B. Year-Long ' Splurge. OI Sport in I958 VICTORIA (CPI A VIII-Iiillj tanned for .pi'irge of IINII1 II P :1: n m cm" h-- be" '09 The Canadian curling cham- .--lure I PFIDDTIIII A0 WIIICII In -:ru:ttiunaI and Canadian my--5 will contribute. on the agenda will be Canada's richest golf tournament to include leadlngplayera from the United Slates. international yacht racing. Canadian championships. ma title events in lacrosse. ten- ms. swimming. wrestling. busing and soccer. And of course there will be the Grey Cup when Eaet meets West to decide the country's foothli championship- The dates are set for some etcllls. for others they are not. Prof. H. F. "Bob" Osborne. chairman of the sports suiH:om- mtuee the B.C. Centennial committee said here "we're Wrking to space these events so my won't conflict. we want eit:I'y0IIC to be able to see them." -as spectacle will he a gtgantle ,,-,i1.past at Vancouver. probably Mrly in lay. with more boats than most people have seen con- centraled in one place at any one tune." llld OIMJHIG. "The sail-past could last for "early I day." he Illd. 350.00 GOLF MEET The centennial -open golf tourn- nth. salmon derbiee are planned. ament ith , - - -rm -'-.u'l';:"' "' '"”. t."'i??5I. ptonshlp will be held in Vlcto larch L7. The Victoria Curllld: Club will hold a week-long bong. Diet before the battle for the championship starts. ROYII Vancouver Yacht Club will have. probably nus-in um "Ht "91 in July. the Pacific Coast Yacht Racing Asgoclguon '9l'"'l- Hlkill it even bigger will be the American iunior chain. plonshlps. slated to be held at the ""”s..uf.'”'s . mp re Games bo trials. for the Barnes laterxmig Wales. will be held in May along with the Canadian chlmplonshipg, Kelowna reason is slated for Aug. 13-16. Provincial swimming championships will be held at Un- iversity of British Columbia Aug. is - 16. Vancouver Lawn Tennis Club will hold the Canadian lawn tennis championship: on a date still to he decided. The Minto and Mann cup finals, for junior and senior Canadian la- crosse championships will be held aonmima during big yeag. An interior provincial city will get the wrestling championships and along the province's men, SPORTS TRAIL Indian's Manager Takes Near Misses By WHITNEY MARTIN NEW YORK (AP!-Al Lopez has had quite a bit to be critical about the last few years. As manager of Cleveland Indians. his team waa runnerup in all but one of the last six years. In 1954 it finished first. The years it finished second a lot of people thought it should have finished first. and when it finished first they thought it diould have won the world series. Yet Lopes neveriblasted his athletes as a bunch of guys who specialized in near misses. He has remained strictly in character since moving over to Chicago White So: this year. He succeeded another fine gentleman as manager. but he'll go around blocks and cut through alleys to keep from even hinting that Marty Marion didn't get all that could be had out of the Chicago club. .. "What do you think was the matter with the Sox the last few years that caused them to fold in the late summer after getting away to a fast atart?" he was asked. , In His Stride "Well." he said cautiously. "They ask that question all around the league. Frankly, I don't know. I wasn't with the club then." "Do you think they were trained too hard in the spring last year. causing them to bog down later?" "I can't answer that. i wasn't here." The closest he would come to being critical of his Cleveland club last year was to say that nobody but the pitchers had a good year. and that wasn't really a criticism That was just the statement of a fact everybody knew. . "Rocco Colavlto hit -176 for us. and that was high." he explained. winning ever so slightly. Someone wondered out loud Ii Lopez held many club meetings. some managers assemble their players at the drop of a fly ball. "I've had one meeting-opening day." be said. leaving the impres- sion he had a squad of major league hall players who knew what the game was all about and didn't have to have their mistakes pointed out to them. SPORT FROM BRITAIN Hyde Has Cantered Rather Than Gallopod To Headlines By KEN tut-rtmivts. Canadian Prue Staff Writer LONDON (CF)-A shy young hardboot from Shropshire. who feels more at home with horses than people. is being hailed as the new Gordon Richards of Eng- lish racing. Although still an apprentice jockey. 1)-year-old Eddie Ride is the current favorite of British rscegoers. He has been booting home winners with such consist- rncy that many punters bet on. him regardless of his mounts. i in much too early to start selecting a winner of the Jockey rhansploaship but young Hide is It" to a flying start. By last week he had 28 wins. compared to in fur his nearest rival. Scobie nrcasley. Veteran Doug Smith. rhampioo Jockey for the last three years. had id at that stale. Hide finlahtd seventh in the list of leading Jockeys Iaat season with 75 winners. Smith. who had many morernounts. won with I55. SON OF TRAINER Eddie Ia apprenticed to his! lather. Bill Hide. who trains at Ludiow. Shropshire. and has been riding from the day he could hold hlmlrlf up in the saddle. He had his first mount in a race at the age of is and a year later rode his first winner. . Even in a gathering of friends the young Joebay is aby almost Remember When M. E. F. tllike) Kelley. former president of the Canadian and On- ivio i ' -I I I I to the pointer