INTERCOLLEGIATE EXECUTIVE TO MEET IN MONTREAL. After the Queen's Game Next Satur- day and Decide Where It Will be Played Off, If One Exists. Toronto News: We certainly are "hog town! when it comes to Rugby. Varsity, Argonauts, Toronto R. and A. A. and 'St. Michael's all came | through in splendid style on Satur. day. Toronto World: Coach Shaughnes- sy Is authority for the statement that McGill will not play for the Domin- ion championship, and after Satur- day's game, everybody believes him. It is not likely that there will be a Dominion championship played for this season, as the existing ties in the Interprovincial and a probable tie in the Intercollegiate and ' io union will carry the sea too far for a Dominion fina. "Jack' Darragh is credited , with thestatement he will not play hoc- key thls winter at all. There are lots of 'goal keepers who will wish that he keeps his word. Toronto Globe: It wouldn't be sur- prising if the championships of all three football unions came to Tor- onto. The fact is that indicationg ng fp " THE DAILY BRITISH 'WH1G, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1914 BELGIAN 'REFUGES RESTING :IN'HOLLAND - point straight in that direction present, In that event the provin- clal newspapers would be justified J in crying "Hogtown. Yea, verily! { Manager Frank Patrick, of (he | Vancouver team of the Pacific coast league, announces his retirement from active participation in hockey, and is now bugily engaged hunting for a defence man to fill his place, Of the O.R.F.U., senior game at Hamilton on Saturday The Spectator says:--"Jack" Williams and his bro- ther, "Ken" from Ottawa, were the officials, but their work was for from satisfactory to ejther side. There was a great deal of uncalled-for rough work which escaped their eye, and the locals were responsible for the most of it. "Harry" Cameron hag with Torontos again He of the best defence men in the A., last season, Cameron is a broke boy signed wis 0 N.H Pem Manager 'Jack Marshal Torontos denies there any outs on the Stanley cup tean says Walker and Minnie will be with fhe team when t! for practice comes around are Hazlett o who will be in President J lr tercollegiate union, Montreal on Saturday to play with Queen's against MeGill, will likely call a meeting for that night, when the question of grounds will be de cided should a tie exist If Queen's win the game the meeting will be cancelled, and the championship will have been won by Varsity M. Montreal Gazette: It was not lack of condition that defeated McGill, but they underestimated d¢heir op- ponents as they did the Queen's team a year ago. This will not likely happen again, as the players now realize what is ahead of them Queen's showed a good performance against both Varsity and McGill, and will be in as good condition for Sat urday as in their previous matche An Ottawa despatch Efforts Says 3 i are being made to have the Inter-|t collegiate amplonship between Mc Gill and Varsity at downe Park on Nov. 21st, if the anti cipation of a saw-off pans out as ex- pected. McGill and Varsity, will seek neutral territory for their com bat, and already the venue of this contest has narrowed down Ot tawa or Kingston, with the chances favoring the capital, where a gate of treble or four times the proportions that could be drawn in King would be assured Laps- | | ged to ston { mn | Montreal Gazette Ald Me- | Gill took no exception t ruling of the officials in the match with Varsity, a mistake was made through 8a penalty imposed that cost the local collegians a try When Ross Laing failed to give Carr h yards while hoagh 0 the anything | cheaply ; = 4 oR : = After a hasty get-away from the scene of hostilities in their na tive crossing" Holland's bord mm taking a catch from Laing's punt, the ball had been kicked from: back of the McGill line The penalty set down for this is a free kick on the five yard line, while the referee gave | possession of the ball and a | Varsity down two yards out from the line, which was the means of Varsity se- curing their only try This put Varsity in the lead and accounted for the disorganization of the MeGill team Had Varsity been given on t free kick it is not likely. they ould have scored the' try New Conditions In Canada. Daily Courier, Toronto Canada is slowly but surely ad- justing herself to new conditions We are learning the penalties of be- ng a creditor nation and of being content to live upon borrowed capi- tal The necessity of being econo- mically self-contained is being borne n upon us in a sense of which the protectionists have never conceived As the individual has learned to keep himself in such a financial po- sition that he can live comfortably through a fin depression. or a period of unemployment, so Canada nust learn how to live as-a nation when the international gates closed Canada buying much abroad, on the theory that could be bought more from other nations than it could be made at home, it was good business to do so. While Canada may not adopt a higher protection. tariff, the policy of the nation will hereaf- ter be to encourage the making at home of all articles vital to our daily existence too Look For Jackman, nadian secret for the Pend.) 14 believed ation is located on a big estate which curious rumors have in circulation recently. The de Radio Office. oF. 13 A Ca agent ghborhood of miles distant, Secret n Mar about been tective has authority from Governor | Haines to scarch the estate and sur- rounding country. The vice-consul Boston is also expect- AFTivs and take part in bunt} ed to here the In connection with Toronio's ap plication for an order compelling the | build board ritilway