JANUARY SALE OF SPORTING GOODS Reg. S125 to 32.15 HOCKEY STICKS - now 99c ALL SKATE BAUER. SAMSON. C.C.M. ZOVO off RUBBER and WOODEN SKATE GUARDS . . . . . . . . .- l-3 off ISCONTINUED LINES 0 Ed cm-:v EQUIPMENT 1-3 off sowune SHOES 25vo.orr LEATHER JACKETS zsworr BADMINTON RACKETS . zsvo off Crested SWEATSHIRTS. zsvo off HOCKEY PANTS ....... 20'Vo.off THE SPORT LODGE 115 KENT ST. DIAL 9363 QUEENS COUNTN FISH & GAME MEETING WHERE . . PRINCE OF WALES COLLEGE AUDITORIUM. . WHEN . . THURSDAY. JANUARY l3th TIME . . . 8:00 P.M. - AGENDA - . (a) Should Non-Resident Gunners he required to hunt with Guides while hunting in the Prov- inoe? (b) Should Guides be allowed to carry a gun while guiding a. party of Hunters? More rigid law enforcement on non-resident bog limits before lcavln the Province. DUCK CALLING ONTEST to be held. Two of the finest Wildlife Films ever shown at any Queens County Meeting. A BUMPER CROWD IS EXPECTED. YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BE A MEMBER TO ATTEND THIS MEETING. COME AND BRING YOUR SON - HE WILL EDHOY THE MOVIES AND WE WILL ENJOY YOUR FRIENDSHIP. 0-4 PP HOLMAN'S Charlottetown Store Sugar Ray T Jones In Bout CHICAGO. (APt-Sugar Ray Robinson makes the second start of his comeback campaign against Ralph (Tiger) Jones. Yonkers, N. Y., middleweight. at Chicago Stadium Jan. 10. Robinson knocked out Joe Rin- done in Detroit Wednesday night as he emerged from his retirement as middleweight champ. That bout was not televised. but Robinson's Jan. 19 bout will be on eoast-to- coast TV. . Truman Gibson. International "sown: Club secretary, said Robin- son's new manager. Joe Glaser. objected to Jones as "a little too tough for Robinson at this point." i Glaser was quoted by Gibson as saying Robinson still was rusty xPenticton V's ;Trip Comes Under Fire PORT ARTHUR. Ont, (CP)-Fi- nancing of the trip by Penticton y Vs to represent Canada at the world thockey championships in Germany lnext month come under fire sat- urday at the semi-annual meeting of the Canadian Amateur Hockey I Association. CAHA president W. B. George I 1 lot Kemptville. 0nt.., served notice 1 that the CAHA feels that other ; muntries will have to consider pay- 1 ing the Canadian team for appear- ' ing in the world' tournament. "We have to compete this sea- son. regardless of the expense." he .said. ”and if other countries want us to enter a team for future championships. they will have to consider paying the club for ap- pearing in the tournament. We can't and won't take funds away from our senior and Junior clubs just to send a club to the conti- nent." He said Germany has promised - to pay the Canadian team 315.000 for playing in four exhibition games and the world champion- ship but that an additional 35,000 will have to come out of the CAT-TA reserve fund to meet the team's expenses. RARE BTRD 'l'ha black-billed suk, only re- maining type of a once numerous species. breeds on rocks around the British Coast. FRENCH 0llT;(TST The French islands of St. Pierre- Miquelon near Newfoundland have a combined area of 93 square miles, Men! Get In On This Saving ONE DAY FEATURE Tomorrow, Friday, Jan. 14th BOND iiB0nus” SALE Tailored-To-Measure Suits EXTRA TRDUSER FREE DDAT AND TWD TROUSERS of New Spring Suit Samples. Come In And Be Measured For A Smart Suit At Low Cost - DIIARANTEED SATISFACTION HOLMAN'S Cliclottotovrn Store 39.75 Also At 49.75 and 59.75 Joseph Storey Will Be In HOLMAN'S Budget Shop All Day FRIDAY. Jan. 14th. With A Wide Range 0 Meet Tiger On Jan. I9 I after being out of the ring for 80 months. ' "If Robinson wants to box in Chicago." Gibson said. "it'll have to be Jones or nobody." Boxer Suspended. Then Reinstoted PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The Pennsylvania state athletic com- mission Tuesday sl pended mid- ello for 75 days and then, in the same breath. reinstated the fighter on payment of a 3500 fine. Frank Weiner. chairman of the commission. said that Giardello's actions outside of the ring were detrimental to the best interest of boxing. However, Weiner said: "In this case there is a differ- ence between Joey Giardello and an ordinary boxer. Giardello ha! been set up as an example to the youth of America, and since he is a very young man, he can still become a very useful citizen by showing repentance and by re- solving to show the people of this nation, Where he is widely known, that his escapades with the law are ended." Weiner said that the