Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Mar 1923, p. 4

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= --~. CRAPS . TO CRICKET THE DAILY "SPORTING BRITISH WHIG RUMMY TO RUGBY TURIDAY. MARCH ©. Hig rm-- i BADMINIO WV | TO - BOXING | YANKEE GOLFERS INVADE BRITAIN 'Many Notable Players Will Go L in Quest of the British Open Title. -- According to reports from New York many American professional golfers are planning another attack on the royel and ancient heights of Great Britein this year in the hope, of duplicating the triumphs they have scored in the past two years. Officials of the Professional Golf- ers association said that no attempts 'would be made to organize a team, such as was sent over in 1921 under Youngstown, Ohio, but that several of the most prominent "pro" stare are Mkely to make the trip as in- dividuals. Gene Sarazen, American open and professional title holder, and Walter Haven, are expected to lead the Yan~ ' kee drive in the British open cham- 9 at Troon, Scotland, June 1ith to 15th. In addition, there is & possibility that Jim Barnes, for- Jner American champion, and John Black, the veteran who finished only, . * - Pain in the Loins » . Driven Out Quickly That dragging, wearying sort of i makes life a misery to many Boobs This pain is due to a pas- inflammation of the adjacent tis- Jue, Because every drop rubs in, be- #ause it penetrates so deeply, Nervi- line gives a wonderful result. More powerful because five times strong- @r, more penetrating because it 'Strikes through soft tissue, more heal- ing to pain, Nerviline Liniment 'should be always on hand Sold a stroke behind Sarazen at Skokie ' |last summer, may join the party. Jock Hutchison, who captured the British title in 1921 efter a play-off with Roger Wethered, English ama- teur etar, has declared he will be unable to go because of an extended exhibition tour he has planned for the spring and early summer. Jock is now in the south giving exhibi- tions with Sarazen. Sarazen has yet to fron out his ar- rangements with the Briarcliff club, where on April 1st, he is scheduled to take up his duties as professional. Club directors have been disinclined to grant the open champion a leave of absence so soon after he takes hold of his new post, but it is be- lieved that an adjustment will be made to permit him to take a crack at the British title. Barnes, who has finished close to the top in Nis last two attempts to Hft the British crown is®anxious to try once more, while Black is eager to go because Troon was his home course before he emigrated to Am- erican Mnks. : The veteran, who has staged a re- markable comeback after being near death from injurfes sustained In an automobile accident last year, has changed his club afficlations from Oakland, Calf, to Wichita, Kan., and may make arrangements to go abroad. Hagen, who fs free from club offiliations, is a certain entry in de- fense of his title. His touring part. ner, Joe Kirkwood, the Australian fanoy shot artist, will accompany him, It is just twelve years ago today since Frontenacs won an O.H.A. championship from Orillia, end the late "Scotty" Davidson, later killed overseas, was twenty years old on that day. It was a great day all round for Frontenacs. JOCKEY M. ANDERSON IS FATALLY INJURED M. Anderson, a leading jockey at the Tijuana race track, San Diego, Caiif., was fatally injured when his mount, Norfield, fell over another horse which had stumbled and fallen in the seventh race. He died within a few minutes, The, deceased was a well-known rider on the Canmdian circuit, and last year, althcugh riding as a free lance, was generally astride Ed. Glassco"s good two-year-oid, Doe Gaiety, Horsemen rated him a much better rider lst summer than the jockey averages showed. Tonight the Hussars and Fronte- nacs will go in for the second game of the Garrison Indoor Baseball Lea- gue's championship series. Fronte- nacs must win to stay in the run- ning, The Giants are reported to have paid $50,000 for Nehf. Stinging Corns Drop Out In Hot Foot Bath Simple Methed Discovered That Stops the Pain and Removes the Corn. Corns and callouses come off under the Hot Water Treatment so quickly and painlessly that everyone should know about it. Here is what you do: Begin by dropping a few drops of Putnam's Painless Corn Extract- or over the tender surface, and at once you will find the pain stops. Of course you forget your corns .until the next hot foot bath, when you will discover that the hot water has removed all the thick tissue as tlean as a whistle. You get glorious relief from Putnam's Painless Corn Ex- tractor. Remember the name. Costs but little and gives big results. Sold by. all druggists. everywhere in large 36 ent bottles, "THEM DAYS IS GONE FOREVER" You not only read it, you sing it. Try it on your plano. Watch nightly for this big ts y 4 hie. ghtly PORT NAP HOTS \ With the intercollegiate season season wound up there are just two more matters before Queen's. stu- dents--+the interfaculty hockey and the spring exams. ""Ernde" Nelson, former Queen's star, is playing sensational hockey in the interfaculty series at Toronto University. He waa.sought by the intercollegiate squads but could not play against Queen's, and still feel natural. Queen's intermediates had a good squad of supporters from Faculty of Fducation and Osgocde Hall 'during their game with Varsity II. on Bat. urday. Several of them will be re- membered by sport followers around the university, for instance: Neil Bis- sonnétte, "Ernie" Nelson, F. Gillan, Chas, Hodgins, James Gow, "Con- Walter Ellis and other Science grads. were also on deck. Ed. Elliott is all ready to match his county league champions, both junior and sendor, against the City L.eague champions