Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Sep 1920, p. 9

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THURSDAY, SEPT. 16, 1920. rr ne -- Oh! Now For The.Royal Battles For Supremacy In Football--the team best equipped and trained, always wins; and-esgpecially#e-if-they-are equipped ie with our football goods. We now have a goad stock of all Football necessities, including Balls, Pads, Pants, Boots, etc., and can fill all orders at present. 3 : There's a shortage of Football Goods and the factories will not guarantee shipments--so the soon- er you or your club get outfitted, the better. Better be on the safe side and get your goods wow. Avoid disappointment by acting quickly so CLUBS and TEAMS: We can give you good prices on your Football Goods. Let us quote. TENNIS : The Tennis Season is not yet over. We have all kinds ofRacquets, Ballsand Nets. You'll get what you want here. This is the leading Sporting Goods House--the store where people get suited. --Drop In and Look Us Over-- TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS CO. 88 PRINCESS STREET : ; Telephone 529, "THE PLACE TO GET THAT RECORD" ~ - GIVE YOUR POULTRY OUR SPECIAL FEED and get results in the egg Fasket and In thriving chicks. This feed is one of our specialties and those who use it are its enthusiastic admirers, Try some and note the improvement in laying hens and growing chicks, W. F. McBroom 42-44 Princess Street "hone 1686 IR | 14 Ib. tin 50 cents TISH CONSOLS or badly treated give rise to of sucha grave character that you should not risk using inferior pein bas preparations. SYRUP is the genuine remedy whese te tha nly yenuine remals whe 'ON SALE EVERYWHERE : | . THE DAILY BRITISH WH World of Sport * * 1 RUGBY NOTES { Sim" Vaughan, veteran Tiger: has retired, and will be suc- "ceeded by. "Doc" Heddle: Eddie Fisher, who played outside wing for Hamilton Alerts, Tigers and { Ottawa, has signed. a Dundas certifi | cate this season. He was under sus- | pension by the A. A. U. of C., but he | has been restored to good standing. | One rule, strictly adhered to by | United States football teams, and! which would go a long way toward stamping out roughhouse tactics In | Canadian football is that which pro- | | hibits holding on the line. The Inter- | collegiate and Interprovineial Un- lons have adopted a new rule this sea- son which they hope will discourage holding. According to advices from Tiger- town, "Bert" Moore, former T. R. and A. A. outside wing, will be found with Tigers this season. An effort is being made to secure "Chuck" Wate- | rous, who starred for McGill in the years before the war. Both Waterous and Moore reside in 'Brantford. The latter attended the practise held on Saturday. Harry Batstone, regarded as at least the equal of any backfield play- | er in the game, is suffering from neuralgia, and his absence from the Argo practises is causing much con- | cern. With only three weeks remain- | ing in which to whip the team int> condition for the game against Mon- treal it is essential that as much team work as possible be developed. John Helsmann goes back to his old campus at Pennsylvania after an absence of twenty-nine years. He left | the Red and Blue stronghold in! 1891, and since that date has been a wanderer through the west and south with a long string of championship elevens In his wake. If Penn slips again this season the fault will hard- | ly be with a coach who has made a | success of his profession for twenty- | nine years. | The O.R.F.U. senior series will likely consist of two teams, Park-| dale and T. R. and A. A. and it| should be productive of some splen- | did games. There is great rivalry be- | tween these teams, and the fur al-| ways flies when they meet. In 1912 Parkdale put T. R. and A. A. out of the running for the O. R. F. U. title, and the defeat still rankles in the | breasts of the Black and Whita. The renewal of those struggles of bygons days should be interesting. "CHICK" EVANS, OF CHICAGO Who Saturday won the National Amateur Golf title championship, de- feating Francis Ouimet, of Boston, 7 and 6. CARPENTIER SAYS HE Georges Carpentier, French heavy- weight champion, arrived