PAGE 112w 1111" UHAKLU‘I'I'IL A \1 WN UUAKUIAN JAN UAKY 30, 1937 21$ so.‘ 80. so. b Cullison k l . £8289l€853935§.l232&.zuu.uv.u asaurv s, SALON $0 Permuncnts at 80 min- ute.» eiuli, i5 “Pflfll-‘limflely u. hours Multiply 80 min- uw, by ll and you have the pm, 9f these perinanents. You may have one 0|’ tilt-e lowly Penn's Div"- tilt}, Uvtlllrsdil)‘ and Friday ' ,; or ‘Tuesday and - evenings, starting _ 1-1-1), 1 and ending _, Feb. 27. . - are sure of a rush.” . M“; appointment. ear- l) to avultl disappointment. Ljuiiriiiitecd Curl. nun an _ _ »;‘_-."IO.C>ICXOIC*'£‘.C‘V3£Q'CEQD~ .- - l. l i Q Q wiOiCiiliOllci-DPIQU-Cifibflfiftillfit . . . >1 3 o‘ 3 3 3 8 o Charlottetown Boy [lies ln Hospital y Louis Bowlan. two-year- . o.‘ Mr Jchn J. Bowian, C. r untl Mrs. Bowlan, tiil _\'e~terday after he mantle reached n purse where the ere ‘kept. So far aw could be, cl he .‘.1owcc1 several. The little sister informed the mother that Liouls had the purse and she at. once rushed to where he was. As she entered the room he col peed. He died shortly after entering the Charlottetown H06- pitnl where he was immediately rushed. The pills were being used in the treatment of Mrs. Bowlan who ls under doctor's care. Halifax Guild llas Winning Play (CI. By Guardian's Special Wirc) ‘l’ he Central Guardian CONFEDERATION LIFE INSUR- ‘ZIE-Zl-PEGLS-"l ‘HO-W P. W.C. DANCE-A very cutti- ablc dance was held .11. the Odd- felloiw‘ Hall last night tinder the auspices of the Prince. of Wales College Athletic Association. Chap- eroncs were: Mrs. W.J. MacDonald and Mrs. H. H. Horne. Mimic W05 supplied by Elliott's Orchestra. LEAVE TOR SO.\"S' BEDSIDE- Mr. and Mrs, L. B. received word yesterday of very serious illness of their Lou 1n Ciovia, Que. Ml‘. and Mrs. McMillan leave today to be with their son during his illness. —Mcmbers of the Riding Club held a (llllllCf and dance at the Canadian National |ULICE COFIYIF-At till.‘ POIICC~ l lCourt yesterday a woman appear- led clinrgnd will: sale o.’ .scnt to j‘ *1 for twciily clays and a man chiirjzed with operating l ‘motor vehicle without plows was fined five dollars and cost". or ten day's in Jail. LETTERS l'.\f NT (ERANTEI) ‘held Thtirstiliv, Litters Patent I.’ were granted to the Mnlpeque 0y- -ster Limited, Charlottetown. James E. Wells, Albcrton, who appointed a Commissioner of Deeds a Jiis- tice of the Pence and Notary Puo- ____. MAKE MAGDALICN FLIGHT- One nger and 1200 pounds of mail tue carried by Canadian yesterday. Pilot H. S. Jones at the controls of the nine-passenger "Dragon" made Gulf Islands. Mr. William Dcveau, Grlndstone Island resident who had been in hospital at Piclou was passenger on the first trip. S ' replaced wheels in the Magdalen service yesterday. Considerable snowfall recently at. Grlndstone and Amherst made the change in landing gear necessary. The Gulf of St. Lawrence was pretty well filled with loose drift inc. airmen said. FUNERAL YESTERDAY funeral of the late Peter J. Oliver wnsheld yesterday afternoon. ‘Alter services in st. Paul's Church C011- ductcd by Rev. H. D. Raymond, as- sisted by Rev. G. Carlyle Webster. the body was laid to rest 1n St. Peters Cemwery. The m1 bearer,- were: hfessrs. George S. Ryan, J. Ross bfocEw/cn, John function. 1d, Stanley Mathcson, Herbert H011 and HALIFAX, Jan. Ztl-Chosen I0- mgh: by Atijudleator George de Wnrfnz, noted Belgian author, actor and producer as the best play of four resented at. the Nova Scotia il Drama Festival, the Hali- l Arl< Guild one-act Miss Harlow at Play, will _. m. this province in the Do- :~ ..;i Drama. Festival at Ottawa. llli 11.. -. ’l‘liorzi Atlnmcs 0f HaiifflX irzlctl the (‘ivorge E. Graham the best. women's per- flllfl A. J. Cunningham ' l'1‘f‘(‘1\'f‘(l the trophy do- it. ("11. s. C. Oland of ilie best performance ‘ lllfll. _ wrr- presented by (‘iliilri (lining the two- w»:- t'-" l’. '.'\_l and ‘Pile Widow was p. r..'r\r bv the Kcntville ‘Fheatrc [iris (-wilr|_ lhc only entiw from outslvb llnhliix Eastern Air Mail Service Considered IifilsilLflX, Juli. 29—(CP)—A11 3i!‘- .: m cover all Eastern a was ‘rcccuving careful c011- oiwt Ji-hll at Ottawa. tiic Ha-ifax liouiil of ‘Trade! was 101d in a letter . ; “up”, 110m Transport .' C. I), Howe. Similar 1n- . iiioii was contained in a lttiii iroin Gordon l3. 