OCTOBER, 1,9.- UARDIAbI 1929 . QIHI". (THARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN BASEBALL 3' ' i’ " » BOXING WRESTLING " S P m R - BASKETBALL ; BOWLING , ornansroar - rAur; say. i; A v REVi1*‘E 'i F.>..rb.. 11 rr...r.t...t. i isenpardieigsafri) . 1 " WHITE-"Now A -" PROMINENT BUSINESS EXECUTIVE. HE THINKS me NEW RULE MAKING A FUMBLED eAcwoeAo" i wau. Huzr me GAME... l i iAoAwsr ante --._ i -'-' SAMMY WHIYE OF Pzuucsron PICKED UP PA FUMBLED BALI. AND RAN 65 YARDS FOR me WINNING ‘rbucHDowu c$§§‘}'ué“§‘é§'a“‘5 . auteur-s, ,,,.-.~...¢$ ~ .. \ . w! I 5U'z”/L%5o: i Q I19.’ IIII henna Immune. h. Gun Imam unto mound score, 6-3, as all the Tigers roared. " Netball rules have been changed this rm so that a fumbled p.11 is dead at the point c! rogvm-y, and \ ""95 °f W"!!! recalls.‘ "Sonny" (Sanford 0B.) White o; pymgsgm-L "lldflllbfl-‘fllr ‘the most famous o! all locse-balihawks. He enjoycfl m, ex. Rlfldilili?" thrill! of grabbing p, blocked kick extinct Harvard in 191i 1M running about so yards to the victory touchdown. Crhat would be will this season.) A fortnight-latex, White scooped up n. Yale "ghost ball" and’ on qgnuddy field careened more than 60 yards for Princeton's winning ‘knack of gathering in a. bounding Old. Nassau needed luck the most, footballil From i911 on, every time and. as fortunes football favorite, a. veteran fan sees o. loose ball; "Sam- he merits whatever immortality sports my"'wihlte'e feats flash to the mindlll, can assure. ' Wlfhite, now a" business executive ‘And, if you know your "Big Three" with ofllces at Chicago, is modestly mild- in observing that the new fumble rule "takes away from the game more than it can possibly add. Shades o! those 1911 coups! During his grid career White was “A 100i tor luck," scone said but, not. conspicuous (or speed or dash. ah, what thrilling plays! What a But he was the greatest "Johhny-\ lsreak 10t- vlgilance and the dimcult on the spot" in gridiron history when A Boy Scout's Diary » Qf The Great Jamboree. B! 5W1". Will. B. Burnett. nmmifroxx BABY or SERIES . bun“ a v I I i eight o'clock. ‘ We were told the Prince would be in our camp any iminutc, and sure enough almost im- mediately ha arrived. He looks great at close quarters. He is not very tall ‘or stout. but firmly built, clean cut. with an eye like an eagle's. He kept when he liked; for instance, when he gazed occasionally at the leadcn skies. Certain Scouts presented His Royal Highness with letters, messages, or gifts from their respective cities or provinces, including the Nova Sco- tlans and New Brunswickers. Scout Grey. son of the Indian Chief from B. 0., was presented and had a short talk. We had nothing to give the Prince from the only Province bear- ing his Royal name-Prince Edward land~not even a. letter or a spud. but I told John I was sure the Gov- ernor would have sent a Silver Fox skin if he had thought it would have been accepted. Alter dinner we had mother rally in the Arena, and speeches from the Prince, who gave u: a message from the King, which concluded: “I wish God-speed to you all. May the Boy Scout movement go from strength to strength in de- all the Scouts said "Amen." The Prince gave a rattling good speech which you will see in the papers. no doubt. He told us the Scout move- ment was a. great thing for indivdual Scouts, for the manhood of the indi- vldual countries, and more than all, for the development between dlfler- ent nations of understanding and good will, in place of suspicion and selfish antagonism. He told us to stick to Scouting and not to forget the comrades or our scouting days. The Daily Arrowe, our Scout journal. contained a picture of the Canadian characters in our show. I am in the vcry forefront, but you would hardly [recognize me. Bob is the most con- spicuous figure on it, but nobody would recognize him either, not even his mother. as he is masqued and ratcd by many as only a.