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. Boracic acid shaken into the
stockings each morning not only
acts as a deodorant for perspir-
ing feet but gives them comfort"
.A pPrson with perspiring feet
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
BABY CHICKS
B0016 veto broller chicks now for gall
delivery so that you will be sure to
get them when you want them and
buy only 1st generation meat We
broller chicks. We have the three.
best Indian River Cross Arbor Acres
While Rocks, Nichols New Hamps,
Send for new folder describing these
top broller breeds.
TWED E CHICK HATCHERIES Br?I ,
WE hatch chicks and turkey poults
every week in the year. In chicks we
have special breeds for layers,dual
purpose, roasters and broilers. In tur-
keys we have spacial breeds forturkeP'
broilers, medium roasters and heavy
roasters, also older pullets 12 weeks
to 20 weeks. Catalogue,
'MEDDLE CHICK 1 VI:CREME ONTARIO
FERGUS,
HATCHING EGGS
IIATCHING eggs wanted by one of
Canada's largest and oldest established
hatcheries. Eggs taken every week in
the year. Btg, premium paid. For full
details write Box 131, 123 Eighteenth
St., New Toronto, Ontario,
EMPLOYMENT WANTED _
YOUNG Canadian Protestant wishes to
manage Farm for Widow or Farmer-
ette or work for them. Experienced,
reliable. Box 133, 123 Eighteenth St.,
New Toronto, Ontario.
LANDRACE Boars from our Swedish
Landrace Sows sired by -outstanding
Landrace Boars. For full particulars
write Fergus Landrace Swine Farm,
Box 460, Fergus, Ontario.
COMPLETE bathroom suite $1.7.5.95:
Complete line of plumbing supplles.
Pipe, fittings and fixtures. Inquire.
AAvenue,oA4ontreal Clifford,
8, Quebec i. Tenth
HELP WANTED
ASSISTANT herdsman for purebred
Angus breeder operation. Young single
man desiring to make a career in this
field preferred. Location Metropolitan
Toronto,
excellent
working m132,1iv3
conditions, RlB12
Eighteenth Street, New Toronto, On-
tario,
should change shoes and stock-
ings at least twice a day,
Q. How can I avoid slaving
cloudy jelly?
A. 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. MUNRO'S DRUG
STORE, 335 ELGIN, OTTAWA. $1,25
EXPRESS PREPAID.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
13A141213 the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disap-
point you. Itching sealing and burn-
ing eczema acne, ringworm, pimples
and foot eczema will respond readily
to the stainless, ordorlesa ointment,
regardless of how stubborn or hopeless
they seem.
. POST'S 1;'i,ii lacca
PRICE $2.50 PER JAR
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price.
889 Queen St. E., Corner of Logan.
TORONTO
PPORTUNITIES FOR _....__
ME
WO
NEW
color
treswlth anY llaslhllte,F1m rp
of 100 photos included. Lowilco, 4143
Broadway, Room 208-C, Chicago 11,
Illinois,
ATTENTION
RURAL REAL ESTATE SALESMEN
11r you are interested in malting extra
money, contact us re selling lightning
rods throughout your territory. Lib.
eral commission on leads and sales..
Contact mules Lightning Rod Co.,.
Limited, 200 Maln Street. Toronto.
Phone OX. 4.0273.
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44 King St., Ilan,i!ton
72 Rideau St., Ottawa
PATENTS
FETHERSTONHAUGH S Company,
Patent Attorneys. Estaonshed 1850. 600
University Ave, Toronto Patents all
countries,
AN OFFER to every inventor List ui'
inventions and full information sent
free. The Ramsey Co.. Registered Pate
era Attorneys, 270. Bank St. Ottawa.
•
PERSONAL
perso all r1.00 equirements. Latest este
Logue included. The Medico Agency,
Box 124, Terminal "A" Toronto Ont.
TEACHERS WANTED
OTTAWA Separate School Board re.
quires teachers for regular and special
classes. Apply stating qualifications
experience and name of last bispec.
tor to:
Aline Arvtsats, Superintendent
159 Murray street.
Ottawa, Ontario
"SUDBURY DISTRICT" Two new mod-
ern two -room schools. 4 miles from
Sudbury.01 aproximately uire p30 C1Pupllstgeach
Salary in accordance with qualifica-
tions. Duties to commence in
tember 1055. Please send applications
to Mrs. D. R. Forbes, Box 395, Sudbu r,:,
Ont."
STOP*
ofinsect
Bites
Neat/iash
Qutckl Stop itching of insect bites, heat rash,
,enema, hives, pimples, scales,orabiee, athlete's
toot and other externally caused akin troubles.
Use Quick -acting. soothing, antiseptic D. D. 0.
PRESCRIPTION. Greaseless, stainless. Itai
stops or your canny back, Your dmazis5
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AN EFFECTIVE WAY TO DEED -
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s
DESTROL, Britain's largest selling home sew-
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b Does not require manual
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No expensive septic tank
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O Completely odourless (Des -
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The Destro' unit
is sold by recog-
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throughout Canada.
Mail attached cou-
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closest to you --
and Illustrated Itt-
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ABSOLUTELY N0
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0 Can be installed in rocky
areas.
e BROWN, FLEURY, WOODS, LIMITED,
196 Reiner Road, Wilson His„ Toronto, Ont,
•I Telephone ST, 0.6655.
Please send ma the .name of the nearest
R Destrol dealer, and illustrated literature. lr
No obligation
$ Name
Y
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I Address .,.
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Specific I
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Destro! .sales Ltd., Salisbury House,
9 London, Eng. W.L. I
Is as q P'1. cc en ea G:1 ea 61 sx es ® sat a
�6 Y UR OWr4
UTTER CIGARETTES
WITH