Pngo I The smootli-passiiig Milton Hor- nets took a four goal lead in the , two game total goal series for the Queen's County intermediate "B" championship as they troun- -; 7-3 in a last, hard-checking en- counter at the Forum last eve- mag. The Hornets. who had an edge in play ui all three periods. led lead in the middle frame and scored a pair of unanswered markers in a tairly listless finale. Referees Leith Jay and Brian l(acCullum called a total of sev- on penalties in the fray. includ- ing majors to Skip Carter of the: FLVETS and Gcrry Machwain oft the lioriit-ls for their brief flurry of iisti-cuffs in thc iiiiai period. 1-line defensive play by the Hornets" rear-guards. especially Bob Mat'K8l'l'lS and Harley Mac- Lean. anti the outstanding goal- tcncling of Sheldon Jordon allow- ed the llliltoii puckstcrs to skate. off with their healthy lead in the. two-game series, which is ex-! 'pected to resume and be con- cluded at the North River Rink on Satuiidziy evening. The winner of this set will advance into the inter-coiiiiiy playdowns with the Montague Primroses. representa- tives of King's County. High-scoring reai-guard. Harley MacLean. and forward Ralph Frizzell paced the Hornets to their win with a pair of goals each while Kelly had one goal and three assists, with MacSwain and Andrew collecting the other Milton singletons. Jimmy Mac- Leod. Willie and Allie Carver composed the trio of Flyer marks- men. Kelly niarked the scoring sheet for the first time in the game shortly after the half-way mark of the opening period, tripping Cruwysi short rebound by Don Simmons to give the Hornets a short-lived one goal lead. The Flyers. who had the odgo in play in the first half of the session. stormed back less than a minute later with MacLeod and Trous- dale going in on Jordan with only Mai:Karris back. The Milton team took over from this point to the and of the period and Ralph Frizzell scored his first goal of the night three minutes later as be combined on a play with Campbell. similar to the one which the Flyers had connected on only minutes before. Again at the start of the sec- ond period the Flycrs came out full of life and before the session passed the five minute mark they were leading the Hornets for the first time by a 3-2 mar- gin on goals by Dunn and Allie Carver. In the latter half of the session. however, they faded again and Macswain, Andrew and Mat-Lean banged in single- tons before the period ended. The closo-checking of the Hor- net team kept the Parkdale for- wards disorganized in the finale and the favored Flyers failed to revive as the Milton men col- lected a pair of unanswered countcrs. Lineups: Horncts- (lo:-il: .lur(laIl: defence, H. MacLc:in. ii;-.cKarris. Code. Blanchard, Connolly; forwards. Millon Takes First Game Of”B"Series Kelly, Mac- Frizzell. Campbell, Lean, Cruwys. Colc-s. Andrews. Flyers-Goal: Simmonds: fence. Burge. Longaphie. Moore; forwards, A. Carver. briggs, Macl.eod. Carver, llurry. SUMMARY First period: 1. Trousdale. S tTrousdalei 13:13; 13. Hornets. Frizzell lCampbelll l15:-12. Penalties: Moore 9.10. Second period: -1. Flyers. l)iinii 59rle5- The A-1 tMacLeodl 1:41; 5. Flyeixs. lCarver 1S. Carver, Smithr -l..'lti; 6. Hornets. hiacsvvain ti"rizzelli 3.1: 7. Hornets. Andrew t('odci 1'1 02; 8. Hornets. lilacLcaii IL'udc, .Kellyl 19:18. Penalties: l.tIIl,Li1phl9i 'il.fl6. Codc 13:58. Campbell lti:4.'l. Third period: 9. Hornets. H. MacLean tKelly) 3.151; 10. Hornets. Frizzell IKellyi 13,55. Penalties: Hurry 5.06. Macsivain 12.10. Car- ver 12.10. MacCallum. Maple Leafs And Canndiens May Tour Europe A 1656 European tour for Mon- treal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs may be arranged. J. F. cBunnyl Ahearne. boss of the world hockey championships and president of the British Ice Hockey Association. said Tues- day he is willing to take up the matter with British and Euro- pean rink managers. Thr suggestion was put to him by Andy O'Brien of the Montreal Star. acting on behalf of the Mon- treal