The Brussels Post, 1960-07-28, Page 3AU REVOIR — Jockey Pat Smithwick desperately tries to stay
with his mount, Gem Ruby, after the last hurdle at the Refugia
Steeplechase at Belmont Park.
PHOTOGRAPHY
ULTRA FINE GRAIN
PROFESSIONAL fine grain developing
for your miniature film — 100 per ere-
posure with one deluxe enlargement
Of each. Quality developing and print.:
lag 600 for 8 exposure roll 700 fox
12 exposure roll, with every print beau-
tifully enlarged. For the ultimate iq quality, mail your films to: Apex Photo.
Printers, Bee 25, Station E, Toronto.
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB.
BOX 31, GALT, ONT.
Films developed end anagna prima 40f 12 movie prints Geo
Reprints 60 each
.KODACCAOR
Developing roll 900 (not Including prints), Color prints 308 each extra,
Anse() and EkteChrenre 35 Mils. 20 ex+ posures mounted in slides $140. Color
Prints from slides 320 each, Money re. funded in full for imprinted negatives.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE _ .
latlainatel OS acres of deeded lend
for sale, good deer, moose duck and partridge hunting, accessible by ear*
one of the best Private locations to this area, ideal for a group of men wanting a private hunting ground. Write to V A. McMurray GlIMOStr.
Oat,
CALEDONIA, ONT.
11/2 STOREY, 3 oedrooms, a little gem,
must be seen to be appreciated.
1 STORY store with apartment at
rear, Central location.
11 FAMILY dwelling, suitable for elderly couple, additional income.
2 STOREY, 4 bedroom brick house, 2
blocks from stores.
BRYCE JONES
Barrister, Caledonia, Ont.
REMAILING SERVICES
GERMANY! Have fun with your
friends. Mail them letters from Ger-
many. I'll send it for $1.00. Or News-
papers $1.00. Roberson, Box 6054, Wets-
baden, Germany.
SUMMER RESORTS
CEDARUEN Lodge. American plan,
home cooked meals, good fishing ant(
hunting. Phone, write Beth McRae.
R,R. 2, Manitowaning, Ontario
CHAUMONT FERRIER INN
Ste. Marguerite Station, P.Q.
VISIT this lovely Swiss Chalet inn;
superb location in heart of Lauren.
tians, Excellent food, swimming pool
with beach, private lake, good fishing,
riding, golf in vicinity. Rates $60.00
to $75.00 weekly, American Plan,
Write direct or telephone Hudson S.
7595, Toronto, for information.
FREMAURAY LODGE. housekeeping
cottages, Wilson Lake, head of Pick-
erel River. Good pickerel, pike, bass.
Boats, motors. Fisherman's holiday at
family camp. Write for folders, Port
Loring Phone Golden Valley 9R25 or
Toronto RU 7-6441,
THUNDER BEACH, ONTARIO
ANCHOR VILLA
2 HOURS drive from Toronto on beau-
tiful Georgian Bay, (near Penetang),
comfortable beds and bedrooms, excel-
lent food, private beach, swimming,
surf board, boats and outboards for
hire, Friendship and comfort are our
business. Write Jas. Redmond or phone
Lafontaine (Ont,). 211123.
TEACHERS WANTED
PUBLIC School Section No. 1, Stevens,
Thunder Bay District, requires in Sept.,
1960, a qualified teacher for grades 1 to
8. Teacher's Federation salary sched-
ule in effect. Furnished teacherage
will accommodate• married couple,
available at $15 per month,
APPLY in writing, stating age, aca-
demic qualifications and name and ad-
dress of last inspector, to C. Riach,
Sec.-Treas., P.S.S. No. 1, Stevens, On-
tario.
TEACHERS required for newly-built
grade school, U S 32, Wabigoon — Red.
vers, Red Lake Road, Ont, to corn.
mence Sept. 1960.
SENIOR TEACHER e4,500 per an.
num.
INTERMEDIATE TEACHER - $4,00(
per annum.
JUNIOR TEACHER - $3,500 per an
nuns.
Apply stating experience to Mrs. 3
McCulllgh, sece-treas.
