PAGE SIX §PORTING NEWS Flag Cline/zed, Cards Work Yanks Prove Out To Keep Up Steam N" slmwhes i" By Judson Bailey Aasociaied Press Sports Writer ST. LOUIS, Sept. 26—(AP)—A World Series Atmosphere settled over Sportsmans Park today as St. Louis Cardinals made ready to re- ceive New York Yankees in the first gaine of the classic Wednesday. The world champions weie not due here until late tomorrow, but the red hot Redbirds worked out on their home field while carpenters hammered up additioiiul seals and Commissioner Keiicsaw M. Landis made a checkup on arrzmfzements for playing the games and holding ul the crowds of about 35.000 for the two ganles that will be played here this week. Wilhoui conlminlilo himself dei- irlnciv- Nilvnnlaer Billy Souihworth of the Curtis lillilCdikd lilat he had his plioillilc schedule already" map- ped out Wllh Mort Cooper. Johnny Beuzliqv, Max Lanier and Ernie White \I‘0l‘iiil'l2 in that order. Starting Cooper in the opening game. oi (‘0Ill‘.~‘.‘. has been a fore- gone coilciuslon His record of 22 VlCIOFIvJS and it) shlliOlils has slump- ed illln llle ycnrks outstanding hurl- er in the nnliors and in spite of the fiirloils Naiional league pennant fiizht that lasted till the final day of the season. Cooper has been rest- ed. since last Thursday. The choloe of Beasley for the second game was based partly on the NEISOIIIIIR ihat a rookie would have a better chalice in his own park before friendly fans than he would in pitching before some '10,- 000 persons in Yankee Stadium. Beazley achieved his Zlst triumph of the season yesterday‘ in ihe sac- ond izame oi a doubleheader with Chicago Cubs and the ilssliililllCllL to face the Yanks on Thursday would bring him back into action flRhI on his remilar pitching sciied- t‘ The two southpaws who then wuuid aiiemlil to inumc the clliun- pious in their own lneila are sui- iicieiilll seasoned ilnu souihworih iiizrucs tiny can “llilsldlifii the SIYillli ihut all Nailoilal League dubs. (‘U111111i-I out of sznllicr parks, feel when thev invade ille huge coilcrcte triple-decked tludlunl in New York. Mos! IKODIe here believed Man- ager Joe i\icCarth_v would icnd with Ernie Bonham, his rigiflhand- ed ace who has won 2i cunles and lost ine. He seems to be a boner be! uliuust Cooper Ihan the veteran Rfd RHYYIHZ. who DPObkibiV would Oppose Beuzlcv in the second game. meatball keeps Going despite ,War’s exigencies By Allan Nicklcson Czumdilin Press Stuff Writer LONLMN, Selil, Zli-ICPJ-De- 5pm. -,\-_.;s exlgcilclcs, the liuie rn.il~.—i.l~.c iwzbul. luil~ivlio down un-ougn Lire lcilrs luvs mane British soccer Lilo most patronized oi all sports is keeping the name alive. Briiuiil will always have its foot- bail. Even bombs cant stop it. For lllsllllilit. despite raziniz oi the roof o; a 5 mid dam-line caused by that fell around the grounds during those Coventry ds, Coventry City's ‘iiigich with Walsall was watched by more than 6.000- Wars blackout of sports ed111p- ment won‘: stop L116 Kflme “mer- et icasi for a 1on2 time-even if clubs requiring football Rear H1115 obtain u "buviiia cefliflcaw- , It's an innovation to Cl-IIMQQWJ; manufactuie and the oer loan must be endorsed by I119 FWLba Association which acts for the re- sponsible government dekaxlmengd Increased admission _ prices time travel restrictions dont daunt em football follower, When the cggm mason opened mole than .h_ watched so league names WW? t l oilntry. OKwQQQE war comes first. 