we were glad to hear fro BACK Belygp, Fredericton. ne Th“ u; liiforme and s,i,\ used i0 owli Noon l, going to lvliitei nilieiss ill y. 515'" l! Abi all is a cod Q§,,,','_"“l‘.s. fllieing lrained ongthe PM; Thanks, ThllI, hear from you, __0_ --¢@pil" Miller was in the city the first partdoft tliizs “Eek seglng p54; an a z ng orse. ew 01d n S caretakers have had idcr experience than the gen- " For years he was with Chiulnmlll‘ tl th tbl --tie es n esa e "5 ‘m’ ' Giant" tl b st tcamstcrs in the B one of lllle DilBC of the best horse According to take any kind of a horse and iii a short tlnie size him up zlriii decide th present 611i’ l w iai "Cobb Clia look _ and still business a pyyriiologists, Chapman training i cult eriw i-‘lemliiliii! that Cl in lils Harrisburg are a n tiiat One C iunict of iiic Maritime l-louli c two colts ' bililll thinks rail o use. riencc qne of ihc best amour! tiic G. C- probably quickir tlian any of the others. u trick which he learned racing over ., the ice illl\fl_\' years ago. travels he saw many of the turf very | could greats including proaiiiicii: Crarles. rlaunil. i liuridrcd i ‘ricii Slllll E. J. 1-4, {rounds cihing C. anyone und sale. of Adam. on. Mr. lit. one of tile “Little was pacers reinsmen get to the the now Baker but is a happened lliirrv Fitzpatrick took over. is Henry 'l‘lionias who will d-rive 3pc Ha. r horses next season. By ie ivil, d iuziiter p iilion Gil But it is in the Maritlmes that "itobb" ins found his happy home for the Ins‘. twelve or more years, tile larger part of lp ll‘, with Johnny Conroy's stable iil are lie looked after High Toby, 2." 7S l-i. th .: iiiillilei- he knows cf and we agree w! a iiim. ill 70rd iiiil "C oiiii" ha Bu niiius. “t bun rac it] uiafllili Itil letoivii i n83 flS ii lllout $300. i ll_\ s stiii Johnny is ll lblc speed. liar-old ly breeding the lvs". lit late _0_ 'l‘e.ise, 2:09 1-4, Johnny and other tops in . considers about the best con- 1.4 l-le cited many horses tl.a'. were tiiliilstht to be “through" ll: in J.iliiiii_v‘s hands have been champions - Jolllty, This season with ll. M, Suerney, Bridgewater. look- l-n- after Roy-iil-At-Law and Pearl : Pearl had not Mr. any time produce a champion, The > Jimmie l 2.1).": l-~l for instance. s been l0 1-4. c,l for years Sriceiiey- bought her but had ' possessing She showed well in h: work at Bridgewater but did r1 . make her expected showing at iii: Nova Scotla races or at Char- At the Exhibition races it Brirllzeu ter Pearl was entered l them He employed wiicn 0H1‘ —-o flycioiiic. 2:08 1-4., eligible 11!» Zzlll Pace. has been purchased M‘ North Sydney horsemen to re- .'icc thc community owned Bat- Todd, 2:07 1-4. He is a four- colt by Protector 3. I00 l-ll, iliid while we have not occupation years. lmflort stock from 398th. “t P ’\t l "ll- liml-opliil, "l": i“ ‘$115500. Pharis‘ owner. at h iillion l Dre. lid who I —O— l it. i022 was also ‘all Present three tracks are op- iikiigmgllikblg gall-mine fact that W» 31118 1n the Paris area and M wright the bakind 00ml" p W “r” llflvlllil an excellent at- king of the United States, P1115- , rttlsorc. The fans m the most 050000 for ‘Belwin 4, 2:00 3-4. I ‘ya ‘"9 W011 dressed women np- and placed him at the head of I lgnficln smart frocks, elnbor- Calumet Farm. LflXlnsl-On- Km‘ m“ boAratctaglrrellrlb-indand beautl- tucky. . lfilllfuit t0 belilgve filerlzeygin; BONE-BUILDING MINERAL! "lllcrralatlnlillllthynifigflllslan’ hm Shellfish contain as much c01- niienlllilrg wruers rglzegggg illnTnnwns. thanneliltggleagltsillzhand .- 5‘: I m‘ ‘hit Longchampal‘. milk bomb n remarking on the great Mn.e|l;.:§eh““d~l°m81y dressed wo- $I in...tll.l'l“mln§§“p§§‘}‘§l..,.,§§ e . _ Illa‘. Fax‘ which "my wore. Our cv lglflf§lflgt m‘ ' 0 one t ‘- Ioou IA“ lii inrth"{h’§'~ fllflricnnn w... Amer-i knew illl about Path. models from the was advertising -nnd as too. C hmcnts l w in of her ilvith .