club. A similar tour by the National Hockey League clubs was suggested a year ago. Ahearne said he will act shoiilrl Montreal and Toronto decidc to make the trip. Such a tour would follow the NHL season. lnierscholasiic Skating Meet Here Tonight This evening at the Forum at 7.30. the best skaters from Queen Square. West Kent. Prince Street Queen Charlotte High School. the Schools of School Unit No. 1 and Crapaud area will meet in a centennial meet to decide which skaters will represent Queens County in this year's P.E.I. Phy- sical Fitness Provincial Meet. Everything is in readiness for a big evening's sport which will ,he run off by the following group of nfficials:- Referee-in-chief. W. A. Gaudet: Starter. George A. Walters; Fin- ish Judges. K. A. Parker. W. E. Scantlebury. Ray MacGillivray; Timer, Bill Bevin; Clerk of Course, A. L. Perry: Patrol Judges, Stewart Macllfillan. Gordon Wel- lner. Jack Turner (.lr.i. Walter Lawlor: Scorers. G. M. Rice. J. Pius Callaghan; Meet Director, Bill Reid. Russians Fair OTTAWA tCPl -Considering the invention claims by the Rus- sians in many fields. they are fairly modest about hockey. They don't say. for instance. that hockey was invented in Rus- sia or even that this year's team will win the world championship when it meets Canada Sunday. Russia won the world title last year at Stockholm. According to one V. Froiov in an article on hockey published in the Soviet news bulletin issued by the Russian embhssy here: "The Soviet players think that Isoy will be able to perform with success in these difficult con- nocitar POPULAR Elsewhere. Mr. Frolnv says: "Ice hockey has been cultivat- 0di.IthnU8SRon1)'forthe1aat eight years. Despite the shortness .1 this period, ice hockey has ac- Iromsndnns popularity in 4 Mains. At the present of GM doII&ffY'l INTI! 0 . ly Modest In Claims About Hockey lncverthelcss, came to the con- .clusion that thc tecliniquc of the Russians could bc favorably com- pared to that of thc Canmlians and Swedes some 25 years ago. and that the Russians had no among the prize winners in the forthcoming global matches. ATTACK AND DEFEND "Ami 10! This very sextet. who. according to the Western special- ists was just beginning to mas- ter the iechnique of ice hockey. carried off the world champion- ship: Some thought it was a sheer accident. . . "The fundamentals of these Russian hockey tactics. which evoked the admiration of the Stockholm hockey fans, -were: The lightning speed and thrust of the players. the precision of their combinations and the smooth teamwork. "The Soviet phyers abide by the principle: 'Fivc attacking. five defending! This. of course. does not mean that there is no delimitation of the players than functions. It only means that at loaded moment each player uaily efficient both aiding and the attack- 11--l Hockey Scores chances whatever even to plncr, -, .... ...-......--..-...-1-su-...s;..-a. .-.- . New Glasgow Rangers Take Kentville 4-0 11 Series And Advance In Maritime Finals Find.Things Are. Not Like :1 The New Glasgow Rangers. The Guardian Wednesday. March 2. 1955 APC Senior Hockey League, took their best of seven final .,..-...... .. ............-....-.---..-..-...-.......4 I representatives of the series for the Nova Scotia senior hockey championship in four straight games as they dumped the Kentviile Wild- cats 6-2 in the New Glasgow Stadium last night. The Wild- - cats were the champs from Senior League. in last nights game. the teams exchanged goals in the first period ,hut the Rangers came strong in ithc middle session to collect three unanswered goals and take a com- g manding 4-1 lead. They out-scored 5I11IlIl)I.. the visitors 2-1 in the finale. cad the powerful Parkdale Flyers GrP80F)'- JICKSOD. Dllnlh 5111131?" the Rangers have played and won. This was the third series that -Lcage during the regular season of play. The New Glasgow men .cncounIered their stiffest competi- H...