EAE ANE RENAN EEE ENE ERRN You'll ind us here with| 'the up-to-the - minute | stock of Tennis goods -- Nets, Racquets, Ballsand | Shoes-- just ready to fit] i ll THE DAILY BRITIS H WHIG. en ------ Er -- TUESKAY, JUNE 35, 1u21, News and Views of the Sporting World | Ponies Easily Win From Hul, 16t0 7 you up with a real good | The Ponies had an easy time Mon- outfit. A few Tennis Balls still left at 40c. and 50c. Just the thing for practice. A complete line of baseball, golf -- everything fér practically every out- {day evening beating the Hull, Que., team, when they won by a score of 16 to 7. The game was in places a poor | exhibition of ball on the part of the visitors, when in the fifth St. Pierre | went up in the air and the Ponies got {seven hits and two runs, and in the | sixth when fourteen men faced Gar- fepy, the eighteen-year-old Hull | pitcher, and ten runs were made. The | locals played steady ball and cut down on a lot of the errors. Stewart on his first appearance slammed out a homer into the cars in centre field scoring Thompson who was on base. He also secured a single and a double | out of six times at the plate, Daley Going Fishing ? | while not coming up to his average lof Saturday got three hits out of We have the kind | four chances, snatching a triple, a | double and a single. Gallagher pitched the whole game of Tackle that the fish all start a riot |; struck out seven, walked two and after. Come in and see our big display. | is credited with three hits out of four times at bat. St. Pierre who started struck out four and walked two and Gariepy who followed let in ten runs, and walked six and struck out three | before he tightened up. Proulx was | in the game all the tims and got a i nice two bagger in the sixth. Stroud RETIRED COLUMBIA RECORDS 69c. EACH All double-sided--no seconds--no defects {the first baseman batted well getting a triple and a double. The Ponies started right off in the | first when Thompson was walked ;and came in on Stewart's home run | Daley got to first on a hit but was TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS CO. PHONOGRAPHS--BICYCLES--C AMERAS--FISHING TACKLE 1 : ~ Telephone 529. " THE PLACE TO G ET THAT RECORD" EEO RR ME TE RT | 88 PRINCESS STREET I put out when Saunders got the { choice. Saunders stole second d {came in on Arneil's hit, Cherry hav- ling walked and he also scored when | Miller fumbled Arneil's one sacker. Again in the fifth, they began to feel #StT Pierre ani collected seven hits Stewart getting first on a hit and second and third on errors of Pilon, and was brought in by Daley's hit, Saunders fled to first, and Daley was caught at third in a double play. Cherry got a single and was advanced iby Twigg and came in on an error over second and Arneil's hit. Arneil retired the side when he passed over second without touching the bag. In the sixth Hornbeck replaced Daley | on. the second time around in the ! batting order. In thjs inning, Gar- | iepy gave six hits and walked four day travelled all night by motor car to get here on time and were showing the effects of the Jong trip last even- ing. "After the rest they got today they ought to be ahle to put up a much better fight, 3 Ponies--Thompson, rf; Stewart, If, Daley, 1b; Saunders, 2b; Cherry, cf, Twigg, 3b; Arneil, ss; Evans, c; Gallagher, p Hull--Mulligan, 2b; Proulx, ec; | Miller, ss; Pilon, 8b; St. Pierre, p; Stroud, 1b; Pilon; If; Durocher, cf; Savageau, rf. Umpire--Sullivan. Score by innings: HE Ponies ........400021000x--18 5 Hull 10000 1320-- 9 12 Dempséy Had Reputation For Gameness Only Jack Kearns, manager of world's champion Jack Dempsey, was some- thing of a boxer himself in his.earlier days. Kearns was never a world-beater jin the ring but he fought a number of battles before he abandoned the actuai scrapping for the compara- | tively easy life of a manager. But the fighting end of the game did not give sufficient play to Jack's rather obvious managerial talents. He gradually drew a number of box- ers under his managerial wing--Abe Attell, Eddie McGoorty, Jimmy i Clabby, Billy Kramer and Fighting | Billy Murray