SPORTING NEWS THE CHARLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN ' Lee Brewer Defects Watchim For Second Time Within A Week "SAL THEATRES ur: TO BRIDGEWATBR, N. 8 , Sept. 38 Sandy D (Conroy 3 2 ;-(CP> _ For the second time in a Bonnie Buciibng (Campbell) 4 4 ii iicss of the season ,1 1, gs lii i110 .111‘ and week, Milton Bell's Lee Brewer from Symbol Harry (Schuman) 6 5 x r, ' Sims despite the 13- cnarlottetown defeated the fast Times 2.101s, 2.08%, 2.00%. - z _ luck M the blinds stepping Watchlm today 1n the me 1, 111111 the Si. Elem ‘s 101- 1,11 "o; a; a hm-ness meet here, Free For All Trot I TECHNICOLOR .1 .\ 11"‘ =\ll-‘~3!°"l5}i~" The Island horse took the evernt L B (w l ) 1 l 1 _ 111111 sflllll‘ 1’ '~' i t i ht heats, turn‘ng in t e . ea rewer er i. . i1 i.- sit‘. tut-n fcr tl1e ffwfé? gums o; the dgy_ 2.07 3-4‘Lee McKillop (O'Brien) 2 I 3 WALLACE BEERY l. filtlliltlllfi on Szllklfdil)‘ 8ft?!‘ 1n the second heat. Watchim (Hood) 3 3 2 FAY BAINTER 1;, ‘ Jenny was (weed w 10m- hem; Basil l-Ianovcf/‘(Harni/son) 4 4 4 f w 18k‘, 1m. free m; an peee after Times: 2.09 e, 2.0724, 2.09. . wally as the veteran “Wu b“ a Mme" flute Hanover and Tip Abbe 83°!‘ ' . " “W! t"""°ll’"n had won a heat. Free For All Pace lcatherneck, will bowl lldvll‘ 111111119)‘, ' ~. ~'@ 1 11191111“ SUMMARY Jollity (COIIYOY) 1 2 a 1 Yo" ‘We’ "m" laughs- r.‘ :11 1111- pinches “Noted lflungvelj Harg-Ilsog; {gstbiii hi? b0WlS over ~ - 1c: __ _q_ q- t d y use ac 1 ocsicr l co x e _ ' k a c ' i1,S6c.~"181l-ll:i(;rig:n) m 1 a 1 iTiil Abbe lO'Bl'len) who and!’ bagged Jail}? .1 (wen, g 1 2 Time ‘ iii 2;09 . 2.10. 2.13. 1'6 suc 9T5 “mug Sziilors S. Baseball Finals Series lCPl Nova Scctin Senior Buss-ball final series n: one game iiece. ' “U15 m bk‘ iwitllis mound for the game. gave up 1'2 hits but irris effective 111 the .. pinches and was never in deep i131, trouble. _ m 17 HAL Cnrinvallis ran riot on the buses; ' . h“ Mm,‘ stealing almost everything: in sight. " including three double thefts and one of two attempts at home. Remember lliicn 'c in the, 111 11-14 N.l'.l(i!lll'. Lmaciie pen-, - 1 St LOIEISi the first time an, ~11c:i the same Nat- icie three straight By The Canadian Press 1 Joe DiMaggio of New Turk Yiink- Aiit-r luring ll of tht-iz‘ lasi 44 ;;.iu s Bill Scuclnvo 11's ads - , . 1 - b. k- years_ ago today {L-biilhfilor: tLhe ggssctotfxigvlertig l -3°° mark. 30 ilolnts .,,.P- n14; 1,,1e.se;,_e01~1 e-ebmmg‘ winning tweivenlage of the previous "~ b a iii-game edge, Year- iliiy. . L‘: Ram Delays b however. ttlhey I l L ‘ ill‘l ill’! ..'.'“...'."i.....i International honstcd over e League Play-Off Jchn 1 err-t" 1. . 1 . BALTIMORE-Sept. as -_ tap» °Q1"‘1§§,'_e-%3_m§f§ —Rnin tonight forced nnzl the straight final International tff o a a ‘and Neuarl: Bears prepared to “m. thv f,“ Gm _, leave for Neyvark, where they are pisibliir tflsct- llélllkllilltfir.‘ ,,t~.§§iat‘inaiils§f gchedgled 7'0 may mmwrm" and nmc the National League “u” “Y- .1,, (,9 League r1 win t. a hun. ctl flames‘ 53mm“? “'0” the "r5; 3am? 0 m, Sm, ca“. " Theiof the bf‘.\i._Uf seven serics last “m W; m 194:3‘ m5 111.43, night. biiistzrig the Bears 14-3 m“, 211,93,“ m,“ 98 games Ncivzirk previously had defeated W}; ("non - Toronto 1i1_ four successive games. ‘ ‘ ‘ . , . while Baltimore was forced to go . 1rt when “(,1 the full seven before eliminating g .' .‘Buffalo. ‘eta?! Thewinni-r of the final play. offs will meet Louisville, American Association winner, in the Little World Sci r Baseball's Big Six By The Ass-Jointed Press Bright Spot“ Purchased By vial iiennesscy Batting (three leaders in each l , leriguc . JD-IPPIIKST’. N-S" henl- ZR —- riey-erteciub t; AB R. it Pct W“ "riahl Sunk "w "l"; Walker, Dodg 144 52s r1 19o asz ' more that Wes bflmsb- Musinl, Cards 144 sac 10s 191 s42 isritinrr Provlrwfl fwm Afcdwick, Gts 12s 4119 es no asv t i. this scrim: and we" Bnudrcuu. Ind 14s ssv 92 1B6 ziza "P (“"1 "Y F- (‘~ .C°“‘“ P‘ Johnson, rt Sox 140 s01 107 16s .321 ever 1hr Wlerlfime "r- Docrr. R Sox 12s 4st; 9a 152 s25 lu-cn sold to Walter Runs Bnttcd In: American Lea- llwncs-ry of Charlottetown. true: Stephens, Browns ‘I03; Nu- The you'll: more 11""! F“ ""5 riminl League; Nicholson, Cubs. nut m" I’) starts imti was nrvcr 117v 0:11 of H11‘ money in the other Home Runs; Amenmn League. ' "he h“ "P"! SIG-AM"! Ette . Yiiitkccs 22: National Lea. ll‘ rimund the circuit. Shr- m Nkhoheflm Cubs 33‘ 1 m-trlt nf $3.12 3.4 when i-nil was marked this v - 111'!