Coalâ€" Coal â€" Coal A. AMewson£ Son PHONE 340 â€" 341 Phone 136 Wbumhyammy!mï¬hm mmltrkhtd(&emm.lthj-t as ALIVE and FRESH as the day it left the factory. Come in and let us talk your battery troubles over. GRIMSBY MEAT MARKET Grimsby to Toronto Toronto to Grimsby 10.10 a.m. 7.00 p.m. 8.25 am. 4.25 p.m. 4.00 p.m. 10.50 p.m. 12.25 p.m. â€" 8.15 p.m. BUS CONNECTIONS AT TORONTO FOR NORTH BAY â€" PARRY SOUND â€" MIDLAND OTTAWA â€" MONTREAL Main West Toronto â€" â€" North Bay â€" â€" Parry Sound â€" .GOODYEAR... FACTORY FRESH BATTERIES "SCOTTY" RYANS Fresh And Cooked Meats Fresh And Smoked Fish MILLYARD‘S DRUC STORE oull Enjoy Going by Bus SHELL GASOLINES AND OILS GOODYEAR TIRES AND BATTERIES Preâ€"War Quality Anthracite Pennsylvania Hard Coal FARES ARE LOW BUSES LEAVE Round Trip â€"â€" Tax included â€" $ 2.90 Midland â€" $15.60 Ottawa â€" â€" $11.85 Montreal (Standard ‘Time) ALWAYS â€" GRIMSEBY, ONTARIO $ 8.45 $15.20 $18.45 hime before. There will never be one like him again. Shamateur or Pro. There have been, and still are, a lot of hockey players who get so inâ€" terested in their game (my partner for instance) that they actually mt_:um,umtcm;mtm.moudm type. The only difference between JERRY and the ordinary player beâ€" ing that JERRY talked to the puck most lucidly and his eJaculations were plainly audible, and delighted in, mm | by the fans on the sidelines. The averâ€" JBRRY CARSON gave a lot to the PEACH KINGS and when he gave it to them he gave it to Grimsby and the FRUIT BELT. He was a mmm.u.u.-mw.ummm cleverest thing that he ever did in his life was when he persuaded Arnette Shafer to change her name. For the past 13 years he has been a valued employee of National Breweries of Montreal and is very highly regarded by the executives of that firm. Still goes to hockey matches but will have nothing to do with coaching hockey teams. Says he is all done with hockey grief. Here‘s the reason, weighs 250 now. FRUIT BELT than there is this winter. Mindful of that terrible trip to Port Colborne on the previous Fridey night, Manager DIXON reâ€" fused to take his team to Welland by bus or car. He took them to St. Catharines by bus and then transferred to the trolley line and went into the Canal Town that way and back home the same way. Welland had no great shakes of a team that winter, in fact they finished fifth in the group and never won a game, neither did Hamilton Beavers, they defaulted their own games. Yet, believe it or not Welland made the KINGS go 30 minutes overtime to beat them 42. KINGS tired and wornâ€"out from that travel trip and 90 minute game in Port Colâ€" immmmmmmmm Year‘s festivities thrown in, did not really perk up until the overtime. If that game had gone another half hour about 1,000 people would have been killed, including some of the KINGS and Yours Truly. The rink had hardly been cleared and the teams out when the roof caved in with the heavy weight of snow on the old barnâ€"like structure. Welland has never had a rink since. It was on the homeâ€"bound trip that night, while waiting to change cars at Thorold Junction that the KINGS ran into an old farmâ€" er, rubber boots and coonâ€"skin coat. Pretty well oiled with some of Mr. Raney‘s O.T.A. juice. DIXON, the greatest kidder in the world opened up and the KINGS followed suit. The old hayâ€"kicker took it and handed back plenty. As the KINGS clambered aboard their car the old fellow yelled "youse are a poor bunch of sports, I hope youse loses, but 1 knows you won‘t, %63452134060790......8$9856350A." He was correct in his prognostication. January 11th, 1925â€"Snow is three feet deep on Main Street and deeper