and the fans of both leagues are keen for a double- Leader to decide the championship of the district. More than 1,000,000 aw the first round soccer ties of the famous Eng- lith Cup Competition, the gate re- ceipts totalling just on $400,000. Thirty<two games were played and twelve replays owing to tied ecores Intense enthustasm prevailed throughout the country, all grounds reporting higher receipts. Golf, from its very infancy, has possessed a stronger power to attract the individual than any other game. It is this samé quality that makes it the game wherein the banker may meet the brick-layer in equality and brotherly feeling. This spirit of de- TAKE THIS ON YOUR TRUMPET. BEHOLD MT FUTURE HUSBAND, GIRLS! HE'S FORTY=NAME |S HE (SNF VERY CULTURED, BUT HE'S GOT A LEVEL niocracy is as old as the game itself. ---Exthange. Rut here we find that curling and bowling are the truly de- mocratic games, thoigh of course roker must be included, Laie Finpo, giant South African heavyweight, wants to meet Jack Demipsey, but the chances are that he Willard-Johnson bout before he is signed to meet the champion. San Frandisco has & new municipal swimming pool. which will be ome thousand 'feet long and one" hundred and fifty in width. A fund is being raised at Brown to revive the sport of rowing at the Providence University. There will be plenty of opportun- ity for Limesttones next fall with Queen's rugby team playing no home games before -October 27th, unless exhibition matches are "arranged. Limestones should Mo well this year with a proper start and rugby always draws good crowds here. MOST MANLY OF SPORTS. How Boxing Is Regarded im the Old . Land Perhaps one 5! the reasnns why doxing 1s on a much higher plane in England than in American is that the boys of all classes are brought up to consider it the most manly of sports, says the New York Tele- graph. Youngsters who wish to see pro- fessional boxing bouts in this coun- try "have to smeak fn. You never see small boys cf good family at the ringside, parents would be shocked to find them there. At the National Sporting olub, in London, on boxing pights during the holiday time, it is a common sight to see young lads of fourteen and' fifteen years of age, from Eton, Har- row and other famous fashionable echools, sitting with their fathers pr cider brothers, watching the bouts. nie" Gorman, "Bob" Bonham, Coon, will have to defeat the widner of the ' x -- FREE!! We deliver free. We don't charge any extra to pring it to your door. Phone 2378m il tor the following: i} Nellson's Saladice Bricks. 46c. '| Nellson's Assorted Bricks .35c. Eskimo Ple 2 for 15e¢. || Masoud's Ice Cream Bricks 30c. || Bulk Ice Cream ...50¢. quart '| High class Chocolates, Fruits, Magazines, Newspapers, To- baccos, Patent Medicines. J. H. JARVIS Upp. Princess St. Methodist Charch. . OPEN NIGHTS. I rn -------- ---- ing for his fight with Geprges Car- | pentier in London last May, he pitch- ed his training camp at the, King's Fead tavern, at Harrow-on-the-Hill. This is where Harrow school is lo- cated, and every afternoon the boys from some of the most famous fami-' ies in England crowded into the BY sium to see Lewis at.work. hey fo a photuresque gal- fery, these lads, with their distinc- /tive dress and low-crowned straw Iliats. They were appreciative, too, understanding the fine points of the manly ant. England has few first-class boxers 'at the present time, but the conduct of Lhe sport over there is beyond anything we have attained here, o are Mkely to. : ONE LEADING VIOTIM. Probably no one man has acted as @ leading 'victim of these breaks | When Ted Kid Lewis was train- Massey own Street WHY WASTE MONEY vr. will feel more lke Ww ride a liicycle, YOU CAN SMOKE on our MASSEY street car. ONLY ONE PLACE If you buy 4 tickets for 25e., aix a week, you pay for a MASSEY Wheel by September, and them you own your GET RIGHT WITH NATURE Save, Money--Ride days Your health will be better and you ork when you Yuy now and have your Wheel half pald for hefore you take it. home. oftener than' Bobby Jones, the Georgla-Harvard golfer. In 1919 Jones reached fhe final round at Oakmont with ve Hers ron, only to have Dave play thirty- three holes on the long, bard Oak- mont course 2 under even 4s. In 1921 at St. Louis, over the 6,700 stretch, Jones ran into Hun- ter's 71, which included a 7, 4 under the seventeenth was almost dead on the pin, but when the bail struck the sun-baked surface it jumped to the left, still on the course, back of a low-hanging branch, shut oft the green. And these are just a few 'instances from his career. They were something along the line tha: sssafled "Chick" Fvans for eight jears, unti! he finally broke threuga to three big championships, two in one year. THE CASE OF RUTH. For a long spell "Babe" Ruth had [either the temperament or the luck to spill his, fireworks on the large cceanions., He bacame one of the grea! show- men of his dypasty--£t his best when the spotlight was brightest. But last fall the tide suddenly turned. Ruth came to the world 0 Tn wgp---- series on the edge of populenity, with a thance to redeem his doubtful statue, 'Two or three home would have lifted him to the again. - But he finished with a bat. ting mark of .118, which in one way = was the luckiest turn of his Mfe. For this knockout blow suddenly clearcd his vision and left him faec- ing the fact that he hadn't been pay- ing quits enough attention to the job. It was the big factor that sent hm into early training, with the blazing determination to make 1923 hs greatest year. 3 There are $mes when tod much good fortune can do a far greater amount of harm than & run of bad luck. 3s ZB III 2.9000) FR 7 PILLS

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