0f 6011354‘- iind lust as ins: season thew W111,“ times when active service ififitblgf presence of some players flII mflhc ' es. Sometimes. mannf-Zers are RFC put to field a full team. _____-_-_-— Red‘ Birds flail Syracuse 10-5 SYRACUSE. N.Y.. Sept. 28—(AP) -Coiuinbils Re ‘ er their second consecutive Little World Series championship tonight when, helped by six Syracuse errors, they routed the Chiefs 10-5 in the fourth ganle of the 25th annual minor league classic. The American Association playoff winners, now leading the Inferna- tional lseciguers three games to one. blew a LIZIII. contest wide open in the ‘last iour innings. explodinil for two runs Ln the sixth and. frames, one in the eiszhth. and in the nirlth. '-_%---.-l.-.-l.-.-.--.'.'-a-'u-.-5§-T' Sport Shorts From Britain '.-. -.-.----.--~.-.a-mv.‘ By Allan Nickleson Canadian PITSS Staff Writer IONDON, Sept. 28—(CP)—'l‘lie Canadian uuniunnvelgnt champion, a gimlc Iiiilt guy lroili Moiiircul. still has to will a ilfznv. in nritain but he's among the most popular boxers over here. That paradox ls because Pte. Eddie Pctriii oi the Royal Montreal Regiment has guinea recognition as a tenacious and clean bOXcl‘ ivilo never quits trvinz even when lies opening Jaklflfl a. beating. Eddie lost ills second London fight to LAC. Joe Davis or the RAJ; an accumie-punciung speedster. by a. decision but it was the Canadian whoreceived most of the cheers. Petrin relkd on spasmodic oli- siaughts to pile up points. The Mloiltrealei‘ dbesnv pick any setups. For his flISL lloildon iixht he met Jolting Jackie Paterson. British and Empire iiywelgllt klllfl who is recognized unofficially as world champion Eddie was flat- tened in the early rounds. One London sports writer Pitching dept. By Whitney Martin Assoc-Meir rrcss sports Writer NEW YORK. Sept. 28—(AP)—- Bay, how ihose Yankees siuu that ball. doiit they? its really too bald they have no DIDCILIIIB. some of their cnuckers actually allow more than six inls a game now and then. ‘ilie common ilusconcepiion oi Joe Mcuai-inys cluo is that it is a ucaili which Just ovexpowers the op- position. Tllxlfi have wileii that luvs practically true; iviien tile Yanks could spot another team i0 runs and beat it. Not that vile present Yziiikee club is on the leeule sine ui. me plate. in Still is the lli0si dangerous team in oase- bail when ll. nus its "iiis.” But it isn't the greatest hitting of Yankee teams. by any ilieaiis. b0 why are ihe Yanks wiiere they are? ‘Well. one reason might. be that. since Auu. l. their cnuckers have iurnqd in l'i games iii which the opposiilph got six hits or less. Eight Q1 Llwse unins- were six-hitters. iive were iive-hitters. and they had one each of four. three. two and one-hitters. This was not. a one-man parade IHTAIIV’ ineans. The honors were spill “idviy. uldicatiniz lviiirse Mc- Carthy can let the boys draw straws and be pretty sure the auy who gets thelshort one can handle the lob 6 y. Ernie Bonham arid Marvin Breuer each contributed four these per- formances, Ailey Donald and Hank Boroivy each was guilty three 1.11mi Red Ruiilny, twice. and spugeon Chandler oilec. The one-hitter be- loniis IA) Borovvy And as another indication that the Yaillkee siuggers don't always sluizpit is noted that they lost the (IUCbiOll ill iollr of those i7 izames in which file other team got six hits or less. We thought Cincinnati Reds had n copyright on such fun- iiy business. Sow Mines In Enemy Waters OUT OUR WAY By William B. King Associated Press Staff Wrliet LONDON, Sept. 24—(AP)—Bx-it- sun's extensive and continiiid aerial mine-sowing in enemy wilt/er: was explained by some Lomln observ- ers today n5 nn effort ;o forestall or harass any German attempt to 5113‘ slip the heavy Nazi