‘ thc half mile truck ‘NOTHING DEFINITE’ lCon inuedyfrom page 1.)___ Baseball Results Board's post War reconstruction com- mittee prcscircd several recommen- tintiOns which the committee be- lieved should be put into effect im- medately the war is over. The NkTloNAi. committee tfdvocated continuous __ ,_ , _ commtin ca on between the Island‘ (SjHTIflAI-‘ElZiofaigrogfgfinos and thc Mainland; more suitable harbour facilities, especially a dec- pcr wzrerfrunt nnd modem piers, a dry dock which utoulcl serve to maintain the large number of men now engaged 1 herein ship repairing, rural electrification. paved highways to BOrden and Wood Islands: leng- thening of the runway; at the alr- port; technctil education; improved Ihcusing conditions; and reforestat- ion. The recommendations were unanimously approved by the meet- ing. 1t is expeclcd that; President Dewi and Mi- Mutch, in attending the Maritime Transpcrtatjcn Commis- sion meeting, will strongly recom- mend a much closer tic-up be- tween the Maritime Provinces so far as the development of nlrtvavs In a free-hitting game, the sail.‘ ors pounded two plctou pitchers ‘g .0“, for 11 safeties. shortstop Hugh‘ ' McGillivray moved to the Corn.~ postpone. , bit’ i" _ ir.cnt of the second game of the ‘V1153! 111 8 U play- scrics and Baltimore Orioies' i Scot. Black i bicnth For Jap Airmen is concerned. It is the belef ti the Board that a closer linking of the‘ Maritimes by air will in turn bring them as a unit much closer to the world's air iinetrafter the war. W M S OFFICERS MONCTON, N.B , Sept. 28 iiomi: morons‘ m; Kent st. - Charlottetown, Lijflelocled yesterday at the conclud-i en's Missionary Society were re iing session of a tum-day annunl conference. Mrs J A Tucker,‘ New Glasgow. N S . la prcsidenti and Mrs. teed b honc 1 president. IRE-ELECTED‘ P —--un square American League i Race At By The Associated Press DEEP BROOK. N.S.. Sept. 2'1 —» Dem?" Tnrs of HMCS. Corn- uullis laced Pictou Red Sox 12.3 NPW York ’ today to square their bcst in five, to tangle Dogs! A Glance MONTAGUE. ! I Teams W L PC GB TP 86 64 .573 4 St. Lnuts 86 65 .567 l 4 (l3 67 .553 Remaining Games 1 Si. Detroit-home. Louis-Home. New York Washington . New York-away. St. Louis (4) WASHINGTON, Sept. 2s -_ (c “t Baseball Pi ~ rjosribmtv of President Rooscvelts campaign for a fcuinh gilt St. Louis 1 sr. LOUIS, Mo, sept. 29 -<AP» —Thc heavens wept in St. today. washing cut the opening of "cos “'11s crowned unoificiai batting lhc loader of the American Lczigue for between New Y the second successive season. four important ‘the Browns, bu He ended up with manager of the below his ding Rain Washes ister Churchill to Commons he hop Lculs your}; 1 roungam l T e United Sta 0,1, Yanfieessegfj; little more than 1 Joe McCarthy. and the President, term in the White terruilted by another ence was seen today a5 Prime with Uncle Sam's fighting Devil MONTAGUE FRI. 8 P. M. SATURDAY 1:45 and 9:45 P. M. Scull? ‘__ MONDAY 8:30 r. M. MATINEE 3 ‘ ‘£1 Another War Conference Soon? W81‘ ' l House being iii-i confer- Min- ld the House of Ed for anothc- t meetinff with Premier Stalin and Mr. Roosevelt before the end of thc tes election is .1 five weeks awa Y so far, has. made yflnkg was shed, only one campaign speech. He is n0 teem p nnlngnano her for Oct. 5 McCarthy 51111 1S 1101-1511111 o; But alreadv there are unofficial lflflliulk the Yankees on top, though they trail Detroit Tigers by three full ga and there go double header. merited’ "We've Anjything might A slim, perhaps. games