commis- sion had decided to give the boxer an opportunity to prove himself and to continue in the ring, by allowing him to pay a fine in lieu of his suspension. Giardellois suspension and fine resulted from an assault on a gasoline-station operator last Oct. 29. He is to be tried on assault charges. Giardello denies that he was involved in the brawl. Horse Scratched ' After Scuffle MIAMI. Fla. (APT-Dixie Style. the Tvto-5 favorite in the first race at Tropical Park Tuesday. was scratched by stewards after a scuf- fle in the horse's stall and detent- ion of a former jockey. John Kelly. brother of Dixie Style': trainer Tom Kelly. reported he saw Frank Truschka. the former jockey. in the favorite'I stall at 12:40 p.m., 50 minutes be- fore the horse was to have gone to the post. Kelly told stewards William Almy .lr., James G. Cstlett and Dr. W. W. Davis that a scuffle ensued. and he overpowered the diminutive Truschka and searched him He said he found a hypodermic syringe on Truschka's person The stewards summoned Trus- chka for questioning Later they ordered Dixie Style scratched. and turned Truschka over to Jack Loome. chief of the enforcement detail for the Thoroughbred Racing Protective Association Looms said he and members of his staff were still questioning the former jockey and had not placed a charge against him gltolion Ra- lSees Trouble ROME (AP)-Italy's chief Com- munist. Palmiro Togliatti. opened his party's national convention Sunday with an assertion that Europe faces catastrophe and the prospect of collapse in Italy. In a 3'.-hour speech launching the convent.ion.'I'ogiiatti said com- munism is confronted with a ,"mors serious and bitter situa- tion." both inside Italy and a- broad. ; He described the projected west- ycrn European Union as a "new .and heavier military pact imposed ion the shoulders of all European peoples and sanctioning the re- lbirth of aggressive German milit- arism." . The seven-nation pact. now in the process of ratification. pro- vides for controlled rearmgment of West Germany in alliance with Italy. France, Britain, Belgium. The Netherlands and Luxem- bourg. The Red chief blasted the Ital- ian government's recent anti- Communisf. measures as "illegal and shameful". He said the coun- try": economic situations is "wor- lrying and in part even desolat- ing."ltaly's prospects are "gloomy" 'and the present trend of Premier iMario Scelba'a government may lead to "collapse and civil war." Bod Emory Saves Cosh OTTAWA (CF)---Odd the wiI)' a Canadian Chinese can suddenly forget. his English-at the right moment. Take the case of Soto Tensang, manager of a midtown restaurant. - Recouniing the incident to no- lice. Setn told of how a well- dreased young man came Into his restaurant. ordered a meal and when it came time to pay. alip- pad Seto at the cash register this pencllled message: "Give me all the money you have in the cash register. I have a gun." The Chinese face went blank. "So soliee." he recalled reply- ing. "! no savvee." "You monee.” said the young man trying to make, the Chinese manager understand. "You menu. I have gun. I have gun." a Still the lame pus-sled look. "So sollee. No aavvee.” The young would-be thief. frus- trated. started to make for the hack stairs. "so sally.” Sets called out. "Checked please." The thug paid Q cents and left. I OIPOIEI YOUNG IAIIAIDI I SYDNEY. Australia (EoudoI'I)-- Bmnalda be marl tun N yeaz old and wear um: drama! to aedursgqman from dtyml toolong in howl bars. L G Jordan sugaated in the new lonlh W Legfalltivo Are so in at raise .. dleweight contender Joey Giard- in Snow cm... Roof or aanr MCADAM. N. B. (CP)-Snow and ice on its roof d the Canadian Legion memorial rink hero to collapse at 8 a. m. satur- day and become a total loss. es- timated at 340.000 with no insur- nice. No one wn in the building at the time. it acommodated a large number of skaters Friday night and would have been well patron- izedw Saturday. The rink also was used by the McAdam curling club. which suf- fered a heavy loss. McAdam has no other rink for skating or curl- g. . Opened in February. 1950. 