Daily Times-Gazette, 30 Apr 1951, p. 12

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A 0 -------- ---------- PAGE TWELVE THE DAILY T MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1951 IMES-GAZETTE EAST YORK XI WINS HERE OVER OSHAWA CITY East York came from behind to defeat Oshawa by a score of 3-1 in the opening game of the Major League season at Alexandra Park on Saturday afternoon. Oshawa, who had a 1-0 lead at half-time, threw the game and the points away by not utilizing their reserves; to ask eleven men to chase after a mud-encrusted soccer ball on a waterlogged field, was asking for trouble and it told its own story when East York came through strongly in the second half to score on three occasions with- out a reply from the locals. Perhaps it is unfair to criticize a team which had to play under con- ditions such as prevailed at Alex- andra Park on Saturday, but mud or no mud the Oshawa forward line's display in front of goal was pathetic to say the least. Jock Sutherland was the out- standing player of the afternoon. His anticipation of the ball was un- canny and on the three occasions that it did get past him he had no chance of stopping it. Glentoran Wins Over Ballymena Irish Cup Final Belfast, April 30 -- (Reuters) -- Glentoran, Irish League Champions, completed the "double" when they defeated Ballymena United 3-1 in the final of the Irish Cup on Satur- day. Even allowing for the fact that Ballymena was handicapped by losing Barr, their left-back who was carried off the field in the 15th minute with a torn ligament, Glen- toran always had the measure of their opponents and should have won more comfortably. Glentoran opened the score in the eighth minute when Rogers, the Ballymena goalkeeper, dropped a long lob from Dunlop and Williamson touched the ball into the net. Ballymena had only one possible scoring chance in the first half when Morrison from a few yards out shot over the bar with only Moore to beat. In the second minute, Hughes put Glentoran two up and then in the 61st minute Currie in a breakaway reduced the lead. Six minutes from | the end Hughes scored Glentoran's | third. FOR OUTDOOR ~ Conservation CORNER SPORTSMEN WILL EXPAND ACTIVITIES Toronto--Expansion of activities in protecting the Province's re- newable natural resources will be continued by the Ontario Depart- ment of Lands and Forests during the 1951-2 fiscal year which com- menced April 1, Harold R. Scott, Minister, said today in announcing some of his organization's plans for the forthcoming twelve-month period. High on the list are additional safeguards for the forests which are considered by the Department to be basic to the welfare of all the other renewable resources of | land, water, fish and wildlife. Research, fisheries and wildlife programs, which include many long-term projects previously start- ed, will be stepped up while the large-scale forest resources inven- tory, now moving into its final stages, will include much aerial photography and map-making. In the field of forest protection an important project will be the extension of the training scheme whereby men from woods opera- tions such as pulp and lumbering industries, commercial tourist oper- ators, railways, municipalities and 80 on are given training in forest fire prevention and actual suppres- sion. Last year 595 men were given instruction and this season it is proposed to increase that number. A revision is planned to the De- partment's weather recording sys- tem in co-operation with the Dominion Weather Bureau. Fire control officers believe this will result in an improved fire weather forecasting system by districts. An analysis of weather conditions that prevailed this past winter is now being made by which the Depart- ment will arrive at a probable hazard rating for the spring months ahead and be able to con- centrate on areas where high. haz- ard is indicated. More Fire Protection The fire detection system, both aircraft and lookout towers, will be more extensive than in 1950 as will the Province's short-wave radio network through the addition of new stations; the increasing of power of existing stations and the installation of vehicle radio sets. Helicopters will be further util- ized on exeprimental basis where needed in forest fire fighting. Experiments will also be continued with "water-bombing of fires from the air using Beaver aircraft. A loudspeaker attachment to be used on aircraft will enable the pilot or other officer to speak