FEBRUARY 2. Babe Zaharias Quits ladies Pro Bolt Association TAMPA, Fla... (AP)-Babe za. lulu quit the Ladies Professional Soil Association Thursday with I tlast at some of her fellow pros ind declared ahemny form a rival group with Fred Corooran. T119 Blbe. who is entered in the Faunpa. women's open golf mums. rnont. and she submitted her re- 1954 Iignntion as president of the LPGA two nights ago and the '.;PGA refused to accept it. "Now." she said. "I'm washing any hands of the whole mess,both ll president and as a member." She protested the LPGA'S ac- zlon in failing to keep Corcoi-an m as tournament director. deem. ng he had built women's golf up 30 I hlkh level and the golfers ire playing for lots more money man they ever expected to. Corcoran'a release from the JPGA was announced Wednesday ry Betty Hicks. publicity director, vho said the golf equipment man- ifacturers who had been paying Iorcoraifs salary were not going with it, and the LPGA could not iflord to. The LPGA. xiiiicli has about 25 members. then decided to arrange its own tours with a committee nade up of Betty Jameson, San Antonio. Texas. Betsy Rawls.Spai'- anburg. SC.. and Marilyn Smith. Wichita, Kas. ' Namefosathlftr Canada's Empire Games Track Team MONTREAL. ival of Toronto, I controversial figure for many years in Canadian sports. Thursday was named coach of Canada's track team for the British Empire Games this year at Vancouver. Percival. a successful coach with the Toronto Track and Field Club. is known for his disputes with the Canadian Olympic com- mittee and the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada over the coa:ii- lng and selection of Olympic learn! The armouncernent followed a meeting here Wednesday night of the British Empire and Common- wealiih Games Association of Can- ads at which 12 other coaches rind managers for the games were con- firmed. Others chosen were: W. B. Cowan, Toronto. boxing manager: Jack Guest. Toronto. rowing manager; Gordon Mackie. Winnipeg, boxing coach: R. J. Bertnhnrpe. Toronto. cycling man- ager; George Grenves. Montreal, cycling coach: George Pouliot, Montreal, fencing coach: Tom D. Lord. at. Johns. Que.. track and field manager: Margaret Lord, Hamilton, Women's track team manager: Lloyd Percival. Toronto. track coach: hank Richads. Gal- gu-y. field coach; Qiarlaa Walker. Montreal, weightlifting manager; Lionel st. Jean. Montreal. weight- lifting coach. Jkn Wall of Toronto was named Instant general manager of the complete team. Paint Firm Saves British Runner IAJNDON. (AP A British paint Mil tothy "sued" distance run- nu Gordon Plrie from having to go to the United States nu Iaid he has accepted I nlunIn's Job from the pIint Inn-plan In Iuton-iobile-uid be- Much i will have the he needs to train and pre- for truck and field meets. lilthonhewillkcephisjobas s suburban bank clerk. On Jun. 1 Pirrie allowed the Min to loIk that several Amari- nn eoliqu had offered him track Icholnuhipa and he intended ac- Iepting one and moving to the Unlined states. "possibly pennan- mm... London papen splashed the IIWI. utter: to the editors called lor elhbliiiment of funds to keep Isoplo llkie Pirie It home. (OP)-Lloyd Perc- l Strange But True l B: i-'. ll. MacArthur In ancient times divarl curled oil in thier months which they released beneath the Iurfaco when rough water made their task d:l.f- lioult. You'll never get your share of it. but there's enough gold in the seas to make every inhabitant of earth worth approximately 514.000. The longest. farm in Canada - ten miles long may be seen in Northern Manitoba. This rib- bon wide piece of land is cultivat- ed by an Indian family. The long farm hm beside the C.P.R. Bobcats are spotted when born, but strange to say the spots fade out when the animal reaches ma- turity. Ever hear oi "Death Island," I disease-ridden piece of land off the coast of Formosa where. the weaker sex rule the roost? Population L429. All have mal- aria, a. tiny bug whose bite causes death within hours is the chief killer. That's how the little is- land came by its name. Divorce is common in "Death Is- land," and women rule the roost. They are choosy when it comes to picking their mates and usu- ally scorn the homely ones. Men with poor fishing reooirds also stand little chance of getting wives. . Women don't repeat gossip. They just improve it. Persons who don't let grass grow under their feet are most likely to end up in clover. Don't worry about finding your station in life. Somebody will be sure to tell you where to get off. The average Canadian uses a- bout 8.000 words. A highly educated person may have