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The Oshawa Times, 11 Jun 1960, p. 12

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12° THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 11, 170w Sees Brighter Prospects For Canucks In Baseball NEW YORK (CP) -- You Jak about 20 days and I only hope we|neapolis before being called up to; "In spite of the long stretch-- hitters, such as Mickey Mantle, in Venezuela and all-I'm not|HarVey Kuenn, Al tired and the throwing doesnt' Moose Skowron, who "is liable to| Jerome, 19-year-old University stir his interest. "I don't even " lof Oregon freshman from North know how he finished." to Ted Bowsfield about big-time baseball, but somehow the patter| keeps curve-balling, around to homey topics and the beauties of| his native British Columbia. can snap out of it quickly," was/the Red Sox in mid-1958, He'd] the southpaw's rueful summation. been out practically all of the "I can't help thinking we|1956 season because of injuries. " shouldn't be in last place--we're] With the Red Sox, Bowsfield bother me," said Bowsfield. "1/kill you on thie mound. EUGENE, Ore. | Vancouver, B.C., Harry Jerome Big Prospect For Olympics (AP)--Harry | school, Jerome sped 100 yards in 9.4 sec | onds three times in three days he decided track was for him. last month and said it showed one thing: he is getting consist-| naturally. His grandfather, Army at palatial New Woodbine track ent, It may be useful this Olympic|Canada in the 1912 Olympics. |Just northwest of the city. Kaline and year, Especially to Canada. ran his first| ania aR E aa als in 9.4. The £.3. Two days later Oregon 100 in 9.4. rine Howard, ran the 200 metres for REMEMBER WHEN. ..? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Lackin Maloney's colt Ace Ma- the 96th renewal of the Queen's Plate at Toronto five years ago today, the last running of the C Famous Stallion, Alibhai, Dies At 22 LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP)---AR- |bhai, one of the most successful anadian classic for three- thoroughbred sires in history, Joar-side si Old Woodbine track n east Toronto. Ace Marine led i ovtren all the way in the 1%-mile race, [TY at the age of 22. easly he other youngsters | 1 "tn 1:52 45 fo Win the ision should Queen's 50 guineas and $25,270. the Toi dee Lave come The race since then has been run|earned more than $10,000,000. (died at Spendthrift Farm Thurs. Alibbai was never raced, but imported stallion's progeny Son of Hyperion-Teresina, he sired such outstanding horses as But Jerome says this did not summer Harry and Valerie made a rare brother-sister combination Family participation could be|in the Pan-American Games. When Jerome runs, fans are |certainly as good as Washington started with a sensational string know I look fidgety on the mound| Then they prepared to leave for| Yankee Stadium, and here the race two years ago, |extended further this year. Jer- Bardst o wn, Bornastar, Deter- mine, On Trust, Traffic Judge and Your Host, each of whom earned more than $270,000. The stallion was hred by the baseball i -land Kansas City. But we lost|of three victories over the mighty but I don't feel that way. A V Mi hg % in of een some players -- such really good| Yankees and one over Washing-| "I know they're rooting for me Story must end. Why? In the California relays atjome thinks his 16-year-old sister,/aware of two things. He looks/late Aga Khan and was ee the 24 1d pitcher, men as Jackie Jensen and Sammy|ton, clinching third place for Bos-|at home and that makes me feell Did you ever try to take notes Modesto, Calif., last month he Valerie, has a good chance to bigger than his six-foot-one, 165/by movieman Louis B. Mayer. int 0 Tue ¥ Yaar. I ' after shaking hands with a couple won his heat in the 100 - yard make Canada's Olympic team. pounds, Asd he moves with great An injury kept him from a track f dians|White--and that's a hard handi-/ton. His record that year was 8-4 good -- gives me incentive. M : a une of fhe Lasgiul J a i to overcome." {with Minneapolis and 4-2 with om Aon mother just ear of major league pitchers? dash' in 94. He captured the fin-'She is also a sprinter and last career. major leagues. Bowsfield and his wife, the for-| Boston. with h. when I'm {mer Lila McDonald who was his) Bowsfield has a brief comment ful. My father and our friend Les| "The chances for Capadiang high school sweetheart in lake-|--"I1 was lousy"--for 1959 when he| Edwards, who once played pro are better now than