p-- -- = Daylight Saving Means i0 : * "THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. . * THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1921 - EE ---- More Time --ior you to enjoy your Massey. If you haven't a Massey you are missing | one of life's big pleasures ---riding a Massey. --We'll be pleased tol show you the new mod- els. Come in now and look them over. No urg-|! ing to buy. Reasonable prices and exceptionally easy terms. + § Twice as easy as walking 88 PRINCESS STREET 1 : § ¢ | | | Three times as fast Store open evenings till 8 p.m, Saturdays 10.30 p.m. BIG PARADE TO-MORROW AFTERNOON 2.30 p.m., from Y.M.C.A. Corner _ Come on, Boys, Girls, Men and Ladies sign | up. Lots of prizes, piles of fun. Enter at our store, or with MR. A. W. DEAN, Y.M.C.A.-- but come anyhow! TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS CO. "INE PLACE TO GET THAT RECORD" Telephone 529. | SPRINGTIME. IS HOUSE. WIRING TIME Enjoy the comforts of Electricity. Let us wire your home. We are experts. "Estimates cheerfully given. H. W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC C0. T Phone 441. - - - 167 Princess Street re . \ a -- OUR SELECTIONS --IN-- Spring Woollens! while not as large as some years ago, is very attractvie and we think we can meet your taste. Our prices are reasonable, consis- tent with high-class work. | CRAWFORD & WALSH World of Sport | ITY COBB. IS SHOWING |. WONDERFUL JUDGMENT ' -- His Handling of the Detroit Baseball Team-Most | Effective. Two of the mest important things | iich helped to make Ty Cobb the] test ball player of all time were | itting and his faculty. of pulling | { the unexpected while on the paths Ty did not lead 'the American league 'in batting last season, but it looks as | though ~ one of his players, Harry | ! Heilman, will be at the top or there- | abouts this season. Cobb is using the] same judgment as manager 'that he did as base-runner, and to date his moves have proven effective, even if they were lucky. Writing of some un- expected moves that Cobb has made jas a manager, H. G. Salsinger writes {in the Detroit News as follows: "Corblan strategy has been given a | successful test. Whether Tyrue has jcarried an element of luck in his | | moves is open to discussion, but there | can be no dispute on the result. "In Cleveland last week Cobb took out Carl Holling with a runner on third and one out in the eighth inn- | ing. At the time the score was a tie at one run and two Cleveland left- handers were coming to bat. He sub- stituted Hub Leonard, his best left- hander. Two outs followed after er- rors kicked a run across. Then, in the ninth inning, he used a substitute batter for Leonard and the pinch- batsman delivered a single that tied up the scdre. "Suds" Sutherland, a right-hander, was then used by Cobb. He held Cleveland hitless and score- less for two innings and also drove in the run'that decided the result in Detroit's favor. '"'Against St. Louis last Saturday Cobb lifted another game into the right side of the ledger by pinch- runners and piach-batsmen. One run behind in the eighth Heilmann singl- all with one on and one out. Hale was | sent in.to run for Heilmann. Flag-| stead battled for Bobby Jones, who had singled in the third, walked and stole in the sixth. Flagstead singled Veach home with the tieing run and Blue followed with a single that scor- ed the winning run and an extra one. So Cobb's switches once more produc- ed results, '"His most severe test came on Sun- day. Oldham had cutpitched Kolp, the Browns' new phenom, but an er- ror had given St. Louls the only run scored in the game. In the seventh the first two Tigers at bat were re- tired. Ainsmith drove a sharp bound- er at Lamb and the third eacker's high throw went by Sisler to the stands, Ainsmith reaching second. Oldham was up. Oldham had hit a three-bagger on his previous time at bat. Since Oldham was pitching in- vincible ball and under the batting conditions described, it would Lave seemed good policy to let him bat, particularly with two out. But Cobb did nothing of the kiad. He sent in {Harry Heilmann, a right-handed bat- ter against the right-handed Kolp. {Hellmann was vut of the lineup be- cause of an injured hip and a deep spike wound. Heilmann delivered. His single tore by Gleason into right field, scoring Ainsmith with the ty- jng run." 1 THE NEW AILMENT CALLED GOLF SPINE And now comes the golf spine and bids fair to be as fashionable as appendicitis or gout. It is the latest form' of athletic ailment and is to A TOOKE 'Summer-weight Collar of Fashion TOOKE BROS. LIMITED TORONTO WINNIPEG VANCOUVER NASR: golf what the Charley 'Horse is to baseball, and is the newest income- producer for the medicos, according to one of them, Dr, Homer E. Bailey of St. Louis. . According to Dr. Bailey there. are.