. | Peralta, a virtual unknown juntil he upset the solidly fav- ored Pastrano at. Miami Beach will match his fiery attack and left-hooking power against the speed, jab and boxing finesse of the champion. The six-foot, wide-shouldered | Argentine will have to make 175 jpounds at noon weigh-in today. The big: question is whether Peralta will be strongat a weight he hasn't made in more than a year. oe Unbeaten in his last 29 fights, Peralta has a 39-3-4 record, in- cluding 18 knockouts. Pastrano's record is 61-12-8, including 12 knockouts. year's British Open, Dow Fins- terwald, Jim Ferrier and Chi Chi Rodriguez. Thursday and' manager Alf Ramsey discussed features of the field with his players, only three of whom have performed there. This is by no means an or- dinary soccer match. If Scot- land wins, wild scenes of na- tional joy will ensue--whisky will flow and the songs of. Rob- | TRACE OFFER BESECTED bie Burns will be heard amid MONTREAL (CP) The ; ; United Harness Horsemen's ie eee skirl of the | sociation Thursday turned down}P ma the last week newspapers Pusiee eae peers Oy have been whipping up interest eae ee Peet ed thet was recded--eith in jrace tracks, An offer of 41.5 per|--' bats nine pl ; |cent of the tracks' nine per cent|timate stones ' such gaat revenue was voted against 80 Raxier, Reed a S itetoa: 66. Horsemen are seeking 47 per|? ato hrne dm es eo i and have forced indefinite tional Profiles including oc ape [postponement of the scheduled|% their babyhood as well as /April 3 opening at Blue Be ES aa GEN jnets, | GH I | It's taken as a good omen Amateur Nick - Weslock of Tornto shot a 73 while the two Canadian professional entries, Al Balding of Toronto and Stan Leonard of Vancouver, carded 75 and 77. respectively.- "GREENWOOD RACEWAY that Law put on a dazzling dis- |play in 1962 when Scotland won its first victory over England in | | FIRST RACE -- 7 Furlong trot for 3- jand 4-year-olds. Purse $700 (8) 4Laird McNab, Findley 3.30 3.00 2.40 3-The Tag, Hill 8.50 4.40 2.60 | Also Ran in Order: Biack Satin, Arm- bro Echo, Mr Twist, Carolina Mike, and | Haul Away. SECOND RACE -- 7 Furlong pace for [fin "year-olds, maidens. Purse $500 also Ran in Order: Uncle Spud, wee) The England selectors by |2-Guinea Mite, -Geiset 17,60 8.00 3.20 ona ke Keystone Killean, turning their backs on_ the |6-Star Johnston, Waddell 5.00 2.70 : \famed Jimmy Greaves gave |3-Spencer's Pride, Crowe Start good, won handily 2.30 Also Ran in Order: Mississaga, Isotta Ben, Ronnie C Chief, Miss Royal Chief, land Rudy's Rebel {DAILY DOUBLE, | THIRD™ RACE -- 1 Mile trot for. 4 lyear-olds and up. Purse $700 (8). |2-Frisco C., Hughes 66.60 17.00 9.10 |}-Meadow Art's Lady, McRann 4.50 3. 3-Scotty PH, Hilliard 4 Start good, won driving 1 4 AND 2, PAID $59.90 70 40 Also Ran in Order: Nero Hanover, 01 1 Sc av 6 Buckaroo, 'Lila Lee Henley, Royal Mc- Poole Saag et A ate dt Ul dadeg wie ~~ ordeaggll 'he om ean, and Darn Tepting. i eedenia: Clatwente 13.30 440 3.20) Song ig a alee plagit Bo FOURTH RACE -- | Mile pace for 4 2-Ardee, Wellwood 290 2.59/Sence and also -y g wi year-olds and up. Purse $600 (8) 1-Van's Pride C, Palmer 8.io/faith in Law and Baxter de- 5-Sputnik, Coke 7-Governor Baldwin, Feagan 2-Lusty Lory, Millman Start good; won driving. Also Ran in Order: Ruth M Direct, Bobby's Girl, Royal Minnetonka; Keih-/ NINTH RACE -- 1 Mile Pace for 4 ; . leen Pointer, and Lee Direct D year-olds and up. Purse $800 (8) trainer who has been with the ; 6-Battle Kinney C, "Furness 14.30 6.80 4.20/jnternational team 10 times and FIFTH RACE -- 1 Mile pace for 3 and 2-Biue Angel, Gillis 6.40 5.00] 1+ l ; ¢ ted: 4-year-olds. Purse $700 (8) 8-Roselawn Boy, Lockhart 7a|lost only twice, commented: 7-Pembrow Bill, Quinlan 14.50 6.80 4.60| Start good, won driving "We'll win this one to complete 5-Dean Sultan B 2nd, Hayes 3.60 2.20; Also Ran in Order: Armbro Bingo, 4 rink , ¢ ie 1-Ring a Ding, Corbett 4.00|Reed's Dream, Poplar Grattan, Mr, -en|t0@ hat trick. If England is 'Start good, won driving. -- 125 years. That was one year so Ran in Order: May Queen J,| Meadow Harvester, lola Hal, Bont after he was called home from) and Homestead Wild Willie. \Italy, where he played ute |Turin, to help Scotland to a 3- | SIXTH RACE -- 1 Mil for 4\03, i year-olds and up. Purse $700 (a, |Win over Czechoslovakia. Scot-| [ie Honey Wier, Oswald 4.90 3.06 2.80/land beat England 2-0 at Hamp-/ -Jahnny Dale, Alexander 12.40 5.10} j e 1 y i-Knightie Kntont, Mectavish ve 330] den in 1962 and 2-1 at Wembley! Start good, won driving. last year. QUINELLA, 1 AND 2, PAID $52.00 : i ee . \the Scots at least a psychologi- NTH RACE --i Mile Pace forica] advantage. The turbulent year-old: 'ea | aoleplertetar ico Ba iade aed NLA /Tottenham Hotspur star, a sen- Jean Third, Geisel Jr. 7.20 3.90 3.10) : ; ' 5-Big Chief C, Norris 4.80 2.90|Sational scorer. in former inter- 2-Vernon's Star, Gordon 3.90/national matches, was dropped Start good, won driving . . v Also Ran in Order: Negley Hal, Sandy from the England team be Dares, Brother Dillon S, and Mighty/ cause of a poor showing re- Creed, cently in regular play. Some observers, how- 2 EIGHTH RACE -- 7 Furlong Trot for Start good, won driving |spite their undoubted flair for Also Ran in Order: Flash Song, Lull- 4 36 water Frost, King C Lee, Lary Louise, the unexpected and ruthless urge to win. and Guess Who. Johnny Harvey, the Scotland and Floyd's Honor. irated as a World Cup hope, DISTINGUISHED ELEGANCE Here is the suit with that well-deserved reputation for outstanding quality. Elegant in appearance ... remarkable in performance, Progress Branp Crotues: NOT CONNECTED WITH ANY STORE OF SIMILAR NAME TONES IN FINE CLOTHING GARNETTS IN THE TORONTO AREA! 1

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