‘ lair end, sence. and we were sorry to have Up ‘early and breakfast over by missed him; also the Wolf Cub Rally applause and cheering on previous vlcesat ll o'clock conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury and Car- velcpment and prosperity." To which ' PHILADELPHIA, Pa. October 9- iBy Brian Bell, Associated Press Sports Writen-Jlmmy Foxx is the baby c1 the i928 world's series but he may prove e. lusty infant. The Maryland boy who led the American Leaguq in batting for months be- fore being displaced by his teammate, Al Simmons. will be 22 years of age October 22. His world's series cheque from Commissioner Landis will be and the Sea. Scout display at West Klrkby, but we could not be in two places at one time. Today the Can- adians led the parade at the Great Rally. .We did this on merit, our appearance having elicited tho most y smiling most of the time, i but now mflrfihe! Dmit- o and then he looked serious and I saw avauzfibailhlrlzadrishzsgt purchue he could gives contemptuous glance Aglgust 4. . mm Y p ' ____ Sunday, and so we got up 1m and had breakfast at nine o'clock. There were Protestant and Catholic ser- cluded "Stand Up, Stand Up For Jesus," "All Hall the Power ct Jesus’ Name,” "Ail creatures o! Our God and King." In-addltion to the Arch- bishop's sermon, the Chief Scout ad- dressed us. In the afternoon there was a Presbyterian Communion Ser- vice conducted by Rev. G. M. McLeod, of St. Cuthbert/s. Edinburgh. It rain- ed hard oi! and on all day. We had early supper. camp fire and bed. (To be continued.) dlnal Bourne, of Westminster Cathe- dral, respectively. Before the service the Gordon Boys Home Band ren- dered o. program oi music. The sing- ing was conducwd by Sir Wilfrid Davies, LL.D.. Mus. Doc., F. R. C. O. The hymns were all old favorites and WCIQ rendered with gusto; they in- I. _=,-~ 12» rcbed as an old woman. After supper we had camp fire and innumerable visitors. and we went to bed tired but cheeriul as ever. grid rivalries, you can realize read- ily that any Prlncion man would even buy a life subscription to "The Harvard- Lampoo " were he w beat "High Hat John" and Old Eli in one August 3. i i As usual the wise old man right. When the situation ad itseli finally of its own accord, i xy was on first base and his = had a great part in the winni; the championship. The youth i yet. a great fielder, but his i:_ Connie Mack robbed the cradle to get Foxx. Another great home run ilitirlr, Prank Baker, the old Athlet- ie's third baseman. now a. Maryland farmer, sent him to the Athletics from the Eastern Shore League and there never was a. thought that he belonged anywhere else. The only difficulty Manager Mack found was in discovering a place where “Foxxyf” as he calls his young star, could do hits trequently iron: bad balls the most good. He was first e. third a more conservative hitter \ ' baseman. had a fling at catching scorn to try to hit. Three tims. and then tried the outfield when he; has driven ball: over the left ' was only a juvenile "down home.