\ll)l’(‘lll0 Hal. 2:01 1-4, and Toronto. him. e best form His Grand Cir- with Vic where he took care of the 1n Vic was llii-‘ll 011111051 lflll where he got away and his long m B. who d of horse hag- viclnity-"W. . olir taximan. was UP i0 ' saw , (Chris) O'Don- Robert Ryan bought at He 5a s lcc looking bunc , would them like 1:59 1-2. champion It is He looked that four Edwards Samuel Walker being a DOWN —T"E_ STRETCH a cause they were beat their best. This correct of course. ente Handles of 19 died in norlbern 012105201 arsenate of lead or mm; 2°15"!- Blbread on grass on e was grazing. Phi" 115D was one of t the self in Australia m start in North m _Q.__ Horsemen are still about the new world's champion, Jimmie Creed 2, 1-2, rixord set up during meeting at Lexington. Kentucky, some weeks past. It was thirteen years ago that Rip Hanover, then known as Calumet Cheeter, in a race against time set the mark at 2:00 3-4. Since then a number of colt-s have appeared that gavc promise of lowering it but l‘. re- mained for Jimmie Creed to d0 the trick in one of the most. amaz- ing miles ever witnessed. Scoring from sixth position on the ex- treme outside of the track the colt was back more than a length when the word Go was given. He was still in that position as they turned into the stretch, but pae- lng like a frec-for-aller he showed in front at the quarter in 30 1-2. From that point on he was never headed, His half was in i200 1-2, the three-quarters in 1:30 and it was not until well into the home stretch that Walton shook up his colt. He came home alone in 2:00 1-2, the third quarter paced 29 1-2 seconds, Considering -4. pacing of mldyimile he certainly paced much bet- lmm sgter than two minutes. In his “Betcha a being coiisld- ‘s summaries for 1903 we figure i.at llf‘ iiiilst have won 11,200 the past season as his win- tliree-year-old were congratulations l0 our North Sydney friends and i hope that the new arrival will Xlllc worthy of the good sports- én the owners are. __o_. The German llfance and the around The f‘ 1° let the industry back on E1. Among the prominent he Germans carted off s. Admiral Drake, Mon- etc. They sent a lie for 600,000 francs to Mar- but returned it with the statement erhflllld not sell for fifteen lfllllcl. which would be “vzllilllegl-tesfll figural}; $500.00? - - no ire llllvr the stallion or the monev. St. 1 iois. owner of Grey-lily King's Counsel, 1:00. and a whole string of other ittlrs .\ir. Baker weighs about a] reul tlynamic person who knows what 5.0 \'i‘IilllS and usually gets it. Sep ‘alin drove for iilni for mimv years and Now to of Allied campaign n liberation have set French horse flit; baek several _~i'u1ans looted many of the bet- d‘ _ establishments f‘ g llil SlIuS aiid mares and it wllll necessary for French sports- n 1% One of the most interesting facts about the youthful western pacer is that his sire, grandsirc and great grandsire were all bred the one small breeder, the faili- ei 0f the breeder 0f this colt. lWiiliam A. Thompson, New Ross, Indiana, who bred Hal Dale r2102 1-2, Frisco Dale, 2:00. Frisco lForbcs Cl, 2:11, while his son Silas 1T‘ ompson bred champion Jimmie Creed. 2:00 1-2. These gentlemen showed a lot of good sense in their careful cro "iig 0f the best blood lines. A friend of theirs, Waiter McCord, of Iiidlana, bred the dam a of Jimmie Creed, starting with a mare called Maude he bred her to Mascot. The produce was Mac- kctta. which when bred to Fuzzy Ciiutliain, 2:08 1-4, produced Red Chatiiam, the diini of Louis Dir- ect, 1:58 1-2, Myrtle McKlyc. 2:00 1-4. etc. When Myrtle Mc- Klyo was retired she was bred Io Silciit Grattzln, 2:09 3-4. a son of Grattan Royal, 2:06 1-4. T119 produce was Virginia Grattan, The Thompsoiis secured Virginia Grat- tan from Mr. McCoi-d to breed to Frisco Forbes and Jimmie Creed. tiic world's champion two-year- old pacer was the result. __o__ What the two small breeders in Indiana accomplished will. we lire sure, be an incentive to umall breeders throughout the Mari- times who may by a combination of blood lines now available, at u extended pedigree of Creed is fascinating from another iiiigle in that his ianiily tree in the fourth generation buck contains the names of such sires as Abbe- dale, San Francisco, Bingen, Ax- worthy, Grattrln, Silent Brooke. Pctcr the Great and Fuzzy Chat-I other ])I\CCI‘S in thc ham a regular mixture of blood! .lnd Pace and Mr. Swec- lines which is contrary to the "Cobb" to drive her. tlreiraiilng tendency 0f inbreildlilg, it WAS that she won quite mostly to Peter the Great rind heats, her Guy Axworthy- 1-2. but -Q— Autograph. 