a vocabulary of some 20.000 words. Bands of wild burros. descen- dants ol those brought into the area bytprospectors. roam through Death Valley. which lies in Cali- fornia and Nevada. There are no poisonous silakes in Cuba, Jnmacia, and Puerto Rico, scientists say. i And strange but true. you couldi not find a simple full-sized treat in the whole of Greenland. Seen oh a church bulletin board Allenwood. - Pa. Directions to Turn Right and go in Heaven: straight. C-ale sign in downtown Mon- treal: "Money has lots of germs - spend it with us and play safe.l 0 O 0 It sounds like a tall tale. but nevertheless its true. If every hu- man being on this planet were six feet tall and a foot and a half wide and a foot thick. then the entire human race descen- dants oi the original palr could be packed into a crate measuring half a mile in each direction - that, as I just stated. sounds like agtall tale. but if you think I'm fibbing. figure it out for yourself and you'll find it to be correct. If one of our crack passenger trains started on a non-stop run to the moon it would need seven tenths of a year to reach that planet. Believe it or not. but the depth of the deepest sea is greater than the height of the highest moun- tain. In other words, if we dumped Mt. Everest into the deepest part of the incean. its top would still be several thousand feet below the surface of the sea. . . . Nature keeps I proper balance in everything she does. When she allow: one sea to go day she starts mother one in some other part of the world. and when she permits certain mountain ranges to disap- pearthen another part of the crust in I totally different corner of our globe is slowly being reshaped into I bwanld-new mountain range. But when man interferes with nature bad results often follow. Take. for example. our greed for timber. What's the story behind this greed? What's the story pic- ture we see in the future? The denudlng of our forest: has turned curtain regions of this province into what one might fit- tingly cell primeval wildnrneases. Indeed our grandparents would hardly recognise their own pu- tures and farm sites. were they to come but to the garden of the gulf for a. brief holiday. Had our greed for timber and cleared land been less we would still have plen- tycfflrewooduwellasgood stands of lumber. ' : By Will Grim.-iiey MELBOURNE, (AP) -- The two key man in the nrgzuniraiion of tho 1956 Olympic Games--a crisp rriirrd :u'nLv general and a grey- znlz little l3rlion---are i'ead,v to guarantee that Melbourne will put. on n ”1:nnd show." l "There is no doubt. in my mindl those games will be among the mosi successful over," said tail, nrei-t lit.-Gen. William Bridgeforrl, chief executive officer. ”VVe liavc wiped out all our early liirkerinz and meryimdy IS intent and en- thusiastic about. making a real go of ii." "I won't any these will be the man beings live the year round is the village of Gartok in Tibet (14,518 feet). The highest lake (l2.5l8) is lake Titecaca. The highest city is Quito in south A- merica (9.343! while the Dead Sea, in Palestine, has 1,290 feet be- low sen-level. . Before the compass was invent- ed sailors had only one way in which to discover where the near- est land lay. For that purpose they always carried a few 111890715- Why? Because when released from the ship the birds always took the shortest route to land. Then the ship was steered in the general direction taken by the birds until they came to land. Of course when the weather was fine the more experienced skippers did a pretty good job of steering a true course by the stars. 0 O O Ilncidcntallv. when the sailors of the Mediterranean first saw I compass they called it an inven- tion of the devil. Here's how the word "knots" came into use when referring to the speed of a ship. In early days I log was thrown into the sea and watched to see how long it would take before passing the stern of the ship. The length of the vessel from stem to bow was of course known, and no the officers could then figure out how much time the ship needed to pass a given point and that would show roughly how many miles the vea- sel was making in an hour. To the log of wood was fasten- ed a line divided into so many piecm by "knots". The line was tossed ovar board 'at. the name time that a sand glam was set running. Sailors kept pulling in the line and counting the knots that passed hrough their hands while the sand-glass was emptying its contents from one bulb to the other. After that A very simple calculation would show how fast the vessel was going. or in the The highest spot on which hu- OUR BOARDING HOUSE l :4 75:25 lz PIPE -me NEAT BU5iNE55 & MDNICKER 1 STUCK on KETCt-i,AMO5I----rM : auieemmermrr - WHEREA5 I KIN Pauoce li 'MA6NETl?c' v PER5ONAi.lTVl lingo of the sea. ”how many knots." Major Hoopie NERVE I5 Wxixhwlll i6T ON ION, GREAT cAE5AR JAKE! Youa Moutirr WQ';f'5cil t8”cEf:3f5'fot3 I some oc THE PROFITS! CAM you MAKE A LIVING AMY LONGER wrn-I Yam TRANED pace 2 : EVEREST THE GUARDIALV. 