directly to ground crews at fires or warn woods travellers of fire hazards. This is also in the test stage. Complete field tests will be car- ried out during the summer on the new-type tank pumper truck de- veloped by the Department as well as a fire plow imported from the United States for trial purposes, Forest protection supervisors in each district are intensifying for- est fire prevention work by arrang- ing meetings with all persons in their areas including school chil~ dren and this work will be con- tinued, whenever possible, through- out the year. In line with the Department's policy of soliciting the aid of youths in conservation the Junior Ranger Program will be enlarged. A total of 350 high school students between 17 and 19 years of age will be engaged, with pay and board, in camps set up throughout the Province. This work will in- clude cutting logs for construction purposes, clearing rails, making roads, delevoping and improving public camp sites, cutting and erecting telephone poles for the Department's lines, assisting in ranger patrol work and general maintenance. Demonstrations of fire fighting and the use of various equipment will be made and the young men instructed in their use. Lectures will be given by Department spe- clalists on other phases of its work. More Help for Tourists Improvements will continue in Ontario's Provincial parks as an ald to tourists, At Ipperwash a new bath house is to be completed and opened this spring while a new road and bridge are being built to relieve traffic congestion. En- largement will be made of the existing parking area. New gates will be . finished at the entrance to Algonquin Park, and at Rondeau Park a new sub- division has been laid out for a Campsite. Other work of this na- ture has included the reserving of areas for public purposes along the J! £4 Trans-Canada Highway north of | Parry Sound. Surveys work will involve the aerial photographing of approxi- mately five thousand square miles in the Kenora District and the preparation of maps for the For- est Resources Inventory. In con- nection with the forest inventory a total of sixty university students and twelve graduate foresters will be required for the field work crews during the coming year. Approximately thirty thqusand prints of aerial photographs will be made for the establishment of a library of aerial photographs of various parts of the Province. Another large task will be the surveying of about four hundred summer resort locations applied for by tourists in different parts of Ontario. Retracement surveys will be undertaken on the boundaries of certain townships in the Thunder Bay, Algoma, and Parry Sound Districts and in the County of Hastings. Work will go forward on the 9th Base Line in the Kenora District to furnish control for mapping by aerial photography. The fisheries program will centre around the broad complex fields of fisheries management, fish culture work and pollution abatement. More Studies Planned Stuales planned include one on the life history and migration of yellow pike-perch in Georgian Bay. Another will be made of maskin- onge and associated species in the Trent Watershed and a third on bass harvesting, growth and popu- lation studies of small-mouthed black bass in heavily populated lakes in southern Ontario. Further studies projected include one to determine the value of hatchery plantings of lake, speckled and brown trout; and another on the survival of hatchery-reared whitefish fry, planted in the waters of eastern Lake Ontario, A study to ascertain the survival rate of lake trout fingerlings and yearlings in waters along the north shore of Lake Superior will proceed in co- operation with the monthly reports from commercial fishermen. Pollution investigations will be carried on throughout the Province to measure the effects of domestic and industrial wastes on fisheries and to indicate corrective measures which may be required. Another will be made of a parasite that affects whitefish. More Eel Control Wanted Other work planned in connec- tion with fisheries includes sea lamprey control through the re- moval of spawning adults; a bi- ological survey of Rondeau. Bay, Lake Erie and the removal of coarse fish from southern Ontario lakes to aid sport fishing. The plans for the wildlife pro- gram indicate that it too will be extensive. In the field of wildlife manage- ment a program to ascertain the best possible methods to control trapping and zoning of registered traplines