Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Sep 1916, p. 12

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S------------------ In the World « of Sport| [Sir Robert Bicycle Bargain Weeki me ewer ----= | PEEL | ae er Gee rd BASEBALL BREF. | 3 only ladies' hygenic cushion frames; the finest CAN gfice_AT Tp op FOR | Jake Schaefer, the "Wizard" rd J J RS. billiards, scored many great isis During the fifteen years Bost - 3 bicycle in the World, Ls We | n his long career on the green baize. | has been in the American 2 Bes its The Cigar That Made the Sc Famous only gents' Brantford cushion Game, the old r Yer {Clan Living is the -Secret. of the He showed this wonderful reserve! tosm hus wor four pewsents: apd ; liable Red Bi d, 244 h. {| Ability to Keep at the Front. HS er \rom the in game 1e played. | three world's championships. The ' 1apie ne i ~lInc |" How long can an athlete stick at | Ben he Was a boy 17.0are 0M Be team Bas won every world's cham- The first.six customers gets these beautiful $55.00 {we top *" C - S 2 besstan Th A ita' bicycles for $45.00. 1 oD mmm e Autoits's * Delight is a tire that doesn't have to be re- placed for a long time, Michelin Tires fill the bill completely. Ask any was matched 'with Adam Klesser, pionships The team has won every | star is ten years. Goodyear Blue Streak Covers at ... . .. $2 .50 wash. that | car owner who has used them and he The Red Sox have finished in the cellar but once and in the second di- | vision only three times They fing { ished last in 1906, seventh in 1907 and fifth in 1908, | echampio of Wisconsin. The m 3 + . 'was i IR four- bhil 1.500 worles series in which it his taken Crack bike riders Eo. a bit over points up, and -was played in Leaven- Tennis players on the average | Pr after eight years on the court. Dominion Chain Tread Covers at . . $2.25 each | EN omung sour Highland Covers (made in Scotland) at $2.25 each | ¥iros out inMve years. Dominion Inner Tubes at .. .. . $1.00 each' worth. Schaefer made a driving Three vetefans in leading sports | Dominion Inner Tubes at .. .. . . $1.25 each after having withstood the ravages of | | time during twenty years of the keen- | . $1. 75 each, est competition' They Eddie | Plank, baseball; are ed Leavenworth in search of a match. | | The citizens of the town raised a, | purse of $100 for a game of 1,000 | ply weakness, however, Season records indicate that the Red Sox are weak in batting, run- getting and base-stealing. This three- has not pre- | will tell you that they are the finest he has ever had and that their big mileage service makes them the cheapest on the market. | finish, scoring 1,500 points while d Kiessor was getting 502, and win- stand out conspicuously this deason | Dominion Inner Tubes, at . . .. . 4 rank Kramer, | If you will need anything i in Dicycles; 'tires or tubes. cycling, and Joe Bromilow, track. points between Schaefer and Shaw. | Schaefer was outclassed at the start, | Yented the Carrigans from setting| but' he never gave up, finally win-| the pace in the pennant scramble. ning 1,000 to 800. Shortly after he" defeated Parker A. Beyers, champ-| The Red Sox share with the Ath-| ion of Indiana; at the thréesball { letics the longest game ever played game, 300 to 189, making a fast|In the major leagues. Oh Septem-| finish after a poor start. | ber st, 1906, the two teams battled When he was 24 years old Sc hae- | twenty-four innings before the Ath-{S3 fer entered a tournament in New| letics finally won the contest by a Yorke in which the best players of! score of 4 to 1. that time participated. He dggeated | Billy Sexton, Maurice Daly, Albert | Garnier, Tom Gallagher, A. P. Ru-| dolphe and J. R. Heiser. | Porritt Garage 2 Co., Ltd. | Phone 454 AA | ping the game easily. "ather Time 'simply cannot catch | After this match Lew Shaw, now the fancy billiardist ,who has often | | given exhibitions in Rochester, visit- this year, now is the time to buy, as everything | imese fenows. Connie Mack grabbed Plank from is going up, but we bought large quantities of | cetiysbure Colles tn 1801 ker six- these tires before the raise. teen years ago. In the seventeen sea- | sons he has worked as a major Plgnk | nas averaged .6560 on the slab. Frank Kramer rodelhis first bike 1 88 Princess Phone 529 | Ee ET race twenty years ago. ur years later Kramer won the American pro- | lair Rn championship and he's {never lost it. Less than a month ago the cycling antique from East Orange copped his sixteenth straight Ameri- can "pro" title. This- is Joe Brorfillow's nineteenth season on the track. Only last year Third Baseman Larry Gardner 1s) - the only member of the Red Sox who |= | 1s batting with the..300 set of Ameri-| wallopers. { oe Ld The decid- ing game was between Schaefer and | can League Slosson. Great 'interest was taken | -- in the contest, and as high as $10 | Harry Hooper, the brilliant Red | was paid for seats. Slosson started | Sox gardener, leads his team in both | <p Paterson's famous half-miler won a senior championship--something he had been striving for eighteen yearS. Now he ig going better than off like a man who was afraid he | would miss his train. He made shots | from all parts of the table and at! run-getitng and