'L;l:iA5gi'lrn'1Uwi1 New Jet Plane Flies like a Bird British Catapult I-lurls U. 5. Jet Pictured (top) on its first flight is the Short hherpa. WW- ered by two turbo jets and con- trolled by flexible wings.-like I bird-with rotaiini: til”; purely experimental plane. it Is expected by its British designers to have a great deal of Infill- ence on the wing shapes for fu- ture high-altitude flight. On left a jet Supermarine At: tacker is hurled from H..ll..N. Perseus by a new clitzipull. llw BS4-U. nicknamed the ”.atenm slingshot". Another British In- vention. it has been adopted by the U. S. Navy and was recently demonstrated before higzh-rnnkw in): officials of both countries at the Naval Air llalcrial ('i-nil-r, at Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Key Men Ar Ready Tofanadiens Reium Guarantee liGo0d Show” For Australia Olympics licst gained over." added E. J. Billy Holt. T();yenr-old Olympic veteran who was chief organizer of the i948 games in London. "We have tried to incorporate the best features of all the past games. I think we have modelled our plan- ninr: more after the 1932 games at Los Angeles than any other." Director In Loan Holt was borrowed by Melbourne to serve as technical director. He is assisted by Leonard Curnow, 49. an emzinz-or in the department nf (it-fence. an amateur athletic of- ficial for some 20 years and arena manager for the Melbourne Olym- plrs. Bridgeford and Holt are the field sxecutives while chief of staff of the entire operation is chairman of the Olympic organ- izing committee, Kent Hughes. Oxford educated and a former Olympic hurdler. the suave. effici- ent Hughes is minister of public works in the Australian govern- ment. and is Credited with bring- ing federal and state government officials into close harmony for united effort. "We plan to make all Australia conscious of the importance of the Olympic Games." Hughes said. "and to see to it that everybody lends his best. efforts to making the game it success." Early Troubles End:-I After its early trials. Mel- bourne's Olympic organizing com- mittee i.1 working full steam now with most of the major rnnstrur- lion blue-prinirrl and ready to move into the saw-and-hummer stage after the Queen's visit next month. Bridgeford la a restless. chain- smoking officer who was com- mander of Commonwealth forces in Korea. Fifty-nine years old. aggressive and no respecter of red tape. the general has proceeded to knit loose ends together and at- tnrk the problem the way his troops would the enemy. Construction. torhnicaland rom- municatinns committees already are at work. Other sub-commit: fees will be set up later to him- dle transport, medical services, ac- commodation and catering. Makeswsuggeshon For Uncovering lleal ilhallenger CHICAGO (AP) -alack Dempsey has suggested an elimination tourn- ament to uncover I. "real" chal- lenger to Rocky Marcianois world heavyweight boxing title. The former champ said that an- other former champion. Emnrd Charles. while appearing is worthy contender. still should dispose of Nlno Vnldes for the right to fight Marciano. Charles. who is being boomed for a possible June match with Marciano. was outpcinted by Val- des in a surprise defeat last year. Dempsey said the elimination should be conducted among chu- les. Valdss. Dan Bucoen-mi and Danny Nardico. as "in my mind the public probably would be con- fused by Charles fighting Marciano after no was whipped less than I year ago by Valdes." "I know 'IVx Rickard mode me go thromh an ellminetion before I got my title shot against Jess Willard." MONTREAL. (OP)-A hat trick by Bernie Quemel Batiunhy night helped University of Montreal Carabins shade Moalll Redrmen 5- 4 in an intercollegiate hockey game before 1,100 fans. ACHE rive ouI' A I (Iorriveau To Valleyfiehlleam MONTREAL, (CF) - Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League Friday announced the re- turn of forward Andre Corriveau to Valloyfield Braves for the bal- ance of the Qunbnc Hockey League season, The hirrlr-scorinz right - wiiiger played three games with Cana- diens and picked up one amist while on loan from Valleyfleld. He will line up for Bravos in a league . western Manitoba town lllVPi'l FLIN