naval coilcent- ifpsted the French-Canadian “wok mum, at KM mm the Norm sea to the rink ‘for the biz contest. too soon after his arrival without there- fore givinz himself sufficient time to settle down and become accli- matized.” and that he "also started. may I suizzest, a little too hlaln up the ladder." stocky Jimmy Wilde, that former hammer-fined world's flywelght champ, is sports organizer to troops stationed in a western area. of Emzland. lt‘s a popular appointment and milk-drinking Jimmy is proud of the lob, Already he believes he has uncovered some future rink The Welsh cyclone of other days -—like a. Dpstnlan 20in! for a walk on his dav oif—seidom misses a bis: willing to help a young baitler. At the British Army boxing chump- ionships at York last spring Jimmy gave Pte. Bobby Dochertv oi Tor- onto's 48th Highlanders what Bobby called “some valuable pointers." Docherty Went on to win the feath- erweight title. Boxing Bits: All this resin dust reminds that the rumor which said seventh Joe Louis was coming over svith the to plan three American forces in the near future the K is stronger than ever The Rsd Birds combed two Byra- Jackie Paterson. whose fight train- cuse hurlers for l3 hits. 10 oif in Clayton Lambert. big Chief hiirlcr who handcuffed them in the series , opener with five bings. John - toneili and Jim Giceson led Red Bird barrage with two singles and a double each. Remember When (By The Canadian Press) Baltimore Orioles defeated New- ark Bears 9-7 on the strength of three home runs early in the sixth game of their International base- ball league playoff two years ago today, to force a seventh gnne. Newark won the deciding and the Governor's Cup. Third Game Of Mar. Ball Series Postponed HALIFAX. Sept, 28--ICP)——T119 third flame in series for the championship was DOSIDOBQd today. The game w be tomorrow. Each team won one of the two games piuyed in Saint John last week. lronmen taklnz the IITSI 3-3 and the Sailors the second 7-3. ______-_--_- FREDERICTON, Sept. za-(CP) -Among the survivors of the sun- ken corvette H. M. C. s. Charlotte- town was stokcr pcftv officer Ken- neth B. Clark, R.C.N.V.R. He is at his home. Shore street, spend- ing a 30-day leave, P. O. Clark re- turned by train from an eastern Canadian port, where he together with the other survivors of the ill-fated “Charlottewwn" had been landed. He gained port a week ago last Friday evening and proceed- ed by rail to this city. arriving here Inst Wednesday. His only belong- ings were what he wore at the time. As for his impression of the in- eldent, Petty officer Clark says little, only that he considered it a narrow escape but nevertheless l. ea ex erience. Er-‘wte wiiere somewhere in the North Atlantic" states Clark. “when out of nowhere. a submarine presumed to be a Nnzl U-boat. opened 11w on the corvette. This first torpedo struck while I was standing at the boiler room door, the force and ex- losion knocking me clean through he open doorway and i found myself on the outerdeck. Before the second torpedo struck, the men had mode a scramble for the aide. We flonlcd for nearly 4 1-2 hours before being picked up by the res- cue ship, which brought us into port." suited Clark. Maritime baseba here work iped ing Jack Dempsey. died in Essex .. He formerly was MC. at the Na- tional Sporting Club. Bruins change’ Training site» Comm nosron. Sept. 28-—(AP)——Ma_n- 11 aizer Art Ross of Boston Bruin: hockey club said tonight his train- inx site had been changed from Port Arthur. Ont.. to Montreal. He explained that the National l-ioc- key Learnies tentative schedule