151107. M- P- llohi. ' ,___ __,,__... _.. DEATHS H _F_ ]llI\'N'I.<\'lCY---A1 the Charlotte- '~ .1 1.li.;;.t:il on January 28, 1937. llt'lll1(‘.&;t‘_\', ago £1 your». .ll» '.\.l‘ll‘ 1tn"\va,rt_lcd yester- iuliiirlrom A. A. 116M105- ii‘ John Spencer. The mourners were Messrs. Alexander Brown, Charles Beers, Frank Laffertv, Horace Brown. Ira Brown, Gordon Laffer- ty, George Beers. Arthur Burns. Peter McCarron. In the funeral pro- cession were a number of incn from the rnilwmv, former fellow associates of the deceased. -_-_____.____ Personals Miss Thelma Benton, Liuiit-liinir. and Mrs. Percy hlvunnrild. of Churchill. ivrrc flllltlllg the visitors to the city ypstertiny. Mr. Harry James loft yesterday on a business trip to Halifax Ho was accompanied by his s1 ', Mrs". if. D. Bldcii who wn< return- ing l0 Liverpool. N.S. lie - elect ‘ lfiiloors MONCTOPJ. Jan. gob-ls‘. ll. Copp, M. L, A, Port Elgin was rc-vlt-ct- cd president o1‘ the New Brunswick Fox Breeders‘ As atioii at thc annual meeting 1 . In his pro idi-niizil report. Mr. Copp declared the fox industry WIIS 1n a healthy condition and would continue to expand. The silver fox pelt is still the mot popular witn the fur dealers and will continue to be. he said. Other speakers were A. S. Rob- ertson, Charlottetown, on "proc- tlcal ranch management," nnd E. M, Taylor, Frcdcrhton, vicc- prcsidcnt, and Mr. Taylor. secre- tary-trcmsurer, 1211.1 the fblltmiiig directors: P. W. Cnlthvcll, Iilor- cnccvillc; Dr. A. B. 'l‘e;ikies, bus- scx; R. A. Snowball. Clizwliaiii; v.0 .1 . whit-III —-.i\t Snmmerside, Janu- nrv ‘JD, 10:77, Frederick Wright, i-gi-i :1 _‘>I'.ll.'§. Funeral Monday. ~ .‘ll‘\l['(‘ at 2 pm, at the l n1 William Barwiv. f0.‘- , lijc service at. St. hlarvs 7 m 2.10. Interment at St. lllt s Cemetery. t . Card o. Thanks Mrs. Allan Cumming, and fam- fly wish to thank their neighbors 1nd friend; for kindness shown them in their recent sad bereave- mcnl, and also those who mil mrds and letters o! iiympatllilyh rind glmim)’. i. ‘JUN’, not a Alex Jclin on, Scotch Settlement B. A. Muraigv, E. M. 'f‘.i_\.ur, Fred- ericton: S. S. Stillivini, Pctitcodiac; Dr. B. F. Rondo. Moiicton, and ltoy Bcckwith, Salisbury. A STIFF BRUSH It is svfse to keep a small stiff brush in the 1auntiry' to brush out the dirt that collects 1.1 sonnys pookcts before his suits go il1'0 the tuib. It will make the articles easier to wash as the dirt clings to the material wivn it is wet. Casual coats for travel or cruise wcar arc loose. but not t:o swagger, and have big patch posktta A bcigc model is trimmed with snowy lynx I and a black and while tweed ll finished with snow leopard. __Weak, Tired, Nervous Women r Nourislied Back to Health _ Many women tired as they want to bed, and ilnlies 110cm a drag and a burden. V.“ become nervous, cross and irritnlilo, “wit; """' "i". "m! everything in life looks tlnrli nrnl wake up in tlio mornizi fat-ling mi tho alriip e house iolil liurdcii. “Lgdnlfzgexilflfl- flee how noon you will feel the McMillan. . the } SO11 ‘ RIDING CLUB HOLDS DINNER , Charlottetown ‘ Hotel lost night. The function, \\'lllL‘ll was vt-r (lljilj-Cbll‘. was at-i tczldctl by sen-ml out of town guests. liquor. ' The case was heard and ticljourn- . led until Monday A vugriint was‘ ~At a l11(!(‘l1l1_' of tlic Government ‘ Airways to the Magdalen Islands‘ two flights to the . on the plane nerd . -—-Thc»‘v' lllBSTER innit; iiiuimt: unis, 1N iucioiiciit. I Island visited By Boat i , “Scouting” A n d ‘ B u y i n g Illegally l Caught Lobsters. j (GP. by Guardian's élpeeial Wirel BUCTOUCHE, N. B., Jan. 29", The Royal Commission investigat- ing illegal fishing of lobsters and .sir.clts heard today that Edmund ltfclansoii, mentioned frequently and prominently in testimony, left this week for a "vacation" in the l Unitcd States with his wife. father and mcihci". Mcfnnlon allcgctlly . hzid a boat. “scoutlng" and buying- illeizally caught lobsters last year. 'l‘cstimony regarding his depart- ure was given by Acquila Barthe, one of three \\'l'.1l\‘>.\‘t‘$ called be- fore the inquiry adjourned until l tomorrow. Bnithc was a crew member of the boat TlTJYCSEI, alleg- l cdly owned by BIHIUFOH. ‘ Melanvon had told him "he had‘ ,not been served with any papers ; and was free to go," said the wit- ness. The "vacation" site 1n the l.