gANUARY 28, ___l_‘HE GUABDMN- ._ QL- PAGE slavery‘ Tth Shore llockey League licld Meeting south Shore Hockey League l, gdlfll to ice three hockey teams m, ye“, some four weeks be- mne schedule however. the man- “m o! Bedeque Rink promise better hockey than ever. Ag the annual hockey league megtlng Thursday nlsht James clerk was again elected presi- den.’ John Myers, secretary and yo)... Forbes, official scorer. The three teams registered so h, ere as follows: Albany, Free- town and Borden. Bedcque re- mlquished from the league this n- because of the loss of many e1 their good players, however “d. players on Bedeque team u Leo Duvar. Mark Bradshaw we Albert Deafloche will play with Freetown Royals or Albany . The opening garne_ of the lea.- le ls scheduled to be played in getlcque rink on Monday night-S .___.___.__ i, we ,Crapaud Defeats Nine Mlle Creek ___._ Fans witnessed a fast game of hockey at Victoria rink on ‘mes- day night when Crapaud Heart- breakers defeated Nine Mile {meek Bulldogs to the tune of 5-4 i, B, south Queens Hockey Lea- e fixture. The game was 1118i er clean as the score would in- dlcate with both teams giving Qypfythlng they had but try as grey would in the last frame the creek boys could not tie the score. Crapaud was fortunate in being strengthened greatly by a trio composed of A. Boswell. B- Moreash and A. MacKinnon and Boswell made his debut in real style as he countered twice in the first peylod to set his team- mates off to a fast start. Ora’- paud was badly mlllllflyrd 111 m! first ten minutes of the game and only for Boulter in the nets the gcore could have been greater than was. Starring for Nine Milo Creek .» as L. Taylor, who scored three f his team's goals and. skated ke a demon both ways through- . t the game. I-Iis last goal was solo effort, skating the length the rink to score unassisted. Lineups: Nine Mile Creek: Coal. W. ayior; defence. A. MwDonaid. ., smith; centre, L. Taylor; r. ing, H. MacEachern; l. wing, C. cDougail; subs. F. Taylor. M- EOES£IIGIII and A. MaoDougall. Crapeud: Goal: H. Boulter; de- nce. F. Miller, E. Norton; centre, . Ferguson; r. wing. G. Nichol- . -, 1...wlng.. s. ..r‘.ersusou;..siut=. . Moreasb, A. MncKinnon, A. -.. "ell, R. Ferguson. v Referee: Jeddy Maoladyn. SUMMARY .‘ Period --N'ine Mile Creek, Taylor, 5.20. mapaud. Boswell (Morensh, MaoKinnon) £1145. apaud. Nicholson (C. 1M1“- sonl 10.50. Nine Mile Creek. C. MacDou- gall (H. MacEachern) 15.06 —Crapaud, Boswell, 18.00. Penalties-None. apaud, H. Ferguson 2.46. ‘ -Nlne Mile Creek. Taylor MacDougaii) 3.50. Crapaud, s. Ferguson 13.46- Nlne Mile Creek. Taylor 15.05 Penalties-None. ll Period Scoring-None. \ f Penalties-MacDonald, Taylor. (C. sly Al Viekery) - WINNIPEG, Jan. 26 —(CP)-A busy atenographe. hasn't. much time for day-dreaming but one of those idle-time wishes came [rue today for 20-year-old Betty Mit- chell. For the comely North American and Canadian senior women's speed-skating cbampion- who'll compete for the world title at Nor- way this year-it is "the dream of my life come true.” The first inkling that Betty would participate in the world speed skating ullflmpiOlilhlpl at Kongsberg, Norway, near Oslo, Feb. 12-13 came today when Percy Gen- 8". president of the Manitoba Speed Skating Association, inform- ed her that-a departmental store (Hudson's Bay) had completed all travel arrangements for her trip. An employee of n subsidiary of the company. Miss Mitchell hopes to tnke part in the Manitoba championships here Friday night before leaving this week-end for Norway. "I've been practicing practically "H1! fllkht. but I would like to let one greet in before I take off." she said. Although she prefers the middle distances, Betty, who captured her second straight North American title at Aipena; Mich., a year ago. proved she could go any distance by winning the 220 yards. the 440. the half-mile, three-quarter