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Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Aug 1965, p. 8

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$ THE CAUAWA TIMES, Mondey, August 30, 1965 ' 'SPORT FROM BRITAIN § ~ | Britons Use The Waves, 'Messing About In Boats' By. CAROL KENNEDY World War when men whose tecent Cowes regatta, can be bought for, £500. At the other end of the scale, in the luxury-yacht class, Brit- ish boatbuilders have fous 4 their custom curbed by the La-| bor government's austerity budget and have had to cast their net as far afield as Can- ada and the United States. One prize order captured by a big Lymington boatyard was the \60-foot Eskasoni, a magnificent cruising designed by Rod Ste- phens of New York for Nova Seotia-banker Col. John _C, Mac- Keen and estimated by one Brit- ish yachting correspondent 'who went out on the trials to have cost £85,000. MOORINGS CROWDED The biggest problem faced by Sunday sailors in Britain is find- ing a mooring. Sailing goes on all round Britain, but the real status stuff -- and the serious \ketch-rigged vessel for deep-sealocean racing -- is concentrated in a 60-mile' stretch of the south coast from Poole harbor in Dor- Chichester---in----Sussex set-te Moorings here are getting al-| most as crowded as central London carparks. a4 Particularly favored moorings) are in the rivers leading off the for every foot of the vessel's length, but often cost much e On tie Hambie= river,--most exclusive of all. it is said the only way of getting a mooring if you are not a millionaire is to have one bequeathed. Solent, the five-mile-wide strait) between Hampshire and the| Isle of Wight which is the near-| est big 'stretch of water to Lon- don suitable for racing yachts. Annual charges here average £1 SALT SEA LIKE SYRUP The Dead Sea contains so much salt that only the strong- est winds can whip up its slug- gish surface. |Sudbury Italia | Beats Abbruzzi By THE CANADIAN PRESS Sudbury Italia left it all to Pat Smith Saturday night and icame from behind for a 3-1 Na- jtional Soccer League -- victory lover Toronto Abbruzzi. | Smith scored all three of his team's goals in the second half SUN i aR eg I MLE Sind to single-handedly wipe out a \1-0 lead Abbruzzi took on Louis Caruso's goal, Smith's performance high- lighted a weekend of play which saw Kitchener Waterloo Kick- ers come from behind for a 3-3 tie against Windsor Teutonia Saturday and Toronto Hellas down Toronto Olympia 2-1 Sun- day. Chuck Vaningen was the hero for Kitchener-Waterloo, scoring in the final minute of play after Windsor blew a 3-1 lead late:in the game, ; Hans Schablinski and Les Fizel got the other Kicker goal y while Joe Schrieber scored k twice for Witser ana 362 Hire bel added one. : ANIMALS LIKE COMPANY Biologists say animals eat more when in groups and a fully-fed chicken will start e@t- ing again if it sees anothe: PEATE chicken doing so, 4 LYMINGTON, England (CP) More and more Britons are es- caping the pressures of com- muter life by taking to the sea on weekends in every kind 'of craft from small sailing dinghies to 60 - foot luxury yachts. ; "Messing about in boats," that characteristically English pastime praised by Kenneth Grahame in his Edwardian chil- dren's classic The Wind in the Willows, has become the fast- growing British sport of the 1960s. The Royal Yachting Associa- tion estimates there are 500,000) boat-owners in the hountry and that a regatta is being held somewhere in Britain every weekend along with hundreds of other fixtures. An enthusiast in this south- coast Hampshire yacht harbor explained the boating boom as the perfect "get-away-from-it- all" answer to life on an over- crowded island with six - mile traffic queues tying up its coas- tal roads in summer. "Let's face it, there are vir- tually