* PAGE TWELVE - The Brunswick "THE ULTONA" This wonderful invention plays any make of record perfectly. All you need to dois to hear it and you will see the differ- ence between it and what other dealers say will play all records. Why Buy Old fashioned machines that only play one style of record properly, then have some attachment that plays others in a kind of a way, when you can have the Bruns- wick at less money than the ordinary ma- chines. "Just hear the Brunswick," which has the new tone 'Amplifier; automatic stop and every feature that is good and is worthy of the Brunswic quality. --_ The reason Brunswick phonographs are so low priced, in keeping with the economy of the times, is that it is made by one of the largest and oldest wood working factories in the world. They have their mahogany forests and factories r every part of a phonograph. F "TREADGOLD "SPORTING GOODS CO, he ~~ 88. Princess Street "Sole Agency For This District." * Phone 529 Kingston : ? : Z THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1918. ° In the Field of Sport| | BASEBALL NOT DEAD; 1 iS MERELY RESTING | mugsy" | The New-York Manager Is | Very Optimistic. "Jf the war ends this winter base- ball will John J {game McGraw, of New York. "The will come back all of a sud- iden and the interest wil be greater than ever. Our soldiers, when they return, will be the most ardent sup- porters "of 'baseball and many of them will find engagements with major and minor league clubs. It is good poliey to play a waiting zame just now. Germany 'is on the ropes and may quit at any moment The magnates have until February or March to arrive at a conclusion. If the war should drag along until early spring hefore the declaration of peace it wouldn't be difficult to get the plgvers together and arrange the pennant races. When the hig {leagues hold their annual business meetings tn December they'll pro< ibably. mark time. There's no sen- {gible reason why they should wind up their affairs then for the period of the war. By the time the sched- tule meetings are held two months {later we'll have a much better line {on the future. Baseball isn't dead. {It's merely resting. You can't kill $1 3 ad | TAKE LITTLE CHANCES. | (RAL Twenty Thousand to One Against A One Stroke. The great gambling house, Lloyds, {of London, some years ago calculated {that the chances of a golf player ma- iking a hole in one made the odds against about 20,000 to 1. A west- |ern paper instances the case of Ro- | bert Johnson, professional of the {Seattle Golf Club. Not long ago, for the second time in his life, he made the "one in one' on the Seattle links. The first time this happened to him was in 1901, a year after he had come from Scotland, where he had been playing golf for some 17 years. So it figured that inasmuch as Johnson played on an average of 18 holes a day, a one-hole achieve- ment was due about once in 17 years, with an average of 756 strokes to the round, or something like 111, 690 holes of golf. Furthermore, this dopester delved still deeper and fig- ured that there were three holes to a round wher the one stroke from tee to eup would be possible, which would make 18,615 short holes, or about an 18,615 to 1 shot, which is not so very far away from the ap- parently off-hand estimate of Lloyds. The same paper records another one-stroke achievement by one W. H. Watts, of the Ogden, Utah, Golf and Country Club. He made a mashie shot and from the fifth tee, destined for the green 135 yards away. The ball struck the flag, which in this case was the Stars and Stripes, float- pu from a 12-foot bamboo pole. he national emblem caught the ball in its folds as an expert spider might trap an unwary fly, then dropped it-lke a plummer into the cup. I wonder what odds Lloyds would offer against the duplication of that feat ?--Buffalo News. Victory Bonds Negotiable. Canada's war bonds are negotiable. "The Home of the Brunswick." TRY 5c Poet Cigar 5c¢ Look tor Silk Thread on Tip of Each Cigsr. ~S. OBERNDORFFER, Maker, Kingston. | WE BUY AND SELL WAR LOAN ISSUES Bongard Ryerson & Co. 1 Members Toronto Stock Exchange. STOCKS, BONDS, GRAINS AND COTTON Private wires to Rew Yori, Chicago, Toronto, Mon- They will be worth at least par after the war, and experts claim they will be worth more than par. If you buy 1918 Victory bonds and find after some months that you need the money for other purposes you will have no trouble disposing of your holdings. There is no gamble in connection with these bonds. No one questions Canada's future. Who would suggest that Canada will fail to meet her obligations? Nobody. Then, there is absolutely no reason why Victory bonds should not be at a premium. They are not taxable. There are few securities offering such advantages to investors. There are some that carry a higher rate of in- terest, but the returns are subject to taxation, and there is always the possibility that their values will fall. Editorial Opinion: Moose Jaw Times, Sask: Every |dollar subscribed helps to bring the war to an end. Winnipeg Telegram: Subseribe to make the soldier's task easier. Lunenburg, N.S., News: Meet the canvassers cheerfully and invest liberally. : Victoria, B.C., Daily Colonist: The loan will cheer our ®boys on the last lap of the journey: let's send a mes- sage of enthusiastic hope and sup- port. The Ontario Football Union has again postponed its opening. It will be unable to get its series under J} way until next Saturday, November " BRINGING UP FATHER Sth. The ban is still on at Toronto. McGraw's Opinion-- receive a great boom," said? in A SPEEDY SCOTCHMANS i i George McCrae Is a High Class Mid- i dle