‘ United SlJlCS had not been mczi- tioiicd. he remarked. ltfclansou had said lie would be back for the spring lobster fishing. Barlhc testified he last saw Mel- ‘, ?1ltSI0l1-\\'f1(‘n th latter and his .‘ ’ _ ‘ a ier Philip Melaison, delivcied a; sggglififcdnflfhriujlibeNgfwim j smells last hfonday to the local Peace. A. and R. Iloggie Co., Ltd., where the witness is em- Dloycd. During his tcn years in this employment no illegally caught .sinc1t~i had been accepted, the wit- ness said. l He had made four trips on Mel- ansoirs boat. to Prince Edward Is- fiind, on 4.1.10 occasion taking $400 to Iltlward Mooney, one of MQ-Ign. son's biivrrs at West Point. The money had been handed to him by i l Mir‘. M81111 on. ; Bin-tho said he had quit his jobi ,oii the boat. because it was tool , dangerous. "I had no time to spend l in Jail." he added. "l- had lots of} l other work to d0." The wiuiess denied he had been ; on the lobster boat "as a. man the t? 2 8 a. E v f) q s ‘ advanced to Mel- iliifiil bl’ inc Loggia Compnnyz The 111M103’ rliven t0 him shortly tho company's man. home near the Mel- zikcrs visitctl a ansonls. The Commissioner said he would l have to he convinced lint Melan- Mill did not. olfcr Barihc employ,‘- inent boratbic the former wanted to sell lobiltcrs to the Loggic Com_ puny. Another ivitncss, Leo LcBionc, of Si- Aime. said that as far as he knew fi-licrmeii employed by him 11nd not pozichctl lobsters last year, Hc iirid tricd to buy lobsters in ti“. fall hut could fincl no one who 11nd iliil’ i0 sell. 11c admittcd having bfliiirhl. lob irrs illegally in i931. Martin Cassie was then called, He said he had had one drink and was det-larrtl by 1hr Commissioner , ln hr unlit. to trslifyn- "If 1 m“; l .\'ou cave this man liquor I can as- l 5"" W" you will irlzrct it," the , Commissioner told LeBlaric. Acquiln. Gallant said he hgd wort-rod for 0'10 but did not know" if lobsters he illcgzilly critight. I-ifriiiii MAY (CriiI-iiuivd IP01; page h bought were proclalmctl the march nf Hlfifiiriiii into the HhlllPlflHd, lllPFFlJy m1: iiig a dead letter of tlic Local-no Security Pact, over-the protests of Frnnrr. ‘ 'l'ii:it his pronouncement. tomor- ‘lrow would be of great importance ‘ to the world was slut-n llilltw . lo the llltllOll mid i indicated ll\‘ elaborate advzmcc pre- lpnrations. That it would (10:11 with lcoloniov was the expectation of many. Is Gcncml Topic In beer cellars, in Workshop; and in homes tonight thcic were con- fident; predictions the Fuehrer gwould procfaim that Germany ag- lain ha» bneoino n colonial power. or nt -L 1's visibly on the road to be: u one. The wt. d Angola. figured often in the Ilofbrnu parlors although tifficials have ciciiied reports Ger- many \'.'0;.lt1 lacs: or acquire the African ('0ll)l1_V, lPortugal also de- iiied officially totlny the colony would go to Germany). Military officer-s, looking back over thc four-year Nazi reign, de- bated whether to volunteer for colonial rervlce-conjurliig visions of service in the tropics counting double time toward promotion and furlough; every two years to the mother country, The German people. who have followed for four years the mous- tnchcd bachelor-Chancellor. to- night were in something akin to holiday mood-randy to chccr their commander cvcn lf he do- ciclci. the time has not yet come for Germany to satisfy demands. colonial Will Discuss Foreign Policy That foreign policy would com- prise a great. inrllon of the lend- er's three-ho".- addrc s, most. ob- servers lock for granted. It was pointed out thi Moscow trial of Knrl Radck and his colleagues who confessed seeking German-Jamm- Hoive told the capital of legal claims being pressed on of some claim yet and corporation would be bill. This corporation would pro- scrvo the priority rights of the Do- minion and lties which Government and railway serve’ without remuneration. to Eden's recent suggcztlon tlnued world peace rests with Ger- many. ler was expected to say little. To both France Puehrer was expected aimurances of lauds llrtistic Merits 0f Play The St. John. N. B. Daily Citizen carries the f0 lowing interesting comment by J. B. Mcflurrlgle, dra- mutic critic, on Mr. Harry Floaters one-act play "Nooiumo" which won the cup for the Charlottetown