Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 31 Aug 1961, p. 14

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, August 31, 1961 SPORT OUTDOORS -- By Jack Sords JERUSALEM ARTICHOKE, A sun FLOWER, HAS A POTATO-LIKE TUBER KNOWN AND USED BY MICHIGAN INDIANS,» @ 381, KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, oe. performances by second - line pitchers are smoothing the rocky road to major league pen- nants for Cincinnati Reds and Detroit Tigers. While Frank Lary, Jim Bun- ning and Don Mossi have been carrying the pitching burden for Detroit and Joey Jay, Bob Pur- key and Jim O'Toole for Reds, the contenders are also getting help from unexpected sources. ple Leafs of the International League six weeks ago, Reds of second-place Los Angeles. showings of Paul Foytack and York Yankees in the American League. The acquisition of Johnson was a master stroke by Bill DeWitt, Cincinnati's general manager. The fast-balling right- George Scott, 'Ron Stewart 'Tied For Top ! TORONTO (CP) -- George 'Scott's switch from Hamilton's wdefensive halfback to the offen- jsive backfield is one of the big 'reasons for the Tiger-Cats' re- PREDICTS OPPOSITION der has won five games and lost only two. He's beaten Los San Francisco, Surprise Power On Firing Line Proves Big Help NEW YORK (AP)--First-rate and came out of the bullpen 36 times- He had a 5-10 record and a 4.28 E.R.A. With the Athletics the early part of this season, he had only one start in six ap- pearances and lost four deci- sions. Foytack, twice a 15 - game winner for the Tigers, had a sore arm most of last season, when he had a 2-13 mark. This season, he had only two com- plete games in his first 13 staris, Without Ken Johnson, whom|winning seven and losing eight they obtained from Toronto Ma-|games. However, in his last two starts Foytack went all the way in would not be 3% games ahead|y pinning Cleveland 81 on a five-hitter and Washington 10-1 And without the effective; o seven-hitter. Kline was knocked out of the Ronnie Kline, Tigers likely i d h 4 would be further than 115 games box x og Thg RL behind the league-leading New|i3 &° Then be blanked Boston 5-0 and Monday defeated Wash- ington 7-3. Jackie Parker Out In Front, Bright Next EDMONTON (CP) -- Edmon- Eskimos' one - man gang, ton Jackie Parker, scored 25 pointsitions under which the federal in two games last week to take government will distribute $5, the lead in the Western Football|000,000 a year to encourage ath- Conference scoring race. _ Parker counted a touchdown, government after a general de- five field goals and four con'|pate is held on the subject, verts and now has 49 points, 13/p rime Minister Diefenbaker more than teammate Johnny|said Tuesday. Bright, who is second. Legend: B.C.--British Colum- bia, C--Calgary, E--~Edmonton, W--Winnipeg, § -- Saskatche- wan. TD C FG S Pts. Parker, E 2 6 ht 4 B. Walden, E 3 Shannon, W 1 Lunsford, C 3 Quillen, E 3 Burket, S 2 Gotta, S 3 Purdin, § 3 Fleming, B.C. 3 Beamer, B.C. Johnson, B.C. PoC ae wo Pog oooeon®Sow --ofPoco _aoonWoce 3 Whitehouse, S 0 mE commercial organization. 1/to be used for encouragement g|sport exclusively: There would g|be no contribution towards pro- 8 Grant, B.C. TALK ON BILL Government Plan For Riding Sports OTTAWA (CP) -- Regula letics will be drafted by the Among the questions which would have to be considered is how the funds will be admini tered in such cases as an ama- teur hockey team sponsored by The principal consideration, he said, is that the funds are of physical fitness and amateur fessional athletes and teams. The broad outlines of govern- 0 0 13 Jauch, W. 2 0 12 Hagberg, W 2 J. B. Smith, E 2 7-2 00 0 2 0 00 12 .