Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Nov 1907, p. 14

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Bling the Abe 5:2 i os £ ly our own game of baseball om Hawaii and the semi-tropical HN Sree, 57, ing championship at the intercollegiates. His fellow countryman, Withington, of Harvard, was second in the short sprints. In cricket Herbert Hordern, the Aus- tralian bowler on Ivania's cleven which toured England during the sum- mer, was the leader, though his team- mates, Hales and Black, from the same land, were also valuable playe as was Osborne, the football player at Har- "a before they abolished cricket there. The class of foreign students brings with it all of its racial characteristics, and especially is this true in sport. When they come from England or her posses- sions, they fetch with them an intimate knowledge of cricket, Association and ! football, (tennis, rowing, and track athletics. From France them come learned in track sports and gvmmnastics; f apan they arrive as experts in jiu-jitsu or self-defence, gymnastics and EB 3 th 4 te | counitries they arrive with a love of the outdoors that only such a climate will healthy and we find fighters to engage in conflicts, a crowd had col xd around two of these opponents 1 followed &, attracted hy the sight was a little Jap sparring for an ening With one of the Aen nw en eager to a an throw the other. Suddenly the Jap sprang forward, seized his oppent by wrists and with as quick a spring H threw his man again they fried and again the w man with his jiu-jitsu mas- This throw was so that our Eskimo upon the Carlisle team, struggling with all his ht one late November afterncon for victory that is so dear to the heart the snow flurried across the of the winter, and the lit- in his battle to face 'which brought to him ome, and as he drank chest jis cool draughts, may know ?--he was giv- 0 ah unknown God for this by far the most wiversity of Pennsylvania has drawing so many Aus- hr TT. vei oer Zo Lodencl.. Ur Correll) Jocker So Crrcked Teams. big have irl zn Aisle OF RID, Se rr lro0EEX Zeros? | Trea? Colum lr anes, COR. vers ly Hoosier, -- Best Gy: oz SP csp er Er Bre, Roo 2D. GC Drsgoslizz | of her best athletes, In past years she has been made more noted by the ef- forts of the Ortons, Alexander Grant and the Gunns, all distance runners, and Dewhurst, the Australian, who won her the tennis title for three successive seasons. Back in the late cighties a Spaniard played on the Quaker football eleven. When the big gymnasium was finish- ed two years ago and the new depart- ment of physical education orgamzed, none better than Dr. R. Tait McKenzie, of Canada, could be thought of 'by the trustees' to place at its head. To-day Penn's most prominent foreign athlete is Guy Haskins, a New Zealander, and undoubtedly the best distance runner any university has ever possessed. Last year he won both the mile and half-mile runs at the intercollegiates and is responsible, for that rea for Pennsylvania's possession of the m- pionship {e arrived at college as a cricket, Association football player and swimming marvel; and under Trainer Murphy first started running three years ago. Cornell's students from other lands well in athletics. J. J. De- shon, her star pitcher, is a Nicaraguan, and the best twirler she has possessed in a decade, When this young man came to Amefica he had never played baseball, but in his first year he made good as a schoolboy pitcher. Last sea- son he won creditable victories over Pennsylvania, Yale, Harvard and Co- humbia, D. G. Dragoshipoff, of Bulgaria, an- other of Cornell's versatile athletes, pre- pared. at Roberts College, Constantino- ple, but did little in the line of athletics until he came to Cornell. There he has been a splendid wrestler, football play- er, track athlete and member of the soc- cer' team for several years. Only his light weight prevented his being a star football man. Jacob Joris van der Does der Rye should by all the laws of orthography hail from Holland and he does. He played cricket and soccer football at HOW'S THIS ? We offer One Hundred Dollars 'Reward for any case of Catarrh that capnot be Hall's Catarrh Cure. ¥. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. undersi My . We the ave known F. J Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him rable © transactions. and' to Kinvan & . _ Wiolasle Drogeitta. Toledo: ©. iT Mh taken intern: x ry Boe gag Boon a ons surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sol ty and from Mh any Take Hall's Family Pilla for Gonsti- | ae Faire » i = + 5 £54 Cerio, Ae Props J LCE LILL| Beds Zrrcter home, and has continued to do so at Cornell. Besides these men 'there are to be not- ed such splendid athletes as E. S. Cras- sidy, a Greek, who prepared for col lege at Constantinople, where he learn: ed cricket and soccer, which he played| at Cornell; and G. Delcasse, of the Ar gentine Republic, who was educated in Switzerland, preparatory to entering col- lege, where he excelled in the art of fencing and played tennis and soccer. All of these he continued at college Then there is Joannes Samuel van Bijlevelt, another Hollander, from the Leyden High School. Both there and at college he was a member of the soccer and cricket teams. Robert de Mesquita Sampaio, a Brazilian, prepared at King's College, Sao Paulo, where he played soccer, which he continued at Cornell. Other notables are an Australian, L. M. McPherson, a track athlete and cricketer; and another South American, lic, who plays én the soccer team; and F. C. Wilson, an Englishman, who came to Cornell to study veterinary medicine He is a cricket and soccer player. At Harvard there are, strange to re- late, comparatively few foreign athletes. In past years she has boasted of Dick Grant, a Canadian, the long-distance runner; "Filley,* captain and stroke of their crew which visited England sev- eral years back, an Englishman, who also played football as varsity end, and Al Castle, the baseball pitcher from Ha- wan, During the last season Harvard's best foreign athlete was unquestionably Os- borne, the All-American football tac- kile, the captain of the cricket cleven and a member of the soccer team. He | bails from London, and is a member of the Institute. of 1770, of D. K. E, of | Hasty Pudding and the Signet. No man! at' Harvard has been more popular. Two Talians, through whose veins] Italy, are Harvard athletes. They are {the Reggio brothers, both members of the soccer teams, and one, A. N. Reg- gio, is a cricket and tennis player of note. From Hawaii comes Paul Withington, one of the fastest short-distance swim- mers in the college world. He is cap-| tain of this winter's team, and won all] of his races last year, except against] Chambers, of Princeton. The only other foreign athlete at Harvard is E | Hanfsteangl, a German. This man row- | led on his freshman crew two years ago, before graduation. i eign fepresentation, there are but three are wrestlers ban, is * - i weight--158 pounds--in amateur athle- | tics. A. S. Skimmon, a Persian, is Co-| lumbia's other wrestler. He has won a place in the semi-finals at the intercol legiates for the last two years. A Chi- naman, V. K. W, Koo, who is the son | of the secretary of foreign affairs at} Shanghai, is a member of the track team. | Yale has been very much behind in| her foreign athletes. Robert Weir La Montaigne, a Frenchman, was last year one of the best quarter-milers at New | Haven. In addition to him was La-! vigne, a Polish lad, whose foothall was | too much for the authorities, and he was finally ruled out of the game for | good. Are You a Woman Needing Strength ? : Not long i rere . A. Sarmiento, of the Argentine Repub- joy Tie T 40. you. yere able: to en: | { You had vigor, strength, ambition | ~--did everything with zest and pleas- ure, Upon your checks health, in your eyes the vim and animation. To-day--all is a drudge. Not actually sick, but if your work were less imperative, how gladly you would rest, Jdugd You are breaking down. 3 Nervous system out of gear. Digestive powers are weak, Blood lacks nourishment, ongon. Coed Z. Qsbor??€ QF LZLVIE Criched | T5727. oA Bu [pers Ore of Correls Best Aizkées was the hue of | sparkle of | i eral BRIE A USER, ris of Seas Avante: Crzcket TE 27, oni aed ges TR 28 Gero. Corb. LoL Ion IRIs etrgl RA Gp Res. Ver Zealend. ie digisie Furman Clbaiglia, is a splendid middleweight boxer, an oarsman of no mean ability, and played centre on the Association football tean In this country he has taken up swin ming, and was second to the wi only in a number of points scored dur ing the winter meets. Herbert Vivian Hordern, N. S. Hales and Reginald Black, all of Australia brought with them a thorough know ledge of and excellent records in cricket, football, track athletics and rowing. Tet suma Akahoski, a Japanese, is an ex cellent gymnatist as' well as a tennis player, competing in the intercollegiates in each of these sports the last winter Dalrymple, an Australian, is a swimmer of ability and plays Rugby football Well known on the track are G. M Gunn, an Australian--a brother of th Gunn wno won points for Penn several years back--and Laise, a German. At fencing, a Japanese, Ryoze Ito, son of Marshal Ito, of the Japanese army, did { well last winter. r QF MAKE NEW BLOOD. | That is What Dr. Williams' Pink | Pills Do--That is Why They Gure So Many Diseases. | When persons have mot enough blood, or when their blood is weak {and watery, the doctors name the trouble anaemia. Bloodlessness is the {direct cause of many common dis leases, such as indigestion, palpita- {tion of the heart, debility, decline, Ineauralgia, nervousness, rheumatis {and consumption. The surest si lof poor blood are paleness, bluish {lips, cold hands and feet, general | weakness, low spirits and headaches land buckaches. If anaemia is not Ichecked in time it will probably de jvelop into consumption. 