at any time,' said the handsome hurler who) performs with Boston Red Sox, a club which unhappily is holding down last place in the American| | Boston and the 6-foot-1, 185-pound ter a disappointing showing. But|a club in Edmonton, were the | fringed Penticton, have a home in was sent back to Minneapolis af- ball with Memphis and managed | pitcher brightened as he dis- his friends have a different story. ones who gave me my first guid-| cussed the baseball prowess of They say he was laboring with ajance and encouragement: Les| their son, Teddy II, a gent of 2%. sore arm caused by pre-season League, ing | or, Dress told me when I was 14, I had the| . | practising in cram quarters in| arm to be a big leaguer. The big HE TAKES A LOSS : PARES JOTER DAD rd and has| Penticton. He had constructed a thing I want to do now is to bring| "When I ; 10 shanty Ws Pret y a S|long shelter covered with a plas- my parents to Boston to see their Yhen 1 was growing up In| aiready managed to lose about atic like material but too narrow [fj pou > | "nl | irst major league game. | Penticton--which, incidentally, 15|dozen balls," said the proud par-|tor a proper pitching motion. the best tourist town in Canada-- ent, "He'll be competing with| TED HELPS OUT there were no little leagues, 00|other ballplayers' children at a PLAYS IN WINTER "The fellow: who's been nicest pony leagues. That's all changed. special day in Fenway Park soon.| Anyway, Ted was with Min-| Leen ne And the new Continental League i i itch 1 i i ittle|® Me in the club is Ted Wil- 1 4 |He likes to hit and pitch so Ineapolis last fall in the little | yams, He's an avid student of the will reach into Canada. With bet-|g esq he'll do a bit of both." | world series, won by Havana, and oe' 'ard kee ou ob our] ter coaching, they can't help but|" Teddy II has no time to lose if|then had an excellent season of CoS ny your! develop better players. {he's to match the record of his winter ball with Maracaibo, Vene-| yA Bowsfield, a well-spoken and|dad, who was playing semi-pro|zuela, where his record was 14-4| Bowsfield's roommate, the star quietly courteous athlete, rumin- (ball in Penticton--as a pitcher--|after 174 innings of play. righthander Bill Monbouquette, ated in this fashion at breakfast/when he was 14. Since Penticton] "Back with Boston 1 had a|ioined the breakfast conversation, on a muggy Saturday during alis near the Washington state bor-|pretty good spring and my record Smilingly claiming Canadian citi-| somewhat depressing visit by the der, Bowsfield had early exper-so far this season is fairly de-|enship because "my great- | Red Sox with New York Y ience against ed competi-| cent," said Bowsfield, who looks|8randfather was a herring choker The Sox dropped three in the four-|tion. {upon the world with a steady|--he was born in Charlottetown. game series and Ted, fighting al He was signed in 1954 by Boston |brown-eyed gaze. Often in relief,| The self-styled Katzenjammer tendency to wildness, was |scout Earl Johnson and played he has played in 15 games and Kids--the crewcut, plack-haired charged with the final loss. {for San Jose, Calif., San Fran- after the New York trip had a 1-2 pitchers are almost as alike as sufficient unto the "We've had a bad streak of| cisco, Oklahoma City and Min- won-lost total. |twins--chatted about the toughest Canada's Ace Sprinter No Longer 'Workhorse' VANCOUVER (CP)--Eleanor Haslam says five months in Eng- land last summer taught her at least one important thing about her track career. "l learned not to hard." Miss Haslam, 20 - year - old sprinter from Saskatoon, is the work so leading Canadian candidate for | the 100- and 200-metre women's events in the summer Olympic Games in Rome next August. In Saskatoon, where competi- tion is infrequent and training facilities Hmited, she earned a reputation as a workhorse. REAL CHORE "I've always taken my train. ing so seriously," she said in an interview here, "It gets to be a real chore that way. "They have a different attitude in England. They make athletics into a sort of game. It's given me a different attitude and I think it's making a big differ- ence in my training." She returned to competition in- door last winter, apparently as # good as new, following a layoff caused by a pulled foot tendon. The injury kept her out of the 1959 Pan-American Games. During the winter she trained with weights in her Saskatoon home and ran on the concrete floor of a hallway in the school where her coach, Bob