were a few of the {many boxers handled by Kearns be- {fore he abandoned them all for Jack | Dempsey. | Kearns met Dempsey | Francisco hotel in 1917. {asked Kearns to manage him and i Kearns, not having a very choice col- {lection of boxers under his wing at {the time, agreed, Dempsey at that time possessed little except remark- able gameness, according to Kearns, but the manager set to work to de- velop him into a good béxer. What Kearns could not do particularly well in the ring" himself, he could teach effectively to another. . The crowning triumph of Kearns' career as a manager came with the signing of the articles for the Wil- lard-Dempsey fight at Toledo. When in a San manager of a new world's cham- pion, Hutchison's 1-Stroke feat Has Only Two Precedents Dempsey 1 the battle was over Kearns was the | I BOSTON'S BASEBALL DRIVE. Former Toronto Pitchers, Credit for Braves' Punch. ;" Chances that the Boston Braves, | | directed by two of the men who had | | considerable to 'do with the great dash of the team to a National Lea: | gue pennant and a world's champion- | | ship in 1914, will repeat this season, | | are being seriously considered by | baseball experts who have Watched | |the team in its series against the | | New York Giants in New York. | Manager Mitchell, of the 1921 Braves, was the first lieutenant of | George Stallings, the manager in 11914, directing the work of the pitch- | | ers that season. Dick Rudolph, vet- | eran "hurler, who is now Mitchell's | | right-hand man, was the Brave's most i | effective pitcher in that campaign | that carried the Boston team, in last position on July 4th to the pinnacle lof major league baseball, | The combined efforts of Mitchell | i and Rudolph now have the 'Big | | Four" of the Braves' pitching staff, | McQuillan, Fillingim, Oeschger and i Scott, working smoothly despite the | hazards of "lively ball." The | team is batting well and is fielding | aggressively. Given | } the | r---- Chub Handicap IT. | Friday and Saturday, July 1st and ! 2nd, 36 hole medal competition. Separate sweepstakes will be held on j each day for members not able to j play both days. Competitors may | | enter for both events simultaneously. Mixed Foursome, Handicap. | Entries for this event are due on | Wednesday of this week and may ! be telephoned to the professional at the club-house. | | | { | Frenchmen are still slow to back their confidence in Georges. Carpen- tier with money. Several wagers of 6,000 to 4,000 franes that Carpen- tier will lose have been taken by Frenchmen, but they are holding out for 3 to 1 on Dempsey. Americans in Paris have millions of francs to | in Chicago, | stride at the first barrier and a slip over Carpentier money, but thege is very little in sight. CEI PPP cre FIFI ITIL RE Earl Thompson Equals World's Hurdle 'Mark University of Illinois won first place in the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association meet at Stagg field Saturday, with 20 1-4 points. Notre Dame was second with 16 3-4. r The feature single event of the day was the feat of Earl Thompson of Dartsmouth, Canadian Olympic cham- pion, who equalled his own world's record of 14 2-5 in the 120-yard high hurdles. Thompson might have beaten his record but for a poor start which left him slightly off TO BE A BIG GO: It is almost a sure thing that Johnny Wilson, world's middle- weight champion, will defend his title in a fifteen-round deci- sion match with Mike Gibbons in Bfooklyn, Aug. Sth. If the go is closed, it will be staged at HEbbet's Field, which has a seating capacity of 20,000 per- sons. Wilson will receive a guarantee' of $35,000, with an option of taking forty per cent. of the gross receipts. PEPPER PERT b Sep Lad EE EE A Ee EE TY which hcaused him to tip over the fourth, « + PEP RFRPPPEPIEIPTLTRS 'WHITE FELT MATTRESS Regular $35.00, for ............$25.00 Regular $18.00, for ............$12.00 Regular $12.00, for .....,.......