| You Like fo Have a | In the le Without the Mork of ex co oon * Peddling ? There will be some 'game on Queen's Lower Campus on Saturday afternoon in the Kingston Amateur Baseball League, when Wolfe Island will clash with the C.L.C. Both teams are going fast. When they last met on June 24th Wolfe Island won out by the narrow margin of 2 to 1, and the game was regarded by all the fans as one of the best ever staged in Kingston. On July 1st Wolfe Is- land put it over Queen's by the close score of 7 to 6. It is expected that Saturday's game will be one of the fastest every played in the new league. On Saturday the Victorias will try their skill against the Athletics. If the "'Vies." can get up enough "pep" for the game, they should certainly win out. The game last Saturday was a fine exhibition, and but for one innings, in which several errors were made, they held the Ponies down to the last notch. If they play as well next Saturday they will surely win. The men are out practising as much as possible now, and are trying to show the fans that they can play ball. Throughout the season the Victor- ias have had hard luck. A number Pyclemotor fits any bicycle, runs from 5 to 25 miles an ~ hour, 100 miles on 1 gal. of gasoline. Only $70.00. eadgold Sporting Goods Co. SS PRINCESS... . . J | PHONE 6. OT Wolfe Island and C.1.C. Will Clash [pion woman baseball coach of the | world--Mrs. Florence Kent Tibbets, Woman Is Great Baseball Coach Atlanta is the home of the cham- supervisor of the Atlanta Play- grounds Association and organizer of the playgrounds normal, the only thing of its kind in the south. Just to look at. Mrs. Tibbets one probably wouldn't think that she, weighing scarcely 100 pounds, could direct a baseball team composed of young men, jump frantically along the side lines, direct her team mem- bers when to "slide," and even go 80 far as to call the umpire a "rob- ber." * Mrs. Tibbets makes no bones about it. 'When the umpire doesn't treat her team right she tells him exactly what she thinks about it. But she stamped her foot when the direct question was put to her, and with all her energy smilingly emphasized that she bas not followed the mascu- line prerogative and has never called an umpire anything worse than rob- ber. The almost inconveivable record of sible seventy-two games gives Mrs. Tibbets the undisputed title of being the world's champion baseball coach. Her team was one of twelve in Washington, D.C., made up of Young winning seventy-one out of a pos-| And yet that is exactly what she did. | of the Manager Bill Carrigan has about decided to make Ruth a re- gular outfielder on account of his hitting. He will do that unless he gets more attack out of his present trio.. Leslie Nunamaker, of the New Yorks, says Foster did net throw a curve ball in that no-hit game. Which, if true, is remarkable. He employed change of pace, Nunamak- er says, and the New Yorks ruined their chances to hit by regarding the pitching as easy and trying to slam {the ball too hard. 5 Refuting the theory that golf and baseball won't mix, Tris Speaker, the American League's best hitter and outfielder, plays golf every day on the Mayfield course when he's at {home, and Bob Shawkey, one of the LA. L's. best pitchers, plays every time {he gets the chance. | The New Yorks have a pitching | prospect under cover who will be a | wonder, according to Frank Baker. {His name is Jack Enright, and he pitched in independent circles last season. Before that he played ball with a college team at Chestertown, Md. Manager Donovan has sent. him to Newark, of the International Motor Boat and Automobile Supplies FE aR WAR A ~ Summer VOU) AON DANG A IAN A AN A AAA X = £ 0 X) (\ 1 Fu m itu Ie 4 4 RAMNAAAAMANY UW: CELT : AAO WW Y d EAS 0 of dast year's players have enlisted,| len of the playgrounds, schools, and | A _ | League, for seasoning. and several men were forced to do Parks. Mrs, Tibbets was the only | & E * i Soldiers, Swear By Batterton, the Photographer, 282 Ontario street. "On the Way to Barriefield,"" Open Day and Night. | ¢ nat? AEE AGE RAIN, PA. Men's Extra How Frank Slavin Defeated Gotch night work and could not get out to| Woman baseball coach in the league. | After Ocean Swimming Record. Lawn Seats, Chairs, Cots, Day on Saturday afternoon. How.|, When Mra.' Tibbets amnousced| yi. Dowiing, New York, nine| Couches, Bt, White En- ever, they have got several of their| that she would assume the manage- ober ng, New York, nine- " ol 3 s team th ' ted | mer covered thirty-four miles around Sommerville and Dick, and on Sat- | grounds t Kk the Yew» Was accep t | Manhattan Island in 13 hours and 45 urday there should be a real good ex-| 8s a huge joke. ut her poys went il at ' "Ito it. They lost only one game of minutes, will attempt on July 29th hibition of baseball. The Athletics| to ¥ ¥ & |to swim from the Battery to Sand will be out with their w i | the entire seventy-two and that game | © SWim [ro attery to Sandy ar paint, and NB] | Hook and back. The one way trip are sure to put up a good exhibition | went fourteen nas and was lost|, only been accomplished by five of ball. McGregor, who has been|ohly by & score of three to twe. ball | Men, and the return trip will prove » Will be on the slab, team!" laughed one of the captains| , .."