Adams, is a teacher. The chilly winter weather in her hometown pre- vents outdoor training. In her first competition since returning home, she ran the 60- yard dash ihdoors in Winnipeg a good 6.6 seconds. In Vancouver, where she made her first outdoor appearance of the season, she twice ran the 100! in 11.2 in heats, then beat two of her leading competitors -- Heather Campbell and Valerie Jerome of Vancouver--in 11.4 in the final. | | running on a hometown track, "I'm afraid to go home," she Saskatoon she trains with the said later, expressing disappoint- men because there are no othei ment with her time. "I ran the|/top women sprinters and she race to win it, but that's no good. says she has no prospects for My time was terrible." more competition before the July Miss Haslam holds the Cana-|15-16 Olympic trials. dian native record for the dist-| Seeking top competition may ance, a 10.8 performance in the take her away from Saskatoon 1958 Canadian trials for the Brit- again soon. She has completed ish Empire Games. In the games her university education and in Wales she finished sixth in hasn't chosen her future vocation the 220 with a time of 24.1, yet, NEEDS COMPETITION "Last year I decided if I was She is confident she can do bet- going to get anywhere I would ter than that but says she must have to run against girls betr have competition to improve. In'than 1," she said. . me-- SPORT FROM BRITAIN England's Peter Radford Setting Sprint Records | | LONDON (CP) -- Twenty-five| ease and spent three years in a | SPT Sr -- |years ago James Owens warmed wheelchair. In 1957 he attracted |up with a few practice races Marlow's attention while running # (against a greyhound and went on|in a junior meet. Since then they 5 |to shatter world sprint records. have become Britain's greatest | This season, England's Peter | combination of coach and ath- | Radford. looking for stiffer com- |lete. ~ |petition than his human oppon-| The W als all schoolteacher's i |ents provided, also went to the|first year in top competition saw Gi ia Gi iH jgos Lack. But is go him Dpeak both Bsltish sprint > J " z ill Marlow, matched adford [records and gain a place on Brit- ELEANOR HASLAM, Cana- | against the electric hare that the|ain's international team. Compet. dian sprint candidate for the |greyhounds pursue. ing against France at Paris, he summer Olympics in Rome, | A. month later Radford re- set world junior records in the says the English attitude to- [corded 20.5 seconds for the 220/100 and 200 metres. ward athletics has changed her |yards around a turn, beating] But his first major effort in top approach to training. The 20- |Andy Stanfield's nine - year - old | company, at the British Empire year-old Saskatoon girl, shown [mark by 1-10th of a second and|Games in Cardiff, showed the ef- becoming the first Briton to|fects of the handicaps suffered approach {break a world sprint record in|by most top-grade British ath- more than 40 years, The 220-yard |jetes--lack of adequate training straightaway mark is 20 seconds| facilities and competition. flat, set by David Sime at| p.qe0.q if | A J i qualified easily for the | Sanger, fall. dn J. . 100-yard final. But he was fourth | or Radlorc, the re {among the six finalists, |crowned a lifetime's ambition. At} eaten BY Farias iL Ole) five he contracted a kidney dis- ner, even though his time was | found the relaxed made a difference when she re- turned after five months in England last summer. Miss Haslam holds the Canadian na- tive women's record of 10.8 for 100 yards --CP Photo New CAHA Official Faces Mammoth Task By DOUG HARKNESS Canadian Press Staff Writer Gordon Wainright Juckes will not serve as a mere "clerk" in| his new position as secretary-| manager of the Canadian Ama-| teur Hockey Association. | The 45-year-old Melville, Sask., weekly newspaper publisher came up fast through the ranks of the ruling body of Canadian | amateur hockey, A "fair hockey player" as a youth, he attended] his first CAHA meeting in 1953, and six years later was elected president | Juckes stepped down from his presidential office to move into the CAHA's "hot seat" when he was d at the jation's recent annual meeting at Syd-| ney, NS, to replace the late| George Dudley as secretary- manager. Dudley, who for 15 years had ruled amateur hockey with a firm hand, died at Mid- land, Ont; on May 8. KEY POST It's acknowledged that the sec- retary-manager's job calls for a| man who can make quick deci- | sions and stick by them. The