Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Jan 1922, p. 10

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THE DAILY BR ITISH CORNWALL'S WHIRLWIND FINISH ALMOST RESULTED IN A VICTORY But Frontenacs Emerged With to Win 7 to 6--Fast Game. Fans who attended the intermedl~--tire game, and turned aside all their |©d slash. fe O.H.A. fixture last night at the Arena, between Frontenacs and wall, were given some genuine . hockey thrills for their money. The fast ice, combined with two teams both out to win afid both up to good avid-season strength, all resulted:in one of the best exhibitions seen on the Jock Harty Arena this year. From the first Frontenacs lead, partly from brilitant and sometimes fortunate combination work and partly because of the good work of Benny' Morris in goal. The period scores were 4-0, 7-1, and 7-6. In 'the first_period it was almost ell in Frontenacs' hands in the scoring ¥Mne though the Cornwall men press- ed hard, failing to score through Jack of combination. In the second period they improved somewhat and managed to slip one past "Benny" Morris. Then, in the third period they really loosened out and ran in five in a row, amid the cheers of the spectators, many of whom beseeched them to make it a tie. Frontenacs were bewildered for the moment but soon found their ice legs again and held the visitors to tha Tast gong, al- though they failed to register again themselves. No Referee. . The stant was delayed for some time on account of the fact that Re- feree Swazee, who was supposed to be on hand from Brockville to handle the match, did not turn up. His ab- sence was not noticed much at first 88 all thought he would be on hand at game time, but when 8.15 arriv- ed and he did not put in an appear- ance something had to be dome, so (the managers got together and agreed on George Vanhorne. An- other delay was then necessary until George secured his skates, but final- ly te set the tilt under way after a record trip from and back to the Arena. " First Period. Frontenacs broke into the scoring Mine early, Play Bad hardly been going half a minute when the vet- eran Bob Stanton meade a lone rush, out-guessed the defence and passed just at the right time to F, Browne, who netted for a nice goal. Corn- wall came back strong but "Benny" Morris. started his sensational goal- | keeping, which lasted elmosat the en- NDE KIDNEY ~ PILLS A. NEAL, Manager ROYAL OAK GREETS 1023 : With a better tire than ever. The mew Royal Oak, 3x33; fabrie tire; weight, 16 pounds; mileage 6,000 miles (backed by the com- pany); price, lower tham ever before. See them before buylag at: BASTERN CANADA MAXOTIRE & RUBIER CO. 284 Oatarie Street. Phone 2080. SP ute after LaRose tallied the sixth and last for Cornwall, One Penalty. | The visitors worked hard to make {it a tie cheered on by the crowd. {Just as things were at their speed- |fest Kinghorne spoiled his team's | hopes of evening it up and drew the {only penalty of the game for a wick- Frontenacs returned once a | more to the attack with one man ad- Smith and Browne made 8 Tiago. bit. though they pleréed the defence on several occasions, { Dennenay held them at the seven {mark until the final gong rang. The teams: Cornwall---Goal, Dennenay; right Atchison; left defence, Narrow Margin of One Goal shots, good rush but Dennenay beat them. Then Fred Browne went in alone j and notched amother for himself after two minutes of play. Fronte- | | nacs were playing beautiful combi-' | nation work and were having great | | | defence {luck with their passing. Smith and | re. y | F. Browne went down together and |J&mes: centre, Tilton; left wing, { Browne 8d across the net "Joe" Kinghorne; right wing, LaRose; {slamming the rubber in for the third Subs. Stewart and Moca, : sigh |goal. With five minutes to go Stan- | Frontenacs--Goal, Morris; right |ton and F. Browne went away to- defence, Hall; left defence, Stanton; gether and once more Browne scor- |C€ntre, F. Browne; right wing, L. [ed from the pass, making three tal- | Browne; left wing, Smith; subs., |lics for Bim in the period. Corn. Nickle and Watts. {wall came back strong end King-| Referee;-George Vanhorne. | horne, on two or three occasions, | The scoring: l.penetrated