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The Seaforth News, 1955-07-21, Page 7PICKED UP HERE AND THERE FDD; THE WORLD OF SPORT Lady river In 1934, the Automobile Club of Europe staged its annual Con- tinental cross-country grind. It was a gruelling fifteen-hunclred- 2nile race across dangerous wind- bag roads, which, from year to year, had paid off in injury or death for some unfortunate drivers. That year a girl joined the most famous drivers in Europe to compete in this gruelling and dangerous automobile race. To the surprise of all, she finished the race, while other far more famous male daredevils failed. ter daring feat created a sen- Laationi The world was even more astonished when it learned that this daring girl automobile rac- 9JJg driver was the most remark- able versatile woman athlete in all Europe. She was an expert horsewoman, a champion swim- mer, a fine sprinter, winner of three Sandinavian tennis titles, and holder of eighteen skiing championships, Nor is that all For in time this girl became world-famous. She became the first girl athlete In history to earn a million dol- lars. Now, for the past twenty years, she had remained one of the most amazing sport celebri- ties in the world. As the greatest figure -skating champion in his- tory, this girl has earned a for- tune of several millions of dol- lars. You know her as the fabu- lous and glamorous star of ice end screen—Sonja Horde, * * Safer in Action Football has its laughs as well as its bruises, its chuckles as well es its sprains. There's the !leery of Bob Barrington, who who played at tackle for Detroit University. Bob came up to the final game of his senior year M Detroit after having played dour seasons in high school, one as a freshman, and three on the QUEEN'S CATCH - A tas y *nook is proudly displayed by angler, Lynn Ann Elliott, queen of the Miami Beach summer 'fishing tournament. Thirty-one varieties of fish are recognized in the July 4th through Labor .Day contest. varsity eleven without ever hav- ing been injured. Not once through eight years of football had he suffered even a scratch. On this, his last clay of foot- ball, Harrington was playing against a rough and bruising Villanova team. In the last quar- ter, head coach Gus Darais of Detroit, after having watched Bob playing bis heart out, de- cided to take him out of the game for a few minutes to give him a well-deserved rest. Bob, unmarked as usual, came off the field and flopped on the bench near the coach, On the very next play, there was a wild mix-up at the side -lines on a punt return. One of Harring- ton's teammates was flung into the Detroit bench right where Bob sat. When the tangle was unscrambled, Harrington was stretched out on the bottom, cold and still. He had been kicked in the face, two teeth were knocked out, and gashes torn in his lip and chin. Revived by cold water, Harrington looked up into the anxious eyes of his coach. "Please, coach," he said through torn lips, "please ,put me back in the game where it's safe!" * :r Lanae Athlete Clarence DeMar is the grand old man of the long-distance marathon, In the track world, they call him "The Shuffler." It is a cause for wonder and amazement when this veteran enters another race, but that is the least note .- worthy point about his great career. For Clarence DelVfar was born with a crooked foot. He took up run- ning as a boy merely as a form of exercising the foot, A friend who taunted hon, egged him into entering a handicap race. He won, and got the crazy notion that he had the makings of a runner in him. He went on and won a ten -mile race. Flushed with victory, the boy with the crooked foot resolved to become a great long-distance runner. So he entered the 26 -mile Boston Marathon, a gruelling gallop that tried the hearts of the best long- distance runners in the world. And, without experience or class, and pitted against the best run- ners in the world, Clarence De - Mar startled the sports world by finishing second! In the thirty years that follow- ed, Clarence DeMar ran in thirty marathons and finished worse than third only once. He won practically every important ma- arthon in the world, and seven times has copped the famous Boston grind. A runner born with a crooked foot proved that he, too, could walk with the gods of sports, even if he had to shuffle to reach the pinnacle of fame! * * * How He Started As a boy, Johnny was doomed to a life of illness. He was a frail weakling, and the doctors who examined him sadly shook their heads. One of them sug- gested that Johnny take swim- ming exercises. But there was one drawback to that bit of me- dical advice. ,Johnny hated the water. He couldn't swim a stroke, and, for that matter, neither could his father or mother. Up to the age of 12, Johnny had never been in a larger body of water than could be contained in a bathtub.. I:Towever, the doctor insisted. Johnny, reluctantly, took up swimmingat the age of 13. Eie started paddling in the muddy BULL BARBER—In a lather over o forthcoming cattle show, 13 - year -old Lee Winkler goes all out in grooming his Jersey bull, Sparklina Baronet. HE PLAYS A SWIMMING GAME—Alfred Huber of Austria looks more like an enthusiastic swimmer than a hard -playing tennis star. These pictures of him in flying action were taken during his match with Great Britain's Geoffrey L. Ward in the Ail -England tennis tourney at Wimbledon. Huber's gymnastics, by the way spelledvictory for him. liquid of the Des Plaines River. And he hated it, hated every stroke he tried to take. Ile want- ed to quit, but they wouldn't let him. Finally he learned to swim. His family moved and Johnny switched his paddling to Lake Michigan. After a while, the sport of swimming begin to ap- peal to him. He happened to see some really good mermen ancl, to amuse himself, he began to imi- tate their swimming strokes. Eventually, this sick weakling who had to take up swimming in order to save his life became the world's most famous swim- mer. To this