Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Jun 1916, p. 12

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"Somewhere in France" "[ Love You, Canada" Two dandy songs on one record for 85c, play on any machine. Hundreds Is your name and of others to choose from. on our mailing list? Testo Sporting Goods Co. PHONE 529. HHI A HH | NO NEED TO GO To 71 King 8t. West, Toronto, for First-Class Portrature Work. Representa- tives o The Blakemore Studio have arrived in Kingston, and intend to open as soon as some live real estate man gets them a location. Home Portraiture and Wedding Groups Specialties. G BLAKEMORE Phone 1082, 238 STUART STREET, Wateh . ythe Whig for all Military Photos In Kingston. | Just Received FINE LINE OF GO-CARTS CARRIAGES, SULKIES Dall Carriages $1.50 to $7.50 R. J. Leading Undertaker Pe oe .e FOR THE EMPIRE'S SAKE Save the Babies USE ONLY PASTEURIZED MILK Our Milk is thoroughly pasteurized and sold in sealed bottles. .. Phone 845 "MONUMENTS ! By placing your orders direc with us you see exactly what you are buying and as we employ no agents you save the middleman's profit. Buy now and have your work set up early in the spring. J. E MULLEN Oor. Princess and Clergy Sts. Phone 1417. © Kingston, Ont. Price's Have you seen the New UNIVERSAL MICHELIN Non-8kid Tire, if not, call in at the Porritt Garage Co., - Limited And see it, it will interest you both in price and quality. PHONE 454. 210-214 WELLINGTON STREET. | one last Saturday, BRETON POINTS WORN FLAT OR ROLLED OUTWARD i5c'ea. 2for30c 6 for 80c i2 for $1.78 Cru, Prasony & Co. , Inc. MonTaEAL The Allies Will Shine | «AT 820 PRINCESS STREET. FIRST CLASS TOBACCO STORE. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY. 1916 ®iTn the World of Sport] BIG CANOE: RACE ARRANGED TO BE HELD AT SUGAR ISLAND AUGUST 4TH-12TH. BASEBALL ON SATURDAY | TO ~ BASEBALL BRIEFS. | The Montreal Royals have released | Pitcher Sammy Smith. It is also rumored that Infielder Almeida, the Coban, and Catcher Wells will also be disposed of, WOLFE ISLAND AND C.L.C. CLASH FOR SECOND TIME. Yacht Owners for the First Time to be United to Take Part in Crusing Are the Phillies going to repeat? The American Canoe Association They are now only four points back | has planned for an innovation in con- of the leading Dodgers. They wal-' nection with the international meet, loped the Brooklyn three straight. open to all amateur canoeists in the United States and Canada, at Sugar The major league races are tight-! Island, Aug. 4 to 12 of this year. It ening up. Both the Dodgers and In-| will be the first meet open to all ama- dians hold their lead by less than a teur paddlers regardless of whether game,, | they are members of the American Canoe Association. The champion- Joe Birmingham's team is only 38 ships of North America will be points behind Buffalo, who are in!awarded to the winners of contests of second place. The Leafs--have alsingle blades, singles, tandems and grand chance to get up behind the] fours in the junior, intermediate and leaders before returning home on Do-| senior classes, The meet will be un- minion Daf. | der the auspices of the American Canoe, Association, which owns the 35-acre island known as Sugar Is- good ball for the Leafs. He is hitting land, located on the St. Lawrence the ball hard and at opportune times, river between Clayton and Ganan- while his fielding leaves nothing to! oque, be desired. An innovation in Atlantic coast yachting will be inaugurated at the end of the month in an inter-club cruising race week open to the mem- bers of the Yacht Racing Association of Long Island Seund, the Long Is- land Sound Power Boat Association and the New York Yacht Club. It is : BIG the first time in the history of the - sport that yacht owners have invited Of Amateurs Becoming Real Rivals) the power boat men to take part in a of the Majors. cruise and the novelty has created Amateur Baseball! enthusiasm among the followers of in the largest cities| both types of yachts. Ohio and Michigan, | BRAINY PLAY | MADE BY HERZOG OF REDS. | Who Put Side Out By Throw= | ing the Ball to Third. "When is a base: may find the In Game to be Played in the Kings- ton Amateur League--Red Socks and C.L.C, Jr, Will Play in the Junior Series, Wolfe Island and the C.L.C, will clash for the second time in the game to be played Saturday afterneon in the Kingston Amateur Baseball League on Queen's Lower Campus. When these two teams met some few woeks ago they put up a fine ex- hibition, but the C.L.C. managed to win out. Wolfe Island show up remarkably well, and in the tussle on Saturday a good game may be ex- pected. The Islanders have a lively team and are working hard to put one over the C.L.C. this time. The game wil} start at 3.15 o'clock and a record crowd is looked for This new league has been providing some good spdrt, and sBould be well supported. In the junior series in