2:18 1-2, was the first mare to produce a two min- utc tf0ttt2l‘——-l\lfi]0i‘ Delmar, 1:59 3-4, foaled in 1897 and she is also 2, 2:00—the first two minute two-year-old trotter. In addition she was the dam of Justioe Brooke , 2:00 1-2. the first two-year-niri colt t0 trot in 2:10 and he was thc sire of Jlistisslmu. 2:00 1-4. grand-t dam of Titan Hanover 2. 2:00. While Jlmmic Creeds pedigree is, unique among great ti-otters andl pacers of the present day. that ofl Titan Hanover is an extraordin- ury concentration of thc best blood lines. o: ._()__ y l; ~ ~ Mr. McElwxn 8 Tlifsya-kiflxdnsagme most talked of horse in America, being the first of his age to take a record 0f two minutes or better. Mr. Mc- Eiwyii passed away this season. Another record that attracted rit- teniion that season was Tillie Brooke. 1:59. in a race. She was . owned by H. u. rnsrflhcm “s: slierbrooke, Qucbev. W110 5194 year. _._|)__ During the same meetinil Lexington Rose Scott took a rec ord of 1:59 3-4. In the interyeré- ing years since 1922 great yo“; gem and paceru have been sr ‘ by Mr. McElwyn and have ap- neared on race tracks all over the Scott and Tillie Brooke hflyf‘ themselves become chamoien! 0" and that _o_ Writes "Imus ed PHI “f! rolgigtr‘ irAtertestleld us ra a Muller still believe the 11°15“ the great 1M. lo- talking afraid he might Thllfify is not that after winning tneeaétiaiitscgfif “l 2:00 "mks Two w»- “iilise H1 the fifth dam of Titan Hanover tossed another g1 at ‘the NEW Jimmy Doyle, ‘Lois Anlzeles ‘tonight by pounding out a one- 5f, sided lO-round decision over veter- _;un Pete Deruzza of land. while the iirorliwc "l m" British West Indies i Sgt. Joe Louis t o, army. i ' PAGE SEVEN - 5011111113 11113113 -- I Bis’ Reception Piarmerl ‘For Racer Twilight Tear ' MIAMI 111,5 Twlrlvvlegllcit Tear g3" n ~ (A? rv. th U 1 dltlavenftiizi? horse n; 01' . lll T5” 1;,“ fie Running )-,' When The rankin m; .' _ Stagtes. one; lIegad-inogldnnnlx.‘ the year hon- t, this winter for s money-winning record ll of $275. (li(1>—the highest ever earri- b l l . Mllltht ‘Yrears l Cfllflllfllkn has brought Bensatihrial 1044 er total lgnllsngmw) the $205,000 mark. and e entered in stake races l‘ fmsfm-lnclildiiiz the $500,000 Widener hnndlc W1 lllflh enough ti. m il.i)— fMt. Pleasant liuopsters Win tFrom Sailors l A basketball team frcm N0 -1() Bombing and Gunnery School atl last night handed a t . n Navy team from ,wiil_ be carried on daily from then; Mount Pleasant 67"!!! defeat to H C S purses F“ h ‘send her riirninlzs l i1 ts mark, if she can o; muons m. a wink!‘ cam“ gar- banncr with the words vWQICOmE . ohm i h " ' wlilgi.‘ :“““ "lake Ptl-lcs hisw w ° 5 s“ Undlllestionably runners that ever put asntgriffites; track. He was in a class by him. “and ‘in his only but it um not giv'§el..°.aln}§°l..‘§%‘.‘; as to how he would fit with the best horses on the American turf. 3;] i u . "Twilight Tear" L! g g1 1 the boys around the “$8.232 08:5 they call her Susie." ' m tprhas bseen arranged 1m- ; bnnd a -~ w .. .. kngwb éuslfineet Sue and if you u e th 1 -;' plead, tuisi‘ Wilaltgeéarftiilglléugbgélsgf Me Mlurrlii Herald sugllested that "19 mll- C111 iuogrnm include the "llllfl. c ou ht tn of a race atgNew Qygndintsle E5? alga?“ fitlllfi"ll'il-l§qllrrelii‘tcnvl by an un- wmmg n suui-ghtttimvesfi-illlft tiller Hockey Practice Sessions Begin Hockey Practice started yester- dav at_ the Forum with the Navy and Air Fore‘. teams working out. Bniii looked good. P W.C.-—Arlny—-Navv will ivcrk out Iilfoiidav and regular Dractice Cliqrlgflngowfi iQueen Charlotte’ l ylnbgrillfrsllfllgg 1%‘: tl-ilgagibgt teams t . n n ~11. ._ .. sac gmne Dupe‘; at U“? flirpgl}? bu“ llglllCll is scheduled for Dccem-bhr The high cl t Al ~ 1 vlllplflyfll llie aisfsars lllnldollcisrdtetzlllr: own l Hume pretty much ln- their haiids throughout; although me saror ‘ . Z i . - n. 0.2 .