Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Oct 1915, p. 10

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PAGE TEN Glimps N es » HE Kootenay district is to the south of the main line of the Canadian" | Landing, the most southery point of the situated one of the finest hotels of the Cs : The mountaiheer also the wandering prospector, anadian Pacific, The district finds the Kootenay di Inn iin, [rvwwwn Porritt Garage Co., - Limited 210-214 WELLINGTON ST. Phone 454. ForA Il Kinds of Accessories Such as Pumps Jacks, Running-board Mats, Headlight Bulbs, Tire Holders, Shock Absorbers Dry Cells. All Kinds of tires and lire. repair material. Call in and sce them, CHARM CEYLON _40c, 50c, 60c, Lb. Charm Coffee, 40c Lb. + For Sale at All Grocers. "yo $ As mdi Three Grand Prizes The "highest awards possible. for Columbia Graphophones and Records at the Panama Worlds Fair. This is our guarantee, backed by the Worlds Judes. : de These long evenings will he Miche and hap- pier for vou with a Columbia -Grafonola or a few new Sparting Goods" Go, "88 -- beautiful and picturgsque Kootenay strict after his own heart for itis full of vi TEAS | il | ve: i | the college. THE DAILY BRITISH of the $OTENAY D 1 wn TE : WHIG, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1915. v v v STRICT Fl Pacific in British Columbia, while it is Lakes. It is a distriet which deli is reached from th ] | THE SPORT nevi | For the first time .in many years C. Mack will witness the world's baseball series from the grand stand ! | perspective. . Cecil MeVilly, winfier of the Dia-| || mond Sculls at Henley Regretia in| 41913, is in an Australian regiment | || destined for Europe. { | Boston seats for the world's baee | { ball series will range in price from { 50 cents to $5. Box seats will sell { for the latter figure and the far || bleachers for the former. Grand | | Stand seats will sell for $3. | Owing to the suspension_of Inter-| collegiate football, Mel. G, Brock, di-| regtor of \sports at the Western Uni-{ r3ity, is endeavoring to make some | thugements with the London O.R.| team do ar LP play under the name of | | Esten Dareh, an enthusiastic Port] { Hope - hockey player, familiarly known as "Pete" has given up a res- ponsible position to enlist with the fi 3th Field Battery, at Toronto. Lorne Emerson, another of star hpeckeyists, Port Hope's = him i has, accompanied 3 i The specessful effort of wou] tawa lacrosse veterans to raise mon. | {ey for the Patriotic Fund at their! i game last Saturday have had the ef-| fect of awakening the football veter- | jans of the capital. They are plan- i ning 'a veterans' game on Thankesiey ing Day sgainst this year's Ottawd | ! team. £ ol | 23 -- i The fact that the O.R.EU. has | | turned dewn the applications of two} { Niagara training camp teams of | | overseas batialions to affiliate with | jed im this city, will share a similar jiate. "Running a man | 199 yards and making him drop fat | on the ground every 10 yards. is a stunt of McEvenue's that will reduce | some of the 100. wall-cushioned Bauts stomachs. He had the Nae Toronto Star: e north by steamers through the lakes, 4 rgin peaks. The Purcell Range in this vicinity is a great unmapped area and INI nn min | Quest of the 70th Battalion, encamyp- | © o- kicking back, whem the Aree g Ww 2 | fc) Boundary Falls, Midway, B.0 (2) Creel Lodge, Slocan, B.0, (3) Goat River Canyon, Erickson, B.0, 3% (4) Familiar Kootenay soens,' 6) Cranbrook, B.0. Fils «| = linked with the east by the Crows .Nest Branch terminating at Kootenay ghts the tourist, the fisherman and the big game hunter, At Balfour ig unknown save 9 TT teri rrr | Madden may. also take a course at dropping like logs, and it came hard It is great for | the Montreal University. for the big fellows. condition, however, 7 -- "Red" Flannery's broken collar- bone is giving him trouble again this season, and he has been moved from George Bush, who played for the Sta Patrick's last year, and Art Mur- phy, a brilliant young quarter-back, who starred for Ottawa intermedia- | by the Hamilton Rowing Club. That tes two years ago. will be with Ye Will be welcome news to some of the Senators this season. Bush was, de-| wings on opposing teams, -siys «the cently reinstated by the A.A.U., flav-| Toronto Globe. ' rar | : - - | Hamilton Tigers . have three / coaches in charge of their teams Ben { Simpson looks after the rear guard, | Bob lsbester is grooming the line | men, and Harry Glasford is paying | attention to the outside wings. The first accident of the football | season at Hamilton oceurred at the practice of the Rowing Club team at the Jockey Club grounds. Ham- burg, -pne of last year's intermedi- ates, was tackling Lorne Gatenby, "{and 'struck with such: force that he * | broke his collar-bone, and as a result will be out of the game for the bal- ance of the season, 5 "Joe" Jeannette, the negro heavy- weight, has decided to retire. "Wil lard has drawn the color line, and | that about lets me out," said Jean- { nette. "There is no one for me fight jany more, and so I have quit the ring a . | game for good." Jeannette is run. AF 3 = {ning a line! of "Jitiey'" autos in Ho- g 3 A { boken, N.I., and is said to be doing | well. i --- { In speaking 'of the likelihood of ; | McGill joining the O.R F.U, Secret: CENTREFIBLDER TRIS SPEAKAER | ary Howard Melville, of the Styud- 62h whoston Red Sex, Suntenderal ent's Council, Stated: that there was series soon oy re pA ith Puta] ho chance of their becoming mem- delphia. ° | bers, It would hardly do t6 aban- ern ; | don Intercollegiate Rugby and throw Ing been disqualifted for participa-|'in their lot with another association tion in a wrestling bout against a. is the feeling of the MeGill students. professional. - ! fee 8 for a mile, champion trotter, © greatest gelding His owner is C.K. G. Uhlan was shown at the d-- ' | New York State Fair at The National Laerosse Club is N.Y, with My. Billings in the saddle. looking for other teams to conquer, | Uhlan 'is reputed to have cost Mr. and has made a hig offer to the: To. | Billings $50,000 several years ago. ronto Tecumseh' to play in Montreal | Lack of competitors resulted tn the Sunday. ; "| retirement of the great campaigner. Vee Heney, the former : ® | "Jack" Barry, captain of the Red Hawas LSox, may not ge ahle ts play again to MeGill. during the American League Seaton. --. ; | With a record of 1.5 Ty Cobb stealing ®hivd with the | Uhlan, the world's bag occupied is a reminfier that there | is recognized as th a certain percentage of wood in ev- {of all time. BiRings. ¥ j Was due to a carbuncle, and that sev- 1 that they ghould be used for such rec- flying wing to a scrimmage position" Wasteful Waiting in an outer office is no longer evidence of efficient salesmanship. Selling by telephone is the modern way. Results have shown that the Long Distance Telephone as a selling agent 's a big, new, vital force, that builds business economically-and quickly. Plan a selling by telephone cam- paign. Ask "Long Distance" for fates. Every Bell Telephone i $ a Long Distance Station The Bell Telephoe Co. OF CANADA. NA A A cm A | but probably will be in cofdition for the world's series games, it was lear- ned. Barry has been at his home in Worcester, supposedly suffering from ad 'ordinary boil. He visited a spec- ialist and was told that his trouble Sood eral days wauld be required for pro- i per treatment.' 2 oy, , go fai . The rétirement'of Fred Clarke this] fall will leave McCraw Ms the only] member of the "Big Theee," who for| SO many years dominated the pen. | nant situation in the National Base naps oF . A i | REBICing So" Yorowt a. ball, League. Chance passed from! the scene of baseball activities a ké » -- x year ago, growling and grumbling! about the way he had been treated, Food when properly Cooked, debpite the fact that he made en. | Can be served First Class, ough out of baseball to retire to a| And the way to obtain it is life of luxury on i California orange |. ranch, . & f -- COOK WITH GAS. August was the mhonth of extra-in- | » ning baseball games, The Chicago Drop a card to the Office of Works, White Sox established a record of 89 {Queen Street," or 'phone 197, and innings Jn eight games, in three of {have the GAS installed in your which the' 'Washington club figured me; as opponents. Evidently peeved | \ Light, Heat, Power and Water Depts. tra séssion games at St. Louis and |G, C. Folger; General Mgr. New York until they had amassed a ' record of 102 innings in nine games, fm -------------- That' McGill will abandon Rugby to » «| ord-making purposes by the Chicago American. Leaguers, the Washington players. proceeded to go the White Sox one better by continuing the ex- Jfor this season, was definitely decid- ed at a meeting of the Students' Council, held Wednesday night in the Union, largely attended by the stu- | dents and members of the council. | The proposal to play Intercollegiate | games in aid of the Patriotic Fund | was discussed, and it.was decided | that it would be impracticable, while | the idea of entéring any other union than the Iytercollegiate was quickly | , disposed of. The abandoning of Rugby at McGill will give the mem- bers of last season's team who care to, an opportunity of playing with the Montreal squad. A number of | them have already signified their in- | téntion of turning out with the Wing- ed Wheelers should there be no téam | at the university, The following is | a statement handed out after the | meeting: Fs : 1 "At a meeting of the McGill Stu- | dents' Couneli, held last night, it was | officially' decided that the university would not participate in senior Rug- | by this fall. The proposal to run an | Intercollegiate series in aid of the | i Patriotic Fund was discussed, but | 'was foungd impracticable." : { The Toronto Globe says: On Mon- | day morning next at 9 o'clock anoth- | er draft of local sportsmen. will ve + for Kingston to join the recently-or- | ganized aquatic battery of artillery. | Thirty additional recruits have been | signed. . Not all of them are aquatic } men, but all are accomplished ath- | [letes in various branches of sport. l The battery will have a football team in the league which it 1s pro- | nize at Kingston to in- | ttery, Queen's University | and the infantry battalion statio: there. . In the event of the soldiers | remaining at the Limestone City dur- | ing the winter a hockey league will be organized. "Bob™ Dibble, the champion oars- | man of the United States and Canada, | will be one of the party to leave To- ronto on Monday, = He will be given a send-off by the Don Rowing Club. Among the other athfetes who will accompany the sculling] champion are B. Lepper, Lindsay W t, Herbert | Arnott, Willlam Elder)! "H. Cassidy, | & mg, J. Price, W. Knapp. J. M- Findlay, Donald Me- Keag, F. M. Wilson, R. Weatherbee, J. Cobban, T. 1. Wright, E. Barber, | E. Hoare, H. MM. ore, "'Jack" | Moore, C. Barker, R. Brophy and A. | Palmer. i \ Among the men in the fitery are | veveral football players from the | teams, London and Mont- |

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