sal- ary will probably be $6,500 | Veteran Quebec hockey official | Bob LeBel declined to stand for the vacant position when CAHA officials voiced objections to the new secretary-manager control- ling the show. They stipulated that the new official must work closely with the executive LeBel, a former CAHA presi- Sent, said he was unwilling to serve "'as a clerk, subject to the dictates of the executive." The gecretary-manager should have er to make major decisions, especially in dealing with profes- sional hockey leaders, he con-| tended But few people feel that Juckes| will become a "clerk." As sec-| only 1-10th second outside the previous Games record. FAILED IN 220 In the 220 yards, Radford failed | to survive the semi-final. His best time was 21.5, a full second | slower than this year's recozd-| breaking performance. But he | was a member of England's win: | {ning 440-yard relay team at Car- | diff and finished the season with a bronze medal in the 100 metres at the European championships | retary-manager he will continue/major. His first executive role to make most of the major de-|in hockey was with the minor cisions. {hockey association at Melville. 5 ne He likes work, often holding at Stockholm. | INTERNATIONAL FIELD {committee meetings late into the| Although many British observ-| Juckes' chief ambition is to night after writing editorials fori ers now fancy Radford's chances | national competition. He would two girls and two boys, and there|to the United States for pre.| like to see more teams compet- are two grandchildren. Olympic training and competition | ing in world and Olympic hockey| He will have less time for his|against crack American sprint-| tournaments, and hopes that newspaper in future, He plans to|ers such as Ray Norton and Bill] Canada can serve as an ambas- devote most of his time to| Woodhouse. sador to "spread the gospel of hockey. "That's the way it has| Although an anonymous track| hockey." |been for the last few months," fan has offered to pay Radford's He accompanied the first Ca- he said, 'and I'll continue that |transatlantic fare to send him to| nadian team to tour Russia in| Schedule. the U.S. championships in July, | 1958, and was at Squaw Valley, | British officials, already exer-| Calif., last spring when Canada| . cised over the American activi. | finished second 5 the United AFL Discloses ties of Radford's sprinting team. | States in the Winter Olympic . mate. Dave Segal, are cool to- hockey tournament. Big TV Contract | wards the project It 'ooks as Suckes eulisted with the Caiia though he will have to settle for dian Army during the Second] NEW YORK (AP)--The Ameri and|cap Football League Thursday came oulj with the rank of -a closed a $10,625,000 five-year deal Wik the Ae rican Broadcasting Company for television rights to i games. Leads Oklahoma nder the contract, announced . Better This Year fey in charge of programming Golf Tourney WINNIPEG (CP) -- Surface! for >-TV, and league commis- : | water conditions are improved in|Sioner Joe Foss, the AFL will| gcLaoNA ony 1ap)-Mas | all three Prairie provinces and (Collect $125000 for each of 17|'ers champion Arnold Palmer) waterfow] prospects are favor. dates during the year came through with a five-under- | reported this week year. The AFL will divide the : a I ed Ie ee vealh money equally among the eight round lead in the $30,000 Okla during the last - few Raye poe bs. Deducting agency fees |homa city open golf tournament | maintained water levels and cut ang other expenses, each club with a 3-hole score of 134 | will start the season with a| p. ) | d , 3 Palmer, golf's top money win-| ions have generally improved on| "The league starts i Sia the Prairies, the report said there|gon Sept. "11 pie Rios Ag tree-infested course in 68 in the| st is 2 large area in west- championship contest Dec, 31. |0Pening round and then assumed | central Saskatchewan and east-| The contract actually calls for|c0MMmand -with his sensational | central rta where surface|the telecasting of 32 games this|™ound today. He carded seven! year. On 15 Sundays one game [birdies but twice was one over racing against the hare | World War as a gunner, Amold Palmer ye Water Conditions Jointly by Tom Moore, vice-presi- able, Ducks Unlimited (Canada)| This amounts to $2,125,000 a par 66 Friday to take the second. | down evaporation. While condi-!g 25.000 TV i $22 cushion, ner this year, got around this] water is "precarious." Over-all duck breeding popula: will be telecast in the West and Par on par-five holes tion is about the same as last another in the East Gene. Littler was in second year but these has been some re- Moore said ABC has signed [place with a 64 for a two-round distribution. 