|- (two forms of golf spine, One results {from swinging too hard at the club while the player is standing upright, thus straining the spine, The other form of trouble comes from swinging the club while the player is leaning forward. This caus- se dislocation of the vertebrae. So in trying to make that hole-in-one, { golfers should watch their step when they swing on the little white pill. Ponies Play Saturday With Alxandria Bay The senior baseball gets away fo an early start this season when the first game is pulled off at the Cricket Field on Saturday with Alexandria Bay and Ponies as the principal ac- tors. A good crowd ought to be out for this initial event. Stanley Trotter deserves a pat ou the back for the work which startec things away so early this year. He made no rash promises but here we are with a senior game two or three weeks ahead of the time expected. Looks like a long and a good season. RACING AND BOXING. Kentucky Derby and Bantam Title Fight Draw Crowds. Basing their estimates on reserva- tion of past years, hotelkeepers of Louisville are of thy opinion that the 1921 renewal of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs Saturday will be witnessed by the largest crowd that ever saw a horse race in Kentucky. All rooms have been un the reserved list for months, the larger hotels report and a good per- centage have been engaged for the past year. The 12-round fight between Pal Moore, of Memghis, and Joe Lynch, Friday, on the eve of Dérby day, also is expected to swell tha number of visitors, The fight is for the ban- tamweight championship. EVERY MAN ON TEAM ; BATTED LEFT HANDED The Detroit Tigers presented an unusual batting line-up in their game with the White Sox at Detroit on Tuesday. Every man on the team batted left-handed against the four Chicago right-hand ptchers, Young, Bush, and Blue hit from either side of the plate as occasion demands. Shorten was inserted in place of Heilmann and made the left-hand attack unanimous, the others being irregular southpaw hit- ters. * . ---------------- CANADAIAN HOCKEXISTS , MAY VISIT NORWAY There is a proposal on foot to sel- ect a team of Canadian 'hockey play- ers from all over eastern Canada and take them on an educational tour of Norway and Sweden, The Swedes are particularly keen on the Canadian game but the Winnipeg Falcons showed them how little they really knew about the game at Antwerp last spring. Now they want to learn "inside" hockey. The suggested tour will be strictly amateur. Traveling and hotel expenses only will be pro- vided. 2 Brockville Team Enters Brockville baseball enthusiasts have appointed delegates to attend a meeting in Cardinal for the pur- pose of entering a team in the East- ern Ontario Baseball Association, with Prescott, Cardinal, Morrisburg, Iroquois, Spencerville and Winches- ter. Brockville will also have a strong city league as usual, and if the. early closing moyement initiated by the merchants and manufacturers carries the scheduled games will be played in the twilight. Carpentier Sails Safurday "Jack Dempsey's style 's made to order for me," said Georges Carpen-' tier at Paris. "I believe I will get -t0 him for the count inside of three rounds." Manager Descamps has bookad passage on the French liner Savoie. * |He and his boxer will leave Paris early Saturday morning by the boat train to Havre. Special accommo- dations have been fitted up' for him on the Savoie wihch will enable him to continue his training throughout the voyage, Another trouble with this country is that too many people devote all of their religion to going to church, ! EERE CAE eee G/0r29. WIXTELIT A Change of Time Will Be Made on CLUS LN SYSTEM Bi SUNDAY, MAY 1st, 1921 Standard time, not so-called Day- | light Saving Time, will continue to | he used for Schedules of all trains on | the Grand Trunk Railway System. For particulars apply to-- J. P. HANLEY, C.P. &T. A, G.T. Ry., Kingston, Ont. Wholesale and Retail Distributors- Office and Warehouse Foot of Princess Street Phone B1Retail Store 117 Brock St. Phone 217 If the case is critical, first aid, then censure, if necessary. ES = SHINGLES We can help you solve your shingling problem. A good barn shingle for $6.25 * per M. , Other grades in proportion, ra l ALLAN LUMBER CO. Phone 1042 Victoria Street TEENA OT HH = = = J SALE OF DINING-ROOM SETS AND BUFFETS AT ROBERT J. REID'S Qt. Cut Buffet, reg. price $100, for . $85.00 | Mah'g Buffet, reg. price $50, for $39.00 Hardwood Dressing Cases, $25, for $18.00 Iron Beds, from $6.50 to $25.00 Chesterfields from $75.00 to $250.00 each (Best quality of Tapestry) R. J. Reid Leading Undertaker Phone 577w. ~ - - USE MAXOTIRES Make your Tires practically puncture-proof. Keep your Tubes from being chafied or pinched. Use your weak or evem rim cut Tires from 1 to 5,000 miles with safety. i EASTERN CANADA MAXOTIRE & RUBBER COMPANY 284 Ontario Street. Phone 2050. Our Complete Eqipment enables us: to do auto repairing in the shortest possible time consistent with good work. So if you don't want your car out of commission, any longer than is absolutely neces- sary send it herd and you'll get it back again in so short a time as to amaze you. Scott's Garag 208 Bagot Street. FOR FIRST CLASS AUTOMOBILE REPAIR WORK SEE US. MCALLISTER & DRAKE THE AUTOMOBILE MECHANICS 503 PRINCESS STREET Phone 1750. * Phone Res. 1346J. ¢ "The National Smoke ™. : BY GEORGE Md -- 488 Princess Street. 'Phone 755 "WE TAKE X-RAY PICTURES Makers of Hollow Damp- oof Cement Blacks, ids, Bills, tles, and Drain Ti also Grave Vaults. A And all kinds of Ornamental Cement work. Factory: eor. of Charles and Patrick © Mgr: H. F. NORMAN ID RATHER C0T SOAKED WITH WATER THAN WITH Ny A CLOB! i Ly li i | |» - © 1921 av nr. Prarune sanvice, | ] me