play- ers in the Canadian Regional Drama festival this week: "The judges could not have chose); better, we think. Mr. Foster's pin,‘- was a remarkable achievement in more ways than one. In the first place the Maritinies have not, to our knowledge produced a. dramatist of his promise. The lines of "Noc- turne" fairly sing, and while we agree with M. do Warfaz about cer- tain repetitions in the script, we were immediately taken and held during its entire time by this little drama. To us, “NOOitll‘ll8" shows the influence of the present Irish school of writers. This play might have been produced by the men who write for The Gate in Dubln. Mr. Foster is wise to be swayed by these people, the vitality of the Irish school and interesting de- cadence of Macterltnck make a telling combination. "The setting of this play showed the author's good taste and sense of the theatre, The heavy Gothic church portal with its trefoiled window above immediately took the audience's eye, this with the dull grey drapes which enclosed the reel. of the stage centre put everyone m the mood for what was to follow. The p1iiy's length was right, and the performers adequate with one or two exceptions. Mr. Foster's own splendid entinclation of the Sacris- Lam's lines was a joy, and we were gratified that M. ticularfy mentioned this." Seeks Support F0 r P o tato lllcohol Project i FREDERICTON, Jan. 29-—At a meeting of the provincial govern- ment, Guy G. Porter, Perth, made a presentation in ‘support of a potato alcohol project for New Brunswick. No announcement was made by Premier Dysart following tho meeting. Mr. Porter cited seven reasons why the industry should be adopt- ed as part of the agricultural pol- icy in this province. They are as follows: “l. It would create a. consump- tive dcmand for agricultural pro- duct: at a price that would pay the farmer a profit. "2. It would keep money circul- ating among the farmers in our own country instead of all being sent otit of the country to pay for ‘imported motor fuel. The residue stock food is nccd to build up a big livestock in- dustry in this province, one that will furnish regular weekly ex- flog: shipments to the British mar- 6 . “4. _By manufacturing the cull and low grade potatoes into alcohol for motor fuel, the sum of $700,000 to $800,000 would be salvaged from that. portion of the potato crop which up to date has had no com- mercial value. "5. By pnynig farmers 50 cents per barrel for their off-grade stock, do Warfaz par-‘ STRIKERS AWAIT llEVElilPMl-INTS 0F IIDNFERENUE ,“Sit-Down” Non-Un- ‘ ion Workers Camp In Governor Mur- phy’s Office. DETROIT. Jan. 29——(AP) —Gov- eriior Prank Murphy, asserting his intentbn to expose whoever 1n- splres “activities designed to make trouble" in General Motors Auto- motive strikes, was confronted by a “sit-clown" demonstration of 25 non- union Auto Plant workers in his of- fioe at Ilansing today. After announcing to the group ‘he would not use troops to evict striking membens cf the United Auto- mobile Workers of America from Fisher Body Plant at Flint. Mich, Murphy said his office doors would be unlocked so the demonstrators could come and go at will. The group settled in an ante-room to await developments the Governor said might be forthcoming in n “very important’ conference under way at Washington. George Gilbert, spokesman for the demonstrators. said they might decide to occupy the Governor's of- Jioe indefinitely. A second group of 46 automotive workers arrived two hours later to lend "moral support’ to the early comets. Albert Johnson of Detroit. who said 1t represented 65,000 non-striking workmen of all Gen- eral Motors Piarits in Mi0hi8w 0111i‘ aide of Flint, presented a petltfon asking lvfurphy for a. referendum to determine what percentage of corporation employees favored the es. The Governor told them a. formal showing that a majority of Gen- em! Motors’ employees favored I vote on the strike would be “a very impressive argument in favor" of the referendum. He said a decision might not now be necessary in view of anticipated developments. General Motors announced‘ the closing of its assembly plant at Los Angeles which supplied Buicks. Pontiac and Oldsmobile; to West Coast dealers. because of lack of materials. At Flint, Harlow H. Curtice. Buick Company President. said approximately 2,000 workers will be called book to work Mon- day in tsiliiin departments of the plant there. FLOOD WATERS ..