'two sponsors for the telecasts. ltotal of 135 after an opening 71.! Are you a worry empert! Some people gather up all the worries of the past and combine them with the anxieties of the future. These they add to the burdens of the pres- ent -- a huge bundle indeed. What a difference it would make in their peace and happiness if they eould take each day as it comes. Jesus said, "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." He not only taught but He lived this lesson. Toil and misunderstanding filled the days of His ministry. Yet He met each one with calm assurance. Forgetting the past, He faced each tomorrow with inward peace. This peace He willed to His followers through all the ages. Come to church and learn how to make this heritage your own. Copyright 1960, Keiser Ady. Service, Strasburg, Va THE CHURCH FOR ALL . .. ALL FOR THE CHURCH "The Church is the greatest fattor on earth for the building of ch and good citizensh It is a storehouse of spiritual valjies. Without a strong Church, neither democracy' nor civilization ean survive, There are four sogmd reasons why every person should attend servioes regularly and support the Church. They ane: (1) For his own sake. (2) For his children's sake. (3) For the sake of his community and mation. (4) For the sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral and material support. Plan to go wo church regularly and read your Bible daily. Day Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Book Psalms Matthew Psalms John John John I Corinthiags 8 Chapter Verses 1-9 24-34 1-9 16-31 1.27 1-16 7-11 THIS FEATURE IS CONTRIBUTED TO THE CAUSE OF THE CHURCH BY THE FOLLOWING INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS KEMP'S ESSO SERVICE RA 5-3680 288 Bloor St HOUSTON"S SERVICE STATION AND GARAGE 67 King St. W, Ww. RA 3-7822 IRELAND STUDIO PHOTOGRAPHY RA 3-3680 21 Athol St. W, METTE PLUMBING COMPANY LTD. RA 5-3279 23 Celina St. LORNE GOODMAN PLUMBING -& HEATING RA 5-1044 758 Mary St. KENNETH ASHMORE PAVING CONTRACTOR RA 8-8412 557 Garrard N. A. C. STARK & SON PLUMBING AND TINSMITHING RA 5-4377 Courtice STAFFORD BROTHERS MONUMENTAL WORKS MO 8-3552 318 Dundas St. E., Whitby ROY W. NICHOLS G.M. SALES & SERVICE RA 3.7242 Courtice MA 3-3353 Bowmanville BROWNS LUMBER AND SUPPLIES LTD. 463 Ritson Rd. N. JIM HURVID, PLUMBING & HEATING RA 5-8563 215 Wilson Rd. S. HENDERSON CONCRETE PRODUCTS LTD. 1089 Nelson St. RA 5-4704 RA 3-4412 McINTOSH FUNERAL HOME RA 5-2943 152 King St. E McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES LTD. RA 3-3481 110 King St. W. HAMBLY TIRE LTD. 534 Ritson Rd. S, D. BERKUTA BUILDING CONTRACTOR RA 3.9813 863 Ritson Rd. §. GUSCOTT PLUMBING & HEATING LTD. (John Bondaruk, Manager) RA 5-5132 207 Simcoe St. S. LUDWIG DEZSI Painting and Decorating Contractor RA 3.9453 736 Eastbourne Ave. R. B. REED & SONS FLORISTS RA 5.1131 10% King St. W. SEEDS' B-A STATION RA 8.0367 Simcoe St. N. & Taunton Rd. W. A. SMITH BUILDERS SUPPLY MO 8-2379 701 Brock St. N., Whitby BOB HOY CONSTRUCTION PAVING CONTRACTOR RA 8-810] 1154 Nelson St. RA 8.6221 ALF LINES ASPHALT PAVING CONTRACTOR RA 5-1905 833 Simcoe St. S. A. W. RUNDLE GARDEN CENTRE RA 5-1764 1015 King St. E. J. A. ARMSTRONG Electrical Contractor RA 3.9363 52 FERNHILL Bivd. STEPHENSON'S. GARAGE RA 5.0522 15 Church St. RICKSHA CHINESE Food and Catering RA 8-1676 42 King St. W. OSHAWA ALUMINUM SALES & SERVICE RA 5.7922 58 Nassau St. CLEMENT ULTRA SERVICE RA 8-0631 352 Wilson Rd. §. NORTH OSHAWA PLUMBING & HEATING Allan Robinson, Prop. RA 5-:3715 52 Wayne Ave. AL HEFFERING'S ESSO SERVICE STATION RA 5-9892 Cor. No. 2 Hwy. & Thickson Road. ALDSWORTH CLEANERS RA 5.1812 36 Athol St. E. BANK'S FLOORING RA 8-1011 80 Eastlawn St. E. HANSINK CONSTRUCTION RA 8-0321 413 Fernhill Blvd. LODWICK ELECTRIC SERVICE RA 5-6369 56 Prince St. NORM WIRSCHING & SON PLASTERING CONTRACTORS RA 5-6222 & 5.8718 130 Roxborough Ave, COOK'S ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION LTD. RA 5-6109 370 Louisa OSHAWA SAND & GRAVEL RA 5-0232 877 King St. E. A. R. SMITH & SON EXCAVATING CONTRACTORS RA 8-8113 50 Taunton Rd. W., Attend the Church of Your Choice Read the Oshawa Times Church Announcements for Times of Services and Activities

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