Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Apr 1915, p. 12

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r- # 4 a i Ha 4 3%. Ph 2 FRR Waleed x #13550 THE DAILY BRIIISH WHIG, FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1915, Be practically patriotic. everything you buy -- whether it costs 10c. or $1,000 -- is "Made in Canada" 151 > ' "Made inCanada" Table Salt - "REGAL™ Salt is made in Canada by Canadians, and it is an ideal Salt for the table be. cause it stays dry and free running the year round. See 3d RUSTABLE dollar to the Hundreds of women in C the D&A perfectsat "lay 024 Shrewd Shoppers will find this season's D & A & La compare more favorably than ever with imported ones. The war tax adds about fifty cents on every Diva Corsets he best dressed sheen buying sets which give old everywhere, '. 918 t-Canada Corsets' AAA tl A ) New Terminal Station, Detroit Wa Canada Fr St. Lawrence and Otta by barrier of the Allegha: Alter the War of [Indepenide argely to the young Canac srovides the mode (2) Tronel under Detroit River. Empire and known as "New France," *d most of the Mississippi Valley. the Great Lakes, Michigan e the Voundary between (3) The Canadian. it stretched less far to the west than it The old French pioneers found their w= ay into th wherdas the English colonists settled on the Atlantic Coast and was part of French Canada, andthe lambermen and coureurs du boi Canada and the United States was readjusted and. Michigan . went business men who have helped to built it up, and the express train known as the "Canadi n link between Capada and the lost Canadian Province of Michigai. Detroit, Kalamaz siness relations with Capada to-day, and send many tourists each summer to our resorts in Ontario and Quebec et PM it A ro om A A lS (4) Kalamazoo Station, Mich. (0) Battle Creek Station, Mich. it on the other of the \ was an outpost of de and it included all of the territory meriean Continent by: way of the | from peneiraling into the interior $ between Detroit and Chicago, s {ts phenomenal prosperity cific and Michigan Central progressive Michigan cities which have' t he Ii Pa 'reéek are three NNN A a rit {| THE SPORT REVIEW | Emslie, Thontas,, ntury to ents liamond d Utility Man Prieste id that Pitcher Man ly member of the pre "lo has yet failed to re er Littlefield and Dr. Sterling srloo were in Toronto yester- and report all the horses in Mr. Seagram's eltablishment as having wintered well, Seven foals have ar- rived this season, five of thein fillies. The horses in training are doing their work on the farm track, and will not be moved to Wolidbine until about the first week in May. "Early closing stakes for the Grand Circuit races at Charter Oak Park, Hartford Conn., from September 6th to 11th were announced last night. There are 10 events, three more than last-year, for total stakes of $23,000, the purse of the Charter Oak trot re- duced from $10,000 to $5000. This race will be 2.08 trotters, instead of the 2.14 class as in the past. Entries close May 3rd. saved Three seconds Al. MeCoy from losing back his title to George Chip, in the ninth round at Brooklyn. In this spasm | the former title-holder dropped Me- Coy twice. The second time he arose about to fall again immediate- ¥, but the bell rang. - It was a most Arrow escape. he was tase involving two of the lead- pitchers of the Canadian Baseball! ue will be considered shortly by the National Commission. Herb Shoe- ker and Louis Peterson are the prin- pals, with the Ottawa and Fort Wayne clubs as the contesting par-| A Leas Frank Moran wants. to meet Jess Willard in England in a title bout at the earliest possible moment, he an- nounced to-day. 'I certainly envy | Willard," said Moran. "Ha caught Johnson at just the right time. The Kansan ought to consider himself a very fortunate man." George Goulding, the champion Canadian walker, denies reports to the effect that he intends to move to New York. He received an offer of a good position here, but preferred the Canadian side. A New York ath- letie club jg said to have made stren- ucus efforts to sign on Goulding, The Canadian Association Ama-! teur Oarsmen will go through with the annual regatta at St. Catharines | this yéar, despite the war. A .meet-! ing will be held on Friday Right, | when all arranggments will be made | for the regatta, which, will likely, be | | held on the first Friday and Satur-| day in August, which has been the | date for many years. A beautiful insert with ea hpleg.. Dr. Joseph | middleweight | Wright, one of the executive, has re-| May ceived information that the represen- tatives from the United States will be as large as ever. Jim Coffey, "Dublin Giant," ad- ministered a severe beating to Carl Morris, of Oklahema, in a ten-round bout in New York. Coffey forced the fighting nearly all the way, and twice bad Morris groggy at the bell. Coffey made good use of a left jab and a right heok to the head, while Morris, who weighed 228 pounds to Coff 200, leaned heavily upon his oppor ent in the clinches. At close quarters | Morris landed many hard body blows Jess Willard, the new heavyweight champion, will get $5,000 for his first week on the stage after winning the title. A contract calling for that amcunt was closed by Hammer- stein's Victoria last night with Law- rence Weber, home representative of Harry H. Frazee, Jack Curley an® Tom Jones, joint managers of Will- ard, who approved the deal by wire. Willard's engagement begins next Mwvnday. His sparing pariner, "Jim" Savage, will box with hi: and a dramatic sketch, conta only brief speaking parts for. the champion, is being-prepared. The contract gives the theatre an option | to extend the engagement a week at a time. The Canadian Baseball League {| will not open this season until two weeks later than the 1914 campaign in order to avoid the pring rains early in May. According to Manager Shaughnessy of the Ottawa Senators the league race