¢0. "\\ccons hinges upon the a wieght as ability of the swimmer to complete Undertaker, a sewing club or the congressmen in He downwild Jeg on the Shing Sar Phone 577 SPORTING NOTES Washington to vote the District of = . Columbia dry." > Ana Se Bt ented. | Some of the most successful male , : : baseball coaches in the big leagues Sunboa Seith of California out-| sometimes resort to rough tactics to | por in an, ol Liu make their team members play ball. | The offciats of the United Siates| SAH IIANEUTNEL o eyaem of kind dié 0 Golf Association are unlimbering er if he happened to drop a ball, and their heavy artillery and preparing! gne would pat on the back her most | . How Frank Gotoh chaninl {lor Aston again those who have | dependable "pinch hitter" shouid bel jor oY Frauk Goleh C Ap op wes: lee oor deed opposed the stand) s,j) 1g deliver in the last half of the| Her: mixed wrestling v {the association has taken for a more | ninth | against Frank Slavin, the veteran men out mew, including Nicholson | Ment of the Mount Pleasant play-| teen year old swimmer, who last sum- ! | 3 Tw . ' . es e y giving such good services throughout What, a woman lead a base a test of speed as well as of endur- ol © > O But the greatest woman baseball . i |rigid amateur status, | 4 3 -- | Everett J. Wendel of Harvard and | {Harry S. Brooks, Yale '85, on behalf | {of the graduates of the two universi-| ities have presented a new cup to be| | competed for in the dual track meets | | between Harvard and Yale. | -- The safest bet to book on the Am-| erican Derby, featuring the races {which start at Hawthorne track in Chicago on Saturday, is that there {will be no open booking or public {betting on the races is issued to members of the betting fraternity. Athletic Underwear--W. G. & R. make. x... si... .. o.. 31.00 per suit Cool Socks for tired feet, 25¢ to $1.00 pair Silk, Wool, Lisle, Cotton. Summer Headwear ...... 50c to $7.50 nary Jabs ale rapidly . that the organization will be launch- | _ * Silk Caps, Straw Hats, Panama Hats. ' 24 this fal). | Fred Kelly, of California, and Bob Simpson, of Missouri, both" hurdlers | capable of beating 15 seconds for the! high barriers and 3 for the lows, | will come east to compete in the! amateur championships at New York ! in September. | A movement has been begun in New York to organize an association | of college swimming instructors and | the preliminary plans are rapidly | Roney's, Nunamaker Is Suspended. Catcher Leslie Nunamaker of the | New York Americans was notified by President Ban Johnson of the Ameri- | can League that he was suspended in-| definitely for his language to umpire O'Loughlin during a dispute over} balls and strikes in the sixth inning of yesterday's game between New| York and Cleveland. 127 Princess Street | ringman, in the Yukon, is a story just The girl instructors in the Atlanta playgrounds system have been put to work by Mrs. Tibbets to master the intricacies of baseball, | told in London for the first time. Slavin, who has grown much gray- wre | ©F than he appeared twenty years ago as a ring favorite, is now in England 5 > { you're going to teach anything about | ip 10 Jatest Canadian contingent. baseball you will have yourself--that's certain," said Mrs. | Tibbets, and she ordered the young women into hard physical training on the diamond. Even the boys, lat'ons with baseball, have been forced to admit that Mrs. Tibbets is on the job, He May Succeed in Duplicating Feat of Alexander. Big Ed. Ffeffer, of the Dodgers, is trying to duplicate the feat of Grover Cleveland Alexander. Last year Alex the Great pitched the Philadel- phia club into a pennant. Pfeffer is actively engaged in an endeavor to accomplish the same ' thing for Brooklyn this year. S leading the National League hurlers now. He is out beyond Alexander, Mamaux, Anderson and all the rest. He has won nine games and-lost two. Wilburt Robinson, manager of the Dodgers, believes that Pfeffer is as great a pitcher as there 's in base- ball. He does not even concede that Alexander or even Walter John- son has anything on the Brooklyn right-hander this year. Pfeffer has has been a good pitcher ever since he broke ifito the National League. On- ly Alexander, Mamaux were ranked ahead of him last year. He won 19 games and lost 14, and | allowed an average of ,209 runs per | game. The Dodger star had a bet- {ter record in 1914, nis first season Condensed "Want" Ads. Order Form | : Use this blank on which to write out your condensed ad, one word in each Enclose stamps, money, order or cheque and mail direct to The British | ig, Kingston, Ont. : Rate: One cent a word, first insertion; one-half cent a word each sub- | sequent consecutive insertion; 25 words or less, 3 times, 50¢; one week, $1.00; | "one month, $2.00. Each initial, figure, dollar sign, etec., count as one word. No senses nsasafrss ee nrasseeleene rsa in Brooklyn. That year he won 23 | and lost 12, nad allowed only .197 | runs per game. Pfeffer stands 6 feet 3 inches high and weighs 210 pounds. He is 27 years old and was born in Champaign, IIL BASKETBALL FOR JAPS. Game To Be Introduced Into Flowery Kingdom. The Japanese baseball team from | the