Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Feb 1922, p. 4

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STUDY SPORTS JUNIOR BRITISH WHIG BIGGEST LITTLE PAPER IN THE WORLD THE. DP HUMOR PLAY WORK or ONE REEL YARNS | TWO OF THEM Jennie tossed up her head and looked yemghtily at the newcomer, "Hello ©*ndpa," ghe gneered. "How did you get in?' William Geat, Esquire, didn't lose his temper. He merely looked bored. "Just because I've a beard." he sald, "Is no sign I'm an old fossil." "Listen to grandpa talk!" laughed Jennie, as all the rest of the members of the barnyard family gathered around to listen silently to the con- ~ versation. "You stop calling me grandpa," sald Williaa, becoming a little irritated "You just get me mad once, and you'll find out how spry I am, soon enough. You can make fun of my beard all right, but If you weren't a lady I'd tell you how funny you look with those big ears of yours, ana how beautiful your voice is--not."" Jennie was about to speak her mind when Mr. Jenkins came into the barn- yard, and the group trotted off and pretended to be busy doing other things. But the fight had begun. Both Jennie and William were watch- ing for a chance to get even. It came that evening when Jennle was chewing hay and William hap- " pened to wander past her stall. "What are you doing around here?' sald Jen- mle. "This is private property." "Til come in if I like," said Wiliam. "No one can order me around like that." He started into the stall, head lowered, just as Jennie's heels shot out. "I wonder what it is that makes Jennie limp that way." sald Farmer Jenkins next day. "I wonder if she had trouble with William. He seems sort of sick. But it can't be that, for REAL WRESTLING LESSON 2 By FRED While there -is no position the wrestlers must assume while on the mat trying to throw each other, the one illustrated on the left side of the picture printed here is the most usual. Suppose you and the boy you are wrestling assume this position. Sup- pose you are the one on top, Your problem is this: "How can I get this fellow off his hands and knees and on his back?' Here's a possible solution: With your right hand take a firm hold on his right arm near the wrist. Jerk hard on this arm and pull it from under him. If you succeed in doing so, all that remains is for you. take advantage of his bad position and throw him Over on his back. Keep Moving But if you are the boy underneath, then what? The best thing for you to do is keep moving, always watching for an op- portunity to get out of your more or they seem very friendly and respect- ful to each other now." less disadvantageous position. You might try a "side roll," pulling vour opponent over with you so that you land on top of him. To do this, reach up with your left hand and take hold of your opponent's left upper- arm, which is the arm that circles your waist. When you have a strong hold, suddenly turn your whole body over toward the open, or left side. Your opponent should roll with you. Work fast so that he does not realize what you are doing. Y Don't Roll Too Hard If you have been careful not to make the roll too forceful, you will land on top of your opponent. But the great danger is that you will roll so sud- denly and be 80 anxious that you will get too much force behind the move- ment and, instead of landing on top yourself you will continue to roll and your opponent will land on top of you If any one ever tries a roll with you, MEYER 175 Pound and Heavyweight Champion Amateur Wrestler of United States. the under man by adding momemtum to the roll so that you come out on top. The "half nelson" hold, one of the commonest in wrestling, is fllustrated on the right side of our picture. You can get the half nelson on your man very easily from the position shown on the left side of the picture. How to Do It The idea of the half nelson is to force ybur opponent's head down and up under him so that he is forced to roll over. Slip your right arm (sup~ posing that you are in the position shown on the left side of the picture) under the right arm-pit of the boy. Then place your right hand on the base of his head as illustrated in the right-hand sketch, Bear down on his head with your hand, and up with your arm. The leverage thus obtained is great, and unless your opponent's neck is very strong, it will be difficult for him to