Daily British Whig (1850), 26 May 1921, p. 10

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r= THE DAILY BRITI SH WHIG. THURSDAY, MAY 26 1921. FOR THE LEAST MONEY: dered a Bicycle is positively the cheapest known way All costs consi of travel, There is a Bic man of leisure. Like practically everything else, The good kind cost a little mo r more for better quality in anything. The bad kind are sold "at a 8 acrifice" the sacrifices is then assumed by the buyer. for a little "saving. ycle for everybody ----workingman, business man, or the there are good and bad Bicycles. e at the beginning. You must pay by the bicycle dealer, and He sacrifices all pleasures When buying a Bicycle, look for these three names-- MASSEY, BRANTFORD, RED BIRD ' INDIAN We sell no other, Our aim is to sell the best. We have succeeded in this by only selling the superior Bicycles to people who want satisfaction. Come in and see the many models. No obligation on your part, Easy terms. Pay as you ride. Store open Saturday evenings un- til 10.30. Ridg m Bicycle AMATEUR PHOTO FINISHING-- 7 Hour Service. Guarantec. wo rk. TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS CO. PHONOGRAPHS-ABIOYCLES--C AMERAS---FISHING TACKLE . 88 PRINCESS STREET : : 'Telephone 529, - * THE PLACE TO GET THAT RECORD" Why Not Use Electric for cooking instead of gas. It is more con- rry a full line - venient and cheaper, We ca i . of Electric Stoves. H.W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC Co, 'Phone 441 . > . 167 Princess Street --~--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." rr -- | In the World of S I SOME CONPARSONS sand Islanders This Year. The fang will remember the rather slow and disgusting batting practice the Ponies had a couple of weeks ago against the team from Alexandria Bay. The local team had a walkaway and from the point of view of a con- test the game lost interest after the first inning was over. The final score stood 20 to 1 for Ponies. » But, if the Bay cannot show us 800d baseball this year they can at least furnish us with a little chance for comparison. On May 15th Ogdensburg defeat this team 21 to 1 and on the 22nd of the month, last Sunday, the Kaysees, of Watertown, walloped them 19 to 1. These three scores form ground for Some interesting speculation. Og- densburg fs due here on the "tenth and eleventh of next month and this would seem to indicate that they are about the same calibre as Poni#s. | | 'be another good aggregation to bring ! here for a game if this could be ar. ce and ps for- ranged, although the distan following expense would perha bid it, . Without getting all puffed up about it or anything like that, King- | ston may safely say that ft has a pretty tidy little team in Ponies of 1921. Knowing this Stan. Trotter has been doing his best to get high-cali- bre teams in here to meet them. Here's hoping he finds some more good stuff after Deferiet, Ottawa and Ogdensburg have departed. LACROSSE REVIVAL Lacrosse Picking up a Little in] Western Ontario, Lacrosse, Canada's national game, which was at one time known per- | fectly to every youngster in Ontarw,, is now threatened with becoming the same kind of sport as Latin is a lan- guage. In eastern Ontario we never see lacrosse sticks any more. Down around Cornwall they still cling to it a little but the remainder of the towns have gone baseball crazy and have no time for this other gama. One of the reasons is said to be a matter of money. It has been figufad that a crowd of youngsters can start a ball game with one bat and one ball, while it takes a stick for each player and goal nets as a minimum to start a game of lacrosse. In western Ontario the game still clings and is reviving. = Starting from Toronto west there are some good teams. Toronto University has & good lacrosse