very day, whenever the world hears of a new swim- ming sensation, the question, "Is he as good as Johnny?", is the first one asked. They measure them all against the greatest swimmer in the world, the in- comparable Johnny Weissmuller. Twice The Height Of Niagara You can hear the thunder 7 miles away. You can see the towers of spray 25 miles away. It is said to be the greatest river wonder in the world. They call it Mosi-oa-Tunya — the "Smoke That Thunders" — Africa's fabu- lous Victoria Falls. For miles above, the broad Zambesi River heaves green and lazily, A sunbathing crocadile slinks silently into the water at your approach; with a splutter of bubbles a hippopotamus goes down; birds of,a hundred colors chatter and call against a sky the bluest of blues; monkeys and baboons scamper complaining into the trees at your footfall. It is tranquil here. Then at the brink of the falls, as though whipped by a huge mixer, the river is suddenly a churning, leaping avalancne of dazzling whiteness which thrusts out and down into the mile -wide gash across the red dust of Rho- desia at 75,000,000 gallons a min- ute. It spills massively in a wall of never-ending giant columns some 350 feet — twice the height of Niagara — to the chasm's bot- tom. This is no escarpment but a fissure in terrain which is level above and below the falls. The gorge zigzags and widens till some 40 miles lower the Zambesi regains its old pace Hundreds of gallons of water funnel back up the face of the gorge in great banks of spray from the bottom' to the brink and then as high again. In April the river level is 50 feet higher than in the hottest and driest month of November and then the spray at times obscures the view from the opposite bank. But when the spray denies this view, it provides an alterna- tive. For the spray that falls again like heavy rain .nourishes an Eden in the heart of the dry. parched scrub that stretches for miles. On the bank across from the falls is Africa's most famous rain forest — a rainforest made by spray. With adjoining areas it is like a Disneyland setting come true, Tropical plants spurt in tangled lushness. The under- growth is a fantasy of flowers of every hue and color of the spectrum, reflected, it seems, in the vivid rainbows by day and the exquisite lunar bows at night caused by the spray. Creepers festoon the trees which arch up and over into leafy rooftops on which the spray drums continually. Drip- ping bushes and leaves slap at your legs. The air is heavily scented. Everything glistens. There is moisture everywhere and great pools lie in your path. The roar of the falls is constant and you catch glimpses of the thundering water through leafy openings. Everyone wears a raincoat, hat, and boots. Despite this .he returns to his hotel drenched to the skin, for in season it "rains" heavily all the time. Such verdancy is peculiarly meaningful in Africa where wa- ter so often means the.difference between starvation and abund- ance. A hundred years ago this year Dr. Stanley Livingstone crawled through the spray to the edge and discovered the falls. Today the falls are still virtually free of commercialism and modern intrusion, They are untouched in the bush, with just a luxury hotel a mile away. So natural is it that animals roam freely. A sign as you leave the hotel warns blandly: "All Wild Animals Are Dangerous." On one visit an armed game war- den on the road warned our party to go carefully as a bad- tempered elephant was crashing through the Rain Forest. Half an hour's flight away you can see all the game you would wish for. Sometimes the animals are more .at home than the tourists. This was the discovery made by James Chapman, one of the early travelers, when he observed the spoor of elephants, rhinoceros, buffalo, and hippopotamus on the very edge of the gorge. For he wrote: "It makes one's hair stand on end to see the numer- ous indications of their midright rambles on the very edge of eternity. Here these pont! ,at the dead, dark midnight hnurs to drink the spray and wallow in the mire; and on my asking a native how it was they were not afraid, he asked me in return: Didn't they grow up together?' How Ctzit 1 ? By ANNE ASHLEY Q. Flow can I prevent straw- berries from settling to the bot- tom of the jar when canning them? A. After the strawberries are sealed in the jar, lay the jar flat until cool, then .shake until the berries are all through the syrup. With this treatment the berries will neither rise nor settle, and it will also add greatly to the flavor, Q. How should eggs be pre- pared for storing? A. - Eggs should never be washed before storing, unless they are for immediate consump- tion, as washing reduces the keeping qualities. Q. Flow can I relieve the pain of sunburn? A. Should one have no lotions or salve for sunburn, spread but- ter lavishly over the burned parts. It will prove an effective first aid. Q. How can I make a remedy for perspiring feet? A. 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As soon as jelly leas cooked sufficiently pour it into the glasses. It will be cloudy if al- lowed to congeal before pouring. Q, flow can I dry out a damp cellar? A. If the cellar walls are damp and moldy, apply unslacked lime with a garden spray. It will freshen them wonderfully. Q. How can I make better sweet pickles? A. A small amount of vanilla and a small amount of lemon extract added to the syrup just before it is poured over the fruit will add a delicious flavor when making sweet pickles. Q. How can I get rid of ants that persist in getting on the table? A. Fill some can lids with ground cinnamon, and place the table legs in these lids. The ants Will not cross the cinnamon. Q. flow can I keep a stove from rusting when it is to be stored for the summer months? A, Give it a thin coating of three parts melted lard and one part resin before puting it away. MEOICAI IT'S PROVEN -- EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. 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