Distance Runner. George McCrae, the Scotch dis- itance runner, who recently set a new | professional retord for 10 miles, came within a second of breaking | the world's record, held by Cannon, a race shortly before he ran his | 10-mile test. McCrae covered two {miles in 9 minutes, 12 seconds. ! The world's amateur record is 9 minutes, 9 seconds, and was made by AKred Shrubb; of England, 14 years ago. The American record is 9 minutes, 11-25 seconds, which Joe Ray made in Madison Square Garden in the early spring of 1917, in a race against the late John Over- ton. a = = SKENE RONAN Well-known Ottawa hockey player, wiho is With the tanks, SHOE ON THE WRONG FOOT, Montreal Admits Hockey Control Is Passing to West, Calling as {t may be to the profes- sional hockey pride of Montreal, it begins to look as if it would have to take a back seat in the final settle- ment of the professional hockey situ- ation, which is bound to be made soon, unless it wants to be left out in the cold or give the privilege of play- ing in second-rate company. Where in the past Montreal has pretty well dictated to the western clubs, this time it will probably be Ottawa and Toronto who will dictate to Montreal. There are apparently two strong reasons for this. The preponderance of money to operate and the preponderance of ice are vested in those two cities, Even with the Jubilee Ring secur- ed, and basing the prospects upon the statistics of the past, the Canadiens will be only able to take in a modi- cum of the money Toronto and Otta- wa will be able to take in, and their expenses will be about the same, even though Mr. Kennedy may cheaper team th n either Ottawa or the two Toronto clubs that are ex- pected to opera though to do him Justice, it must be admitted that in the past Kennedy always had a great- ar abundande of strong players than any other club. GERMANS ARE "YELLOW." Have Always Shown the "Streak" in Prize Fights, Looking back over prize ring his- tory it is hard to find a single Ger- man that was really dedd game. The pugilists in whose veins German blood flowed were ferocious enough as long as they believed that they could whip - their antagonists. They were merciless, too, when they saw their rivals staggering helplessly as a result of painful blows. But when- ever those Germans discovered that they were in danger of sustaining serious injuries in the ring they in. variably showed the yellow streak. Precisely the same conditions pre- vail in Europe. The German army {is groggy and hopelessly beaten. The yellow streak is again showing itself in the plaintive wails for an armis- tice and peace. Nothing like the good old Anglo-Saxon wallop that has won hig glove fights and victories on the battlefield. Field Hockey. Field hockey, which has been pop- ular in military camps in England for some months, is now being played in Canada. As hockey, as played ou skates, was probably developed from the good old game of "shinny on your own side," this looks like a re- version to type. Roller polo is a combination of shinny and hockey, and perhaps they all have common root in that ancient, honorable and jterocious Iridh pastime of "hurling" with eleven players on one side and a war club each. : have al' These marks on Rubber Footwear distinguish a Dominio wos N\A a -, # pl Io Product. n Rubber System Modern Efficiency Says: ~ Wear Rubbers and Keep Fit Get them NOW--so you'll be ready for bad weather. - A sick man, or a sick woman, slows up the whole machinery of business. If a man, his work is . neglected. If a woman, her household is disarranged and the bread-winner of the family made less efficient by worry. If a child the progress in school is retarded -- sometimes the whole school year lost--because of some serious illness which might have been prevented had Rubbers been worn. Let's all stay well this winter, by wearing rubbers. Let's avoid the epide- mics of colds, sore throats, grip monia that upset business and previous years. , pneu- omes in The cost of rubbers is so reasonable compared with other needs, that you can well afford to buy more than one pair. "These six brands of reliable rubbers-- "Jacques Cartier" "Merchants" "Maple Leaf" "Granb "Dominion" "Daisy" --enable you to obtain from the leading shoe stores a étyle and shape for every shoe for men, women and children. Ask for these brands--they give the best wear. : 1 DREW DOES COME-BACK. Negro Sprinter Defeated Great Field at College Meet. The remarkable. athletic "'come- back" of Howard' Drew, the negro sprinter, running in the colors of Drake University ai the recent cham- pionship meet of the Conference Col- Jeges, is undoubtedly the outstanding feature of the intercollegiate track season. By winning both the 100 and 220-yard dash from the fastest fields that the middle west colleges could boast, Drew demonstrated that his victories were not due to either accident or lack of formidable oppo- nents. If any further proof was needed, the time would amply attest .the high standard of Drew's sprint- ing, as he ran the 100 in ten sec. onds flat and the 220 in 22 2-5 sec- onds. When it is taken into consideration that Drew is 28 years old and has| 'been competing for thirteen years, > during which time he has wom nu- merous victories and equalled world's: record time in both these events, it can be seen that his latest triumphs are little short of athletic marvels. © -------------- Look: For the Button. When you meet a person look for the subscriber's button. If be or she has bought a Victery bond the button will show it. It's a passport these day. If the bution is not to be seen the question is----why not? i 4 -s se .. Lad - of