mile. and mile-the first clean sweep of any girl racer. It also waa the first time in the history of modern racing that n girl had been able to win the cgiampionshlp two years in succes. a on. Inactive Flying Clubs Lose Charter OTTAWA. Jan. I - (C?) -- TbeRoyai Canadian Flying Clubs Association today clipped from membership four clubs which have ceased to engage in actual flying training and adopted a stiff set of by-laws enabling the egeeutlvg to Iuspend other clubs which fail to meet Transport Department specifications. Dropped from the mornbership avers the Beileviiie Flying Club. the Caribou Flying Club and the Comox Aero Club of British Coi- umbia end the Huron County Fly- ing Club of Goderich, Ont. This narrowed the nilmber of members to 17. _“We would rather have only l6 adive and (co-operating clubs than a much larger number existing in name only," said president DD. Yorath of Calgary at the organ- ization's annual. meeting. Adoption of the'by-lavvs was a preparatory move to a detailed program the RCJRCA. is ex- pected to lay down for operation under the new Transport Depart- ment grants. The Department will grant each club 9100 for each qual- ified pilot turned out. e100 to the pilots themselves. and another $100 to pilot; accepted from RC.- A.ll‘.. reserve or auxiliary" Tomorrow the meeting is ex- pected to map out a standardized system. of operation under the new Federal grants, which demand higher flying and ground school standards- The representatives were wel- comed at a luncheon gathering by 'l‘ransport Minister Chevrier, who said his Department was "extreme- ly sympathetic" to the clubs. Guest speaker was Philip s. Hopkins, vice president of Link i odel T Fords tThis ’Spiel LINTLAW, Basie, Jon $0 - cpt _ A bonsplei nowadays i051 oesn't seem to rate unless auto- oblles go to the bis winw- 5° his curling-conscious community l Northeastern Saskatchewan has unipod on tile cars-for-PTAZBS and-wagon. The club is sponsoring what they liii tile "Little W-orid Series of ilrifilg." The prizes: four model y Fords. i Sponsors say there will be HO t-striciloil on cilirics for ills FBb-e 4-18 event although the dcrrcts, oods and hums of previous auto- Aviation, Ltd, Binehsmhcn. NY- -l»le urged the R.CF.C.A.. to con- sider the extension of aviation ed- ucation in the schools. Spill‘! Breif TORONTU. Joli. 27 —t(ll‘) —-The American influence has reached into Canada's softball diamonds. Two American imports, said to be the first 1n the game's history in the Dominion, have been signed bl’ Toronto Tip Tops of the Beaches Softball League. They are the famous Negro battery of Joa Louis Detroit Puncbers Club-Charley Justice and Shelley Miiey. NEW YORK, Jan. 2'7 —(AP) — Eddie Siowinski. right- wineer of New York llailgPTS of the Niltlpnfll nockm. Lggguc, [Dilly W35 SBILf. Z0 New l-lavcn of lire American Lea- gue to skate iiimself into condition. The Winnipeg-born Siowinski luf- fered a deep skate wound K. I inner fame aren't Q ompete, Trim: nilcHTA BE A LAW! [INALLTNEMEAQSWLLMEVMF WORDAB PIIHCYINTIO lN-LAWGJJE DIDNTGEGMTDKNOII TIEIEVUE GLEN A Dwflfidw and now is fully recovered. d WinniIpegJGirIToCompete In World Skating Event Bcwiing Results CHTOWN ALLEYS Commercial League Big Five-—3092. Michael Bros.—-3032 High single R. Pinctlu 295 High three R. Pineau 701 Points: Big Five 3%; Michael's 1% Wholesale league R. E. Mutch—2906 G. H. Toombs db Son--2806 Iiigh single G. Francis 328 High three G. Francis 7'11 Points: Mutch‘a 3; Toombs’ 2 Canada Packers-MW Clark's Fruit Co.