resist the pressure. His head will go down and he will roll over. But if any one should try the half nelson on you, remember that you oan break away very easily by trying the side roll I described in the first part of this article. (Next week Mr. Meyer will tell about the '"'wrestler's bridge" with which you ean increase the etrength of your neck.) TO-DAY'S PUZZLE VOLA, LEKE, LOEA, LEVA Rearrange cach group of letters te form the proper word. Then arrange the words to form a square. Solu- tion to-morrow. Teacher (explaining banking and in- vesting): "Now, Janet, suppose I gave you fifty dollars, what would be the first thing you would do?" bear in mind that you can 'avoid being me Jaasti "Count Wg AAA Ann | MONDAY, FEBRUALY 6, 1022. AILY BRITISH WHIG. Children's Coughs [SUICIDE RECALLED Ju Quickly Relieved = | BY DIVORCE CASE OO: WHITE PINE White Pine is again quite reasonable in price, and when we say ite Pine, we mean White Pine, the Ottawa Valley kind that is lasting and easy to work. Allan Lumber Co. E Phone 1042 Victoria Street = OS mote, her children might do 80, | the clause n in:possible. | RENOUNCES ROYAL RANK. Pe 7 NEWS FROM NAPANEE. I= A Prisoner's English Wife | Finds Her War Romance Blasted. JT It is hard for to keep the children from taking vold, they will run out of | doors not Propeny wrapped, or have | too much clothing on and get over- | heated and cool 'off too suddenly, they get their feet wet, kick off the cloth- ©8 at night; the mother cannot watch them all the time so what is she go- ing to do? | Mothers should never neglect the | children's coughs or colds, but on the | first sign should procure a bottle of i DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP It is pleasant and nice to take, and | relieves the cough or cold in a very | short time apd thus prevents bron- | chitis, pneumonia, or perhaps con- | sumption getting a foothold on their | | system. | | Mrs. E. Smith, 288 Victoria Ave, North Hamilton, Ont., writes: --*1 '| have three children who have had | very bad colds, due to change of cli- | Mary Becomes C Mate. I have tried different remo. | !'Tincess : . Commoner {dles, but I seem to get the best re- | by Marriage. sults from Dr. Wood's Norway Pine| London, Feb. 6.--By her marriage Syrup. I have no difficulty in giving [to Viscount Lascelles, Princess Mary it to them as they like it. I always |renounces her Royal rank, and all | have at least one bottle in the house." [claim forever to her right of succes- Price, 35¢. and 60c. a bottle at all [sion to the British throne, This was | dealers. Put up only by The T. Mil- [learned from a source intimately | burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. { connected with court circles ' yo . In the marriage contract which will | skint caught on a barb | be signed the day before the wedding freed it. {by the King, Princess Mary, Earl Besidg this man in blue flanney | Harewood and Viscount Lascelles, a | shirt, baggy khaki trousers, uneven [clause has been inserted to this ef- | Suspenders, end wile felt hat, she was | fect, small and exquisite. i While the possibility of Princess The sunly Pete set out an upturn- | vary succeeding to the throne is re- ied bucket for her. She lounged on {it, her elbows on her knees. "Whers | are you going?" { SE -- "Just starting off for the summer, horse-trading." Bjormstam chuckle], His red mustache caught the sun. "Regular hoboes and public benefac- ors we are. Take a hike dike this | Notice is given in the Canada Ga- zette, of an application Ly Dorot! ¥ | L Jewitt, Bath, Eng., for a divorce {from her husband, Ernest J. Jewitt, Portsmouth. The ennouncement {follows the sentence at Brookville of Jewitt in 1918 to five years in peni- |tentiaty on a charge of bigamy. | Jewitt, a returned soldier, in 1918 (Was married to a Brockville girl, {who learned from his paybook of his previous marriage. Two days later {she committed suicide by'drowing Examination of the prisoner's effects ,at the time showed that Jewitt had several other sweethearts im Liver- pool, England. ETT iii but, ov maker uh or ed | Howard Ferguson After Slanderers at Kemptyville Brockville, Feb. 6.