Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 22 Jul 1958, p. 11

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ES FUR. FIN AND CAMPFIRE By JACK SORDS four morning heats for Wednes- THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesdey, July 22, 1958 11] Record try In day, opening day of the regatia. Crews are centred from such|a j ingl from Sta ford Uni /s are ¢ om such|a junior single from Stanford Unie The unprecedented number ofi . iered points as Philadelphia, |versity, . Canadian Henley races will see afternoon programs|new york, Kenora, Ont in. ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- En-|as early as 3 p.m. neapolis, Ecorse: Mich "Brock- There are 14 entries in the tries from some 20 United States| "We had hoped for an entry|ville, St. Paul, Buffalo, Detroit|open dash for singles and 13 in and Canadian rowing clubs have such as this, but really didn't'and Palo Alto, Calif. : [the 145-pound dash. Ten scullers i) i Toceivel - ae, week's dare dream # Soule Sure [re Kenora is coming to the Henley are competing in the junior 145- gh gel og Bo gid ry Chute 2 i ors of Rami for the first time since before the pound singles and 10 crews are J g Second World War. The Palo|entered in the dash for eights, re- |gram in the 76-year history of|Association of Amateur Oarsmen.|Alt try i i iri i the four-day rowing champion- 1A o entry is a senior double and quiring heats to pare the field. LOOK! NEW REDUCED PRICES The record entry has forced Effective Immediately On Premium Quality FURNACE FUEL OIL "NOW c Jim Vipond's Drive Nearing Objective diamond when sports fans ganioperation after he reaches his eat Suffet style with Toronto area|$100,000 objective, has been with sports celebrities for a fee of $5|The Globe since 1937 after grad- apiece, Dinner attendance is es-|uating from Triaity College timated at 1,000, 300 of them School at Port Hope, Ont. celebrities who are buying their|------ own tickets. When it's built, the swimming! TUES., JULY 22nd, 8:45 P.M. KINSMEN STADIUM pool will have a close connection) IN THE EVENT OF RAIN OSHAWA ARENA TORONTO (CP)--A few days] ago Toronto police phoned sports editor Jim Vipond of the Toronto Globe and Mail to watch for and report to them on contents of a registered letter. A man had committed suicide. In his pockets were a $2 bill and a receipt for the registered let. ted to Vipond, Police, hoped it might offer some exp anation. When the ]etter arrived it fidn't heln police. But the $5 do- | aation it contained helped Vipond 8 FT. 2 IN. 430 LBS. SEE with the newspaper. Main build-| ing at the crippled children's | THE centre at 186 Beverly St. on the] fringe of Toronto's downtown area is the old home of George inch closer to a $100,000 objective Brown, one of the fathers of Con- for construction of a swimming|federatin who founded the old pool at Toronto's centre for men-| Globe 115 years ago. i RETRIGVING, 66 SLOWLY. A BASS OFTEN LIKES BBE RETREE GIES HM HAT CHANG: A A Ca TO RESIDENTS OF OSHAWA AND WHITBY YOU CANNOT USE A LANDING NET "THAT IS TOO LARGE PER tally retarded children. BEGAN IN 1955 {PROGRAM VITAL The Metropolitan Toronto As- = | Not all donations fave that sociation for Retarded Children {macabre touch. But the experi-|gay; itz swimming program is vi-| |ence reflects the interest in the tal improving the general well- drive which Vipond started in his| peing of youngsters who don't get| |daily sports column late in 19553 chance to play with normal as a Christmas cheer fund for|children around their homes. [the retarded and soon. turned into|Most of the 345 children who will the year-round swimming pool|attend its centre in the new | project. : {school year come from the To- His fund now stands at more ronto area although there are a [than $70,000, within shouting dis-\few in rcsidence from other On- {tance of the objective, built upliario centres. 2 {mainly through small donations.