—2521 High single A. McKinllon 273 Iilgh three C. McNeiil 717 Points: Canada Packers 5; Ciark's0 Garage League Stewart Motors-Hm Bntt d: McRea-ZSOG High single 0. Manuel 274 High three O. Manuel 643 Points: Stewart Motors 0; Batt & McRne 5. Horne Motors-NOE! F. R. McLaine-Z-ISO High single E. Hudson M‘! High three E. Hudson 599 Points: Horne Motors 3; F. R. Mc- Lnine 2. iitt And Creenberg Baseball flail 0f Fame Candidates By I015 REICHLIB NEW YORK. Jan. 26 - (AP The baseball hail of fame poll is on again and it is almost certain that in a. couple of weeks two now names - Mei Ott and Hank Greenberg - will be added to the 55 already immortalized in the shrine at Cooperstown, N.Y. Veteran scribes of the Baseball Writer Association of Alrnerlca - those who have been members for )_-. I0 or more years -— have been asked to na/me i0 men for elec- tion. A candidate must receive at least ‘f5 per c'ent of the total vote cast. Ott and Greenberg ought to make if. on the first ballot. 30th were champion aluggers in their day, both made contributions to the game, and both were known as "nice guys". 0tt's baseball career Ls one of the most sensational in history. He came to the Giants from Louisiana at the age of i6. Twen- ty-ttwo years later. he still was with the Giants having never spent a day in the minors. Ott compiled more records than any other player with the excep- tion of Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth. He hammered more home runs than any other National Leaguer. Greenberg was one of the most dangerous righthanded hitters in baseball. Only Jimmy Ilbxx. among the righthanded hitters in base- ball, ever awatted as many bcm- ers. 50. in a single seem- Bne-Iegged Pitcher Reported Confident WASHINGTON, Jan. 25—-(AP)- A one-legged fellow is. so certain that he can be a top-flight base- ball pitcher he's willing to sign a contract for $1 n year. There are a couple of catches to this offer by Bert Shepard. He wants to be with a triple-A baseball club, and he wants to be nreguiar, pitching every fifth day. Then every game he wins. he'd like to collect S400. He figures he'd be collecting a lot of $4001. ' Shepard lost his right leg below the knee when he was shot down over Germany fivc years ago. Since then he has barnatormed with mujor ieagucrs. pitched ex- hibition games and coached for the Washington Senators. DISCOVERED on SUN Helium was discovered Q the sun before the elelnit II i! on earth. By Fogoly ond ‘Shorten rnent of Harvard aircraft “Fill Your Pipe" Chainnan’: Order At Montreal Club ‘ By nave cnoss Canadian Pres Staff Writer _ MONTREAL. Jan. 26 — (OP) —-\ When the Montreal Pipe Smokers’ Club meets in bi-weekly session. the 53 members get down to the business in hand with the chair- man's direction: "Gentlemen, fiii your pipea." They puff, talk and relax. They experiment by mixing any two or more of the five pipe tobaccos they prefer-Virginia, Latakia. Perique. Turkish and Buriey. - The purpose of the club was summed up by Terry Lee. McGili University student: "It isn't so much to get together and smoke and talk about pipes. But it's getting people meeting in close relationship and harmony. If world leaders could get together with their pipes like we do I think they could straighten out all their problems." The club's S! members. who range from dress-cutters to pro- fessional men in business life, boast a total private ownership of more than 1.000 pipes. The pipes are of all shapes and sizes. There is the Dublin, the fish head. the apple head, the bulldog head. the meerschaum and those with pes- shaped bowls. Vice-president Bill Adelman trea- sures a briar. It was given to him by s German paratrooper he captured in Italy. Dave Wiseman has a pipe with a three-foot stem. Wiseman's pipe has been in his family for two generations. It was made in Switzerland and weighs four pounds. When Wiseman uses it at the club he rests the bowl on a. table. Joe Resmnnh pipe dates back to the 17th century. It came into his family three generations ago. the gift of a priest. It is meet- schaum with a bowl‘ shaped like a lion's claw. When club members meet each brings along two or three pipes. An average of four pipefuls is smoked at each gathering. Mem- bers oficn exchange