§ THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Taesflay, October 8, m5 "MOM" WHYTE OF Bow- manville, who is looking after some 60 needy children at her Three More Volunteers | foster home was privileged, with two members of her staff, to view a news film of their work on Saturday. The three | | workers were guests of David | left to right: Mrs. Whyte, Mr. Savage, manager of the Plaza | Theatre. Caught by the camera | Reta McLean. before viewing the film are, Join 'Mom' Whyte Staff While municipal authorities are preparing to officially review the operation of "Mom" Whyte's Bowmanville foster home, people in many sections of Canada are volunteering their services to keep the home operating A. Chatham, contractor, a Fort william nurse, a Kitchener moth- er have all decided to "migrate" to Bowmanville to help Mrs. Whyte care for more than 60 homeless children. TEACHER ARRIVES A North Bay school teacher, Ingrid Carlson, 25, arrived at the home this weekend and will open school for the 22 school-age wards rext Monday Miss Carlson became acquaint- ed with the work of Mr. and Mrs. | Bert Whyte when she became lost while driving from Niagara Falls to North Bay and called| at the farm for directions. | Mrs. Whyte said today that alhome. trained Kindergarten teacher has also volunteered her services to| the home, but details are not yet available. Today a bull-dozer began dig- ging the basement of a further extension to the dormitories at the Whyte's 50-acre farm The new dormitory is needed, said Mrs. Whyte, for accommoda- tion and playrooms during the wet winter months. PREPARING BRIEFS As tempo of activity at the Whyte farm increases, officials of the United Counties of Northum- berland and Durham and other district councils are preparing briefs for presentation at a meet- ing in Bowmanville tomorrow af- ternoon. The municipal authorities plan to present to the public what they describe as '"'the other side of} the case" of the "Mom" Whyte| The Chatham contractor, who has dedicated himself to helping Mrs. Whyte, is Peter Schell. His! wife is a trained nurse Mr. and Mrs. Schell are selling | three houses in Chatham to fi- nance their mission to the White home WORKING IN ORPHANAGE From Kitchener is coming, Katey Bearinger, 26, who is pres- ently working in an there And in Fort William, Rose- marie David, a mother of three children, is packing her posses-| sions to join in the crusading| work of the Whyte family and growing band of supporters "Again and again our prayers are being answered", said Mrs. Whyte today. "The people at tomorrow's of- ficial meeting are going to be amazed', forecast Mrs. Whyte. Alston Pins Dodgers Hopes On Clem Labine nerve-tingling epic that had every score. At the last second, how- gathering of 64,519ever, every inches By JOE REICHLER BROOKLYN (AP)--Their bac to the wall, just as has been the case all year, Br ers today were staking their worl series hopes on friendly Ebbets Field in the battle with New York Yankees for the world baseball * championship. oe] ! Beaten for the third consecutive time at Yankee Stadium Monday 20, in a history-making perfect | game performance by unpredict- able Don Larsen, the Dodgers found themselves trailing for the first time, three games to two. | Realizing their could be no to- morrow, manager Walter Alston turned to his ace relief pitcher, | rcan Clem Labine, rather than to hisj 27-game winner Don Newcombe, 3 to pitch the sixth and what could be the payoff game FIRST START This was Labine's first starting relieving eight adopted less than a month ago. assignment after times in three series. In his one relief effort during this series, he striking out vielded one hit and one unearned was his feat that only four batted the eighth. run in a two-inning relief job in balls had a chance of being rated STRONG He started only hits the third game. son, all in the September drive verted and twice he pitched fine games. He wound up with a season record CLOSE CALLS of 10-6. Kucks in two has appeared ks fan ] anging = h 1d| The 27-year-old righthander's in- again was victimized by a thrill-| credible performance, embellished' ing Yankee play. Gil hit a tricky, by Mickey Mantle's third series low liner to the left of Carey. The