U.S.A, RESORTS
RUST LODGE, cottages and motel
Route lA on 2 mile sand beach, ocean
front. 50 large modern buildings, 1 to
4 bedrooms, equipped 'with kitchen,
ettes, bedding, linens furnished, heat.
ed. H. Rust, proprietor, phone York,
Maine, 8110; write York Beach, Maine.
U.S.A.
VACATION PROPERTIES FOR SALE
HOUSEKEEPING cottages: resort or.
Lake NipIssieg, 800' frontage, 2 drillec wells, I/4.mile off Hwy. 11, outstand
ing buy at $22,500. H. Lindsay, Brkr.
143 Audrey Ave., Toronto. OX. 8-1621.
ISSUE 31 — 1960
PROTESTANT teacher required for
Public. School S,S. No. 13, Manvers,
County of Durham, duties to com-
mence September, 1960, Enrollment 20,
grades 1 to 8.
APPLY stating qualifications and sal-
ary, to James Gray, R.R. No. 2, Janet.
ville, Ont..,
TEACHER, Protestant, with interme-
diate diploma and to act as principal,
Session 1960-61. Apply giving full par-
ticulars to W, Hogg, Sec.-Treas. Jolt.
cite, Quebec.
14,
then hard the umpire give t
point against him.
130rotra lost more than. the
point in .0)0; Moment, Bis con-,
centration went; even, f think,
his will to win lie served
double f a 14; I; Cochet sailed
through to save the game And
Clia111plortehi r;
We Will Bet
His Eyes Are Blue
•.What colour are yours eyes?
If they are brown, you're too
easily sway.ed by emotion and
tend to drift towards the artistic
side of life. But if they're blue
-- you are clear thinking, can-
not be swayed by any form of
emotion and are booked for the
top!
At least, that is the view of
Dr, Neil Clyde, a leading physi-
cian. He says! "Most blue-eyed
people generally see straight to
the core of • a problem. They
know exactly where they are
going and how to get there."
Dr. Clyde points out that most
of the leaders. of • Britain have
blue eyes, the Prime Minister
and. many senior politicians and
service chiefs. Lord Montgom-
ery has ice-blue eyes, as have
Sir Winston Churchill and the.
Duke of Edinburgh. Top show
businesa personality Frank Sina-
tra has deep blue eyes,
The harder the blue the more
successful the owner is likely
to be. Brown-eyed people are not
without their good points, how-
ever, says the doctor. They are
at their best when dealing with
love problems.
SWEET VICTORY — Among the
happy fans that cheer:0 Don
Bragg to a world po!( vault
record of 15-9 In Olympic trials
was .his fiancee, Terry Fiore.
She ran from the stands into his
arms after he made his mighty
vault.
Will It Be The
Death Ray Next?
--- Light, the kind you get when,
you Alp a light switch, is an
innocuous form of energy, com-
posed of waves vibrating at dif-
ferent frequencies.
But if a "coherent" beam of
light — light of a very narrow
frequency band — could be
made out of this jumble of
waves, it might approach that
favorite weapon of horror fic-
tion: The death ray.
Last month physicists from the
Hughes Aircraft Co. in Culver
City, Calif., announced they had
created such a beam. Project die
reetor Dr. Theodore Maiman pre-
dieted that the company's
(achievement "marks the Opening
of an entirely new era in elec-
tronics."
The intricate gadget is called a
"laser," an acronym for Light
Amplifier by Stimulated Emis-
sion of Radiation. Its synthetic
ruby cylinder absorbs light, then
emits it as a stronger and pure
beam of light, intense enough to
injure an unwary observer's eye.