only two things you can do in this country to get away from crowds at a reasonable cost--go up a mountain or get out on the sea." | He traced the roots of the! boom to the end of the Second war service had included the handling of small boats found) the sailing bug still gripped them after demobilization. At that time there were few new boats to be had, but one could pick up "all kinds of wrecks" cheaply and convert them. DINGHY FOR $156 The craze really got going in the mid-1950s, coinciding with a burst of national affluence after years of shoestring living. Wide popular interest was sparked by the first of the Daily Ex- press annual Boat Shows in 1955, and many enthusiasts who bought small dinghies then have since graduated to family-size cruisers, Today boating in Britain can be tailored to all pockets. Any- one with the urge to get out upon blue water can do so for as little as $156--the price of the cheapest sailing dinghy on the market--and the wind, of course, is free. Powered runabouts, seen in dozens on the upper reaches of the Thames and along the in- land canals, are also enjoying a boom, They cost anything from £200 to £1,500, For the ever- growing fleet of racing enthusi- asts, a Flying Fifteen class rac- ing yacht like Prince Philip's Coweslip, which he sailed at the OLD COUNTRY SOCCER LONDON (Reuters)--Results of soccer matches played in the United Kingdom on Saturday: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Aston Villa 2 Leicester 2 Burnley 2 Arsenal-2 Fulham 0 Chelsea 3 Northampton 1 Man United 1 Notts F 3 West Brom 2 Sheffield W 1 Newcastle 0 Stoke 1 Everton 1 Sunderland 4 Sheffield U 1 West Ham 2 Leeds 1 Liverpool vs. Blackburn ppd Division II Bury 4 Derby 1 Charlton 2 Ipswich 0 Crystal P 2 Leyton Or 1 Huddersfield 6 Midlesborough 0 Man City 2 Bristol C 2 Norwich 3 Cardiff 2 Plymouth 1 Bolton 3 Preston 3 Birmingham 3 Rotherham 1 Coventry 1 Southampton 2 Portsmouth 2 Wolverhampton 3 Carlisle 0 | Division II Brighton 1 Hull City 2 Bristol R 1 Brentford 1 Gillingham 1 Millwall 0 Oldham 2 Peterborough 4 Oxford 0 Shrewsbury 1 Queen's P R 1 Mansfield 2 | Wrexham 1 Hartlepools 1 Colchester 1 Crewe Alex 1 Darlington 0 Chester 1 Lincoln 1 Notts 2 Newport 1 Rochdale 1 Southport 2 Doncaster 1 Torquay 2 Chesterfield 0 SCOTTISH LEAGUE CUP Aberdeen 2 Clyde 0 Airdrieonians 3 Stranraer 0 Abroath 3 Queen's Pk 0 Brechin 0 Ayr U 1 Celtic 3 Dundee U 0 Dundee 1 Motherwell 2 Dunfermline 6 Partick 2 East Fife 1 Alloa 2 E Stirling 1 Dumbarton 0 Hamilton 0 Cowdenbeath 1 Hibernian 3 Falkirk 1 Kilmarnock 3-St. Johnstone 0 Montrose 1 Stenhousemuir 3 Morton @ St. Mirren 1 Queen of § 2 Albion 0 Rangers:1 Hearts 0 Stirling 1 Raith 2 Thd Lanark 3 Berwick 2 IRISH LEAGUE Bangor 3 Derry City 1. ° Cliftonville 2 Portadown 6 Coleraine 1 Glentoran 1 Distillery 2 Ards 1 Glenavon 2 Linfield 4 Scunthorpe 2 Reading 0 Swansea 1 ooo 1 | ANDREWS Walsall 3 Southend 0 Watford 3 Exeter 0 HEATING omen" _ a 2 It Pays te Have @ vision | Aldershot 3 Luton 1 | FURNACE Barnsley 4 Bradford C 2 | 725-1660 Oehowe Bradford 2 Barrow 3 | TO BE MORE EMPLOYABLE ON FOREMAN LEVEL take a Here is what the Canada Pension Plan will do for people like Steve Sawchuk, 'The Canada Pension Plan: and its benefits % a 45-year-old steel mill worker who earns $110 a week ($5,720 a year). ---- i Dale Carnegie Course Yes;-a-Dale-Garnegie-course that is likely to start in Oshawa before the end of September. For information telephone 728-5032 See advertisement on page 3 IN. OSHAWA * OSH Miss Ida Arnott, 20 Arlington Ave. Mrs, W, Coulby 791 Westdale St. Mrs. Jon Drygala, 789 Law St. Mrs, J. Dickson 15 Beatrice St Mrs, P. Edmondson, 498 Harwood Miss Olive French, 38 Lioyd St, Mr. R. G. Geen 300 Mary St. Mrs. L. Gunn, 406 Athol St. E Miss |. Harvey, 365 Simcoe St. N. Mrs. J. Kerr, 98 Sunderland Ave Mrs. P. Lesley, 