base-stealing. Hoop-| eris the only Sock among the first! fifteen American leaguers in both de-| = F ootwear the end of the sixth inning had com-<| partments of the game, piled 511 points to Schwefer's 19. The game was 600 points up, and Jack Barry fs the léading pennant | the spectators began to leave, think-| pastimer with the Carrigan crew. | ever, How do these jen their longevity? ! account for Save the Babies FOR THE EMPIRE'S SAKE USE ONLY PASTEURIZED MILK Our Milk is Thoroughly Pasteurized and sold in Sealed Bottles. {Phone 845 otitis. icine Pee ETE wee TTeY Price's SYMBOLICAL MON UMENTS of special deBign are made here with expert care as to all detafls.. No de- sign is beyond our skill, none too simple to receive less than our best attention. We can copy any memor- fal or will submit special plans if you request, . JAS. E. MULLEN Cor. Princess & Clergy Kingston. Phone "1417 . Have You a Photo Taken in Your Own Front 1 Room? required. We try to please. Prices from 97 te $35. Have 8 rode ve tAken af pense. Bve taken Bf our ox Home portrature and groupsspecialties BLAKEMORE, Stuart Street, City. Summer Furniture Lawn Seats, Chairs, Cots, Couches, Ete., White Ens amel Goods R. J. Reid, Tig Tigi y PR 2 RR y i" DX pr i CARTOONISTS AINT GOT NO SENTIMENT Each is. a fiend on the subject of taking care of himself, Two words will sum up the secret of their ability to come back in championship form year after year, and the words are-- {CLEAN AIVING. | WAGNER'S BATTING EYE IS NOT YET DIMMED The Old Pittsburgh Shortstop is Leading Batter in_the National. Sure, Honus Wagner is a rickety, | rheumaticky old has-been. The old batting orb is dimmed--just like Andy Carnegie is broke and Mr. Kah- { roo-sah a friglit!at the warblin' game. | If you don't believe it, just lamp the | National League batting averages. See who is up there at the pinnacle-- that decrepit old patriarch, Honus, the bow-legged. He's tofping the National League circuit hitters with a mark of .333. The last time Honus headed the Mgt was in 1911, when his | poling mark was .334. He fell to .324 the next year and them to an even .300 in 1913, to .254 in 1914 'and .274 in 1915. Jake Daubert, of Brooklyn, is squeezing she banty- legged vet for this year's honors, but there is every prospect that Wagner will finish the top of the heap. Two. years ago they had the pall; bearers picked for his funeral. They 1 IN DETROIT'S FAVOR. Jennings Thinks That His Team is Going to Win. . "There is one detail in our favor," says Hughey Jennings, "that most of you have overlooked. At the start of the season Washington and Cleve- land fought out the lead. When they began to slip the Yankees rushed to the front. When the Yankees were broken up the White Sox and Red Sox carried every one's attention, and when the White Sox started slipping the Browns pumped themsélves into favor. All this time the Tigers have been plodding along, overlooked. No one up to September pick us with a chance to win. We had none of that early worry and the strain they talk about. We were merely holding our own and keeping in close sight of the leaders. No one can tell, of course, who is going to win a race where three or four clubs have a fine chance and where the break of the game may decide the finish. But I wouldn't care to trade chances with any of the others just now." Honus Wagner, the veteran Pirate shortstop, is out of the game with a strained ligament. It is likely that he will play no more this season, as the Pirates will likely try out recruits said he was a dead one, | from now on. ing Schaefer was hopelessly beaten. | Then the Wizard" began to play as if his life depended upon the re- sult. He knew that in order to win he must make 681 points before Sloeson counted 89. He went out] after everything and with a wonder-| ful run of 376 finally defeated Slos- son by a score of 600 to 541.| Schaefer had made 581 points while Slosson was getting 30. It was one] of the greatest finishes ever séen in a billiard game. eA rei BREAKS HURDL E RECORD. J. J. Eller of New York Establishes New Figure, At Lewiston, Maine, John J. Enter. | of the Irish-American A. C., News York, broke the world's record, es-| tablished By himself in 1909, 120] yards hurdles during the track| events at the State Fair here, His | time Jd4 1-5 seconds, which | clipped' hfth of a second off his | previous mark." The meet was sanc- | tioned, "whith "clipped a fifth of a| second off his previous mark. The! meet was sanctioned by the New| England branch of the A.A, U. - as a | Voix Leads in Batting. | According % unofficial averages, Jimmy Viox, Toronto's new outfield- er leads the International Le gue in batting, with an average of 344, one point ahead of Hartzell of Baltimore and Smythe of Montreal, 15¢. each, 2 for 30c. or $1.75 the dozen: 4 COLBORNE TOO KE COLLAR Admitted the Best Quality and Best Fitting in Canada. TOOKE BROS. LIMITED, Montreal | ZManager Bill Carrigan joined | July . Jack has been a member of five pen-|8 nant winning teams -- four in Phila- delphia and one in Poston' the Red Sox in 1906. The next vear he was sent to Toronto -and in 1908 was recalled by the Sox. He succeeded Jake Stahl as mamager of the team "5th, 1913. \ The Red Sox are generally credited with possessing the