Aside from generating pure
color, laser light might be' used
in medicine. "Perhaps individual
parts of bacteria, small plants,
and particles could be vapor-
ized," Matman Offered. And,
since narrow frequencies make
MERRY MENAGERIE
''Blot, )P1110 rtGi I teoteig
tht"
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING •
o
Bray
t loR
r.lalteflea
Acrhsry, 120
EQUI PM ENT FOR SALE
BABY CHICKS
B
eltey /Week old pullets spa started
,hicks at new low prices. Prompt ship.
scent, r DaYeld chicks toorder„r Wi3re olotk
fall
eAow'8ee
agent _
o
John North, Ham-
ilton,
BADGER Northland: barn cleaners, silo uldeadera, auger and tube feed,.
ers, reued-the-silo feeders, feed carts
and
completear
ba rn equi pment,
installations, rgilY eq uComplete
equipped
stria available at warehouses. Narold
Row and Sons, 5.5. No. 1, Belt-nen',
Ont. Phone flarrietsville 76.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
GENERAL store, summer store, school
bus, largo clean store with modern
living quarters, excellent. equipment,
Volkswagen bus; a terrific buy at $14,-
400! Terms arranged. II, Lindsay, Brkr.,
143 Audrey Ave., Toronto. OX, 8-1621.
MOTEL, 8 units, AAA, 4 years old,
with dairy bar, icehouse; Highway 11, 70 miles north of Toronto. Good yes+ taurant, 200 yds, Nice 4-room apart-
ment for owner,eottage for help,
Gross increasing each year, e20,900
down.. Principals only. Reply It Horn
R,R. 2, Shanty Bay Opt.
RESTAURANT, serving full course
meals and lunches. Established over thirteen years, steady clientel, close to
three highways, fully equipped, air-
conditioned, soeroorn apartment above,
large lot, 66' X 180' deep, will sell for
cash or half down. Interested parties
write Box 129, Comber P.O.
FARMS FOR, sat,E
90 ACRES with house and barns, highway location, $16,000, 130 acres,
large hosfee and barn, bordering on
paved, rd. e16,000, 140 acres, excellent
modern brick !soiree, geed barns, cons-
Pieta line of equipment, e32,000, 250 acres, 3 geed.nets pf buildings, 1,000 lb. milk quota, 70 head ,etelek, silk.. 000lleg and complete line of huseldn-
ery, $98,009, A. 5, kiniberley Ltd. Heal-
tor, 25 icing St, East, Beernevilie, tot,
38e72 anytime,
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
CANADA'S lowest ammunition priees
Save wholesalers and retailers. pro.
fits — Send for free demonstration
shotsbells, XL ExplosiYee Limited,
Ilawkesbury, Pitt
CHARM Bracelets, 6 animal charms
gold plated or silver. Reg. e1,98. Send
el.25. Listing of farm animals and
award pins, teen age jewellery, ladies,
men's and children's jewellery. Special;
Lassie cuff and tie set Or boys $1.00, Dexter Manufacturing Co., Box 324. St,
Johns, Que,
OIL Lantern, 590, Nylon Terylene Pas-
tels, 10 yards Encle, 51,89. Machine
Needles, 20 for $1.00. Blue Blades, 300
for $2.00, Batteries, dozen e1.29. Flash
Camera, 98e. Thread, 80 yard spools,
25 colours, $1.00. Free lists, Schaefer,
B070, Drummondville, Qtrebec. . —
RUBBER hose and belting, plastic pipe,
etc., new and used at greatly reduced
prices'
'
phone, write, or drop in and see: Snowden Industrial Rubber &
Plastics, 91 Bruce Street, Oshawa, On.
tarlo. RA, 8.1658,
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
REFRESHMENT STAND
BUILT into a bus in perfect running
condition. Inside and outside newly
decorated half living, half selling, corn.
pletely wired for 220 or 110 V. Priced
for quick sale. For further infor-
mation contact John Kanaar, Simcoe.
Phone Garfield 6.2404 or see ft your-
self at 35 Basil Ave., Simcoe.
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN
PROFITABLE spare or full time earn.
trigs. Study this interesting and use-
ful profession, For free brochure and
charts, contact: Canadian College of
Massage, 18 Farnham Ave., Toronto 7.
RCA VICTOR OFFERS
AN Insurance policy you can collect
on now and in the future with no
interruption when sick, retired or
travelling, We supply locations, Arlene-
ing etc. Persons wishing to own 1 or
more.
COIN LAUNDRIES
PLEASE call RO. 2-7311 or write RCA
Victor Co. Ltd., 1450 Castlefield Ave.,
Toronto 15, Out of town inquiries in.
vited,
BE YOUR OWN BOSS I
OWN AND OPERATE
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles,
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you. Itching, scaling and burning ecze-
ma, acne_ ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment, regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem.