pipes for the night. The Montreal club was started a year ago. So far as its mem- bers know. there are only two other pipe smokers’ clubs in Canada. one in Toronto and the other in Winnipeg. ‘ On Jan. 25 the Montreal club will hold its first annual banquet. A pipe seven feet long. made of pressed wood, will have a blinker light and fluffy cotton to give the appearance of burning tobacco and smoke. At the door will be wooden kegs of tobacco bearing the sign: ‘Till your pipes. not your pouches." Club members said even "sissies" will be admitted-thercigaret and cigar smokers. who can't become members. Tableaux will be presented show- ing dress and pipe styles of other years and the present day. One will feature an Lndian and his pipe of peace. A hint from club members how to keep your pipe in condition: leave the pipe-cleaner in the stern after cleaning. This helps absorb the nicotine. Instrument Flying Course Established At liartmouthfli. S. OTTAWA. Jan. 2B — (Ci?) Naval headquarters announced to- night expansion of its peacetime air program ‘with the establish- an instrument flying course at Dartmouth. NS. The course, at the Royal Can- gdlgn Navy Air Station, H.MC.S.. Shearwater, will be conducted by No. 1 Training Air Group and ev- entually will be attended by all pilots of the R..C.N.. air compon- 611K. It will include high speed blind flying interceptions under radar and radio control and n variety of instrument landing techniques, headquarters said. be given in and Firefly trainers. a dual-controlled version Instruction will of the Firefly reconnaissance and anti-submarine plane currently in operational use by the Navy. techniques instnxnetnt All-weather flying will be stressed. The flight will be underthe adminis- tration of the Training ‘Air Group and will be staffed by top-notch FREE-LOAD“? OFF Hi9 Burrsiuceieooransceosutcotatie FEIHOTOHAVE LOCKEDITUP! oper " l pilots. Headquarters said the drain 01’ the new course is to make in- eminent-flying experts of navel pilots fighter-type singleqeater aircraft. SUGAR OI. HONEY? There is no important ‘nutri- tional difilerence between sugar and bone!- ____________-____-a RAFFLES KNIGHTS OF COLUMIUS HOME TONIGHT Everyone Welcome (By Gustav Bvenseen) STOCKHOLM, Jan. %— (AP)- The Scandinavian military nillnnrc project sccmcd doc ‘ today. "Only a miracle can prevent n rifi straight through Scandinavia. with Norway joining the Atlantic pact, leaving Sweden in neutral isolation and Denmark at the cross roads." n Stockholm diplomat told newspaper men. His pessimism was shared bv most observers here. A "last at- tempt". conference in Oslo next week-end will seek to recon 'le dif- ferences between Sweden and Nor- WHY. A meeting of Denmark, Norway and Sweden ended in Copenhagen Monday without agreement on for- mation of a defenc alliance. The stumbling block was Swe- den's insistence on true neutrality as the sole baala of her alliance offer and Norway's desire for some form of guarantee from the West- ern Powers. Grain WINNIPEG. Jan. 2'1 -- (GP)- After scoring minor losses in early trade today. all grains firmed up towards the close on the Winnipeg Grain Exchange in sympathy with a better tone at Chicago. Early weaknesses in oats were prompted by selling by American accounts and commission house of- ferings. Locals. however, turned to the buying side in the late stages ondfiirlces recovereiffrom the loss- es. closing 1-4 cent higher to 3-8 cent lower. Barley firmed up un- der light shipper demand, with prices closing 1-4 cent higher to 1-8 cent lower. Rye prices made comebacks after displaying early weaknesses under commission house and American selling. With ofefringa drying up, prices at close were 3-4 to two cents higher. The flax market was inactive with unchanged prices showing. In the export business reported. a fill-in cargo of 100,000 bushels of wheat went to the United