'the building was 220 feet long and 100 feet wide. with an ice surface 185 by SE Disc Jockey Tries Experiment MONTREAL (CP) - A Mont- real disc jockey who wanted to prove people tire easily of "hit. parade" songs made his point Fri- day night. Lloyd Cheater, on the late radio program Lloyd's Lobby, played a new release 18 times entitled "I Gotta Get My Baby." After each three-minute playing Chester Iden- tified the next tune by another name but repeated the same rec- O -1 Within 15 minutes listeners he- gan calling the radio station (CPCF) and I. few minutes later a telephone exchange capable of handling 50,000 simultaneous calls was completely jammed. Some listeners telephoned police and several prowl cars were sent speeding to the station. The record. recorded recently In the United States by Theresa Brewer was reported to have sold some 500,000 copies within 48 hours of its release. On that basis. Chester told his listeners. the recording is a hit parade candidate "so l've saved you three months of effort. ”You're tired of the hit parade record right now--all in one night." New Assistant Fisheries Deputy OTTAWA. (OP) - Samuel V. Oaere 52-year-old Austrian-bom lawyer. has been appointed assist-. ant deputy minister of fisheries. Mr. Ozere. who has been director of legal services in the fisheries department. succeeds George R. Clark, who recently became deputy minister when former deputy stew- art Bates was made president of Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation. The new assistant deputy. who came to Canada as a child. has been with the department l0 years lie has acted as legal adviser on several international delegations since then. At the time of his new appoint- ment. he aLso was legal adviser board us no fisheries . r board. - A graduate of the University of hlsnitobs law school. he practised grim Wlrmipel and later in Man- a . . - ' Page .8 l oarernnn us-rinsusx Tllltyrand. the French states- man who died in 1838. was crippled lanes are cultivated at us .1 ”,'dhood. i at 12.900 feet in mm. ' for life by a fall in he 1'lmrIda.y'. lanniryi 18., . U . 1088 ls nionlxraaua. Blrltv. pontoon. turnips-ans .4. hide Tip Tbp's famous tailored-to-measure suits for men and ladies 2 O 539-60 E 547-60 iii; 55 569.50 um-"Bu CLIIIHES "TIP TOP" BLIIIIIES "FLEET STIIEET" CLIIIHES IN PLACE OF THE ORDER ANY OF THE RE DISCOUNT YOII MAY IF YOU WISH ABOVE RANGES AT TN II R PRICES AND GET AN EXTRA P R 0F PANTS FRE I-AN FOR THE l.ADlES- AN EXTRA ' 99 GRAFTON STREET. ”'LirIP TOP CANADA'S GR EATES CLOTHI jrAILoR of OFF GULAR 0 PRICES- Nti VALUE FLYLWITN .- two worlds to conquer g Your day may begin with a dawn patrol. Or a spell of duty as Officer of the Watch: The Navyis Officer Pilots and Observers get the best of both worlds. They combine the thrills of flying with those of the sea. Their lives are full. exciting, absorbing. , These are hand-picked men - men who have proved their ability during intensive training. They do is vital job. They command their own planes on convoy protection and anti-submarine patrol. They give lighter cover for the ships. On them may depend the whole course of a vital action. Each day is full for these men of Naval Aviation-full of adventure iull of excitement. Their day can be your day. Their career yours. gurus Ylallliil-The Navy's Avlarora get omen or Tlll WATCH muplm flying training at land haaaa spread their wings If sea. Voimtlowl-Judged to a hairulneadrls av. 90 knots. the Naval Pilot cma his engine for a perfect landing on-the carrier's deck. W,” Jordpa was. in new rm! liquor to . which is the lowering of the mini- barlnalda-from If to: 3'3 "' .. . , -i . --On the bridge. the Naval . PI!-Illlill (ONIAAI-The Pilot-Observer uaasa of bafoahhcy Aviator is thoroughly mined in seaiaansbipnvall the RCN CHICK dd!"-I 505030 I .5855 TIZCI .1 .. y ) as airmanship. This Naval Pilot sakes a bearing: is a RIFNE I" 5' NIH- l on the sea. commences shortly. coupon sodsyi, A smna 1'0 If none or I The Naval Aviator is a Naval Odicer who tiles with the Fleet. Above the gold lace on his left sleeve era the wings of the Pilot or Observer. Today he is flying-tomorrow be my command a ship. He serves Canada bod: in the air and a A NEW COURSE STAITS SIIOITLY y . con mi rnors no OISIIVIIS I I if you are between 18 and 23. are pumped have nnlor Matriculation or the equivalent an guali to standards set, you can start your train- ing on the next Naval Aviation course which will 0mClAlAFPIl'CATl0l MIN &TIlII'lIl; M For full information and your appli us, write or phoncthe Naval Recruiting Oicot as the address” is the coupon --or mail the &tlon form. n.c.N. , lulldlna. amomuwn. N-.-tleio-atria locnulungl olfiear. Ell. c.s. r.n.-canon. on. . 3 H90 ml . vnmv.ou' M autumn” voquiv.aavonn?ad openings In Avlitioa In ll; . has ans:-lath. lam