'I'nere is one certain cure for anaemia--Dr. Wil Amherst possesses two foreign speci Name', Pink Pills. These pills actual- mens in Levon Kootumjian, an Armen- {ly make new, rich, red blood, which who is the best shot putter on the [fills the veins and brings new life, new k team, and Heuichi Tanaka, a Jap- lenergy and good health to bloodless a se; rag won Fhe all-round gymnastic people. In proof of this Miss = Mabel championship title. Clendenning, Niagara Falls, Ont. The New York University athletes |says : "For two os 1 suffered from reserve all their strength for gymnastic |anaemia. I was weak, thin, had no work, and each year these boys win the appetite. I sometimes had distress intercollegiate championship. The rea- |headaches and felt low spirited. Son Seems to be, for the most part, her {heart would palpitate violently; foreign athletes, could do rork ar ge: | One who has aided in this has been Soule do ua work aroun She hou got Juan Fernandez Rubio, a Cuban, who unstrung, The cfiorts of two wool has won the sidehorse championship for doctors failed to help me, I was in several your, He is alo an cxpert Hn [chy piiable ste. Ona day tn ain g = ond | Imre ur, me to try = ilhams A. Auffant, a Porto Rican, who played Pink PIE and I did so. Soon 1 saw tackle on the football team. the pills helping Eby the At Lehigh there are two Cubans noted ti e ¥ ; h wig -- pang me..anc Tr - for their athletic powers, Juan R. Geno, | ™® pa taken nine boxes was of Santiago, holds the college title in completely cured. 1 had a good the pole vault, and Luis Gaston, is a appetite; gained in weight; 1 hadnt an gymnatist and sprinter. ache or pain, could sleep well and | p. N. Henry Sze, a little Chinaman, [8m in far better health now than 1 was the all-smiles man around the Syra- [ever was. I cannot speak too highly cuse hoathouse at Poughkeepsie during of what Dr. Williams Pink Pills have He intercollegiate regetta last spring. Hohe lon mel ns' Pink: Pills has Sze, besides playing tennis, manages to . Wilhams n }is have coxswain for the EE Le done for Miss Clendenning they -have Nikifer Schouchuk, who was born a|done for thousands--they will do for i Russian subject on the Kodiac islands,|you. But you must get the genuine i Alaska, has been certe rush on the|with | Carlisle football eleven for several years. | Pink Pills for { Among the foreign athletes at Am-|wrapper around every box. Hf erican colleges are a number who made dealer has not got the genuine pills records of prowess in their own lands|you can get them at 50 cents a hox and at their own games. Gerrit P. Judd, jor six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. {of Honolulu, who has become a baseball | Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, player of much merit, was a well-|Ont. : | knewn athlete at home, being a member | : {of the Oahu polo team, which won the | | championship of the islands several A Good Word. {times. His father was chief justice of | Buffalo Expréss. {the islands in the days of the royal fam-| Cleveland, Ohio, is just now shaken {il to its foundations by a law suit be name "Dr. Williams' Pale People" on the your the full courses some of the noblest blood of {carious | and bids fair to make a seat in the eight able to sleep. In all I took twelve box- {last vear, else his name would be em- At Columbia, in spite of the large for- Erwan edn Samii fe lis 54 gf athletes from abroad, and two of them you--then nothing Fred anes, A qo Senggist acl it in 50c. boste-liet- BRtatacy school, Just one thing to do--build wp-- lis the son of Raron Takaki, surgeon win back your health with Ferrozome, | general of the Japanese navy during the No remedy restores so fast, builds | recent war, is a sturdy son of a sturdy up so permanently, instills such vigor jrace. He plays both baseball and foot- or surplus strength like Ferrozone. iball well, and would stand much nearer A case showing how Ferrozons acts 'the head of the college athletics but is illustrated by the following from | for unfortunate injuries. Mrs, H. Wright of Enfield, N.S. i Dan Renear, from Hawaii, takes to "Six months ago I experienced a | Water as naturally as a duck, and was illness. It commenced with the best Swimmer in his ciass