$ 95 Large line of m-- PORCH and VERANDAH FURNITURE From $35 to $300 per set complete. R. J. Reid THE LEADING UNDERTAKER 230-234 PRINCESS STREET Telephone Ambulance 157w. 4000 MILES FOR $15.00 Non-8Skid Tire 20x3% | giving the Ponies ten runs, which | put the game safe. Gallagher, Thomp- | At St. Andrews, Scotland, the mar- A. NEAL, Manager We are offering for a limited time a guaranteed for 4,000 miles for $15.00. EASTERN CANADA MAXOTIRE RUBBER CO, 284 Ontario Street. Can you beat it? | Phone 2050 " KEEP Pricesranging Phone 441 H. W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC Co. COOL With an Electric Fan from $8.50 up 167 Princess Street © "SPECIAL BARG S | twice | Cherry, Twigg and Arnleil contribut- | ed one apiece. son and Stewart crossed the plate each and also Saunders, Hull made. their best attempts to over take the lead in the seventh and eighth when Stroud, Pilon, Gar- iepy counted in the former, and Mil- ler and Pilon in the eighth. The teams meet again to-night and a much better exhibition is looked for, as the visitors after playing Sun- a . . . ild Epidemic Going Round due to impurities in the causes cramps, diarrhoea, headache, Those who take twenty drops of Nerviline in sweetened water usually get quick relief. It is really wonderful how good old Ner- viline fixes up a sour upset stomach, how it stops hiccoughs, how quickly it-puts a stop to those nasty attacks of gas. Every home should keep a bottle or two of trusty old Nerviline on hand. 35 cents everywhere, HOE | It is water, Misses Patent Kid Ankle Strap veins $2.95 Pump... .. A real good shoe. Women's Black Kid military heels . . .. .. $3.95 leather . Oxfords, Women's One Strap Pumps, Cuban heels in kid or patent elle o's 0'le a, less $4.95 Women's Brown Kid Oxfords, Louis and Cuban heels . $5.95 THE VICTORY SHOE STORE Cuétom Tailors Own Material Made Up. Prices right. 20 MONTREAL STREET Two doors from King Edward Theatre FOR SALE velous shot made by Jock Hutchisop, holding out at the eighth hole hn only one stroke, has only two prece- dents in championship play. In 1872 James Anderson holed the seventeen- th in one shot. winning the match and the championship .by one stroke. The other was at Deal, England, last year when Abe Mitchell holed out the eighth ii one, while playing in the open golf championship mateh. This week Jock Hutchison used his mashie from the tee, pitching the ball to within four feet of the the cup, EARLY DAYS OF CRICKET. Large Stakes Were Played for When George III Was King. A good deal of money still changes hands over cricket matches, but it is not in the form of stakes. We no longer hear of one team playing another for a specific stake, says Answers, Formerly, however, large sums were played f6F, One thousand guineas, it seems, were the ordinary stakes in county matches at the close of the eighteenth century. Tak- ing up the "Sporting Magazine" for 1793, one may read how twenty-two of Middlesex won that sum from eleven of England, at Lord's, on Aug- ust 26th, of that year, and in the re- turn match, on September 9th, won {another thousand guineas from the eleven of Hants, Surrey also played All Engiand, and Essex played Herts, on the same terms. money must have changed pockets between the wickels of Lord's when George III was King. in the very early days of cricket the government of the day did not view with favor the popular Ibve of games. In 1477 an Act of Pariia- ment mads the players of certain games, including "hand in hand aut" (played with a ball and a shaped stick, and supposed to have been the primitive form of cricket), liable to "implements to bo burnt. ! The genius of Hobbs in that dark age would most probably have been rewarded with incarceration in the Tower instead of a "benefit." pin, whence it rolled beautifully into | Altogether 2 good deal of, two years' imprisonment and their MACDONALD'S | WHO "ROLL THEIR OWN" A ES) Ee ER (dl MACDO Fine Cut: FOR THOSE SMOKERS WHO LIKE stm, ALDS ng Vv Ye (aT, od SMOKING TOBACCO CUT FINE, OR MAC OOWT \ ARE a TH ¢ SHELL Take NOW 'BE 1 JUST GAVE MAGGIE A 4000 TALK. ON HOW HARD TIMES ARE AN HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE OUT OF THE HINT A AINE LOOKING CALLED AnD [A © HE'S Bee our ™ OF Work For D0 | GAVE HIM TWO OF YOUR SUITS TO HELP Ep ----------------