which has the Bruins openinsz thc season in Montreal Oct. 31. made it me befimbilvfi impractical to train in Port Arthur 31g Balm; base, Rpparemly The Bruins will report to Ross in Montreal about Oct. 15 and_ will Boston, ‘New Jop Minister Masayuki Tani, 53-year-old ca- reer diplomat, ls Japan's new foreign minister, appointed by Dictator Tojo to fill the port vacated by Shigenori Togo. to join forces with the raider fleet led by the battleship Tirp‘t1.. The King took the unusual step today of visiting the Admiralty war room wilerc the Royal Navvs move- nleliis arc charted. l-le spent. "some- time" there, nn announciment said; but naval sources declined to dis- cuss the purpose of the call. Both Admiralty and Air Ministry communiques have indicated un- usual minc-layiing activity. Last night, for example, British planes were planting mines In German waters when bad weather held all other R Al‘. forces aground. In daylight today, however, RA. F. bomber forces hit powerhouses _ in the Lille-Lens area of northern d Birds moved near- boximz tournament and he's always “WW8 and an iron and steel works in the Netherlands port of Ijmuld- en. The RA F lost two bombers and a fighter in the daylight offen- sives. Observers said Britain was using large forces of heavy planes 0n the mine-layiing assignments and point- ed to the loss of five in one opera- tion ins! WOCk-Clld as the’ risk which th air ccmmand is willing to run f mines in the siiagerrak, attegat, the Baltic and even BY°11!1<‘1»-- the Kiel Canal. The planes are being med to lay R 17105511’ W115 made 11F? 0f 111"‘! mines close to the enemy's coasts in the Glaszpw shipyards has and f.“ 2 whomfngdgfigéa-glfgg ti€mgzi waters, supplementing the routine the evéry champion smce 19% 1nd mine-laying by surface vessels and within enemy-controlled ' submarines. Mines would not necessarily keep enemy naval forces cooped up, one expert. conceded, but dense mine- fields would endanger any German attempt to break out of the ‘Baltic and necessitate extensive sweeping Operations beforehand. Mines also serve in harass Axis shipping fhrouch Baltic wafers ‘.0 German armies in Northern Russia. and to the Gelnmn homeland from supplv sources ln Norway, Sweden nd Finland. Latest information here is that the ZGOOO-ton baitfeship Scharn- horsi. the l0.000-ton cruiser Prinz Euizcn and 6.000-Ion cruiser Nurcmburiz are complefiniz repairs of brittle damage at Kiel and that the stlll-unuslied aircraft czvxrior Graf Zeppeln also is III’. the ready for service. Observers expressed belief, how- playm conclude their preseason practice in eve,‘ that oven a rcyngol-ced mm fleet. would not risk iin all-out bntiic WiIll the Royal Navy but. in- stead, use its strength against North Atlantic convoys. 'I‘he R Al“. medium two-motored bombers which made the daylight raid flew 4O miles inland wiiholit fighter escort. One pilot said the switch house of n power plant near ‘liens wns hit from a height of 50 cot. Dense coulds of smoke hung over the power station at Combines near Lille after two planes scored hits, and at anofher power house the roof of one building- was blown off by bnnhs dropped from 400 feel. Four German raiders swepf in lower over the southeast coast of England late todav. unloaded their bOmbs and sped back to fiance. A movie theatre we: hit. ‘The b11116- ing was emnty at the time. bub the mnnmzcr and n girl usher were. be- lieved trapped in the wrecknun Three wmkmen in another section of the (own were killed. SOUTH AFRICAN WOOL CAPE TOWN-Jfhe ‘Brliish Gov- ernment has raised the price bnsIq for ‘wool produced in Ih» Union of Soufh Africa by more fhnn 20 per cent compared with last year. BOXLESSfIITCIIEB PRFTORIA — Mulch»: now are sold In Snuff» Africa, WIIhflIlI. bOXQI, and householders must provide their own containers for milk. been years f“ THE CHARLOTTETUWN GUAKDI Storm Causes Damage In N.8. And P.E.l. i HAtII-(IFMAXX Bepti 28——(CP)— Raz- ll ' - defuse wfiQ,°flf,_,h§f."