with the full games ahead of them, while Cnllntmg upon the Tigers to stum. thNl‘ ‘remaining IICEJVBY tie. By Ralph Associated Press Staff Writer The Japanese air force is in the throes of its most disastrous month of the war. With only a few days to go, Sep- tember already has cost the Nip- poncse upwards of 1,100 planes. In August. few could be found 111 the skies. Allied pilcts complained opportunity to become aces. Mil- 1 ary lenders said probably were being conserved for defense nf the Phil pplnes or Jap- an itself. Barely destroyed during Then came September. The picture changed overnight and fighters roared from the decks of Admiral Wlllia third fleet carriers to strike by sur- pfls“ deep into the Philippines. They spotted concentration of enemy uir- craft on the ground, much shipping and met some sky opposition. while the seaborne attacks swept over the Archipelago other Amcr- m m ;1cnn and Allied warplnnes relentlessly i g ‘ hammered enemy vast Pacific war last 'I‘uestlay Zvrasthtcifiistlgyiiire 0121111 prunes. of 151?: "l" similar B"°“PS~' 377 shot down in combat, 337 fell As he contem still got a chance I1." almost hopeless chance,‘ The New Will three of their remaining fourl ll Heppe they 1.154 Japanese planes sgptcmbgr n5 Nnnrirfs most ruin- ous month in the air. ng. plated tomorrow's, McCarthy, com- happc Yorkers must. Browns, still two to PORT, Sept. 28 at hanging from four Waskcsiu have re North Atlantic. Hay of Blsnny. In 12 months of the score of their a sub-stands les "Whisky 5119" to her commanding and North Sydney, ed rum-runners Japanese aircraft Protestant Gf Churche they had little enemy aircrift a hundred were the month. Wm“ “mm” several Protestant m F‘, Halsey's ure Rt. Rev. L. chairman 11nd Rev .er_ Toronto United secretary. They will ‘til an election of o _c constitution. bases through the ' meetmg M theatre. Through to mark E consultatio British council of he ground over that Archipelago. least cne Ndzl U-boal their The Waskcsiu. better known TORONTO, Sept, The Canadian counc formally came into when a meeting bf h h :.’orkin'ns er :C urc , says that the council shttll had destruyedflprovitle an agency for conference. n and common planning by Canadian churches 11nd _ The staggering ‘Otni b1 1'11 planes "'1" a m” Pelagiglffglélgl Miigf ‘Frigate Waskesiu Back In Canada (CP belts, turned to Cun- the uctioii at sou. shun-first Cnn_ possi. 8S her crew, hurl officcr. Lt - Cindr. James P Fraser of Halifax NS, who chas as an RCMP. cutter captain before the war. Councfl shmm 28 ~ (CF) l of Churches being today delegates from denominations ‘today formally adopted a proposed cons itutlon. Provisional officers W B. Broughnll, Anglican Bishop of Nngurn. 11s W. J Gallagh- churchman, as hold office un- fficers tomorrow approved at n Baptist maln- llcds Make Gains Soviet Comment 0n m, Road Towards Plans For Germanyilormm Hungary LONDON, Sept. 2B —- (AP) -—! In the first detailed Soviet com- ment on post-war , etl Germany, Tess reaffirmed to- day advisory but denied info small states. In a Moscow broadcast, the cf- ficlal Russian news agency jumped into the discusson which has d vel- opcd since the Washington that vclJs cabinet was split over question of how harsh peace terms should be after the unconditional surrender. ' The broadcast was ,repared before I German re suggestion boxes in Anny cutab llshmcnts have led to the adnptiu. of manv successful George E Ross, Mon-iimprove the efficiency cf the Can ladiln Army. that. the ti-ipower European 0n the road to commission rime Minister Churchill called in this House of Commons speech for , w big-three conference, indic- (CP) - All officers of the easteriratins that no final decklons had division b! the Presbyterian Wom-, been made at the Quebec conference reonccrning Germany. plans for defeat- Wily into Lupkow from Poland into pow forces stacking on Hu gary. more than a mile frontier and seven LONDON. sent. 2a - (AP) - Riuaslan troops today fought their Pass leading