Kingdom under the Canadian wheat agree- ment. Belgium was assigned a small quantity of Canadian oats in another shipment. Class two wheat prices advanced one cent from yesterday. Cash prices: Oats: No 2 CW 75 1-8; ex 3 CW 72 1-8; 3 CW 72 1-8; ex 1 feed 71 3-8; 1 feed 7O 1-8; 2 feed 67 7-8; 3 feed 63 7-8; track 71 58. Barley: 1 CW 6-row 1.26: 2 CW 6-ro\v 1.26; 1 CW 2~row 1.14; 2 CW 2-ro\v 1.14; 3 CW B-row 1.20; 1 feed 1.08 1-4; 2 feed 1.07 1-4: 3 feed 1.02 3-4; frnck 1.06: 2 CW yellow 1.12; 3 CW yellow 1.11. ~ SHIPPING NEWS —HOCKEY Long River rink. Ex- hibition gnme Stanley vs. Long River, Friday, Jan. 2s. Also French River vs. New London. league game, Saturday. Jan. 29. "Skate at Milton Rink tonight. SHIPPING AT HALIFAX- Arrlvotl Thursday Clyde L. Seavey. from Colombo Saint Marlo, Sydney. N. S. Wellington Kent, St. Nfld. Sailed Thursday \ None. AT SAINT JOHN- Arrived Thursday Empress of France, from Halifax Ragnbiid, U. S. ports Valacia. New York Hada County, continental ports Saiied Thursday Hedei, for continental ports Benverford, Halifax Manchester Regiment, Manches- John's, tel- Federal Mariner. ‘dubs and Mexico PHILADELPHIA. Jan. 2'1 -(AP) Joe Column. the big righthander who twirled three hitless innings in the 194.8 all-star game, mailed in his signed contract to Philadelphia Athletics today. FREDERICTON, Jan. 27 --(0P) —Universlty of New Brunswick students are sports conscious. In a plebiscite, held more for expression of opinion than to decide action. 800 to 64 favored a rink in prefer- ence to a library and 6B4 to 143 fav- ored Canadian football over Eng- lish rugby. ‘no zoo know zoo can n.r re alsnaas-r oa rauao Ill’ Ill.“ (I passengers it'll aaelal UIIII POINT! JUST A! IIAlONAIl-I rauvs nvmo aaavlcs OITCIIIWPIGIIQ Rift Scandivavian Military Alliance Plans Wtiik-tliil TcrcntcAlarmed Over ‘Teen-age Gang Violence TORONTO, Jan. 36 - (CP) —- Toronto today became alarmed -- officialiy - about ‘teen-age gang violence. . Police Chief John Chisholm told a special Board of Control meet- ing that full co-operation of citizen was needed to cope with the wave of teen-age “hoodlum lawlessness" which was "affecting public safety." Controller Allan Lamport said he was prepared to organize vigiiantes — patrols of citizens in each neighborhood to halt the out- breaks of violence. Last night swelled the total of the youthful hoodiums’ victims: Three more persons. one a 15-year- old boy. were attacked. The night before a 17-year-old girl was at- tacked on her way borne in a. laneway and hw face and hands slashed with a penknife. In other recent assaults, two street-car conductors were. beaten up, a 15-year-old boy suffered a fractured jaw and 12 youth were hurt in a gang battle in suburban Long Branch. Several offenders caught. Said Controller Lamport: "The situation is growing steadily worse. It is time to let these young hoodiu know they cannot toy with e law. They have no scruples as in whom they attack." Ono problem, Chief Chisholm said. was fear of reprlssls by victims of the gangs if they identified their attackers to police. have been Brothers Charged With Cabbie's Murder ' FREDEZRICTON, Jan.. ‘.26 — (OP) - Further action in Fred- etictonfis taxi _trunk murder case followed last night's inquest when George and Rufus Hamilton, (Negro) brothers aged 23 and 22. respectively. were charged today with murdering Norman P. (Sliv- er) Burgoyne. The warrants, on information of the R.C.ltf.P.., were served on the two Hamilton: in the York County Jail. Officials said the young men probably would be arraigned to- morrow and remanded. They had been held since Jan. ill, the day after the 34-year-old taxi operator was found dead in the locked trunk of hi5 new car. Details of a savage assault, with robbery as the motive, were un- folded at the inquest, when the coroner's jury found ihat the cab- ble htvl been "murdered by being struck on the head with a ham- mer." The verdict said the Hamil- ton brcthers "were both involved in the crime." Snow Welcomed By Winter Resorts NEW YORK. Jan. 26 — (AP) -"- Snow valued at about $3.50 a square foot settled over New Eng- land and upper New York State today, mantling ski trails and possibly keeping the wolf from many a. winter resort. The last month has been a night- mare to resort owners and the growing army of skiers. There has been no snow to speak of since Christmas. and hills have been barren in Ver- mont and New Hampshire. A re- sort at North Conway, N. . which normally houses 200 guests had l8 last week-end. Scores of special ski trains have been cancelled. and losses have run into millions of dollars. Dates for the scheduled world bobaied championships at Lake Placid in Upper New York have twice been set ahead in the hope there would be a break in the un- seasonable weather. They now are Draw For ___. The draw for the regular week- 0nd bonspiel at the Charlottetown Curling Club follows: Friday-ICC I. M. Ice Ne. 1-G. l-l. Buntain, T. A. White, Ed. Nicholson, Dr. E. S Giddings. skip; vs.. Geo. Craig, T. F. Mitchell, F. Hansen. Dr. H. Pierce, skip. Ice No. 2—Robt. DeBloll, P. R. McCormnc, W. Wilson, Frank Cox, skip; vs.. Wes Whitiock. R. Man- ning. H. R. Bevan, T, W, L, Prowse, skip. Ice No. 3—Dr. R. H, Barrett, J. D. Stewart. Don Gnss. R. R. Bell, skip: vs.. Bob Rogers. R. A. Parker, H. C. Atkinson, Col. G. E. Full. skip. . Ice No. 4—-D. Tinney W. Mg. Lnine, R. C. Parent, Dr. H. Mc- Intyre, skip; vs.. Maurice Blake, W. T. Weir, J. H. Howstt. C. M, Fraree, skip. Ffldily-S.” P. M. Inquest In St. John Murder Adicurned CAD?!‘ JOHN, NJ. Jan. I — (C?) —,A scheduled inquest into the death of Joseph Allan Morrisey, ae, stabbed army veteran found dead in his Pond Street ‘bedroom last Sunday, was ad.- Journed tonight until next Wed- ndsy. No estim was heard. With evidence to be presented still incomplete, the adjournment was ' requested on behalf of city police. Hundreds of peraonsqueued fol hours in an attempt to get into the Inall county courtroom. Earlier, police announced he‘ release of two women who had been held as materiel witnesses. One main remained custody. Mine detectors were used today in the search for the steibbfng weapon.. Police combed the area around the building and extended the quest over snow-covered ground throughout the districts llew Drug Hailed Ice No. 1—H. B. Willis, H. K. Acorn, L. Turner, W. R. Jenkins, Skip? vs.. Dr. W. Hogg. F. W. Cur- tia. J‘. J. Morris, I. S. Moore, skip. mond. G. A. Hawkins, G. R. Keefe, skip; vs.. l-I. Caiibeck, Fred Mac- Millan, W. R. Cruikshank, P. W. Turner, skip. Ice No. 3-H. C. Trninor, Gordon Foster, Gordon White, E. Tanton, skip; vs.. 0. R. Simona, C. Milton. Frank Anderson, H. R. Carruthers, skip. Ice No. 4—Clnude Ives. A. H. Roper, R. E. Jenkins, I, A. Horne. 5MP; V!» Dbl-l! Mayne. Percy Gay. Fred Driscoll. Art McPherson. skip. Saturday-LOB P. M. Ice No. ‘l—D. L. O’Rouke. Gordon Avard. A. W. Mutheson, J. S. Mac- Donald. skip; vs.. Gordoh Leitch, c. L- Jay. A. Bognail. Russ Spiliett, skip. Ice No. 2-4‘. W. Troop. A. How- att, S. _R. Benton, W. H. Worth, skip: vs.. Ivan Trainor. Frank Hobbs, Percy Keyed, A, w, Hynfl. man, skip, Ice No. 3—E. Devvling. W. R. MflvNeil. A. O. F. Gill. N. J’. Ander- Spn. skip; \'-*-. Tom Rogers, Cliff MacDonald. Ev. MacNcil. .Y. A. Fraser. skip. Ice No. 4-——J. P. Campbell, G, R, Hooper. m. K. McNutt. .1. J‘. Lar- rabe, skip; vs.. Hon. Geo. Bar- bfllil‘. W, Swindell, F. R. Seaman, E. F. Acorn, skip. Saturday-Silo P. M. Ice No. 1—Jas. Coiea. J. H. Hell- offs, W. R. Burnett, W. W. Lord, skip; vs.. O. C. Crasweil, E. H. Saunders. Hon. M. McGuigan, n. F. McPhee. skip. Ice No. Z—-E. E. Jardine, Doug. Sounder, Howard McInnlI. H. I. Spiiiett; vs.. Eldon Campbell, G. J. Rogers, Walter Pickard. R. B. P. Jnrdine, skip, Ice No. 3—A. E. Saunders, Ron NOPITIHH. -T- H. Howatt, P. S. Cobb. skip; vs.. Clarence Duncan, Dr. Don Campbell. R. M. Jones, F‘. B. Con- rad. skip. Ice No. 4-4. P. Doyle. A. C. Mao- Mmflll. J. S. MacKay. Cleaver Mae- Lefln. skip; vs.. H. E. Hyndman, Ern. MacInnis. F. ‘M. Nash, J. E. Burden. skip. ilundreds Ill With Flu In Sault Ste. Marie ‘ SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont", Jan, M <— (C?) —- Dr. J. E. Gfmby, medical officer of health. report- ed today that school attendance has been cut sa per cent by the city's influenza outbreak. Several hundred persons are ill. Remember When By The Canadian Prose Defenceman Eddie Shore return- ed to Boston Bruins’ line-up l5 years ago tonight after a Iii-game H; suspension from the National H» key League following the historic onto right wing star, had suffered a. fractured skull Ln a collision with Shore ln a. game at Boston and as a result was forced to quit hockey. SHARP LIFE JACKET The poroupine's air-filled quills keep him afloat even if he should set. tentatively, for Feb. 12 to 22. fail asleep Ln the. water. Ice No. _2-—A. Ayiward, J. O. Dia- , As Creat Advance in Medical Science CHICAGO, Jan. 26 — (A?) - The new miracle drug, aureonliy- cin. was hailed today as one of 1048's greatest medical discover- led. Aureomycin is a golden-colored, well-tolerated drug that takes up where some other antibiotics leave off. Many doctors view it u a clue to the possible solution to such virus diseases as the common coid,_ mumps, infantile paralysis measles, influenza and tuberculo- sis. The selection of last year's out- standing medical advances was made by the heads of medical col- leges and medical institutions in the United Statu. They were poli- ed by the National Society for Medical Research which announ- ced the findings. The doctors predicted the discov- ery of aureomycin “will shape u? as one of the most significant medical advances of 194.8 when the year is surveyed by research- ers in future years." Aureornycin has proved effective against all three of the major en- emies of public health — bacteria. viruses and riokettsia, 1t has cured virus pneumonia. spotted fever, typhus, Q fever. parrot fever. and various infec- tiona. Aureomyein, either or liquid in form. is derived from a thread-shaped mold of the fam- ily that producea the previously Bailey incident. Ace Bailey, Tor- in discovered antibiotic streptomycin. _._._.Z___-ie "DBLCRESTT- Si!!!) . . B! DI Canadian tobacco IO showing great emhusialn fn the new "Delcrest" variety o! flue-eur- ed cigarette tobacco, which was introduced as a commercial variofl in i048 by the Tobacco Division. Experimental Farms larvlee Dominion Department of Agrfeid- ture. Delcrest-the “Del” coma ken the Experimental Farm Station at Delhi. Ont, where moat of fie final selection work was done-cep- resents a varietal improvement and was developed at the Experiment- al Farm Station at Harrow, Ont., where the original crosses and black rootrot tests Mere onducted. Fifty farms carried out the Divi- sion's seed increase program for! i048 so that it is estimated than will be enough seed available to meet the expected heavy demand for i049 seeding. Delcrest has proved itself to be more highly resistant to black rootrot than any variety released so fal- and in tests gave 46 poi’ cent better returns per acre than the average of eight other flue- cured varieties. The returns are based on yield per acre and quality grade obtained. The new variety is semi-erect growth. and has an average number of leaves of good colour and medium width. The cured leaf la “flashy" in colour, has a smooth texture and , senses a rich, mellow aroma. In addition to all this, under comparable condit- ions, Deicrest apparently matures slightly earlier than standard varieties. "iijlfvyvyln i [liil i! k -. nu ¢ a 1.x 11,»; 2.. ~_.-:--_-,~:-'-~——.. -..~'~. - ~= =—..~*:.2:'".;“§.;i'rl:m- ;