home run and Hank Bauer's run- Yankee third baseman lunged for producing single, was at the ex-'the ball i pense of Sal Maglie, who literally above the ground pitched his heart out in a gallant ALL AWARE {but losing effort. It was Maglie, the 39-year-old stands Cinderella man, who turned back Larsen had accomplished the most the Yankees in the series opener spectacular and who went into Monday's game This fect leagues and only the fifth in base- it was ball's modern era. |as |GREATEST EVER ries in the breathlessly on s the sentimental favorite. At the end, however, the fun-loving, devil-may- standing delivery which Larsen made but 97 seven One was a foul homer by into outs by Yankee fielding inning, o% In the second Robinson smashed vicious ond in world series competition, Larsen did it with a most revolu- was 'a heart-breaker. The Barber tionary delivery, a no windup se- pitched a better game in defeat Each pitch was served from than in his winning effort against he the Yankees last Wednesday. He permitted only pitches, two and struck out five, including So amazing the last three batters hefaced, in cere thanks. Jackie single one of the 11 the ball curved foul--by Then, in the eighth, Hodges t and caught it inches ze7-3 the that soul in realize wasn't a who didn't There of all was only the game pitched spectaculars seventh per- in the major e § The last perfect game in the care native of Michigan City, Ind., majors was achieved by Charley 9% who had the huge, emotion-filled Robertson of Chicago White Sox ty keep the Dodgers' faint series|. owl cheering wildly as he fired April 20, 19 hopes alive. Yankee pilot Casey/a third strike past pinch hitter Detroit Stengel, in a spot where he canipaje Mitchell for the climax to score amble, selected Johnny Kucks, the greatest game ever pitched in is 18-game winner, as the man ; wo ud4 ceries. 22 when he vanquished also hy a 24 . hi Tigers, For Maglie, the defeat, his sec- 5 8! five hits, walked START t was his pitching that not a hitters was able to hit the ball to right field, games, both times in relief, and grounder off Andy Carey's glove in t he direction of the nearby has given up three hits and two at third base for what momentar- right field wall runs in two innings. Although . Stengel leaned toward Kucks, there was a possibility he mght change his mind at the last min- time to nip Robinson at first by pitches to left, lashed into a curve ute In that event, the Yankee pitcher would be Bob Turley, the hard-throwing righthander, who also has pitched in two series games, striking out three, giving that appeared headed for the al- Maglie up no hits, no runs and no walks in 1 1-3 innings. His season rec- ord was 8-4. REPEAT UNLIKELY It is extremely doubtful in fact, ily appeared a certain hit. But Gil McDougald, the alert Yankee shortstop, recovered the ball in half a step. In the fifth, minutes after Mantle had put the Yankees ahea 1-0 with a blast into the right field stands, Gil Hodges sent a drive ley between centre and left for extra bases. But Mantle raced across the turf to make a sensa- tional backhanded catch Then, with two out in the fourth ani the bases empty, Mantle af- ter fouling off several two-strike that broke a little inside and drove it into the right field seats to break the spell. The Yankees got run their second for three hits with a single and after sacrificed, Bauer with a single opened Larsen through the odds are better than 40,000 to connected with a pitch and rock- but this time Maglie got Mantle to 1 against it, that either of today's eted a drive toward the right field hit into an inning-ending double the National League that pitches ing township, on Friday morning fo! pitchers will duplicate Larsen's stands that promised to tie the play. Use Central Depot OSHAWA AND To Load Vehicles A $500,000 vehicle release depot, designed to handle the loading and releasing of the entire pro- duction. of automobiles and trucks in the Oshawa plant of General Motors of Canada, Limited, start- ed operations this morning The depot, built by Gen.