Czecho-Slovakia northern Hungary, proposed and Budapest acknowledged further three separate zones of occupation, Rains by other mere was any plan un- dcr discussion for cutting Germany‘ in their i erful Red Army a 100 mile front n-vaaion of southeastern! e village of Lupkcw is sligliily from the Czech miles southeast disclosure rcm 0f Vydi-am. It was possible that the President Rooge- Russians were over the frontier the because n Hungarian communique told of fighting insi Hungary. dion Y.. Mal forces. was using upwards of 300,000 cond city. and inventions b lauds satellite to s n. de Lupkcw Pass, which is only 43 mile; from Northern rts laid Marshal Ro- ncvsky, commander of combined Russian and Romanian 30 divisions or men in an off- Bnllve Wh'ch has reached to within, 15 miles of Szeged_ Hungary's ae-g to within 102 miles of the capital at Budapest, Moscow has not yet men ionccl the big dr.ve , and practice aimed at knocking out. Hun ary, last tend W th 1B0!‘- 31, gepilalrts the}; a Chwchiill-Roosevelt-i m i _ U; a n nice ng ls be ng p tinned .1111» e pa“? Se that the President will do the in-i tire only four games to nda on leave after action on the‘ Murmansk _ run, the English Channel and the adirtn-built frigate and first to pct‘ Hillbil- nt one confirmed U- gnnt kill, one assist and two “good hunting". in the words of; i .1»- t. i B Do ll Canadian Fryers Wig: o" i Comedy Of Errors Relieves l“ O ‘Monotony On Adriaiic Front V 1 i i1 WITH THE GANADIANB ON THE, but lhey Wmlld d0 their bB-lt. ADRIATIC FRONT, Sept. 1GP Cable) ,'of this story 1 certain The final touch fer an hour-long truce ians carried 1 dugout battalion - of a dapper i three Germans ‘ ical snowball thus: . Unarmed are best artillery 28 -—l Th -— 'I'ha weird whimsyjjoined can only be under- A , stood when it 1s explained without his c0 1 the preliminaries that concerns (a: Canadian; who figured certain Geirnans wan-ted to sur- Irender to them (b) certain Ge:- mans who figured the same Canad- ians wanted to surrender u; them Rubicon River ' discussion 1n the ditch three Canadians. Plnskin 0n the agreement - At l! quarter. Blindfolded, the headquarters in a nearby house blind folded CanadqThe conversation went like this: the prolem to the. Forclnan: "I 1Foreman procee to battalion the three were marched back to a Idugout where a jolly resplendent baron and Foreman repeated the William Gray, Guelph, ont , walked lines. up to u house Canadian Observation bumped into an unarmed German Wrong Prcsumptlnne Gray presumed the Germans wanted to surrender. Three more Germans —wltl1 arms-and der. Gray argued Germans in in English: the only word understood wfls "kvm to go black for an officer Gray fcuncl an infantry platoon‘ the 1 under Lieut. T |expiali1ed his called in Maj. of New Westmlnister. problem . sniper forced them to hit the ditch They called to the through a private ‘Stresses Value 0f Scout Movement jTo The Community i i i "The Boy Scout organization in 1this Province 1s soliciting public iccntributions to help defray ex- ‘pcnscs incurred in the conduct cf Scout camps, field services. and other Scouting activities. said Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell in an nddrcss last evening. _ Li not the desire cf the Association to make a personal canvass at the present time and contributors are therefore requested to forward their contributions directly to the honorary treasurer, Major Alexan- der Knox, Box 100. Charlottetown. "The amount of money which the Boy Scouts raise from public rubscriptions is very small in com. parlson with the value and bene- AN EAST COAST CANADIAN, fits of the services performed by l - With scalp of the 11111111111‘ CHEW‘ members of the Canadian frigate. the Scout movement. In fact, one objects of the movement 1.