on the French liner La Lorraine 'at New York, nettled by criticism of his fail- ure to make a match on his previous visit, and detefliined, so he said, to prove he is neither a motion picture actor nor a "paNor boxer." With jaw set and clenched teeth the French boxer showed plainly cri- ticism had cut him to the quick. He denied he had come for "easy money,' and that he had no stomach for a match. When told "Battling" Levinsky, whom he will meet October 12th, may prove a "hard nut to crack," Carpentier said: 'So much the better. I prefer a tough match. I am confident I. can beat him, and I want to show people who have criticized me that I am a boxer and not an actor." Carpentier added he could mot meet Dempsey before December 31, when his contract with Cochran, the London promoter, expired. Carpen- tier was accompanied by his Mana- ger, Francois Deschamps. KING ALPHONSO'S RACER CAP- TURES RICH PRIZE. King Alfonso's great racer, Bra- bant, won the grand prize event at San Sebastian, Spain, over 13 other starters, the distance being approxi- mately a mile an& a hal, The king, who was given an ovation, led .the winner back to the stables. The purse was 100,000 pesetas, -- ES RULE CHANGES. players are well pleas- changes in the rughy and are of the opinion which prevents a scrim- mage being held within a yard of the line of the side, not in possession of the ball, is the bést of the changes made by the rules commission. -------------- An overworked mouth is quite sure to cause trouble in any commun Fin cima sa tit IS NO PARLOR BOXER! THE LONG DRIVE | Tyres Seek Joys of Teé Shot Above All. . | Describing' the delights of a holi- | day golf cohrse in England, a writer | in' The Times concludes: it "While all this hard sloggivg is | going on round the course there is | also much hard teaching on a vacant + | i piece of tur! near the club-house. All day long the professional and his assistants seem to be at work--an | encouraging sign for those who say | we do not practice seriously enougn | and shall soon be beaten by more systematic Americans. At almost any | time of day there is the lady in the purple jumper or the yellow jumper | or the green jumper having her left wrigt tucked under the shaft, her | right elbow tucked into her side, | looking very grim and earnest ana | also very uncomfortable. Occasionally there is an elementary gentleman, but the ladies are by far the more | industrious. | "One thing is very noticeable, Pv- erybody wants to learn to drive, no- | body seems to regard the iron as worthy of study. The passion for long driving, of which we hear too much | nowadays, seems to extend to the | whole golfing community. Or per- | baps, it is only the natural spirit of | holidays. Say what you like about the | value of the short game, a holiday | of missed putts is endurable, but a | holiday of sliced drives is too gloomy | te contemplate." { The comment on the desire for | long driving is equally appiicable to | many Canadian players. All appear | | | | ! -happy if a good tee shot is secured, and frequently the more important. Shots of the iron club are neglected. However, with the gradual increase of "class" in Canadian players, it is probable that more studied attention | will be paid to all round excellence, rather than to skill with the wooden clubs alone TO FIGHT IN GARDEN. When Jack Dempsey meets Bill! Brennan in the Garden, at New York | for 15 rounds to a decision on Octo- | ber 1st, it will be the first time that | a heavyweight champion has defend- | ed his title in that historic arena! | since the days of John L. Sullivan. James J. Corbett, Fitzsimmons and all of that great line of heavyweights | who flourished during Horton Law days, except Jim Jeffries, boxed at the Garden, but Sullivan was the on- ly title holder to defend champlon- ship honors in that arena. The others appeared there either | before or after they had lost the championship. Jess Willard defeated | Frank Moran in the Garden, but that | | was a no-decision engagement. | ete | MISS AMERICA BREAKS POWER BOAT RECORD. | Establishing a new world's record | {of 71.43 miles an hour, Gar Wood | with Miss America of the Detroit | Yacht club, won the gold challenge | | cup of the American Power Boat As- | sociation at Detroit, taking the final | 30-mile heat of the power bomt clas- | sic in 25 minutes, 37 2-5 seconds. The record was made in the fifth | five-mile lap, which was covered in | 4 minutes, 12 seconds. Gar Wood's | average speed for the 30-mile heat to | day 'was 70 miles an hour flat. Second | place in the race went to Miss Detroit | V, with George Wood at the wheel, | who finished third. Increases Your Weight, Restores Lost Strength, Prevents IlIness Every day come new converts to that great army of men and women who rejoice in new-found health that came to them through the use of that wonderful blood-renewing pre- aration called "FERROZONE."" ery simple how it acts. r All you have to do is take two small choco- | late-coated tablets with a sip of wa- | ter at the close of each mea]. Ferrozone is a marvel. It con- fains just what thin blood lacks-- | lots of iron, but mark you, the kind | of iron your blood is able to absorb | Ferrozone puts life and' vim into the | blood. Makes it rich, red and nour-| ishing. Naturally the body is better fed and grows stronger day by day. Of course digestion must be im- proved, and probably the stomach will require aid as well. Ferrozone serves the purpose admirably. Those who use it, enjoy appetite and diges- tive powers far beyond the ordinary. That tired feeling is replaced by 1G EE ---------------- Overseas Trade Made Us Prosperous . Overssnt Trade | i . - Will Keep Us Prosperous - Tot maintain | our * overseas trade Canada must have sea- conscious spirit _--In the People --In the Government Schools \ Canadian Ships Must Carry Canadian Products to World Markets The Navy League of Canada vor "" For tatermation and J. P. Hanley, ©. r. aT. way, Kiagstea, Ontarte. Dining Room Furniture IN OAK, WALNUT, AND MAHOGANY ALL LATEST DESIGNS AND FINISHES R. J. Reid The Leading Undertaker nad Furniture Dealey Ambulance Phone 577. 280 PRINCESS STREE1 | | Frontenac Mattress Co REGULAR SERVIOES 1 Sept. 35/06t. 30 ee..Saturnis Oct. 16]NOY. 20 , mueus or oe or Cassandra PORTLAND--GLASGOW Chri Dee. 11 JOR ums Mili) tale N. Y.,, GLASGOW, (via Moville) Ot. SINOY, § +vuva ses noses eesCoRmBIS! NEW ~=-LIVERPOOL Sept. 25|0ct. .28{Nov. 20 -, 4.3. Ook INO sIDee s 0 Lit Darmags N. Y, PLY., and CHER, Sept. 18/0ct. 21{NOV. 25 +.v..,..Caronla N.Y., CHERBOURG & t. 21/0ct. 13[Nov, . Bone. Bolock Jaov. 2 ane Oct. TINOV. 11{De0. § (oneness. Imperator! . N.Y PLY, Oe HAMB § Ott. B0IDEC. 3 a ereere sues aon § N. Y,, Patras, Dubrovalk and Sept. 33 aver ares ves ung TH OCL. 30 canned ed io ducbdimesPaNDODLS, For rat fe t ther dca y Selah 328 Rust THE ROBERT REFORD CO, LTR. General Agents New Goods to Hand s--Goodwillies' Jams and ike ~--Wagstafl's Jams and J =--Walsh's Jams and Jellies, ~Heinz 57 Variety Goods. r--Leoes' Pickles and +~at thew Unique Grocery 490 and 492 Princess Street Phone 530. Don't throw away your olf ttresses. Ma We renovate all kinds make them as good as new, Get our prices 17 BALACLAVA STRERT Phone 23100w WOOD Sawed in Stove _ Lengths # BOOTH & CO., Foot West Street Phone 133 SLATEX SHINGLES SLATEX ROOFING WATERTITE ROOFING See our window display, 'W. H. COCKBURN & CO. Corner Wellington and Princess Street. Phone 16. the buoyant, joyous sensation of health and vigor. Day by day as your strength increases, you feel new energy surging through your veins, and know that a great tonic of great merit is at work. No remedy more nourishing or up- lifting, no treatment so sure to bring lasting health, good spirits and con- tentment. Ferrozone contains just what run-down folks need; it cures because it supplies more nutriment than you can get in any other WAY. S0c per box or six for $2.50 at all dealers. ] 'Watch for Robin- son's Ad. Friday f Professional or business men - particularly will find -the Coupe greatly to their liking. The ease with which it may be operated, the protection it offers, and the com- fort it provides under all condi- tions, are specially pleasing. More- over the cost of operation is com- paratively small. - and we will mate Se

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