company to 200 new cars, the municipal truck motors, to be bujlt and in ep- eration hy June 1st, 1915. When Father Time tries to o ke a woman she makes face BRIGHT are j¢ if | has left | where | a secret German radio | British | ordered | | the company to build 50 new double - § rs DYSPEPSIA" GONE + NO [Time 10! In Five Minutes Your Sick, Upset Stomach Feels Fine, | Vhen your meals don't fit ecomfort- fabty, or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you {have heartburn, that is a sign of in- digestion Get Irom cent of tal alle your pharmac Pape's Just as soon be undigested #t a fifty- Diapepsin and 4s you can. risings no food mixed or heart- in the head- riping. case a dose There 1 belching of with acid, no stomach g bura, fullness or heavy fe stomach, nai aches, dizzine w no sour ea country, these Belgian refugee A A a te A ts Po Po i A AA INDIGESTION, GAS, SOURNESS---PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN This will all go, and, besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes hold of your food and digests it Just the same as if your stomach wasn't there Relief in minutes from all stomach misery is waiting for you al any drug store These large. fifty-cent cases contain enough ""Pape's Diapepsin" to keep the entire family free fromi stomach disorders- and indigestion for many months It belongs in your home five STORY OF AN AIR DUEL. Wounded Artillery Man Tells How German Was Brought Down, Paris, Nov. 11-----The Intransige- nt pr an account of an air duel from the lips of a wounded artillery man He says 'My battery was crossing an open plain when the humming of an aero- plane motor, like the nofSé of a huge fly, was heard above Instantly every- one stiffened and was silent. Some- one whispered { 'I recognize the Boche motor, It | is certainly a German biplane.' i All erouched near the ground for purpose of remaining unnoticed Suddenly another aeroplane ap i pears i Ch pered my Ww 3 French mono', . whis well-informed comrade can see the tri-color emblen They are going to fight, mount Suddenly the rattle quick firer bursts from » Ger | The monoplane ive sharply wavs, 'My God, she's hit! Licer near me No it was only a Frenchman, dodging th2 fu mounts to deliver a broadside { His big adversary seeks vainly to es- | cape The more agile meonoplans outmanoeuvres him, diving under and delivers. a broadside. " 'The enemy veers upward as if trying to escape, but dense smoke sprouts from the steel carcass. He digs downward and then slides in a long volplane toward a neighboring clover field. "We run toward him cheering, but the biplane clears the clover field of an side- ' cries an of manoeuvre The de, THIS TALK IS FOR WOMEN ONLY. If your husband or men folks of the family are constantly soiling their clothes and pockets chewing tobacco get them to try PACIFIC with their. CHEWING each plugis separately wrapped in foil which not only makes it free from dust, dirt and germs, but keeps it clean in the pocket, Present him with a plug of PACIFIC and he will never go back to the other kinds sold in bulk, for it's so "DELICIOUSLY GOOD" A satin insert for making all sortsof beautiful fancy work is contained in each. wrapper. L _ See window displays around town. 10c -- AT ALL DEALERS. and seems about to rise again. Then it pitches headfirst into the swamp beyond Flames shoot from the wreck We find the occupant, a {captain and sapper, both burned and mangled Amid cheers -the victor- lous monoplane, the pilot of which is a well-known airman, now a ser- geant, disappears." CANADA'S WINTER PORTS Special Precautions to Navigation. Ottawa, Nov. 11,--On account of the important part the ports of Hali- fax and St. John will play this win ler in connection with Canada's mi- litary activities, special precautions are being taken by tite Marine De- partment to ensure safety of navi gation at paints. - J. 6. M. Phail, commission of lights, leaves for Halifax to-day to see that lights, buoy a other navigation aids at inter ports are kept in proper TLis work is generally left tment"s agent at Hali- ! decided to take special t'ons this season. : Na'al Service department uj number of sea-zo iatrol duty on the Atlaatice coast during the winter months. Ves- "13 of ten-knot speed and a"out 50 Secure Safe these a a 135 for. , MANY TONS OF BLANKETS | Have Been Made In Canada For | Freach Soldiers Ottawa, Nov. 11.---Canada is sup- plying equipment of one kind or an- | other for all the allies in the Euro- { pean war theatre -- shirts and | for the British, saddles for { Russians and blankets for the i French Information with regard {to latter was obtained to-day. Fac- tories all over Canada have been turning out blankets for the French army in preparation for the winter campaign and. these blankets are now being assembled in Montreal | for shipment to France. ' The order blankets have arrived for shipment there will be several hundred tons. Practically all the flour given to Great Britain by Canada is mow in | the United Kingdom, having been | landed at various ports designated by, the imperial government. Soldiers' Claims To Be Protecte:. Ottawa, Nov 11-An order-in- council has heen passed allowing holders of mining rights in Manito- ba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, the North-west Territories, the Yukon, and part of the British Columbia, who have gone to the front to hold their claims free from the risk of cancellation owing to failure to eom- ply with the mining regulations pre- scribing the amount of work to be done on such claims. g Crown Prince Didn't Deliver Goods. London, Nov. 11 -- Telegraphing from Copenhagén yesterday, W. Duckworth, special correspondent of the Telegraph, says: "A neutral subject, who has just returned after a week's stay in Berlin says the crown prince is being blamed for the failure of the Germans' advance in France. The people had put their trust in him to reach Paris within the scheduled time." Lieutenant-Colonel L. W. Stotes- bury, inspector-general of the first bricade of the New York Nationa: Guard, will almost certainly be made adjutant-general when Charles 8 Whitman takes dfice as zoveruar It takes a woman to love au man because he doesn't deserve it. feet length are being advertis- | was a large one and when all the | § are resting in peace and quiet after POSITION OF PRUSSIA WHERE COSSACKS BIVOUACK IN KAISER'S STABLES. Czar's Army Adopting Itself to Win- ter Campaign, And Mean Do Not Suffer From Cold. Petrograd, Nav. 11.