-M15. Keuyltion in the first series. the APC, 2-1 at the and of the opener. tMacLean. Cruwyst 12:11; 2.1-'ly-ll-WE"? ""l"l”'3l5 came from belimd to gaiii a 5-3. ers. Marl-cod with the Saint II-Francis Xavier Collegians from who forced them to best of nine their Antigoiiish eight games in a Itaiiizcrs took By THE CAN.-TIIIAN PRESS Nova St-otla Senior K-eiitiille 2 New (ilasgtiu ti r.Vew Glasgow wins best-of-seven series 4-0! l . Ontario Junior A Toronto Marlhnros 2 (Ball 4 lIBcsi-of-five quarter-final llPd 1-ll Rcfcrecs: Lcith Jay. and Briaii'i(;uelph unis ticst-of-iivc quarter-l 'H.'-illlllltln 1 Guelph 5 final .'l-tli l'l'oruiiIn St. Miarliclis 4lSt. Cath- arincs 6 .tSt. Catharincs leads best-of-seven st-ini-fiiial Ii-(ll Ontario Senior A Windsor 1 Stratiord 5 tilest-of-seven semi-final tied 2-2) Kitchener 4 Owen Sound 3 l semi-final ll-ll Quebec Junior :Quebec 6 Montreal 4 ltQuc-bec leads round-robin semi- final with six points; Montreal i ; Trois-Rivieres 0i l Quebec League ,VailL-ytield 4 Chicoutiini 9 Nova Scotia's South Shore ibest of seven league finals with .the Pictou Royals. who ousted ?the Halifax Wolves. in five games. i Last night's win gives them the right to advance in the Maritime senior hockey finals with the win- ner of the present Moncton-Char- lottetown series which the Hawks lead 1-0. It will continue in the ' 3"" "'""l"g Fl”-V Wml me APC Moncton Stadium this evening. Crapaud Bantams iWin Game Ai ice Sports , Crapaud Bantams defeated .:Trinity tcharlyottetownl Bantams 3-0 last night in an exhibition hoc- key game at Crapaud rink. The game was part of the annual ice sports program. which was very 5. successful despite stormy weather. In the hockey game the scoring chores for Crapaud were perform- ed by Large and Cutcliffe in the lfirst period and A. Hawaii in the .third. each with singletons. Details of ice sports prize win- jners will be published later. S'side Curling Club Schedule at the Summerside Curling Rink DUESSELDORF, Germany rcpt tKii0h""" leads best: 0i" "W" for tonight: 6:45 - Earl Carney vs T. D. Morrison; William Jenkins vs A. ,Brooks. . 8:45 - Frank Cameron vs T. lL. Linkletter; Art Clark vs A. H. Hublc-y; Elmer Offer vs Wil- liam Jenkins. Big League Spring Training By JOE REICHLER ST. Pl'1TEliSBLlRG. Fla. tAP- lihe citrus and cactus season - baseball's spring training-opened yesterday in Florida and Arizona. This is the day baseball offi- ciaily opens the long grind lead- ing to the world series in seven months. Thirteen clubs go through their paces in Florida while three more - the world champion New York Giants. Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cubs - are in Ari- zona. The clubs have 10 days to get .into shape for the exhibition sea- son beginning March 10. This late opening of training, put through by the players them- selves, has proved unpopular and it wouldn't surprise anyone if the yrule were changed in the near future. ONLY TWO LAGGARDS The big three in the National League this year are Giants, Brooklyn Dodgers and Braves. St. Louis ,1-lhilaoelphia and Cincin- nati also could come through and. in fact, only Pittsburgh Pirates and the Cubs seem to be out of it. The American League race again shapes tip. as strictly a two-team affair between Indians and New York Yankees. who fin- ishcd one-two last year so far ahead of the rest of the loop they couldnit be seen'with a spy-glass by the also-rans. Al 'Lopcz and his Indians are in Tucson, Ariz.. and Al said on arrival that he thinks his club ,will be improved over last year. .If that's so. the tribe could win .120 games. They have come up (with ihc top minor league pitcher Minor Hockey Playoff Series Thc first games in home and homc. total goals series for the King's-Queen's paperweight. pee- wee. and midget hockey champ- ionships were played at the Rotary rink last night. in paperweight division Ahbies defeated Montague 5-1. Abbie goals were by D. Burgoyne 2. J. Cullen 2 and D. Flood. For Mon- tague D. MacCarron scored. In Pee-Weea Abbles shut out Montague 10-0. Scoring for Ahblcs were B. Prowae 4. W. Ward