the defence, only to be | beaten by Morris. The Cornwall in- dividual offensive was not making {headway against the combination play of Frontenacs. Period ended, | Frontenacs 4, Cornwall 0, | -- | Second Period. { The pace increased a little in the | second round. Early in the play | Morris prevented a few hot ones. | Nickle relieved F. Browne at centre | jond two minutes from the start of | | the period L. Browne hooked one | into the corner of the net on a pass from him, Three minutes later | "Sammy" Hall got his "hunk," when {he and Lloyd Browne rushed to- gether and he slammed in the re- turned pesas. Both Stanton and | Browne got away together on several | occasions but could not beat Denne- nay. Finally Browne got in behind the net and passed out to Smith, who poked the rubber over the line in a mix-up for Frontenacs' seventh and | last goal. The pace was faster than Cornwall end by a close score. ever after this and Morris was short- | 'Bobby Burns' Night" must have ly given plently to do. He was finally | been a lucky one for Frontenacs, beaten by Larose who shot from -- close in on a pass from Kinghorne Belleville will have something to after seventeen minutes of play.| worry about seriously in the inter- Pertod ended, Frontemacs 7, Corn- | mediate group when they meet Fron- wall 1, tenacs on Kingston ice. The locals have improved wonderfully, First Period. Frontenacs, F. Browne, 1-2 min. Frontenacs, F. Browne, 2 min's, Frontenacs, Smith, 9 min's. Frontenacs, F. Browne, 15 min's. Second Period. Frontenacs, L. Browne, 2 min's. Frontenacs, Hall, 5 min's, Frontenacs, Smith, 10 min's, Cornwall, LaRose, 17 min's, Third Period. Cornwall, LaRose, 2 min's, Cornwall, Atchinson, 5 min's, Cornwall, Tilton, 15 min's. Cornwall, Kinghorne, 16 min'. Cornwall, LaRose, 16 1-2 min's. Final--Frontenacs 7, Cornwall 6. ICE-TICKLES. And the juniors won down in Third Period. With a six-goal lead against them, Cornwall opened the third stanza with a great burst of speed. They set a truly dizzy pace and Cornwall increased epeed to keep up with them. Tilton, the visiting centre, was ell over the ice at once and dis- played that wonderful playing which characterized dis work with Corn- well juniors last year. The whole Cornwall team worked hard and their combination plays showed great improvement. In two minutes LaRose beat Morris for a score. Three minutes later Atchison repeat- ed on a pass from Kinghorne. The crowd, delighted with the speed of the game and the competition, cheer- ed the visitors on and once more the speed increased. Tilton, who pos- sesses a wicked shot, had been bom- barding Morris on two or three oc-. casions and finally scored with a bul- let-like shot from outside the de- fence, after fifteen minutes of play. Kinghorne was warned for lagging, 'but made up for it by scoring unas- sisted a minute later. One half min- ny "Benny" Morris should have been in goal all year for the Frontenacs, though he did break just a little in the last period last night. His form- er work made up for that, however. Tiiton and Kinghorne, of last year's junior Cornwall team, possess the same old ability and speed. Til- ton is a dttle wonder with his India rubber person and his little jockey cap. hed ----- It was one of the cleanest games seen here this year. Vanhorne was sorry to put Kinghorne off, but he had been warned once and brought it on himself, Queen's intermediate 0.H.A. team will have to change its tactics and develope a lot more speed to have a look-in with Frontenacs. on Friday evening, Frontenac jundors can hardly hope Separation, But No Alimony A peaceful, quiet separation, no damage done, everybody happy again ~--that's the situation when you di- vorce your corns. Try Putnam's Corn Extractor. Acts like magic, no pain, no failure, success every time. Refuse a substitute for "Putnam's, 25¢c ev- erywhere. - Canada's Favorite Pipe Tobacco ORTING to win the local group with the beavy Queen's team in the running but they will certainly make the tri- color move up a little tighter on the first shelf to give them plenty of room in the eecond compartment, The absence of heavy body-check- ing was very noticeable and made the contest all ghe fester. George Vanhorne received a nasty Mttle