TIievChnHotitc9t2wn CinrdlgiL!:lidayLApril 20, 1iiso.. .1 Con. Sport Scene Switches From Indoors To Outdoors By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian sport is moving out from under its cover of hockey arenas. basketball courts and curl- ing rinks as winter fades and em- phasis shifts to outdoor activities. Hardy outdoorsmen and women are participating in sports in many Canadian centreswhile others are impatiently awaiting for the effects of winter's final strokes to disap- pear. Baseball. golf. tennis. yachting and fishing enthusiasts. held up by late winter. are preparing for happy hours in the open away from office cares. with the coming -of spring long distance swimmers looked at chal- lenging stretches of water. 1'' med distance swimmer Florence had- wick was reported interested in making a second try at swimmins Lake Ontario and Toronto's Janet Scott was in Victoria to see about another attempt at the Strait of Juan do Fucs. IRON OUT KINKS Hardly had the snow left the ground in some areas than intrcpid golfers and tennis players were ironing out winter kinks. Prairie and Maritime golf courses and tennis lawns were not expected to open for some weeks but in On- tario many courses opened last Lopez Denies Trade Talk CHICAGO (AP) - Manager Al Lopez said Wednesday there is no truth to reports Cleveland Indians have offered to trade pitcher Early Wynn to Chicago White Sox for outfielder Jim Rivera. "i wouldn't give up Wynn (or two Riveras." Lopez said. "Wynn is not on the block. He is one of the best pitchers we have and I don't intend to tamper with our pitching. That's our strength. our pitching staff is the very best in baseball. We're not going to break it up." York Rifle Club Scores The following are the scores for April 11th., 1956 at the Your Rifle Club: Class 1: H T. Vessey George Andrews Howard Watts W. L. Crockett Jack Andrews l'tiey Birt Raymond Vessey Class 2: Harold Taylor Irena Hardy Peter Proud DFtI'al' Sivan Cecil Watts (lass 3: Leigh VPSSEY Carol Hardy Lloyd Vessey Stuart Vessey A..l. fluney Harry Welton ("lass 4: .lnyrc Ling Christine Proud Betty Andrews Everett Wylie Leonard Ford Hazel Vessey Robert Cooper Class 5: Marion Vesse! Frank Watts Harry Lewis Elizabeth Watts Frank Veasey Stephen MacDonald Class 6: Willard Murray liisriorie Iawil Bonnell Ling Class 7: Rnddie Munn Earl Taylor Rupert Godfrey Erma Watts Laken Lewis T.V. JINGLES or wiiw M...i- m 32888 33-! 833238 8333228 2338833 88288 8883588 PRICES BTAIT A'!' SHED. TV Aerials Installed. Expert Television. homo ear rsdio repairs. RADIOS from seats up can names SU.I'lp Firestone ttiitni r. Yc.s oiii Auto raiiiiiiig and body works depart- ments are fully equipped to service jobs as large as the above truck. Also your car or trailer, with the paint Job Von m's.ly..rc:uire. umm omen l IODY SHOP IIIALCOI X wekend. Spect t wise.-the greatest sport is baseball. The Pacific Coast League has a team in Vancouver for the first time this year. In Quebec and Ontario there is the triple A international League. The Western Baseball League opens in Edmonton .iiine 9 and the Northern League opens in Winni- peg May 5. For the first time the New Brunswick-Maine League will ban: night games in New Bruns- c . i Baseball has drawn increasing spectator support in Newfoundland since it was revived in 1947. The first game of the season will be played in St. John's near the end of June. A crowd of 10,000 is ex- pected. BOTH OWNERS PREPARE Wherever there is water there is the sound of hammers and the smell of paint as boat owners pre- pare for the season. in Toronto. yachting officials report a few brave souls already have been sail- ing on Lake Ontario although the season does not open till May. The Maritime.-i reports it has twice the number of boats per cap- its than ilie rest of Canada-two to every 22 persons. Late snow is having a dampen- tng effect on fishing in the Mar- itimes although the season opened in mid-April In Saskatchewan, season generally opens in May for most varieties of fish. Horse racing. another great spectator sport. is opening in some areas including Saskatchewan, On- tario and Quebec. LONDON! (CF)-Nine years ago Winnipeg youngster and wrote him off as a,"puny wee thing, too small for a man's game." Today five-foot. tour-inch Victor C. (Chick) Zamick is the "Biggest thin " in British hockey and one of ie most.proflific scorers the winter game has ever known. Nottingham Panthers at the start of the 1947-48 season. the 29-year. old product of Winnipeg junior ranks has poured 650 goals into opposing nets and assisted on an- other 525 for a 1.175-point total. Chick's 650-goal total exceeds hy more than 100 the NHL all-time goal record held by Montreal Czina. diens' great Maurice illnckeil Richard. When, early this season. Richard notched his 500th goal in 11 years of NHL play. Zamick al- ready was well past the 600-mark. BREAD AND BUTTER Zamick. son of Winnipeg masseiir John Zamick and one of a family of is, learned his hockey in the pan ii and tumble of the Manitoba cap tsl's open-air rinks. Right from the start, hockey was a "bread-and-butter game" with Chick. It had to he for ”rlad was having a rough time" clothing and feeding Chick. his 10 brothers and four sisters. He played in the fast Manitoba Junior League with Canadian Uk- rainian Athletic Club and St. Bona- face, Man. Athletics before moving east to play with the junior St. Catharines. 