--Hon, G. How- |ard Ferguson, leader of the Conser- | vative party in Ontario, has offered and | 15 donate to any charitable object | the sum of $100 for evidence that will enable him to prosecute any per- son guilty of circulating slanders in and about Kemptville regarding his personal and public affairs. AAA tc tat it PILES i7:= People Leaving for Calgary Vancouver, (From Ou wn Corr t Napanee, Feb 6 ike dy) A ¢y and ber daughter, Miss May, leit this week for a trip to Vancouver, B.C., and other western points, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Davidson 1o0¢ this week for thelr home in Calgary after spending some weeks visiting friends in Napanee and Camden Bast, Mrs. S. T. Clapp, Toronto, was in town this week to visit her brother, Thomas Diamond, who accompanied her back to Toronto. with Fiftial3 He ; he carefully Bg, or e ing Plles. Ne sutgleal r- tion Dr. and Chase's Ointment will reife Fro Denet" : hie! The Kidneys The office man and the outdoor worker suffer alike from de nge- meats of the kidneys, : | Backaches and headaches are «J among the symptoms. In some cases Bright's disease soon de- J velops, others suffer from high blood pressure until hardening of the arteries sets in, In order to forestall painful and fatal diseases prompt action should be taken at the first sign of trouble. Mr. A. D. MacKinnon, Kirk- wood, Inverness county, N.S, writes : "I can highly recommend Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills to all suffering from weak kidneys. 1 suffered from kidney disease for a long time, | may also say that for three years | was nearly always | | troubled with headaches, and no treat. ment seemed to do more than afford temporary relief. | was finally told of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, and after wing a few boxes was completely relieved. 1 have also used Dr, Chase's Ointment with the best results, and never fail to recommend these wonderful remedies," Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill a dose, 25¢c a box, all | IE | Co., Limited, Torento. Automobile Hood | stepped | strides. |a handful of the soft nto the bosom of her while blouse. |the air, { Fields of epringing wheat drew her | man foillo [trom the straight | railroad and she crawled through the | rusty barbed-wire fence, She followed {a turrow between low wheat blades | jand a field of rye which showed sii- | ver lights as it flowed before the dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & | wind. She found @ pasture by the i So sprinkled was the pasture | with rag-baby blossons and the cot PA Acree | TONY heTb of Indian 'tobacco that it 3 | spread out like a rare old Persian car- pet of cream and rose and delicate green. Under her feet the rough grass lake. CHAPTER XII L One week of authentic spring, one town into flash railroad track, whose directness and dryness meke it the natural highway for pedestrians on the plains. She | to tie, in long | for joy of freedom re, from tie body bemit The thick grass beside the track | coarse and prickly with 'many bura- | ings, hid canary-yellow buttercups {and the mauve petals and wooly sage- | green coats of the pasque flowers. [14 | The branches of the kinnikinic brush |} { were red and smooth as lacquer on al | sakifbowl. She ran dowm the gravelly em |bankment, smiled at children gath- Daaly Al each road-crossing she {had to crawl over a cattle-guard of | sharpened timbers. She walked el | ralls, balancing with arms extended, | cautiious heel before toe. As she lost | | balance her | arms revolved wildly, {toppled she laughed adoud. propriety of the | MAIN STREET | The Story of Carol Kennicott By SINCLAIR LEWIS Jo a pleasant crunching. wild plum trees. the limbs of a Pierrot. | tance. [ter. her from Choke-cherry the where a submarine light dipping rolling fields bright wheat. do I care for Thanatops'ses?' its meck, and plodded, content. neath the road. She (rudged healthy weariness. Mft, Mrs. Kennicott?" "Thank you. It's awfully good you, but I'm enjoying the walk." Covers manufactured by us, R. H. JONES 390 PRINCESS STREET CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years high. Well, so tong." compapionship which she had ne: (whether by her fault or theirs trons and commercial lords of Phone 153 We are equipped to make anysrepairs to above pencils. We carry a supply of parts. Prompt service. Political vindication frequently that the people have been " ~ town. @ covered wagon, a pegged out horses, A od man was esquabted bids heels, a and her. He was Miles Bjornstam. Sweet winds blew from