dlffidence. But ” there is nothing ahy or reserved about the way he handles him- self once he is up on a horse. He can drive a horse home with all the power of a Johnny Longden or a Gordon Richards in a tight finish. Equally important. he has an instinctive gift of judging tho right tmment to make his move. Hide has an ideal built for a jockey-small-boned and wiry. He holds his weight at lot pounds "without any special training or dletlng.' Hide has centered rather than gailoped into British racing head- lines. Typical of his steady pro- gress is his experience in the Cesarewitch. His first Cesare- witch ride was in I952 when ht- finished ninth. A year later he was seventh and the year after that he came third. in 1955. he was second and in I956. his fifth attempt. he pulled off a family "double" by winning on Prelone. the horse his father trains. Ilia biggest day. to date. this year was April 27 when he booted home four successive winners. in- cluding Babur in the Llncolnsnlrv Handicap. Eddie's father tries to shield his son from the unsettling nlarr of publicity and hero-worship. "Ed- die is inclty to be getting this chance and he is young enough to be able to wait." Eddie. himself. says he hasn't any particular ambition. "l luxl want to get on and I take each race as it comes along." SMOIIES tit! seals 400 export CIOARRTTIS Medsaeldhaad halsdd Lab Technicians To Meet In B.C. The British Columbia Branch of in Canadian Society 0' 1350"" iory Technologists is .. paths for a great influx of laboratory t L ' 1 mo v... .B.C.. in May of this year. 11:: event is the C.S.L.'l'.'s alst annual meet- ing and convention. May 1-D La- boratory technologists irons all parts of Canada will gather at this anniversary convention to gain valuable knowledge from the scientific sessions and to partici- pate in the general meetin- The c.s.L.'r. la the professional representative body for medical laboratory technologists in Canada and it was established in lI3'f: -' to more efficiently aid in dIIll0l' III8 and treating disease: to I119 mote closer co-operation between the di ' profession and the technician; to promote research endeavour in all branches of lab- for you Now you can have "controlled- heat" cooking in ordinary pots and pans. Dial-Temphaautomatic Thermostat actually controls the heat of the pan itself! Won't let foods bum; won't scorch pans! oratory work; to improve the gun. iticatioa and standing of labors. I011 lOlIIlI0I0llIts in Canada: and to promote a recognized and pro- fuslonai status for technicians. Medical Laboratory technolo- gists are at work in the nations universities. nscarch and com- rnerclai laboratories. as well an in 1 ” ' and other medical labora- iorlee. The field of medical science has increased in an unprecented in the past few years. re- ) 3 MARVEN15 I, The Guardian ?age 7 suiting in unlimited opportunities for young man and women in any of the various Hold! 01 medial science. This ' Thursday. May 23! people into tiis rewarding field- BISCUITS .Y PUFMTY AND QUA- Recipe for foot-re em.- Let Adlllifdl do it Admiral Flex-0-Heat lets you dial any degree of heal you want from lowest simmer to fastest boil. plus all the in-between heats. Exclusive with Admiral-a thousand-and-one heats on every surface unit! only two settings. Automatic Electric Timer Clock - - : - 1 turns on oven or Rotary Roaster: :)?::Imf,:'gh:x'3;:1oi1:,r;)lm;zk; p . U CW” fwd "Id Wm” MI ”"I”""" Roaster. Meats basic themselves tically at time selected. Enjoy outdoor-style barbecuing, N00d9 automatically as they turn 'round and 'round. toptlnaaalea-tea.) I share atwayel I87 (IIIAT GHDIGI 81'. NEW WAY FURNITURE CO. LTD. . in ones! oaonos: s-r. YOUR BEST CHOICE Admiral FLEX-O-HEAT 30" ELECTRIC IANGI WIOIX I Yr home deaarvoe the beat . . . Admiral CANADIAN ADMIRAL CORPORATION, III. 0 PORT CREDIT, ONTARIO FIRESTONI HOME &Au'to co. LTD. CH Wu AILO'I'I'I'I0 DIAL 5547 WN DIAL 8211 has result-2 ed in a drastic stsartsss or wean!-I icgl personnel and one of the rnoatl imp...-ism jobs for the C.S.L.'l'. st. this time is to encourage Y0!-"ll: nrietyIee.udhaddlIoa.T Iopleaaeea6e&l0- SWEET JUICY MEXICAN &0M I N ION is the-place tobuy Wick olytle Otop” PREEE .2-.-.29.. Iablae. Vllsatlser caaadlaa gsowa er Imported from be deep sooth. you all depead ca the freelusoes ud quality of Dominica Iruita and veqatahlee. You get buitaaad . miooas. (Sill 96) ORANGES 2 79c Igcglourg Lettuce V 2 27c Apples 5 69c 14 oz. osrtsn l Tenclerflake Lar Grapefruit 6 -- 49c 2 '- 29c Parsnips Tomatoes 9c MAPLE LEAF A 2 --45c 2 1.17 am 29c 20 oz. tins C. EVERYDAY LOW PRICES NEW GLASGOW on WILTSHIRE srussr on ADE Creamery Butter GRAVES VITAMINIZED Apple Juice FLOTILL CHOICE Tomatoes Government Graded Meats space MacKAY a. 'co. LTD. MJNIEIK DIAL 2191 I rm-zsn FOR nossrmo c ”ptrlt';'.L . . . -49 F0ltMlll.A'62' l DOG FOOD 4 "st-3:” 39c ' cnoicr. ISLAND snzrzn ML BLADE ROAST 49C TEA BAGS IOOcount 79: CANADA mcanns SUPERIOR no FANCY "NR ' I SAUSAGES u 49c SALMON ”n:” 32: LYNN VALLEY STANDARD PEAS EMBLEM AIt'l'II"IClAL IPIIIGSII HOURLY GROUND HAMBURG FBESII KILLED FIIYING II 0!. 'l'INI 2 us 59c 2 33: s.'..-'.2'.'s26c CHICKEN u. 49: VANILLA mm TASTY All Mguhundigc told :19 youvoDomvnm;1Stovn is uarontt-c to wv IO '1 Sat-S ozhon BEEF LIVER be 35: G ” G The llaarrssred Heine Library Ink" ENCYCLOPEDIA """" om: vol, Titers. Fri. I Set. .. 993 ,,,,1,',,,, , Mat 13-14-15 us punt st. . - 3”” 1951 noannmr sroasauas. r