SPORTS TRAIL ........&O..-.....: Spitball ls Already Under Fire As Seas By WHITNEY MARTIN t 'V YORK tA.PI - Caught ' tor league baseball seems to teaching midseason form early. Already the spitter is under fire, urn Birdie Tebbetts accusing Mll- it -uliee's Lew Burdeite of throw- In-' the unsanitary pitch; umpire llill Summers is hit by I POP i...oiie. and Yogi Berra has given in: annual yelp over a decision. The rule barring the spitball is 5 ll'.'. and if anyone is interested it reads: "The pitcher shall not ap- plv a foreign substance of any kind to the ball; expectorate either nn the ball or his glove: rub the hall on his glove. person or cloth- ui:. deface the ball in any man- deliver what is called-the 'nhiiie' ball, 'spit' hall. 'mud' bal; o .-tturse. is allowed to rub the ball imiticcn his bare hands." The pen- alty for any violation is ininiedi- and suspen- kit!!! for I0 days. But try to catch flllli. oi 'emery' ball. The pitcher. air disqualification. them at it. x stair. it's a dieeptsecrcl. so don't tell a soul Floyd Patterson has ltrcn giving some exhibitions! A on Commences ltrteiid found out about it and , We re some up to Minneapolis." "but donlt tell anybody." We can recall wbe weight champion .... inn was practically the oceaaio. (ga . holiday. As a cub reporter in the mid-west we used to man down to the depot for an interview when a champ was just passing through. and his board ofldirectors would make 'aure we knew when he would arrive. and depart. com- pared to such fanfare. Patterson practically is travelling under cover of darkness and wearing a false beard to prevent detection. n a heavy- i to An off day apparently saved the consecutive-game streak of Stan Musial. the nice man who plays first base for St. Louis Cardinals. He must have been hurt badly to consider sitting out a game. since he often has played when stiffer- ing in i' nce injuries which would keep many players out of action. called Cus D'Amato. PBll!'eIBlI'I manager. to find out how they were drawing at the gate. and uhere he was showing off the heavyweight champion next. Cus advised. then added fearfully: . THE S'SlDE ACES - SENIOR B CHAMPIONS Senior 3. Hockey League, BACK now tleft to gasps outnooits Sportsmen Responsible For Teaching Youngsters Safety SASKA'1'OON f('.Pl J W- Lliiiii Houlde . an expert on the handling of firearms. says it is the iesponslbilily of every senior sportsman to teach the young hunter safety in gun use. ”We learn by trying and repell- ing what we have been taught." ll! said. '-young people learryto handle firearms safelyoby being taught and then by trying it out for themselve... ' "They enjoy sliootinil and anxious to do it right. and safely. and for this privilege will listen in good instruction." BISLEY MABKSMAN llouiden. it gradpaie of QllEEll'l llniveraity in mechanical engineer- lng. was for many years one of t"anada's leading riflc shots. He uas a member of the Canadian ilislcy team l2 times and holds the King's Medal and bar among his shooting awards. He now heads the western sales division nf an ammunition firm. (Canadian Industries Ltd). He gave his advice before the Saskatchewan Fish and Game League. - He said there now are more than 20.000000 gun handlers in North America and the number is increasing annually. This along with an increasing number of acci- dents has various law - making bodies considering laws to curb thr use of guns for sport. "(inns are meant to be used for getting food. sport and law en- tnrcemenl." he said. "When the same guns become involved in