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE 53.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
"HOW TO Make 'Money In Any Crowd
In The World!" Be a Memory Machine!
Automatic Memory brings Security,
travel, recognition, Actually improves
Memory! Details. Memory Research
Center, Box, A-7192, El Paso 3, Texas,
MEDICAL
HELP WANTED MALE
WANTED. Beef cattle herdsman with
general farming experience for small
Angus herd bordering western Ontario
city. Family man around 40 with son
interested in 4-H Club preferred. Free
house, permanent position, Apply stet-
ing experience, wages expected. Box
215, 123-18th Street, New Toronto, Ont.
INTEREST TO ALL
WANTED — EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
TO TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect.
SPECIAL for Farmers Wholesale
prices — Rubberized canvasses for all
makes combines at dealers cost. Save
up to $30 per canvas, For wholesale '
prices refer to this ad when ordering,
Chatham Farm Equipment No, 2 Hwy.
E R,11, 1, Chatham. Phone EL. 2.1070,
Oldest Of All
Living Things
One of the most gigantic trees
in the world lute been declared
a eationel relic at Cherebe, Me-
Onniakete, East Africa, It le a
baobab tree — the same tree on
which David Livingstone, the
seat Missionary explorer, carv-
ed his initials,
These strange trees are, be-
.laved by many botanists to be'
the oldest of all living things,
Some specimens have been de,.
dared to be at least 5,000 years
old, The baobab grows immense-
ly broad without growing pro-
portionately tall.
Its trunk often measures 30
ft. in diameter with a height of
only 60 to '70 ft, while its 60
ft. branches, each as thick as a
good-sized, tree, sweep the
ground with their foliage.
One veteran baobab measures
95 ft. round the trunk and is
as youthful and robust-looking
as the suckers springing up
round it.
Another is so enormous that
it was hollowed out a century
or so ago and used as a lock-up
for native prisoners.
Many thousands of years ago
the baobabs were only found in
the tropical parts of Africa and
the neighbouring island, Mada-
gascar, but today they flourish
in most other hot parts of the
world.
Before Rome was founded,
more than 6,000 years ago, the
baobabs were familiar sights in
Africa and North-west Australia.
The grotesque shapes they as-
sume are sometimes frightening.
Some of the trees are like vast
bottles, some resemble enormous
round rocks, some are like the
prehistoric animals that prob-
stbly browsed on their branches.
But these ancient trees are
more than botanical marvels.
Their many uses make them
"universal providers" for na-
tives.
The baobab produces a large
fruit often called "monkey
bread", from which a cooling
drink containing citrate of mag-
nesia is. obtained.
In Africa the great leaves of
the baobab are pulverized into
lao which the natives mix with
other food to diminish exces-
sive perspiration. A sweet per-
fume is given off by the large
white flowers.
The tree's green and glossy
bark has medicinal properties,'
Natives weave material from the
bark fibres. The wood is too soft
to be formed into timber, but
it is so easily cut that homes
up to 50 ft. square are con-
structed in the trunks.
West African natives found
that the baobab has the peculiar
property of being able to pre-
serve organic, matter from decay.
They used to hollow out a
trunk and hang inside the bodies
of executed criminals who were
denied burial. These became
perfectly mummified without fur-
ther attention.
A Coin-Metered Unattended
Westinghouse Laundromat
Equipped . Laundry Store.
Net $4,000-$8,000 Annually .
Write or phone today toy full informa.
tion about unattended coin-operated
Westinghouse Laundromat equipped
laundry store opportunities in your
community, You manage In your spare
time — while netting high income. We
finance 90% of your total purchase,
offer you longest financing period at
lowest monthly installments, You re-
ceive training and advice from a na-
tional organization that has helped
over 8500 men and women like you go
into business for themselves. No ex-
perience necessary. Modest invest.
ment. This proven new profitable automatic business offers a money.
making opportunity to anyone who
wants to own his own business. Com.
pare our complete program.
ALD CANADA LTD.