‘.‘.°.Z.‘i”..?.i.‘il.‘.°°“ “M” ““ Tli Al F" 1i Robellis lixllfl (Sligecknilaen Osrpaglileiihrtlisib‘ Evvrllls- wlii. 20, l5 and 12 polntg. respectively. MacLeod. with l0 points. Wag nigh man for the Navy. Pimlico Track Closes Today BALTIMORE, Nnv, :4 _ (AP; — Plmlico closes its 22-day joint "19911111; 0f Mflllvlaiids combined 11101111‘ 1_'ace tracks tomorrow with two $23.0U0-fl(l(l6|i stake features, the Waidron Handicap for two- YB-‘ir-olds, and a revival gof the 2 l-2-mlles Piiiilico Clip. _In the Walden test. nine elit- rles were attracted, with D. Widenerks Pleblscite - rllriilbtig llll to Pot O‘Luck in last week's Pimllco Futurity and Mam Chance Farms Jgep the early favorites. Although some may not star‘. in the Cup, a surprisingly large flstd of l3 was named for the distance 051011". among them Miss Ruth McClenrlgliairs Harford and with Townsend B. Martin's Boiing broke. a marathon favorite. Bflllllflbroke, a notable distance racer, probably will be making his final start iii the Pimlico Cup, Th: son of Equipoise is expected to be sent to the farm for stud service next yiear. - War Turnesa Leads A Portland Cpen PORTLAND. 011a,. Nov. 24 _ AP! ~ blxiirlcij Mike 'I‘ui'i:csa. nevlr n champion but always a staunch contender, moved int}; the lead of the $15,000 war bonds Port. land 72-liole open golf tournament today iviieli he Dusted a two-round total of 142 The White Plains N Y.. pro field that enabled iilm displace colorful Sam Snead. Hot Springs, V0,. star who led the parade yesterday with u two-undcr-par '70. He took ‘l4 lliililiws tcdav for a halfway total of The ‘Pttrnesa contribution was Practically a repetition of his first round-for the two (id's he racked up identical nines of 3i-35 Par for the course is 35-37-72 Snead who had u 33-37 yesterday. went llll on each side todav carding 36—38—7-1 Jimmy Doyle Wins New York Debut AP) — welter- weight. made his New York debut YORK Nov. 7A — ( Mamiironuck. C , at St. Nichols Arena. wDoyle weighed I44 2.. Deruraa In the semi-final of six rounds. Johiinv Juliane, 125 0i, Paterson, N.J., outpolnted Clvde English, l2? Wins Scrap Easily CHICAGO, Nov. 24—(AP) —S¢t. Joe ‘fouls kvllnding ‘up aniexhibéil- i ourw v01’! cave rom e ca“: Pu unac- o o even . . ygdl-nliimtfisarln their three-rounder at Chicago Stadium before a crowd of 0.905 tonight, REMEMBER WIIEII By The Canadian Inn v Conn of 31p Piflaburkh. recoil- ‘nized light heavyweight champion in New York and California. was awarded the Edward Neil Memorial Trophy loi- 1939 by ilic New Yer‘.- Boxing Writers Asoclation for having done the moot for boxing durlna the RN. Fighting Men Arrive Home ' UITAWA. Nov. 2-1 — Numbers of ‘--~“'“_l‘=lll 118111110: liicn wl.ti ualllc iUilLB trained 1n the lace of l-lb‘ P1101111’ iii liiltily theatres ut ivar l-uvc usl. flYHVLLl iii Corinna trcni “113151 5» ‘b01051 every branch of the Uoliiiiiiulrs armed 101105 tiuroacl was rcllrescntle .vlcli 0i iiii .1111)’. navy and air force were iii tile movement, many Ol tiltlll lvUlii led, some ileum-u llUllll.‘ Lo be discharged, others v11 ieiilc. iiiid still more bound 101- 119w quilts ill iliis country. isrtnoiliiiiaiit lli llie gfqllp were soldiers who ii.i:l gained hard-cur- iieo respite iroiii war by siir ring three lvuuliirl, uliucr ttie armys new leave syslriia M»; Cilllilf-sill Ol- ~ tours and were eliroute lioine ior lcuvc or discharge, Col rvfarguret Eaton of 1'01:- Ol-LQ. UMACQL‘ tviliilillilflillb‘ the U W A- 0-. ivus back from a 2 1-2 lliJniIiS tour oi ririfaiii illlLl iiic 1C . A C. csllluiishiiieli. ill ueigiuln. Also returning from an jlisl] tion trip to the Uiiilcd Kingd n. was Mrs Clara F McE-articrii ofl Toronto, national chairman bi wo- iiiens war wcrk for the Canadian Red Cro". Iiunrirctls of "' isii “war brides“ oi Clililtlldll SBFVlCL-lllfll lvxre in the inovciiieiit. ilbout 100 yOLlllgLSiGfS were with ilicrii. Turcnty-two members of the Tin Hat concert party, six of tileln wearing wound stripes, were back‘ after inuiiliis oi entertaining the, troops close to iiic lilies iii Italy, their troupe UIK-iil‘ ii,i,.v llll El‘.