= to tench boys to be self-reliant and to work for and earn everything that is really worth while in life. This is one of the earliest lessons of Scout. ing, as the boys are taught that they should earn the money to purchase _ money thnt they require to go to The principle of "getting something for nothing” is definite- lv discouraged in the Scout move- ment, and Scout leaders are of the opinion that camp discipline i5 greatly improved by the fact that every boy has to earn at last part of the cost of his uni. iorm and camp life. Reward For Merit “The policy nf reward for merit is continued 111 the earning of Scout badges. The Boy Scouts tire lcd through a scrlcs of courses and tests aimed at fitting them to take care of themselves under any circumstances. nnd to be ready to give aid to others whenever re- quired. The courses are not easy, but the boys obviously appreciate and value the badges which are earned by their own efforts. “The first badge is known as the Tenderfoot Badge; 1n order to ob- tain it. the recruit must memorize and understand the Scout promise and lznv; he must. kncw- the story and composition of the Union Jack; he inust tie six klndsof knots; know the uses of the Scout staff, and know the Scout signs and solutes. On passing this test the recruit cnn then be invested as a Scout. “Next is zhe Second Class Badge: its test involves an elementary knowledge of First Aid: Morse or semaphore signalling; laying and lighting a wood fire, using not more than two matches; cooking a Imeal in the open, following a trail through woods for a quarter mile; going r1 mile. using the Scout's pace. in twelve minutes. andknow- ng the sixteen points of the com. pass. . . First Ald, Bic. “Finally, 1n order to obtain the First Class Budge, the Scout must puss advanced tests in First Aid. camp cooking and signalling; must be able to swim 50 ards; to esti- mate heights, dstances and weights; must be able to nave money of his own; toread and make maps; must know how to fell n tree: and must pass the final test of a ten mile overnight hike, camping out and preparing three meals in the open. After passing these tests, the boy is a First. Cltiss scout. "In addition. there are neurlg; B0 Proficiency Badges, any of w ich can be coined after the passing of the Second Class tests. These include ,thc Alrmanb badge, Am- bulance. Blacksmiths Boatmans Camper's, Carpenter's, Debaters Electrician's, Engineer's, Fireman's. Horsemaws, Pioneer, Radiomnnh, swimmers, Arc. The interest aroused in studying and working for one of these Proficiency bad. gen. is often valuable to a boy in choosing. and preparing himself for, his life vocation. Safeguard Against Delinquency “From my experience in the ud- ministrnticn of criminal law. am convinced that the principles of Scouting can g0 far tn urcvi-nt the spread of Juven- ile delinquency. The Boy Scout he thought was a Post and the Gennan-and slur-c i .1 i mandnnt," it was agreed for each i T. Fox-man, New | Westminlster, B.C , dug in. in front of a tough German position. and It was decided to proceed to the agreed rendezvous but en route a Germans who knew the Hoskln called down a fierce artil-i language to tell them t-o stop the lery barr their uniforms, and the. They finally solved the puzzle ‘and came to the conclusion that .|nobody wanted to surrender to 1 anybody. Back went the blindfolded Can- and all the way toward adians appeared‘ their lines their escort. kept: an eye presumed the i unarmed Grey wanted to surren-_sa1d Iiev mustreturn by7p.m. ,1 . the hour neared the Germans broke on the watch because Hoskln hi2 into a run. Thev arrived sharp at 7 o'clock at the ditch where the other Canadians and Germans were lying side by aide. There was a. Pole who was with Germans said he wanted desert, but the Germans shot him plained to the Canadians Formnn, were always having trouble with the n. F. Hoskin also P0165 and Czechs like him. but i there were always Germans around to discourage them. He decided to return with the [others to the German lines and, the Canadians returned to theirs.