is being considered as Old Country Rugby Results London April 30--(Reuters) -- Re- sults of Rugy, Union matches play- ed Saturday in the United King- dom: Aberavon 9; Llanelly 3. Barnstaple 8; Camborne 12. Bridgwater and - Albion 16; quay Athletic 8. Cheltenham 9; Penarth 8. Ebbw Vale 27; Exeter 0. Gloucester 14; Coventry 0. Hartlepool Rovers 15; R. F. Oakes Team 16. Newbridge 16; Bath 3. Nearth 10; Bristol 8, Newport 8; Cross Keys 5. Nuneaton 9; Northampton 3. Penzance and Newlyn 6; Ponty- pridd 15. Plymouth Albion 3; Swansea 13. Pontypool 6; Cardiff 11. Taunton 8; Teignmouth 0. Bradford 14; Birkenhead Park 14. Maesteg 15; Bridgend 0. Middlesex 7a-side Final Richmond No. 2 Team 13; Wasps Tor- 10. RUGBY LEAGUE London, April 30--(Reuters)--Re- sults of Rugby League matches played in the United Kingdom on Saturday: Championship Semi-Finals Warrington 15; Leigh 9. Wigan 5; Workington Town 8. --- Rugby League Batley 8; Keighley 8. Halifax 23; Swinton' 16. Huddersfield 38; Hull Rovers 6. Hunslet 14; Bradford Northern 10. Liverpool Stanley 5; Salford 23. Rochdale Hornets 25; Featherstone Rovers 2. Kingston Other Match St. Helens 45; Players Union Team / well as a continuation of last year's program of fur management. Also mooted is the experimental mani- pulation of trapping quotas. A survey conducted in. 1950 in certain areas of the Patrician por- tion of Kenora, to ascertain the possibilities of creating suitable marshlands for the establishment of muskrat colonies, will, in all probability, be continued in the form of an engineering survey on the basis of the muskrat project and survey conducted in 1950. Other investigations are planned regarding marsh fertility. A moose investigation started in 1948 to provide some estimate of the population of this animal will be maintained this year. The best possible methods of capturing mar- ten and fisher will be investigated through studies of environment and habitat with a view to the transfer of live animals to new areas. Also continuing will be last year's program involving a survey for the purpose of estimating the popula- tion of hungarian partridge and prairie chicken. Research work for summer pro- jects falls under six main cate- gories: fisheries, genetics and tree breeding, mechanical," silviculture, soils and wildlife, To Take Creel Census In fisheries research a creel cen- sus in Algonquin Park will follow trends in fishing success by anglers and assess the value of. various management measures. In the Park fertilization of lakes is being tried to test the value of chemical fertilizers in increasing the produc- tion of game fish in lakes of low productivity. In the same area a study is underway to obtain in- to aid in fish management. At South Bay the experiment is pro- ceeding to determine the effect of fishing on all elements of the fish population but especially the effect on game fish of the removal of a portion of the coarse fish popula- tion. - . Also underway is a project 'to determine the food habits and age of fish. This is a laboratory task mostly conducted at the Southern Research Station. It consists of stomach analysis of fish and age determination by means of the scales. Work at the Station will continue in basic fisheries research on fish oxygen needs, temperature preferences and similar studies. In genetics and tree breeding the work is mainly concerned with two main profects: selection of a strain of white pine which will be resistant or immune to blister, rust and weevil and the production of a rapid-growing hybrid aspen resis- tant to disease and of good color. Both are long-term and highly im- portant undertakings. Mechanical research includes a program of design and develop- ment of new equipment for use in forest fire suppression and other forest operations. Classified ads are sure to pay -- Phone 35 with yours today formation on habits of game fish |g, NO WAY BUT UP? - LUKE SEWELL. F:» Alan Maver HE ENDED A SIMILAR 20) STRAIGHT 3EAsONS » MANAGER OF THE EINC/INNAT! REDS, WHO'S SHARPENING YP His Boys TO CUT THAT STRING OF 6-STRAISHT 2Mp LIVI ION FINSHES - CURRENTLY THE LONGEST WN THE LEASYE 7 Distributed by Ring Postures Syndicate COULD GO PLACES --/N /950 -- HE CURBS THE REDS OF THE | FRUN LOSING HABIT THEY THEY WERE LAST IN "6QUEAKER STATISTICS -WON ONLY 16, LOST 29, MST REVERSING THE FIGURES OF THE CHAMPION PHILS WHO [FD WN THIS CATEGORY 7 Newcastle Wins English F.A. Cup Over Blackpool Lendon, Apfil 30 -- (Reuters) -- 'Two second-half goals by