FLON. Mam. (CF) Twenty years ago an aged pros- pector turned up in this north with I story about finding the ruins of an old fort not far away. People just laughed at him. The prospector. Allan McDonald. went. on his way. He now is in his 80's and lives in Nova smile. But it was not until last fall that there was concrete evidence to confirm his statement. New dia- coverer in Harry Moody, veteran stnrekeeper in the Flin Firm dis- frivt. Mr. Moody learned that the fort was somewhere In the area from his study of early history and from the tales of Indians who traded at his Denare Beach store. He searched Z) years before find- ing the fort -- 2') miles away. The ruins are of the Alexander Henry-Forbes Brothers fort. estab- lished in ITI5. They are located over the Saskatchewan border, where the Sturgeon XV:-ir river flows into Amisk or Beaver Lake. Afr. Moody first learned of the possible location of the fort from George Cusiter. an old metis who near the site in his boy- hood. He romllerl legendary star- in: of the white man's stronghold, Othnr Indians and historians sup- plied more clues. Pnrnver Remains Having sold his Denars Beach game today at Springfield. Mass. Aged Prospectorsfllaini Of Finding Ruins Of Manitoba Fort Confirmed business, Mr. Moody spent. most of last summer on his search. Though the discovery was made in the fall, offtcial information was withheld pending research work. A few months ago J. D. Herbert of the Saskatchewan golden jubilee rnmmittro partially excavated the area and uni-m-errrd the remains of five,huildings and six fire- places. The relics conform to description: in journals of Alex- ander Henry, the jubilee commit- tee states. The rominiilm: says the inn is of special significance as it l71Zl'lxS one of the important events In the amalgamation of dlSlf'lF'. fur traders to meet. the competition of the Hudson's Bay Company. Among artirles unearthed with the aid of R mine drtnctnr--by Mr. Moody and nwmlwrs of the Saskatchewan department of nat- ural resources are knives and fork.-I. axe heads, hair clippers and sea-chest hinges. They are being catalogued by Mr. .lfrmrl,v, who is said to hr SFPl(Il'iS! the erection of a museum at ilrnarr Baal-iv in house thr-so and mixer liislrlriral relics found nnarhy. -OIOIEAT r.'lfl'SIOl Georg Froidrlch Haiidr-l arntr his "Messiah" in 2'). days in l7-1i and it was first performed in Ire- land in 1742. . PAGE SEVEN Walls To Fight Freddy Beshore On February 15 'rORON'IO. (OP)-Earl Walls of Edmonton, Canadian heavyweight champion who lost a 10-round de- cision to Tomy Harrison of La Angeles here Tuesday night, will fipcht Freddy Beshore of bad An- geies in Edmonton Feb. 15. Jack Berry, Edmonton boxing promofd. said Wednesday. "Earl was in no way hurt in last night's fight,” Barry mid, ”He'll be in shape for the Hillbil- ton match.” Berry said Beshorn is push ho- contenderu for low the 10 top Rocky Marcianrfs world heavy- weight title. Walls. listed by Ring magazine as the fifth leading world eon- tender, has been a 2-to-1 favorito bu-fore Tuesday nizht's bout to take the eight-ranking Harrison. University Gets Two Million 'l'()Rl)N'f'O- --I C?) -City nouns! Monday umnimousiv approved paying :4 32.000110!) grant. to the Universitv of Toronto The money was requested recently by univer- sity president Dr. Sidney Bmath. who said lhn funds were needed for a general huiriinz program. St. Andrews, birthplace of golf, is on the east coast of Scotland between Edinburgh and DURAN The door of your nearest Naval Recruiting Station in the door to a lively. adventurous. well-unveiled life . . . I planned career in the expanding Royal Canadian Navyi The Navy often you the beat in trade: training-I permanent well-paid lob-and I pension at an age when you're still young enough to enjoy it. But that's not am The Navy provides you with free food. clothing. living quarters. medical and dental care, plus I worthwhile goal --the defence of freedom! GO PLACES! GO NAVYI ll'fVft!6SI"?T'-'”1”'- - . - ROYAL C SEE THE NAVAI. RECRUITING OFFICER A THE ADDRESS Q IN THE COUPON-OR MAII. THE COUPON TODAY. cm IT'S YOUR GATEWAY TO A MAN'S LIFE -SERVING CANADA. I Jo ioin the I.C.N. you nnn0- In between I1 Ind 25 (19 In some Ipedolnd utogovba), be piiyeielly It and have Grade I ldncnien or harm. , n. M.- t Sims Building, available in the R.C.N. NAME (Please Print) STRIIT ADDRESS c'.'a-q-rr. .. , Charlottetown. l'. E. 1. Phone: (Ml. Please mail to me, without obligation, lull particulars Hoarding Imolmun requlnmenia and opening: new ' IDUCATION (lw grade and province) EziTo'r"1-r.. 4 PIOVUNCI . ...e:u. XWAFMN luv?