in the country. KINGS are scheduled to play in Dunnville. The MUDCATS were a formidable team that winter and it being cold weaâ€" ther they had a swell sheet of natural ice. KINGS did not want to travel alone by train to play. Fans wanted to go. How to get there. It all wound up by 10 farmers sleighs, drawn by horses, loaded to the gunwales with fans drove to Smithville â€" team went by train â€" and there boarded a special train on the T. H. & B. Dunnville branch and arrived in Mudcatville before eight o‘clock. That was a swell game of hockey. MUDCATS always a swell team to play against and the Dunnville fans always a swell bunch of people to meet, packed that rink to the rafters. BILL FRY was alive then and had just retired from the presidency of the O.H.A. and he faced the puck. On that keen, natâ€" ural ice the KINGS forward line of Reid, Clarke and Horne flew like meteors, but do not think that that Dunuvilie front line was not fiying. KINGS win the game 4â€"2. Dunnvilie citizens and MUDCATS treated them like winners. That is what has always made the Big Town on The Grand a real sporting town:. SPORTOLOGY mwmmmnmmm&mmzmdm mdhanbymn.flno'oloeklnmu.m-dm mmmm:m-»mm«:mmnm m.muumuwmouam«.muu stay home and protect the town. ‘There is a 250 pound Sergeant of Provincial Police in Welland m,m*mmmmmmm.mu.my- wmmmmwmmmmuum Mdlmunoduhnwmwbaoht.dmm ADDITIONAL SPORTS ONPAGE 9 ialllllltllt' P . â€"’â€â€"â€llllj THE BILINGUAL PEACH KINGâ€"There never was one (By Bones Livingston, Sportologist) THE _GRIMSBY INDEPENXpENXNT (Continued on Page 9) Peach Kings 7; Thorold 2 with accurate passing, brother, you really have a winning combination, und that‘s exactly what the eight hundred fans can testify to the reâ€" sult of last Friday‘s encounter with the not so slow Thorold Legion. Incidentally on that Thorold outâ€" fit are a couple of guys by the name of Rocco, who can dig up a lot of speed and pass the rubber around with a pretty fair concepâ€" tion of this national game of Canâ€" ada. The fact that the Rocco boys were well checked by Grimaby forâ€" wards, and soundly thwarted by the Grimsby defense, is anoth«r to two victory so decisive physicalâ€" ly and morally. ‘Taking over the conching duies while ‘"Pop" McVicar was malking with additional Black Horses, vas Pud Reid. Pud sent out thirten men, dressing Whitfield in plac» of the missing Craig. With Mush X1}â€" ler, Pud Reid, Jr.. and Hann deâ€" fensively giving Al MacMillan in the nets some very substantial mupâ€" port. Alf played a very good game, looking particularly brilliant on several occasions. The first line of Zuke, Mattison and Hill gave a lmm,mmm- chard, Tallman and Whitfeld tri put on a great display of combin ation hockey. 5 The Kings opened up at the 240 mark of the first period, when Razorback Hill slipped the puck past Clement on a play set upby Zuke and Reid. Hutchison‘s bng shot from near the blueline was Grimaby‘s second tally, this coning at the 4.35 point Miller got the only penalty of the initial stanza. Two quickies at 5.01 and 5.1 put the Kings four up. Mattisa Tallman and Whitfield. Then near the threeâ€"quarter mark of the seâ€" cond period, McGill scored for Thorold, on what was termed by some of the perpetual inhabtants (’IIIII’IIIII’II’II’IIIIIII.‘& & \ KAISERâ€"FRAZER OO ooremomnsnomese . = â€" 0. f o i Midâ€"lown Motors PHONE 542 WILL ARRIVE ON FEBRUARY 156 SHIPMENT OF RUBBER TIRED FARM WAGONS CA RS High averageâ€"D. MoBrideâ€"245. Special Prizeâ€"Team with highâ€" est single gameâ€"Victory, 1031. Linesman: Artie Clark. Grimsby. It‘s a mighty poor sportaman -u:-;nu-unmmm feats of his bird dog. GRIMSBY % &