| as a final salute. "Churchill Sets ‘Allied War 5 Effort Straight By CHARLES BRUCE LONDON, Sept. 28 -—- (CP Cable) —Prime Minister Churchill set the record of Allied war effort and sacrifice straight today with a reaffirmatlon of the huge part played by the armies of the Bri- tish Commonwealth on all fronts g1 more than four years of con- ict Unstinting in his tribute to Brl. tain's Russian and American Al- lies, Mr. Churchill at the same time reminded the worldthat in Italy nlone the largest mass of all the troops along the entire front came from the United Kingdom. Nearly half the divisions in Italy were composed cf Britons, he‘ said, and to them were added Cana- dian, New Zcaland, South African and Indian divisions. He reveal. ed that the American-commanded 5th Army was half-British and! half-American. v "After more than five years cf war," he said, "we still maintain! almost exactly the some number of divisions taking both theatres cfwvar together, in the field cf action against the enemy as the United States. by all the shipping resources which can be employed, have vet been able to send to Eur. ope." Britons fighting on the western front were in a proportion of two to three to the Americans. Of the campaign in Western Europe. he said: "It was with great pleasure that we all saw the ning advances which certainly have not been surpassed anywhere." The little publicized Burma cam- Daikn by Lord Louis Mountbatten?! 14th Imperial Army of Britons. South Africans and Indians “con- stitutes the largest and most im. portant ground fighting that has yet taken place n alnst the armies of Japan," he said. This army has suffered 40,000 battle casualties und 237,000 cases of tropical illness. Ten Japanese divisions had been repulsed and largely shattered and 50,000 to 60,000 Japanese slain. Not Cpprcssors LONDON, Sept. 28 _ Gen. Eisenhower told the peo 1e vffiermflnr today that his All ed. armies arc coming "its conquerors but not as cppressors," with the Purpose of eradicating the Nazi Pflffy and Germain militarism. tigenb Eisenhowers first; prcclama. (CF) "cru Oliilreosivi and discrlmlnatoig 18W " end w try all military and Party leaders, Gesbnpg men and others suspected of war crime; and atrocities. They will be pun ished "a: they deserve" if gonna guilty. ._____________ Eight Dead in Train Collision MISSOURI v may, 1a., Sept. 2n —— (C?) -- Eight persons are knbwn to be dead. four more are not cx- pected to live and up to 100 are be- ieved to have been injured ln a collision tonight between a Chic- ago and Northwesiem passenger and freight trnin on the outskirts of Missouri Valley. ‘ ' handicap of war time, is perform- ing u valuable service in develop- ing character nnd self-reliance among the youth of our land. "Contribution will help to im. prove the extent and quality of the services which the Provincial organization can give to the Boy e aiuiwer agreed to lay off. cud the . results of which have German oberlieutcnant said, affected the course of m ny declined to enter into: exits, have had their origin in me negotiatons but would like toseethe} most trivial or co cred this and decided to let Gmy and libs-man, with an interpreter 80. tree, they returned .with1n an hour or three German lies in the factlhcstages would suffer reprisnls. nobody surrendered to anybody 11f- reigne’ over a little sector of the battlew .. front gfOUIld the ' while three three cmltilflfll- cause the righ Ere 10d YD the Gflmfln GWIF-RBYI time was in the bathtub, under the understand you _ headuuartersgwnnted to see ME about surrender- Qommgwane, 0f German baron nnmin " passed the time of day as hostages of the Canadians. The intricacies of the chronolog- headquarters. explained‘ sgt. -Maj . gtlll bewildered, grey agreed that Blindfolded again, m‘ had already achieved a place in the 11.». he crossed the fields. and ex- w theyl this blood serum to some PTOCBSS n 11' h ld dry it without British and Canadian armies... Lvngfi-filg fm°°gfleet1venege, and show themselves capable of light. “we 1t 1n 31,4151" eentegneyg. Guardian representative by Rloutley, preached the Canadian Government