Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Jul 1918, p. 12

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\ _ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, PAGE TWELVE Bicycles! HERE'S A REAL BARGAIN IN BICYCLES = - Ride to Work Here's a fully equipped Indian Bicycle with Dunlop style tires, coaster brake, rol- ler chain, comfort pedals, motorcycle sad- dle and extension handle bars. 2 Regular $47.50. " Today $40 TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS CO. | "The Home of the Brunswick." Kingston 5 £4 * 5c Poet Cigar 5c Look for Silk Thread on Tip of Each Cigar. 2. Ee te S. OBERNDORFFER, Maker, Kingston. { " » - MONUMENTS ! of Seotel and American Granites, Vermont Marble, um te Company, Ltd. Telephone 897 Princess Street. 1931 iY In The World Of Sport Baseball Briefs _| Cy Seymour, former Giant out: fielder, wiio was for years a favorite with Polo Grounds fans, has faded oul of the big show, but he is still 'active as a ball player. The veteran | Cy is playing with a steel team in Bethlehem, Pa., and is going strong in the league composed of teams from the big steel mills and muni- tion plants, Walter Cruise, the St. Louis Card- Y hard hitting 'outfielder, has the drafe, beard in his home deférred classification. 'He will 1e- join the club Sunday. The Phillies hold the record of making thirty-six hits in one game, the largest ever made by any Nation- al League team. It was done August 17th, 1894, off Pitcher John Wads- worth, of Louisville, who has never been heard of since. Probably that game is the reason, They talk about Walter Johnson being the strike-out king, but how about the struck-out king? The strfick-6ut emperor of baseball last . season was Leslie, a Texas League first baseman, who fanned no less than 116 times during the campaign --about once in every four times he went to bat, re UNCLE SAM'S SOLDIERS. Canadian Minister Chosen As Athle- tic Instructor. : Rev. Thomas McCrossan, pastor of Olivet Presbyterian church, Minnea- polis, Is one of 500 athletic instruc- tors to be attached Sto the. United States army oh October 1st, He has been granted leave from his church for one year on full salary. The athletic preacher is a Can~ adian, having been born in Chatham, and back ia the '80's and early '90's was one of the best known of Can- adian athletes, He! was adept at al- most every branch of sport, and it is owing to his former prowess in this direction that he has been chosen as one of those who will teach Uncle Sam's sons to enjey the hours that they are not engaged in fighting the Boche, Cobb to Replace Hughey Jennings? is persistently rumored in baseball circles that this is Hugh Jennings' last year as manager of the Detroit Tigers. Jennings has failed utterly and Detroit fans. are clamoring for a successor. There is another report in cireulation that when the time comes to. supplant Jennings the management of the Tigers will be offered to Tyrus Ray- mond Cobb. From various sources it is learn- ed that Cobb and Jennings are at loggerheads and that the Georgian Peach has managerial ambitions. Cubs Sign Veteran Catcher. The Chicago [Nationals have come to terms 'with Tom (Clarke, a wveter- an catcher, formerly with the Cin- cinnati club of the National League. Clarke, a free agent, was signed be- cause Manager Mitchell fears Catech- er Killifer will soon be called into the military service. ' ruaning and the the I Copynght. _-- - TN ------ x HR -- COULD HAVE IT RESTORED. A Bright Future For Racing In Can ada, T. P. Phelan, a well-kngwn Toron- to horseman and A. R nden, sec retary of the Hamilton Jockey Club who are New York visitors, both spoke encouragingly of the future outlook for racing in Canada. Mr. Louden expressed the opinion that the Canadian Racing Association could have the sport restored almost at once if they made the effort. "It 18 an orgamization, though, that has always been governed bv a most conservative policy, and those in control do not care. to take a chance on too hasty action. They want nothing but strickly legitimate racing, and are determined that when the report is revived it shall be free from all features and policies that are objectionable, They believe that this is the only way in which the higher class of sportsmen can be at- tracted, and without their support there is little ¢hance of putting rac- ing on a plane: that will give it the standing it merits and absolutely 4n- sure its permanence." Detroit Dropping Down. The standing of the Detroit Tigers in the race for the American League pennant has been the surprise of the season. After making such a bid for the pennant in 1918, it was thought that the team would in a year or s¢ round into a strong ag- gregation. Only "one regular has been lost from the line-up which battled the Red Sox so hard in 1916, while other teams which have been badly riddled are up much higher in the race. The same old trouble seems to be following Hugh Jennings--mpoor pitching--for last week the Tigers made 107 hits, with a team average of .320 for the week, but lost six games out of ten. Cobb made 23 of the 107 hits iQ 45 times at bat. Novelty In Golfing Stunt. Frank J. Helmle, of the Marine and Field Club of Brooklyn, is well known as a golfer of ability. An idea of the excellence of that player may be judged from the fact that his driving is so long that, to cover possible injuries to others away off in the distance by his far-fiying rubber'cores, he carries an insurance of $5,000. Playing the other day with a friend who, although a weak player, had an exaggerated idea of his skill driver, Mr. Helmle casually mention- ed his insurance. "Good idea, that, Frank," said the friend. "I'll have to take out some. Why, only last week I nearly hit a chap standing near the tee with a savage slice, If'I'd hit him I'd have killed him. Yes, sir, that insurance is a dandy." : "No. Man's Land Fight." New York World: Besides the boxing there will be a novel military event termed 'No Man's Land Fight.' 