0nt., Teepees. Chick's uncanny ability to get the puck Into the net brought NHL scouts on the run. But one look at his 130-pound frame and they left just as quickly. "After one scout called me a 'puny wee thing,' i decided to try my luck in England. "My old coach Joe Matheson of Winnipeg gave me lots of encour- agement and recommended me to Nottingham. I borrowed a suit from my brother and left in the fall of 1947. "it was the best gamble I ever made." Today Zamick is one of the most popular Canadians in Britain. At Nottingham. legendary home kaf Robin Hood 123 miles northwest of London. he has twice been voted "sportsman of the year.” beating out soccer greats like Tommy Law- ton. He wears made-in-measure suits. drives his own car, owns two dry cleaning and dyeing shops and has 30-Inch ELECTRIC RANGES Surface Cooking Units Brood, fiat-lop Phiioo coils give up to Vi more contact. Entire coil is used for every heat. Unit swings up for removal and easy cleaning of drip pan. "L" cirrongcmentof units doubles useful space. plans for expansion. He is married ..Qogfoo New beauty and years-ahead features on yours in this amazing Philce range. Super-Wide balanced-Heat oven. Cook-By-Color Controls. Automatic Oven Timer Clock leaves you free while your meal cooks. Timed Appliance Outlet. SUPII-FAST COMMERCIAL HEAD Branches In: in the nine years since he joined r warn sneer. suwcssios ;to a Nottingham girl. Vera Saxton. iwlio had never seen a hockey game until meeting Chick. They have two daiightcrs, Jane. 5, and Linda. 2. Zamick. iiho hopes to continue ivlaiing for another three or tour iyears. took over as playing coach lot Nottingham Panthers last fall iand guided ilie club to the Autumn .Cup championships; which covers time first half of the selison. (Tmiatliaiis on the club besides izamick are goalie Jack Siemsii of iKitchenor, Oni., Ken Westman of lw”"llDcg. Lorne Smith of Port Credit. 0ni., Ernie Dougherty from ivancouver, Dave Russell of Wa- ldena. Sa.-;k.. Gerry Watson, Kirk- pl:-ind Lake. 0nt.. Fred Hall. Medi- cine Hal. Alta. and Gerry Hudson, (ianiiiinqiie, Out. I "I insist on positional play and ”''f1"1 ill:-Lv.” says Chick. "The other ihniizs i look for in a player is adaptibiiity to conditions over here. lie want hoys who will fit into the lbllzlish environment and give the T IIE SERVICE V CANIZING AND RETREADING IOU TYPI IAKINO UNIT No fussing with heavy pull- out units or drip trays. Just lift the light rod . . . spill- overs can be wiped cleon quickiyl OFFICE: ST. JOHN. N. B. l 2?. EQUIPMENT LIMITED Overlooked In Canada But Is British Scoring-Whiz sport and Canadians I good name." A great forechecker. Zamick is adept at stealing the puck inside the opponents' blue line. He shoots off either foot and gets his shots away fast. In his first eight seasons in Brit- ain, Zamick won the scoring title four timesgand tied for the lead a fifth-year. Only once has he wound up lower than second-in 1351-52 when he broke his left arm mid-way through the season. He was leading the pack by a 14- point margin at the time. His big season was 1954-55 when he averaged more than three points a game in the 62-game schedule with 94 goals and 74 assists for I record I69 points. Zamick, who believes hockey is once again on the upgrade in Brit- ain, is a firm supporter of hurt)- pean - style hockey which empha- sizes stick-handling and team work rather than the stunning body-con- tact of the Canadian games. TIRE SERVICE VULCANIZING Moiicton, Halifax, New Glasgow, Truro. Sydney nines Iowans Fighters Get Back To ''Old Days" SYDNEY, A u s t r a l i a tAP.i--- Jimmy Carruthers. retired defeated world bantam champion. and Ray Coleman, former Austral- ian feathcrwelght champion. slug- ged it out with bare knuckles more ' than two weeks ago, it was re-. vealed Wednesday. About 30 persons watched as the pair battled for 14 minutes with- out a referee on the night of March (ii. Then Colelnan who, Csrruiiiers said. was knocked dnun si-it-ii times, said he had enough. Four years ago Carriitliers gained a de- cision over Coleman at Sydney stadium. Carruthers. now a saloonkei-per, told of the light. ”For sometime Ray has I)l'('iIi coming to my pub and creaiiiig disturbances," he said. ”I run a respectable pub and cannot have- that sort of behavior. I repeatedlyl Costs little more than a standard tire! TUBELESS. SUPER-CUSHION W t'.oon.37s:An asked Ray to behave himself orl leave. l t un- iv b"I9htens, beautifies the whole room VVhu( a world of diiferonce "Square-Tex" will make to you kitchen or Isathrooml Although it costs so little, it way” gm! wears - as you would expect from "(.'ol(l Seal” Congoieusn. See "Square-Tex” -- and all the other heantifiil Congoleum patterns, including the luxury-looking "Sequin" and "jackgu-.w" - at your floor covering dealer's. The (,'old 5.3.1 .. .l Congoleun is your guarantee of satisfaction. 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