J. F. Burke. D. Lee and F. Dow. In Midget division Abbies de- feated Georgetown 4-1. Scoring for Abbles were M. Arsenault 2. S. Pasher and 1). Stewart. The fveorgetown gopl was by A. Gal- ant. In a Bantam game Georgetown and A bles played to a 1-all draw. Georg town's goal was by G. Sul- livan and Abbies by J. Kennedy. Referees were ,.I Kane. A. Gorveatto and A. Parry. Opens in Southern States of I954. Herb Score of ln.lian- apulis. and slugger Ralph Klner from Chicago Cubs. YANKS HAVE TURLEY Yanks. of course. hope they traded themselves into the pen- nant when they acquirad pittliers Bob Turley and Don Larsen from Baltimore Orioles. Chicago White Sox, who finish- ed 17 games behind Yanks in third place. still need a hard- hitting outfielder. Walt Dropo, who toiled for Detroit last year. and third-base veteran George Kcll, must come through if Sox are going to improve. Boston and Detroit both are loaded with youngsters and should fight it out for the last spot in the first division. ...sL.m..4....h.. Campnnellds Hand Better VFIRO BEACH. Fla. tAPts-For the first time since the 1953 world series. Roy Campanella took a full grip on the bat Tuesday and rapped Pete Wojey's first pitch past Carl Furillo in right field. He sizzled the next past Chico F.-rnandez at short. "See, ' said the all-star Brooklyn catcher "I can use my full hand. Last year I could use only two fintlers." Until he underwent a second op- eratlon last fall. (fampanella had feared his left hand was becoming paralyzed. 1 After earning National League "most valuable" honors in 1953. the 33-year-old backstop broke the hand in an exhibition game last March at Miami. Hockey Slniiding COLOGNE, Germany tCP)- Standing in the world hockey tour- nament after the fifth round Tues- ay: LT F A Pia. Switzerland Finland Tuesday's Rea Czechoslovakia 0 Sweden Switzerland 4 Poland 2 Germany 7 Finland 1 Wed 's Games Russia vs United States at Krafald Canada vs swltserlaad at Colonic Sweden vs Finland at Duaaaaidorf Czechoslovakia vs Germany at Doesseldorf Qt-ltd!-IIDIIGAOO! .as..asnu...oo gogoooooo -E...:::ns: S8!::;3uo QUQJMQQQQI Thursday's Games Canada vs Sweden at ltrafald Russia vs Germany at Duasseldort Czechoslovakia vs United States at Cologne Finland vs Poland at Cologne A . -The following is the schedule Curling News From Local Rink The final game in the Physical Fitness. a Junior competition. was won by the Gordon Stewart team which went through the competi- tion without a loss. winning the right to represent the C.C.C. at Montague in the provincial play. At Montague a team from each of the Island curling clubs will play a round robin series and the winner and runner-up teams will represent Prince Edward Island in the annual Maritime junior bon- spiel to be played at Sackvillc. sponsored by the Atlantic Whole- salers Ltd. The line up of the Charlottetown Club winners is: Gordon Stewart. skip. W. Goss. mate. .1. Cameron. and, R. Le- Clair. lst. Draw for tonight:- 7 P. M.- Ice 1: R. Carruthers, M. Mc- Guigan. L. Bagnall, Dr. Brown; vs., C. Whiteman. C. Boudreault. S. Crosby, J. Dingwell. Ice 2: D. Saunders. W. Whit- lock. Dr. A. MacMillan. H. Mac- Lean: vs. R. Bevan. E. MacNut1, H. Sear. H. MacDonald. Ice 3: C. Macbean, K. Elliott, G. Milligan. S. W. Willis; vs.. F. Hobbs, H. Willis, Dr. MacEachern. V. Rodd. 8:30 p.m. Round Robin Series: Ice 1: H. Atkinson vs. W. R MacNcill Ice 2: C. MacDonald vs. J. S. MacDonald. Ice 3: E. Maclnnis vii. J. Wil- son Ice 4: Dr. Giddings vs. D. Hill In 10 . l: n- - Ice F. R. MacLaine vs. F. co in. . Ice 2: Dr. Prowse vs. A. B. yhagnall. y Ice 8: .Worth. 