“ i stands at Shibe‘ Park. great blc heels and he is a threat every ‘he goes to bat. He gets extra _ I Ticketed as a. catcher he came to . any leafle- ros A's. a case o! sending a loadi 0i’ C081 t0 Newcastle if there ever‘ ' was one. for the one thing Mr. Mack did not need was a. catcher. The gin; sure hands or Foxx made him a great infield prospect and last year he played both third and 11m base. He was tentatively assigned to mil-d when the players reported for spring training this year but the boss of the Athletics left his permanent as- signment open. A women whose son was re- from drowning oifered the rescz. two-shilling bit, with a. request 1 shilling change, ' The man should have said. "L1. You another boy drowning i where?" and at the word. “Yes, y matter oi fact I have." he sh. have rescued the second boy. Wt. upon the woman, with a court‘ smile, would have said, "Keep l changeP-Daily Express, “Foxxy can play anywhere." can. nie Mack said at Fort Myers, “It's lust a question of finding where we need him most. First. third, the out- A cotton‘ spinning mill, equip GEDm-UINI I R __¢,_.,_, __,.._, . .. .\__/~ '.__; _______o i. I I: T his Screen 6 I .()WBOY, for only ... SEE IT! HEAR IT! ON FREE TRIALl. season as "Sammy" White did! r i Alter breakfast we were giver. l::r.".- i Nome DAME sodomy The following pupils secured an .-Gmdc v: (ID-Eileen Mullln. Grade VI (in-Elwin Ayers; Esther Hughes; Bernadette Trainer; Mary McDonald; Betty Lelgbtizet; Phll- hi’ Pam“ i" 8° t” Lmlpmi- lppa Bradley; Eileen lllIcCabe; Eileen Reid; Winnifred Shelloon. Our‘ - patrol. under John McLean's leader- ship, left at 12.15 and arrived in Liverpool at 1 o'clock. We went direct i ' HE first shipment (of all-electric Philco i Balanced-Unit Radios has arrived. You can ace them now at any Philco dealer-H. You can field, it makes no difference m F°VXi'-" opened in 'I‘ripoli. ... 4n 1.1.2.), \\' .I ." 1-... _,... , . is impressive. He swings fro» ‘ . with American machinery, ha; L, amigo o! 15% during the month of B/ptbmbcr: (In order of merit) Grade x-Mary Power and Betty Doyle. (equal); Mary McOarron; Eli-Idle Bmsl: Miriam-is Mitchell; 801m Ournn; Miriam mum; Kath- leen ‘Iralnor. _ Grade IX-Enid Cantwell; Flor- ence Martin. Grade VIII —- Winifred Moran; Marie Arsenault: Florence Howott: Gertrude McCp-ron; Isabelle Corbett; Mil‘! Nahlf; Mai’! Martin. Steele; Betty Mitchell. Grule V-Blanche Griltith; Mar- garet Shelioon: Lillian lvlctlarron; Grace Doyle; Genevieve Monaghan; Helen ‘Irainor; Agnes Lappln. Grade W~C. McCloskel/i P. Arsen- ault; C. Leightlzer; I. MacDonald; M. Mooney; M. Lappin; M. Hogan; C. Kelly. _ Grade III-J. Prunty; N. Pcppin; D. Peters; K. Hughes; I. Goodwin; B. minor; B. Martin; E. MacLean; M. MacKinnon; G. Latter; O, Donovan; M. Kiggins; R. Prunty. ' Commercial Department (In order oi merit) Eileen Hynes; Florence McAulay. b". ' ch08 Howott; Catherine McCIoskey; Etheb Mar- tin; Jessie Waller; Mary Lelghtiaer; Margaret Stewart; Margaret Dawson; The» following pupils» of the Pro- _ gressive Series of Music secured 90% in each written test during Septem- Mary McCarron; Agnes Plgott; Eileen Mullin; Marlon Mahar; Flor- Muriel McDonald; to the Edinburgh Cale. recommended by one of our number who had been there before, and had a good tuck-in, which tasted much nicer than what we cook ourselves. We went on a round of visits. taking in the Museum and the Cathedral, the largest in England. We climbed to the top oi the winding stairs in the steeple and from the‘ balcony had a magnificent view of Liverpool and the surround- ing country. We started to return to the Edinburgh Cate Yo: supper. but; had quit‘ a time reaching it. The your own home. .mglggan-angementenowforal~‘re_eflv‘dalia Equtrren wrrn canon-m anacrno-nrnamc srnsxaa and balanced to take two oi‘ the mar- velouu new 24-5 power tubes with push-pull amplification, this Balanced-Unit set has created I. new standard of radio entertainment. You nave NEVER naano eucn "roux. Free from the slightest blur or distortion, even the deepest bass notes come through round and clear. Many ones VIL-Msripn mm, _ Grade ll-Kathieen O'Brien; “throat-e "in n , a 1i cause It res’ leeches my, cures {or no a ioneitloi a‘ "prelllnehpfl- - fleuedtorecommend cigarettes to e0. Thy