-Auto Shippers Ltd., is located at the corner of Wentworth street and Park road. It consists of a 300- foot loading dock, 19 acres of black-topped marshalling yard, plus a 130 foet by 35 foot office buildin Gen Hoar, depot vehicles per uto President Harold T. of Toronto, said that the is designed to handle 2.000 day, but would not likelv handle more. than 1,000 per day this year, or whatever GM produces. Gen-Auto will handle the entire GM output under agreement Here is how the depot will op erate. GM vehicles will be driven from the assembly plant to the depot, where they will be mar shalled until ready to be loaded on to carriers from the dock. The earriers will deliver the vehicles to GM dealers across the coun- try Before responsibility was plac ed with Gen-Auto for the release and shipping of GM vehicles, in- dividual carriers picked up GM vehicles and loaded them at their own yards. Now the carriers car- ry the vehicles away under agree- ment with Gen.-Auto from the single yard. Thirty carriers could be loaded at the same time. If they were five-unit carriers, this means that 150 cars could be loaded jin 20 minutes, if necessary Gen-Auto has named four On tario trucking companies as car- riers. in addition to several un named Western transporters The Ontario companies offices in Oshawa are Transport Ltd., Charlton port Ltd., and McCallum port Ltd. The fourth con Roadway Carriers Ltd ronto offices. The ovening today was not the official opening. Gen.-Auto Presi dent Hoar said the official open- ing will take place in two weeks Boutes that these carriers will with Russell Trans- Trans- any, has To- DISTRICT BIRTHDAYS TODAY Congratulations and best wishes are extended to Robert B. Proc- orphanage § Ontario who toaay opened she 43rd Inter- national Plowing Match and Farm Brooklin, has issued the foliowing greeting to the competitors tak- ing part in the match and to the thousands of watch the competition: as an active participant great without gomplete farm ince and welfare of the province. appreciation' of made by Association that I extend my sin-| Apert pe Match and" Farm Machinery De- monstration vi nature of modern er mutual ing has worked so long to make this Interment occasion a real success my sin- plot in the Oshawa Union Ceme- profitable agriculture." in the sixth, ganging up on Yankees but not once did he pre. ert Caverly, Donald Ennis, Carey cede a pitch with a windup came get a man on base all afternoon between while third and short to make it 2-0. Joe they On the next play, Sandy Amoros Collins followed with another hit like it before. of the Giants." up was Larsen's own idea. Saturday afternoon the Osh- awa B'Nai B'Rith sponsored a trip to the Shrine circus for 23 underprivileged children from Cv wn th hp. Ee : A a HE 5 % B'NAI BRITH LODGE | the Children's Shelter and Sim- | B'Nai B'Rith: bus driver, Ar- coe Hall. Here is the group be- ; nold Green, B'Nai B'Rith; Tim fore they left for Maple Leaf | Nelson, Simcoe Hall; Jane Bak- Gardens, Toronto. Back row | er, supervisor; Al Spring, B'Nai | left to right are: Max Collins, | B'Rith; Mrs. A. Spring. Next to HOST 5 hong : f | PE ATS pe | Mrs. Spring is one of the chil- | dren's group. Next to her is | Mrs. Frances Schwartz, Mrs. | Spring and Mrs. Schwartz re- | presented the Oshawa Hadas- | of sah. The group travelled by the chartered bus in the back- ground, Saturday was the last ay of the Shrine Circus. --Times-Gazette Photo. Savage, Sharon Rogerson and ~--Times-Gazette Phato. a recent meeting of the South Ontario Federation of Agri- {eulture, held in Myrtle Hall, it was decided the federation would | participate with Simcoe and York | counties in placing a display at | the International Plowing Match at Brooklin. Durham county was also asked to take part. It was arranged that Mr. Tin- |dall, chairman of the federation, with the co-operation of the prize donors, the paint companies ard the agricultural committee of the | county council, would look aiter {tre distribution of prizes for the farmstead improvement competi- {tion. The prizes are to be {awarded on Wednesday at 12 aonn at the Eaton tent. Cheques not | picked up there will be available {at the federation of agriculture Uxbridge Church, Wed., Nov. 14. A letter was read from 'Le {Hon. W. A. Goodfellow accepting an invitation to be the soeaker at the annual meeting of the 'ed- eration. The turkey dinner will be served by