1 Ice 4: W. Mat-Laine vs. R. Par- em. .1. F.. Burden vs. W. By Arch Mackenzie Canadian Press Staff Writer DUESSELDORF. G e 1' m a n y. (CPl - Canadian sports writers covering the world hockey champ- ionships know they are away from home. German rinks-as far as time clocks, score indicato a, scoring systems and other factors are con- cerned-are a far cry from the modern. well-equipped North American variety. None of the other 860 newspap- er men from the 14 competing European countries seem to miss these mechanical aids. German officials are puzzled but accom- modating about Canadian cust- OITIS. REALLY NECESSARY ”What do you want the time of .the goals for?" writer at Duesseldorf during the Czech-Canada game. ”Why is this necessary?" Assists are given sparingly by official scorers. No score indica- tors are installed. Time clocks. where available. lack a second hand and in the Canada-Poland game at Cologne. the clock ap- peared to have no firm connec- tion with the game. Some scorers skip the times altogether. At Dortmund the announcer started giving goal times midway through the second period of the Canada-United States contest. The ice was cleaned in the third period only after an American protest. NEW TERMINOLOGY Penalties and goals are an- nounced everywhere-in German. But the penalty-calling is not in- fallible and the terminology is dif- ferent. ilafal Some translations. offered by kindly German reporters: "Two minutes for impermissible beating over the head with the tick. F"""wl"g "'9" "w swrcs al 5 "Two minutes each for jostlini the Charlottetown Rifle Club's .,h "h ilk” T999” 5h'"”'5 lwlC.'1(iil:Idlaflc lrihiiortors boiled the A. r. Gormley 99;---j--- Roy Vnssey 93 R. wssins '6. Canada And R. Kennedy 96 . ii" S'”.”;Ill... 2-: Russ-a Idle Earl Burke 95 M. Carver 94; G' Mc.Le"nan BL COLOGNE. Gcrmany tCPl - grs" ('iw'g'el,;l"gcr5 Czcclioslovakia. Switzerland and ' " .'Gcrinany won Tuesday in the L Mcbmam 9J'fifth round of the world hockey A; 91.1 tournament. Their victories had L ylittlc to do with the standings. R' 9.,,as Canada and Russia. the lead- M' 9;,crs. were idle. A- . Czechoslovakia. beaten by Can- A; ;”,ada and Russia. barely eked out F" .1” a 6-5 victory over Sweden; Switz- .Ri .0"""'.'l ' ' ' ' ' " gmjerland and Germany both won calm Mheflmn their first games of the tourna- P- 3- L”'li”'5”" ' m.mcnt. The Swiss handed Poland illaul -l'3'”j'f'5 ----- -- 8;; its third straight defeat 4-2 and ':i-is;A"g'9l(l,:n” 85,tlie Germans loafed over Finland ' .7-I. 5- BMW" El Playing at Cologne. the Swedes R: "W95 sglturned on everything they had ljl' J and even pulled out their goalie 9' "950" M for an extra forward in the cloa- w- vying minutes but the Czechs held . . V ion. 0' illfn Sfavomir Barton. ttar Czech R-h "i”'5?'” M forward. scored two goals in the ill: " 3338, .final period. His final goal in the Fl"kndl;ew;9"""" " lath minute proved the winner as N. C. Atkinson A. Mcl-jachern Statistics of S. Shore League Team Itanding: 1 Freetown Royals Albany St. Pats Schurman's Eagles Lot 10 Rangers Wilmot Aces The tie for fourth place has already been broken, lot 16 elim- inating Witmot Aces from the play-offs. Albany and creetown are slated to play their tie- breaking game this week, and the winner will receive the Hor- ace Wright Trophy which goes to the team winning first place in the regular league S J ' The two top teams will then meat the third and fourth teams in the semi-finala for the. league cham- pionahlp. Mr. John Myers who has kept the league's official statistics for the last 11 years . leased the information above and the following statistics: -The k Trophy for the player first in the scoring race was won by Bonnie Hmfatt of Albalu Bi. Pats. Silver Spoons will be p. sentsd to the following 11 up scorers of the league: L-.-at-.o.aS N55595:” N ESE333?1- ..1a 2'-5:3ns: l I 2 3 3 P 12 Bonnie lawatt. Albany ..... 8CCCCCDCi'lCQDCU wjths Swedes rallied for three goals mi themselves. Both team: now have won two and lost two and are tied for fourth place. Canada and Russia. with 40 records. lead the pack and the United States .alao idlo Tuesday. is third with a 3-1 mark. Germany. Poland and Switzer- land follow, each with one win and three defeats. The Finns are last with four losses. Today Canada's Penticton Vs meet Switzcrwnd at Cologne: Sweden takes on Finland at Dues- seldorf: Czechoslovakia is paired against Germany. also at Duca- scldorf, and Russia clashes with the United States at Krefeld. The Canada-Switzerland match starts at I p.m. (2 p.m. EST). Clayton Mill. Freetown Benny Grady. S'Side . Edgar Taylor, Freetow Bob Feller Makes Baseball Million Pitcher Bob Feller recently inked a 835,000.00 contract for the 1955 season with the Cleve- land Indians. By the time ” October rolls around he will have grossed just about 01.000.