the sunny shore. She leaped a tiny creek bowered in pussy- rare sweet week of May, one tranquil | willow buds. She was nearing a frivo- moment between the blast of winter | and the charge of summer. Carol walked fr ing country h; with new life. lous grove of birch and poplar and The poplar foMage had the dowm- | ness of a Corot arbor; the green amd One enchanted hour when she re- |silver trunks were as camdid as the turned to youth and a beldef in tha | birches, as slender and lustrous as possibility of beauty. She hed walked toward the upper | white blossoms of the plu. shore of Plover Lake, daking to the | ed the grove with a epringtime misty | mess which gave am illusion of dis- " The cloudy ! | | m trees fibl- | She ran into the wood, crying out gained after win- blossoms lurad outer sun-warmed spaces to depths of green stillness, | came | through the young leaves. She walked | over, her pensively along an abandoned road. | end when she |She found a moccasin-flower beside | | a lichen-covered log. At the end of |the road she saw the open acres... | with "I believe! The woodland gods still | ve! And out there, the grea: land. | t's beautiful as the mountains. What | She came out on the prairie, spaci- | jous under an arch of boldly cut] [clouds. Small pools glittered.. Above | | ering flowers in a little basket, thrust (a marsh red-winged blackbirds chas- | pasque flowers ed a crow in a swift melodrama of | On a hill was silhouetted a wing a drag, His horse bent | A path took her to the Corinth | road, leading back to town. Dande- lions glowed in patches amidst she | wild grass by the way. A stream el loped through a comcre'e culvert ba- | A man in a bumping Ford rattled up beside her, hafled, "Give you a | "Great day, by golly. I seen some wheat that must of been five inches She hadn't the dimmest notion who he. was, but his greeting warmed her. This countryman gave her al ver neither) been able to find in the ma} the Half a mile from town in a hollow between hazelnut bushes and a brook, she discovered a gipsy encampemen': a bunch of frying- Dan over a campfire. He docked tow- [sell 'em to others. We're honest -- | OFFERS SAVING OF I ducked out but--Say, you better tie Oe playing mumblely- ALL SALES FOR CASH. through the Bad Lands, into the | Te Hise Vet & Yam ot the SEVIER ivisimmmiemminini nis sivmminies ie v0 cs $400 Then dn the morning we'll lie snug _--_------ SAWYER'S SHOE, STORE grr secs in 3 le" Souris DISCOUNT SALE I had a | chance to say goodyby to you before | ems er | ON ALL wa wil" be ramble soromn. pubs NO DISCOUNTS ON RUBBERS butte country, and when fall comes, | Vomen's Five Buckle Overshoes, latest we'll be crossing over a pass of the | camy in a snow-storm, quarter of a mrss The Sawyer Shoe Store Phone 159 184 Princess St. in our blankets and look up through | the pines at an eagle. How'd it strike | you? 'Heh? Eagle soaring and soar- { [ing all day---big wide sky--" | (To be Continued.) | AMES HOLDEN McCREADY LIMITED MONTREAL November 3rd, 1921. Censdisn Daily Newspspers' Associstion, ' Excelsior Life Building, Toronto, Ont. Spesking from the standpoint of the menu-~ oes 8 Dominion-wide business, newspaper ade vertising is as necessary to the successful distribution of » trade-merked piece of merchsndise as food, reiment and shelter are to the well-being of the individuel. fsoturer who a Newspaper advertising nourishes the pro- duot; it olothes it with reputation, integreity end re- speotsbility; end it protects it from the storms of competition snd the inrosds of goods of questionable | parentsge. Netion-wide newspaper advertising is the foster-som of tramsportstion. A8 the facilities for the distribution and delivery of goods inoressed, so did n vationsl newspsper sdvertising develop. The shoe menufsoturer of to-day was the villsge cobbler of yesterday. The menufsoturer who makes thoussnds of good mouge-traps for the public mow is the suogessor of the men who yesrs ago msde mouse-traps for himself snd his neighbors. But the world does n the door of these menufsoturers! "tell the world™ sbout it through ¢ the world reapouds, snd buys. of ot beat 8 pethway to No, they go out sna or he newspspers. And ASSISTANT TO PRESIDENT. R. W. Ashoroft/s. on Tsswed by The Conpdion Daily Newspepers Association, Head Office, Toronto.

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