the ladies in the a HON. W. A. GOODFELLOW Federation Of Agriculture Plans Display At Plowing Match Yankee The serious problem confront: ing the farmers of Ontario coun- ty regarding the Rural Co-oper- ator subscriptions was discussad as the bill was presented for the year ahead. The secretary was instructed to write to all the par- ticipating organizations to ascer- tain whether or not they wished By WILL GRIMSLEY NEW YORK (AP)--A hundred and fifty years from now, and a hundred and fifty more, baseball | fans will speak in awe of a tall, to participate to the extent they| JASY-S0In8 | Seandinayian a ed ha? before the federation of agri- i culture took over the re perfect baseball game in the world ] 3 : eries, of lists aud eollecting and paying "what about this fellow Larsen? os 4 "He loves his fun," says a New Studying the proposed Farmed| York Yankee teammate. 'I don't Products Marketing Act had to|guess he's one for keeping train- be set aside until the next meet-|ing and observing curfews. But ing as were the bylaws of incor-' he's one heck of a pitcher when poration for the newly incorpor-|he wants to be." ated Ontario Federation of Agri-| "He's been typed strictly a culture. playboy," says a baseball writer Mr. Tindall was named dele- Who travelled with the team all gate to the provincial annual|Year. "You get the idea he is a meeting. Delegates to the conyen-| Wild roustabout who goes around tion include Mr. Rodd and Mr. busting up beer joint . That's not Doble of Reach township, Alfred so at all. He has a devil-may-care fackson of Drooklin and Mrs, Attitude. He's really a swell, Hamer, Myrtle. friendly guy." . "Just an overgrown boy," says Match Praised OBITUARIES | Bill Dewitt, assistant to Yankee | general manager George Weiss. \ "This fellow is a good pitcher," ysays Casey Stengel, the Yankee ABRAHAM S. GRAY A resident of Oshawa and dis- trict nearly all his life, Abraham Gray passed away at Fair- view Lodge, Whitby, early today in his 90th year. Mr. Gray had made his home at Fairview Lodge for the past 14 months. A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. who will Ira Gray, the deceased was horn at Aultsville, Ontario, on Feb. 12, "One cannot spend a life-time 1867. | in the| Mr. Gray was an employee of of agriculture the McLaughlin Carriage Co., for realization of/17 years and later for mahy ye=ars the various wes an employee of the city board of the prov-of works department. | in advancing] He was predeceased by his the economic first wife, the former Orleita| Howard, in 1926 and by his sec-| therefore, with sincere ond wile, the former Louisa | the contribution Groves, on Sept. 19, 1956. the Ontario Plowmen's| pe leaves four daughters, Mrs. | is Gooding (Winnifred) of ere wishes for your continued Oshawa, Mrs. David Shearer uceess on this, the occasion of (Edna) and Mrs. Charles Ruther our 43rd International Plowing ford (Ruby) of Toronto and Mrs Gordon Burns (Velma) of Osh-| awa and four sons, Milton of RR| 3, Bowmanville, Harold, Cecil and] Leslie of Oshawa Also surviving are 24 grand- 20 great-grandchil- - = By Minister William A. Goodfellow, Minister of Agriculture, Hon Machinery Demonstration at visitors industry he important part organizations have played maintaining "It is, "I deem it appropriate that this ear's "International" should be eld in Ontario County where, by your geographical po- ition, progressive agriculture and children and industry have demon. dren. | trated that they can work togeth-| Rev. S. C. H. Atkinson, minist- in harmony in a spirit of er of Albert Street United Church, respect and understand- will conduct the memorial service at the Armstrong Funeral Chapel that at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 10. will be in the family "To the local committee To the visitors from tery. other parts of the province and id other For 3 2-3 innings, the veteran yolcome. three games during the entire sea-/inches. Three drives were cga- righthander matched Larsen bat- mutually spectacular ter for batter. turning back the first 11 Yankee ™ tters. So master- ful lands I extend a sincere FUNERAL OF May your visit prove MRS. SALOME CAVERLY profitable and do much The memorial service for Mrs o further our interest in a sound. Salome Caverly, who died at the Oshawa General Hospital on ternational Plowing Match. manager. 