- giish Channel torpcciliiiig that, cost the lives of four members as they were 0n their way to the western front. Another arrival was Frank Cl Anderson of Vancouver. in ciiargcl of Ciltiirlflllllflfllli for ilic Canadian Legion War Services. R. C. A. F. Conference 3 OTTAWA, Nov. 24 — (CP) —ThB R C A F‘. announced tonight that spccial s rviccs officers from all tzii" l lorce corrliiaiid lien tors will iiirct iii Otiziui Winn l' a ‘vc- dtiv conference ..L '.\ -h 1115115 to intensify the l'."‘i‘L‘.'lilfJ_ll. sport. nn- weliare iirolzrzin be trrtaiiiiiiclit, and now iii elLct on all units will discussed, Danny Webb. Canadian Army (Overseasi featherweight ciiainp. poses here for a Canadian Army cameraman, He recently won a three round decision over ivnrld flyweiglit champion Jackie Pa‘ ' son and London, circles. real. skinned lad from l s iCanadian Army Over- l 89M Photo). I ed. I-lc reported what be had heard. It won't be long now before ihwkcy fans will see the City v League teams swing into 11.011011: for yestwdoy morning the Navy team was out for a whirl on the steel blades over the Forum loe surface marking the first time that hon. lkeyists have taken to th; ice this season. | o - 0 l New had a biz turiwut on hand . for the workout as Tarn geek been“ on the team that will re resent the Queen (Iiiarlottle in t e coming league. However. little could be Judged of the strength of the team as the practice was devoted mostly l0 Skill-mg session with very little sklrnaishing taking place, o n Now that practiw hours are open Athlete is T0 Be Sent iiome SOMEWHERE IN SOUTHERN ENGLAND, Nov. xi - (CP Cable! ._ Well, it. took a long time but the doctors have at last found out something about Ted Reeve that has been known by everyone who ever saw him strip in a. dressing room within the last l5 years. The big Canadian all-round athlete and sports columnist for the Toronto telegram la not in A-1 category. The doctor! discovered this when Gunner Reeve, member of Conny Smytbe’: sportsmenk battery, com- plained that lils left elbow hurt him “some" after he had been hit by a "flying rock" during a Ger- man artillery barrage in France His elbow was found to be frac- tured. So they sent Ted back to l. Can~ adian Army hospital here to wait for a ship that will carry him home Canada. Ted says—and he must have to put most of his tongue in his big cheek when he says so — that. he didn't know his arm was frac- tured, And that's the reason it l! 1S CXPQCted that all four teams will cram asmany practice sessions‘ as possible into the time allotted before lllc league swings rim. actioiil tor. Dccenibel- 5th,, just eleven shorti lduls away. They are all chafing axflerl’ lull? bit and yesterdayls welcome |iiews iras recelvcd with much en. tiiusiasm. a a a Whether or not Montreal Can- adiclis can hold their first place 511141111X lll the National I-icckey League which they obtained Thurs-' day night rests entirely in thelrl ‘own hands for tonight and on- Sunday Dick Irvin's Stanley Cup Champions tangle with the Maple Lcafs ivlioiii they lead but by g solitary point, a Canadlens will luivg m be their best if they are to still be at the top iviien the week-end games are cciiiplcicd. They are batting for eXdclly .000 in their two previous games against Hap Day's crew so far llils season and will certainly llliYf‘ to show better tonight and Sunday if they are to retain posrossion of the top spot. . 