Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Nov 1921, p. 10

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Almost Giving Them Away AWA roger er Wp THAT'S WHAT YOU WILL SAY $24.00 now buys a Phonograph which we have been always selling at $35.00. These Phonographs are up-to-date. They play Rll Records correctly--have a wooden horn and other new features. To enable every person to get one of these we are offering exceptionally easy terms. But you MUST come early. We've only a few. REMEMBER these are no * cheaply made Phonographs, but are positively guaranteed. Oak or Mahoghany finish. Come in while you have the time and we have the bargains. HAVE YOU HEARD ""YOO-HOO?" Some Fox Trot. \ R-E-C-O-R-D-S 65c., 85¢., $1.25 (127) $1.50 All'the new hits and most of the old ones. Get the Habit: "For Re- cords, Try Treadgold's First," TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS: CO. PHONOGRAPHS--RECORDS--SKATES--CAMERAS 88 PRINCESS STREET PHONE 529. "THE PLACE TO GET THAT RECORD" ; Ee I A -------- Don't Use a Broom to Clean Your Carpets Use a Hoover ™N\ . . "Phone 441 and we will demonstrate at your house H. W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC C0. 167 PRINCESS STREET ORDERING SUITS "TODAY" A Requires the most careful considera- 'tion. You may also require expert*ad- vice as to wearing qualities of certain Cloth. After over 35 years in the busi- ness, we claim to be able to advise in this direction. It cos* nothing to call and have a talk with us on woollens. Drop in to-morrow! CRAWFORD & WALSH N -- es The Parkdale O.R.F.U. champions are said to be any too enthusiastic im i about practice, They should be when they are meeting a team of the cali- bre of Argonauts. BRINGING UP FATHER THE DAILY BRIT ISH WHIG. ' | In the World of Sport | SATUIIDAY, NOV. 26, 1991, ssid, SO HardwoodFlooring | Shaughnessy Unlimited Interference on Line of Scrimmage. | | The Montrea] Gazette has the fol- | lowing: Now that the rugby football sea- fon in the dominion has practically closed for another year, officlals, | Players and followers of the game | are reviewing the past fall's activi- f ties and directing particular atten- { tion to the game as played under the jevased rules during the past three | months, With a view to making | modifications to the existing rules, i should it 'be deemed necessary, W. {Foulds, president of the Canadian Rugby Union, is gathering data from tae various authorities on the game | in Canada, which will be given due | consideration before any revision in { the regulatfons is made for the 1922 | season, Coach Frank Shaughnessy, of the { MeGin University Rugby Club at {the request of the president of the | Canadian Rubgy Union, has submit- | ted a number of suggestions, which | im- | weaknesses. | +wERn existed in the game under this f The McGill rugby | |he considers will act towards | proving the alleged | season's rules, {authority has made two important | proposals to the executive of the governing body of rugby, the first dealing with interference on the line |and the second regarding officials. | Regarding officials, the McGill | coach has stated that he believes it game {f changes were made in the duties allotted to the various men handling the play and suggests that officials be appointed in the various leagues, who have no direct affilia- tions with the organizations concern- ed, For the Intercollegiate series he has proposed that officials from Hamilton and Ottawa be picked, men who have not been directly con- cerned with any of the universities former university players'to handle the games. These suggestions, he adds, are not put forth as a criticism of the past performances of dfficials {in either league, but simply as a more efficacious way of eliminating !any suggestion of unfairness. In this regard he would have all minor of- ficials, as yard-stick men, touchline "judges and goal judges disinterested parties, Defining Duties, | In defining the duties of the of- ficials, Shaughnessy proposes that the referee will function on the field as before. The umpire he would sta- tion behind the defensive team to | watch for offside interference, hold- | ing and rough play, also being called upon to keep time and watch the | touchline on the opposite side of the | field from where the head linesman |1s situated. The latter official he would make responsible for watch- ing offsides on the line of scrimmage, besides carrying on with his present duties, That the three yard Interference rule was not properly observed by all teams, especially in the Interprovin- cial is the statement made by the McGill coach, who claims to have the authority of two coaches of "Big Four" teams that line players were used to cut down opposing "outside 'wings, that the