accidents. especially where the lA'Q... rause ts carelessness. people as I whole become angry. ”Today this anger turns up in the form of laws to protect them and restrict use of guns." Mr. Houlden told of work done by the National Rifle Association and the Canadian industries Ltd. Dominion Marks en. "Our records ead us to believe that over 100.000 boys have won marksmen awards. and as far as can be checked. no active member of either organization has been reported in a shooting accl- dent.” This indicated that the keynote to safety was experience. gained under proper training and super- vision. usually in clubs. As another example. llouldea cited a plan in New Hampshire where firearm safety was taught in high schools on a year-around basis. In a season when the plan was barely a year old. he said. 90.000 hunters roamed the woods of the state without a fatal accl- dent. Antelope hunters in Saskatch- ewan had 71-per-cent success dur- ing the last season. says Ernie Paynter. game commissio r. Suc- cess in deer hunting was lrbotit I) per cent and elk and moose hunt- ers had a 5t)per-cent kill. The percentage kill of hunters wasnlt worked out. but the rec- ord in Saskatchewan certainly in- dicates more safety training with firearms is necessary. Paynter said. Of 24 accidents in the province lasl year. he said. l6 were caused by hunters of 17 years and under. HALIFAX (CF I -Nova Scotia's -Proposes A Maritime School To Train Future Teachers .ln England. who retires next year. Shown above are the members Wally Shepherd. Garth Harri: Dr 1' of the Summerside Aces. cha!nD- H-3- MICNNU .ions of the Prince Edward Island Ulric Gallant. Leroy Cl"W- y CENTER ROW-- Eddie fiallanll righlt- tmanagerl. Grant Grady. GfIr(T1F.llSI3('P Reeves. Charles Hozan.l utcllffe. Elmer Phillips ftraineri. tClub piiysicianl. Frank Steele. Ron MacArthur. HPlIllf'SSDy t('0Rf'l'l'. tLavsh Schurman. ritosrr now.- Thane Mann. 5V-sure Harri: tcaplainl. lmnr ("olie Gt-ititv, Don Simmons. l Photo By Heckhertu tltiutio By JOSEPH Mai-SWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK I(.'Pl-The prosper- Puerto Rico Has Attained Firm Industrial Status Union Carbide CANADA WELCOME So far Canada has taken no part Expect Queen To Visit ' Home Of Famed Story Teller COPENHAGEN lCP' The Christian Andersen when they go uord is out that the Queen and to Denmark in May. the Duke of Edinburgh may visit That's the most popular rumor ity versus poverty struggle has in the ”Bootsiriip" program. Gas. the old home of story-teller Hans' here as Dani-s hegin preparations erto Rico. sunny Caribbean island of 2.250.000 population. . "Operation Bootstrap." an all- out economic program. has at- tained industrial status for the its- land which long lived--or sub- sisted-on an agricultural basis. But unemployment persists. Puerto Rico's Economic Devel- opment Administration r e p n r t it substantial progress and paints a rosy picture of the future of the exotlc isle which holds charms for investors as well as tourists. TAX PARADISE Among these are tariff-frce ac- cess to the United States market. no U.S. taxes. no Puerto Rico taxes for l0 years. and cheap la- bor. in addition. the ll.S.-protected commonwealth has a stable gov- ernment. unllke many of its south- ern neighbors. Rafael Durand Manzanal. EDA executive director here. said 450 industries have been attracted to Puerto Rico in the 10 years that "Bootstrap" has been in opera- tion. mnst of them U.S.