'Wonderful equipment and potentiality. I always felt he of could do it if he set his mind to it.» On a chilly, windy Monday, Oct. 8, 1856, Don Larsen set his mind to it--and made baseball history. pallbearers were Ken ALL VICTIMS Blackmore, Donald Blackmore, Twenty seven members of Stoddart Mercer, Jack Gillette, | Brooklyn's fence-wrecking forces Terry Graham and Carlton Black- walked to home plate at Yankee more | Stadium. Twenty-seven promptly Funeral Chapel at 10.30 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 8. Rev. Clinton Cross. rector St. George's Anglican Church, conducted the services. Interment was in the Oshawa Union Ceme- tery. The Hurler Pitches First Series No-Hitter (walked back to the dugout--vic-|the second inning of | tim of Don's blazing fast ball and | game, won by the AA a | tricky slider, | "That's the last time I'm going | It was the first no-hit, no-run|to bed early,' he said. game in world series history. The| Larsen is 27, boyish-faced, good- 'game's mightiest pitchers, Cy|looking and crew-cut. He likes his { Young, Christy Mathewson,| beer and is a comic book fan. | Grover Cleveland Alexander, Lefty| During spring training last April Grove and Carl Hubbell, had tried| Larsen drove his automobile into a and come short of Monday's per-|tree at 5 o'clock one morning, suf- | fection. fering no physical damage but | Larsen threw 97 pitches, 71 of | getting involved with the traffic them strikes. He got as many as! court. |three balls on only one player--| Everybody expected Casey Sten- Peewee Reese in the first inning.' gel to crack down on his "prob- The six-foot-four, 225 - pound|lem child." But Casey called Don righthander retired the Dodgers|into his office, gave him a strong with such consumate ease--catch-| dressing down and sent him out on ing them looking and swinging, |the field to do wind sprints. They making them pop up and ground |were the only punishment, out--that the crowd of 64,000 sat| 'Casey likes Larsen," a Yankee there numbed--hardly realizing) said. 'His two favorites are Lar- the drama. | sen and Billy Martin. I think it's Larsen demonstrated a bit of | because they've got a little devil his complex personality later, in them." when, pale and breathless, he an-| SIGNED BY BROWNS swercd machine-gun questions of| Larsen was a crack baseball {his herculean pitching feat. {and basketball player at San BEER AN BED | Diego high school--having moved Somebody asked him what he|with his family from Michigan planned to do that evening. | City, Ind.--~when he was signed "What I do every evening," he by St. Louis Browns after grad- said. "I'll have a couple of beers! uation in June, 1947. and go to bed.' After his tour of minor league Larsen told a friend he was so, duty, he moved to the big leagues | anxious to win in the world series; with the Browns in 1853. He was that he decided to start training| Browns' property when the fran- hard. So he put himself on a|chise moved to Baltimore. | schedule of no strong drink and| He won only seven games in early-to-bed. 11953 and only three in 1954, while He was disillusioned when he|su® 21 defeat: 954, the was shelled from the mound in!se.son's high. HEADS OF ONTARIO COUNTY OSCAR DOWNEY Co-chairman of the ittee for the Inter Plowing Match. EL : HEBER DOWN Chairman of the Ontario County Committee for the In- PLOWING MATCH COMMITTEE H. LYNN FAIR ] W. G. MANNING Agricultural Representative | Ontario County Clerk-freas- and International Plowing Match | orer and treasurer.for the In- local secretary. ternationa! Plowing Match. | | Thursday, Oct. -4, in her 82nd year, was held at the Armstrong Funeral Chapel at 3.30 p.m. on' Sunny clouding over by noon, and | clearing this evening, sunny Wed- | nesday, cooler. Winds northwest Larsen Threw Saturday, Oct. 6. The services were conducted by i . Rev. W. J. Stonehouse of Ottawa, |assisted by Rev. R. W. McCaw 1 C es land Rev. M. E. Dawson of To- ronto. Interment was in the Osn- NEW YORK (AP)--Don Larsen 3%a Union Cemetery. threw 97 pitches in Monday's The pallbearers were Stanley perfect no-hitter for New York Pollard, Archie Goldsmith, Rob- John Barlow