0 a hfaple Leafs of course have been liririls cal by injuries notable of wliicii was the injury to Sweeney Schriners leg. At Boston Thurs. day night. they could only dress eleven men which may or may not have accounted iii a large par-t, for llicir 5-1 defeat, but l; ma‘. can get back to near normal strength for liicsp coming games then iiockey tans can be assured of real bang- u-p battles between what definitely abusers to be the two best teams in the league. I O Jce Jackson, the famous "Shoe- lcss Joe". me DiMaggio of his day has never ceased in his efforts to get reinstated, to remove the stig- ma of having figured in the Black Sex scandal, says Baz O'Meara. He maintains lie went to Charl‘! Corniskcy three weeks before the series, asked to be kept out of the games. He pleaded to be suspend- Camiskey laughed at him, said things like that couldn't happen in baseball. u . Jackson recalls that Eddie Rousii saved the final game for‘ Cincinnati with a circus catch against the wall off "Happy Felseii, ivith the bases loaded in a late inning. Roush did that twice in that series off "Hap." "Or we'd ‘a probably won anyway." Jackson thinks. a - “f ll alivays feel I did my part to wln_and maybe it's Just as \\'c.l things turned out the way they did.“ Jackson has made money iii businessMHe is widely respected in his town. People tlicre rcfusc to believe he was very deep in the Black Sox busi- iicss. n o u ‘He set many baseball records in his day. He was always leading lii.ter in any league he played in. Baseball people studiously refrain from mentioning Jackson or his records. He thinks he was maclc a victim for the good of the game. c n . Ever s0 often he tries to get Judge Landis to see it the way the Cook County jury saw it twenty years ago. S0 far he hasn't made any impression. Some day though Jackson feels he will be exoner- ated. He would like to be in the baseball Hall of Fame, He belongs said it was not correct that the department would seek to "scrape up" andnin full swing before gilibther planned movement of a total of 16.000 has been added to 1 these movements. the additional planned movement comprises 5,000 1n the month December. 5.000 in the month of January and 2,000 in each of the succeeding three months- d ti - geeilirrlihgetfhrebaxrxrilcililghsaxalre tolehesilg- the matter. ken out of the u. R. M. All" ask- H ed John R. ronto-Davenporti. Naughton. "There will be includ- ed a few other personnel, natur- all took him until Nov. 4 to report that he had been wounded near Caen last July. Reeve, who has played almost ame that a tough guy can play, d dn't want to go home. But today, while lounging in his blue hospital uniform 0n his cot. , admitted he wanted to get backl to Canada. 1 "The sooner I get home." lie said grimly. “the sooner I get back, and I sure woilul like to end up this show with these guys." But if Ted thinks he is going to return to the battlefield as combatant with his old anti-air- craft battery - well, he probably is the only one who thinks so. Be- cause when he came out of the line with his injured arm, the 43- year-old Reeve could not pass his routine medical. For one thing, Reeve was found, to be suffering an old football in- ury and the doctors said it was arthritis that had been causing the additional pain from which he had been suffering for a long time. Reeve, who became an outstand- ing coach at Queen's University and later was skipper of the i940 Montreal "Big Four" team, didn't want to report to the medical of- ficer after being struck as made his way to a slit trench at the height of the Nazi barrage. He remained on duty to do such things as man an ack-ack gun and guard prisoner of war cages. Then. a couple of weeks ago he wrench- ed his arm while handling boxes of ammunition in Holland and decided to consult the doctor. That doctor started Ted on the way to England, en route to Can- ada where the things he wants most to see are his wife, "the old gang", and “some hockey games at Maple Leaf Gardens." P McNaughton Pledges- Weli Known l he: Corps was organized Dfllflflflly 1° watch for enemy aircraft, work gradually developed to - brace coast watch for enemy sub- marines, mines. wrecked lifcboats. OTB-It 108$. from all walks of life, has result/ed 1n the saving of many air force and merchant mariners lives. aircraft of considerable value, botih SATURDAY IS YOUR FUN-DAY SKATE-row CHEER AND HEALTH n-Frouliu TO IT 8-10 NOVA SCOTIA—PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. L-CARIBOU. N. S. M. V. PRINCE