-owned. These include units of Remington Rand. General Electric. Paper- Maie, Consolidated Cigar passed a major milestone in Pu- ment director. commented: Puertn Rico and receive l0 years of 100-per-cent-iax exemption. At this point. thoulzli. we are not mak- ing any particular promotion in Canada and thus far no Canadian company has joined . . . Morley D. Bursey. Canadian .commercial counsel for Piiertn iRicn. said trade relations between the two countries. profitable now. will increase. At present Canada exports to Puerto Rico about 510.- 000.000 worth of goods fl year-- mostly lumber and codfish-while ibuying about sl,000.000 a year in fruits. coffce. rum a'iId other pro- ducts. EDA predicts that petrochemi- cals and oil refining will play a tlcading role in an estimated Si.- l500.000.000 heavy industry develop. ment during the next nine years. This would double the island's net income to 32.400.000.000 com- pared with 8652.000.000 in I949. par Roca .lr.. industrial develop- nouihly to New York. where the islanders have congregated in -many thousands. frequently in squalid conditions. U.S. branch companies eased the employment situation on the islandl and their arrival resulted in thel establishment of local supply plants. for iniilance it Sl2.000.000l ammonia plant and R &2.il0il.000I steel bar factory within the last two years. o l On this liasis "you begin in tin- derstand why an industrial middle class of managers and iecliniciiins is growing up. wily engineering land business administration have become among the most popular courses in the universities." Man- zanal said. A commonwealth since I032. Puerto Rico is self-governing in in-i Iernal affairs. with its own i-on-, stitution. elected governor. con-' gress. laws. culture and language MANY IDLE Current factory jobs are eslim-. rated at 740.000. leaving ll.'i.000 tin- andiemployed and 160.000 working only Armed Forces and federal courts. -Spanish. it is wiiliin the ll.S.l monetary. postal and customs area. safeguarded by the US. GOOD RIASONS WHY YOU SII MORE FARGO TRUCKS on the road than ever before! 'for the state visit May 21-73. The trip in Andersen's home in the "Any qualified 1-nmpgny from WIN - llmf. Unemployment has. town of Odense would be part nf a any part of the world can start ,”U5Pd llt'BVY fmllflllnn and 908-. private stay in Denmark after the manufacturing operations int-Vlllal IOTIYS "' Mlffh "7 W”"k-i nIill'i2l Phi!-12 "I ill! Visit. The couple will arrive in the lroynl ynchl Hi-itannla and will Idi'ive through the capital to the ltlfh-century palace of Amalien- borg. where they will live during their stay. Remembervlllfhen A great record in winter sport was celebrated at a banquet in Winnipeg 25 years iigo tonight when L'4)VPrl1lIl0nl and civic offi- cials Joined sportsmen in honor- ing Winnipcgs. Allan Cup cham- pions; Elmwood Millionaires. the Memorial cup champions: Frank Stack. international indoor speed- skating king. and R. G. Gourlay'a rink that won the Canadian citri- ing Iitle. HISTORIP LINK 'l'llP first l.acltiiii- (Tamil along the St l.nwi'ent-e near Montreal was opened in M25. I-ID!.NBUR(iH tI'l"t military tattoo in front nf Hrlin lranted possession of the land he. tween New England and vi. foundlantl. and tilanru-rl its ...ni.. the country at xi-it Sl'lillJql)rl nr Nova Smtia us had ... ,.,,.,,. gm”, men and mnnet for ihr eiilrrrittisp and a new order of tn...