bump by accident Browne, but took it well. The attendance was very disap- pointing, especially for a game of that calibre. It will no doubt im- prove for Friday's contest. The veteran "Bob Stanton is far from being slouchy yet. He still car- ries great speed along with his weight and uses headwork all the time, "Sam" Hall showed up 'well and got for himself a score. The two Brownes and "Joe" Smith meke a wonderful forward line, es- pecially since Lloyd Browne has started to use the passing game more freely. Tomorrow Night. There will be a capacity crowd in the Jock Harty Arena tomorrow evening for the second of the "big interest" games of the season, those between the Frontenacs and Queen's intermediate O.H.A. teams. Once more the old rivals will clash ard once more the spectators will lustily take sides to cheer them on. Queen's won the last tilt, but it is doubtful if they can repeat. Frontenacs have improved wonderfudy and the style of hockey they played last night is away beyond the showing of the stu- dents this year. It will be a great oM battle anyway and everybody is going. The Juniors Are Lively. The Toronio Globe says: It is pret- ty generally admitted that the O, i. A. junior teams this season are bet- ter than those which showed the way in the last campaign. Queen's Uni- versity, Aura Lee and Collingwood are sure to enter the next rounds, while Kitchener will likely do "he same. St. Mary's and the University of Toronto, two of the hest teams in the series, are fighting it ou' in the same group, with the former at pres- ent out in front. They will settle the issue in abou: two weeks. Picton Beat Trenton About 2,000 hockey fans saw Pic- ton intermediates defeat Trenton at Trenton on Tuesday night by the score of 5 to 2. SIGNS NEW CONTRACT TO PILOT GIANTS FIVE YEARS Veteran Manager Wiil Contin- ue at Helm Until Season of 19827. President Stoneham of the New York National league club announced that John McGraw has signed a con- tract to manage the Giants for the next five years, McGraw was asked, in connection with the contract, if he had made ar- rangements to resume active duty on the coaching lines, a job he has left % his assistants for several years. "It is too soon to talk about that now," he replied. "I may go to the coaching lines this n, but cer- tainly not in the eafly days." McGraw's new salary was not an- mounced, but Mr. Stoneham said it was in excess of the $50,000 yearly specified in the old contract. Mec- Graw also will remain vice-president of the club, of which he is now the third largest stockholder. The veteran manager will ceie- brate his twentieth anniversary as leader of the Giants mext July. In that time he has placed his team in the second division but once. in fourth place twice, in third place once aid all other seasons in first or second place. . . Women Only Allowed, New York feminine golf devotees have launched the organization of a club and acquired an option on asite for a course on which women ouly will be permitted to play. It has long been the custom on golf courses throughout the country for women golfers to give men players full sway and right of way on Sat- urdays, Sundays and holidays. WHIG. ' THURSDAY, JANUARY 39, 19mm NEWS BADMINTON TO BO XING | r 8 ' 1 The Essential in Baseball | l Pitching is the most essential fac- tor of baseball. | Good pitching can make a poor | team win; poor pitching will make a | 800d team loose. : | Pitching first, fleMing second end | batting third, in the order of their | importance. | Nothing can beat a combination of , good pitching and good fielding. | Important as pitching is, compara- | tively little attention has been given | the subject. The public likes to see | maulers at bat and a player's batting |average gots far more consideration | than a pitcher's ability, | Pitchers with ability will discount | hitting strength. Go through the re- | cords of the Detroit club, The Tigers [of 1921 were stopped completely at times, The Tygers set a new base | ball record with a team batting aver- age of .316, but they were helpless before the kind of pitching to which we refer. Pitchers Mke George Mogridge and Samuel Jones, the former a member of Clark Griffith's staff in Washing- ton, and the