NOVA (DAILY-SUNDAYS INCLUDED) DURING NOVEMBER Will leave (‘iiribou 12.00 noon unii 4.00 p. m. Will leave Wood Islands 10 a. m., 2.00 p. m. LUNCIIES SERVED nonrnuiuncuaivn IERRIES LIMITID CIIARLOTTETOWN. P. a. I. Service will he discontinued after November 30th. Detection Corps Workers Commended i Commendation of the °lll5lbllla€6l - l lng porfonnanoe _of over 2 v workers of the Al-YCTB-ll l-eiefl-Wll coy-pg Qt‘ me RCAI‘. in the Mari- times in the 118st four Will's W35 expressed yest/eroay in o. iurev-‘Ell letter to members of the corps from Air Vice-Marshal 6.0. Johnson. CB. MC. Commander- in-Chief, of Eastern Air Command. v The letter was issued following a recent statement from Ottawa of thc disbanclment 0i’ t-he Alrflfflil» Detection corps owing to the im- provement in ilie general war pic- tura and the diminished possibility o; gnelfly attack; from the air on the, Eastern seaboard. While the Aircraft Detection ETE INSURANCE SERVICE ” W. K. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 their 6CD subversive activities, alr- in dist-fess or crashed. and auspicious surface vessels. The diligence of the volunteer watchers which included civilians salvo-EV, 0i vital training and operational, and n _....j§2¥?‘l¥‘_“"d from page U"; alerting of coast and sea defences _ Prime Minister Mackenzie King when enemy U-boats surfaced near. cgnfirmcd u Quebec announce- Canadian and Ncuifgundlnnd shores; inent that Air Minister Power 0f the one hundred and forty- i had submitted his resignation, but said it had not yet been accepted. Mr. King said he wished to con- sider the matter carefully. On tiie question of di-aftces and_ Monday Government. Gen. McNaugllwn general service volunteers be- yester- “Since yesterday he said. "The planned movement, that is of Taken From Draftces "The 10.000 that are to go in MacNicol lPC—-T0- "Trial. is right." said Ge“- Mc- the officers are not There are of- two suspected and proven sightings of enemy submarines in 1943 lvyl Aircraft Detection Corps observers, fifteen were made from the Port- their use overseas which nvili form P02;- mom were the subject of a debate on a motion of confidence in the ad-lucenl‘ coastal are“ and we 11' meinder from the lonely stretches of the Maritimes and Gulf coast lines. fli receugntlyon was pfltd by the RYC_A_F_ cisin L‘; reflected iii numerous lit- to men and women of all areasJwFHr“ Labor Minister Mitchell said con-l odlan Army. and promised to look into the matterw Denies Draftees ;Are Not Wanted lFor Reinforcements Sim?‘- Blusques prep, alone. the made from While it was impossible to make fore using draftees — "Zombies" mention of all-tire Mariiimers and strong Criticism of we mrdmoss —overseas. Nelvfollndlfllldeis and 1"‘°17-° °f‘of the Dominion Lioleiniiieiit 1n “We had a very considerable Quebec and LLbTQClCf‘ who coii- senumg man,“ mcrscus m, :1»- moveinent which was arranged tributed to the brilliant record of inforccments is being made bv lllG corp; 1n the coastal area" troop-S at the front and lliis criti- rd bv relatives hcre. e men with W’ three wounds itoiiiiz ncluding GEOPgQ lilac-Donald, gicnal director, Montague. P.E.I. m. d,“ gyms-ml w. . . . and G.T. Hard-y, assistant Pegional 11191-6. are '10:; of iii r director at Charlottetown. wr a." one young soldier to lils ._____T_ ..- - . - . .- l:it.l,i tnirlsclf a \\‘.ii' vltmuiiii in Skunbury) said he was concerned lfillafifrilfwwillméif llllflnglsg 1135;112:315 tdih u 0.1m ‘- "L'- ll?“ 105s all ctr its .2 . . t . ~ . . . .,' compelled to 5"” m (he mm" lacire it tlicv are S110\'Lfl riizilt back vcr." o "LIcNliugliwifs talk sideration now is being given to ‘ about w i t H- Ha-tgelld (Pls-Vlcfliorla! lgdsllotgvfedr file?-ffllsililginrcoll} .' . “ ii. t\\'i ' ii i. ti‘ t not izet mail and parcels and were lflie rgcii tltllld iHIPK‘ .‘ ....»“.-l1,‘i. tligv not allowed to return to the Can- wouldn't rare Will) iti: reinforce- Gcn. McNauithion ‘irienu- rlrc.“ Postmaster-General l Mulock This seems to be the tieiicral op- inion e:\',."rss:d ii. letters from all Y. tlicre on his field performances. in that category. _ _ llrlillflllllfi 15 llebxflffefl Olhefwlr. ficers and C. 10315330 “egg thlziidcitfgfntlfiléld wglgo bgfélgplflllggd ranks of the ilrmv Ovclsc. s. wi ci s strange or a man w o eneral serv ce lvoiin ' _ - i? f‘ tried to warn baseball people of isnust go with them." 5CTlPl9d_ "id Ml~ Mlichell $1", CLO"! FROM_S0‘BEANS the trouble ahead, ilicn got hlm- Answering further questions the Canarias ‘regulations mnthercall-y _ ‘ —~ self so deeply involved lie was General said the first considera- up of faimcis \\0l(‘ iiioic .l1)(‘l.’\l (Ijlwl ton 1.x- niade out of bin-red out “f basebml, “on “.35 m ggL the most fully than those of any other country. seyb oleiii ' ' ' trained infantry reinforcements i 1; .-- —— ., ;-_;__ —_—___._____= News despatch yesterday ln- which could be Bot. The b11515 Ol nouncing the release from the R. selection would be the best in- l C. A. P‘. of Wallie Stanowski must fpntry soldiers available between I linve brought big smiles cf satis- faction to the faces -of Toronto Maple Leaf followers here, par" ticulariy in one certain section of the City that this writer imowl of. . Of course, the dcspatch did not state whether Stanowski would resume lils defense position with the 'I‘oronto team but it is likely that if lils physical condition war- rants the former Winnipeg junior will be lined up with Leafs in the very near future.‘ Stanowski would add a great deal of strength to the Toronto defense as when he performed with them previous to his enlist- ment he was very valuable in every game that he took part in. And on top of Stanowski’: effect- iveness both on offense and de- fense hia appearance would do lnuch to niililfy the loss Leafs silstained when Sweeney Schriner high scoring winger suffered I bad leg injury_ several games ago. It took almost a week for the word to get circulated, but we've finaliv found out the reason for the surprising reversal of form shown by New York Rangers last Saturday night when they scored their first National Hockey League victory of the season by beat ng Detrot Red Wing's; to 2. You want to know the answer? _Wcil, here it is, Lester Patrick l! feeding lils Rangers vitamin pills. What's iiinre Mr. Patrick person- ally makes certain that his "bovs" take these energy-giving, sickness- resistlnr! concoctions. o - 0 5w iielp us. our informant tell! iis that lll‘(“1‘.l)ll\‘ at noon every diy all members of the New York ream hnvn tn rnnnrl u- Patrick, now and the date of sailing Ships. var (L-Halton), he said the in-~‘ 01".»: the total strenulh 01' m? overseas army and 1t was oiilydlg infantry that casualties excce e expectations and resulted threatened shortage of reinforce- m patch of 16.800 trained peraomeli ester-day " colnmencrll Y - ~ "we have met the requests of our of To questions from flushes C100‘, rOUBhlY 9119" comprised ina- ents. "With the addition of the dis- infantr hi h i arrange . w c “as he said. military advisers in the field and with a. slight marfllll mifilgi h‘; order to do those things vl 1c mentioned yesterday — Mme Ydgte will be able to provide W“ l‘ ' tional periods of rest for individu- als and will be able to compen- sate for those men we are hopini! to be able to ivithdrilw in order to give them leave in Canada. N» Invldlous Distinction on" n man goes overseas. whether voluntarily or by 00"‘ scription, there should be no in- vidlous distinction between him and other soldiers, He is ilivlnv. instructions in officers to change regimental numbers in order to make sure of this. Hon, R. B. Hanson. (PC-York- who first hands the player I» gins; of water. then a vitamin pill. then a cold capsule. Like or not, the athletes have in take their pills and swallow their water before they M? dismissed. Now that the secret is out. Art Ross. manager of the Boston Bruins, and Paul Thompson of , the Black Hawks will ‘,7l‘il).1lllV l elcu. to go Mr. Patrick one hcficri and add spinach to the Ranger. dint l a i. “YA-f “No Vino, no Sm." ‘l; . 111ml iiii dunies. dais wot keeps me in good shape.‘