‘E‘L“H“.‘E‘_*_.".‘Z“_‘. P?“ . 1)____ the highlands. And the real work is still ahead. A large majority (of the deaths) were the result of cold and exposure." Paducnh, Ky, farther south. looked for its greatest crisis yet as the crest tieared there. -Cair0, Il1.. situated at the con- fluence of the Ohio and the Missi- ssippLstood fast behind a sandbag- topped bulwark. Most of its in- hablfanLs long since had fled. The rest, hardy rlvcrinen for the most Non would subuantially reduce the cost of production on the top grade and place New Brunswick in a very strong position in the potato trade of Canada. "6. Tlirotigh the industrial use "T agricultural products rather than through a policy oi‘ restricted production, we shall go a. long way towards relieving unemployment which-generally begins back on the fnrm. “7. We throw away enough ppm- every year to pay for this in. . m. NERTcXbFAL _____ _ “(Continued from page 1) In cffcct the new arrangement will wipe out the capital stock shown in the railways balance nliect from the Grand Trunk Rall- way and the Canadian Northern Railway which were merged in the Canadian National. It had not been possible, Mr. House, to proceed of the railways structure sooner because with a revision behalf of shareholders in ind old Cirnud Trunk Railway. Tlic Privy Council lincl rcccntly (dimmed the case as, against. the Government and the rnllivriy but gavcthe plain- tlffs n. right to sue the railway for damages, whatever the right. was worth. To guard against any possibility being allowed preserve the interests! as pres- ently constituted a security trust set up by the would hold the secur- claims the Dominion was to surrender. would be Government officials who would Directors amplify Gf‘1111iif1Y'-' duty to the world as Hitler secs 1t—compared to par- liament that the answer to con- But of Premier Leon Blum. lilt- and Britain the to renew peaceful intentions. including possibility an offer of a guarantee of Belgian neutrality. can nld to overthrow the soviet Nazi circles said tonight Hitler's regime would furnish the peg for whole policy now ls one of elim- reiteration of Hitler's antl-Com- 111M318 B" Doisiblul-lefl 0f MONO“ niui-ist creed. with Western Europe so that he lfe ivns exp." trd by many to re- may have a free hand in the east iri~l f‘ "n" v Eden that l —1l nny trouble should develop "-011, p do hii; i. . . ‘. ltary growth Ls wrong, mll- , ivltli Russia and tol Czechoslovakia. r11 rough dispute over l l 1 l . part, faced with courage a predict- ed crest of 62 feet-against a 60- fool: wall to which three feet of handbag filling had been added. Village lnumlatrd Down below Cairo and on to Memphis-regarded safe itself in any eventuality because of its hilly situation-many villages and count- less farms lay under the slow in- undation of the Mississippi. , ‘The 31.000.000.001? levee system built after the. disaster of 1927 was on trial as never before. The United States Government. which already 11nd instructed the army command to have everything in readiness to evacuate the Mis- sissippi lowlands for 1,000 miles up and down, if need arose, marshal- lcd new relief and rehabilitation foices. While in the Ohio Valley more than 30,000 works progress admin- istration workers were helping in the mopping up operations, sanita- tion units got busy from Wheeling, W. Va. to Owensboro, Ky. Number of portions evacuated on the Ohio and Mississippi ran into the HIICOUHUOQ thousands; refug- ccs streamed from the Mississippi lowlands as coast guard cutter: bobbed up nnd doiwn tho river spotting levee weak spots. Memphl . looking for at least 50,000 flood victims, had a grent problem of fighting disease among them. Physicians and nurses gave fnnoculatiom without halt; many of them had not slept for hours. In the 200 miles between Mem- phis and Cairo, whole villages were imder water. Camp fires blazed on snow-topped levees. CANADA SEEKS _.,_f§?'!f_l_'1l£°§j'9'!