‘,,,§e 83123013; until Saturday morning. The Mus. Nov; 500m, m“ Monday and may quodobit Valley line is still under d“ “Us d u“. d water along a considerable strewn. ma“; the at, cams’ lbmugm All disruptions were due to flood m mm y?‘ Q's‘ mp§"“°“ (us: conditions. which washed away 511%; o; d,,u,,¥°""' at‘; diddmamou‘ roadbeds and threatened brldxes go wads’ raLviay-gorbmlgings £3‘? Washouts on several of the main mo q ' ' highways halted traffic for hours m‘ “mm” “gmamms ‘m’ ul m flood at bsid a mbiwd my menuon o, the 5mm‘ un e w era su e . until wday, when conditions were nearly normal again. Parts of New Brunswick felt the Impact. of the storm. but to a. lesser <198ree than southern and central Nova Scofa where most damage was done. Prince Edward Island and Cape Breton escaped the m1] W. Tons of water fell during the outside Halifax a washout stopped rail communication and clogged me main highway entrance to the city with l2 feet of water. Rail traffic was not resum ’ un- til Thursday mornlnz but the highway reopened 2i hours euiler when the water uubsided. The Dominion Atlantic Railway line to the Annapolis Valley, was out for three days, and traffic on the C N.R.’s Halifax and south- westem branch was not resumed and Ontario was halted. and was just getting back to normal today. Highways flooded Near Truro the highways were flooded with several feet of water. One truck slid off the road and overturn: in the ditch, practically d su merg g. At another place, a sliovil-tlpiiiigrvvillliclirllleetpiiméwhffif’ military provost from Debert halt! band by near“, two months‘ of dry h‘s motorcycle and sldecar swept weather. was unable to absorb the from under him, nnd had a narmw mnents or water’ which raced iescgpteh from hIOIIOWIIIR his bike 1 - n e mrs es. au€1qg;ev§rylavanah'e dlmh and At Stellarfon in Eastern Nova § 3 n ‘fmal river's‘ The Halifax Seotln production at three c051 rea rece _ . - ours. . Th,‘ d tn , the inrush of wa‘er and the motors the 3:0,. efiongytivgge bggfgggtgiofl‘; algae flooded. lack of coal cars Ilfxystheglgudbwst, Near Stewiacke, “Mfg? dfillufh” mam line‘ “Med “peg. ,{,‘,,f,§‘en§f§,f“‘§er:"°drom§ About vs feet of rails were 1m in the swolen Shiibenacadie River Suspended m mum“ on one "c" M Dartmouth. us. P: this. all: M sh . ~ stgfmalkegig. gigs rgvggplplfintflywwer: flooded the streets of Ihe entire i» H. w» at... l. i..- all: i’f"“2§°~““ ‘ rmen n e .R,. we a “now wmker W1“ W“ 8115- roundhouse and other buldingl. 569mm"! Bil/ed by another man. PIER! WAS STOPPED WORST ON RECORD a m m Nmmmfl RQIWYWK Pggge rtiiidwufilrvisfiaanfdoxvriaspiiwoig u - '- yor es at Moncton said down- on Monday, but resumed Tuesday I”? W" ‘he WWI on "word and mel- tile rainfall ended n gum . senied anvmiii-rclitgelritrsce sigh‘: wit?‘ Telephone “n” we": mt w" °f lines} M it was the C N R "M? commission in parts of Halifax and “Delay was t-hebnly disability" 1 through 04mm“ Nova Rona’ B5 All rail traffic on the may '1' floods uurooted poles and water m, the C N}; from “um "N 1s"? seeped into underground cables. to Hahn“; ‘éagued u f 4h h ~- 1n Halifax a serious milk short_ smmng Tuesaav magma; A as: nae threatened when oommunlca- of 102s from a. “broken boom above tionsedwith the milkshed were ma‘ Bfewiacke, menaced the railway 3:81.!’ liganafefleritrag°§ed w" "r1629 there as the flood surged to commumclmoni qua 5 yedumn within inches of the structure. and Total "In; ‘n water} remm ' traffic was halted. hm“. down on“ u n“ the Near the Falrview underpass Iust p r Canadian 36- was 9 . 4 inches. LISTEN, IC -- YOU CINE ME FOUR’ DOLLLIHS. GOIM‘ WIF NOBODY TAKE WES ///// ’%~ M’; I 12x09‘ W, {I OFF.‘ _ ._/"'ri*. ’ _ f‘ ,~_ 12f ‘um. u. 1.041‘. on. LQ PI. I951.’ '5 '_ BRINGING UP FATHER -__ ~24! - - 4 Bus communication with Quebec Mr By J. R. WILLIAMS MISTAI-I CURIH, VOLL FOUR DOLLUI-IS.’ AH H BUTIFVOLYLL HADSAIIVHAMFOH BIZEAKFUS AM‘ can TAIGS vou 10- 22mm; A SALTV HAM DAV ru. CALL SANWICH! sovnxn THEI’ DEBT GWINE T22 BE DIGGIM‘ no WELL V. vi=_l2~/ TIME HE WANT WATE - AB heaviest over registered hen. and nearly an inch more than the aver- an rainfall for the two months of August and September. The rainfall was also felt. in New Brunswick, but no damage was re- ported. mained. it was a boon to farmers and dried-up municipal water supplies. It ended n. two- week forest fire menace and e11- abled hunters to get into woods which had been closed to forest travel before the rain. INP.I..I- m heaviest rainfall ever ex- perienced here soaked the around and flooded cellars in many urban homes during the early part of last week. A total of 10.83 inches fell during a period of 80 hours. stated . W. A. Burns, official weather observer. The highest previous rainfall over a whole month was 10.86 inches. The heaviest part of the torren- tial downpour took place durimz the afternoon and evening of Tues- day. Sept. 32 when 3,23 inches fell in a few hours. A washout on the railway line near Winsloe temporarily disrupt- ed communications until the dam- age was repaired, Though the rainfifl may have had a brad effect on sane of the potato fields in low lylmz sections. the general comment from fami- era is one of saIlsincUon. The pre- vluos dry weather find left the land much too dry and hzrd for plowing but the three days of Iver weafhe. remedied that coilditlon. Manv wells and springs had also been dried out and this situation has also been relieved. The storm started on sundav evenlmz and continued throuizh Wednesday night. Censorship regulations prevent- fld any mention of the storm until yesterday. HEALTH. CAMPAIGN CAPE TOWN——IIlCIlld6CI in South Africa's new legislation which makes slum clear- ance compulsory, and provides £1,500,000 68.705000) for creation of a. special nutrition section of the Public Health Department, and a national anti-tilberculosis drive. SOUTHERN AIRGRAPHS CAPE TONVN-An airgraph ner- Vice similar to that operating be- tween Britain and Canada has been inaugurated In South Africa to provide two-way communica- tion with Britain. health campaign is g; OUR BOARDING HOUSE Latest R.0.A.F. Iiasuaity List OTTAWA. Sept. 28-(CP)- '1'.he Royal Canadian Al: Force in its 381st casualty list oi’ tha war issued lube wday repel ed seven men kiled on active service overseas and five missing believed killed during iilr operaions overseas. The overseas section of the list also named one man as a prisoner, one previously missing now Dre- sumed dead and six missing after air operations. The "Canada" section of tlis list also named one man as a. prisoner, one previously missing now pre- sumed dead and six missing after air operations. The “Canada" section included one man killed on active service, two died from natural causes and three seriously injured on active service. Following is the latest list; OVERSEAS Killed on Active Service: Vye, Benjamin Havelock, Flt. an}; R C. Vye (father) Newcastle Boudreault, Joseph Raoul A1- phonsc, set, SepL-Ilw. Que, V/Glrcunvd, Donald Alfred. 