team. Windsor, St. Thomas, Woodstock, Shelburne, Fer- gus, Orangeville, Sarnia, Mimico, Brampton, all have lacrosse clubs. In the senior Ontario series Toronto Riversides and Beaches played a Bame the other day with Riversides victors by two goals, i Just why the game has been drop- ped in eastern circles is hard to say. The price is not the question this time. It Jmay be that, bordering closely on'the United States bound- ary down through the eastern par: of the province, the eastern towns have had a tendenty to compete with the Americans and therefore have adopted the national American Bame as fully as do the Americans them- selves, ------ ey The "Bean" Ball Again. Joe Sewell, who replaced the un- fortunate. Ray Chapman at.short on Cleveland, was' hit in the head while at bat by a ball by: Pitcher Naylor, of Philadelphia, in a game at Cleve- land on Sunday. Many of the fans were struck by the coincidence, Sewell continued in the game with only a slight headache although the ball bounded high from his dome. Separation, But No Alimony A peaceful, quiet Separation, no damage done, everybody happy again ~--that's the situation when you di- vorce your corns, Thy Putnams Corn 4 CRAWFORD & WALSH Extractor, Act like magic, no pain, no failire, quccess every time. Refuse a substitute for "Putnam's, 25¢ ev- erywhere, SE wee ' The Kaysees, of Watertown, would | | i | | i G. MEL. BROCK The well-known athlete, who has re- signed from the staf of Western Uni- versity, London, to accept a position at Ridley College, 'St. Catharines. testi any ¢ Little Bits. Spo Lycett and Lowe, British entries, won from Manuel Alonzo and Count de Gomar respectively, Spanish con- testants, in the preliminary contests for the Davis Cup. The spring slugging fever in the big league baseball is goidg to put, several records in danger. The home-run craze seems to be catching! William T. Tilden, world's tennis champion, is matched against Flaqu- er, Spain, in the first round of the hard court championship matches at Paris next week. In the second round he will probably meet Crawley, re- puted to be the best man on the Brit- ish team, The Toronto Leafs are- beginning to get "Hppy." Umpire Morar had (» clear their bench, Manager Doyle in- cluded, in Buffalo the other day, What will the poor guy who cov- ers baseball games do when the Mercantile League and the County League open up next week? We'd like to know. Evidently Carpentier has not al} France behind him when Henry Le- tellier, proprietor of Le Journal, Paris, bets 100,000 francs on Lemp- sey at 2 to 1 odds. . Carpentier's first public workout on Monday is said to have made the press hounds gasp. Dempsey is lengthening his daily sparring ses- sions, It is a question whether R. J. Rodger's presents to the Kiwanis ball players will harm their amateur sanding. Somebody page Judge Landis, ee Butwell's Fee, Jimmy Butwell, the jockey who rode Herendesy to victory in the King's Plate race last Saturday, re- celved $500 as the tee for his work on that occasion. This was according' to the arrangements made last fall between Butweil and the Brookdale stable when he agreed to accept that sum for his services, "win, lose or draw." Butwell was at ome time a G.N.W. messenger in Toronto, ------------ That man comes mighty near being a fool who sits down and expects that hoping 1s going to put bread and but- hter in his mouth. Think well of others if you would ave them think well of you. e000 000000000000 e 3 -™~ # CO-OPERATION. WANTED * : = > #% Send in your sporting news to # the Whig. If it is only . game of 4 #-quoits between two friends, # " send it in: Results of any games 4 % are reques. * of the .teams or: # cerned. Get all the sporting 4 # news in thé paper by sending in 4 + the little bit you have yoursel? ¢ % and 80 co-operate with. us for # # the advancement of sport gen- ¢° + erally. * * » agues con- 4 t ya p8econd round but §of a hole by a b | Yow margin. ted from tHe officials & | BRITISH GOLFERS COME BACK GIVE AMERICAN LEGION SCARE Guilford, \ Ouimet and "Chick" Evans. three of the strongest play- ers in the American team contend- ing for the championship agaiast | the British team at Holylake wers | Put under for defeat on the 24th. Guilford went down before the Brit- ish champion, 'Cyril Tolley and Oui- met before Charles Hodgson of York- shire. "Chick" Evans was beaten by Fownes, another American player, to!the amazement of the world of golfing. It is generally conceded that Evans plays the better game and would. strengthen the American team's chances more' than Fownes but Fownes happened to have a good day and Evans an off one, with the result that Fownes triumph really ra. sults in the weakening of the Ameri- can team, ur ig) Jones, the fourth mainstay of tho nkees, was almost trimmed by ap E. A. Hamlet, in tha pulled himself oy: rilliant rally and winner with a nar. A EXTRA PANTS IONAL CHARGE | ASAE Overcoat ordered ||| Tailored-to-Measure on -- TT ' pg GLISH & SCOTCH LE unknown mad, a ee ee eee = Squeezed out a -- ee -- This puts hope back in the hearts of the British golfers as the whirl- wind start of the Americans, when they carried everything before them, rather had their opponents bewild- ered. The downfall of three such prominent members of the new worlg aggregation means a gobd chance for the Britishers which they had not ex- pected. | ---------- FAST HORSES. -------- Winners of King's Plate at Wood. bine Since 1902, 1902--Lyddite, Wm. Hendrie, 2.15. 1908--Thessalon, N. Dyment, 2.15 1-5, 1904--Sapper, N. Dyment, 2.12 1§35-=1uterve, J. E Seagram, 2.12. 1906--slaughter, J. E. Seagram, 2.11 3-5. 1807----Kelvin, T. Amb. Woods, 2.12 3-5, 1908--SBeismic, J. E, Sea ram; 2.11. 1909--Shimonese, Valley ¥. Stable, 2.10 3-5, 1610--Parmer, Val. Farm 2.12 2-5. 1611---8t. Bass, H. Giddings, 4-5, --Heresy, 1 J SALE OF DIN BUFFETS A ~~ ® ~ ING-ROOM SETS AND T 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 577. Stable, 2 08 1912 Brookdale Stable, 3.11. 1913--Ht. of Oak, H. Giddings, 2.09 ~5 oo 1914--Beehive, H:' Giddings, 2.10 3-5. 1915--Tartarean, C. Miller, 2.09 1-5, 1916--Mandarin, J. E. Seagram, 2.12 1917--R, Mahone, J. E, Seagram, 208 4-5. *1918--Springside, Geo. M. Hendrie, 2,08 4-5. 1919--L. of Light, G, W. Be'rdm're, 2.09 2-5, 1920---8t. Paul, H, Giddings, 3.09, 1921--Herendesy, Brookdale Stable, 2.10. - " New Issue Provine Of On 15-Year 6% Bonds--Due May 2nd, 1086 Denominations: $500, $1.000 Price: 99.50. To Yield 6.057%,. Real Estate, Bonds and Insurance KINGSTON AGENCIES, Limited + 0. HUTTON. B. G. ROBERTSON i Phone 703 67 Clarence Street. ----, Perfect men belong to an order of things not yet in effect. tario Cramipe! Cramps ! ramps! How to Stop Them Quick When you have cramps, it is a mighty quick relief that you want. Good old "Nerviline" is sure as death to relieve cramps in a hurry. Just a few drops in sweetened water, and the pain is gone. Buy a bottle of trusty old Nerviline to-day and keep it handy. Nerviline is a common household necessity, and is so useful in case of sudden illness at night, or when cramps, nausea, diarrhoea, vomiting or, the like occurs. Sold everywhere in large 35 cents bottles, ----------. J. Some Kingston men seem to be Unless a wan has self-respect he born liars. There are others that 1 |cannot comnsand- the respect 'of othe. have in mind that have acquired the |ers. act as easily as a cat learns to lap Too many people perform their sweet milk, work after the style of a machine. - ---- eae} ¥ Everybody Smokes OLDCHUN Sees sssenssns 3: 2 ¥ HALF OF IT? BY COLLY ~) WISH HE H ALL OF 170! wd OH MR. JIGG S - THERE'S A POOR HU LOOK! MAN PASSING QUT rN ny Bey HE WISHES a HALF OF WHAT YOU ARE EATIN - wr; AD, 1 - ~~

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