University of Waseda is in San Francisco, ready to embark on the Nippon Maru for Tokio. While the players have had a fine trip in an educational way, the baseball end of it has not 'been satisfactory. Out of seventeen games played the Japan- ese won but five. Members of the team are deter-| to know | little mix with Gotch happened Big Ed. is| and Tony! mined to introduce basketball into Ja- | years ago when Gotch, under the | name of Kennedy, was at Dawson in | the Yukon, trying to fix up wrestling ynically skeptical as to feminine re jmatches when everybody wanted to cynically - see prize fights. Here to-day Slavin staged the story with Jack Londonish settings--griz- zled miners looking through blue to- bacco smoke at the ring in Dawson's | main emporium, Gotech, failing in wrestling matches, agreed to take Sla- vin on for a ten-round bout. | "In the first two rounds he came at me strong," related the old sol- { dier-fighter. "I floored him two or | three time. Then in the third round he dodged in, and before I knew what was happening, he grip- ped me around the waist and threw me up in the air. 'lI laughed, the referee laughed, and in fact we all laughed. The ref- eree said: 'Do you claim a foul?' "I said: 'Well, if I don't, I suppose | T'll never he able to come back into the ring again,' so, of course, I got the decision. But the big American farmer got more money out of it than he ever got for his wrestling bouts up there." Slavin just now is delighting Brit- ish sporting writers with his remin- iscgnces. They flock to the military |cafmp,where Slavin's regiment is wait- ing for the call to France. In Slavin's 54 years he has been a pioneer in the Australian bush and the Klondike, as well as a leading prize ring favorite in England, Amer- ica, Australia and Alaska. Before hegwas 18 he had made $12,000 in the Australian gold field. He then came to England and clos- ed five years of boxing with his de- feat of Peter Jackson. | Then he went to America and drift- led into the prize ring limelight by | knocking out Jake Kilrain in less than a round. San Francisco was | the next stop. Ap-- | Before Big Strike. "Those were the days before the big strike on the Yukon," said Sla- | vin to-day, 'but I' decided to take the trip there through British Columbia. | When we arrived in Alaska my part- EAE ERECTA ETE TE LH ner and I staked a claim on the Forty- | Mile river, and I started to Skagway | --600 miles over the ice behind a dog { team--to get a guarantee for the con- cession. *1 got .the concession, and they Cesss sss enn sess ress ses es ere rns einen essence srs sa sss esles dans nanan enrrssenne siaee atta en alee se eTenIe ain ey 3 sess ssnsnee sees sansa terse - Please publish: the above advertisement. . . . times, for which I enclose $...... SE es tessa s sires tetas Et saat narra e nants Brea Tee ae assets tt att Rs t ttt srs tare eas nea | replies may be addressed to Box Numbers at The Whig Office. If are to be mailed enclose 10c extra to cover cost of postage. pan, and, they assert, could a few | gave me the official mail to carry bar- games be seen, the Japanese sports- | ry back to the government at Yukon. men would quickly take to it. The Waseda team expects to begin a cam- paign to get the five-man game start- ed in the three big universities of To- kio. an ; - BRETON ARROW COLLAR POINTS WORN FLAT OR ROLLED OUTWARD Seen. 2for30: § for®0c (2 fori. f Crvxrr, Pranoov& Co, Inc. Moxvazar |! | The concession is still working to- {| day--in fact, it has a hydraulic plant capable of handling 15,000. cubic yards a day." : Te '+ Slavin related the cutting of the White Pass to Lake Bennett in 1897. given him up for dead. "1 made the first map of the Whites not leave the route that my party fol- lowed for more than 40 yards at any point," said Slavin. of the peace in late years. Slavin's only son, Frank Charles Slavin (named after Charlie Mitchell) stands 6 feet 1 1-2 inches, like the elder Slavin. White Pass trail from the summit of |== When he returned home his wife had : Pass, and the railroad there now does|= Slavin has been a Canadian justice|S HURT | Fine Suits 75 men's fashionable tweed, flannel and worsted suits, light, dark grey, brown or mixtures. Made in latest styles. Reg. $18.00, reg. $13.93; reg. $12.00 and $15.00 Suits Saturday for $9.95. BOYS' SUITS at $4.00 offer exceptional values. These are by no means $4.00 suits. We have selected these from the cream of ofr boys' suit range because the sizes are incomplete. All made Norfolk style from smart and serviceable tweeds and worsteds. Colors are browns, greys and mixed sizes to fit b oys from 16 to 18 years. Sale price on Saturday, .. $4.00 + sami BOOTS and SHOES Ladies' Pat. and Gun Metal Pumps, reg. $4.00. Sat. for $2.50 Ladies' White Canvas Pumps, Saturday for Ladies' White Canvas Oxfords, rubber soles and heels, Saturday for ... Complete range of Men's sonable prices. Louis Abramson's New Footwaer -- For Your -- Holiday Trip [mn 5 No matter where Jor plan to go, we can supply you with good comfort- able footwear, suitable to your needs. Dressy pumps in palent and gun met- al leathers. White canvas with leather and rub Tennis shoes and bathing shoes. | Sutherland &Bro. umps and oxfords soles.