56¢, Eilrilt"; Kvizvlr. Eugene, Flt. SKI... Innis- free, Alta, Norman, John, sgf... Detroit, Mich, Rioux, Raoul Joseph. $811.. J.M. Rinux (fafher) Grand Rails. N‘ B. St. Cyr. Edouard Wilfrid, Sgt, Richmond, Que. Wllsslng believed killed during ali- operations Bertram. Richard Edgar, Flt Sgt. Grlnsby. Ont. Shumsky, William Nelson, Fit. Sgt." Winnipeg. Blair, John Lawrence. Sat. Re- nn. McLellan. Albert Benjamin, A R. McLelian (father) River Philip. Cumberland County, N5. Woolaar, James Harold Boston, Sgt, Winnipeg. Prisoner of War: Smith. John Gordon, 9.1120,, Pit. 1A., Fines Moon, Guatcion, Guatemala Central America. Previously reported mfglng ._ now for official purposes presum- ed deild. Drvsdale. Robert miner, P0. WITH sEPTEMiiizn 29. 1942 PHI-II. Ont. Mil-In: Ami- Air “elm. Cari Aoi ' W411“. Vermont, 511111-11. George iEuiIr-hs Hills. Ont. b“ ’. Edward ‘ (Filtration. am» WO,, (‘u-Lb Hillard, won ' Edmond 58L, RhG. Sh ' Magnum St. 1538x1131?‘ (father) 7,5; saslriilniiorlmnald Harv“ 8n. Sh h rd, omen e Austin, Sgt, 10nd,)“ Taylor, ux Flt Hermann Man. CANADA Killed n A tl I Rash, Igflhkfylilelllfierligé. wash ington. D.C, one of four men Hm i": e w en W9 flifplfines coma Bent. u. ‘*1 John_ 5n near Richmond, Ont, k:.:...';:"".*:::"~' 5st..1.onci6n.niz¥e Fredemk’ F“ nDtg/iskfJohn Henry, Ac; T J av a her) a w ' ' - race. Halifax. oodmwn TH‘ vicserhusly minted on Ad"! Ser- 8 alace. John Maurice, xvog J. Wallace (futile 457 '1" Rt‘. Halifax. r) Chebllfiii l-Iuggan. John Wilson, my Preston, Ont. Sgt“ Farm Workers OTTAWA Sept 28 _ The number of farm Canada for the ‘weak rndn" ‘May si, mi. totalled 1.216.622” m. Dominion Bureau of Statistics said in a pvmlimlnar report issued w, day. 0001191911 arms in the Dom 11110“ durlne that period “m, zlzszriilfid W T1116 TQPQFI “'85 00m lie . basis that farm worlogvsdiggivrii}; members of! the family as well as an" k191i) 111111111 11110 year round. by m; mouih and by I-he d8 Th n however, were exclugive gr flit; workers. k A "brea (IOWTI of the ti lire, provinces showed Oniaifio swiliiyi 308.567 had the largest number of farm workers Figures for caller pwvinces were as follows: Quebec 390,680; Saskatchewan 211,302 A1 berm 160.244. Manitoba 10.1.399- New Brunswick 54817, Nova Swami gflfi, British c0llllilblg 46477’ rnce ‘Tdward Island 20,911 1 “ukopwaa- and " 1 en’ s? AIkIT wuo I-IAI UT I y Eeamrwless! "rule pooizrwsnis UNIFORM I5N‘T HBLF BAD.» BUT THEN ‘l. ALWAYS DID wean NW CLOTHES - RATHER WELL.’ w W's A GIVING SHAME THAT A FIRE -5I-\0\IEL was wvru THE s08. INSTEAD ol= THE ,1 IMPDSING sworao OF A new MARSHAL -- OTHERWISE 1 MIGHT CONGIDBR THE OFFER.’ W’? "m: w»: 1: am- w, n‘ IGNW‘ An ocean AN‘! LoNeERm/iaooe --THE\I‘\IE eoT u HOé-TIED.’ spy sweep IDEA is MART "TAM/one -~ cAvAuav eAsEa Mlei-vT OME m HAND‘! TO our THE mews M06 WITH CHILD! nAomcroizs! movcmoua! ITOOK _THAT-‘A Kiss wrru A r aouozsisu - AND ISOLD soups 114m‘ vow- 'I‘ILLIE THE TOILER LULLABY! IWAHT TOVJRITEA S FIRE AND B SERVICE VOU ARE EVERY HE ART IIPPIE AND “CAP” STUBBS ‘OY ‘THAT WIJ. GLOW WITH THE EALITV Gm: "VH5 | A STORY THAT WILL THE ‘IOU WITH ALL VOIC S THIS? "I ALLOW LIKETHE TIHKLING AH sToizv 1 MY LAND! WHAT'S 19.0w’ CAP DOlN' f w/i-IATHQE Ybu a? v if! ‘THANK woo, I WILL PAINTA PICTURE COLORS THAT IT WILL BE A KLIOCKOIIF-Ei? _ CLEANIN’ 0U N’ FOR LOOKI mow N yum-- ouno THIS ouz HO Ikl SUCH VIVID HUNT .C'LUB’5 -- OUR T TI-I’ snileD. 1 we ‘EUBBER AT i?! AN’ LOOK SE! ISN'T T14 WUN NERI-"Ul