greatest pitching | staff in the American League. Shore Rut Mays, Leonard and Foster form a twirling staff second to none in big league company, The Buffalo club are the only team that the Toronto Leafs have. not more. than held their own with this season. They have won seven and lost eleven to the Bisons. The Leafs have won thirteen and lost seven to | Providence; won six and lost five to Montreal; to Baltimore; to Richmond; won seven and lost five to Rochester, and won tem and lost sevén to Newark, ' with three more to hear from. | STROMBOLI SHOWS WAY TO ROAMER Two Speedy Runners Wage Duel in Municipal Handi= cap at Belmont. A two-horse race, grind between 'Stromboli, the plugging _chestnut-runner, and the great Roamer, over the mile and a half, was the feature at Belmont Park, New .York, yesterday after- noon. It was the Municipal handi- cap, and Stromboli won by a little more than a head, through the great riding of Johnny McTaggart. His dash to the wire made twell, who had the mount on Roamer, look like an amateur. Butwell had the race won until the last sixteenth, when McTaggart hooked up with him. From then on it was a question of riding, and the «fever jockey won. The Brook Cup handicap, a.three- mile affair, was something of a dis- appointment. Three started and only one, Pebeto, finished. Blank- enburg fell on the last trip around and Duke of Duluth, the pacemaker, tumbled at the next obstacle. , Pe- beto also was anxious to call it a draw, but the representations of his rider finally induced him to continue to the finish line. S------ Familiar Misquotations. "A star on the team is worth ten in the bush." won eleven and lost nine] won ten and lost tea] a gruelling|' "Time and Ty for no man wait. or -- We Are Now Ready To Show You Many Styles of Beautiful Fall Shoes All women who are interested in styl- ish footwear should visit this store and see the new ideas in the art of shoe making. « These natty styles are just in from the world's best shoe-makers, and we can please you at any price you wish to pay. | AH. Sutherland &Bro. The Home of Good Shoes SECOURS IS THROUGH FOR THIS SEASON President St. Pere Suspends Rowdy Player, While Like Fate May Await Pitre. "For his cowardly attack on Judge of Play John Denenny in Saturday's match at the Maisonneuve grounds, Secours, the National defence player, has been suspended for the balance of this season by President Eddie St. Pere, of the N. L. U. Dider Pitre, whom Denenny alleges punched him over the eye, is also likely to receive the same punishment. The cut oven) Denenny"s eye re- quired five stitches to close, and it is this blow that he claims was de- L livered by Pitre. The latter states that he only pushed the official, but did not strike him. Denenny critic- izes the police for not interfering when h& was attacked, there being two or three officers nearby who look- ed on without gplig to the official's assistance. Denenny states that he will also take court proceedings against both players, charging them with assault to do bodily harm. Denenny also states. that during the game he handled between the Ot- tawas and Nationals, Secours, after haying been penalized, said that he would settle accounts with Deneny before the season was over, though the official at that time believed that the threat was made in the heat of the game and would not be carried out. Secours' suspension shows the I a AN i unbiased manner in which President St. Pere is handling his position, for he is punishing a member of his old. club. He believes that officials must be protected, and did not hesitate to act. . The action of the two National ~ Lplavers may cost their clubthe cham- pionship, as the deciding match is scheduled for Saturday on'the Mile End grounds, and without this pair the chances of the Frenchmen regis- tering a victory are at least minim- ized. Though defeated on Saturday the Shamrocks directors were per- fectly satisfied with the work of the officials, and are prepared to accept the same pair for any of their games. William Ewing. president of the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union out notices to the clubs advising m that the semi-annual meeting would be called off, This is doné view of the fact that the union will not operate this season, owing to the majority of the players of a year ago having joined the various battalions, some of them now serving the colors overseas, while others are with bat- talions being trained for overseas service x The Yankees have purchased Southpaw Buckles from the Scranton © club, of the New York State League. Buckles pitched and won three dou- ble-headers for Scranton this year, and ig talied the "Iron Man" of that league. Christy Mathewson's "fadeaway'" may be less effective than of yore, but the Giants' fadenway percentage is still on the job. By BUD FISHER. memind [om GLAD THAT GUY WHO DRAWS US T. HURT (N THAT AUTrgmoBiLe AcudenT AND WAS LAID-UP FOR SW WEEKS, = NOW HE KNOWS NOW d CPA EXACTLY! HELL Be MORE KIND HEARTED! COME on we'Le Gof NEVER Draws US GET Ting SMASHED up EVER DRaw NOW | iD, REE MBER , WHAT YOU WENT THROUGH. AT WAS 4 WARNING FRO FaTg NOT TO BE SO CRUEL T0 US AbArN YES, DONT 'You DARE vS GETING \

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