428 Gibbons St. N Miss Geraldine Lee, 613 Carnegie Miss Lucille Lyzonchuk, RR 2 Mrs, Bruce Mackey, 151 Gordenia Mrs. C. Naylor, 27 Athboska St Mr. E. Oscpelio, 407 Maion Ave Mrs, lL, W. Parrott, 695 Mary St Mrs, J. H. Wilkins, 29 Patricia St Miss Helen Willard, 684 Tennyson * BOWM Mrs. ©. Dudley, RR Rowmany Mr. Ross Metcalf, Hampton Mrs, WO EOC Mrs, M.H. Stoples, R.R Mrs. R. J. Horper, Mary St Mrs. J. E. Jackson, Queen St. Mrs, E. Kerr, RR 2 Mrs. A. Martin, Box 3, Sunderland Mrs. V. P. Stoutter, Bigelow St Mrs. Morie Toylor, Box 270 Mrs. A. Walloce, Blockwoter Mrs. Doris Beotor Mrs. A. Fisher, 259 Chine Mrs. Inger Odum, 892 Doug Mrs. PN. Sprott, 304 1 Mrs. P. J. Wilson, 203 Hollett St Mra. Reuben Brown, Townline Rd Mrs. R. English, 899 Mary St. N Mra. Julie Jockson, Newtonville, ORMTA REGISTERED MUSIC TEACHERS Mra. Gary Booth, 695 Florien Court Mrs, Ralph Coupland, 1156 King St. E Miss Judith Davison, 812 Hortop St Mrs. Everett Elliott, 309 William St, E Mrs. W. B. Kinsman, 24 Aberdeen St Miss Joan Motthews, 75 Oshown Blvd. S. Miss Ruth Skinner, 98 Sutherland Ave. Workman, 21 Beech St 1, Newcastle * PORT PERRY * Ave. Piano, Theory ANVILLE * le Pinno, Theory School Music Piano Piano, Theory } Piano, Theory * WHITBY * Mrs. Elaine Broughton, 946 Dundas 5 jeview Dr Mrs, W. E.G. Summers, 1120 Dundas St. & * INTERIM MEMBERS * AND DISTRICT AWA * Piano, Theory Piano Piano, Theory Voice, Theory Voice, Theory Violin, Piano Piano, Theory Ave Piano Piano Piano, Theory Voice, Piano, Theory Piano Bollet Piano, Theory Piano, Theory Piano, Theory Ave Piano, Theory Piano, Theory Piano Court Piano Pino Violin, Schoo! Instruments N Piano, Theory Piano, Theory Piano, Theory Piano, Theory Pians. Theory Pians, Theory Piano, Theory Pianc, Theory Piano, Theory Piano, Theory Voice, Piano School, Music Piono, Theory Voice, Piano Piano, Theory Piano N Pione. Theery Pian, School Music If Steve works full time until age 65 he can look forward to a monthly retirement income of $104.17 from the Canada Pension Plan and $75 from Old Age Security--a total of $179.17 a month. When his wife receives her Old Age Security pension, their monthly income will rise to $254.17. If Steve becomes disabled after 1970, having contributed until his disability, he will get a disability pension of $103.13 a month. cP.1s8 o If,when he becomes disabled, Steve has children under 18 or under 25 and continuing full-time education, benefits of $25 a month for each of the first four and $12.50 for each additional child will be payable. Thus if Steve has five dependent children, the total will be $215.63 a month. If Steve dies anytime after 1967, having contributed until his death, his wife will receive a widow's pension of $64.06 a month. In addition, orphan's benefits of $112.50 a month will be paid for her five children. if they are under 18 or under 25 and continuing full time education. At the time of Steve's death Mrs. Sawchuk will also receive a lump sum payment of $500. All benefits under the Plan will maintain their value. The actual benefits payable will probably be higher than those given here since benefits will be adjusted to meet changes i living costs and in wage levels before they are paid and chang living costs after they becom¢ payable. What will the Plan cost you? If you, like Steve, are employed and have earnings of $5,720 spread evenly over the year, you wi commencing in January, pay at the rate of $1.77 a week until your contributions for the year amount to $79.20. Your employer will pay the same amount. This advertisement is one of a series which relates some of the important benefits of the Canada Pension Plan to individual circumstances. Issued by - flere d of the Minister of National Health and Welfare, Canada The Honourable Judy LaMarsh.

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