running backfield plays might be worked with greater i ease, Shaughnessy advocated that the men on the line of scrimmage should be allowed to interfere without lim- it, as Jong as they go forward. He does not believe in interference be- hind the line of scrimmage as coun- tenanced in the American game. The present three yard rule he claims A AAA NANA Deep Hollow Coughs That same cough {is everywhere you- go, deep and hollow, why---be- cause consumptive.' First it was a cold, next came Catarrh, vitally de- creased then the trouble was very serious. Never neglect a cold, not even a little one. Never trifie with sore throat or Catarrh. Get out your *'Catarrhozone Inhaler." Breathe deeply into your lungs the healing, soothing 'vapor of Catarrhozone. Let Catarrhozone clear out the nostrils. You'll wonder all the change when you use this healing remedy. It's | really splendid for coughs, colds, bronchial irritation and catarrhal trouble. Sold everywhere. Two months' treatment, $1.00. Small size, 60c. | Are Mighty Dangerous | CHANGES IN RUGBY ULES wholly un o the officials, 'wh Would Allow J untaly Io the of yi would be in the best interest Jof the | in the league, while in the Interpro- i vincial he favors the appafntment of | penalt d es too numerous to allow 800: nsive p i offe: besides being cannot possibly judge aocurately | Whether a play js correct or not, the {decision necessarily being left to | guess work, Severer Penalties, That there is considerable rough work in Canadian rugby is a further point made by the McGill coach, who Suggests a more stringent method of penalizing offending players. He j would have the player in question ruled off the field for the balance of the game, although allowing a | substitute, but besides this, would penalize the offender's team, half the distance between its"goa! line and {the point where the foul was com- | mitted. : | Regarding the forward pass which has been suggested as a good play for adoption in the Canadian game, | he claims that the three yard rule | would have to be considerably modi- | fied before the aerial game could be | adopted, "* LITTLE BITS. | i Eddie Livisghione, who is the Edi- [tor of the new magazine called [ "Sport," 1s said to be dickering for |the use of the new Arena in Toronto with a view to having skating there | this winter, The new arena was {built primarily for the live stock | shows rugbyists, who Ottawa saw the | leaves the defence too strong and [Gren of Pittsburg at the Newark = _ == ES _= -- = = of | Boxing Club Friday night next. Ls = == = = = --_-- | the winner- of the Toronto-Hamilton | Argo-Varsity game declare that the | | Scullers would have won more easily {on a dry hard field. The Canadian professional team: {has been ordered to report at Mont- | real for training on December 9th. | If ice is not available at the Mount | Royal Arena the team will likely go | to Ottawa to Dey's Arena, It is not at all improbable that | major league ball owners will insist | that their players sign an all year | round contract in future. This mat- f ter will be taken up shortly, It's {adoption would mean that there | would be no further challenges of {authority such as that exhibited by | Babe Ruth recently, ~8mith's Fall will form an amateur Athletic Association, Kingston is forming one and Brantford is now considering the formation of one. Queen's won the junior college rugby title this year, Harvard's vic- tory should be a good omen for a senior championship in 1922, Tennis is going the way of all sporting flesh, To the fleshpots. New York promoters have offered tre- mepdous salaries to Tilden and qtiiérs to turn pro: Little else could be expected after the basketballers fell by the wayside. They say Solly Green will meet the hardest' opponént of his career in Marcél Denis, but they have said something to the same effect often before and nothing distressing oc- curred (to Solly, Montreal will have to be reckon- ed with in the' Big Four next year. The recently-formed University A.A. A. has combined with the Montreal A.AA. and the infusion of the col- lege players should give Montreal a high-class team next year, Today's rugby contest simmers down to a battle of boots and brains between Conacher, McCormick and Batstone one one side and Breen, Brophy and Munro cn tle other, Every one of them can run and kick and Breen is just as willy as Bat- stone, Judging by the suggestions of Frank Shaughnessy for the future, the plan of using graduates as offic- ials in the college football games this fall was not & complete success. Shag suggests that disinterested officials from outside cities handle the college games next year and that college officials handle the Big*Four games. Bobby Rowe, the clever defense player of the Seattle professional