-i... M. fnrrned called tho Nova Srntin. The order win imuir tip of nu-n who stihscrihed substantial sum: toward seilleiiieui iii the flt"u hind. and vtho eat-it lP('PllPfl the ',"l9 i" 3 Ditcei of land in return. so that they Rernm-it nt . I J the llroiind lE'll"lWl'Rl1 castle was rlr-t-lari-d in ll" Dari of Nora Si-ottii and thr- new hil.Flll)Pl.I took tip their rights atid prtvlle ifeudal splendor. PLAOUI: I-ion RI'II”(lIllt Many of them lfllPr mitt their lands to France. but I'lPh'Pl'llII'l”kK Elbe decree calling the rastlr es planade "Nova St-otia" lifts rIPtPl' 'hei-n rescinded. and R plaque hr side the drawhridize record: the ,faci that the reader is llallfllllg 0" Canadian territory Hdinbiirixh Castle dorntitatp: tiw whole of the Scottish capital from out vantage point on (lastip nnrl. ' The raatlt-s' oldest hiitldtniz ta fllmlnlllivv St, Mallgnrltin ('happI. built in l010 by Queen Margaret, the Saxon wife of Malcolm Fan- irnnre son of King Duncan who had been murdered by Macbeth. i0bVl0U5l.V the castle rock had been a stronghold long before that, for among the chapel (mm. dations are traces of Roman huildiniz l Somewhat later in diite are the them realize. ax they MRll'h Ihp -bUl'RlI.('astlP. that the mm-ta;-1.. "ll3k":tl DIECPIMI Faiiatlian soil. ll I622. the lnarl ni Stirling um i Stttilland! men - f ges In a cerenitiny of " Famed Edinburgh Taffog lg Legally Held On N. 5. Soil Tl t;- . sands of Caiiatitana t-rut: thr"AllI- lt.li':l ul"”' ll believed to, limit "Pry year to attend the the earliest "3;-M ilnr mniunn "l Edinburgh Festival Hut i.... ,,, - - "'""' nnrhnmenu. 3'” ”" "mil Kbartmentii which 3'0 entered through a doorway :'l"V"”""l' ltaniis the cipher of all Quivn of Scots and Darn. lev. and the duly ism sol-Hi; hmwest building of all. the A I s NnlIt'lIIll- War Memorial, lax an international reputation, rltr memorial consists of ii hall f',' l'f'"0l'r and I central shrine. llwlv II no 'rore for each Scot- tish regiment. including the Cana- dian Scottish regiments In the i--ntial shrine. siandlna on the hat"! rnrli lllllrll is the highest Dtvlnt of the rustle. 3 green mat-hla stone of remembrance tame: a st-"oi casket guarded by olfllif kneeling angels. in the casket are contained all the names n1 ' who died in the l The United Services Museum tcnnlnins the brilliant stir-cessinn uniforms and battle weapons of Scottish regiments of mgny lretnl Some of these. too. have been known in Canada. during her "urly ,V!nT.l nI struggle. The regatta of Scotland are kept in the crown chamber at the castle The Scottish crown is rlatnii-rl to be older than many of the crown JPWEII at the Tower nf London it dates frnm the time of Robert lite Britra Il274-l.'l29t l i I IIIIWE ll f'.0I.0Nl'Il. Pl)Tl'l' ARTHUR. Ont t4'l't ill” Rllimintmcnl of Trade hftn isier Hutu an honorary colonel of .a militia regiment here was an- FIOIIIWHI by army officials Saturn day. Mr Howe. liberal MP for, Port Arthur. has been named hon-l iirary ciiliinel of the Lake Supe-lo rior Scottish Regiment tmotorittl RII.VaI Canadian ('orpa of Infan- try tflllllilll. l of iiuuaii its-CA IIGIITWEIGOII FREEDOM WITH GIANT STIIICH Monday. April 22. 1957 The Guardian Page 7 B.EGoodrich TRUCK-TIIIS 5 form l.0Wa.r 29 Ill try is ulnar off him hit when m an get all! lslir Glillltllllll IFS EXPRESS llliltl llllf toms Ilu mt multttl an Scolx 777ml” 0' K. RIIBRER Wft)l.l)lt2RS :4 st. Peter's Rd. r-ii: No. ms rum-".i.i-".ss TIRE EXPERT Iiltamidrit li ictutie C0W"5 u r, 'V roe nun emf - of whmi, . and and Kingsley Smith of the Institute -.- Wcdnudu, me Mmmc pggmceu of Education in London. - I o , 5 i - b' End l” mi”P""" . - T. Forward laeli atylln . Clean. a valuable bonus in hauling ability. - Drlvlna ease. Shnrtaat turning It "57 C.C.I. Ib hm 1" "ubmmu " lmmulc 0' M" ""0"" "Writ ii"-ll" :' smooth-flowing lines Torward- diamataralon many inodelal Lake vou .