for financial assistance to 111d him in solving the blood problem. Unfortun- a.ely. there had been no approp- As Hintions made at the time for any 9 work of a kindred nature. Dr. Best “It may he necessary for told Dr. would require $10,000 but that if he lrOllld 8ft; $5.000, he would be nble to tackle the problem at once. Dr. Rooney's answer was characteris- tic of the mun: “I huve not got it," he said, “but I'll gel: it for you to- morrow." illr. Iloutley Tells I | Genesis of Fluid their outfit,» Many scientific discoveries, the profoundly human ev- commonplac hap- Peflihxi. Archimedes in his bath- tub, Isnac Newton under the apple- Galileo on top of Plan's lean- inf! tower. Watts speculating 1m the rising and falling of the keitleq; ll¢1__ all those were tremendously lmpur. I tant events in the world's history be. l; man at the rghi: apple-tree, on the tower, or watch- ing the steaming kettle. Dr. F W. Routley, National the Canadian d Cross, who visited town this week, had no idea that’ dfly in the fall of i930 when h‘; old friend, Dr. Charles H. Best, vis- ed him at Red Cross headquar- it ters in London that the visit would Paris, which greeted a Gaulie, given a place of carried occupation I prove any more than just another pleasant meeting between olcl ifriends. Certainly, he had no idea that millions of men, still follow- i ing their peaceful callings in shops 1 factories. fnnns or in other occup- BQV 5001A ations, would, in the very nearfut- for Kingston, rure, owe their very lives to that casual and friendly renewal of an old friendship. But so it was. Dr. Best was no strnng:r to London. nor to scientific circles in ny city of the world. Though only lfluld Blood Treatment V a ,forty years of age at this time, he world's Hall of Fame by having, it Dr. Frederick Banting, given to a suffering humanity the great, ‘discovery bf insulin. And now his,‘ mind was obsessed with the solving of another problem, that of the pre- 1“ the Unwed SW19 servation of blood in some form which would maintain itscffective- " ness for long periods of time. The transference cf blood from one person to another had been g (accomplished successfully even be- fore the beginning of World War 1. At the end of that conflict, the method of transference had progres- I 56d to the point where a soldier, silliirliig from shock caused by] wouirtls, could receive blood which! miiit; hove been given by a D07"; scn hundreds of miles away. But the effectiveness of that blood s01- elv depended on the number of days uinlch had lapsed since 1t had been given by its original owner. After a week. the virility of the blood was gone. For this reason hundreds of gallons of the precious fluid often had to be dumped. Dr. Best’: Problem At the bfifilnning of World War l1, Dr. Best had succeeded in so treatiiig fluid blood that its effect- satisfactory conditions for as long as 60 days. But he was not satisfied, He saw that. with a world war im- minent, a blood reserve of thous- and; of gallons must be bu lt up for use in any emergency 11nd that if the efficiency of such blood re- serves could only be maintained for a, period of two months, a whole blood reserve of thousands 0f BR1- lcng might have l0 be dllmPed 0B9 day while twice that might be needed in the next month. Some revolutionary method of pres- iblood Treatment isniper. The Germans allplalnlid be| Correapondentiwasnt a member of Charlotte- Iuth, pe October 21nd so as not with Thanksgiving week town of Nowq Sacz, Pet shot to death by Md‘ occupation force‘ mii-Wd membership in Scout M I banned service clubs and Scout is Scout Executive for were selected to act 1111c conference of the United M, SEPPEMBERMQ‘), 19.14 “n t 1 811 . [Notmes Cafiafz-wid M l» , for the’ late eLcrdc "§’§1?§.~.