| vinond who figures he may Oa ron 0» |The biggest individual chunk| +P down to a aka fund |came from the Globe and Mail| it - |ifself which announced when he | reached the $18,000 mark it would A GOOD WAY TO LOSE A FISH IS TO USE A ABTI00 SMALL. No-Hitter Over Red Sox, In Fenway Park, Real Feat BOSTON (AP) -- Righthander| Jim Bunning of Detroit Tigers| pasked in the glow of a no-hitter today after overcoming Ted Wil- liams, superstition and a tough park for his share of baseball history. He faced 30 men as he de feated Boston Red Sox 3-0 Sun- day in the first game of a double-| header. He walked Gene Stephens twice and hit Jackie Jensen with a pitch, But it was Williams, 1957 Amer- jean League batting champion, who haunted Bunning's thoughts as he neared his goal. "The big thing I had on my no-hitter from the sixth inning on|pennies mind goidg out for the last in- ping was I didn't want to walk anybody," Bunning aid. thought was I just mustn't get anyone on -- so Williams could come up and hit a homer." Williams had beaten Detroit with a two-run, 12th-inning blast Saturday. TWO WERE DOWN Bunning struck out Stephens on an inside corner delivery, then fanned Ted Lepcio on a slow high curve, and thére were two down in the ninth. He had struck out 12. Next: Williams. First pitch was wide. "" | match the next $25,000. Another js. 00 came in five individual do- | nations of $1,000 apiece. "The response has been ter- rific," says the 42-year-old sports editor, who figures that the other $40,000 came In more than 8,000 donations averaging less than §5 " |apiece. ies the ball There's one baseball fan who sends $1 every time Rocky Nel- Al Kaline grabbed it and Bun-|son, home run king of the In- |ning, a fall, 6-year-old Kentuck.| ternational Baseball League, lian, was mobbed by teammates. blasts a circuit blow for Toronto | Williams also was the final out Maple Leafs. | ithe last time an opponent threw SAVES PENNIES Bunning said. | sailed into right field I know it | wasn't hit that good." | | Mg =a» o SPECIAL © PAUL BUNYAN (THE GIANT) vs. GENE KINISKI Fred Atkins vs. Bill McMurray Dan Miller vs. Pat Flanagan GENE KINISKI Get Your Tickets Early for These Fine Exhibitions RINGSIDE 1.50 -- GENERALS 1.25 -- CHILDREN 1.00 DIAL RA 3-9721 -- PAT MILOSH, Promoter REDUCED T 2 » 16 GAL. WHY PAY MORE? For Prompt Delivery By Our Fleet Of Metered Trucks Phone VIGOR OIL "=" RA 5-1109 OSHAWA % MO 8-3644 WHITBY @® OIL BURNER SERVICE DEPT. @ AUTOMATIC FUEL OIL DELIVERY @ la no-hitter at the Red Sox. That was Sept. 28, 1951. Allie| {Reynolds former fireballer with New York Yankees, did the job |then, getting Williams to pop foul jie catcher Yogi Berra. BUT HE KNEW Bunning said he was after the {and while his teammates refused {to defy tradition by mentioning "My|it, Jim let them know he knew.| "There's all the more credit to Bunning because he pitched it in this park," catcher Red Wilson |said. "It's a rough park for a pitcher." Bunning is only the third man to throw a no-hitter in Boston's |Fenway Park in 47 years. The others were Walter Johnson (1920) and Ted Lyons (1926). | Facing power righthanders like Jensen, Frank Malzone and Dick Gernert levelling at the inviting) left field wall, Bunning was re-| markably accurate at keeping his pitches low and outside. An elderly Toronto salesman | ly anders in periodically with al pickle bottle full of pennies. He| lives in a downtown hotel Each | night before dinner he stops in the beverage rooms of three ho- tels to drink beer with his cro- nies. He puts his pickle jar on the table to collect their loose Vipond looks for a big boost, possibly $10,000, from an Inter-| Inational League Baseball game] in Toronto Aug. 8 when Miami (Marlins play the home town Leafs. The fund will get net pro- ceeds, after payment of fixed ex- [penses, plus a net of $2 a head from a pre-game dinner on the Be rem------------ Tennis Star Says Canadian Players Need More Travel VANCOUVER (CP) Paul Willey, 27-year - old Vancouver TIRES with exclusive RUBBER-X NOW ONLY Firestone "Shock-Fortified" Nylon Tires give you maxi. mum protection against the hazards of summer driving 95 size 670:15 Of Luxs PER Campo, "Then I threw him a slider, tennis star who was a member of Canada's unsuccessful Davis Cup team against the United States i Tennis Ace Must Mak Chote Of Citizenship Foto mo = oice itizenship ltoruationat tows. VANCOUVER (CP) -- British| Surville, who is single, displays [ror °'0°" [°° Dlayers--we cant oy : earn much by playing each Columbia's number one - ranked the nomadic urgings of many other," Willey said in an inter- tennis player is facing a decl- young Australians. He went to view on his return here from the sion: whether to settle in Can-| England in 1955 "to improve my 59, Davis hid defeat in Toronto. ada, move to the United States tennis" . e countries which have 'the or keep his Australian ara | teuHly 2 Hae 3 "on the Dest Players have pearly always ship. |continent. In 1957 he travelled |E%% Prayers on tour/s Ye sald. A native of Sydney, Australia, |25,000 miles by car throughout oma Jail along Louis Surville makes his sum- the United States. ida an) Pie 5 het mer home in Vancouver and his| Surville's immediate plans are|chance in international competi- winter residence on the campusto enter the Upper Vancouver [tion if players were ser. to the of the University of Portiand, sland Championships at Courte- big United States and European Oregon--where a tennis scholar- (nay, B.C., then piay in the Cana- (tournaments. He said Canada ship is helping him meet fees. |dian Cham pion ships at Van: didn't have a single player at Surville. at 25, a five-foot, 10-|couver July 28-Aug. 2. Wimbledon this year. inch 155 - pounder, has traded --Seem---- ---- drives with some of the best play- ers in the game today. His big- gest tennis thrill came in Aus- tralia in 1955, the year he began to wander aroufid the world, | when he played world - famous Lew Hoad and led 4-0 in the first set, only to lose 6-4, 6-3. Last month he became the first | unseeded player in at least 15 | years to win the Vancouver City men's singies crown, as he stroked to an easy 6-2, 6-1, 6-0 vic- tory over favored Jack Pedlar of Vancouver. That win boosted him to the province's number one ranking. | Lucile Wheeler | Awarded Ski Medal LONDON (Reuters)--Champion skier Lucile Wheeler of St. Jovite, Que., has been awarded the Pery Medal of the council of the Ski Club of Great Britain, it was an- nounced Saturday. She is the first Canadian to win| the award, the highest the club] can bestow. Miss Wheeler enjoyed outstand-| ing success in competitive inter- national skiing in the 1958 world | championships» winning the downhill and giant slalom, and coming second in the alpine com- bination. She has also won many import- ant international events, and won a bronze medal in the 1956 winter Olympics when she came third in the downhill. The Pery Medal is awarded to a skier of any nationality who has either made a notable con- tribution to knowledge of moun- taineering in relations to skiing; achieved distinction in explora- tion on ski; notably advanced the technique of skiing; or enjoyed outstanding success in competi tive international skiing. on sizzling pavement. It's the strongest nylon cord body built today -- specially fortified against damage due to t, puncture and impact. 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Enjoy trouble For Your Convenince We Are Open Till 9 P.M. EVENINGS You Can Do a Lot of Travelling on 50 GALLONS OF GAS! ONTARIO MOTOR SALES LTD 140 BOND ST. W. OSHAWA Only One Competitor Completes Glide Trip BRANTFORD (CP) Elvie Smuth of Montreal was the only competitor to complete the course as the national soaring cham- pionship contest started Sunday. Fifteen gliders took part in the event, organized by the Soaring Association of Canada. Smith fin ished the 120-mile round trip flight from Brantford to Centralia and back in a Skylark IIID. 4 RA 5-6504 - 5-6507

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