\. lraitfc officials said. In the 1928 calendar your. exports of Canadian seed potatoes to the Repuilc were 333,491 bushels valued at $414,202. Table potato exports. were 000 bush- els valued at $900. In 1935 seed and table potatoes were not divided in Dominion Bureau of Statistics flg- ures. but the total of all potatoes was 322.375 bushels at $304,445. The total for 1934 was 373,668 bushels 3. at $346.61 "Negotiations are still proceed- ing". Mr. Roars said. "for the con- clusion of an arrangement which will remove Canadian products from liability to the Cuban maxi- mum tariff." .___.__._.___.__ A small toque of bright red felt crowned with a huge fox head form a colorful ormtriist with t" is to gleaming silver of l‘- of British that the King has intimated he vdll continue the award of an an- nual gold Charlottetown handed to their 7w...- =- lianm Auxiliary ‘l Tollanadiantagion holds g Mrs. J. A. MaoKenzte was rc- elected president of the b86165 ’ Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion. B1131... at the annual meeting last night. ’ An increased members‘ 1p and nn improved financial condition iwere reported to the meeting b)’ l retiring secretary Mrs. J.J. Leiglil- l izer in a review of the year's work. ‘ Othre ofllcers elected were! vice-president, Mrs. A. B. Cosh: , 2nd vice-President, Mrs. J.C. Hous- ton: secretary, Mrs. L. '1". Lowther; i treasurer, Mrs. J. J. Iieiahtizer: ex- ,‘ ccutive, Mrs. o. Elmer Ritchie. re- ; elected, Mrs. J. P. Hllllon, re-elect- , ed, Mrs. N. J. MacDonald, Mrs. T. l E. McNutt, Mrs. ‘Prank Fraser, and ‘ Mrs. A. R. Cooper. Reports were presented to the | meeting by the president. Mrs. J.A. MacKenzie and the retiring treas- urer, Mrs. J. S. Walker. ~ ,_-_a Down The Alleys Y. M. C. A. ALLEYS C. N. R. Bowling mum: The Abbfeo led the four team bowling classic with a total pin- fall of 2357, with the Hawks and Cubs tled for runner-up position with 227i. Ladies high three was rolled by Miss Jean Mclcod, 418. Mr. MacDonald had high three mid high single for men with a total score 0t 593. Abblca: J. H. Howatt 161 175 125 Chas. Toombs 172 147 129 Sam Hood 101 188 188 Grace Blenkhorn 133 132 115 B. Earle MacDonald 178 107 206 Total~2357 745 749 863 Cubs: Geo. Fmmpton 189 163 206 Harold Howatt 153 143 149 E. R. Bovyer 134 144 188 Kay McRae 153 130 106 Em Cameron 166 145 192 Tota1-2271 775 725 771 Rovers: ,1‘ A. Scott 133 162 124 C. Hodgson 145 167 188 J. F. Gordon 114 179 1M Jean McLean 177 142 107 N. Nicholson 148 139 186 Total--2l93 717 785 887 Hawks: C. J. McLean 150 125 183 .- HRJTY Hyde 127 102 171 M. McDonald 191 208 194 M. McConnell 82 111, 116 Tom Verge 164 146 121 Tota1--2221 714 772 785 HOLY NAME BOWLING BIG FOUR LEAGUE Prince Grocery Meeting‘ 1st‘ Add-iii? (Continued from page 7) l -_-------»- -~_- ~_--_- -- . been B6 years of age had he lived until last Monday. Geers was ~ known as "the Silent Mart from Tennessee." He had some wonder- fui knack whereby without appar- ent effort his horses could finish ike demons. It was perhapl due to the way he trained them, as he always taught them to finish fast. Geers’ method was in direct con- trast wlth that of "the Wizard of the SulkW-Mymn McI-lenry-who was literally alive and all over his horse, even to half. way out on the sulky shaft finishing ii. real tight contest. Vlo Fleming, noted Canadian rcinsman and driver of Calumet Evelyn, holder of the world's reo- ord for fastest performer at both gains-Lilli 1-4 pacing and 1.59 1-2 trotting-is recuperating in Florida from the effects of an operation which he recently underwent. Vic will have a strong stable out. this season which will include Calumet Evelyn and other stars of last year. According to the Dominion Bur- eau of Statistics the production of horse-drawn vehicles in Canada is valued at over a million dollars a year. This may seem surprlslngln view of the number of automobiles now used. but the horse lover still demands rulkies and light rigs for trotting races and horse shows. Business still calls for delivery wagons of certain types, while the farmer and lumbennan of neces- sity use slelghs and heavy wagons Most of the top trainers who race on the Grand Circuit have gone South either to Florida, Geor- gia or Pinehurst, N. C. The only one of note that still sticks to the cold frozen north is Walter Cox, who some years ago made the statement that any horse trainer who could not train a stable of horses in Labrador and have them