- 5 .,..,.s "l"Clll0l1 10 lrllll T9lUlll' Ind IP2- WM M5 "IF I0 3l'llll"- ""95 9" i thrusting fenders. niodhrn hooded 3. Ieenomlcal operation. Far oV-!'e easilv out of ti ht. apota. Puah-button 3! . I tiallst teache .. establishment of an Atlantic House ha.” . widgawogpin grille-all and proved Sixaa give you f power driving ia avaj .519 on Dion it. don) h k HM”. I n b HIYOH 01- NIIM slid in I re- in Bfilllll which V0010 supply 13- have a buainau-building oolt of hair on regular gas. Exclusive full-opening models for at.art-atop hauling ease. as kl. port to Premier Stanfield the in- formation on these provinces. He and uaamaaa. alligator hood tnskoa on ion mninllh . o l value in the would of Mine. atltuto could train teachers much said British press publicity on the 2 . mince easier. fitatar. thri tier. - MOM comfort. nfotv. Willi. WI! -7” saggy (noun a H4 and the same as universities train doc- Gordon royal commission had - Super-wolared Jul it. From built. rah lent. has fore-and-Aft ville W” if. r oma-a oy Ilpringa to E. Top power. For .- tors and lawyers. The lnatl unuld give the teaching pi ' "the prestige it needs." Mr. Nason recently returned from Britain where he recruited as teachers for Nova Scotta schools and interviewed a' a for the provincial highways department. He suggested the proposed in.- itttute could get good staff mem- bers from Britain where educa- tion men retire at so. He said these older men. working with the younger men of the province. could t.n-t.ake- nalra-heavy-duty frames to shot- peened rear axlaa. Fargoa give you into done the Atlantic provinces trurlta lead in advanced-design V- power. from Hill to 282 b.p. Fargosixee. too. are leaders. hebbaC.C.M.olvnaHII. Ioauly,poed.hHUe5aIIt -50"I.ItdhallIoDyllId a-ehsC.C.M.leIaaaa. SocIiooovC.C.ia..v6daD. o--itaudiot-NI-ooove-I-Q elln'dsIho0"'D'0-vtatandl el'7haiutM:aab-You-.' ..v.ry great d and to ' act this publicity he suggested a pro- gram of positive information on Nova Scotla be sent to Canada House in Inndon. hack angle iidjtiatmsint. Electric wind- ahielrl wipers. safety door iatoheia an standard equiprnent. ,a..... an. Chrysler Corporation of canada. Limited CHILDREN DIE IN TUB IIURBANK. Calif. (AP)-Police said a bathtub of scalding water proved to be a death trap for a pair of two-year-old playmates at iN Modalnlt't0lxptnss,1i,00flIhs. inai.G V W. also Model D100 litptm, M00 lbs msii G.V.W. .. T :;;;;gI3mgc.tshw' 9' con-M"-his ....a.. s... Valley. They crawled ,. A He said such people as Sir Man ""0 "'9 "'5 Vlllcll "'1 I4""' Air 3,000 DEAIEIS Hit Rosevere. senior clieif inapoc- drvws. I). had filled to use in tor of the ministry of education scrubbing doors. IIOM THE-Tgv-M--” M T7"-E Am-W--E.E COAST TO COAST I-'lNERECOllD.....IyAIuiMavar IUY C- C. M. FROM:- ..-an-N -. -.-"Va, ' umiouitt - - Moist am stilt. body. mo Ila. -mi evxt. with Van am. "”,",'l.,',';',':,",:,':,,',l",;'5',:',”"' j lsillllhe ' A I "I ' o e 0 e ' inn. I.V.V. SIIMMERSIDE The Bike Shop CHAIILOTTET OWN ihawq-ggiztwrvrsfrgissssro. v-. t-;.x.v.... .-my erg; , o -;.':a -A W Z mlomluu l W” "'0" item. ram -qaai trout ans 6 O 1 at'. B0 in Hull lit! o o FARGO - I EAI ON .. I -HUM M A R I T I M E S Cl-IARLOTTETOWN BRANCH Brace. Mcilay 8. Co. lttl. SUMHIISIDI. P. I. I. litilplt Caliliscli 8. Ca. emm nnnouuai . LIMITED DIAL CIT ounou 'uV .',FOII V We” 1 i. .,g...,.-' .t. S-d2'&iw -its-i:Ai?s'-A Watch OIa1Kl-- SHONE OF STARS. Thursdays; 8:30 P.M., over Channel I! MULLER MOTORS Mentitewan A