- ooo.oo from buobsll. All - of which lsn'Hoobadfnrsyonag fellar of 36 years of ago. In The Standard this weak, Sport Editor Andy O'Brien talk in whole story. Get The Staldud - on sale now. osnplolo with ll-mine. ll-page an-land, no pages of comics. Isl cub! one asked this 1 Home In German Rinks . former down to high-sticking and the latter to roughing. '1'hey- have Joined forces in collectively as- timating approximate goal times. and in scoring assists. The double assist is almost unknown hora. Starting lineups are not spec- ified in the progressive informa- tion shects issued but this in no handicap. Considering the pressure. com- munications are good and well- handled. lulliiut seating has been A prob- Canadian reporters and others have. sometimes found themselves in ordinary spectator seats; far from official scorers and tele- phone facilltles. Those filing through the game have worked out a " ' system. d near the scorer with an unofficial interpreter handy to check on de- Six Cilia: Seek 1960 Olympics LAUSANNI-J" (Reuters)-Only six cities had submitted requests to stage the 1900 Olympic games when the official time limit for ap- plications expired today. They were Lauaanne. Roms. Budapest, Brussels, Detroit and Tokyo. For the 1060 winter Olympics ap- plicationa were received at the In- ternational Oiymplc Committee's headquarters here from St. Moritz. Switzerland. Garmiach - Partcnk1r- chen. Germany. and Innsbruck. Austria. The IOC will make its choices in Paris next June. NHL Scorers The leadcrs:-- -n sssssn:ssaF '0 2.325 G Beliveau, Mtl ..s 13 Geoffrion. Mtl. .. Richard. Witt. Olmstead. Mtl. .. Sullivan, Chgo. - Smith. Tor. .. Howe. Dct. .. Harvey. Mtl. .. Moiideil. Mtl. .. Reibel. Dat. , Mines Minister Comments On Imported Fuels OTTAWA. (CP)- Mines Minist- er Prudbam said today Canadians ::;:e:.un ssnssssseak aaxsaasi Ofinwn Team May Go To Russia Soon OTTAWA (C?) - Negotiations are under way to send an Ottawa hockey team to Russia later this month. T. P. (Tommy) German, Ot- tawa aporta promotor. said Tues- day negotlationa are well advan- ced. He was waiting for confir- mation from officials-of the Rus- sian embassy that the trip can be arranged. i The embassy official with whom Gorman has been talking was not availabla Tuesday for com- meat. Gorman said he began discus- sions some weeks ago with Rus- sian embassy officials at the in- vitation of the Russian ambassa- dor to Canada. Dmitri Chuvakhin. Details have yet to be worked out. They will depend on the plans of the Moscow Dynamos, now defending their world hockey chlmnionshlp in Germany. Gor- man said. The exhibition games Would P F ” be against the Dynamos provided the Russian club returns directly from the world championships. Before the Ottawa team could Play in Russia. the trip would have to be approved by the Can- adian Amateur Hockey Associa- tion and the National Hockey League, which has options on most of the amateur players, he said. If the negotiations are success- ful the team would probably leave Canada about March 10 or 22. The players likely would be selected from the Ottawa senior hockey league and clubs in the district. Population 2.7 Per Cent Greater Than Year Ago OTTAWA tCPt-Canada's popu- Iation totalled 15.4:l0.000 Jan. 1. up 2.7 per cent from l5,035.000 the wrreapondlns date last year. the bureau of staistlcs estimated Tuesday. This gain of 404.000 for 1954 is numerically greater than the gains of 85.000 or 2.6 per cent for 1953 315 38.000 or 1.7 per cent for The Jan. 1 figure is an increase of 29.00) over the Dec. 1. 