are yon- " y tlu-oateelyl Dur- asy” fifiesdoldefl c npranq of Quebec." lielen ' u! mother." ' ~ momenta but. at int. nviltup. Murphy; Genevieve Mmosmm first car we took landed us at the end Ruth Trainer; Lillian McCerron; Nora. MacMillan; Mary Paquette; E. Hughes; B. Mitchell. took u: t0 the other end 0i the docks. Then we were told to take an elevated train and this ultimately brought lll to within walking distance of the cafe. Am: supper we had lfloi-hcrmilhl-D-wne o! our patrol di-llllpeaxcd. w, huntcdhlgh and "Now, Mary, when you bathe the baby. be sure and use the thermome- ter to test the water." n it's toohot. the baby turns IOd,ln€i ‘hm’ w W" m“ °i w“ W“ i! it's too cold, he'll turn blue." w" mud’, “m, “n, ‘m! our “we expired at "that hour. when we ruched our tent at about twenty min- utes tocleven. it was to find our lost shun in M. Vvndcrlngwhat was "filling us! I‘ don't know whether we were more pleased than annoyed, but we did not forget him. Prince George visited the camp in our ab- A little girl ran into the house with a piece o! wire which she had picked up in the street. and inquired o! her I sister what it was. Her sister looked at it bluntly for a moment. "1 don't know." she laid; "go and n- MANHOOD AND STRENGTH hi: 0n llerllel lamedlec Yunghlltvon Lou, of Manhood and icon-dare o! lhn, and book- let on llll or Women with ad~ vice in plain envelope. free by Illllilhnflillidltl by llall cur y. INGLIUI IIIBAI. The mother thought hard for some - "Go and u]: grandma.” she nld. The little girl did u she was bid. , Grandma told her. It nnppenedytor be a hairpin. Bclentlatl now figure that when the United States Senate u in ceulcn the temperature of the chamber rim noun-mm to ma: . degrees. n u ‘mmuu- W- lucky m the thermometers that un- “"o':'l"'u:*ghf|?'a":ifh'~ "- der the rules only one Senate may noun ma. " speak at a time-Boston ‘Iranscript. v oi’ the docks. Taking another car it allied f being late anyway, as it times a hair-breadth turn of the knob will com- pletely shut out one station and bring another ' sweeping in. Amazing selectivity! Fan-or? STATIONS You NEVER G01‘ Baronial When you want distance you MI! get it 0|! lilil new Philco. 'We believe it will outreach any other set cold today at my price. Owners are 10w f0 him. d th tr 11 Returning an hour lailrhthe mis- ,,,,,,,,,§,,, wmffu, his’ $023.3“: constantly writing in to tell us how they got “s” f?“ "m4 Y“ u" ii" “M” what penalty would be imposed upon Era-gland, Japan, Cuba, Mexico, and other for» m ma r ” ~ ' "Ne. "Wm. I an “u without m“. us for returning without the lost as“ “ab” v ‘Exoorsmcnr osstcneo momma. Wbenyou lee the beautifully-ultimate, you will wonder how ‘ Inch a mitrveloua radio can be priced so low. Bird's-eye maple panels, matched Oriental wal- nut, butt walnut, tapeetry over speaker, costly overlays -— each model of a piece in the finest home. Face ram. IN YOUR own non. We mm: you s2 we"; 9° Ymlfiifi Mm . h. ems “edlfieee Wholesale WILLIAM MARlTlME ACCESSORIES, Limited, . Halifax, N. S.-Saint John, N. B. ' 4h: BALANCED-UNIT LUVBO NOIIUDJ o a": 0;!‘ 0 Screen 5:1. . . .i.i.v.u.‘. $109.00 listed-Uni! ‘Higllboy. Nnlirolyne Pine. 1115.00. ‘QC! GI“. “H18 kid-Unit Highboy ll LUIfiNOIIfBJyl'lIl,'1’,-m- 8i GI“, m lIilmll-Unil T161: Mold. Snood Gril hi1, Ill y Elm-imbued: 5 “U! - .' _ tau new u.- r-iu) , ~_. the marvelous performance of Philco Bnlancellfi _- Unit Radio. Any one of these registerco‘ Philcd dealers listed below will gladly install the Philcd, in your home on this trial oEen-no obilgaflog on your part whatsoever. PWE“!!! shes!!! we deem t» i197: Distributors B. KEIVER Dealer. 187 Great George Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. -'_ ._<.._ _ __ __-_—:_-::.;:. t .