team, has again put his John Han- cock to a contract, Homer Smith, the Michigan giant, is preparing for his bout with Harry ~~ o i 3 , Our Hardwood Flooring is unsurpassed in quality and manufacture. Get our quo- tations on Beech, Birch, Maple and Oak. "Allan Lumber Co. Phone 1042 . . . . Victoria Street "Jack" Stark and Young Luby = = have been matched to meet tor | SOO OAR th hah tnt SE tiie is a twelve rounds at the Walker Sport- ing Club on Saturday night. Eddy Crozier tackles Young Skies on the same card, for ten rounds, Peterboro knocked Oshawa out of the running in the Interscholastic series on Wednesday, and will meet Marty Silvers and Paul Dana are | to box a 12-round bout at the 47th | Battalion Corps of Engineers in | Brooklyn on Saturday night, i = Fradkey Jerome, who boxes = Frankey Fay, at the Commonwealth s Sporting Club on Saturday night, has | = Benny Leonard helping him during |= his training stunts. s Famous for comfort and service, Ropular natural wool--soft and guarant un- shrinkable. Two- Plece or i group, probably U.T.S., in a sudden- combinations, Ae death game about the middle of next week. Oakwood Collegiate plays the Sarnia Collegiate in Sarnia today, and 'the winner will meet the win- ner of the Hamilton-Toronto-Peter- boro series in the final a week from today. The O.R.F.U. officials for today's games are: ! Intermediate, at Galt--Lic Loftus and Charlie Lewis. ! Junior, at Scarboro Beach--Hal | and' Cuthbert DeGruchy. { Interscholastic, at Sarnia--Bobby Armstrong and Bill Balley. President William Foulds, of the C.R.U., last night announced the list {ot officials for to-day's game at the | Stadium between Argonauts "&nd | Parkdale, as follows:--Referee, W. A. Hewitt; umpire, Reg. DeGruchy; | head linesman, Warren Coryell; yard | sticks, Pendergast and Davis; touch- line, Dr. Lawson and Charlie Gage; | timekeepers, J. Dolan and Dr, Me- Collum, and penalty timekeeper, Percy Scott. Tyrus Cobb, manager of the De- troit American League Baseball Club and manager of the San Francisco | team of th: California Winter Lea- gue, was fined $150 as the result of an altercation with Umpire Phyle, formerly of the Canadian League, during Saturday's game between San Francisco and Vernon. Cobb was fined $50 for abusive language and $100 for delaying the game. Chesterfield and Library Tables, Chester- field Suites, Easy Chairs, Parlor Suites, Par- lor Tables--big reductions. R. J. Reid Leading Undertaker Ambulance Phone 577 -- . i Didier Pitre has forwarded his 230-232-234 Princess Street, Kingston signed contract for the coming sea- son to Leo Dandurand, business man- ager of the Canadiens hockey team, and the veteran will again be seen with the Flying Frenchmen in the N.H.L. this winter. Pitre is the old- est player in point of years in the association, The Ottawa "mystery" hockey player has been announced as Gordon Roberts. . Pro. Hockey Season Begins Dec, 17, Montreal, Nov. 25.--The annual meeting of the National League will be held here on Sunday next. Dis- cussion will be confined to routine business and new subjects which may develop. The meeting has heretofore been held on the last Saturday in Novem- ber; but has this season been altered to permit of the attendance of dele- gates who cannot attend on Saturday evening. It is proposed to start the cham- pionship games a little earlier this season, probably about the 17th of December. ~ This will give the first and second teams plenty of time for the play-off before the Stanley Cup games, which are to be played in the east in 1922, starting about March 15th, HE man who smokes Master Mason KNOWS 'he flavor of tobacco. He demands the big Master Mason plug, because to the last pipeful it gives him the best for the least money. BIG PLUG Arbor Turns "Pro." Brandon, Nov. 23.--Ty Arbor, the speedy left wing player on the Bran- don hockey team: last winter, will perform with the Eskimos in the new pro. league. It is stated that Arbor was given a two-year contract with a big salary to make the jump from the amateur to pro. ranks. Ladies Remove Their Corns in a Very Simple Way || No pain, no trouble, costs only a quarter, It is a very simple thing to paint on a small application of good old "Putnam's" night and morning. To remove corns, to get entirely free cents et ee 'We Serve Good Meals Fo meals prepared right come and try us -- you will be delighted with our service. , Everything you could want served as you like it, from them, use Putnam's Corn & Dainty Restaurant Wart Extractor. It is guaranteed. 83 PRINCESS STREET 25c. at all dealers. Refuse a_substi- ||P - : ' » a now, 'wu BY GEORGE McMANUS HOURS THAT LET TER FOR HEAVEN'S Saxe OION'T 1 TELL YOU TWO ALO TO TAKE y ON YOUR [| ALL. 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