this league the game will be between the Red Socks and the C.L.C. juniors, and this should be a good game, too. This match will start at 1.30 o'clock. Al- together there should be a fine after- noon"s sport for the fans, mania Athletics vs, Victorias, Everything augurs well for the game that will be played at the Crick- et field Saturday afternoon, when Athletics will try their skill against the Victorias. It is expected that this will be one of the best fixtures of the| League, taking season. Victorias will have several]of Pennsyluania, I A AA AA AANA NNN MEAN "Red" Murray is certainly playing Morton, of Cleveland, is "the leader among the pitchers. He has won nine out of eleven starts. Gul- lop, of New York, has won his only three attempls real is The proposed Those who ask, { hit not a base-hit?"" answer here, The Giants were playing the Bos- {ton Reds in New York, with the home crowd at bat. Burns was on {second and Doyle was at bat. There were two out at the time. The Red hurler served one up to Doyle, and he smashed a bourider to deep short, | Herzog almost ran out ok the dia- | mond to snare the ball--but he got | it. ! Herzog saw in a flash that he had no chance to catch Doyle at first be- cause Larry at that very moment | was only three jumps away from the | bag. Had Herzog made the throw Doyle would have beaten it by three strides at the very least. So Her- zog, having noted that Burns got a slow start from second, flipped the ball to third, Heine Groh grabbed it and touched out Burns, sliding in, for the third out. . Doyle didn't get a hit on that play. I was scored as a fielder's choice. et Hats Doyle would have beaten the | throw easily. It was a clean hit, {but the slowness of Burns in that CHAMPION GOLFERS OF GREAT BRITAIN SELL THEIR particular 'instance robbed Doyle CLUBS TO AID WOUNDED. The play also stands out as another i . | instance of Herzog's braininess. To aid the three hospitals in Southend, a golf mateh Ninety per cent. of the other shert- wis arranged between Edward Hay, ex-champion; J. B. Bat- | fielders in the game would have had ley, international champion, and other golfers. After the their minds so focussed on making game, which netted over $500. for the hospital, the clubs|the play at first that they wouldn't used by the players were sold at auetion and br ht $25 glare taken third into consideration. ought $00 | But Herzog did and because of that additional funds for the * hospite Amr {he beat Doyle out of a hit, killed off Anima. | 8 AN going to third, retired the side new men-out, and w the biggest step toward the ama~{and possibly stopped the Giants from {port than he had. last Saturday, Gil- [Teur boys becoming real rivals of the scoring in that particular game. lespie, 'who is pitching very good ball, will likely put something new over majors in sporting circles. It is thé effect of the organization of ama- the opposing batters. The Athletics won from the Ponies several weeks teurs all over the country and shows OLDEST BASEBALL the interest that can be aroused and dgo, and hope to show the Vics, how NOW IN EXISTENCE. to play ball this Saturc The Vics the support given amateurs if preper- | ly handled. The new league, .as -------- are determined to get in the win | Proposed, is along the lines mapped Was Used Forty-four ] column and are practising hard to] out by the Amateur Association Dur- Ago At Kingston, | get the game. The game will ing this week a meeting of the league N. Y started at 3.15 and it is likely that] Will be nel iy Cleveland, nt Deh . + " § an 3 , {time officials wi he elected. t will | George - Sullivan wilt haddle: the be called the Middle West League, | If a baseball museum should ever game. 1f tie game : ey do not and include the Baileys, of Cleveland; | be opéned---and it would be a mighty | od ory. The so has been Grand Laundrys, of Detroit; Berg-| interesting exhibit for the fans--the need 1q.WOrry. ' hoffs, of Pittsburg, with other teams | nucleus of the collection would cut in the field. at Toledo, Canton, Youngstown, Co | dolibtless be a baseball now in the lumbus and Shelby. ion of the Bast End Church of Pittsburg, This sphere | is declared to be the oldest in exis- On account of the wet weather, it| tence, and it was used in a 'game be- 1as been deemed advisable to call off | tween the Newburgh, N.Y., Hudsons the races which were scheduled to|and the Kingston, N.Y,, Eclipse elub, take place at the Napanee Driving | played fifty-four years ago, June 20, Park on July 3rd. - It has been found | 1862. The pellet came in for a lot impossible to get the grounds in good | of rapping, as Kingston won the shape, and as a result the horses game by a score of forty-nine to have not"been able to get into condi- | eighteen. The sphere was long the tion. " The committee felt that t | property of John Miller, of Corn- would be better to postpone the|wall-on-Hudson, first