|sought for 30 years, Mr. Dief- Will Debate | ment policy will be contained in the legislation to be placed before Parliament, but details of how it will be administerd will be contained in regulations lowing discussion in Parlia- ment," Mr. Diefenbaker said. The establishment of a na- tional sports council and contri-/helm of the American League bution of federal funds has been|Orioles in 1954 after leaving Chi- enbaker said. "Everywhere athletic prow- ess has given prestige to those|doubleheader against Los Ange- nations which have had a rec- ord of victories, and the fact that the U.S.S.R. has been able in a period of 25 to 30 years to bring about such victories is something that has not been lost sight of among the uncom- mitted nations of the world," Mr. Diefenbaker said. HUGE INDUSTRY Canada's electrical manufac- turing industry spent $467,000,- 000 on raw materials in 1959. year term as general manager Baltimore Orioles when they "which will be decided upon fol-{35k him to finish the 1961 sea- Paul Richards To Finish Out With Orioles LOS ANGELES (AP)-Paul Richards, heading for a five- of the National League's new Baltimore until the season = completed. , It was reported that the Hous' ton contract would run through 1966 and provide an annual sal ary of $60,000 or more. Rich- ards' contract with the Orioles runs through the 1963 season at $50,000 a year. Houston club, will go along with son- Oriole officials say they will ask him to stay. Richards, who took over the cago White Sox, announced his resignation as the Orioles' field manager Tuesday, just before a les Angels. The move was rumored for weeks. Houston begins play in an expanded National League next season. Richards said the contract with Houston has not been com- pleted but that Houston officials have agreed to his general de- mands. Joseph Iglehart, the Orioles' board chairman, said he will PAY as you PLAY 18 Challenging Holes S Low Rates Club House onstruction © No Tee-Off Waiting BOOK YOUR FALL TOURNAMENTS NOW JUST 1 MILE WEST OF AJAX Toke 401. Turn South ot Ajex fo Bese Line. Follow Signs. DUFFINS CREEK Golf & Country Club ask Richards to remain with MELBOURNE (AP) -- Pres-|; heer THIS GIRL 1S SWINGING ON TWO NYLON CORDS ident Norman W. Strange of the Lawn Tennis Association of Aus- tralia Monday forecast increas- ed opposition next year to open tennis tournaments. He said he believes the United States, which favored the introduction of open tournaments this year, is a nifty 3.10 and he's fanned 29 while walking only 13. WAS RELIEVER The odd feature of Johnson's previous big league record was that he was almost strictly a reliever, With Kansas City in is likely to alter its views. ivitalized showing this season in the Eastern Football Confer- 'ence. + The six-foot-one, 190 - pound Scott, picked up in mid-season !last year from New York Gi- 'ants of the National League, {has given Hamilton an outside isunning threat with his great 'speed and shiftiness. He Is tied for the Big Four scoring lead 'with 24 points on four touch- 'downs, although the Tiger-Cats +have played only two games so| 'far. He shares the lead with home-| 'brew Ron Stewart of Ottawa .Rough Riders, who In four] «games has also counted four ! touchdowns. Legend: H--Hamilton, 0--Ot- | tawa, T--Toronto, M--Montreal. ! TDC FG S Pts. : Scott, H 40 : Stewart, O | Gilchrist, T Jackson, O Schreider, 0 Thelen, O . Shatto, T « Mann, T ! Goldston, H . Yarbrough, M + Nesbitt, O . Sutherin, H 'Bewley, M ° ! Desmarais, 0 Simpson, 0 ' Smale, O Sowalski, O . Reynolds, O + West, O : Kelly, 0 . McDougall, H + Dekker, H ! Philp, T + Poliziani, M ¢ Clark, M CALL 723-3481 24/] Oshawa's Oldest & Largest Supplier . . « | MCLAUGHLIN :| COAL and SUPPLIES LTD. FREE DELIVERY ON ALL ORDERS! 110 KING ST. WEST -- just this size .