latter recently sold by Boston to New York, had little diffi- culty stopping the Tygers. Detroit would batter pitchers with plenty of speed and curves and them flunk be- fore Jomes or Mogridge men that had little to offer outside of pitching wis- dom and control, There you have the great secret of successful pitching--thought and control. A pitcher who puts thought behind every ball he serves and can control his delivery will win. Mog- ridge and Jones won for this reason against & mauling club like the Ty- gers. Grover Cleveland Alexander is probably the greatest pitcher in the majors since Christy Mathewson quit active pitching. And yet, Alexander uses only two kinds of deliveries, a fast ball end a curve, With a left-hander at bat Alexan- der keeps his curve breaking over the handle of the bat and shoots his fast ball over the outside corner. He works oppositely on a right-handed batsman, Alexander delivers his curve ball with precisely the same motion that he uses on the fast ball and he throws two fast balls to every curve. Alexander has control and Alexander thinks before delivering a ball. Great pitchers' do not try for strikeout records nor low hit re- cords. Season before last Jim y was hit hard in nearly every game and he won by close scores, but Bag- by elways managed to tighten and prove unhittable when the score be- came close. Batsman could slam Bagby only while Cleveland had a lead | { Mathewson was the peer of all pitchers. There never was another just like him and his equal does not promise to appear in the near future. They talk of this and that pitcher having everything, but Mathewson is the only ome in the long list of suc- cessful hurlers who really did have everything, ) Methewson knew how to pitch as few men in all base ball Mathew- son had poise, control and the most remarkable repertoire of 'stuff' that any pitcher ever carried to the mound, He had a fast ball, a curve, a slow ball and a fadeaway. There are good pitchers who would have been great pitchers with any two of Mathewson's eeveral de- liveries. His fadeaway alone would have meant lasting fame for another man. This fadeaway stagds alone among curve ball deliveries, for that is what it was after all---a curve. He threw it as a left-hander throws a curve, It travelled toward the plate eppearing to the batsman as a"nice" fast one and, just as the batter was set to hit, the ball would break, sweeping out or in, sometimes three feet wide. Mathewson used to be hit bard. Mathewson never tried to keep bats- men from hitting except when hits might tie the score or put his oppo- nents into the lead. Mathewson, lke other great pitchers, tried to make the batsman connect and let ris fielders take care of him. '. » . Hiccup Epidemic . Prevalent Don't get the habit of hiceups-- stop the slightest attack at the be- ginning. Nothing brings such magi- cal relief as slowly sipping a .few drops of Nerviline in sweetened wa- ter. For stomach pains, bloating, cramps, ' diarrhoea, nothing will 'prove more useful in every home than a 36 cent bottle of good, old Nerviline. 3 | Tr ' . It's Great, This Skating night. Needless to sav, she used and everybody knows that they are the best Skates for either or novice. Get a pair of Automobile Skates, and feel the difference, expert ~--SKATING SUPPLIES ' Boots and Shoes, Straps, Ankle Supports (Steel or Leather), Laces, ete, HOCKEY NECESSITIES Gloves, Sticks, Sweaters, Stockings, Pads, Pucks, etc. Special Prices to all Clubs, AUTOMOBILE TUBES--the best for speed or hockey | TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS CO. PHONOGRAPHS--RECORDS--SKATES--CAMERAS 88 PRINCESS STREET - PHONE 529 "THE PLACE TO GET THAT RECORD" Baby Cribs and Children's Cutters SPECIAL PRICES TO CLEAR CUTTERS Regular $14.00, for ....... $11.00 Robt. J. Reid & Son UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS 230 Princess Street. Ambulance Call 577w, 10% REDUCTION ON ELECTRIC IRONS AND TOASTERS This would be a quiet and peace- able world were is not for the move- ments of the under jaw. When a men goes at things head first, he often gets there with BE: i #1 BY GEORGE McMANUS OM! MAGLI - Will. YOU LEY ME HAVE TEN DOLLARS ?

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