baseman of the events than to disappoint the public. | Kingston nine, who lived past the The 146th Battalion is also not in a j century mark, but Miller turned it position to carry out a contract for jover to the Smoky City organization that day. | to be preserved as a relic of baseball - { antiquity. The ball, made -of a Athletics in Cobourg. | single piece of horsehide, is care- The 235th Battalion are having a| fully guarded and is protected by big sports demonstration at Cobourg] both burglarly and fire insurance en Dominion Day. There will be) Roisies & aggregating a thousand dol- baseball between Toronto and Ro-|lars. chester amateur teams, and aquatic | and field sports; th "be ttor 8 Years be THREE BOWLING GAMES, Wormwith, W. C. Races Called Off. Crozier and H. D. Bibby Won, Three interesting bowl game | were played Thursday evening at the Queens' bowling green The team skipped by W. Wormwith won from A. Turcott 16-11 In the other two games W. C. Crozier won from J. W. Corbett by 16-15, and H. D. Bibby from W. M. Campbell by 11-9. In both these games an extra end had to be played. The teams: {Teams of W. H, ! ! ng | H by J. Stanton, T. Lambert, Dr. R, Sparks, H. W. Wormwith, skip. J. Mortimer, Wm. Moore, J. J. Baker, Alfred Turcott, skip. gar Linton, Geo. Vaanhorn, K. Sleeth, W. C. Crozier, skip: H. F. Price, Dr, Knapp, M. han, J. 'W. Corbett, skip. Ww Mana- R COBB IS CONFIDENT J. W. Power, R. H. 0 Boyd, H. D. Bibby, skip. E. Hartrick, D. A. Givens, Williamson, W. M. Campbell, Crocker, : That He Will Again | Lead American League Batters .. Cobb is confident that he will lead ! American League batters again this season. He aims at the thought that he always goes at tov speed in Au- gust and September, particularly the latter month, and the other fellows generally slump at this time. He wants to stay close up to the lead- ers so that when the time comes for him to spurt he will be within hail- ing distance, Possibly you arenterested in what Cobb thinks of his own ability to run. He says: -« "When I first broke in with the Detroit team I could rum all day without seeming to exert myself. It Was never an effort to break into top | Edward skip. LANK CAMPBELL IN TRENCHES. Great Sprinting Done in Morning From Trenches. Lank Campbell, a former well known Britannia paddler, who has been at the front for the lost ten months, wrote an interesting letter to a friend in Ottawa. He states that they have been in the trenches for some time, but so far he has come out all right. "Lank" who was d always well known for his speed, states that he is daily being out- classed in a 100 yard dash. He says that in some cases their line of trenches are about one . hundred yards apart and when ever a shell falls in one of the trenches they are ordered to run back to the next one. "Talk about your speed," says Starched and light weight "A NOVELTY IN TOOKE COLLARS Admitted the best and best fitting in into a jam where I had to depend upon my wits and my legs. Now I have to werk just a bit harder. I find that there is an effort to run- nihg, but I believe I can move just Call and give us a trial. 'Lank," "but there are more boys there doing the distance in ten flat: than you could find aay place else." as fast when I a started as ever TOOKE BROS. LIMITED I could, Sir Robert PEEL THE CIGAR THAT MADE THE 5 Se avons if no runner had been on thej~ speed and I used to like to be forced |! Kingston's Electric Store Cool Smmer breezes from our eleetrie fang Highest grade at reasonable prices. Also electric irons from $3.00 and up. oi H.W. Newman Electric Co. 79 Princess street The Point of Contact. The merchant who is alive to his opportunities will keep in constant touch with his customers, and with others whom he hopes will become his customers. He will keep them informed of the arrivals of new goods, the prevailing tastes or fashions, the latest improvements in things to eat or to wear, or to make housework easier, And the point of contact is advertising. To ad- vertise intelligently, is an evidence of progress- iveness. It is safe to conclude that you will re- ceive the best service and best value from the merchant who seeks your patronage by modern methods. Lo ¢ Motor and Auto Service KINGSTON MOTOR TRANSPORT & LIVERY CO. 34-38 Princess Street. Phone 177. General Motor Cartage and Auto Service. Livery, Feed and Sale Stable. First-class Horses and Carriages. Freight and Baggage Trangfer attended te promptly. Premier Gasoline and FP olerine for sale. J. C. MORRIS Motor Boat and Automobile Supplies Halliday's Electric Shop, Phone 94 -i- -3- : 845 King Street White Canvas Footwear . The popular summer shoes for women are WHITE CANVAS PUMPS OR OXFORDS. We have a full range of this cool comfort- able Footwear | in all the newest styles, from $150 To $450 J.H.Sutherland & Bro The Home of Good Shoes

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