'Get this, Six soldiers: from Camp Upton, three on a side, will engage in this new form of battle royal. They have the usual boxing material on their hard fists, and the side hav- ing the most men on a box three feet high and four feet square at the end ; When the drone of a Hun airplane was heard the crews of these loft i» removing hus cont as be, runs. rs fb 8 cn > =" of three minutes will be. declared the winner. Oh boy! AN INTERRUPTED GAME OF CARDS fg guns To -- ' HAVE HIS LITTLE JOKE. | WALTER JOHNSON 1s as 'al SAME OLD WIZARD Though He Made Poor Start, Washington Pitcher Is Hav- ing Great Season. Walter Johnson has been recog- nized as one of the greatest pitchers ile game ever produced. ' For the last decade he has ranked among less than half a dozen great twirlers in the major leagues, While a¥ in- dividual pitcher may have excelled him for a particular season, John- son's record, along with that of Al- exander's, stands out conspicuously as the best for the last eight years. He is now serving his eleventh sea- son with Washington, the club with which he entered the major arena. Including the games he has won this season, Johnson has a string of 263 victories to his «redit. This means that his average per season reaches nearly twenty-four games, This is a remarkable record, os- pecially when it is considered that the speed king won a total of only thirty-two games his first three years in the majors, hie entering as a boy in his teens. Exclusive of his work this season, Johnson has struck out 2,297 bats. men and passed 743 batters, A high average of Js passes was handed out in his first Years, when he lacked the fine control he now possesses. Like his compeer of the decade, Alexander, Johnson never has achieved the feat as dear to the heart of every pitcher ---a no-hit game, Three times, how- expr, he has held opponents to single hit, while he has figured in seventy- two shut-out battles, including the games he has lost this year, he has suffered defeat in 183 games, While Alexander's record is not available now, it might be stated that in his sixteen years of service Mat- hewson won 372 gathes and lost 189, while for the same, period Eddie Plank won 209 and lost 179. Striking Out in New Line. At the agé®of 48, that world-fam- ous golfer. J. H. Taylor, who was the first English professional to beat all the Scottish professionals at the games, it striking out in a new line of life. He has been appointed a supervisor of canteens to the Navy and Army "Canteens Board. The duties will méan an abstention from golf--no small trial, says a writ- per in the Evening News to a man who for forthy years has scarcely pent two' consecutive days without | playing. . Myers Sorry, So He Gets Back In. Player H.. H. Myers, who was placed on the ineligible list of the Brooklyn club, was reinstated yes- terday by the National Baseball Commission that he rbgretted his action of leaving the Brooklyn club, without permission, and desired to rejoin it at once. His reinstatement had the endorsement of the Brook- Iyn club. ! qn Ainsworth Gets Orders. Bdward Ainsmith, catcher of the Washington American League Club, 'has been ordered to engage in some useful occupation, or be placed in class A-1 of the draft by his local draft board. Joe Judge, first base- man of the club, has been served ~Canadian Wa: Records Officia with a similar notice. sprang to ther piuces. [(Jote alt . Photo RR. A A i i KITCHEN CABINETS All Styles, Finishes, Best Her Last Good- Bye to Corns W HEN a woman onde buys Blue-jay, her corn troubles end for good. She will try one on a corn. The pain will stop instantly. The corn will soon disappear. She will know then that , corns are needless. And every corn thereafter will be ended before it fairly starts. . Never again will she pare corns, and never use harsh treatments. She will never wear corn pads. Nor ever again will ghe let a corn spoil one joyful hour. Blue-jay is keeping millions of women entirely free from- corns. The way is simple, easy, sure, modern and scientific. It will keep you free if you let it. Prove this on one corn tonight. You will laugh at a corn after that. PB Blue-jay Corn Plasters Stop Pain Instantly -- End Corns Completely Large Package 28¢ at Druggists -- Small Package Discontinued BAUER & BLACK, Limited, Makers of Surgical Dressings, otc., Chicago, New York, Toronte (965) A A tt Selection in the City -to Choose From. R. J. REID, Leading Undertaker Phone 577. THE REO MOTOR CARS "The Gold Standard of Values." Reo Reliability OO schedule to the minute, on the job all the tigie--and at a cost you can compute as readily as the wages of the man who drives it. That, in a word, is Reo quality as embodied in Reo motor cars. For, the cost of operation, maintenance and repair; and withal, cone: stency of performance, is the test. It is in the test that the Reos prove their quality. : Better materials "do not enter into the making of any mo- tor car for the simple reason that the science of metallurgy knows "no better materials nor the formulae for the treating of them. Nor can any maker claim to put bettér workman- ship into the making. Call around and see the Reo models. You will want to own one. Va Phone 201 129 Brock Street _ | By BUD FISHER. EVEN IN THE SUBMARINE ZONE JEFF MUS T I'te Run AND TELL HM now BefoRe © FORGET: IT MUTT, TR HERE'S A Good ONE THAT AL JotSoN' SLIPPED me. "why ISA UT oF A windiw LiKE A fuLe HORSE LookiING George W. Boyd

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