PIRATES' BOSS WATCHES HIS ACE Pittsburgh Pirates' manager, Harry Walker (right) checks his club's new leading pitcher, Bob Veale, during their first spring training camp workout, at Point Myers, Florida.' Veale led the National League last season in 250 strikeouts, ac: counting for 18 victories against 12 defeats. --AP Wirephoto. IT'S CALLED 'BANDY' Russias Hockey Success Credited To Ancient Game MOSCOW (CP)--The Soviet Union dates the arrival of hockey from 1947 when the first national championships were held here. What, then, accounts for the _ Country has become the domi- nant power in international am- ateur competition? may be the answer. Similar to hockey in many re- side. Bandy has been played in one form or another for centuries in Russia and some other parts of Europe. A game with some sim- ilarity is also believed to have been played in early times by Canadian Indians, and some au- thorities suggest it's the father of ice hockey. The game can take credit for supplying much of hockey's playing talent in the Soviet Union. All the leading players are graduates of the older game. To a great extent support for the two games overlaps since bandy fans take readily to hockey. "We have to try to schedule the national championships of the two sports so they don't co- incide,"" says Roman Kiselev, Russia's representative on the council of the International Ice Hockey Federation. 'There are protests if games in both are played on the same night, forc- ing the fans to make a choice." KIDS PREFER HOCKEY Valentin Alexhin, president of the ¥.S.S.R. Ice Hockey Feder- ation, estimates there are 400, 000 players taking part in the two games on an organized basis,. with the split about 50-50, Bui. hockey is evidently. con- tinuing to make inroads after its phenomenal rise of the last 18 years. "A new generation is grow- ing. up that plays only puck hockey," Alexhin (pronounced A-loe'-hin) acknowledges. "People like puck hockey here. It holds one of the honor- Many Young Rookies' In This Year's 'Brier SASKATOON (CP)--A group of precocious newcomers have combined to sweep almost all of the old guard out of the 1965 Ca- hips|bia rink. Arnett, nie has skipped Saskatchewan rep- resentatives to a record four national crowns. Richardson and his family rink were side- = 4 city competition and replaced on the firing Ine 4 Harold Worth and his tink from Delisle, Sask. Canadian and world champion Lyall Dagg of British Columbia will not be back to defend his 1965 titles--but he has an ex- cuse. Dagg received a lucrative promotion in his Vancouver) forced to step out of high-level curling. He will be replaced by Jack Arnett of Port Alberni, skip of a University of British Colum- 25, is the youngest skip and heads the youngest quartet, with an av- erage age of 23. Joining Dagg and Richardson on the sidelines are two other 1964 western representatives, Ron Northcott of Alberta and Bruce Hudson of Manitoba. Northcott and his Calgary rink bowed to Nick Lashuk of Cal- gary in the southern Alberta playoffs and Hudson and his Winnipeg mates were frustrated by Terry Braunstein's Winnipeg crew. Lashuk actually collected two public relations post and was agen scalps. He rapped lec Gervais of Edmonton, 1961 Former Yankee Teammate Both Have Arm Ailments By MURRAY CHASS Associated PVRESS Sports Writ Whitey Ford and Bob Turley pitched togethe: with New York Yankees for eight years. During that time each won the Cy Young Award as the best pitcher in the major leagues. Now, playing in different leagues, they again find them- selves in similar circumstances. Ford is trying .o prove his valuable left arm is sound while Turley attempts a come- back, after a year's absence, with Houston Astros. The 36-year-old Ford devel- Oped a vascular problem that ¢reated arm trouble in the final|i0 month last season. He under- went surgery to correct the difficulty during the off-season and now faces a test in spring fraining. WS A LITTLE He threw lightly for six min- ites in the Yankees' first drill y, then said: "My arm feels all right, but this was just loosening up. I'll be able to tell more after I oo to utters Tll_ throw jarder each day, but I might skip a day. I believe I'll be able to throw regular pitches hard after a week or s0."' Turley, whose 21-7 record in 1958 earned him tne Cy Young honor, indicated Thursday he is pleased with his comeback efforts to date. The 34-year-old right hander has no contract with Houston but has been working out witn the Astros since Feb. 15. "I'm really happy because I'd rather be witt Paul Rich- ards (Houston general manager) than anyone I know because he has done so much for veteran pitchers," said Turley, who coached with Boston Red Sox 1964. "The first time he saw me this spring, he came up after three pitches and told me I was stopping my motion when 1 reared back. That's some- thing I have been doing wrong the last three years. Nobody else spotted it, and it's ifficult to correct your own faults." Another sore-armed pitcher, Ernie Broglie of Chicago Cubs, also tested his arm Thursday and said: "I threw every pitch I have, and my elbow didn't hurt a bit." ' For persone! use or for @ Company use there are @ definite * Ne me! you leese @ new... Ne Insurence coors . . . for full detelts. PHONE 