54 Advance Road
Toronto 18, Ontario
ROger 6-7255
OPPORTUNITIES
Modern Tennis
Stars Lack Glamour
"Where are the big tennis per-
sonalities today?" — that's the
sort of remark overheard at
Wimbleton this year, and, in-
deed, for the past few years,
Somehow the moderns haven't
the magic appeal of great stars
like Bill Tilden, Fred Perry,
Jack Crawford — and, of course,
the "Four Musketeers": Jean
Borotra, Henri Cochet, Jacques
Brugnon, and Rene Lacoste.
It is over thirty years since
they captured the hearts of
Wimbledon crowds, but their
deeds are still fresh after all
this time.
Cachet, in particular, was the
hero of what must be one of the
most exciting final stages in
the history of Wimbledon. We can
only guess how he would fare
against the atomic services of to-
days "power-house" players, but
his uncanny positioning and skil-
fully placed return shots carried
him to the championship with
victories over the hard hitting of
Big Bill Tilden and the varied
game of his own compatriot,
13orotra.
The miracle was that in each
case he triumphed after being
two sets down and at match
point in the third.
Personally, I find it hard to
decide which was the greater
performance. Looking back, we
have the advantage of knowing
how the matches ended. But try
to imagine we are mingling
with the crowds at Wimbledon
on those sunny days of June,
1927.
Borotra was the holder of the
men's singles title, but there
was considerable doubt whether
he could retain it against the
challenge of Big Bill Tilden, the
American giant who had won in
1920 and 1921 and was making
his first appearance at the All-
England club's new headquar-
ters.
Big Bill smashed and volleyed
his way through all the opposi-
tion before the semi-final, in
which he was drawn against a
young • Frenchman, lean, wiry,,
and barely half his size. Henri
Cachet had not yet reached hig
peak, and• few thought he could
stand up to the terrific pacer
Tilden would see
Tilden tore him to shreds dur-
ing the first set. It was a su-
perb exhibition of tennis, but as
a match was farcical. Cochet's
quick anticipation enabled him
to get the ball back occasionally,
but usually it had flashed past
him before he could get his
racket into position.
In a few minutes he ,was al-
ready one set down, at 6-2. The
second went the same way, at
6-3, and the crowd began to
drift away as the massacre con-
tinued in the third. This time
it looked even worse. Tilden
swept through to 5-1, and Co-
chet's Wimbledon dream looked
about to fade in the biggest
fiasco of his career writes a ten-
nis expert in "Tit-Bits."
I can think of no logical ex-
planation for what followed
other than that Tilden, always
a gr ea t, showman, decided to
round off the match with some-
thing the crowd would remem-
ber, and over-reached himself,
The American launched smash
after smash. But in his eagerness
for the kill he surrendered his '
accuracy. Now Cochet's racket
was always there to stop his
passing shots; when one did get
by it went out of court, The
game Tilden had' intended 'to
take at love went against him.
So did the next, and the next.
The crowds returned to watch
this amazing transformation; and,
when Cochet took the next game
to level the set the cheer was
almost as great as if he had
won. Tilden had gone complete-
ly to pieces. In those four games
he had won only one point, and
now here was Cochet, playing
from the baseline, blocking his
shots and returning them with
uncanny accuracy. The French-
man took the set at 7-5 — six
games in a row to the man who
had been on the brink of hu-
miliating defeat!
Now it was Cochet who held
the initiative. He went ahead
in the fourth set, staved off a
brief challenge at 4-4, and took
the next two games to be level
at two sets all.
The final ,set was a mockery
but of a different kind from
the first. Tilden had recovered..
much of his accuracy., but Co-
chet Was teasing him with deli-
cate returns, sometimes dropped
short to tempt him into a fatal:
smash, The American was not
quite done, and in fact led at
first, but Cochet soon caught
him and went ahead to 5-3,
Now the positions were re-
versed. At 40-15 against him Til-
den produced a Cochet-like drop
shot to save the match point,
but he ended the next rally by
slithering into the net. Show-
man to the end, he pretended
to strum it as if it were a harp.
The tune must have been the
Tilden Swan Song.
The final, between. Cachet and
Borotra, was not so obviously
dramatic because there was .not
such a. contrast in playing styles.