1054, estimate of 15,410,000. The bureau also released final vital statlaticsflguraa for 1953. V: To Receive Milk From Home VERNON. B. C.. (CPi-- Penile- ton Vs, who requested reinforc. ments from the Okanagan Hockey League will be further bolster-e'.i by milk from Okanngan dairies. Directors of a dairy co-ope.-M... in the valley said a case of mm. a day will be flown to the world tournament in Dueaseldo .. T. Everard.Clarke of Vernon, general manag of the co-Dperat. ive. said reports indicated tho vs were losing weight becausc lhcv would not drink unpasteui-ma German milk. The first case of milk will board the same flight for Europe as .i.,.. Middleton of Kclowna Pat-km and Jack Taggart of Ktlnlloops Elks. en route to atrengtlteu the Penticton club. Yugoslav Boxer Bolts To Wesi VIENNA (AP) - A pi-..m....,. Yugoslav boxer bolted his lcam Tuesday to seek asylum in the out the second athlete in less than tun weeks to flee the Iron Curtiiin. He is 22-year-old Hugo Koclilt-r, member of the Esseg team which took part in a tuurnament at Smu- gari. Germany. and stopped herr- en route home. Ten days ago Miroslava Nat-li...1. aka. Czechoslovak ice ballc-i'iii:-i. escaped to the west after ihc uorld ice - skating championships in Vienna. Koehler. middleweight champion of Croatia, said he lived in Vienna until he went to Yugoslavia in 1950 to visit his mother. The Yugosliivs refused him yca isslon to it-ine. 416.825 and the birth rate of 1012 per 1.000 population was seiciitli among the major countries of the world. There were 127,381 deaths. but the death rate of 8.6 per 1,000 pop- ulation was the lowest on record. Previous low was in.1952 with a total of 125.950. and a rate of N7 per 1.000. Total population in I933 was 14,756,000 compared with 14.- 405.000 in 1952. The 1953 death rate was thurl lowest in the world. Only the Neth- erlands with 7.7 and Norway with 8.3 were lower. The rate of natural increase or excess of births over deaths was 19.6 per 1.000 Population. sixth highest in the world. Jon lato To classify can ACCOMMODATE om: ioi"n age pensioner, single room. in City. 335 monthly. Apply HtiX should be slow to convert to im- poi-ted fuels competing with Cana- dian products. He made the suggestion in the Commons while replying to Will- iam Buchanan L-Cape Breton North and Victoria. Mr. Buch- anan askcd whether a recent speech by Dr. G. S. Hume means liquefied gas soon will be arriving in Nova Scotia by ship and. if so. whether it will threaten the prov- ince's coal industry. Mr. Prudham said the depart- ment's director of scientific serv- ices merely had mentioned the possibility of imported liquefied gas becoming availabla. There is no evidence that this development will occur at an early date, Mr. Prudham If and when it did. it would have an impact on the Canadian fuels industry but the degree of impact would depend on the competitive p co. OTTAWA (CF) - The Canadian Legion said today charitable organ- izations should be permitted to con- duct small lotteries and games of chance to raise money for welfare work. But its brief to the Com- mons-Ssnats Committee on Capital and Corporal Punishment and Int- terles opposed national” ' ' . bingoas and swan takes an groundstheytondto fa underiha control of racbsusra and profus- ainnal promoters. FllIZZELl'S This week's spacial- Wash. grease, cleaner and Slmonize - 87.00; A.C. spark plugs 65c Inch. For pick up and delivery of cars. Dial 4637. F0llllM I DATES "II" 1 T0 ,0 WlnNlIDAY- thdeai lltasos loo Iports SERVICE 8'l'ATI0ll l l l l A FEW HOURS A FEW BAGS and YOU can do Insulating yo Flberqlos Requirements 4 r ....a it it lllll Births Ieached a record high of CH Ina vsaa aaouua sonar - .1: YOUR ATTIC IS NOT INSULATED YOU ARE THROWING MONEY OUT THE WINDOW BUT- INSULATION WOOL USE Johns-Mnnvillo Rockwool or the TWO BEST Names in Insulation A Phone Colo:-Lotterwilibolivoryour Phone: Kohsingfon I0 - Summer-slide 2265 Charlottetown 73" A Guardian. LABOR AND A OF POURING the Simple iob of ur own attic. Insulation toyonrnoor. ” 1"-it woo:-'rr1on-.:e i-