and Robert McCoy. FUNERAL OF MRS. CHARLES C. STENHOUSE The funeral service for Mrs. Charles C. Stenhouse, who died at Altona road, Picker- Brooklyn Dodgers, who didn't 24, agreed seen anything losing hadn't they quite "I don't think there's anyone in her home, like that," said Peewee Reese, 18st, was held at the McIntosh "except maybe Dick Littlefield 2 lack of a wi iY, i Manager Casey Stengel said the him so long gs oy Jat idea of pitching without winding|ahead and throws it. You can't 3 tell when he's going to let it go. . "He thought Boston was steal- And while you're 2 siting there, ing signs two, three weeks ago," 'maybe you drop your elbow or said Stengel. "It's helped him, something and before you get set and I suppose everybody will be again the pitch is there. I guess doing it now." i we should have stepped out on Brooklyn's Duke Snider said he him more, like Jackie Robinson had a heckuva time with that did." ! tor, 835 Mary street, who is cele- brating his birthday today take to get out of town are in definite. Gen.-Auto has declined to" disclose them One likely route is along Park road south to Bloor, and on to Highway 401 via the Cromwell cloverleaf, Other opinion holds that some carrier trafiic will dis perse to local yards before leav ing the city. A Wentworth-Rit- son road route to the highway bas also been suggested as a pos sible route Construction has been going on at the site for two months, Three Oshawa firms did .the job. They are the Gay Co. Ltd., W. B. Ben nett Paving, Ltd.,, and Pleasure Valley Construetion Co., Ltd | An Oshawa man is vice-presi- dent of newly-formed Gen.-Auto He is Harold Mothersill of North | Oshawa | -------- have already 12,327 "3% 1956 Home of Ideas The only home of its kind in Canada Why don't you drop in and see the Beautiful - Truly Remarkable Home WEATHER 120 today, northwest 15 tonight, | TORONTO (CP) -- Official fore. light Wednesday. casts issued by the Dominion pub- FORECAST TEMPERATURES lic weather office at 4:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Strong winds from the! 1ow tonight and high Wednes- northwest brought cooler air rap- day: | idly southward and it now covers| co. Ane all of Ontario. Snowflurries and} nasor vers 88 rainshowers, associated with the! St. Thomas .. ! cool air, are occurring over north- London .... : ? ern Ontario. Cloud is expected to Wingham : | develop over Southern Ontario. A Toronto few showers are forecast over lrenton .... areas in the lee of the lakes. Skies St. Catharines will clear this evening in the lower Hamilton .... : - CHRIS SCIENCE Swaps Falls Exercising,| coq heating snd regemptive 3 | power was emphasized in Chris- Leg Believed Broken | tian Science services on Sunday, CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) -- Swaps, | Oct. 7. The Golden Text was from one of the world's greatest race| Psalms (67: 1,2): "God be mer- horses and winner of the 1955 ciful unto us, and bless us; and Kentucky Derby, broke down cause his face to shine upon us; while exercising this morning at that thy way may be known Garden State Park. Early reports upon earth, thy saving heal indicated he might have broken|among all mations." his left hind les. | ; The lakes of Killarney in Ire- |land's Kerry County have been ac-. claimed among the world's most beautiful scenic areas. The island of Zanzibar was in- la creasingly colonized from. south- west Arabia from at least 700 BC. Great Lakes area and frost is ex- Muskoka .. pected tonight. Sunny weather is Killaloe recast for Wednesday. Earlton Regional forecasts valid until Sudbury midnight Wednesday: | North Bay Lake Erie, Lake Ontario. Niag- Kapuskasing ara, Windsor, Toronto, Hamilton: 'Moosonee ATTENTION Watch Next Friday's Paper For Important Announcement For FUEL AND HEATING IS OUR BUSINESS Ww. G. "Walter" CORBEN Walter is in the Sales Depart- ment of the company, selling oil - coal - oil burners and fur- naces, air conditioning equip-. ment too! He would like to tell you about our quality merchan- dise. Call him soon. Quality Fuel Quality Equipment Quality Service DELCO HEAT BY GENERAL MOTORS FOR OIL OR GAS MOTORISTS FUEL OIL TINSMITHING PHONE AIR CONDITIONING RA 3-4663 TUNE IN THE DIXON NEWS -- CKLB -- 12 NOON DAILY COAL