Borotra took the first two sets
at 6-4, 6-4, but either of them
tould have gone the other Way.
The turning point came when
in the eighth game of the third
set with Cochet leading 4-3, Bola
otta just failed to reach an
acutely angled shot across the
court. That miss put Cochet
ahead at 5-3, and he took the
get. Borotra led 3-I in the fourth,
but then faded, and. Cochet took
that to level the match.
So; once again the stage was
set for a drametie finish. It
seemed Borotra Mug win When
he got to 6A arid match point,
yet he loet the game, in the
nod he 'had — and lost — five,
match points.
An' extraordinary inci de ri
happened' here Which lest the
Bounding' Bascitie = as Borotra
Was ;called his title. At One
match point Cochet shaped
awkwardlY ire reteirning the bail.
Beretta thought it was s double.
hit and anal that he hed therefete
Wofi He tore :Off his beret and
rari up, to the net to receive
hie Vietire'e handshelte end
ATTENTION--MEN
17-54
HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS
ARE in demand for bulldozers, scrap-
ers, graders draglines and shovels.
IF you qualify you will be trained by
top instructors right on the equip-
ment.
DON'T DELAY—INQUIRE NOW
WRITE N.S.H.E.O.
2213 YONGE ST., TORONTO, ONT.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
DOGS FOR SALE BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession; good
wages Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
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MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
SHELTIES (Lassie, apartment size) pup.
pies. Yearling bitches, bred. All regis-
tered. Paul Robins, Oro Station, On.
tario.
Q. Row can I remedy a rug
whose corners persist in turning
up?
A. A good remedy is to sew a
piece of stiff canvas, underneath
these recalcitrant corners —
which will not only keep them
down, but will also help to pro-
long the life of the rug.
FARMS FOR SALE
200 ACRES; 60 cattle, 30 milk cows!
Mile to town. Price $39,000 — $15,000
down, W. C. MacDonald, Broker, phone
280, Winchester, Ont.
A 400 acre Farm, two sets of buildings,
electricity, telephone, near Public
School on High School and Separate
School Bus lines, Gravel Pit, 30 acres
woodlot, two miles from railway sta.
tion and churches. A down payment is
expected and the balance in yearly
payments without interest. (If desired).
David A. Ross, Moose Creek, Ontario,
Stormont Co.
• PERSONAL
LADIES Dumas Female Pills 55.00
Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danforth, Toronto.
radio communications possible,
he suggested the laser might
yield "very-high-intensity beams
for space communications,"
But what about the death ray?
Maiman hedged, saying it was
not possible "according to pres-
ent knowledge."
Princeton physicist Dr. Robert
Dickie, however, had a different
theory. He, told Newsweek: "This
might very well be the fore-
runner of the death ray."
."JOIN the Sixth Sense Club for sue.*
cess. Questions answered. Confidential,
Enclose stamped envelope. P.O Box
161, hfanotick, Ontario."
DRUG STORE NEEDS BY MAIL
PERSONAL needs. Inquiries invited.
Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danforth, Toronto, .
ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goods. 36
assortment for $2.00. Finest quality,
tested, guaranteed. Mailed in plain
sealed package plus free Birth Control
booklet and catalogue of supplies.
Western Distributors, BOX 24TF
Regina, Sask.
GET 8 HOURS SLEEP
NERVOUS tension may cause \75% of
sickness, Particularly sleep essness,
jitteryness and irritability. Sleep, calm
your nerves with "Napps", 10 for $1.00.
50 for $4.00, Lyon's Drugs 471 Dan-
forth, Toronto.
Happy John ThOrricidi right,
high 'um ry 6(1' feeti, -3 14 •niches
juiTip' `is oftioiciliy recognized,: i4
star to daie, Without
RUNNING WILLIE WILLIE DOWN — Frank MalZone of the Red Sox tags, Willie Mays oF the diatifs
a rundown between third and home in the first treeing of the All-Star dame hi New York,
Watching are unipire 3Ormati and catchier Yogi Berra of the Yanks.
THOMAS OUTJUMPS HIMSELF
watches as officials confirm his
attiring preOlympic trials. If the
will make Thomas the all-time
aiu es tion.