ready to race at the start of the Grand Circuit, was not flt for his profes- sion. Cox does not seem to be get- ting very far with his northern trained charges and the boys that are capping the big money in the colt stakes are those who winter in the sunny South, so they must. be right, as results are what count. Hirsch Jacobs has been America's leading trainer of runners for the last three years. He will be 33 years old {next April and is called the “Miracle Man" by racing fol- lowers because he Jumped from the Job of training homing pigeons to the foremost trnincr of thorough- breds in America in six years. Jac- obs is extremely modest and is not impressed with his remarkable per- formances and record on the race tracks. “It 1s all no silhplo I do not sec why anybody makes a fuss about it." he said as he took a few min- utes of! his job of directing the ac- R. Bradley 274 223 206 .A. Burke ‘.119 281 229 J. Cameron 306 242 298 J. Clow 300 211 192 C. Praught 196 218 220 Tota1-3590. om Timer! J. Hughes 191 196 212 V. Coyle 197 206 258 R. Duncan 215 254 314 J. D. Webster 173 220 249 J. A. Bentley 2'71 181 203 'I‘ota1-3340. High single, Robert Duncan 314. High three, James Cameron 841. COMNIERCIAL LEAGUE tlvities of forty race horses. “Peo- ple have asked mc my sccrcl; of training. There is no secret, it is merely common scnsc. I baby a horse as I would a child. I do not overwork him. I dish out the pro. per food for him and do not try to rush him for =—*—- ee1§1><>r <4 trials: but above all I am kindanr gentle to my horses and try u; “n. darstand them. Anyone can trap, horses. There is no secrecy o, tricks necessary. Let a horse up his time and he will repay you b5 being fit and fast when you m, him out on the race track." Jacobs ls a. little sandy balm man who holds the world's recorq for having saddled more winnersin one year than any other racing man, yet lie has never won a bet. He has never made a bet on g horse race in his life and never expects t0. He ‘does not like to bother with the‘ development of two-year-olds-"mkea too much tune," he says. "I would rather take other horsu and improve on them; but forget that stuff, there ls nothing to it." Commenting on the above, it is the writer's opinion that Mr. Jac- obs has put his finger on the catisc of a great many thoroughbred trainers‘ troubles. namely, fast early morning trials. When I first start. cd out in athletics I did my train- ing in the early morning between half past six and hall’ past seven, and 1n a short time I was indif- fercnt to track work, which is a sign of staleness. I recognized the trouble and with the permission of my boss managed to shift to the afternoon, getting a. half-hour ex- tra at tea time, evenings I worked in the drug store. My improve- ment was rapid and I never over trained. It is a fact that vitality 1s low 1n the early morning and the practice of tralninghorses sev- erely on an nlmost empty stomach will very quickly thin them down and train them backwards instead of forwards. Years ago it was the custom to train pugllists by getting them up very early in the morningand giv- ing them many miles of road WOfk. Brainy chaps like Tunney and Dempsey changed all that. Tun- ney made it a. practice to sleep as late as he could in the morning- nine o'clock if it could be done. Then after a little light exe '0. have breakfast and in a couple o! Ihours do some training. But his principal training was done in the afternoons when the body hail reached its maximum of vilnfltv. Training horses calls for n d1.’- ferent procedure as they l1.l\(‘ n. be worked in the c/pen 8lld1i\\'i.‘tli(l take too much out of them, pin- tlcularly harness horses who have to go a numlber of heats, to ivork them on hot afternoons. There- fore the usual method is to teed at flvo or six o'clock and start jog- ging about six or mven and haw all the work done and over by ten or eleven o'clock. been tried ‘with good succcrrinw I IROUND BY ROUND/ I ._.__. Jacobs‘ insistence on kindness and "babying" his charges i‘:- 1100f! common sense, because a horse is jun: as responsive to that kind of treatment its a man 0r a. woman. Tempermental horses have been known to develop into champions because of a. good caretaker who knew Just how to keep their ner- vous mechanism from boiling over. Other stunts such as companion- ship of a dog or even a. goat have Eagles R. ‘Bowes 255 156 212 G. Giilis 235 233 232 G. McMahon 199 213 199 E. Vessey 216 185 180 . u. Fisher 151 22a 21s ._-..-.-‘9°“-‘I5‘“f‘_*.’.'f'fi.ifliflLse. T°m1"3122' obeyed commands from his corner to kept moving. They clinched N” "m" tlvxvllgemin mldlningitals hJge fralled to B. Fletcher 11o 201 22s ° m" W 1° l "Md- L‘ . 7 19 Louis caught Pastor with a right J_ 5323:?“ 12g; g0? 23g uppercut as Bob rushed in. Pastor F‘ Mccnwm, 197 124 13g then whalled Joe's body with both K_ Acorn 251 173 233 hands after Joe backed into the Tot ;_3960_ ropes. Louis took a harchrlght. to 1.11;, 51,181,,’ p“ 3on5. 255_ the Jaw and was backed into a High ma,’ a (mp5 70a dormer laftgr bmlsirling gwowattelitipts react o 's aw. o." r siow- L/tplgs gmvuug od more aggressiveness as Louis Kelly and Mclnnls Trophy shifted to the body. Louis dug his right to the ribs as Pastor itgiitn Freeze Outs rusted the Bomber with both hands. Pastor’: round. I. liable 15s II Q E. Dougan 145 148 120 ROUND SEVEN A. sherry 208 226 244 ' M. Mcllellan I13 137 127 Louis moved more quickly, try- T0l-I1—3014- ing to connect. but was wild with a loft hook and missed a vicious Style Marla right IIPDercut by inches. Joe e w» w» m w ilféiiiiii 232321123 .'}.'°.'.'."2.l'.‘§ R" 5mm“ 145 33 153 with his head down Pastor took I D. MBOKIEIIZIO 112 16'! 111 “an; 1e“ w th f ' "A, b0 d E- °°"“°"' 113 137 13° in; off the lfisfiafjlta iiliadeulilo; Tbtci-ddfll. -< ’ - m '.°°."..‘."°i’f.'l. fn°“.‘i.ll"ii’..illi°°l.lf Mm“ "°°' ‘m’ Sh?“ “m lad his back pedalling tactics only onday night at 7oc1ock, Indian, m rush in and sub Lou's about Wimplea vs Tip Tops. . Commercial League 7 o'clock. the. waist" B” back‘? “my mm‘ Maritime Electric vs Laundry grggetgeéma ‘:2: ‘éelgvmglilemgg’; cnnkeu'_____________ Wore I. completely bifflc expres- MEDAL FOR ARCHITECTURE slon. Round even. (By The Canadian Pren) NOON-The Royal Irwtltuto Architects announces modal for nchitocture. .__..____...__ Eastern Guardian __._... , JBUBSGMPTIONB to Guardian may be RGMLAIOIIII Hume, one '47. oi_-_i_eft ut H. J. Matron‘; c 0d being floored by i vicious right hand which glanced off his temple cZng around like a rubber bail. Louis, still alow and obviously be- dlrrcilon o.’ Psstofs chin but miss- opponent too elusive a: led thin Pastor hooked with his left. Th! Bomber shot both hands to the head but again Pastor was promPl to continued to chase his opponent around the ring until the bell. Louis’ round. ROUND NINE They mixed briefly in inidring after one complete circle or the track. Pastor sttuig Joe with a left to the head and deflected the negrds hard counter punch. The crowd Jeered ns Joe landed both hands to the head without damna- ing effect. Pastor slipped and grab- bed Joe's knees to keep from drop- ping to tho floor as they went into a clinch. LOuls hooked hard to the head with his left but found his he ll- hmpted to follow up. Blood tflck- from Joe's nose nfwr get out of range. Louis‘ round ROUND TEN They shook hands 1n midi-ina- Joe was short with a. left lead. Pastor back then swung before clinching. Pnrtor hard right to the head and was jolted by the Bomber’; left counter punch. Louis half swung Part0? around 1n a. clinch. Pastor recoil- cd from a hard right and almost slipped to the floor as he side- stepped rapidly out of range. Bob pednlled furiously and both hands to the body shot a swung a hard right to the Milk BOUND EIGHT Stlfllng to his defensive tactics Pastor continued to circle the te clouter. Bob barely escap- la he backed into the ropes. They exchanged left: to the body. Iiouls jabbcd Pastor with a swift left to tbe chin but Bob was soon boun- wlltleled, pumped hi; left in the ‘ - I-"nncc ted. and they slugged furiously for l few leoonds had a slight eye. Bob charged Joe twice, punch- ing to the body and stung 1.01115 with a and got inside Louis’ punches and connected to the body Just below in mlt-lntt. Pastor cut over hi: right short left, Pastor balked - final bell. Pastor's round. ._____________ ‘lb brighten a simple black frock. wear a smart little slip-over blouse. One outstanding model in a blouse waistcoat o; white and sliver lame fastened with frogs made of rhino» stones