723-4634 There Are Special Benefits For All BUSINESS EXECUTIVES AND SALESMEN ACADIAN Other PONTIAC Models BUICK __ Request --_* ~ One rete covers Intenanee on one er twe yeer leese items . . Phone or come in THE MILLS AUTO LEASE LTD. 266 KING ST. WEST Dominion champion, in the Al- berta final. Carrying experience as a ma- jor weapon to attempt to com- bat youthful rivals are the Ray Grant rink of Unionville, Ont., and the perennial Prince Ed- ward Island representative Doug Cameron of Charlotte- town, Cameron will be making his sixth jaunt to the final. Grant, who replaces 1965 Ontario en- trant Bob Mann of Toronto, has made two previous trips. Braunstein, despite his youth, has a distinguished career in the national final. He repre- sented Manitoba in 1958 and caused insertion of a new rule able places' behind soccer as a popular sport." An indication of its popularity|), was the heavy demand for tick- ets for the three-game exhibi- tion series Feb. 25-27-28 be- tween Russia's national team and a Canadian team made up mainly of players from Winni- peg Maroons, 1964 Canadian senior champions. Figuring there would be a special allotment of tickets for Canadians working in Moscow, hockey - minded Muscovite friends began weeks before try- ing to line up some from these sources. Interest was high despite the fact that only three members of the Canadian team playing here were tabbed to play for the na- tional team in the world cham- pionships at Tampere, Finland, March 4-14, in which the Rus- sians were to defend their title. FACILITIES LAG While hockey has developed rapidly in the Soviet Union, the erection of artificial ice rinks has not kept pace: There are five in Moscow, including one designated for practice sessions, but none in the rest of the coun- try. Plants are being built or are planned, however, in Lenin- grad, Kiev, Riga, Gorky and other centres. Dynamo Stadium has the largest spectator capacity--15,- 000--but it is an open-air arene and hasn't got. artificial ice. But the sell-out crowds that are common, especially for cham- pionship. games, indicate that fans like the game well enough to endure the cold. Admission to games in cate- gories below national-level com- petition is free, and that does nothing to hurt the gate. into Dominion Curling Associa- tion annals. All members of his rink were high school. students, and a rule was passed barring high school students from future Dominion finals. The Braunstein rink wound up with an 8-3 record as Matt Baldwin of Alberta won his third national crown, after nipping Braunstein in a playoff. Lead Ray Turnbull and sec- ond Ron Braunstein were mem- bers of that 1958 Manitoba quar: tet and are back again this year. The draw will be announced here Sunday afternoon. CAMERON Wrecking Demolition We Wreck Anywhere-- Any Description FREE ESTIMATES Call 725-4285 Or Write-- 161 Mill St., Oshawe SERVICE SPECIALS TIRE RAL QUALITY ARMSTRONG SHOCK ABSORBERS '4 ONLY 8 90 a ompect Cars Softglide Shocks Installea 1-10, FROM HAVE YOUR CAR SAFETY CHECKED FREE Ge GENERAL TIRE 534 Ritson Rd. South OF OSHAWA 728-6221 By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports a lot of money out of football he hasn't had much success holding on to it. And while his obvious talent still ---- him with a certain amount security, he's 29 yee old and time is running ou "T have no education to fall back on when I'm through or hurt," he said a couple of years o. "I like good things-- lothes, food, cars, all the nice things in life--so I have to make money." The remarks were made shortly after he had signed five one-year contracts with Toronto Argonauts of the Eastern Foot- 'Cookie' Gilchrist Has Talent, But-- A deal like that would seem to offer both security and money, but it didn't work out for this controversial native of Pa. A wuts were -| Tarentum, rgona' Cookie's fifth professionel club but he didn't last the five years. And even though his sixth team, Buffalo Bills of the Amer- ican Football League, won a title with Gilchrist's consider- able help, they couldn't see their way to keep him either. TWICE RUSHING LEADER Now. he's heading seventh club, Denver Broncos of the AFL, and those who have watched his career can't be blamed for wondering how long he'll last there. There's no doubt that Cookie is a talented football player. He has been scoring champion and crashing ball Conference at a salary re- ported to be $25,000 a year. fullback who has twice led the AFL in rushing with the Bills. 'Red' Storey QUEBEC (CP)--"It keeps me young," says the referee, his hair thin but still carrot-colored. "You're surrounded by young- sters, you've got to be young." Red Storey, ex-football pro- fessional, ex-National Hockey League referee, now a Mont- real public relations man and broadcaster, has been coming to the international peewee hockey tournamem since the year after it first started--for five years. Thursday night he showed the young competitors, most of them little taller taan his waist, that he can be tough. In the longest game so far in the tour- ney--it continued into a second 15-minute overtime frame--he handed out 18 penaities and dis- allowed a home team goal. The homers, Quebec's Little Beavers, won anyway, by a 4-3 count over Ottawa's Alta Vista squad. IT'S EDUCATION But Red sees the annual tour- nament as an "education" for the young athletes, and tries to be one of their teachers. He wags a finger at a two-time of- Stays Young By Tooting His Whistle fender and tucks in the loose shirttails of a centre before drop- ping the puck in a faceoff. They play. under rules Storey says are "stricter than the Olympics." There is no body checking allowed in this biggest of international hockey tourna- ments, and all the players wear helmets or head guards. The boys, between nine and 12, play two 15-minute periods with the clock going nonstop, then, after a break, a third with it stopping when the whistle is blown. ' REMEMBER WHEN? .. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada's Kimberley Dy- namiters were crowned world amateur hockey champions when they won a 2-1 overtime victory over Switzerland at London 28 years ago today--in 1937. England, which for the first time had won the title the previous year, had been beaten 3-0 by the Cana- dians, but clinched second place by beating the Ger- mans 5-0. for is) 2 The ORFU in those days, and even dating back to oy on when it was a power in dian football, simply Giant draw at the gate. Its. players performed for pocket money. oe had security but little a perennial all-star,|°85 He was soon spotted by the more affluent clubs of the East- ern Football Conference and went to Hamilton Tiger-Cats, They had a tough time control- 'pound after two years, sold him to Saskatchewan Roughriders for $5,000. BILLS WON TITLE The Roughriders turned him over to Argonauts for two play- ers, "I'll even carry the water bucket," he told re signing with the Toronto club, giving the impression he was a changed man. But two years later, after an incident involving curfew regul- jations, Argos decided they had had enough of him. He was waived out of Canadian football. "T've gained ce both on and off the field," he told Buffalo newspaper men on join- ing the Bills, again implying that he was a new man. In Buffalo, Cookie got into THE OSHAWA TIMES, Scturday, February 27, 1965 Fi, (ae. comme pape 8. Bp ; SANDY TERRAIN Sand dunes, some 1,000 feet!hara * SEE SUNNY "ONLY < 12 A DAY WITH CANADIAN PACIFIC AIRLINES wmm--m= MAIL TODAY FOR FREE FOLDER --=--=--men Seeraee roams Ritnes, Cire Cae Oley Ke & Yn Sats, Teron, on Please send 3 Spain (IT/ATE/10, "TATED, IT/ATE/12). NAME ADDRESS MY TRAVEL AGENT IS. e bene direct to Madrid on a Super © 15 days only $169.75--includes hotels, ind ate be Aig sightseeing, guide, all yang © pam to el nean. jadrid, other historic cities. @ For free folder, mail coupon, call TRA MiaCminra "Canadian ----s pen Bee Ld most COMPLETE 7 COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION. SYSTEM SYSTEM trouble with the cops over traf- fic violations. And Coach Lou Saban put him on waivers last November, then took him off when he apologized to' team- mates for remarks he had made, particularly about the play of quarterback Jackie DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE Oshowe-----Whitby--Brooklin 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY PHONE 668-3304 Kemp. Now the Bills have shipped him to Denver in ex for a fullback who has Cookie's size but not his playing talent. The Broncos are gambling that, as team No, 7, they'll be lucky. Experience suggests it's a real longshot. MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE 22 SIMCOE ST, SOUTH PHONE 723-9441 senate Remember that income tax form you got in the mail? It's different. Personalized. Here's how you should handle it. By now, you should have received your Personalized Income Tax Form in your mail box. What makes it Personalized? The fact that it's mailed direct-to-you and that it carries your identification code number, 4 When you have your T4 slip, then you can complete your Personalized In- 4, When your Personalized Tax Form is completed, put the copy bearing your name and address in the preaddressed envelope provided for you. Be sure to include one copy of your T4 slip and all receipts to support claims for charitable and medical deductions, come Tax Form. The copy without your name on it is your rough copy. Keep this copy for your own files and transfer your final calculations to the pre'label- led Personalized Form. If your name and address are incorrectly labelled on this form, please correct them. If someone prepares your return for you, forward your Personalized return, bear- Ing your name, address and Identifica- tion code number, to that person for completion. When you receive your Personalized envelope, there will be twocopies of the T1 Form inside. Keep your Income tax form In a safe place until you receive your T4 slip. This should be no later than February 28th, DEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL REVENUE The Hon. E. J. Benson, Minister ' Before sealing the envelope, check to make sure that your tax form Is completed correctly and that you have enclosed the copy of your Personalized Income Tax Form printed with your name and address, If you did not receive an income tax form in the mail, or if you lose your Personalized Form, you may get a blank, unlabelled form at your local post office. MAILED TO YOU. COMPLETED BY YOU, RETURNED BY-¥OU,___ &