Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Nov 1919, p. 10

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4 PAGE TEN EEEEENEENEEENN ENA N NENA lumbia ecords "Oh! What a Pal Was ary bl "RR, ¥ : Her ¢'s a good old-fashioned ballad song that's making one of the biggest sentimental hits on record. Henry Burr sings the appealing words and "beautiful melody with sincere and tender feeling. Coupled with "Waiting" (from "Listen Lester™), by Charles Harrison. A 2788---90c¢ Other Good Records TELL ME"--Fox Trot TBREEZE"' -- Fox Trot «namsrsss:. uc "Take Me Back to Canada'--Burr "Hearts of the World" --Quartette ....... ... .. IRISH JIGS--Accordion IRISH REELS--Accordion n,...c.p.:t a A2783 90 R4013 90 Al917 90 Best selection of Records Between Toronto and Montreal wera, e ote DOES QUALITY COUNT WITH YOU? Treadgold Sporting Goods Co. 88 Princess St. Kingston, Ont PHONE 529. INEEENNNRENNNERNEEANEENNEENERNREE ~~ ------ wo MEDIUM for. 15 cents ! THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG } i } General Sport Battling Levinsky will open his fall campaign with a bout 'with Eu- gens Brosseau Montreal, Nov. 10th. at Pitcher Luque, the Cuban twirler | of the champion Reds, i§ to pitch for 4 team in Havans this winter The real test of the Navy football team will come Nov. 8th, when the Middles are to meet Georgetown at Aunapolis. Larry Gilbert, the former Boston Braves, led the Southern League in batting with an average of .348 in 136 games. ! The Roxing game is flourishing in | New Jersey these days. New clubs] are springing up at a rapid rate and all report big business i Chicago, Cleveland, Toledo and Atlantic City are all out to land the 1920 Grand American Handicap Trapshooting Tournament. WEATHER MAY FAVOR Mc@QILL SATURDAY AGAINST QUEEN'S The Montreal Star: | Stadium was ¢overed with a thick coating of slush, the McGill team turned out for gractice Thursday af- ternoon. In order to keep the field | in as good condition as possible for the game on Saturday it was thought best that no scrimmage work should be indulged in and a light work-out was held behind the goal line. If wis almost impossible to kick the: ball and remain standing and the men did not remain out very long. There is no signs of overcoufidence about the teanr. us might be expec! ed, but rather the men ars apparent- ly In the same frame of mind as they were before assuming the lead in! the race for the penmant. They are quite sure that everyone will play his hardest and are prepared to have a. stiff contest this Saturday against a well-conditioned team which has been benefited a two weeks' res! Should the weather remain as itis ai present the game will likely go to the team that has the stronger line and the McGill men feel that they will be able to hold their own against the tricolor wings. The Queen'# team had several promising players out on their wing line in their first game, bat they lacked condition. This fault has been remedied and it is expected that they will put up a very stiff fight in order to he credited {with a win this season. Although the RM.C. MEETS MoGILL II. + IN MONTREAL TO-DAY | ------ Military College Rug- by team left on Friday for Ment-| real to play Me@Gill II. in the semi- finals of the championship of the In- tercollegiate series The winnérs will play Varsity II for the championship, and things look very favorable for the Cadets to take a trip to Toronto. They de- feated McGill 10 to 0 in Kingston] last Saturday, and a finer game of rugby could not have been wished | for There is one important thing that may change things a bit, and that is the possibility of Dunbar, the Cadet flying wing, being unable to play. He played a magnificent game last week, but he was not in good shape to play, and the result was that he was ordered off the field by the college doctor. He has been rest- ing up all week, and although much improved, is not as well as he might be. In the event of his mot play- ing McDougall will take his place The whole Cadet team is very strong | and stand an excellent chance of! beating MeGill. The line-up for the| R.M.C. will likely be: Dunbar or Me-| Dougall, fiving wing; Mundell, Rus-| sell,' Evaus, halves; Ross, quarter; | McKenzie, Adami, Birn{ingham, | scrimmage; Winter, 'Carsley, inside | | WIRES, White, Rudaay; middie wings; | Rutherford, Walker, outside wings. { The Royal by What "Varsity Overlooks. Toronto Telegram: Varsity not given up . hope of turning tables on McGill at Montreal on November 15. Harry Griffiths, the veteran wizard couch, is to lend a hand to Coach Foulds. They 'esti- mate that the wing line needs mors | drilling in tackling and that Breea's | punts should be so timed and dis-! tanced as to enable the wings to get down under them. i 'They are overlooking a couple of | things. The smashes of the McGill | men into and through gaps in the | 'Versily line meant anly one thing! ~--that the Blue and White were be- wildered by Shaughnessy's t{actics, | {and that is something that a whoie | { college of coaches may find it diffi- cult to correct. i has the Agree With the Whig. Toronto Globe: Without entering | into the question of the legality or} illegality. of the kind of football played by the McGill University team, the fact must be admitted that the methods employed by Coach Shaughnessy of the Red and White have brought about. @ discussion of the rules which sh a fierce light on their impotencies and ambiguities. The possibidities of 'the game have | been demonstrated in a manner hi-| therto not thought possible. If Shau-! ghnessy has played fast and loose; | with the rules, as is contended by some of his critles, he should be | checked up now. If some of the rules ! are possible of the various interpre- {| tations that have been placed upon them, they. should be revised (and | made more explicit.'If, on 'the other | hand, new plays have been evolved | { within the rules, they are a tribute { to Shaughnessy, and should be a les-| } led to win a regular place wn | Captain Fails to Make Team. A situation believed to be without precedent in Inter-collegiate football has developed at West Point, where Alexander George, the captain, fail in the team. When candidates for the Army re- { } 3 v 3 { ported for practice, George was elec ed to the captaincy He had viously played at the Texas Agri cultural and Mechanical school De yond this nothing was known of him as a player. As the day for the opening game with Middlesbury Collage drew close: it .appeared that George, who is a quarter-back would be unable to displace Wilhide, who had been put at quarter-back. He was subsequen ly tried at end, and at this positic he also failed to show ability enoug to win a regular position pre- £ The Longest Run Yet. .. .. The most remarkable play of the: season in Canadian rugby and cer- tainly the lougest run ever made in the history of organized rugby in { Canada. took place during the Cent Y.M.C.A-Grantford game ° at Mitchell, the hero of a ral Brantford Saturday Central's half-back, is the 120-yard ran. When Brantford punted the ball over Central's iine Mitchell, who was back at the dead ball line, 160k « fiying kick at it. He lifted the oval, ran and caught it, and stoutly pursued by half of Brant- tord-team, sprinted the length of the field for a touch down, a run of 120 vards--110 yards of the playing tield and 10 vards between the déad litte and the goal line. When Appetite Fails And Health Declines | Follow This Suggestion | REQUIRES ONLY A COUPLE OF SMALL TABLETS AFTER MEALS TO FIX YOU UP AGAIN i A New Blood-Food Called Ferrozone | Sure to Restore You Quickly. i Every day comes the good news of wonderful cures with Ferrozone. i In Peterboro' it worked marvels for Louis Meehan--put him right on his feet---made him entirely well. "About three years ago," says Mr. | ' » SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8 1919. oF tee Great Pyramid. near Grzeh. Wh BALLAS SARI NA Fee Se NG One of the most remarkable monuments ever erected is the Great Pyramid near Gizeh, Egypt. The weight of this pyramid of the length of time takem to erect it has never been prily calculated, It is seven hundred and sixty feet square af' by four hundred and eighty feet in height. ; Modern tendencies in monument work are inclined toward simplicity and massiveness in design and construction. We are equip- ped to embody your own ideas of design in the memorial you seek to have built. Let us furnish you a design and estimate. THE McCALLUM GRANITE €0. LIMITED 397 Princess Street Kingston, Ont. 200feet more ;, persecond 2) «~--tiyt is what the new Dominion 30-30 means to the sportsman. The component used in these cartridges j~a progressive burning powder y that gives a flatter trajectory, greater 2° + penctration and by far the greatest shocking power knowg in a 30-39,/ f The new Dominion 30-30 insures t6 a greater degree the accuracy that has always cHaracterized Dominion Ammu. [nition, and posesces"the usual nitro ccllulose qualitieshof uniformity and sta. bility under all climatic conditions, {Look for the yellow late! on the back of the 30-30 box. ¢ It gu speed, accuracy amd per ntees gredter etration. fshould be your selection {for deer and other big game, Let the label be your guide,' Dominien Cartridge Co. Limited i son to players and coaches. The deli- | Nfeehan, "I had the Grippe which left | | cate suggestion that "Shag" should me in a very run-down condition that | | be forced to see eye-to-eye with oth- | ringlly developed into Dyspepsia. I] i er coaches or compelled to relinquish | was unable to eat but a few things! | his position at McGill University is ang had a craving for acid. I gave! | utterly ridiculous. lip treating with the doctors because | | they did not help me and on the ad-| vice of a friend used Ferrozone. It! American promoters, who would not only cured me of Dyspepsia and | like to.stage Dempsey in a limited ! Biliousness, but has built up my| round bout this winter, are finding it [strength to what it was before I had | hard to select an adversary possess- | the Grippe. I can recommend Ferro- | ing even ordinary ability; In fiscuss- 20De as an ideal restorative." i ing a probable match for the world's] Ferrozone gives you force, energy, | champion such heavyweights as Lev- vim. , insky, Brennan, Meehan, Fulton and It strengthens the stomach, cures | others are mentioned. Should Demp- | indigestion, prevents headaches-- | sey meet any of these men he could guarantees good health. { win easily, if only haif as fit ag he" Thousands use Ferrozone--they was when he won the title from #Wil-|all feel better; try it yourself-- lard. sold in 50c boxes, six for $2.50, at Dempsey, at the top of his form, ail dealers. : is a pugilistic phenomenon. He prov- ed this assertion when he slaughter- ed Willard at Toledo. Veterans, who had ween all the best heavyweights. since Sullivan's time, agreed that Dempsey never had been excelled as. a hard hitter, and that he was fas- | ter on his feet than any of the for-. mer champions, with the possible ex- ception of Corbett. Having beaten all | of the heavyweights named above, except Meeban, with knockout wal- lops. Dempsey today has no formid- able opposition in America. Dempsey Is Supreme. EASY CHAIRS, RATTAN CHAIRS, ROCKERS FUMED ~ OAK FINISH---UPHOLSTERED IN TAPESTRY. LIBRARY STYLE 3 R. J. Reid LEADING UNDERTAKER bi proposed 'constitution, by-laws, general athletic of the Amateur Athletic Union, as prepared by Justice Bartow S. Weeks, chair. Se

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