will open on May 19 with the first - local game here on) Deliciously Id is President = Fitzgera south, but he ha tated will be over hundred played. a5 21st now in ti toatl the games one Charles against . Mays, St A. C., Tor- onto, was . pitted Armstrong, on's hard-hi 158-pc 1 Boston Mays' face was"beaten b: selo nd and he from the mouth into boy kept pushing i Armstrong's stomach, causing iueh werriment;s but lost his wildness in running ! the ring. Thus was Toronto's y¥ hope of a champion- disposed of. d ro copiou wa London syfidicate has offered a £4,000 ($20,000) a etween Jess Willard, who 'won the heavyweight championship from Jack Johnson at Havana last Mon- day, ai Frank Moran, Pittsburg Willard wil be offered £200 ($1,000 for is travelling expenses. Moran was defeated by Johnson in twenty rounds on points in Paris on J > 27th of last year oi for 1 d Referee Jack Welsh says: "If 1 had heen compelled to give a decis- ion at the end of the 25th round it would have been Johnson's by a wide margin, Up to the 20th round Wiilard had won enly one round by a real margin' and two or three others by the slightest shade. In the 13th and 14th I was almost sure Johnson | would knock Willard out; but Will- ard showed that his jaw and his body | were too tough. 'Johnson put up a wonderful fight A A AAP Pr rs A itt to the 20th round, but age stepped in then and defeated him." The City of Angels is the latest to shy its hat in the ring for the Qlym- pic games in 1916 It is generally now that Berlin will aban- don any attempt to hold the world's greatest athletic meet, and it seems obvious that the contestts should be held in a neutral country. Los eles. claims that could furnish practically as large atten- dance-as either Philadelphia or New York. in addition to offering the fin- e<t climate and scenic setting in the world. The opening of the Panama Canal has brought Southern Califor- nia in touch with European countries by boat, so that distance would not figure materially: Abandonement of the games for 1916 is'not looked on with favor in this country, even though the great meet should have to be held with nations than usual represent- believed Ang it fewer ed Willard has never stimulates or used alcoholic tobacco in any form. He says: --*"I won because I have lived right. I hope to be champion for many years by living right. Fight- ing the booze doesn't make cham: plons----it destroys, them. Johnsen was and is a physical marvel, but his strength has been undermined. Dissi- pation will wreck any man, no mat- ter how strong his constitution." Clark Griffith predicts that.the mighty Walter Johnson, who & in fine shape, will win thirty games this year. "Griff" is grooming the "Speed King" for the opening game with the Yankees in Washington on April 14, ELA ee EOE A AR A ed |p ed phe ness of the Indies SOLID CHOCOLATE MAPLE BUDS For bites between meals there is nothing equal to * Maple Buds---all the good- seems to be caught and prisoned in these pure, velvet- smooth bits of solid choco late--and they're so whole- some and nourishing too. other boxmen, and says that the American League race will narrow down to a struggle between the Sen- ators and the Red Sox. He declares that the Athletics will be lucky to finish in the first division. A Soldier Lloyd's Weekly : magistrate at West London Police Court on Saturday made an order for Henry Olden, a private in the Royal Field . Artillery, to be handed over to a military escort Olden was charged as an absentes. The full pathos of his. ease--nand' it is deeply phthetic---was disclosed at the police court the previous day. Them a police officer said that he went to" St.Ann's Road, Notting Hill, and saw the prisoner. He ask- ed him why he had not gone Back 10 his regouent. The prisoner (point. ing tu a collin) said : "Look at this. You know now shy I have not gone back." The coffin contained the dead body of his child, 5 § "Dick you, arrest him ?"* asked the magistrate. "Yes," was the reply. "I should have thought," said the magistrate, "that yom could have left it for a day. 1 shall take the responsibility of remanding the ae- cused for a day, so that may at- tend bis child's funeral." ~~ s a sad incident af he the same afternoon, when Olden arrived to witness the funeral .of his child. The bereaved father reachel the And A Coffin, "Griff". has great confidence in his Be Kind To Actors. Kansas City Star A vaudeville "team last week in a theatre City. The young man and his girl part. ner on the stage were doing their level best to please, but it was plain they were amateurs, acd the gallery, the keenest critics in every theatre, would not have it, There came a sharp, sibilant hiss, and then anoth- er and another, until the sound was like steam under great pressure es- caping from a boiler. It was eruel and pitiful. The two actors shrank as if they had been struck. The vim and sprightliness went out-of them, and, cowed and ashamed, they finigshed their act list- lessly agd vanished. If the putiic only knew how act- hissed Kansas was in . 018 in the beginning of their carears dread each opening night in a nes town, fearful of the reception they will get there; how sensitive they are in each breath of approval or disapproval; how elated they are at applause, how cast down by lack of - it, there would be more charity for those who now are new in the busi- ness The greatest actors in the world were amateurs onte, There must ba a time in stage of life of each actor when his work is more or less crude Remember that and be kind to the beginners. 2 Did you ever stop and think that the dollar might have been henest until it got into your hands? graveside j the ittal sen- tences were uttered by the of- | ficiating The absentee completely | broke down, and burst nto sobs while the tiny coffm was being lowered into, the grave. i advicd. is stmply present: rpese of meddling J 7 £

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