~S°“br§ Scout b: the British ' ' originally scheduled have been -end. In the huge liberation paynde 1,, Qlicriii 1) ' 30y Scouts tees‘ honour. They h“. on throughout the Naz‘ French t 61h schedtneg Thirty-two Polish boy; ‘he cvement which by the Nazis. Mr. J. Harold Willi ~ he outstanding B0,, 52$,‘ 5. is to make a coast to coast tour of Canada in he next few Weeks, spanking w leaders, p, th N . Ishild am onset Council, Rhode Twentv Montreal Boy 3mm R5 runners at one Relief and Rehabilitation Administration lUNRRAl he 1n Canada’; recognition pf the international spirit e1 seem. ng. séflfeljbl gum kid's game," “ye rrcll of the British was captured and decided ic make a break for liberty. (m. ting safely from the camp, he h“ to live for eight weeks in the Ap- penine I-lil country, living in a shelter, cook- ing from smokeless fires and Re“; erallv living off the country Hiérrell’ saysi hle an so e arrva-in Brit h ll iveness could be maintained under grflyt to hi; trafningma; n cou End 0f The War Comment quantityIBy in enemy occupied owes his stirvival e5 en- n B0! ‘X 1 . 1 d. A d D gfeltt ixitbuingvl to fxilnd itr. LONDON, Seirl- BB — (AP) — Blood, as ha; been known for This is what Prime Minister process, ve threads m serum, therefore. is simply Now, 1r Dr. -Besl; could subject’ sis ll Best, like moat Dr. Routley’; Answer Acwrding to the story toldDa r. Dr. Best had already ap- Rciutley his experiments All on of And he did. "I depreciate “m, being carried away into premature a expcctutiorts news of captures places and of army. But t ere ls still u great dea guess -it could come. est technical attainments, knuwl-. edge and responsibility have good hopes that it will be over by the end of 1944. "On the other hand, —certninly not I -can guarantee, that several months of 1045 may not be required. There is also the possibility that, after organized IE1. lsistance of the German State and- arm war are may be maintained in till forests and mountains of many by numbers of desperate mvb conscious of their own guilt and impending doom. centuries, has the striking physical Churchill had W My tbdfly abflu‘ property of coagulation when 1t l3 the end of the war. shed, to form the well-known blood clot. This elo._ set; into n iikrszrrizzrrib:..:.......e........i. - - consists of blood corlmidfs enmesh- ed in a fine network of formed by a substance called fib- i . 1212511111 deprived of the fibre aub- stance, fibrin. . very much people of an immediate ry hard not to be _when each day e papers are rightly filled with of important advances of the l to do in a military sense. ‘Unless organized German taiicc collapsed in the IL D 881' future, enormous additional U. S. forces will be brought to bear in the final struggle. which would maintain its life-glv- ‘ ing qualities for months, or even years, the problem would be solved But he needed scientific apparatus, some cf which would have tn be of his own designing. and apparatus - cost money. Dr other scientists, had no money. ‘I shall certainly not hazard l be no more than guess-as to when the end will Many persons of the high- no uni is completely broken. fierce GOT‘. flu ies to declare at a certain dat-I that the actual war against tht German State has come to n11 ena d thnt a period of mopping HI bandits and war criminals ha: begun. ‘Nn one can foresee what fom ,exnctlv the death agony of Nell» Best went to wcrk on the problem‘ 4°!" ‘V311 "Um" with the result that today the lvu fit Lhfllilllfiitllilds of Czrilnadinn and 8d B n8 men ave been sav because Dr. Best thought he would‘ gorges we; Qriginnliy pay a call on his old friend. ph Scouts in this Province." A Christmas cud, bearing the i; brand spouting i1 l5-f signature of Privne Minister Mac‘ 5min P-‘Yachlmr I5 H8 Kenzio King, will be sent to cam-j bomb. Irvin: on its movement. even ‘under the leverehdian biisonere of In! in Germany. minutes. British authorities recently disclose ,1: new type of ln':'"-i'.liary bomb which. on ignition. b80071"! " m’ NOT BY Till CUP sold in annacistcioLmedfcal use 011E d the use. by RAF bombers 0' cot flame. its descent is partially controlled by g en in inset, upper right. Largo photo shows 18111:!‘ aide, spouting flaming Jet which burn: for W