-- -- 1960 he started only six games|} Pratty Judy Cox and her graceful 109 Ibs. swing through 1 It's ma tire cords like those in Canadian Tire's the air with the greatest of ease and safety on two |DOUBLE-STRENGTH = S ; Prompt OSHAWA OHH pa pa MS OO HN NNN owe coo Co0o®PPoP PW noo on a® Coo g000P Poon oc 0c oko "OOP oOo oHONOcOSooPoe® HADRIAN RDM 00 | Berretta, M B.EGoodrich win NYLON In every 750/14 Super-Lastic Twin-Ply Nylon Tire there are 2168 similar cords = sufficient to support, with absolute safety, 1084 young ladies (59 tons of beauty at one time). This is living proof that the DuPont Nylon cord in the NEW Super - Lastic TWIN - PLY tires by being TWICE AS BIG is TWICE AS STRONG as the tire cord used in conventional fires. A NEW CONCEPT IN TIRE BUILDING . . . that gives the SOFTEST RIDE on any road . . . the COOLEST running Tire ever built! ® SO SAFE -- that millions of miles of driving on over 100,000 of these tires in the past test year have not produced a single, solitary re- ported case of a blowout. Bruise damage caused by striking curbs, pot-holes and stones is shown to be a mere 1/100th of 1%. ® DOUBLE STRENGTH TWIN-PLY- NYLON --- contains by weight the same amount of finest DuPont Nylon Tire Cord, but by being twice as big, is twice as strong as the tire cord used in conventional tire building. This new method allows the production of a tire that is "ALL MUSCLE" -- like a well-trained athlete, so com- pletely flexible and ready to respond instantly to every call for action. Yes, flexibility Is the secret of the success of the new Double- Strength Twin-Ply NYLON. ® DARE TO COMPARE ~ Examine this new Super-Lastic Double-Strength Twin-Ply NYLON tire -- FEEL IT! You'll be amazed aot the light- weight, flexible resilience. Like a champion boxer, the Twin-Ply NYLON "rolls with the punch," that's why It soaks In and absorbs every variation in the road surface -- resists heavy impacts that cause breaks and blow- outs in the kind of tires you've been riding on. © LONGER LIFE -- Tire cords flex at every turn of the fire; in conventional cord tires this causes heat buildup -- tires run hot and the hotter they run, the weaker they get. This "flex fatigue" is like over-burdening a strain- ed heart, for the tire cord is the heart of the tire. Super-lastic Double-Strength TWIN-PLY NYLON runs appreciably cooler -- minimizes the damaging heat buildup that Is a major cause of premature tire failure. ® SPEED SAFE -- Super-Lastic Double-Strength TWIN-PIY NYLON TIRES have successfully proven capable of sustained high speeds, hour after hour; with sidewalls that are all but im- pervious to breaks, even from the most brutal impacts. The Full-Thick TREADS are the latest in tire design for traction and quiet running. There's a lot of talk in trade circles that the new 1962 cars in popular categories will be equipped with the new Twin-Ply fires. You can get these new, finer features NOW -- but only at Canadian Tire. ® SAVE SAFELY -- From a service life angle, Super-Lastic Double-Strength Twin-Ply Nylon could command a much higher price; but in keeping with Canadian Tire's 40- year-old policy, the consumer price is our factory cost, plus a small, direct - selling profit margin. Investigate Super-lastic Double - Strength Twin - Ply Nylon this week end . . . at CANADIAN TIRE. Road Hazard Insured, plus 5-year Guarantee, Roy ROAD HAZARD 5-YEAR INSURANCE _PLUS GUARANTEE WHENEVER AND WHEREVER YOU DRIVE--Every Canadian Tire Store from Newfoundland to the Head of the Great Lakes will honor the Super-Lastic INSURANCE- GUARANTEE, in the event of tire failure due to workmanship, materials or ROAD HAZARDS . .. including Blowouts, Accidents, Glass Cuts encountered in normal driving. This is a big convenience that you'll appreciate on out-of-town trips . . This Adjustment Service is there for you, IF--~AS and WHEN YOU NEED IT. Customer pays only for service rendered. ASSOCIATE STORE ON ANY TIRE PURCHASED! Take your vacation the Smilcage Way On New, Safe B.F.Goodrich quality tires ! 95 6:70 x 135 4-ply Bik or 7:50 x 14 4-ply Bik SAFETY-S NYLON ' TUBELESS AND YOUR RECAPPABLE TIRE * NO CASH NEEDED YOUR TRADE-IN CAN BE YOUR DOWN PAYMENT ------------------------------------------------------------- SALE PRICE WITHOUT LTT TN - - 7 ~N WAS RN Ks Smet WHITBY Bruce R. King, Prop. 311 BROCK ST. N. MO 8.5828 Whitby Service open te 10 p.m. daily except Saturday. OSHAWA Pred A. Smith Co. Led. 115 SIMCOE ST. S. 728-6272 i QUEEN ST. -- PORT PERRY ™ 985-2824" I ------------ ---- A ---------- -------- -- i ---- 88 KING ST. WEST 725-4543 SEER r

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy