l slon of the 19th PAGE SIX_H__ UHARLOTTETOWN- §UARDIAN LBaseball ‘liters Add Roger ‘Rajah ’Hornsby To Baseball's Hall 0f Fame NEW YORK, Jan. 20—(AP)— Baseball's flail clf Fame at Coop- erstown ls slowly beccmina more populous. Rogers Hornsby was added today to the group of 26 who have been enshrined. rl baseball's ilirthpiooe. The Rajah now nearing 46 years of ago, Colllplcltd his ncilvc career in the maj'~r leagues only four seasons ago. and now is manager of Fort Worth in the ‘TCXQ; Lea- gue. He was named on 182 ballots in poll of 1:33 baseball writers cori- ducted by Bill Brandt, publicity director 0i the National League, in the first olccllorl held since 1930 and thus caught up with the hon- or he mixed by a small margin three yours ago. A three-fourths vote was need- c<i to cE-zst and nlihough 72 play- ers were otfcrad by 1h‘ W'l‘llé‘l‘5, ouch of whvm was asked to list 10 nominees. TIUFlL-by was l-hc only star selected. There svns no question that the greatest righthnzrdcd hlt-tcr in bust-bull's long historic had earned the accolade. In 23 years in the may»: hc carved an everlasting ELECTIONARUNIORS (Continued from page l) nounc tor proposals being rvrelznl by tho govcrnincn, for the ion. but there have been occas ms when important meas- ures hnvc been brought into Par- liament that were not even men- tioned in the Throne Speech. Conscription Drmands The situation zit present; is that the Government has for days been considering demands from within and without the Liberal party for rclnovnl of the bun against com- pelling Cwnrllirnlls to serve outside the Doriirnirzi. One reason why the Govern- ment's marrpoivcr" policy should be in the Throne speech is that it would forestall any attempt by Opposition groups to precipitate it debate in advance of the Gov- ernment's declaration of policy by moving adjournment of the House immediately after the opening to discus: conscription or a. kindred issue. Amid the talk of possibility of a referendum to ascertain the peo- ple's opinion on ilnllnrited con- scription there xvns one report that. instead of a plebiscite for or ag- ainst conscription for overseas ser- vioe the ministry would test the public opinion on whether the Prime Minister should be released from his anti-conscription prom- iscs of the past. No official com- ment was available. It ‘was learned today that for some weeks plans have been afoot to reorganize the Liberal party's publicity office, and it. was report- ed efforts were being made to ob- tain a parry organizer. Other election signs were seen in the dellrv in completing cabinet reorganization, forecast by Mr. King himself wee-ks ago, and the fact that nine Senate vacancies have not been filled. Hanson Carries 0n Conservative House Lender Han- ron arrived in Ottasvtt today. He will carry on as acting Conserva- tive leader and leader of the of- ficial Opposition pcndirlg outcome of the Fob. 9 by~elccllon in York South riding whcrc the new Con- scrvative lcztcicr, Rt. lion. Arthur Meighen, is seeking a scat in the House. Mr. Hanson expects to open the debate on the address next Mon- day afternoon. The address will be moved Friday nftcrnoon by A1- phonsc Fournier. Liberal member for Hull. and seconded by W. Ross Macdonald, Liberal member for Brantford who recently made s public address urging unlimited compulsory service. In the senate the address will be moved by lion. L, M. Gollin, Montreal, and seconded by Hon. Donald McLcnnnn. Inverness. Tomorrow's ceremonies are al- most entirely formal. The Com- mons will meet at three o'clock in the afmrnoon. thrlt being the hour I0 Whlflfl it was adjourned last N0- vember. but the senate is not due to meet until a p.m. EDT. so the Commons will have to wait until that hour for prorogntion pIOCECKL inlzs. Thcrc will b" one dcpnrturc from fOYIHHI roulillc in tllc Commons “T1971 ll "Kilian will bc made for the inclusion in tho official re- cords of the session now ending the address dclivcrcd in the B01159 by Prime Minister Winston Churchill lust Dlge, 3n At. eight o'clock the sccond ses- Pzlrliament will be prorogucd and the way cleared iur opening the third session Thursday afternoon. l SAYS ARGENTINA (Continued from page l) hemLspheric front against. the Axis as. proposed at the current Pan- Amcrican conference of Foreign Ministers at Rio dc Janelm, Castillo asserted that Argonll-lll‘; position "is open. frank rind lfif/ll] and represents, right or wrong, me ~ opinion of the co-untlfiw‘ Argentina's position. he “w, "has been misinterpreted to the iwlnt Where the Argentine is no: going to collaborate in till: foreign the thesis that i- America, will c 1.-,._.l. - " lng president “"117. on By this he nlpnrrrlltlv meant col- laboration on nll l mispllcrc mat- tera excluding a unzrllilnolls break with tho Axis. Cnstillo snltl tho foreign office might make an oIfLclal statement inter. Fbrelgn ministcr Enrique Rluz Guinazu. chlcf ot inc Argentine delegation at Hi1 d!- Jnnciro. in "carrying out instruct rm; given him by the cabinet." the acting prccident declared. . NII‘ GLASGOW dcckers who coilidrft resist a temp- tnllcn to szlnianl n "wcc nip" whle l" r"r.lg whisky llbcard a snip were .. trnrcd tn 3) (lavs in yall for guling "drunk on the 109-’ niche for himself. He played for five different clubs and managed four of them. led the National League in hating for seven sea- sonsflslx in succession frcnt i920 and again in 1928. hit over .400 for three different years. and twice was named the most valuable play- er in the senior circuit. He set many batting records that still stand for baseball's modern era. the foremost being h .424 average for St. Louis Cardinals in 1924. Hornsby broke into the majors with the Rel-birds ilr 1915. Ten years latcr he bsczrme their marl- ager and he steered th-sm to world championship. Horns-by svas the 14th star of the modern era chosen by the baseball writers. Those named previouslv were Ty Cobb. Babe Ruth. Hcnus Wagner. Christy Mathewson. Vt/altcr- Jnhnson. N:r- polcon Lzrjoic. Tris Speaker. Cy Young. Grover Nexander. George Sister. Eddie Collins. Willie Kecl- cr and Lou GGIlTiE. All except hfallii-Wsfln. Keeler and Gehrig are st-lll alive. CallingAlsab for U. S. crown But Three Other Three-Year- Olds Muy Hove u Chance if Lucky. NEW YORK. Jan. 20—(A.Pi— Unless a. trio of likely locking but. ailing youngsters can be patched up over the winter, you might as well wrap up Uncle Sam's three- yetlr-old racing crown for 1942 right now and hand it over to A. C. Saibatlrs Alsab on a. platter. ‘Iliese three-Colonel Ed Brad- ley's Bless Me, Herbie Woolffis Con- tradiction and Sun Again. the good tiring Ben Jones has in his Cal- umet» Farm barn~seem to be the few real reasons for U.S. race tracks to even bother running their t-hree-year-old classics at all next lng and sulmzner, so completely did sabath’: ck rocketing sensation sprgad-eagle e 1941 juvenile ure. However. Alsab will need some- thing more than his good looks and appetite to pick up the mar- bles if Bless Me, contradiction and sun Again are able to run on four lac agahi. Bless Me, u. late-coming two- year-old 0f the 194i campaign rac- ed Sabathk bargain baby to a head in the Walden stakes :1 few weeks‘ back. He looked so hot doing it that. “Ounnel Ed." who still feels the disappointment of Blmelechs flop, immediately tabbed this one as his fifth derby winner. Contradiction. who showed signs c-f becoming the best Woolf cam- paigner since Lawrin won the Derby in 1938. turned in a flying victory in the Pimlico futurity and thereby established himself among the fellows to watch come Ken- tucky Derby-time next May. Holds Second Ac: '0 5' Ben Jones” meantime, holds the best hand even if Sun Again doesn't shine again. As his second ace, he can lead with some Chance, the chestnut san of Chance Play. who won the Belmont futuriiy. But. as if the fnct that Alsab is around wasn't enough to discourage this hard-worked campaigner, there's always the Jinx that the Belmont futurif-y winner has never worn that necklace of rcses at Church- ill Downs. And then there's the Whitney quartet that coplpcd the first four placcs in the Hopeful Stakes at Saratoga. R. Sterling Clark's Col- chi; also must be considered if for no other reason than that he ran a dead heat with Alsab in the {ikalilfd Johnson giakes in Mary- Hll . Sun Again won four of his seven 4wutiilgs during the year. topping it off with the Arlington futurlty, and Ben Jones immediately startéh dusting off the three-year throne abdicated by his Whirlaway. Oddly enough. however, all three of these standout threats were 1n- jurcd. Contradiction suffered a cut. leg 1:1 the Plmlico futurity. sun Again injured his lee in the Arlington futurityl and Bless Me was hurt in a work-out several d-ays n20. Aussies Facing (Continued from page 1) arrived. in some instances using hand grenades thrown point blank to knock out enemy could not be reached by anti-tank gllfls. Japanese crews crawling from their damaged velficlcs were killed one by one by Australian infantry- 111011. Tins morning's bombing of Sing- apore caused damage to some military installations. This corres- pondent, forced to take refuge in iv bilildlnz rntrance by the bombs [rill-g fr ill .\ largo formation of ' nv nlancs. (merged from the ' in find his automobile 12d to bits across the road. Carrier In Action? One Japanese navy "0" type plum and one enemy bomber were s‘ llirln in this raid, while an- n: r enemy bomber was probably d» royod, the British communi- rlllo reported. (This official mention of Japa- nese naval planes in action against Singapore raised the rossibillty that a Japanese alrcrnt carrier was in action.) From yesterday through today a total of at leut six Japanese planes were destroyed and enemy craft shot down to date in Malaya were thus brought to ln aggregate of 41 for certain and an additional l6 "probnblcs." An announcement in Washing- ton during the day that United States army bombers had sunk a Japanese cruiser" off Jolo in the southern Philippines. between Min- danao and Borneo. was described tumfflcinlly- in London as an ind.- cntioll ofthe beginning ofanalllod air counter-offensive that might lid the situation in Malaya. tanks which. Rangers Pall Into Tie For First Place By Whipping Boston 4-2 BOSTON, Jun. 20—(AP)-—_After£ o a spotting Boston Bruins a P811‘ goals. New Ysrk Rangers pulled into a first-place Natiorql Hoc- key League tie by overtaking the Stanley Cup champions for a 4-2 victory tonight bsfcre a capacity crowd of 14,901) at the Boston Gardens. l; was the Bruins’ first regular hcme game setback since Feb. 25. 194i. when the Rangers shut them our 2-0. Rudiger-s uncorked p. three-goal lat-lack in the final pcnod and their last pilil‘ of tallies were registered while the Bruins were playing short harlded. Lynn Patrick tied theysoore at 2-all during the third minute of the final period, With the‘ lQOl-h goal he has made during his eight N.H.L. seasons. About 11 minutes later. ulhilc Art Jackson was serv- ing a. minor. Alex Shibicky blasted a game-winning lO-fcot drive through goalie Frankie Brimsek. While the Bruins were attempt- lflg to rally. Dit Clapper drew a major penaltjzwiill only five min- utes remaining. for punching Art Coultcr. While he wns off. Phil Watson scored the final goal af- ter a rink-length solo dash. When the bell clangcd, Coulter Robinson and Maxie Berger Sign for bout NEW YORK, Jan. 20—(AP)— Ray Robinson, unbeaten New Y0!!! Negro, and Maxie Berger. veteran Canadian welterweight. today were signed by Promoter Mike Jacobs for a IZ-round bout at Madison Square Garden, Feb. 20. The bout will replace the pro- posed title fight between Robin- son and welterwclght champion Red Cochrzme. Cochrane was un- able to obtain gufficient lcnve from the United States Navy to train. Juvenile Hockey Juvello hockey is being revived in the city this ycar according to the interest being shown in this particular brunch of Canada's na- tional pastime. Several teams np- penr to be in the making judging from the numerous workouts he- lng held. Jack McCQurt and Charles Worth have signified their inten- t-izn of placing a iezlrn in the run- ning and rcqilest that players wish- ing to participate notify thorn at once. Remember When (By The Canadlkn Press) United States amateur tennis suffered a crushing blow 10 ylcelrs E20 today when Frances '1‘. Hunter jolncd Big Bill Tildcn his famous doubles partner in professional ranks They made their debut Feb. 18 the same year at New York before 14.000 fans. iv. n. L. srmvmxF. (‘luh l’ W L l) F A Pt! Boston 2617 6 3 83 54 37 New York 28 1B 9 1 104 83 3'7 Toronto 2616 9 1 80 5'7 33 Chicago 2'7 l3 1t 3 ‘l’! 29 Brocklvn 3i 10 20 l ill 113 21 Detroit 2R 917 2 77 88 20 Montreal 28 8 19 1 66 1 1'1 OTHER ATTACKS (Continued from page i) itcd States bombing planes porin- ccd upon n Japanese cruiser, the \Vnr Department reported today. sank the warship and for good measure left a big enemy tanker in flames. The successful attack occurred south of the Philippines where the forces of Gcn. Douglas MacArthur were withstanding renewed Japa- nese assaults on Luzon and, it de- veloped, Filipino troops were battling the Jup; on Mindanao. Announcing the destruction of the Jap cruiser. the army added no details othcr than that the sinking took place 100 miles off line Island of Joio. That isle, one of the Bulu group. lies about mid- way between Mindanao and Bor- neo. Since reports have indicated Ja- pan was using Mindanao as a base , for its attacks on Borneo and the Netherlands East Indies, it was assumed that the enemy craft were in that area to support the in- vaslon effort. Previous announcements have told of other successful attacks by American airmen in that general region, particularly a, raid on Jap- anese shipping in the harbor- of Davao. n. Mindanao town. Where the American bombers were based has been a. secret. Word from MacArthur that Fill- pino troops were engaged in a. sharp battle with the Jnps on Mindanao was received as a surprise, It had long ago been assumed that resis- tance there had ended. Beau-n back and brought to a standstill in a full scale onslaught, after an ineffectual effort to turn MacArthur’: flunk. the Japanese renewed the uptick, exerting their pressure particularly at the centn of the hne. As always the assault was heav- ily supported from ‘he air, and rlrarpshooting Allin in and Pili- plno forces dowr l three Jab plant-s in the spacc uf 24 hours. Oliver wrre firs‘. intlb-ducsd into oslifnrui» bv the Franciscan mis- lmnl i3 17“. cusp-sun L‘ headed for the lllllalll)’ box to con- tinue his argument with Clapper and they gralplui. '1‘nc_v tugged and pulled and aired rcundhousc punches at each other for more than a minute in ii circle of layers before the Ofiltlilis burst Lircugh and pulled them apart. Milt Schmidt accounted fol- both Dog knew way To hospital BRIGHTON. England. Jan. 20- (CPt-Thcy don't breed dogs more ilrtcllirt-snt than Bruce. a black Laibrnrlor" retriever. When Bruoc slashed his ear on a barbed wire during a run on the Downs. he trotted five miles to the Royal Susscx County Hospital for treat- lnenl. He was “rclezlscd" with this label on his collar: “This patient presented himself at hlvspitnl with u blcezlinlc right car. One stitch Curling at Montague rink A number of interesting gunles have already bccn played for the Ciarkson Shield in the Montague Curling rink but the competition is still young. Every team is keyed up with the prospect of emerging the victors and the ronrin’ grime is attracting considerable attention each night. Fhllmviilg are the various tmums cntercd in the competition: H. Johnston, C. Brothers. lVfcLellan, L. m. Lil. Poole vs George McIn- tyre; Feb. 2 at 7 p. m. Dr. John- 5.1111 vs. George McIntyre; a; 9 p. m. R.W. Beck vs. R. G. McDonald. A mug KEEN coon MUSIC GENIAL FRIENDS THE FURIJM PROVIDES HAPPY SKATING Join Hundreds-TONIGHT - 8-10 High Service Club Bowling Lcague ICE three. E. Henry, 53-5,“ our our: WAY SLOPPY.’ Jlu Iv an srnvlcr .Ilfl. u. a. ‘a-rzmcnvo urkriirncn OH .THl9 SHED.’ WHV a I BUILT IT ‘TO PUT STUFF OUTA WON'T LOOK SO WELL, WHUT ARE YOU GOIN‘ TO FUT ‘TH’ SHED IN 4’ MEDICINE WORSE THAN rue SICKNES§ z/ if} ,, l . f JW-‘NILLQQNI§ . .’ 1 AlN‘T AReulNL/voulda L” EiLEATlu‘ FER A PIECE o‘ MY cuawiolseu!» oww! u»: $25 on TH‘ LINE,AN‘ N0 QUESTIONS ASKED!“ flu. APPOlNT You TRNNERJAN‘ ME, sew‘ rl-r‘ BRAlN5, r. GOTTA GET AROUND AND Mats; some Mouse TO car Pleural-w- THAT TAKES CABBAGE.’ of the Boston goals during the was put in and dressing applied. , _ lil-Y Grads first 24 minutes of play and Bryan it ‘should be renwved in five days." §c1i°f§°b§§lgo‘§‘ 5' G§3d§§ m Frill-slit‘; f€§‘;f.;?...‘§“fi’.‘l.i 5§°§i ..ll.». “u... if?" i‘. 30 WL 1N3 ‘t by: scoringvthc first Rnngcr- goal Illé Dr. Pl). lvicfntylrc, and assisting on Plltrrcks iyllll.’ o ~*_1I§-_ - 1y. R» Mfllhe-‘Oll- W- R. m tally y Mlners blank (ialrrck. Dr. L. A. Jclrnston. skip; ______ Olrtpper was nct the only Bruin E. Stewart. Lloyd 10<§k<?1'b.\’. S- fotrevécdwmoslniss ItD-hc lust flVIQLZ mini V, t , 4 0 gouiwscll. A. létrrknidikrp; Bell, y_ 3L g, ARBQWMNG g5; u . o we ulnar. w lo wi . YflSEI‘, . . c ny. corge Businggg (jrlg mag“ '3l undergo b, Canadian A1‘l'll_\' pirysic- lc arias - Mcfrltylrc. skip; R. sample, Daniel ltfi a1 examination m Lnndm. Out. Power. F‘. s. lWCliIlyTi‘. n. l .-- Pilots n9 wmwrcllv. had to ru-_h ¢i\\'ll}' lit _____ Donald. skip; M, Richard ll, E. E. Cox . . . . . 177 209 H‘! that, point to cat-ch his train. if rvlqxlllllnll, B. Mcbcnll’ wglllam u. .u...-Llunc .. 152 126 GLACE BAY, N.S.. Jan. 20— S\viridell,5kip. E. Holmesd“ H sullmmml fCPi-Gcolle Ken MK‘ Tl, > l‘ " _~ u. ‘vmcbw . '8 l 111m: up his fifth Cflpeclilperl-g: IOIIOKSZI Blletgllop. litlmfif 1c 1.4m“ I _ _ _ ' _ _ H m 105 ‘t! First Period Hockey League shutout of the sczl- typg vs. GQQrgg‘McInt\~1-p q‘ 7' v) Wail-Wm‘ 2°! son tonight as Glace Buy Miners m and at q p m L ng-jfnh ‘f; Buck Privates lit l--Boslon. sclxmidt- (Bzlucr Du- trounced North Sydney Victrrins W111i...“ swindén 3m‘ 9i f7“ ' C'- Dullw“ 121 139 l“ mart) 8:36 4-0 and stoppcd oilt into a. 25- Rw 13-44; H. 'G(\OII:,»II;~ Djlplnllslilzlf pmMclmglmll - ~ P; 153 Penalties-D. Smith 2. Pr-ltr puma lead over m» s u- l- ' ' ‘ " ..' ' t- ‘M1113 a 1 16° , ‘ ‘ r ‘$.3l.‘.‘;l..*l.F‘-...“.’f‘3§"§é%‘?; l2: r ~ is u: it: ‘ ' | ' ' L . .1100! 59cm“, Pfiwd PM Pesbiem 53am spearh°awid G. Parks vs William Swiildell; nt Togapqllgg, 1o: Miners offensive, getting two goals . B Nlchgbon 1g L-Boston. schlnidi. 3:24 and helping out on another Des- 9 pm‘ RG‘ McDonald "S" D" PD" 5875mm’ G‘ lers 167 1 ‘l w‘ 3__New Yo“; Hsxmn (‘Mammy bin“ m“ h“ sccrmg “rhg to 16 McIntyre; Jan. 2G at 7 p.m. LH. J. Kiciiy 206 140 178 ‘To l z-sié-‘m- 5~ 151 . * - . .. . r - - . 512s’ sirriizlht gt: .05 _ 3081c QI-j-DA-fil- Poll-s. n: 0 n. gr - 1199 High Sing1e_w_ E_G0ss_._,&,_ Penamcs_None Tcfilolrlltgllhlktdll‘ lisnclslcliilrltmklkithrunx: Jun‘: ht Orlhlldlllvfiblp" ‘ s‘ L“. l‘ 01:11 -- f: ~ 109 14" 1349 High mme’ w’ E G053’ 7U‘ 1111"] period gcgl and an §._q§l_ charlie Phil“ 5_ R.W. Beck; nt 9 p.ni. GeorgdMc-In- H‘ 5“_“u‘ 66 79 l“ HOLY NAME BOWLING PAL . . P .. . . Total-MUD - M‘! f. hlgh-gcQ-rlng defqnggman’ came ijrc \s. RC. McDonald, JZIH. 22! cm. or ls - ._____ 4-—New York, Patrick (Hextall) through with the other. at '1 p.111. Dr. Johnston v5. A. G. E He}: “ 140 17-1 2 6 Tonight st. 9 o'clock 2:33 ‘The circuit leaders had the edge PPYkSI i1! 9 K1111» DT- Mvllltfvrc vs. E? ytc.£.'“'"""" n9 191 “I38 ._____ 5—N'I\\’ York. Slilblcky (M. Col- n11 the uln l in lilo sl"\_v but rough Wlllialn Swinricll: Jan. 2i] fll 7 p. {laws 115 128 159 Big Four League: Old Timers v5, vllcl 13:56 mat“ l - lllcl n tvo-nlan ud- m. RG. IvicDnlmltl vs. L. H. Panto; ._ 107 103 14. Corvettes. Please note this game 6—N"\\‘ YOYK- Wat-Wm 13147 "" ll "P billrc of the ,><.':.- at 9 17.111. Willizun swindcl vs Dr". . , 153 lfiq 13211215 been moved ahead from PP1l£l1llE5—-C(lll1l9l‘. schnliclt. A- fllf-Y-Jllled fifwmi period but Johnston; Jan. 3O at 7 p. m, Dr. Toml_2214 gay n13)", when the All 5mm Wm Jackson. ClA-liper (major). couldn't cnpztnllzc on it. McIntyre vs. AG. Parks; at 9 p. High single, L. Ford, 240. play Five Aces. By. J. R. Wiliams OUR BOARDING HOUSE can? 7/ " JAKE.’ vdu 4.,’ ’ HAVEA HENZT i 4,, comp/smote l/ p T0 A LEMON_ / SEED/w“! ,/' PAP,’ ol-l, WELL, I'LL Railee 1H With Major Hoopla TH‘ Mlssus SENT ' ME UP TO WHISK THE MATTREss our ‘FROM UNDER you GENTS two / PAR OUT THE POLICE- JU€T TELE- Pl-IONED THAT THEY g . .' ...,.. ‘T TOLD “HAVE- You A HAT- Box»? l WANT DOES COUSlN MERCY. Not lF WE {AN ONLY GET MILLIE CAP swabs! ‘lOUVEQ/(EUQ? You ‘ro MAIL some OF MV THINGS» ~ro JANE KNOW BUT SHE WILL, on 1mm roam. ‘FORE SHE "N05 ANYMD” YET "A ° sues COMIN’ soows 1w aox s our MR. super. ISN'T 60m‘ 1o ALWAYG "tau. BWRYTHINé-a TO VISIT HER? are»; ARRIVIN woousrocx, "root __ .5... swim. 1x370“ M! WW"! ~ voukzr; IZlGHT- ' MAGGIE -HE is AN lMPOSTOlZ- E. _! . . 5Q;- m-ai n sit-- 95m. |-.-. ‘a By Edwina KNOW! 1 WAS STA'\'\ONED‘ HERE _\'\|E GOT TO RE -