--Twenty mi- les from Insterburg and less than seventy miles from Posen, that Is the position in which the Rus- sian forces in East Prussia stand. This is the new phase of the war whie s followed the general Ger- le¢treat to the Austrian bor- ihe last units of Gen. Hinden- burg s army were driven from the Rypin district, where they took re- fuge in retreat near Thorn. Once nore Spallupoenen is in General Rennenkampff"s hands, and Cos- sacks are bivouacking in the royal stables at Trakebnen, where kaiser has his famous breeding establish- ment No private person in Prussia suf- fers more than the kaiser from the Russian advance. His great hunt- ing estate at Rominten, with its collection of European deer in the park, has twice been a battlefield. It. has heen found necessary to cut down all the trees, and the troops helped themselves liberally to the game Since the taking of Bakalargewo and Schirwindt, fighting on the east Prussian front has been less severe. The earlier successes of the Rus- sians resulted in the losses of the Germans. being so heavy that the latter were not in a position to con- tinue effective resistance. For the { moment, the Konigsberg garrison, which bad been heavily drawn upon for the attack on Bakalargweo, was unable to afford more men, and-the only substantial German reinforce- ments received was a division of ea- valry from the Kalisz district which had been recently withdrawn from Belgium. The armies now operating against the Russians are said to be com- manded as follows: The Austrian army on the San, by General Dankl, the German main army in Poland, by the crown prince, and the Ger- man army on the left flank and east Pragsia, by Gen. von Hindenburg The last named on three occasions attempted to communicate with the Russian commanders by means of a white flag, but each time the over tures were refused, and the enemy were informed that such a ission in future would not be respected The roads on the eastern front are deep in snow. Part of the Rus- sian trapsport already consists of sledges. In fact, the ezar's army is adopting itself to a winter eampaign in the smallest detall and the men are not suffering from the cold KAISER LIVES IN TRAIN He Is Guarded By A Picked Body Of Germans. Emperor William, is virtually liv- ing in his railrQad train, in which he is continually on the move, be- tween his armies in the east, that are operating against Russia, and those in the west, that are engaged {in fighting the French, the English jand the Belgians. This train con- | sists of 10 cars, and a considerable | amount of comment has been created | by the faet that they all have large red crosses painted on their roofs, with the object of conveying the impression to hostile aviators, that they form part of an ambulance train, and to thus deter the aviators in question from~hurling down upon them any explosive bombs. Those responsible for the person- al safety of the kaiser, seem to be | particularly apprehensive of danger to his Mfe from aerial attack, and at those chateaux in France and in. Russian Poland where he has made brief sojourns, and even in his own dominions as, for instance, at Cob- lez, the roofs of his quarters have been thickly covered with bags, so as to protect him from the bombs of aviators. i His personal safety is watched over by his suite, a body of the Garde du Corps regiments, and a large staff of detectives, known ay imperial field police, and great care s taken to conceal his movements and plans, and to prevent them from becoming known. The reasen for this is the absolute confusion and chaos which wouid ensue in Ger. | naay were he tobe killed, or even i be seriously wounded, while the an uel present Whe is in progress. J Those Tinkling Tango Tunes are simply fascinating when repro- duced by The EDISON Phonograph. There's no fun trying to do the new dances -- the Fox Trot, Maxixe, Qoe Step, Hesitation, Boston, Three Step--to the. jerky drumming of a piano. There's Bo tempting tempo. But when the National Promenade Band swings into the seductive "La Bella Argentina' or "Waltz reproduces the full, rich melody --the sway and swing of it--the fascinating thythm of it--then you have some- suitable for the new dances ~--and any number of Tango songs like "Underneath The Tengo Moen." The new Edison Phonograph has the diamond reproducing point, unbreakable end long playing records, superior motors aad construction, concealed horns, and the Cabinets ere made in true Period styles, in perfect harmony with the finest furniture. Come in and hear the EDISON play all these tinkling tengo tunes--play them as they should be played--then you'll appreciate just how much pleasure you can have with en EDISON PHONOGRAPH ju your TRADE MARK ' own home, 139 EDISON DEALERS IN KINGSTON F. W. 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