centre- forward Jackie Milburn gave New- castle United a 2-0 decision on Sat- urday over Blackpool in the English Soccer Cup final before 100,000 fans in Wembley Stadium. The King and Queen™watched the contest -- climax of Britain's soccer season. Milburn, the hero, was nearly the goat. Time and again throughout a scoreless first half he was: off- side at crucial minutes, .once put- ting the ball into the Blackpool net only to have the goal called back because of offside. Hotspurs Sure English League: Soccer Crown London, April 30 -- (Reuters) -- Tottenham Hotspur, Saturday, won the English Soccer League Cham- | plonship, defeating Sheffield Wed- | nesday 1-0. | Even a 6-0 victory by Manchester United over Huddersfield Town left the 'winners still three points be- hind the new champions, with only one game left to play. At the foot of the table, luckless Chelsea eked out a 2-1 victory over Fulham but still seemed almost cer- | tain to be relegated to the Second Division. The relegation scramble saw | Everton move almost clear of dang- | er by upsetting Derby County 1-0. That left Chelsea and Sheffield Wednesday tied with 30 points each, two points behind Everton with one | game left for each of the three clubs. Manchester City took a negative step toward promotion from the Second Division by drawing 0-0 at Sheffield United. That left them leading Cardiff City by one point in the contest for second place. Manchester has a game in hand. Cardiff were beaten 2-0 at Leeds. Preston North End, not scheduled, is already assured of first place-and promotion. By only drawing 1-1 at South- ampton Town, Chesterfield sank into the Second Division relegation zone firreparably. Grimsby Town, which managed to win 3-1 at Swan- sea Town, already are doomed. Rotherdam, already assured of the Third Division North Champion- ship, won 2-0 at Lincoln City to finish off the season with a flour= ish. , Notts Foresi captured the South-- ern Section Championship by whitewashing Southend 3-0. Nor- wich City, losing 3-1 to Ipswich, finished second, three points be- hind. Hibernian, already the new Scot- tish League champions, rubbed in their superiority 'with a 4-1 victory over Rangers last year's victors. In Division B, Queen of The South won 2-0 at Forfar to tle Stirling Albion for top spot. Both clubs will move into Division "A" next year. J+alkirk, beaten 11-1 at Airdrie, and Clyde, beaten 1-0 by Celtic, suffered relegation from Division "pn The most powerful gasoline your car can use... 'activated' Shell Premium! Old Country Soccer Results London, April 30--(Reuters)--Re- sults of soccer matches played in the United Kingdom on Saturday: FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION CUP FINAL Blackpool 0;#Newcastle United 2. ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Charlton Athletic 3; Middlesbrough 0. Derby County 0; Everton 1. Fulham 1; Chelsea 2. Manchester United 6; field Town 0. Sunderland 1; Albion 1. Tottenham Hotspur 1; Wednesday 0. Division II Hull City 1; Notts County 0. Leeds United 2; Cardiff City 0. Luton Town 1; Coventry City 1. Sheffield United 0; Manchester City 0. Southampton 1; Chesterfield 1. Swansea Town 1; Grimsby Town Hudders- West Bromwich Sheffield 3. West Ham United 1; Birmingham City 2. Division III (Southern) Aldershot 0; Bournemouth Boscombe Athletic 1. Brighton and Hove Albion 1; Wal. sall 0. Bristol Rovers 1; Millwall 0. Colchester United 1; Bristol City Crystal Palace 1; Watford 1. Newport County 0; Leyton Orient and Northampton Town 1; Plymouth Argyle 3. Norwich City 1; Ipswich Town 3. Nottingham Forest 3; Southend United 0. Port Vale 0; Reading 0. Swindon Town 2; Gillingham 0. Division IIT (Northern) Bradford City 1; Oldham Athletic 0. Halifax Town 1: Carlisle United 0. Hartlepools United 1; Accrington Stanley 0. ' Lincoln City 0; Rotherham United SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division "A" Airdrieonians 11; Falkirk 1. Celtic 1; Clyde 0. Hibernian 4; Rangers 1. Morton 5; Motherwéll 0. Partick Thistle 1; Dundee 1. St. Mirren 2; Raith Rovers 0. Third Lanark 2; Aberdeen 0. Division "B" Ayr United 2; Dundee United 2. Forfar Athletic 0; Queen of ths South 2 Stenhousemuir 0; Albion Rovers 1. St. Johnstone 3; Alloa Athletic 1. IRISH CUP FINAL Ballymena United 1; Glentoran 3. MEATH SOCCERITES TRAVEL TO NEW YORK Dublin, April 30 (AP)--Meath de- feated Mayo 6-3 Sunday in the home final of the National Foot ball League. 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