last year. eplitting headaches, dull pains through | ie won points in" the short distances my chest and shoulders, 1 found it (And longer swims, and at diving he had hard to get satisying .sleep--would roll | "® equal. Then he would take a turn and toss and in the morning felt tired |3! Water polo, which is aps the all: over. Then I grew nervous. :lost { roughest game possible. Durning his early flesh, got pale and had heavy dark school days he wor many a sprint Tace cle nde my shes, My_Sirondh got 1nd Bammer thw, and from that goog so low I couldn't do house work: ¥{ < Nt ng. wine was worried and unable to eat and jons San resist in Hawaii, : feared I would not get well. Ferrozone | Sinrhart H. Hunter, from Bendigo, Bad te a or reasks Ta { Australia, came to America a year ago ol to Huiiy Buda ona I | with an athletic record "that is' seldom Rah WE oa - 1 lequalled. . The new eligibility rule bar- g in flesh, looked better and was | ring freshmen kept him out of the game y. | Shunto Takaki, of Tokio, Japan, who| tween a negro and a restaurant keep- er. The latter has apparently been supplying 'the former with sandwiches covered with soft soap. After consum- ing several dozen, the customer began to fancy that he noticed something ueer about the taste; and said so. e restauranteur's reply was that he wished to discourage the negroes who patronized his establishment. Discour- age is a good word. They Had Rheumatism, They are now cured. What they say about the remedy is of far more im- portance than what we say, We refer { to those in this locality who have been cured of rheumatism by Dr. Hall's Rheumatic Cure. Jf interested call and Jet us refer you to well kmgwn people who can tell you just what. the reme- dy will do. Dr. Hall's Rheumatic: Cure is p harm. Jess, inexpensive remedy that cures all ' He has done It Ferrozone doesn't help and cure | 108 yards in 9 4-5 seconds; covered 23 ever will; vour {feet ina broad and once, in pre- on ten out of a pos- firsts in a track meet. sorts of rheumatic troubles when oth- er remedies fail. It has been so thoroughly tested that doubt as to its remarkable mer; its can no longer exist. Ten days Hetreatment 50c., at Wade's Drug Store. Strongly Opp Not . Dean Farthing preach ject of "Temperance," cathedral, Sunday ni his text, the words, spirit is temperance," tans, chapter v, pe 23rd verse. The mea ance, literally, ewas fruit of the spirit w Seli-control was not our eating and drinki speaking us well. Con petite was often far m for our drinking. Dri in itself a sin, but the thing was wrong; | wrong. The dripking not condemned by ou Wé Christians must our blessed Lord Him for He, on one occasi water into wine. We that we were followe! not judges. The lo and the drinking to e The word of God said shall inherit the kin One had only to go i in this city, to see the result of drink. And 1 homes, there was foun misery, as a result of The speaker could rea people coming from these, using strong la demning it. He could all, and could sympat He himseli had found use self-control in spe: bring about reforms must be calm. We our feelings to take a in bringing apout 1t most desire. He did n small, the evils of dri hardly be exaggerated the minister of justi fourteen per cent. © were total abstainers, per cent temperate ar cent. intemperate. Sp of the prison guards, that there was a tend criminals to blame downfall, and thus t apt to be exaggeratea Referring to the que option, Dean Farthing he stood for the abolis he did not favor loe cited several cases, de option. Portland, N population of 50,000, tion city, yet there places retailing liqa option in this city, w Quuch the same positi ' Wonderland Theatre, evening. Civic Light and Pow p.m., Tuesday. This is the Festival ¢ Virgin and Martyr. Recital by Rev. Harp cation Hall, 8 p.m. Remember Entertainy Church, on Wednesday e¢ Ontario Diocesan Ci sessiops at 2.30 p.m. Tenglers for Cataraqui veived till 8 p.m, to-m Thais day in history of Poland, 1795 ; Isas writer died, 1748: Companion Court, IO Social, Chosen Friends' night, 8 p.m. Admissio Bijou Theatre--Qome Beauty," "A Con tion." Dream." At The Princess--King Fis Majesty Ship, The a Comedy Film by Paris. "A Pressing Let Dear." or Pathetic nnd WHIG TELEF 243--Business Office. 229--BEditorial Rooms 292--J obbing Departu Forms, all kind i ig is al Turkey an Sett Just opened sow POULTON BETS, ¢heap {rom $3.50 to Quaint old odd sh designs, A very aj ent at this time © See Ther 1 Robertsor Rimmer wm ---------------- GREAT BAR HEAT! ~ Thirty eh Hal} Stoves, also a lot of | Stoves. All those 'm month. Those that come and sco us, as sell them. TURK'S £ 808 Princess St. Tele }

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy