Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Nov 1919, p. 10

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_PAGE TEN iL SRENNEENRENNENNENNNNEENNRERANENE] A i a ETN 5 BUY NOW You know the price of Shoes to-day, so if you will need a pair of Hockey or Skating Shoes get busy. We have a quantity of Hockey Boots for Men, Boys, Women and Girls at LAST YEAR'S PRICES. They won't last long, then you will have toa PAY MORE MONEY as our new stock costs a lot more. gr nani RIES uNces LIGHTER & . SOLE AGENTS FOR KINGSTON AND VICINITY GET YOURS TO-DAY The manufacturers have sold out of some lines al-| ready, and it might be what you want. ONLY ONE PLACE readgold - Sporting Goods Co. 88 Princess St. PHONE 529. "THE HOME OF THE BRUNSWICK" INNA RENE RR SE The Value Of The Home The man Who can afford to own a home--and the average man of » y cam d make it his first concern * te wolvelthe problem. He will be aided In that task by studying the real estate offerings closely and Investigating those which impress him favorably, He will thus be serving himself, his and kis eity. To every suc "Get = . heme to rally around." For the choicest ots, houses and locations, apply to: elephone 703 J. 0. HUTTON 67 Clarence Street, Kingston man, we would say = -- i Kingston, Ont storekeepers and druggists. Te '| General Sport City charities are to receive the profits from boxing bouts in Toledo jin the future | © Frank O'Neil, the American joec- | key, piloted sixty-six winners and led {al} jockeys in France the past sea- | son. guard, holds the distinction of be- ing the heaviest man on this sea- son's football team at Harvard, Commander J. K. L. Ross, the Ca- nadian horseman, leads the list of winning owners this season, his run- ners having won $150,995 in purses. Notre Dame is represented by a ~footbatl the South Bend boys having a string of brilliant victories to their credit. . The Duluth boxing commission re- fused to permit Sam Langford and Jack Thompson, jeague, to stage their bout in Du- { lath, i ~ ---- Manager Tom Jones the erstwhile | | pilot of Jess Willard, believes he has | another champion in the making in the person of Joe Downey, of Colum- bus. From all accounts minor league baseball is to start a real comeback | next shrimg, with a number of new | leagues to be organized in the west {and south. Horse racing was & big success in France this season. age taken by the mutuals on the ponies will reach a total of nearly 53,000,000 francs. Em] Athletic Field for Hamilton. Jt was decided at a meeting of those interested in establishing an : | athletic field on the Scott property to | make an effort to secure the Armour- |ies for the holding of an athletic | | meet on December 12. The object! | of the meet will be to advertise the | | by-law that will be submitted to raise | money for debentures ror the purpose i | of establishing the field. | Helps a Weak Throat | Strengthens the Voice Cures Bronchitis By Breathing the Healing Balsams of Catarrhozone You are Cured Without Using Drugs. I You breathe through the Catarrh- | ozone inhaler medicated air that is {2411 of healing, soothing balsams, full of piney antiseptic essences that resemble the air of the pine woods in the Adirondacks. This piney vapor has a truly marvelous action on weak throats. It brings strength and health to the bronchi- tic, stops that hacking, irritating cough, prevents hoarseness and dif- ficult breathing. You ecan't find anything for weak-throated people on earth-more beneficial than Ca- tarthozone. It means heaven on earth to the man that has had bronchitis, catarrh or throat irrita- tion. You will realize this the first time you use Catarrhozone, whiich is a scientific preparation specially designed for diseases of the nose, throat and bronchial tupes. Get the large size. it lasts two months; 'costs $1.00; medium size, 50c,; sample size, 25c. All A smd Weighing 220 pounds, T. S. Woods, | of the colored | - THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG In the World of Sport | TO ENTER TWO TEAMS IN SUNDAY SCHOOL-A.A 1 Sydénhame Street Methodist Bi- { ble school will be represented by two teams in the S.8.A A.A. basket- ball series this winter. At a meeting {held on Sunday it was decided to} | enter 'both junior and scnior teams. | The senior team will be composed of | young men from the Union club. Af- | ter the regular session of the school | the young men under the age of | eighteen years met 'and organized by electing the following officers; Ho- | nory presidents, 'Rev. W. T. G. | Brown, A. Shaw and E. P. Jenkins, i president J. J¥ Woods; vice-president | Joseph Crawford;-secretary, Donald | Anglin; treasurer, Harry McQueen; | committee, Gordon Crawford, "Ted- | dy" Jenkins, L. McKinnon, Charles | Thompson and W,. Anderson. | OTTAWA CHALLENGE ~~ "ALSO GOES ~team---this season, -- Second Vice-President Hugh Gall lof the C.R.F.U. has received from the Ottawa club a challenge for the Can- adian intermediate title. Ottawa won the intermediate honors in the Quebec union. They are anxious te | play the O.R.FiU. winners. 'How- ever, they will not be accommodated. as the O.R.F.U. will have no winner | until December 6, which will be too | late for a play-off. | The winner of today's intermed- | fate_final nright take on Ottawa, but {it 48 hardly likely. = Ottawa are | through early for the simple reason | that there were only three feams in | the Quebec series. The O.R.F.U, had | eight teams operating. | SCIENCE TEAM WINS THE CHAMPIONSHIP | Science students are Inter-Faculty | rugby champions. In the final game | of the series played on the lower i campus on Saturday afternoon the | science men defeated the medicals by a score of 8 to 5. At half time [the score stood 3 to 0 for the win- The percent- | |ners. Although the day was stornly | la large number of the students were ion hand to ch thelr teams. A | week ago the men from Science Hall won from Arts. 'The officials were | Prof J. F. Macdonald referee, and | "Jack" Williams, umpire. | SEVEN MAN HOCKEY . | | adopt the system in vogue in the Fast, 4nd under. which Allan Cup | series and. other national amateur | | competitions are conducted, wag vot- | ed down at the annual meeting of the B.C.A.-H.A,, ma y YALE INVASION FAILED Sturdy Harvard Too Much for Old Rival by 10 to 3. The Harvard team versatile in attack and sturdy ig defence qn Sat- urday turned back by a scord'of 10 to 3 Yale's football invasion. The crimson victory came as a result of a strong offence in the early periods and a stiffened defence later. Har- vard at the outset scored by touch- down, and fleld goal, with Casey and R.Horween as the individualperform- ers. Yale obtained its three points by a remarkable kick for field goal by Braden in the final period. He booted the ball 53 yards cleanly be- tween the posts, Yale errors had robbed the blue of many chances to score, some of which were turned to Harvard profit, and the record of the game will bs one of Harvard success plus Yale errors. JOHNSON AND MORRIS Matched tor Finish : Fight at San S, . Jack Johnson, the fermer heavy- weight champion, has been matched to fight Carl Morris, of Tulsa, Okla, at 'San Luis, Mexico, fourteen miles south of Yuma, Ariz, according to announcement Yuma boxing promoter. The bout will be held sometime in December, Jones said. 1t would be a finish fight. Both boxers have signed articles and posted forfeits, the promoter asserted. Johnson is expected to train at San Luis and Morris at Yuma. Jolson is at Nogales, Mexico, and it was said he probably would have to use an airplane to reach San Luis, as the federal officers would, a bim on a statutory charge preferred several years ago if he passed through United States Hams is French Champion. The heavy-weight championship of France changed hands at the Salle Wagram, Paris, when Nilles was out- pointed over twenty rdunds by Paul Hams. Hams was floored in the sec- the end he Reid the upper hand, Nilles was down in the twelft seventeenth. : - Hams 1s a native of Guadeloupe, is powerfully bulit, and has good all- yot develop. : "to play off In the event of Winning| | mediate championship of the Inter- | collegiate Rugby Union when it de- IN BRITISH COLUMBIA -- British Columbia amateur hockey | | teams 'will continue to play under | | seven man rules. A proposal to] night by Al Jones, | ond round, but from the fourth to | round boxing qualities, which he may MAKE IRONCLAD RULE TO ENSURE FINALS Carladian Union Likely toAvoid Repetition of This Sea~ son's Wind-Up. The Ottawa Citizen gays: The collapse of plans for the an- nual championship playoffs in: the Canadian Rugby Football Union and the failure of the McGill-Montreal and Varsity-Toronto matches to mat- erialize, continues to be the chief topic in football circles. The first post war series has really fizzled out and there appears to be general regret all round the circuit. Many suggestions have been made and it is understood that the Canadian Union will act in the near future to guard against a repetition of the unsatisfactory windup of this sea- son. Clubs in each of the leagues affiliated will probably be compelled the. championship. In any event, some sort of a stan@ing rule will be made. In Montreal there appears to be more soreness over the coilapse of the McGill-Montreal-game than over the Canadian' championship final. ] Montrealers were looking forward to a great old tussle between the Inter- 1 collegiate and the Interprovincial | champions and explanations are still { flying thick and fast. The fact of the matter at Montreal appears to be that Montreal, thinking McGill wanted a game, issued a challénge. The McGill club was willing and the M.A.A A. of course, gave its consent, but the players of both teams heid a joint meeting, smoked 'the pipe of peace and agreed not to play. Both clubs have been hard hit, but they, of course, could not order their play- ers to take part in the game. Mont- real sport writers appear united in | one thing, viz.: that there was a de- | cided lack of sporting spirit on both | sides. The cancellation of the Var- | 8ity-Toronto game was due solely to | interference on the part of the Uni- | versity Faculty. ) | *VARSITY Il WINS # INTERMEDIATE HONORS Toronto 'Varsity II won the inter- | feated MoGill II. at Toronto by 20 to 11. A week ago at Montreal! Varsity defeated McGill by 19 to 14, 80 it wins the round by 39 to 25. ini For the O.H.A. Executive, Toronto Star: The London Hoc- | key Club is nominating H. H. Fer- gusonyTor a place on the Ontario | Hockey Association executive. | "Fergy" is well known, and he is a! { hockey enthusiast of the right type. | He was brought up under Jim Suth- | Perland in Kingston, and played for | Frontenacs for several years, Then he was with T. R. and A. A. in To- ronto. He has been up in London during the past two or three«years, and his hustling has played no little 'part in keeping Forest City on the hockey map. He was in a great mea- sure 'responsible for the London Club, when rink accommodations could not be secured for a third round game with Seaforth last win- ter taking the fixture to Woodstock, an undertaking that forced rfergu- son, Jack Greer, 'Buster Reid, Harry Lecky and others to go down in, thelr pockets for over $300 to make up the deficit on the trip. The supporters of the London Club were each given 'the ride to Woodstock > ' MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1910. LIBRARY TABLES, PERIOD DESIGNS ALL IATEST STYLES. R. A Reid LEADING UNDERTAKER PHONE 577 and admission to the rink for $1. It cost $1.80. Mr. Ferguson should make an ideal member for the OH» A. executive. No Military Football Games. Owing to the heavy rdin on Satur- day, no 'games were played in the military football league. Some of the R.C.A. and 21st players went to the cricket field "Feady for a game under any conditions, but the other teams were not so hot for a contest. i A soiled cuff attracts the eye OUR cuff is the most exposed portion y of your shirt. It soils the quickest. And everyone knows how PROMIN- ENT a soiled cuff is. It seems a magnet that draws all eyes. * : A soiled cuff irritates a particular man. He keeps pushing or pulling up his shirt sleeve to hide it. %e causes him to change his shirt when the body of it is still fresh and clean. - af The Double Wear Cuff is a boon to the particular dresser. When the cuff gets soiled just turn it. It folds easily and lies perfectly flat whether turned in or turned out. And just think of the comfortable feeling it gives you to know that you can turn your cuff, if you should happen to get it soiled unexpect- edly when down town, and it's inconvenient to go home and change your shirt. ° THe newest and smartest patterns are to be found in : Shirts ih DOUBLE WEAR CUFFS Trade Mark Patented 1918 "she cuff that doubles the life of the shirt" + EVERY WEEK BETWEEN MONTREAL AND KINGSTON; AL- WAYS ON TIME. SHIP YOUR FREIGHT BY THIS RE- LIABLE ROUTE % ¢ ELEPHONE 2105 FOR INFORMATION. PP Ferry Kingston--Cape Vi ent . STR. MIS SISQUOI oe EFFECTIVE NO VEMBER 17, "19, Ly. Kingston Ar. Cape Vincent, Lv. Cape Vinoent ... Ar. Kingston nas Special accommodation for a utomobiles Fords, $3.00; touring or other cars, $4.00. Close connections at Cape Vincent with N. ¥. C. for all N. X, points. PHone 21035. Subject to change without notice. * BRINGING UP FATHER se BY GOLLY HERE COMES + HHE MUSTIHY ' as at : ee % "a OION'T | TELL YOU TO CLEAN THAT BEFORE T™ING YOU OHO AMY ELSE NOW SET BUSY mi :: es [To 8 SURE vou DO TTL WT HERE By GEORGE McMANUS THAT GUY MUST HAVE 4 / BTEN UDIN' A CROW BAR YO BEAT THis RUG' Wilde To Meet Sharkey. ; Jimmy. Wilde, the English Sy« weight champion, has signed an ar ticle of agreement ere to meet Jac! ey, of this city Na a. a bout at Milwaukee on 6th, The weight is to be 118 ringside to make which Sharkey posted a for/ feit. Otté Borchert, president of the Milwaukee club, also signed the ap reement. Gi Gibson To Manage George Gibson, former gue catcher and manager, sod a the Toronto oi tendered a nage the Pittsburgh a er Barney Dreyfuss at the league meeting early in according to reports. . | Al Resch, the New York heavy weight is the latest boxer to try a who looked y a few years ba 1s still bn when he dons | bout a tow

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